Newspapers / The Norlina Headlight (Norlina, … / Oct. 9, 1914, edition 1 / Page 6
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INSTEUG LIVES A GIRL BST ILLUSTRATIONS ofry LAUREN 5TOUT J ; "fig SYNOPSIS. Ibhn Valiant, a rich society favorite, suddenly discovers that the Valiant cor- MMHn nthtih Mm father founded ' ana wkloh "Bras tha nrlnHnal BOUrce Of "-hiS wealth, has failed. He voluntarily turns k.o rxir. fnrtnna to the receiver far the corporation. His entire remaining possessions consist or an oia inuwr uu, 'white bull dog and Damory court, a neg lected estate in Virginia. On the way to Damory court he meets Shirley Dand-: ridge. . an auburn-haired beauty. and de cides that he is going to like Virginia lm mrasely. Shirley's mother. Mrs. Dand rldge. and Major Bristow exchange rem ladseences during which It is revealed that the major. Valiant's father, and a casus named Sasson were rivals for the tmnd of Mrs. Dandrldge In her youtn. Sasson and Valiant fought a duel on her account In which, the former was killed. Valiant finds Damory court Jerf3ow.n with, weeds and creepers, and the JulM- nga In a very mucit negiecieu wuujwu. make the land produce a living for him. ; Valiant saves Shirley from the bit of a Okaafce, which bites him. Knowing the eadUnes of the bite. Shirley sucks he poison from the wound and saves his lire. Shtrlev tells her mother of the Incident sad the latter Is strangely mpvea ax tjearme: that a Valiant is again living at oAiirt Valiant learns zor tne Brst time that his father left Virginia on account of a duel In which Doctor flotrthall and Major Bristow acted as his Cather'a seconds. Valiant and Shirley become good friends. Mrs. Dandrldge faint when she first meets Valiant. CHAPTER XIX Continued. He sat down on a mossed boulder, areathless, his eyes sparkling. He had thought himself almost a beggar, and here in his hand was a small fortune! Talk about engagement rings!" he muttered. wny, a aozeu ox uibb ought to buy a whole tiara!" At length he rose and climbed on, presently turning at a right-angle to bisect the strip to its boundary before e paused to rest Tm no timber-. cruiser," he said to himself as he wiped his brow, "but I calculate there mra all of , three hundred trees big enough to cut. Why, suppose they are worth on an average only a hundred apiece. That would make Good lord! " he muttered, "and I've " been mooning about poverty i The growth was smaller and sparser now and before long he came; on the hill's very crest, to the edge of a ragged clearing. It held a squalid set tlement, perhaps a score of dirt-daubed cabins little better than hovels, some with sod roofs and window-paTnes of fiaxrr-fi&ckin&r. Fences, and outhouses there was none. . Littered , paths ram- mcui mm dbd t nirnar unn rnnner imm cMp-etrewn yards to starved patches of corn, under-cultivated and blighted. Over the whole place hung an inde scribable atmosphere of disconsolate jfHth, of unredeemed squalor and' vile mess. . -' j " i vlth one hand on the dog's collar, smsbing him to silence, Valiant, un seen, looked at the wretched place with a shiver. He had glimpsed many wretched purlieus In the slums of ereat cities, but this, in the open sun Hglit, with, the clean woods about it mad the sweet clear blue above, stood out witn an unrelieved Doianess ana contrast that was doubly sinister and forbidding." He knew instantly ' that the tawdry corner was the community known as Heil's-Half-Acre, the place to which Shirley had made her night ride to rescue Rickey Snyder. A quick glad realization of her cour age rushed through him. On its heels came a feeling of shame - that a spot like this could exist, a foul blot on euu a uuiuakaye. - was uu uia un u land! Its denizens held place - by squatter sovereignty, but he was. nevertheless, , their landlord. The thought bred a new sense of responsi bility. Something should be done for uem, loo. ; As he gazed, an uproar in a cabin iched a climax. A red-bearded fig- In nondescript garments shot from the door and collapsed in a heap in the dirt. He got up with a dreadful oath a Jug thrown at him grazing Ids temple as he did so and shakinz bis fist behind him, staggered into a near-by lean-to. ; Valiant turned away with a feeling almost of nausea, and plunged back sown tne rorest hillside. , CHAPTER XX. - The Gardeners. 1 He saw them coming through ;the sate on the Red Road the major and Shirley in a lilac muslin by his side -and strode to meet them. Behind them Ranston propelled a hand-cart filled with' paper bundles from each of which protruded a bunch of flowering stems. There was a flush, in Shirley's cheek as her hand lav In Valiant's " As for him, his eyes, like a wilful drunkards, returned aaralri . nnn a train '' between; the. majors compliments.' to tier face.-"'' ; v- ' : iou nave accompiisnea wonders. f J , . wae in sucn a . iimitea ; time, i you nave ; certainly primped the old nlaee op. I could ; almost think I was look ing at Dunbry Court in the sixtiesr sah!" - ; t - "That's quite the nicest thing you could have said, Major,"; responded Valiant.. "But it neetls the flowers' He looked at Shirley with sparkling yes." "How splendid of you to I bring them!- I feel like a robber." ; ; With cour bushels' of them? We shall never miss them at alL 1 Have you set out the others.?" , ' , T have,Mndeed. Every one k has i rootadv too. You shall see . them." He led the way up the drive" pll they stood before the porch. ' " ; - f "; "Gad ! " chuckled the major. ; "Who would think ltv had been unoccupied for three decades? At this rate, you'll soon be giving dances; sah.' f j "Ah." said Valiant. "That s the very thing I want to siiggesL The tourna ment comes off next week, I under stand, and It's been i, the custom to have a ball that night ' The tourney jground is on this estate and Damory Court iSi handier than the Country Club. Why wouldn't it be appropriate to hold the dance here? The' ground floor rooms are ' in order! and If the young people would, put up with ' itr it would be a great pleasure to me, I as sure you." "Oh!" breathed Shirley. "That would be too wonderful!" .' : The major seized bis hand and shook It heartily. "I can answer for the committee," he said, i "They'll jump at It. Why, sah the new gener ation has never set eyes inside the house. It's a golden legend to them." "Then I'll go ahead with arrange ments." ". . . j ",. He led them around the house and down the terraces of the formal gar den, and here the major's encomiums broke forth again. "You are going to take .us old folks back, sah, he said with real feeling.' "This gyarden' in its original lines was unique. It had a piquancy and a pictures queness that, thank God, are to be restored! One can understand the owner of an es tate like this having no desire to spend his life philandering abroad. We all hope, sah, that you will recur to the habit of your ancestors and count Damory Court home." Valiant smiled slowly. "I don't dream of anything else," he said. "My life, as I map it out, seems to begin here. The rest doesn't count only the years when I was little and. had my father." The major carefully adjusted his eye-glasses. His head was. turned away. "Ah, yes," he said. "The last twenty years," continued the other, "from my present view point, are valuable mainly for con trast." "As a consistent regimen of pate de foie gras," said Shirley quizzically. "makes one value bread and butter?" He shook his head at her. " As star vation makes one appreciate plenty. The next twenty years are to be here. But they hold " side-trips, too. Now and then there's a jaunt back to the city." "Contrast again?" she asked inter estedly. . "Yes and no. Yes, because no one who has ever known that blazing clanging life can really understand the peace and blessedness of a place like. this. No, because there are somethings which are to be found only there. There are the galleries and the opera. I need a breath of them both." r "And semi-occasional ! longer flights. too," the major reflected. "A look-see abroad once in a blue moon. Why not?" "Yes. For mental photographs Im pressions one can't get from between book-covers. There's an old cloister garden I know In Italy and a particu lar river-bank in Japan in the cherry- blossom season, and a tiny island with He Leaned Slightly Toward Her, One Hand on the Dial's Time-Notched , Rim. : " t ; .. . :. - a- Greek castle on It in the ' Aegean. Little-- colored memories : for me to bring away to : dream over. But al ways I come back here to Damory Court For this is home!" r They walked beneath the pergola to the lake, where Shirley gave a cry of delight at sight of its feathered. population. : "Where did you get them from?" she asked. "Washington. In crates.". ' "That explains it" she exclaimed. "One day last week the little darkies in the village all insisted a circus was coming. They! must have seen these being .hauled here.- They watched the whole afternoon for the elephants."; - "Poor youngsters ! " he said.' "It's a shame to fool them. . But I ve had all the circus I want getting the live, stock installed." : : ,. fh "They won't suffer," said the major "Rickey Snydeill get themiup a three ringed : show ' at the drop of a hat and drop It herself. Besides, there's tourn ament day coming,; and they ."can live on : that I see you've dredged - out some of the lilies." Yes. ; I take . my. dip here every morning." 'rr , ' ;i v.- fii yy- "We 1 used to nave a' diving-board when we were little shavers, pursued the major. "I remember once, 'your father. v;-.- ' ?: : He cleared his throat f and stopped dead. . 1 v--; yM y'::--yy-:':: i "Please," said John Valiant "II like to hear about him": ; h "It was only that I struck my head on. a rock on the bottonr. and stayed down. . The : others were frightened, but he he dove down again and again till he brought me out It was a nar row squeak,; I reckon." : ; A silence feU. Looking at the tall muscular form beside her Shirley had a sudden vision of a determined little body cleaving the dark water, over and over, - now rising panting for breath, now plunging again, never giv ing up. And she told herself that the son was : the same sort That hard set of the jaw, those firm Upsy would know no flinching. He might suffer, but he would be strong. J Half unconsciously she spoke her thought aloud: "You. look like your father, do you not? ) "Yes," he replied, "there's a strong likeness, I have a photograph which I'll show you sometime. But how did you know?" '-. : ' "Perhaps I only guessed," she said in some confusion. To cover this she stooped by the pebbly marge and held out her hand to the bronze ducks that pushed and gobbled about her fingers. "What have you named them?" she asked. - "Nothing. You christen them." "Very welL ; The light ope shall be Peezletree and the dark one Pilgar 11c. I got the names from John Jasper he was Virginia's famous negro preacher. I once heard him hold forth when he read from one of the Psalms the one about the harp and the psaltery and he called it peezletree." Valiant's laugh rang out over the lake to be answered by a sudden sharp screech from the terrace, where the peacock strutted, a blaze of span gled purple and gold. They, turned to see Aunt Daphne issue from the kitchen, twfg-broom in hand. W'-- h "Heah!" she exclaimed. "What to' yokyahln' on like er wil" gyraff we'n we got comp'ny, yo' triflin'j. ol' ln tall, yo! Git outen heah!" - She waved her weapon and the bird, with a raucous shriek of defiance, retired In ruffled disorder. The master of Damory Court looked at Shirley. "What shall we name him?" "I'd call him Fire-Cracker, if he goes off like that," she said. And Fire Cracker the bird was christened forth with. "And now," said Shirley, "let's set out the ramblers." The major had brought a rough plan, sketched from memory, of the old ar rangement of the formal garden. "I'll just go over the lines of the beds with Uno Jefferson," he proposed, "while you two potter "over these roses." So Valiant and Shirley walked back um the slope beneath the pergola to gether. With Ranston, puffing and blowing like a black-porpoise over his creak- ing go-cart, they planted the ramblers Crimson, and pink and white Va liant much of the time on his knees, his hands plunging deep into the black spongy earth, and Shirley with broad hat flung on : the grass, her fingers separating' the clinging thread-like roots and her small arched foot tamp ing down the . soil about them. Her hair the color of wet raw wood In the sunlight was very near the brown head and sometimes their fingers touched over the work. Once, as they stood up, flushed with the exercise, a "great black and orange butterfly, dazed with the sun-glow, alighted on Valiant's rolled-up sleeve. Jle held his arm perfectly still and blew gently on the wavering pinions till it swam away. When a redbird flirted by. to his delight she whistled its call so perfectly that, it wheeled in mid-flight and tilted Inquiringly back toward them.' :--' ' y': ) : As they descended the terrace again to the pergola, he said, "There's only one thing lacking at Damory Court a sun-dial." ' . "Then - you haven't found it?" she cried ; delightedly. "Come and let me show you." She led the-way through the maze of beds at one side till they reached a hedge laced "thickly with Virginia creeper. He parted this leafy, screen, bending -back the springing; fronds that thrust against the flimsy muslin of her gown Jand threatened to spear the plnk-rosed hat that cast an ador able warm tint over her creamy face; thinking that never had the' old place seen such a : picture as she; made framed in the deep green. - Some such' thought was in the ma jor's mind, too, as he came slowly up the terrace below. He paused,' to take off his hat and wipe his brow. :- ' -v "With the place" all fixed up this way," he sighed to himself, "I could believe it was only last week v that Beauty Valiant and Southall 1 and I were boys; loafing around . this gyar den. And : to think that now It's Va liant's' son and f Judith's daughter! Why, it seems like yesterday that Shir lay there was only knee-high to a grasshopper and I "used" to tell her hr balr-vaa tb&t color bcaiu slie I ran - through" hell , bareheaded.4 ; Ym about a thousand years bid, I reckon!" Meanwhile the two figures above had pushed through x the tangle t, Into a circular sunny space where, stood a short round pillar of red onyx.' &It was a sun-dial. Its ylne-clad " disk cut., of gray polished stone in which its metal tongue was socketed. Round the-outer edge" of the disk ran an ' Inscription in archaic ? lettering. Valiant pulled away the clustering Ivy leaves and read : "I count no hours but the: hap py ones." ; y " T' "If that hadi only been true!" he said. - "It is true. See how the vines Tiid the' sun from It It ceased to mark the time after the Court was : de serted.'? "FIl put moonfiowers at its base and where you are . standing. Madonna lilies. " The outer part , of the circle shall have bridal-wreath and white irises, and they shall shade out into pastel colors mauves and grays and heliotropes. Oh, I shall love this spot! perhaps sometime the best of all." "Which do you love the most now?' He leaned slightly toward . her; one hand , on . the dial's time-notched- rim. "Don't you knd w 'V-he said in a lower voice. "Could any other spot mean to me what that acre under the hemlocks means?" - -v. ' , i -v-v,-''.,. ::.Sy-y yU: . Her face was turned from him, her fingers pulling at the drifting vine, and a splinter of sunlight tangled in ; her hair like a lace of fireflies. f "I could never forget it" he continued.- "The thing . that spoiled -. my father's life happened there, yet there we two first talked, and there you" "Don't!" she said, facing him. ."Don't!" ' "Ah, let me speak! I want to tell you that I shall carry the memory, of that afternoon, and of your brave kind ness, always, always! If I were never to see you again in this life, I should always treasure it If I died of thirst in some Sahara, it would be the last thing I should remember your face would be the last thing I should see! If I " - In the silence there was the sound of a slow foot-fall on the gravel walk, and at thesame moment he saw a magical change. Shirley drew back. The soft gentian blue of her eyes darkened. ThellpS that" an instant before had been tremulous, parted in a low delicious laugh. . She swept him a deep curtsey. "I am beholden to you, sir," she said gaily, "for a mostknlghtly com pliment There's the major. Come and let us show him where we've planted the ramblers." CHAPTER XXI. Tournament Day. The noon sun of tournament . day shone brilliantly, over the village, drowsy no longer, for many vehicles were hitched at, the curb, or moved leisurely along the leafy street; big, canvas-topped country wagons drawn by shaggy-hoofed horses and set with chairs that bumped and jostled their holiday . loads from outlying tobacco plantation and stud-farm; sober, black covered buggies, long narrow, spring less buckboards, frivolous side-bar run abouts and antique shays resurrected from the primeval depths' of cob webbed stables, relics of tarnished grandeur and faded fortune. V At midday vehicles resolved them- FINANCIAL PANIC OF 1 837 Year That Many Banks Failed - and Specie Payments Were Practical ' ly Entirely Suspended. Political rancor was at its height when Andrew Jackson vetoed ther'bill renewing the charter of the United States' bank and removed the treasury deposits, under which, opposition the bank collapsed . and a vast number of state , banks ' competed for the ; bust ness, which included the issue of bank notes.' In 1837;there-were 634 banks, with an' aggregate , capital of $291. 000,000. . In the history of banking , the' year of 1837 is prominent for one of the worst panics that was ever known in America, which resulted in the failure of many banks and a universal suspen sion of specie payments throughout the country, which were not renewed until over a year and a half later, says the National Magazine.: , During this trying period, when hanking .. opera tions were practically wiped put i of existence, all the banks but three con tinued doing business in Boston. There were temporary suspensions of specie payments in 1857. known as the panic of '57;'-alsoin :'61, when "Boston 'foj- lowed the lead of New York, since It ' was evident, that; further attempt selves into luncheon-booths tampers stowedX away v beneath the 1 seats,' dis closing all manner of picnic edibles thev court-house yard was ' an array; of grass-8Dread table-cloths, and an air of plenty reigned. K Wlthm 'Mrs. Merryweather Mason's brown house hospitality sat . enthroned ani the irenerous dininK-room was held by a regiment of feminine out-of- town acquaintances. The yard, an hour later, was an ao- tiveff encampm ent T of ' rocking-chairs, and a-din . of conversation - floated out over; tne; pink oleanders ' whose, tubs had c achieved a fresh coat of bright green paint for ; tb occasion.'. Mrs. Poly .Glfford- gtest of the day here shone respienaent : The young folks are counting rvw - nttr, . ..w served Mrs. Livy Stowe of Seven Oak. "Even the Buckner girls have got new T - tT waaau,?ro ball dresses- ing to water. I had pimples on my face . and a bad color, and for five years I had r, , V VT TX fh wftTSSr JfLJ ll S ?S r!f 1 .rtased UP to the roof the way it is. Mrs. Mason's soft apologetic alto intejrposed.: "They're sweet girls. and - we're never young but once. I think it was so fine of Mr. Valiant to offer to give the balL " I hear he's motorea to unariouesvuie tnree or four times for fixings, though I under- " a - m . .mm - i a mmm B"luu1 owuu Biw u kt spells or indigestion,should immediately up his money as he did. What a Beek restoration to health bfr taking Ly Drlncelv act that was!" tr. -ip nUom'. t4..i princely act that was! "Y-e-e-es," agreed Mrs. Gifford. "but a little what shall I call it? pre cipitous! If I were married to a man like that r should always be in terror of his adopting an orphan asylum or turning Republican or something equally Impossible. The doctor shut his office door with a vicious slam and from the vantage oi ine wire wxnaow-screen looKea sour- ly across the beds of marigold and nasturtium. 1 j - "I reckon if Mrs. Poly Gifford shut her mouth more . than ten minute hand-running," he said malevolently, "the top 'Of her head'd fly from here to Charlottesville." ; The major, ensconced with a cigar in the easy chair behind him, flour ished his palm-leaf fan and smote an errant fly. '. - ' , "Speaking of Damory Court" ; he said in his big voice. -"The dance idea was a happy thought of young Va liant's. -I'll be surprised If he doesn't do It to the queen's taste." . The doctor nodded. "This plac can't teach him much about such fot derolings. I reckon. He's led more cotillions than I've got hairs on my head. ":-:'V-' 'I'd hardly limit It to that" said the major, chortling at the easy thrust "And after all, even folderolings have their use." T "Who said they hadn't? If people choose to make whirling dervishes of themselves, ihrgr? at least can reflect that it's, better , for their lives than cane-bottom chairs. Though that's about all you can say in favor of the modern balL" "Fsnaw ! " said tne major. 1 re member a time4 when you used to rig out in a claw-nammer and 'ance all klgrht till broad daylight And go home with the gryrla in the mora " 1ng. - with the bravest of us. Used to Iia it. too." ' r (TO BE CONTINUED.) to tide the popular panic would mean ruin to all the interests involved There are men ' still living today who remember with a shudder the trylnf times of 57, when the merchants" met in the Boston merchant's 2 exchange day after day, insisting that the bank must be' sustained: until finally Amasi Walker rose up anf said: "GenUo men, the banks must suspend specie payments. There is 110 other course to be followed." There were mnr murs of discontent and they were al most ready to lynch the ex-governoi or the commonwealth for the bold po sition he ' had - taken, but he facei ! them courageously, andnext came th news of r the suspension of the NeK York banks. Difference. - f Sald a Russlan-dancer to a pfilla delphla , reporter: , ' "We can learn much from the dana ing of animals, ! but1 why did; wa ga oi armings, to tne turkey? There il something a tttle too vulgar inVthtl turkey's dancing, and they who' imi tate it get talked about." ' . ' She shrugged her sltmder should ert ..That WOnt d for Women," She rs SUmed.'To sav ' 'V.v.y"oxnA- i- 7 " t. f 7 "ryhOdy is tall Ing about him that ia an eulogy u say, , -mverybody la har thf bb mi m , Who JSuf f ered As Many Giris ; , Do Tells How She Found Relief. .. Sterling; Conn. M am a girl of 22! years and 1 used to: faint away every month and was very weak.. . I- was also bothered a lot with female weakness. 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The Norlina Headlight (Norlina, N.C.)
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Oct. 9, 1914, edition 1
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