during scholastic castigations. Johnny attended a private
school and had had trouble with his teacher. As has
been said, there was an excellent
editorial against corporal
punishment in that morning's issue, and no doubt it had
its effect.
After this can any one doubt the power of the press?
TOMMY'S BURGLAR
AT TEN o'clock P. M. Felicia, the maid, left by the
basement door with the
policeman to get a raspberry
phosphate around the corner. She detested the police-
man and objected
earnestly to the
arrangement. She
pointed out, not unreasonably, that she might have been
allowed to fall asleep over one of St. George Rathbone's
novels on the third floor, but she was overruled. Rasp-
berries and cops were not created for nothing.
The
burglar got into the house without much difficulty;
because we must have action and not too much descrip-
tion in a 2,000-word story.
In the dining room he opened the slide of his dark
lantern. With a brace and centrebit he began to bore
into the lock of the silver-closet.
Suddenly a click was heard. The room was flooded
with electric light. The dark
velvet porti锟絩es parted to
admit a fair-haired boy of eight in pink
pajamas, bearing
a bottle of olive oil in his hand.
"Are you a
burglar?" he asked, in a sweet,
childishvoice.
"Listen to that," exclaimed the man, in a
hoarse voice.
"Am I a
burglar? Wot do you suppose I have a three-
days' growth of bristly bread on my face for, and a cap
with flaps? Give me the oil, quick, and let me grease
the bit, so I won't wake up your mamma, who is lying
down with a
headache, and left you in
charge of Felicia.
who has been
faithless to her trust."
"Oh, dear," said Tommy, with a sigh. "I thought
you would be more up-to-date. This oil is for the salad
when I bring lunch from the
pantry for you. And
mamma and papa have gone to the Metropolitan to hear
De Reszke. But that isn't my fault. It only shows how
long the story has been knocking around among the
editors. If the author had been wise he'd have changed
it to Caruso in the proofs."
"Be quiet," hissed the
burglar, under his
breath. "If
you raise an alarm I'll wring your neck like a rabbit's."
"Like a chicken's," corrected Tommy. "You had
that wrong. You don't wring rabbits' necks."
"Aren't you afraid of me?" asked the
burglar.
"You know I'm not," answered Tommy. "Don't
you suppose I know fact from
fiction. If this wasn't a
story I'd yell like an Indian when I saw you; and you'd
probably tumble
downstairs and get pinched on the
sidewalk."
"I see," said the
burglar, "that you're on to your
job. Go on with the performance."
Tommy seated himself in an
armchair and drew his
toes up under him.
"Why do you go around robbing strangers, Mr. Burg-
lar? Have you no friends?"
"I see what you're driving at," said the
burglar, with
a dark frown. "It's the same old story. Your innocence
and
childish insouciance is going to lead me back into
an honest life. Every time I crack a crib where there's
a kid around, it happens."
"Would you mind gazing with wolfish eyes at the plate
of cold beef that the
butler has left on the dining table?"
said Tommy. "I'm afraid it's growing late."
The
burglar accommodated.
"Poor man," said Tommy. "You must be hungry.
If you will please stand in a listless attitude I will get you
something to eat."
The boy brought a roast chicken, a jar of marmalade
and a bottle of wine from the
pantry. The
burglarseized a knife and fork sullenly.
"It's only been an hour," he grumbled, "since I had a
lobster and a pint of musty ale up on Broadway. I wish
these story writers would let a fellow have a pepsin tablet,
anyhow, between feeds."
"My papa writes books," remarked Tommy.
The
burglar jumped to his feet quickly.
"You said he had gone to the opera," he hissed,
hoarsely
and with immediate suspicion.
"I ought to have explained," said Tommy. "He
didn't buy the tickets." The
burglar sat again and toyed
with the wishbone.
"Why do you burgle houses?" asked the boy,
wonderingly.
"Because," replied the
burglar, with a sudden flow of
tears. "God bless my little brown-baired boy Bessie
at home."
"Ah," said Tommy, wrinkling his nose, "you got that
answer in the wrong place. You want to tell your hard-
luck story before you pull out the child stop."
"Oh, yes," said the
burglar, "I forgot. Well, once
I lived in Milwaukee, and -- "
"Take the silver," said Tommy, rising from his chair.
"Hold on," said the
burglar. "But I moved away."
I could find no other
employment. For a while I man-
aged to support my wife and child by passing confederate
money; but, alas! I was forced to give that up because it
did not belong to the union. I became
desperate and a
burglar."
"Have you ever fallen into the hands of the police?"
asked Tommy.
"I said '
burglar,' not 'beggar,'" answered the
cracksman.
"After you finish your lunch," said Tommy, "and
experience the usual change Of heart, how shall we wind
up the story?"
"Suppose," said the
burglar,
thoughtfully, "that Tony
Pastor turns out earlier than usual to-night, and your
father gets in from 'Parsifal' at 10.30. I am thoroughly
repentant because you have made me think of my own
little boy Bessie, and -- "
"Say," said Tommy, "haven't you got that wrong?"
"Not on your coloured crayon drawings by B. Cory
Kilvert," said the
burglar. "It's always a Bessie that
I have at home, artlessly prattling to the pale-checked
burglar's bride. As I was
saying, your father opens the
front door just as I am departing with admonitions and
sandwiches that you have wrapped up for me. Upon
recognizing me as an old Harvard classmate he starts
back in -- "
"Not in surprise?" interrupted Tommy, with wide,
open eyes.
"He starts back in the doorway," continued the
burglar.
And then he rose to his feet and began to shout "Rah,
rah, rah! rah, rah, rah! rah, rah, rah!"
"Well," said Tommy, wonderingly, "that's, the first
time I ever knew a
burglar to give a college yell when he
was
burglarizing a house, even in a story."
"That's one on you," said the
burglar, with a laugh.
"I was practising the dramatization. If this is put on
the stage that college touch is about the only thing that
will make it go."
Tommy looked his admiration.
"You're on, all right," he said.
"And there's another mistalze you've made," said the
burglar. "You should have gone some time ago and
brought me the $9 gold piece your mother gave you on
your birthday to take to Bessie."
"But she didn't give it to me to take to Bessie," said
Tommy, pouting.
"Come, come!" said the
burglar,
sternly. "It's not
nice of you to take
advantage because the story contains
an ambiguous
sentence. You know what I mean. It's
mighty little I get out of these
fictional jobs, anyhow. I
lose all the loot, and I have to
reform every time; and all
the swag I'm allowed is the blamed little fol-de-rols and
luck-pieces that you kids hand over. Why, in one story,
all I got was a kiss from a little girl who came in on me
when I was
opening a safe. And it tasted of molasses
candy, too. I've a good notion to tie this table cover
over your head and keep on into the silver-closet."
"Oh, no, you haven't," said Tommy,
wrapping his
arms around his knees. "Because if you did no editor
would buy the story. You know you've got to preserve
the unities."
"So've you," said the
burglar, rather glumly.
"Instead of sitting here talking impudence and
taking the
bread out of a poor man's mouth, what you'd like to be
doing is hiding under the bed and screeching at the top
of your voice."
"You're right, old man," said Tommy,
heartily. "I
wonder what they make us do it for? I think the
S. P. C. C. ought to
interfere. I'm sure it's neither
agreeable nor usual for a kid of my age to butt in when a
full-grown
burglar is at work and offer him a red sled and
a pair of skates not to
awaken his sick mother. And look
how they make the
burglars act! You'd think editors
would know -- but what's the use?"
The
burglar wiped his hands on the tablecloth and
arose with a yawn.
"Well, let's get through with it," he said. "God
bless you, my little boy! you have saved a man from
committing a crime this night. Bessie shall pray for you
as soon as I get home and give her her orders. I shall
never
burglarize another house -- at least not until the
June magazines are out. It'll be your little sister's turn
then to run in on me while I am abstracting the U. S. 4
per cent. from the tea urn and buy me off with her coral
necklace and a falsetto kiss."
"You haven't got all the kicks coming to you," sighed
Tommy, crawling out of his chair. "Think of the sleep
I'm losing. But it's tough on both of us, old man. I wish
you could get out of the story and really rob somebody.
Maybe you'll have the chance if they dramatize us."
"Never!" said the
burglar,
gloomily. "Between the
box office and my better impulses that your leading juven-
iles are
supposed to
awaken and the magazines that pay
on
publication, I guess I'll always be broke."
"I'm sorry," said Tommy, sympathetically. "But I
can't help myself any more than you can. It's one of the
canons of household
fiction that no
burglar shall be suc-
cessful. The
burglar must be foiled by a kid like me, or-
by a young lady
heroine, or at the last moment by his old
pal, Red Mike, who recognizes the house as one in which
he used to be the
coachman. You have got the worst
end of it in any kind of a story."
"Well, I suppose I must be
clearing out now," said
the
burglar,
taking up his
lantern and bracebit.
"You have to take the rest of this chicken and the