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Show H "SHORTY M'CABE" TALKS. "At 19 I was a full fledged report- B er, as fresh and self confident a pen- B 1 ell pusher as ever turned In copy. B "There I had a stroko of luck. The B editor of that little dally could write B' English clear, concise forceful, B ntraightforward EngHah, He did his B best to make nic 'do IL, too. No B lilghfaluting flowers of rhetoric cs- B caped his blue pencil. The fire which H burned tho .steeple off the Congrcga- H tlonal church did not masquerade In H his columns as 'the devouring elo-R elo-R - in eat' It wok a fire. H "And If I have niiy faculty in the B use of that cort of English IL is bc- Ba cause of tho drifting he gave mo dur- BH Ing the dozen yf ara wu were together j in various cities. Eventually I brought H 4 up In New York. I had lived north, B' -1 cast, south and west. I thought I H was equipped to write fiction. I want- H ed to write IL So I started In. How BL many magazine stories resulted I can- HF not say; never counted them. There Hf; have beion several books, too. Hf-t ' "The character of Shorty McCabc I H r bit on about four years ago, and I've V 1 had heaps of fun with him cvor since. H I 1 Ho has linked me with unseen friends B I . from Tasmania to Vancouvor. HIa B I '' manner of expressing himself. I know, H V must give Hamilton "V. Mable cold H IE stivers up the back; but we can't all H V? ; deal In' delicatessen literature, can H ip 1 t-c?" |