A AAI t Bellefonte, Pa., January 7, 1910. NO 'COUNT WASH. “Wash no ‘count? Don’ say dat sah.” Uncle Mose was wont to plead. “He's jes’ projectin’. Boys will pro- jee’. yo' know. sah. Dey's fo' all de worl’ lak calves an’ colts an’ kittens. Wen dey's young dey kicks up dere heels; den dey steadies down an’ chews | dere cuds an’ pulls dere loads an’ | i ketches dere mice jes’ lak ‘spousible tings wus’. Wosh he ain’ vary bad spot in him. sah. He don't tink: dat’s ail. Wen his heels git plumb steady on de groun® he'll pull his load shore ‘nough. Yo'll see, sah” But iu spite of the sanguine espec- tations of Uncle Mose, who was not Wash's uncle at all. but his grandfa- ther. the boy continued to “projec’.” He was now fourteen, and his chief labor seemed to consist in devising ways of eluding chores and school and just punishments, [lis habitual movements were skulking, and. though his eyes danced fesrlessly and his mouth proadened into almost perpetual mer- riment. he sought rather the solitary paths of the pine woods and Suwanee banks than the more populous lanes and roads of his native Ellaville. | There he was apt to be reminded of | unfulfilled contracts, stolen melons, decorated doors and fences and of | many other mutters which he prefer- red to let sink into forgetfulness. Of his own family Uncle Mose was the only one with whom he condescended to frateruize, and this concession was due as much to the fact that the old man excelled him in his own chosen pursuits of trapping and fishing as to his being openly sympathetic. There were few spots inside a radius of ten miles with which Uncle Mose was not familiar, and this familiarity was especially comprehensive in re- gard to the fishing holes of the Suwa- nee. Fifty years before he had been a slave boy on a neighboring plantation, stealing off to the river on every pos- sible occasion, and this love for the sport had been the one great pleasure of his life, interrupted only through the score of years which followed his emancipation, during which time he was working hard to provide himself with a home and to fit his children for a future which should be worthy of them as free citizens. But as they grew up and branched out for themselves he returned more and more to the pleasure of his child- hood until now there was scarcely an afternoon which was uot spent in part upen the Suwanee banks. And with accumulating years and stiffening joints his early wanderings up and down the river had narrowed down to a bank beneath a wide spreading, moss grown tree, from which he could cast a line into water which experience had | tuued, lenping again upon his hoe | nandle and looking straight at Wash. | two big tears still undried on his black taught him was congeninl to fish, Here after the sun had begun to throw | shadows to the east he could generally be found either alone or in company with Wash, His zon Link was of a different na- ture. He was hardworking, shrewd, wore tolersint of faults than of trivol- ity or carelessness, able to read a little and subscribing for several political pa- pers. narrow in his polities and party and voting at every opportunity and on every possible pretext. He was an example of strong. ambitious nui hood weighted down by a lack of knowl- edge. Between him aud Wash there could be only misunderstanding -ap- prebension and avoidance on the one side. disappointment aud upbraiding on the other. But before an open break cme there were rumors of war, its declaration, a call for troops, and then before the family realized what was happening Link had volunteered and peen accepted. the first to join the immunes from his county. The day after he left Uncle Mose did not even look toward the river. Wash skulked down and fished under the big tree for awhile, then wandered off into the woods to look at his traps. The next day he went to the big tree again, but apparently did not like tish- ing alone. for he soou bid his pole and once more wandered off jute the woods. And the third day and the foarth were the same, hut after eating dinner on the fifth, instead of hurry- fue out to dig bait. as usual, he looked wistfully and irresolutely at Uncle Mose and when the old man rose and went out followed him to the truck patch behind the cabin. | incredulous amazement, for there was “Ain yo' gwine fishin’ no we’, gran’ pap?” he asked disconsolately. Uncle Mose leaned upon his hoe han- | die and looked at him beniguantly. “Not till yo pap gits back. honey.” he answered. “Dar's heaps o wuk roun’ dis place now. Yo' pap been do hit mawnin's an’ arter he done git from wuk at de sawmill nights, an’ ‘eep'n’ 1 tuk his place hit'll shore fall on yo mammy, an’ she hab mo’ now den she ought. No. no, honey, yo'll Latter look out fo’ de fish an’ let de ole man ben’ his back ober de 1aters an’ fnyuns an’ tings.” The boy dug his heels Into the sand. “1 reckon yo' ain’ ear’ fo’ fishin’ no- how, gran’pap.” he said irritably. “if yo' did yo'd fix de wuk some way." Uncle Mose sank the blade of his hoe among the weeds at his feet. “I's been fishin’ off an’ on mo'n tifty yeahs,” he said defeusively, “an’ yo' ain’ mo'n ten. Dat means | car’ fo' hit five times mon yo. But we mus'n leabe wuk fo’ good times, honey. I wout fix de truck patch wuk, lak yo say. but dar's odder tings. 1 aim to ne’p yo! mammy ’bout her chickens an’ washin’ an’ bousewuk, She ain’ strong lak she mout me.” Wash dug his hecls deeper into the sand and sniffed. As he heard it a ~ sudden hardness came into the old man's eves, “An' dar's anudder ting.’ he con- “1 alin to chop an’ pile up a heap o nice wood fo' yo' mammy. She hab to go out un'er de trees mos’ ebery day to pick up bits o' stick an’ bark an’ chips to kiu'le her tire, case dey ain’ uwot’in’ round de wood pile 'cep'in’ big sticks w'ich yo' pap brung aw’ w'ich ain’ chop up. [| alm to cut hit all an’ pile hit ‘ginst de do’ whar hit'll be handy fo’ yo' mammy. No, no, honey, | cayn't go tishin® nohow. Yo mus’ do de fishin’ yo'se’'f now.” Wash dropped his gaze to the ground, an unusual thing for him: but, then, the woodcutting was one of the chores he so studiously shirked. “I's gwine wuk hard w'en I's big- ger.” he muttered deprecatingly, “My mammy say boys wus’ make mos’ 0 dere playtime. W'en I's a man I's gwine wuk hard lak my pap, an’—an’ be a soger.” for in spite of their au- tagonism, Wash regarded his father as embodying all that was manly and heroic. “Yo'll nebber be lak yo' pap,” Uncle Mose said. “He study an’ wuk bard | w'en he's a boy. Yo' mo’ lak ole rag- zed Jake.” ‘Then his gaze dropped in sudden abashed consciousness of hav- ing upbraided his favorite, and if the boy had waited a moment longer he would have heard the most abject apol- ogy and au contrite “Don’ yo' min’, honey; hit's jes’ de ole man a talkin’. i Yo's a good boy. a sho’ nough good boy." But Wash did not hear. He was speeding toward the woods with dim eves nnd heaving breast. He like dis- reputable Jake, the scoff of the entire community! If his father or any of | those who were accustomed to upbraid him had said the words he would not have remembered them a minute after they were spoken, but Uncle Mose, who had never scolded him in all his life before and from whom a harsh word could not be wrung except by direful provocation! The words were true. He anew it even while combating them in impo- tent anger and wrath. And they stung utd lashed him to the big tree, to lus traps. to a spot in a dense thicket where he lay for a full hour picking viudictively at the leaves and finally to his bed in the loft. He not to be like bis father when everybody said he was growing up big and strong and would some time be his very image! And this was his last thought when, far iu the night, he fell asleep with a dB i ln AN A AB. AM NB cheeks. The next worning Uucle Moses first thought was of reconcilistion with Wash. But the boy was not in his bed por in the kitchen below, and only when he went to the door and heard a faint click-clicking from the truck patch did he understand that Wash was digging bait for an uuusually early start. Shuffling in the direction of the sound. the old man stopped at the corner of the cow shed in sudden the boy. not digging bait, as he had supposed. but hoeing potatoes, Wash looked up with an odd smile ou his good natured face. “Yo' better go he'p marmmy wid her | chickens, gran'pap.” he commented. | not even pausing to rest on his hee | handle as he spoke, but working vig- orously on. “1 finish dese taters.” Then. as the old man opened bis moath without seeming able to make a sound. the boy continued: “1 tink ‘bout what yo' say, gran” pap. an’ I's gwine be lak pap, an 1 alu’ gwine be lak ole Jake. An 1 reckon yo' right "bout mammy. 1 ain’ nebber neiis befo', but dis mawniu’ I ‘low she do ook poreiy. Wen dese taters is done 1's gwine chop dat wood an’ do lots udder tings. Now yo' bet ter go ‘long. gran’pap., case I's in a hurry.” This was the beginning of a big reformation in Wash—a reformation brought about by the force of exam: ple. And this is the origin of all refor mations. Great wilitary leaders have not said “Go,” but “Follow me.” The Christian wartyrs supported the in fant religion by an example that was effective not only 2.000 years ago, but is a shining light to millions of Chris tians to the present day. And so it is in our everyday life | Uncle Mose, it is true. spoke to the boy about what be was doing, but only to explain why he did it, tht he might make the lesson of his own industry the more effective. A week later there was not a weed left in the truck patch, not a stick of | wood that was uncut and pot a chore about the place that was in urgent need of being done. | Uncle Mose was acquiring a chronic habit of rubbing his hands, mammy was smiling to herself almost contin ually. and Wash grinned even while kis hands were being blistered by the unaccustomed tools, And then one day. at mammy's in stigantion. Uncle Mose and Wash made a compact. It was to spend every Sat urday afternoon under the big free on the Suwanee. And what Saturdays they were! Wash has learned that pleasure Is; mainly a contrast with work. One cannot enjoy rest without being tired One cannot enjoy idleness without having been busy. So Wash, after a hard week's work. knew the pleasure of indolence. Not Deceived. “Never in my life have 1 deceived my wife.” “Same here. Mine only pretends to believe the yarns 1 tell.”—Louisville Courier-Journal. 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