is Better for One Titan' vavHEN Hark Twain appeared my - 11 ' a driving mow atorm clad In f I , laat winter, wtaa-acrea ahook their heada and aagely da- clared: " ri knew 1C Clemens has reached hla . second childhood. His race Is nearly run." " Tt despite these gloomy predictions the i" dean of humorlats la hale and hearty at 72 years of are; la grinding out the best humor the Amerlean people - ever except to read; and la delving Into scientific work with equal ardor. Long . liva "America's ' greaiest man! Ha la America's greatest man, history and a certain portion of public sentiment not wiinBianaing. tie nas maae - laugh: has airen the world aspect to every man who has of hla humorous books, and i his. There can be no areater than hla, the task of making merri raan t - MarkT Twain at home la the place to see him If you wish to fully appreciate ( what a really great man he la. He Is .the typical American, Independent, fear- Taiedo. is hla bedroom. He does all his writing reclining on hie bed in tbese latter days, it la a ver ry plain 5e can room but the author declares e author declares lie can when there are no "fol-de- to distract hla attention work better rols" about Hi Own Story. It'to tt. wthor'. greatest joy to Ml how Jie achieved hla present age and sound health. He said recently: ' , -I hav. achieved my 71 yjar. In th. usual way. by sticking stricUy to a scheme of life, which would kill any KM, al.a , T mv.Am Kir am avAaMfi. '?;:Jt WftSim tlon. but that is really the common rule 21 cheaper than, the other breakfast ad worked day and night to build a lus. The truth la that even now the for attaining old age. "We hav no per- fooaa. I was the first Standard Oil city The location illustrates the curl- people of Florida take very little inter manent hablta until w are 40. Then trust. I nad it an. By tne time trie 0us notions of tha path blasers aa to an est in the famous humorist. One old . w Kat4 a harden, preaently they iwitifVfhun hualneaa be-ina. fllnna 40 f haveTen regular about going to bed aa oei whea there waa not anybody left to sit' up with, and I have made It a rule to get up when I hav to. Thla has re- Suited In an unawerving regularity, of irregularity. The matter of diet which Is SIMPLICITY, ESSENCE OF WISDOM-Power Direct Glance of Honest, Loving Soul . 1 By Landon Carter. (Copyright, IMS, by W. B. Hani.) THERE are some pessimists who probe, duplicity, sneer at virtue and declare i that simplicity Is but , an encouraging target for the more worldly wise, who are over ' keen to take advantage of Ignorance and ' Innocence. Such theories, however, can i from no standpoint be upheld, f for " there la no human being ao totally de 'praved but that he will respond to cer ; 'tain gentle Issues, and there is n ''' quality more insinuating In Its gentle hens than simplicity. So far from simplicity indicating a -' lack of Intellectual strength, it is the essence of wisdom and Inspires condi denoe when all else would doubtless fail. . There is a power in the simplicity and direct glance of an honest, loving soul that will do more to dissipate prejudice ; and kindle, charity and faith than the ;. most elaborate and intricate arguments. " What greater power known to man than . BABBER SHOP DIALOGUE In Which a Questioner LaUer Ven tures a Prediction. 'From the New York Sun. The man cam into the barber shop but he wasn't after shave, haircut or shine. He looked about blankly for a , r, moment and then aaked: "Where'e the manicure?" The boss -was out at lunch, and it waa .t the second barber who answered: "She a not hr." - - . . H didn't ay"8he'a not here today," r "She's not here any more' fwt, "She's not-her.' i:-'4!t ; ,., . "Oh. said the man Who wanted the' manicure, rather. Inconclusively, that Isn't tnurh of an answer." Then' sud den) v. " You're not the boss here, are YOU ' -' ' -.; '"Ko, I'm tha second barber,' replied tha other. . -..:-, . "Well, that's what you'll always be," gald the Inquirer and Went out "I wonder what he ment by that.! - said the barber to the man he was shav "ina. - "One of; thaqi. ccentrlc fellers, t Ut Exercise His Workroom miiuun, , ti. 1 a., ... j V . ... ..a.. brlKhttr uullsr iuiu uuui, x nv uwu ir- 10 wutn any. Axercisa IB loiiuiome uia early oiiier. rid on n7. ""5i.m,V l? u.'r Jt cannot b of ny benefit when you trem wouia h didn't Bgra with m, until on or th .... . . .. . from the town wnrv pmer or u -ot mo Deat or it. until ". ara visitor lately I got the best of it myself. But recently I stopped frolicking with mince pie after midnight; up to then. I had al ways believed It wasn't loaded. For SO years I have taken coffee and bread J!1flia9tAlABA. TPL''Z? Jl. J""? A .l0del- vrI at f In the morning and no bite nor auo until 7:10 In the evening. I have made rule never, t amoke mora than one "f" " um.,J nv?r5..l5er ?J?1 .i. t v..;. .k,, ,.V ?JjLnAlnlfc--,6i2? 'Ji?.JHa iJft? lTi' .KIT ki iur.Vn t.T 2" oth5r" ,rl2ki If,lkwbfi.,V otherwise I remain dry, by -habit ana preference. This dryness does not hurt me. but It could easily hurt you, be cause you are different, tou let it J?.nnc; t WM seven yr. old I have seldom taken a dosa of medicine and have seldom needed one. But up to i'ix StiSFtESZ for I don't think I did. It waa for economy's sake. My father took a drug ItOfl tOT tL dDt AUG It mad COd llVOr orug store waa eanaustea my neaitn was sUbllshed. And there has never cl the matter tith me since. Trie Rest Care, , w .,.f " nTr tkn exejeise, . except sleeping arid resting, and I never Intend the' Influence of a slnoere, unaffected wnman an rathar than her faith and honesty beine- imposed upon, her very oub auspicious chaperones would be nnweria.a tn vart i . Aain. aa hri.ht T&mi i .rhaiimn nr- ifLrVwJwi- 22 ?hi- mS h-Tmi- rtSuvfX ' and this hand may be a. little child s., Simplicity has, indeed, stronger spec- Iflrlua than vtrafanaa ann la nna nr tha tacles than pretense and is one of the nrlnr-iDal rnmnnnenta of areatness: in deed, may it be said, that no form of greatness or success can be achieved without it. Duplicity may create sensations while for a time simplicity remains unnoticed. However, the former quickly burns it self out, while th latter is sewing seed silently and unseen and eventually only reaps what has been sown, but above that a harvest of justice, respect, and admiration. ' ' Simplicity Is inborn and Implanted in every child, and according to th influ ence nf earlv life la th result of their maturity the result, however, largely depends upon the original character, miai 11x11 v 1 un rraui l. iiuwrv di . laiKci v for some receive a larger heritage than oiners, out uie aivine sparK is m an w - be cultivated and clung to with endur- ana tn tlioi-a la mnu mrhm that mnph come from we are Human neings, in - . . . . lJniI:' WJUi ZliLvmi! - id US .V vus unavHBva h asu tne aivme simplicity witnin us mat makea us acknowledge and correct them. If we do not always know the best means for correction we may at wui ttever prove a satisfactory veneer: whereas, simplicity and honesty, which .moi. uukii'-j afl.' f.p,,m .,tne ,v,n nman, will .-vonBcience ana tne sin- .V.i0u. .u .f "Ri . y " ?f.rhnlat-Knitk,aU Pthclea.r' ,iAh2hn-JKithtner'ie? hPPn" -?."?, .wHh '".'ounded upon Urn- v"; ! wnerein in V?F-t2r lAatr!A"S t reach nor-,the simplicity ana aepenaeno is ner rei- uw muv m numuni ui on- .cunn cu m.n. ..midmi and irnm. tovitienta crowded - into a life's seace. "Well." plishes natural and without effort but in the depth and Intensity of our disgust, what hj .ainitiain rwnvan nf nitmnr- never to entov.'! lazier th Wtlonrwh.VVvU,i.li Cb:;r,.,?-i. I-.,..-,,.' i a.-.-.h..-.. ' t.......i-. -i'.. :t 'i a mm . . -r ma ror Its nnnnrtnnltlaa 'l?iL.'aS i Voe-for Its monotony x,. .,iwlllru an a aounaane M Uvloc ar incnauMd by simple taste i, THE OREGON SUNDAY ( JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY. MORNING, JANUARY is His BcJroom Tells in a aeverely moral life but it would be a mistake for other people to try it r recommend it. Very few would suc ceed. Tou have to have a perfectly co lossal stock of morale and you cannot have the whole thina and nut them In gei mem on a margin, xou nave to your boa. Morale Ire environment like music, like a foreign language, like P"1'. poaer, paralysis no man is oorn w"h them. 1 wasn't myself. I start- Mr??Z- .. Twain has brought to the attention of the world many places of far less In- terest and natural beauty than attach to Florida, In the eastern part of Mon- roe county. Missouri, where the humor- iat first blinked his baby eyes in the sunlight I The excitement over the discovery or gold aDout Virginia city was no more Intense than the feverish spirit tnat dominated tne pioneera wno settled Imnn ITInrMa mm rha YimnA nt rxm vl tra ti aw Ideal towhaite. Tha vlllao-e la on the rrar nf sv tremendous hill, almost big enough to be called a mountain. It la an equal distance from the north and south forks of Bait river. Dallr Dsckets up these streams from St. Ixula were the serious dream of the considerate manners, high thought and wholesome acts, nor are these slmDler live lacking in fullness, for happiness Both Christianity and refinement de- mand simplicity, ana annougn certain jacKs u no ibubb Binipuui . ocuitiur Beveridge, in speaking of Serglus Witte. when hi was president of the council oI ministers In the imperial Russian em- piret .na, he 1 simple man." and - 2 U 1 Jl?' ,9jrr ll".,', Ill , .W.:WiX?t:.-- I I f J7 ' IHKH It il I g 7T 1 . Jl. 1 -. it c . '' Ill ff Jfrl I J "J.(T wll If LEARN TO LIVE IN BEAUTY-To Every Man Tnere Always Come Notle Thoughts By Maurice Maeterlinck. T O every man there, come nobl thoughts that pass across his heart Ilk great, white birds. But unfortunately they do they ar stranger whom aurprised to see, whom we - an impatient gesture. Thei hnrt in tnunh ntir Ufa nrt t0 t0UC,B 0UI' ""' Our SOUl Will HOt bSOOmS deep -searching as Js the soul or tne . . ... .. angels, beoauss w Wa for tfn ahort -aw .tataii.aa. ' jA mhmA ww """w - ow of death or eternity, In ths radiance . of Joy or the flames of beauty and love, We have all known moments such as .worthless ashes. These tnougnta must become habits with us for they are n.cao, a w.j w useless when they . come only in iiimpan. w must lemra w 'v m a P""1'- wniwiuw. vuai a.mi. j.ni iimsure, wo are BtBruea to befom,prL 1urMlv!!l..(i,. . a ffPi ttt M i"!"" other than tho- I'4?I,1?J,.M cr2iuJeJl,',td?"5..wi,lcn.w are Spelled toward per- rded tot It dotr not know what i, 'feet beauty. , - noom ana buuiui mini 10 an, pur . nobi and beautiful is not strong atranstn wnmn Tlrat nr all milaf nil- . ". . tlvate within ourselves, and it grows . - - -: . -;- r iVlnThn.J ?wh h.-!J t.arn2rf t5w J?aJe?.-n.WhS-i?h.n. !2-wfha era traauaaUy Uua oUiarg, upon tha t - , oniy . mora XJLtJ: a Humorous Vein' Ho w He AcKieved His Present Age i and SounJ Healtk--Tne The landing on either the only surviving architectural land have been, half a mile marks of the humorist's residence In on a level and the aver- Missouri. Huck's oottaae Is tenantlees would add half a mile un to- wara we bkt. xns nearest rauroaa is eight miles. , . His Birtholace. ' Mark Twain s birthplace waa aa un- nretentioua two-room dwalline- in the " V. ..- v ' T.. . " - ed on the site. The town consists of three or four ordinary country stores, with high ajat- forms in front to assist the women in mounting their horses. There Is a small modern building In one corner, built of stone. This Is the bank and what there is of It looks modern enough. The cltisens of Florida would rather. talk auout the town in Its happy days man bdoui xaarx Twain, xney only vAmaam Kaa him mm m itaw rvmA I at Kaw with nnfhtn Viaii( him tm KImt mi .- gentleman remarked: "Ht'i loft na- anrt what', tha naa nf us making a grand duke out of htm? If he thinks more of them people down east than of hla friends In these parts, let them put on the taffy." The family residence on Hill street and a portion of Huck Fin's house ar li en added that all great men are un in ostentatious and that It is only the little fellow in the big place that puts on airs. Worthlpss Blan. From the Cleveland Plain Dealer, Two women seated together on Spencer avenue car the other day were Ut HWUVJM W VVtl.l.- sava one in a tone of deen "your husband can't be any an mine. He stays home all day long and sleeps Just sleeps and sleeps.- - ys, . Buniiiiou mo xnoi out. He's a watchman at a factory, but all he has to do there Is Just to sit around all night with a lantern. Then he comes home and sleeps all day." heights where life absorbs th soul, V umm'I!5,.?5AtT?.f ln,V hlv hounrt im with math n i-.t -n immortal. . . """" am.l In "," 2 t.hountc "lcl ura.lll;iJ to HIIU W1U1UUL VLlCb on tne lives .or those who admit them, It Is far more important that one's life ahould be perceived than that it should be transformed, fqr no sooner rorms itself of its own accord. These thoughts of which I speak make -..'" iiiia- v up the secret treasure of heroism and on tae aay -woen m compels us to ais- x nen n is no longer necessary tnat a neat Un ahould. die for us to remem- Z"K:2?"rl? hut tha amallaaT thin a- mff I a .., . i.u, uu iiiiui mm nui cuuuv l7l--,,- J7"i.k ,.." '"r"r 7""s. "J?Fay.u' Himself has not achieved success. ta in 7"-r "'"; "'?. ''. v" " wu M a. tent wnn innumeraDie iotas. riarwin waa . Rnriimi'i ' " " aesire, nver rorgetting tnat tne snadow una yet shall the least a-natur of thaaa "3rvt'T'"l.TS it an With th. Ihn, oa V.at naa. K '.. 1. M I J- aL." T." .T OHHl. Ill U1B- JUUlll IIS UBU TCmUT r time I. too lock or wall. U but the feUng image You must be keenly vigilant, and you ' Bit onVSay. in IT. oiS age! ' J ija 1 MVVI Ilia- UHIIUB VW ldlWrCeVUDJ LO niU. . :;' BKU l.n,t.ii.Ua .nn... A m . . j - i Ji.. , wing ofVflmmoTJaTtnrfie, 'than slumbe - In tiT. SlV"Sl: a tWhSfo earnest ana every soul that draws near to their and arandmir R.Vta h .-in-. ,u . tii. P IK "I "."J God 1 treat and that you move la . hla " ' . ' . hie the soul. - - -..... -M-.v.a iw vim.;- 'and Says Rek and aa dreary looking as the old mill on sail river. Bom people say Tom Blankenahlp of Hannibal was the original Huckelberry Finn, while at StoutsvTlle ther lay It on Barney Farthing of Paris. The latter is a jolly good-natured fellow of 70 and he y be is willing to stand for any thing In "Tom Sawyer" except "Injun joe." ' w .' Varied oolniona or Mark Twain's ae lus exist at Hannibal, where Mr. Clem- ena apent a greater portion of his bby hood. Clifton Johnson In Outing tells of thla: Rcturni to Hannibal "When I returned to Hannibal I mat other old-time acquaintances of the hu morlat Acordlng to two ancients whom I Interrupted in an endless series of checker garnet at tha back of a store, Mark Twain's 'the most overrated man in America.- There's about as much truth In those sayings in his books,' I was informed.- ae there Is in a 10-cent novel. His brother Orion, who was a nrinter. knew more in a mlnuta than Bam ever did know; and yet Orion never -mad no reputation. Aa a boy Sam was Just like other boys, except he might have been a little slower. He was con- stdered blamed dull, to tell you tha truth. It waa his peculiar drawl and c- THE SUCCESSFUL MAN-But A 1 Always By John Anderson Jayne. Y 0U ARE reading much In your mtiunM ralatlva in tha aim- ... n oessful man. Tou are hearing of mn who i have climbed from low nosltlons i n wiuiun inuu PWH to tnos or power being heralded as ths men who hav captured tha elusive1 e-od ! daaa o annnaaa - ci " ' ' iou nave read or boys starting With nothlM ?I,r.,.. "otn,nK t good nalr, off muscular -rms and lndomlUbla ensftfy, rising to the place where th jrortd of ' finance Tou hava read of hove atartlna with the place where the jrofld,: Of finance radianc that you will b able to live in th bauty and fertile depths whore v,r W-V.. :,J .,,, day 'and night that th hands of all tha neeaa dui an unexpeotea incident to r- . . . . - . " . ' . -- Mm t0 - ' 1 ' - ' Early Leap Year Story. ' From the Indianapolis News.. , A mlsmated family's troubles . war an m m. luiwrior wun, room 1. Judge MOtaater ''liatanetf to' tba '. - i -1 i man's story he was the plaintiff and; naa Charged his wife With cruel and innuman treatment. He was; a .small Hot every man can survey a I n for .man. and his wife well.7 there were i a railroad thsough a mountain, yet he at least apparent grounds for thewho follows that line with picti : and charge After tha plaintiff had finished anbval( If that la what his eWeltr alvea - his testimony Judge McMaster decided to askTa ciiestlon. "WWr. Tro;uWa.dtd -.you--. aat jour wilt wno naa treataa .vou inn . , - . ; - . " wf.U. Judge (somewhat meekly), you see, It s thl- ways I never did met hr. fihe JUst kind o' overtook xae." , ' ' - , - ' .j i . t . v, .-. 23, 1C03. . cept that made him famous. I'll be dogged if it wa'nt' "But another man, one of the author'" old schoolmates, discoursed thus: 'He waa a mighty still sort of a boy. He was distant, and had as a rule rather be by himself than with the rest of the boya. Most af us used to like to get in a sklft after school and go off fiahln. We'd have our polea and boxes o' worms all ready under the schoolhouse. and we'd grab 'em out aoon aa school was done and go off across the river to the sloughs and pounds and stay till dark drove us home. But I never rlcolect of Sam a-goln' flshln' with us or a-hunt-ln' with us. though ha liked to go down to the cave. . '"He was a good talker and had the same slow way o' speakin' he's got now. If h was to com along thla minute and say. "Charlie, let's me 'n' you go down to the cave,' I'd know him just by the tone of his voice. - " "Whatever h told about, he'd talk so to make sport. He'd tell things In a different way from, what the rest of u could.' and It sounded funny. He used to tell us tales, and we loved to listen to him. His father had a book, "The Arab ian Nights," that no one elee had in town, and Sam would get ua boys to- ? ether of, nights and tell us stories rom that book, and we'd have been giaa to listen at. mm an nignt. "In the SDrlna of '68 he went on the river to learn piloting, because then the steamboats was more Interestin' than anything alee, and you found people from all parts of tha world travefln' on kr JYlean Ouccess m trembles at their softest spoken word. oU hav rad of boya like Lincoln nnAAI. nna na. nvivinff mil aw m n ". - warrieia, nnu coming to tne presidential chair. - lou have said, and said trulv: "These are successful men." ' But again you hava read of meh Who . ,fl,t,j t,nhlno- hut mnnav .. ,h .,nan.. t th. and lahnr ot othera. Yon mav hnva - known of men. multitudes of them. keDt at nlarvutlnn that tha nnA nt nnriaihiw tK.n mirht ha a hia tn mi an nnanihlv tha two ml ah t be able to'slarn Shecki for the rmiiiion. " oftecks g"0t'n;r otf com. m? "Mother malSm coroMo Identify ' success with money. -1 . ' .... ...v..v j tnecKS ror tne minion. ' v - identify success with money. But money, does not or necessity mean suceess. . Money never spells success, no mat- ter how you mav twist the alDhabet. Many a man haa made "hia pile" and lias failed In th accomplishment of success... ':' ' f f . .Neither can money buy success. It t"V''" can buy fame, it can build hospitals, endow colleies. It cannot buy succesa. Suocess consists In making the mosl . i,: He who has not made the most I . H1R71I1B III. - .ironhied' hla muaical talent bv dia use He had-not made the most of ana diraotinn. Ant auoceaafu! aa S scientist though he was. he' was a fall- ure as far as fully developed, manhood was concerned. . . t . ' i . . th am-eives to their utmost, are lust aa iiiaeui ti mi f hlher."whA mabl : Mn ot lower , cinirirv -' nan nnmr - of themselves all that th eternal In tended they should. ' ,. .. -1 him Privilege' of doing Is aa successful iffS2f MitoSr siMmiI -i ,abJeotWa - aaalns-tha-llna befofe it is ' mint. - ... i , . . .. - . , . . , - . . . . . iiiitiK tu ma i uw. r' n a (inn drawers of vater, H who hews the ston and draws the water well need not fear the consummation of hla workv ' . r -i , v .i iiara muit - db nawera or ainna anrr '"Enjoys Home " Life at Worlds Greatest Humorist Enjoys Joke on Himself. While Mr. Clemens enjoys a Joke a the expenaa of someone else, he la nevel more pleased than when It Is on himself One of the stories which he most de lights to tell is of the time his owl daughter turned the laugh on htm will a pun and at the same time saved alii tha aznanfla.of a. box at tha thaatra. It haDDened that a certain theatrical manager-star who was a great admire! of Mark Twain, met the humorist onl day and Invited him to attend his open! ing penormance tnat nignt. He assurei the author that the best box in thl theatre would be at his disposal aril aaked him to call for the tlcketa at thl box office. I The humorist's party waa aoon mart I un and that evening all made their at pearance at the theatre. The guest ol honor stepped to tne wicket ana inquire! or tne nouse treasurer; "Have you seats there for Mr. Cleo ana?" Tha man in tha hox office ran racldll through tne tlcketa which had been lall out to nil orders ana inrormea mi Clemens that there were none. Thi seemed strange to the author and hi insistea tnat tnere must ne soma mix take. The treasurer waa. a little gruf but looked through the tickets agall and became positive in hla denial Knowledge or.any aucn reservation. -Misa Clemens' was standing at hf .father's shoulder keenly enjoying till chagrin, witn a emue sne remarxear i "Father, there Is evidently a markel wane in your popularity." I "Mark Train? Mark Twain?" shoutel the excited ticket-seller, "why dldnl you aay so beforeT or course tnere ar aeata ror you nere, Mr, i wain. A labor oandldate for a vacant sen in the Australian parliament has hi upon a novel Idea "young age pen alons." on the ground that they ar "wise and merciful, and would be conl merclally profitable to the commoil wealth." He adda that they would coil duce to good citiienahip and "enable thl struggling parenta of large families tl brina un their children decentlv aa with credit to themselves and the coni munity." " i i 'j ' '.! ... ...i Money DoM No Tnis World A pint cup is not as large as the quarl yet if it la full to the brim it 4s dolnl tnar it i na .rt nnnn vao f . I . M .......... ..v... it is extiectea to ao. r Hv! who nlanta a rosebuah an hrlnc It to perfection is as great as a BuJ D.anK producing nis hybrids. Success I Simply th llvllW UD to the full meftgUr of one's own abllltv. Tou cannot mead ure yourself in your neiahbor'a baskel neither should you measure him if yours. I every man his canacitv for worll x -every man nil capacity t nd when a man works to his he Is beyond reproach. . y y not lng In groat producing splendid oratorios, .1 1.HU a ' " " aynviii ehoitisd producing splendid oratorios, but . ?j " , l" eep, ana iri sleeping child, through your song, mnl uream or eeiesnai narmonies, tnat mot in the sfter days swell into joyM cadnce" and delight thousands, -h v " I Ihe violin, 'cello and bass viol, are si smtpea somelhlna- alike, but the eH paclty of each is different. Men f ail built differently, "enousrh alike to entirely different." Each must do hi own work, sing his own song, make, hi owr. meioay. you cannot make a wnistia out or P'rs tail, or- from. a ; whistle produce tl curling appendaae that rives grace the pig. But each In their proper the Dir. But each in their nroner dad may bwhI the music in orchestra of II and make musio .that shall uplift tij race. Arguing for a Deduction, From the -Touth's Companion. Tn Vri tanhim'i . fnmll v rtri1a YA powers of reasohlng were accounte most remarkable and convincing. Ou, side the family her ability to convlnu waa not so maricea. . -: . r- See. here," ah saio, without reieai inr the ten cent piece for which tl eonduetdv of -tha trolley, ear -had atone t Bee nere. her side, "I've only brought Willie wit me. He's J, SO J v got to pay his far I've left IB yra,r tnat s t ana -Nedd that's t, at home Now you wouldn have charged me for them, would you ' v--No. midam," said the t conducto "Tour far please. . .., . "WelL theVd have Uken one seat persisted Mrs. pham. ll retalnln ner noia on tne un cent , new. ' cuuiun i iisvv nriu -rin ubiii. ;, i inoux v.u lj.l , .4 of bringing them, only Now, why can't you take from Willie, under the cli J - ' : :. ', twas too ib Off somethlti circumstances