spelt his name. He put his 
hand into his pocket and produced a card. On it was engraved, 'J.M. 
QUAYLE.' Then I understood. It was the spelling that puzzled 
Leopold." 
* * * * * 
THE NEW APPEAL.
We observe with interest the latest development in the London 
Press--the appearance of the new Labour journal, The Daily Nail. 
In the past, attempts to found a daily newspaper for the propagation of 
Labour views have not always met with success. Possibly the fault has 
been that they made their appeal too exclusively to the Labour public. 
We understand that every care will be taken that our contemporary 
shall under no circumstances be a financial failure. 
The Daily Nail is a bright little sheet, giving well-selected news, 
popular "magazine" and "home" features, and, on the back page, a 
number of pictures. It has a strong financial section, a well-informed 
Society column, and a catholic and plentiful display of advertisements, 
including announcements of many of those costly luxuries which 
Labour to-day is able to afford. 
While in its editorial comments it suggests emphatically that the 
Government of the day is not and never can be satisfactory, it refrains 
from embarrassing our statesmen with too many concrete proposals for 
alternative methods. 
We learn that the new Labour daily is substantially backed by a 
nobleman of pronounced democratic ideals. From his Lordship down to 
the humblest employee there exists among the staff a beautiful spirit of 
fellowship unmarked by social distinction. 
"Good morning, comrade," is the daily greeting of his Lordship to the 
lift-boy, who replies with the same greeting, untarnished by servility. 
* * * * * 
[Illustration: THE NEW COALITION. 
Mr. ASQUITH (_to Viscount CHAPLIN and Lord ROBERT CECIL_). 
"THANKS, MY FRIENDS--THANKS FOR YOUR LOYAL 
SUPPORT. DO MY EYES DECEIVE ME, OR DO I SEE BIG 
BEN?"]
* * * * * 
[Illustration: Son of House (_entertaining famous explorer and 
distinguished professor_). "IT WOULD ASTONISH YOU FELLOWS 
IF I TOLD YOU SOME OF THE THINGS I'VE SEEN AND 
HEARD--THOUGH I'M, COMPARATIVELY SPEAKING, A 
YOUNG MAN--TWENTY-TWO, TO BE EXACT."] 
* * * * * 
THE INSOMNIAC. 
Miss Brown announced her intention of retiring to roost. Not that she 
was likely to sleep a blink, she said; but she thought all early-Victorian 
old ladies should act accordingly. 
She asked Aunt Angela what she took for her insomnia. Aunt Angela 
said she fed it exclusively on bromides. Edward said he gave his 
veronal and SCHOPENHAUER, five grains of the former or a chapter 
of the latter. 
They prattled of the dietary and idiosyncrasies of their several 
insomnias as though they had been so many exacting pet animals. Miss 
Brown then asked me what I did for mine. 
Edward spluttered merrily. "He rises with the nightingale, comes 
bounding downstairs some time after tea and wants to know why 
breakfast isn't ready. Only last week I heard him exhorting Harriet to 
call him early next day as he was going to a dance." 
They all looked reproachfully at me because I didn't keep a pet 
insomnia too. I spoke up for myself. I admitted I hadn't got one, and 
what was more was proud of it. All healthy massive thinkers are heavy 
sleepers, I insisted. They must sleep heavily to recuperate the enormous 
amount of vitality expended by them in their waking hours. Sleep, I 
informed my audience, is Nature's reward to the blameless and 
energetic liver. If they could not sleep now they were but paying for 
past years of idleness and excess, and they had only themselves to
blame. I was going on to tell them that an easy conscience is the best 
anodyne, etc., but they snatched up their candles and went to bed. I 
went thither myself shortly afterwards. 
I was awakened in the dead of night by a rapping at my door. 
"Who's there?" I growled. 
"I--Jane Brown," said a hollow voice. 
"What's the matter?" 
"Hush, there are men in the house." 
"If they're burglars tell 'em the silver's in the sideboard." 
"It's the police." 
I sat up in bed. "The police!--why?--what?" 
"Shissh! come quickly and don't make a noise," breathed Miss Brown. 
I hurried into a shooting-jacket and slippers and joined the lady on the 
landing. She carried a candle and was adequately if somewhat 
grotesquely clad in a dressing-gown and an eider-down quilt secured 
about her waist by a knotted bath-towel. On her head she wore a large 
black hat. She put her finger to her lips and led the way downstairs. The 
hall was empty. 
"That's curious," said Miss Brown. "There were eighteen mounted 
policemen in here just now. I was talking to the Inspector--such a nice 
young man, an intimate friend of the late Sir CHRISTOPHER WREN, 
who, he informs me privately, did not kill Cock Robin." 
She paused, winked and then    
    
		
	
	
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