Deuoreaics ald = Bellefonte, Pa, March 9, 1928 —————————————————————————— THE OUTCAST. There dwelt a man in Galilee Long centuries ago; He dreamed that men could live by love And for his dearest foe He had no thought except to teach The faith he grew to know: His faith was simple as a song, As fragrant as the May: He learned it as he gathered flowers Along the country way, He learned it thinking of the stars And toiling day bv day. He saw in God a Father Heart Who lived for every child, Whose love was boundless as the sky, Whose face forever smiled. What happy days God gave his son, By dawn and eve beguiled! Alas! men spurned this friendly soul, Rebuked his dream sincere; They said he wronged almighty God, Who ruled by hate and fear; They cast him out, this son of love, And left him, with a sneer. He sits without the gate today Amid the shadows dim, While haughty priests ignore his plea And chant their doctrines grim,— And sometimes he must wonder why Men turned their hearts from him! —Thomas Curtis Clark. ——— ee —— THE FABRIC OF ROYALTY. Binks started up drowsily from the arm which he had rested—just for a moment—on the stair above him, and listened. Some one was in his house. He could smell the heavy aroma of tobacco; and as he waited, he heard the distant murmur of voices, men’s voices. Binks had called it his house for many months. There was no one to object, for no one else ever came here now. Indeed, it had never been oc- cupied since he could remember. It was bolted and barred from the iron gates in the high stone wall that sur- rounded it to the tall wooden shut- ters at the windows inside; but Binks had no difficulty in getting in, in spite of the iron brace on his bad leg, since he had found the little door in the basement wall—an underground route thoughtfully provided by an early Pelham for his dogs, and happily ov- erlooked when the house was closed In such hurry, years ago. Binks came here often, and he al- ways lingered for a moment at the foot. of these stairs to throw back his shoulders and look bravely up at the gentleman with the lace collar and the sword who gazed so haughtily at him from the dark oak wall. Al- though there were other ' portraits staring or frowning or simpering at Binks from the panels of the wide hall, and lying in ambush in the rath- er daunting shadows through which the great stairway eircled upward, he never felt any real lack of self-con- fidence before any but this one. But the gentleman with the lace collar was too overwhelming to be casually passed by. He did not need the legend, “His Highness Frederick George Lou- is,” which was cut into the frame in tarnished gilt leters, to give him maj- esty. That was the way a prince should look—that arrogant nose, those decp-set eyes, which seemed al- ways about to flash in command, and that firm mouth, with just the quiver of a proud smile at the corners. Binks supposed that princes always looked like that. That was what made them princes. It was from Frederick George Lou- is that the Pelhams had boasted of their origin before the coming of the family to America, three centuries ago. Over the fireplace in the vast hall was the family motte, Frederick George Louis’ motto, “We Never Turn our Backs.” Binks loved the swagger «f that motto. It always made him feel as he did when his father read him at bedtime the story of the “Re- venge”— about how the mad little ship ran the gauntlet of fifty-three mountain-like Spanish galleons. He never listened to that poem without a happy ache in his throat when his papa came to the line, “For I never turned my back upon Don or devil vet;” and when he read, “For he said. ‘Fight on! Fight on!” Tho’ his ves- sel was all but a wreck,” Binks had to swallow and blink very hard to choke down the hot, exultant tears that sprang. At a glance one saw that Frederick George Louis had never turned his back. He was one reason why Binks loved his house. But there were other rea- sons. He loved the cool and quiet of the great, high chambers. Being there was like being in church without any minister to disturb you. There were intricately carved arches over the windows and doorways. There were also great arched beams supporting the lofty ceilings, which—lost as they were in the shadows of the close-shut- tered rooms—seemed as limitless and mysterious as the night sky. As you lay on the cool floor and let your eyes follow their upward vault, you had the feeling of being very light and free, as if you could leap as pow- erfully and lightly as they from corn- ice to cornice. And as you sat here on the stairway, magic lights fell on your hands—rose and green and violet “through the stained windows on the landing above. Sometimes, if you sat very still, you could even slip through the cool, gray-green tapestry on the opposite wall to an enchanted green- wood beyond, where you jousted with plumed knights and rescued beautiful ladies from nameless dangers. Then there was the wide window-seat in the library. Binks had built a cir- cular embattlement of red and black volumes about the shiny spot his trousers had polished through the dust of years. There were alluring col- cred pictures in those volumes, and fascinating strange words like “nec- romancy” and “leman” and “donjon” and “palfrey.” After all, a bad leg bad its advantages; it gave you time to discover and dream over such de- lightful things. Today Binks had lingered for a long time before His Highness Frederick George Louis. He felt a heightened interest in princes. Only this morn- ing at breakfast, his father had read a momentous paragraph from the pa- per. The Crown Prince Charles Otto of—couldn’t quite remember the name was reported to have taken refuge in America from the Bolshevist assas- sins who had overthrown his govern- ! ment and killed his royal father. He was traveling in-cog-ni-to, but in Philadelphia he had been recognized by the sagacious press, with two members of his royal household. It was assumed, father read, that the prince wished to avoid publicity by retiring to some secluded spot until he had recovered from his wounds and could rally his allies for a triumphant return to his kingdom. Binks wished very much that there had been a pic- | ture of the prince. He wondered if he looked like Frederick George Louis. Now he realized that he must have gone to sleep there on the bottom step of the great stairway, thinking ' of Crown Prince Charles Otto. Of course, he couldn’t still be dreaming, for the leaves of the carved pillar at the foot of the stairway were just as substantial as ever under their years of dust. Yet Binks clutched the edge of the step in a daze of incredulity. “Well, Prince, you sure picked neat auarters—eh, Royale. Where d’yon hear about this?” The voice was thin, with a whine that made you sure you would not like the speaker. He must be just coming into the great parlor that opened up- on the hall. Behind him another voice spoke. It was not at all loud— rather lazy, in fact—but every word was distinct, like velvet with a crack- le. “That’s one of my secrets,” the voice said. “Leave those shutters alone, Siebert.” “Oh sure,” whined the thin voice. “Anything Your Royal Highness com- mands.” The speech ended with an unpleasant, whinneying laugh. Binks had to clap his hand over his mouth to smother a gasp. Prince! His Royal Highness! Why! Hardly breathing, he drew himself up to the railing and peered into the room. ' Of the two men visible, only one was in uniform—a large, blond man whose stubble of short beard shone ! like gold wires against his heavy, purplish face. He wore a uniform of olive drab, with shining high boots and wide-cuffed gloves, like Binks’ papa’s chauffeur—all with the ap- pearance of having been intended for a smaller man. Now he turned an- grily. “Shut up,” he rumbled. “If you're dying to advertise yourself to some | huck constable, go out and set in that car you wrecked for us down the road. Prince don’t need no advertising; he’s out for privacy.” : Binks had become quite rigid with ! attention. Privacy! And this was a secluded spot! “I ain’t advertising,” whined the other. “All I want is to get out of this before something drops. We done: what we agreed, didn’t we, after he spilled the beans at Buck’s place? We got him here; now I say let's pull out while the goin’s good. We've got to go some to get to Pittsburgh tonight.” | The speaker was a shabby, elderly man, with strangely restless, bright | eyes in dark circles, and restless ! hands like ivory claws. He bit his | nails incessantly—a thing even small boys in private life are forbidden to do. Distinctly perplexing in the no-: | | | i ble follower of a banished prince. “You're sure,” the big man was ad- dressing some one just beyond Binks’ range of vision, “that you can see from here if we set off the signal on the hill there when things blow ov- er? “Sure,” said the crisp voice. Binks had to clutch the marble Ve- nus at the foot of the stairs in a strangle-hold and lean far out and ' around to see the third man. He was sitting by the long, carved table at | one side of the fireplace, his 1e &5 .t, show you the castle? And you can | would permit. spread before him, his hands deep in i his pockets— a rather dejected figure, despite the mocking smile that curled his lips. No, he did not look at all | like Frederick George Louis. It was | cnly that one missed the flowing cape | draped with so dashing a gesture about the gentleman’s shoulders, and ' the swagger boots and gauntlets and plumes. Even Binks missed, though he did not analyze the lack, that flash of high purpose, that air of invinci- | bility which had so stirred him in the princely Jacobean. Then the man in the chair moved, and for the first time the bandage about his right wrist was visible, and the stain of fresh blood on the shirt sleeve of the right arm, which hung free of the coat. He was wounded! Like a homing bird Binks’ hero-worshipping heart flew and nest- led, quivering, under the hand of the young man who stared, with such haunting pathos in his hollow eyes, into the great, empty fireplace. “As Siebert graciously suggests,” the young man was going on, “I did spill the beans, and you've done your share. No one has anything on you yet, and the farther you get from me, the better. If you'll take that path I showed you through the trees, you will get to the railway without being seen. Better beat it.” Now! Now they would fall upon their knees and, kissing their hands, protest that they would not leave him —But they did not! They were going; they were actually leaving the prince alone, alone and wounded, with no one 3 stand between him and his wicked oes! As their footsteps died away at the back of the big house, the young man rose and walked about the room, studying with that dark, brooding look of his, here the carved table with fluted legs, there the shadowy tapes- try between the windows. He was whistling to himself a gay little tune; but when, on the farther threshold, he turned, the tune was startlingly be- lied by the haunted misery of his eyes. Why, so one would expect a banished prince to look! The discovery was too much for Binks. He lost his balance and shoot- ng down the steps below him, made a fittingly humble, if somewhat Sec tacular appearance before roya by prostrate upon his face and stomach, This is an awful s’cluded spot. the force of the exclamation with which his entrance was greeted it was evident, even to him, had produced a gratifying sensation. “I'm—I'm not crying,” he protest- to his feet. “You—you can see for yourself that I'm not crying. But it— it kind of s’prised me.” «It kind of surprised me,” the tall young was 2a his tired eyes that encouraged Binks to grin up at him as he dusted his bruised hands on the seat of his ov- eralls. Binks was hideously embarrassed. People in the stories he had read did i not burst in upon princes headlong like that. ‘Why, he might even be It is improbable that Binks caught" man told him curtly, but there | flicker of something back in' | taken for a spy in pay of the enemy!. “Please,” he gulped again, “please don’t mind me. I'm really just a little boy. But I know all about you. My ‘ father read it from the paper this ! morning. And--" He stopped in dismay. “What,” demanded the prince, , but slowly, he put his hand on the : that he of the door behind him. i i | i Hands had | tightened painfully on his shoulders. : and ful, { Binks told him quickly. ed in agonized gasps as he scrambled been locked ever since. Finally Charles Otto shut his eyes ; as if he were very tired, and ying ; no Ee ————— This Vicinity. Seeks Rest and Seclu- sion.” Binks felt his whole head flush the floor. a long, gray pencil as he stared at “Siebert and Royle?” he hot. He knew he would never be able ' asked at last without looking up. to lie to Bunny if he should under- Bunny's eyes twinkled, but his tone “It’s no good, Your Highness,” ' stand and ask him. But how was it was respectful. “Your Highness can “That one’s But there are lots of others.” | “Ever since?” cut in His Highness. He did not entirely turn around, i and his voice was low, but there was something in it that made Binks jump. It was almost as if His High- ness were afraid of something. “Why, ever since—Oh, I guess I didn’t tell you about that. Ever since young Mr. Pelham went away. He— he went kind of suddenly. It was! funny, too, because he had just got home from college. But my father! never told me much about him.” i “Perhaps,” hesitated Charles Otto, still very low, “it was because he was —the exception.” “Sir?” said Binks, blinking. ! “You said they never turned their backs—the Pelhams—except one. He was the one?” | “Well,” Binks’ manner was regret- ' “] guess he did turn his back. his face was very white, “what did : And when his father heard, my father you say your father read you 7” “Why, about how your father, when the Bol—Bol—the rabble beat | and yelled at the gates. And—and hoarse sharpness. ’ | says, he locked this door and threw the king, was shot before your eyes, but he died. It—it killed him—the thing you wouldn‘t leave the palace, even ! his—" away the key. And then, that night, “No.” His Highness spoke with a, “Not that! He | how your soldiers carried you by ; had been ill for a long time!” you must have known all about them, force to safety on a ship for America, ,and—" | Abruptly the princ | given beneath him—the way Binks’ bad leg did sometimes. He was laugh- ing weakly and mopping his forhead. | With his well hand he drew a paper | from his pocket and scanned the “headlines. { head and. laughed again, wrinkling his nose delightfully and wiping his eyes with his handkerchief. This informality on the part of roy- alty was reassuring. Binks became sunnily expansive. “I s’pose the one in the uniform was the captain of the guard,” he | ventured. “And the little man who bit his nails—he was the prime minister? He didn’t look just like a prime min- ister, but of course, when you're in— incog—" Again the prince choked and wiped his eyes. “A little out at the elbows,” he said brokenly, “like the rest of us, but—" “Oh, but I know all about that,” Binks hastened to reassure him. “My papa often reads to me about Bonnie Prince Charlie, and how he was often in rags and hungry. But you—why, you aren’t really ragged at all,” he added politely. “You are very kind.” The Prince raised an arm and ruefully inspect- ed cuffs which showed an indubitable fringe. Again Binks was hideously embar- rassed, but he edged a step nearer. “Well, anyhow,” he told his guest eagerly, “you're quite all right here. 0 one ever comes here now but me. No one’s lived here for years.” The prince seemed not to be listen- ing. He sat quite motionless, staring into the empty fireplace as if—why, almost as if he were seeing things there, “And I--I think you would feel at home here,” Binks hurried on.—It was just like a story. He felt like a noble vassal offering the refuge of his castle to his hard-pressed liege.— “Many, many years ago, the people that owned this houtre had a prince in the family. house, too, and I could bring you ap- ples and things, the way Flora Mac- . Donald did to Prince Charlie, and—- Oh, you can trust me! You can trust me to the last ditch!” he ended, quite "intoxicated by his triumphant excur- , sion into heroic diction. Passionately he yearned to swear allegiance on his bended knees. And now, Your Royal Highness,” he sug- gested happily, “wouldn’t you like me pick out the royal bedchamber.” In the gloom of the hallway Binks paused with a new impulse of hospi- tality. “Perhaps,” he said, “you’d like to look at the pictures as we go. This is the prince I told you about. His name is Frederick George Louis, and he was a very brave man. He died fighting. That's his motto over the fireplace, ‘We never turn our backs.” I think,” cried Binks in a lyric burst, “it’s the finest motto I ever heard, and I—I know you're just like that,” he finished in a small voice. Reverently and very sacredly he brushed his cheek against the empty sleeve that hung so still just by his head. Then he wondered again if ' Prince Charles Otto was listening, for he did not answer at all. He was | staring hard at the portrait of Fred- erick ‘George Louis—so hard that he seemed to be looking through and be- yond it. “And all the Pelham men have been like that,” Binks went, on, glowing in his role of feudal bard. “All brave, honorable men—all ‘cept one maybe. Now, that one over the landing, with the high white collar and long, white hair is Augustus George Pelham. When the British soldiers wanted to live in his house he set fire to it and burned it down right before their eyes. And I call that being pretty brave, too, don’t you, Your High- ness?” “Very brave indeed, my Lord Bink- shop,” agreed Charles Otto. But al- though the words were cordial, his eyes were somber. The newly-made peer wondered anxiously if he were boring his royal guest. “Well, I guess you'd rather go to your roo—your chamber,” he declared hastily. “I'll show you—" But Charles Otto was not waiting to be shown. He was going straight up the dark winding stairs ahead of Binks, as if he knew just what he meant to do. Down the wide balcony, past the rows of studded oak doors, he went, until he came to the windows opening on the veranda at the back of the house. There he stood for a long time, very still, looking off across the woodland slope to the stream that shimmered through a valley golden with cowslips. The old house seemed very cool and quiet and dark by con. trast with that gay shimmering world and very badly winded. beyond. a e sat down at. to be coming here to stay,” he sai the table, almost as if his legs had i last. | lawful good this time.” | Binks stared. “Oh, well, of course, | d at “Well, there’s the milk wagon. | I'd better go now. You said milk and bread and apples, didn’t you? And say, Your Highness, the cookies are Although he waited patiently, there Then he threw back his | was no response. a long time, | “Well—all right,” Binks said at last | (down abruptly at the table. your eyes “What matter wif® and child My emperor, my emperor—in prison curiously, suddenly turned the paper and glanced at the headlines. For a moment he reflected with narrowed ' eyes; then he loosened Binks’ shoul- ders and turned away. “Never mind, buddy,” he said quiet- ly. “It doesn’t matter.” Binks waited until, whistling loud- ly, Bunny passed out at the front gate and crossed to his side car. Now he would go on down the road to headquarters, and he would not pass again until almost dinner time. That was all right then. Shakily Binks picked up his tray and sped towards waiting royalty. He found the prince again in the great salon. When Binks entered, he was standing very stiffly facing the door, one hand resting, with knuckles bone-white, upon the table before him, the other in a pocket which bulged abnormally. When he saw Binks, he wondered why his hands were trem- bling. “Well?” asked the prince. “It was only a policeman I know,” Binks explained cheerfully. “He asked had I seen any one come in here, and I said, ‘No.’ I hadn’t. Say, I'm awful glad I didn’t have to lie.” The prince looked at him strangely. “So am I,” he said, almost as if he were surprised that it was so. Then he looked with pathetic interest at the tray. “Now,” suggested Binks hopefully, It’s really a quite nice | | rather vaguely, and turned. His Highness stirred, as if rousing from a bad dream. “You'll remem- | ber, Lord Binkshop,” he said hastily, “no one must know—no one. Better not come back if any one’s about.” “eyes, elbows wriggling with the ro- i mance of his inspiration. “If I see any one, I'll—I'll sing very loudly, like the jester when Richard the Lion- Hearted was in the tower.” “That wouldn’t be a bad idea,” as- sented Charles Otto. There was some delay about assem- net, the housékeeper, was of a sus- picious nature and stoutly insisted upon Binks draining one whole glass of milk before allowing him to escape with the rest. Binks had hardly stepped into the open space beyond the hedge before he realized that something had gone wrong. A man in uniform was ad- | vancing cautiously upon the house ! through the lane of lilac and willows | that ran along side. The new Lord Binkshop’s blood ran cold. If Prince Charles Otto should show himself! Now—now the signal! It was in rather quavering tones that he gave voice to his warning. He thing rich in heroic tradition—“Scots Wha Hae,” for instance, or “Will Ye No Come Back Again?” But his ex- tremity was great. Binks caught at the first thing that came to mind—an utterly forbidden bit of doggerel from the repertoire of the chauffeur. “Qh, it ain’t a-gun-a rain no more no more. It ain’t-a-gun-a rain no more But how in the heck Can I wash my neck If it ain’t a-gun-a rain no more?” i The uniformed figure in the iane “whirled. Binks almost dropped his ‘tray in his relief. Not to have rec- ‘ognized that trim, gray tunic, those ‘ glossy boots! Binks had always con- i sidered their wearer splendid enough | to figure as the hero of the most thril- (ling romances. Involuntarily he threw ‘up his head, stiffened his shoulders, | and clicked his heels as nearly togeth- ler as the brace on the right ankle “Why, hello, Bunny!” he yelled and peamed hospitably. The tall young man with the stripes grinned, too, as he approached with a speed and lightness remarkable in so big a young man. But he eyed Binks as if he wished him elsewhere. “My lunch,” Binks explained, a trifle out of countenance as the eyes focuded on the generously loaded tray. I—I quite often bring it here.” Though Binks’ tone was light, his eyes were not quite steady, and his receding color left his freckles high and dry. Of course, the prince had nothing to fear from Bunny, but he had said, “No one must know—no one.” “Oh, and Bunny,” pursued Binks with desperate guile, “my scooter that you fixed goes faster than ever.” “Fine!” said Lieutenant Bunstead rather grimly. “I wonder whose auto- mobile I'll be dragging you out from under tomorrow.” Binks had put down his tray to caress the shining buckle of Bunny’s belt. It was funny how different he felt about Bunny and the prince. Bun- ny, now—why there was nothing Bun- ny was afraid of or couldn’t do; but —well, Bunny did things for you. You did things for Charles Otto. “Binks,” said Lieutenant Bunstead abruptly, “have you seen anyone come in here today?” Binks’ scalp crinkled, then he gave a sigh of relief. Incontrovertibly he had not seen any one come in. “No sir,” he said very loudly, but he was glad he had put his tray down. It is hard to keep dishes from rattling when your hands shake. Bunny looked at him steadily for a moment, before he took him by the shoulders and faced him about. Binks stood very straight, but his freckles twinkled out from an ashen face. It might have to be a lie now, and he didn’t want to lie to Bunny. “Binks, old man, what's on your chest?” Bunny’s voice came from far away, for it was at this moment that the thing happened that was almost the undoing of Binks. Under Bunny's arm was a paper folded so that only one headline showed. It seemed to Binks, as he stared, that he must be screaming that headline aloud. It read “Prince Charles Otto Believed in Fr “J"]] tell you what,” Binks stopped, ' bling His Highness’ lunch. Mrs. Ben- | should, of course, have chosen some- of a lieutenant of the state police ! don’t I stand behind you and—and understand,” hand you things?” | “My dear Lord Binkshop,” ' Highness, “in less time than you can imagine, there will be nothing to hand.” It was almost true. Charles Otto things, quite as efficiently as if he were mot a iprince, accustomed to Already ' that old song went, the one that made ' set his mind at rest. The gentlemen fill and your throat swell? | are traveling, quite safe, under escort: to me? | worthy of their—er—their rank and 1” | reputations.” : Bunny, who had been watching him Binks was proud of them both, ' standing there so straight and brave ‘and pc’ite—proud, and quite shivery with excitement. It was just a like ‘a scene from Ivanhoe or The Prison~ er of Zenda. “It’s all right he assured the prince: ! cordially. “If Bunny says they're: safe, they are. And you'll take the: | prince where it’s safe, too, won't you, Bunny? You see, I felt kind of re~ sponsible for him.” “You haven’t anything on me, son,” said Bunny heartily. Then he turned again to the prince. “I am instructed by my government to escort Your Highness to a—a more fitting estab- lishment until certain formalities are disposed of. 1 even have with me a trifling gift of—er jewelry, provided by my thoughtful government. I won- I der—would Your Highness rather—"” | to preserve our incognito. said His manage the thing on that basis?” _ “We shall be most grateful,” put: in Charles Otto with a quick glance. laughed, a quick, short laugh, and sat at Binks, “if you will keep them for Binks us until a more suitable occasion.” | “Well, since that’s settled,” sug- gested the young lieutenant cheerful- ly, “shall we start?” “On one condition,” replied Charles: Otto. He ‘looked slowly about the great room, with the coat of arms over the carved fireplace, and the: chairs and tables and tapestries which: the first Pelhams had brought with. them from England. Then, though: there was something almost pleading: in the eyes turned upon the young of- ficer, he drew himself up proudly. “For reasons which you will readily he went on, “we prefer Can’t you. i | think I can promise you,” Bunny" spoke “very gravely, “that our busi-- ‘ness can be carried on entirely—say,. was handing himself | myriads of liveried servitors behind . i his seat. Binks curled up on one of the armchairs by the fireplace and | watched the feast in a gentle glow of ‘ self-approbation. | “Of course, he wasn’t looking for {you anyhow. Bunny hunts thieves iand things—not princes. My papa ! yead me this morning about some men ! playing cards and shooting some one (in a house down the road. I guess maybe—" | A timber creaked just outside the “door. The prince turned in his chair, | something stealthy and cat-like in the movement. Again his hand disap- peared in the pocket that bulged. “That’s nothing, Your Highness,” Binks assured him, “There are al- ways noises here, like people walking around and talking. I don’t guess * you'll have to shoot.” He sighed a bit regretfully. “I bet your enemies will never find you here. “what there is about princes that makes them different from common people. I'm not very brave, Your Highness. That’s because of my leg and not going to school with other boys, Bunny says. I have to make believe I'm not afraid lots of times when I’m honestly scared to death; { but when I think of you, and how | ' your enemies killed the king and took your throne and tried to kill you, I —why, I feel just like Joanne d’Arc, or Ivanhoe, or some one like that. That’s because you’re Prince Charles Otto, and—" He broke off abruptly. to was on his feet, his face tightened into a scowling mask, one hand in the coat pocket, the other supoprting his weight as he leaned across the table. Binks squirmed about in his chair. In the doorway stood Bunny. Ux- cept that his right hand rested cas- ‘ually at his gun in his belt, he stood deferentially at attention. His blue eyes were clear and steady as he ad- dressed the prince. “My humblest respects, Charles Otto, alias Slim Prince, alias Benton the Slicker.” i Binks listened with reverent atten- ‘tion. Alias. now—that must be some lofty foreign title. But what could to Prince Charles Bunny have to say { Otto? “Ah,” breathed His Highness and | stood straight and still and white, looking at Lieutenant Bunstead. “So 'it was not just a board creaking.” i “I hope Your Highness will excuse me. I did take the liberty of listening for a moment. Otherwise I might not have been able to address you by—by your proper title. And I have an im- portant message for Your Highness.” Bunny, too, was pale, and intent of eve, and although he stood quite still, he was breathing quickly. “It will be best for you te come with me immedi- “Ah?” said the prince again. He was smiling now, a crooked smile, as if at something not entirely funny. “And if I don’t?” «I don’t think Your Highness will refuse,” answered Lieutenant Bun- stead steadily. “The consequences would be too distressing to—to your loyal subject.” Although two men continued to look into each other eyes, it was al- most as if both had turned to glance at Binks, standing there wide-eyed and intent. “They left him, Bunny, both of them,” almost sobbed Binks. “The prime minister and Captain Royle— and he’s wounded.” There was an instant’s silence be- fore Bunny said quietly, “You see for yourself. And Your Highness will let me advise you to remove the right hand from the pocket? Thank you.” Charles Otto's hand was visibly trembling as he picked up a cigarette from the table and lighted it. “As a matter of curiosity,” he said unstead- ily, “we might parley. How did you come ‘to look for me—for us—here?”” “Well, Your Highness,” said Bun- ny, and for the first time he permit- ted himself a smile, “I knew some- thing of your—your earlier relations’ with the Pelhams.” “Ah?” murmured the prince again, and the ash of his cigarette grew to “I wonder,” he went on dreamily, | under the name of Benton.” “In that case,” agreed His High- ness, “we are ready to trust our per- son to your escort.” Binks was delighted that these two,. his most distinguished friends, should have reached so amicable an under- standing, but suddenly he was feel-- ing very desolate. “Well, Your Highness,” he said, in ' a voice which he hoped did not betray the lump in his throat, “well, Bunny" can take lots better care of you than. I can. But I—I never had a prince before, you know, and we were just: beginning te get acquainted, weren’t we? Do I—do I kiss your hand?” Charles Otto came over to him. ' where he stood, very high-headed and very solemn eyed. He took the small brown fist clenched at Binks’ side and’ shook it gravely. 5 “Our gratitude for your loyal serv- ices is so great, my Lord Binkshop,”” he answered, and weary as his face was, his smile was very warming, | “that we prefer to shake hands. And i | i Charles Ot- now, Lieutenant you will doubtless: wish us to precede you.” Binks watched the two men down the elm-arched avenue to the great: iron gate—Bunny, very alert and very straight in his smart uniform; His: Highness, shabby and walking with a weary limp. Any one who didn’t know might have taken Bunny for the: prince. But Binks knew better now.. It was the way they made you feel inside that made princes. —Elinore Gowan Stone in Good! Housekeeping. Maryland Boys Sell Pine Cones. Farmer boys of Maryland may de-- velop, according to county agent J. P.. Brown, an exceedingly profitable en-- terprise by following the lead of Dor- chester county boys, who have found’ something with a sales value which rreviously had been thrown away. Acting under the direction of W. R.. McKnight, agricultural agent of Dor- cester county, pine cones are being" collected by farm boys of that county "and shipped to the State forestry nur- Prince; sery at College Park, where the seeds: are extracted by University experts.. The seed thus extracted from the cones will be used in growing loblolly pine seedlings for future sale and dis- tribution to farmers of the Eastern: , Shore, who in turn will use the trees to beautify highways and their own farms. A good seed year, according to the state assistant forester, occurs once in about three years and, there- fore, it is necessary for the depart- nent to lay in a three-year supply of seed. A number of forest plantations started from seedlings from the state department are now growing well in various counties. Seventeen members of the 4-H clubs, at Hooper's Island and Crapo,, have just shipped 145 bushels of the cones to F. B.. Trenk, assistant state forester, who is now settling with the shippers on a basis of 85 cents a bush- el. It is said that from the stand- point of time expended the industry is the most profitable in which 4-H’ club members have been engaged dur- ing the yean. Most of the cones are delivered to neighboring schools, whence they are sent to College Park. Dorchester is said to be the first county in which 4-H club members have been engaged in actual forestry work with their other duties along: agricultural lines, and it is said there. are few States in which work has been done.. Thoroughbred Horses. The bureau of animal industry says that as far back as it knows there are no race track regulations requir- ing that only thoroughbreds enter a race. However, a horse that is not a: thoroughbred, unless he is exception- al, would stand little chance against a horse who has been bred from rac- ing ancestors. Thoroughbred horses in this country are registered solely on the thoroughbredness of their an- cestors: Registration in a thoroughe bred society necessitates that both the sire and the dam be registers] in the society, which means that their sive: and’ dam: were registered.