i 5 I if i i J A Ffc e l is tf L p I XStStSSSSSBSbtSa AFI1TC I will give you this ring of mine I be coming and going so some day will turn my back upon France and so with you Well well be it so then said Laro although with evident reluc tance But youll not speak to any one of our sailing to night Nay not I Why should I asked Jean as he opened the door Ill see you again before sailing time Jean walked slowly along the streets seeing nothing for a time He was going toward home and had al most reached the narrow street upon which stood Margots cottage when he saw approaching that which sent his dreams flying and with them all thoughts of Laro and Louisiana It was Greloire who appeared to have seen him at the same moment for he paused as if waiting for the boy to come near Tell mc have you seen him What said he Jean demanded be fore they had gone half a dozen steps Never mind whether or not I have seen him replied Greloire rather slowly Let it suffice that he knows of my having met with you and of your anxiety to see him But he bids you with his love to stop at home for the present Wait quietly here as he asks of you and you will be sure to see him in a short time See him here exclaimed the boy How can that be I cannot tell you that only wait and you shall see He was not pleased that I ever thought to encourage your leaving the city and so you must promise not to attempt it A rebellious light shone for a mo ment in the dark eyes turned to meet the soldiers stern look Then it was pone and Jean answered with a deep sigh Yes I will do as he wishes It lacked but a few minutes of eight oclock and the neighborhood of Le Chien Heureux was unwontedly quiet Inside however there was the usual gathering of soldiers and citi zens Laro was not in the room with the other customers and Jean upon in quiring for him was told In a low tone by Thiel that the captain was in his own apartment He then invited Jean to follow him and after bidding Pierre wait where he was and to open the door to no one he led the way to the passage liSCiSaDkNA BY RY PCVEREUX WTH ILLUSTPATIONS BY DON C WILSON CHAPTER V It was the afternoon of the fourth iay when Jean fearing lest Laro might come to seek him and thinking that perhaps Greloire also would be coming decided to go to Le Chien Heureux Pierre having already gone out to see some of his military friends The air was crisp and Jean walk ing rapidly was turning the corner of the street leading down to the inn svhen he saw Laro approaching Ha runaway the latter called out a smile lighting his dark face I was but just coming to see you I put to sea this night Jean started and stared Aye this very night with the Aigle set sail for Louisiana contin ued Laro Would you not like to go with me you and Pierre I will take loth if you but say the word v Jeans cheeks were filled with sud den color and his eyes sparkled with excitement But this all passed away as he said sighingly Aye I would like to go but Then it is but for you to come urged the tempter Jean paid no heed to this but in quired Why are you going in such liaste Well replied Laro lowering his tone Tkere is in the city a certain -Wealthy royalist who has fled from Paris with his daughter Roselle a anost beautiful demoiselle of eighteen He and a few others have made it worth my while to carry them to Louisiana where they will seek new homes Come lad he added coaxingly make a run of it and come with me over seas Come with me I say and youll reap more gold in shorter time than did ever an aristocrat of France Not on this trip Laro replied Jean calmly but with unmistakable firmness You have said you would Dropping on his knees he grasped a ring and a square of the appar ently solid wall rolled up with a grat ing noise until it was level with his head as he still knelt and a rush of damp air as if from out of doors stirred the short locks on Jeans fore head as he stared with wonder filled eyes into the dark opening that gaped before them A minute later the boys eyes were nearly blinded as he followed his companion into a cave like room with a floor of rock which was also the material of its ceiling and walls It was furnished but scantily and around a table at the farther side were severfll men while somewhat apart from them sat two women As Thiel entered with Jean close behind him the men ceased talking and stared with evident displeasure at the boy all except Laro who called out Aha my yonng mate is it thyself Welcome my sea gull He put out an inviting hand then as the lad came to his side he said turning to a slenderly built man of middle age seated next him with an elbow on the table and a hand sup porting his cheek Count de Caze neau permit me to present to you my young friend Jean Lafitte who is some day to be my mate and who is as daar to me as an own son The count did not cnange his posi tion but stared moodily at the hand some boy while murmuring a cour teous acknowledgment of his pres ence As for Jean he scarcely heard the words So engrossed had his senses become with the beautiful face confronting him from the other cor ner of the room The young lady was looking at him and from her clear blue eyes there flashed a smile that opened the red lips to show two rows of little pearl like teeth as she said in a voice whose sweetness held yet a note of command Come over here pretty boy and talk to me I was feeling lonesome in this dreadful place and if the sight of you is so pleasant what may not your words do to cheer me And she smiled again He knew her to be the counts daughter of whom Laro had spoken and he felt still a more poignant re gret that he was not to sail in the Aigle that night Have you been long in Toulon Jean inquired somewhat at a loss what to say and yet longing to man ifest his sympathy for so lovely a being Since last summer she answered and bent toward him as from a sudden impulse while she said Did you ever meet people who were strangers to you and yet who from the moment you looked into their faces seemed otherwise She had laid a hand upon his shoul der and a puzzled expression showed in his face as he looked into her earn est eyes But this gave way to a half mischievous but wholly winning smile as he replied with a gallantry hardly to have been expected in a lad of his age Never until this mo ment She laughed and drew her hand away the wild rose color deepening in her cheeks The smile was gone as she said speaking in so low a tone that he scarcely caught her words Is he re lated to you this Laro Oh no mamselle he whispered I have known him only a few weeks And do you like him She perhaps unconsciously raised her voice a little and the gravity of its tone coupled with that which showed in her face caused Jean to stare at her with surprise She leaned forward until her face was close to his own Jean Lafitte she said slowly and distinctly I never had a brother but if I could have one I would wish him to be like you I should not like it that you grew to be a man such as I feel this Laro must be Again Jean was slow in thinking what to say and all he did was to look into her lovely face into the lustrous eyes fixed so intensely upon him You may forget me Jean she re sumed as he did not speak but I shall hope not Yet for fear I may ywBWIHMfpMniiwwwIJ slip from your memory I will give you this ring of mine and she drew one from her finger I wish you to wear it and to think it says always Roselle de Cazeneau gave me to you and she will always pray for you that you may be a gallant gentleman lcVal to what is true and right Willi you have the ring say this to you Her words touched deeply the boys chivalric impulsive nature and bend- ing over the hand that proffered the ring he pressed his lips to the eled fingers Thank you he said as now with a smile she slipped the little circlet upon the fourth finger of his left hand and the touch of her own warnV and gentle sent a thrill of delight through his young veins I shall never forget you he de clared looking up into her face and no matter what or where I may be you and yours will always have my love and service It is now my turn to thank you she said for and a far seeing look chased the smile from her eyes who shall say but that I or mine may call upon you to make good your promise Before he could reply they were in terrupted by the entrance of Laro with Thiel close behind him and fol lowing the two was Pierre who with open eyes and mouth stared about him wonderingly Laro gave his orders hastily but clearly after which he turned to Pierre who stood near him Good night my boy I am sorry you are not to go with me for I would like greatly to have your stout heart and strong arm aboard the Aigle You will come with me next time laying his hand on the boys shoul der Jean remained silent standing with lowered eyes while the bell jangled a second time Ill be in this port again within two years added Laro and then I am sure you will be ready to come with me Until then dear lad good night And he moved away mo tioning for the others to follow Good night Jean and adieu said Roselle as she was about to pass him Do not forget me nor what I have said to you She was gone leaving the boy standing mute sensible of the odor of violets and regretting ruefully his in ability to have acknowledged her gra cious farewell But the sound of Thiels voice soon aroused him from his self reproachings Come the fandlord said sharply come with me The hooks of a rope ladder were soon fastened into two iron rings bolt ed to the rock A coil of rope was then put through the opening and lowered carefully until Laro who kept a hand upon it felt it grow taut with a pull from below Good night again boy my heart is sorry to leave thee behind he said to Jean who was close to him Good by again and good luck He had while speaking stepped through the opening and as the fare well came from his lips disappeared down the ladder Ropes were fastened under the arms of the young girl and of her maid One of the counts friends fol lowed Laro then the maid after him next the count himself and then his daughter the two remaining gentle men going last of all There was no sign of fighting when Jean and Pierre left Le Chien Heu reux that night and the sough of the rising wind was all that broke the silence Next time I will surely go Jean said to himself as he and Pierre af ter putting out the light which Mar got had left for them took off their shoes and crept softly upstairs to their respective bedrooms Laro said he would return within two years and in two years I shall be larger and she -will not call me a boy I will go and I will find her To be continued An Insult to the Cock We had just engaged a new cook said the young matron I was going out and as lots of little things were lying around in my rcom I locked the door Imagine my surprise when I returned to be greeted in the hall by a veritable fury impersonated by this same newly arrived cook She hurled all manner of violent language at me and surprised as I was and incoher ent as she was I managed to make out that she had been accused of be ing a thief Why she felt so bad about it was the puzzle Why do you lock your door she howled Of course that explained it all and so very gently I asked her how she had known it was locked She was only silent a moment in order to think up an answer I wanted a needle and so I went up she was saying when I interrupted with But that was quite wrong I was just about to send in an alarm when my husband came home He did the rest We dined out Philadel phia Record Respect for Age in Japan In Japan there is no such thing as disrespect from youth to age No Japanese boy or girl could ever think in a light or disrespectful manner of his or her superiors or teachers and this may account for the earnestness so unusual among young children When a student enters a masters presence in Japan he bows to the floor and when the lesson is finished he bows again with expressions of the deepest gratitude as he takes his de parture The teacher sitting in most cases upon his feet on the flor grave ly returns each salutation then lights his little pipe and waits for his next class There is no hurrying of mas ters from room to room as in some of the schools in our enlightened land The Pumpkin Fountain you must insert from above small end first and pull through until ihe joint is tight Now put your pumpkin bowl in the fork of a tree six or eight feet from the ground and fasten it securely Slip the large end of another leaf stalk over the small end of the stalk you have attached to the howl the large end of a third stalk over the small end of the second and so on until you have made a tube long enough to reach the ground and run over the ground some distance like a growing pumpkin vine You may make most of the tube out of the main stalk of the pumpkin vine instead of leaf stalks and by using a number of vines you can make the tube as long as you please The end of the tube should be a leaf stalk Turn this upward and fit it to a hole in the top of the pumpkin the saucer Fasten the tube to the ground with pegs cover it with earth or leaves if you want to mke the thing look more mysterious fill the pumpkin bowl with water and sum mon your friends to see the pumpkin fountain play The jet will not rise as high as the level of the water in the bowl be cause of the friction of the long tube and of the air but it will rise a good deal more than half as high and fall back in drops into the saucer making a very pretty little fountain The tip of the tube should rise an inch or two above the saucer and if the bore of the tip is not very fine it should be plugged with a bit of cork wood or pumpkin in which a small hole has been bored A fine jet is prettier than a large one and it does not need so much wator Rooster and Hens As many girls and boys as wish catch hold of each others coat tails and skirts The foremost one is the rooster and the rest are hens One player stands cbout fifteen feet away and makes motions with his leg like a rooster scratching The one who is playing rooster says What are you doing strange crea ture Scratching a hole replies the strange creature What will you do with the hole Find a stone in it What will you do with the stone Sharpen a knife with it What will you do with the knife Slaughter a hen shouts the strange creature and makes a dash at the rooster and hens Now all the hms must try to escape but they iflfo 3jn vrrai n j JwatznvwwaviiiviBHU rwpr I T King of the World In the acorn is wrapped the forest In the little brook the sea The twig that will sway with the sparrow to day Is to morrows sturdy tree There Is hope In a mothers joy Like a peach in its blossom furled And a noble boy a gentle boy A manly boy Is king of the world The power that will never fail us Is the soul of 3imple truth The oak that defies the stormiest skies Was upright in its youth The beauty no time can destroy In the pure young heart is furled And a worthy boy a tender boy A faithful boy is king of the world The cub of the royal lion Is regal in his play The eaglets pride is as fiery eyed As the old birds bald and grey The nerve that heroes employ In the childs young arm Is furled And a gallant boy a truthful boy A brave pure boy is king of the world London Answers A Pumpkin Fountain The pumpkin season is here and all the country boys and some of the girls are making jack o lanterns and those terrible pumpkin stalk whistles that make a noise like the honk of an automobile horn only worse Here is another way of extracting amusement out of a pumpkin vine but without scaring people or setting their nerves on edge Having procured a big round pump kin or squash cut it in two horizon tally a little above the middle and scoop out the pulp and seeds In this way you make a large bowl out of the lower part of the pumpkin and a large saucer out of the upper part The eye of the pumpkin that is the de pression opposite the stalk is in the center of the bottom of the bowl At this point bore a hole and fit to it one of the hollow leaf stalks which must not let go of the rooster or of each other The consequence Is that there is great opportunity for agility and cleverness in dodging and the game is full of fun Of course the strange creature can catch hen after hen in the end When none is left the rooster selects a new rooster and becomes the strange creature himself Little Bravo Years ago some Indians lived on the banks of a beautiful river The men fished and the women planted corn in little hillocks instead of in rows When they sat down for a friendly gossip they held their little babies in their arms or strapped upon their backs One young mother never took her eyes from the cradle in which her handsome boy slept When ho waken ed she sang to him and called him Little Bravo with such love and tenderness in her voice that the other women all stopped to listen Years passed merrily until Little Bravo was ten years old He could hunt and fish and his mother was happy dreaming of the time when he should be a young man All her spare moments were spent In embroidering clothes for Little Bravo and his father with the result that they out shone all others of their tribe Little Bravo always wore moccasins of yel low buckskin trimed with beads and porcupine quills He was a noble warm hearted and sunny tempered lad The Great Spirit however saw that the foolish doting love of his par ents was ruining the gift he had given him One summer night the heat hung heavy over the land There will be a storm said the father Where is Little Bravo Down on the river bank asleep replied the mother I sat by him a long time brushing away the insects that bothered him He had taken off his moccasins and his feet were bare He is very beautiful our Little Bravo I will carry him in when the storm comes without awakening him The storm soon broke with great violence The mother hastenc to the river and just as she was about to lift her boy a vivid flash of lightning revealed the two hands of the spirit who lives in the water They reached up and drew Little Bravo into the waves All the mother saw was the print of his body on the shore and his two yellow moccasins A scream brought the father to the spot They both dived into the water though the storm raged What cared they for that Their Little Bravo had disap peared beneath the surface finally in heart broken accents they pleaded Oh spirit of the river Give him back to us By and by the father arose and looking into the sky said It is the will of the Great Spirit He has taken him away but will save him for us Turning he disappeared into the for est The mother sat by the river for many days without food or sleep kiss ing and caressing the little yellow moccasins One night on raising her eyes to the sky she beheld the pathway made of star dust which leads to the spirit land Longing to follow it she felt the pressure of a small hand upon her shoulder Turning sne met the smil ing gaze of her son Oh Great Spirit I thank thee The dead is alive - Come mother said the boy We are to follow yonder path to night I have come for thee because thy weep ing grieves the happy ones The mother placed her hand in the small clasp but said Here are thy moccasins Thou wilt need them the way may bo rough The boy laughed and held up his foot upon which flashed and gleamed moccasins of shining gold Lay down my old moccasins he said and thou shalt see how a mothers love shall be remembered She placed the little yellow mocca sins on the ground and a plant imme diately sprang up It grew rapidly and on the highest branch the mocca sins were fastened They shrank in size and changed into flowers keep ing their original shape and color Little Bravo said See mother these flowers shall bloom on forever by this shining river Long after the red man has gone they shall bloom Wondering but happy the mother wsWFmz followed Little Bravo along the star strewn path to spirit land Not many moons later from the midst of battle the father joined them All this was long ago The Indiana have left the banks of that river but the yellow flowers bloom on by its waters Tho white children gather and can them orchids or ladys1 slippers but the Indians always give them their real name of Indian moc casins Toboggan Travels Fast There is a spot in the Swiss Alps where a sled or a toboggan runs a mile in seventy seconds Tho winter sportsmen of Europe take great pleas ure in the Cresta run as it is called at St Moritz The toboggan season there begins about the middle of No vember and the slide is made smooth and safe by a committee appointed for that purpose The Swiss tobog gans are raised on runners shod with iron or steel The rider lies flat upon the toboggan head first both hands grasping the framework at tho sides steering with both feet just as boys do on sleds in this country Iron spikes are fastened to the toes of tho boots and by trailing one foot or tho other along the ground the big sled is guided Pindertoy Scissors and a pin only needed This Fancy Dancer if cut out and fastened together with a pin will make a very attractive toy If you push the pin firmly into the cork or the end of q stick and paste the pieces on an old visiting card before the pieces are cut out this Pindertoy will last longer Take Care Take Care is a game played by any number of persons in several ways In one of the most common flour is packed tightly into a bowl which is then turned over and removed leaving the flour in a mound On top of this is placed a small coin The players in turn then remove each a part of the flour with a knife and whoever lets the coin fall must pick it from the flour with his teeth Sometimes each one says take care as he cuts off his portion of the flour and the game thus receives its name There are many substitutes for the flour and coin One of the best is a cardhouse of two cards on a pile made of the rest of the pack loosely thrown together Each player removes one card and he who allows the cardhouso to fall must pay a forfeit The game may be played out of doors with a Lt tle flag stuck in a pail of sand from which each player removes a little on the end of a stick Route of the Bobolink The amount of traveling done by some of our birds is astonishing Dr Cook says that the common night hawk spends the summer in Alaska and the winter in Pategonia The bobolink which is the reed bird of the middle states and the rice bird in the South winters on the waving pampas of southern Brazil It covers 700 miles from Cuba to the South American coast in a single flight following a track not popular with other birds which might be call ed the bobolink route Saturday Evening Post A CHILDRENS REGATTA 5SZSg At Ryde Isle of Wight a childrens regatta was held recently on a boat ing lake only 24 inches deep The il lustration is from a snap shot of tho Boys Tub Race taken with a pocktt kodak 3n