lpdal P(2ig ior The: B'(s Bmisy Littl it I; il' it l f' i' 1 i. I Stories by Our Little Folks (Prize) Hindy' Air CaitU. By Pan! Thompioa. Age 11. Alliance. Nah. Sid Hindy to Bill when the war tint broke out Let' first wipe out France and then England rout. And then go to Italy and capture - her kinsr. j And last in the United States make our cannons ring. ... ' And then you can lit on a throne . all jof bow. And make the whole world do just s, they're told. i -So they waited four years and still - France dldnt nre In. But Hindy was stir m the end they would win. And then he got reckless with' an old submarine And said of our vessels the ocean . . he d clean. ' He killed women and children and .. A, - vuc ,iai uajr, We made old Bernstoff "beat it" without delay. , Then we began saving ' sugar and . making transports. And eating less wheat and making hew ports," --.j.. And when our boys got over there . - and went over the top Hindy saw his recklessness would surely have to stop. The Yanks kept on advancing al ways beating the Hun. They captured Sedan and went to wards Met! on a run. And then old Hindy began to get wiser And saw all was lost for him and the kaiser, v And. then the allies made him an armistice sign - v Giving up his territory from France ' to the Rhine, And then he and the kaiser got it into their head 1 - . That, it wasn't them, so from Gerv many they (led, - ' ?..:. But the Yanks are behind him and they'll catch htm sure And then of his fighting spirit they'll him cure. t (Honorable Mention.) Trying to Fly. t Sy Bllaabeth Spear, in It, tit Street, - , , , rlfbury. 9b. Little Aileen was sittinsr in a hiar ppie tree in xneir orcnara looking at her picture book. . Now Aileen loved to pretend and so just now she wasxsayh "I know what I'll do. I'll pretend I'm a robin and then I'll fly." And fly she did, but instead of flying up, she flew down. . She wasn't a bit hurt, but she thought she was, so she reasoned, 'Well,. I fell out of the tree and when people fall cut of trees, thev usually they usual ly," she liked that word, it WM so big and long, "they usually go to the hospitable." Aileen loved to use long words, hut sometimes she didn't get them just right, "And," she continued, "when people are m the hospitable everybody is nice fc them and give them nice things to eat.'so" I guess 111 go.".-. r,-:;v?. Therefore she marched down the road at a. very rapid pace fori so tinv a stirl. i Presently she met old Mr. Wilkins, who was driving to ward her. : "Wal.'hello Miss Aileen. Where you a goin' all bv yerself ?" ; "Good , afternoon," she , answered grandly. "I'm going to the ho pitable." - He looked puzzled, hut suddfnly his face brightened. "Goin' to the hospital air ye? Well, yes, you hop in and I'll take ye." . . f She obeyed. , and ' they merrily went down the 'rotii"-"----,-. Suddenly, "Why, r Mr, Wilkins, . that's my house. What did - you bring me home for?" "Wal, ye. see, I thought as how it was a gittin' late and maybe your mother would be gittin' wor ried about ye." ; ' -i-, "Well.' maybe you're right," she answered as they stopped. "Thank you. Mr. Wilkins." Needless to say she soon forgot all about it and when she did re member she didn't care to go. ' By Q. Martin Otter. At tt. 1521 Beuth 5 . Seventh Street, Omaha. ; Jack lived with his parents on a ' large clearing in a forest. Jack, who was 13 years old, knew almost all the work to manage a farm. His parents died whenjie was il. Another farmer lived nearby." This farmer was a good friend of Jack's father. He adopted Jack until he was old enough to sell his farm.: , r This farmer had three sons, Frank,,; Joe and Edward. They often played with Jack and helped him with his work. ; Many years passed. He was 19. There was a call t&- arms, for all young men bad to go to war. Tack answered the call proudly, received training and went to the battelfront, where he was severely wounded. He had to go back to his native .oun try Jor medical care., t When he was well he. went back to the battle front, but was not wounded. He returned to his native coun try and met a crl his age. A little later he married this girl. He lived happily with his wife until all died. I hope the Busy Bees accept my : story, as this is the first time I have : written. .,-. . "Original" v Jtllth Anderson, Am 11, Weston, Neb. B. F. D. No. 1. Box 45. "Tht Gate City of the West," I wish to become junior of The Bee. One Saturday afternoon we took a : - .i? j ii iiij, iu viuaua in uui l uiu. vvc were going to take our aunt home, who lives in Omaha on- Decatur street. After we had-been there a while we went to our uncle's home on Corby street..' My brother and I went to the street car track and took tha Florence car .to our other uncle's home en Grebe street in Florence. I' stayed there, but my brother went back to the other'a at Corby street. sunaay my cousin took ma to Flor ence park. Afterwards we went to Sunday school. In the afternoon we went to my uncle on Corby street and my' aunt came and took my cousin and me ta Riverview park. There were many animals in the park and it was tht prettiest one I have seen. Florence park was pret ty, too, it had a slide and a flower bed in it. I have also been to Hans- corn park, which is better than the other two narks. I have been on ton oi tne woodmen of the World build ing. 1 1 have been, to the movies in the Strand theater and like it fine, Omaha is worthy of its name, "The Gate City of the West." I hope this letter escapes the waste basket. By Asmes Holden. A( 14, Petersburg, Neb. Dear BUSY Beet! This, ia mv sornnrf letter to the junior page and I hope to see my letter in print. Once there was a little girl named Margaret, who was the nnlv rhHH of the family. Her mnther via nM and had very poor health. Margaret naiea to worK at nome but delighted in working for some one else. When her mother would a sir hi An something for her she would get angry and begin to pout and say, "I Qon i nave to. The older she got the worse she was. When she was abnut 12 vara old she got angry one night and ran away to work for, someone else. ""re was coia ana snowing outside. When it was dark she tried to find a nlaca to itav all niarht - hut tvurr body refused her a bed, so she stayed outside an nignt ana returned Home in the mnrniner ' y ...... When she reached hom she found her mother dead.: She started to cry and her father said to her, "You will always have something to re member, how you treated your mother." And this was true, for atter that she changed altogether! She was good-hearted to everybody and always stayed at home. She lived with her father and kept house for him. Br louts Zeleny, Ase f. Llnwsod, Neb. -- Dear Busy Bees: This is my (irst time I have written to your page. I read your stories every week and enjoy them very much. I walk two and one-half miles to school and go nearly every "day. I don't go now on account of the 'flu." ; I m 9 years -old an4 in the sec ond grade. I have one brother and one sister that go to school with me. Well, dear "Busy Bees," I think 111 close, for my letter i getting long. 1 hope MrWastebasket has gone for a visit and hope to see my letter in print. So, goodby. 'V My Pet. ' ' iJ- " EMroa Smith, Age 12, Crete, Neb." Dear Busy Bees: As I dida't see my first letter in the paper I will write again. Once we had three lit tle pigs; two of them died. . I asked pa if I could take it. He said I might, I fed it milk and it soon be; came big and fat. It was so tame that it would follow me. When it was almost 6 months old It weighed over 200 pounds. Then I sold it and got almost $40. Good-by, Busy Bees. A Surprise. Lucil Bauer; Age It, Atwood, Kan. " - TorlTlTl! went the door bell. Bes sie shut the book she was reading and went to the door.. "Miss Bessie Devd-raii?" hlimtl asked the messenger boy.- xes, this is she,", said Bessie, her heart in her mouth. Message for you," and disap peared. Bessie opened the envelope with tremhlinof finarera Was if the War department announcing that ner orotner was lulled t Killed f She shuddered. Many thoughts raced through her mind as she opened it. When she got it open it read: - "Will arrive next Friday.- Have surprise for you. Brother," V She read it with a sigh of relief and ran to tell 'her grandmother. It Seemed an ftirnitv until VriAav The' train was an hour late but Bes sie was there to meet her brother. The crowd was so dense Bessie could hardly get through; but 'she must see her brother? Who was that man nv,r rhrit in uniform with a black-eyed baby in his jrmsr in a nasn sne reanzect it was ner broth er, ane ran to him. r- ' "See here, look at thr surnriae Tt'a a little French orphan found in a aesenea village. - "O, isn't she cute? She's bretty. too. Let's go take her to grand mother. - "All's well, let's go, Nannette, and see grandma." i Thrilline ; Story' of. A n .-. ;. "V :! - W.v .,.,,! I ' "Yes, it's true," sighed the fire horse mournfully. "There aren't many of us left.. That hideous red and gold demon out there in the middle of the fire house floor has put an end to our Ions . rears of faithful and untiring service; so wtl have literally been put on the shelf. For a moment' he thoughtfully munched the lump of sugar I had given him. - -- "How is it that they keep you and the fire demon which you describe in the same fire house?' 'J asked, . The fir chief says when they get rid, of me they have to accept his MfiirnirtAn a latt 'ncumrsil aIsJ a viriajiiwiiun tmjf atp TT V VU , j 4 s horse, tossing his head proudly; "and as he 1 a very good hre chief, I am still here." Are you his soecial pet? I asked. "Well, I didn't us tobe. In fact the chief seemed to have a gru against me in particular when I first cam on the force, but after that time when- oh, but that' another story I" "Pleas tell me about it," I beg- ged, scenting something interesting to narrate t$ my juinor readers. "I don't mind telling you' said the horse, "if you will promise not to think that I apt blowing my own horn." He was really a very modest animal.;, f . .- ; .K : , : J. ,'v-r "I promise not to think any such thing," I eagerly assented, ''if you will just promise to begin at the be ginning and go right through to the end, and not stop one till you finish." . - ;! ...'. , "I'll do my best," agreed the horse with a little neigh. - "Well, here goes. I was born on a farm in Massachussets, where I remained until I .was about 2 years old- All I had to do all day long was to race about the green fields with my' mother, and taking my young mistress, Elizabeth Tal bot, out for a ride every morning before lunch, which in itself was no effort at all, because Miss Betty, as everyone called her, was such a lit tle thing that I scarcely felt her weight on my back at all. She was a sweet little girl of about 12 years of age, and even at that time, was an excellent horsewoman. -She and I tpgether have jumped more fences and raced down more long stretches oflevel road than many an older peVson. Betty' brother, Richard, was a lad of about 16 years, and he used to teach me how to do-all sorts of thines. From him l learned to pick up handkerchiefs in, my teeth! while at a ganop ana to touow mm down the lane . when t he carried lumps of sugar and juicy apples in his pockets., v - I . Life was all a path of roses then, and I had all I wanted to eat of sweet cloyer and juicy young grass that grew rank in the broad mea dows on the farm, I loved the chil dren with all my heart, and they loved mc in return. We played out of doors every day when it was sunshiny, and when it rained, the children came into the stall where I was and climbed on my back and played hide and go seek in and out between my long legs. : "Mr. and Mrs. Talbot were also very good to me, and once when I cut my leg on a sharp stone, Mr. Talbot put a soothing salve on it and bound it np carefully with soft rags, as if I had been one of his own children. The days flew by like lightning and I paid small attention to them as they passed. We were all so perfectly happy that there seemed no need to look into' the fu ture, when one .night M. Talbot came home with i heavy cold from f , . i, ,,. -V, . 't ...... ... .1 . '' ..... . By the Horse Himself the city where he had taken some -i I " 1 , . , , r i i oi ins produce to market, ior wnicu he retused to do anything on the plea that 't was nothing and would soon pass off. The cold soon devel oped into pneumonia, and in three days he died. He had invested a good, bit of the - money realized from the crops of his prosperous farm in some mining venture out west, and six weeks after his death poor Mrs. Talbot read in the paper of the failure of the whole scheme! with the result that hundreds ot peo ple had lost everything in the final smash. The Talbots had only the farm property and a few hundred dolalrs of insurance money left be tween them and starvation. Richard and Betty at that time were 18 and 14, respectively. Richard wa eager to leave school and (tart into work in order to help out. but his mother put her foot down, saying that his CUUtauuil iijusi tuinc ins,., Betty in a vague sort of way real ized that something serious had happened to the family fortunes, but her mother aid not aiscuss tne 'The terror-rtricken child was directly in 4he path' subject with her little daughter very much for feat! of worrying the child and endangering her healthy They say it never rains. but it pours. Just one week after Mr. , Talbot's death, Richard wok up up one night to find himself coughing and choking in the thick smoke that filled his room. Darting from the bed he rushed out into the hall, and aroused his Wther and sister. The fir had evidently started in th kitchen from some clothes that had been hung too near the stove to dry and which had caught fire during the night, spreading the flames to other parts of the lower floor and cutting off escape from above.. "Bv clambering out on the roof of the veranda, and - descending by Home James! This tiny miss is one of the Bel gian refugee children who have been sheltered during the war in Switzer land. She is enjoying her final "piggy-back ride" on the shoulders of an American Red Cross worker be fore leaving for the train that will carry her back to her old home it) Belgium.. Giddapl . . .. . . .. i-Xa "vm'V "V -iff 01 d Fire means of a trellis at the side, the lit tle family reached safety only to watch their home burn before their eyes. The night was cold witii a promise of snow, and the children ami their mother not being any too heavily clad, heavy Colds resulted irom the exposure. The children's strong, animal spirits pulled them through, but Mrs. Talbot was not long in following her husband to the grave,'! ' "How very sad," I murmured. "Indeed it was," answered the horse, shaking his head slowly. "I don't belive lever aw a more for lorn jpair of children than Richard and Bettv when they came out to my stall after' the funeral. The Talbot had no relatives nearer than Flint, Mich,, so it meant the parting of the way for the children ana myself. A very sad parting it was, too, for we had been together so long that the thought of separation seemed almost unbearable, I was sold to a neighboring farmer, and the children cried little, salty tears on my neck when my new owners came to take me .away, i never saw my little playmates again." The old horse paused thought fuly for a moment and then went on. - '.' -' My new owners soon found that I was not of much use to them. I had never done any very hard work, my job having been that of play mate for Jhe children rather than of a farm animal, so 'when Bing Bing Brothers Greatest Show on Earth came through the town, I was made to show my tricks and accomplishments to the manager of the'show, with the ultimate result that I was resold to the circus peo ple and loaded on a box car bound for, Nashville, Tenn., the following night, x "The next six months 'were a nightmare which it is painful to re call. My suffering during that per iod of enforced training accoraea performing animals in the circus was almost more than flesh and blood could bear. At nisht. when I was driven into my narrow, - all - smelling stall, or even into the foul er box car enroute, i ten as it my spirit would leave 'my ; tired body and T would just lie down and die right then and there. .. "I was taught tq.. go round and round a small - rinj while tulle skirted """bareback v riders jumped through hoops to my tired back. I was put through all my old tricks of picking up handkerchiefs and opening barred gates with -tny hose until I was so tired that I could have dropped where I stood. Oneof the circus clowns was my special ene my, or so it seemed, for he never lost an opportunity to teas me or cause me to rear on my hind legs. He Stuck me with pins to make me caper so that the audience would laugh the harder, and once when he was riding me around the arena, h put a 'great burr underneath the blanket so that I bucked and kicked with all my might to rid myself of the horrid,, stinging pain. - - One day during : the afternoon performance, I lost my temper com pletely, and with a mad lunge, threw the offending clown over my head and into the sawdust of the arena. He , being . an acrobat, however; turned a somersault and landed on his feet to the intense enjoyment of the crowd. After that my suffering increased ten-fold, for the clown, in order to avail . himself of the ap plause which always followed an exhibition of temper on my part, took pains to torment me in order to make me prance and throw him. One day during the parade through a small western city where our company was playing, I heard the clatter and clang of a fire-engine on the way to a fire and a thrill of excitement filled me as I watched Horse Told X ' ' -i ' r:?'J: the flying manes and distended nos trils of the three huge gray horses, who flew down the street dragging behind them the brilliant red en gine. A stream of smoke, and cin ders followed in their wake, and like magic the street cleared before them in order that nothing should obstruct their passage. "What a glorious feeling it would be, I thought, to tear along like that with the wind whistling through my mam; as it did when Miss Betty and I Vaced Master Richard on the bay mare up at the old farm. What., wonder to feet that perhaps the safety pf a home depended on the fleetness of one's limbs. If only I could have been able U race down the night of the fire on the 'irm dragging great engine behind me and nave arrived in the nick of time to save the duelling of those w'lom I loved from destruction by the flames, : Before I thought what was do ing I reared on my hind feet and threw off my rider, and before the bewildered clown could collect his wits, I was off down the street like a shot after the fast disappearing engine. I finally caught up with them and tore along beside them until the scene of . the fire was reached. Flames were spouting from the" roof of a two-story and jase nient building, and on the top floor a frantic mother was crouched in the window with a 6-months'-old child in her arms. I fairly quivered with excitement as the brave fire fighter adjusted their ladders and clambered to the rescue. Never could I return to the sordid drudg ery of the circus routine when I might share in work as thrilling as this. The woman and child- were wrapped in blankets by one of the firemcn and brought down the long ladder to safety. The flames died down" under the force of the stream of water that was turned on the heart of the conflagration and within an-hour the fire was practically out. Several of the engine crew remain ed to watch the smouldering ember in case they should be rekindled by a vagrant breeze, and the tired horses on the engine were turned! ana siowiy anyen oacn to mc nrci house,, while I trotted along after a thing in the world to do. The firemen'were so amused at my apparent attraction to their out fit .that theyv forthwith made me one of them,v'and when the circus people appeared to demand that I be returned to their rightful pos session, the hre company ciubbea together and bought me for the de partment at my former owner own price. ., -v ; 1 ; My new work proved fully a fas cinating as I had anticipated, the excitement even during the period of training, which, needless to say, was not quite so gruelling as that undergone with the circus, the mad dashes for the harness at the sound of the gong, the thrilling race down through the crowded streets of the city, and the throb of the pump as they forced the water into the great coils of hose, eventually became the very breath of life to me. I entered into the routine of the department and became part of it, The men pet ted me and the children of the neighborhood came into my stall 4 il 38t c5 Our Ricture Puzzle IS & V5 - ' V K 25 " -54 " V w V 5J - 32 i v'"'-: to 8 rS 1 Vz 'u. if. 75 What is hidden in this space, ,. That lights up old Rastus' face? ' Complete th picture by drawing a line through the dot beginning at Figure 1 and taking -them numerically. - with offerings of sugar and apples, and the gentle pats of countless lit-, tie, grimy hands. I loved them all. for they. brought back to me memo ries of the good old days when Mr. and Mrs. Talbot were ; alive, and Betty and Richard playefrwith me in the meadows of the Massachu setts farmstead. ' ; One of my most frequent visitors was little Bobby Shea, the S-year-old son of the chief. The little fel low came in nearly every day with a pocketful of apples and one or two of sugar, and one of themen would hoist him onto my back and walk me around the floor of the fire house, .while my rider screamed with delight. He would put his two arms around ; my neck and sty: "Dear old horse, Bobby's ' horse someday, when Bobby grows up to be fire chief, Won't jfou dear old horse?" And I would whinny byway of, ; answer. Whenever we swept ; down the thbroughfare Bobby would always run out of the house to see us go by, and would shout himself hoarse as we flew past on our way to a fire, and so the time passed. Day grew into weeks, weeks info months, and months into years. I began to get old, but had by -no mean begun to lose my fleetness of foot and strength of. muscle. However that might be, the fire de partments of both New York and Brooklyn were undergoing many radical changes. Under the new. re- . gime the fire horses became a thing of the past, to be replaced in i all possible haste by the new tangiea -motor trucks that roared like 40 of the lions and tigers from th cir-. cus.' Much as; the men hated to part' with me, who had become their pe dal pet. the day came when one of the huge trucks was mstaiieo in e-n-erine' House No. 12, and the chief put an ad in the paper for my d- posal. , . ' ' F.ach time the eonir rana: I suffer ed the most terrible agony, for, in stead, of having the iron chain dropped from before my stall, so har I could dart toward the- sus pended harness, the crew slid down the pole from above and mounted the red and gold usurper without an much as a nod in mv oirection. The other two horses had been sold. So my loneliness was even worse than if they had been there to bear me company in my misery. Bobby still continued his visits, I am thnk ful to say, and-this helped somewhat t9 while away the. long, lonely hours of waiting? ..: ; ? ! s One hoi. sultrv nicrht in July, about 7 .o'clock,, when dusk was just falling, a triple alarm sounded that . caused even those hardened old fire fighters a twinge of uneasiness. The location was in one of the ware houses along the water front, so there would not be much rescue work to be done, but the danger lay in the fact that, quantities of paints and varnishes, piles of canvas and sacking and hundreds of empty barrels were stored there, The place had 'not been open in some time, so fhat there was the added risk of back draft and suffocation from the fumes of the burning chem- icals. The men came down the pole like greased lightning and leaped into, their places on the truck." I neighed and whinnied to be taken along, but to no effect. In two min ute the truck, rattled out of the door and down the street toward the spot from which the alarm had been sent. : (Concluded Next Sunday.) i! il i! i! i! i! M 'I!