7 SUNIAT OKEGOXIAX, PORTLAND. PECE3IBER 15, 1912. ON! Gltr "By M AXIM G O R Y - " 1 mean you see, once for all out - with everything.' . " 'Tou are a fool.' "He shook his dased head and then, letting it sink on his breast, he said ''Tn' frightfully disgusted with It all; and oh. I feel very lonslyl Tomor row Is Christmas, but I I cannot stay at home. It Is absolutely impossible.' " 'Remain with ub as our guest for a while,' proposed Taschka. WE iat in a tavern, and aa time hung heavily upon me. I asked .. my companion to toll me a story of his life. My companion was an ex tremely tattered and worn fellow. He looked as if he had all his life been squeezed through tight places; his clothes were In shreds and his body at artaln points shrank away as If parts It had been torn off In the strug gle. The man was thin, angular and quite bald; not a single hair grew upon . his yellow cranium. His cheeks were sunken, his cheekbones forming two bright points, and the skin covering them was so tightly stretched that It glistened and brought Into greater prominence the wrinkles with which his whole face, was cut up. But his eyes shone bright and clear; his long, gristly nose contracted constantly In an Ironic expression, and his talk came fluently out of his mouth, which was partly covered by a stubbly red mus tache. It seemed to me that the story of his life would be very Interesting. (OU wish to hear my story?" ho I asked in a hoarse voice. "Well, yes." "Then I'll tell It to you, since yon desire It. But the whole story that won't go. I have lived through an un usually long life: It would bore you to listen to It, and It it is not altogether amusing to tell. But just one little thing, a sort of anecdote that goes all right. Would you like to hear It? Very welL But yon will surely order a coudIs of "bottles of beer for my trouble. For you know It Is sometimes as unpleasant for a fellow to go Into his past as It Is to go down into a sewer. 'This little storr. mv dear sir. will not strike you as being Important and will hardly suit your literary taste. but to me It is I like it. xne matter, as you will see. Is very simple; It hap pened in this way: fir was on a Christmas eve, and I we my comrade, Taschka Slsov and myself had been hanging around the street the whole day. We offered our services as baggage carriers to the ladles who passed with their Christ mas bundles, but they didn't seem to hear our words, and would enter their carriages and ride off from which you can see that we were not in luck's way. We also did some begging, and in this way managed to collect some thing. I got together about 29 copecks, out of which a 10-copeck piece, given to me by a gentleman on the Court house steps, proved to be counterfeit. "But Taschka a fellow in many ways more talented than I am be came toward evening really a rich man. He had 11 rubles and 24 copecks. Ac cording to his story, all this money was given to- him In one lump by a lady who had suddenly become so gen erous that she not only handed him the money itself but her purse and her handkerchief as well. That sometimes happens, you know. A sudden Impulse of virtue often brings a person into a state wliere he forgets all about his dignity and then does anything to crush this goodness in order to get rid of it "As Yaschka told me about the real ly Christian conduct of the lady, for some reason or other he glanced fur tively all about him. I suppose he wanted to thank the noble soul again for her generous gift. Suddenly he shouted to me: " 'Hey there, run faster!" fVA E ran s fast as we could. W Every part of my body seemed to be frozen, and I hurried on to warm It a bit. The wind blew fiercely, caua . lng the snow on the streets to rise into a whirl and throwing it off the I I Terse Tales From THE STOXE AGE, f The Masses. Two men say that a certain stone in the road Impeded traffic and that It was a manifest duty to clear It out of the way at once. "This great bowlder must be moved," said the first, "that Is clr. Let us work side by side In this noble task whose accomplishment Is to bless com ing generations." The aeoond clasped his hands ecstat ically. "Oh. happy day! Oh, thrice de lectable hour! For years I have been seeking a helper in my glgantio task of tidying up this road. Comrade, I greet you. Together we will lever tis stone out of the ruts." Lever It! Lever it!" repeated the first gently, though apparently with some surprise. "Why, you poor Igno rant fool! Tou mollycoddle of an old woman! Tou dull, stupid kowtower to custom! 1 shan't lay a hand to the Job unless we use dynamite." . "Indeed!" commented the second, a note of displeasure evident In his voice. "Indeed, you unmitigated jackass and agent provocateur! Tou flat-headed thug of an Informer! You with your corrupt maggot-ridden brain! Tou for sale body and soul to the highest 1 bidder!" I "Yah. white-livered spy." returned II the flrst "Tah. labor fakir! Blood ( stained, fawning hound! " Despicable llCk-Spiltie pjatR-ucai lcu . Everlasting disgrace to our glorious movement!" The second drew a long breath and began: "You miserable, contemptible, par etic ' The stone is still there. COSMETICS. Little Tommy, at the movies," saw a tribe of Indians painting their faces, and asked his mother the significance of this, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. "Indians." his mother answered, "al ways paint their faces before going on the warpath before scalping and tom ahawking and murdering." t" . . .. i w, rr .ft.. Hfnnar aa tha a i .tj nr i ririi.a - - mother entertained in the parlor her aausmers young man, j v. mm j uouu downstairs wlde-eved with fright. "Come on. mother!" he cried. "Let's get out of this qulckl Sister is going on the warpath!" A tOBO. Kansas City Times. Here they ara again, men. Our old friends. Weary Willie and Dusty Rhodes. Thinking that perhaps the last time yon saw them they took some roof in cold and pointed missiles, flying in the air and falling down my neck. My face felt as If it was being cut with knives, and my neck was so frozen that It seemed to have become as thin aa a finger. I thought It would break at any careless movement I might make, and fearing to lose" my head, I burled it as deeply as I could between my shoul ders. Neither of us was suitably clothed for such weather, but Taschka felt warmer than I did, which made me, out of envy of him, feol colder still. "Tou know I have never been a fa vorite of fortune devil take me! Only once in my life was I presented with a samovar, and that was filled with boiling water, which, as I tried to get away with it, so scalded my feet that I had to spend a week and a half in the prison hospital. At another time but that's another story. Well, then; so I ran on with Taschka, while he kept saying to himself: " 'We'll celebrate the holiday In great style. We'll pay our rent here, you old witch, here It is a pint of whisky and perhaps a leg of ham. H"m! A leg of ham wouldn't be at all bad, but It would be expensive. Do you know what the price of ham la in the mar ketr ((m DTD not but I knew the real value I of a leg of ham, and we decided to acquire it. We determined to go to that market where there were the most people. When the store is crowded with customers It's a sure sign that it sells the best goods; ergo, as the Latins used to say. if s Just the place .where one can pick up whatever one wants. 'A leg of ham, please,' cried xascn. ka, pushing his way Into the crowd of buyers. 'Show me a leg of ham not big, but good excuse me; you hit me in the side. I know very well which of us Is not well bred, but I also know that It's not easy to be pome under present circumstances. I can't help being so uncomfortably close - here. What's that? I've touched your pock et? Excuse me, sir, that was your own hand which met mine as It was crawl ing into my breast pocket. I buy for cash, so do you. therefore we have both equal rights.' "From Taschka'a bearing In the mar ket you would have thought he had come to buy a whole earload of hams perhaps 800. Meanwhile, I took ad vantage of the confusion and, aided by what ability I had. lifted a box of mar malade, a bottle of olive oil and two large sausages. " 'Now, we, too, will have a holiday,' rejoiced Taschka. 'It will be a great feast!' He skipped as he walked, and sniffed with his big, wide nose. His little gray eyes were bright with Joy, and I, too, was rejoicing.. A square, ap petizing meal once in a while Is no small pleasure for people like us, sir. (t l ND now, with the wind driving r us forward, we were nearing our home. At that time we lived at the ex. 1M MMI Humorous Pens other a:ulse. I have slung a battered tin can over the shoulder of the taller, so that you can't go wrong. They are discussing the third vaga bond, who can be dimly seen beating it along the railway track which trav erses the picture at the rear, vvnat are they saying? Listen: It is Weary Willie speaking: Weary Willie Is dat guy California Cal much of a hobo? Dusty Rhodes much of a hobo! Why, he beat his way across the Saha ra Desert on a camel. CAR SERVICE. Two Boston schoolteachers were pas sengers on an overcrowded elevated train one evening recently, says The Traveler, and one of them, who lives a little Joke, thought he saw a good chance to catch the other, who is noted for his precision of speech. "Mr. Smith," he said, "can you tell me If there is any difference between the word "made' and manufactured?" " Mr. Smith, who thought he was ask ing his opinion In regard to some tech nical point, thought a minute and said: "I think not, Mr. Brown. Made' could be used In place of "manufactured," and vice versa."' "Wrong," said Mr. Brown, "and Til prove it. Take this car, for Instance. It was manufactured to carry 100 pas sengers and it Is made to carry 300." FVZZLIXG. While the agent was selling farm ma chinery at the house, says the Chris tian Herald, the friend at the gate held his horse, and a conversation took place with the small boy of the family. With grave incredulity he was say ing. "Are you sure you are only years old? I think there must be seme mis take." The boy was positive, but to make sure, "Ma!" he called, "ain't I Just 9 year old?"" "Tes, eon." After a time he ventured: "Say, mis ter, what made you think I was more than years old?" -Why." said the etranger. "I couldn't understand how you could get so dirty In nine years." SALESMANSHIP. Sir Thomas Llpton in an Interview In New Tork praised American salesman ship. "The excellence of your salesman ship." he said, "Is doubtless due to the high salaries paid, these high salaries drawing into the work a very high class of men. "Even your book salesmen are good. treme end of the city, near elathes market, where we hRRement belonging to a very man. This part of the. town was al ways deserted after 6 o'clock in the evening, and It was seldom that a liv ing being was met with in this neigh borhood after that time. If any one ever did make his appearance here af ter that hour he most certainly carried bis life in his heels. "So we ran on. Suddenly we saw the figure of a man before us. He tot tered as he walked, and It soon became evident to us that he was drunk. Tasch ka nudged me and whispered: 'Fur coat.' "Now, you must know that to meet a man In a fur coat Is very pleasant. Indeed. Tou see, a fur coat has no but tons and Is easily pulled off. Walking stealthily behind the man, we saw that he was big and broad-shouldered. He was muttering tomethlng to himself. We, on our part, were thinking some thing, too. "The man stopped so suddenly that our noses almost touched his back. He raised his hands high, and in a strong bass voice growled out: " 'I am he whom no one loves! "If a cannon ball had struck us we should not have been more surprised. We quickly retreated. But he had already seen us, and turning to us with 'his back to the fence evidently he knew where he was he asked: . " 'Who are you, you scamps?" " "Brother beggars," Taschka an swered modestly. " 'Beggars! that la well, for t, too, am poor In strength. Where are you going? ' " 'To our cave, said Taschka. " Til go with you. Where else can I go' I don't know. Beggars, take me along with you. . I'll feed you and give you plenty to drink. Take me as your guest; be friendly with me.' "'Let's Invite him, whispered Taschka to me. - "I had recognised In the great voice of the man the tones of a drunken man, but I also made out something else the raging and groaning of a heart that was sick and deeply wounded. I i inctinpt for the dramatic I was for a time prompter in a theater and good took salesmanship is a rare thing. ' "phaa'a a inn.rn In 1!n8lana that runs about a thousand bookstalls. These stalls are manned by poor little Doys ox B or 10 years poor little shabby, dirty fingered boya who earn about 10 bob, or $2.50, a week. And what a Job they make of book salesmanship, to be sure! "I once went up to a "stall ana said to the little boy who was lunching be hind the counter on cold cocoa and bread: "Have you got Chaucer's "Canter bury Tales" here?' "Setting aown nis cocoa cup, me .ti tle fellow answered, with a voluble and pathetic attempt at smart book sales manship: ' " 'No sir, we ain't got It that Is, sir, we ain't got It at this stall, sir. Tou see, we're tryin' it out at a few of our larger stalls to see how it goes. If it makes a big hit. why, then we'll have it here, sir." Exchange. A PUZZLBw Head Coach Howe toM at the Tale training table a football story. "The English," he began, "are crazier over football than we are. Why, there will sometimes be nearly 100,000 Eng lish at a single football game. "Two Englishwomen of the lower class were drinking "four-ale" In a "pub' one afternoon. 'What's the matter With "ee, Bess?" said the first woman. " 'Ah'm puzzled,' said the second. "What about, Bess?" " "Well, ye see my Garge's's on the football team, an when the team wins he treats me to fried fish an' the movies, but when It loses he gives me a beatln' up." ' "Well, Bess, I know all about that But what's puzzlln' thee? That's what I asked.' . " "Well, ye see, today's match ended In a draw.' " Washington Star. THE PROOf. Governor Dlx, apropos of the milk bill that he recently vetoed, said at a din ner party in Albany, according to the Washington Star: "We don't want New Tork's milk, you know, to return to the condition that once characterized It. "An Albany maid once said to her mistress In those past days: -Madam, there's something radical ly wrong with this here milk. A very thick, yellow scum has gathered on the top of it. rm afraid it's spoiled." " 'Where were you brought up?1 smiled the mistress, as she regarded the rich coat of cream that had formed upon the milk overnight. " 'In New Tork, ma'am," answered the maid. . " 'I thought as much, .said the mis tress quietly." . 1 td? win th..oid, -! mwiSimfM&f? tfu occupied a Ml WiWSti&ff&jWMTSJ . . Utf old wo- f ffli UWi!irfJWSw.-''-' MAT so I eagerly Invited the man to come with us. "Tl come. Ill come with you, you beggars!' he shouted with all the strength of hi big lungs. "We walked together three abreast. (Iff. O you know who I am?" he . if asked. 'I am a man who Is run ning away from his holiday. I am the tax inspector, Gontscharov Nlcolai Dimitrievlch Gontscharov that's who I am! I have a wife and a borne, chil dren two sons and I love them. There are flowers In my home, pictures, books everything Is mine it's all beautiful, comfortable and warm, in my home. If you had all the things that I have In my house it would long ago have gone for drink. Tou are swine, of course, and drunkards; but I am no drunkard though I'm drunk just now. I'm drunk because I'm depressed. I'm al ways depressed and uncomfortable on holidays. Tou don't understand it it's a deep wound It's my great sorrow 'I listened to him with Intense inter, est. Whenever I see a big, ' strong man It always seems to me that he is unhappy. Life is for the small, the weak, the puny and the petty. Put a sturgeon In a swamp and it'll certain ly die; while frogs, toads and the like oan't live in clear, flowing water. The man interested me very much. "We had now brought him to our basement, and our landlady was not a little frightened by his appearance. She thought we had brought him with us to rob htm, and wanted to tell the police of it. We quieted her and drew her attention to our own emaciated forms in comparison with the figure of this giant with his long arms, big head and broad chest 'Why, he could stran gle us both without effort. So the old woman, reassures, was aem t-u ui, Quips and Flings Poet All my Ufa seemed to go into that poem. I was perfectly exhausted when I had finished writing It - Qn,in. n-ditnr I ean sympathize with you. I was In exactly the same oondltlon when I naa rinisnea rt.uiu it Pathfinder. "By George, I call this rubbing It In," declared a Pittsburg poet "How now?" "I sent this magazine two poems and they sent me back three." Pittsburg Post . "She worries every time he takes the car out" . "Tes, I don't blame her. They had to save a long time to get that' car." Houston Post Poet I called to See If you had an opening for me. ; iK.r.'t one rlaht pe- hind you. Shut it ee you go out please. Satire. "Burglars broke Into our house last "'"That sot Did they get anything?" "Nothing except my husband's nerve." Detroit Free Press. . "Look at this beautiful castle." "'Don't bother me. How can I read i u.i . i ..rm Vpflfi tiesterlnsr me to look at rocks and castles?" Kansas City journal., "Courageous,' isn't she?" "Very! Why, she Is engaged to marry a man named Trlplett!" Judge. Important Poet (with a lofty air) This, sir, is my last poem! Tired Editor Thank goodness. a . "I believe in strict news , censor ship." declared the man with sad eyes. "What Is the matter now?" asked the friend. "I haven't had any peace since my wife read off the arrival of a $1,000,000 cargo of sealskins at Seattle." Buffalo Express. a "He's quite regular in his habits. Isn't her' "Oh, yes! He drinks a quart of whiskey a day, smokes eighteen cigars regularly and has a regular habit of never getting to bed before 2 A. M." Life. " "Have you anything laid by for a rainy day, Mr. BooklyT" "Indeed I have. It's one of the best novels written In a decade, and I can If : ' ern, and the three of us sat around the table. . HVf E sat In our cave and drank V slowly, waiting to hear about j the holiday. Our truest took off his fur coat and sat in his shirt sleeves with out a vest. He sat opposite to us. 'Tun urn evidently rascals,' both of you,' he growled. 'Tou lie when you say you are beggars, ior you re young to be beggars: and your eyes, ,fea'..a tnn Inanlant. But Whoever YOU are, It's all the same to me. I know that you are not ashamed of Hie and that's the thing. And I I am ashamed. I ran away from my house to escap'e disgrace.' "Tou know, my dear sir, tnere is a nervous disease called chorea. Well, there are some people whose con sciences are stricken with this dls u ..,1 T aa w at once that the in spector belonged to that class. "'In my nouse, ne wbhi vu, bwj thing is conducted in the most proper manner; and it gets fearfully tiresome to live according to the conventional rule. Everything is put away or hung up in its proper place once and for all. and everything has so grown to its place that even an earthquake couldn't move them sofas, pictures and book cases. They have shot roots into the ground and Into the soul of my wife They those wooden and lifeless things have become a part of our Uvea, and I, for one, cannot live with out them. One gets so used to them one worries about them and troubles about them the devil take it! The damned things grow, take up all the room, stifle the air until one can't breathe freely any longer. " Now, for this holiday, this Diessea army m nau- rooNiNY hardly wait till it rains." Birmingham Age Herald. . , , "Why are you looking so thought fully at that cigar?" - "'A fellow Just gave it to me, and it looks pretty bum." "It Is evidently a two-fer, but we should not consider the .value of a Blft-" , . "I wasn't I was Just wondering If i. .hf. .sttmitt of the value of my friendship." Louisville Courier Jour nal.. "Hold on, old chap. I can tell you what will cure that cold of yours." "Say, I ought to brain you! Well, what Is it?" "Time and nature." "Shake!" Cleveland Plain Dealer. - Sunday school teacher And what should we do after breaking a com mandant Willie Muzzle de papers and hire a good lawyer. Life. a "I was so embarrassed that I didn't know what to say to her." "What did you dor' "Her father helped me out" Judge, a a a His friend Go In for any kind of sport Mr. Specks? Specks Tes. I collect insects. Sketch. a a Cockney Fine haystack you've got there. Cost much to build? Farmer Fifty gallons of the best sir. Punch. a a "How did you feel at that fashion able wedding?'' -"About as conspicuous as my piokle .1-1. -aVa amnno tha 1 P W P 1 f fl hi" Oil ZCS and ropes of pearls." Pittsburg Post a , a Pouting wife Tou used to call me the light of your life. . Hull So I did; but I had no Idea the meter was going to register such a cost Boston Transcript ' a a a Friend (congratulating the poet) Now your dream is realized. Tou have become Immortal. Poet Tes; now I can die in peace. Pele Mele (Paris). a a a "My wife made me promise to quit smoking before she would marry me," remarked Mr. Meekton. "And nowr" "I'm doing my best to get her to promise not to begin." Washington Star. ' ' - . "Where ' do all the people Who have automobiles get the money that is necessary to afford them?" "Many of thorn don't" Chicago Record-Herald, it- hi. dunked Itself out. has made It cnlf snick and scan, and It shines and glistens. It glistens disgustingly. It mocks me yes, It knows everything. Once i bad only three pieces a bed. a chair and, a table. Yes, and I had also a picture of Herzen. , Now I have a hundred pieces or furniture. iow unn to ask neoDle to sit down in them people who know their value. So people who are well-to-do come to us to use our lurnuure.' rtiHB inspector drank a glass of 1 whisky and went on: "Thpv are all most respectable' pee pie, pious cattle who have been brought up on , the sweet ideals that are pie in Russian literature. But I feel horribly bored the very flavor of their talk chokes me. 1 Know every thing they can tell me and also what .v, oan't An to become more alive and interesting. The stupidity of their souls makes them abhorrent to me They are all so heavy and sluggish that even the words they speak fall like stones.. They stifle a man. When they come to my house it seems Xo me nnt t sm surrounded by bricks and that I am about to be built into a wall. I hate them, but I cannot drive ... . A v. .. ,' . whv T hatA them so. I don't attract them; personally come for the simple reason that they want to sit upon my luntnuia. I can't throw the furniture out, either ir inWa. t. All. Rv Heaven! Ill ""O v . vo .v . - my wife only lives for the sake of the furniture, one neraeta una wooden. . wall and laughed. And Taschka, who was certainly oorea uy m . nf tha nallSA to sav: .. .v,. v. i ni. n.a. Ynlcrht have smashed the furniture into pieces on your wile.' - "Well, and then?" fi:N Among the Poets MARCHING THROUGH TURKEY. Bring the good old bugle, boys, we blew at old Tcbatchok, Also at that place named like the tick ing of a clock Also at that place whose name will cause your Jaws to lock While we were marching through Turkey. Hurrah! Hurrah! Set Zhagubltxa free. Hurrah! Hurrah! We sound the Jubilee. Karahassakolon was as easy as could be While we were marching through Turkey. Tcherkeskist was baffling, but we hung on for a spell; When we struck Moschopolis we got on very well And we've found another town Just like a college yell When we are marching through Turkey, Hurrah! 'Hurrah! Our Jawa refuse to break, , Hurrah! Hurrah! It is no trick to take Old Trebotlvlshte with a gurgle and shake While we were marching through Turkey. Vlahcollvedon we won it was'a long campaign Syllable by syllable we counted up our gain: Old Kovatchobete we even now recall with pain While we were marching through Turkey. Hurrah! Hurrahl Tcherkeskist waits us yet Hurrah! Hurrahl Pokasckoi we will get In another week we'll rise and fight the alphabet While we are marching through Turkey. Exchange. Today. Sure, this world is full of trouble I aint said it alnt Lord, I've had enough and double Reason for complaint Rain an' storm have come to fret me. Skies were often gray; Thorns an' brambles have beset me On the road but say, ( Aint it fine today! What's the use of always weepln', Makin' trouble last? What's the use of always keepln' Thlnkin' of the past? Each must have his. tribulation Water with his wine. ((THE) Inspector looked around, our I room .was reeking with smoke and dirt. It's disgusting here, too. But listen to me, you devils. Can't we go to some hotel? Want to do it tomorrow? And then won't we drink! Tes, and we'll think about It think how people ought to live. Will you do It? By God. Its time to stop leading tnis rpecuiu" life. It's high time to stop It! But you ara both scamDS and cannot under stand what I mean.' J .understand very wen wnat im macier is,' I said to the Inspector. "Tou? Who are your ne mucu. . 'i am .ian a man who was once re spectable,' I said. 'I, too, enjoyed the happiness of a quiet, peaceful life. I. . wo. .riHd nut of life bv little things and petty details. They weighed me down, pressed out my soul and everything else mat w m ......J tnr aomethina- lust as you ara now yearning. I began to drink and be- came a arunaaro. i uavv to introduce myself.' "The Inspector stared at me and ex amined me closely In grim silence and with apparent satisiaction. men a saw his thick, red lips twitch in disgust a kt. w...l.tf mmtirh,. and the way he sneered wasn't at all complimentary to me. . ..... Is that really sor ne aeicea sua- denly. ' . , " 'It is, omnia mea mreum " -asserted. "Who are you, anyway?" ne asked, still looking at me. " 'x man. liivery vagauuou i and every man Is a vagabond.' I once knew the art of speaking In epigrams very well. tt ERT wisely put." ld the n V spector, without taking his eyes off me. , , .. "'We, also, are educated people," said Taschka. 'We can converse with you..' perfectly well. If we are plain peo- j pie, we understand a thing or two, and we, too, dislike elegant furniture. Why . should we care about it? We don't sit with our faces on the chairs. Tou should make friends witn us. " I?' said the Inspector. He had sud denly become sober. " 'Tes, sir, you. Tomorrow ws 11 show -you such secrets of life ' "Hand me my coat,' demanded the Inspector quickly of Tas hka, and he stood up. He stood very i'lrmly on his t. . feet. "'Why, where are you bound forr I asked. , " 'Where T" He looked at me with pain .r. in his large, calf-like eyes, and then a shivered as if a sudden chill had run -y through him. I I am bound for-., home.' " . . . l" "I looked at his face, which had sud-' denly grown very long, and did not say r another word. 'Fate has prepared a barn for every . kind of animal, and no matter how that y: animal may kick with its hind legs it :, still, remains In its allotted place. Ha, ,v ha ha' "And so the Inspector departed. Out- side we hoard his big, heavy voice cry--v lng, Cabman!"" ' ' My companion grew silent and began to drink his beer with measured sips. After finishing his glass he commenced to whistle, tapping on the table with '. his fingers. "And what then?" I "I"1-- What then? Nothing. Did you ex- -. pact something else?" "Tes, the feast " "' "Oh, yes, we had the feast all right. r" I forgot to tell you that the Inspector made Taschka a present of his purse. There were twenty-six rubles and some copecks in it. We had the feast all right-" ,. tlJUpy TIROL if-. of the Daily Press Life it aint no celebration. . Trouble, I va had mine But today is fine. It's today that I am llvln'. Not a month ago. Havln', losln", takln', glvin". As time wills It so. Yesterday a cloud of sorrow Fell across the way; It may rain again tomorrow. It may rain but say, Alnt it fine today! Douglas Malloch. REXUJfCIATIOS. His Letter. "Dear Madge Of course you've noticed bv the papers That I've eschewed the Joys of single J life; Rnnouncinc all my former merry capers, & DUQriiy laaa umu i u n v . . a. ' My stage-door days, I feel, have found an ending Most circumspect from now, must be my lot; But as you see, for old sake's sake I'm sending An au revolr and this forget-me-not" Her Letter. "Dear Jim Accept a friend's congrat ulations. I hope your luck will be the bestest yet Although I fear you'll miss your old flirtations. Unless you've changed a lot since last We met Be good to her and, ere this letter closes, One friendly word it's quite the best I've got Tour marriage, Jim, will not be strewn . with roses. Unless the tie's a real forget-me-knot" Stanley Quin, in Judge. THE PROUD FLY. The Fly looked around at her progeny As they swarmed up the walls and And promptly smiled, "Well, it seems to me That I am a sort of Carne-gle, For I rank with the mllllon-helrs!" Harper's Weekly. A POEM-ETTB. I hold it truth, whate'er the cost (It hasn't cost me much as yet). Tls better to have loved and lost Than loved and won a suffragette. Puck, 4