TIDE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBUEG. PA. ww'Dimow diwnm Andrews Niiony jtir pri?rTCT.TRiDurr,jHC pmrf? TnrAaur?r, nci 6y ILLSVORTi VDVNG IfOPritwjsa er Doaot nrmu corn' 12 V V V it 8YNOPSI3. Francois Baaupre, a peasant babe of three years, after an amusltiK Incident In which Miunhal Ney flirures, li made a Chevalier of Kranon by the Empror Na poleon, who prophesied that the boy MlKht one day be a marshal of France Under another Ilonaparte. At the axe of ten Francois vlalta Ueneral Huron Ou purd Uourgnucl, who with Allxe, Ills srven-yrur-oltl daughter. II wa at the Chateau. A soldier of the Kmplre under Napoleon he Urea the boy's linuitltmtlon with storttta of hla campulKiia. The boy bocnnits a copyist for the general and learn of the frlunrislilp between the gen eral and Marquis Zappl, who cumpulxned with the Kent-mi under Napoleon. Mar quis Zappl and his son. l'lelro, arrive at the Chateau. The icenernl agrees to care for the Marquis' son while the former Koes to America, The Marquis auka l-'run-cols to be a friend of his son. The boy olemnly promises. Francois goes to the Chateau to live. Marquis Zappl dies leav ing I'letro as a ward of the general. Allie, I'letro and Francois meet a stnins-s boy who proves to be I'rlnee Louis Na poleon. Fruncols eaves his life. The gen eral (Uncovers Francois loves Allxe, and extracts n prnmlne from him that he will not Interfere between the girl and I'letro. J'Vancols goes to Italy as secretary to I'letro. Queen Hortense plans the escape of her son I,ouls Napoleon by disguising Mm and Marquis Zappl as her lackeys. Jcrancols takes Marquis Zappl's place who Is III. In the escape of Ilortense and Ixiuls. 1 tressed as Iiuls brother I' ran rols lures the Austrlans from the hotel al lowing the prince and his mother to es cape. Francois Is a prisoner of the Aus trlans for live years. In the castle owned bv I'letro In Ilalv. lie discovers In his Tjard one of Pletro's old family servants, and through him sen'N word to his friends of tils plight. The general. Allxe and I'letro plans Francois' escape, r ran rots receives a note from I'letro explain ing In detail linw to escape from Ills prison. Allxe awaits lilm on horseback and lead.) him In bis friends on board the American snlllng vessel, the ' Lovely l.uey." Fruncols. ns a guest of Marry Hampton, on tho "Lovely Lucy." goes to C merle to mnnnee I'l.tro's estate In Irglnla. Lucy Hampton fnlls In love with Francois. I'rlnee Louis Nnpoleon In America Incomes the guest of the Hamptons, where he meets Francois, liucy Hampton reveals her love for Fran cois after the latter saves the life of flurry Hampton and Is himself Injured n the effort. Francois tells Lury of his nvs for Allxe. He returns to France and tells Allxe bis one wish In life Is that she love Pletro. Francois Joins the political plotters. His health fulls and he Is forced to return to America. Later Napoleon summons tilm to Indon to aid him In his plots to gain the French throne. Lucy Hampton weds her cousin. I'letro pro poses to Allxe and Is accepted. They plan a lettor to Francois telling mm his wish Is grunted. Francois on the night before the battle shows the prince a let ter from Allxe, which he thinks is a confession of her love for lilm. ' CHAPTER XXXI. Continued. Frlnco Louis saw the dawning of consternation. Ilapldly he considered. Was It well to take away a man's hap piness and courage Just before a light? He remembered some words of Fran cois spoken three years before, words whose dramatic bareness had struck him. "When a knight of the old time went into battle," the young man had laid, "he wore on his helmet the badge of his lady, and the thought of her In his heart. A man fights better so." Very well. This blind knight should have hla letter, with the meaning he had read into It, for his lady's badge, and be should fight tomorrow with the thought of her In his heart Tho let ter suggested another meaning to so phisticated Louis Bonaparte, but there Is no need to hasten the feet of un happlness. The resonant French voice spoke at last In an unused accent of cordiality and tbo Prince lied, with ungrudging grnclousness. "Mistaken, my Francois! Not at all. The little billet-doux breathes love for you In each line there la no question! Hut, mon ami, you have not ftnlHhed your story." So Francois explained about the letter left with Lucy Hamp ton and Its premature sending. "That has reached her now she knows now that I love her, she knows what has really been my lifelong wish she has hurried this," and his hand crushed the note tenderly "she has hurried this to me before the fight that I might know her love also that I might fight better for you, my Prince Louis with that Joy In my heart." Prince Louis, his head thrown back, tils expressionless eyes watching the rSiib's of smoke which bo puffed from bis mouth ring after ring, mounting In dream-like procession to the low celling, considered again. Somewhere In the chain of events of this lovo B flair his keen practical sense felt a link that did not fit a link forced Into connection. Vaguely he discornod how It was something had happened to the Virginian letter there had been a confusion Bomewhere. To him the four words of Alixe's postscript wore Bnnl. "Pletro sends bis love." A sub conscious reasoning made hlra certain that Pletro would not havo come Into Buch a letter If It had been Indeed a love-letter: that tho three lines of writing Just before the battle could dot have held another man's name, If they had been written to the man whom she loved. Very dimly, very lurely the Prince concluded these thingB; and then he lowere d his cigar, and hla gray dull eyes camo down from the celllug and rested, kindly on the radiant face. "You are right, my friend. It was an exquisite thought of your lady-love to put this other weap ou, this bright sword of happiness Into your hand, to fight with tomorrow. Mon Dleu, we will reward her by send' Ing her back a Marshal's baton by you; a Marshal's baton tomorrow, Francois! How would it sound, par example, to say 'Madame la Mare- chale'T" The light from Francois' eyes was like a lamp. "My Prince Sire there are three things I have desired all my life, all great things, but of them that ono the baton of a Marshal Is the least If I might win bor love I have sold; If I might help put you In Napoleon's place and shout "Vive rEmporeur for ' you on the throne of France; If I might fulfill the Emperor's prophecy and be not a 'Marshal some day' any longer but a Marshal of your empire It Is asking much of one llfotlme, above all for a man born a peasant. Is It not? Yet of those three wishes one wonderful fulfillment has come to me1 he gripped his lotter closer "and one. I bolleve tomorrow brings. Be fore tomorrow night" his great eyes were lifted toward the celling of the room, and In them waa the rapt look of the child of the farm-bouse In the Jura, a look of a seer of visions, a look that caught at the Prince's nerves, and made him draw a breath quickly. "Something above myself tells me," Francois sold slowly, and the words camo with a languid power, as If his personality were a medium, "that be fore tomorrow night the officers who stand about you shall hall you Em peror over the body of a man who lies before you." In the silence, the Prince's watch could be heard ticking. Francois shiv ered violently, "Ugh!" he said, his teeth chattering. "It gives me a 'crlso de nnrfs,' that trick of vision-seeing. I do not like It, and yet at times It seizes me. Why should It come to a man happy as I am a man who has dared ask three enormous wishes of the good fairies; w ho holds one of them in his hand" he lifted tho letter "who sees another In easy reach, and who," he smiled brilliantly, "who will be well content without the third, my Prince, the first two being his." He shivered again. "Is the night raw 7 It is as if I were in a gravo, this coldness," be said, look ing about with a disturbed gaze, "yet my llfo is Just beginning." The Prince rose and tossed bis cigar to the fireplace. "It is simply that you are tired, Francois," he said in the tranquil tones which no peril dis turbed. "Tho nerves of us all are stretched and yours are the finest strung. Go to bed, and at daylight you will be warm enough, with tho work that awaits us. Sleep well good night, my friend." Later, In the darkness of his cham ber, Prince Louis lay awake, his imag ination filled with the man whose dra matic personality appealed to him as few bad ever done. He thought of his own life, according to bis lights not a bad life, radically strong and radically gentle, yot complicated, abnormal from Its start, with many shadows and many stains; then of the crystal clear ness of this other's, with bis three wishes In which he trusted as simply as a child would trust to the fairies. A smile almost tender stole across the mask-like features In the dark. "There Is no doubt but the girl will marry the marquis," he reflected. "Yot I am glad I left him his hope and his happi ness." A vision of Francois' beatified look rose before hlra. "A man fights better so," the Prince murmured aloud, and, bis own sadness forgotten In another man's joy, he fell asleep. CHAPTER XXXII. Tho Bugle-Call. The gray dawn of a Sunday morning began to break over the sleeping city of Boulogne, yet earlier than the dawn anxious eyes opened to watch, and men's hearts beat fast to meet it Scattered in lodging-houses and bar racks Louts Napoleon's followers were waiting before daylight for the part they had to play. No man among them was as quiet, ae little nervous as the Prince, yet his as well as every gal innt heart of them felt a throb of relief with its bound of excitement when a trumpet from tho Austerlltz barracks, the barracks of the fourth artillery, Napoleon's own regiment, suddenly sounded. It was tho signal, and in a moment the Prince and his escort were mov ing down the dnrk street toward Colonel Vaudroy'a quarters, toward that ringing note not yet died out from the pulsing air. The city was tranquil when .rrlnce Louis reached the barrack-gate, and the eoldler-blood in him rushed in a tide when he saw sixty mounted artil lerymen posted at the entrance, and beyond, in the yard, statue-like, war like, silent, the regiment formed in square. If the fourth artillery fol lowed its colonel, If the day went well, this was tho core of his army. Colonel Vaudrey was in the center of tho square; the Prince marcnea quietly to him and as he came, with a sharp simultaneous clutter that was tho mu s; n't 1- --.T-7'iV?t-Ji-lL: "Soldiers! The Honor of Beginning a New Empire Shall Be Yours!" slo of Heaven to his ears, the whole regiment presented arras. In the glowing light the soldiers who fronted toward him could soo that the colorless face turned grayer, but that was all, and quickly Colonel Vaudrey spoke to his men. "Soldiers of the fourth artillery," he said loudly, "a revolution begins to day under the nephew of the Emperor Napoleon. He is before you, and comes to lead you. He has returned to his land to give back the people their rlghus, the army its greatness He trusts in your courage, your de votion to accomplish this glorious mis slon. My soldlors, your colonel has answered for you. Shout then with me 'Long live Napoleon! Long live the Emperor.'" The terse soldierly words were hardly finished when the regiment, strongly Bonapartlst always, carried off its feet now by the sight of the Prince, by the honor of being the first I MP to whom he came caught up the cry, and the deep voices sent it rolling down the empty streets. Louis Bona parte standing erect, motionless, im passive as always, wondered if a pulse might beat harder than bis and not break. He held up his hand, and rap idly, yet with lingering shouts of en thusiasm, the tumult quieted. "Soldiers," he said, "I have come to you first because between you and me there are great memories. With you the Emperor, my uncle, served as captain; with you he won glory at the siege of Toulon; you opened the gates of Grenoble to him wbon he came back from Elba. Soldiers, the honor of beginning a new empire shall be yours; yours shall be the honor of sa luting first the eagle of Austerllta and Wngrara." He caught the standard from an officer and held It high. "It Is tho sign of French glory; it has shone over every battlefield; it has passed through every capitol of Eur ope. Soldiers, rally to the eagle! I trust it to you we will march today ngalnst the oppressors, crying 'Long live France.'" ' One who has not heard a regiment gone mad can not know how it was. With deafening clatter and roar every sword was drawn and the shakos flew aloft and again and again and again the men's deep voices sent up in bro ken magnificent chorus the great his toric cry to which armies had gone into battle. "Vive l'Emporeur! Vive Napoleon!" The souls of a thousand men were on fire with memories and traditions, with a passion of consecration to a cause, and aB if the spell of the name grew stronger with Its repetition they Bhouted over and over, In tremendous unison, over and over and over. "Vive Napoltin! Vive l'Empercur!" It was necessary at Inst for the quiet slender young man who was the storm-renter to raise his hand again, and with a word, with the glimmer of a smile to Bpeak his gratitude- to stop tho storm. There was .much to be done. The fourth artillery was but one of several regiments to be gained if the victory were to be complete. Colonel Lombard was dispatched to a printing office with proclamations to be struck off; Lieutenant Laity hur ried away to his battalion; a detach ment was sent to bold the telegraph office; the tumult once quieted, the yard was a scene of efficient business, for all this bad been planned and each officer knew his work. In a very few moments the officers of the tblrd ar tillery who were with the Prince had hastened to their quarters, another had been cent to arouse the forty-sixth of the line, at the Place d' Alton bar racks, and shortly rrlnce Louis him self was on his way to the same place. Through the streets of the city, no longer empty, he passed with his offi cers, and the people poured from their houses, and joined and answered the shouts of the soldiers. "Vive 1'Empereur!" the soldiers cried. "It is the nephew of Napoleon, and the citizens threw back, "Vive Empereur! It is the son of the hon est king of Holland! It Is the grand son of Josephine!" They pressed so close about the small figure in Its Swiss uniform of a colonel that for a moment he was sep arated from his officers, and Colonel Vaudrey, smiling for all his military discipline, was forced to order his mounted artillerymen to clear the road. Every moment an old soldier broke out of the mass and embraced the eagle which Lieutenant de Quer elas carried proudly high above all this emotion; the soldiers' eyes flash ed with success; the Prince's heart beat high for Joy to know that he had not misread the heart of army or peo ple. When the column passed the gen darmerie the guard turned out and presented arms, shouting, "Long live the Emperor!" So he went through the streets of Boulogne, Louis Napo- eon Bonaparte, eight long years be fore he came to his own, and march ed in triumph and acclamation to a failure. And close by his side, bis look as radiant as the Prince's look was con tained and Impassive, marched always Francois Beaupre. The hard-earned military knowledge, the patient toll of preparation had come Into play, and in a hundred ways the man bad been useful. With no exact rank as yet, but ready at any moment, eager for the hardest task, never asking for reBt, quick-witted, resourceful, officers as well as Prince had developed a habit of turning to Beaupre for serv ice after service. And always they were met with a glad consent which encouraged them to ask more until the Prince said: 'It is the case of the willing horse; I will not permit that my right-hand man he worked to dcuth It must stop." Today, however, Francois had a definite duty of responsibility. While the Prince marched, gathering strength at every yard, through the town toward the Tlace d' Alton at its farther side. Colonel Couard of the third artillery had gone to proclaim tho great news to bis regiment and to hold them ready. In case of success at the Place d' Alton, Beaupre was to go back and bring them to Join the Prince. In case of failure they were to be his reserve. The Place d Alton barracks lay between town and ram parts, to be reached from the town side only by a narrow lane; but the ramparts commanded with a large open space the yard wnere me soi dlcrs assembled. If the Prince entered from the town side, from the street- Faubourg Tlerre only an escort could go with him. If he went by the ram parts the whole enthusiastic fourth artillery might be at his back. This then was the route chosen. But as the Prince and the regiment and the swinging shouting mass of citizens made its way toward the quarters, suddenly, too late, the off! ccrs about his Highness saw that some one had blundered. Someone In the van a man had lost bis head, had forgotten, and the compact inelastic procession had been led toward the approach from tke faubourg Pierre, the narrow lane at the side toward the city. It was a serious mistake, yet not of necessity fatal, and at all events they must make the best of It The Prince could not make a dramatic entrance at the head of a shouting regiment, but for all that he might win the forty-sixth. He did win the torty-slxth. Some thing had happened to the officer sent to arouse them anothei llp in tho chain and Instead of being drawn up In the yard they were getting ready for Sunday Inspection, but tliKy flock ed to the windows at the nolm, they rushed Into the yard at the name of Napoleon. An old sergeant ol' the Imperial Guard ran forward and kiss ed Prince Louis' hand, and the re served face lightened he knew the value of a bit of sentiment with Frenchmen; be was not wrong; In a moment the line regiment bad caught up the cries of "Vive 1'Empereur!" raised by the artillerymen, and the earlier scene of the Austerlltz bar racks was being repeated here. Prince Louis, pale and composed in the cen ter of the roar of voices, the seeth ing sea of excitement, beard a word at his car and turned. "Sire, it is success. I go to bring up your MoJesty's other regiment," Fran cols said, and the Prince answered qulotly: "Yes, it Is success. Go, mon am!." In a moment the messenger bad thrown himself on the horse of an ar tilleryman and forced a way through the recoiling mass, down the lune, and out to the Faubourg Pierre. In the free street he galloped the horse, through the windings that he had learned with this moment in his mind. The third was drawn up waiting, and a shout like a clap of thunder greeted his news. Buoyant, proud, he took his place by tho colonel at their head, and gaily the Joyful march back be gan. The sun had como from behind the clouds of early morning and shone glorlouBly on glancing steel, on the brilliant swinging line of the regi ment Low branches of trees brushed Francois' shoulder as he rode and the touch thrilled him, for he knew by It thnt this was true and not a dream, and he, Francois Beaupre, was lead ing a regiment of France to Franco's Emperor. . Suddenly a man galloped from a side street, In front of the advancing troops; he stopped, saluted, called a word. It was not a day to take any thing for granted; Colonel Couard halted the regiment "The arsenal," the man gasped. "They have taken Monsieur de Per slgny prisoner. Monsieur lo General Volrol Is on his way, but be Is dis tant It Is a step from here. The third artillery could arrive there be fore him they would surrender Monsieur de Perslgny would be re leased" he stopped breathless. The colonel turned an inquiring look on Francois. As the Prince's mes- "The Arsenal!" the Man Gasptd. scngcr, as tho man whom ho had seen closest to the Prince's person, he de ferred to him, and Francois realized that be must make, and make quickly, a momentous decision. The nrBenal was Immense and lightly guarded. De Perslgny had been sent with a small force to take it, for tbo ammunition It held might at any moment be of supremo Importance. It seemed that the detachment which guarded it bad been underrated, for it had made pris oners of De Perslgny and his men, and this nldo-do-camp had alone es caped. If they were to be rescued, If the arsenal was to be gained lor tno Prince, this very moment must be seized. General Volrol, royalist, tne commandant at Boulogne was on his wnv . with reinforcements and the third might well hold the arsenal against him but not gain it from him. With his whole being concentrated Francois thought The orders were plain to lead the third artillery to Join the Prince on the ramparts. But there are times In history when to obey or ders is treachery. Was not this mo ment heavy with the right or wrong of his decision, one of them? Was it not the part of a mind capable of greatness to know and grasp the flying second of opportunity? Would not tho Prince renroach him. if bo stupidly let this one chanco in a thousand go by. for servile fear of disobeying orders? He had left his Highness safe with two regiments at his back; this other could do nothing nt tho Place d' Alton barracks buUswcll the ranks; here, by a turn of a hand, they might win ror the cause the very blood and bones of success, a mighty arsenal, and for themselves honor and gratitude from their Emperor. In Francois' mind was a touch of innocent vanity that ne should have the power to render so signal a service, yet no thought at nil for himself or for the honor he might gain or lose; whole-heartedly he weighed the reasons why or why not it would be best for the Prince. The alde-do-camp'B voice broke In. "My Colonel, I beg you, I Implore you, save MonBlour de Perslgny. The Prince loves him he will be very angry if he is loft helpless they threaten to execute him I myself heard I lmpore you, Monsieur le Col onel. For the rest, it 1b Indeed the moment of fato to win the arsenal." Francois' face lit with a fire of decision. "My Colonel, It Is for the Prince it would bo his will we must not lot slip the gift of destiny. To the arsenal!" And while orders rang out sharply and the regiment wheeled Into sliding lines that doubled and ported and flowed together again in an elastlo stream toward the looming arsenal, Francois, with a quick word to De Perslgny's aide-de-camp, was writing raptdly on a bit of paper. "You will take this to the Prince at once," he ordered, and the young offi cer saluted, for be, too, knew, as moat of them did, this man's anomalous yet strong hold on Prince Louis. Francois rode again to the coionei s side, and he did not doubt that he hud decided lightly. CHAPTER XXXIII. The Accolade at Last. Tt la a common tragedy that men, being human, cannot see all sides of a question; that a decision right in one light may bring disaster in an other. If events had stayed where ne left them, Francois Beaupre and Col onel Couard and his regiment would have won honor and eternal grati tude from Louis Bonaparte for the quarter of an hour's work which made thn arsenal theirs. Events, instead or standing still, or going forward, took an unexpected sinister turn, not long after Francois' going. The hanny Prince, smiling the snna- owy smile which made his fuce win ning, stood In the center of triumphant turmoil; his new followers, the men of the forty-sixth, crowded about him shouting, cheering, kissing his hands, and tha loval fourth artillerymen fra ternized, embraced, congratulated tho men of the line regiment, me narrow eourtvard wns a hubbub of rupturous excitement, and tho Trlnce's olllccrs Montholon, Vaudrey, Volsln, rarquln. D'Hunln. Querelles these and others whose names Frenchmen knew, sur rounded the small figure whicn yet had so much of royalty, and luughed and chatted light-heartedly. In a few moments, when Colonel Laity s engi neers and the third artillery should hi arrived the Prince would have five thousand men under his com- mnnrt The great came was practical ly won Prince Louis was all but Em peror. Suddenly, above the sea of sound, a commotion wns heard at the farther end of tho barrack yard. The colonel of the forty-sixth, Colonel lalanuier, had nrrlved. Very loyal to Louis Phil- llpe, very angry at the sceno before lilm, he would not believe the news. He called excitedly, and the mens voices died down as they saw him gesticulating. "Soldiers." he cried, "you nre de ceived! This man for whom you are Bhoutlng Is an adventurer, an Im postor!" In the shock of Bllcnco which fol lowed his words, another voice rang out, clear and Indignant, the voice of a etaff-offlcer whom they all knew. "It Is not the nephew of the Em peror! It Is the nephew of Colonel Vaudrey! I recognize hlra!" the offi cer cried In a strong Btaccato, and a gasp as If ice-water had been scat tered went through the crowded place. There Is nothing more absurd In his tory than the Instant effect of this nnirk wltted lie. Only with a mer curial French mob, perhaps, could it have succeeded, but It succeeded here with hopeless swiftness. It flew from mouth to mouth they wero cheated, tricked; the Emperors nephew, their Prince, had not come; this young man was a make-believe, a substitute, tne nephew of an officer; some of the soldiers who had shown most enthus iasm almost lost their minds now In rage. Colonel Talandlcr began to form bis men; the Prince, composed as ever, yet earnest swift, tried to rally his, but It was impossible to start any where, In this confusion, for line and artillery bad become mixed In an un manageable mob. A word from either Prince or colonel and blood would have flowed. Yet the steadfast mind kept Its hope; he glanced every moment toward the ramparts. The third must appear there shortly; It could not be many minutes. They would turn the tide. One gllmpeo of that solid swinging regiment and the day would bo saved and salvation was certain. The third was coming, would bo here any second Francois' faithfulness could bo trusted. Slowly, with his officers crowding about hlra, he was driven toward tho barracks wall, and, In a flash, from Bomewhere, a man was before him, thrusting a bit of paper nt him. With a Bwirt movement he had It opened and read: "Destiny throws arsenal Into our hands. Have taken third artillery to hold It. I wait to bring the news a Jewel for your crown. Vive1 l'Emper eur! Ileaupro." Few men ever heard Louis Napo leon sob, yet the officers stood about him nt that moment caught n sound that wrung them. It meant tho end, and they knew It. Passionately he crushed the paper and threw it Into tho seething mass. FEEDING BIRDS IN WINTER Kindly Act to Set "Dinner Table" for the Wild Feathered Song sters. How best 'to feed the birds 1b al most an art in Itself. A winter lunch counter spread with suet, nuts, hemp seed, meat and crumbs will attract nuthatcheB, chickadees, downy and hairy woodpeckers, creepers, blucjayO, etc. Canary seed, buckwheat, oats and hay chaff scattered on the ground beneath will provide an irre sistible banquet for other feathered boarders. A feeding place of this sort can be arranged for convenient obser vation from a window and afford no end of diversion and Instruction. Dut whothcr close to borne or far afield, the great secret ot success in such work is regularity. Degin to put the food out early In November, and let the birds get to know that they are always sure to find a supply of dain ties In a certain spot, aud the news will soon spread among them. In win try weather, especially, It Is amazing what can be accomplished by feeding the birds regularly, and at least the following blrdB have been induced to teed from the human hand: Chlcka dee, white breasted nuthatch, red breasted nuthatch, brown creeper Carolina wren, cardinal, evening gros irnnn Tin ha thrown away tfie em pire," be hissed through set terth. If I could run hlra through: H'hnn nil ickiv. ha was himself again Serenely while the maddened soldleri pressed on him, he turned ana spon a quiet word to his friends, and then, serenely, too, with a gaze that was half contemptuous, hair rnenaiy, u let himself be made prisoner. Yot the fight was not all over even now. On the ramparts, where the Prince and his column should have been, had gathered from the Faubourg Pierre a formidable crowd, who ad vanced angrily to his rescue, and pelt d h linn regiment with stones, and cried again and again, "Vive 1'Emper eur!" Colonel Talandler had to recK on with a many-sided trouble. But the "Sire! I Bring You the Arsenal." henrt of it was in his hands, and Blow !y order and the old rule were coming back. Tho tumult of tho struggle had quieted, the volatile forty-sixth regi ment, returned to lis allegiance, stood formed In ranks, In appearance ns firm for the king ns tho everlasting hills, and, at tho end of the court was a sad and silent, yet a Btately group of men, the Prince who hnd almost been Emperor and those who had watched slipping with his hope, their hopes of grandeur. Suddenly a horse's hoofs rang down the lane from tho Faubourg; a rider clattered at gallop Into the yard and across the front of the soldiers,' and every one In the agitated company saw that tho man reeling In his sad dle was wounded. With blind gaze he stared about as he reined in, and then he caught sight of the sorry group, the Prince and his officers. To Francois Beaupre, clutching to this world by one thread of duty, this was tho victorious Emperor and his tri umphant staff. With a choking shout ho threw himself from the horse and fell, too far gone to stand, at the Prince's feet. "Sire, I bring you the arsenal," he stammered painfully, loudly. In the silence of the courtyard ono heard every word. "Two wishes good fair ies " he gasped. And then, his mouth twisting to a smile, "the third Is no matter." Louis Bonnparte looked down at the man whose dying face stared up at him in a rapture of loyalty; whose life had been consecrated to him; whose death was for him; who had lost hlra an empire. For a seconl a struggle shook him, and then the large kind ness through which he came nearest to greatness, overflowed. In the ca reer to come was no finer moment, no higher inspiration for Prince Louis than this. He bent close to the glaz ing eyes. "Courage!" he said clearly. "Cour age, mon ami. Live for me and for our country. Live, my brother Fran coisChevalier Beaupre, Marshal of the Empire." And tho Prince's sword flashed out and touched his shoulder. The other world closing about him Francois heard they did not doubt It who Baw the eyes flame as a firefly flames out of darkness, and when his Hps stirred they knew that ho wished to cry once more "Vive l'lCinpereur!" Frenchmen all, shaken with tho liv ing drama, the ruined men who stood about a defeated Prince cried It for lilm the old mnglc cry of tho llona partes. With kepis lifted, as one man, "Vive I'Kmpereur!" the deep voices cried, hailing a lost cause for a lost llfo. Hut only the Prince knew that a thought enmo after; only he caught, on the gaRp which lot the soul out, a girl's name. Ho bent qulrkly again, with nn eager assurance, hut It was late. Tho accolade of a higher king hnd touched his Bervant. and the knightly soul of Francois had risen. TUB END. beak, tufted titmouse, Canada Jay, Florida Jay, Oregon Jay, and redpoll. Even In spring untiring patience has resulted In the gratification of this su premo ambition of the bird lover, and bluebird, robin, catbird, brown thrash er and yellow throated vlroo have been known to feed from the hand of a trusted friend, even with plenty of food all around. From Uoy Scouts of America. American Benefactions. Many a worthy but struggling char ity has been placed on Its feet by a timely bequest or gift from n living friend, and the whole cause of organ ized benevolence has frequent rea son to rojolco over this tendency which, while not by any means con fined to one nationality, la known in the United States on a scale never known before. Large gifts in this country amounted last year to more than $300,000,000, without including any of less than $10,000. Examined In detail the list is a long one. The evident purpose Is to benefit man kind in making It better equipped for the duties ot life, and to prevent and ameliorate human suffering. Educa tional Institutions, hospitals and sani tary work received more than half the gifts of last year. Elevated art was well remembered and responsible charities received a generous share. Mm (Conducted by tha National Wom-jr-. WHAT A WRITER SAW. A short time ago I noticed him u he came into town, with his wagoj full of vegetables, and chickens, at! eggs. He found a ready market loi his produce, and I thought how happr his little ones would be when he n turned home In the evening with toys, and dresees, and shoes, and food t the morrow, and some clear money ) bis purse. I thought I could see hla wife standing In the doorway to gin hlni a cordial greeting on his return, so uesirous was i mat ne biiouij mai, the home ones happy and contented. could almost see hie cheerful f.ice u he returned to his family after a daj i absence. So I thought, and return, to my work. Hut evening came, and he passed by my window aguin. , had nothing I thought he would ban The bed of the wagon was bare. Mo little shoes, nor food for the morrow, nor money In his purso, I dare say! The man was drunk. He had chaiigpd, and this changed my thoughts of his homo. I could see the children uhrlnk. ing from his approach, and tlm wif so care-worn and sorrowful; sin could not meet him with the tender smile with which she had IniendHd greeting him. He was breaking hr heart, nnd preparing to make a Ahq. late homo for his wife and chlliln u- XV. 11. Engler. COST OF A BOY. (liy MI13. KM.A A. ltOItr.K. IT, l,l,t v--w iorn mate v. (.;. T. l; i ii i wtiru iu piace a money value ot v.hat that mother does for tlm buy from the time he Is born until lie k t twenty-one years of age, I am not m. ting it too high when I assert it li worth say two dollars a week yu. could not hire It done for that --whirl tneuiiB that tha mother hits invested li the boy from the time he wan r. until he Is twenty-one yearn of ag- more than twenty-one hundred dullanl In hard work. What has the father done for uV boy? He has provided the home, tk- food and lodging, paid the doctor I bills, puld for his hooks, lib dotliet I his schooling, and his bills when b went to college, bo that when I niak I the average amount expended tiy tb? I father $100 per year my estimate bl low. This means that when t he In; has reached twenty-one years of ip hie father and mother havo expend upon mm in cairn and naru labor mar-1 than $4,000. If 1 had a house valued at and some 0116 were to destroy lib;. fire, I would have the man arreiteJ and sent to the penitentiary, but If had a boy, and a house, I would 1 1 thousand times rather some one ww!: set fire to my house and burn lit the ground than have the saloon p hold of my boy and ruin him bodyaal soul. Wouldn't you? SMALL PROFIT TO FARMER. Tho manufacturers of Intosirat!:: liquors quite frequently reprefe: themselves us Indispensable, lo it-l farmers, on account of tlie niarkt they afford him for 'his grain. P:i Investigation shows that only a Kinall part of the farmers' total proi I ucts are taken by the breweries : distilleries. For Instance, during It fiscal year ending June 30, 1911, 1H 509,855 bushels of barley, wheat, n- corn and oats were used in making 1 1 cohollc liquors. Hut tho farina raised, during the year linu, a ml of 5,14.1,187,000 bunhels ot these sat grains mid this shows that tho Up- traffic uses less than two and a b per cent, of the five leading P crops of the land. For every bus' of grain used by the breweries t distilleries more than forty-four a: threu-llftlis bushels are used for H- mate food purposes. Prof. John Nleholls. JUSTICE TO WIFE AND CHILDREN Tho court was hearing a caw "drunk, third arrest." The J"'; turned to the woman who stood nei l whoee worn, sorrowful face M touched his heart, and said: sorry, but I must lock tip your l- hunil." The injured wife, victim - tho legalized liquor trailic, oneoftlj many who "take the conseqiW'i while tho husband takes the drla had no thought of touching deepm"! or economic problems, but only plain, every -day, common sense, Mie replied: "Your honor, w'""1 It ho better for me and tho chili"! If you locked up the saloon and WM husband go to work?" COMMON SENSE IN NORTHEfj WISCONSIN. There are a hundred miles of" road through northern Wisconsin ,: but ono saloon town on tlie '' route. This station retained In "' ness" at the last election by Ity of only four votes. And yet nM em Wisconsin is the homo of the' I filon ntn I ire.,.. i I. I .. ... 1t,,r lllUll 11 the copper and iron workers! TWO INVESTMENTS. Part of the exhibit in a Q': I (Mass.) Bhop window during L poster campaign was a little co"5! with the announcement that: "Henry saved one dollar p ), ..i i.. o imiiillni! ' At tho end of 25 vears he had ""'I tl.ln HHh linmi oil no 1,1 flir " flnsft 1ft tha Pnttnpfl wnfl ft P1 1 l..cena: "John spent ono dollar Per J for beer. At the end of J" ..J llnil this nllo nf omntv barrels'0: and even these he did not dam nM I imiriD nrAI FRS. n ii.,. -l.ivoWM ........ - .... .,....,. meH'l wnicn nave lacea me jw"' - 1 only in rcnnsyivanin, " tij states, mis year, snia surety company agent tno l j, "has been tin sudden refusal ot I .... Knlld OH companies to go on n uv "pp saloonkeeper or other pers" e in the liquor business. .s.H uoes jour town wi"" .m its chamber of commerce i I 8J v' ganlzatlons, the number of operation?