THE FALLS CITY TRIBUNE , FRIDAY , JANUARY 10 , 1908 "Sef Seffy my Softy. No not ex actly not to say nick. I like him so he's all I got anil It's somoslnB wrong wlss him. He can't live long this way. Efery night he's down by the Poison spring wlss the witches often all night. He's there now. 1 chust kem awny trying to cheer him up n little. Well , so good night. " He passed on , for he was u merciful old man , and Sally hurried away to the Poison spring. And Old Uaumgurtner laughed through his gnarled hands be hind the cover of the next turn In the road , though even to him laughter was no more gay , as of yore. Softy was there , on his back , with his hands under his head , staring up at the moon. He looked pitifully alone. A great lump singed in Sally's tin oat , and If she had obeyed only her hoirt she would have Hung her arms around him. But another of those qualities which go with red hair , pride , pre vented this. She cotighed a little and Scffy flew around. "I was Just taking a walk , " she said. "Yes , " said Softy humbly. "Tho Poison spring Is on my prop erty " "I'll go away ! " said Softy , rising. Ho looked gaunt as he stood on his foot In the moonlight. "Seffy I didn't mean " began the really unhappy girl , her hand quit' giving way to her heart now "I got nowheres else to go now , " ex cused Seffy. " 1 can't go to the store Sam's got the tombstone there or any where where there's people account everybody knows. Sam's got a notice of It hung up In the store. It's all they talk about. He got It printed in the paper , too ! I'd go away , out west , but pappy don't want me to go. I come here , account no one else ever comes It's unhealthy. I didn't know that you owned " He was sham bling off. The last words came from a distance. "Good night. " He did not know that Sally was fol lowing him. When she spoke It was close behind him. He veered so sud denly as to catch the pain In her fact ) . Hut he was dull , Seffy. "Seffy , " she said , close upon him , "Seffy , I was at home. " Seffy said nothing. "Seffy I am unhappy and a fool ! " Still Scffy did not move nor speak. "Don't you care that I am unhap py ? " Still silence. "And don't you never forgive no one ? " At the end was a sob. Ah ! Seffy could not harbor 111 against a dog that had bit him. And Sally sobbed. The hands ho had kissed before , he kissed again In that fashIon - Ion , you will remember , which must Urnve survived from some cavalier an cestor. "Seffy , " she said a llttlo later , "you inow I got an awful temper1' "Pappy says so , " sighed Seffy. "He's right , and you know ! But , Seffy you can help mo to cure It will you ? " Joy leaped back Into her life and It was very sweet. And would he ? Ho left her no doubt not the least. She tiovered about him bewltchlngly. What v' the peering moon saw I shall not tell. And when the watchful old man saw them coming out of the cotton woods together ho went singing homo and slept. Oh , it was not entirely the pasture- field now. He did not forget that. But Seffy whom he adored perhaps for , the very gentleness and sweetness which constantly vanquished his hap piness Softy was going away from happiness which sought him and. for this farmer , and this time and place , where was little Joy and much labor. It seemed wanton It was wanton ! Do you think it was a slight thing that kept Sophenljah P. Baumgartner , Sen ior , awake for five nights ? For , lot mo tell you here , all this had become serious business to the old man if WP do treat it lightly. For he loved his son adored Sally and valued the pasture-field. Therefore , in striving to bring them all Into his keeping to gether , ho was dealing with the things ( little things to you ) ho loved most on earth. You , of course , have greater things. But you must , now and then , try to feel tbo imperiousness of small things In small lives. I shall tell you of their conversation as they came from the Poison spring , the radiance of the moon in Soffy'a wan face , the very Joy of the starry heavens in that of the girl I must tell you what their talk was of. And I beg you again to remember that these small things , which you despise , wore all they had there and then. I have wondered whether the wanton sacri fice of a child's toy when he Is three Is not as dreadful as the sacrifice of his love when he Is 20. Do you know ? "Scffy , " said Sally , with his hand held so close under her beating heart that it registered each avid pulsation , "I am most to blame and you have forgiven me. But you are to blame , too , and I hope you won't forglvo yourself lee soon. " "For why ? " queried the dull Seffy , with attention only for that wildly beating thing for , alas , that was his bane as hers was something else for getting futuie perils In present happi ness. "Then you'll fix it before you do ! " "Fix what ? " asked the astonished Seffy. "You let yourself bo fooled. And that raises my temper more than any thing else. I don't want no beau that every ono laughs at. You got to have more backbone. When 1 am mean to you I can't help It when my temper's up and It's hard to get it down , mighty hard , when It's up when I am mean to you curse mo ! " Seffy stared aghast. He would as soon have heaped maledictions upon the head of an archangel ! "Or hit mo ! " Another stare another conviction of the utter Impossibility of such a thing ! "Yes ! With a club ! A flat-Iron ! A potato masher ! A poker ! " Seffy could laugh now. She was be coming absurd. Had he only known that she poor futile woman ! was tryIng - Ing to secure In advance their happi ness In the turmoil which she know would come ! "Yes ! That IB the way for such as mo' The only wayl And I'm used to 111" Now Seffy was shocked ! "My father or mother or granny or" she hesitated "Sam have , at oiio time or another , used all these things on me. I need the snaflle ! You need the whip ! " And she laughed a little herself , and that was Soffy's excuse for joining her. "You have no temper and I have a thousand times too much. You can see how that will work. And , Seffy , you got a bad reputation about here now , and I wouldn't like you to have it always. So you must brace up and do things to make people like you again. I want you to be able to face any ono at the store and do it in front of Sam. " The dull Soffy answered : "But what can 1 do ? " The whole case seemed quite hope less. less."I "I don't know. But there is some thing Ask your pappy. Whatever it is , I will hell ) you. You know It makes me foolish , too. And I hate that more than anything being laughed at. If 1 was you , I'd lick Sam. But 1 know you won't. I expect he's too big for you. But there are other things. " And Softy left bar at her door that night , determined to do some gieat thing to set himself properly before the little community once more. Be cause once more she had let him hiss her. He and his father hold a star-cham ber session that night yet Softy waking him up for it. "Take her homo from church , be- goshens ! " adjudged his father. Now this seems small advice upon a small matter. But It was very great advice upon a very great matter , as you will see. VIII. The White Signal Which Might as Well Have Been Black. No suitor in German-Pennsylvania , though It be In Maryland , has entirely established his right to the maiden of hla choice , either before the public erin in her sight or his own , until he has escorted her offhand from ohiirch on a Sunday night. And this he must ac compllsh at the cluitch door , out of sometimes a savage rivalry cbulleng' ing disaster. For by this simple , primitive , heroic process the status of contestants for a maid's fa\or is fixed. Ho whoso arm Is taken can face his llttlo world on Monday. Ho whoso arm Is rejected Is on Monday , a Eoclal exile. For the small world of the vlclnago Is always there and this is the maiden's public election of him she chooses to honor and her public rebjiko to his too prc sumptuous rival. And , after that , she is a poor thing Indeed who will bo seen In public with the latter. For nothing is moro sweet and cruel than love. Soffy was not a publlcly-acknowl edged suitor. IIo could not bo. It was Impossible ! There was that tomb stone atlll up In the storo. Sam bad not yet boon dislodged. And Soffy. bjid not yet nrrlvort where ho might put ihu awful question there was a recog nized pnrlod ( or this , and events had put It further and further off ! Indeed , ho shuddered whun ho thought of It even then , after that understanding with Sally ! and contemplated getting ils father to do It for him. It had become known , In the wire- ess way such things spread In the country , that there had been a tenta tive maklng-up between Soffy and Sally. But Seffy was still not received n public. Nor did ho appear with Sally ! Nor might ho call upon hurl There must be some open dollanco and victory which all could see and under stand before these things might hap pen. The right hand of renewed fellow ship would not bo extended to Seffy un- 11 ho had met and vanquished hta rival in public. It was the primitive right of the strongest , proved physically tare as In the Honian circus. Soffy liad never shown himself u master of material prowess. He demurred a bit at such a plunge Into the arena. But there was no other way. "Why. Sef , " advised his father , "after that It's a dead open and shut game. You better do the biggest sing you ken and that's the end of It. If I had Sally on my side , I wouldn't keor who the hell was on the other ! You take her home from church ! Yas , right afore their dam' noses ! Then they'll run after you and send you presents. It nln't no guess-work for you ! You know that Sally will be waiting for you wlss her arm all ready to take yourn. Gosh ! I nefor had no such sure sing. I had to take my chances wlss you' mammy ! And It was three other fellers wlss their arms out and the right side yet ! But your daddy was close up against the church door. And when she come out ho didn't waste no time a-saylng polite , 'Miss Hongler , ken I hat the pleasure to see you homo this evening ? ' I'd 'a1 lost the game If I had waited to git off all that dictionary stuff ! Yasslr ! For right opposite me was Bill Elsen- krout Sam's uncle and I knowed his arm'd shoot out like a patent corn- busker the minute you' mammy come. "Ho was mighty quick , but mighty polite ! I knowed he'd say that fool ishness about belli : ; pleased to see her home. Well , she come out and I chust grabbed. And while I was marching on like u conquering hero , informing her that It was a nice efenlng , I could hear Bill on the off side , gitting out that stuff 'bout pleasure and seeing her home. Nancy says , says she : 'Sank you , Mr. Eisenkrout. I'm suited ; ' and I laughed like hell ! And , begosh- ens , Nancy laughed too ! And that settled Bill for efer more ! Oh , It's nosslng like a laugh at the right time to kill a man off ! Bill left town the next day. He had too. And he didn't show up tell the next fall ! Sef , you got a sure sing. And , begoshens , you might just us well finish Sam up In the same job put him out of town. Next Sunday you watch Sam. Keep right opposite him. Then git your arm in action about a second sooner. Left bide , you know , her right ! Sally ' 11 be on the lookout. Don't stop to say any fool sings about the pleasure of seeing her home. Do it. And , when Sam gits his work In , laugh ! Laugh like a bull ! And git Sally to laugh. 1 bet you two dollars and ten cents that Sam won't be in town the day ! " Like a campaign speech was the effect of this ! Seffy objected no longer. He said he would do It all ! Perhaps this , too , got ubout. At all events , before the next Sunday , the interest created by their rivalry was more than equal to the voice of the Gospel. All the town ship would be at church ! Sam would not bo dislodged. He invented the most diabolical schemes for sequestrating Sally to himself dur ing the week which followed Into which guileless Sally often fell and which seemed to proclaim her suitor to bo himself. Sam , you remember , had access to Sally , but Scffy had not. Soffy confessed that this looked sinis ter. True , ho remembered ail that had passed between them. But once before ho had been In error. So that Seffy , before the week's end , begun once moie and more strongly to deprecate the necessity for this public demonstration of his status. His father demanded it as n diplomatic necessity , Inasmuch as Sally still letalned Sam on a basis ao much like his own ns to muke the sit uation extremely embarrassing to oven Old Baumgartnor. who had let It be I known that he was the active coudju- ' tor of his Bon. To vanquish Seffy was t to vanquish him , and he. If not Seffy hlnibolf , screwed Seffy's courage to the ! I sticking point. After this , Seffy weak ened no more , but proclaimed his pur pose. It was generally conceded that the one \\lio failed now would have to loa\o town. I So hero was retiring Httlu Soffy 1 forced by circi'"ances Into a public rivalry which iio detested , and , U may ns well bo confessed feared. It miiHt , also , bo explained that Sally's course In maintaining these two strings to her bow until the breaking moment was not only universally commended , but was the unswerving custom of the vlclmigo for girls so fortunate ns to have two strings. It was hold likely to force ono or the other to the point and this was the purpose of rustic coquetry ! And Sally's coquetry was not only acknowledged ; It was tolerated - orated , and , 1 fear , encouraged. And , alas , It had been ns ttwcot to her as vinous dissipation to men. But now it had made not only her own , but Soffy's position tremendously moro difficult. IX. It Was Beffy Who Was "Sacked. " So they throe went to church on a certain Sunday. Sally sat on the "women's sldo" and Seffy and Sam on the "men's sldo" In full view of the "audience" which perceived and un derstood and was ready at the proper time to applaud , from the preacher to the sexton to raise or lower Its thumbs upon the combatants. When the benediction had been said Soffy hastened out and found himself a place close to the door , according to his father's word In ono of the lines of young men which stretched on either sldo of the path from the church door to the road beyond , at least a quarter of n. mile. But he did not see Sam. Some ono pushed In front of him. And , Instead of com bating for his position , ho yielded It and found one further down , still seek ing the location of his rival. Ho was crwdud from this ono , too , and ho lot it go anil sought another one because ho had not seen Sum. And it was nec essary to his fathor's scheme , he re membered , that Sam and ho should bo about opposite. Of courso. all this was error. Ills place was right by the church door. That was where Sally had a right to expect to find him. It had become a public matter , too. The public had Its rights. It expected him there , even If he had to shed the blood of noses to stay there. This had often happened. But ho was bewildered lu the contradictory courses advised by his father , and , finally , seeking that which seemed host , found that which was worst. Dull Seffy ! Ho at last discovered Sam and found a lodgment for himself opposite and away down near the gate , whore only the married men were such as still watted for their wives who ami ably smoked until they came along , No unmarried maiden ever expects to bo matched there. And , had Scffy been as wise as ho was not , he would not have halted there. But he was deluded by Sam. There he was In the opposite line , the wrong ono , indif ferently chatting , and even smoking , with Hilary Graff a married man. Seffy was now so sure of his conquest , that Sam's Indifference vexed him. Ev idently he did not mean to contend with him for Sally's arm , and It was to bo u cheap and bloodless victory. For ' Seffy was one of those who'grow bravo as opposition diminishes. And now they were slowly coming down the maidens running the gantlet - lot of love. One two three four live a dozen happy matlngs were made. Seffy was counting. One poor chap was "sacked. " He crushed his hat over his eyes and charged back through the lines and across the fields no matter where. And then came Sally ! In a trim little hat with a Hut- terliig ribbon that looked for all the world like the white signal , bearing straight down upon him ! But there was something in her eyes expectant militant that made them starry. On she came with her bend in the air looking neither to the right nor to the left , as If she expected to walk homo alone , nearly three miles ! "Oh , no ! " thought Seffy and Sam. But a bit of terror smote her face palo when she had passed the door alone and showed moie and more us she went on. Some ono hiushed then there was an unmistakable titter along the line. Still Sally passed on , Keep ing her temper as never before. Was not the old man right about the effect of laughter ? But now the temper loosed Itself slowly her face was scarlet. She had nearly reached the married men. Someone ono whispered : "Gosh ! He's glttlng oven by sacking her ! " This was repeated. There was moro laughter and more tittering. The crowd deserted the lines nearest the church and followed Sally down on either side In hugo tumultuous pha lanxes to see what would happen If It were possible that she would have to go homo alone. Several young men who had never dared to approach her began to think of It. They knew that rather than not be taken at all she woul.l take any one of them ! There was moro tumult now than laughter. And Sally's face grew so white that her eyes blazed like stars In the midst of It. Softy quailed. Ho recognized the temper only ho had never seen It as tenlblo as this. Ho had forgotten Sam. It was only Sally ho saw , as ono sees with fenr-Btallfd nerves the locomotive us It leaps upon him. And the onlookers , crowding at the sldoa , thought It a great and terrible hand to hand battle to wait that way till the hint moment and then to spring llko tigers or n piece of tremendous foolishness. "Both of you must be absolute sure , " said Hilary Gioff to Sam , "or absolute foolB ! Ain't you got no pity on the ! girl ? " "Shut up ! " answered Sam , "and I watch. I'm calculating on him t leaving town to-morrow. That Is my gamo. And I'm playing for the pot. " You goo that Sam had not forgotten Seffv for a morr , even If Seffy had I forgotten him. . . stepped noiselessly three paces toward Sally , crossed In front of Softy and took her arm. There was n laugh almost ribald. Soffy could not BOO clearly ho could , least of all , think clearly ho did not know what had happened. Ho saw only the llttlo white signal before htm and blindly put out his arm , It did not reach Sally at all , but Sam who turned and said with an Imitation of girlish politeness : "Thank you , Mr. Bnumgartner , I'm suited. " And , Sally , her face flaming with vengeance , took the trouble to turn back and cry not into his ear , but Into hla very heart : "Thank you , I'm suited. " There are some people to whom no punishment seems auOlclont , while any remains to bo administered. Ono of the onlooker * wag of such a tort. IIo orled out aa poor Softy slunk away : "Giro her back her dollar1' ! And another : "Or ninoty-nino cents , anyhow ! " Soffy quailed and draw back from the line It was the Instant that makes or mars and he had lost. Ho might still hnvo knocked Sam down and won this would hnvo boon per fectly proper but he followed the man who had but n moment before crushed through the line , and wild jeers followed him. X. The Huge Flat of the Farmer. From that day Soffy avoided all pub lic places and all men. Ho was no body nothing. Ho fell rapidly Into that kind of disrepute which Is com mon to persons with falling reputa tions. It was to his dlucrodlt that ho did not leave town , but this his father prevented. Again ho took to the cot- Lou woods and the Poison spring ! ) , with , perhaps , the dim hope that Sally might again ilud hint there , and'that the peeping moon might again inter fere on his behalf. But the moon wont through nil her phases and then slowly turned her back on him and Sally never came. In their casual meetings she was ice. Once they passed on the road to the store. She was In precisely the dear garments ho remembered so well of that first day and as gay as then. Ho trembled , and then looked up llko a mortally wounded animal. She was looking calmly over his head. To the rest of the world she was gayer than over , though that Sunday night laugh still echoed In her head kept her maddened. After all , It wasn't worth while to care for oven Soffy with such a llttlo spirit. Why didn't ho fight kill Sam or somebody ? And the cun ning Sam sot the story moro widely going that for revenge Soffy had de serted her nt the church door and that ho had llrst laughed Soffy. This was too piquant to bo passed over , and It was hoard far and wide. To Softy's father , who , oven In this dire strait , strove for happiness for thorn both and , of course , the pasture- Held oho said with moro abandoned disrespect than she had ever ad dressed to any ono : "You ought to bo glad that I do not take revenge on him ! If he wasn't HO little I would. But he's not worth bothering about. Sacked mo , did ho ? I'll show him ! " "Why , Sally ! What would you do ? " "Put him ever my knee and spank him and then pen him In the collar ! " "Sally , don't talk like that , " pleaded the old man. "it Hp'Iles your voice. " And Sally gave him then and there a rude specimen of how her volco was being spoiled which I may not re produce. But It was expressed In anathema. Indeed , others had noticed that her volco , somehow , had lost Its soft richness. She was particularly kind to the young storekeeper now , and he was particularly reckless and drunken. And rumor presently had It that nhe was known to bo drunk with him sometimes ! "Sally " said Softy timorously , one day , ( ho had waited to tell her this ) "you don't think you don't believe that I said " "I know , " said Sally In volco that froze him , "that you arc a fool and I am not fond of fools. Go away ! Be glad I don't lick you ! " And then rumor hud It that she and Sam woie to be married "for spite. " But , curiously enough , the person moat affected by all this was not Sal ly , nor Soffy , nor Sam. It waa Seffy's father , whoso sufferings were naarlng agony. Nothing could bo done with Seffy. And course of the love between them , which hud * novcr been ruffled slnco Seffy was born , was often ruffled now. The old man , as their relations grow strained , became more and more exasperated at Seffy's lack of inltta live. "Gosh-a'mlghty ! You goln' to let that molasses-tapper sot right down on you and nefer git off ? Can't you see that she wants you ? It don't matter what she says ! Don't you know It's a dare ? Air you going to take a dare ? Why , you usen't to when you was a baby ! When you year that durned new laugh of Sally's can't you see that somcBlng's wrong ? She's drinking ! That's what ! You think she'd laugh BO and drink if bho WUSB happy ? You was a fool yus , a durn fool. It's your fault. Go right up to her llko u man and say so. " I did , " said Soffy. "Hah , you did ? An' what she says ? ' "She said she knowod it ! " "Well begoshena ! Sho's a worse fool. Gather her in and muke a fee off of her and git ofen ! Turning her back on an ol' man that harms no one ! aud her giiardeon ylt ! " ! Alas , this was another thing ho hat done to secure the pastuio-lleld I made hlmsolf her logul guardian ! "I'll glfo it up the guurdoen. Yas air. She ken take koer herself. Fee ot course. Boso fools ! You wal tell she marries that duru molasses- tapper If you want to BOO fun ! " There wan such real agony In the * old man's volco that Soffy suffered , too. "Pappy , I'm sorry I nln't no good , I oxpoct. I guess I'll go away before the wedding. " "Wedding wedding ! You goln' to lot that wedding go on ? And him git the pasture-Meld ? Put him between us and the railroad ! " "How can I stop It , pappy ? " "By marrying her yourself ! " "I got enough , pappy , " said Soffy hopelessly. "They'd lynch mo If I tried It again. I guess I'd batter gp away. " Quick anger flamed In his fathor's face at this Invertebrate submission. And hta volco , when ho spoke , was harsher than Softy had ever hoard It. "dot enough got enough that's all you know ! And go awayl That's all you ken say , yov hull-headed Idjlotl Go and apologize and git her back. Don't run. Then marry her next day. That'll settle the molassea-tapper , I expect , and show that you got an Inch or two of backbone ! Choke her chloroform her and carry her oft ! " Soffy laughed at the absurdity of the thing. But It was unmlrthful. "Gosh-n'mlghty ! On n time llko this you ken laugh ! You right , you ain't 10 good no , begoshens ! You air an djlot and fool ! You no man ! No , nor nofer will bo ! I'm aorry I'm you' Inddy. I am , bogoshons ! " Then , ns his wrath mounted , ho raised his hugo list and threatened Softy. "Git away from mo , or I'll break your head ! I can't stand you no nero ! You not worth a dam' not a dam' to nobody , You look llko you' inimmy's rolutlfes and they WUB all no good git away , I toll you ! " Ho roared ominously ; for Softy , unazed at this from his gcntlo old 'ather , was looking straight up at him out of a child's round eyes , his HA * , " iiirted , his throat exposed. Slowly , as ils parent heaped contumely upon him , his sensitive -young face whiten ed , and the light left It. Only , when ils father mentioned his mother's name , he said with Infinite softness : "Why , pappy ! " But ho stood without fear under the great list as ho had often dono. "You hoar ! I told you to git away or I'll smash your face In ! I don't want you no moro. Go to your mam my's relatlfes out west" ho laughed liorridly "and see what they'll do for you ! Yon'll live on broad and water they ain't got nosslng olsol You'll work all day aud all night and you'll liaf no fun they don't know no better go ! " "Yes , " said Seffy , turning dumbly away. There was no doubt that ho meant to go now. His dumb acquiescence In , his sentence raised his father's wrath to fury. "Yes go , and bo mighty quick about It. I'm chust Itching to smash you. I'll ncfer send for you If you rot In the poorhouse. I'll nefer mention you1 name as long as I llf no ! I dis own you ! Never lot mo see you1 dam * face again go ! " It was nil so utterly unbelievable that Suffy turned back. ThU raving madman his Jolly old father , who had reverenced the memory of his mother and hail taught him to do so to men * tlon her every time ho prayed ? Tha old man had turned , but Scffy came closu and touched htm gently. The caress only maddened him. Seffy cowed at the passion on the face of his father. Ho raised his fist. "Git out dam * you ! " ho shouted. "If you don't " Hut the boy could not. now. now.The The huge list trembled on high a moment , somn Instinct of saulty strug- gllng to rontrol It then It fell on Softy's upturned face. He dropped among the cloda his pale hair mingling with the dust his hands Inertly outlying terror _ still quivering In his lips and nostrils , lilnocl slowly oozed from his mouth and nose , and a livid red mark begun to grow upon the depression In his forhend which the blow had made. Ono moment two the old man looked down at this. Then ho under stood that ho had done It , and with a navago animal-cry he swept the boy Into his arms. Seffy doubled Inertly upon him , as the dead do. His father raced fionzlodly homo with him , leap ing fences like n hound. He put him upon the pretty white bed the boy had been wont to mnko with such cara for himself. It was dainty and smooth now. The blood dripped from Softy's face and from his own board and stained the white coverings. The sight was full of horror ! He staggered drunkenly away. Ho looked hastily for his gun moaning , perhaps , to kill himself. Hut then It seemed to him that Seffy sighed. IIo fell on hla knees and agonized for the life he thought ho had taken. Then ho felt a pulscbeat. With n hearse cry ha rushed out into the road , calling for