v i- j Willie.:..:; i( 4 SYNOPSIS ' i i Sniadina listens to the history :., i, boring- Hostile Valley, with ii of the. mysterious, enticing wife of Will Ferrln.' Inter ', he drivel to the Valley for a -. iiHhing, though admitting to i ..if hia chief desire la to see the v, .iiy glamorous Huldy. "Old ' Pierce and her v nineteen v -old granddaughter Jenny live i,i . e valley; Since little more than cnlld Jenny has at first admired fuxi then deeply loved young Will 1 .. ,-in. neighboring . farmer..: older tissin she, and who regards her still v merely a child. Will takes em j ,. -nnt in nearby .Augusta. , Jenny In ii i nconsolate. . Bart Carey, ,1 soma thi.ur of a ne'er-do-well, la attraoted hv jenny, but the girl repulses him. learning that Will is coming home, ; Jenny, exulting, sets his long-empty house "to rights,"' and has dinner T'-mty for him. He comesbrlnglng; his . wife, Huldy. Th girl's world .collapses.: Huldy becomes the: sub. jnct of unfavorable gossip In the .Valley. ,.. . ... CHAPTER IV V 1 WOULD be a long time before . Jenny knew the full tale of that x tiay's events. The latter part of the drama she witnessed, 'and. had In ' " it a part ; but the beginning was hid : den from her for the time. ' ,v - I If daring these months since he brought Huldy home, -bis wtfe and become a by-word in the Valley and ' In the wide region roundabout, Will . as is apt to be the case was the last to know this. Yet be was . not wholly in Ignorance. He might - not admit even to himself doubt or mtrgivjng, for there was In this - man a fine loyalty; nevertheless he .' was not witless, nor wholly blind, ., nor could any man loving Huldy as ' intensely as he did be unconscious of those withdrawals and evasions and scornful mockeries which she offered him behind the screen of her arrogantly yielding smile. ' He never even shaped- doubt of ' In his thoughts ; yet Just as one ! i '.lng alone through a deep wood f be conscious of a movement ' ind him, so Will, was conscious i many things that happened Just 1 beyond his sight or ken. He Was thus In some degree pre- pared. for what occurred this day. 1 It was not that he had known any- ' thing before; but. rather that with ", a sixth sense he felt, certain things, And was brought Into a frame of mind where, full comprehension and belief were made easy, where It needed no more than . one" tangible '' nee In order for blm to pick up and bang upon it the whole web of his ' wife's deceptions. , , 1 '. Be had been all the long summer very busy about the farm, and dusk each day found, blm bone-tired, so that he might i nod . at the supper 1 . table, and presently thereafter go :: quick and beavtly to bed, and sleep till dawn. "He- loved Huldy; but after the -first rapture of possession passed, be loved also this farm of his fa ther's, and 'with an almost equal -"dor, serving It with the full meas- of his strength and energy. At ht he was hungry only for sleep, ...td rose to work again at dawn. But Huldy needed no more sleep than a cat Sometimes Will, drows ; lng in bis chair after supper, waked - to find her watching .him wlth'a .disquieting eye; and more than once ' on summer nights she had roused . him, shaking him by the shoulder, ' a hot fury in her tones, demanding t'.iat he - prove himself something more than a, dormouse of a man. So when the time did come, he vs prepared for. comprehension. There bad been many visitors at the farm that summer. Will at first dis covered in these visits no more than '..us natural curiosity .of r his nelgh- s ! a to see this bride of whom : e was so proud. Bart Carey came. , ",1 old Win Haven not lnfrequent- '?; and then Seth Humphreys, whom I and Huldy had known In ::ta, brought bis steam mill to Valley. Also others who had wn Huldy in Augusta came to at Bart's and fish the brook ?, although they had never a before. ' .- :i, when he wooed Huldy, knew r popularity; yet he was contln v being reminded of it now. He return from the fields at dusk 1 some stranger sitting with S i the kitchen. In ad easy fa? "y; and on Ms arrival, the vr and Huldy were apt to fall and the. man presently to -lf away. , , , ' a day when Jenny saw Will nrd Seth : Humphreys' mill. ' mned to go to Liberty to , lumber for a piece of re- t on the barn; some stud- 1 a bundle of shingles. He i t e farm wagon, behind m. Huldy asked wheth- I be home In time for 1 thought not. r .1 "Don't have me on your mind. I'll pick up a bite when get back," be said. V - He took the steep road' up the bill; .and a little above the house he met Seth Humphreys' big truck, Seth at the wheel, descending. Will lifted a hand to the other man as they passed by. Seth was baulpug bis sawed lumber to North Frater nity; but the easier road back to the mill would have brought him to the valley at its foot, three or four miles lower down, Will was mild ly surprised that Seth should have come this way. , . ,..K ' r. Yet the matter stayed not long In his mind. He thought casually that Seth might mean, to stop- at Bart Carey's. .' ,-v-v v, He was fifteen or twenty minutes from the house when the right rear wheel or his- wagon: dropped off; and Will, alighting to .Investigate, found that he had "lost the ' nut which held the wheel In place.' He walked back along the road, search ing In the ditch and by the road side for the lost nut; but the weeds were tall in the ditch, and the nut escaped hl search. In the end, as the quicker : way,: Will decided to cutrdown through the woods to' his farm, where he could find ft spare nut among the miscellaneous litter of hardware which accumulates In every farmer's shed ; so he returned to the wagon and let the horses off the road to let- casual traffic pass by, and tied them there. ' Then he set out to walk home. " " - It was. not far, In a straight line through the woods. Five- minutes fast -walking brought him Into his upper field, with the house lfl plain sight below. He- paid it no partic ular heed, at first, oming on rap idly to do this errand; but as he drew nearer, he saw, stopped In the road in front pf the house," Seth must have alighted for a word with I Huldy. " There was In this nothing unusual, yet Will vaguely resented It. The Inconvenience of the lost nut had faintly frayed hia temper; the Sight of Seth 's truck stopped here Seth mpst have been with Huldy for a long half hour made Will's cheek hot, .his pulse fretful. He went on toward the house more swiftly; and across the barnyard to the kitchen door. ' " '. V. The door was closed; and this was In some. degree surprising, for the day t was warm. " Will opened the door and stepped'' in, . , Neither Huldy nor Seth was in the kitchen ; and when Will saw the kitchen empty, he stood rooted In his tracks for an instant that may have been longer. Then be called, harshly, his wife's name. There was n reply. ' ' - t ' v Beyond the kitchen lay the din ing room. Will crossed to the din ing room -door. The bedroom opened off, the dining room, In front of the bouse,' toward the road, The bed room-door was closed; but Will heard movement there,' and strode that way. Bli cheek was white as stone. v ' , .- '' ' ' . Before he could come to the door, however, It opened, and Huldy con fronted him. She stood, smiling in solently, as though she were just awakened from deep sleep. 1 . He said hoarsely i fWhat yon do ing?" i . I laid down a spell," she told him." ,-, .!,--' " "Where's Seth gone1 to J" he de manded. 1 ' Sethi" : Her tone was amused, derisive. . "His truck's In the road outside." There was a window tn the bed room on the side toward the road; she turned to look out Of this win dow, but without moving. - T don't see it." she. retorted,', maddeningly. Will brushed past her,- himself looked out. . The truck In fact was gone; but ' the screen which be longed in the window lay on the ground outside, ana it was broken as though a heavy foot had stepped upon the light mesh. . Will turned back Into the room. He passed Buldy silently: but she Manorht hia arm i- - k 1 "Where you golngr - t V After htm." said Will to thick tones strange to his own ears, Whyl" she challenged. - ' ' He shook loose, treed . himself from her. moved toward the kitch en. She said, behind him, la a ris ing, defensive fury: . , ;You work all day and sleep all night What do you look for me to do?" ' ' He swung to face her, .and there was death in his eyes. 'Til be back to tend to you," he said; and with no further word burst through the kitchen and away. , . She came, with one of her rare quick movements, after him as far as the kitchen , door ; she called mockingly: ' r -" ' v. i ! t.ut time yo're done .'i S-'ei.i, thrae's a-plenty more!" Will, if he beard, made no sign; a went plunging through the barn nd down through the orchard. Hul sy stayed In the kitchen door, and the sun utruck her pleasantly, and she smiled, standing there alone. If she bad any regret. It was only that she would not be at. hand to see Will and Seth when they came to gether. " , ' But Seth Humphreys, when he slipped away from the house, was more disturbed by the situation. He had a lively respect for Will's phy sical powers; and he leaped into the truck and let It coast silently down the blU.;Also, he stopped at Bart Carey's k farm, beyond the bridge, and there tried to make his tone nd his demeanor usual, and stayed a while, talking of the fish ing, or of the weather. But while he talked, be looked'. Back along the rdad, expecting to ''see . Will . ap proaching ; he stayed here In order to have Bart at his back If Will should come.' ' . But Will had spent no energy In vain direct pursuit He bad cut straight for the steam mill down the Yalley, to wait for Seth there; and Humphreys ' after a - while guessed this. He said to Bart, him self reluctantly preparing to depart! "Bart, you got gun In ; the house? There's a wild bull fn the woods down where we're working, been bothering the men.? I'm a- mind to shoot him." : . Bart said : "I've got an old re volver that throws a heavy slug, if you can hold it straight You get near, enough and you could kill an elephant with it" ' , "Let me have that," Seth pro posed. "This bull, he comes right up around the mill.. I can get. near enough to him without no trouble at all. . - - , , ', v : So Bart produced the revolver, an ancient model, In a heavy holster stained by years of use., "Got quite a history, that gun has," he said proudly, t "Fellow out in. Denver found a dead man' in. a gulch In the mountains one day, with this gun on him and a bullet through his head. He sent the gun to me, Trigger's mighty light Single ac tion. Yon have to cock It." Beth hefted the weapon, sighted It made sure It was loaded. "Much But. He Did Not Loose the Grip obliged," he said. "Ill fetch It back to you." And he got Into the truck, ana laid the pistol en the seat beside him, and went on his way. The man was afraid! He was as big as Will Ferrln ; not quite so tall, but heavier. Nevertheless. Just as a dog fights best to Its own yard, so does a man In the wrong fight poor ly. Seth wanted no fight with Will Ferrln; and bia very rears gave him a false courage, a pseudo-feroc ity. He gritted his teeth and shook his head and vowed that. Will had better not try to lay a hand on him. He drove down the Valley road and turned into the rough wood track that led to the clearing where the steam mill was set beside spring brook' that furnished -water tor the boilers. The mill was work' lng,- the mill crew, gathered In the ahml. ' " " But Seth did not see Will any-. where about and knew-a .deep re lief. There was at one side. a shed of rough boards, roofed with tar pa per, with a dirt floor, in which the truck was customarily stored against the weather. Its doors were swung wide, and. Seth turned the truck Into this shed. But as he did so,. Will Ferrln came suddenly out from behind one wldeflung door, and leaped on the truck's running board, by Seth's very .elbow. His countenance was affrighting. Seth's foot missed the brake, pressed the throttle Instead then i he' , found .' the -- brake and lammed It down. The truck leaped ahead, tried to stop, skidded side wise; the right rear wheel broke partly through one wall, the front mudguard burst Into ' the opposite wall. ' ' And Will, In Silent, deadly pur pose, caught Seth's throat with both hands to arag mm to tne ground. Seth's hand found the . ready pis tol: he thumbed the hammer back. As the weapon came Into his sight W1U released Seth's throat with his left hand and grabbed : at Seth' wrist that held the gun. The two men were falling together as the pistol exploded. W1U felt the heavy ball plow . Into his leg below the ;H;-l.Cj-M'; knee, eruaiiiug t . the bone with a shocking lmpuc-t , But he did not loose the grip he bad. ' . The mill was sixty or - seventy yards away and the saw, at , the moment of the shot, was whining through a log; but Luke Hills was beyond the mill, by the brook, and hia ears warn plear of the saw's close proximity He heard the shot and came lumbering -up the bank, shouting the alarm to the others. The men came to the shed door, and saw Will and Seth down to a locked grip,' and Will's leg was hideous. But the muzsle of a heavy pistol pointed' toward1 .them from the ground, wavering to ' the tight grip of . two opposing 'hands, and. this was enough to deter the bold est for a moment They dodged aside, . peering cautiously ; and by the,' time -they found courage to draw near, .Seth was dead. But Will, despite bis wound, was alive; and Luke knotted a bit of rope around Will's leg, and twisted It with a stick, .There was a bab ble of commands and advice and argument ; For Seth, clearly, there was nothing to be done. . 'But we got to get help for Will, herej mighty quick," Luke pointed out One of the other men remembered Marm pierce Two boards secured together by crossplecet served as a rude litter. They set out to carry wui tnrougn tne wooas to tne old woman's bouse. ' ,' It was thus .that Jenny saw Will agalnt bis face drained white, his eyes closed, his leg below the knot ted rope ' a shattered thing. She saw the men approaching with their burden, and she and Marm Pierce came out on the kitchen porch, and the old Woman cried urgently : Somebody's hurt' badi Jenny, get the cloth off . the dining room table. Put a couplo leaves In, and a blanket on it, so's they can lay him there." , 'ji. Jenny would have run desperate ly to meet them, but the old woman held her from that 1 futility. So when. Luke and the others arrived, the table was prepared, and Marm Pierce met them at the door. Fetch him to," she commanded. "Who is it? Will Ferrln?" His leg's shot off," said Luke Hills hoarsely.' "Seth : shot him : would have killed him, like as not But Will held on till he choked the life out of Seth." - - "Don't stand there talking!" the old woman scolded. "Lay him on the table here, easy. One of you go over to Bart Carey's bouse and te ephone for a doctor.'. "We lowed you could . . ." "Get a doctor, I told-, you I Jab bering like a. pack of crows! Lay him down.'. Now get out of here, the' lot of you; Jenny : and ' me, well tend to htm,1 One tfforgd-telephone, and the rest of you stay bandy, case I need you." . . . A man departed at a clumsy run, and Marm Pierce, standing by Will, slitting away his overalls,: tugging at, his heavy shoe, asked over her shoulder s "Where's . Seth ?" , ."He's dead. No help for him," Luke Hills told her. ,T "Well, go stay with him,' one of you,";-she directed. "Get along." And to Jenny: -snut tne aoorr So Jenny and Marm Pierce -were left to tend the hurt man; and Marm - Pierce as she - bared the wound made little rueful whistling sounds between her teeth, and Jen ny was cold as. stone, all emotions In abeyance, standing like Ice. ' , "Get water boiling, Jenny," Harm Pierce directed. "The doctor!! want that certain. And fetch some wa ter here till I clean bis leg an I can." ' , Jenny turned - to the kitchen, chunked the fire, primped water, put the kettle on the stove; then she came back to the dining room. She bad not spoken. Will's ' eyelids wavered, opened, then closed again. He said weakly My team's tied, up on ridge road. Somebody fetch 'em home." Yon bush up, Will." Marm Pierce told him. "You'll need all the strength you've got" She loosed, the tourniquet a little, till blood flowed again, then tight ened It once more. She saw Jenny's fearful doubts of this procedure, and saldt ' "I dunno, Jenny. Seems like I've heard tell you've got to let some blood get through, or the legll die. I guess It's going to have to be cut off, though. No bone left only splinters; for four-five Inches down the shin." , Jenny, nodded dumbly. ' "All we can do Is keep him quiet till the doctor comes," Marm Pierce confessed. "1 can cure some hurts, this here Is too much for me." And later she said: "You put a pillow-under his head, and a blanket over him. to keep him warm.", i But when these things Were done they could only keep vigil, UU after a long hour the doctor did arrive. ' When that which had now to be done was done, Jenny , ws left drained and ? empty, her - muscles limp, her heart sick. Throughout, she and Marm Pierce bad helped the doctor;' the old woman admin istering chloroform , drop by drop under strict direction, Jenny holding this and that as she was bidden, (TO BE CONTINUED) Good! Wore! for Ires iron has Its place as a heat con ducting metal. While It may be less attractive than some other materials, It is still an old standby, practical for many uses. It holds beat gives a good brown color to foods, and Is readily cleaned., Oke.inokee W""" "" '"'"''sfwr tOMSITMBt WtlT ttlT " ef WIINWICH f Okefinokee SwampMystery Land of Georgia. Prepared by National Geographic Society, Washington, D. C WNU Service. DOWN in the southeastern cor ner of Georgia lies the great Okefinokee swamp, a prime val wilderness rich In treasure for the modern biologist Mystery and enchantment live In Its coffee-colored waters, its moss-hung cypresses and sunlit piney woods. The . Okefinokee owes a great measure of Its unique charm to its "prairies ' wide, unspoiled expanses filled in large part with a tropical abundance of aquatic plants and flanked with dense "bays" of state ly cypress. On these one may de licti hia soul amid scenes of un earthly loveliness that have changed virtually not at all since tne em. lnole warriors Doled their dugouts over them. The Okefinokee prairies are not land, out water i Tn these morasses are many areas of open water, varying from lakes a quarter of a mile in diameter to "alligator holes" a rod in wiatn. They are also dotted here and there with wooded islets the so-called prairie "heads" of cypress, slash nine, aweetbav. and other trees, the taller ones hoary with moss. The anowv blossoms of the white wnterlllv eiadden many acres of the deeper water, and the golden, glob ular flowers of yellow pona-uues, or "bonnets," -glow In a setting oi nuge irreen leaves, in tne shallows yei- low-eyed grass. Its tall stems sway ing, forms a sea or pleasant color. The small Dltchernlant Is hardly true to Its name on the Okefinokee prairies, for Its spotted greenisn tnhAH reach a vard Into the air a height unheard of elsewhere; the parasol-like flowers of greenisn gold, each on a separate scape, stand a little below the summit of the leaves. Resort of Hunters and Trappers. For venerations swamD hunters have pushed over these prairie wa ters, standing up in tneir sngnt hnnta and bendlne rhythmically with graceful thrusts of thetr long poles. The skilled Doatman is aoie tn mnkn better Drozress over the prairies than the bear he chases. Old hunters knew well now to unve a deer out of a prairie head In the direction of a waiting companion. In winter the trapper camps for weeks at a time In these heads, tending his line of traps and taking the pelts of raccoon, otter, wildcat and opossum. To nass from the sparkling sun shine of the prairies Into the gloom of the adjoining cypress nays is a striking experience. The huge trees, buttressed by "knees," stand In close ranks In a foot or so of water. Their areen crowns. 80 feet or more overhead, shut out all but few stray beams of sunsnine. causing even at midday .a sort of twilight. Here and there a winding channel or "run" permits the hunter to push his tiny boat between the tree trunks ; but in the greater part f ha cvnreHS bavs there Is tall. dense undergrowth that makes even foot travel a Slow ana arauous un dertaking. The bear, having the double advantage of bulky strength and a tough iilde, is the only large animal that can readily and rapidly break through such a tangle. ,' Welcome rifts in the cypress bays In the heart of , the . swamp are formed by long, narrow lakes, most Important of which are Billys lake, Mines lake, and the Big Water. Though each- of these is several miles in length, their width aver ages scarcely 60 yards. They are merely expansions of "runs" on the headwaters of the far-famed Suwan-, nee river. On entering one of these lakes the swamp boatman lays aside his push-pole and takes up the pad dle. He, IS also apt to cast out his fish line, for the waters shelter multitudes of warmouths, large mouthed bass, and other- toothsome fishes, t , , Good Fishing Thers. - More than thirty species of fishes Inhabit the Okefinokee. Persons who love simple pap-fishing, with an old-fashioned reed pole, find here their heart's content At Suwannee lake this sort of angling surpasses owaijip Dan br Ntwnu IuimuwI that In almost any other part of the country. When one considers that the lake is barely a quarter of a mile long, with an average width of perhaps 30 yards, a year's catch of more than 40,000 fish (recorded In 1925) Is astounding. Farther within the swamp, at Bil lys, Mines, and Buzzard Roost lakes, or on the Big Water or the Suwannee canei, there Is likewise rare fishing. The bulk of a day's catch with hook and line Is made up of such basses as the warmouth, the "stump-knocker," and the "sand-fllrt-er," with a goodly proportion of mudfish and catfish. Those who elect trolling are more apt to land Jackflsh and large-mouthed bass. The irreat state of Texas can boast of 30 species of frogs and toads; the Okefinokee region, with one-two-hundredths the area of Tex as, has 20. With varied habitats to suit the requirements of different species; with unlimited Dreeaing places In the cypress ponds, cypress bays, and prairies; with abundant rains In normal years, ana witn a warm and humid climate, the Oke finokee Is a veritable frog paradise. Alligators and Birds. Men still living can speak of the times when- It appeared as If "a feller could walk across Billys lake 4-on 'gator backs." To this day the Okefinokee remains perhaps tne best stronghold of our famous cor rugated saurian. Suwannee lake In particular, where .the alligators are protected, provides unequaled op portunities for making Intimate studies of the habits of wild indi viduals. Of the approximately 180 species of birds recorded In the Okefinokee region, scarcely one-half remain during the summer and breed. While some of these summer resi dents move southward with the ap, proach of cool weather In the au tumn, their places are more than filled by hardier vspecles coming from the northern states and Can ada to find a congenial winter home In the swamp. By far the largest mammal of the swamp, and perhaps the most In teresting, is the Florida bear. From early times It has attracted the swamp hunters not so much be cause of any particular value of Its hide and flesh as by reason of the thrill that comes from matching wits and strength with' so formid able an animal. An additional rea son for the pursuit of the bear Is its numerous depredations on the hogs that range through the plney woods and the swamp borders. At a hog's prolonged squealing tne raairionta hpr-ome Instantly alert. Guns are hurriedly lifted from nun nn the cabin walls, the dogs are colled together with the bunting horn, and the chase Is on. Primitive Life of the People. For generations the sturdy, self sufficient, and gifted people of the Okefinokee have led a rather iso lated and primitive existence, some of them on islands within the swamp and others along Its borders. They represent some of the purest Anglo-Saxon stock left tn our coun try, though a few of the families have a slight mixture of French Huguenot and even Seminole Indian blood. , In ancestry, speech, folksongs, and general social ways there is a marked affinity between the rest, dents of the Okefinokee and those of the Appalachian mountains. In each case there has been comparative Isolation, tending to preserve the cultural heritage from Britain of several centuries ago. The pic turesque regional vernacular con tains various elements representing survivals from the Elizabethan age that have dropped out of general American usage, The old-fashioned square dance, or "frolic," still holds sway here as a leading form of social recreation. The fiddle, the handclap, the foot beat, and the "calling of the set" by the leader all lend their aid to the rhythmic performance. The late fall days the season of "hog-klllln an' cane-grlndta' "see these social expressions at their height LEADS IN KINDERGARTENS -. ' Public school kindergarten Instruc tion: la Pennsylvania received its start through a school conducted at . the Centennial exposition to Phila delphia to 1876. There are more than 600 public kindergartens in the state with more than 85,000 pupils and to excess of 600 teachers. Yum! Yam! Cosmetics put young heads on old shoulders. Will a cheap quality spray do the iobf...rr ) vWhat's the answer?, ;i . mfvsc aussTnvns, Utmtma tox: U vvartH remembering! Mr For hot, tired, aching, tram tag feet, a light application of Catleara OlatnaeBt, gen. try robbed in, after bathing the feet to a suds of warm water and Cautlear Sap relieve the tired muscles, soothes the skin sad give comfort and rest KILL ALL FLIES Vbea) anrwhsm. Drtnr mr Killer attrooM and kOIS fnaa. OuanntMd. sffeotlnL . Neat, convenient Cwuk spUI wuinotBQuaruuureauruiuK. lam all anaon. SOo at au dealeni. Harold Somen. iDe-, laUPKalbj.reJ'klmN.Y. I.MLiVNsaVl.flTO:! When In NIW YORK Live at... HOTEL EDISON NEWEST MOST MODERN HOTEL W THE HEART OT EVERYTHING V All OnUlda Booms BADIO TUB V 8HOWHR Ioe Water In each. MyC'tfJ room ftaetanranta -ramrroa Qrean iVV Boom Bar and Gate... 4aV?aw HklT. Wat ot sa immt . .tr' Sprinkle Ant Food along win dow tills, doors and openings through which ants come and so. 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WNU 4 2885 8H1QLB BOOM AMD PBJVATB BATS HOTEL TUDOR HEW TOBX CITT A new total on 42nd Street 1 blocks east oi Grand Central Station. $Jo you Py svVM. taESH Hi mm i V .... mm FIY- ,niiii'L-a-e 5T.'.FYl Led"" r7 )

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