cs ee re a RE Te Te Bellefonte, Pa., November 4, 1927 LITTLE BOY BLUE. The little toy dog is covered with duse, But sturdy and staunch he stands: And the little toy soldier is red with rust, And his musket molds in his hands. Time was when the little toy dog was new And the soldier was passing fair; And that was the time when Little Boy Blue Kissed them and put them there. “Now, don’t you go till I come,” he said, “And don’t you make any noise!’ 8o, toddling off to hia trundle-bed, He dreamt of the pretty toys. And as he was dreaming, an angel ‘song Awakened our Little Boy Blue; Ob, the years are many, the years are long, But the little toy friends are true. Ay, faithful to Little Boy Blue they stand, Each in the same old place, Awaiting the touch of a little hand, The smile of a little face; And they wondered, as waiting these long years through, In the dust of that little chair, | What has become of our Little Boy Blue, 8ince he kissed them and put them there. —FEugene Field. Ne rr ————— THE BOY IN THE SILVER SHIP. It was light. There was no more rain, and the fog was lifting every second. He got out and nodded to Frazier. Again the motor roared into life. “I wonder if she knows she’ll never stop for a day and a half, this time?” Lindley thought, and people marveled at the smile that came to his face. He looked at the crowd, and dozens of bearlike grips from the men about him fairly crushed his hand. “Good luck, boy,” Accord said huskily, and Chambers, his face drawn and tense, was wordless, but in his handclasp was all the understanding of brotherhood of the air. Commander Fowler held his hand for five long seconds, Then: 1 “So long, Slim. See you in Paris!” . Lindley turned away in agony of eribarrassment. He could not say the things he wanted to say to those great hearted sportsmen=— nsysens hii ering roar of the en- gine died slowly to ag, : show dees she sound?” Lindley evenly. “Sounds good to me,” Frazier said, his voice unsteady. “Then I might as well go,” Slim found himself saying, and he was in the cockpit almost before the mechan- ic was out of it. His hand eased the throttle for- ward as the “Spirit of St. Louis” strained against the wheel blocks, wild to be gone. His eyes swept the in- struments. Gently, the throttle came back. He took a deep breath and and leaned out the open door. “Pull the blocks,” he shouted, and then: “So long, everybody!” The throttle went forward. Slow- ly, the overweighted little craft start- ed down the ash runway. Slim was looking through his periscope, his body strained forward over the stick as though to help his comrade along. The gallant monoplane did its mightiest. He could feel it strain- ing beneath him, and felt that it was a living thing making a superhuman effort to do its job. The soft, rain- soaked earth clung to the wheels. Ahead of him was a gully, then tele- phone wires. He rocked it, and felt it answer. He was in the air— But only for a second. The ship dropped, and again the wheels were held in that clinging embrace. But there was no turning back. Sudden- ly, there leaped into his vision the half of a propeller thrust into the ground ahead of him—grim remind- er of the fate of gallant men who had lost there lives here a year before, starting on the mission he had set himself. as He heaved back on the stick, and again the ship answered. It was staggering through the air, like an ov- er burdened animal weakening under the strain. He must keep it there, or that gully ahead would turn him and his beloved craft into mangled ruins. It seemed that the indomitable spirit flaming within him flowed through the fingers into the ship. With all his transcendent skill, he fought to keep the ship in the air. One more dip to the ground, and no power on earth could save them. The monoplane staggered drunkenly along —but above the ground. Foot by foot, with scarcely enough flying speed even to stay level, he forced it upward. He was white, his eyes pools of tragedy, as the telephone wires loomed ahead and above him. Then: “You did it, you did it!” he whis- pered weakly, and as the wires, fairly scraping the undercarriage, slid be- low him, he sank back in his seat. He leveled out a bit, as though resting ‘his hip. A mile ahead were trees. Somehoxs he knew they would hurdle that obstacle, The test had come, and the ship had been equal to it. He was not surprised when the slow-climbing ship cleared the trees, and the song of the motor became a hymn of tri- umph. ~ As though the gods themselves were smiling, the first ray of sun burst through the thinning clouds. And to Slim, sitting in his snugly enclosed cockpit like a lone crusader bound for conquest, it seemed that a higher power was clearing the way for him. That coast, which had been fog-bound for days, lay smiling be- neath the sun ag the fog fairly rolled away ahead of him. t a hundred miles an hour he winged his way along, knowing every second where he was. Two hours later, he set his course from Scituate, on the shores of Mass- achusetts Bay; for Nova: Scotia. That land flight had seemed like the hops from San Diego—a mere preliminary. Now, as he got halfway across on the two hundred mile water jump, he gazed below him at the smiling sea. hips were here and there— “But there won’t be any, later,” he reminded himself. Fog over Newfoundland he'd been told. He hoped it wouldn't be too thick. Perhaps there wouldn't be any. He was unaware of the passage of time. The figures on the clock were meaningless, as far as actual con- sciousness of what they indicated was concerned. Prevading his whole being was sort of a transcendent exaltation, an exaltation so great that the thought of what lay ahead of him held no terrors. The Atlantic was merely a difficult obstruction, requir- ing greater ' concentration to sur- mount. - : Land ahead—Nova Scotia. That would be Meteghan down there, if his earth indicator had not failed. It was. The time was 12:25. Again the flying was easy as he roared up the coast. Halifax, then Port Mulgrave, and the electric clock said exactly four o'clock as he pointed his ship out over the water from the tip of Nova Sctia and sent it hurtling into the misty air that stretched ahead of him. Now as the cooling air chilled him and sullen water rolled beneath, his face grew more set, and his eyes held a look of deepened brooding. One nore tiny interval over land—and the die would be cast. Five o'clock, six, and about seven he should sight land again—the southern tip of New- foundland. Be The mist was turning into a heavy fog that rolled in from the icy waters of the Grand Banks. Foot by foot, he was forced down, until at the last the Spirit of St. Louis was darting along less than a thousand feet above the sullenly heaving water. His eyes- held -almost ceaselessly fo his compass, flitting occasionally to his drift indicator. . Nearly seven o’clock—and there appeared in the eyes of his periscope a dark line acoss the sea. He strain- ed forward in his seat. “Land all right,” he told himself thankfully. “It must be Newfound- land.” Sr a moment he leaned back, re- laxed.. Then his body stiffened. His ship. dropped lower. It was the rug- ged, bleak-looking coast of Newfound- land, but he must find some land mark to set his course by, The fog was so thick he could scarcely sd anything. He must find the elty of St. John’s, if possible. He could, perhaps, take his bearings from Cape Race, but he wanted to make sure of himself by locating the island’s chief town. He swung the nose of the dripping mono- plane northward, seeking about like a hound for the scent. The northeast ir of the southern extreme of the is- and— Suddenly it burst into view as he flew northward, now less than five hundred feet high as the fog forced him down. There was the bay, and there the small city. Tense as =n drawn wire, he circled: around it briefly, getting his bearings and set- ting his course. Then he circled again, methodically figuring what he and his ship had done. Eleven hun- dred fifty miles in a few minutes less than twelve hours. A favoring wind had helped the overladen ship aver- age a hundred miles an hour, and now it was picking up speed as its tremendous cargo lightened. From his fuel guage he estimated that he had used gas at the rate of about twelve gallons an hour. Eastward stretched the Atlantic— nineteen hundred miles of it—-to Ire- and. Again he verified his course. The slightest deviation would mean hundreds of miles off course at the other end of the flight. He had plenty of gasoline, and plenty of oil. Ahead of him the motor was firing without a break, and below him, his second self, The Spirit of St. Louis, | seemed to be straining ahead as he pointed it eastward. Cs His eyes were the eyes of a man in a trance, and his lips worked as his hand caressed the throttle, now at three-quarters. “Here we go,” he whispered, as they—he and his ship—hurled them- selves into the fog, which blotted out tke land as though Newfoundland had been wiped from the earth. Just a few feet below him, huge white-topped waves, like the teeth of a monster lying hungrily in wait for prey, leaped at the ghostship. He was utterly alone, save for his ship. The fog had swallowed up the ship and the man whom the world was watching. He never dreamed, as he hurtled along through the gradually lighten- ing fog, that he was being borne on the hopes and prayers of three hun- dred and fifty million people. He did not know that he had searcely gone fifty miles beyond Newfoundland be- fore the world was aware of the fact that he was out over the sea, nor that: in gorgeous theatres men and women were standing in silent prayer for him. He would have been stunned at the mere idea that there was scarcely a home in the western world or a street corner in a town, where his name was not on someone’s lips, and his fate close to someone’s heart. He would have smiled his bashful, boyish smile, and flushed with embar- rassment, had he ever been told that he had gathered within himself the dreams of the world he had left be- hind, and that he in his silver ship was the physical symbol of what earthbound mortals of the watching world dreamed they would like to be. He wag just a flyer, taking a chance to prove what a ship and a man could do, writing another page in the his- tory of the game he loved, and the only reward he wanted was the op- portunity to march in the vanguard of the air. Momentarily, as his motor roared its song of defiance to sea and fog, he weakened. He found himself taut and overwrought as his eyes strained into the opaque mist, and saw the darkly brooding pot of water below him rise perilously closer. “Have I got to go through this for- ever?” he exploded, and it seemed that the strain of fourteen continuous hours -in the :air - had frayed his nerves, and broken the iron control with which he held himself. “Guess I'll climb,” he decided sud- denly, and the temporary nervousness was over. He was again the cool’ flyer, as he thrst the throttle all the way on, and sent his ship upward in- to a blank wall of mist. He kept it level, and in a gradual climb, with the help of his banking and climbing indicators. His eyes of | were on the little bubbles almost con- stantly. He could not see fifteen feet in any direction. Hunched in his tiny cckpit with the fog like a shroud about him and the open sea beneath him, he leveled out at five thousand feet, and the song of the motor, drop- ped into a lower key as he throttled it, was like the voice of a friend from out the limitless loneliness that was s. iy A half hour later, and suddenly the silver ship hurled itself out of the fog. Above him was a darkening sky, be- low him a blue-gray sea that stirred itself in long swells, like a monster, stretching. Stars winked on as the heavens darkened, and the water be- game a white-splotched floor below m. He wasn’t hungry, but he munched a sandwich—bis first food. To his dy- ing day he will never know what that sandwich was made of. As night fell, shortly after nine o'clock, the motor seemed to run with a smoother rythm, and the ship, as though to reassure him, was bounding more buoyantly through the smooth air. To the north of him, like ghos*- ly rafts, great icebergs glinted in the wan starlight. Then a great, heav- ing sea of ice floes. And ever the twain—ship and pilot—rushed on into the night, farther and farther from possible rescue, and nearer and nearer to their goal, twenty-two hundred miles away. ; Again he was unconscious of the passage of time. Flying was auto- matic, now, and his sustained exalta- tion sped the time on wings. He thought of nothing in particular. The consciousness of his goal was always with him, and yet in the background. The roar of the motor had become hypnotic, lulling his senses info 4 vague dreaminess.’ e scarcely looked ahead. Occa- sionally he gazed down at the water patiently waiting to destroy him, but he rarely thought of what the fail- ure of two of those cylinders ahead of him would mean. His ship would not fail—why, it couldn’! It was his own— j “A ship!” he said suprisedly, and it was almost unpleasant to come out of his trance, and realize what that single twinkling light meant. The knowledge that below him, a boat was plowing through the water, brought no sense of comforting safety to. him. It brought not even 'a momentar thrill of companionship, nothing would, now. He was alone, a demigod wing- ing his way through the air—and that Teant the height of happiness for m, ; The light dropped behind, and dis- appeared back of one of the growing number of white piles that sailed in stately splendor across his path. Midnight—more than five hundred miles from shore. : ; “Plenty of gas, plenty of gas!” be-. came the refrain of the Wright as he made a mental calculation from his fuel guage. . Another light shone on the clear night. Far to the south some vessel was plowing its own lonely way across the swelling sea. Another hour passed. Time didn’t exist. The sky seemed lightening, while the clouds thickened and grew larger. He was conscious of occa- sional puffs of wind, too, that some- times lifted the wings of his ship. The water became lighter as the stars went out, and the cloud seem- ed to turn grey. i He looked at his clock unbelieving- v. “Gosh, it hasn’t stopped, has it?” was the thought that flashed into his mind. Had he been five or six hours more than he thought, out over the sea? “No, that much ‘gas hasn’t been used up—Holy Moses! What a dumb bell I am!” he told himself disgusted- ly. “Nights are shorter in this coun- try!” < " : In a few minutes, he was winging along in the broad daylight—and it was not yet two o'clock. But as day- light came, the clouds seemed to mass together in menacing gray piles. Now - he was leaning forward, his eyes fiit- ting from compasses to the periscope. A huge bank of mist lay directly ahead. It would be only a mile or so to go northward, so he could get around it. His eyes. on the earth in- ductor compass and the clock, he turned his ship and darted along on the very fringe of the cloud. He must turn the ship southward the same number of degrees, for the same length of time, to get back on his course. As he banked around the cloud, others seemed to be closing in on all sides. ; ' “I've got to go through!” he told himself grimly, “or I won’t know where IT am!” i He turned southward, eyes on the compass, and a few seconds later his ship was swallowed up in the fog. And: he had become a drawn taut mechanism, with narrowed eyes and bounding heart as he realized ‘the truth. The sleet rattled against his ship like the continuous roll of musk- etry, and before his eyes, his win struts were being coated with ice. few minutes of that, and the curva- ture of the wings would change, his ship become unmanageable— “I've got to dive to melt it—I can’t get over!” he thought with sinking heart, and shoved the stick ahead. It would melt, at a lower altitude. If it didn’t—he thought of himself afloat in hig litle raft, and strove to blot the suggestion. Meanwhile, his ship flashed downward at almost two hundred miles an hour. “Thank goodness for the all-metal prop!” he thought as he darted through blackness. The altimeter dropped swiftly. He was white fac- ed and tight-lipped, and his eyes look- ed disaster in the face, as his ship be- came wing heavy—so much so that he had to fight the stick to keep it level. Fifteen hndred feet, a thousand. He could ‘scarcely: control the mono- plane, now, and seconds would tell the tale. | spirit reservoir. dle of the Atlantic, he scarcely: re- the ice coating on the ship turn to water. He was but fifty feet high. Now he wag down to ten feet, he had tobe, tosde. . A few seconds later he leaned for- ward hope in his eyes. There was light ahead, but even as he flashed forth from the storm, he knew that his temporary exultation had been! premature. All around him were more clouds, down to the very water, and on every side. | he renewed the fight, the fight that seemed never-ending. He bank- er around the first cloud, eyes glued to his compass, and with motor full on, climbed at the same time. Banking and circling, striving to calculate in! minutes and degrees the changes in his course in order to compensate for them when he had a chance, he inched his way upward on a tortuous course. Three times, below five thou- sand feet, he was forced into a few seconds of that deadly rain of sleet and snow, but each time he fought through in time. Six thousand feet, and there loom- ed above him, from horizon to hori- | zon, a dense wall of black mist. He could never get over it, and again the silvery ship rushed downward, and | for taunt miles he skipped along, barely above the waves that flung themselves upward like wolves leap- | ing at their prey. The rain pound- ed against the ship, and suddenly a great wave, twenty-five feet high, rushed like a charging monster from ! out the opaque storm. He cried out, as he pulled the ship ' back, and as it answered, its under-' carriage was wet with the creamy foam that was like teeth on the crest of the water. 2 Then, as a momentary surcease from the deadly strain, came an in- terval of a minute during which time he must decide between two things. He was in the clear, but another mass of sleet-filled mist was marching to- ward him. It was not so high, and he decided to go over it. With the motor roaring ifs loudest and the tachometer needle wobbling as the ship vibrated, he elimbed desperately. Circling and ducking back, chancing a minute of sleet at a time, he work- ed his way upward. He handled the ship with the matchless skill that was his, ag his brain almost unconsciously kept track of his deviations from com- pass course. . Ten thousand feet high, he sank back and wiped the beads of icy sweat from his lined forehead. He wag above them, but miles ahead, higher ones, their tops scraping the very sky, were coming toward him. And they never stopped. Hour af- ter tragic hour went by, as he fought his fight. A dozen times he was forc- ed to rush downward through the icy particles which drove against his ship in savage, deadly millions, and then almost to dodge the waves in a driving downpour of rain. Then up again, fighting for every inch of al- titude, making a thousand life-and- death decisions every honr, sometimes attaining a moment’s peace two miles in the air, only to see coming toward him, in ceaseless phanlanxes the army of the air. His ship thrown about in the swirling cauldrons of the winds, his body a network of nerves strained to the breaking point, sleepless and without food, he fought until he could fight no longer. Not even the blurred song of the motor that had never fail- ed him could help him now. “I've got to turn back—I can’t make it!” he thought desparingly, as another gargantuan cloud, that seem- ed to cover the sea and the sky at once, forced him into another heart- breaking fight. Flesh and blood could stand no more. He was through— And then it was that the strength he had stored up through the years seemed to well from some mysterious The blood of Vik- ings, who had conquered the sea a thousand years before surged hot through his veins. In a sort of su- blime madness he flung back his head, and to the great gray monsters who rolled down on the battered dauntless ship he cried his challenge to do their worst—and fought on. He felt a ferocious joy in the fight, now. He flung his ship into the teeth of the storm of gods, and it seemed that he helped to lift on. Two hands on the stick, sometimes, to combat the winds that strove to tear it to pieces, cheating the waves that would de- vour him one minute, and fighting for precious altitude the next, he clung to his course. In the very mid- alized where he was or what he was doing, as he and his ship fought their great gray enemies, and beat off bil- lions of missiles that sought to batter them. A thousand times the ship was almost out of his control, until he gritted his teeth and brought it level in the lower rain. It was eleven o'clock, but he did not know it, when his bloodshot eyes, peering through the periscope, for a second, before going back to the com- pass needle, discerned a lightening ahead. He lifted his ship over a wave, and as though to dare the sea, drop- ped it down again to look. A mo- ment’s respite was ahead, he decided, and then another round in the fight that would go on until he and the monoplane were battered into ruins— He stared ahead stupidly as the plane flashed forth into a smiling sunlight on an almost tranquil sea. These were great rollers, but they were not pricked by rain. And as far as he could see, there was not a cloud in the sky. For a moment, he scarcely could comprehend that his fight was over. Utterly spent, he mechanically sent the ship into the climb. His dulled mind began to work. Eleven o'clock —if he was still on his course, within five hours he should sight land. For the moments, though, that thought meant little. A five hun- dred feet, he leveled the ship, and munched half of a sandwich. He threw the other half out the window. He had no desire for food. He was so tired— : He: caught himself just in time. For a minute or .two, he had been flying in_ his sleep-—sleep with his eyes wide open. He strove to combat He gasped with relief, as he saw | | briefly through his periscope, below him overcome him. He seemed without feeling incapable of thought. “Snap out of it!” he told himself suddenly and his weary body straight- ened. ; He looked over his instruments, and then it was that something elec- tric seemed to course through his veins. He was on the way to Parts already only five hours from land. | The worst part of the Atlantic was conquered. All that it meant came to him, and his dulled eyes brightened and strength flowed from his mind to his body. And as his eyes rested on the motor cylinders before him, he was ashamed. Th ship was no more his brain child— it .was a mighty thing, more worthy of trust than he. ‘With each minute, his exultation mounted higher. bg An hour passed, and as he gazed he leaned forward. “Land!” he cried aloud, and his heart was pumping like mad. He had made terrific speed—must been a strong tail wind— “Where is it?” he asked himself in: bewilderment, as that island he had seen disappeared. : He slumped back in his seat, and then the boyish smile flickered across his drawn face. “A mirage—and I was crazy enough to believe it,” he chided him- self. “Wake up Slim, wake up!” Two hours that were: meaningless chunks of time, and what he saw he knew was no mirage. There were fishing vessels ahead—he must be nearing land! And then there assailed his sud- denly super-stimulated mind all the dread possibilities to which he had given no thought for hours. He had tried to remain on his course—but had he? He might be hundreds of miles from it. But there must be land, somewhere, not too far away. Impulsively he cut the motor, and sent the ship into a steep dive. For a second he held it in a semi-stall above one of the vessels. Vague white faces looked up at him wonder- ingly. “Am I on the road to Ireland?” he ‘yelled at the top of his voice, and then laughed at himself. “They couldn’t hear,” he chuckled— an exultant chuckle as he pushed the throttle forward and the motor an- swered. He knew he was close to land. He felt that he had finished the flight al- ready. But only for a minute. As he got a grip on himself, and the cool ‘placidity of mind that was normally -his, returned to him, he realized that ‘he was still looking over water to the horizon. ’ : : Nevertheless, his eye barely. left the periscope before him from then on, and he searched the sky line with mounting eagerness. His speed, he dared not try to calculate; the storm had made that impossible. "And the thught, which seemed despicable ‘to him, still would recur: Suppose the motor ‘should fail— after eighteen hours over the ocean!” But it did not. When he actually did see land, the motor seemed to lift its song into a pean of triumph, and the ship seemed to increase its speed as though it, too, saw that narrow black line in front of it. It was no mirage, this. It was land. A rocky coast. “Ireland, by the mighty!” the young flyer told himself slowly. “Got to turn south, of course, set my course again, and it’s only six hundred miles now.” And 1:30 in the afternoon. In a few moments, his last doubt wags dis- sipated, as the outlines of the shore coincided exactly with Dingle Bay. . “That was lucky,” he told himself. “Only a few miles off my course, with that storm. And I'm in Europe!” Starry eyed, the feel of victory within him, he sent his ship higher and higher and rushed along on his nearly completed journey. The short hop to England was made, it seemed to him, in but a moment, as he sped over the rolling, park-like terrian of Britain, he went still higher to cross the channel. = He felt superstitious about that strip of water, somehow.’ “Just my luck to come in that, now!” he told himself, and laughed then with almost hysterical exuber- ance. : “We have won, we have won, we have won,” sung the mighty little mo- tor, minute after minute. As darkness fell, his glowing eyes picked out Bayeaux, near the arm of the channel noted on his map as ‘Seine Bas. so: “An hour and a half more, an hour and a half more!” the motor was sing- ing in his ears, and his body was afire. ~ “Pipe down, big boy, pipe down,” he talked to himself. “A forced land- ing in the dark could cook your ‘goose right now, as easy as the Atlantic could.” And again he was the constrained flying man, his joyousness suppressed into a quiet happiness such as he had never known before. “Now to the Seine River—can't miss it—and Paris!” he thought, and with his whole being set on the goal, the significance of it he temporarily forgot. He just must get there that was all. A full fifty miles from Paris, his eyes discerned the lights of it. A slim golden arrow—the Eiffel = tower— beckoned him. Tiny lights that seem- ed to be rockets danced like fireflies below huge lines of light shooting upward into the black sky. Rockets, and the searchlights of the aero- drome, With his goal in sight, all he could think was: “If the motor should fail now!” But it did not. He was two miles high, because he wanted plenty of gliding distance should the engine that had carried him thirty-six hun- dred miles without a miss, fail at the end of its cruel strain. And two miles high he still was, as he peered down on the brightly lighted field that he knew must be the Le Bourget air- port. There were the lights of myr- iad cars, and a dense black mass that must be people, waiting. He cut the throttle gradually, so the drowsiness that was trying to gently that it was like a caress. The : motor seemed to The | i clothes. die thankfully, as 1 very tired, © = Ho And then, winging down silently through the night in graceful spirals, he strove to comprehend what that field below him meant. And he could rot. A vision had come true, and all that he had yearned for would be his. His silver plane had become a dreams ship that had carried him to the har- bor of his heart’s desire. And his eyes were wet as he patted the side of the cockpit, and said huskily: . “You did it, old girl, you did it!” He landed smoothly, but he was in a trance. Suddenly his body went limp, and he gazed stupidly at a tor- rent of black figures sweeping across the field toward him. He knew, later, that ‘twenty-five thousand frenzied people had burst all barriers to rol} over him in a tidal wave of humanity. He could not move, it seemed, save to cut the motor dead in order to have the propeller .still when those people arrived. As the leaders swept up to him, he thrust his head from the cockpit, and smiled, “Well, I made it,” he found himself saying, but it was scarcely heard by a living soul, he knew. In a daze, he felt himself lifted’ from the cockpit, felt himself" swaying" on the shoulders of a dozen men, the center of a sea of humanity, mad with excitement. He was dropped, and he’ fought to keep from being trampled. A sea of faces, indistinguished words in French battering at his ears, woe men in tears and men shouting them- selves hoarse— He was whirled about, and saw the crowd around the ship. They were tearing at it—souvenirs— In a trice his brain cleared, and he found himself shouting: “The ship, the ship! Don’t let them: hurt it. Don’t let them do that!” But it was useless. For a second, he felt that he himself was being mangled. But he was helpless. Again he was lifted to the shoulders of the strangers. : A car forced itself through the mass that was fairly hurling his tired’ body over a surface of hands. Smil-- ing uncertainly, he felt himself whisk-- ed into the car, and two French offic-- ers were pumping his hand as the au-- to sped across the field to the com- mandant’s office. . Drawn faced and grimy, hair fall-- Ing over eyes that were burning with: an almost unearthly glow, he ank in- to a ‘chair. He shook a thousand hands, smiling always, and then a distinguished looking man with a shock of gray hair burst through the men about him and took the fiyer’s hand in both of his. “I'm Ambassador Merrick,” he said’ unsteadily, “and-—Captaln, you're the' hero of the whole world this night!” “Thank you, sir,” Lindy said smil~ ingly, “but that’s going a little bit too far, isn’t it?” There certainly was a lot of excitement, he thought. It hadn’t been such a tough flight, all in all. A half hour later he was at the Embassy, spirited there as though by magic, safe from the tens of thous- ands of men and women who would have worn his tired body out with: thei¥ adulation. Some hot milk, a bath—and the happiest youth in all’ Christendom has laid himself down: to sleep in pajamas belonging to the: Ambassador of the United States to: France. 2 Gosh, but he was tired. His long legs bent slightly to fit the bed, his hair spread over the pillow, he had time ‘to think. “Well I'm here. Everybody sure- is marvelous to me. I'll bet Mother, and Billy and the Major and the boys: get a little kick out of it. I wonder —what—they’re doing now—"" The door opened slightly, but the Ambassador stopped ‘as he saw the doubled-up fiugre beneath the bed Outside a mob was singing and cheering, but Slim was. sleeping like a tired baby. The Ambassador closed the door softly. Fed Three minutes later a message was flashing across the Atlantic, follow- ing’ SIim’s own, previously-sent mes- sage: : “Warmest congratulations. Your incomparable son has done me the honor. to be my guest. He is in fine condition, and is sleeping sweetly be- neath his country’s roof.” —Ameri- en ‘Boy. From the Reformatory Rec- ord. though The Real Music One will lose no music by not at: tending: thie oratorios and operas, The: really inspiring: melodies are cheap and universal; and are as audible to: the poor man's son: as to the rich man’s, Listening: to the harmonies of the universe is not allied to dissipa- tion: My neighbors have gone to the vestry to hear Ned Kendal, the bugler, tonight; but: I! am come forth to the hills to hear my bugler in the hori- zom 1 can forego the seeming ad: | vantages of cities without misgiving No: heavenly strain is lost to the ear that is fitted to hear it.—Thoreau. Aquarium Cement Cement for panes in aquariums is produced: from litharge and glycerin, The former must be as finely pow dered as possible and the glycerin: very condensed, of a sirupy consist- ency and limpid. Mix the two ingredi- ents into a semi-liquid paste, coat the places; or pour the tough mass into the respective cavity, and press inte it the part to be cemented on. The surplus oozing out must be removed at once and the place cleaned, as the putty hardens very rapidly. Found at Last ‘Phe harrassed-looking man was be ing shown over some works. *That machine,” said his guide, “does the work of 30 men,” The man smiled glumly, “kt last,” he said, “I have seen what my wife should have married.” ——————————— ——The Watchman gives all the: news while it is news.