V .. ... t t 5 pdal. Pago "iw The lee's Hussy Little Honey-Makers 4 . -ATV) a v3r$ Xs :&r- dm - " 1 ' tit ? V p k J I I I I r i I I- "I ? r A T It 1 t ft ? I I ? V a I f a I It 1 it vvv I J Stories by Our Little Folks , (Prize.) Boy's Honesty. By Luetic Butler, Aci d 11 Jcana, Atwood, Roy Campbell had to papers after school to help earn a living for his invalid mother and himself. He had a bii; sister who worked out and gave half her wages every week for the support of her mother. But this did not go far. It was all gone by the end of the week. About Christ inas time matters became worse. Hii mother grew suddenly ill and as they didn't have any money to pay a physician she grew worse. Roy became desperate. If he did not get some, money his mother would die. He left school and found employment as a telephone boy in a large store. One day as he was cleaning and dusting the counter he lifted up some papers and underneath was a $10 hill, and written on it were the words, "A Xmas present to the clerk who needs it most." The temptation to keep it was strong, but he took it to his em plover. Vhen the manager looked over the names of his clerks he decided Rov needed it most and as a reward of his honesty he added $5 more to hit pay check Saturday. In all it uas V0. - Rqy mother grew strong again for (he cause of her invalidism was removed 'by the physician free A charge when he learned how 'poor they were. Today Koy Is a famous physician rioted for his charity which he says he gives out of gratefulness to the doctor who saved his mother's life. (Honorable Mention.) My Little Friend. By StU Gould, Aged 11 Yeafi. toons, Neb. On bright morning in August, the) sun was shining, and it made it very hot out of doors. I put my sun bonnet on and a pail on my arm and started on my way to the woods ip get some berries. While I was busy picking berries I heard something behind me; I looked around and there was a little kitten; It was black and white. . The poor little pet had gotten its leg hurt some way. So I finished picking' my berries and started with my little pet for home. When I got home I told mamma where -I found it. She told me to feed it some milk, so I did. Afterwards I fed It every morn ing and night, aud it soon got fat and also would catch mice. One day about a month after I had found it, it disappeared. I looked all over for it, but never could find it. I felt very sorry it .went away because it had gotten very tame and I thought lots of my dear little friend. Snookums. By Salt Irrln, Ar?d 11 Teari, Broken low, Neb. When I was about 7 years old my cousin and I lived in the same town. My cousin is a boy and his name (s Durward. One day he and I wefe walking down the street and we saw a kitten. It was a pretty Child Ruler of Two Nations Henry VI Kec&me King of England and France When Littk More than a Baby and - ' War Followed Between thd Two Nttiona. f Henry VI was born while King Henry V, his father, was at war in France. The news of the birth of a male heir reached the king one cold December da.v, and he was re joiced that the thrones of England and France should be united through his child for the mother of Henry V wss Catherine f France. The king went to Paris to meet his queen and the child for she had journeyed from Windsor castle, in England to f resent the prince to the rulers of France. Thus littte Henry, scarcely nine months old, wss declared the future king of England and the heir apparent to the throne of France. A few months after this ceremony, while taking part in battle, the king became ill and, died. 'so the queen and baby Henry never again saw Henry V. Before the mourning cortege reached the coast of France, where the body was to be conveyed tl England, news came that Charles VI of France was also dead. Thus a feahe, not ten months old, was proclaimed king of two great nations. But the people had to have rulers, so the duke of Bedford wss chosen as regent of France, while Humphrey, duke of Glou cester, was selected as lord protec tor of England. Queen Catherine undertook the care and training of her eon. Henry was reared with great care and wisdom until he was 9 years old, when he was crowned at West minster Abbev. The English people accepted Henry a? their king, bull the t rench rebelled at having turn their ruler, so they started a war to make Charles VH king of France. It was during the days when France was on the verge of being annexed as a province of England that a little country maid. RULES FOR YOUNO WRITERS. 1. Write plainly and number pages. 2. Use pen and Ink, not pancil. ' 3. Short and pointed articles will be given preference. Da not use over 250 words. 4. Original atories or letters only will be used. , 5. Writ your name, ag and address at th top of the first page. 6. A pme book will be given each wedc for the best contribu tion. Address all communications to Children's Department, Omaha Bee, Omaha, Neb. gray one so we decided to keep it. Durward had a dog named Rex, so he couldn't keep it and I was very glad. Now Snookums could hot do many trick One day he was taken very ill anct a few days after that mother and I Went away to spend the afternoon. When we came back Snookums was dead. We buried him in the garden. A'Happy Christmas. By Ethal Moor, Aged 10 tear. Fairmont . Neb- One Christmas in France was spent in very different way from very many others. Pierre was a little French boy. He knew Christmas would soon come and was wondering what hi9 .present would be. His parents wer very poor, his father Was in the army and his mother had to work for what they had to eat. On Christmas l'ierre was very sad. He had had nothing to eat for two day. Christmas morning l'ierre looked out of the window and saw a man coming toward their house. As he came nearer he saw it was an American soldier. When he came in he gave them a basket of food, which the, were careful w.th, sijd I don't think l'ierre for got it very soon. A Good Trick on Mother. By Allot Anderson, Aired 13 Years, Oak land, Neb, Dear Busy Bees: I have riot written for So long, and now 1 thought 1 would write a story about what my sister and I got for moth er. Last Friday we butchered a hog, and on Saturday mother was handling the meat, so she told me not to scrub the kitchen floor be cause it would look just as bad by night. So I cleaned the other rooms and let the kitchen go. When night came my sister and I made up our minds that we would go down and scrub the floor after mother had gone to bed. When night csme we did the dishes early and went upstairs. We waited until mother had gone to bed and then we took oft our shoes and went downstairs as quietly as we could. When we went downstairs it was dark as in a cave. But 1 got some matches and , lit the lamp. Then we got the pail and some water. Soon we had the kitchen i L "W-:, v Joan of Arc, rode to fte court of Charles and inspired the people to save her country for itself. War waxed fiercely then between the French and the English, but the latter people won, and on December 2. 1431, King Henry rode victorious into his second kingdom. But the Studious if' y 1 I " - ! ' ' 4 I ' V y ' A lover of books is this studious Busy Bee, Virginia Morcon. Even the beautiful outdoors doesn't tempt Virginia as much as good fairy story or one about the Indians who roamed our land so many, many years ago. and pantry floor scrubbed. Mother was so surprised the next morning, for she did not think we could do it without being heard. . Peace, By Orval T. Hansen, Aged 12 Teara, Ken Hard, Neb. There now is peace And the great wa,r did finally cease Now the liberty bells can ring again That the war is at an end. Soon out boys will be back home And not be over there W roam Between the wounded ones each day And the suffering all the way. Now out boys will come with glory Each one with a big, long story To tell their own old folks behino Of their journey to the Rhine. So nOw that the war is all gone over, Let's s'l be happy as our Rover But. give three cheers for our Old Glory. , ' t v fs' v N -Hi (,.f French bided their time iiet3y. The unrest grew until once more the two-nations were at war. Then it was that peace was offered the French by having Henry marry a French princess, but they refused, and .Henry married Margaret, daughter of the king of Sicily. Busy Bee is How r Many Children Know the Value of 'Birds in Nebraska ? Birds benefit agriculture by de stroying caterpillars and other pests. The bird population can be in creased greatly by simple means, one of which is the setting out of nesting homes, not so much to fa cilitate nesting as to give protec tion from cats, snakes and other en eniies, and a refuge from extreme cold. The good done thus lias been made so clear that the farmers in some parts of Europe have set out nesting homei of their own initia tive. Much information on this sub ject is given in a little book, "How to Attract and Frotect Wild Birds" (National Association of Audubon Societies). In order to have any appreciable economic ffect, nesting homes must be set Dtit, not in tens, but in hun dreds of thousands, if not in mil lions, and hence they must be made cheaply enough to permit this. The experiments of the Bedford Audu bon society of Bedford Hills. N. Y. show that gourds fulfill the needs of the case, in being both attractive to the birds and extremely cheap, SO cheap that over 2,000 of them have been sold within the last two years to people living in and about Bedford township. They were first brontht here for this purpose by William G. Borland. These gourds, says H. M. Howe in-Eird Lore, when tried in compe tition with more than J'9 shingle boxes, of a form approved by sev eral of the most competent Ameri can authorities, proved so much more attractive, 50 per cent of those examined having been nested in dur ing the first year against only 19 per cent of the boxes. These gourds, strung with marlin and ready for hanging, with the proper holes for entrance and drain ing, cost us only 10 cents apiece, but a properly organized industry ought to turn them out much more cheaply, probably at a cost of not over 6 cents each, because our cost was based on unfavorable condi tions, working in an amateur way, with no special appliances, wholly by adult hand labor, on a small scale, and at a great distance from North Carolina, where our gourds were raised, SO that - our freight charges were excessive. A gomi lasts four years nd per haps longer. Papier-mache gourds would last much longer, and might, perhaps, be made a an even lower tost, to judge from the cost of papier-mache pails J but here actual experiments are needed to show whether a finish could be given them which would sttract the birds. Tht cost of raising and curing the gourds themselves is very small, and the only additional expense is that of cleaning them out and cut ting and stringing a few holes, so that the total, cost is small enough to permit distributing them on a scale of real importance to agricul ture. .The preparation would nat urally be done in winter, and there Virginia VN fore under favorable labor condi tions. Here, .then, seems to be an in dustry awaiting a captain. The work to be done is, iirst. to diffuse among the fanners the knowledge Of the benefit from setting uy nest ing homes and winter feeding, so as to create an active demand; and, second, to organize in the south an industry for preparing and deliver ing these gourds. . THE POET'f CORNER flnoit evening, little Jar; Why 6o you shine ao brlelitT W'hy. don't you Unow, It's my l!aht To Rllmn and gluw on each dark night? The mill la bipr and round, Whl!. t am If tt la and atmlBlit; Hut I can shina on my pin) mate by being loving and kind. J. M. they are tha rl whnjook befort, Nor feHr the !"ok bpftind; Who In the darkneea atlll ia-uora Pale nhadowa of the mind. Who, havinK lout,, though lorn he much, HHil dlare t dream and do, for what win ahattcred at touch. It may be tnanded, too. vOur Picture Puzzle 61 t J- ! V ' 22 w u . v '6 ' What has Piille drawn? Complete the picture by drawing a line through the dots beginning i at Figure 1 and taking them numerically. i The Little Willful Princess By DAVID CORV. fTHE following morning the little . willful princess and her pet monkey left the castle, the beautiful owner of which they had awakened from her long sleep by the magic of the dwarf's jewel, and resumed their jouriney homeward. Over high hills and valleys they winged their way in their flying suits until, toward evening, they ap proached the outskirts of a small village. As they descended to the ground they noticed a queer little old woman hobbling away on her crutch toward the wood. Her nose was as crooked as a horn, and al most as long. ' It crooked down to meet her chin, and chin crooked up to meet her nose. Her face was brown and full of wrinkles, and her eyes were as black as charcoal, and as bright as diamonds. She was very old, and her back was bent like a bow, Her hair, which was perfectly white and as long and fine as the finest of flax, hung dovyn her back in a braid. The princess and the monkey paused to watch her as she hobbled away from the nearest house, where she had apparently just made visit In the garden on one side were three rose bushes on which were growing three vert beautiful roses. The little princess leaned over the fence to gaze at them, for she suddenly felt homesick at the sieht of them, remembering how beautiful were the roses in the royal" gardens at home, now so far away. And as she stood there Watching the lovely flowers a woman came to the doorway, and shielding her eyes with her hand, looked an iouslv down the roadway. And as she turned to gaze the other way, she noticed the little princess and her pet monkey standing by the Lnce. A look of astonishment passed over her faceiat the strange spectacle of a girl and a monkey with wings upon their shoulders, but before she could speak the lit tle princess came forward and said: "What beautiful roses you have in your garden !" "Why. where did they come from, sue said in a tone ot sur price. "Tis late for roses, and this morning early I did not even notice a bud upon the bushes." "No?" said the little princess, "that is indeed strange I" "Did you see three children?" asked the good woman hardily no ticing the little princess' remark, two boys and a girl: "I don't remember seeing any one," the princess replied, "except." she added, "a little old woman with a very crooked nose and a very crooked back just as we neared your cottage. Ah, met signed the good wo man, "whither can those children have gone?" And she wiped her eyes with the end of her white apron. "Perhaps we can find them," suggested the monkey, bowing po litely. "Yoa will perceive, my good woman, that we have on magic wings which will enable us to trav el quicklv, so that if you have not missed the children for over long, we might come upon them in a short time." ' Twas but r half hour ago I told them to be gone and not re turn until thev could behave them selves, and I fear they have wan dered a war with sadness tn their little hearts." "Let us fly about and set if we cannot discover them," suggested the Princess, and suiting her actions to her words, she flew off in one direction, while the monkey took an other. Try as they mifjht, however, they could find no trace of the three children. Behind bushes and under thickets, in the wood and the tall meadow grass, they looked with are, but finally they were forced to return to the cottage and tell the anxious mother Unit they could find them nowhere. "Do not weep," said the 'ittle Princess, laying her hand on the good woman's arm, surely no harm can have befallen them. They will no doubt return at any moment." The Princess and the monkey finished their meal as quickly as possible irtd went out again to the roadside to watch for the children. "Come, I will pick you a rose," said the good woman, trying to hide tha tears that ere tailing from her eyes, "for I know you love roses." Then she ami the little Princess and the pet monkey turned from the roadway into the little gate and entered the garden. A narrow pebbly path wound in and ont among the flower beds, so they went in single file toward the three beautiful roses. "Is it not lovely?" asked the good woman leaning over the nearest rose. And with a sudden movement she leaned over and kissed the beautiful .lower, while her tears fell jtpon the trem bling petals. But before she had time to pluck it from the bush it timed into one of her little children. With a glad cry. the child threw its arms around the mother's neck, promising, over and over again never to be disobedient again. But the good woman could hardly wait to give a kiss in return, so anxious was she to press her lips against the petals of the other two roses. There was great happiness in the small flower garden after this, and' the children, after a short cry and many embraces, were most inter ested in their two visitors, especially the monkey. "Come," said the good woman, "ycut supper is still waiting." "Wre will come, too, if ve may," said the little princess, laying her hand on one curly head, and the monkey knowingly took the lead, so that the three children eagerly fol lowed him into the house. As tlu supper neared its end the ' good woman looked up suddenly and asked, "But how did it come to pass that you were changed Into roses?" for in the excitement and joy at recovering her children she had forgotten the strange circum stances. '"Twas a little old woman ho made us into roses," cried the lit tlest boy. "Yes, she asked us why we were crying, and we told lier because we had been disobedient, and that our mother had told ua not to come home until we were good." "Yes," Interrupted his brother, "and I said I didn't want to be good, and that I would rather stay away; so she said: 'I will change you into roses, so that you. may see how $or rowful your poor mother will be when you do not return this even ing.'" And then we began to cry," aaid the elder child, "but before we could rim, away, we found ourselves roses growing out in Our own garden." "It must have been the little old Woman toe saw," said the princess, turnittj? i.o her pet monkey. jjii sue nave a very crooked nose?" asked the littlest boy. "And did her chin turn up till it almost touched it?" asked the next child. "And was her hair in a long, white braid?" asked the girl, "and were her eyes black as coals and bright as diamonds?" "Yes," answered the princess, turning to each child in answer to the question. "And she hobbled along on a crutch," added the monkev. "Yes," cried all the children at once, "she did." At that moment the little old woman herself appeared. The chil dren clung in terror to their moth er's skirt, while the little princess caught hold of the monkey for pro tection. - "Fear not," said the little old woman in a kindly voice. "All's well that ends well. I returned to find out whether the three roses were to sleep in the garden or in their feather beds." At this the children grew bolder and lost much of their fear. And the little prin cess turned to the little old woman and said, "I am Mire you would not have let them remain roses all through the long night." "Bless you, no," replied the old woman, with a twinkle in her black eyes. "Bless you, no. But I am glad it was the mother's kiss of for giveness that made them good little children again." "So am I," replied the little prin cess in a whisper, "it makes ine re nlember how often my dear mother kissed me in loving forgiveness." And here the little wilful princess actually began to cry. "I feel quite homesick," she sobbed. "There, there," said the little oH woman, "don't cry," and turning to the mother of the three little chil dren, she said, "take the little prin cess into your cottage and pat her to bed with your own dear children, for she is far from her home and lonely." "That 1 will gladly do." answered the pood woman, and placing her arm lovingly about the little prin cess, led her into the humble cottage for the night. I I ! I i I i I