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olber coryvmicHr TWO REBELS. Their brew was poor; and the spir- [a pretty pass in Johnstown when two, “If a pretty wench were as rare a ea GOLEY thy hid gone ny its of the dozen old Tories who sat] honest farmers must go home for lack |a broken head in Johnstown,” he mut- Seca nes anes had COUN ay et ee te | over chess or draughts, or whispered | of a rogue or two of aufficient spirit| tered, “I'd be undone, indeed. Come, mole-skin cap in hand; and ‘round| 1 listened, amazed, to this school- he wheels and away he tears like the] girl chatter, marvelling that she her- with no. i : ow : < And then, just as we had mounted] celebrated Tory in the song, Jock Gal-| self believed such pitiable nonsens: ‘ @ugat bush for another year. The snow wns gone; the Kennyettol. ing soled gazcites, was poorer atill.| to liven a dull day withal Jack; shall we ride that way home. fand were gathering bridles and search- | lopaway. But I said only that I hoped this § Foared amber brilliant through banks of melting ice, and a sweet odor] Pye dark jooks« cast ut us signalled! We stopped at the White Doe Tav- | ward?” ing for our stirrups with moccasined] “Here's a kettle of fish,”’ remarked| county might escape the conflagration ‘ of arbutus filled all the woods. . toes, comes a galloper in scarlet] Nick in disgust. now roaring through all New England i Spring was in the land and in my heart, too, and when Nick Stoner Pepi and breeks, with a sealed let- Were it not Lady Johnson," mut- aot eee nie ee Se ate |). galloped to my door in his new forest dress, very fine, I, nothing loath, ald waved high to halt me. tered I, but checked myself. After] and the Cai . Sitting my horse in the street, I}all, it’ seemed ungenerous that I] brary below, where, to my chagrin, hasten to dress me in my new doeskins, not less fine than Nick's. broke the seal and read what t { I saddled my mare, Kaya, in her stall, which was house, and presently mounted and rode around to where Nick sat in his #addie a-playing on his fife, which loving music but obliged to make his own, “Lord Harry!” cried he on seeing me so fine. “If you are not truly a » Viscount then you look one!” “T would not change my name and health and content,” said I, “for a And I clinked the silver coins in my pouch and laughed. We rode away along the Johnstown road. king’s gold crown to-day He also, I think, was dying for a frolic. Young minds in trouble as well as hard-worked bodies need a holiday now and then. He winked at me and chinked the shillings in his bullet -pouch. “We shall see all the sights,” quoth he, “and the Kennyetto could not quench my thirst to-day, nor our two horses eat us much, nor since time began could all lovers in history Jove as much as could I this April day. . . . Were there some pretty wench of my own mind to use mo kindly. . . . Like that one who smiled at us—do you remember ?"' “At Christmas?” “That's the on he exclaimed. “Lord! but she was handsome in her sledge!—and her sister, too, Jack!" “I forget their names,’’ said 1. “Browse,"’ he said,—‘‘Jessica and Betsy. And they live at Pigeon-Wood near Mayfield."’ ‘Oho!" said I, their acquaintance: He laughed and we galloped on Nick sang in his saddle, beating time upon his thigh with his fife. “My brother, John, desires to be a drummer in the Continental Line, said he. “He is only, fourteen,’ said 1, laughing. . “I know. But he is a tall lad and stout enough. What will be your reg- iment, Jack?"’ “I lke Col. Livingston's,” said I, “but nobody yet knows what is to be the fate of the district militia and whether the Mohawk regiment, the “you have made a log wing to my he carried everywhere with him, he TORY AND WHIG. E rode into Johnstown and W through the village, very pleased to be in civilization again, and saluting many wayfarers whom we recognized, T and Whig alike. ‘We had silver in our bullet pouches. We visited every shop, but purchased nothing useful; for Nick bought sweets and a mouse-trap and some alley-taws for his brother John who wished to go to war! Oh, Lord!— and for his mother he found skeins of brightly colored wool; and for his father a Barlow jack-knife. 1 bought some suckets and fish hooks and a fiddle—God knows why, for I can not play on it, nor desire to! —and I further purchased two books, “Lives of Great Philosoph by Rudd, and a witty poem by Peter] “YOU MIGHT HAVE SUSPECTED Pindar, called “The Lousiad"—a bold] MY LIPS WERE PAINTED IF YOU pes Jampoon on the British] wap BEEN EFFICIENTLY AD- These packets we stowed in our] VENTUROUS. BUT YOU ALWAYS saddle bags, and after that we knew] WERE A TIMID YOUTH.” not what to do save to seck another tavern, ; But Nick was no toss-pot, nor was|storins; but none came, so poor t I. And having no malt thirst, we re-) spirit of the compan, mained standing In the street beside| “Gentlemen, you seem melancholy our horses, debating whether to go]and distrait,” said 1. “Are you so home or no. pensive because my Lord Dunmore has “Shall you pay respects at the| burned our pleasant City of Norfolk? Hall?" he asked seriously. Is it that which weighs upon your But I saw no reason to go. owing] minds? Or is the sad iplight of Tom- no duty; and the visit certain to] m: ent 2 Be were written to me. 1 looked around me, soberly, at the old familiar town; U glanced at Nick; «d coldly upon the galloper—a who now was virtually a prisoner of my own party, penned here within that magnificent domain of which his @reat father had been creator and absolute lord. “I must go, Nick,’’ I said in a low voice. He said with a slight sneer, ‘‘No- blesse oblige——"' and then, sorry, laid a quick hand on my arm. JOHNSON HALL. OW what seemed strange to me N at the Hall was the cheerful- ness of all under circumstances which must have mortified any Roy- alist, and in particular, the principal family in North America of that po- litical complexion. Into the drawing room came black Flora, all smiles, to say that the gentlemen were dressing but that Lady Johnson would receive me. She was seated before her glass in her chamber, and the red-cheeked Irish maid she had brought from New York was exceedingly busy curl- ing her hair. “Oh, Jack!"’ said Lady Johnson softly, and holding out to me one hand to be saluted, “they told me you were in the village. Has it be- come necessary that I must send for an old friend who should have come of his own free will?" “I thought perhaps you and Sir John might not take pleasure in a visit from me,”’ 1 replied, honestly enough “Why? Because last winter you answered the ¢ ct summons were on guard at the church wi Rebel Mohawk Coimpany?" She knew that, too, But I had arcely expected otherwise. ome,” said she in her lively man- a s00d soldier obeys his Colonel, whoever that officer may chance to me—for the moment. And, were you even otherwise inclined, Jack, of what use would it have been to disobey h the 8] should decline to see even Sir John, | who should be lounging but Hiakatoo, war chief of the Senecas, in all his ceremonial fine I knew Hiakatoo to be a savage beast and a very devil, the more to be suspected because of his terrible intelligence. ‘With him was a Mr. Hare, sometime Lieutenant in the Mohawk Regiment, with whom [ had a slight acquaint- ance. I knew him to be Tory to the bone. The next instant Sir John entered the room with Ensign Moucher of the old Mohawk Regiment, and young Capt. Watts from New York, brother to Polly, Lady Johnson. Scarcely had compliments been ex~ changed with snuff when Lady John son entered the room with Claudia Swift, and I thought I had seldom be- held two lovelier ladies in their silks and powder, who curtsied low on the threshold to our profound bows, Candles seemed fewer than usual tr the dining hall, but were sufficient te display the late Sir William's plate and glass. The scented wind from Claudia’s fan stirred my hair, and I remembered it was powdered not a trace. La,” sald she, “you vie with Hiaka« too yonder in Mohawk finery, Jack— all beads and thrums and wampum, And yet you have a pretty leg for @ silken stocking, too.” “In the Bus I, “the back woods aristocr: ake little of your silk hosen, Claudia. Our stockings are leather and our powder black, and our patches are of buckskin and are sewed on elbow and knee with packing thread or sinew.” “It is a fashion like another,” she remarked with a shrug, but watching me intently over her fan's painted edge. The mode is and knows ne taste."" “How so?" “Why, Hiakatoo also wears paint, Claudia.” “Meaning that I wear lip-rouge and tyrant,” said T, her pity nor good ge distressing you? Or the after Philip Schuyler disarmed our|Mly-balm? Well, I do, my impertt4 Palatine, and the other three are tolprove awkward, if, indeed, it aroused|several pickles in which Sir Guy poor Scots?” ‘ nent friend.” be recruited to. replace the Tory de-,in Sir John no more violent emotion|Carleton, Gen. Burgoyne and Gen ern, and Nick gave the company an- “Which way?” torbet'of) Border Horne, and as:aolemn ‘If Sir John feels y ae at “Who could suspect it?’ I protest«+ serters, or what is to be done.” thgn pain at sicht of me. Howe find themselves?" other poem, which he said wus writ-] ‘By Pigeon-Wood."* 3 he was young kes my visit easier for all,” said 1.] °,, mockingly. Nick flourished his mt ‘All I] With our tridies over our arms, still “Possibly,” quoth Nick, “a short] ten by Lord North: i “You have a sweetheart there, you Sir,” y present to ir John,” she replied, “is not a]. YOU might have suspected it long ~<ef | Know," he said. “is that my father| debating, wo walked along the street | poem on these three British warriors| “O° Besten wives and maids draw| say?" y + af teady. duties. and my| whit concerned. Woe here ai the Hall} Since had vou been sufficiently adven~ and brother and I mean to march.” until we came to the Johnson Arms | ma: “T also,"’ said I. Tayern—a Tory rendezvous not now liven you: rieton, Burgoyne, Howe, f marked cheerfully, ‘‘and I mean to} It was so dull in Johnstown that we} But there was nothir | use my ears and eyes in Johnstown|tied our horses and went into the|of these sullen § H turous."* near and seo “Ang so, perhaps, might you, for}compliments, and say that [ am|have laid down our arms; we are @ ; : “How so?” T inquired in my turn . y Py) Our delicate Souchong and Hyson] the pain of passing by. honored by her ladyship’s commands, | peaceably disposed; farm duties be- ‘By k tf Bakes F “Then it's in God's hands," he re-| frequented by friends of liberty. “Bow-wow-wow tea; "No," said I, “T want no sweet-land shall be—happy—to present my-| gin; a multitude of affairs preocevpy| “BY Kissing me, pardieu! But you i to be hoped] Buy it, my charming fair,| heart. {Vo clip a lip en passant, if|self at Johnson Hall within thelus; so let who will fight out this quar- Lets i Were a timid youth, Jaci | af Tories, for they took black, or brown; the lip be warm and willing—that is} hour.’ rel in Massachusetts Bay, so only that} DRM a naicate, 2 to-day. Johnson Arms, hoping, I fear, to stir | our laughter scowling, but budged not If not we'll cut your throats and]one thing. A blush and a laugh and} Young galloper salutes; I outdo him| we have tranquility and peace in 1 dala Byndiests,. ine) ' We put our horses to a gallop. up a mischief inside, eRinoh,: “A nity, for it waw come te burn your town!" b (To_Be Continued.) ‘tis over. But to journey in quest of[in exact and scrupulous courtesy, | County Tryor Most Faithful, Sweetest Servant, |THEFUSSYFOURSOME - - - - Gives Three Rules That Won Her me le $3,000 Legacy From Her Employer ies wort ine TY BACK IN “TH' ROCKS, bo 1? WATCH ~Ty' BACKSPIN \T'LL PROB'LY RoLL DOWN A ON “har ONE! GOPHER HOLE ANYWAY — —G05H,|__ “THIS 1S GONNA WRECK MY SCORE — Now _{'M_SHOOTIN' FIVE WHEN paul drcssiae deh — GES y “Close to the Green”) MAY oe ee int OF ARMENIA According to Enright, His Pic~ j tures Are Revered Through- out Country. right, 1922 (The New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. PICK OUT A NICE PLACE To DROP IT~ WHY DON'T You Tee (Tt UP AND BE DONE wiry iv? Mary Carlson Says Maid Must Consider Her- Speaking yesterday to 3,000 policemen, members of the Holy Name Society, at their annual breakfast at the Hotel Commodore, Commisstoner En- right said he had been informed by a representative of the Near East Relief that a New York \ policeman {is the new patroa saint of Armenia, as the result of the gratitude of an Ar- menian poet whose iife was aaved by the policeman while | self One of the Family, Take Interest AG Ta prew Pui! How DYA Get ‘EM UP THAT WAY? F in It and Not Talk. F } ' | ye TQuGHTa BG PUTTING By Fay Stevenson. agree that things have changed and it in ’ Mary Carlson, « domestic, has just| #8 Msht for housekeepers and maids to (io. FoR A FIVE. A i$ ,| receive the wages they get to-day, 6 Ye Fecelved $3,000 in tho will of the late/ they ought to be willing to enter 9 ae Mrs, Hannah E. Ferguson, a widow, | family and be as interested in its wel- BETCHA ' of Montclair, N. J. The bequest reads] fare as the mother or sisters, ‘That ‘s MILLION | sp the most faithful and sweetest | My idea of a faithful servant.” fp DOLLARS: | servant.” tenes ' 4 %) ‘ Then Mary Carlson told of her un- 2 t : : eee em tm, aplasia) Olle ioe interoet in her benctactrecs, the alopg in middle life. Her flaxen halr,}jate Mrs. Hannah E. Ferguson, She ; now tinged with gray, and her bright} said that she went to work for Mrs. : blue eyes tell one at a glance that she} Ferguson in the prime of her life, | “4m the old fashioned Swedish girl, al-| When she was sturdy and strong ; and capabl She did the general housework, the laundry work and the ‘What is Mary going to do with this} marketing, and when the family was j $3,007 {1 she nursed them and made tempt- y Is she going to buy an automobile,}'7S broths for them, After fourt tn this city. The poet pruclaimed him as a hero until he had been cle- vated to the dignity of a saint. Pictures of tke blue- coated saint, with shield and night-stick, have been spread broadcast throughout the most extinct to-day. n A ars of servi hen Mr. country, i bach z ars of service, when Mr. Ferguson | fenary the cop on the beat orgo bask! Gieg, the widow docided to sell her} - Rap tanta see ee meena ys 1} to Sweden? home and beard. ‘This was in 1903, | STATE WILL TRAIN | ba She isn't going to do any of these} but Mary Carlson did not cease te | j | @hings. She th going to put the|interested in the family she hud) TRADES TEACHERS { known so long, She made weeks cake money in the bank and keep right] {10") ekly t ; sits to Mrs, Ferguson, and still con Twenty-Five Scholarships (to Re | on “working out” for the next feW}tinued to be “the most faithtul and REST eeeereeeee | years. And when you ask Mary how|swectest servant" at heart Awarded, . ; The State of New York ts offering she won the love and respect of hre sai T tute of former mistress, wifh whom she lived “There is no reason why girls twenty-five industrial teachers’ schol- fourteen years, and. just what the]Sbouldn’t take much interest. in arships of $1,000 each to qualified the families where they work as they .. | Would in their employers downtown,” Mary smiles in}/said Mary. “A faithful employee be- defjnition of “the most faithful and sweetest servant" i trade and technically trained men. Persons selected to hold these scholar~ er P he Buf- Swedish fashion and {s slow to com-| comes interested in the flrm, and a e fl. No.5 ships will spend one year at the Bu faithful domestic must have ty Ol : -5.- falo State Normal School, preparing muntcate her thoughts. \ ave that is same binding Interest in the home to teach their subjects in the public BRE rs say /eou what'a taithe|® which surrounds her,’* THE FUSSY FOURSOME, Vic’s New Comic, Appears Each Monday in The Evening World. Copies Will Be Reprinted on Hard Paper and Mailed to Eve-| vocational schools of the State, The ne nea nn't) ania Xi ee panier ey —— = ning World Readers on Receipt of a Five-Cent Stamp for Each Copy, You Will Want the Series in Your Home or Golf Club. This is the Forty-Fourth of the| satisfactory completion of the ones UE atch ai ice present place W. T. JONES DROPS DEAD Series, the First Having Appeared May 30. Address Sporting Editor, Evening World. year course by scholarship holders a ai date WHILE PLAYING GOLF - - —--- aveal —— an | wit entitle them to secure a life ov ent, No. 55 Mountuin Ave- ‘ As istributién of the literature and wi; the exte > 649 and stocks val- Heense to teach a specific trade, in- mus, Caldwell, N. J domestic] Brooklyn — in UPROAR ON BIRTH CONTROL. | ‘istrtbutign of the literatura a ras ESTATE OF PENROSE stent of $44,649 and stocks val-|OLD SOL WITH MIRROR lands. ta: tapos soReATG Sea a should have three rules and live up] exertion 0 couple. ARpICoeN. ne Nae VALUED AT $744,419] 4 at $699,770. Of the latter his four FIRES BRONX SHOP B PRT to them. First, she must consider Wallace 1 ete: “aida lat Wem Fol- received with hisses. ar t holdings were 4,986 shares pica ai annual salaries paid vocational teach- herself a member of the family; s*¢-| chocolate manufac company nl ed to be silenced the au-] g, smense Vortune”} Utah Copper Company ck, valued! sans n, cacetes by Glass s0l@ or Tene? from $1,800 to $3,500 ond, she must take as much interest] No, ss Washingto: inaiiel lows Propaganda in Mexico, dience marched out {n a body Bt $319,104; $960 abares of Ray Con. ct 3 art * at By Alpen | after a peripd of experience. in ‘the family as she would in her} groppeg dead yeate ernoon while UNGTON, April 3 » te —e PHILADELPHIA, April $—Boles| 80lidatea Copper Company stock, ERT SEND ONS. anes The twenty-five scholarships will own; third, she must not talk outside | | the pte A a urot Sanger on birth control are] “TRIPLE DIVIDE” IS FOUND. «. late United States Senato |Y2ed at $45,140; 788 shares o;| | THE Sun was hot enough (0 cause &11. awarded to qualified persons with the home. Seiesis Club, at Rye ep nts por in Mexico, if the unfriendl ‘ . late United States Senato: vtation Company stock, val [Are Its rays were reflected from ®| a1) round experience in the following "Girls of to-day take no interest In} Jones, who war ‘scventy yeara| reception by the people of Merida, cupt. WASHINGTON. Acril ¢ nnsylyanian, who died 9,400, and 10,000 sharee or|hand mirror on display in the shop] trade, industrial and technical occupa- Peemenuee where Shey work’ #8141 14 lived at No. 434 Washington Aves | tal of Yuoutan, can be accepted as a ares tee f n last Dee. 81, left only ° City and Chelsea Improve. | Window of Lydia Welnig, men's acces-| tions: (1) electrical construction, re- Mary, “They want money and plenty nue, Brooklyn, He had just mud: ulde : OP RMB Y | 744,419, instead of amense for-| ment Company stock, valued at $20,-| sories, at No. 503 Fast 161st Street, op-| pairing and operating: (2) machine of time off, but they don’t try to think | hard drive when he fell. unconscious WN reas ia aia Medan Chatman | te au mou North | $744,418, Ins eaten ae ne a [000 posite the Bronx County Court House,|S8hop work; (3) automobile repairing; what they should give in return.| When a doctor arrived Mr. Jones was of Primary Education, America has e| tune that his frier bellevéd he ha 2 oer P ‘ (AS. caching! Arata’ ana: Ganeniae i of the Board jeation, a —_— caught by a magnifying glass sus- When I came to America straight} dead. Overexe ad superinduced to a Meaxleo ity patch to-] United States Geographic Roar h | accumulated, yrding to an AD-) sig ARA SAILS FOR JAPAN. Ae string and concentrates | (©) architectural drafting and design ~ from Sweden I was only in my teens, | #" scute hear ‘lste 1 b contr Y t va (harne W. F. Schae ; FRANCISCO, April 3--Baron K. belie ll At ppt Mee Concentrated | ing; (6) baking; (7) printing, includ~ I made up my mind that I would work LLES AN om ON PARIS, Ie Pee, Bibl pa DUE " Mia ee ai sh rm, Ambassador to the United! “phe umbrellas ware destroyed, but |!N& Presswork (ont compost tions an for my money and try to give value whe oman fe Suspulent | Shnerine | eet pam Japan, sailed for home at] Patroiman John Fournier put out the|Oricklaying; (9) painting and dec~ received. In those days I didn’t get preativaiaa feann tiaive | cin +4 | , sour en Mar flames before further damage was done, | Orating; (10) carpentry; (11) textile ‘as much for a week's wages as the petty i t lea Ki i ved that st b ichara is on leave of absenee| Patrolman Fournter reported the fire} working, including weaving, spinning, tuedern girl gets a day and, while I 4 Lady Granarnd, rf teacher, af ibly againat | Oo t aM consisted of bonds and mortgages w \que to illness. aa ace te tnatural cause knitting, dyeing. 4 L { : ¥/ v 1 a