"A BROWN MOUSE" STNOPSIS? Jennie Woodruff refuses to marry Jim Irwin, young farm hand, because of his / financial condition and poor pros pects. He Is InteHectually above Ills station, and has advanced ideas concerning the possibilities of school teaching and farming, for wlilih he Is ^ridiculed by many. In short, Jim Is an off ox. He Hocks by himself and reads books i\nd has rt philosophy of his own. Hut there are latent powers in him unsuspected even by himself and Opportunity comes knocking at his door. Jim is nominated *for school teacher, .is a Joke. CHAPTER II ? Continued. ? 3 ? ?i The president followed usage when tie; said: "If there's no objection, it will l?e so ordered. Prepare the bal lots for a vote on the election of teueh er, Mr. Secretary." There was no surprise In view of the( nomination of Jim Irwin by the blarneying Homier when the Secretary smoothed out the first ballot, and read: "James K. Irwin, one." liut when the next slip came forth, "James E. Irwin, two," the board of directors of t tie Woodruff Independent district were stunned at the slowly dawning knowledge that they had made an election! I'.et'ore they had rallied, the .secretary drew from the box the third and last ballot, and read, "James E. ' Irwin, three." President lironson choked as he an nounced the result ? choked and stam mered, and made very hard weather of it, but he went through with the motion, as we all run in our grooves. "Tlie ballot having shown the unani mous election of James E. Irwin, I de clare him elected." He dropped into his chair, while the secretary, a very methodical man, drew from his portfolio a contract duly drawn up save the name and sig nature. This he calmly filled out, and passed over to the president, pointing to the dotted line. Mr. Bronson would have signed his own death-warrant at that moment, not to mention a per fectly legal document, and signed with Peterson and Bonner looking on stonily. The secretary signed and shoved the contract over to Jim Ir win. "Sign there," he said. Jim looked it over, saw the other signatures, and felt an Impulse to dodge the whole thing. Then he thought of Jennie Woodruff's "Humph!" ? and he signed! "Move we adjourn," said Peterson. "No 'bjectlon 'tis so ordered !" said Mr. Bronson. The secretary and Jim went out, while the directors waited. "What the Billy ? " began Bonner, ?nd finished lamely! "What for did you vote for the dub, Ez?" "I voted for him," replied Bronson, "because he fought for my boy this afternoon. I didn't want it stuck Into him too hard. I wanted him to have one vote." "An' I wanted him to have wan vote, tpo," said Bonner. "I thought mesilf the only dang fool on the board ? au' he made a spache that alrned wan vote ? but f'r the love of hlvin, that dub f'r a teacher! What come over you, Haakon? you voted fr him, too!" "Ay vanted him to have one wote, too," said Peterson. And In this wise, Jim became the teacher in the Woodruff district? all on account of Jennie Woodruff's "Humph!" * CHAPTER III What It a Brown Mouse? Immediately upon the accidental ?lection of Jim Irwin to the position of teacher of the WoodrufT school, he developed habits somewhat like a ghost's or a bandit's. That is, he walked of nights and on rainy days. On fine days, he worked In Colonel Woodruff's fields as of yore. Jim's salary was to be just $3G0 for nine months' work in the Woodruff school, and he was to find himself ? and his mother. Therefore, he ^ad to indulge In his loose habits of night walking and roaming about after hours only, or on holidays and in foul weather. The Simms family, being from the "mountings" of Tennessee, were rather startled one night, when Jim Irwin, homely, stooped and errandless, si lently appeared In their family circle about the front door. They had lived where it was the custom to give a whoop from the big road befoje one passed through the palin's and up to the house. Otherwise, how was one to know whether the visitor was friend or foe? From force of habit, Old Man Simms started for his gun-rack at Jim's ap pearance, but the Lincolnian smile and the low slow speech, so much like his own in some respects, ended that. "Stranger," said Mr. Simms, after greetings had been exchanged, "you're right welcome, but In my kentry you'd find It dangersome to walk In thlsa way." "How so?" queried Jim Irwin. "You'd more'n likely git shot up some," replied Mr. Simms, "onless you whooped from the big road." "I didn't know that," replied Jim. "I'm Ignorant of the customs of other countries. Would you rather Id whoop from the big road? nobody else will." "I reckon," replied Mr. Simms, "that we-all win have to accommodate ouree'ves to the ways hyeh." i Evidently Jim was the Simms' first / " By HERBERT QUICK (Copyright by The Bobba-Merrill Company).' caller since they had settled on the little brushy tract whose hills and trees reminded them of their moun tains. Low hills, to be sure, with only a footing of rocks where the creek had cut through, and not many trees, but down in the creek bed, with the oaks, elms and box-elders arching overhead, the Slmmses could imagine i themselves beside some run failing into the French Broad, or the HnJston. The creek bed was a wl.li i-nwiug room In which to retire 1. .>.u the eternal black soil and level cmnlieh!.; of Iowa. ' The soil was so poor, in cnmparl | son with those black uplands, that the owner of the old wood-lot could find no renter but it was better t' :tn the soil In the mountains, and su d the lonesome Slmmses much more than a better farm would have done. They were not of the Iowa people anyhow, not understood, not their equals? they were "pore," lind expected to stay "pore" ? while the Iowa people all seemed to be either well-to-do, or ex-, pecting to become so. Jim Irwin asked Old Man Shunts about the fishing In the creek, and whether there was any duck shooting spring and fall, i f'We git right i^mart of these little panlish," said Mr, Simms, "an' Callsta done shot two buttorball ducks about 'tater-plantin' time." Callsta blushed? but this stranger, so much like themselves, could not see the rosy suffusion. The allusion gave him a chance to look about him at the family. There was a boy of sixteen, a girl ? the duck-shooting Calista ? younger than Itaymond?a girl of eleven, named Virginia, but called Jinnie ? and a smaller lad who re joiced in the name of Mcfleeliee, but was mercifully called Buddy. Cullsta squirmed for something to say. "Raymond runs a line o' traps when the fur's prime," she volun teered. Then came a long talk on traps and trapping, shooting, hunting and the joys of the mountings ? during which Jim noted the Ignorance and poverty of the Slmmses. The clothing of the girls was not decent according to local standards; for while Callsta wore a skirt hurriedly slipped on, Jim was quite sure ? and not without evidence to support his views? that she had. been wearing when he arrived the same regimentals now displayed by Jinnie ? a pair of ragged blue overalls. Evidently the Slmmses were wearing Old Man Simms Started for His Gun. what they had and not what they de sired. The father was faded, patched, gray and earthy, and the boys looked better than the rest solely because we expect boys to be torn and patched. Mrs. Slranis was Invisible except as a gray blur beyond the rain-barrel, In the midst of which her pipe glowed with a regular ebb and flow of embers. On the next rainy day Jim called again and secured the services of Ray mond to help him select seed corn. He was going to teach the school next winter, and he wanted to have a seed corn frolic the first day, Instead of waiting until the last ? and you had to get seed corn while It was on the stalk, If you got the best. No Si turns could refuse a favor to the fellow who was so much like them selves, and who was so greatly Inter ested In trapping, hunting and the Tennessee mountains ? so Raymond went with Jim, and with Newt Bron son and five more they selected Colo nel Woodruff's seed corn for the next year, under the , colonel's personal superintendence. ) In the evening they looked the grain over on the Woodruff lawn, and the colonel talked about corn and corn se lection. They had supper at half past six, and Jennie waited on them? hav ing assisted her mother in the cook ing. It was quite a festival. Jim Irwin was the least conspicuous person in the gathering, but the colo ^nel, who was a seasoned politician, observed that the farm-hand had be come a fisher of men, and was angling for the souls of these boys, and their interest in the school. Jim was care ful not to flush the covey, but every boy received from the next winter's teacher some confidential hint as to plans, and some suggestion that Jim was relying on the aid and comfort of that particular boy. Newt Bronson, especially, was leaned on as a strong staff and a very present help In time of trouble. As for Raymond Simms, it was clearly best to leave him alone. All this talk of corn selection and related things was new to him, and he drank it In thirstily. He liacl an Inestimable ad vantage over Newt in that he was starved, while Newt was surfeited with "advantages" for which he had no use. ' , ( "Jenule," said Colonel Woodruff, after the party had broken up, "I'm losing the best hand I ever had, and I've been sorry." j "I'm glad he's leaving you," said Jennie. "He ougl;t to do something ex cept work in the Held for wages." "I've had no idea he could make good as a teacher ? and what Is there In It If he does?" . j "What has he lost if he doesn't?" ? ?? -Joined Jennie. "And why can't he iuake good?" "The school board's against him, for j one thing," replied the colonel. "They'll Are him If they get a chance. They're the laughing-stock of the country for j hiring him by mistake, and they're lr- | ritated. But after seeing him perform j tonight, I wonder If he can't make good." "If he could feel like anything but an underling, he'd succeed," said Jen nie. "That's his heredity," stated the i colonel, whose live stock operations ! were based on heredity. "Jim's a 1 scrub, I suppose; but he acts as if he , might turn out to he a Brown Mouse." j "What do you mean, pa," scoffed ' Jennie ? "a Brown Mouse 1" "A fellow In Edinburgh," said the j color/el, "crossed the Japanese waltz ing mouse with the common white j mouse. Jim's peddling father was a waltzing mouse, /no good except to Jump from ohe spot to another for no good reason. Jim'$ mother Is an al bino of a woman, with all the color washed but in one way o?* another. Jim ought to be a mongrel, and I've t always considered him one. But the Edinburgh fellow every once in a while got out of his variously-colored, waltzing and albino hybrids, a brown mouse. It wasn't a common house mouse, either, but a wild mouse unlike any he had ever seen. It ran away, and bit and gnawed and raised hob. It was what we breeders call a Mende ilan segregation of genetic factors that had been in the waltzers and albinos all the time ? their original wild an cestor of the woods and fields. If Jim turns out to be a brown mouse, he may be a bigger man than any of us. Anyhow, I'm for him." "He'll have to be a big man to make anything out of the Job of a country school tencher," said Jennie. "Any Job's as big as the man who holds it down," said her father. Next day Jim received a letter from Jennie. j "Dear Jim," it ran. '"Father says you are sure to have a hard time ? the 1 school board's against you, and all that. But he added 'I'm for Jim, auy how !' I thought you'd like to know this. Also he said, 'Any job's as big as the man who holds It down.' And I believe this also, and I'm for you, too! You are doing wonders even be fore the school starts In getting the pupils interested In a lot of things, which, while they don't belong to school work, will make them friends of yours. I don't see how this will help you much, but It's a fine thing, and shows your interest in them. Don't be too original. The wheel runs easiest in the beaten track. Yours, i Jennie." Jennie's caution made no impression ' on Jim ? but he put the letter away, j and every evening took It out and read , the words, "I'm for you, too!" The i colonel's dictum, "Any job's as big as i the man who holds it down," was an Emersonian truism to Jim. It reduced all jobs to an equality, and it meant equality In Intellectual and spiritual development. It didn't mean, for In- j stance, that any Job was as good as j another In making It possible for a j man to marry? and Jennie Woodruff's j "Humph !" returned* to kill and drag off her "I'm for you, too!" CHAPTER IV The First Day of School. Jim Irwin was full of his Emerson's t| "Representative Men," and his Car- ; lyle's "French Revolution," and the other old-fashioned, excellent, good literature which did not cost over 25 cents a volume; and he had pored long and with many thrills over the pages of Matthews' "Getting On In the World." His view of efficiency was that It Is the capacity to see oppor tunity where others overlook It, and make the, most of it. , All through his life he had had his own plans for becoming great. And all the time he was bare-footed, 111- , clad and dreamed his dreams to the | accompaniment of the growl of the plow cutting the roots under the brown furrow-slice, or the woosldng of the milk In the pail. At twenty-eight, he considered these dreams over. As for this new employment, he saw no great opportunity in It. He went Into the small, mean, ill-paid task as a part of the day's work, with no knowledge of the stirring of the nation for a different sort of rural school, and no suspicion that there lay In It | any highway to success in life. He rather wondered why he had allowed ' Jennie's sneer to sting him Into the course of action which put him In this ' new relation to his neighbors. "Half the kids call him Jim," said Bonner. (TO BE CONTINUED.) No woman is satisfied unless sLa has something to worry about. 1 Grand Army Veterans Marching Through Milwaukee LUCKY YOUNG SINGER Llna Paglinghi, the protege of Tet razzlnl, who was picked out of a legion of girls whom she heard all over the world. Miss Paglinghi is only sixteen years old and is a resident of San Francisco. Mite. Tetrazzini will per sonally educate her in her studio in Rome. Miss Paglinghi's soprano voice is rich and warm and has thrilled large audiences in San Francisco as well as elsewhere. ' The famous diva has given the youthful singer her Dame to become hyphenated with that of her own and the girl will in the future be called Llna Paglinghi-Tet razzini. HEADS RELIEF IN JAPAN , Brig. Gen. Frank It. McCoy, mem ber of General Wood's staff, who has been appointed director general of American relief in Japan. WON'T WAIT FOR MARY Alllster McConnlck, prominent young Chicagoan, will not be found waiting at the altar again for Mary Landon Baker, society belle of Chi cago, for his engagement to an Eng lish girl, Miss Joan Stevens of Lon don. has been announced. Miss Baker repeatedly postponed her ma'rlage to McCormick. Fortissimo. "Ph wat's that noise, Mrs. Mulcahy?" "It's me daughter Maggie runnin' up and down th* scales." "Begorra, she must weigh a ton." Spelled Differently. Wife ? This pudding Is a sample of the new cook's work. What do you think of it? Husband? I call It mediocre. Wife ? No, dear; it's tapioca.? Lon don Tit-Bits. { ' '. ) > City Crowns 87- Year-Old Qu een Here is Mrs. O. A. Oelwein, eighty-seven years old, after whom the to.\u of Oelwein, Iowa, was named, and who lives on the property on which standi Oelwein's first log house. Oelwein held an elaborate historic pageant Sept. 1^ when the people of that community celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the city. During the celebration Mrs. Oelwein was crowned queen. Columbus Beauty Again Winner "Miss America ol 1922" (Katherina Campbell of Columbus, 0.) was acain selected as "Miss America" in the Atlantic City contest. She is here seen on her throne beside Father Neptune. One Issue Dodged by Mr. Bryan This photograph shows William Jennings Bryan at the -annual jv in Los Angeles. Mr. Ervan refused to pick the winner and admitted to kiss all of the 150 contestants who so sweetly smiled at him as t ^ in review. However, he did consent to pose for a picture with tvu head o?> the parade. ,, *