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PAGE 2

Jimmy’s Cruise In The Pinafore
by [?]

“I’ll do it as sure as my name is Jim Nelson. I’ll take a look at the ships this very night, and go in the first one that will have me,” he said, with a resolute nod of the head, though his heart sank within him at the thought. “I wonder which kind of captains pay boys best? I guess I’ll try a steamer; they make short trips. I heard the cannon to-day, so one is in, and I’ll try for a place before I go to bed.”

Little did desperate Jimmy guess what ship he would really sail in, nor what a prosperous voyage he was about to make; for help was coming that very minute, as it generally does, sooner or later, to generous people who are very much in earnest.

First a shrill whistle was heard, at the sound of which he looked up quickly; then a rosy-faced girl of about his own age came skipping down the street, swinging her hat by one string; and, as Jimmy watched her approach, a smile began to soften the grim look he wore, for Willy Bryant was his best friend and neighbor, being full of courage, fun, and kindness. He nodded, and made room for her on the step,–the place she usually occupied at spare moments when they got lessons and recounted their scrapes to each other.

But to-night Willy seemed possessed of some unusually good piece of news which she chose to tell in her own lively fashion, for, instead of sitting down, she began to dance a sailor’s hornpipe, singing gayly, “I’m little Buttercup, sweet little Buttercup,” till her breath gave out.

“What makes you so jolly, Will?” asked Jimmy, as she dropped down beside him and fanned herself with the ill-used hat.

“Such fun–you’ll never guess–just what we wanted–if your mother only will! You’ll dance, too, when you know,” panted the girl, smiling like a substantial sort of fairy come to bring good luck.

“Fire away, then. It will have to be extra nice to set me off. I don’t feel a bit like jigs now,” answered Jimmy, as the gloom obscured his face again, like a cloud over the sun.

“You know ‘Pinafore’?” began Will, and getting a quick nod for an answer, she poured forth the following tale with great rapidity: “Well, some folks are going to get it up with children to do it, and they want any boys and girls that can sing to go and be looked at to-morrow, and the good ones will be picked out, and dressed up, and taught how to act, and have the nicest time that ever was. Some of our girls are going, and so am I, and you sing and must come, too, and have some fun. Won’t it be jolly?”

“I guess it would; but I can’t. Mother needs me every minute out of school,” began Jimmy, with a shake of the head, having made up his mind some time ago that he must learn to do without fun.

“But we shall be paid for it,” cried Will, clapping her hands with the double delight of telling the best part of her story, and seeing Jimmy’s sober face clear suddenly as if the sun had burst forth with great brilliancy.

“Really? How much? Can I sing well enough?” and he clutched her arm excitedly, for this unexpected ray of hope dazzled him.

“Some of them will have ten dollars a week, and some more,–the real nice ones, like Lee, the singing boy, who is a wonder,” answered Will, in the tone of one well informed on such points.

“Ten dollars!” gasped Jimmy, for the immensity of the sum took his breath away. “Could I get that? How long? Where do we go? Do they really want us fellows? Are you sure it’s all true?”

“It was all in the paper, and Miss Pym, the teacher who boards at our house, told Ma about it. The folks advertised for school-children, sixty of ’em, and will really pay; and Ma said I could go and try, and all the money I get I’m going to put in a bank and have for my own. Don’t you believe me now?”