ERNS OE1 WOLFPEN *W Harlan HaicKer_ ration/ OJp«in-My»r» ■» t, tte Mt"ill O- ** W MV. StUVttt SYNOPSIS In 1785 Saul Pattern of Virginia came Into the beautiful virgin coun try of the Big Sandy valley In Kentucky. Chief of the perils were the Shawnees, who sought to hold their lands from the ever-encroach ing whites. From a huge pinnacle Saul gazed upon the fat bottoms and the endless acres of forest in its pri meval quietude at the mouth of the Wolfpen, and felt an eagerness to possess it, declaring It a place fit for a man to LIVE in! Five years later he returned with Barton, his tifteen-year-old son, and built a rude cabin. In Saul's absence the In dians attacked Barton and wounded him so badly Saul was forced to re turn with him to Virginia. In 1796, when it was reasonably safe, Saul returned with his family and a pat ent for 4,000 acres, this time to stay. He added to the cabin, planted crops and fattened his stock on the rich meadows. Soon after settlers arrived. A century later, in the spring of 1885, we find Cynthia Pat tern, of the fifth generation follow ing Saul, perched on the pinnacle from which her great-great-grand father had first viewed Wolfpen Bot toms. The valleys, heretofore un touched by the waves of change sweeping the Republic, are at last beginning to feel that restless surge. Her dad, Sparrel, and her brothers, Jesse, Jasper and Abral, convert the old water - wheeled mill to steam power. Cynthia feels that something out of the past has been burled with Saul. Cynthia is a pretty and imagina tive miss in her late teens, who often re-created Saul and her other fore bears, and fancied them still living. Sparrel proudly brings home the first meal out of the steam mill, and Julia, his wife, Is pleased. Genera tion after generation has added com forts and conveniences to Saul's homestead, and Sparrel has not shirked. The family goes easily into the work of the new season, due to the simplicity of life designed long «4go on the Wolfpen. Joy Is abun dant. Jesse plans to study law. A Stranger, Shellenberger by name, comes to Wolfpen, intent on buying timber. Sparrel refuses his offer. Shellenberger tells of progress in the outside world. With the advent of Shellenberger some intangible dis turbing alteration seems to affect tha atmosphere of Wolfpen. Spar Tel decides to sell timber land to Shellenberger. Jesse arranges to study law with Tandy Morgan. Doug Mason, a neighbor, in love with Cyn thia, calls to secure medicine for his sick mother. The feeling of disturb ing suspense continues at Wolfpen. CHAPTER VI—Continued —9— “You’re about the purtlest thing I ever saw on a horse, Cynthia,’’ he said very simply. “Why, Doug, you mustn’t say any such a thing." “I want to show you that ’seng bed I told you about It’s just a little step. You don’t even have to get down. It’s right around the bend." She was moved by the eagerness in his eyes and the pleading in his voice. “Well, just a minute. I must be getting back.” She slid lightly from the saddle^ The mules had finished drinking. Doug slapped one of them on the rump, urging it out of the path. Doug led Cynthia and the Finemare up Buzzard to his ’seng bed. “There it is," he said with pride. It lay like a still pool at the ab rupt head of the hollow, a flat place at the feet of the steep hills which closed in upon it in the shape of a. horseshoe. A thread of water dripped over a green rock cliff from the upper reaches of the gully. It trickled around the edge of the 'seng patch into Buzzard branch and ran on down the hollow Into Gannon Creek. Hazel bushes, laurel and spicewood shrubs were thick around its edges. The odors of muggy loam and rotting leaves and of balsam and ground pine on the unsunned slopes of the moun tains were tossed together by a light wind In the bowl of the hollow and lay heavy on the air. Cynthia gave a little cry of surprise. It 8 a purty place, Doug." "They’re sprouting fine. Look." He raked away the leaves and ex posed the pale olive plumules springing vigorously out of their forked roots and crowding a pas sage into the upper air. “They’re fine plants. When did you make it?" ‘‘Las’ fall. It's too wet and shady for corn anyway, so I just got the idea to plant ’seng berry seeds. I’ll make a sight of money off of this patch," he said with confidence. Cynthia’s eyes wandered over the lovely spot. “I hope you do. It’s getting right scarce in the hills." “If I can make me some ready money I want to ask you something, Cynthia." “It’s a good bed. I must be get ting back now. I hope your moth er gets all right.” "It ain’t that so much. You don’t know how it is with all your folks l up on Wolfpen to work all by your ' self all the time, it’s nice to see you and have you look at my patch and not anybody else know rbout it." She turned away and they went back down the hollow. She mount ed the saddle from a fallen willow. Doug handed her the basket, and she smoothed her skirt over her legs, adjusting her knee In the rest, thinking: “He looks up at me near ly as sad-eyed as Sarah, but I don’t feel anything only sorry.’’ “I must go. You come up when you can." “I will. You come back.” The Flnemare stepped impatient ly off In a running walk which car ried Cynthia quickly and without jostle up Gannon toward Wolfpen. CHAPTER VII 'T'lIE days passed but everybody continued to be restless. Julia had caught up with her garden now, and even she was affected beneath her outward calm. At the supper table she said cas ually: “I’ve a mind to go over to Jenny’s tomorrow and stay all night. The men will be coming In soon and we’ll be tied down a right smart while they’re here." “That’s so, Julia,” Sparrel said. “Somebody ought to go over there.” In the early morning Sparrel handed her into the saddle, and the boys opened the gate, watching her ride. Cynthia waved farewell from the yard. “It seems the natural way of things for menfolk to be going away somewhere. But when Mother ever goes off by herself, Daddy and the boys look glum all day.” Julia’s absences from the place were so infrequent that the house, the yard, the garden all preserved In consequence a more profound si lence. The day was hot and sultry. All the crispness of the mornings was gone in mid-May. When Cynthia built the supper Are in the stove and put the sweet potatoes to bake, the heat filled up the kitchen for the first time in that year. She laid off the neat blue twill dress for the coolness of an old and faded brown calico. “It’s an ugly old thing but it’s nice and cool to cook In. The first hot days always tire a body out so.” Back In the kitchen, she lifted the stove lid to lay on a piece of wood. The hot lid slipped away from the lifter and fell on her right hand She Was Moved by the Eagerness in His Eyes and the Pleading In His Voice. leaving a black smear and the furi ous bite of Are tearing Into the skin. She caught her breath with the first pain, waving her hand up and down to relieve It. “What an awkward thing for a body to do and on a hot day when you can’t hardly get your breath In this kitchen, and then to go and burn your right hand Just when you’re ready to mix up the cornbread batter.” She washed away the soot and anointed the burn with linseed oil from the bottle in the cupboard and spread soda over It and wrapped it lightly with a white rag. She placed the large wooden mix ing howl on the table and began to stir in the meal and the sour milk, the soda and the shortening. It was an awkward process. She took the bowl into her right arm, pressing it against her, and stirred slowly with her left hand. Some of the soft batter sloshed over against her dress. A wisp of hair slipped from its place and dangled into her eyes. She pushed it back with her left hand, leaving flakes of cornmeal stuck in It and on her perspiring forehead. She was hot und fretted. “Gracious, but 1 feel u sight 1 could nearly cry,” Outside she heard the yard gate close sharply. "There’s Jesse and Tm so glad I could cry. He’ll help me some now and me with tills burn." She dabbed at the sweat on her lip and went toward the door. "Oh, Jesse, I’m sure glad—” She had reached the door. Her words ended as abruptly as though the living self had walked straight out of its hot body into the hab itation of spirits. She stood per fectly still, hugging the bowl of corn-bread batter, shielding her burned hand, looking at him through the meal-stained lock of hair. “Good evening,” he said. “This is Sparrel Pattern’s place if I’m not mistaken." For the first time in her life she was without the words a meeting needed. She stood dumbly in the door, while the young man came on across the yard to the porch. He wore a brown corduroy cap. breeches of the same materia) tucked away at the bottom into heavy shoes, a blue shirt and a black bow tie. He walked with the easy grace and strength of u man who was used to moving nbout In the open on foot Mr. Shellenberger described the place like u surveyor, that Is. If this is the Pattern place.” he said, ids blue eyes and his voice smiling at her across the porch. Slowly Cynthia felt her natural self return to the doorway. She looked at the young man. Over his bent left arm lie carried a large brass surveyor’s compass with shin ing, upright peep-sights on each end. With his other hand he grasped a long, smooth Jacob's start like a huge walking stick tipped with brass, and over his shoulder was slung a knapsack and a sur veyor’s cliaia “This is the place. Daddy and the boys are out about the barn somewhere." “Well, I'm glad to get here be fore dnrk. My name’s Reuben War ren, I've come to survey the place.” Cynthia was bewitched by his voice and the clear music of his spoken words. His vocabulary was very much the same as that of the better Gannon Creek folk, but the quality of the Intonation, the rhythm of the sentences, and the pitch of the voice were unusual to her ear. Cynthia remembered to say that the menfolk would be In soon and to Invite him to sit down. “I’d better get on with the sup per if you’ll excuse me." Reuben Warren set the Jacob’s staff against the door, slipped the knapsack from his shoulder, and then sat down with the compass on his lap and felt the ugreeable glow of rest sweep up the muscles of his legs and settle in his neck and shoulders where the heavy knap sack had imprinted a red band. He sat at ease, watching the dark shadow of the Pinnacle slice up ward toward Cranesnest. “The finest place I’ve seen In all my trips into the hills.” Cynthia hurried back Into the kitchen. “Reuben Warren. What a nice name. Reu ben War ren. It’s like a singing. It goes like his talk." She poured the batter Into the large Iron skillet and placed It In the oven, bending over the stove and opening the door carefully with her burned hand. The loose strand of hair again fell Into her eye. This time she would fix It properly. She went to the mirror that hung above the table and looked at herself. She gave a gesture of despair. “Oh, my gracious, Cynthia Pat tern, you never looked such a sight In your whole life. That awful wisp of hair over your face and the corn meal In It like scruff, your hand burned and bandaged, and your sweaty face all red as a beet, and this old brown striped calico dress on and It spotted with batter I And Reuben Warren saw you like that, and he’ll think that’s the way I always look, and I don’t. I never do." There flashed Into her mind the picture of her mother Julia years ago In the wood-lot with a dress full of chips, looking up suddenly at Sparrel Pattern on a tall horse, and then staring down at her dress, and running away to the kitchen with her confusion. The vision was so sharp and so unexpected that It completely changed Cynthia’s mood and she felt a smile forming through her tears. “And my dreaming on about a pear tree and a fine dress like Lady Arabella’s and him saying, 'Lady, you're the prettiest sight I ever saw In all my born days’." She removed the unsightly ban dage and brushed away the loose soda, and carefully washed the burned hand. Then she bathed her eyes back into composure. She felt her spirit lifting above the confu sion and the heat. She opened the oven to look at the baking sweet potatoes and the bread. She went Into the smoke house and sliced off the best cuts of the home-cured ham to fry. She took dripping spoonfuls of dark fra grant honey from the stone Jar, and sweet new butter from the spring house. and a fresh loaf of wheat bread from Julia’s box. Then she slipped the every-day red and-whlte eheeked cloth from the table and spread in Its stead one of the hem stitched while covers from the cedar smelling linen closet In the hall. She poured the brown sugar back into the Jar and filled the bowl with white granulated. She cut a spray of wild honeysuckle from the clump behind the drying kiln, arranged It In a low brown earthen pot, and set It Ifl the center of the table. It was all very beautiful now, and she stood hack to admire It for an instant "He’ll see that I’m not anyway slouchy. If he has any eyes.” She heard Sparrel and the boys coining into the yard. She looked at the supper again and ran up to her room to change into a fresh dress. "Blue is best for my face when it’s hot and for my hair.” She felt neat and orderly, like the table she had Just laid. She hurried back to the kitchen. •’I guess I’ve got things about ready for him now.” Outside on the porch she could hear the voices of her menfolk mak ing Reuben YVarren welcome on Wolfpen. “Where’s your mule?" she heard Abral ask. “I haven’t any mule." "Then how did you get over here with all them things?” "I walked.” "You walked?” "Yes, I walked. Don’t you peo ple ever walk any? You're as bad as city folks.” It was the first time she had heard his free laugh. Cynthia was taking up the sup per. She could hear the men at the wash rock, Jesse offering Reuben the soap and Jasper the towel. Everything was ready now and she mmui t k— Julia Had Caught Up With Her Garden Now. stepped to the door. The days were noticeably lengthening, as though the light clung to the trees and the sprouting fields and tried to shoul der the darkness from the hollows. ‘‘Come in to supper,” she said. "You sit right here, Mr. Warren,” Sparrel said, placing him on the right facing the kitchen where Cynthia stood ready to serve. Then Sparrel asked the blessing, raising his head and looking at Cynthia as he said the Amen. Cynthia returned the look of com munication, following Sparrel’s eyes over the white table to the honey suckle in the center. “lie thinks It all right to tidy up the table for company, but he wonders why 1 put on the white cloth for Reuben War ren and let Shellenberger take Just what he found.” Sparrel passed the food to his guest, urging It upon him generous ly after the manner of Gannon Creek folks. Cynthia moved silent ly about the table with water for the glosses and with hot coffee and warm triangles of corn bread that was soft and flaky between the crisp red crusts. Her brothers took only the wheat loaf, but Reuben refused It for the corn bread and Cynthia flushed with confused pleasure, for she felt Intuitively that he did It out of consideration for the distress and embarrassment she showed when she met him at the door with batter In her hand. It was the first time In her life that such a secret understanding had come to her and It left her surprised with the won der of Its recognition and communi cation. Abral had finished and was full of questions. Where did Reuben live? How did that Shellenberger fellow find him? How did he know where to come by himself? “My father has an office down at Catlettsburg. He Is a surveyor. You can look out of the office win dow and see the Big Sandy and the Ohio coming together In a V around West Virginia. Shellenberger Just dropped In one day on his way to Pittsburgh and said he was buying some timber-land from Sparrel Pat tern In Pike county and he wanted a surveyor. My father was tied up on a big Job over In Ohio, so I packed up the traps and took the train and then the boat and came to Pattern Landing. I got ofT there this afternoon about two-thirty, and walked over the bridle path. It felt good to stretch my legs. When I saw this place from up there at the head of the hollow, I thought It was about the finest place I’ve ever seen away from the river.” "Does it take very long to learn to be a surveyor?” Abral demanded. “It’s not a very hard Job. You Just naturally learn It after so long a time. I guess I’ve been around with my dad since I was about flf teen.” (TO BE CONTINUED) Willi Under Engliih Law Under English law a person can dispose of his property by will as he chooses. Neither husband not wife Is under any obligation tc leave any part of his or her proj* erty to the other. =Curiosa Americana= « By Elmo Scott Watson Coincidence in Samoa THIS is a story of three Ripleys. Back In the nineties Lieut. Charles S. Ripley of the United States nnvy was shipwrecked In the South seas and landed upon an Is land In the Samoan group. He was taken before the ruler of the Island, King Malletoa, who asked the offi cer his name and who then aston ished him by greeting him ns "cous in." The explanation was simple. Many years before, a great-uncle of Lieu tenant Ripley, a native of Maine, had sailed for the Orient and had never returned. He, too, had been shipwrecked in Samoan waters, had married a native princess and found ed the dynasty of which King Malletoa was the third generation. King Malleton insisted upon adopt ing Lieutenant Ripley and several years later an International commis sion, composed of representatives of the United States, Great Britain and Germany, then engaged In set tling the question of sovereignty over the Samoan Islands, settled upon him as the true heir to Malle toa’s throne. Ripley, however, de clined to exercise his right as king and returned to the United States to make his home In Colorado. Coincidence in Samoa? Yes, and In the United States, too. In one of his radio broadcasts a few years ago, Robert L. Ripley, the “Believe It or Not" man, told that story. Soon afterwards he received a let ter from Mrs. Charles L. Ripley In Denver saying that at the very mo ment his broadcast came to an end, Lieutenant Ripley had died! Sacred Harp Singers SOMETIME In the late summer go down into the South and attend a convention of the Sacred Harp Singers. When you do, close your eyes as they sing and feel yourself transported from modern America back to Elizabethan England. For the Sacred Hurp Singers cling to the “fa-so-la” singing of that far-off period, the “fa-so-la” being the names of the notes with which the major diatonic scale be gan. Because they have refused to take Into consideration the “do-ra mi” and “si-do” ndded later, they have been called a “lost tonal tribe.” The Sacred Harp Singers have borne that name for almost a cen tury, taking It from a book of hymns called “The Sacred Harp,” published In Philadelphia in 1844. First compiled by B. F. White and E. J. King of Georgia, It has gone through many editions and many hymns have been added. On some week-end between early July and early September, when their crops “have been laid by," the Sacred Harp Singers gather for a convention.. The president opens It with a song, then a chapter from the Bible *ls read and the chaplain leads the group in prayer. There after the Sacred Harp people fre quently sing all day with ten-min ute recesses every hour and a half. “A Dollar Down and .. IF YOU think buying on the In stallment plan Is a modern cus tom, consider this good advice, of fered the housewife In “Decorum— A Practical Treatise on Etiquette and Dress of the Best American So ciety" in 1877: Avoid Concealment. Instances frequently occur of con cealment with regard to money con cerns; thus, for Instance, a wife wishes to possess an article of dress which Is too costly for Immediate purchase, or a piece of furniture li able to the same objection. She ac cordingly makes an agreement with a seller, and there are many who call regularly at houses when the husband Is absent on business, and who receive whatever the mistress of the house can spare from her ex penses. A book Is kept by the sell er, In which payments are entered: but a duplicate is never retained by the wife, and therefore she has no check whatever. We have known an article of dress paid for In this manner, far above its value, and heard of a poor young woman who had been thus duped say to a lady, who remonstrated with her: “Alas! What can I do, 1 dare not tell my husband!" It may be that the same system, though differing according to cir cumstances, Is pursued In a supe rior class of life. We have reason to think that it is so, and there fore affectionately warn our young sisters to beware of making pur chases that require concealment. Be content with such things as you can afford and such as your husbands approve. You can then wear them with every feeling of self-satisfac tion, and have a contented mind. © Western Newspaper Union. Complaint in Form of Poem When the residents of Lower San dusky, Ohio, wanted to change the name of the town to Fremont in the latter 1840s they engaged Ruth erford B. Hayes as their legal rep resentative. Strangely enough, says the Cleveland Plain Dealer, Hayes, later to become governor and then President, was the only person to present the only formal petition asking for the change and the only person to present the only formal complaint made against the pro posed change. The complaint, which h3 presented after he had submit ted the petition, was In the form of a seven-verse poem written by an old man of the town who want ed the place to retain the same name. It was, of course, changed. SERIOUS FEEDING TIME FOR TURKEYS Raisers Should Be Putting Pounds on Birds. Bjr L. E. CLINE, University of Nevida Agricultural Extension Division.—WNU Service. Turkey growers who want to make profits at the business are putting the pounds on their birds as fast as possible these days. The four or five months of the summer feed ing period are the most vital to making profits. The first six weeks of the turkey’s life is a very critical period, but little weight is put on. The finishing period just before marketing the birds is also impor tant, but in it likewise little weight is added in proportion to the large expense for feed. But during the in-between period, according to Cline, the rapidly grow ing turkey adds pounds economi cally because it converts, at a rapid rate, large amounts of a relatively low priced feed into a high-priced commodity to grace the table dur ing the fall and winter. During this fast growing period a relatively small proportion of the feed given is needed for maintenance while a large' proportion is available for growth and profits. When the average turkey is two months old it will weigh about 2.5 pounds. This weight is put on at an average rate of 2.15 pounds of feed per pound gain in weight. A month later the turkey will weigh 5 pounds, and will be gaining one pound for approximately each three pounds of feed eaten. At the end of the fourth month, the turkey should weigh at least 8.25 pounds and is turning feed into tur key meat at the rate of 3.5 pounds of feed to one pound of turkey. Good gains may be made also during the fifth month, but there after the ratio of pounds gained to feed consumed declines very rap idly, until it takes 5.6 pounds of feed to produce one pound of tur key in the sixth month and approxi mately 10.7 pounds of feed for one pound of meat in the seventh month. After that the feed often costs more than the net price which will be received for the additional pounds of turkey. While feeding in adequate quan tity is very important the composi tion of the feed is equally impor tant. The two must go together if the most pounds of turkey are to be put on. Maintenance Ration and Laying Ration Different Poultry is fed chiefly for one or more of three purposes: growth, egg production, and maintenance. A maintenance ration differs from a laying ration, not in the ingre dients, but in proportions, less ani mal food, or protein, being used. Whether feeding for growth, egg production, or maintenance, five classes of foods are necessary for poultry, asserts a writer in Hoard’s Dairyman. 1. Grains, for energy, heat, flesh and egg-forming materials. Usually fed in two forms: ground, called "mash” and in the kernel, called “scratch feed.” 2. Greens, as aid to digestion, for their health-giving and growth pro moting properties. 3. Animal foods, rich in egg- and flesh-forming materials; the most essential as weli as the most expen sive and most frequently lacking ingredient in all laying rations. 4. Mineral matter, as an aid to di gestion and to supply material for egg shells and bone structure. Ex amples: high-grade limestone grit, oyster shells, and charcoal. Keep these accessible to the fowls at all times. Feed a small amount of table salt in all mashes. 5. Water. Quenches thirst, regu lates body temperatures, transports nutrients, and eliminates wastes. Picking Out Feathers The trouble with chickens picking out their feathers is caused by a small mite that gets into the skin near the base of the feathers and causes irritation. To get rid of this mite, according to the North Caro lina State college, the poultry house should be thoroughly cleaned and sprayed with a solution of three parts of crude petroleum or carbo iineum and one and one-half parts of kerosene. Dip the birds in a tub containing two ounces of flowers of sulphur and six ounces of flaked soap to five gallons of tepid water. Be sure that the solution gets to the skin. Chickens Need Water Hot weather sends the poultryman to the well many times during each day for a refreshing drink of cold water. He must remember that his layers get just as thirsty as'does he and they need water just as much as he does or even more because of the body functioning which he expects of them. The water supply in the summer henhouse should be extra clean—for it is hot weather— always abundant, cool and fresh. Cleanse the water pans every morn ing and again in the afternoon. Never let the supply run dry.— Rural New-Yorker. Quaint Sampler Will Keep You Occupied COME IN THE COME IN TNE •rt. EVENING MORNING r « 0,1 COME WHEN COME V YOU’RE WITHOUT > LOOKED TOR WARNING OR _ Pattern 1187 No matter what the Season—a sampler’s always fun to do, espec ially when it offers as colorful a picture, as quaint a verse, as this. You’ll find it a grand way to use up scraps of cotton or silk floss, and a design that works up in no time, for the background is plain. Wouldn’t it go beautifully in a young girl’s room? Perchance that Young Miss will want to do this easy cross stitch design her self! Pattern 1187 comes to you with a transfer pattern of a sampler 12 1-4 x 15 1-4 inches; color sug gestions; material requirements; illustrations of all stitches used. Send 15 cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y. Write plainly pattern number, your name and address. Tennyson Hot-Headed Thomas Hardy has commented dryly that “it is as risky to calcu late people’s way of living from their writings as their incomes from their way of living.” I heard in London, from a de lightful old man named Macmur do, who had been the intimate of the Brownings and other Victorian notables, of an incident in which the poet who wrote “kind hearts are more than coronets,” threw the mustard pot at his children’s tutor (Macmurdo’s brother-in law) one morning at breakfast, because the tutor, in the course of an abstract discussion, stood firmly by opinions in opposition to Tennyson’s own. “Simple faith” may be “more than Norman blood,” but illustra tions are legion that the man who said it was the quintessence of autocratic arrogance and undisci* plined temper. Week’s Supply of Postum Free Head the offer made by the Postum Company In another part of this pa per. They will send a full week’s sup ply of health giving Postum free te anyone who writes for It—Adv. On the Hearts Write your name by kindness, love, and mercy, on the hearts of the people you come in contact with year by year and you will never be forgotten.—Mrs. Anne Royall. If you feel... -tired - run-down -nervous -out of sorts « THERE is usually a definite reason for such complaints... so, now let’* reason sensibly. Don’t try to get well in a day.. .this Is asking too much of Nature. Remem ber, she has certain natural processes that just cannot be hurried. Therefore, if you are pale, tired, lack a keen appetite, have loet weight and feel rundown...a frequent sign that your blood-cells are weak, with « tendency towards anemia—then do try in the simple, easy way so many mil lions approve—by starting a course of S.S.S. Blood Tonic to feel like your self again. © S.S.S. 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