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* * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Vol. VIII.—No 25. May 21, 1887.
GOLDEN DAYS
For Boys and Girls
Philadelphia: JAMES ELVERSON, Publisher.
* * * * *
[Transcriber's Note:
Text incorporated into advertising illustrations is shown in (parentheses); where necessary, a brief description of the illustration is given in {braces}.]
* * * * *
QUITE UP TO THE TIMES.
New Applicant—Do I know how to use Sapolio? Well, that's fresh! Do I look like a girl who don't know about Sapolio? Am I blind, d'yer think, or can't read? Why, the babies on the block know all about Sapolio. What are ye givin' me?
SAPOLIO
is a solid, handsome cake of House-cleaning Soap, which has no equal for all scouring purposes, except the laundry. Perhaps you have heard of it a thousand times without using it once. If you will reverse the position and use it once you will praise it to others a thousand times. Ask your grocer for a cake, and try it in your next house-cleaning.
No. 3. [Copyright, March 1887.]
DYKE'S BEARD ELIXIR
For_es heavy Mustache, Whiskers, or hair on bald heads in 20 to 30 days. Extra Strength. No other remedy 2 or 3 Pkgs. does the work. We will prove it or forfeit $100.00 Price per Pkg. sealed and postpaid 25c., 3 for 50 cts., stamps or silver. SMITH MFG. CO., PALATINE, ILLS.
$50 WEEKLY
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*We want agents* for our celebrated Oil Portrait. *No experience required!* *4 orders* per day gives the Agent $50 weekly profit! Our agents report from 4 to 30 daily sales! Send at once for terms and full particulars. *$2 outfit free!* *SAFFORD ADAMS & CO., 48 Bond St., N.Y.* [Mention "Golden Days."]
IMPROVED
HIRES' ROOT BEER
25 cents / PACKAGE
Makes *Five Gallons* of a *delicious*, sparkling temperance beverage. *Strengthens* and purifies the blood. Its *purity* and delicacy commend it to all. Sold by druggists and storekeepers everywhere.
A ZANZIBAR TIGER COWRY SHELL, 8c. Send stamp for list. Steel & Co., 135 E. 23d St., New York
CURE FOR THE DEAF
PECK'S PATENT IMPROVED CUSHIONED EAR DRUMS *Perfectly Restore the Hearing*, and perform the work of the natural drum. Invisible, comfortable and always in position. All conversation and even whispers heard distinctly. Send for illustrated book with testimonials, *FREE*. Address or call on F. HISCOX, *853* Broadway, New York. Mention this paper.
FREE a $2.50 *Gold Ring* to all who will act as our agents. The Journal Co., Essex, Conn.
GOOD NEWS TO LADIES.
Greatest inducements ever offered. Now's your time to get up orders for our celebrated *Teas* and *Coffees*, and secure a beautiful Gold Band or Moss Rose China Tea Set, or Handsome Decorated Gold Band Moss Rose Dinner Set, or Gold Band Moss Decorated Toilet Set. For full particulars address
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AGENTS wanted for Lyman Abbot's Life of Beecher. The only proper one. A. GORTON & CO., Philada.
* * * * *
Vol. VII "Golden Days"
NOW READY,
is a
MAGNIFICENT BOOK OF 832 PAGES!
A perfect mine of everything that will interest young people.
*It is Superbly Illustrated,*
—CONTAINING—
Over 400 Finely-Executed Wood Engravings!
Making, without question,
THE MOST ATTRACTIVE BOOK
Of The Season.
[->] This volume will be sent to any address, prepaid, on the receipt of price—$4.00.
JAMES ELVERSON, Publisher "GOLDEN DAYS," Philad'a
* * * * *
[->] Advertisements inserted on Second and Third Pages of Cover at 50 cents per line, and on the Fourth Page at 75 cents per line, agate measurement).
* * * * *
The Best Practical Joke of the Season
The perfect Electric Bell Button is made to pin on your breast, Fine ebony finish with white button sure to induce a push, which never fails to produce a shock with "Hail Columbia," and variations. *A Full Charge* of electricity every time. The old joker is told "*That is Good! Ring the Bell.*" The *Best Selling Article* ever invented. *4760* sold by one agent in *3* weeks. Sample by Mail *15* cents.; two for *25* cents.; *14* for *$1.00*. 100 for *$6.00*. Try *$1* worth. Stamps taken.
Send all orders to World Manuf. Co. 122 Nassau St. New York
*EUREKA RECITATIONS*
NINE NUMBERS NOW READY.
Each number contains nearly *100 selections* by Mrs. Anna Randall-Diehl, and bound in 4-color lithograph cover. Mailed for 12 cents each by J. S. Ogilvie & Co., Publishers, 31 Rose Street, New York. Send for one.
* * * * *
*THIS BINDER* is light, strong and handsome, and the weekly issues of GOLDEN DAYS are held together by it in the convenient form of a book, which can be kept lying on the reading-table. It is made of two white wires joined together in the centre, with slides on either end for pressing the wires together, thus holding the papers together by pressure without mutilating them. We will furnish the Binder at Ten Cents apiece, postage prepaid. Address JAMES ELVERSON,
Publisher, Philadelphia, Pa.
* * * * *
*We want you as our Agent* to sell the *Perfection Slate Eraser* in schools. It is attractive, well-made and indispensable. Send five 2-cent stamps for sample and particulars. WITTRAM MFG. CO., 525 Front St., San Francisco, Cal. (*Box 2414.*)
*FOR 10 cts. to pay postage &c.*, we will send this Charm Pen-Knife and five other samples FREE. *Atlantic Works, East River, Conn.*
*BICYCLES $8 to $150. EASY PAYMENTS.*
Tricycles, $7.50 up. Standard makes. 2d-hand Wheels handled. Send for Catalogue.
GEO. W. ROUSE & SON, 34 G St., Peoria, Ill.
1 Stone Ring, 1 Band Ring, 275 Scrap Pictures & Verses, Book of Poems, Book Flirtations, 40 Agt's Samples, All 10c. Austin Card Co., New Haven, Ct
*THE NEW DEPARTURE DRUMS*
are made with patent double acting rods and folding knee rest. Light, substantial and handsome. Used in the best Bands and Orchestras. Unequaled for tone, surpass all others in finish and appearance. If nearest Music dealer does not keep them, write to us for Illustrated Catalogue.
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*PRINTERS* Send stamp for wholesale list of BLANK Cards, 1000 kinds. Card Co., Montpelier, Vt
*SHORTHAND* Writing thoroughly taught *by mail* or personally. *Situations procured* all pupils when competent. Send for circular. *W. G. CHAFFEE*, Oswego, N.Y.
23 HIDDEN NAME *MOTTO CARDS*, 10c
Story Book and AGENT'S OUTFIT with each pack. HAMDEN CARD WORKS, Hamden, Conn
REEL, 25 FEET HOSE, NOZZLE AND COUPLINGS, $4.00.
Sent on receipt of price.
*Rubber Footballs*, No. 1, *$1.25* each
Additional sizes to No. 6, 25c. extra.
[->] *RUBBER GOODS* of all descriptions—Gossamers, Shoes, Boots, etc.
*ROBERT C. GEDDES*, 316 Market St., Philada., Pa.
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100 Fancy Pictures, all new designs, 30 latest Songs, 50 Elegant Fancy Patterns, 1 Album, over 60 Colored Transfer Pictures, with our Grand Premium List all for *10 cts.* BIRD CARD WORKS, MERIDEN, CONN. Autograph Album, name in gold, *10 cts.*
HIGHLY Educated Physician who has traveled much and speaks several languages, wants to complete a party of youths for travel in Europe. References exchanged. Address "Aeskulap," (office of) Advocate, 805 Broadway, N.Y.
* * * * *
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria
* * * * *
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Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
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Sold by all Druggists and Dealers in Medicines.
* * * * *
*LEARN TO TELEGRAPH*
With the Pocket Telegraph Instrument
In a few hours. Want an agent in each town. They sell fast. Sample and alphabet, postpaid, for 13 two-cent stamps, or 6 for $1.00. You can sell them quick for 25c. each. *PORTVILLE MF'G CO.* limited, Portville, Catt. Co., N.Y.
MORE MONEY THAN EVER
You thought of can now be made. MALE or FEMALE. Write quick for free Sample and Terms. BEST selling article ever out. *NATIONAL CO.*, 21 Dey St., N.Y.
*LANGUAGES.*
*The Meisterschaft System*, by Dr. R. S. ROSENTHAL, is the only successful method ever devised to learn to speak without a teacher, and in a few weeks,
*French*, *German*, *Spanish* or *Italian*.
Endorsed by leading linguists. Terms, $5.00 for books of either language. Sample copy, Part I., 25 cents. Liberal terms to Teachers.
*MEISTERSCHAFT PUBLISHING CO., Boston, Mass.*
*100 Choice New Recitations* 13 Songs, Elegant Sample Cards, all for a 2c. stamp. CADIZ CARD CO., CADIZ, O.
*SPRING SALE* To reduce our stock of music we will send by mail, postpaid, the *Beautiful Blue Danube* Waltzes and 60 pieces, full sheet-music size, including songs, marches, quadrilles (with calls), for only 20 cents. Satisfaction guaranteed, or money refunded. *WHITE WINGS & 100 Songs*, words and music, *10c.* W. HATHAWAY, 339 Wash. St., Boston, Mass.
*BROWN'S FRENCH DRESSING.*
The Original! Beware of Imitations!
*AWARDED HIGHEST PRIZE AND ONLY MEDAL*
PARIS EXPOSITION, 1878.
Highest Award New Orleans Exposition.
*PRINTING MADE EASY!*
With our Economy Outfits. Business men save money doing their own printing! Fun for the boys! Instructions free. Business Outfits $7.50 upwards. Card Outfits $2. Catalogue for 2c stamp. Wm. Volkmann & Co., 164 Washington St., Chicago, Ill.
CAT'S-EYE SCARF-PIN 44 cts
The Gem Cat's Eye is so called because it possesses the peculiar ray of light or glisten seen in a cat's eye in the dark. I have a limited stock only, and offer you one for only *44 cts.*, post paid. The same in Ear Drops, choice, *87 cents*. Send Stamp for large illustrated catalogue of Mineral Cabinets, Agate Novelties, Indian Relics, etc. Trade Supplied.
H. H. TAMMEN, 935 16th St., Denver, Col.
*100 New Imported Scrap Pictures, 12 Elegant Imported Cards*, 1 Album of *50* Colored Transfer Pictures and Agt's Samples for '87. all for *10c.* S. STOKES & CO., Meriden, Conn.
*DRUNKENNESS* *OR THE LIQUOR HABIT POSITIVELY CURED* in any of its stages. All desire or craving for stimulants entirely removed. Medicine can be given without knowledge of the patient, by placing it in coffee, tea, or articles of food. Cures guaranteed. Send for particulars. *GOLDEN SPECIFIC CO., 185 Race Street, Cincinnati, Ohio.*
How to Make, Your Own *CANDIES*. By an Experienced Confectioner. Book containing 68 Recipes mailed on receipt of 10 cts. L. SCHWARZ Confectioner, 68 Fulton St., N.Y.
1000 foreign stamps, including Mexico, Jamaica, Dutch E. India, Barbados & Portugal, 25cts. CHAS. A. TOWNSEND, Akron, O.
*PAKET* of *FOREN STAMPS* and Catalog, 10c. *ALBUMS*, 50c. Agents' terms and Catalog, 10c. JOHN NEWHAM, *Box 3694*, N.Y. City.
*500 FOREIGN STAMPS*, Australia, etc., 10c.; 105 varieties, 10c. F. P. Vincent, Chatham, N.Y.
STAMPS 106 varieties, 10c.; 1010 mixed, 20c. Putnam Brothers, Lewiston, Me.
*STAMPS* APPROVAL SHEETS. Agents wanted. *E. A. OBORNE. Jamaica, N.Y.*
*STAMPS* Agents wanted. 30 per cent. com. on sheets. Keystone Stamp Co., Box 200, Philad'a, Pa.
25 *Foreign Stamps FREE* to every collector. Send your address. A. E. Ashfield, Box 233, Rye, N.Y.
* * * * *
*A NEW BOOK ON CURVE-PITCHING*
That so fully explains the Art that
*Any one with a Little Practice can Master all the Curves* used by the most noted pitchers. Price, *15* cts. Send for Catalogue.
A COMPLETE HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES FROM 1492 TO 1885, INCLUSIVE, FOR 10 CENTS.
A. J. REACH & CO., 23 S. 8th St., Philad'a, Pa.
*390* Funny Selections, Scrap Pictures, etc., and nice Sample Cards for 2c. HILL CARD CO., Cadiz, Ohio
*THE RED BOOKS.*
NEW PIECES TO SPEAK IN SCHOOL,
at Church or Home Entertainments. Elocution. Gesture. Beautifully Illustrated. 12 different numbers, $1.00. Sample by mail, 10 cts. *Agents Wanted.*
*HALL & STEBBINS, 11 Michigan Ave. CHICAGO, ILL.*
*CARDS*
New Sample Book of Hidden Name Cards for a 2c. stamp. STAR CARD CO., Laceyville, Ohio
*WAKE UP* and earn *$70 per month* at home. COSTLY OUTFIT of samples, a package of goods and full instructions sent for *10c.* to help pay postage and advertising.
*H. C. ROWELL & CO., Rutland, Vermont.*
*4 U.S. 1/2 CENTS*, postpaid, 25 cents. Price List free. G. J. BAUER, 73 Front St., Rochester, N.Y.
*PRINT YOUR OWN CARDS!*
Press, $3; Circular size, $8. Press for small newspaper, $25. New Rotary Jobber, $100. Send 2 stamps for catalogue Presses, Type, cards to factory, Kelsey & Co. Meriden, Conn
*WARNER BRO'S*
*9, MILLION*
worn during the past six years.
This marvelous success is due—
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2d.—To the superior quality, shape and workmanship of our Corsets, combined with their low prices.
Avoid cheap imitations made of various kinds of cord. None are genuine unless
*"DR. WARNER'S CORALINE"*
is printed on inside of steel cover.
*FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING MERCHANTS.*
*WARNER BROTHERS,*
*359 Broadway. New York City.*
*THIS HAMMOCK CHAIR*
May be changed instantly to an automatic floor Chair adjustable to many reclining positions. Has no equal, and is desirable for
*Library, Steamer, and Invalid Use.*
Used in hospitals, colleges, families, and wherever
*COMFORT AND HEALTH*
are desired at a small cost. Folded compactly, and shipped anywhere. Circulars, testimonials, and photographs for 2 cts. Price $7 to $15. LIBERAL DISCOUNTS to agents and dealers. Mention this Paper. *BLAISDELL CHAIR CO., 96 High St., Boston.*
* * * * * * * * * * * * * *
GOLDEN DAYS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS
(Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1887, by JAMES ELVERSON, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D.C.)
VOL. VIII.
JAMES ELVERSON, Publisher. N.W. corner Ninth and Spruce Sts.
PHILADELPHIA MAY 21, 1887.
TERMS $3.00 Per Annum, In Advance.
No. 25.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * *
LINDA'S CRAZY QUILT.
By Fannie Williams.
"Oh, dear!" sighed Linda Trafton, turning over the pages of a closely-written, school-girlish letter, which her brother Fred had tossed into her lap, on returning from the post office. "I do wish I could get silk pieces enough to make a crazy quilt. Cousin Dell writes all about hers, and it must be very pretty."
"Crazy quilt! That's about all I've heard for the last six months! I should think you girls had all gone crazy yourselves!" ejaculated Fred.
"Why, Fred!" was Linda's only answer to this outburst.
She was a very sweet-tempered little maid, with soft, brown hair and soft, brown eyes, that matched in color as exactly as eyes and hair could match, and gave her a look of being—as indeed she was—too gentle to dispute, or even to argue, with anybody, least of all with Fred, who was fifteen, and three years her elder, and always took a tone of great superiority toward his little sister.
Still, he was a pretty good sort of brother, as brothers go; and, in Linda's eyes, he was a prodigy of cleverness.
So, whenever they happened to differ in opinion, and Fred expressed himself in this vehement style, she only looked at him in a deprecating way, and murmured:
"Why, Fred!"
"Well, I should like to know," continued Fred, "what could be more idiotic than the way you spend your time, you girls, fitting those ridiculous, catty-cornered pieces of silk together, and working them all over with bugs and cobwebs and caterpillars, and little boys in Mother Hubbard dresses! You may well call 'em crazy quilts! I don't believe there was ever anything crazier, unless it was the lunatic who first invented them!"
"Why, Fred!" said Linda, again. "Now, I think they are too pretty for anything!"
"Pretty!" snorted Fred. "They're made out of the last things that you'd suppose anybody would ever think of putting into a bed-quilt. I can't get a chance to wear a neck-tie half out before somebody wants it. Kate Graham spoke for my last new one the next day after I bought it. And I hardly dare to put my hat down, where there's a girl around, for fear she'll capture my hat-band!"
By this time, Linda was laughing outright.
"Oh, you are so funny, Fred! But you only just ought to see Kate Graham's crazy quilt. I know you couldn't help calling it lovely. She has got pieces of ever so many wedding dresses in it; but I don't know who would give me any. Aunt Mary never will get married, nor Cousin Susie, nor our Bridget, unless Pat hurries up with his courting—and there's nobody else. Besides, they are all making crazy quilts of their own. I would start one with papa's old silk handkerchief and his Association badge, if I thought I could ever get pieces enough to finish it; but I don't see how I could."
"Bess Hartley told me that she was going to send off somewhere and get a lot of pieces that are put up to sell. You get a whole package of assorted colors for a dollar," suggested Fred.
"Oh, that would make it cost too much! Mamma would not let me do that," said Linda, shaking her head. "She says it is well enough to use up odd bits of silk in that way, if one happens to have them; but she doesn't think it right to spend money in such a manner, instead of using it for better purposes—and I don't suppose it is."
"Well, I am sure I don't know what you are going to do," was Fred's consoling observation. "You'd be as crazy as the rest of the girls if you began to piece a quilt; and I don't know but you will go crazy if you can't."
With which conclusion, Fred walked off whistling, and left Linda to read her Cousin Dell's letter over again, and wish that Patrick O'Brien would propose to Bridget, if he was ever going to, so that she could get married, and have a new silk dress for her wedding.
However, Linda was not the girl to fret and worry after things which were unattainable.
Fred would have his joke, but she was not going to make herself unhappy just because she had not the materials for making silk patchwork, as Dell and the rest of her girl friends were doing. There were plenty of other pleasures and amusements within her reach, and the one that she enjoyed most of all came in her way, as it happened, the very next morning.
Her father said to her, as he rose from the table after breakfast:
"Linda, would you like a ride, my dear? I am going to drive over to East Berlin, and I will take you along, if you would like to go."
"If I would like it! Why, papa, you know there isn't anything that I like so much as a good, long ride with you!" cried Linda, dancing with delight, as she ran off to get ready for the drive.
For it was indeed a "good long" ride to East Berlin—fifteen miles at least—and the day was just as fresh and bright and lovely as a day could be in the fresh and bright and lovely month of May.
The young grass was emerald green along the country roads, the apple trees were all in sheets of bloom, hill-sides were fairly blue with bird-foot violets, and sweet spring flowers were smiling everywhere.
Linda was so full of happiness that she could scarcely keep from singing in concert with the birds that trilled and chirped among the trees on either hand, as the pleasant road led through a piece of woodland.
But the woods came to an end abruptly where the trees had been cut off, and where some men with ox-carts were hauling away the long piles of cord-wood. Then there were fields of plowed ground on each side of the road, and then a long stretch of rocky hills and old pastures, and presently some houses came in sight.
Old, weather-beaten houses they were—a dozen, perhaps, in all. Two or three had once been painted red, and still displayed some dark and dingy traces of that color; but most of them were brown, and some had green moss growing on their broad, sloping roofs—roofs which were two stories high in front, but came down so low at the back that a lively boy might reach them from the ground with very little effort, only the place did not look as if anything so young or so lively as a boy had been seen there for at least twenty years.
Still, it was a pleasant place. There were thickets of lilac and mock-orange bushes around every house, and old-fashioned lilies and roses growing half-wild along the fences.
There were flagged walks leading up to all the doors, with borders of evergreen box, which had once been trim, and still was quaint and pleasing; there were old gardens, where everything was "all run out," but where the bees and birds appeared to find congenial homes; there were gnarly old apple-trees, with bending, twisted branches that touched the ground and made the most enticing rustic seats.
Withal, there was a calm and stillness brooding on the place that filled one's fancy with sweet thoughts of olden times and—
"Whoo-oo-oop! Hip, hip, pip, hoo-ray!"
"Good gracious!" cried Mr. Trafton, starting from his pleasant reverie, and clutching at the reins which lay loose upon his knee. "Good gracious! What's that?"
"It's a boy!" said Linda, with a quite disgusted accent.
Unquestionably, it was a boy—and a boy of the most aggressively modern type, clad in garments of the very latest cut, from his flannel yachting-shirt to his canvas "base-ball" shoes—a boy with a look as well as a voice, which proclaimed him all alive.
His close-cropped head was bare, and his white straw hat came spinning over the stone wall and into the middle of the road, as if impelled by steam-power, before the boy himself scrambled over, giving vent to another whoop, which would have done credit to a Comanche gone mad.
The whoop and the hat together were enough to startle almost any horse; and, although Mr. Trafton's fine roadster, "Billy," was pretty well trained, the combined effect was a little too much for his nerves. He gave a sidelong leap and started to run. His master checked him sharply, and veering from the road, he ran the wheels into a deep rut, and over went the buggy with a crash!
Linda screamed, as she was pitched headlong into a thicket of sweet-fern which grew along the roadside; but the bushes broke her fall, and, beyond the fright and a scratched hand, she received no injury.
Her father was equally fortunate, and, as Billy had recovered from his momentary panic and did not run, the accident appeared, at the first glance, to be nothing serious.
The boy who had caused it came forward, with a look of trepidation upon his countenance, exclaiming:
"I'm awfully sorry, sir; I didn't mean to frighten your horse. I was down behind the wall and didn't see you coming, or I wouldn't have thrown my hat so. I was only scaring a squirrel."
"He must have been pretty thoroughly scared," said Mr. Trafton, drily.
However, the boy's bright face wore an expression of such honest regret that he added, with a good-humored accent:
"Well, well, I was a boy myself once. You must be more careful another time, my lad."
"That I will, sir."
And as Mr. Trafton began to raise the overturned buggy, the boy took hold and helped him.
On getting the vehicle righted, they found that one wheel was broken so badly as to need repairs before the journey could be continued, and Mr. Trafton surveyed the damage with grave concern.
The boy gave a low whistle, and murmured:
"Here's a state of things!"
"I don't see what I'm going to do," remarked the gentleman. "There's nobody in this region who could mend that wheel, I suppose?"
"Oh yes there is!" cried the boy, brightening up. "Doran's blacksmith shop is only a little ways down the road; you can get the wheel fixed there. I'll go along and hold up this side of the buggy; and I'll pay the bill, sir, as I caused the damage."
Mr. Trafton looked at him approvingly, but answered:
"You need not do that, my boy. The bill won't amount to much; but the job may take some time—and where can I leave my little girl? I suppose you would not care to wait in the blacksmith shop, Linda?"
Before Linda could reply, the boy said, looking at her frankly, and not at all abashed:
"She can stay with my grandma while you're having the wheel fixed. Mrs. Deacon Burbank is my grandma; she lives right here, sir," pointing out the house.
"And where do you live?" asked Mr. Trafton, who took a liking to Mrs. Deacon Burbank's grandson, for all his annoyance at the trouble which that lively youth had caused him.
"I'm staying with grandma this summer," said the boy; "but I live in Boston when I'm at home. My name is John Burbank."
"Well, John, you will have to take Linda to your grandma, for I cannot leave Billy standing here with this broken buggy."
"All right, sir; I'll be back in a minute, and help you down to Doran's."
So saying, John Burbank led the way, and Linda followed, to the nearest of the brown old houses—a big, broad-roofed domicile, with wide, double doors and narrow windows, and with two great cherry trees in the front yard, looking like two great drifts of snow, they were so thickly covered with white blossoms.
A border of red and yellow tulips, gay daffodils, and "crown imperials," edged the narrow walk which led from the front gate around to the side door, where they were received by a surprised old lady in gold-bowed spectacles, to whom John presented his companion, with the following concise account of the accident which occasioned her unexpected appearance:
"Grandma, here's a girl, and her father is out there with his team, and they've just had a break-down, and it was all my doing; but I didn't mean to! I scared the horse, hollering at a squirrel. I've got to go and help her father get the buggy down to Doran's, and she's going to stay here till it's fixed, and her name's Linda. I don't know what her other name is."
"Linda Trafton," supplemented Linda, as the boy paused to catch his breath.
"Johnny," said the old lady, speaking as severely as a stout old lady with dimples in her cheeks and a twinkle in her eyes could be expected to speak, when addressing her only grandson—"Johnny, I do declare for 't, you air the worst boy! What under the canopy will you go to cuttin' up next? Come right in, my dear," she said to Linda, "and make yourself to home. Johnny, you run along and help the gentleman; and tell Mr. Doran your gran'ther will pay the bill."
"Oh, I'm going to pay it myself, grandma, with my own pocket-money, if the gentleman will let me; but he says he won't."
And Johnny was off before he had done speaking.
"I declare for 't," said his grandmother, "that boy is a regular Burbank; jest exactly what the deacon used to be at his age—always into suthin'. I knew the deacon when he wa'n't any older than Johnny, an' I remember jest how he used to act. Take off your things, my dear, and make yourself to home."
She took Linda's hat and sacque, and carried them into the spare bed-room, where there was a great "four-poster" bedstead, with blue-and-white chintz hangings and a blue-and-white spread; and then she came and sat down by Linda, and asked her a great many questions about the break-down, and about her father and mother and herself, but she was such a nice old lady that Linda did not mind her being a little inquisitive.
In return, she gave Linda quite a complete history of her own family, and told her a number of entertaining stories about Johnny and Johnny's father, and about the deacon when he was a boy. Finally, she looked at the queer old clock on the kitchen mantle-shelf, and remarked:
"It's time I was gittin' my dinner over to cook, and I guess I shall have to leave you to amuse yourself a little while, my dear. You might go out an' look 'round the garden, if you want; or maybe you'd ruther go up in the garret, an' look at Johnny's picture-books an' things. He likes to stay up there, when it rains so't he can't go out."
"Oh, I should like that, of all things!" cried Linda, delighted. "I do love a real old-fashioned garret, with all sorts of old things in it!"
"Do you now? Well," said Mrs. Burbank, beaming over the gold-bowed spectacles, "our garret is full of old truck, an' you can go up there an' rummage 'round all you've a min' to."
She opened the door of a narrow staircase, with steep and well-worn stairs, and told Linda that was the way to the back chamber over the kitchen, and when she got up there she would see the garret stairs; and she guessed Linda could find the way up alone. She was pretty hefty herself, and she didn't travel up and down stairs any more than she could help.
Linda very quickly found her way to the garret, which proved to be indeed a veritable treasury of "old truck;" and her brown eyes opened wide with ecstasy as she caught sight of a real, genuine spinning-wheel, stowed away under the low, sloping roof.
Then she discovered a smaller wheel, with a motto carved around its rim in quaint lettering, which Linda studied over a long time before she made it out—"Eat not the Bread of Idleness." She learned afterward that this was a flax-wheel, on which Deacon Burbank's mother used to spin the thread to weave her linen sheets.
Beside the flax-wheel stood a superannuated chest of drawers, with dingy brass handles, which had once, no doubt, been a fine piece of furniture.
Then there were broken-down chairs, with straight, stiff backs; queer, cracked jugs and bottles, and painted teacups with the handles broken off; and funny old spelling-books and school-readers, all inscribed, in beautiful handwriting, on their yellow fly-leaves:
"John Burbank, his book."
Linda knew that the John Burbank who had learned his lessons from these old books must have been the deacon "when he was a boy," and not her young friend, Johnny.
There were several old-fashioned wooden chests among the treasures of this delightful garret, and Linda hesitated to open them at first; but finally she called to mind that she had been given permission to "rummage" as much as she pleased.
One chest, painted green, stood near the narrow window, which threw a checkered square of sunshine upon the garret floor, and as Linda raised the cover she gave a little scream of rapture, for it seemed almost as if she had found a broken rainbow, there was such a glitter of gay colors in the sunlight.
"Oh! oh!" she cried, "what lovely, lovely pieces for a crazy quilt!"
For the old chest was nearly filled with scraps of silk and satin of every shape and size, from bits not over an inch wide to the large, three-cornered pieces, of which there seemed to be a great number, left in cutting trimming-folds "on the bias," as Linda knew, for she had seen many such remnants proudly displayed by those of her girl friends who happened to be in the good graces of Miss Cranshaw, the village dressmaker. But such brocades and stripes, such "plaid" and "watered" and "figured" silks, such brilliant shades of color as she found among the contents of that chest, her eyes had never looked upon before.
"I wonder if these are pieces of Deacon Burbank's mother's dresses?" thought Linda, as she turned them over, exclaiming, every other minute, "Oh, how pretty!" or "Oh, what a beauty!" for every new piece that she took up seemed prettier than the last. "Why, she must have had as many as Queen Victoria. Why don't they wear such colors now? Most of the silk dresses that Miss Cranshaw makes are black, or brown, or sage-green, or some other sober shade; but these are all so bright. Oh, what a lovely blue!"
"It is a handsome piece of silk, ain't it? That was the dress Miss Polly Newcome wore to the inaugeration ball at Washington, 'most forty years ago. They don't have no such silks in these days."
Mrs. Deacon Burbank had mounted the garret stairs with footsteps far from noiseless, being, as she said, a "hefty" old lady; but Linda had been too much absorbed to notice her approach until she spoke.
"Oh, Mrs. Burbank! What beautiful pieces!" cried Linda. "Where did they all come from?"
"Why, they come from all 'round, my dear," said Mrs. Burbank, sitting down with Linda, beside the green chest. "You see, my girls used to take in dressmakin', when they was young, and the pieces kinder gathered an' gathered. The girls used to keep the silk pieces separate, thinkin' they might do suthin' with 'em sometime; but they never did. They was always too busy to do much putterin' work. So the pieces have laid there ever sence the girls left home. They all got married, many a long year ago, my girls. Cecilia went to New York, and Evaline lives down in Pennsylvaney—she's got to be quite an old woman herself now; and Nancy Jane, she's layin' in the cemetery over to East Berlin, with her own little girl buried 'long side of her," said the old lady, sighing. "But they used to be called the best dressmakers there was anywhere round these parts; folks used to come from as far off as Tolland County to have their nice dresses made by the Burbank girls. Miss Polly Newcome went to Washington the winter that her father was elected to the Senate. She was a great beauty, Miss Polly was, an' they made everything of her in Washington. But my girls had the makin' of all her new clothes, 'fore she went. This was a dress she wore to a grand dinner-party that was given to her father, Senator Newcome."
And the old lady picked out a scrap of marvelous brocade, with silver-white roses on a wine-colored ground, and smoothed it on her knee.
"This was the one she wore to the President's reception"—selecting a bit of rose-colored satin, striped with sky-blue velvet; "and this," she continued, smoothing out a long strip of changeable silk in green and ruby tints, "was another dinner dress. Here's a piece of plaid silk that was made up for Squire Harney's wife, when she was goin' to Europe; and here's a piece of Mrs. Doctor Thorne's dress, that she had made on purpose to wear to a grand party over in Tolland."
This last was a good-sized square of bright yellow silk, with polka-dots of mazarine blue.
Linda, looking at the gorgeous fabric with admiring eyes, exclaimed:
"I never saw such pieces in all my life! They would make the loveliest crazy quilt!"
"What kind of a quilt, my dear?"
"A crazy quilt," said Linda, laughing. "Haven't you ever seen one, Mrs. Burbank? Fred says the person was crazy who first invented them; but I think they're just as pretty as they can be. It takes a great many pieces of silk, though, to make a bed-quilt, and some of the girls only make sofa-pillows and such things."
"Oh, you mean patchwork. The land!" said Mrs. Burbank, "I used to make silk patchwork more than sixty years ago. It was all the style then, but I didn't s'pose they ever done it now."
"Oh, yes; it is all the style now," said Linda, with a smile.
"Do tell! I want to know if you like to piece patchwork?" said the old lady, looking over her spectacles at Linda's girlish face, with its gentle eyes and frame of soft, brown hair. "I declare for't, you look just as my Nancy Jane did when she was your age! If you want them pieces, child, you can have 'em; I ain't got any use for 'em, and don't s'pose I ever shall have. I'm too old to piece patchwork, myself—my eyesight ain't what it used to be."
For a moment Linda was speechless with delight, but finally she found her voice, and cried out:
"Oh, Mrs. Burbank! All those lovely crazy pieces! Do you really mean to give them to me?"
"Of course I do, and I'm real glad to see ye so pleased, my dear. Them silk pieces have laid in that chest years an' years, doin' nobody any good; an' they shan't lay there no longer, if they can make a little girl so happy."
And the good old lady looked happy herself as she opened another chest, and, taking out an old pillow-case of home-spun linen, began to fill it with the wondrous "crazy pieces."
When she had crowded them all in and tied the bag with a piece of twine, she said:
"Now, you can take 'em right along with you, an' whenever your father happens to come this way ag'in, he can bring me back the piller-case, for it was one of Mother Burbank's, and I shouldn't want to lose it. I declare for 't!" she added, "I forgot all about your father, child, I got so took up with lookin' over them pieces. He's got the buggy mended, an' he's come back after you, so you must come right down. I want you an' he should have dinner 'fore you go; it's all ready."
And happy Linda went down to the kitchen, where she found her father and Johnny, and Deacon Burbank, who had just come home to dinner.
Mr. Trafton was hungry, and quite willing to take dinner at the deacon's, instead of waiting till they arrived at East Berlin.
They all became very well acquainted in the course of the meal, and Mr. Trafton promised to bring Linda to see Mrs. Burbank, whenever he came that way.
"And I will bring my crazy quilt and show it to you, when I get it done, Mrs. Burbank," added Linda.
Whereupon Johnny spoke up, and said:
"If you don't get on with your crazy quilt any faster than my sister does with hers, you won't ever get it done!"
And Linda told him that sounded just like Fred!
Johnny carried the pillow-case out to the buggy and tucked it under the seat; and Linda could think of nothing but her crazy pieces all the way to East Berlin.
When she got home and showed them to Fred, he declared they were the jolliest, craziest lot of pieces he had seen yet!
And when Linda's quilt was commenced, all the girls went wild over it; but she laughingly refused to tell them where her pieces came from.
She made a great mystery of the matter, asserting, in reply to all inquiries, that hers would be a crazy quilt with a history, and nobody should know anything about it until the quilt was finished.
A crazy quilt with a history is no trifling piece of work, and the girls have not yet heard the story.
DAVY'S TURN.
BY FLORENCE B. HALLOWELL.
"Never mind! It'll come my turn some day, and then I'll pay you boys up; and you'll be sorry enough for all the mean things you've done to me," and Davy Potter stooped to pick up the books which one of a group of a dozen boys had pushed from his arm.
The school-house yard was muddy from recent rains, and the books were so wet and dirty that Davy took out his pocket handkerchief to wipe them off.
"What'll you take for that handkerchief, Dave?" asked Fred Bassett. "It's a beauty, and no mistake."
There was a loud shout from the other boys, and universal attention was directed to the little square of faded calico Davy was so industriously using.
A hot flush rose to the boy's thin, freckled face; but he made no reply, except to mutter under his breath something which the boys could not catch.
But there was a bitter, vindictive feeling in his heart as he followed his persecutors into the school-house. He did not understand why all the wit—if wit it could be called—should be leveled at him; why he should be the target for every poisoned arrow, simply because he was poor, ugly and always at the bottom of his classes. He thought it unjust and cruel, and longed with all his heart for the time to come when by some real good luck he would have a chance to "pay the boys up."
He knew that if he ever needed assistance in any such work, he could rely on old Sim Kane to help him; for the old man—a half-witted creature who earned a miserable livelihood by doing odd jobs of wood-sawing and cleaning for charitably-disposed people—had good reason, also, to hate the boys of the Prickett school, and long for revenge.
Davy lived with an aunt, who gave him a home as a matter of duty, and regarded him as a burden and a nuisance, often treating him so unkindly that he was made very unhappy, and spent as little time with her as possible.
He tried honestly to be dutiful and obedient; but he couldn't help forgetting occasionally to wipe his feet before entering the kitchen, and sometimes he let the fire go out, or forgot to feed the chickens. Then he was severely reprimanded, of course, and told that he was ungrateful, as well as stupid.
But in the woods he was free to do as he liked, and there was no one to scold or find fault with him, and he had many dumb but affectionate friends there among the squirrels, rabbits and birds.
So he always took his way to the woods every Saturday as soon as he had cleaned up the yard about his aunt's house, filled all the water-buckets, cut the kindling for the kitchen stove, and attended to the dozen or more other chores Miss Potter required of him.
He never shirked the least of them, no matter how anxious he was to get away; for he had been so frequently told how much he owed to his aunt, that he believed he could not do too much for her.
It was while exploring the depths of the woods, one day, that he discovered the secret retreat of the "Mystic Nine," a club of nine boys who disappeared from the village regularly every Saturday morning during the spring, summer and fall, and remained away until sunset, often returning with torches to have a street parade after dark, or with a bag of plump birds for a grand "fry" in the kitchen of some indulgent mother.
That they had a hiding-place of some sort, where they held meetings and ate the generous lunches they carried with them, all the boys outside the nine felt sure; but none of the Mystics ever answered any questions concerning it, and threw out vague but impressive warnings as to the terrible fate that would befall any one whose curiosity led him to seek to penetrate the secret they guarded so closely.
Davy stumbled upon it quite by chance. Following the trail of a bird with a wounded wing, he found himself in a part of the wood he had never been in before, and came suddenly upon a great pile of brush a dozen feet high, behind which was the entrance to a deep cave in a rocky hillside.
He entered, and found it well furnished with rough blankets, a table, an oil stove, and many other things necessary to the comfort and convenience of nine boys. A large window in the roof, which was carefully covered with brush, afforded a means to obtain light, when that given by the mouth of the cave did not prove sufficient, or when bad weather made it necessary to drop the canvas which did duty as a door.
Davy, afraid of getting into trouble, kept his discovery to himself, but he made frequent stolen trips to the cave, and resolved that some day he would use his knowledge for the purpose of obtaining his revenge.
He had a vague plan in his head to guide about fifty of the roughest boys in the village to the cave, and thus give the secret to every one, and he fully determined to let this be his form of revenge, when, being called upon to read in class, he was forced to use the wet, soiled books.
His thoughts were directed so much to this subject that his lessons were recited even worse than usual, and as a result he was kept in to study for an hour after the close of school.
When he was at last free to go home, and left the school-house, he found that poor old Sim was in the hands of his enemies. The Mystic Nine had placed him in his own dilapidated hand-cart, and were wheeling him down one of the side streets as fast as they could go, shouting and laughing at his frenzied cries of distress and the ludicrous picture he presented, as he clung to the side of the cart, the brim of his torn straw hat flapping in the wind, and an old scarf of bright scarlet silk, which he cherished as his dearest earthly possession, streaming out behind.
Davy felt very sorry for the old man, but did not dare interfere. He could only wait until the boys, becoming wearied of their sport, ran the cart into a shallow pond and went off to seek other diversion.
Old Sim was almost helpless with fright and exhaustion, and when Davy waded into the pond and pushed the cart out on dry land again, he threw his arms about the boy's neck, and clung to him, sobbing and moaning like a child.
It was all Davy could do to comfort and quiet him, and to persuade him to go home, so apprehensive was he that another attack would be made on him. But Davy finally succeeded in convincing him that there was no further danger, and the old man went scuffling off to the miserable shanty he called home.
The next day was Saturday, and as the weather was clear and bright, Davy resolved to spend the whole morning in the woods. But his aunt found so much for him to do that it was nearly noon before he was able to get away.
As usual, he divided his lunch with the birds and squirrels, and then lay down under a tree to read a book he had brought with him.
But it failed to interest him, and his mind persisted in dwelling upon the unkindness with which he was so systematically treated, both at home and at school.
"I wonder if it will ever be any different?" he thought, as he sprang to his feet at last. "If I only could get to the head of the grammar class just once, they might treat me better. But of course there is no use in thinking of that, for there's no chance of it."
He strolled through the woods, his steps turning unconsciously in the direction of the secret cave.
He had almost reached it, when he suddenly became aware of where he was, and started to retrace his steps, fearing the boys would come out and discover him there.
But scarcely had he turned when, to his amazement, he saw old Sim Kane come rushing toward him from the direction of the cave.
The old man's face was pallid with excitement, and he was swinging his long arms, and muttering and laughing to himself in a way that made Davy's blood run cold.
"Sim! Sim! what's the matter?" he cried.
But the old man paid no attention to him, and not pausing to question him again, but sure there was trouble of some sort at the cave, Davy ran toward that secret retreat.
His ears soon told him what the trouble was. The great pile of brush which concealed the entrance to the cave had been set on fire!
Terrible was the vengeance which the half-demented old man had taken on his boyish persecutors.
Davy, with a loud cry of horror, and forgetting in that awful moment all his own wrongs, seized a stout branch, and rushed upon the pile of brush without a moment's hesitation.
The entire mouth of the cave was a mass of flame, and it was no easy matter to scatter the burning brands, so intense was the heat.
But Davy fought the fire right and left, with a wild energy far beyond his strength and years, and at last the mouth of the cave was clear, and the fresh air could enter it again.
Then, exhausted, faint, and suffering most intense agony from a dozen terrible burns, the brave boy sank to the ground.
At first he was scarcely conscious, but presently he became aware that some one was bending over him, and opening his eyes, he saw Fred Bassett's face, so full of pity, admiration and kindness that poor Davy scarcely recognized it.
"We didn't deserve this good turn of you, Davy," said the boy. "But I can't tell you how thankful we are to you. But for you we would have been suffocated inside of ten minutes. It was that old Sim who set the fire. We were busy at the back of the cave, making it deeper, and didn't know anything about the fire until we heard the old man shout at us from the window overhead. He was half mad with joy, and was just about to light the brush on the window. He must have fired the pile in front in twenty places. There was no use in trying to get out. It was like a wall of fire. I tell you, we all thought our time had come. It was just awful."
"I'm glad I came when I did," said Davy, gently. "But I'm afraid you'll have to help me home. My feet are so badly burned I don't believe I can take a step."
"As if we'd let you even think of walking!" exclaimed Fred. "We'll rig up a litter in short order."
So Davy was carried into the village in state by seven of the boys, while the two others went on ahead to tell Miss Potter what had happened and engage the services of a doctor.
And it was not until his wounds were all dressed, and he was lying quietly in bed, with Fred Bassett and Tom Harper sitting beside him, that Davy happened to think that the "turn" for which he had waited so long had come at last, and he had failed to take the revenge he had so ardently desired.
But he never regretted this, for he never had to complain again of unkind treatment from either his aunt or his schoolmates. For Miss Potter, in taking care of her young nephew during the three weeks he was confined to the house, found good qualities of head and heart the existence of which she had never before even suspected, and she made up her mind that she had thought Davy a burden because she had never really understood him.
As to the boys—well, they made a hero of Davy, and the "Mystic Nine" became the "Mystic Ten," by the admission to membership of the shy, freckled-faced boy who was always at the bottom of his classes.
And affection and encouragement brightened up Davy's wits so much that he ceased before long to occupy that unenviable and lowly position, and astonished his teacher by his rapid progress.
No punishment was ever meted out to old Sim; but it is scarcely necessary to say that the boys were careful to let him severely alone after that memorable Saturday on which Davy became a hero.
THE BLIND GIRL AND THE SPRING.
BY SYDNEY GREY.
Yes, it is true that I am blind (it was not always thus), But oft it comes into my mind how God can comfort us. For if, of some good gift bereft, we bend before His will, He ever has a blessing left which should our sorrows still. This very morn I found it so; scarce had the day begun, Ere with small, pattering, restless feet that hither swiftly run, The children came in joyous mood, and shouted, "Spring is here!" And when they led me through the wood, I knew that she was near. I felt her breath upon my cheek, and while we walked along, A thousand times I heard her speak the rustling leaves among, In tones as though a harp had thrilled beneath an angel's touch, And all my soul with rapture filled: yet when I said as much, The others laughed and whispered low, "Nay, nay, it is the wind!" To them perhaps it might be so; but, ah! if folks are blind, They learn in every sound that floats around their pathway dark— The breeze, the brook, the glad bird-notes—some hidden voice to mark. Therefore, when spring begins to don her garments fresh and gay, Because I cannot look upon her beauty day by day, Nor see the pointed crocus flame above the garden mold, Nor watch the snowy tips that frame the daisy's heart of gold; Because unto my longing eyes may never be displayed The changeful glory of the skies, warm shine and soothing shade, Nor the great sun's far-reaching rays which crown the day with light, Nor yet the star-lit purple haze that comes before the night; She breathes the tender tale to me, in accents clear and plain, Until I nearly rend the veil and see it all again. And though I'm blind, I know quite well, when to the woods we go, The place to find the wild bluebell, and where the lilies blow; Shy violets tell me, as I pass, their buds are at my feet, And through the lengthening meadow-grass run murmurs soft and sweet. Oh! I thank God that He doth bring such daily joy to me, For even I can welcome spring, like happy girls who see.
How to Make A Canvas Canoe,
(Concluded.)
BY E. T. LITTLEWOOD.
The covering is best made of what is known as "crash," strong and close. It must be wide enough to go completely under the canoe, and can be had about 5 ft. wide, which will be quite wide enough. Seven yards of it will be sufficient.
To put on the canvas, turn the canoe over. Lay the canvas with the centre line along the keel. Stretch it well by pulling at each end, and tack it through the middle at the extreme ends with a few tacks in a temporary manner. Put in temporary tacks along the gunwale at moderate intervals, stretching slightly, and endeavor to get rid of all folds.
Begin in the middle and work toward the ends, and always pull straight away from the keel, and not along the gunwale. Then put in a second set of tacks half way between the first set of tacks on one side, pulling fairly tight. Then, on the other side, put in tacks opposite to the latter, pulling as tightly as possible.
The best way to do this is to seize the canvas with a pair of pincers, so that on pulling you can get the head of the pincers just over the gunwale, when they can be used as a lever to give an extra pull. A tack may then be put in on the outside of the gunwale; half-inch galvanized tacks will do.
Now remove the temporary set of tacks. To get rid of folds, which will not occur along the keel, but along the gunwale, keep bisecting the distance between two consecutive tacks by another tack, so that the canvas is equally loose on each side of it, always now pulling the canvas as tightly as possible.
In this way the folds will disappear, and the canvas be stretched tight and well-fastened to the gunwale. Leave that portion within a foot of each end untacked.
Next cut away all that portion which projects beyond the stem and stern-post; turn the edges in, and tack along the edges at moderate distances.
Bisect these distances, and these again, till you have a very close row of tacks, as in Fig. 12. Pull fairly tight, but not too tight, and do not use pincers for this part; quarter-inch tacks will be best.
The ends may be cut out and put on, lapping the edges over the side, as shown in Fig. 12, and enough canvas will be left to fill the part along the sides of the well, into which the canvas should be tacked with a fine row of tacks, afterward being stretched over the gunwale. The canoe will now be completely covered in except the well.
Before putting on the top, however, give the lower part outside a good coating of boiled linseed-oil. This will be most of it absorbed into the canvas. The same may be done afterward with the top.
When this is dry—that is, after two or three days—give another good coating of the same. Then paint the canoe according to taste. Two coats for the bottom will be advisable, and paint which will stand water well should be used. It would be well to paint the framework with one coat before covering.
Make a stretcher (Fig. 13) for the feet, of half-inch board, and slips to fit it into (Fig. 10), with stops on the floor. Also, a backboard of half-inch board, to correspond (Fig. 14). Each piece in the latter may be 18x4 inches. They should be nailed into two cross-pieces behind, so as to form a hollow for back, and should be placed two inches apart, to allow a space for the spine.
I prefer myself to fit in the backboard by means of stops on the floor and back of the well, making it keep one position, and that at a considerable slope, and have not found a swinging backboard so comfortable as some appear to have done.
For the paddle, for which I think about 7 feet 6 inches long over all is a good length, take a light, clean piece of yellow pine, or fir, 1-1/2 x 1-1/4 inches, not more, and 6 feet long. In the ends of this cut slots 6 inches long, each to receive two pear-shaped pieces of very light half-inch plank, 1 foot 3 inches by 8 inches. Nail them through with copper nails, if possible. The blades should be at right angles to the thickest direction of the handle.
Before nailing in, shave down the handle from an oval of 1-1/2 x 1-1/4 inches for 2 feet of the middle to an oval of about 1-1/8 x 7/8 inches near the beginning of the blades.
The handle should have its full thickness at the beginning of the blade, but should be well tapered off along the blade, so as to be quite thin at its middle, where it ends. It should have its full breadth across the breadth of the blade. The blade itself may be shaved off thinner toward the edges.
I do not think that for ordinary purposes any strip of copper or tin need be put round the blade, and the weight is increased by using.
The great thing about a paddle is that it should be as light as possible, and, if it appears able to stand it, it may be reduced still further. It may be painted or varnished, all but two feet in the middle. I find no rings on the paddles necessary.
A short strip nailed outside the gunwale in the middle of the canoe is a good thing; it prevents wear from the paddle, and forms something to catch hold of in lifting the canoe.
A short outer keel is also a good thing at each end to prevent wear; but in making holes for the nails through the canvas into the keel care must be taken to turn in the edges round each hole, to tack with a close circle of tacks, and paint well, so as to render the place water-tight.
An apron is seldom wanted, but may be made of canvas rendered waterproof with boiled oil, if desired.
It is well to fasten some inflated bladders in each end, so as to make the canoe a diminutive lifeboat, in case of an upset or of a hole being knocked in her.
The canoe will now be ready for launching. The owner should learn to put her carefully into the water and take her out by himself—to carry her on his shoulder.
Superfluous wood may be cut from the central parts of the shapes, and also from along the keel toward the ends before covering. The floor forms a considerable item in the weight, consequently this should be made no wider or thicker than necessary. In paddling, learn to reach well forward and back, with a good swing of the body from side to side.
Such a canoe as described will be found to wear well, and one made by myself for a friend two years ago is now in use, and quite water-tight.
HOW THE PARTRIDGE DRUMS.
"When I first came to Canada," says a writer from that locality, "I found there were various opinions as to the method of making the sound. One man, who read a great deal, but rarely went into the woods, said that the sound was produced by the bird's voice. Some of the hunters told me that the bird struck its wings on the log, and others that it struck them together over its back.
"I did not give much heed to the bookman's explanation, for all the woodmen laughed at it. I soon learned to discredit also the idea that the bird thumped the log with its wings, because whether it stood on a stump or a stone, a rotten log or solid timber, the sound was always the same. Lastly, I did not believe that the wings were struck together, because, when a pigeon or rooster strikes its wings together, the sound is always a sharp crack. At length, after watching the bird carefully, I came to the conclusion that it drums by beating the air only.
"It is not an easy matter to get sight of a partridge when he is drumming, but I managed to do it by crawling on my hands and knees toward the bird, lying still while he was quiet, and only moving forward when he renewed his noisy courtship; for it is only to woo and win his mate that Sir Ruffled Grouse indulges in these musical exercises.
"In this way I contrived to come within twenty feet without alarming him. Through the alder thicket I could just see his shapely form, strutting about like a turkey cock; then for a moment he stood upright, with his feathers lying close.
"Suddenly his wings flashed, and at the same moment I heard the loud thump. Then for a few seconds he stood looking about as though nothing had happened; but presently came a second flash and thump, and others followed at lessening intervals, until at last the serenade rolled a way like the galloping of horses or the rumbling of distant thunder."
FROGS AND TADPOLES.
BY E. S.
It is very interesting in the spring to watch the gradual development of a frog from the egg, through the tadpole stage of its existence, till at last it assumes its final form.
The old frogs emerge from their winter hiding-places in the mud, early in the spring, and during April their eggs may be found floating on almost every stagnant pond.
A group of these eggs in their early stages of development looks like a mass of clear white jelly, containing numbers of black specks, each of which is really the germ of the future tadpole.
In order to watch the development, a group of the eggs should be taken and put in a shallow vessel of water, which, if kept in the house, should have a bell-glass, or some other covering, over it, to keep out the dust.
The jelly-like mass which envelopes the future tadpole is so clear that all its changes can be easily watched.
First the head appears, then a flat tail, and in course of time the nostrils, mouth and large eyes, till at length the completed tadpole bursts open its gelatinous covering, and apparently not in the least embarrassed by its new surroundings, begins swimming briskly about, looking for something to eat.
The time occupied in hatching varies in different countries, according to the climate, from four days to a month.
The following stages are even more interesting, especially for those who can take advantage of the transparency of the parts to watch the circulation of the blood through a microscope.
The body of the tadpole gradually gets broader, while the tail gets thinner and thinner, till it finally disappears altogether; but before that happens, its place has been taken by two hind legs, which first appear under the skin and then gradually push their way through.
The fore legs next appear, and so on through all the stages of development, till in a longer or shorter time, according to the amount of warmth, light and food it can obtain, the complete frog appears.
But woe betide the unfortunate tadpole which, first of the shoal, attains to the dignity of possessing limbs, for so ferocious are the later ones, and so jealous of their precocious little brother, that they almost always fall upon him, and not content with killing, never rest till every morsel of him is eaten.
And unless several of the tadpoles assume their final change about the same time, this proceeding is repeated till their numbers are very considerably diminished, or, as sometimes happens, till only one survivor is left, who, having helped to eat all his brethren, instead of meeting with his deserts, is allowed to live on in peace, till some day, in the course of his walks abroad, he, in his turn, is snapped up as a delicate morsel by some hungry snake or water-fowl.
BE HONEST AND TRUE.
By George Birdseye.
Be honest and true, boys! Whatever you do, boys, Let this be your motto through life. Both now and forever, Be this your endeavor, When wrong with the right is at strife.
The best and the truest, Alas! are the fewest; But be one of these if you can. In duty ne'er fail; you Will find 'twill avail you, And bring its reward when a man.
Don't think life plain sailing; There's danger of failing, Though bright seem the future to be; But honor and labor, And truth to your neighbor, Will bear you safe over life's sea.
Then up and be doing, Right only pursuing, And take your fair part in the strife. Be honest and true, boys, Whatever you do, boys, Let this be your motto through life!
[This Story began in No. 22.]
IN SEARCH of HIMSELF.
A Tale of Dangerous Adventure.
BY GEORGE H. COOMER,
Author Of "Arthur Summers," Etc.
CHAPTER XIII.
RALPH MAKES A FRIEND.
Ralph had need of all his courage, as he realized what was before him. In a low, swampy spot, close under a pile of rock and earth, that rose out of it like a wall, was an animal such as he had never met with until this moment, although he instinctively guessed what it must be.
The creature appeared to be in a complete frenzy of rage. It was covered with mud and water, and with furious motions was trampling down the long, rank grass which grew about the place.
"A wild boar!" uttered our young friend to himself, with his heart leaping to his throat, as his glance took in the sharp back, the high shoulders, and the immense tusks that curved from the jaws like cimetars.
He had seen pictures of such animals, but had never dreamed how startling the reality would be.
The boar seemed to direct his fury against the ledge which formed the boundary of the muddy and grassy place where he was raging about; and looking a little above the savage brute, Ralph perceived a something which appeared like a human form in some manner confined among the rocks. He thought the body looked as if partially under a big stone that held it down.
Instantly the thought came to him:
"It must be that a man has got caught there under a rock, which he has pulled down upon himself in trying to clamber up."
Just as this thought entered his mind, he saw the boar give a fearful spring and fall back with what seemed a strip of clothing between his jaws.
The position of the imprisoned man must be awful, and there was not a moment to lose. The next spring might be more successful.
The fierce jaws clashed together with a startling sound, and the huge head was shaken, as if the frenzy of the monster was increased by the possession of that bit of rag.
The prisoner gave another wild cry, and Ralph responded, with all the strength of his lungs:
"I'll help you! I'll help you!"
He was too far off for a successful shot, but he hoped by firing to attract the animal's attention from the man to himself, and then, in case of need, he might retreat into some one of the trees among which he was then standing.
So, taking the best aim he could, he fired both barrels in quick succession. But the boar, except by a furious toss of the head and a single terrible "Whoosh!" paid not the slightest attention to him.
Indeed, the efforts of the animal to reach the intended victim became, if possible, more frantic than ever; and Ralph guessed that once, at least, the tusks came in contact with some part of the poor captive's body.
"I can do nothing in this way," he said to himself. "The man will be torn in pieces before my eyes. I must make a bold move and take my chance."
Between himself and the scene of danger there was neither rock nor tree, but only the shallow mud and water, and the rank grass. The venture would be a desperate one, but nothing less would save the man from a terrible death.
Ralph had about him shells containing charges of all descriptions, from fine shot to bullets. Quickly throwing open his breech-loader, he slipped a ball cartridge into one barrel and a heavy charge of buckshot into the other.
Then springing forward, he went splashing across the morass, with the mud and water almost up to his knees.
"I am no marksman," he thought, as he strode rapidly on, "and shall have to get close to him to hit him; but if he should come at me, I shall have my second barrel, besides a plenty of shells."
There was some reassurance in this thought, especially as he had two of the spare shells in his hand, ready for use in case of need.
At a distance of only six rods from the enraged animal, he stopped and brought up his gun.
The boar was not still for an instant, but rushing about in its efforts to get up the rock. He had certainly struck the man, for there was blood on the rock and on the savage tusks. This probably rendered him all the more eager.
"I'll try the buckshot first," thought Ralph, "for they'll scatter a little, and some of them must hit him."
He ranged between the two barrels, and pulled. "Bang!" sounded the report. "Whoosh!" uttered the boar, stopping short in his efforts against the rock, and turning his whole attention upon the intruder. Doubtless he was hit, but perhaps not mortally.
Ralph's gun was again at his face. "Bang!" This time the single ball was sent, but through the smoke of the discharge he saw that the boar was rushing upon him.
An interval of six rods, and a wild hog, six feet long, bounding over it with clashing jaws! How the breech-loader sprang open, and how the two spare charges went into it! What if Ralph had not held them all ready in his hand?
"Bang! bang!" The boar's head was not three feet from the muzzle as the second barrel was fired. The monster's impetus carried him on with a plunge; and the young hero's legs were knocked from under him by the weight of the huge body, so that he fell at full length in the mud.
For an instant he believed himself lost, and while scrambling to his feet he expected to feel the sweep of those sword-like tusks.
But there was no longer any danger; the last discharge had done its work to perfection, and with his knees bent under him, the boar lay just as he had plowed into the mire, having not even rolled over.
Picking up his gun, Ralph hurried to assist the person on the rock, whom he had already seen to be a negro, and whom he now found to be held down by a large stone, which lay upon his legs, he having doubtless pulled it from a position above in his frantic efforts to escape from his pursuer.
The confined black could not help himself; but Ralph succeeded, without much difficulty, in relieving him from the heavy weight.
The stone could not have slipped more than two or three feet, for the negro was not much injured by it, although it had held him so firmly. He had the marks of the animal's tusks on one of his legs; but the wound was not a dangerous one. Ralph bound his handkerchief around it, and felt very glad to find that the poor fellow was almost as good as new.
Finding himself able to walk, and seeming to realize how much he owed to his young rescuer, the stout negro grasped the boy's right hand in both his own, and with tears glistening in his eyes, uttered a number of rapid sentences, only a few words of which Ralph could understand, but which were evidently the outpourings of gratitude.
Still, there was in his manner an appearance of apprehension, as if he feared that the lad might not be alone. He would glance furtively about, like one who is expecting an enemy; and it was plain that he was meditating a retreat.
Back of the rocks there was dry, firm land; and in this direction he looked, as if desirous of moving off.
Ralph recalled the conversation which he had heard the day before about the runaway slave.
"This man may be Jumbo himself," he thought. "I'll try to make him understand me."
Then, looking kindly in the negro's face, he said, in Spanish:
"I think you are Jumbo. I am only a boy, and I am all alone. You are free; you can go where you will."
And he pointed to the deep, free woods.
Ralph had great difficulty in getting out this amount of Castilian; but the negro, whose own command of that language seemed to be of the most meagre description, comprehended his meaning. He took the spirit, if not the words.
A grateful expression came over his dark face, and again he clasped the boy's hand, with the same flow of mingled African and Spanish upon his tongue.
Ralph bade him a kind good-by, and he walked away into the forest, waving his sable hand with a gesture full of feeling as he disappeared.
Our young sailor now proceeded to examine the animal he had killed.
It is said that the timid man is afraid before the danger, the coward during it, and the brave man after it. Ralph was afraid after it.
He felt a kind of weakness about the knees, and wondered that he had not noticed it before. He remembered how the bristles had stood up on the boar's back, how the savage jaws had clashed together, and how he had seen the tusks standing out like long knives as the creature came straight for him.
Now how grim the monster looked as he lay in the mud and water, just where he had dropped dead—not on his side, but with the legs doubled under him, and the stout, hoggish ears sticking up like ears of corn.
"The next thing is to find my pony," thought Ralph. "Let's see—which way did I come? Here are my tracks. I must have come out of that thicket yonder."
Then, looking about him, he saw another line of tracks, and, going to examine it, perceived that it was where the boar had chased the black man across the morass. Most of the negro's footprints were lost in those of the hog.
Almost at the moment in which Ralph reached his pony, he heard the report of a gun at some distance, and guessed that Mr. Arthur was coming in search of him. He answered the signal, and the planter, who had become anxious for his safety, soon made his appearance.
"I had begun to be really alarmed about you," said Mr. Arthur, "and feared I should have to go back and summon assistance in the search. If you had not heard my gun, I should have missed you, for I was just about to turn in the opposite direction."
"Oh, I am sorry I have given you all this trouble!" said Ralph. "It is too bad. But you can't think what I have killed! I am glad you have come, so that I can show you."
"Why, how wet and muddy you are!" said the planter, "and how your clothes are torn! For heaven's sake! where have you been?"
Ralph related his adventure, and told how the black man had gone into the forest.
"I would not have had you take such a risk for all I am worth!" said Mr. Arthur. "What would your father say if he knew of it?"
"But the man couldn't get away, and the boar might have got at him before I could have had a chance to bring any one else here," replied Ralph.
"Yes, I know; but it was a fearful risk. No doubt the man was the runaway that I was speaking of to Mr. Osborne. At least, I should judge so from your description. Osborne would have detained him, of course; but I am not sorry that you made no such attempt. I should have been tempted to let him go myself."
It was a great relief to Ralph to find that Mr. Arthur took this view of the matter—a very singular one, he thought, for the owner of five or six hundred slaves; yet, from what he had seen of his kind friend, he was not surprised at it.
The planter was curious to visit the scene of the adventure, and, with some difficulty, they made their way to the place.
"Why, Ralph," he exclaimed, looking at the dead animal, and then at the surroundings of the spot, "it is fearful! Had I known what you were about, I should have given you up for lost. Not a tree within twenty rods of you! Suppose you had failed to kill him? It frightens me to think of it!"
Going to the ledge beyond, they saw where the negro had scrambled up with muddy feet, and where the sharp hoofs of the boar had scratched long lines on the rock.
It was easy to see how the large, loose stone, which had prevented the fugitive's escape, had slipped from its place as he tried to climb over it.
"Well, well," said Mr. Arthur, "you ought to have one good friend in the forest, and I guess you have! I don't think that poor fellow will ever forget you."
Ralph felt that this was pay enough, even though the friend was only a poor negro, whom he might never see again.
And now, leaving the huge game where it had fallen, he accompanied the good planter back to the little village of huts, where Mrs. Arthur and Camilla were awaiting them in some anxiety.
CHAPTER XIV.
OUR SAILOR BOY DISLIKES MR. OSBORNE.
"Oh, how dreadful!" exclaimed Camilla, as she listened to the recital of what had taken place.
"I am thinking of his mother," said Mrs. Arthur, "and I am so thankful—so thankful—that he is safe!"
Mr. Osborne took a very practical view of the matter.
"You could have kept the negro, I suppose," he said, "as you had your gun; but then it might not have been very easy to get him anywhere, you being a boy."
"I didn't wish to get him anywhere," replied Ralph. "I wished him to go where he liked."
"Of course; it wasn't your business to catch runaway negroes," said the overseer, "and you did perfectly right. Only I wish I could have been there. Did he seem to be afraid of you?"
"No, sir; I laid down my gun."
"Suppose he had taken it up?"
"I never thought of such a thing, sir; I was trying to help him, and he knew it."
"I wouldn't have trusted him," remarked the overseer.
"I did trust him, sir; or, rather, I didn't think anything about it. I wanted to stop his leg from bleeding."
"Was he in a hurry to be off after you had fixed him up?"
"He looked uneasy, as if afraid that somebody else might come before he could get away."
"Perhaps he expected you to take up your gun and order him to march for his old quarters?"
"I don't know how that was," said Ralph; "but the gun lay all the while where he could have taken it up if he would."
"What did you say to him?"
"I told him he was free. And it almost made me cry to see how grateful he appeared for what I had done. I hope he has some good place to stay in."
"No danger," said the overseer; "he has a good enough place for this climate, and lives on the fat of the land, besides. I think some of my negroes could go straight to him within the next two hours, but they won't tell."
"And do they never run away, too?" asked Ralph.
"Yes; but I have generally got them back. Sometimes they are arrested by the Spanish soldiers, if they venture out of the woods; and sometimes, when they keep in their hiding-places, I track them out myself."
"And do you whip them when you get them back?"
"Of course I do; that teaches them better than to risk it again."
Somehow, Ralph did not like Mr. Osborne; for, besides that it was hard to help associating him with the cruel office he occupied, there was a something in him as an individual which repelled the boy's quick, intuitive sympathies. Practically he might be better than most overseers, but how could he be otherwise under a superior like Mr. Arthur?
Ralph had brought in the parrots and paroquets that he had shot, for he had not forgotten them on remounting his pony, and he now took off their skins in a very artistic manner, leaving the beautiful plumage almost unruffled, much to the delight of Camilla, who thanked him for his thoughtfulness of her.
Upon the journey homeward, the two spotted ponies, keeping close together, galloped, trotted or walked, according to the fancies of their riders or the variations of the road, while the horses of the older people jogged more steadily.
"I wonder," said Camilla, "if Jumbo will not often think of you? I know he will, though—he cannot help it."
"I hope he will," said Ralph; "and I hope, too, that he will not suffer. Your father does not seem at all anxious to get him back."
"Oh, no! papa does not care for his running away. He says that if the revolution should succeed, the new government would free all the slaves, and he is willing that this should be done. Somehow, he is a slaveholder against his will."
"Do you like Mr. Osborne?" asked Ralph.
"Not very well. Papa has a high opinion of him as an overseer, but I do think that even papa himself is not quite satisfied with all that was done while we were away in the United States."
"The revolutionists appear to ruin a great many sugar plantations," said Ralph. "Do you ever feel afraid of being molested?"
"Yes, mamma and I do, because they sometimes come very near us; but papa says he does not think there is any danger. They know what his sentiments are; besides, he is an Americano, and they have a great respect for los Americanos."
"And isn't he afraid, then, of the Spanish government?"
"No; he takes no active part on either side; only his feelings are with the liberal party. I think papa is not much of a politician."
"I know how he feels," said Ralph; "he is good and kind, and wants everybody to be free. He is one of the best men I ever saw."
"He really is!" exclaimed Camilla, enthusiastically. "He is just as good as any one can be. And," she added, with childlike earnestness, "he likes you ever so much, too."
Ralph was perfectly happy upon this ride; and when the party reached home, it was to be greeted by the unaffected welcome of the negroes, old and young, who were evidently much attached to their master and his household. The parrots chattered, and the song-birds sang, while the odor of the orange blossoms was well in keeping with the rest.
CHAPTER XV.
A NEW PROPOSITION.
Next day the planter and his young guest visited the city, and returned with Captain Weston. He was thrilled by the story of Ralph's encounter with the wild boar. It shocked him to think how narrowly a dreadful calamity had been escaped, and he all the while attending to his ordinary duties, in ignorance of the danger.
"Captain," said Mr. Arthur, as they sat conversing together after reaching the plantation, "I have a proposition to make. Why not let Ralph remain with me till your return from Philadelphia? I may take a journey or two about the island within the next few weeks, upon business, and probably he would enjoy going with me. It would give him an opportunity to see more of Cuba than he is likely to see in any other way."
"I don't know what his mother would say," replied the captain. "She expects me to bring him home, and I am afraid she would be troubled about it. Besides, I like to have him with me, though I know you would take every care of him."
"I understand your feelings," said the planter; "but my wife is about writing to Mrs. Weston concerning the debt of gratitude we owe him; and should you consent to his remaining, I think her letter will place the matter in such a light as to remove any objection on his mother's part."
Mrs. Arthur seconded her husband very earnestly.
"You cannot think how much we would enjoy having him here," she said. "He has such a kind, lovable nature, and is so bright and active. I do hope it may be arranged that he may stay."
Captain Weston revolved the matter seriously, and concluded at length that it should be left to Ralph's decision. What that decision would be he could have had very little doubt, as he glanced toward the boy and girl who were at that moment enjoying a swing under an orange tree of unusual size, the vibrations of the rope occasionally bringing down some of the golden fruit.
Ralph was in ecstasies at the proposition, and Camilla's bright face lighted up with a pleasure that she did not try to conceal.
"Oh, how nice it will be!" she said. "I am so glad you are to remain."
A soft flush leaped to her cheeks as she spoke, and her beautiful eyes expressed an artlessness that was very bewitching. |
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