Newspapers / The Duplin times. / July 18, 1935, edition 1 / Page 9
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4lU (Willie ::" SYNOPSIS . Jim Baladln Hatena to th hlitory t netg-hborln- Hostile Valley, with of th myaterlouay entlcins .iy," wit or Will Jeerrin. Inter . nl, h driv t th Valley for v fishln-, . though admitting to 1 .self hi chief deair 1 to M the trHtr alamoroue Huldr. .."Old in-'" Pierce and her nlot j r-ol granddaughter Jenny live in th Valley. Sine little mora than a rt,j)d Jenny he at 11 ret admired r-.-a than deeply loved young W1H "ierrin. neighboring farmer, older than aha, and who regard bar atll) a merely child. Will tkee em ployment In nearby Augnata. , Jenny l diaeonaolat. Bart Carey, eome thing ol a ne'er-do-well, t attraotad by Jenny, but the Ctrl repulaes him. Learning that Will la eomlng home, Jenny, exulting:, aeta hia long-empty ' : hone "to right,", and baa dinner ready for him. He oomee bringing hla wife, Huldy. Th girl' , world collapse. . Huldy bsoome th aub . Ject or unfavorable goeslp Irt the , vaney. Sintering ma noma, uniooaeu for. Will And aeemlngly damning evidenoe of bM wlfe'e unfaithfulness. Humphreya breaks from the home. . Will overtake him. and ohokea blm to death, though Humphreys ehat ters hla lee, with a bulleti At Harm v CHAPTER IV Continued " ' With the first stroke of knife, phe - was stunned as though by head blow; had thereafter no sense or strict consciousness of what went forward her at all. This still form on the table ceased to be the man she loved: she helped like an au tomaton, her cheek white a stone, r her hands precise and strong, while .flesh and blood and bone of good Will Ferrln were reduced to car rion. The overpowering physical ex perience would leave its traces on her, thereafter in lasting ways; yet she was for the moment spared emotion., iM'ik-M rV's'i wnen at last sne- was no ranger needed,: she went weakly Into the kitchen to wash her hands and clean her. garments; she returned Id: Tier own room to change Into her other gear. Time had. flown; dusk was purple In the Valley. When she re turned to the dining room.-Will had somehow been moved so that he. lay, breathing Ur long gasping inhala 1 tlons, on the couch ; . and Jenny found the doctor gone, and only 'Mann Fierce and Luke Hills re gaining here. The old woman looked at Jenny In the lamp's pale light, and saw the girl's exhaustion: and she came to say to her softly: "Jenny, there's nought to do here for a while. It will be, long enough ' till he knows us, or knows anything. - Ton get out of doors, get some air, - breathe life back Into' you, : child. You're pale a a gone thing your self, this minute. I'll tend all here." ' And Jenny, moving with a curious passivity, obeyed the old woman as , she was used to obey, and went out : Into the thickening darkness. ,, This was a still, cold night, with threat of another frost before dawn. The stars prickling overhead, steop ing low, peered brightly down like 1 the eyes of curious children." The girl heard the rumble of a distant automobile, somewhere toward the steam mill, and saw a sweeping ray of light above the trees as though a car were turning there, It head lights like a searchlight's beam. .... ' Than wvtili h f atrlni flaffi ITiim. "VUIV nans, a uea, uvvm' uuih phreys" body away; - she thought; and she thought WllT had killed him, -and thought, of the lav nd : what the law would have to say to this ; and she thought .loyally the none could blame Will Blame Hul dy, It might be; but not Witt ( . And slow anger began to wake to her, to supplant the terrible strlck en grief because a part of Will was gone, and the sweet flesh she loved was . now ? reduced to . a noisome thing that must be disposed of, se cretly and swiftly. Anger woke in her; at Seth Humphreys for his ac tive part, and at Huldy for her se cret, passive role.' iv.fe .;:!.' !. ,oth was dead, beyond reach of J iiny's wrath; but Huldy lived I And Jenny found herself going at 1'irg strides, like a swift avenger, t ward the brook, along the wood !i, toward ' Will's farmwhere i.uldy now would beV'i J nny went In wrath; but her ), abiding' anger, was .bound to ,.,-s not easily to be broken,. for My was Will's wife, and the girl 1 wit enough, deep sense enough, 4 wisdom enough to under 1 that this, was no seemly hour a woman's brawl. - To shame 7 would be to shame Will; and i sudden clear perception Jenny that this she' would .not do. ? the time she had crossed the : and climbed the steep trail tie up through the orchard : i lime, she was steady again, 1 bound first and above all i protect Will from ugly She came through the bam Into the farmyard; and through the on shaded window of the kitchen she saw Huldy within. And sight of Huldy checked the girl; for Will's wife was dressed in an unaccus tomed fashion, In a skirt and coat of some dark stuff, ; Also Jenny saw that Bart Carey gtoodteeide her, bending down to her speaking In tently;, and she saw Huldy's stow, mocking smile as she looked at the man, her head tilted backward, the smooth line of her throat sweeping deep into her bosom., - : This much. Jenny saw, not par ticularly intent on Bart, but startled by the fashion of Huldy's dress; and she went quickly to knock upon the kitchen door. .-'' . Huldy called: "Come mi" 80 Jenny entered. - The two faced her from beyond the table; the lamplight was strong upon them. Huldy sat with her head a little on one side, her dark eyes , shadowed, her lips curled In that deep smile; Bart, beside her, stood half-erect, one hand Still upon the arm of her chair, as though he had been bending over her in some stern or ardent urgency. 1 And Jenny said slowly t "Mla' Ferrin, I guess yon dont know it, or you'd been there; but Will's hurt over to Granny's house. The doctor cut his leg off. Xou'll have to come on overt" . ' v Bart straightened up, his face hot "That's what Fve been telling her," he said, yet not convincingly; and Huldy's eyes turned toward him, with -a sardonic upward twist of her. brow. . j ' - , i, "Hell be coming to, soon," Jenny urged. "When the chloroform wears. off,:-And beii want you there. ' Bart Insisted : "Tea, Huldy 1 HeU want you 1 1 You'd ought to go -along with Jenny I ; f '1 Huldy ; sat at . ease, one knee crossed over the other, , one foot moving slightly In.ra j tlgbt little rbythm.V Jenny saw that the other woman's hat lay on the table by the lamp, ;.; f -.iv. i "loo were getting ready to come?" she hazarded. "I guess Bart told yon ;,, about It Vg I s thought you mightn't know." Huldy did not speak at all ; and Jenny asked Bart "How did you knowl" . i ; ,xney telephoned . from . my house," he reminded her. 1 was fishing, down brook,-) with ' a man thafa been staying' at i my place, Amy told me, when I ' got home, a while ago. , I come, right op "Quick as a tomcat," said.' Huldy, with a mocking glance at him; and he said hotly, , virtuously : ;i? i ; ; i. "It looked to me you'd heed some one. i You'd ; have 2 the chores to do tV1':i;'j!:aC'iSK4J'.ftvi,;!vi. - Jenny remembered something for gotten. She cried; "Oh, Bart I Will says his team's up on the ridge road. He lost a nut off the wagon. You'd. better go fetch them back: to the barn.?.tr.j-.v Bart hesitated; but Huldy said, watching him cruelly: "Go along, Bart You can make up to a horse, mayber;;';:; :: Jenny perceived, . without- under standing, a baffled anger in Bart ; she thought he , was" provoked by Huldy's , heartlessness, and , . she touched his arm. "Go on, Bart," she urged. "Go fetch the team back and unhitch them and give them some feed. . . Til take Huldy oyer home, ' :-y:!$fy k -'S-j r." ii There was sweat on Bart's brow ; he looked from Jenny to Huldy and his dark eyes fixed on .Will's wife. "Ton -stay here till I come back," he muttered. "I, want to talk to you." "rve heard ail you've got to say," Huldr told him. "Get away, from me, and stay away 1" There was no heat In her. tones; no trace of anger; rather a slow, maddening scorn. ' ' Bart snatched at his hat Til come : back,"' he - Insisted, almost threateningly, and then was ' gone. So these two women were left alone, and Huldy looked at the girl with narrowed eyes,', and. she said tonelessly : sK;''y! v-S Livi "I- guess you feel bad about i "Yes, "Jenny assented. ,Yes, i dor yh',?'i iA-vh&r :. Huldy shifted her position, spoke In casual inquiry. "Is he hurt real badr : -i;: 't ' i t -;0' ): Jenny watched her, remembering that this woman : was the source from which catastrophe had sprung; and Huldy waved' a. careless hand. "Will, he's always one to look for trouble,' she reflected. "He come tramping into the house, and flew off the handle at nothing, and went out again a-runnlng. That's all I know." Her lips twitched with amusement "Ion can go on and tell me," she urged. , ' Jenny explained: "Will and Seth, Li, down't the- mill. Seth had i t ,11. , . v-; -That wa Barfe gun," Huldy aurrupted. 'V "Seth " borrowed . It, cMimea ne wanted to shoot a wua bull." , She laughed softly. "As if Will was wild, or a bull either, mat ter of that 1 But Seth always would lie." .. Ms- . V.-sv:. ir-v.-i-, :t' ' :' "Seth shot Will," Jenny persisted, her tones shaken. The bullet hit Will's leg and broke the bones all to pieces. -It went smashing down into his foot; and they fetched him to the house, and the doctor cut US leg Off." ' :'"'V'v :''&"! "Seth ought to been ashamed," said Huldy chldtngly.Td give blm a piece of my mind, shooting my WIU that wav. If Will hadn't , al ready tended to him plenty.1 And she asked with wide Innocent eyes:. "Did yon see them cut his leg off?" . "I helped the doctor," Jenny an- l;VjA::i':.'W;''.&.;.-i 'H Huldy was all surface sympathy. "That was hard on you with -you loving my Will sol" Her last word bit and stun.:--,.f.i. ''Sv-'im: ..tii'; And Jenny breathed deeply, and was strong. "I do love him," she assented-, gravely. ?But yo're not likely to know what that means.' She added Insistently ; "Cant yon come to Urn now?" Huldy smiled and shook her head. l ain't coming," she said calmly. "You can have him., Tell him I said I never could be satisfied with half a manl" . Mr- ftW'v'tik. . The world shattered into frag ments, as a mirror shatters under the Impact of a thrown ball, Jenny rocked to and fro as though she had been struck; and her lips were dry. The ' lamp was ' smoking ; a .thin thread of smoke like a black line rose from the chimney top, to bil low into a faint plume In the rising air current above the flame. ' The girl leaned forward to turn the lamp down- a little. , . : "Wick needs trimming," she mut tered, j , 1 1 "Youll take care of all such things for him,' Huldy predicted, I'm Here, This Is My . . Kitchen." "Yo're such a housekeeper I But- tending a cripple would weary me. I'm going away I" ' '' , . ; . , "You'd not go when he's hurt, and needs you?": Jenny whispered al most pleadingly. .-.r:.:r I'd rather be wanted than needed," Huldy retorted, "But that's a riddle to you." "Yo're ; bound to go?" Jenny asked, still Incredulous. ' "I am going. In a little now." f 1Wttera?'!i,S'iC;r!C: " .,' v.-. i' "An .old friend of mine," said Huldy ' lightly. "He's been fishing down at Bart's. 'i Boon's he gets his clothes ' changed,., he's .coming ' to fetch me." ' Jenny, suddenly, was almost hap py." "It will hurt Will awful at the first" "he decided,:, speaking , her thoughts aloud, i "But hell' come to thank you. With you gone, maybe he can be nappy again I" , t -. - . Huldy's brows knotted, and her lips moved as though to speak; but she smiled then suddenly, and she rose." :. "Well, anyway,- I'm' going. Now get out" ehe said, her tones rasping. "Go back on to that one legged man. Long as Tm here, this Is my kitchen, and m not have you In it Go along with you.", ( A Jenny turned without a word to the door Her very passivity seemed to drive the other woman Into fury. Huldy : came to call some black word at the girl , departing; but Jenny did Hot even turn her head. In the barn, she paused, hearing, be hind her, on the road down from the ridge, the beat of the feet; of running horses. That would be Bart, riding back' to the farm In haste. He must have left the wagon where . It was. . And as she emerged Into the orchard, she saw the headlights of a car laboring-up the hill, and guessed this was the car which would bear Huldy away. .The stars were clear, the .deep wood dark and comforting. ; Jenny came home In peace. . She thought the Valley would be brighter, with Huldy gone; thought- there was a rainbow promise in the starlit sky. She had no least prevision that though Huldy might for a while de part, yet she, would presently re turn. ' , , -f CHAPTER V 1 ' IT WAS In October that Will wa hurt and Seth Humphreys came to his end, and Huldy went away. Will stayed at Harm Pierce's farm till his leg was healed; and Jeruiv was happy In attending him. Shc "Long as I gave him X -saage. and he received it uucu. . -ilnlngly. "Natural for hr to feel so," he decided. "No one-legged man Is good enough for ber." . There was no bitterness in bis tone; but he saw Jenny's loyal an. ger, and he said appeaslngly: . "Huldy's one that takes a lot, of stock In the way folks look, Jenny. She was like a cat always cleaning herself. Took as much pleasure in herself as an old skinflint does In his money. And she lived to have every one around her the ' same. Farm folk like us, we're apt to kind, of forget If I come Into the house with barr on my boots, It always bothered her." .v'-'.y y::.- . And be added: "I can see how she'd take this. Anybody with two legs is kind of bound to feel that a man with only one leg is no good. It's Just like youll shoot a horse that breaks Its leg, or get rid of a crippled cat or ,,dog.T;;-K; '-:',.? I.?.' Jenny, faced by bis stubborn loy alty to this women who, despite the fact that ; she.' had wronged and flouted him, was still his wife, felt a reluctant pride in him. ; If he had cursed , Huldy, he .would not have been-Will Ferrln ; not, the - man she had long loved. 80 she' said no word of blame for Huldy,' and the matter thereafter did not rise between them.! s'u.,.';,,i;::;" ' But Bart Carey was not so tact ful, tUl Will ' silenced him. Jenny, In the kitchen, heard them talking together, heard Will's slow tones at last"::.::V4?''':5 -' "Bart," he said Strictly, "I don't want that kind of talk about Huldy. She was need to gay times In Au gusta, and when I fetched her here, It was bound to be hard on her. I dont blame her none." Bart protested hotly: "You was mad - enough.' yourself, when you went after Sethl" t'V "So I was." Will confessed. "He was a man, and responsible. But I dunno as I can blame Huldy. Any way, not forleaving now I" "She was scared Bart Insisted. "Scared ", fort fear you'd treat her the same as you did him. She knew It was her due. That's why she skinned 0Btf4,'f "She had no cause to be scared of me," said Will gently. "I wouldn't harm her. ' And Bart; you keep your tongue off her, If yo're good friend ta Be,"';;:'::!:,. - And Jenny, listening, loved him more and more,:i In the matter of' Seth's death. Will was held blameless. None had seen the beginning of the encounter between them ; but the mill men had seen and could testify that Seth shot Will, and tried to shoot him again; and Bart could testify that Seth. had' borrowed the gun, as though -the thing were premeditat ed.' So, though 'Will had to answer to the law, he was presently free again; and, when he had learned the use of a peg leg, he went back to the farm on the hill. He dwelt there alone that winter, and Bart dally tramped up the steep road from .his farm to take the heavier ; chorea off the cripple's hands; but by February, Will had become almost as nimble on his peg as he had used to be on his sound foot Only the work indoors he slighted, as a man will;- and Jenny sometimes went to catch up loose ends, 'i Between them during these winter months a bond began to form, and no longer on Jenny's side alone. Will never spoke his mind nor his heart to her, nor she to him ; yet to them both the thing was dear. To him It was a trouble, and deep concern. From Huldy. he had had no word; yet to her he still was bound, and would remain so if she chose. - He told Jenny this one day. They approached the subject guardedly, by long indirection, naming Huldy not at aU; until at last Will said, soberly: "Jen, no use our dodging around the thing. Here's my look at it A man might want to say a woman wa'n't his wife, if she'd acted wrong. But I don't see it so. The way I see It; Tm bound any man's bound long as he's give his word." And he said: "It looks to me, the worse a woman Is, thelbore like she is to come to a time when she needs a husband to stand by her, and look out for her. A man, If his wife ever come to him, no matter what she'd done, and said he'd got to help her, why it looks to me he'd have to. ,vV.:!,r ;U'.--'.;'.:.:'.' Jenny assented without reserva tion;': but when she - told Marm Pierce, days later, this word of Will's, the old woman said irascibly ; "That's Just like a manl : Once you get an idee Into the critter's heads, there's no knocking it out again. A man's worse than a broody hen I Only sure way to break her is to cut her head off. "A, woman like Huldy, all she deserves la a knock on the head. 'Stead of that yon and - him will go on eating your hearts Out and shell gad around with this one and that one. , . n like to lay a hand on her once. Fd trim her comb I" - Yet the girl was 'content and when winter broke and the feeble pulse - of spring began to flutter, Jenny had come to ascertain hap plness. She was bappy In serving Will, going almost dally to clean up the kitchen ' and cook a batch ot doughnuts, or make biscuits, or con coct a pie. To see htm, to be alone with him was for the time bliss enough for her. ' (TO BE CONTINUED) Tla Can" Boat : t Many old-time seamen of the sail boat era scornfully refer to steel plated steamers as "tin 'cans, . 1 r Motto GCJI) HEALTH 1V rR. I.LOYD ARNOLD Pn .-or of bacteriology and Pre vcvuive Medicine, University of Illinois, College of Medlciae. rl ' V.KABIE Because the so-called dog days are In August, many people think - the danger of rabies. Is great est In the sum mer. But this is not so. The dls- , ease - occurs at all .seasons of the y-ear ; In deed, the cold . winter months seem to In crease its viru lence. r , Cases of rabies have decreased most encouragingly since Pasteur, the great French scientist de veloped his vaccination treatment against rabies in lS84--a treatment that since has been used throughout the world, and Is known everywhere as the "Pasteur treatment" But there are still too many cases of rabies., Xa cities the greatest danger is from stray dogs; in the country dis tricts the danger is from the bites of home dogs that may nave been in fected by stray dogs roaming the neighborhood. The Infection in rabies Is carried in the saliva of the animal or pep son who has It This was estab lished as early as 1813. It is a wound Infection. One usually gets It through a bite, but If one really has an open wound and the saliva In fected with rabies touches It one may develop the disease, although not bitten. Bites on the bare skin, therefore, are more dangerous than bites through the clothing for then the cloth may soak up the saliva. Bites on the head and neck are most serious, as the virus travels along the nerves to the brain, and these parts of the body are the shortest distance from the brain. I have read stories of children at tacked by mad dogs where an older person running to the rescue, and unable to get between the dog and the child, have managed to throw a coat or other heavy cloth over the child's bead, so that the dog's teeth have sunk Into the cloth. Such persons have done the wisest thing possible In, the emergency. Babies Is most common In dogs, although all animals are susceptible. Even birds get It Fortunately the Incubation period Is a long one, from two weeks to eight weeks, and sometimes even longer, so there usually Is time for the Pasteur treatment to be effec tive, If the treatment Is not delayed too long. Formerly there were only a few cities in this country where the Pasteur treatment could be given, thus necessitating a long, expensive and anxious trip on the part of an Infected person. Now, however, It Is not necessary to leave home. Any accredited doctor can administer the treatment . When a dog, frothing at the mouth, is on the loose, snapping at other dogs and at children, there Is usually panic In a community. Mothers run out snatching their children in; neighbors telephone frantically to each other; If men are at home, they form an emer gency committee; the police are called. It Is lucky Indeed If some one doesnt' use a gun. Using a gun is decidedly wrong, unless there is no other way of stopping the dog. Every effort should be made to cap ture the animal alive. This Is the proper treatment of the dog, according to a bulletin Is sued by the Illinois department of public health: "The dog should be securely chained or confined In a safe place and provided with his regular food supply during an ob servation period of two weeks. The early symptoms of rabies In a dog are variable. He may.be unusually friendly or may develop a limp In one leg, or his voice may become hoarse and he may appear to have a bone or other foreign object lodged in his throat It Is dan gerous even to attempt the ex amination of such an animal, and he should be observed by a vet erinarian. , If the dog remains well and healthy throughout the two weeks, he may. be, released, and any person whom he may have bit ten need have no fear of rabies re sulting from the bite. If, on the other hand, the dog should mani fest symptoms of rabies during the observation period, he should be killed so that the head may be de tached without mutilation, packed In Ice 10 a double tin-lined contain er and expressed to the laboratory." It cannot be shipped parcel post. States and municipal laboratories are equipped to make this examina tion. - ' A person bitten by a dog should go to a physician Immediately. He will clean and dress the wound prop erly, and if the dog is known to be rabid, he win start the anti-rabie treatment at once. Home remedies should never be relied on, :' ' T , -. ' It Is estimated that there are 40, 000,000 dogs in this country. It We embarked on a vigorous campaign to exterminate the strays and then would vaccinate all pet dogs in In fected districts, we would virtually stamp out rabies. . , v Weetera Newapaper Units. ' Ot High Import Is World Within Invisible Power Functions , 1 .'Through Radiations ' , - of Thought. Every person lives In two worlds at once. One is the physical world surrounding blm or her and of which the body Is one functioning element or combination of elements. The things which can be seen, heard, felt" smelled. and touched make up the realizable world to Individuals. It Is such a gloriously wonderful world, this physical one, that It would seem sufficient Just to be in it and of it and able to be a part of it however small.. But with an overflowing Goodness, each person Is given another world to Inhabit This other world is within, and is sacred to each individual. No one else rules or governs there. It Is a little world, a microcosm, ruled by the scepter of the Individual him self. It Is variously called, .as- .the world of the Mind, the world of the Spirit the Beal Person, the World Within, etc. It la invisible. The Individual cannot see It nor an out sider. Whether this wlU always be so, no one can predict Since many things once Invisible have, been re vealed by delicate Instruments, But there are forces which are known to exist, such as electricity, which In the years of Its having been rec ognized has yet to be seen. So It Is with tbe World Within each Individ ual, call It what you will. Because this world Is not visible does not mean that Its power Is not felt We know from electricity that a force does not have to be seen to be felt nor put to use. And so each person has a power which is not visible ' In Itself, but functions through the radiations of the thoughts as felt by others, and through the actions prompted by the workings of this World Within. The power of this world Is so strong that no one has been able to gauge It The study of it Is one of the fascinating pursuits of scientists and doctors, who are probing continually and endeavoring to turn the Invisible Into the visible, and to find reasons and causes for the results. But It Is a research which fluctuates with the times and with tbe reactions of the mind of the one doing the probing, the research, and the experiments. And all the time and within each individual there exists this second world. Parents watch the signs of Its working by the expressions and actions of their children. They seek to Influence the currents favorably for the greatest good, just as scien tists and Inventors seek to direct electricity Into many channels. In school days trained advisors to stu dents attempt to aid them further, Sometimes the Individuals are helped, sometimes hindered, although the suggestions are made with high purposes. All through life each person Is ex erting an influence for good or bad, for trouble or happiness, for health or sickness, by the workings of their own World Within as subtly felt or actively expressed. The Influence of parents on children, and vice versa, Is greatest through the life they actually live, not the words they speak. 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July 18, 1935, edition 1
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