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+Project Gutenberg's Harper's Young People, April 13, 1880, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Harper's Young People, April 13, 1880
+ An Illustrated Weekly
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: May 12, 2009 [EBook #28778]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE, APR 13, 1880 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Annie McGuire
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: HARPER'S
+
+YOUNG PEOPLE
+
+AN ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VOL. I.--NO. 24. PUBLISHED BY HARPER & BROTHERS, NEW YORK. PRICE FOUR
+CENTS.
+
+Tuesday, April 13, 1880. Copyright, 1880, by HARPER & BROTHERS. $1.50
+per Year, in Advance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MISS NANCY TAKES LEAVE OF THE OFFICERS.]
+
+NANCY HANSON'S PROJECT.
+
+BY HOWARD PYLE.
+
+
+It was in the old Quaker town of Wilmington, Delaware, and it was the
+evening of the day on which the battle of Brandywine had been fought.
+The country people were coming into town in sledges, and in heavy low
+carts with solid wheels made of slices from great tree trunks, loaded
+with butter, eggs, milk, and vegetables; for the following day was
+market-day. Market-day came every Fourth-day (Wednesday) and every
+Seventh-day (Saturday). Then the carts drew up in a long line in Market
+Street, with their tail-boards to the sidewalk, and the farmers sold
+their produce to the town people, who jostled each other as they walked
+up and down in front of the market carts--a custom of street markets
+still carried on in Wilmington.
+
+Friend William Stapler stopped, on his way to market in his cart, at
+Elizabeth Hanson's house, in Shipley Street, to leave a dozen eggs and
+two pounds of butter, as he did each Tuesday and Friday evening.
+Elizabeth came to the door with a basket for half a peck of potatoes.
+William Stapler took off his broad-brimmed hat, and slowly rubbed his
+horny hand over his short-cut, stubbly gray hair.
+
+"Ah! I tell thee, Lizabeth, they're a-doin' great things up above
+Chadd's Ford. I hearn th' canning a-boomin' away all day to-day. Ah,
+Lizabeth, the world's people is a wicked people. They spare not the
+brother's blood when th' Adam is aroused within them. They stan' in
+slippery places, Lizabeth."
+
+"Does thee think they're fighting, William?"
+
+"Truly I think they are. Ah! I tell thee, Lizabeth, they're differen' 'n
+when I was young. Then we only feared the Injuns, 'n' now it's white men
+agin white men. They tuck eight young turkeys of mine, 'n' only paid me
+ten shillin' fer 'em."
+
+"But, oh, William, I do hope they're not fighting! I expect my
+son-in-law, Captain William Bellach, and his friend Colonel Tilton, will
+stop here on their way to join General Washington; and they may arrive
+to-night."
+
+"Ah, Lizabeth, I've lifted up my voice in testimony agin the young men
+goin' to the wars an' sheddin' blood. 'F a man diggeth a pit an' falleth
+into it himself, who shall help him out thereof? Half a peck o'
+potatoes, did thee say, Lizabeth?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+During the evening rumors became more exciting, and it was said that the
+Americans had been defeated, and were retreating toward Philadelphia.
+Late that night Captain Bellach and Colonel Tilton arrived at Elizabeth
+Hanson's house.
+
+"I've heard the rumors, mother," said Captain Bellach. "I don't believe
+'em; but even if there was a file of British at the door here, I would
+be too tired to run away from them."
+
+Pretty Nancy Hanson spoke up. "But, Billy, they would not only send thee
+and thy friend to the hulks if they caught thee, but they might be rude
+to us women were they to find thee here."
+
+"Yes, sister-in-law, if I thought there was any danger, I would leave
+instantly; but the British, even if they have beaten us, will be too
+tired to come here to-night."
+
+"I agree with my friend Will, Mistress Nancy," said Colonel Tilton.
+"Moreover, our horses are too tired to take us farther to-night."
+
+About two o'clock in the morning the silence of the deserted streets of
+the town was broken by a rattling and jingling of steel, the heavy,
+measured tread of feet, and sharp commands given in a low voice.
+
+Nancy Hanson awakened at the noise, and jumping out of bed, ran to the
+window and looked out into the moon-lit street beneath. A file of
+red-coated soldiers were moving by toward the old Bull's Head Tavern.
+The cold moonlight glistened on their gun-barrels and bayonets as they
+marched. Nancy ran to her mother's room and pounded vigorously on the
+door.
+
+"Mother! mother! waken up!" she cried; "the British are come to town,
+sure enough!"
+
+The family were soon gathered around the dull light of a candle, the
+gentlemen too hastily awakened to have their hair _en queue_, the ladies
+in short gowns and petticoats; Elizabeth Hanson wore a great starched
+night-cap perched high upon her head.
+
+"You were right, sister-in-law," said Captain Bellach, "and I was wrong.
+The best thing we can do now is to march out and take our chances."
+
+"So say I," assented the Colonel.
+
+"It's all well enough for thee, Billy, to talk of marching out and
+taking thy chances," said Nancy; "thee has thy black citizen's dress;
+but Colonel Tilton is in uniform."
+
+"True; I forgot."
+
+"It does not matter," said the Colonel.
+
+"Yes, but it does," cried Nancy. "Stay now until morning, and I think I
+can get thee citizen's clothes. I have a project, too, to get thee off.
+For mother's sake, though, we must hide thy uniform, for if it is found
+here, she will be held responsible. Billy, thee will have to go with thy
+friend back to the bedroom and bring us his things as soon as he can
+take them off. Thee must lie abed, Colonel Tilton."
+
+Nancy's plans were carried into execution. The bricks in one of the
+up-stairs fire-places were taken up, the sand beneath them removed, and
+the Colonel's uniform deposited in the vacant place, over which the
+bricks were carefully replaced.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the gray of the morning Peggy Allison and Hannah Shallcross, on their
+way to market, each with a basket on her arm, met in front of Elizabeth
+Hanson's house. A company of soldiers had halted in Shipley Street, and
+their arms were stacked before Elizabeth's door. The red-coated soldiers
+were lounging and talking and smoking. Some officers sat around a fire
+near by warming their hands, for the morning was chill.
+
+"'Tis a shame!" said Hannah Shallcross, vigorously--"'tis a shame to see
+these redcoats parading our streets as bold as a brass farthing. I only
+wish I was John Stedham the constable; I'd have 'em in the
+Smoke-House[1] or the stocks in a jiffy, I tell thee!"
+
+She spoke loudly and sharply. A young British officer, who was passing,
+stepped briskly up, and tapped her on the arm.
+
+"Madam," said he, "do you know that you are all prisoners? Be advised by
+me, and return quietly home until the town is in order."
+
+However patriotic Hannah might be, she did not think it advisable to
+disregard this order, and both dames retreated in a flutter. As the
+young officer stood looking after them, the house door opposite him
+opened, and Nancy Hanson appeared upon the door-step. She had dressed
+herself carefully in her fine quilted petticoat and best flowered
+over-dress, and looked as pretty and fresh as an April morning.
+
+"Friend," said she, in a half-doubtful, half-timid voice. The young
+officer whipped off his cocked hat, and bent stiffly, as you might bend
+a jackknife.
+
+"Madam, yer servant," he answered. He spoke with a slight brogue, for he
+was an Irish gentleman.
+
+"We have a friend with us," said Nancy, "who hath been compelled for a
+time to keep his bed. He was brought here last night on account of the
+battle, and was too weary to go further. Our neighbor Friend John
+Stapler, across the street, hath thick stockings, and I desire to get,
+if I can, a pair from him, as, thee may know, in cases of dropsy the
+legs are always cold. I am afraid to cross the street with these
+soldiers in it. Would thee escort me?"
+
+"Madam, you do me infinite honor in desiring me escort," said the young
+officer, bowing more deeply than before; for Nancy was very pretty.
+
+Friend John Stapler was a very strict Friend, and as such was inclined
+to favor the royalist side; still, he was willing to do a kindly turn
+for a neighbor. He was a wrinkled, weazened little man, whose face, with
+its pointed nose and yellowish color, much resembled a hickory nut.
+
+"Hum-m-m!" ejaculated he, when Nancy, who had left the officer at the
+door, stated the case to him--"hum-m-m! thus it is that intercourse with
+the world's people defileth the chosen. Still, I may as well help thee
+out o' the pother. Hum-m-m! I suppose my small-clothes would hardly be
+large enough, would they?" and he looked down at his withered little
+legs.
+
+"I hardly think so," said Nancy, repressing a smile, as she pictured to
+herself the tall dignified Colonel in little John Stapler's
+small-clothes.
+
+"Well, well," said he, "I'll just step out the back way, and borrow a
+suit from John Benson. He's the fattest man I know."
+
+He soon returned with the borrowed clothes, which they wrapped up in as
+small a bundle as possible, after which Nancy rejoined the officer at
+the door.
+
+"'Tis a largish bundle of stockings," observed he, as he escorted her
+across the street again.
+
+"They are thick stockings," she answered, demurely.
+
+When they reached home, she invited her escort and his brother officers,
+who were gathered around the fire near by, to come in and take a cup of
+coffee--an offer they were only too glad to accept, after their night
+march.
+
+"Gentlemen," said Nancy, as they sat or stood around drinking their hot
+coffee, "I suppose you have no desire to retain our afflicted friend a
+prisoner? The doctor, who is with him at present, thinks it might
+benefit him to be removed to the country. I spoke to my friend whom I
+saw this morning, and he promised to send a coach. May he depart
+peaceably when the coach comes?"
+
+"Faith," said the young Irish officer, "he may depart. He shall not be
+molested. I command here at present."
+
+"What is the matter with the invalid?" inquired another officer.
+
+"He appeareth to have the dropsy," answered Nancy, gravely.
+
+In about half an hour an old-fashioned coach, as large as a small
+dwelling-house, and raised high from the ground on great wheels,
+lumbered up to the door. The steps were let down, or unfolded, until
+they made a kind of step-ladder, by which the passenger ascended to the
+coach which loomed above. The door stuck, in consequence of being
+swelled by the late rains, and was with difficulty opened. The officers
+stood around, waiting the appearance of the invalid, and the young
+Irishman who had been Nancy's escort waited at the door to help her in,
+for she was to accompany her afflicted relative to the ferry.
+
+The house door opened, and she appeared, bearing a pillow and blanket to
+make the sick man comfortable. She arranged these, and stepped back into
+the house to see him moved. Then, with a shuffling of feet, the
+pretended victim of dropsy appeared, dressed in plain clothes, and so
+enormously puffed out that there was scarcely room for him in the
+passageway. The so-called doctor, dressed in black, and wearing a pair
+of black glass spectacles, assisted the invalid on one side, and Nancy
+supported him on the other. The dropsical one groaned at every step, and
+groaned louder than ever as they pushed, squeezed, and crowded him up
+the steps and into the coach. Nancy and the doctor followed, and the
+Irish officer put up the steps and clapped to the door, while Nancy
+smiled a farewell through the window to him as the great coach rumbled
+away toward the Christiana River.
+
+"Oddzooks!" exclaimed one of the officers, "that is the fattest Quaker I
+ever saw."
+
+He would have been surprised if he had seen the fat Quaker draw a stout
+pillow from under his waistcoat after the coach had moved away, while
+the doctor stripped some black court-plaster from the back of his
+spectacles, and instead of the invalid and the physician appeared two
+decidedly military-looking gentlemen.
+
+The coach and its occupants had lumbered out of sight for some time, and
+the young officer still remained lounging near the door of Mistress
+Hanson's house, when an orderly, splashed with mud from galloping over
+yesterday's battle-field, clattered up to the group.
+
+"Which is Major Fortescue?" he asked, in his sharp military voice.
+
+"I am," answered the young Irish officer.
+
+"Order for you, sir;" and he reached the Major a folded paper, sealed
+with a blotch of wax as red as blood. He opened it, and read:
+
+ "You will immediately arrest two men, officers in the rebel army,
+ known respectively as Colonel Tilton and Captain Bellach.
+ Information has been lodged at head-quarters that they are now
+ lying concealed at Mistress Elizabeth Hanson's in Wilmington town.
+ You will report answer at once. By order of
+
+ Colonel ROBERT WYCHERLY, R. A.,
+ Com. 5th Div. H. M. A.
+ in the Province of Pennsylvania.
+
+ To Major ALLAN FORTESCUE,
+ Commander at Wilmington,
+ in the Lower County of Newcastle."[2]
+
+"Stop them!" roared Major Fortescue, as soon as he could catch his
+breath. He gave a sharp order to the soldiers lounging near; they seized
+their arms, and the whole party started at double quick for the ford of
+the Christiana River, half a mile away, whither the coach had directed
+its course.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meanwhile the fugitives had arrived at the bank of the river, where they
+found that the ferryman was at the other side, and his boat with him. He
+was lying on the stern seat, in the sun, and an empty whiskey bottle
+beside him sufficiently denoted the reason of his inertia. When the
+Colonel called to him, he answered in endearing terms, but moved not;
+and when the officer swore, the ferryman reproved him solemnly. Affairs
+were looking gloomy, when Captain Bellach, who had been running up and
+down the embankment that kept the river from overflowing the marsh-lands
+that lay between it and the hill on which the town stood, gave a shout
+which called the Colonel and Nancy to him. They found that he had
+discovered an old scow half hidden among the reeds; it was stuck fast in
+the mud, and it was only by great exertions that the two gentlemen
+pushed it off the ooze into the water. The Colonel then took Nancy in
+his arms, and carried her across the muddy shore to the boat, where he
+deposited her; then pushing off the scow, he leaped aboard himself.
+
+"Lackaday for my new silk petticoat, all spotted and ruined!" cried
+Nancy. "I'd rather have been taken prisoner at once!" And she looked
+down ruefully upon the specks of blue marsh mud that had been splashed
+upon that garment.
+
+Neither of the men answered. The boat leaked very badly when it was
+fairly out in the water, and the Colonel was forced to bail it out with
+his hat. The Captain sat in the middle of the boat, paddling it with a
+piece of board. His hat had blown off, and his black silk small-clothes
+were covered with mud. The tide was running strongly, and as the boat
+drifted down the stream, it was swung round and round in spite of the
+Captain's efforts to keep it straight, while the leak gained on them,
+until Nancy, with a sigh, was compelled to take her best beaver hat,
+ribbons and all, and help the Colonel bail.
+
+They were scarcely more than half across when Major Fortescue and his
+squad of soldiers dashed up to the bank. They ran along the embankment,
+keeping pace with the boat as it drifted with the tide.
+
+"Halt!" cried the officer; but no one in the boat answered. "Halt, or I
+shoot!" But Captain Bellach only paddled the harder.
+
+"Make ready! Take aim!--"
+
+"Down, for your life!" cried Colonel Tilton, sharply, dragging Nancy
+down into the bottom of the boat, where Captain Bellach flung himself
+beside them. It was the work of a moment. The next instant--"Fire!" they
+heard the royalist order, sharply, from the bank.
+
+"Cra-a-a-ack!" rattled the muskets, and the bullets hummed venomously
+around the boat like a swarm of angry hornets.
+
+None of the fugitives were hurt, though two of the bullets struck the
+side of the boat; but Nancy's petticoat was entirely ruined by the mud
+and water in the bottom. Before the redcoats could reload, they had
+reached the further shore, and run into a corn field near by, in which
+they were entirely hidden. Captain Bellach wanted to go up the stream
+and thrash the drunken ferryman; but the Colonel and Nancy dissuaded
+him, and they made the best of their way to Dover, which they reached
+after a very weary journey. There Nancy, who considered it safer to
+absent herself from home while the British retained possession of
+Wilmington, found herself the heroine of the hour; and she was feted and
+dined and made much of, until it would have completely turned a less
+sensible little head than hers.
+
+In after-years, when her husband presented her to President Washington,
+"Ah, Mistress Tilton," said his Excellency, "your husband should indeed
+value an affection that not only endangered a life, but even sacrificed
+a fine silk petticoat, for his sake."
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] The Smoke-House was a small stone structure something like a
+sentry-box, only with an iron door and grated windows. In this negroes,
+petty criminals, vagrants, and drunkards were confined. It stood at the
+junction of the two most important streets of the town.
+
+[2] Newcastle County, Delaware, formerly a portion of Penn's Proprietary
+Government in the Americas.
+
+
+
+
+[Begun in No. 19 of HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE, March 9.]
+
+ACROSS THE OCEAN; OR, A BOY'S FIRST VOYAGE.
+
+A True Story.
+
+BY J. O. DAVIDSON.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+AN OCEAN PRAIRIE.
+
+Frank found his new work tolerably easy, though it required constant
+attention, for every joint of the machinery had to be watched, and oiled
+afresh the moment it began to get dry and hot. There being two other
+oilers, he now stood his regular watch of three hours at a time, having
+the rest of the day to himself. Most of this leisure time was spent in
+talking with Herrick, or studying the ins and outs of the machinery; and
+Frank soon learned to "take a card" as well as any man on board. This is
+done as follows: a slip of paper is rolled round a brass tube attached
+to the valve of the engine cylinder, and a pencil fixed so as to trace
+certain curved lines on the paper as it turns, the shape of which shows
+the exact working condition of the engine.
+
+On the fourth afternoon of his new duties Austin heard himself hailed
+from the upper deck by a familiar voice:
+
+"Hello, Frank, my boy! come up and have a look at Daddy Neptune's
+pasture-ground."
+
+Up went Frank with all speed; but his first glance around made him
+start. Instead of the deep blue water that had surrounded her a few
+hours before, the ship was now in the midst of a smooth green plain,
+extending as far as the eye could reach, and covered, to all appearance,
+with coarse grass and broad-leaved plants. Nothing was wanting, in fact,
+to complete the picture except a few sheep and cattle.
+
+[Illustration: IN THE SARGASSO SEA.]
+
+For a moment our hero really thought he must be dreaming; and then he
+suddenly recollected his school-book pictures and stories of the famous
+Sargasso Sea, where, for thousands of acres together, the water is quite
+hidden by a thick growth of "Gulf weed," and knew at once that this must
+be it.
+
+And certainly this ocean prairie was a wonderful sight. As the steamer
+ploughed its way through the matted weeds, Frank could see in the narrow
+openings their trailing roots hanging far down into the clear cool
+depths below. Above these open spaces thousands of sea-birds were
+hovering with shrill cries, while ever and anon one of them would swoop
+down into the water, re-appearing instantly with a fish wriggling in its
+beak.
+
+In the purple shadow of the weed beds bright-colored fish were moving
+lazily to and fro, but these darted swiftly away at the approach of the
+steamer. On every side queer little crabs and turtles were plumping into
+the water, scared by the plashing wheels, while, stranger still, birds'
+nests and eggs were seen here and there amid the huge broad leaves of
+the stronger plants, to the great delight of Frank, who thought the idea
+of birds nesting in the middle of the Atlantic the finest joke he had
+ever heard.
+
+A mass of the tangle was hauled on board, and the men amused themselves
+by stamping on the hollow air-cells which give the weed its buoyancy,
+producing a series of cracks like the explosion of fire-crackers.
+
+"I've heerd tell, though I can't say I've seen it myself," observed a
+sailor, "as there's places whar them weeds are so thick and strong that
+a man can walk on 'em all the same as dry land."
+
+"Well, they can stop a ship, anyhow, whether they can carry a man or
+not. A chum of mine as v'y'ged here in a Portigee steamer told me that
+she once got reg'lar jammed among the weed, and only 'scaped by
+reversin' her en_gines_."
+
+"Well, it's a fact that some whar in these seas there's a place they
+call the Lumber Yard, 'cause of all the driftwood and floatin' spars and
+bits o' wreck and sich gittin' jumbled up together; for all the currents
+sort o' meet there, like them puzzles whar every road leads in and none
+out. If a ship once gits in _there_, good-by to her; for there ain't no
+wind, nor tide, nor nothin', and you jist stick there till you rot."
+
+Here old Herrick muttered, dreamily, as if speaking to himself, "_I_'ve
+seen that, and I sha'n't forget it in a hurry."
+
+The men nudged each other, and there was a general silence; for it was
+but seldom that Herrick could be got to spin a yarn, and he was now
+evidently about to "get off" one of his best.
+
+"I was cruising in these waters," he went on, "'bout twenty years ago,
+when one afternoon we sighted a sort o' mound in among the thickest of
+the weed, with somethin' like a ship's mast standin' up from it. The
+'old man' came out to look at it, and then gave orders to lower the
+boat, and we pulled for the wreck with a will. But as we neared her, the
+very look of her seemed to strike cold upon us all. Her hull had such an
+old-fashioned build that it might ha' been afloat for a hundred years
+and more; and all up the sides and over the deck great slimy coils of
+weed had trailed, like them eight-armed squids that clutch men and drag
+'em down. As we came nigher, the very sun clouded over, and all was
+chill, and gray, and dismal, and the wreck itself looked so unearthly,
+with no sign or sound of life about it, that I guess I wasn't the only
+one who felt queer when we ran alongside at last.
+
+"Up we scrambled, our very tread soundin' hollow and uncanny in that
+awful silence. Not a livin' thing was there aboard, not even a mouse.
+The mainmast was gone, all but a stump, and the moulderin' tackle lay on
+the deck all of a heap. The plankin' was rotten and fallin' to bits, and
+the place on the starn where her name had been was clean mouldered away.
+All at once our coxswain, Bill Grimes, gives a jump and a holler as if
+he'd trod on a rattlesnake; and when we ran for'ard, what should we see,
+half hid among the weeds, but the skeleton of a man, fastened to the
+bulwarks by a rusty chain!"
+
+The speaker ceased, and looked round the attentive circle with the air
+of a man who feels that he has made a hit.
+
+"A slaver, I reckon," said one, at length.
+
+"Or a pirate."
+
+"Or some craft that had got starved out."
+
+"Ay; but how cum that skeleton there? Did _you_ never find out nothin'
+'bout her, old hoss?"
+
+"_Never_," said the old man, solemnly. "That's how many a gallant ship
+has ended--just a mark of 'missing' opposite her name in the owner's
+list, and a few poor souls watchin' and waitin' for them that'll never
+come back. Ay, boys; for as bright and pretty as these waters look,
+there's many a black story hid aneath 'em as'll never be known till the
+day when the sea shall give up its dead."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They were now east of the Azores, and within four days' run of
+Gibraltar, which was their first halting-place. So the men were set to
+work to scrub the deck, polish the rails, new paint the boats, mend such
+of the signal flags as were torn, and "smarten" up the vessel generally;
+for a sea-captain is as proud of his ship as a lands-man of his wife,
+and likes to bring her into port as trim as possible.
+
+Frank, always ready to be of use, took his share of the work, though he
+had plenty to occupy him without it. He was never tired of watching the
+sun make rainbows in the spray of the bow, and the pretty little
+sea-fairies, called by sailors "Portuguese men-of-war," float past with
+their tinted shells and outspread feelers; while at night the moon was
+so gloriously brilliant, and the sea so clear and smooth, that he often
+staid on deck till midnight to enjoy the spectacle. But another sight
+was in store for him, even more to his taste than these.
+
+One evening, just before sunset, two sail (the first for several days)
+were descried by the look-out, quite close to each other. Herrick, after
+eying them keenly for a moment, pronounced them to be a British steamer
+and a full-rigged American clipper ship.
+
+"How on earth can you tell that?" asked the wondering Frank, who could
+see nothing of the strangers but their topmasts.
+
+"Easy enough. That un's a steamer, by her smoke; and she's a Britisher,
+by the _look_ o' the smoke, for they mostly burn soft coal. T'other's a
+clipper, by her rig, and the lot o' handkerchiefs [studding sails] she
+has aloft; and she's a 'Merican, for nothin' else could hold its own
+with a steamer. But what can they be doin' so close together? Ah! _I_'ve
+got it--they're a-_racin_'."
+
+[Illustration: AN OCEAN RACE.]
+
+When the two vessels came near enough to be signaled, and to reply,
+Herrick was found to be right in every particular, and the excitement
+aboard the _Arizona_ rose to a height. The captain himself came out to
+watch the race, and every man who was not on duty below hastened on
+deck.
+
+"See how Johnny Bull's a-pilin' the coal on!" cried old Herrick,
+pointing to the eddying smoke, which grew blacker every minute. "But he
+don't whip _that_ craft--not much! Canvas agin tea-kettles any day!
+Hooray!"
+
+"Right you air, old hoss! Guess some o' them clippers can show as good a
+record as any steamer afloat. Why, didn't the old _Nabob_ run 7389 miles
+in thirty days out thar in the Indian Ocean?--and that's 246 miles a day
+for a whole month, anyhow."
+
+The two racers were now crossing the _Arizona_'s bows, and every one
+crowded forward to look at them. The steamer's passengers were seen
+clustered along the side like bees, while the crew were bustling to and
+fro, setting every sail that would draw. But still on the starboard
+quarter hung the beautiful clipper, gliding along smoothly and easily,
+one great pyramid of snow-white canvas from gunwale to truck, while the
+look-out and the two men at the wheel (the only persons visible on
+board) grinned from ear to ear at the "Britisher's" vain efforts. Just
+as the clipper passed, the Stars and Stripes fluttered out jauntily at
+her peak.
+
+"Come, boys!" cried Herrick; "let's give the old 'gridiron' a cheer."
+
+Mingling with the hearty shout that followed (in which Frank joined with
+a will) came three sharp blasts from the _Arizona_'s steam-whistle, by
+way of salute. Instantly the clipper's crew sprang up from behind the
+bulwarks, and, waving their caps, sent back a rousing cheer, answered by
+the Englishman with a short whistle of defiance as he swept by.
+
+Little by little the racers, still close together, melted into the
+fast-falling shadows of night; but there were not a few who declared
+that, when last seen, the clipper was getting the best of it, and their
+belief in the superiority of wind over steam was greatly strengthened
+thereby.
+
+[TO BE CONTINUED.]
+
+
+
+
+APRIL'S TEARS.
+
+
+ April's tears are happy tears.
+ Joy when the arbutus sweet
+ Creeps about her dancing feet,
+ When the violet appears,
+ When the birds begin to sing,
+ When the grass begins to grow,
+ Makes her lovely eyes o'erflow.
+ She's a tender-hearted thing,
+ Bonny daughter of the spring.
+
+
+
+
+BILLY'S GREAT SPEECH.
+
+BY WILLIAM O. STODDARD.
+
+
+Billy was the youngest member of the debating society; that is, the
+other members were all grown-up men, though none of them were very old,
+and he was not yet quite fourteen years of age. Some of the boys he knew
+told him he had been let in by mistake, and some said it was a joke; but
+there he was, week after week, every Friday evening, sitting on a front
+bench, and as much a member as the president, or the secretary, or
+either of the three vice-presidents.
+
+One of the names of that village debating society was "The Lyceum," but
+it wasn't much used, except when they had distinguished strangers to
+lecture for them, and charged twenty-five cents apiece for tickets.
+
+The regular weekly debates were "free," and so there was always a good
+attendance. The ladies, of all ages, were sure to come, and a good many
+of the boys. Billy never missed a debate; but he had not yet made so
+much as one single solitary speech on any subject. Nobody knew how often
+he had entered that hall with a big speech in him, all ready, or how he
+had always carried it out again unspoken.
+
+A little after the Christmas and New-Years' holidays there was a
+question proposed for the society to debate that Billy was sure he could
+handle. It had something to do with the Constitution of the United
+States, and Grandfather Morton said it "was too political altogether";
+but Billy silently determined that at last he would make himself heard.
+He read several things in order to get his mind ready, especially the
+_Life of Benjamin Franklin_ and _Captain Cook's Voyages_.
+
+He could not see just how they helped him, but he knew that was the way
+to do it. Then he practiced his speech, too, in the garret, and up in
+the pasture lot, and out in the barn, where he was sure nobody could
+hear him, and the night before the debate was to be he hardly slept a
+wink.
+
+He knew Grandfather Morton and all the family would be there; and they
+had scared him out of making more than half a dozen speeches before, but
+he made up his mind not to be afraid of them this time. Speak he would!
+
+He was careful about his dress, as every public speaker should be, and
+succeeded in borrowing one of his father's standing collars. It was
+dreadfully stiff with starch, but it would not hurt his ears if he held
+his head straight.
+
+When he got to the Lyceum Hall it seemed to him to have grown a good
+deal since the week before, and to have a greater multitude of men and
+women in it than he had ever dreamed of.
+
+It was warm, too, and grew warmer very fast, and he wondered why the
+rest did not take off their overcoats. Perhaps they would have done so
+if they had known Billy was going to address them.
+
+He knew who was to open the debate on both sides, for that was always
+arranged beforehand, and his chance would come afterward.
+
+He listened to them, and could not help thinking how much better they
+must feel when their speeches were all spoken. He knew very well what a
+troublesome thing a speech was to keep in, and without any cork.
+
+Billy thought he had never known men to talk so long as they did--two
+young lawyers, three young doctors, the tutor of the village academy,
+the sub-editor of the _Weekly Bugle_, Squire Toms's son that was almost
+ready to go to college, and the tall young man with red hair who had
+just opened the new drug store.
+
+That was the man who did Billy the most harm, for his argument was
+nothing in the wide world but a string of quotations from Daniel
+Webster. He called him the Great Expounder, and a great statesman, and a
+number of other names, and wound up by asserting that the opinion of
+such a great man as that settled the matter. There was a good deal of
+applause given to the red-headed young man as he was sitting down, and
+Billy took advantage of it; that is, before he knew exactly what he was
+doing, he was on his feet, and shouted, "Mr. President!--ladies and
+gentlemen--"
+
+"Mr. Morton has the floor," remarked the president, very dignifiedly;
+and Billy, as he afterward said of himself, "was pinned."
+
+There was no escape for him now, and when Grandfather Morton pounded
+with his cane, and shouted, "Platform!" dozens of other people took it
+up, and it was "Platform!" "Platform!" "Platform!" all over the hall. He
+knew what it meant. All the favorite speakers were sent forward in that
+way, and it was a great compliment; but Billy thought he must have
+walked forty miles, from the tired feeling in his legs, when he got
+there. Oh, how hot that room was just then, and what a dreadful thing it
+was to have a crowd like that suddenly begin to keep still! They must
+have been holding their breaths.
+
+Billy knew his speech was in him, for it had been swelling and swelling
+while the others were speaking, but he could not quite get any of it
+very close to his mouth at that trying moment.
+
+Stiller and stiller grew the hall, and Billy had a dim notion that it
+was beginning to turn around.
+
+"Mr. President, ladies, and gentlemen--"
+
+He heard some of the boys over by the window crack some pea-nuts and
+giggle.
+
+"--I don't care a cent for Daniel Webster--"
+
+Billy paused, and was hunting desperately for the next word; but
+Grandfather Morton had voted against Mr. Webster a good many times, and
+down came the old gentleman's cane on the floor.
+
+That was the signal for a storm of applause all over the hall; but Billy
+groped in every corner of his mind in vain for the rest of his speech.
+Whether he had left it in the garret or the barn, or up in the pasture
+lot, it was gone; and when the stamping and clapping stopped, and the
+audience began to listen again, there was nothing more for them to hear.
+
+It was so terribly hot in that hall; and it grew all the more like the
+Fourth of July, or a baker's oven, all the way to his seat, after Billy
+gave the matter up, and walked down from the platform.
+
+But how they did cheer then!
+
+The boys did their best, and even the ladies seemed to be shouting.
+
+"Did I say anything so good as all that?" thought Billy.
+
+But at the end of the debate, which came very soon after Billy's effort,
+Grandfather Morton shook hands with him very proudly; and it was the
+president of the society--and he had been a member of the
+Legislature--who came up just then, and said,
+
+"Capital speech of yours, Mr. Morton. Best thing of the evening."
+
+"Good, wasn't it?" said Billy's grandfather. "Laid that red-headed
+poison peddler as flat as a pancake."
+
+"Best speech I ever heard in this hall, Mr. Morton; it was so splendidly
+short."
+
+But Billy kept thinking, all the way home, "What would he have said if I
+hadn't forgot the rest of it?"
+
+That was years ago, and Billy is a great lawyer now; but he says he has
+never forgotten what it was that made his first speech so very good.
+
+
+
+
+THE CZAR'S FISH.
+
+BY DAVID KER.
+
+
+One fine July morning, a few years ago, there was a great stir among the
+villagers of Pavlovo, on the Lower Volga, for the news had got abroad
+that the Czar was coming down the river, on his way to his Summer Palace
+in the Crimea. So, of course, every one was on the look-out for him; for
+the Russian peasants of the Volga are a very loyal set, and many old men
+and women among them, who have never been out of their native village
+before, will tramp for miles over those great, bare, dusty plains on the
+chance of catching a passing glimpse of "Alexander Nikolaievitch"
+(Alexander the son of Nicholas), as they call the Czar.
+
+Among those who talked over the great news most eagerly were the family
+of an old fisherman, who was known as "Lucky Michael," on account of his
+success in catching the finest fish, although hard work and experience
+had probably much more to do with it than any "luck."
+
+But of late "Lucky Michael" had been very _un_lucky indeed. His wife had
+been ill, to begin with; and one of his two sons (who helped him with
+his fishing) had been disabled for several weeks by a bad hurt in his
+arm. Moreover, his boat was getting so crazy and worn out that it seemed
+wonderful how it kept afloat at all; but the news of the Czar's coming
+seemed to comfort him for everything.
+
+"If Father Alexander Nikolaievitch would only give us money enough to
+buy a new boat!" said old Praskovia, Michael's wife, as she put away
+what was left of the huge black loaf that had served for breakfast; "but
+I suppose it wouldn't do to ask him."
+
+"Of course not!" said Michael, who was an independent old fellow; "he's
+done quite enough for us already, in making us freemen, when we were all
+slaves before.[3] Now, then, let's get to work. Come, Stepan [Stephen],
+come, Ivan [John], and let us see what God will send us."
+
+But at first the luck seemed to be still against them, for they drew
+their net twice without catching anything. The third time, however, the
+net felt unusually heavy, and there was such a tugging and kicking
+inside of it that it was plain they had caught a pretty big fish of some
+kind. John, who was the first to look in, gave a loud hurrah, and
+shouted, "Father! father!--a sturgeon! a sturgeon!"
+
+There, sure enough, lay the great fish amid a crowd of smaller ones, in
+all the pride of its spiky back, and smooth, brown, scaleless skin. All
+three rejoiced at the sight, for a sturgeon will always fetch a good
+price in Russia, and the two lads began to think at once how far this
+would go toward paying for a new boat.
+
+They fished some time longer, and made one or two pretty good hauls; but
+the sturgeon was the great event of the day. John and Stephen wrapped it
+up carefully, and were quite proud to show it to their mother on getting
+home; but they looked rather blank at hearing their father say, in a way
+which showed that he meant it,
+
+"This is the finest fish I've ever caught, and I won't sell it to any
+one. It's a Czar among fish, just like Alexander Nikolaievitch among us;
+so it shall be _his_ fish, and I'll give it to him as he passes."
+
+The news of Michael's fish, and of what he meant to do with it, soon
+spread through the village, and created considerable excitement. But
+there was not much time to talk it over, for, two days later, young
+Stephen, who had been sent to look out for the Czar's steamer, came
+running to say that it was in sight. So Michael put his sturgeon into
+the boat, and away they pulled. It was a hard pull against that strong
+current, but at last they got near enough to hail the steamer and be
+taken in tow.
+
+Up went Michael, fish and all, and the captain led him aft to where the
+Czar and his officers were standing. Many of them were handsome,
+stalwart men, all ablaze with lace and embroidery; but the old
+fisherman, with his tall, upright figure, clear bright eye, and hale old
+face framed in snow-white hair, looked, despite his rough dress, as fine
+a man as any of them.
+
+"See here, father," said he, "this is the finest fish I ever caught, and
+so I've kept it for _you_. I want nothing for it; take it as a free
+gift."
+
+"Thank you, brother," said the Czar; "it's a royal fish, indeed, and
+I'll have it for dinner this very day, and drink your health over it.
+What's your name?"
+
+"Michael Ribakoff, father, from the village of Pavlovo."
+
+"Good--I won't forget you. Good-by!"
+
+When the villagers heard what had happened, they all thought Michael
+rather a fool for giving his fish away, when the Czar would have paid a
+good price for it. But a week later came a fine new fishing-boat for
+"Michael Ribakoff," in the stern locker of which were a complete suit of
+fisherman's clothes and a new net, with a piece of paper inscribed, in
+the Czar's own handwriting, "_A midsummer gift from Alexander
+Nikolaievitch._" And old Michael always said that he valued the paper
+far more than the boat.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[3] Here Michael must be corrected. Of the forty-nine millions of
+Russian peasants, only twenty-three millions were actually serfs.
+
+
+
+
+THE HERMIT AND THE ROBBERS.
+
+
+A gentle hermit, one day, proceeding on his way through a vast forest,
+chanced to discover a large cave nearly hidden under-ground. Being much
+fatigued, he entered to repose himself awhile; and observing something
+shining in the distance, he approached, and found it was a heap of gold.
+At the sight he turned away, and hastening through the forest again as
+fast as possible, had the misfortune to fall into the hands of three
+fierce robbers. They asked from whom he fled, and he answered, "I am
+flying from Death, who is urging me sorely behind."
+
+The robbers, not perceiving any one, cried out, "Show us where he is."
+The hermit replied, "Follow me," and proceeded toward the grotto. He
+there pointed out to them the fatal place, beseeching them at the same
+time to abstain from looking at it. But the thieves, seizing upon the
+treasure, began to rejoice exceedingly. They afterward permitted the
+good man to proceed on his way, amusing themselves by ridiculing his
+strange conduct. At length they began to consider what they should do
+with the gold. One of them observed, "We ought not to leave the place
+without taking this treasure with us."
+
+"No," replied another, "we had better not do so; but let one of us take
+a small portion, and set out to buy wine and meat in the city, besides
+many other things we are in need of;" and to this the other two
+consented.
+
+Now the evil spirit, which is always busy on these occasions, directly
+began to tempt the robber who was to go into the city. "As soon,"
+whispered the bad spirit to him, "as I shall have reached the city, I
+will eat and drink of the best of everything as much as I please, and
+then purchase what I want. Afterward I will mix with the food intended
+for my companions something which I trust will settle their account,
+thus becoming sole master of the whole of the treasure, which will make
+me one of the richest men in this part of the world;" and as he purposed
+to do, so he did.
+
+He carried the poisoned food to his companions, who, on their part,
+while he had been away, had come to the conclusion of killing him on his
+return, in order that they might divide the money among themselves,
+saying, "Let us fall upon him the moment he comes, and afterward eat
+what he has brought, and divide the money between us in much larger
+shares than before."
+
+The robber who had been into the city now returned with the articles he
+had bought, and was immediately killed. The others then began to feast
+upon the provisions prepared for them, and were seized with violent
+pains, and soon died. In this manner all three fell victims to each
+other's avarice and cruelty, without obtaining their ill-gotten wealth.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: CARNIVOROUS OCEAN PLANTS.]
+
+ANIMAL-PLANTS.
+
+
+The aquarium presents a field for delightful and ever-varying study, as
+its inhabitants belong to the most curious and interesting of ocean and
+fresh-water creatures. Fishes alone are well worthy of close
+observation; and when to these are added odd little reptiles, queer
+shell-fish, and different classes of the wonderful zoophytes, an
+aquarium presents a constantly changing picture of the marvels of ocean
+life.
+
+The zoophytes are the most remarkable of all marine creatures. The name
+zoophyte comes from two Greek words--_zooen_, an animal, and _phyton_, a
+plant--and therefore has the literal signification of animal-plant.
+
+An important member of the zoophyte family, and one often introduced
+into aquaria, is the actinia, or sea-anemone, sometimes called sea-rose.
+Sea-anemones were for a long time considered as vegetables, beautiful
+and gayly colored flowers of the ocean, and only comparatively recent
+investigation has discovered them to be animals, and blood-thirsty,
+voracious little robbers and murderers of the worst character.
+
+One of the most common among the many varieties of sea-anemones is the
+_Actinia mesembryanthemum_. The polypus-hunter who finds this living
+flower clinging to sea-coast rocks, and bears it home as an addition to
+his aquarium, unless he is already acquainted with the nature of his
+prize, will behold with astonishment and delight the wondrous variations
+in the appearance of this little creature. Clinging to the rocks, the
+anemone probably appeared like a round leathery bag drawn in at the
+centre; but when placed on the miniature cliffs of the aquarium, a
+wondrous transformation takes place. The bag gradually expands, a mouth
+appears in the centre, and from it unfold a multitude of petals of a
+variety of colors--pale scarlet, blood-red, orange, and white--which
+wave gently back and forth like a graceful nodding flower. Now drop a
+small earth-worm or tiny fish in the water. The instant it touches the
+least of these petal-like tentacles the whole flower is in commotion,
+all the arms reaching toward the struggling victim, and holding it in a
+grasp so firm that escape is impossible, and it is soon drawn into the
+capacious and hungry stomach. Every animated thing that comes within
+reach of the tentacles of the anemone is mercilessly seized and
+devoured. Even small mollusks and Crustacea are unable to resist the
+power of the grasping threads, and crabs are often conquered and
+swallowed by this voracious living flower. For this reason sea-anemones
+are dangerous inhabitants of an aquarium stocked with creatures having
+the power of locomotion, and are best placed in a tank with other
+zoophytes like themselves. How often they eat when free in their natural
+element is unknown, but weekly feeding is said to be sufficient to
+sustain them in an aquarium. Small bits of meat are acceptable food,
+which can be dropped into the water. The instant a descending morsel
+touches the petals, or tentacles, of a hungry anemone, it is eagerly
+seized and drawn into the open, greedy mouth. The _Actinia
+mesembryanthemum_ is a very long-lived creature, and certain specimens
+are reported to have lived over twenty years in aquaria in England.
+
+There are many varieties of sea-anemones, and although all possess the
+same distinguishing characteristics, they vary in the form and color of
+the open flower. The _Actinia gemmacia_, which is like a gorgeous
+sunflower, is said to be the most voracious of its kind. An English
+naturalist describes a specimen which swallowed a shell as large as a
+saucer, its own diameter not being over two inches. Its elastic stomach
+extended sufficiently to receive this enormous prey; but as the shell
+completely separated the upper half of the animal from the lower, a new
+mouth began immediately to form, through which to convey nourishment to
+the lower portion, thus presenting the curious spectacle of a
+double-headed monster in miniature. So remarkable are the anemones in
+their reproductive power, that if the tentacles are injured or broken
+off, new ones immediately form, and if the animal be cut in two, new
+mouths form, and soon two perfect animals are waving their graceful
+tentacles to and fro in the water.
+
+The locomotive power of the anemone, or actinia, is very sluggish. It
+will remain days and weeks in the same spot, and it moves only by
+sliding one edge of its base very slowly along the object to which it is
+fastened, and drawing the other after it. It can therefore never pursue
+its food, and appears to have no sense except that of touch, as a worm
+or shiner may float in the water all about the anemone without causing
+it the slightest agitation; but if the tiniest tip of one of its
+tentacles be touched, or brushed even, the whole creature is alive in an
+instant, and grasping for its prey. In the centre of the illustration
+are two specimens of this animal-plant, the wondrous flesh-eating flower
+of the ocean. To the left may be seen a specimen of the _Eledone
+moschata_--a small and very common member of the octopus family. The
+eledone is a hideous-looking beast. Its small eyes, which it can open
+and shut at will, are glistening, and of changing iris. Its long arms
+are strong enough to grasp a mussel shell, and hold it firmly until its
+contents are devoured. At the least touch a dark color instantly appears
+spread over the whole body of this curious creature, and dark prickly
+spines arise, which impart a stinging sensation when handled, like the
+anemone and sea-nettle.
+
+The two odd-looking things in the background of the engraving are
+specimens of the limulus, or arrow-tailed crab. The upper side of the
+limulus is covered with two smooth overlapping shields, in which are two
+tiny eyes. Armed with six pairs of nippers, the limulus often fights its
+companions in the aquarium, and boldly engages in battle with the
+eledone, which, with its long arms, is more than a match for the
+pugilistic crab, whose retreat and utter discomfiture generally end the
+battle, for, thrown on its back, it can with difficulty right itself. If
+a limulus and eledone be confined in the same tank, almost daily must
+the former be rescued from the arms of the latter.
+
+The palm-like creature to the right of the picture is a _Spirographis_,
+or tube-worm. This savage little beast lives in a tube formed of
+particles of lime or grains of sand, and stretches its gill-like threads
+upward, in search of food, in the form of a spiral wreath. It is very
+sensitive, and at the least touch on the surface of the water, or on the
+walls of the tank, the threads are instantly withdrawn into the tube.
+
+In the background may be seen the waving, bell-like _Medusa aurita_,
+armed with prickly threads. It belongs to the jelly-fish family, and
+loves to lie near the surface of the water, but it is with great
+difficulty kept alive in an aquarium. When it dies, it dissolves itself
+into the watery element of which it is so largely composed, and its
+fairy-like skin can scarcely be discovered in the tank.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: A VISIT TO THE OLD HOME.]
+
+
+
+
+EASY BOTANY.
+
+APRIL.
+
+
+Now it is April, and the time has come to explore the woods and wilds.
+
+Let us hasten to welcome the first blossom, so delicate and yet daring
+to face the uncertain sky of early spring.
+
+Happy are they who live in the country, who have the freedom of rural
+roads, rocky banks, wooded hills, and smiling meadows! The young
+botanical student can not expect to become acquainted with all the wild
+plants in his vicinity in one summer, nor is this desirable; the pursuit
+will last for a lifetime, becoming more and more enchanting. But every
+one can make a pretty collection; and if, in addition to studying out
+the flowers, and keeping an accurate list of them, and pressing some of
+the most interesting, the young student will learn to draw with pen or
+pencil a few of the most simple and graceful, the pleasure will be
+greatly increased. A great deal of information might be given on
+botanical subjects, but in this brief article little more can be done
+than to mention the names of those plants which may be looked for during
+the month, and the localities they choose. Most of the flowers mentioned
+are found from Maine to Florida, and West and South as well, though some
+that are abundant in the Middle estates and on Western prairies avoid
+the chills of New England. The wild flowers delight in the
+semi-seclusion of pastures and meadows, and spring up along the lines of
+old fences in fields and on the hills and in the dim woods.
+
+Among the earliest come the anemones, and one of the prettiest of these
+is the _wood-anemone_, or wind-flower. It grows from six to eight inches
+high, beside old stumps in the moist woodlands; the stem is smooth, and
+on the top nods a single flower, drooping, graceful, softly white, and
+shaded on the outside with pinkish-purple. Another of the same family,
+the _rue-anemone_, has a central blossom, pretty large, which is
+surrounded by a row of little buds and blossoms, which has given it the
+name of hen-and-chickens.
+
+[Illustration: HEPATICA.]
+
+Another delightful April flower is the _hepatica_, growing sometimes in
+New England woods, but abundantly in the Middle States. This charming
+little plant is fond of the loveliest shades of deepest blue, fading
+into the palest purple and white, and on the Orange mountains, in New
+Jersey, are clumps of the most beautiful rose-color. The hepatica grows
+finely if transplanted.
+
+[Illustration: DRABA VERNA.]
+
+Do not fail to find the snow-white bud of the _bloodroot_, which comes
+up wrapped in a charming little green cloak, and also the smallest of
+all the floral tribe, the _Draba verna_, with atoms of white flowers,
+and stems only an inch or two high. Some plants that may be easily found
+are:
+
+ Wood-anemone, margins of fields; New England.
+ Rue-anemone, same localities; New England.
+ Hepatica, woody hill-sides; Middle States.
+ Bloodroot, rich open woods; New England.
+ Blue violet, fields, meadows, hills; everywhere.
+ Draba verna, sandy fields and road-sides.
+ Spring beauty, moist open woods; New Jersey, South.
+ Wild geranium, open woods and fields; New England.
+ Erigenia, damp soil; New York, Pennsylvania.
+ Quaker ladies, road-sides, fields; everywhere.
+ Dandelion, road-sides, fields; everywhere.
+ Azalea, New England woods and elsewhere.
+ Benzoin--spice-bush--damp woods; New Jersey, Pennsylvania.
+ American mistletoe, New Jersey and South.
+
+
+
+
+TWO ANCIENT FAMILIES.
+
+A PAPER READ BEFORE THE "LITTLE LITERATI" BY MOTHER.
+
+
+I fear I appear before you but illy prepared for the evening duties, as,
+mother-like, my week has been full of cares--unusually so. Being left to
+choose my own subject, I thought to speak briefly of a worthy but almost
+extinct family, or, indeed, I should say two families.
+
+Many grown persons persist in declaring that the families have passed
+entirely out of existence, but I find there are a few of them to be
+found still on the rugged mountain-sides, on the plains, and down in the
+deep green valleys. Little children know them best, as they seem to be
+modest, retiring families, seldom or never intruding themselves on the
+notice of others. I conjecture, from the freedom with which little
+children use their names, that they must be a kindly, simple people. My
+little Mary, or Minnie, tells me almost every day of little Johnnie He
+or little Sallie She, and in my mind's eye I see little Johnnie He
+coming through his father's gate on his way to school--a plump,
+rosy-cheeked little fellow in white pants and blouse.
+
+ Most amiable and fair he looks,
+ That little Johnnie He,
+ While following close behind his heels
+ Is little Sallie She.
+ With flaxen curls and laughing eyes,
+ This little girl we greet,
+ Exclaim, "How fair is Johnnie He!
+ And Sallie She, how sweet!"
+
+Very little is known of the ancestors of these simple people who dwell
+among the hills. It is believed they were a worthy, renowned family in
+their day and generation; but, alas! history has given us all too little
+of them. It is known that they were born hundreds of years ago, living
+bright and useful lives in the earliest ages of civilization. History
+speaks freely of one who may have been the great-great-grandfather of
+the present Hes (much less is known of the Shes), and while speaking of
+him forgets not to take his travelling artist along to sketch him. This
+noble ancestor is Mr. Zaccheus He, and he is in the act of performing
+the feat that saves his name from utter oblivion. The deed is made
+doubly impressive by the travelling artist sketching the same. The poet
+too lends his sublime aid to render the act one never to be forgotten.
+In the present age of the world, many parents, from some deep-seated
+prejudice, strive to blot out this unpretending family entirely; but
+little children with tearful eyes bring the Historian, the Artist, and
+the Poet at once to the rescue, exclaiming, "Then why does the book say,
+
+ "Zaccheus He
+ Did climb the tree?'"
+
+
+
+
+CHIN-FAN, THE CANTON BOAT-BOY.
+
+BY THOMAS W. KNOX.
+
+
+How many readers of HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE are aware that in China, on
+the other side of the world, there are thousands and thousands of boys
+and girls that live in boats? There is a great city in China called
+Canton, and at this city there is a river which is so crowded with boats
+that it is not easy to get around among them. They are not large boats
+like the great steamers on American rivers, and they do not have
+comfortable rooms where you can sleep as well as in a bed on shore. Some
+of them are so small that they can only hold three or four persons, and
+there is no space for walking around; but these three or four must live
+there from day to day and from week to week, and if they ever go on
+shore at all, it is only for a few minutes at a time. A whole family
+will often be found living on a boat which we would hardly think large
+enough to cross in from one side of the Hudson River to the other. They
+cook and eat and sleep on the boat, and they manage to earn a little
+money by carrying passengers over the river, or doing other work. The
+kitchen where they do their cooking is only a little heap of coals that
+a man might put in his hat, and it rests on a box of sand about a foot
+square. When there are any passengers on board, they sit under an awning
+in the front part of the boat, and the children are kept in a sort of
+well, like a dry-goods box, near the stern, but at other times they can
+run or creep about the deck. The smaller children are secured by means
+of cords tied around their waists, so as to save them in case they fall
+overboard. Sometimes the cord that holds a baby is fastened to the side
+of the boat, and sometimes it is tied to a stick of wood that serves as
+a float to keep him from sinking. The latter mode is generally
+preferred, as the baby has more freedom, and can drag himself along the
+deck where he likes. It is very common to see infants crawling around in
+this way, and it is surprising how soon they learn to keep out of
+danger. A Chinese child has only to fall overboard once or twice to make
+up his mind to keep away from the side of the boat as much as possible.
+
+One day a baby was creeping around the deck of one of these Canton
+boats, and wondering how he should amuse himself. He looked over the
+side, and as the sun was shining, and reflecting his face in the water,
+he thought he discovered a new baby that would be a nice playmate for
+him. His mother was in the forward part of the boat, and busy at the
+oars, and his father was working on a ship that lay in the harbor. So
+this baby, whose name was Chin-Fan, was quite alone, and could do as he
+pleased. He felt lonesome, and when he saw the strange child in the
+water, he smiled at him, and wanted to make his acquaintance. The
+strange baby smiled in reply; and then Chin-Fan held out his chubby
+little hand to lift him out of the water. Of course the other one held
+up a hand to meet him, but he could not reach far enough. Then Chin-Fan
+reached down, while the stranger reached up, and pretty soon Chin-Fan
+lost his balance, and tumbled into the water.
+
+Wasn't he in a dangerous place? His mother did not know what had
+happened, and she kept on rowing the boat right away from where the poor
+little fellow was struggling and trying to keep from being drowned. An
+American baby would have screamed and sunk, but Chin-Fan was not
+American, and so he did nothing of the sort. He dropped all thoughts of
+the strange baby, and considered nobody but himself; he managed to get
+hold of the billet of wood to which his cord was fastened, and by
+holding on firmly he kept his head out of water. The current of the
+river carried him along, and very luckily it carried him to where a ship
+was anchored, with her great cable sloping down the stream. He struck
+against this cable, and as he did so, he let go of the billet, so that
+it went one side of the cable, while Chin-Fan went the other. Then he
+took hold of the cable with both his chubby hands, and next he screamed
+as loud as his little lungs would let him.
+
+A sailor on the bow of the ship heard the scream, and was not long in
+finding that it came from the cable. Chin-Fan kept it up until he was
+rescued, and just about the time he was taken on board the ship he was
+missed by his mother. She came paddling down the river in search of him,
+and shouted to everybody she met that her baby was missing. The sailor
+held little Chin-Fan up so that she could see him, and in a very short
+time he was back in his place on the deck of the boat.
+
+For a good while after that incident Chin-Fan kept at a respectful
+distance from the side of the boat, and he did not show any desire to
+make the acquaintance of strange babies in the water. His mother taught
+him how to swim, and he became a boatman at Canton, and afterward he was
+a sailor on one of the great steamers that run between San Francisco and
+China. He did a great many brave things in and on the water, and his
+mother was very proud of him; she said she always knew he would be a
+famous sailor, when he showed so much good sense and coolness at the
+time of his first plunge.
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF GEORGE WASHINGTON.
+
+BY EDWARD CARY.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+One hundred and fifty years ago a sturdy, hard-working farmer lived near
+the southern bank of the Potomac River, in what was then the English
+colony of Virginia. On the 22d day of February, 1732, a son was born in
+the modest farm-house, who afterward came to be the most famous, and one
+of the noblest, of Americans. His name was George Washington. He grew up
+a healthy, hardy boy, quiet in his ways, fond of study, and still more
+fond of out-door sport. His playmates loved him because he was fair and
+generous, and looked up to him as a leader, because he had a way of
+doing what he set out to do.
+
+George's father died when he was only eleven years old, but his mother
+proved a good care-taker for him. She was a bright-minded woman, gentle
+but firm, and George always loved her dearly.
+
+At the age of seventeen he began to earn his own living as a surveyor.
+It was no light work in those days, for the country where he had most to
+do was in the backwoods. Many a day he trudged through the forest from
+dawn to sunset, and lay down at night with nothing but a blanket between
+him and the stormy sky. But he was faithful and careful, and got plenty
+of work.
+
+[Illustration: BIRTH-PLACE OF WASHINGTON.]
+
+From early boyhood Washington had a strong liking for a soldier's life.
+He used to train his school-mates as soldiers, was an eager student of
+drill and tactics, expert in the use of the sword, and a skillful
+horseman. At that time the Indians swarmed through the forest in the
+back country, and were often urged on by the French (who claimed the
+Ohio and Mississippi valleys as their own) to attack the whites. So the
+colony of Virginia had to keep a good many men under arms to protect the
+homes and the lives of the people. When Washington was about twenty-two
+years old he became a Major in this little army, and devoted a great
+deal of time and hard work to training his men.
+
+In 1755 the French and Indians became so troublesome that quite a large
+army was sent over from England to clear the borders of them. General
+Braddock was at their head, and he asked Washington to go with him, with
+the rank of Colonel, as one of his aides; that is, to be always with
+him, and help him with advice, or in carrying orders, and in any way he
+could. The gallant young officer was glad to go. The English General did
+not know much about fighting in the woods, and his slow and stately
+march toward the Ohio did not suit Washington's ideas, for he knew that
+nothing could be done against the French unless it was done swiftly.
+
+When the army neared the French fort, at what is now Pittsburgh,
+Washington, who was on his back in an ambulance, sick with fever,
+insisted on going to the front, for he knew there would soon be
+fighting, and hard fighting, too. The fighting began before it was
+looked for. The British troops crossed the Monongahela River, and
+marched up a wooded hollow toward the French fort. As they swept up the
+hollow in close ranks, with gay red uniforms and gleaming arms, there
+suddenly blazed upon them, from unseen guns on every side, a murderous
+fire, before which they shrank quickly back. Startled, but not cowed,
+their officers rallied them again and again; but they could not see the
+enemies whose fire was mowing them down, and they slowly and in great
+disorder tried to get back across the river.
+
+General Braddock was mortally wounded. More than half the army were
+killed or wounded. Colonel Washington behaved "with the greatest courage
+and resolution." He rode from point to point carrying orders, and seemed
+reckless of death. "I had four bullets through my coat," he wrote to his
+brother, "and two horses shot under me, yet I escaped unhurt, although
+death was levelling my companions on every side of me."
+
+Fifteen years later an old Indian, who was in the fight on the French
+side, told him that he had fired at him many times, and ordered his
+young warriors to do so. None of the shots hit, and the Indians,
+thinking the young officer was under the special care of the Great
+Spirit, ceased to fire at him.
+
+After this battle, Colonel Washington was kept in bed for four long
+months with a fever, which was made worse by his exposure on the
+battle-field. He had little more hard fighting to do, but he learned
+many a good lesson from the war--especially to rely on himself, and to
+study his own way out of any troubles that he met. His fame went, too,
+to the other colonies, and the young Colonel of Militia was becoming
+known as a man on whose courage and faithfulness and sound good sense it
+would do for his country to lean in time of trial.
+
+[TO BE CONTINUED.]
+
+
+
+
+PUCK AND BLOSSOM.
+
+From the German of Marie Von Olfers.
+
+
+PART I.
+
+Once upon a time Puck and his little sister Blossom lived together in a
+great big egg.
+
+"It's too close in here," said Puck: "let's go and see how it looks
+outside." Bang! went his head, right through the wall.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Outside it was raining, so he drew back his head in a hurry; but the
+rain came pattering in after him. "Oh, my doodness!" moaned Blossom, "is
+_that_ how it is outside? Now we shall det wet to the skin."
+
+"Come," said Puck, "let's go find us another house; it'll be better
+by-and-by."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+So they went, and they went, till they came to old Mother Bee, who lived
+with her children in the leafy house of the linden-tree.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"Oh, come in," said she; "but you must sit quite still, or else my
+children will sting you. As for me, I must go and gather honey."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+For a little while they sat quite still. "Sister Blossom," said Puck,
+"it's too close in here. I must go see where they keep the honey." He
+was starting off that very minute, but all the Bee children flew up in
+such a rage, and fastened themselves upon Puck and Blossom, that they
+got away, they hardly knew how.
+
+"I didn't even det a taste of their old honey, and I'm all stung up,"
+sobbed Blossom.
+
+"Never mind," said Puck, comfortingly, "it'll be better by-and-by."
+
+On the meadow whom should they meet but Master Stork. "Oh, take us with
+you up to your nest!" cried Puck. Master Longlegs, being quite willing,
+quickly snatched up the children in his long bill, and set them down in
+his nest.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"Sit still," said he, "then you'll have plenty of room."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+For a little while they sat quite still. "Sister Blossom," said Puck,
+"it's too close in here. I've seen young storks fly. I know how they do
+it; I can do it too. Come, now, you do just what I do." He spread his
+little arms, she spread her little arms, and--
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Thump!--they lay on the ground.
+
+[TO BE CONTINUED.]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: OUR POST-OFFICE BOX.]
+
+
+ MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN.
+
+ I have subscribed for YOUNG PEOPLE for a year. When I have read
+ it, I send it to my cousins in England. We are going there in
+ June, to stay at my grandfather's house. I shall be eight years
+ old on the 25th of March, and I have been across the ocean six
+ times. I will write when I am in England, and tell you about the
+ beautiful things I shall see there. Grandma has some rabbits
+ waiting for me. There is a pond there, with ducks, and Chinese
+ geese, and swans, and all kinds of fowls.
+
+ JOHN MACC.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ MUSKOGEE, INDIAN TERRITORY.
+
+ I am nine years old. We live on a hill. There are many hills here
+ just like it, and the people here call them mounds. They are
+ shaped very queer. They rise straight up on one side. There are
+ rocks on some, and on others trees. We have two ponies, and when
+ we go hunting, they let me ride on one of them. When they shoot
+ anything, I go and bring it back to the buggy.
+
+ EVA S. T.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ JEFFERSON BARRACKS, MAINE.
+
+ I am a poor boy. I lived with an officer here, and I was so fond
+ of reading the daily papers and other things that his wife kindly
+ subscribed for YOUNG PEOPLE for me, and I like it very much. I
+ live in the woods, and I caught nineteen wild rabbits this winter
+ in traps. I tried to tame some of them, but I could not. I wish
+ you would tell me how to tame them.
+
+ JOSEPH D.
+
+Have any of our correspondents had experience in taming wild rabbits?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ GRAHAMVILLE, OKLAWAHA RIVER, FLORIDA.
+
+ I am a little boy eight years old, and a subscriber to YOUNG
+ PEOPLE. I made the money myself that paid for the subscription. I
+ live away down in Florida, and during the winter months I sell
+ flowers and curiosities to the Northern visitors. I have made
+ twenty dollars this season. I don't go to school now, but my mamma
+ and papa teach me at home. I have a handsome scroll-saw, and can
+ make nice brackets. I had a shepherd dog, but it died. I want to
+ take YOUNG PEOPLE till I am a grown-up man.
+
+ TURNER E.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DAVENPORT, IOWA.
+
+ I want to tell you something about myself. My papa was an
+ American. When he was young, he went to Florence, Italy. There he
+ met my mamma, who was an Italian lady, and married her. I was born
+ in Florence. When I was five years old we moved to Spain. Then I
+ learned the Spanish language. Papa taught me to speak English. We
+ staid in Spain one year, and then moved to America, and came out
+ here. We had not been here long when mamma--poor dear
+ mamma!--died. Then papa went back to Italy, and left me with Aunt
+ Esther. He died while he was there, and now I am an orphan. I am
+ eleven years old, and I can speak and write Italian, French,
+ Spanish, and English, and I am studying German now. I want to be
+ an artist some day, and go back to Italy, and make my name
+ renowned. A friend here gives me YOUNG PEOPLE, and I like it so
+ much! Please put some nice pictures in it for me to draw.
+
+ AURORA.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DANVILLE, ILLINOIS.
+
+ Some little girls--my cousins Nellie and Fannie, Clara Hessey,
+ Nellie Woods, and Kittie Short--are going to have a cooking club,
+ and I wish some other little girls would send some receipts. My
+ cousin Nellie sends you a letter too.
+
+ PUSS H.
+
+ Here is a receipt for sugar-candy that some little girl may like
+ to try: Two table-spoonfuls vinegar; four table-spoonfuls water;
+ six table-spoonfuls sugar (brown is best). Boil twenty minutes,
+ and pour into a buttered plate. I think the Spanish Dancer was
+ very pretty.
+
+ NELLIE H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ FORT SMITH, ARKANSAS.
+
+ I am a reader of YOUNG PEOPLE. I live on the border of the Indian
+ country, and I see plenty of Indians when they come to town to
+ trade. I went to the United States jail not long ago, and I saw
+ about fifty prisoners. Some of them were white, some Indians, and
+ some negroes. They were all together. I felt so sorry for them. I
+ am ten years old, and I go to school.
+
+ CARL C. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ FORT PLAIN, NEW YORK.
+
+ My uncle has come home from India, and brought my brother and
+ myself a beautiful bow, quiver, and arrows. The bow and arrows are
+ made of black cocoa-nut wood, and have ivory tips. The arrows have
+ pointed ends, and colored feathers on the head. The target is
+ three feet high, and has an ivory heart in the middle. In the
+ centre of the heart there is a hole. We have a club of girls and
+ boys, and the one that shoots his arrow in the hole gets a prize.
+ The next prize to be given is an upright writing-case. We only
+ shoot once a week for the prize, but we can shoot other times as
+ much as we wish. Charlie Clark got the prize a month ago. It was a
+ pair of skates. We live in Chicago, and are going home in May. We
+ are visiting my grandma now.
+
+ PEARL F. S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ FORT WARREN, BOSTON.
+
+ I have a pet Newfoundland dog about three months old. I am
+ teaching him to "fetch and carry." He is very intelligent, and
+ learns very quickly. Every morning he waits at the door of our
+ quarters for my papa, and when papa goes to his office he carries
+ his papers for him. He looks so much like a young bear that we
+ call him Oso, which is Spanish for bear. I am ten years old, and I
+ live on an island in Boston Harbor.
+
+ MARY B. R.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SYRACUSE, NEW YORK.
+
+ I want to tell you about a baby bear I saw yesterday. A man had it
+ in a store. He brought it from the North Woods. It was so gentle
+ that mamma held it in her hands, and I took hold of its little
+ paw. We have two canaries, named Dick and Daisy. Daisy has made
+ her nest, and there are two pretty little blue eggs in it. If we
+ should have any little birds by-and-by, I will write and tell you
+ about them.
+
+ ETHEL M. L. (6 years).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA.
+
+ I am nine years old. I found the answer to the Geographical Double
+ Acrostic in No. 18. "Sadie," the little girl who made it, is three
+ years older than I am, but I have studied geography the last two
+ years, and I think I can find out any geographical puzzle she can
+ make. Ask her to try again, please.
+
+ MAUD T. K.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ MUNICH, GERMANY.
+
+ I am a little girl six years old, and my name is Meta, but my
+ sisters call me Peter. My thirteen dolls have all funny names. My
+ rubber boy doll is Moses in the Bulrushes. My big rubber doll is
+ Pharaoh's Daughter. I live in Germany, and am learning German. I
+ hope next year to go back to America, and I shall be glad to see
+ all my friends again. I have two gold-fishes, and I feed them with
+ fish food. Papa bought me a microscope to look at bugs with. I am
+ tired, so I will stop.
+
+ META F.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS, _March 25, 1880_.
+
+ I wrote you last November, and told you I was lame, and confined
+ to the house. I am in the house still, but better. I have a
+ gentleman friend who comes to see me every other day, and last
+ week he brought me a plant which he got in the woods, called
+ hepatica, and it is now on my window, in bloom. It is sometimes
+ called liverwort. [Hepatica is a Latin word, and signifies
+ pertaining to the liver.] The willow "pussies" have been out here
+ two weeks. As I can not go out and enjoy sports like other boys, I
+ amuse myself by reading, and I enjoy HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE and
+ WEEKLY very much. I fare pretty well for a sick boy, for I take
+ five different periodicals.
+
+ HORACE F. H.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ORANGE, NEW JERSEY.
+
+ I thought some of the young readers might like to hear about our
+ alligator. It is about nine inches long, from its tail to its
+ nose. It came from Florida last month. We keep it in a tub. It
+ would not eat much, but we feed it by tapping it on the nose, and
+ putting a small piece of meat on its tongue with a stick.
+
+ J. O. U., JUN.
+
+You would better give your alligator a piece of board to crawl up on,
+for it will die if compelled to remain constantly in the water.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ MELROSE, MASSACHUSETTS.
+
+ I found a caterpillar when I was going to school one morning last
+ fall. When I came back, I brought it home with me. I put it under
+ a glass globe, and fed it with milkweed leaves for about a week,
+ and then it changed into a large brown butterfly, with black and
+ white spots on its wings. We put it on a piece of Brazilian wood,
+ such as naturalists use, which a lady gave me. The time to find
+ the caterpillars is in July and August. I am trying to keep a
+ cabinet. I found willow "pussies" last January. I put the twigs in
+ a vase of water, and now they have leaves on them about an inch
+ long.
+
+ ARTHUR L. H.
+
+Your caterpillar must have passed some time in the chrysalis state
+before it became a butterfly. It is very interesting to watch the
+process of transformation from a caterpillar to a chrysalis, and nothing
+is prettier than the butterfly or moth creeping out of its cell, and
+expanding its wings for the first time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CHESTER, NEW JERSEY.
+
+ I like YOUNG PEOPLE very much. Although I am only eight years old,
+ I can read it all except the hard names you call some of the
+ animals and plants. But papa explains them to me. I have a Maltese
+ kitty. A short time ago we moved, and I was afraid I would lose
+ it. A lady told me to take it to the new house, and rub butter on
+ its paws. I did so, and kitty spent hours licking off the butter.
+ It kept it busy until it became used to its new home, and
+ contented to stay.
+
+ MAMIE B. L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CONCORD, NEW HAMPSHIRE, _March 22, 1880_.
+
+ We are four children, two boys and two girls, living in rather a
+ lonely place, and YOUNG PEOPLE gives us a great deal of pleasure.
+ In warm weather we hunt wild flowers and go fishing. There is a
+ brook near here, where I have caught a good many nice pickerel. My
+ sister has found trailing arbutus buds, which have blossomed in
+ the house.
+
+ B. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ NEW HAVEN, VERMONT.
+
+ I shall be eight years old next August. I have a cat named Pet. I
+ have a little saw-horse and a little saw, and I saw kindling wood
+ for Grandpa Kent.
+
+ KENT K.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ DEER RIVER, NEW YORK.
+
+ I have four brothers, and we have lots of fun. We have three
+ lambs, seven rabbits, a pair of peacocks, and guinea-hens, geese,
+ doves, ducks, and eleven little pigs. My brother Bert is eleven
+ years old, and I am nine.
+
+ DE VERE V.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+C. V. Hess, No. 440 North Seventh Street, Philadelphia, writes that
+L. H. N., of Lockport, Illinois, can obtain collections of minerals by
+addressing him as above.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY.
+
+ I take your paper, and nobody is more happy than I when papa
+ brings it home. Just as soon as my sister comes back, we are going
+ to get up a sewing society. Do you think it is a good idea?
+
+ "BLUE LIGHT."
+
+If you intend to devote your time to making clothes for poor little
+girls like Biddy O'Dolan, your sewing society is an excellent idea, and
+we hope you will carry it out. If you stop to look about you, there are
+many poor children within your reach whose lives you can make brighter
+and more comfortable. You can not realize the good you can do until you
+begin, and see the effects of your work.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MILLIE B. S.--The fact that you take YOUNG PEOPLE through a news agent
+makes no difference whatever. "Wiggles," puzzles, and other favors from
+our young readers all receive the same attention, and are equally
+welcome.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+C. H. W.--Ceres, called Demeter by the Greeks, was the goddess of
+agriculture. She was pictured by the ancients holding a torch and sheaf
+of corn, a basket filled with flowers at her side, and a garland of
+wheat ears interwoven in her hair. Her festival fell on the 19th of
+April, the beginning of seed-time. There is a pretty legend that
+Persephone, the daughter of Ceres, was stolen by Pluto, who allowed her
+to leave his subterranean kingdom only during the period between
+spring-time and autumn, and that Ceres, enraged at the theft of her
+daughter, refused to bless the earth with fruits and flowers during
+those months when she was deprived of Persephone. The name Ceres is
+derived from the Sanskrit, and signifies to create. Vulcan, whose Greek
+name was Hephaestus, was the son of Jupiter and Juno, and the god of
+fire. He was lame and ugly, but was worshipped as the patron of all
+craftsmen who worked at the forge. He is represented by ancient artists
+as a powerful, bearded man clad in a workman's cap and short blouse,
+surrounded by smith's tools. His festival fell on the 23d of August,
+when the young men of Athens ran torch races in his honor. You can
+obtain answers to your other question by inquiring at the rooms of the
+Society, corner of Court and Joralemon streets, Brooklyn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HARRY VAN N.--Wheeling is the capital of West Virginia. The _New
+Hampshire Gazette_, published at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, is the
+oldest paper in the Union which has been continued without interruption
+or change of name. It was established by Daniel Fowle in 1756. The
+Worcester _Spy_, still in existence, was established in 1770, and there
+are several other papers of equal age. The New York _Commercial
+Advertiser_ is one of the oldest dailies. It was established in 1793 as
+the _Minerva_, but soon assumed its present name. The New York _Evening
+Post_ first appeared in November, 1801. You will find a complete
+history of American newspapers in Frederic Hudson's _Journalism in the
+United States_, published by Harper & Brothers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WILLIE S. W.--There are no rules by which you can train cats. They are
+not so easily taught as dogs and birds; still, with patience and
+kindness, you may accomplish your purpose.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"NORTH STAR."--Your puzzle is very neatly and correctly made; but we can
+not use it, as we have recently published one with the same solution. Do
+not be discouraged, but try again. The book you inquire for is published
+by Henry Holt & Co., and is a very useful little volume.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+C. W. LISK.--The dauw (_Equus burchellii_) is a South African quadruped,
+intermediate between the zebra and the quagga. It is found in numerous
+herds in the wide plains north of the Orange River. It is somewhat
+larger than the zebra, but more easily domesticated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WILLIE B. A.--Read the paper on "Gold-Fish" in YOUNG PEOPLE No. 6.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PUZZLES FROM YOUNG CONTRIBUTORS.
+
+No. 1.
+
+EASY NUMERICAL ENIGMA.
+
+The combined numerals in the following sentence form the name of a great
+poet, which is composed of 11 letters. A little girl sat in the garden
+watching some 6-2-5-8-7 frolicking on the grass. The gardener was at
+work with a 10-9-4-11, and he gave her a 7-5-3-10 to eat. Then a poor
+Italian came up the road with a 2-9-10-7, and she ran to 9-1-4 her
+mother if 6-9-10-3-2 might give him a piece of bread.
+
+ POLLY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No. 2.
+
+DROP-LETTER PUZZLE.
+
+Each dash represents a letter. The whole is a familiar proverb:
+
+B--r--s--f--f--a--h--r--l--c--t--g--t--e--.
+
+ A. T.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No. 3.
+
+ENIGMA.
+
+ My first is in battle, but not in fight.
+ My second is in darkness, but not in night.
+ My third is in brighten, but not in cheer.
+ My fourth is in antler, but not in deer.
+ My fifth is in knot, but not in tie.
+ My sixth is in near, but not in nigh.
+ My whole is a tropical fruit.
+
+ EFFIE VIOLET (12 years).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No. 4.
+
+DOUBLE ACROSTIC.
+
+A vegetable. A puzzle. A gem. A buffoon. A bird. Labor. A roll of coin.
+An affirmation. Answer--Two branches of an important study.
+
+ C. P. T.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No. 5.
+
+WORD SQUARE.
+
+First, a governor. Second, to join. Third, flexible. Fourth, a girl's
+name. Fifth, attachments to fishing-rods.
+
+ E. M.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No. 6.
+
+ENIGMA.
+
+ My first is in made, but not in done.
+ My second is in work, but not in fun.
+ My third is in knit, and also in spun.
+ My fourth is in take, but not in won.
+ My fifth is in chase, but not in run.
+ My sixth is in cake, but not in bun.
+ My seventh is in left, but not in begun.
+ My eighth is in mortar, but not in gun.
+ My whole was a noted French general.
+
+ C. W. L.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANSWERS TO PUZZLES IN NO. 21.
+
+No. 1.
+
+Violet.
+
+No. 2.
+
+Story of Robinson Crusoe.
+
+No. 3.
+
+Athens, Orleans, Oporto, Dover, Granada, Naples, Madrid, Paris, Basle,
+Berlin, Lyons.
+
+No. 4.
+
+Candy.
+
+No. 5.
+
+ H ebre W
+ U mbrell A
+ D um B
+ S iberi A
+ O at S
+ N eig H
+
+Hudson, Wabash.
+
+No. 6.
+
+Wellington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Favors are acknowledged from Lula Barlow, May Thornton, William N.,
+Carrie G. Hard, Laura Wharry, C. N. MacClure, H. T., Lura W., William
+H. M., Frank Haid, Jennie Clark, L. A. G., J. E. Conger, Clarence L. M.,
+Jennie Graves, Robert Hoyt, Amy R. Du Bois, N. Rust Gilbert, M. H. and
+M. B., G. C. M., R. V. Thomas, Munn Trowbridge, Walter B. and Clara M.,
+Jeanie Curtis, Marion Comer, Nellie Douglas, E. G. L., Lillian Murdoch,
+Annie Wright, "Frank," Susie Benedict, Florrie Cox, C. B. Albree, M.
+Isaacs, Lillian Morton, Fanny Pierce, Deffie MacKellar.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Correct answers to puzzles are received from Maud Knowlton, C. H. MacB.,
+George W. Raymond, F. Schakers, Fred and Mary Pitney, Susie Randall,
+Willie Atkinson, Grace J. Richards, Lottie G., Herbert N. T., Edward
+Chamberlin, Hugh Burns, Arthur Brigham, George B. Wendell, Fannie and
+Florence M., Rose C., May Fields, Agnes Witzel, Lily and Carrie Levey,
+Huntington Merchant, Etta Rice, Walter Dodge, V. L. Kellogg, Dora
+Jelliff, W. S. Wenship, Fannie Rockwell, Pierre Jay, "George," C. H.
+Conner, J. E. Marshall, Clara Jaquith, Willie Morris, Jessie G., Katie
+and F. Lawlor.
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENTS.
+
+
+
+
+HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE.
+
+HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE will be issued every Tuesday, and may be had at
+the following rates--_payable in advance, postage free_:
+
+ SINGLE COPIES $0.04
+ ONE SUBSCRIPTION, _one year_ 1.50
+ FIVE SUBSCRIPTIONS, _one year_ 7.00
+
+Subscriptions may begin with any Number. When no time is specified, it
+will be understood that the subscriber desires to commence with the
+Number issued after the receipt of order.
+
+Remittances should be made by POST-OFFICE MONEY ORDER or DRAFT, to avoid
+risk of loss.
+
+ADVERTISING.
+
+The extent and character of the circulation of HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE
+will render it a first-class medium for advertising. A limited number of
+approved advertisements will be inserted on two inside pages at 75 cents
+per line.
+
+ Address
+ HARPER & BROTHERS,
+ Franklin Square, N. Y.
+
+
+
+
+CANDY
+
+Send one, two, three, or five dollars for a sample box, by express, of
+the best Candies in America, put up elegantly and strictly pure. Refers
+to all Chicago. Address
+
+ C. F. GUNTHER,
+ Confectioner,
+ 78 MADISON STREET, CHICAGO.
+
+
+
+
+=CARDS OF BEAUTIFUL PRESSED SEA-FERNS=, from New England coast, at 25
+cents per dozen, postpaid. Will be sent to any address on receipt of
+price, by
+
+ B. A. A., Vineyard Grove,
+ Lock Box 54.
+ Dukes Co., Mass.
+
+
+
+
+OUR CHILDREN'S SONGS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Our Children's Songs. Illustrated. 8vo, Ornamental Cover, $1.00.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The best compilation of songs for the children that we have ever
+seen.--_New Bedford Mercury._
+
+This is a large collection of songs for the nursery, for childhood, for
+boys and for girls, and sacred songs for all. The range of subjects is a
+wide one, and the book is handsomely illustrated.--_Philadelphia
+Ledger._
+
+It contains some of the most beautiful thoughts for children that ever
+found vent in poesy, and beautiful "pictures to match."--_Chicago
+Evening Journal._
+
+An excellent anthology of juvenile poetry, covering the whole range of
+English and American literature.--_Independent_, N. Y.
+
+Songs for the nursery, songs for childhood, for girlhood, boyhood,
+and sacred songs--the whole melody of childhood and youth bound in
+one cover. Full of lovely pictures; sweet mother and baby faces;
+charming bits of scenery, and the dear old Bible story-telling
+pictures.--_Churchman_, N. Y.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.
+
+HARPER & BROTHERS _will send the above work by mail, postage prepaid, to
+any part of the United States, on receipt of the price._
+
+
+
+
+Old Books for Young Readers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Arabian Nights' Entertainments.
+
+ The Thousand and One Nights; or, The Arabian Nights'
+ Entertainments. Translated and Arranged for Family Reading, with
+ Explanatory Notes, by E. W. LANE. 600 Illustrations by Harvey. 2
+ vols., 12mo, Cloth, $3.50.
+
+Robinson Crusoe.
+
+ The Life and Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York,
+ Mariner. By DANIEL DEFOE. With a Biographical Account of Defoe.
+ Illustrated by Adams. Complete Edition. 12mo, Cloth, $1.50.
+
+The Swiss Family Robinson.
+
+ The Swiss Family Robinson; or, Adventures of a Father and Mother
+ and Four Sons on a Desert Island. Illustrated. 2 vols., 18mo,
+ Cloth, $1.50.
+
+ The Swiss Family Robinson--Continued: being a Sequel to the
+ Foregoing. 2 vols., 18mo, Cloth, $1.50.
+
+Sandford and Merton.
+
+ The History of Sandford and Merton. By THOMAS DAY. 18mo, Half
+ Bound, 75 cents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.
+
+_Sent by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United States, on
+receipt of the price._
+
+
+
+
+CHILDREN'S PICTURE-BOOKS.
+
+ Square 4to, about 300 pages each, beautifully printed on Tinted
+ Paper, embellished with many Illustrations, bound in Cloth, $1.50
+ per volume.
+
+The Children's Picture-Book of Sagacity of Animals.
+
+ With Sixty Illustrations by HARRISON WEIR.
+
+The Children's Bible Picture-Book.
+
+ With Eighty Illustrations, from Designs by STEINLE, OVERBECK,
+ VEIT, SCHNORR, &c.
+
+The Children's Picture Fable-Book.
+
+ Containing One Hundred and Sixty Fables. With Sixty Illustrations
+ by HARRISON WEIR.
+
+The Children's Picture-Book of Birds.
+
+ With Sixty-one Illustrations by W. HARVEY.
+
+The Children's Picture-Book of Quadrupeds and other Mammalia.
+
+ With Sixty-one Illustrations by W. HARVEY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.
+
+_Sent by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United States, on
+receipt of the price._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: I'M ALL READY.]
+
+
+
+
+DECAPITATED CHARADE.
+
+
+ My whole a churchman is of weight,
+ Summoned his grievances to state,
+ Where, in the lofty audience-hall,
+ The bishops are assembled all.
+ His head cut off reveals his plan,
+ Which he will do as best he can.
+ What's left, again beheaded, shows
+ The state of mind in which he goes,
+ As, mounted on his good gray steed,
+ He rides along through vale and mead.
+ Behead that word, and, lo! 'tis plain
+ Why all his efforts were in vain.
+ Dejected now, at close of day,
+ He, sighing, takes his homeward way.
+ Behead once more: see what he did
+ Ere sleep fell on each weary lid.
+
+
+
+
+A GEOGRAPHICAL GAME.
+
+An amusing and instructive geographical game has just been invented by
+M. Levasseur, a well-known French geographer. It is called "Tour du
+Monde," and is played on a large terrestrial globe, richly illustrated,
+and divided into 232 spherical rectangles, each of which is marked with
+a number corresponding to a number on a list which indicates gains or
+losses in the game. A brass rib or meridian running from pole to pole of
+the globe, but raised above the latter, is perforated with a row of
+eighteen holes; and there are eighteen tiny flags provided for the
+purpose of being planted in the holes. Each flag corresponds to one of
+the principal states of the world, from China the most populous to
+Holland the least populous.
+
+To play the game the globe is set revolving, and a player, commencing at
+the south pole, plants a flag into each hole one after another at each
+revolution of the globe, and advances northward. The score of the
+player, which may be either a gain or a loss, is determined by the
+nature of the facts indicated on the rectangular space above which a
+flag may stand when the globe stops revolving; and this is, of course,
+the interesting and humorous part of the game. London, for example,
+counts thirty, Paris twenty, and so on, according to population. A coal
+mine, a Manchester cotton factory, a grain mart, all are reckoned gains;
+but an encounter with a Zulu or a lion in Africa, a storm in the
+Atlantic, a polar iceberg, a crocodile on the Nile, naturally go for
+serious losses.
+
+
+
+
+A PERSONATION; WHAT IS MY NAME?
+
+BY ELEANOR JOY.
+
+
+I was a queen of royal birth. I was married on the 8th of September,
+1761, to a certain King of England, with whom I lived for fifty-seven
+years. I had fifteen children, all of whom lived to grow up except two.
+The king whom I married had never seen me, and was only attracted toward
+me by my writing him an eloquent letter on the miseries and calamities
+of war. I was brought to England in a yacht covered with streamers and
+flowers. I was not very handsome, and the king, my husband, winced when
+he saw I was not as beautiful as some of his ladies at court. But he
+soon began to love me, and I lived happily with him till my death. Who
+am I?
+
+
+
+
+THE METRIC SYSTEM IN COINS.
+
+
+It may not be generally known that we have in the nickel five-cent piece
+of our coinage a key to the tables of the linear measures and weights of
+the metric system. The diameter of this coin is two centimeters, and its
+weight is five grams. Five of them placed in a row will, of course, give
+the length of the decimeter; and two of them will weigh a decagram. As
+the litre is a cubic decimeter, the key to the measure of length is also
+the key to measures of capacity. Any person, therefore, who is fortunate
+enough to own a five-cent nickel may be said to carry in his pocket the
+entire metric system of weights and measures.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: GIVING THE BABIES AN AIRING.]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Harper's Young People, April 13, 1880, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE, APR 13, 1880 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 28778.txt or 28778.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
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