in tho 1ast hm"; of fading day- Ftttht, the Rraniards did precisely what Captain Blood so eonfidentl, counted that they would dtr--preciselr that they mart do to meet the attack, men in all? They have put at least twice that n'muhcr ashore already." Amazed " he wu. his amazement would have F "n deeper had he been told the truth: that them was not a jingle burear, “r or a single gun ashore on Prlvmas. The deception had been complefe. Den Miguel could not (“as that the men he had beheld in thr " pin gua- wv‘re always the same; that on the jou my: to the shore they at and Mood wright in full gimr; and that on the journeys hack to the din they lay invisible " the bottom of the has". which were thus made to .rl-car_orn_rty. _ - _ H - Don . Migm-l had clearly chewed throogh his tot---sst lent a icaen guns. His murlo"~'eco no longer smiled; it wa- a little wrathfnl. "Who WM the fcol who told me that they Wind“!- but thmq hundred men in al'.? Thy have put at least In v Ctrrtt'evrsft to POMS. And at I»! cw: 'f the Spanish ofheers ven- turmi an explanation: “Hwy am going to attach an by land- to alt'mpt to storm the fort." "Of rourw." Tho Admiral smiled. "? had toesritod it. Whom the gods wmld- destvny they that make mad." Put hy evening the Admiral', equa- nimity m- mt quite no perfect. By then tha. piraqm had made a half- down ijrvwrs with their loads of rum. and thy ind landed .ltwr--as ."v Chro,t wno m (won Imdom of the uni ' " tomb to betray Cnptain Bloc! Ind his h-flnws. but fails. Blood nil: to Tor! ma headquarters of huernneers, where he Joins with Levasseur. an- 01' _. :uhvontnrer. Tr," mvernor of Tortuga tries to v.. . an attachment between his, laugh? t Mademoiselle D'Otteron, and lav: or r. He undn'his daughter on a new T" rvnze. guarded by her brother. Io" F' --~vr fnllows and kidnans Mad"- r ' iu-Nv and her brother, and Catpta'n F' was lavas-cur in tt duel to Ir, oN' WITH THE STORY. "WM" the devil does it mean, the Mimi h Admiral naked. No .. mm him, all toing as puv.2!o-r! as he VII him-elf. Aster a. little while, Esteban. who bo ,r! Liv eyes on the water, plucked at h'. um'le'l alcove. "There they p!" ho I‘v'led, nnd pointed. A ni there. indeed, Trent the pin- " aw 4 " tl, 'r way back to the ships. r-t m " It, was observed that they we†nymty. rave for the min who n ov.l chm. Their armed cargo had "on who tom. " Kayo teeth white, hunch we“. aid: We d “b. . . . -,.esen -semeerou'veerkd'e. DOUBLE MINT-m to "member-and hard â€for Superb in Flavour "Mi,illliiiiiil,i,llil) Ill" kFthta( Every cup is a new delight. Ash for it. t' . I alt r I ()dlillgif m" " WiN A 7 ' ( 'ieiiiilllt5, 129 Rafael mam: Cd " PR Fd . f'gt,t.,"5,1,uegt,'g,t,e..., - BEGIN HERE TODAY, evrsri to Pllomns. And who". - [ the ship. they pulled. to ain premtly with 1 fresh fcol who told me but three hundred have put at least . ashore already." which similarly The fume which he Ind enjoyed be rm Me, (mt n it dread, was. In dwarfed into insitrnifknnt:e by the fame that followed. CIIAPTBR XVIII. YME mm. The affair . Maruubo in to be con- s4demd a Captain Blood’s baccalau- Their sloop had enemmtemd and had been sunk three days ago by the Sanw'Nim And those that crawled out after him-the remnants of his crew-- cursed him horribly for the pmilanim- ity which had brought them into the ignommy of owing their delivennec tothmmwh4tmtherhaddeeertedas lost beyond hope. "Slaves." said Wolverstone, and persisted in that belief, cursing Span- ish deviltry until Cahnsac crawled up out of the dark bowels of the ship, and stood blinking in the sunlight. Dismissing the Captain, who went over tho side of the Santo Nino, Cap- tain Blood proceeded to investigate the vatue of this further prize. When her hatches were remov'ed, a human cargo was disclosed in her hold. At first the Spaniard had conceived that she was meeting the victorious Beet of Don Miguel, returning from the destruction of the pirates. When at comparatively close quarters the pennon of St. George soared to the Arabella's masthcgd to disillusion her, tho Sumo Nino these the better part of valor, and struck her flag. Captain Blood ordered her crew to take to the boats, and land themselves at Oruba or wherever else they pleased. Santo Nino, speeding- under niiGiii to re-enforce Don Miguel at Mara- caybo. Under the cover of the darkneu Captain Wood’s fleet weighed anchor quietly. glood's- feet came upon Thus was Don Miguel de Espinoea left to chew the bitter end of a lost opportunity. And whilst they waited them, under cover of the darkness and no the tide began to ebb, Captain Blood’s Beet weighed anchor quietly; and, as once before, with no more canvu spread than that which their writs could Parry, 9.2- as to give them steering way-avr' even these having been painted blaek--the four vessels, with- out a light showing, moped their way by sounding-s to the channel which led to that narrow passage out to sea. The Elizabeth and the Infants. lead- ing side by side, were almost abreast " the Crt hole re their shadowy bulk! and the soft gurgle of water at their y‘raws-z P, 'N' detectvd by the Spaniards, whose arthritic-n until that moment had been all (n the other side. The Elizabeth cmptizrl her larboard guns into the fort as she was swept past on tho swift ebb. rfrsmee, that fleet mm throuirk the nan-(Mr and standdng out to sea. Some slight. damage was sustained by Blocd’s fleet. But the time the Spaniards had resolved their confu- sicn into some order of dangerous Off the coast of Oruba, at the mouth of the Gulf of Venezuela, Captain preparations for which had been so thoroughly simulated. They set them- selves to labor like the damned at was Londrmus guns emphoed to command tho narrow passage out to Thus, when night fell they Mood to their guns. In Tortuga, during the months M'Mlmrd'a Linlment for Toothache. the belated canatia'titemtiN wheat supply won three and a quarter times greater than one us now produclnc, he sold. and in the lat ll! yum one had led the world u o when exporting country. The Canadian when growers would eventually be able to supply the bread require-onto ot 417,000.000 people in addition to Conndn's needs. Vietoritr-Ctutada't, importance now and the greater importance it would assume " r wheat growing country. was dealt with by G. H. Barr, KC., Regina, before the Ptteitie Foreign Ttude Council rocently. He pointed with pride to Suntchownn’s produc- tion of " per cent. ot the wheat growth of Cunndn. Canada is Greatest of Wheat She smiled at little crooked smile. "Such a man is best forgotten." (To be continued.) "He killed a man for her, do you say'?" There was horror now in her "Yer-a French buccaneer named; Lwasseur. He was he girl's lover) and Wood's associate on a venture.) Blood coveted the girl, and killed Le-‘ vasscur to win her." "Who told you?" I "A man who sailed with them, L Frenchman named Cahuaac, whom C found in a waterside tavern in St] Nieholas." ,) tuga? "The same. You see the fellow's well protected. And as for the girl, I'm told she’s a wild piece, fit mate for such a man as Blood. He killed a man to win her." voice "He told it me. That is why I ey.ecmed him-for the calm fortitude with which he bore adversity." His lordship laughed a little. "He has grown rich, I hear. His future father- i-n-law, M. d'0geron, has seen to that." "Bis future fatherilaw?" said she, and stared at him round-eyed, with parted lips. Then added: "M. d’Ogeron? The Governor of Tor- "In those days I esteemed him for an unfortunate gentleman." "You were acquainted with his "And what manner of man did you find him?" story "I wonder now," he said, as they were sauntering on the poop, "if you ever saw this fellow Blood, who was at cm time on your unele's planta- tions as a slave." ""r saw him often. I knew him very well." Miss Bishop was a young woman and a lady. On his side, with his title and position he bore about him the atmosphere of the great world that was little more than a name to her. It is not therefore wonderful that they should have been attracted to each other before the Royal Mary was warped oat of St. Nicholas. The Royal Mary-the vessel bear- ing that ingenious, tolerably accom- plished, mildly dissolute. entirely ele- gant envoy made a good passage to St. Nicholas, her last port of call be.. fore Jamaica. It was understood that as a preliminary Lord Julian should report himself to the Deputy-Gov- ornor at Port Royal, whence at need ho might have himself conveyed to Tortuga. Now it happened that the Deputy-Governor’s niece had come to St. Nicholas some months earlier on a visit to some relatives, and so that she might escape the insufferable heat of Jamaica in that season. The time for her return being now at hand, a pas-sage was sought for her aboard the Royal Mary, and in view of her uncle's rank and position promptly accorded. Lord Julian hailed her adrvent with "tiafaction. _ My Lord Sunderland, the Secretary of State, had appointed a strong man to the deputy-srovernorship of Ja- maiea. This strong man was that Colonel Bishop who for some years now had been the most influential planter in Barbados. _ The third and last of these ships with which we are at present concern- ed was an English man-of-war, which was at anchor in the French port of St. Nicholas. She was on her way from Plymouth to Jamaica, and car- ried on board a very distinguished passenger in the person of Lord Julian Wade, who came charged with a mis. sion of some consequence and delicacy. mites. Aboard the Milag tevindjttire Don Miguel The t Spanish which, frigate oer fleet Antilles. In Europe the news of this Beet, following upon the news of the Spa-n- ish Admiral’s defeat at Maracaybo, produced something of a sensation. spent them retitttntr the three ships he had captured from the fleet that had sane out to destroy him, he found himself almost " object of worship in the eyes of the wild Brethren of the Coast. When no: he sailed away it was with a Beet of fine ships in which went something over a thou- sand men. The three captured Span- ish vessels he had renamed with a certain scholarly humor the Clotho, Laeheo'.s, and Atropos. W' I," second ship was the great galleon, the Milagrosa, accompanied by the smaller Hiddga, lurked off the Gay- Aboard the Milagrosa sailed l Judge H. S. Mott, of the Toronto 'Juvenlk Cotart,utoantmretts that we are itul 1rrins In In use at "inditrested on i His Once, Archbishop Neil McNeil. {pointed out that there is today a weakened some of parents] responsi- bility which he ascribes, in Inge mea- Fa; to the taet tint there no so many uenciea willing to mum the work ot caring 'or and guiding ~chiid- ron“that parents cut their responsi- PPP, on these institutions and or- gunning. Prof. Peter Sandltord ot the Ontario College of Question can that par: ents do not know how to meet their problems. In the past It was easy. Children were’nmply would. He concludes that the knowledge will have to be imparted by an extra- rdmary type ot person. First of all, came a discussion of the present-day parent as compared with the parent ot previous genera- tions. Judge Emily Murphy (Janey Canuck) of Edmonton, declared that as she honestly did not know, it was safer to aey that the present-day father and mother compared more Invonhly. Sir Robert Falconer. President of the University ot Toronto, brought up an interesting point in his general dis- cussion of the question as a whole when he inquired who was to do the) educating. _ l "I should like to ha’ve been educated myself," he notes, "but I neverdpaw the person whom I would be quite willing to accept as my teacher." It is possible here, of course, to make only a rapid-fire review of their comments. Each one answered six questions. Recently a group of leading Cana. dians contributed their personal opini- ons on the matter to a symposium which the Canadian Social Hygient Council prepared. The complete list ot idea. son the subject forms a unique document since the contributors in. elude, judges, educationlsts, medical men. government omcitylts and officials of leading health and welfare organi- zations. . I The problem of supervising mental development and facing the simple. [ii'jij,iiiijj] problems which must! be met are the ones which constitute; a real difficulty. Obviously, solution, ot it involves the education of the par- ent. That is something which has never before been attempted. Therel lis little more than a series of occa- sional experiments on which to base l any plan. The question of how the' work should be done has not yet been; answered nor the question ot who is / to do it. What particular knowledge " is most necessary and which should , {be selected from the host of subjects, ‘which might be dealt with, is still an- ,1 l ther matter for decision. H i Preliminary study of the broad l topic ot parent education is probably 1 further advanced, in some regards,) in Canada, than it is almost anywhere l else in the world. For the past two I years, for instance, the Canadian " Social Hygiene Council has been mak- t ing exhaustive researches. 'l _ By this not meant purely material ot training. matters. In recent years, this aspect‘ "Presently parents," Rho says, of the question has been receiving a /'trre the product of a stern but un- great deal of concentrated attention. tscientitte discipline by their Parents- Mothers are advised regarding diets. They have been given no proper train- Most women make a rather detailed ing to prepare them for the duties or study of the subject of feeding and 'parenthood.' " the primary principles of health and! As to whether or not parent" can there are numerous agencies through be blamed for juvenile ueliuquency--- which accurate information can too,ttte second question discussed-there secured. Ire a variety of opinions. Hon. Dr. ‘ Few Canadians ever face more im- portant responsibilities than thel duties involved in parenthood. Most of us would not think ot playing golf, laying a sidewalk or operating a. eeeond-hand truck without some care- ful preparative tultlon, but we quite} blithely assume control over the des- tinies of members of the next genera†tion with whatever knowledge we sag1 cure by guess or good luck. 1 Sir Robert Falconer, Hon. Dr. W. F. Roberta, Hon. L. A. David, His Grace Archbishop McNeil. Judge Emily Murphy, Prof, Peter sanditord, Dr. J. L. Huges, Judge H. B. Mott, Judge Margaret Patterson, Judge J. F. Mc. Kinley, Judge Helen McGlll. on "Parent Education." The value ot each of the the an- nual Nobel prizes will this year be 832,478, according to the most recent calculation based on the total earn- ings of the estate ot the late Alfred Nobel. who founded thb prizes 25 years ago. While the peace prize I: paid in Stockholm. the winner is se- lected, according to Nobel's will try a Norwegian committee, appointed by the Storting. Prize Winner Btockholm--tir Robert Baden.. Powell, founder ot the Boy Scouts movement, has been formally nomin- ated as a candidate for the next Nobel Peace Prize. It is believed here that the world wide Scout organization backs the nomination.\ Earlier in the summer Sir Robert visited Stockholm and took part in the international ttun. boree attended by more than 3.000 Scouts from many different countries. Are Present Day Parents Alive to Their Responsibilities or Are They Assuming Duties Unprepared Baden-Powell Named " Nobel :DtSahall's Should Parents Be Re-Educated? Put on: on -dll pain a (one Grace Emily Dr. J. Judge i On the tAttt:t definition of the words WW.“ ot c'ontrmtlng material give a .“Parent education," too, depends the Tod/tl! waistcoat ethrt, and the krmt age at which various members of this dart-fitted sletvrs "re finished with group think the training should rtart.i5-_hnped Cuffs. A belt fastens at the Without exception, they agree that it made scams and ties in a chic low at should commence before marriage.lthe back. No. 1571 is in 93195 38, ESome suggest at 12 years of anal“), 42, 44, 46 and 48 inehirs bust. Sizt :Others propose that it commence in :40 renuirrs 3% yards 39-inch mater- ithe secondary schools. The concen- I ial, m' 2% yards 64-inch, and lh yard sus ot opinion is that it training tor/ff or 30-ineh contrasting material fparenthood could be started now; (cut etmsswir:c). Price 20 cents the :among the present problems facing pattern. the parents of today would automati-' ‘cally be eliminated. ( HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. i Part of Professor Sanditord’n state- w?†your name and Idling. pinin- tmentl on the matter are worthy of ly, trwtne number and lilo of melt speck! note. "Seventy years ago.†he patterns " pu want. EWING Me in Intel, “Spencer pointed "out that we 31an or com lettht profeemd; VIrIp trained people " it they wore never it earefunr) for mil Ninth! and to be the parents of children. The .e.e" your order to Pattern Dept., whole subjecbhu been taboo, simply Wilson Ptrirtiahintt Co., " Weet Ad.. beam - m tnboo." ‘lnido Bt., Toronto. Putters: sent by Hon. L. A. mm. mum“ Btrere- mm ntait. . my or Quebec, not: that meme ail ------+---- which such mining should m " " . [iii) nimopt entirely in the 'ct/ct, 'l'h'U"a,t"tt to m " “I. am: or the individual ettiid. 4.... " - --; 1,PS',tt?Totte I Judge Helen McGill, of Vancouver, B.C., notes that the discussion of par- ental neglect goes back into antiquity. ‘Adam and Eve, in fact, were obvious- Jr not perfect parents. The question ot responsibility for delinquency dates 'back to the tirgt generation in the 'world's history. Hon. Mr. David, too, in expressing. the opinions. ot mutually all m. WM when, In touching on the tinert question under ditrcutusion, he iii) that health should undoubtedly be one of the maior topics in any parent edu- cution scheme. A majority ot the. group. novevor. qualify their auto-i metn_trr noting that tho sponsors ot _ On one questinon ie,?",', is complete unanimity. Eveiy wr or who has con- tributed his or her opinions regiisters a belief in the principle ot parent edu- cation. The problem of what it should include, however, brings vary- ing opinions and is, chiefly, too in. voluved a one to deal with a few sentences. I Whether or not the parent can mould the child's character as; desired was another point considered. To quote Hon. Dr. Roberts again, he em- praslzes the necessity of frank and free education tirttt. Archbishop Mc- Neil discusses the need of creating an attitude of respect in the child's mind trom the earliest infancy. Prof. Sanditord adds that it would be well, i nthis connection, to remember that there are children's rights as well as the rights of parents. Dr. James, L. Huge objects to the word "mould" and would substitute "develop" instead. Prof. Sandiford draws attention to the fact that tho blame, to a great ex- tent, 15 due. to changing nodal condi» Hons. Judge McKinley lists as the prime causes of delinquency: Dieeasse, ignorance and parent neglect. I As to whether or not parents can be blamed for juvenile delinquency--- ‘the second question discussed-there are a variety of opinions. Hon. Dr. Roberts, ot St. John, N.B., voices what is the general view, when he says: "To a very marked extent. parents' time in being taken up with the de- mands made upon them by society and with amusement, resulting in a lack of good home inttuenee." I Dr. Margaret Patterson, Judge of the Toronto Women's Court, repeats the contention of other writers when she states that the average parents of to-day are helpless because of lack of training. Dr. James L. Hughes holds that most of the training Is now better than it was. Until recently all child training was negative-and, there. fore, nil. portunitles." New fields of enjoyment have been opened up and the word "home" does not mean the tour walls that it did in times gone by. Judge J. F'. McKinley. of Ottawa, says that parents have always been neglectrul but that the children of today are tac. ing a great many more temptations than those of earlier generations. Dealer-"That, air, is a rare old re- volver. It was carried by Christopher Columbus." Customer-"What'. Why, revolvers were not invented in Colum- bus's time." Dealer---', know. That's what makes this one so rare." Other manifestations of the rabbit. without any qualifying adjective of locality, present the little animal as "beaverette," "chinchillette," "eonr" "electric bepver," "mole," and "seal," "erminette," "motrkin," "mollne." "minhonr," "sealette," "sealine," "squirrelette," "squirrellue," and "vis- onette." The rabbit also masquerades as "French chinchilla," and “Arctic seal," "AuMralian seal," and "Bay seal." Watthintrton--Rabtrit skins are being sold under a "rfetr of name, trom "Baltic lion" to "Baltic tiger," accord- ing to a. report by the Biological Sur- vey undo public by the Department ot Atrrieulture. With the prenex ot "Baltic," in tact, bunny masquerades as everything from a leopard, a. black, brown, red ard white fox, to a seal. All these transropmitions are made from rabbit furs variously dyed and treated. TORONTO of the rabbit, Fur “_Mln.1rd'o â€all.“ to: 'Astlmu. that he was married." "irivi%riiri addres- u once. [mat at him In- meduuly how he man-M It." that every I'm-phony In: a wor- In It. (Thai-min»eg simple is tho smart dress shown here and a style tasily f as'rione j by the home modiste. There is an invested plait " each side of the from paricl, and the back irs in one piece. Tho long rolling collar and vestee of contrasting material give u modiah waistcoat efhet, and the long dart-fitted sleeves are fmishcd with shaped cuffs. A belt fastens " the side scams and ties in a chic bow at the back. No. 1571 is in sizes 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and " inehit bust. Size 40 requires 3% yard: 39-inch mater- ial, or 2% vvHdtrtr4-,"meh, and % yard M or 39-inch contacting material These few excerpts from the com- pteto set of comments. while neces- sarily scanty, give a comparatively comprehensive survey of the results of this parent education survey. it should be distinctly noted, however, that, in preparing it, the Canadian Social Hygiene Council spec'siims that the comments are in no way intended as a ttcient/tlc treatise. Before con- tinuing further with parent education research, the Council felt that the opinion of the Canadians whose word carries weight would be of incalcul- able aid in evolving a plan ot action. Summing it all up. the views which the Canadlan Social Hygiene Council has secured in these teatime by lead- ing Canadians all tend to the feeling that the development of some ei11itfent system of training adults and adoles- cents tor parentltcoU is an immediate need, but a. problem, moreover, which requires the most export considera- tion. Judge Margaret Patterson, for example. declares: "Children cannot be brought up in the spare time. " is a full-time Job.." any such movement, while putting sumcient stress on the leaching ot health, should make certain that the physical in not allowed to overshadow the mental, moral and spiritual as- pects ot things. Wilson Publishing Company A poo-lulu In a mu who A SMART DAYTIME DRESS - *w' w... -- I q"aE"MTNd but the â€wells: on, a." Pttrittr--'ttt tor gum" " not Inclination to apply What to [unpaid mutter-u. In truth, the British Emph- would be when but for the Cm and the atatremitting and“ of the Sourcing and tha Stent Funny for our tetio--subjcsetr, 1570“! um all their concerns. Royal Funin in everything (but corp earns the Over-en: Empire with the within “nuance and looming indif- (Renee of most party politicians who no no mum and overwhelmed by than common but and daily round that â€in, in. neither time, energy. not Ittetinatioet to npply mum 9}}:ng mutton. In truth. the National Review: We have fre- quently heard returning Colonial Got - emu, And Go-Ori-General, cow taut the close And intimate knowr t.1tt.ed Ell-but“! humans of our Cloudeelcy Brenton in th: (fun temporary Review: Like the poor, til: present generation are always with us. end Just as opinions of thy por vary from the Tennysonizm dictrm, of regarding thm as bad in the lump to the soapbox orator's cliche of thvi. being a aort of exclusive and ities, toustible reservoir of all the natinnN virtues. so have the opinions of tir. younge genention, upecinlly in thes formative years, been equally dive, At one extreme w: have had the chi fashioned belief that the child is . potential criminal, end nothing but the right envimnment on quarantine lines can prevent his evil ature com- ing out. At the other extreme We have had the Bone-ecu dogma that he is born good. and that Anything that goes t"oeur with him is the fault of his envimnGent. a hill and a hill" 1nd back ugmnr for this iitheir trirthrt'ght-"The wo ' I with all its grace of meaning an! melody is the heritage of all of 1h.- chlidten of men." children of men." We have let the children in-- th: chokes, their desires, their taupe n all considered. We allow them make- wee small poems of their .--. to close their eyes and see and for their own pictures. to daved afar bb, ships. We are living in a new era of (-1: and Joy through our conlvmyw- poets. Robert Prost, Vachel Lima: Carl Sandburg, Amy Lureâ€. My“ Vincent Milky, Burn Teasdal: _ all the rent. have given to us a l solace. a sweet nectar to trip. it taken In nil into the land of “lit color- ant! stories." And the littrarlatttr, blme thrn. have poeped right over the adult \\ straight into the hearts of the t dren. They have brought to the ratio. the poetry written not ah children, but for children. Thry helping the children to look tor t somathing in poetry that they I And have you quite recently i your children laugh and chuck." old Jim Jar, or live again with old My who want blackberry I ir' ‘tallvuy over tram Iver!) L. . lug“? Yes. the wee-small (il. l? opened. Our children are rrlivi, deuce. rediscovering the toil: _ It entering the poetry kingdom. are learning to express thorns 's, "pull cut" ot their Belt-eonsrui 's'. and to weave their own dreams. l own times. their own aspiration, 1 very salve: into patterns ot beam: Do the children not have thrir nun choices. their own mates. their 1.. friends canon. the poets? Han- tt l watched your little child claim†in, "other Goose, dear old 'Molhor um. . when every line tsparkles with q‘... L uni queer "naming. whtcr. 11.: am Ire u tine In any we can 'f": ', our children? Have you soâ€: tcr-., tree for more and more of that other child, tar, far and: that in another garden Hun that little, child tLat Stow-mun , , turel to us so Bympathrtiedl.v, L. small horizon, his tiny exquis‘n tl Jects ot fancy, " ('iovu tros ,'.,. rainpool seal? " II lard to; the Child to 1111‘ A stand the coldly technical 3mm l our education] training mu 891nm to rob him ot IO much Joy. 1: L, hard tor him to undeanam: th mother and the camber who 1r .-r on getting an the exact mummy t' tho arrinted page, divulging th, up: of the message, when he so mu', T I ~. (an that everything be not explanw , "In the unexplained lies his arm‘- :' plenum.†ttFest With their [nut-eats Linux." 1y eottttttqd to the mystery. t; ln phyroom. or to the fence about 2.1 garden, their cauclti for enjugnmt is often trreater thftt ours, for C.cur: in natural and sincere, tree from. m; prejudicg or unfortunate tri:; ll, They m (tumble ot-ttsinking n may. acting their poetry. Bomeone bu. told us the poetry nnd children belong together becuuw they on the two loveliest things in the world. How no we going to b: ing them mu clout? How an we going to om wlde and mu wider The wee small door When nomeono come- knocking! Those of III who hare the pm of play. who love to do what childn I. do, who feel 5nd nee and live ,rlth than. know that children are just naturally hem. joyou- nnd plum. The Present Generation in music or in beautiful fri The Child's Joy in Poetry Royal Vigilance u “'0 Wald credit .‘ . nte. “ligament r--", glider-um: than " CO - ll Kee “United w main: d and “perk with the uh " tollowti: he Putnam north country out in the Stan ot th was othe t' hm e nqu‘ tor tl mun! etbl I'D Io te ft ll Morrissey Expedition Visits Nearly " h .ny “or†“um “up; continuou- your. nor ot I!!! ecu-III tttoq6 od my; one other mu mm! of use»: The - tatt tl “In†more h|llll7\l u. hunting quarter' than l homes. and canaldernbly " dun our undersundlnx or 1 ac rennin: of Norse In! Greenland. 1 "Then II no Whack} Any Nora â€tut-non! In “an: continuously for not yen. nor or m "on. , con-II: thou o! In! “4 And! nle other much hurl " wt Strange R a mu