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12 THE PRESBYTEFT
For the Children
pimi_5? INVtbTMENT.
Hal's pocket was a very queer place,
A little of every)hing in it;
A ball, a knife, some hooks and tacks,
That he might need any minute.
But one day it held a brand-new cent,
Yellow and shining as gold;
Not to be spent for candy or toys,
But to be '"vested," as he told.
So he 'vested first in shingle nails,
And straight off to his mother ran;
"I'll fix lue closet for you now,
As well as the carpenter man."
Ten cents he earned with his penny.
Then bought two balls of stout twine,
And each fruit bush in the garden
He tied up straight and fine.
So the penny grew all summer,
Turned over again and again,
Until at "treasury meeting"
It counted up ten times ten.
The queer little trousers pocket
Could scarce all the money hold.
And a prayer went with each penny
As It into the mite box rolled.
?Over Sea and Land.
BERTRAND'S VALENTINE.
By Ernest Gilmore.
Bertrand had only been in America a few weeks. He
tallrprl in cnr?U T71 1
?.... oi.v-n uium.Ii jj.ii^iisii mat wncn ne went to
school the boys all laughed.
"He's Dutch and no mistake," Herman Downing
said, with a comical grimace, "as Dutch as sauer
kraut."
"We'll have lots of fun out of him," Dick Steele
observed. "Oh, my! Ain't he a picture?"
Yes, he certainly was a picture, but not in the sense
Dick Steele meant. He was dressed very shabbily, to
be sure?the sleeves of his old coat out at the elbows,
patches on his knees and his tattered shoes tied to his
feet with strips of leather. But notwithstanding these
drawbacks, a true artist would have enjoyed sketching
him. A sturdy little form, a pleasant face with honest
blue eyes, an obedient son, a kind brother, a true, brave
boy?that is a picture of Bertrand.
He did his best to master the English language, and
the other boys did their best to torment him. But he
tried not to mind their teasing. One day at recess he
saw Herman Downing and Dick Steele looking at
something which he thought very beautiful.
"Hello, Dutchman," called Herman, "watchin' us,
are you? Wan't to see what we've got?" and he displayed
a wonderful silken-fringed valentine, with
cherubs floating about in a blue sky, underneath which
flowers bloomed and birds fluttered. "I'm goin' to send
this to my sweetheart, Dutchie. Where's your valentine
for your sweetheart?" laughing as if his question
was a good joke.
AN OF THE SOUTH. February 10, 1909.
"1 haf got a sweetheart?my Gretchen," said Bertrand,
seriously, "but 1 do not buy dc valentine?haf no
money,"' and the boy turned away from the merry,
laughing boys with a misty look in his big blue eves.
"I say," said Dick, "let's hunt up a comic valentine
to send him tomorrow, a rag-tag boy bowing down to a
rag-tag girl."
"Good! so we will," assented Herman, "and if
Dutchie wants to he can send it to his sweetheart."
The valentine was bought?a ludicrous thing?and
stored away in the coat pocket of Herman until morning
should come.
But the boy for whom it was intended did not arrive
at the school-house, much to Herman's and Dick's
regret. They found out from one of the scholars where
he lived, and after school they took their sleds and
raced out to the dingy old tenement. A sweet-faced,
crippled girl opened the door in answer to their rap.
"We'd like to see Bertram!-" tlicv
, ?..v..
"Conic in," she said, politely, "mine bruclder is sick."
They stepped within and stood mute and motionless
at the scene before them. A sick woman was lying on
a cot, looking very pale and weary. A young woman
with one arm in a sling seemed to be waiting upon her.
And Bertrand sat before a smoldering fire with bandaged
throat and head.
"I'd get up if I could," he said, "but my head feels
as if 'twould split when I move. You're good, boys,
to come and see me. Please sit down."
"What's the matter?" asked Herman.
"T Viof fnl-nn ?u
^ tuiu sume way,' ana he shivered.
" 'Tisn't very warm in here, is it?" asked Dick, wondering
why the folks did not stir tip the fire this bitter
day.
"No, 'tisn't very warm," Bertrand said.
"We can't have it any warmer," put in the little
crippled girl. "We're out of coal."
"Hush, Gretchen!" and the boy's face flushe i
The boys had heard enough and seen enough. In
another moment they were out of doors. Their eyes
looked rather red and mistv. "T
-- _ J - ? WW..V T V unit. IV. V CI
was a meaner fellow than I've been," said Herman
"Unless I am." added Dick. *
"And the poor little chap got that awful cold going
without an overcoat!"
"And Gretchen isn't a sweetheart, but his own
sister."
Daylight was just fading into night when a package
UrOC Of ,1 - Ti ' * //T>
at uwuaima uuur. it was marKea "tsertrand's
Valentine." It was opened quickly. Ah! Bertrand
would not take cold so easily again, for there were a
warm overcoat and cap and shoes?all new; a nice suit,
partly worn, a book with pictures, some delicacies, and
other things. But there was another rap at the door,
and a man set inside the door a basket of coaband one
of provisions, with the sententious remark, "More to
follow."
There were smiles and tears and prayers in the humble
home that night, I can assure you. As for Herman
and Dick, they had learned a lesson worth a great deal,
never to treat unkindly the "least of these."?
Northern Advocate.