Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 10, 1910, EDITORIAL, Image 15
THK BKK: OMAHA, SATURDAY, SKITKMHEK 10. 1010. KE'Si HOME ; MMMIINE PAGE $ HUMPED I r i. (J Dottie Dialogues BT WALTER A. SINCLAIR. "Now that the fruit la run nod and the Jelly mads, we com to the truck Jam," an nounced Dottle, aa wa peered Into the bag (ram room. "Heavens preserve us!" I shuddered. "Wall, at any rata I trust you won't be pickled," ahe observed. "Oh, call me a quince and be dona with It," I growled. "Oh, but I'm very fond of quinces," ahe objected. "All tha fnore reason," I urged. "Isn't It good to be back In town again?" aha queried, shifting the aubject. "If only everybody else hadn't decided to come back at the same time." "It was thoughtlesa of everybody lse, waan't It?" I agreed. "Even If their vaca tlona did end last week, they might have been a little more considerate of you and have come home a week earlier on their own time or stayed a couple of weeks longer and lost their Jobs. You should apeak severely to them." "I'm most anxfoua to speak severely to the baggage man or anyway to speak to him," she replied. "I can't see my trunk anywhere. Isn't there a regular mountain of them?" "Very rocky mountain, I d say." I ven tured. "Maybe if you had a letter of In troduction to the baggageman he might accelerate the progress of your trunk to the platform. If the Ineurgenta Insist on a progressive platform, you should Insist on a progressive trunk on It." "Do you know, 1'va always wondered why I they speak of some railroad aa trunk J lines does thai mean that on the other kind one can only carry a suit cae?" she aaked. "Oh, hera cornea the baggage mas ter Im going to smile at him and maybe ha will arproach." "Don't smile. You may foozle hla ap proach," I warned. Too late. She was already talking with the man In overalls and cap. "And I've been In town four days now and the transfer man says he Just can't Vget at anything here until you come to It because there are ao many trunks piled In , Ziere all at the same time, and I thought perhaps If I explained to you how neces sary" she rattled on. "Well. I read that Mme. Melba" he be gan, when she Interrupted him. "How dare you mention that to a lady? It's nothing like that ot all!" "Oh, I see. Pajamas" "You do nothing of the sort!" aha snap- Brightside and His BY LAFAYETTE PARKS. ' ."Heema atrange that any employer should advertise for any ugly cashier," muses Brightside, when sarlent Son haa art tied himself for the verbal handicap. "The girl that answers an 'ad' like that certainly needs a Job," replies the heir ap parent, shooting smoke spirals upward. "I fall to see why beauty ahould be a handicap to business," protests Father, , fwtth the usual devotion to the eternal feminine. "A peach In an office Is apt to take the hlrd men's minds off their work," sug gests Ron. "I notice that our Boss always Ires a bunch of lemons to tickle the type- iter keys. I think ha does It because ay work cheaper and not because he's cot a grouch on against the glad eyed skirts." "A man must be extremely commercial Vto be willing to taks such pains to employ unattractive young woman," continues father. "I don't know but he's a wise gink after all," admits Son. "when he picks out a pie faoa to watch the money drawer. These coy young things, whose faoes are their fortunes, don't worry very much even If the boss' masuma won't - baianoe up - at night to the cent. They know they can pry lose another Job by togging up In their glad rags and wearing a sweet smile." "My experience with young women In business," remarks Father, "Is that they an ba trusted to handle money mora than men." 1 "But If you take a aecond look, Pop," Son explains, "it's usually a dame with an Iron Jaw aud hair that will never be golden v again who Is clinking the cuah. if any body can slip her a piece of wooden change and get to the door before she can call for the police, they've got to beat better than ten seconds flat In the getaway sprint" "It is dlfflouit for me to understand why jhers should be any moral significance in the matter of looks," argues Father, "or why a plain girl can be trusted more than a pretty ene." ... "The girl cashier In the quick-eats dump rvthere I occasionally squander thirty cents (Jr grub," continues Son, "Is one of them classy little ladies. I wish you oould see the jam there at noontimes. Every piker that comes In to blow a dime for a stack of wheat thinks he's got to butt In with a line of hot air." "Then this good looking tcpung woman really draws trade," triumphantly declares Father, believing he has scored a point. "Sure," agrees Son. "every slx-dollar-a week clerk within walking distance prances Into the place, swinging a cane, and makes his little bluff that he'a the real cheese. A plate ot sinkers and a cup of coffee la his limit, but he takes up the room and makes a big nolsa which drives away the NO DIFFERENCE. 'Td like to know how long girla should be courted." Juft the tame way as abort auxlU I sT J V-J Preserved Pleasantries and the Trunk Jam. "MACGAGE." ped. "I'll tell you. to end any further guess work on your part" "Oh, the company pays for any kind of work," he Interposed, flippantly. "A very revered relative presented me with a very atrocious necklace which I wroie her I wore constantly. It Is at the bottom of my trunk and this relative of mine, who Is also wealthy. Is going to ar rive here tonight to dine with us and I positively must have It or lose' her esteem," she explained. "My trunk is a large Sara toga trunk, leather handles at each end, you know, and the top Is sort of disfigured where, the last man knocked a couple of chips of varnish off." "Ah, Saratoga chips, eh?" responded the baggage man genially. "Why, have a look at that avalanche! I can't get to your bag gage any faster than It Is dug out." "Couldn't you be slipped?" I inquired, getting an Inspiration. "Madame, take your husband away," said the smasher, addressing her. "I could make a fortune iaklngall the money pushed my way for trying to do the Impossible, but the company pays liberally to do what's possible. There's the whlBtle; lunch time, and I can't loaf on my own time, you know." After he had toddled away she glanced around the immediate vicinity, "What are you looking for?" I Inter rogated. "For the husband he mentioned," she glgled. "book no further." I cried, gleefully. (Copyright, 1910. by the N. Y. Herald Co.) Boy b to Stop Girla Their Latest J Tabllod Sketch. WV JVTPV PIKE THINK.. HEV9 OT TO TVjtt I IN .WITH A UNC or noT guye with real money In their clothes." If this particular cashier were wise," surmises Father, "she would prevent the crowd by refusing to talk to everybody. She It only employed to take In money and not to engage In conversation with the cus tomers." 'They're all alike," asserts Son regret fully. "I never knew a peacherlno who didn't Ilka to unllmlt the chatter. If the boss tells her to cut out the chin music, she spills a bucket or two of the damp stuff and beats It home to ma. You can't talk. horse sense to these prise winning gaieties after they've listened to the 'Oh, you kid!' dope from a bunch of flatheada" "Why should business men- be forced to employ ugly cashiers and deny positions to attractive young woman on account of the flirting habits of foolish youths?" de mands Father. "Let us teach our young men to ba mora respectful." "That listens easy," admits Bon, "and there may be ways of getting around the game without losing any money. But If you aver have to hire a pretty cashier, I.' ad, remember th worda of the poet: I never knew a Pretty skirt Who wouldn't do her best to flirt; The boss may swear the girl look wiae, But still she makes them goo-goo eyea (Copyright, 1810. by the N. Y. Herald Co.) r The Gentle Cynic J Hope la merely breaking a pair to draw to a flush. When money talks it frequently says "i told you so." The man who can bottle up a little sun shins for a rainy day is a corker. Lots of fellows get Into financial straits from being crooked. The average man is one who is just about as good as he is bad. Love will find a way. but the question la, who Is going to pay the freight? Ambition never grows old. In fact, it seldom even reaches the age of maturity. A thing of beauty is a Joy forever, or at least till she gets old. A promoter Is a man who earns hla dally bread by the aweat of some other fellow's brow. Soma people can never take a middle ground. They are alwaya either attaining the helghta of folly or the depths of despair. "In vine Veritas'' means that some men never tell the truth till they are so drunk they don't know what they are talking aooui. I""- . rj w U1TTOgra A Itoyal Inheritance. An Inheritance may be of great value to the one til H'linni It rnmi nr It mav h a curse, according to the spirit In which It Is receivfd and administered. Certain It Is that It brings added responsibilities to the one who receives It; responsibilities for Its proer use and safeguarding. An lnhrl taneo that representa the life blood of the toll of another cannot be lightly squandered without grave fault If rot crime. Again an inheritance may come unexpectedly, where none haa been looked for, or may fall to materialise after long years of patient ex pectation. Two men died a few years apart en a charge where I was one time pastor. The first had lived with hla family on a little tract of land in thi outskirts In very humble circumstances. One day he reii over dead and the neighbors said: "If he left the family enough to bury him they may count tliemselea fortunate." When the undertaker was preparing the, body for burial he discovered a belt around the dead man's waist, which, on examina tion, was found to contain between 17.000 and IH.000; money that hla wife even did not know that he had in hla possession. inus the heirs came Into an inheritance that they had not expected and which seemed truly magnificent to them. A few years later the other mm Hlad also. He had been ranutarl tr a mn .r wealth and it was found that his will be queathed $25,000 each to two relatives and smaller amounts to others. But when all the dead man s assets had been located and all Just claims against the estate very "mil in me aggregate had been met it was found that the entire esta.t -n-n nrth between $7,000 and $8,000, or about the same amount aa was found on the person of the one who was supposed to be worth nnthino- To the grief of the heirs was added the scnock or disappointment over the scanty ciurns irom tne expected inheritance. I wish to write concerning a royal in heritance that came to the "people called Methodists" from the founrlara nt church. What a field of Investigation this "P i tne student of Methodism. Think of the many things we Inherited from the Wesleys and their coadjutors, such as our distinctive doctrines, our rich hymnology, our distinguishing social ser vices, our characteristic polity and our name. But It is of none of these that I will wish to speak, delightful as It would be to do bo, but of Methodism's attitude toward Christian education. Let me Just say in passing that the church whenever it has followed divine leading, has been the friend of higher learning, not for the classes only, but for the masses. In the response of the church to the appeal of the race for educational advantages will be found one test of Its responsiveness to the voice of Ood. Indeed I think that this teat should be placed alongside of its evangelistic zeal and missionary endeavor IntesUng the attitude of the church to ward God and man. Early Methodists and their preachers were sometimes credited with being an ig norant and noisy set. Fifty years ago a young lad said to his Scotch Presbyterian father, "Father I -wish to go to the Metho dist academy at Wilbraham ." . His fath... replied, "Robert. Robert, hev naethln' to ao witn me Methodise. They are a bad lot. They are like an empty wagon runnin' over a frosty road. They make lots of noise, out there Is not much In them." Through the assistance of his mother, Rob-, ert went to the Methodist scariomv an college and for forty years has been one of the foremost educators In our church. However, much of the polish of the schools some of the early Methodist Itinerants may nave lacked they were not Ignorant ratUe boxes, but were the eauals. and In manv cases the superiors of the people to whom mey were called to minister: They were possessed of a "saddle-baa: culture raniiv wit and humility that made them men to be reckoned with. They were able to adapt themselves to the conditions confronting them and generally proved themselves equal to any emergency they chanced to meet It has been asserted that our attitude toward education Is not as It should be as in -) afMankVaF-tsaeBs .awsaassassa. i taWiUfarfT, Ull m i i .rasJsiijjjv j 1 v- . I J Kit. John Grant Shiok, Pastor of KcCaba Methodist Charon. evidenced by our failure to require a col legiate education of the candidates for our ministry. In answer to this I would say that I for one hope that the time will not come when we ' shall make It a rigid requirement for admission to our ministry and conferences that the candidate be poa sessed of a college diploma or degree. The distinctive field to which Methodism has ever been called to minister would make such a thing.colamltous. But we do Insist on ministers being students, not to say scholars. We do recommend college and seminary training for those coming' Into our ministry, and we do require a five years' course. Including the course for ad mission On trial, of those coming Into the traveling connection. This course averages thirteen points a year and Is a liberal edu cation kn itself. I think I have made It plain that our traditional attitude toward education Is not alwaya rightly Interpreted. Historically. Perhaps we can better gain the true per spective we are searching for by consider ing Methodism's attitude toward education; from a historical standpoint. It may seem a trite saying to. affirm that Methodism was born In a college, yet It Is none less than the truth. The Wesleys came of cul tured parents and were themselves possessed of no mean culture. Their linguistic accomplishments were known afar In their day; their skill In dialectics made them marked men during their days In Oxford. Sometimes it Is easier to crit icise than to do the things that the person does whom we criticise. Let the critics of Methodism's humble beginning take their places alongside of John and Charles Wesley. Let them translate from the Hebrew, Greek, Latin and German and carry on conversation in Greek as these men did and their criticism may be worth paying heed to. . The Methodists early' began founding schools and have ever kept It up. In 173i Methodism took definite rise In England, and In the same year John Wesley founded Ktngswood school for ' children. In 1744 Wesley held his first conference, fore runner of our annual conferences, and the same year he proposed a theological school and projected a seminary for lay preachers. American Methodism was organized at the famous Christmas conference In Baltimore, 1784. The same conference that formally set up the Methodist Episcopal church In America projected Cokesbury college, whlih was built the next year at Abingdon,-Md. It would be a delightful task to. trace the history of our church's progress In the edu cational field during the 125 years that have elapsed since Cokesbury college was built a task that would have Its all too frequent sombre tlngo cn account of vicissitudes through which our education' work has passed but I have not space to devote to such a detailed review. Prophet leallr. The future of denominational schools is hard to forecast at the present time.. Ten or fifteen years ago one could have as sumed the role of the prophet In this par ticular with much more assurance than at the present. Of recent years some unfore- n4 at TO afc UUm nUilftAM UOst I0U aa I ft Itl ll I V III 1 1. l -JV s$S ' Trfzfir. A.t five) V I J WEAK Ar?C J ! m- ti facii rs have entered, complicating the problem and making the future les easy of prediction. Chief among these problems' Is the one piesented In the Carnegie foun- datlon. bringing, as It does, tremendous pressure on struggling Institutions to "de nature", themselves. Will these institutions in our own church remain true to the spirit In which they were founded even though they must struggle against great odds, or will' they throw off the denomi national name, which lias become a yoke for them, In order to get in on the Carne gie aud like foundations? Or will the con ditions of the foundations be made leas harsh and rigid hi their applications to the schools of the church? These are questions that must give us pause for each of them present Its own difficulties and dangers. Were It not better for a Metho dist school to be compelled to disband than to betray the spirit and traditions of Its founders by throwing off the denomina tional slleglance In order to perpetuate a doubtful career under any foundation that refuses to recognise Its right to reverence and preserve the family name? Another problem that confronts Methodist schools, some of them at least, la the ac tion of our bwn university senate requiring that within six years every college must come up to these conditions: "Must not admit students with -lesa- than- fourteen units of preparation, must give four full years of college Instruction, must have at least six professors giving all their time to college work, and must have an endowment of at least $200,000." We are told that this ruling will affect at least thirty-seven of our Institutions which must seoure an ag gregate of $4,000,000 Increased endowment, with a possible expenditure of $4,000,000 more for necessary buildings and equip ment to carry on their larger work. Will the men of wealth as well as those of les ser means respond to the call of these Schools In order to bring them to the re quired standing, or will the university sen nte give a longer time, If neseccary, before degrading the school that may fall to reach the requirements In six years? f Sunflower Philosophy J Trouble Is the balance wheel that keeps many a man from being too gay. ' Try to sit on soma people and you'll una them too sharp for you. No man likes to be Interrupted In the middle of a sentence unless he Is serving a sentence In Jail. Perhaps the time will come when women will have more rights than they'll know wiiat to do with. You don't have to be an agricultural ex pert to refrain from pulling a leg before It laxlpe. . .... One half the world, driving motor cars, doesn't know how the other half dodges. The beauty about a thirst for knowledge la that it leaves no next-morning hang' over. It Is very careless of a girl to drop her eyes, especially If they are glass eyes. Love Is blind; or at least he doesn't al ways succeed in shooting straight. ' Some people are so sour that even a mot qulto wouldn't bite them. The way of the transgressor is certainly hard on the rest of us. Many a man who has s reputation for dishonesty Is really moro skinned against than skinning. : "The Lord will provide" Is a comporting text for those who are too lazy to hustle for themselves. MtluU) . U turn Isni If Tilings You Want to The 1!10 season for the great American noi t of hunting with the dogs has begun. the Initial number on the urogram being the field trials now being conducted by the Manitoba Field Trial club At Pomhtl.ri City, Manitoba. Dogs from every section of the United States and Canada, are tak ing part In the trials, and f;-om now urnll the beginning of next summer there will be busy times for both the dogs ami their handlers. For bird dog the season starts with the Manitoba meeting and emls with the United States field trials snd the championship stakes, which will be held In January at Rogers Springs, Tenn. Aa All roads of the political world, at one tme led to Rome, so all loads of the bird shoot ing World lead to Rogers Spring. To win the championship and the T'nited Slates Derby or all-age stages. Is the last letter In a bird dog's career, and tho whole circuit of field trials constitute a process of elimination looking toward the final event at Rogers Springs. ' The present season Is to be the longest In the history of field trials, and dates are so arranged that dogs may attend every one of these trials. Just as horses make the circuit of the great shows or of the prlncl pal race tracks. It requires from 1 000 to 20,000 acres of land for conducting a mod em field trial, and It Is growing Larder each year to find sufficient contiguous territory. When trial week arrl.es the dogs are assigned by lot the order In which they shall run. The names of all candi dates entered are written on slips of paper and placed In a hat. They are then drawn out one by one, and the dogs are assigned to run In braces. Tbe dogs getting Into the first race run first, and so on until the whole list Is completed, which usually re- quirea many days. Much depends on the luck of the drawing, since the dogs which Start In the frost of the morning or the heat of the afternoon are at a disadvan tage. After all of the bracea have had their run, the Judges select the best dogs for the second series, and the winner of this sec ond series Is awarded first honors. The handling of dogs for these events is an art in which but few men are skilled To train a dog so as to make him aa much a master of his work in the field as If he were a human being, while at the same time developing that wonderful power of sense which makes him the most dls criminatory animal in the world, is no small task, and requires a degree of pa tience that Is almost sublime. A well trained bird dog can point birds at from ten to fifteen yards, with no other guide than his remarkable sense of smell. He can tell whether a bird Is alive, dead or wounded. He can unerringly recognise whether the scent Is from a covey or from a single bird. When crossing a foot trail he can recognize the difference between that and a body scent, and is able when crossing a foot-trail to decide Instantly which way the birds went. He will barely pause at a roosting place, but Invariably will stop when, he approaches the game. While the dog Is displaying this marvelous power of his olfactory organs, he is at the same time giving hs maBter an Inti mate picture of ail the mental operations going un In his mind. To see him coursing over broad acres, choosing with unerring accuracy the spots where birds are likely to be found, ranging through a large field with as much Intelligence as a man pointing when the birds are near, backlog when his brace-mate points, dropping at shot and wing, makes a picture to warm the cockles of the heart of any man, how ever slowly the blood may course through his veins. As the dog is traveling 'at the rate of about ten miles an hour when he perceives the body scent of the quarry he points, and must stop stock-still at the first perception of this scent, the feat be comes the more remarkable. There - long has been a controversy be tween the lovers of the setter and the supporters of Hit pointer, as to which Is the better from the sportman's point of view. The friends of the setter declare that the pointer never has won a cham plonshlp stake; while the friends of the pointer reply that the pointers have won high honors In proportion to the number entered at the big field trials. To thla the Better people reply that the reason there are so few pointers entered at the big trlais is that few of them are able to make sufficient showing. In the . smaller events to get a chance In the more Im portent trials. The pointer Is claimed to be a little weak in endurance and gain liness, and to be a less steady worker In the field than the setter. Yet It mast not be presumed that he Is without? his good qualities. Judge Macdonnel of Manitoba has a dog known as Old Point, which he dec Lares la so well posted on the game laws that In hunting Mongolian pheasants he Invariably recognized the difference between the hen and the cock pheasant and never points the former. Types Ye Meet Every Day BY Kays Trivia: The reckleHB I I tpend a day Next morning Past Norman Where on the My handso'ne. The world's a BOBBIE BABBLE. "For a time I've gotten lahlt of globe trot tin'. In London town, finds me ru shlng down towers to gay I'aree, boulevards I Bee wicked Uncle Paul small place after all! "Away I start to see Aunt Sara Her villa's on the ltlvlora And next to Germany set off, To climb the lofty Oberhof. There on the summit, crowned with pine, I meet three old schoolmates of mine; It makes me cross to hear them bawl, 'The world's a small place, after all!' "Old 'German ngM sung to a zither Appeal to me, so I rush thither, And on the heights of Wendelsteln, Or floating down the castled Rhine, I listen to the sweet old airs, Forgetting people and their cares, Until we i each some little place. Where I eiicouut) r glum MIfm Chase, Who settles near me like a pall The world's a small place, after all! "When, for Seiteniher days, I turn To rest awhile In fair Lucerne, Whom should I meet right In the town Hut that rich, vulgar MIlllons-Hi own. He dogs my steps both night and day; I've simply got to run away. At home he wouldn't dare to rail The world's a small plac, after all! "l'aat pyramid and tottering pile I travel down tht ancient Nile, Know Hunting IHfr. The training of a field trial dog requires many mouths of patient labor. The dog la at Hist yard-broken, that Is, taught to obey such commands as "to-ho.l' which In the hunting vocabulary means to come to a standstill, lie Is then taught to "come In." and Inter trained to walk at the heels of the handler when commanded. As his natural desire always Is to range around over fields, It Is rather a punishment to have to walk at the heels of his master. To avoid his becoming "gun shy," much patience and good Judgment Is necessary. For hunting work he must be taught to retrieve, although retrieving Is no longer part of the field trials. After having been tuught these things, his next lessons are in ranging, dropping to shot and to wing. and pointing. When he has mastered these. important lessons he Is ready for work. The bird dog Is like the athlete in one respect; he often suffers from over-train ing. The dog which learns to rely entirely on the order of his master never will take first honors In a big field event. He must have the quality of self-reliance and mint ba taught to Judge many matters for himself. Tho professional handler shows hla bett kill when he reaches the happy medium of. training that will at once make the dog perfectly responsive to the desires of his nifter, and at the same time fully fillip huu to do his work without de tailed Instruction. When a dog rtMhee this point he has nearly approximated human Intelligence. More attention is paid to the breeding of dogs In Engluod than in America. There they give much attention to the qualities that make the dog a prize winner at , bench show, while In a measure they overlmok the qualities that, make him successful In the field. Hunting conditions are so different In. the mother country from those In America that the English dog would not be as great a success here as the American dog. Not only Is this true with reference to bird dogs, but equally so with referonce to fox hounds. The American cares not so much for the looks ot his dog as for his staying quali ties In a race with Sir Reynard. Soma Americans have been heard to say that they would not trade' a single favorite dog for a full pack of English hounds. They assert there Is no Joy under huaven that surpasses the full, deep-mouthed music of a pack of hounds In full pursuit of an American fox. In some sections each farmer owns a dog or two, and when they meet for a common chase there is often considerable betting as to whose dog will reach the fox first. As they listen to tho running hounds each man Is able to pick out the baying of his own dog, and some times can tell by the voice whether ha is at the forefront or lagging behind in the , chase, in England It has been said that it Is harder to find a first-class fox hound than It Is to get a good prima minister. The greyhound has tne most complete record of any breed .of sporting dog. The Waterloo cup stake, now about a century old. Is the classic of all dogdom, and "coursing" Is the aristocratic sport of Eng land. In this sport a brace of dogs la al lowed to chase a hare. They are sent of on even terms, and the one which "beats him to It" Is awarded a score ot from one to three points. Thon there is a careful notation made of all "turns," "wrenches" and "kills." A "turn" occurs when the hare Is forced to turn from his course at more than a right angle. A "wrench" oc curs when he turns from his "path at lens than a right angle. There Is perhaps more betting on this sport than on any other la which dogs take part, unless It be the brutal bouts of the fighting pit. It Is said that the first man who ever saw an American Jack rabbit wished, most of all for a good greyhound. If the grey hound is suited for chasing the Jack rabbit the beagle Is regarded as the dog par ex cellence for the molly cottontail, and there are many beagle clubs In the United States which enjoy long seasons with the Ameri can hare. In Canada there Is considerable demand for wolf dogs, and much profit is made out of the business of wolf hunting. The government pays a bounty of $1 for each wolf scout and the pelt la worth $1.60. Some wolf doga have earned as high as $300 a year for their masters. It requires no end of endurance and grit in a dog to suc cessfully cope with the wolves of the plains. It Is said that the most important dosj center In the world Is the town of Haver fordwest, the county seat of Pembroge shlre, Wales. This town nas a population of 6,000 people and of more than 6,000 dogs. When one goes about on the street he In variably sees mora dogs than people. The majority of then are setters trained for the bird shooters, although every on of the more than forty well-marked breeds of dogs recognized by - the kennel clubs of En rope and America, are to be Hound there, BT nXDBBXO J. lAIKUr. Tomorrow Prolonging Xumaa Ufa, The Girl Globe Trotter As on my camel's hack I ride My driver's smile urows on. fr.ni ni-. And there I find, to my despair, lie drove me at the last .wnrlrl'a f-i,- Completely bored, homeward I crawl i ne worm s a small place, after all'" Copyright, 11.10. by the N. Y. Herald Co.) (ooil fur llorlora. Doctor's Wlft--Y.H. mv hnahan I. rushed I scarcely see him five ir.it.. .i . day. Her l'"ileiid Iar me. tias a flaw AhlilaniU broken out? Doctor s Wlfe-N'o, the people are begin ning to return from lha f..i,i....i.i. nir resorts. .September Lippiacolt'av