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was the frank reply.

      “There is this difference between us,” said the Scarecrow, “that whereas I will bend, but not break, you will break, but not bend.”

      At this moment the soldier returned leading a young girl by the hand. She seemed very sweet and modest, having a pretty face and beautiful green eyes and hair. A dainty green silk skirt reached to her knees, showing silk stockings embroidered with pea-pods, and green satin slippers with bunches of lettuce for decorations instead of bows or buckles. Upon her silken waist clover leaves were embroidered, and she wore a jaunty little jacket trimmed with sparkling emeralds of a uniform size.

      “Why, it’s little Jellia Jamb!” exclaimed the Scarecrow, as the green maiden bowed her pretty head before him. “Do you understand the language of the Gillikins, my dear?”

      “Yes, your Majesty,” she answered, “for I was born in the North Country.”

      “Then you shall be our interpreter,” said the Scarecrow, “and explain to this Pumpkinhead all that I say, and also explain to me all that he says. Is this arrangement satisfactory?” he asked, turning toward his guest.

      “Very satisfactory indeed,” was the reply.

      “Then ask him, to begin with,” resumed the Scarecrow, turning to Jellia, “what brought him to the Emerald City”

      But instead of this the girl, who had been staring at Jack, said to him:

      “You are certainly a wonderful creature. Who made you?”

      “A boy named Tip,” answered Jack.

      “What does he say?” inquired the Scarecrow. “My ears must have deceived me. What did he say?”

      “He says that your Majesty’s brains seem to have come loose,” replied the girl, demurely.

      The Scarecrow moved uneasily upon his throne, and felt of his head with his left hand.

      “What a fine thing it is to understand two different languages,” he said, with a perplexed sigh. “Ask him, my dear, if he has any objection to being put in jail for insulting the ruler of the Emerald City.”

      “I didn’t insult you!” protested Jack, indignantly.

      “Tut—tut!” cautioned the Scarecrow “wait, until Jellia translates my speech. What have we got an interpreter for, if you break out in this rash way?”

      “All right, I’ll wait,” replied the Pumpkinhead, in a surly tone—although his face smiled as genially as ever. “Translate the speech, young woman.”

      “His Majesty inquires if you are hungry,” said Jellia.

      “Oh, not at all!” answered Jack, more pleasantly, “for it is impossible for me to eat.”

      “It’s the same way with me,” remarked the Scarecrow. “What did he say, Jellia, my dear?”

      “He asked if you were aware that one of your eyes is painted larger than the other,” said the girl, mischievously.

      “Don’t you believe her, your Majesty,” cried Jack.

      “Oh, I don’t,” answered the Scarecrow, calmly. Then, casting a sharp look at the girl, he asked:

      “Are you quite certain you understand the languages of both the Gillikins and the Munchkins?”

      “Quite certain, your Majesty,” said Jellia Jamb, trying hard not to laugh in the face of royalty.

      “Then how is it that I seem to understand them myself?” inquired the Scarecrow.

      “Because they are one and the same!” declared the girl, now laughing merrily. “Does not your Majesty know that in all the land of Oz but one language is spoken?”

      “Is it indeed so?” cried the Scarecrow, much relieved to hear this; “then I might easily have been my own interpreter!”

      “It was all my fault, your Majesty,” said Jack, looking rather foolish, “I thought we must surely speak different languages, since we came from different countries.”

      “This should be a warning to you never to think,” returned the Scarecrow, severely. “For unless one can think wisely it is better to remain a dummy—which you most certainly are.”

      “I am!—I surely am!” agreed the Pumpkinhead.

      “It seems to me,” continued the Scarecrow, more mildly, “that your manufacturer spoiled some good pies to create an indifferent man.”

      “I assure your Majesty that I did not ask to be created,” answered Jack.

      “Ah! It was the same in my case,” said the King, pleasantly. “And so, as we differ from all ordinary people, let us become friends.”

      “With all my heart!” exclaimed Jack.

      “What! Have you a heart?” asked the Scarecrow, surprised.

      “No; that was only imaginative—I might say, a figure of speech,” said the other.

      “Well, your most prominent figure seems to be a figure of wood; so I must beg you to restrain an imagination which, having no brains, you have no right to exercise,” suggested the Scarecrow, warningly.

      “To be sure!” said Jack, without in the least comprehending.

      His Majesty then dismissed Jellia Jamb and the Soldier with the Green Whiskers, and when they were gone he took his new friend by the arm and led him into the courtyard to play a game of quoits.

      8. Gen. Jinjur’s Army of Revolt

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      Tip was so anxious to rejoin his man Jack and the SawHorse that he walked a full half the distance to the Emerald City without stopping to rest. Then he discovered that he was hungry and the crackers and cheese he had provided for the Journey had all been eaten.

      While wondering what he should do in this emergency he came upon a girl sitting by the roadside. She wore a costume that struck the boy as being remarkably brilliant: her silken waist being of emerald green and her skirt of four distinct colors—blue in front, yellow at the left side, red at the back and purple at the right side. Fastening the waist in front were four buttons—the top one blue, the next yellow, a third red and the last purple.

      The splendor of this dress was almost barbaric; so Tip was fully justified in staring at the gown for some moments before his eyes were attracted by the pretty face above it. Yes, the face was pretty enough, he decided; but it wore an expression of discontent coupled to a shade of defiance or audacity.

      While the boy stared the girl looked upon him calmly. A lunch basket stood beside her, and she held a dainty sandwich in one hand and a hard-boiled egg in the other, eating with an evident appetite that aroused Tip’s sympathy.

      He was just about to ask a share of the luncheon when the girl stood up and brushed the crumbs from her lap.

      “There!” said she; “it is time for me to go. Carry that basket for me and help yourself to its contents if you are hungry.”

      Tip seized the basket eagerly and began to eat, following for a time the strange girl without bothering to ask questions. She walked along before him with swift strides, and there was about her an air of decision and importance that led him to suspect she was some great personage.

      Finally, when he had satisfied his hunger, he ran up beside her and tried to keep pace with her swift footsteps—a very difficult feat, for she was much taller than he, and evidently in a hurry.

      “Thank you very much for the sandwiches,” said Tip, as he trotted along. “May I ask your name?”

      “I am General Jinjur,” was the brief reply.

      “Oh!”

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