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Show MURRAY. EAGLE. MURRAY. UTAH Little Marlon, age six, wns expectantly uwaliing .Santa Clitus with fond hopes arid with restrained fears. On the wall of her Kast side home, Marlon often looks ut n picture of her Aunt Lena, who lives In I.r--s Angeles Marion's choicest gifts always come from Simla Chum via lxs Angeles. Now, since Marlon Is aware that tlie donor of the gifts Is Aunt Lena, she often looks at the picture of her aunt mid talks of the expected arrival of the box filled with presents, greatly enthused am wondering what II will bold for lier. During one of her perplexing mo uienls Marion's face clouded as slie asked: "Mamma, Isn't Aunt Lena much older than her picture?" "Why, yes, dear," replied her moth or, "why do you ask''" "Then," Marion paid moe solemn than before, "she might die.1 Indianapolis News. MOTHERHOOD lawa Woman Found Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound Always Helpful Vinton. Iowa. "When I was seventeen years old I had to stay at 1 home from school. II finally hail to quit r I school, 1 was so weak. I suffered for about two years bo- fore I took Lydia 13. Pinlthani's Vege table Conipouud, then I picked up one of your books and read It. I began taking thernedl- clne. Now I am a housekeeper with children, and I have taken It at before each one Was boru. I cannot tell you all the good I have received from It. When I am not as well as can he I take It. I have been doing this for over thirteen years and It always helps me. I read all of your little books I can get and I tell everyone I know what the Vegetable Compound does for mo." Mies. Thank Sixlebs, 51( 7th Avenue, Vinton, Iowa. Many girl3 in the fourth generation are learning through their own personal experiences the beneficial effects of Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Mothers who took it when they were young are glad to recommend it to their daughters. For over half a century, women hay (trailed this reliable medicine. rr Audience Warned Net to Expect Too Much Mary Louise, age eight, was to play n music recital one afternoon, a As the ovontril day few days ago. In drew near, unusual effort was necessary to master the little piano selection, which had suffered somewhat by rather irregular practicing th week before. Mary's mother was much concerned about the slow progress the child was making, for she waf to be present at tlie recital, and she bad a very natural desire to see her child do credit lo the family. The afternoon of the recital, Imagine her chagrin, when her daughter wall. ed on the stage, turned te the rather largo audience and said in a most indifferent manner: ''Well, folk, I just want to tell you before begin do not kimw this piece very that Stop Coughing The more you. eoiiKh t ho wur.w you I eel, rind tin' nioru in llaineil jKur throat ana lunes I'lcoino. Give them a chance ti Leal. Boschce's Syrup 1 1 relief for Nixiy-otimid i"lc Imttirs. liuy y. .u it at your ill tift store. G. (J. iJreeti, Inc., Wonlhury. N. J. bi-nU'lner s Try It. :iue 1ms n well." y Denver, Colo. "I have taken Pr. Tierce's remedies off and on for several years and I know them to be reliable. perfectly I always ftund the 'Favorite Prescrln" If z-t!on' very satisfactory as a woman's tonic, and when I r.rrived at middle lifo I did not for- ml tnt n'.nlir U pa .kl 3t(oV r"! 7 Health the Greatest Obstacle to Happiness III CGWLNS r7 Ends pain at qjioc T or.r minute pain from corns is ended. Dr. S holl's ih this infrly I y removing the cause pu sine; and rubbim; ef slmrs. Tin " Me thin, imili-cate, hcali'm;. At all drug nd bhoe tames. Cast but a trifle. I:i t 'fi Srf d. 8nt:.;-ptic- Hi in rlt;ht ,lI"n? 8,1,1 ,l carried nie through tho critical period Xow I fim doliiR all my honsmsork and am well and happv." -- Mrs. V. C. Hlack. 21J2 Champa St. All dealers. Largo bottles, liquid ft. :!.".; Tablets 1 35 and C5c. Wrltrt Dr. rieree'n Clinic, Huff ah, N Y., if you deslitj frca advice. Just fino. BSSckoU's tto Trescrlpllnn' S-t- f i;io-pai- Vut vne 0:1 1 is g'u-.- ' For Piles, Corns of the phnio eh eiric t.i'ie of d.uvr wl.it ll sllfi i 1." baeui.-nwih'lous will eniiuli nd automatically start the feriiaee. by leser-- e iipplleatioll of the did u'ow li;he the town's street lights will 11:1 nuloiiiallcally as. turn theni-ehe- s dii-approaches and elinoi-- h them tint mIms when the Mill conn's I'.y tin the Bunbns.Chilblains.ctc. Try Harford's Balsam of Myrrh Jr!rt rt mwf jrA to m-'- VV. N. rtf-ri- Salt Lake City, No. 2'.923. U., Veil III! t( 111 lie Fair Reasoning U y N it always g,.od for Ihe truth? my memory Is bad Maty - la'i aii'-and I alnavs forget my liUlos. Teach. aid ym:r valuable lii'l p.iper," Johns' J.lil Jopptrs to the e l (or of the otiiei day. "I'm fral.U ti..' war and hereafter I walita ly afraid It eicrati called a haMle scared M.iri' than once and this is true o In.iti.v a Mihl.cr tncludin' the hravo-- t I should 'a' been decorated for pallor. - I arm and I 'ire-hi- e. III J ; t Ci'lTec" ii'tl a ht iiet ni.iririr. The Old Rascal "I l:-- 1 ifct j for jixir :111s lir-- t e-- i ,i 1 ! i.-l- e : Tlie w Llli of !t Amazon river at i!s luou'iii is inore (bah i'iiial lt Hut ehiire letijih f the f.iuiotis 'J'hanie lier iO Lllaltd. In CHAPTER n.,y HELEN II. MARTIN 1 not know whether to be more amused or irritated at her temerity, not to say impudence, In keeping him waiting. He glanced at his wrist watch. Ten minutes past the time for their rendezvous and he had been here live minutes ahead of time. Waiting fifteen minutes for a common little Pennsylvania Dutch girl! Iteally, he must be taught better. He would have to give her a lesson. Hitherto It had been he who had kept her waiting here at their tryst-Inplace. Deliberately. To keep her In her place. Lest she get It Into her head that be wanted to marry her! Any girl might expect anything these days all social barriers falling, no lines drawn tShe was not, as yet, spoiled. She had never presumed to resent bis keeping her waiting. Itegarded him with awe. Demure little thing she was He considered how he should Impress upon her the seriousness of the fact that sbe had displeased him. (Jo home nnd not be here when she did finally get here after walking three miles to meet him? No, he couldn't be quite so ruthless as that. Anyway, she would Just think he had failed to keep their rendezvous and would not know he bad been here and had gone away again. Leave a note pinned to the tree? Not safe. Lvon If he did not sign his Commit yourself to writing name. and you're apt to have a lawsuit for damages or "heart halm" on your Above all things he must liamls. avoid n scandal Just now especially on the eve of becoming engaged Well, one thing was certain, she must not know he bad been so eager us t have gotten here as.'es ahead of her and so forbearing ns to have waited nil this time. He'd hide and not appear until a Tier she arrived. Picking bis nay to avoid mud. he descended the bill on Ihe slope opposite the ime she would ascend. He found himself surprised that be should be taking all this trouble fur a little counlrv girl. I'liprecedenled In bis eiei ii lice. Never, even for one of his own class, bad be put lilntself out and be was nothing If not a slick ler for "class" in lho-- day- of fall FlrM lime In Ids lif. Ing barriers. I o bad ever been so lured by a girt A I'clin ylvania ( f bw Dutch farmer's datml 'T who talked g enume J 41 SAY rfiita BAYER ASPIRIN" and INSIST! I'ruvcJ :tfe by millions anJ prescribed by physicians for WNU Service and all he had been able to elicit from her had been. "The Yes, It's nice." A "nice" view ! So of course, far from feeling the ugliness of her father's farmhouse, she was probably proud of Its fresh paint anil aspect. generally From where he stood St. Croix could plainly see live miles to the right of the Schwencktons' farm, his own home, rising from a hilltop, overlooking a wide area: the imposing estate, "Peechlamls." that for two generations had been the home of the powerful Crelghton family, visible from all points of the compass for many miles. And In the valley at the foot of their hill clustered the monotonous rows ol ugly little houses in which the men and children lived who worked In the Crelghton coal mines, creating tlie wealth which maintained the mansion vee-you- well-to-d- il:t 'A m jfa ' sj. .f!' 1I1 . &JYi o How on earth liiiuo -- beaetis ; was II that be, usually too pi nib kety-rice- , he admitted It. found the vulvar little tbin so Irresistible? Ah. but ihe fact was she Wasn't vul it gar, realty; only unsophisticated, St. Croix Crelghton Was Clad That Looked Much More a Man of Letters Than a Man of Business. Ho the were Inherently vulgar, the 1:11111 chewing Dpo. be would not be I ore No. not for ail the seduction of Ilia' while thru:;! so tal la! .zlrgly epo-.c- i when she I'lit b.i'U her bead and laughed; lllid tb it lilmf :eral.le Mvvel lie-of her lips; nnd the dazzling of her leelli; Whiteness and vvetil!i-find lh.it liuishal tiHle gurgle when anything amused her. (And such 1111 I'Vpetled tbilrgs ill. I amuse Iter, hi.e his correcting her I'nglisli mid her lliatiln I's.) She pu;led him a little; bad from f I! t'.rst ; he ilid "get" her ex.ietlj ; Something there was about her-- It could not be Mib'lely. she was ton simple. Put be vaguely sensed thai she was tmt unite mi simple a sin' SeetilctI; vaguely distrusted her; she illtl. sometimes, wi'h an innocence that as iiinitisi suspiciously stupid, sa ?u h p( lined things; things that tiid tifh'k beneath the skin a liule. Youthfully prblitig himself ijjh.ii bis extreme t!iodeiiiim, and upon being disciple if Trench iocaicn! criiles of nit and lite, be believed that lulu ct'luuiei! With nil the new i;etiera ti.. who i.d any thinking, bad ictect rd all religion. Put ti e truth vvn thai 111 nf taltlii the face t.f the vv veck-igall over the landscape, be did timst tenaciously and tlevi.uity cling to flu f.iiih of bis fathers their deeply f.iiili In the respectability ot the t "re:j;htou family im l p divine rlht to special prerogative - the pre rvalue naturally Inherent In nvvn fis of nii'hi in i!i t".i! mines, St Croix I'ivig1il..u v:ip clad that lie l"i l.i d linn li H'"!e like B In. Ill o( ,. letters 1I1.111 n man of businesp that "iiteraiy" t,,,k he cultivated Iho'lgl.l I. bid; ti I lie ! I Pave .1 p hi I ileal to to on - tear t ut featt'.'es. f i' odd. fie, a rathcf I'viam;.-bend1 11 m. by Podd, Mead ft Co. Copyright Tie did Kite Dawn to Duild Fires A!I M mute of the yivia Dire Possibility Had Small Girl Worrying GIRLHOOD TO 11 UnH-U'i- on the hilltop, and at the same time, under a wise and beneficent Providence, earn ing their own subsistence, however hare and Joj s such was Na! - ture's divinely ordained plan, the ('relghtotis had always reverently and devoutly believed, and In) religious believers bad ever lived up In a creed more faiil, fully and consistently, Our young lo ir tn the great t'relgh ton estate, as be Malted o!l bis way back to Ihe appointed tueeiing place, decbl'd that If Meely (Ibat was her silly name "M, fly") were not there this nie he would certainly go home. "And." be tM himself as be tit a cigarette and began his second ascent of the bill, "if I do gn home without seeing her. she'll surely pay the piper! If I don't decide to drop her altogether t" He had an uneasy suspicion that this latter omrse would not hurt her nearly sn much as It would fret him though It had been she thai had made the lirst advances in their Intimacy; at a barn dance p, nlt neighborhood of bis holue; outraging the rural In tier determination to nt tract his attention by boldly executing a dame solo down the length ol ibe barn, slopping before him with a deep curtsey and holding out her Lively arms in Inv itatleii afit r which be bad ilamvd vv ilh lin one else during the remainder of the evening. She had tried that evening tn pin hllll down tn a dale for llndr next meeting, but though be had tally Intended In tueet her again, he had kept her In susofiise ; ti it only for Unit eve ning, but for wo weeks following was the weapon for I'lieertaliily-th- al winning and holding a girl. lie bad cotiiidetitly epet !ei her In try In seek Li 1,1 out. Put when a whole week bad passed without a sign from her. be bad begun tn grow restless. I'nb succeeding day nnd night thai he waited grew b'tiger. Intolerably longer, mi I be had finally realized, with mi Iroiiit-riamusement nt , own expense, that all tht 'micer I.'litity" he bad meant lo Itiliict upon her, he himself was enduring with a poignancy tbilt ns. unshed (,ti on 1 i CoUis HeaJ.iche Wih Nouralsi.i Neuritis Toothache Ihtd LuniKigo Rlicumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART "Ilivr" p'Vr.! only lucii .... (tl!i' ...pruve:iel u.:cti'"-"Ser I. ..to 'ihp . ci,-,t.i;r,- A I I I:' IV , i't f r. t -- ,1. f . he liot In tl Welt lilaci d In life 11s iilwavs to t .. iniii. to. I m.si.iera lion. In1 would I inl'y hue "gut .v" did vviih hip so smoothly a ntptimp! i"iip of superiot it v imd I s Pait hp tot Him 0' bUle iiffct ! illolin hi Wot) I hud i'ur I' id Ihe lcli.cr.lv ,i ei iisidcr him rt.j:. ijitHfp. he i,a f.a It tin vv be Vva To be SUie. II tie vv a p M irvin. vthu l.p hbr Ictilit-rtin a p vv ae I sjik as 'c nt i!ti,ii..,. . in the Judgment but of tp not own ti.isp. vt it to pa Selloll-i- ), f'T Itie otv!-.e:fel t S..JI that he '! I 0"t li.i' f,r hi v' eat I si ll'ti in tie iv .1 h) t . Hit I'reU'.Ioll f.i'i.iiv JtPflf 1. ri' 'Kh . . AH tills I, t, v.fi ma V e .: g tch'i'-i.luive .' V SUit'ditig mi'"'! fc-.,.1, ;.! on tie mm!'') siojie of a i.d.a g n li e vl. vv. Ml C'lT.r o1lgf I t"ll lit tin- - d';Ibe red lir'- - k if n Pel ...V in S- h li e mi 10 kl p pt,of Hit? io n i t the n rl f,.r whom .n w.ili.'d; I'pVimp ..f'(i ,) Did be. be w melt r, by (, fftd It llglitieP? He n tilt d ,, to fouse In r tn n.ti'it. rtitl i)i ever this womb ful t frm the hillion ...0 , 1 11 i r' I 1 Culicura hi-v- He:Is Irrilalbu Rasf.cs D 'ii'l v.Mh ta"-!- p. K nit uiil quiulv f'aivf BV.vJ h- A. H.uhP with dtvJ Cti'.iuis S.ojt sii'l hot w.tl'-t- , r.oiiit villi Cutit-utOititirrnt. fiothing tpl.drf i f liaf'f tJn Cutiilita S. p f,d Otntmritt fot 'l ii;n Uuuld-'S- a . f ftM". - Imml 9" T ' P rp- - irtp, 'iUipip Wttktwt,Ii Cati.ir Skannt Slitk iU, A i tu liln'i. -- ! fn-i.ii- , 1 l i.rila-ti'M- end D.nin Dit'CHr vi-ff- cr a fi.-nr.- . lv .11 in gered him. A little htissy like that, a peasant girl, play fast and loose with him, causing him sleepless nights, hungry yearnings to see her again and hold her, fresh and fragrant young beauty that she was, in his arms again, as he had ecstatically done at the barn dance! Put the trouble had been that he did not know where she lived nor even her name. So sure had he been that he would hear from her In a day or two that he had not taken the trouble to ascertain these unimportant facts about her. It had been only when, quite beaten, he had been about to give In and try to discover her that he had received from her a funny, crude little note. What sport he had at his club showing It around for the enjoyment of his fellow club members! "Since you are the only Gentleman Frend I got that's a purfect Gentleman In whom I feel I know well enought to ask for such a favur, dear, I am asking you, now, to keep com pany with me and be my Steady Dale." That was a month ago and he had been seeing her several times a week, furtively, ever since; his "ridiculous Infatuation," as he scornfully called it to himself, growing more Irresistible with each meeting. As he reached the top of the hill he was greatly relieved (and thrilled) to see her sitting there under the tree which was their appointed meeting place. At sight of liirti she threw away the apple she had been eating with greedy abandon, drew the back of her hand across her mouth and hastily rose. Ills peculiar sort of egotism derived an almost sensual pleasure from this girl's worshipful bearing toward him, from her timid admiration of everything about him, which she so help lessly betrayed of his modish clothes, his finely shaped white hands, his cultivated speech, even his faintly supercilious and autocratic attitude toward herself. She came toward him. Just now, shyly, rubbing her soilnl right hand on her hip before offering It to him. Put he waved It off, and resisting, vvilh a strong self restraint, the tenderness as well as the desire to which she powerfully moved him, be looked down upon her severely as she stood before him. "Ho and s!t down again." She obeyed him like a child, her soft brown eves fixed upon his face with a doglike anxious uncertainty that acted on his passion for dominance like a titillating stimulant. Sbe wore a cheap, dressy frock of blue voile trimmed with tawdry white lace, a bunch of ariitlclal tlowers on one shoulder, streamers of flimsy blue ribbon nt the waist. lie frowned at the slovenly way she sat and she quickly straightened up, pulled her skirt over her knees and tried tn look prim. Spreading his handkerchief on a flat rock a few feet In front of her. he sat down, clasped his shapely hands tile mt his knees and silently, She disapprovingly. Inspected her. became uneasy, making a timid, tentative movement to come closet to him, evidently as eager as he was (though hss controlled) to begin their "pet-linparty." us she most vulgarly called It. Put again he waved her on. "Not yet." he said curtly. He always held her oT In suspense like, this for a little while, partly to Im press her with a proper sense l(f hei Inferiority, partly to prolong the stimulating contemplation of her charms and of her subservience, so (hut when he tlid presently permit her to coma to him. Ihe nearness of her beauty would be nil the nmre thrilling. She relaxed against the tree, her pretty head drooping, an adorably childish pout on her red lips. "I'm sure I don't know what I done!" she said In an injured tone, on the vergo of tears. "Did. Say did." "What I've did," she meekly repeated. "oh'." he sighed, "you hopples child: Didn't they teach ymi any English grammar at the district school down there? "with (,n Inclination of his head toward Ihe valley. "Well, you see, till I wa Iwelf years old a'retidy, Pop he wouldn't do It In leave me gn to school no more. So J ain't Just sn good educated that way, like joii, Mr. Crelghton. You'ru got an awfu! nice education ain't yon A 1.- .- Lt.n u'llt-Jhum n.l.1...t UIHVOIU An, I U ueep "renin, 'you pecoiiie your clo'e sol Achr She was given to lumping unrelated kits In IbH way. , (TO UK CUNTINL'ED Q Q Q 3 IPS ON SALESMANSHIP . O. T. FRASM The Well-Dresse- Clerk d who behind the TUB clerkin sloppyetands attire is, to say the least, making a mighty poor disinide. He play of his personal stock-ishould remember that till day long be Is selling two commodities his employer's merchandise and his own personality. And It'8 the personality of the clerk that largely determines his real value. An attractive personality most certainly is not made so by a soiled collar, a three-daygrowth of beard, frayed cuffs or a rumpled waist. When you're selling your personality, put U into a pleasing package. That's real merchandising. That's why crackers sell better In appealing cartons than when packed loosely In barrels. Dirty finger nails and a grimy neck never helped the sale of a single article of merchandise. A clerk with a appearclean, comfortable, conte-nteance creates au Impression of confidence. The employee that becomes a fitting representative of the emj loyer and of the institution for which he Is working. And when the time comes for the boss to select some one for promotion, the chances are very strongly in favor ol his choice falling on the clerk who has most effectively sold bis own personality to the retail customers, and through them, to the boss. Dress neatly and cleanly, but not gaudily. Avoid as you would a quarantine placard anything ' that looks freakish or bizarre. In other words, dress so thai your appearance will convey the general Impression of quiet neatness without ostentation. Peineiii-he- r that the merchandise you are selling Is Ihe thing on which you want your customer's attention concentrated, and when you wear something that will distract that attention, you deliberately reduce your sales ellicleney and therefore j our earning capacity. I mice knew a book agent, ami a very .successful one, who started out one Monday morning wearing a dark-revest. The following Friday, after nearly a week of miserable business, 1111 Incident occurred which revealed to him the fid that his prospective buyers were wondering why a salesman who obvioiivly knew his business in other respects should decorate himself like a circus wagon. He went Instantly to his hotel and changed vesis, vvhe. capon business Improved to a marked degree. It I every man's undeniable right, of course, to wear a crimson Windsor s tire, or discard garters, or ltrgo through life. Put these things attract the attention of ,ieople who don't like such eccentricities, and those people have money to spend. If you want fcnini of thai money, dn everything ymi can honorably to :et It. including careful attention lo your at tire. d hat-les- Working Off the Stickers are certain Items ol that have worn out their welcome. possibly they're soiled, shelf worn, out of date, or otherwise slighlly below standard and they should be moved us quickly as possible. Your employer wants this done Put be doesn't want It done badly enough to Justify any deception or sharp practices with the customer. There is a certain thrifty class nt trade that will welcome Ihe opportunity to save a little money on such merchandise and those people gladly will buy the slighlly Imperfect goods at a fair price, especially If you call attention to Ihe bargain as though you were conferring a favor, whlcu Is exactly what you will be doing. In lids case the customer will buy the gooiD. knowing exactly whul they ure, and you will tint on'y hnve disposed of artleels that nre undesirable as merchandise, all hough perfectly good for nil practical purposes, hut you will have convinced your customer of your friendly personal Interest In bint nnd will have sdiown him that your store osks lis regular prices only for perfect goods, and that It's good falih Is beyond question. Pear In mind the fart, thar pulling a "P. M." on any article finest 't mean giving ymi permission lo lake advantage of a customer In Us sale. l!IJ. Weirm Nwppt t'nlon.) TIIFPK Nights Not Mentioned in Mr. Sykcs Sentence "Whul Ihe dickens Is the matler with you?" furiously demanded the warden of William Sykes. "Kicking up a row like Unit at this lime of nighir ) "I only want tn go home," said Pill. "Dmi'i be fool, nunt!" Mild Ihe ward n, coming nearer to sec If his charge vv.n quite well, "Pool. Indeed I" shotiit il pill from the other fcide of the grating. "I'm 11 "Star.Spanglcd Banner" Finished in Rowboat The l.'ni t s of "Hit. SLir Span-giiiitti"' written in a by t unicls Si-- it Key nnd were not peiilii I In the bt.hl f n pris.-hip ;ip tie o!. pfhtB.l Look (aught. -t d P wt-r- row-bea- t I.ccinliiy l.lsi.ty wns that Key nap piisoner of war while Wiitchini Lumbal dnn-liof P.all iluore tie la I I '.it j M.ll. rry tbiring the war Jsl.'. "J he on rot story lap breti Lfoug! t In light by the Woman's Home r..a pain li, which chows thai was tPHiiined tn n to the PH flagship tri.hr n truce signal tn vv l.n had la tin V e teb ase of f; r, hern t.k.ti in; I nt rived Just ;i bs li t enemy ready t opp n f're, The )i'U)lg poet developed Lis vrrM'P during tie nnxlity of the tiight, but It wsj while rctutiiiig tn shoru la a small boat tho following morning that he w rote exultantly ' 'l is (he Pahhcr. Ob! long may ( wave o'er ihe land of Ihe free and the home of ihe brave," S;ar-Spangl- Got Through, All Right 11 i'-- Pe.il.tly there vs,l,., Ii r hJ tr-.-ii- m$ r(J gcniune old Ooirgi:! 'cracker" from the outlying pitiey wood MVthn of that state. While here he attended for the flr-lime In his life an l t Limit service. Later he re luaikcd In n friend: "It was all ns Inlorctih' np a I never did know Mini hunt. much o' what nil Ihe folk about rut wna but I Jest kept my wits about m an' fell an' ri with 'em eturjr time. n In my rights" "Now. look In lie." broke wanbn. meaningly, ''you've In the got seven you've go days' bard. Seven days to n. s, yoll'il biltet dn Ibetn quietly.' ' You'fo right." untied Pill. "The old boy gave tne days, bnl he (lidii'l say imy thing nbtuii tdgh's; and J oil can surely trtl-- l tne In rntim back l;i ll.e iiioriiing piiinbiirgh d l.'pls-copa- PostoD GloNx Killing a Both kill a tn in n kill good book; who kills a man kills a tTiisonable creature, t!od s Image; but bp who delrojs a Rnd book, kill reason Itself, killo the Itmigp of Hod, a It were, In Ihe die. Mil ton. wi ll nl:i;.is |