$ M TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 31, 1920. THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER 5 W
CT LOVE and MARRIED LIFE
I hq. the noted author
M Idah MSGlone Gibson
' I SHALL I SI HRFVDKU TO
lKfll ELfBABHTH?
it 1 Alice and Helm left me soon after-
I ward und I went up to the nursery, as
I I had learned thnt my baby In my arms
I was Ilk'1 taking a composing draught
I I I With her tiny head burrowing Into my
I j bosom I i buld alwaya think better anfl
H I I more clearly
This time, howrvet. I could not dis
miss the Feeling of unrest Into which
. Karl's letter had thrown me I almost
I J wished he had not written me, and
tfl ; yet, 1 Knew that If anything terrible
WU to Come f' me, I would feel much
H 'BL more able to bear It It I knew that the
fM steady hand mid ready sympathy of
j iiL - Karl Shi pard was near.
v HP I had many things to think about
First, I had to decide If I were, going
to carry on the battle that I had begun
I with Elisabeth Moreland. Again cam'-
ino question, aia I want to Keep JOIM
Should I ask him to choose, after
t showing him the letter which wouia
3 tell him that I kn?w all? I knew that
nc would Instantly choose me and res
pectability rather than Elizabeth 'and
IJ the scandal which would ensue. I
i knew ilso fron th? look on his face,
as he looked al Elisabeth when tt
were over t the new house, that li j
w.is mine to keep If I wanted him.
John, like most other men, was a!
''ward when it came to facing conse-'
, I quencea That was one- thing I had ro i
I give Elisabeth Moreland credit for;
wBvM she, too, lived up to her typo. She, loo, j
had the courage to face anything ror
Dl 'he man she loved. But, like other
-JjSHLf loving women, she could not race him!
gffmM with the truth. She was always trying I
1 1r to be the woman he wanted her to be,1
t'WfVc rather than the woman she was
wft-'wT All the same I felt very sorry for
ct this woman She probably loved John
belter than I did Mif eertalnly had
f .'o ed him morf Arid besides Elizabeth
cared more for the material things I
H i iii i John 3 1 rl grlve her than I did.
yr 1 kni'V, that it must have grounn r.er !
. nroud spirit Into the dust to see all
'.he things that had come to me as
Johns wife yes, to hac helped prc-
, pare for another woman som of the
things that John had. In his obtus
nesr. asked her to prepare for me.
W a It because Join Oorclon was so
'gotlstlcal? So bound up in himself
that he had make quite unhappy the
I two women who had loved him most !
Even while asking myself this ques
tion. I gave John credit for not real
izing Just how he had tcrtured both
Elizabeth and me. To both of us he
exerted the same magnetic influence
I probably to a much greater degree
I with Elizabeth than with me. I waa
' quite mire of this, because that very
I morning I had found another ml 867V
, from Elizabeth which said:
"My world means only you. John.
i md whatever romes I want you to re-
1 member
ah tnrougn tne long, unnappy years
I made one passionate plea,
Imploring Kate to br.ish aside
The dark dspalr of Hope dererred
j And give me the boon of Love.
Without which life were derear im
deed.
In the gray days and months and
years
That span Eternity's far shore
Just sixty minutes filled with love,
Would make mv rup of bliss o'erflow
And I on memories feed for ever
more. One little hour by radiance blessed.
One golden hour.
Alas' Deaf were the ears to which I
cried
And I went stumbling through the
dark ;
Until you came I saw the sun
Of love shine through your eyes
I laid my wean head upon your
breast
And there encircled by your loving
arms
I found my houi of gold
Sister Mary 's Kitchen
:: i'Jfm Sometimes one hardly knows Jus..
7 what to do with a fresh enke that is
.M too bis to go into the cake box.
J II a large crock is turned upside
down over the whole cake, the take
-jSB v."I1I keep perfectly for days
The '.-art hen ware excludes all air
' from the cake and keeps it moist and j
-ttI BOft
MENU FOR TOMORROW
I Breakfast Blackberries, bacon in
m cream sauce, coffee.
. M Luncheon Salmon salad, bread anr,
J butler, chocolate roll, tea.
'w Dinner Mock fillet mlgnon. French
1 fried potatoes, cauliflower in while ;
iM Bauce, cucumber salad fresh peach,
J pie, coffee
L. MY OWN RECIPES .
It is always a good plan when bak-1
i gfl ing a fruit pie to mix the sunar and
wgflH - flour The pastry shell should bei
. ,n well dredged with flour before the fruit ;
5$ ' is put in And the fru should be j
Jgjl thoroughly mixed with the combine!
je ' 6Ugar and flour
SALMON SALAD.
1 cups salmon, canned or freshly
Yt3 cooked.
r-yjt3 12 square soda crackers.
; ;;.2S 12 small pickles (chopped)
v$S hi cup eugar.
;v-j5 1 tablespoon mustard.
cup diced celery
'mjfl 4 hard-boiled crrs
WTm 1 teaspoon salt
M cup inegar.
J' "-"sS ' tablespoons but lor
s ,
SffS There Is a closer connection be-
pWSA tween the gastronomic and the spirit-.
ft3B ual processes than we are wont to be-j
M friend was at the head of a blgi
fjlaM business. For years he had been re-1
Lsjffs? gardcl by his acquaintances as a eke.p-1
mmf tic. He did not hesitate to express his,
disapproval of the way the universe .
IS b ing run. During this period, he j
POR" came near dying from nervous dys-1
wMy pepsla.
But h. had regained his health '
completely. We were having an Inti
mate ialk about his religious views
. His skepticism was a thing of the
MB past He was In perfect agreement
with God's administration. 1 asked
Eftyd him what had cured him of his doubts!
He laughllngly replied: When my
-B stomach got right, I found that mm
Skepticism was gone." I
JB How much Infidelity is caused by
Rippling'
m I Rhymes
H ! By WA1T MA80N
M l )
Tit AN SI Y NTs
Wo act as though we planned to
HIbiibhHbY t-ta earth f..i ears,
IjEpr -' 1 1 ha . t..
Tr- unohtrted spheres A little while e
It charge around, and put up Ice and1
Brass, then to the village planting,
yL ground in solemn stale we pass. And
there till time Is done we'll wait, andj
no emotions heed, so what's the good!
!of all our hate, our envy and our
greed The evil thought corrupts the1
II mind and turns the blood to bile, so
let our thoughts spo'tl this world of
ours and make the spirit sick; far bet
I ter deck a foe with flowers than soak
I him with a brick. If there's a neigh
bor you detest, and whom you'd gladly
slay, admit forgiveness to your breast.
j and send him a bouquet. All bitter
IB i.i-ss la a mistake; try klndllnoss lh-
.stead; for any mornlnR you may wake.
F to find that you are dead. Each even
ing when I go to roost I spring a pray
l erful spiel for thos'- by whom I've been
! traduced, who for me hatred feel. Eor
(' I would hate to die tonight and In the
$! silence start across the darknass to
J tin' light, with malice in my heart
U oo
JUST FOLKS j
, ' By Edgar A- Quest I
THIJ TIME I PLAYED WITH
VARDON
The tlm- I plad with Vardon, I was
surely on my garni:,
I Roll cracker. Mash yolks of eggs I
with mustard and salt Add vinegar, I
quaking a smooth paste. Chop salmon I
and yvhltes of eggs Mix all ingred J
lents Add melted butter Chill and i
serve on lettuce.
CHOCOLATE ROLL
3 eggs
1 rup sugar
1 cup flour
1 teaspoon baking poyvder
6 tablespoons boiling water
Filling.
2 squares chocolate
cup sugar
cup water
1 teaspoon butter
Vz tablespoons cornstarch
4 cup milk.
Beat whites of eggs until stiff. Fold
in yolks of eggs well beaten, sugar
boding water, flour and baking pow
d i Bake in a hot oven ten minutes
Turn out on sugared paper spread
with chocolate filling and roll like jel
ly roll
To make filling melt chocolate
add sugar and water Stir until blend
ed. Add cornstarch mixed with milk.
S ir until it bolls and thickens. Take
troni fire and flavor with vanilla
Spread over Bheet of cake. The fill
inc should be made before the cake as
the cake must bo rolled while warm.
Qray hairs may be a sign of wisdom
but most women believe in thai otner
sign post no bills
I I DR. VANCE'S DAILY ARTICLE
m
Indigestion' More, doubtless, than Is
dreamed of In our philosophy.
It Is a humiliating confession, hut
one that must be made, that often the
soul falls to function because the liver
Is out of order
The secretary of a foreign mission
board canio near losing hl official
head because he wrote to a pessimistic
missionary ' T ry a blue mass pill " He
should have been less blunt In pre
scribing, but no doubt he named the
medicine that his patient needed
There is a lot of bad theology trace
able to too much acid In the stomach.
Man Is a monad To have the right
kind of religion he needs to pray, but
he ne-ds al" to keep himself physi
cally fit. The best saint is not a lean,
pate-faced cadaverous dyspeptib, but
a red-blooded, healthy, normal human
being In y horn th physical and the
spiritual are well attuned.
Thf gallery was greeting every shot
With loud acclaim;
I was driving rljr h i with Harry, andj
was getting hom- in two
And every trick that Vardon tried, I
showed that I could do.
I had the Hrlton worried I eould tell
It from his look,
For I was doing ee thing he d print-
ed in his book
Id held him ievel several holes, and I
then the crowd began
In a fever of excitement to applaud)
me to a man,
Men were whispering together, "Ed-!
die s surely richt todaj
He Is Just as good as Vardon' uh, It's
great to watch him play' "
Then Vardon tried a long one, but his
ball just missed the cup. 1
Should Anyone Call You ''Catty,"
Make No Mistake; It's a Compliment
,ACTRESS SAYS CAT TAUGHT
HER BEAUTY OF MOVE
MENT AND REPOSE
BY DJUNA BARNES.
NEW YORK Have you ever felt
lyou lacked a certain grace'
Have you ever wondered If you had
somehow missed knowing all the se
cret of that mystic thin charm?
Go get you a cat, fair lady, and be
a humble student at its feet
! Perhaps you already own a cat, but
i if you don't you should. N'o great wo
'man in blston thought to got along
yvlthout one.
So says Fania Mannoff, the actress
, wife of the author, Carl Vpn erhten
Her hueband has just written a book
all about the caiF. so she ought to
know.
"Cats are particularly Indispensable
to women vho simply must exert their
'charm.'1 says Fanla. "If ou are In a
i business y here charm Is not needed
(and I know of no such business) vhv
I you can afford to neglect llu feline
! element, but not in any other case
ALL LEARNED FROM CAT
"The women in the past, the great
i sirens, the gTcat lovers, the great rld
jdles and the great Intellectuals, have,
all of them, learned the trick from
the house cat
"Hypatia may have picked up a book
on economics, but it s a sure bet that
Cleopatra and Madame du Barry
pic ked up a tabby.
I "Watch the 'smart woman- she is
i invariably a cat lover
'When a man wants de.-i rlbe a
'woman who has exerted some indis
cribable influence on his life, he will
irrrtl lli nail, luar.T i r i,-rv
tures, and suddenly his face will lmh'
up 'feline' he will ejaculate, like a
tiger, you know "
"Why''" she was asked
W.itch its long deliberate move
menis, the mysterious languid eyes,
eyes composed of some kind of cold
Intolerably beautiful fire its soft paws,
hiding the terrible and swift claws, the
apparently gentle purring that ever so
slightly disturbs the shining. Immac
ulate fur
" as it not because of these thincs
that they made the Cat god In Etx p'
ages ago, and was li not because of
LITTLE- BENNY'S
Note Book
By LEE PAPE
J 4
THE PARK AVE. m:VS
Weather. Yes.
Bxter! Hlg Mystery' Puds Simklns
got a letter last Satidday with his
name on the frunt In red typewriter,
and wenevet the subjeck is mentioned
ho Jest looks mlsterlous without per
vldlng eny information However, a
good meny think it was nuthing but a
a vertlzement.
Spoarts. Sam Cross was unavoid
ably detained in the house after supplr
last Wensday, being a punishment for
his father finding him standing still in
a puddle to find out If his new shoes'
was watterproof
POME BY sKl MARTIN
Life Is Short
1 picked a bewtlflll flower
ut of the grass this summer.
But alas In about a hour
It coulent of looked env bummer.
Slslety Mr Ed Wernlck and Mr
L w Davis was observed meowing like
2 cats outMide of Miss Iorctur Mlneprs
house last Thersday ei nlng while a
party was going on, saying that the
tack that they hadent bin lnlted dld
ent have enything to do with it
Dont throw away your supply of
broken china Repair work done for
C cents a article as long as my Irongrip
Glue dont run out. See Sam Cross
( Advertlzement 1
PEARL DIVING OPENS
PAPEETE. Tahiti. Aug 10. Pearl
dh lng opened at Hlkueru. Paumoto Is
lands, on the first of AugusL Practi
cally every boat hero has sailed for
Hlkueru, loaded with articles which
will be traded for the shell and pearls
! of this year s diving. Divers this
year expect to reap a big harvest, as
the oyster beds have not been mo
lested since early In the war
And I dropped my twenty -footer for a
birdie and was up'
Nip-and tuck out there we battled, and
I ventured soon to guess
If I could keep It going, I'd make Mr
Vardon pretus.
lie was very nice about it. but when
I'd got home in two
I noticed he was lunging like I often
used to do.
Then he dubbed a shot completely,
when I'd played a perfect cle. k.
And I whispered to mv caddie: "Var
don sometimes takes a peek"'
I was just one up on Vardon on the
good old eighteenth lee.
And a half was all I needed for my
greatest victory.
I was confident of winning calm and
cool about it, too,
I wasn't going to falter, for I knew
what I could do.
I looked the distance over, then I made
a perfect stroke
But just then the missus shook me,
and confound It1 I awoke!
CtiH Wm t:' iBom ' Ml Swift
TV J
It was a cat who made me realize what can be done with an eyelid."
j these same qualities, that they drove
cats out of Puritan England, as yyitches
were driven out of Salem9
"And are not black cats a sign of
.ill luck, and white of impending Rood
! fortune ""
VALUE OF AN EYE-LID.
Fania's husband had to read 3000
books or so on cats before he knew
enough about them to attempt a book,
but Fania could have told him if he
had listened lo her, because as she
says :
"I have lain on the flor very quietly,
making no movement, showing no
sign of life, just to watch a cat rise up,
yawn, and begin pacing It was a cat
who taught me how to rise up how to
awn how to pace It was a cat who
made me realize what can be done
AUT
t I 'l III V . - i. , w, '
WASHINGTON, Aug 31 George
Creel, former head of the Bureau of
Public Information, has been ' called
down" again for giving out misinfor
mation In his recent book reciting L'ncle1
Bam'S efforts and accomplishments ln
the war, Creel gave credit to former
Secretary of Treasury MeAdoo for j
having first conceived the Idea of gov-,
eminent Insurance foi soldiers andj
sailors
This claim caught the eye of for
mer Secretary of Commerce Wllllaml
C Redfield. Redfleld's n .1 sideburns
bristled as he read. He buzzed for his I
stenographs and dictated a sizzling
letter to Creel.
That Idea, he said, was born in the
Department of Commerce, and not In
the treasury building If Creel would
look at the official bulletin, for Mich
and such a date in May, 1017. he
would find thai the suggestion was
first inado by Edwin F Sweet, assls
tant secretary of commerce, and not
by MeAdoo. Please shoot an order to,
the publisher at once and make cor
rection in the next If there should
chance to be any next edition of the
book.
Creel looked, saw and submitted.
The next edition If there Is a next
will credit Sweet and not MeAdoo I
with the Insurance idea.
The American Protective Tariff
league has Just Issued campaign but
tons which read;
Harding and Coolldge. 1020. Smile '
The sentiment seems proper, and
everybody can join The itepuidicans
and protectionists, confident of a G j
( I . P victory, can smile with Harding
and Coolldge.
Democrats and Free Traders, equal
ly confident that, with the assistance
of the Tariff league, Harding and
Coolldge will be defeated, can fcmlle at
them
So let's make it unanimous All to
gether now, everybody.
SMILE!
TONSILLE6S 1 MILY
(By International News Service)
CHICKASHA, Okla., Aug 27. Now
comes a tonsllless family. It is that
of J. W Robertson, of Grady County
consisting of himself, wife and si en
children. None of the family, accord-1
Ing to Hobertson. have ever been both
t-red with the troublesome organ. Th J
absence of tonsils. Uobc-rtson maln-
tains. Is due to natural causes and not
to operations 1
I with an eyelid A beautiful woman
should have no swift movementsi
except " and here Fanla Marinoff;
half closed her eyes "except when i
she Is ready to drop the paw
'The cat is called the only domesli
Cated animal who has refused to be
domestic Because of this, perhaps, it
'has made civilisation possible a cWJ
lization that could be at once hauphty
'and bending.
"The cat has taught us what we
know of poise, of beauty of line; of
svmmetry, and of repose, thai repose
I which Is never weariness; that lazi
ness that is never rest.
"And, ' she finished, "no matter how
beautiful and attractive ynu may be, :i
j cat will never teach you anything you
1 cannot use "
HEALTH 1
BY UNCLE SAM, M. D.
Health Questions Will Be An
swered If Sent to Information
Bureau, U. S. Public HeaJth Srv
Ice, Washington, D. C.
w 4
BY V S. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE
With school days at hand parents
should make alire that the children
burn some of the simple rules of
health and right living. This Is fully
as important as learning "reading,
ntlng. 'rlthmetic, Jography " Here are
some things for each child to remem
ber. 1. See that the class room Is well
ventilated, has good lights. Is clean and
free of dust. not overheated, too
damp or too crowded.
2. Make recess, or recreation per
iods, pay large dividends by taking the
right sort of exercises. Don't sit under
the tree and read. Get out with the
crowd and play every minute.
3 Avoid the common drinking eup
and the public towel. Drink pure, fresh
water.
4. Take a bath dally. I'sc soap
freely. Clean your teeth morning and
evening.
5. Be most careful to keep tne
hands clean Don't put your fingers,
pencil, money or paper In your mouth
Disease germs often get Into the body
In this way. Be most careful not to
take a "bite" from the other person s
apple The disease germ from the
oiner ii'iiow miKin prove miai 10
you although quite harmless to him.
Uss the same care In "swapping
other foods. Don't eat food that has
bt en exposed tfl flies or disease-carrying
Insects, or touched bv unclean
hands.
fi. Don't eat or drink when over
heated by exorcise. Rest a little while,
and then chew your food we.
7. Arrange your dally routine so
that you will get In bed early enough
to get plenty of sleep Pec th:it the
windows in the bdroom are open.
8. Don't spit on tho floor or side
walk. 0. Cultivate the habit of sitting and
standing erect. Breathe through tho
noso and take in plenty of air so as
to aid ehest expansion.
10. Don't neglect your cough or
cold. It may lead to something else.
Keep away from a playmate who has
a couKh or cold You may "catch" It
verv easily
1 1 The mind acts on the body.
Keep happy and cheerful, and you will
get along more rapidly.
oo
NINE
(By International News Service.)
HARPEERSVILEE, O., Aug. 23.
Somebody may say "neln," but "nine"
Is right.
On August 9 a daughter was horn
to Mr. and Mrs. James Kumbera
Tho child, the ninth in the Kum
bera family, weighed nine pounds and
BEDTIME STORIES I H
BY HOWARD R. GARIS
INC IE WK.OILY AND THE PIE. I
opyrlght 1920, by MeClur Newspa
per Syndicate,
Will you please put up a lunch for
ne today, Nurse Jane. ' said Cr.cle
lYIggily one morning as he started to
OOP out of the red. white mI blue
Griped bungalow oh, excuse me. I
nean hollow stump house.
"Tut you up a lunch what In tho
ivcrld tor?" asked Miss Fuzzy 'Wuzzy,
he mu6krat lady housekeeper.
"Well, I am going for a long walk,
;o look for an adventure." replied tho
Imnny rabbit gentleman, "and I don't
ivapl to have to come all the way back
for my Junch. So put me lip little
snack,' as Jackie or Pectlc Bow Wow
might say."
NUTSS Jane said she would, and she
made some carrot and lettuce sand
wiches, some picked turnips, and then
she looked In the pantry for something
c-xtra good
I note tylggil) is very fond of
cherry pie," thought Nurse Jane "I'll
put a piece in his lunch." si n slipped
.i Ki'iieiiius sine ui ur in wic hivkci
and tie was just going to close it!
when Mrs Wlbblcwobble, the duckl
larly, ( ailed to ask about the best way
of baking kk
"I'll tell you how to do It.' soldi
Nursi Jane going out on tho back
porch.
Just then I nclo Wigglly who had
been out on the front porch, looking
up at the sky to see If It would rain,
ci me In the kitchen Ho saw his lunch
partly put up and noticed the cut pie
on the table.
1 II just slip in an extra plere of pie
for myself," said the bunny rabbit,
with a twinkle of his pink nose So he
did. and then he wvnt upstairs to get
his old red white and blue rheuma
tism crutch, for he didn't want to take
his best one this time.
Nurse Jane cams In from the back
nnn -iftr fnHlnr- t VVll.KI. ti-rK
ble, the duck lady, how to boil lolly
peps, and the muskrat lady said.
' Now. I might as well glve l'ncle!
Wlgglly two pieces of pie a well as!
one It looks as if he'd been in here,
helping himself to a slice, " she went!
on. 'but no matter 1 So she slipped'
her second piece of pic Into the lunch!
basket, making three In all Then Mrs.'
Bushytall, thr squirrel lady, called
Nurse Jane to the telephone to nslc
about putting hooks and eyes In o bed I
Spread to stop It from falling out of
the crib And while Nurse Jane wasl
talking on the telephone Uncle lg
gil) came in tho kitchen again.
"I'll Just slip myself a second piece
of pie," h said, blinking his nose
Nurse lane may forget to give me
Bny " So he cut another slice and put
It In the lunch basket, making one,
two. three, four In all
' Well, good by." called Uncle Wig
glly to Nurse Jane, slinging his lunch
basket over his shoulder i
'( h, wait s minute! i waa going to
Mie ou an extra piece of pie'" called
I he muskrat lady, at the last minute.,
"Oh, that's very kind of vou." said
Ur.ole Wlgglly, with a bllnklo of his!
left eyelid. "But as my lunch basket1
in closed, wrap the pic in a piere of
paper and I'll put It In my pocket."
"This will be three pieces I've plvenl
h,m. but no matter,' thought Nurse'
1
I arrived upon earth as the clock
struck nine.
The Kumbera family resides at No.
9 on their .street
The ipilntet of nines associated with
the . hlld B birth led the mother to
name her new daughter Nina, It Is
said.
' 1 B ft
Inne, and she cut another slice of f
cherry pie And she dldn t know a I
thing about the other two pieces the
bunny h.id cut for himself.
Along and alon? walked Uncle Wig- f
pily. looking for an adventure, with
Ms lunch baBkct over his shoulder. But
adventures seemed to be scarce that
day I
I guess I'll sit down on a log and
eat the piece of cherry pie from my I
pocket ' said the bunny. So down he t
oat and he was Just eating the pie
I and letting the red Juice run down E
hit paw, knowing he could v aah It f.
off later, when, all of a sudden, out
ficm behind a cinnamon bush Jumped li
the unpleasant old Whiffle Whaffle. I
The Whiffle Whaffle had two heads
nnd faces and while ono was aslefp jt
I th other was awake. E
"Ha' Give me that cherry pie!"
cried the bad W hlffle Whaffle, most
Lunpolltely, prabMng the slice from
i ,,, Lo Wigglly's paws "I like cherry !L
'Bp lo I.' said the bunny, "but I if
never grub It away from other folks I
However I'd rather have you do that t
tl a lake my souse And I think 1 if
can tool ou. for that Is not the only ft
pie i have- '
So while the Whiffle Whaffl with
hlc one face asleep and the other t
awake, ate the piece of pie, Uncle f
Wlgglly reached In his lunch basket '
and took out a second piece. 6
Ha! That's funny'" cried the bad
Whiffle Whaffle, as he saw the bunny
eating more pie "I never knew that
tl,cre could be two pieces of pie In the
"Oh. yes," said l'ncle Wlggllv cas- f
Well III take that pioce too!"
''led the hid hap. and before Uncle f
IW.gglly could take more than three IH
I bites the Whiff Whaff (as I call him If
'" Short) grabbed the second piece of I
1iv miu suuuicu ll up
' Well, I still have another." laughed !
the bunny and, reaching in, he took
out the third slice.
The Whiffle Whaffie was so sur
prised he nearly fell over backwards i
a
"Well, you can't have any more af- I
"r that, sneered the unpleasant ani- I
mal. I'll take the last piece of pie.:"
He grabbed It away from Uncle
Wigglly .who- was very sad.
"Yes, I guess that s the last of the I
pie." said the bunny, but his paw hap- ;
pened tj slip into the basket, and he t
felt tlll another piece of olc. f
"Well" Well'" exclaimed" Uncle Wlg
flly, as he brought out the fourth
piece of pie.
"Oh! h: Oh" screamed the Whlf
fie Whaffie "You aren't a bunny I
rabbit at all You're a magician you j
can bring forty "leven pieces of plo
from that basket If you wish, and you j
can turn me Into a Snipper Snapper I
if you choose to' h, this is no place I
for me!" rind away he rftn and L'ncle j
Wiggily had all the pie that was left.
And I had an adventure. too."
laughed the bunny. "but I never
'bought I had so much pic Though (
I'm glad I did " And If tho Ice cream If
doesn't melt and run a race with ths I
blackberry Jam down tho back of the
rocking chair, I II tell vou next about
Curie Wlgglly In the hay. j
ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS I
BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON j
THE STORY OF MR BUMBLE
"There's one fellow I can't find."
complained Tingallng looking at his'
rent book, 'and that's Mr. Bumble-
IBee "
"Doesn't be live In Farmer Smith'-i
hive?" asked Nick, surprised 'hat thci
falryman andlord didn't knov
"No," said Tingallng. "Tha,- Mrs.
Honev Bee Mr Bumble lives under
the ground." I
perfectly well' What he didn't know I
was where Mr. Bumble's front door I
door was, for, like Mike Mole and Wal H
ly Woodchuck. Mr Bumble had a lone,
crooked hallway into his house under
ih' ground, and he made his own front iH
door to suit himself.
Away he flew Just that minute, hav-
ing taken as much honey from the red- I
clover as he could carry, and away
went Nancy and Nick and the fairy I
man after him as fast as they could I
"There he Is now, buzrlng about that red clover blossom!" said Tlngs-
llng.
"PeThaps," suggested Nancy, "our
I little Green Shoes will take us there
I if we ask them "
I Tingaling smiled BUddenly. "Why,
ir.f course," he nodded. "The very nezl
ii. ue we see the gentleman we'll follow
him and see where he goes There he
ie now, buzzing about that red-clover
blossom! Bo ready when ho leaves,
children for he'll fly straight home."
You will think it queer, my deara.
that Tingallng, being landlord, didn't
know where his own house was that
I SSr Bumble rented But he did know,
scamper, not supposing that the old
honey-gatherer had the least Idea that R
he was being followed. But he was a
wiser fellow than they supposed, and
he laughed to himself.
"Ah!" exclaimed Tingallng when he
saw Mr Bumble's black and yellow i
stripes disappear into a tiny thlmblo
hole in the ground under the old syca
more "Count your money, my buzzy i
friend' Have It all ready for this la
rent day, and the landlord has found
your door at last ' "
Alas' Poor Mr. Tingallng!
The currency circulation of the 30 I
leading nations of the world has In-
creased from $7,000,000,000 before
the war to $51.000,000,uii the first j
this
vu
Platinum Is worth four times its
weight In gold.
DOINGS OF THE DUFFS An Off Day for Danny. By Allmarj H
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