I- THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CUAKLUTTE, N. C, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 26, 1921. 4-B Illustrated by Fontaine Fox THF.B I .LCALLED -K U ' - r : i , 1 I ! j i , 3 I 5 I i w E WERE sitting at a corner table In 'a certain small res taurant hard by where Sixth Ave.'s L structure, like over grown straddleburg, wades through the restless currents of Broad way at a sharpened angle. The dish upon which we principally dined was called on the menu Chicken a la Ma rengo. We knew why. Marengo, by all accounts, was a mighty tough bat tle, and this particular chicken, wo judged, had never had any refining in fluences in its ill-spent life. From its present defiant attitude in a cooktd form we figured it had pipped the shell with a burglar's shimmy and joined the Dominecker Kid's gang bo fore it shed its pin feathers. Ther were two of us engaged in the fruit less attack upon its sinewy tissues the present writer and his old un-law-abid-Ing friend Scandalous Doolan. For a period of minutes Scandalous wrestled with the thews of one of the embattled fowl's knee joints. After a struggles in which the honors stood practtcallv even, he laid down his knife and flirted a thumb toward a bottle of peppery sauce which stood on my side of the table. "Hey, bo," he requested, "pass the liniment, will you? This sea gull's got the rheumatism." The purport of the remark, taken in connection with the gesture which ac companied it, was plain enough to my understanding; but tor tne nonce i could not classify the idiom in which Scandalous couched this request. It could not be Underworld jargon: it was too direct and at the same time t'vj picturesque. Moreover the Underworld, as a rule, concerns itself only with altering such words and such expres sions as strictly figure in the business affairs of its various crafts and pur suits. Nor to me did it sound like the language of the circus-lot, for in such case-jt probably would have been more complex. So by process of elimination I decided it was of the slang code of the burlesque and vaudeville stago, .with which, as with the other two, Scandalous had a thorough acquaint ance. I felt sure, then, that something had set his mind to working backward along the memory-grooves of some ono or another of his earlier experiences in the act-producing line of endeavor, arid that, with proper pumping, a story might be forthcoming. As it turned out, I was right. "Where did you get that one, Scan dalous?" I asked craftily. "Your own coinage, or did you borrow it from somebody else?" He only grinned cryptically, After a bit he hailed the attendant waiter, who because he plainly suffered from fallen arches had already been rechristened by Scandalous as Battling Insteps. "Say, Battling," he said, "take away the emu; he's still the undefeated champion of the ages. Tidy him up a little and serve him to the next gvy that feels like he needs exercise more'n he does nourishment. The gravy may be mussed up a trifle, but the old ring general aint lost an ounce. I fought him three rounds and didn't put a bruise on him." "Couldn't I bring you somethin' else?" said the waiter. "The Weiner Schnitzel with noodles is very" "Nix," said" Scandalous; "if the casso wary licked us, what chance would we stand against the bison? That'll be all for the olio; I'll go ' right into the Rfter-show now. Slip me a dipper of straight chicory and one of those Flor de Boiled Dinners, and then you can break the bad news to my pal here." By this I knew he meant that ha craved a cup of black coffee . and one of the domestic cigars to which he was addicted, and that I could, pay the check.' . . ' , ? . He turned to me: "How're you goin' to finish your turn?" he asked. "They've got mince Windy was the only parent Emily ever knew, phe having been left a helpless orphan on account of a railroad wreck to the old Van Or ten show back yon der in eighteen-eightx-something. So Windy, he took her as a prattling in fant in arms when she didn't weigh an ounce over a ton and a half, and he adopted her and educated her and pam pered her and treated her as a menv ber of 'his own family, "only better, until she repaid hni by becoming not only the largest bull in the busin-iS3 but the most highly cultivated. "Emily knew nearly everything thera was to know, and what she didn't know she suspected very strongly. Likewise, as I came to find out later, she was extreiriely grateful for small favors and most affectionate by nature. To be sure, being affectionate with a bull about the size and general speci fications of a furniture-car had its drawbacks. She was liable to lean un against you in a playful, kittenish kind of a way, and cave in most of your ribs. It was like have a violent flirta tion with a landslide to venture up close to Emily when she was in one of her tomboy moods. I've known her to nudge a friend with one of her front elbows and put both his shoulder blades out of socket. But she never meant no harm by it, never. It was just a little way she had. "It seems like Windy and Emily were .liming to join out that season with a tent-show, but the deal fell through some way, and for the past few weeks Windy had been infesting a lodging-hous for members of the profession over here on East Elev enth otreet, and Emily had been 'n a livery barn down in Greenwich Vil lage, just naturally eating her old India-rubber head off. Windy, having run low as to coin, wasn't able to psy up Emily's back board, and the livery man was holding her for the bill. "So, hearing some way that I'm fairly well upholstered with currency, he comes to me and suggests that if I'll dig up what's necessary to get Emily out of hock, he can snare i line of bookings in vaudeville, and we'll all three go out on the two-a-day together, him as a trainer and me as manager and Emily as the princi pal attraction. The proceeds is to be cut up fifty-fifty as between me and him. "The notion don't sound like such a bad one. That was back in the days when - refined vaudeville was running very strongly to trained-animal acts and leading ladies that had quit lead ing but hadn't found out about it yet. Nowadays them ex-queens of tragedy can go into the movies and draw down so much money that if they only get half as much as they say they're getting, they're getting almost twice as much as anybody would give 'em; but them times, vaudeville was their one best bet. And next to emotional actrines who could emosh twice dal'y for 20 minutes on a stretch, without giving way ar.y where, a good trained animal turn had the call. It might be a troupe of educated Potomac shad or an educated ape or a city -broke Gil, monster or ,a talking horse or what not. In our case 'twas Emily, the bull. "First thing, we goes down to the livery-stable where Emily is spending the Indian summer and consuming half her weight in dry provender ev ery 24 hours. The proprietor of this here fodder-emporium is named Mc Guire, and when I tells him I'm there to settle Emily's account in full, he carries on as though entirely ove: come by joyfulness--not that he's gst any grudge against Emily, understand but for other good and abundant suf ficiencies. He state that so far as Emily's personal conduct is concerned, ' during her, enforced sojourn in his midst, she's always deported herself like a perfect lady. But she takes up an awful lot of room, and one of tin hands is now on the verge of nervous ?Le,he I? JES6 Prostration from overexertions incurred careful it don't explode in your hand." I shook my head. "I'll nibble at these," I said, "until you get through." And I reached for a little saucer of salt ed peanuts that lurked in the shadow of the bowl containing the olives and celery. For this, you should know, was a table d'hote . establishment, and no such place is complete without its drowned olives and its wilted celery. "Speaking of peanuts," he said, "I don't seem to care deeply for such. I lost my taste for them dainties quite some time back-" "What was the occasion?" I prompt ed, for I saw the light of reminiscence smoldering in his eye. "Jt wasn't no occasion," he said; "it was a catastrophe. Did I ever happen to tell you about the time I furnish the financial backing for Windy Jordan anj his educated bull, and what hap pened when the blow-off came?" I shook my head and in silence heark ened. 'It makes quite an earful," he con tinued. "Business for gents in my pro. fession was very punk here on the Main Stem that season. By reason of the dishonest police it was mighty hard for an honest grafter to make a living. It certainly was depressing to trim an Ezra for his roll and then have to cut up the net proceeds with so many cen tral-office guys that you had to go back and borrow car-fare from the sucker to sret home. Besides, t was somewhat lonely ana low in my peace of mind on account of my regular side-kick the Sweet Caps Kid being in the hospital He'd made the grievous mistake of try ing to sell a half -interest in the aquar ium to a visiting Swede. Right in the middle of the negotiations something came up that made the Swede doubtful that all was not well, and he betrayed his increasing misgivings by hauling out a set of old-fashioned genuine an tique brass knucks and nicking up Sweet Caps' scalp to . such . an extent mv unfortunate companion had to spend three weeks on the flat pf his back in the casualty ward, with a couple of doctors coming in every morning to replace tne aivots; .fena- ing his recovery, I was sort of figuring on visiting Antioch, Gilead, Zoon and other religious towns up State with a view of selling the '"-haymakers some. Bermuda oats for their fall planting, when along: came W4ndy Jordan and broached a proposition "This here Windy Jordan was one of them human draughts; hence the name. At all hours there was a strong breeze blowing out of him in the form of words. If he wasn't conversing, it was a sign he had acute sore throat. But to counteract that fault he was the sole proprietor of the smartest and the largest bull on this side of the ocean, which said bull answered to the name of Emily." "Did you say a bull?" i asked. "Sure I said a bull. Why not? Ain't you wise to what a bull is?" "Certainly I am, but a bull named Emily " "Listen, little one; To them that fob low after the red wagon and the white top, all elephants Is bulls, disregardless of genders, just the same as all regu lar bulls is he cows to refined maiden ladies residin in New England and points adjacent. Only, show-people ain't got any false modesty that way. In the show-business a bull is a bull, whether it's a lady-bull or a gentlemih bull. So very properly this here bull, being one of the most refined and cul tured members of her sex, answers to the Christian name of Emily. MORE d-rfbh!aho ."Well, 4bis Emily is not only the Joy and the pride of Windy Jordan'3 life, but she's nis entire available a it Bets. Bull and bulline, she'd been with kim Xxona early childhood. In fact. in packing hay to her, and it seems she's addicted to nightmares. Sh: gets to dreaming that a mouse nearly an inch and a half long is after her all bulls is terrible afraid, you know. that some day a mouse is going to come along and eat 'em--and when she has them kind of delusions, sh cries out in her sleep and tossf-s around and maybe knocks down a cou ple of steel beams or busts in a row of box-stall or something trivial like that. Then, right on top of them pe: ty annoyances, McGuire some davs previous has made the mistake of fesd ing Emily peanuts, which peanuts, ad he then finds out, is her favorite tid bit. " 'Gents," says McGuire to me and Windy Jordan, 'I shore did make the error of my life when I don that act of kindness. I merely meant thrn peanuts as a special treat, but "Emily figures it out that they're the- start of a fixed habit,' he says. 'Ever since thm, if I forget to bring her in asr ""five cent bag of peanuts per diem, per d.iy, she calls personally to inquire into the oversight. She waits very patient and ladylike until about eleven o'clock in the morning, and if I airt't made good by then, she just pulls up her le nob ble by the roots and drops in on mp to find out what's the meaning of the delay. " 'She ain't never rough nor ovr bearinsr. but it interferes with trade for me to be sitting here in my office at the front of the stable talking busi ness with somebody, and all of a sud den the "front half of the largest ..Eat Indian elephant in the world shovvs three or four thousand pounds of her self in at that side door and begins wav ing her trunk around in the air, mean while uttering fretful, complaining sounds. I've lost two or three custo mers that way. he says. 'They get right up and go away sudden," he says, 'and they don't never come back no more, not even for their hats and um brellas. They send for 'em. " 'That ain't the worst of it,' he fays. 'Yesterday,' he says, 'I rented out my whole string of coaches and teams for a burial turnout over here on McDou'Vl street. Being as it's a big occasion, I'm driving: the first carriage contain ing the sorrowing family of deceased. Naturally with a job like that on my hands, I don't think about Emily at all; my mind's all occupied up with making the affair pass off in a tasty and pleas ant fashion for all concerned. Well, the .cortege is just leaving the late resi dence of the remainders, 'vhen around the corner comes bulging ISmtly, follow ed at a suitable distance by eight or nine thousand of the populace. She's missed me; and now, by heck, she's found me. "'Emily gives a loud, glad snort of recognition, wheels, herself around and then falls in alongside the front hack and gets ready to accompany us, all the time poking her snout over at me and utterina: plaintive remarks In East In dian to me. Gents,' he says, 'you can see for yourselves, a thing like that occurring right at the beginning of a funeral procession, is calculated to dis tract popular attention away from the main attraction. Under the circum stances I wouldn't blame no corpse on earth for feeling jealous let alone a popular and prominent corpse like this here one was, a party that had been a district leader at Tammany Hall in his day, "and after that the owner of 'the most fashionalbe retail liquor store in the entire neighborhood, and who's now riding along with solid silver handles up and down both sides, and style lust wrote all over him. Here, with an utter disregard for expense, he's put ting on all this dog for his last public appearance and a strange elephant comes along and grabs the show right away from him. " 'The bereaved family don't care for it, neither. I gathers as much from the remarks they're making out of the windowg of the coach. But Emily just won't talte a hint.' She sticks along until I stops the procession and goes in a Italian fruitstore on the nest block and buys her a bag of peanuts. That's all she wants. She takes it, and she leaves us and goes on back to the stable. '"But, as the feller says, it practj. cally ruined the entire day for them berefts. I lost their patronage right there and them a nice family, too. A lot of he friends and relatives also re sented it; they were telling me so all the way back from the cemetery. There ain't no Teal harm in Emily, and I've got powerfully attached to her, but taking one thing with anoth er, I ain't regrettin' none that you'va come down all organized financially to take her out of pawn. You- have my best wishes, and so has she.' "So we settles up the account to date, which the same makes quite a nick in the bank-roll, and then we goes ba,vk to the rear of the stable where Emily is quartered, and she falls on Windy's neck, mighty nigh dislocating It, and he introduces me to Emily, and wa shakea hands together I mean trunks and then Windy unshackkles hor. and she follows us along just as gen tle as a kitten to them freight-yards over on Tenth Avenue where her fu. ture travelling home is waiting for her. It's a box-car, with one end rigged up with bunks as a boudoir for me and Windy, and the rest of it fitted out as if i oil fe " i mm I 1 here s some scenery in her way, and some furni ture and props, but she don't trouble to go round significant facts. For one thine ain't eatin' sacks and all am miH she's emptying the peanuts om0 throwing the paper bags aside T-n(i wise her work ain't clean an , Llk like it was. Her underlip is J1mQt1' down, and she's beginning tn l'ng loose goobers off the lower end 01 and her low . but intelligent W is all furrowed up as if thought. ith fleet "Observing all of which, i Mv. 4 myself, I says: . 'If ever Emiiv 1 ft start to cramp, the world's cram ul1 record is also in a fair way busted this afternoon. I Certaii 1)6 hope,'' I says, 'that Emily Sj and get overextended.' 1 So 'You. see, I'm trusting for the t . because I realizes that it would' 1' middle of it on account of th do e 01 ivviiiij, o cure 10 folfn "ft e disap. ain' passed in review vet ,-n.f01)n v,. ' "u le gen. lu j-gjj T". ""y tots that tnts ha va print hv urttu . u -till 'uc DVB em a private state-room for Emily. "From that time on, for quite a spell, we're just the same as one big happy family, as we goes a jauntily touring from place to place. "We're playin' the Big Time, which means week stands and no hard jumps. ' Emily's a hit, a knock-out and a riot wherever she appears. She knows it too, but success don't go tc her head, and she don't never get no attacks of this here complaint which they calls temper'ment. I always fin gered out that temper'ment, when "a grand wopra singster has it, is just plain old temper when it afflicts -a bricklayer. I don't know what form it would take if it should seize on a bull, but Emily- appears to be absolutely immune. Give her' a ton of hay and one sack of peanuts a day, and she's just as placid as a great gross of guinsa pigs. Behind the scenes she never makes no trouble, but chums with the stage-hands and even sometimes with the actors, thus proving that she aint stuck up. "When the time comes for Emily to do her turn,' she just goes ambling ci behind Windy and cuts up more didoc. than any trick-mule that ever lived. She smokes a pipe, and she toots on a brass horn, and waits on table while Windy pretends to eat, and stands oh her head, and plays baseball with him and so forth and so on, for 15 minutes, winding up by waving the Amurikin flag over her head. But .L this time she's keeping one eye on me, where I'm standing in the wings with a sack of peanuts in my pocket wait ing for her to come off. Every time ' r ii i 1 1 1 - - , - . i r . .. ... ; s ; v - , ,, I I j ,f SSSST ' i-".? Hmrit Mini- c;a. - ' r t , . in. ill' jT r . ... . -- , WfuG Til IS taraapMr Sy'W ' "Emiljrmakesa ; T f -A side-swipe at a stout & . gent who's in the 1$ , y act of climbing a 7 Sh V" & ;: fa i telegraph pole.'" S? ' j ( she works over toward my side of the stage, she makes iittle hoydenish re marks to me in her native language. It aint long until I can make out v erything she says. I've been pedding the bull too long not to be able to un derstand it when spoke by a native. "For upwards of two months things goes, along just beautiful. Then w strikes a town out in Illinois where business aint what it used to be, Af in deed it ever was. Along about the mid dle of the week the young feller that's doing the press-work for the house comes to me and asks me if I ain't got an idea in my system that might make a good press-stunt. "There's an inspiration comes to nv and I suggests to him that maybe ne might go ahead and make an announce ment that following the Saturday mat. inee, Emily the Pluperfect, Ponderous, Pachydermical Performer, direct from the court of the reigning Roger of Simla County," India, will hold a recep tion on the stage to meet her little friends, each and every one. of whom will be expected to bring her a bag of peanuts. " 'That listens all right, says the lad, 'but providing she likes peanuts. " 'Providing she likes 'em?' I says 'Son,' I says, 'if "that bull ever has to take the cure for the drug-habit, it"l be on account of peanuts. If you don't think che likes peanuts, a sim will win you a trip to the Holy Lands,' I gays. 'Why, I says, 'Emily's middle name is Peanuts. Offhand,' I says. 'I don't know precisely how many peanuts there are,' I says, 'because if X ever heard the exact figures, I've forgot but I'd like to lay you a little eight to five that Emily can chamber all the peanuts in the world and then set down right where she happens to be, to wait for next year's crop to come onto the market. That's how much she cares for peanuts,' I says. "Well, that convinces him, and he hurries off to write his little piece about Emily's peanut reception. The next day, which is Friday, the an nouncement is in. both the papers. Sat urday after lunch when I strolls round to the show-shop for the matinee, on-3 glance around the corner from the stage entrance proves to me that our little social function is certainly start ing out to be a success. The. street r. front is lined on both sides with dagos with peanutstands, selling peanuts to the population as fast as they can pas3 'em out; and there's a long line, mainlv kids, at the box-office. I goes on in and takes a flash at the front of the house through the peephole in the cur tain, and' the place is already jam full. If there's one kid out there, there's a thousand," and every tiny tot has got a sack of peanuts clutched in his or her chubby fist, as the case may lja. And say, listen: there's a smell in the air like a prairie fire running through a Georgia goober-king's plantation. "I goes to where Emily is hitched, and, she's Weaving to and fro on her legs and watering at the mouth until she just naturally can't control her own riparian rights. She's done smelt that smell too. " 'Honey gal,' I says to her, 'it shore looks to me like you're, due tr get your fullupances of the succuiential grouhd-pea of the Sunny Southland this day.' - "She's so grateful she tries to kis me, but I ducks. All through her turn she dribbles from the chin like a de fective fire-hydrant, and I can tell that she aint got her mind on her busi ness. She's too busy thinking about peanuts. When she's got through and taken her bows, the manager leaves the curtain up ' and EfhUy steps back be hind a rope that a couple of the hanjs stretches acrosst the stage, with me standing on one side of her and Windy on the other and then a' couple move hands shoves a wooden runway acrojst the orchestra rail down into one of the side aisles and 4hen the house-manager Invites Emily's young friend? to march up the runway and acrosst over from left to right, handing out their free will offerings to her as they pass. "During this pleasant scene, as the manager . explains. Emily's dauntless owner, the world-famous Professor 2on davesta Jordan, meaning Windy, will lecture eti the size, dimensions, habits and quaint peculiarities of this won drous creature. That last part suits Windy right down to the ground, him being, as I told you before, the kind of party who's never so happy as when he's, started his mouth and . gone away and left it running. "For maybe a half a minute aftT the house-manager finishes his little spiel, the kids sort of hang back. Then the rush starts; and take it from me, little one, it's some considerable rush. Here thev come up that runway tiny tots in biue, and tiny tots in red, and tiny, tots in white; tiny tots with their parents, guardians or nurses, and tiny tots without none; tiny tots that are be ginning to outgrow the tiny tottering stage, and other varieties of tiny tots too numerous to mention, and clutched in each hand isva bag of peanuts, five cent size or ten-cent size, but mostly five-cent size. As Emily sees' 'em com ing, she smiles until she looks in the face like one of these here old-fashioned red-brick, Colonial fireplaces, with an overgrown black Christmas stocking hanging down from the center of the mantel. - ' ; "Up comes the first " and foremost "of the tiny tots. The Santy Claus stock ing reaches out and annexes the free will offering. There's a faint crunching sound; that there sack 'of peanuts has went to the bourne from out which no peanut, up until that time, has ever been known to return; and Emily is smiling benevolently and reaching out for the next sack. And behind the second kid is the third kid, and behind the third kidr still more kids, and as far as the human eye can. reach, there ain't nothing on the horizon of that show-shop but just kids kids and pea nuts. ; i "It certainly was a beauteous spec tacle to behold so many of the dear little ones advancing up that runway with peanuts. To myself, I says: '1 guess I'm a bad little suggester, " eh, what? Here's Easily getting all this free provender and Windy talking hjs fool head off and the house getting all this advertising and none of us out a cent for any part of it.' In about ten minutes, though, I'm struck by the fact that Emily's original outburst of enthusiasm appears slightly on the wane. It seems to me she ain't reaching out for the free-will offerings with quite so much eagersomeness as she was displaying a spell bacfl. Also I takes notice that the wrinkles in her tumtum are filling out so that she's beginning to 4ose some of that deflated or punctured look so common amongst bulls. "Still, I don't have no apprehensions, but thinks to myself that any bull which can eat half a ton of hay for breakfast certainly is competent to take in a couple of wagon-loads of pea nuts for five-o'clock tea. Even at that I figgers that it wont do any harm to coach Emily alon a little. '"Go to it, baby mine,' I says to. her. 'You ain't hardly started. . Here's a chance,' I says, 'to establish a new world's record for peanuts.' "That remark appears to spur her Up for a minute or so, but something seems to keep on. warning me that her heart ain't in the work to the extent it has been. Windy don't see nothing but of the way, he being congenially engaged in shooting off his face, but I'm more or pgw nrT-nd hv certain mighty " . Hue waiting thpif turn, when there halts in front , Emily a fancy-dressed tiny tot whiC he must've been the favorite tinv S of tho richest man in town, beW he's holding in his hands a peanuts fully a foot deep, it couLwi of cost a cent less'n half a dollar th . bag. Emily reaches for the oontS tion, fondles it for a second or twi" and starts to upsend it down her tw and then with a low, sad, hopeless m she drops it on the stage and sort S shrugs her front legs forward an stands there with her head bent ani her ears twitching same as if she's iit ening for something that's still a al ways off but coming closer fast Anfl at that precise instant I sees the first cramp start from behind her righthanJ shoulderblade and begin to work south Say, it was just like being present at the birth of an earthquake. "Moving slow and deliberate Emllv turns around in her tracks, shiverne all over,, and then I sees the eraran ripple along until it reaches her carm hold arid strikes inward. it lifts all four of her feet clean off the floor and -when she comes down again she comes down traveling. There's some scenery In her way, and some furnl. ture and props and one thing and an other, but she don't trouble to g0 round 'em. She goes through 'em as being a more simple and direct way and a minute later she steps out through' the stage entrance into the crowded marts of trade with half of a cottage flat hung around her neck. n ana winay is trailing aiong, urging her to be ca'm but keeping at a reasonably safe distance 'while doing so. Behind us as we comes forth we can hear the voices of many tiny tots upraised in skeered cries. 'Being a Saturday afternoon, the bus iness section is fairly well crowded with people, and I suppose it's only na tural ' that the unexpected appearance upon the main street of the largest bull in captivity, wearing part of a set of scenery for a collar .and making sounds through her snout like a switch engine in distress, should t;ause some surprised comment amongst the popu lace. In fact, I should say the sur prised comment, might of bef n heard for fully a mile aWay. "Emily . hesitates as she reaches the sidewalk,, as though she aint decide yet in her own mind just where she'li go, and then her agonized eye falls dh all them peanut-roasters standing in a double row alongside the curbings 01 both sides of the street. The Italian and Greek gents who owns 'ern are al ready, departing hence in a hurrieJ manner, but they've left their outfit! behind, and right away it's made plats to me by her-actions that Emily gards the sight as a part of a generil conspiracy, to feed " her some peanut! when she already has more peanuti than what she really requires for per Eonal use.' She reaches out for thf first peanut-machine in the row, curls her trunk around it and slams i! against a brick wall so hard that it immediately begins to look something like a flivver car which has been in a severe collision and something like a tin accordion that's had hard treat ment from a careless owner. With this for a beginning, Emily starts in to get real rough with them roasters, fx about three minutes it's raining hot charcoal and hot peanuts and wooden wheels and metal cranks and sheet-iron drums all over that part of the fair city. ' "Having put the enemy's battels out of ' commission, Emily now swirls around and heads back in the opposite direction with everybody giving net plenty of room. I heard afterwar. that some citizens went miles out 01 their way in order to give her room. Emily's snout is aimed straight up m though she's craving air, and her tr ia ifanrllntr atraio-Ut nut behind, P3l as a poker except that about every fcj' seconds a painful quiver runs throu?!i t frnm Va orrt tVint's nearest JMIUV to the end that's furthest away frca her. Windy is hoofing it along mo 50 feet back of her, uttering soothins remarks and entreating her to listen . . . Tr; Jr mil iT-eason, and I'm trailing for once Emily don't heariten w her master's voice. , "Out of the trail of my eye I s fat lady start to faint, and when sne right, in the -middle of the ""i change her mind about it ana 00 back flip into a plumber's shop, purtiest you evar seen. I see a poi man dodge out "from behind ft JT post as Emily approaches, and rw for his gun. I yells to him not shoot, but it's unnecessary aduj cause ne s oniy cnucKing llia" ..j. away so'a to lighten him up for a . sprinting. I see Emily make a 9 ( swipe witn ner nozzie a- ",-.,!, who's in the act of climbing a telegw . . , t-u misses W1 poie nana over nana, one "- Rifjilij mm i il I j'B'i'"11 T" ''totis v- J- j S j She drops in on me to find out what's the meaning of the delay?- :i;.J- . . ii f ' ' : .-. x. - . : ' , - ' I.