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Landscape

By Charles Phelps Cushing

OME day the story of this country's long battle against ugliness

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will be written, with a leading chapter on the triumph Kansas City has achieved in turning its barren hillsides and shantylittered hollows into beautiful parks. A notable paragraph of this chapter will be upon the transformation of a supremely unprepossessing bluff which overshadowed the city's union station. That bluff was the traveler's most lasting impression of Kansas City, for beneath the shadows of its sheds and shanties, weeds and trash heaps, the trains always stopped-with sighs, moans, and dismal whistles. No wonder !

But to-day this cliff is a terrace which is becoming famous the country over for its picturesqueness. Its steep sides are planted with shrubs which make the bare stones have artistic value. Half-way up the slope a broad boulevard traverses a shelf circling the hill; and above that is a flight of white stone stairs climbing sinuously to a high wall which is surmounted with two red-topped lookout towers. From these may be seen a striking panoramic view of one of the city's manufacturing and wholesale districts, the Kaw (Kansas) and Missouri Rivers, and half of Kansas City, Kansas. After a recent visit to "Kersey Coates Terrace,' Lorado Taft, the sculptor, compared it to the appearance of the hill towns of Italy. He declared it was "very close to the most picturesque thing of Europe."

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From the ugliest sight in the Middle West to something very close to the famed beauty spots of Europe is a record in jumping. In scraping the blots from this scene and retouching it with new colors, Kansas City appears to have produced a picture with a moral-an object-lesson in landscape.

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HE RETURNED TO HIS HIDING-PLACE FOR THE REST OF THE WEARY DAY"

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A Story of Roadside Adventure

By Edward Verrall Lucas

Author of "Anne's Terrible Good Nature"
With Pictures by L. Raven-Hill

CHAPTER XIV

ADVENTURE

OF THE LITTLE OLD LADY

HEY left the weir very early the next morning, after a breakfast from the cold ham which Mrs. Avory had bought them at Stratford. On their way through the village they stopped at Salford Hall, because. Hester and Gregory had had an argument as to whether or not it was possible to hear the breathing of the person in the hiding-hole. The farmer allowed them to go upstairs and try, and, as it happened, Hester was right, and you could hear it, if you had patience. Gregory came out again as purple as a plum through holding it in so long.

Then they said good-by to the farmer and strode on through Harrington and Norton, and a little beyond this Robert

took those that cared about it to see the obelisk on the site of the Battle of Evesham, at which Simon de Montfort was killed in 1265. And so they came through the orchards of plum trees, on which the fruit was now forming, to Evesham itself.

It was while they were walking through Evesham, beside or behind the Slowcoach, in the middle of the road, that Janet felt a hand on her arm, and, looking round, perceived a very small and very neat and very anxious little servant.

"Please," she said, "Miss Redstone, my mistress, says will you all step into her house and partake of refreshment and do her a very great favor?"

Janet could hardly believe her ears. "All of us !" she exclaimed.

"Yes," said the little servant, "all, please.'

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Janet thought very hard for a moment Copyright, 1910, by E. V. Lucas.

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The pathetic little face settled it. "All right," Janet said at once, and, calling the others together and telling Kink to wait

for them outside the town, she led them in.

They were shown into a tiny and spotless parlor, with woolwork footstools, where after a moment or so they were joined by Miss Redstone, the little old lady whom Janet had seen at the window, but whose face was now smiling and contented.

"You must think me very strange, my

dears," she said, "but I will explain. I am Godfrey Fairfax."

A dreadful silence fell on the room. The children looked at each other shame

facedly, and almost in fear, for they.. thought the little old lady must be mad.

As for her, she again looked the picture of woe. "Oh, dear," she said, "is it. possible that none vi you have ever even heard of me! Surely one of my stories must have found its way to your house?" "Do you write stories ?" Janet asked.

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would be so very kind as to sit down and have some cake and milk while I read you my last story-quite a short one-and you can tell me what you think of it. There are so few children that I know here, and it makes such a difference to get some real criticism. Do you mind?" They all said they didn't mind at all, and after the cake and milk had been brought in by the little servant, Godfrey Fairfax cleared her throat and began.

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It is a story," she said, "of Roundheads and Cavaliers-a very suitable story to write here so close to the battlefields of Tewkesbury and Marston Moor. It is called Barbara's Fugitive.' Now listen, my dears."

Barbara's Fugitive

On a bright June morning, early in the Protectorate, Colonel Myddelton, followed by a groom, rode through the gates of the old Hall and turned his horse's head towards London. At the bend in the road, half-way up Sheringham Hill, he stopped a moment and waved his hand in the direction of the house. A white handkerchief fluttered at an upper window in reply.

"My poor, lonely Barbara!" said the Colonel, smiling tenderly as he passed again out of sight of his daughter.

"Dear father!" said Barbara, as the Colonel disappeared from view. She did not, however, at once leave the window, but remained leaning out, with the warm touch of the sun on her head, drinking in the morning sounds.

The village, half a mile distant, was just visible to Barbara through the trees red-roofed, compact, the cottages gathering about the church like chickens round the mother hen. On a summer day like this any one listening at the Hall could hear the busy noises, the hum of this little hive of humanity, with perfect clearness; the beat of the hammer on the anvil in Matthew Hale's smithy, the "Gee, whoa!" of the carter on the distant road, the scrunching of the wagon wheels, the crowing cocks, and now and then the shouts of boys and the laughter of children. These audible tokens of active life were a comfort to Barbara. A moment before, on parting with her father, she was aware of a new and disturbing

loneliness, but now she felt no longer with the same melancholy that she was solitary, apart from her fellows.

It was the time when the country was divided between the followers of the Throne and the followers of Cromwell; the time when sour visages, who were for the moment in the places of authority, glowered beneath black hats, and the village games were forbidden; the time when Royalist gentlemen dropped a crumb into their wine-glasses after dinner and, looking meaningly at each other, tossed off the red liquor, saying fervently as they did so, "God send this crumb well down." But actual fighting was over, and the country on the surface peaceable again, although a word often was sufficient to draw forth steel among the high folks or set an inn full of villagers to fisticuffs. There was not a Royalist in the country but awaited the moment when he could strike another blow to avenge his dead master and reinstate his young prince. Among these loyal gentlemen Colonel Myddelton was not the least.

Colonel Myddelton was a widower, and Barbara, young though she was, had long acted as the mistress of the household. Yet, in spite of her good sense and caution, Barbara had been the obstacle to the Colonel's departure. She was, he considered, unfit to be left alone with no more stalwart companions than old Digger, the maids, and the children; but her repeated assurances that she felt no foreboding at last conquered, and that morning, as we have seen, he had ridden off.

"You know, father," she had told him again and again, "Philip is close at hand, and truly I can see no danger. Was not I alone for days and nights together when you were with the king and the prince ?"

"Well, well," the Colonel had responded at last, "but I shall speak a word to Matthew as I pass the forge to-day, and he will keep his eye on the place." Matthew Hale, the blacksmith, had served under Colonel Myddelton in more than one campaign, and he rang as true as his own anvil.

Thus it was that Barbara was left alone in the great house, with none to bear her company but Jack, who was but twelve, and Marjorie, who was but eight, and little Alys, and old Digger, the odd man,

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