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Show THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, JULY 29, 1906. "<>==T? OUR CHILDREN'S PAGE {i==<>y SL eo 7 en . en é . BY MAUD u a |called 1e WALKER. | quite. ef define in as Mary, his little oO i puppy way. ]Ah, there was C7' the way! and some | them, a | A huge whistled to them, pouring{old milk in a chicken trough thus to coax them nearer, Rodger ash | Milk Ee Puggle and and made lapped friends with mistress. Giving one for|in the direction from came Puggle saw the up : the} the figure = of like boy, down swift which glance the voice en round dumplingI L ucind a > Lay coming Miss Miss 2 ani ays. the steps of her front porch.squlHer it had to do with. getting outside |ean stood close beside thie fenge arn who ran into the house and brought} face was florid, her eyes more rom | : i y ore squint} house-that yard, and away from]|its top he could easily jump to the | ?Ut some bits of cold meat and. bread, than formerly and she seemed to walk| Lueinda Lay And more than|ground outside. And it was only the | Which he threw to them. Then both} with greater difficulty than when Puc-| he wanted to go. a very long way!work of «a minute to leap upon. the wagged their tails in thanks, permitted | gie had seen her last j rying some three hundred pounds of off, too, so -far'that none of that house- ( can's top | the boy to pat them on their heads The danger which threatened him, | wight. In fact, vt Mis§ Lucinda Lay v hold would ever lay eyes on a hair of ThWisaiDrethcrhind Fi a little and stretched themselves in the shade| the imprisonment in that dark, lonely | 4 nda Lay Was | his hide again i i : Ls y big Jump : ittle | of an apple tree to rest a bit. louse, the caresses of Miss Lucinda all | a every s tout : » doe y « ‘ ee are a TT od ms f . that she could searcel: So sollloquised Pugg'an ihe mocnc| einen ee Den anit ih 1 ied "You may both stay here," said the|€ame over Puggie with li¢htning-like wall; thus it Was that sometimes Puging of which we speak But the reward was worth the risk | boy You are a bute, little fellow," |T@pidity, and without a bark of warn- Pugele was the pet and : i pet and almost stan companion: of Miss "Ttic F : Miss Lucinda a maiden lady of many. years and Heohack waowed to saunter the thesback yard without Lactd ofchis very affectionate But con: that Lay, |} Miss. car- | that, out into! Just the maid, protection stoop -thinking that mistress, who, | before her mistress' UY left the to limb she would return! caller should de-! Gf the the or life, When he landed ground on all fours there big dog--Miss Lucinda Lay v= ene on| He #@ded to Puggic..""Wonder how you ; slay there, for a | gie decided'to do Nereus MN etka NA rere er RS "amy IR wm lz o Nisa |!& to eithhr Rodger or the boy, he come to be with that mongrel. But turned tail and fled he's all right-If he is mixed breed, he { "Oh, there goes my doggie!" frantii I can tell from his eyes and ears." | Cally screamed Miss' Lucinda Lay | And as. Rodeat seemed. Asictined. to directing the remark to the boy, who, stood would - while at the same. least, They Pugopen-mouthed also | 5t0°%: watching with astonishment,| her, not having seen |} found a very jolly play-fellow in the Puggie's sudden departure. "Run af| boy, Who took them with him fishing, | €" "im, boy!-run for your iife and ‘hunting and everywhere about the catch my darlin' Puggie!"' farm. Indeed, the three were rarely But the boy, glancing round with: | |apart. The boy saw to their meals, |" expectation of seeing a pug dog,| giving them all they could eat of the | #4 failing to do so, thought the "fat very kind of food they liked best. lady" must be a bit out of her mind;| uw One day the boy started off down | road which led toward town. | whistled to Rodger and Puggie cael jaccompany him, | did so, bounding and, gladly the ahéad of him, the | S® Whistling to Rodger and Puggie-| He for he had not yet noted the latter's| to} @!84ppearance-walked off down the two| first} Steet smiling te himself. At ©O!Ner he_ missed Puggie. !into the grass on one side of the road.}| | then into a cornfield at the other, O! what fun to be free to run and romp | lat will, thought Puggie And so on| they went to town. - In his happy frame of mind, |}ing had and the be- | £0t And the boy was home two hours right. When he later there came so taken up with his frolic, Puggie | Puggie frisking at the gate not noticed that he was nearing} him and the way he wagged his old home. In fact, he would Best A)0 ES | "onder where little Bob (the name the boy had given Puggie) has trott©d off to! But he's no fool and will| t¥rn up home all right, I bet." } have | i" cheerful greeting to to meet his tail both the boy passed right by the quite pretentious| 4nd old Rodger was enough to make | home of Miss Lucinda Lay, Which | thelr hearts go pitty-pat with joy | fronted on the "aristoeratic' avenue of | And from that day, whenever the | the town had it not been for a very boy started townward with the dogs| | familiar voice falling on his ears. "Oh,| at his heels, Puggie would turn back | | thank goodness! there's Doggie} and remain patiently at heme, fo. |darlin'!"" shrieked the voice Then|rothing could have induced him to! Puggie knew he was very close to his| ever risk that town again-nothing. | | - | (F nu : poe : kept her small quint eyes part Pug pricked up his ears and{have ealled him a monere! wailing } hen eh "Doggie, Oats from her place | listened to something just outside the|for him just like a big brothet } { But one on the le mck stoop * back gate Beyond that gate was the The touched noses, which is the|}I'm glad I'm not a little maid sut one day while "Doggie darlin' |alley, and often Mi Lucinda Lay had | dog's way of saying Howdy-do.' Like they were long ago, Was airing hims¢ If in the yard under! warned Puggie against going into it; Then they trotted off down the alley,) With manners prim, and frocks the : ve of Miss Lucinda Lay the! when the back ile happened to be! biting at each other in play. At the And curls alwitys just ) Ina Came tell her ladyship that a|open. "There are always caller awaitedto her presence in the Ipar- Pinning Lbout theel eet < ns -abow We ll 1ofdeave gie W'll go, Mats : but you the stoop til return. 4s there remain in here the yard and watch and a vou must a : him The ; Phen, "ed Carel INithenlenal erica vesceer Mike brewing a kissceoeen toCoc Puggie, who didn't! Lanhida CAs ec ie Pt tcaviedt 484 cadaPalrecwie nrghcd ( in And the the society duration wasithe cause of Pr n e thatat nor Rerieceiy of of all that fo iL ed ha Pugsie the that edge t owart wa 1 creatures of th e not Sound. | Was heard own entranc he was heard keie his: g to get rou our id ing « call) |a¢ Pucsie. his big ss happened tol|see MMar : rTOW- | we OF eaneiclie Ga of sou - Sis the loan that ify clousy But did not particularly care for heLucinda the 4 did a nat Lays Lay,pam not TOMER eslat TA Rael miid: nor Jane. uways an gies heart the JS. z or visit bafta he! 2 sloop Loop, see| se and, rest ry. oO nbout point an a 5S cordial "Ais and rae ess et tre nant ween= Oo 3 jan of leaving 1 me ee Cesperate ee f seemed and exit ' on vhen a ee lis wl ae here came the little ones peace fates Sent Wilh them ay ie taes tok It .to) th ‘ for} face attention about, alley, Puggie to first then In jam to ie nE pol' under MACK the < reh Oo lemptir ) ine: yard ha there +: came oe then 7 eae from ios eral i825, ton, | aS | | vhie Wi at h oe « ‘Marey over : gard: \ i displ 7 d ( reatne the re ) iid \: p ‘ as | a exc i i lv - ‘Tat A AO schoolhouse. Anna) w fo} for there was Danny | as you | in the} ius . i 2 the. first}a countrs The : ttled In. a so few faml- fe t ‘thet bifidins ; "which ick a question little to pay one meant But ur uck round ‘V< have: it And gt mepers out his tongue, turning hi Lea so that each might ser it please Your Greatne /") tending to be oj. ‘ Bone aes teach vou very o 2) foo spank rein i how 1 awfu par poor,Grandpapa helpless, aid threatening wee lie ice Se SVU eee YOU) in voices to do Means BO 1tch fees a Pat Dana a pak 1 let if' Stas h ; » diver and) wilt | must aro. vo if been etm ae about lw ties three or my . merry ree eor- | in| ones little of with tinge ~) St bagel Ss . ° . E = Pei ogo °° s ~ | | } , ; " pp fo \ eT pe\ Vie ¢ - 44 © . - ° lve z \ eff ° & eos a i ueeatty7 bree t JRO? a is ate ores Ns es { $1 lived at that time in-a ef two rooms, and as sleeping other: We were thet wa kitchen without winters found big, it room we very warm. a pocket, a Tien ins rk in the too, with | | us \ \ = 20 n going \ ; up his luger > as ‘ @ warniue for all 2 to y year} Darling-| and <A asse vast crowd mbled a ofbaieskeptical weitnices the mended day; ‘Serr horseman the be late," sald Grand-| opportunity we had, you may flesh for his Ca even the Bible ee ar} ys - . day =in y (‘s kb, x ) «1 now hisSe for e the | was| IT) flag was with to fields to a few to get going the out 15. teewide2 was hour, sock = Hoven of to ‘let her K ‘a é ae gentle and consisted of six wagons loaded| with coal and flour, then a covered ceach containing directors and pro-! prietors, with 21 coal wagon s fitt violent motion, the red-hot chimney ejecting clouds of black smoke, amid the cheers of the delighted spectators, the immortal George Stephenson brought his as "< Samar on the horseback and the horsemen flag left behind. So, 7. a were With the cross-beams trembling from the 9 | first train ‘and. elde' rods into Darlington." =o proper? reddest asked headed or red headedest‘" "It doesn't make any , ay she's old and homely," ahead! The | amid' little the difference if replied the child's father, "‘but if she's young and pretty ‘richest auburn' is the way to say it.."-Chicago Record-Herald. e Z Cw safely _-_- okt "Which is Robert, "the ; J "NU excelled in Le ae re! cess wins go to school when you Grandpapa," said Anna Out o' sight!" ered 5 5 LAZEZ gh ee. were a 7h es Z £ boy, NvVEN ors : Fulton. ; be used as a motor for the vessels Of -Stmhets he wrote. in {structing yy ay ? aan eS A - = l yi sy ( , of fork the day. served called us inside, nside, listened from the Ps to and the the of to at t the Then capitals - twenty the{ whiz! on the} you'd a bell! wish books.' forms, schoolmaster's the us upon purpose Seriptures. of took a minutes [ we!times = we had had reading | Grandpapa, the! it. little be don't, grown 3 "I ones Don up ingenious about Which ttle apparatus : the Which : have not me, on this said <n > ¥ us most religious is the you . Vhich and changed, would here « wish) t changed grown never sitting you up never never had followed | dear of to + . Grandpapa, never times "Ir si ford communication, Robert : ; 7" Fulton. ak e the Jmin West, who, like Fulton, was aj] which you inte ee is ey oe ticulnc Pennsylvania, at eeslebrity i oe of mechanics ; x ‘ andeee who Sere || studs | eoearea ae a well-deserved celeb 7] In 181 Fulton had»brought his sub4 i f naCe"But pinnae Fulton soon gave up the| marine boat to a state ofEy perfection, ac study ot art for that of civil engineer. | cording to a report made by the French It was at about this time that the] government; which has not since been j young man concelved h idea that | equaled. : Pere ie ws Le Se a ; a ee poly < CAN YOU GUESS? | spect, advocating' the invigorating so en = > = y tapping youngsters seated ib singing it entered ‘The Cis *% -- J Sometimes tuning ete aA eR = Se oa .the sent to is said apt putime to | In con- imuch to the annoyance of ae teach- | s and the amusement of his com-| crs (@ : trades at books s the s boy Pere grew yet hi ijtalent for art became pronounced, and lhe developed considerable ability with }his pencil, achieving quite a good deal| of success as un artist later in life. | | He was undoubtedly a most energetic and industrious boy, for at the age of | 21 he had succeeded in saving from his| learnings enough money to buy a little} ltarm for his widowed mother, whieh | | would insure her a modest living | |} Then did the young art enthustast! lsatisfy his great desire. He went abroad | ; >. /to study under the direction of Be Nja- | oi a = receive oes | still in nis world so} | child was old enough he was the district school, where, it he was not considered : y | pil, for instead of devoting his his books, he busied himself ; B to born in an Irish. full of promise In course of time he} married a young American woman of English descent. | When Robert was only three years of| ace his father diec As soon as the "KES \ was was |man-ua tailor by trade-who theto Emerald America, islethe while new - SZ \ of the achievement! glad "Gee-| | from teens Danny. Pe As the glory marks during the term of school WaS | for himself. |} the hero or heroine of the district In 176 HKobert Fulten "Ho lovely it must have been to} Pennsylvania. His father had rj eee SS and | Once roaring the he to ny be sure. | ‘ oy y <p : -\ Injand beside when the teacher) linen Gta WoTcoat}EH ge E>) the | duties kitchen up gentlemen ™en With g not | were we as ‘And James. keep some of the "iron horse," openly declaring} that it would prove a failure. 3: To| as gorged with overmuch schooling we} were all glad to embrace the smal)! to| to- wae j with way, peo- | #n¢ oy a nen startling back should ride on the track of the engine carrying a flag train started without difficulty, W. tried ¢ See "h en, cones the 5 go " orderin firem mie keep F s he her Scie hot, lad,' opened ; ; and : the throttle valve, speed ob lw nice ° on re eee to 2 miles an ee a eae hearty age } m1 in number. Stephenson's neeC, named "The Locomotion." had a 16foot boiler and weighed about 1,500} some,| Ceres away! -Annile 2" Norseback thegalloped across accompany train. After minutes Stephenson shouted ' innovation| the Many < 2 ener on march is ts e the cleanly eae st most the sickliest state? medleal state? egotistical : nor would thest Which is de lightful) Which is the |Jution for st: 29 Pract , | | the optics. ass (sight, -(Wash.) the |tenie state? | the -(Me Me.) ibey anySine distressed' condition of p. ‘ Tearsoe do not weaken the bs but improve on eye and that sympathetic |prighter a} | others." } They muscular soft noticed -(UL) it the and act vision, as a keeping limpid, and it will eyes "* in whose falelo chine gather quickly : women tears more tender MAIZE near na orbs than ; ‘ BS | | | | | listen. to i San tt eee ene ee oldfashioned nye ne as Bie eee erate like fairy storles--they the body, and the lachrymal gland is en there was a pretty | ‘gestrick fathet asked him why he fi ae‘ P t behir ply to 0 | ¢ 2IC) 6spvlendi " abet exc éne hind the eye , simply it ‘eriek'. in' those did not follow the Bible reading with) @T® 80 splendid! - exclaimed Danny. | No placed: be tt . : sometimes It took | the - hy min and the teacher replied "Yes deed, they're better than anv /fill space or give expression to emoto ford-it, . too." i ‘youth a wanted variety; a fairy storie declared ‘ Anna and/tion," says an exchange The chemthat that con; ; just think of it! iptiedl: Date net inde etidin ante divine worship | Mirtie in a breath Grandpapa hasjical properties ef tears consist o never have any such fun in| take a-hold of the mind better" And] been telling us of his own schoo!l| phosphate of lime and soda, making ; ve called wade, and: minutes "T to school , " Heldive > 1g my pe the ‘Oh, \ 4a = going tapped against a -e DI MOANUP SIS y AGM eS ok Y Led Ts hee work-shop, |} window its for |! in the Stockton . : Credit cheers. j steam Then ifter breakfast we again| United States, which, by the way, was; porch enjoying tea and cakes No, featuta? alae washed our faces; mother gave our|a very good way to learn them Welno. mv dears'' and a mist came over| Which is the oldest state -(Ark.) ittire a finishing touch by straighten-|also learned the multiplication table| Grandpapa's gentle blue eyes ‘alWhichiis the most maidenly state? ing a ‘gallus' on one and setting aj|the same way And you may be sure|though old times are dear to recali -( Miss.) home-made cap straight on another it was not a diMlecult task then as it! the present with its many dear tles Which is the most paternal state? head: then with a well-filled dinner,sceéms now to some of the little ones! -ts sweeter and more precious still -(Pa.) pail e set_out for school, tor we hadi I know." And Grandpapa looked | "What, story-telling >r asked a low,eine Which is the mining state ° to walk. three. mil and there was! knowingly ? at Danny el who hung y his weet voice And the children's || -(Ore.) pe nuch to cause ou to iV wlong the' head abashed t was a we known) mother came to join the group rive - --Way Our roud led through a beautiful) fact in the family that Danny had|me a cup of tea, Anna, dear, and let The Value ot ‘Tears, wood and over a long sloping hill, And | never yet mastered the "nines." me hear the tales What are they . miteatol| in that wood abounded deer, rabbits, Then, by ald of the tuning fork, about this time, father -fairies? Tears huve their function duty | quirrels and many other small ani- | yy, choolmaster. would lead in an ‘Well-not exactly fairy stories, | accomplish. like every other fluid of brool das \\ 1Y \ f / my But, of course, the fault I paid the penalty after all the children a, house living | his and dining-room pleasant, fireplace, little log one was and a opened I for rele gaily mareh, ae of ae description \ / oo in alassembled s|rose, 1 put wa logs a ‘fe Bs 9) -_ @ ~ id e T shall |reeall it Mine and Vell, hills, mother would rouse us out ot} bed. We'd run.to the back yard, wash Fen oe our taces at the big pump, holding t t ¥ * our heads over the water trough as we Would comb our hair before a little wavy looking-glass hung on the bach porch, and presto eat we hich quite ready for the breakfast, which 1 ‘ i on the same big back porch.! 1 te , You ee, we-my father's fatnily | and four} ve Sans gleam the : storv| little) SLO see--that remember ~go?:|rect And the quickly |Grandpapa's eve made < DSS like "have wears ; "you. Eo Ow TLL Y es ‘uu are richt. Dannv. ‘The ‘ \ \ treat|is about the time when I was a to in those days to return to what . epi neid Lime we had Vil never lorge i neve Eearly in the morning, just as the zy a sun wa peeping over the Eastern te II anes " aughed Myrtle [ see a story there} ey Oo "Gtral rida mp, 1, Please forgive u just é as pla rhe can be leas ovely 1A if disturbed you sald Ann: "Well, well,' ejaculated Grandpa,; ¥a pologetically, going to the couch | smiling Isn't it funny that I never} w hie re the old gentleman sat and put-]felt or tasted it?.What is the story} ting het irms. lovingh about his about? neelk "Tt was very naughty for us-- I think it's bout when you were} oe : \ id. Dant : . But Grandpapa hushed he. by | little like u . , 5 macked 3 bhine her in his arms ind, pre-Tre Grandpapa hi lip a if' Be nae ar rE nervy and about) tasting something Then he said: | Locomotive. . railway am Them To play ; Was a preacher of the gospel sto che Gutter ae . an s vee BG jthe fact Is Fulton only "gathered up 4793 laying forth his plan. The Earl's little community, as well ‘3 enay, ‘te tiie: ae hatin anh Dar ‘oalegica the wasted made on by ya, inventive (fact answer below, valuene SS to the children But, for all that, he; the recitation while C- alls Bled | z ; efforts that is Itgiven proves the date when Robwas a ste man, and inside the|to excel in was the spelling How | men: for the past hundred years napa IPs Fulton gave his attention to steam Fe iN rine twee Bavetal latcorie ial: lwe did con those long words of many|adding his own inventive genius, made} ‘Sir-I huve received yours o he S¢ 9Olne . y « . ? x le : = ' , 7" , ‘gads' which to enforce! syllables with thetoo oldmany silentof letters, of them have which you ya pro i easoned ai] l had.with good. reason to re-|for we had system ‘spell-| | valuable ut all use inventions come to us| | Mth pose ofto September, communicatein to ma the 1 ae 5 ; . ne r@-\e 3 f < inve ‘4 . r ¥Y member the strength of one of those|ing each other down and getting; through a long process of improv mais iples of an invention wees ee ey ; In fact: 1 feel) ‘hend=marks® The boy or girl who! ments, ind the ist inventor who] you have discoverec respecting > sads for many years n ae . TG i i 3 ae 7 He nr? ie j- | crowns the feeble first efforts with suc-| moving of ships by steam. I shall be walking bout! Ye we're all-read for the story! our district the chool board wa ay near "Comeee bs in: , ‘would younestet called .a} which } T lene srandpapa has on the! obliged to take a teacher who 1 ' > HY : 5 voice through the doo ‘t hen allbbend: of hi ongue said Mi na, as shej)cane otly through the summes ae . theee Danny Mirtie and Anna rat poured the tea ind handed it to| for he or she is the cause migh Ie, | iayously into the big front room upIyrthk: to pa round could tay farther East during the taly which was usually kept for But jolly erandpapa to tease the! winter and get good wages in the bet: articularl for Grandpapa dear litthe grandchildren a. bit id ter equipped schools Well, our first a et ow'd ‘ =e know we were here? What is that a story on the ¢ na of | sehool was a succe I remember it k a ny 1: t eh ingly i" tongue Well, well: just look and! opened the first da of June and conwsked Dan augnInE 15 y ' al a ; ~ And Oh. one' would have to be with-}see, and if there is on there, you may) tinued till the first of September, 4 ne ort cars to not hear aoe stage ee ors of yours,' assurec Grandpapa tine Indulgentls "You've been at} bs i 5 1 Ben § foor thre times ince 1 came ' hose' hair won't stay<iny curl; pounds As six miles an hour was| Whage are vo greatly we uae to' ‘be \the-limit: of speed, it i frfrockeo ks are soiled, || supposed Who never wears often a hat, was arranged that a man on horse-|F Grandpapa. luncheon| word the what known chool-or hard to settle My father guve an gqere of ground, another man in the oO -unity weave the lumber to tura 7 loor a nd I aK W s <and doors Phe 1 a i . between fun! | papa "When. ut las we arrived at} One of the Abid recitations was | A Peep into the Life of Robert the schoolhouse the teacher would be| grammar, and a the sentences given fend th re itting in the shade of a tree in|the pupils to parse were taken from Many people claim fer Robert Fulton steam could ‘ : ig é é = 5 3 ; Fane el : : , . days|the yard and' reading his' Bible Hel the Bibl How often we struggled| the glory of steamboat invention, but en \i- In| be -M. begin oe A‘in a new: sparse 1s a being c might DSS |} But who enjoys herself all | You may depend on that. have Grandpapa _ liv rash ‘ey Seer Oe) \ aid nye!" was , i chair ae closed aaa | to mi Grane Ipa ing het Di ut did yo ac j ‘ 0 Ww! 1 1 you, do ‘that } Of a : yvaeation Hlo iw-f-u"Well, we voungsters didn't. think) &| tea- public such quote from an about old description: ‘‘The} train weighed 90 English tons b Ee e nen I = 4 little fellow like hadn't.a immer vacation, om now Ve: » school nan ummeros thatWV is, wer a partot ofothe1 " Steam first . Eng. 27th. ple OUNG. iwe " First is and Edthe a enterprise in the autumn of that year,| 2 the opening day being September the = house there When the band begins to Their joyous salina me Keeping time to music gay Till loud the echoes ring. Far down the street, With dancing feet, ADA ae a None, ioua gray was due George Stephenson Pp ar 2ees ward Peese, who completed* j in| r the oT ee Dies to then locomotives. imme- With pleasure mi hitth lady, atner aoz,e@e fatter who had no monmiled grandpapa eating himself vy to. connate went into the wood \ ow vere nixed O. KK." said|j and cut' dawn trees of uniform +12 WV seating him cross-legred | phewed them mooth and built a littl a poreh bench and reaghing for a} 12x12 cabin teachel ert earce |} Da on | | neve ae x VW) eC rorel pretty. Yoiour | tiv af- be pel pemns Oh, The was tired for the first time in| ‘ JE } | ae him park the band begins to play little ones do shout; mansion grand and attic all come trooping out. Into the street, vneth ee lone ror what theeband.: down Lodger Bohinae in a street, a long, ad (6 Bat Ds Pi BOAGh: tha, ey be On ee rae straw stack There the . twor - slept} i stac *here > through the night in sweetest peace, | Barly the next morning they were up| at. the | shining, ‘tiny. cup 1ticers,'. creamer isleep.|end sugar about it A hasket of should | fruit-wafer ndicinzernane ni \- uggested she might like oring."' finger a formallco-iisten ast so an every-day girl. his life Old Redger made off toward A Carmenicheboriesed mnt ia enw Puggie of course;. following ": tag han haviaccived ‘at. thelr destination.;Piee| gie was delighted :to find' that ‘Rodger waking WHLS- | th moc COUPLES) bowing Toy be-| at the keyhole | for Grandpapa, and placing a great! "T. Cal heat rmchalr for him beside the tea-tabl will. ou "be served?" : . , Maybe he noring Apna deine nearer so that heat wh t} yund vere AVel| j you eull that aid Danny hoiding up hi canning Onto creep-| onthe I just little When The From Chey } | at aG Te | lay Puggle 2 ae frisked rut o the sinlanat pla aticatic I'm a the|and off towards another farm, where | | they got a good breakfast, for Just as !they went nosing about the kitchen CH | "[ do believe, he's, peved Danny, his ear h Grandpapa's door Seth 1. OoSe and the banister il) cau You and) all lauch"at. hig-joke "Well, to Ux -ascup.of. te for. ms ee va ‘ a y 2 Amidst the laught ; that' foll . but first Te gt Poe my ie 4 UF} \ shite Nowed | Greanipap swoellowed> off oa « Anna nodded her head aflirmativel tt "a a pe bodes In the house htly to his door, listening enema rtain if he e1 MeHaralaait tin! he ar SO : buggyshed I'mSortgladof | OW, ] | | | looked about for } rosy-cheeked boy with a pan of milk from-his prison. in his hands Seeing the dogs he 0 ous cool . and . : shady reed aun + d ana get e- | lookes e ole ishiones Lov) en { 1" eo pm | } refi | I aire reac nap | little t tab ith the stear es old : ' and ‘and: - a diately chased out by children or the park policeman, when night came € % « « and ¥ c eee PUpa JER come. All \l him, STON ald | fomped shone rree Vi) 2 any .wa coatmn in1 ne ret he 1 y 1K ‘ dea Hardly had th ; + man unpacked his trunk ea hims th a-bath : ter he had finished with the bone, then 3 be ri got titup and trotted off down the ; tI alley ti 1@ came to a street, Puggie close at his ia ao ; ae ¢ . All that day the two new _friends| ne was an entertaining story-tellei id. leaping to. Ihe eet, ran down and, unlike some old peopl Grandfairs with a bound. In a few minute ‘apn was " nky" nor cross- | Grandpapa, accompanied -by Mirtie Dey aly Indeer 1 I Giivan a Lp mapa was the nd Danny followed rrained I Wie on , " ohey & oi ne Point ou Boo where nose about Ext ripetnaeant . he quick- | P@! ane ( eves } ( dl "7 Va WILLIAM WALLACE, : ' dnana had just ; see My rin St met them mrt nme ters happy to have Phe as nd | Hone gate and|t® have his luncheory satay Puggie look ee ington ca oe jm since Puggle could | neither comeaving, out 1 nor vit .in, oul invite him 18 p lonely, pampered fellow be- a longing aaGa he coul th 1), BY cook unsalisied 1 longi o es the watched, tri > brown alittle 3 ingaWeary of remaining on the : V iously wagged back, trying to thrust to Watch a pesky pup," as she put it) his nose through te touch that of the to) the cook, rot up and went below /) stranger on the other side to'the kitchen, where there was more Ras at onee- they were friends. and cangenial company at once Puggie knew what it was that Now, Puggie was not.a pug dog. He }he longed for. He wanted to be free Was a little fox-terrier. He never knew} to run and romp. and bark. and. frisk y ; should have called] in the strects ; J a \ ; stress' we oe a ai ue eoTaited ‘ne auiee ne Pore titer ~ Lin CRA SE aan f dogs that'. ant by that name Retial oe i ta ' po And liss Mi: stoppe ner*behind igs renvecloneeasl ele : La ut I the gate and peeped throug! { igh the ‘ n ar ow evack" To ; ran a iene : .; a s ee a J c there ae anothe1 og o Sick rceping in ¢ c z An Se ee noe ae Face ae friend. lady's Ose one ae aah ; her the noise-that MNke- jing about another maiden jad with NUCH : : néighborhood gossip to repeat. As this age 1M Todi ri ; ested Mis sucind: sity very mtteh, she remained a long time with her"caller really forgetting Doggie darlin' horrid dogs | corner they Mi s 1 ele in ie aS was: aaUp ‘| ir A is su- | garbage can, no lat Puggie - | cinda Lay. "Common mongrels whos gry, but his new acquaintance was.| must| company would contaminate my Jittle | After finding a bone the strange dog- Pug- | doggie darlin'.' who had been named Rodger when he i 4 and of my now. little Wish brother, I had been) instead of ch I had been his little ventured Anna "What fun to I carry one's luncheon." -d it dinner-not luncheon,"'| Grandpapa ‘T doubt if many) little school comrades would| | *jow E And he wa : then right, too ‘ followed . the days-in ; study,) "hich was done aloud. | "Aloud!" exclaimed the interested} trio in a breath ‘Mercy! however! could one hear his own voice?" asked| Anna "Oh, we were used to it," laughe d| with panny, him fact, when ‘And we've he spent was whenever a young," he is while|them in said! the) Their ficial, very action and salty, on here but the never eve consists is very thelr bitte bene- pre-| mood to take us back to those days |scribed duty to the body, washing | we'll trot right along with him, so/thoroughly the sensitive organ, which we will." l'allows noe foreign fluid to do the work Take a sharp-pointed pencil and start "Bless the children," smiled Grand- | Nothing cleanses the eye like a good, from the center of the Maize and draw papa. salty shower bath, and medical art] the way out. hen turn the ree eee And their mother said "Amen." | has followed nature's law in this re- | side down and see what shape it Is in. |