Show THE PITY ITY OF understanding Tramp Was the only one who truly sympathized with his fellow of the idle class in the park a man was asleep on one of the setters settees set sett tees ces ills tice face was upturned to the sun ills his hat bat which he be had evidently placed over his eyes to protect them from tho the glare had fallen rolled away aay in the dust now and then a passer looked at him some curiously some with amusement some with scorn some with indifference let him sleep they seemed to say pretty soon a policeman will dame along and wake him up by pounding tho the lazy fellow on op soles of his shoes and sending him off to sleep somewhere else in a workaday world there Is little sympathy for the idle somo seats distant sat another man of the same stamp ills his own ragged feet vere bere stuck out in front of 0 him and he contemplated them steadily as it if ho he wondered a little at the wreck of his own life to which they had conducted him ills his hands were deep in his pockets ets and his battered hat inclined well over his noso nose to protect his eyes from the sunshine presently he diew grew weary of 0 sitting and rove rose unsteadily as an if won wondering Cering where to sit next then he advanced along the path toward the sleeper the hat lying in the dust caught his bla attention lie he stopped and look od d at it and touched it absentmindedly absent mindedly with one onet toot then he looked at the sleeper ite ile teemed seemed neither amused vor cor scornful nor curious lie picked up the battered hat carefully end and dusted it with the sleeve of his bli coat then lie he approached the sleeper placed the hat bat over his face and shambled off along the path nod and be did it 1 all with infinite precaution to as not to awaken the sleeper youths companion |