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Show '4' 'ttbc~lgbt 'Wlatcb Glltl mose antl Sflller "It won't rain to-night," he said, gloomily; "look at the stars ! " The sky was clear, and pale stars shone faintly in the afterglow. There w~s not even a Jigh t breeze-the world was as st1ll and calm as though pain and death were unknown .. When they reached the scene of the awdent, Romeo set the two red lanterns at the point where the back of the car touched the road. They spread one blanket on the grass at the other side of the road and sat down to begm their long vigil. Romeo planned to go home to breakfast at sunrise and bring Juliet some of the mush and milk left from supper. Then, while she continued to watch the machine, he would go into town and make arrangements for its removal. "Is there room in our barn for both cars?" she asked. 0 No. Ours will have to come out." Juliet shuddered. "l never want to see it again." "Neither do 1." "Can we sell it?" uwe ought not to sell it unless we g~ve him the money. We shouldn't have 1t our-selves." "Then," suggested Juliet, "why don't we give it away and give him just as much as 1t cost, including our suits and the dogs' collars and everything? " ):lena nee "We have no right to give away a mankiller. 'The Yellow Peril' is cursed." "Let's sacrifice it," she cried. "Let's make a funeral pyre in the yard and burn it, and our suits and the dogs' collars and everything. Let's burn everything we 've got that we care for ! " "All right," agreed Romeo, uplifted by the zeal of the true martyr. "And," he added, regretfully, "!'II shoot all the dogs and bury 'em in one long trench. I don't want to see anything again that was in it." ''I don't either," returned Juliet. She won· dered whether she should permit the wholesale execution of the herd, since it was a thing she had secretly desired for a long time. "You mustn't shoot Minerva and the puppies," she continued, as her strict sense of justice asserted itself, "because she wasn't in it. She was at home taking care of her children and they'd die if she should be shot now." So it was settled that Minerva, who had taken no part in the fatal celebration, should be spared, with her innocent babes. "And in a few years more," said Romeo, hopefully, "we 'II have lots more dogs, though probably not as many as we've got now." Juliet sighed heavily but was in honour bound to make no objections, for long ago, when they arbitrated the dog question, it was written in the covenant that no dogs should be '43 'ltbelDog &untfon |