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Show ii , ii I Turning tha Page .By E. W. Osborn ' CarrlsM. Itll (Itaw Tark va-alas va-alas WerMJ. fn FaklUblaa ' eej . . .. ., Tha hatter said that' hata1 were ood (This tlfa maeneas tn ' hla blood). . The cobbler, sewing la the sun. Cried, "Without shoes we wars un-, un-, done!1 -' i .. Ths batcher said, "But w must aat! Here la meatf Hera la meat!' The miller called from his tower, "The world was kneaded out oL flour." , , ' N Rvery man to his trsde, si Thus indeed the world Is made. ' 9o bare I cry to the busy thronffa, "Ac should die without eonss! " Tha prelude to "Tha Mlller'a Touna-aat Daushter." a tale told In , voraa In tha July number ot Poetry. J a sawlni ....... t J DI8CIPLINB AND EMOTIONS. J Thus In bar "Hunting- a Hair J Shirt and Other Spiritual Adven- I turea" (Dofan, wrltea Aline KfJT I mberi . J "Kmotlons are much like children. A ctrtaln amount of discipline Ja good and aeoeaaary for thfera. But If you dlaclpllne.your amoHloha too severely you are In dancer of becoming be-coming ona of thoea terrlblo persona per-sona whoae emotions con) a .when they sre called. -"By this It Is not meant definite, ly that children should not come when they are called, but rather that they should not be! always slavishly at hand awaltlna a call. . "Healthy children should . sometimes some-times be out of hearing and other eometlmea they should be present when they srs not at all alvelred. "And It la ths same with-ema-tlone.. They ehould not be crushed pas; ths possibility of revolt." Couneel ot first and last aid to Wl.l'sm Jennings Bryan, Billy Bun-day Bun-day and tha professional umpire In bcsrbalL . e e ' HAVING TRUST IN AUDREY. From "The Book of a Xenedlot. by Duncan Bwaan, a book. to which ths British reviewers ar, paying amused attention: , "Audrey is much too pretty and fascinating; for ma to keep her to 1 myself, even If. I wanted to. Also, there Is a strain of Indolence In ma V my Intimates call It slackness that prevent, ma getting szclted when a young man displays oaask. s , admlrstion for my wife's abamrs, y ' I "I take It as a tribute . to the 'e. I soundness of my Judgment'' of things feminine, and am flattered accordingly. t "It rather amnaes ma than otherwise other-wise to hear her being Invited out ta this restaurant or that theatre, with hypocritical regrets on the wouldbs boat's part that, aa the party la made up, I must perforce , be excluded, t 2 "I go off to dins with a crony. A secure In tba knowledge that Aud- J rey ran look after hereelf, and con-W 1 sol ous that a bousa divided by mu- I tual suspicion would not ba worth I living In. . J "As a consequence. Audrey has I collected such a train of followera I that I am loot amid lta ramifies- 1 tlons Thst Mr. Swsnn must ba very young Is ths comment that drops from ons London Pen. But, ws ssk you, is this Isxy eomplscsns ths believable quality of youth In lovsT Or Is It not rather the possession of so sgs when ths fires that feed Jealousy arc burning low ? Aud-rey's Aud-rey's lover may be young Indeed, but bis author writes of hint Uks fortv-somethlnf. B ' ONtBIINO HURT WHCRC ONI LAUGHS.. In his hook. "The Mad (Mullah of Somallland," Douglas Jardlns t.l.s this story: "la 1111 Soman eatted nto tho Barbara hoeplial-wltk a Oras bullet wound In his leg that had become gangrened, and a apear wound right through his body. Just fnlsslng ths heart- He had crawled eighty miles to tho hoepltal la this condition. "Ths medical officer - promptly plsosd him on tho operation table and proceeded to probe tha bullet wound. Wbereupoa tha patient patient sTssped: "Do not worrv shout that, hutV plsasa have a. look at this spear I wound.. It harts me when I laugh I Ws suppose there could bo nw jr mora denrssalna stats of things m thsa that which would folic w lbs wounding ef tho world at larf ia tha place where it laugha, |