SYNOPSIS I—-APRIL.—General factotum in the house of her sister Ina, wife of Herbert Deacon, in the small town of Warbleton Lulu Bett leads a dull, cramped existence, with which she is constantly at enmity, though apparently satisfied with her lot. She has naturzl thoughts and aspirations which neither her sister nor her brother- in-law seemingly can comprehend. To Mr. Deacon comes Bobby Larkin, recently graduated high-school youth, secretly enamored of Deacon’s elder daughter, Diana, an applicant for a *“job” around the Deacon house. Hp is engaged, his occupation to be to keep the lawn in trim. The family is excited over the news of an approaching visit from Deacon’s brother reanian, whom he had not seen for many years. Deacon jokes with Lulu, with subtle meaning, concerning the coming meeeting. Again he laughed. This laughter was intoxicating to Lulu. No one ever laughed at what she said save Her- bert, who laughed at her. “Go it, old girl!” Ninian was thinking, but this did not appear. The child Monona now arrived, . banging the front gate and hurling herself round the house on the board walk, catching the toe of ome foot in the heel of the other and blundering forward, head down, her short. straight hair flapping over her face. She landed flat-footed on the porch. She began to speak, using a ridiculous perversion of words scarcely articu- late, then in vogue in her group. And, “Whose dog?’ she shrieked. Ninian looked over his shoulder, held out his hand, finished something that he was saying to Lulu. Monona came to him readily enough, staring, loose-lipped. “I'll bet I'm your uncle,” said Ninian. Relationship being her highest known form of romance, Monona was thrilled by this intelligence. ‘Give us a kiss,” said Ninian, find- ing in the plural some vague mitiga- tion for some vague offense. Monona, looking silly, complied. And her uncle said, my stars, such a great big tall girl—they would have to put a board on her head. “What's that?” inquired Monona. She had spied his great diamond ring. “This,” said her uncle, ‘was brought to me by Santa Claus, who keeps a Jewelry shop in heaven.” The precision and speed of his im- provisation revealed him. He had twenty other diamonds like this one. He kept them for those Sundays when the sun comes up in the west. Of course—often! Some day he was go- ing to melt a diamond and eat it. Then you sparkled all over in the dark, ever after. Another diamond he was going to plant. They say— He did it all gravely, absorbedly. About it he was as conscienceless as a savage. This was no fancy spun to pleasure a child. This was like lying, for its own sake, He went on talking with Lulu, and now again he was the tease, the brag- gart, the unbridled, unmodified male. Monona stood in the circle of his arm. The little being was attentive, softened, subdued. Some pretty, faint Ught visited her. In her listening look, she showed herself a charming child “It strikes me,” said Ninian to Lulu, “that you're going to do something mighty interesting before you die.” It was the clear conversational im- pulse, born of the need to keep some- thing going, but Lulu was all faith, She closed the oven door on her pies and stood brushing dour from her fin gers. He was looking away from her, and she looked at him. He was com- pletely like his picture. She felt as if she were looking at his picture and she was abashed and turned away. “Well, I hope =0,” she said, which had certainly never been true, for her old formless dreams were no intention —nothing but a mush of discontent. “I hope I can do something that’s nice before I quit,” she said. Nor was this hope now independently true, but only surprising longing to appear interest- ing in his eyes. To dance before him, “What would the folks think of me, going on so?” she suddenly said. Her mild sense of disloyalty was delicious. So was his understanding glance. “You're the stuff,” he remarked ab- sently. She laughed happily. The door opened. Ina appeared. “Well!” said Ina. It was her re motest tone. She took this man to be 8 peddler, beheld her child in his clasp, made a quick forward step, chin lifted. She had time for a very javelin of a look at Lulu. “Hello!” said Ninian. He had the one formula. “I believe I’m your hus- band’s brother. Ain’t this Ina?” It had not crossed the mind of Lulu to present him. Beautiful it was to see Ina relax, soften, warm, transform, humanize. It gave one hope for the whole species. “Ninian!” she cried. She lent a faint impression of the double e to the initial vowel, She slurred the rest, until the y sound squinted in. Not Neenyun, but nearly Neenyun. He kissed her. “Since Dwight isn't here!” she cried, Copyright by D.APPLETON AND COMPANY. pe MISS LULUBETT Si Zona Gale Iust Le 3Y IrwinMvers and shook her finger at him. Ina’s conception of hostessship was defi nite: A volley of questions—was his train on time? He had found the house all right? Of course! Anyone could direct him, she should hope. Ans he hadn’t seen Dwight? She must telephone him. But then she arrested herself with a sharp, curved fling of her starched skirts. No! They would surprise him at tea—she stood taut, lips compressed. Oh, the Plows were coming to tea, How unfortunate, she thought. How fortunate, she said. The child Monona made her knees and elbows stiff and dapced up and down. She must, she must participate. “Aunt Lulu made three pies!” she screamed, and shook her straight hair. “Gracious sakes” said Ninian. “I brought her a pup, and if I didn’t for- get to give it to her.” They adjourned to the porch—Nin- ian, Ina, Monona. The puppy was presented, and yawned. The party kept on about “the place.” Ina de- lightedly exhibited the tomatoes, the two apple trees, the mew shed, the Bird bath. Ninian said the unspell- able “m—m,” rising inflection, and the “1 see,” prolonging the verb as was ex- pected of him. Ina said that they meant te build a summer house, only, dear me, when you have a family—but there, he didn’t know anything about that. Ina was using her eyes, she was arch, she was coquettish, she was flir- tatiows, and she believed herself to he merely matronly, sisterly, wom- any... i. ie She screamed, Dwight was at the gate. Now the meeting, exclamation, banality, guffaw . . . good will And Lulu, peeping through the blind. * * * * * * * When “tea” had been experienced that evening, it was found that a light rain was falling and the Deacons and their guests, the Plows, were con- strained to remain in the parlor. The Plows were gentle, faintly lustrous folk, sketched into life rather lightly, as if they were, say, looking in from some other level. “The only thing,” said Dwight Herbert, “that reconciles me to rain is that I'm let off croquet.” He rolled his r's, a favorite device of his to in- duce humor. He called it “croquette.” He had never been more irrepressible The advent of his brother was partly accountable, the need to show himself a fine family man and host in a pros- perous little home—simple and pa- thetic desire. “Tell you what well do!” sald Dwight. “Nin and I'll reminisce a lit- tle.” “Do!” cried Mr. Plow. This gentle fellow was always excited by life, so faintly excited by him, and enjoyed its presentation in any real form. Ninian had unerringly selected a dwarf rocker, and he was overflowing it and rocking. “Take this chair, do!” Ina begged. “A big chair for a big man.” She spoke as if he were about the age of Monona. Ninian refused, insisted on his re- fusal. A few years more, and human relationships would have spread san- ity even to Ina’s estate and she would have told him why be should exchange chairs. As it was she forebore, and kept glancing anxiously at the over- burdened little beast beneath him. The child Monona entered the room. She had been driven down by Di and Jenny Plow, who had vanished up- stairs and, through the ventilator. might be heard in a lift and fall of giggling. Monona had aiso been driven from the kitchen where Lulu was, for some reason, hurrying through the dishes. Monona now ran to Mrs, Bett, stood beside her and stared about re- sentfully. Mrs. Bett was in best black and ruches, and she seized upon Mo- nona and patted her, as her.own form of social expression; and Monona wriggled like a puppy, as hers. “Quiet, pettie,” said Ina, eyebrows un. She caught her lower lip in her tooth, “Well, sir,” said Dwight, wouldn't think it to look at us, but mother had her hands pretty full, bring- ing us up.” Into Dwight’s face came another look. It was always so when he spoke of this foster-mother who had taken these two boys and seen them through the graded schools. This woman Dwight adored, and when he spoke of her he became his inner self. “yan “We must run up-state and see her while you're here, Nin,” he said. To this Ninian gave a casual assent, lacking his brother's really tender ar- dor. “Little,” Dwight pursued, “little did she think I'd settle down into a nice, quiet, married dentist and magistrate in my town. And Nin into—say, Nin, what are you, anyway?’ They laughed. “That’s the question,” said Ninian. They laughed. “Maybe,” Ina ventured, “maybe Ninian will tell us something about his | monplace. travels. He Is quite a traveler, yon know,” she said to the Plows. “A reg- ular Gulliver.” They laughed respectfully. “How we should love it, Mr. Dea- con,” Mrs. Plow said. “You knew we've never seen very much.” Goaded on, Ninian launched upon his foreign countries as he had seen them: Population, exports, imports, soil, irrigation, business. For the pop- ulations Ninian had no respect. Crops could not touch ours. Soil mighty poor pickings. And the business—say! Those fellows don’t know—and, say, the hotels! Don’t say foreign hotel to Ninian. : He regarded all the alien earth as barbarian, and he stoned it. He was equipped for absolutely no intensive observation. His contacts were negli- gible. Mrs. Plow was more excited by the Deacons’ party than Ninian had been wrought upon by all his voyag- ing. “Tell you,” said Dwight. “When we ran away that time and went to the state fair, little did we think—" He told about running away to the state fair. “I thought,” he wound up, ir- reievantly, “Ina and I might get over to the other side this year, but I guess not. I guess not.” The words give no conception of | their effect, spoken thus. For there in Warbleton these words are not com- In Warbleton, Europe is never so casually spoken of. “Take a trip abroad” is the phrase, or “Go to Eurcpe” at the very least, and hoth with empressement. Dwight had some- where noted and deliberately picked up that “other side” effect, and his | Ina knew this, and was proud. Her covert glance about pensively covered her soft triumph. Mrs. Bett, her arm still circling the child Monona, now made her first ob- servation. “Pity not to have went while the going was good,” she said, and said no more. Nobody knew quite what she meant, and everybody hoped for the best. But Ina frowned. Mamma did these things occasionally when there was company, and she dared. She never sauced Dwight in private. And it wasn’t fair, it wasn’t fair— Abruptly Ninian rose and left the room. * * » * * * * The dishes were washed. Lulu had washed them at breakneck speed—she could not, or would not, have told why. But no sooner were they finished and set away than Lulu had been attacked by an unconquerable inhibition. And And Instead of Going to the Parlor She Sat Down by the Kitchen Win- dow. instead of going to the parlor, she sat down by the kitchen window. She was in her chally gown, with her cameo pin and her string of coral. Laughter from the parlor mingled with the laughter of Di and Jenny up- stairs. Lulu was now rather shy of Di. A night or two before, coming home with “extra” cream, she had gone round to the stde door and had come full upon Di and Bobby, seated on the steps. And Di was saying: “Well, if I marry you, you've simply got to be a great man. I could never marry just anybody. I'd smother.” Lulu had heard, stricken. She passed them by, responding only faint- iy to their greeting. Di was far less taken aback than Lulu, Later Di had said to Lulu: “I s'pese You heard what we were saying.” Lulu, much shaken, had withdrawn from the whole matter by a flat “no.” “Because,” she said to herself, “I couldn't have heard right.” But since then she had looked at Di as if Di were some one else. Had not Lalu taught her to make buttonholes and to hem-—oh, no! Lulu could not nave heard properly. “Bverybody’s got somebody to be nice to them,” she thought now, sit- ting by the kitchen window, adult yet Cinderella. She thought that some one would come for her—her mother or even Ina. Perhaps they would send Mo- nona. She waited at first hopefully, then resentfully., The gray ralo wrapped the air, “Nobody cares what becomes of me after they're fed,” she thought, and derived an obscure satisfaction from her phrasing, and thought it again, Ninian Deacon came {into the kitchen. Her first impression was that he had come to see whether the dog had been fed. “I fed him,” she said, and wished that she had been busy when Ninian entered. “Who, me?’ he asked. “You dfd that all right. Say, why in time don’t you come in the other room?” “Oh, I don’t know.” “Well, neither do I. I've kept think- ing, ‘Why don’t she come along.’ Then I remembered the dishes.” He glanced about. “Oh!” she laughed so delicately, so delightfully, one wondered where sne got it. “They're washed—” she caught herself at “long ago.” “Well then, what are you doing here?” “Resting.” “Rest in there. He bowed, crooked his arm. “Senora,” he said—his Span- ish matched his other assimilations of travel— “Senora, allow me.” Lulu rose. On his arm she entered the parlor. Dwight was narrating and did not observe that entrance. To the Plows it was sufficiently normal. But Ina looked up and said: “Well "’—in two notes, descending, curving. Lulu did not look at her. in a low rocker. Her starched white skift, throwing her chally in ugly lines, revealed a peeping rim of white embroidery. Her lace front wrinkled when she sat, and perpetually she ag- justed it. She curled her feet side- wise beneath her chair, her long wrists and veined hands lay along her lap in no relation to her. She was tense. She rocked. When Dwight had finished his nar- ration, there was a pause, broken at last by Mrs. Bett: “You tell that better than you used to when you started in telling it,” she observed. “You got in some things I guess you used to clean forget about. Monona, get off my rocker.” Monona made a little whimpering sound, in pretense to tears. Ina said, “Darling—quiet !”"—chin a little lifted, lower lip revealing lower teeth for the word's completion; and she held it. The Plows were asking something about Mexico. Dwight was wondering if it would let up raining at all. Di and Jenny came whispering into the room. But all these distractions Nin- ian Deacon swept aside. “Miss Lulu,” he said, “I wanted you to hear about my trip up the Amazon, because I knew how inter-ested you are in travels.” He talked, according ta his lights, about the Amazon. But the person who most enjoyed the recital could not afterward have told two words that he said. Lulu kept the position which she had taken at first, and she dare not change. She saw the blood in the veins of her hands and wanted to hide them. She wondered if she might fold her arms, or have one hand to support her chin, gave it all up and sat motionless, save for the rocking. Then she forgot everything. Lulu sat talking and looking not only at Ina and Dwight and their guests, but at her. I. June, On a June morning Dwight Herbert Deacon looked at the sky, and said with his manner of originating it: “How about a picnic this after- noon?” Ina, with her blank, upward look, exclaimed: “Today?” “First class day, it looks like to me.” Come to think of it, Ina didn’t know that there was anything to prevent, but mercy, Herbert was so sudden. Lulu began to recite the resources of the house for a lunch. Meanwhile, since the first mention of picnic, the child Monona had been dancing stiffly about the room, knees stiff, elbows stiff, shoulders immovable, her straight hair flapping about her face. The sad dance of the child who cannot dance bece se she never has danced. Di gave a conservative assent—she was at that age—and then took advantage of the family softness incident to a guest and demanded that Bobby go too. Ina hesitated, partly because she always hesitated, partly because she was tribal in the extreme. “Just our little family and Uncle Ninian would have been so nice,” she sighed, with ther consent, When, at six o'clock, Ina and Dwight and Ninian assembled on the porch and Lulu came out with the basket, it was seen that she was in a blue cot- tan house gown. ? “Look here,” said Ninian, “aren't you going?’ “Me?” said Lulu. “Why not?” “Oh, I haven’t been to a picnic since I can remember.” “But why not?” “Oh, I never think of such a thing* Ninian waited for the family to speak. They did speak. Dwight said: “Lulu’s a regular home body.” And Ina advanced kindly with: “Come with us, Lulu, If you like.” “No,” said Lulu, and flushed “Thank you,” she added, formally. Mrs. Bett's voice shrilled from with. in the house, startlingly close—just beyond the window blind, in fact? “Go on, Lulle. ItM do you good. You mind me and go on.” “Well,” said Ninian, “that's what 1 say. You hustle for your hat and you come along.” For the first time this course pre- sented itself to Lulu as a possibility. She stared up at Ninian. “You can slip on my linen duster, over,” Ina said graciously. “Your new one?” Dwight incredu- lously wished to know. “Oh, no!” Ina laughed at the idea. “The old one.” They were having to wait for Di in any case—they always had to wait for Di—and at last, hardly believing in “Oh, no.” her own motions, Lulu was running to “I come to help wipe dishes.” | For | the first time in years some one was My: RS: “Look Here,” You Going?” “Oh, No.” Said Ninian, “Aren't “Me?” Said Lulu. make ready. Mrs. Betts hurried to help her, but she took down the wrong things and they were both irritated. Lulu reappeared in the linen duster and a wide hat. There had Been no time to “tighten up” her hair; she was flushed at the adventure; she had | never looked so well. They started. Lulu, falling in with Monona, heard for the first time in her life, the step of the pursuing male, choosing to walk beside her and the little girl. Oh, would Ina like, that? And what did Lulu care what Ina | liked? Monona, making a silly, semi- articulate ebservation, was enchanted to have Lulu burst into laughter and squeeze her hand. Di contributed her bright presence, and Bobby Larkin appeared from no- where, running, with a gigantic bag of fruit. “Bullylujah !” he shouted, and Lulu could have shouted with him. She sought for some utterance. She wanted to talk with Ninian. “l do hope we've brought sand- wiches enough,” was all that she could get to say. They chose a spot, that is to say, Dwight Herbert chose a spot, across the river and up the shore where there was at that season a strip of warm beach. Dwight Herbert declared | himself the builder of incomparable fires, and made a bad smudge. Nin- ian, who was a camper neither by birth nor by adoption, kept offering bright- ly to help, could think of nothing to do, and presently, bethinking himself of skipping stones, went and tried to skip them on the flowing river. Ina cut her hand opening the condensed milk and was obliged to sit under a tree and nurse the wound. Monona spilled all the salt and sought diligent- ly to recover it. So Lulu did all the work. As for Di and Bobby, they had taken the pail and gone for water, dis- couraging her to the point of tears. But the two were gone for so leng that, on their return, Dwight was hun- gry and cross and majestic. “Those who disregard the comfort of other people,” he enunciated, “cannot expect consideration for themselvesin the future.” He did not say on what ethical tenet this dictum was based, but he deliv- ered it with extreme authority. Ina caught her lower lip with her teeth, dipped her head and looked at Di. And Monona laughed like a little demon. As soon as Lulu had all in readiness, and cold corned beef and salad had be- gun their orderly progression, Dwight became the immemorial dweller in green fastnesses. He began: “This is ideal. I tell you, people don’t half know life if they don’t get out and eat in the open. It’s better than any tonic at a dollar the bottle. Nature’s tonic—eh? Free as the air. Look at that sky. See that water. Could anything be more pleasant?” He smiled at his wife. This man’s face was glowing with simple pleasure. He loved the out-of-doors with a love which could not explain itself. But he now lost a definite climax when his wife's comment was heard to be: “Monona! Now it’s all over both ruffles. And mamma €oes try so hard. oO After supper some boys arrived with a boat which they beached, and Dwight, with enthusiasm, gave the boys ten cents for a half hour's use of that boat and invited to the waters his wife, his brother and his younger daughter. Ina was timid—not be- cause she was afraid, but because she was congenitally timid—with her this was not a belief or an emotion, it was a disease. : (Continued next week). ——————— pe ————— Not His Hard Luck. The Colonel had heard of two re- cent disasters in the family of his col- ored orderly and was surprised to find him apparently as cheerful as ever when he returned to duty after a brief furlough home. “Well, Sam,” said the Colonel sym- pathetically, “I hear you have had some hard luck.” : “What me, suh? Nossuh, Ah ain’t had no hahd luck.” “Why, wasn’t that your brother who was killed in a railroad wreck recent- ly, and wasn’t that your wife that was hurt in an automobile accident?” “Oh, yassuh, yassuh—but dat’s deir hahd luck—not mine.” | ture, FARM NOTES. | —When tomatoes are very cheap tand do not sell easily, try grading them. Dessert tomatoes are usually in demand when ordinary field run | goes begging. i —Bees do not injure fruits of any i kind. There is an erroneous idea that i they puncture the skins of grapes and { other fruits because they are found | feeding upon such broken fruits. —Raspberry and blackberry planta- tions that have not been trimmed out ‘by this time, should be given careful ‘attention at the first opportunity. , The old canes are frequently diseased and should be removed. This practice also gives the young growth a chance . to develop. | —The farmer would do well to in- ! spect his field of corn at this time, noting all low, wet areas that have failed to produce on a par with the rest of the field. Plans should be made now for draining these wet | Spots after the crop has been harvest- ed and before cold weather sets in. —Get rid of the surplus cockerels as soon as possible. About ten days ' before marketing, separate them froi% the pullets, confine them and feed the following mash twice daily, all they will clean up in twenty minutes: two pound corn meal, one pound ground oats, one pound wheat shorts, eight pounds buttermilk. —The safest kind of catle to feed under average conditions are calves that are to be fattened and marketed as baby beef. They bring a higher price per pound because they are in greater demand than heavier cattle. "The initial investment is less for baby beet, and they require less feed per hundred pounds gain. —Salt is required by all animals. The United States Department of Ag- riculture says that the dairy cow re- quires an ounce or more a day, and, while she should be given all she needs, she should not be forced to take more than she wants. It is best, therefore, to place salt in the boxes in the yard, where the stock can lick it at will. —Reports to the Bureau of Drug Control, State Department of Health, that certain race track men are pro- curing heroin and arsenic for the pur- pose of doping race horses and put- ting them in “condition” have resuit- ed in a notice that veterinary sur- ' geons may prescribe or dispense her- ;oin and other narcotic drugs as the | law provides, “in the course of profes- sional practice only.” Dr. Thomas S. Blair, chief of the 1 division of drug control, asks that per- | sons who may secure evidence of the | above practice communicate with the | State Health Department, Harrisburg, and prosecutions will follow. He said, “This practice of doping horses, aside from the violation of the narcotic laws, constitutes cruelty to animals and procedure can also be taken on those grounds.” ‘It was long the custom in Austria to give arsenic to horses to improve ! their wind and make them appear { plump and spirited. It became an in- | tolerable abuse in Europe and the | practice was suppressed on the basis {of fraud. These horses, unless kept ion arsenic regularly, lose health and | are apt to die; the arsenic habit, also, ! may shorten life and bring on disease. | —Serious ravages causing almost complete destruction of the bee-keep-. (ing industry in parts of Europe by | the “Isle of Wight” disease has start- ‘ed determined action by American i bee-keepers to save their business from similar losses. Thus far the dis- i ease has not gained a foothold in this {country or ‘in Canada, and it is be- lieved that should the disease become | established here bee-keeprs, queen breeders and manufacturers of bee supplies would quickly be ruined and horticultural interests would be ser- iously damaged. ; As a first step toward preventing this, a meeting was held recenly at the bureau of entomology of the United States Department of Agri- culture, which was attended by spe- cialists from several States and Can- ada who are inerested in protective measures. The meeting decided to use all feas- ible efforts to prevent the introduc- ; tion of queen bees from all foreign { countries except Canada, and to dis- courage the introduction of adult bees into the United States except for ex- perimental and scientific purposes by the United States Department of Ag- riculture. Since there is no known Isle of Wight disease in Canada and since it is hoped and exepected that the Dominion of Canada will establish the same safeguards to the bee-keep- ing industry, it is planned not to es- tablish any quarantines or prohibi- tions against shipments of bees from and to Canada. All importation of queen bees should be stopped, they believed. Pending full legislation in this mat- ter, the conferees are hopeful that bee-keepers in both countries will co- operate to the fullest extent by mak- ing no attempt to introduce adult bees. Any queen breeder who intro- duced this disease into the country would be doing a great damage to the bee-keeper industry that would be a serious drawback to future business, it was said. Bee-keepers who see any outbreak of any disease of adult bees are urged to send at once samples for examination and diagnosis to the bureau of ento- mology, Washington. More detailed information concerning the disease may be obtained by writing to the United States Department of Agricul- Washington, for a copy of De- partment Circular 218, entitled “The Occurrence of Diseases of Adult Bees,” which is available for free dis- tribution. : Isle of Wight disease is caused by a parasitic mite in adult bees, and is easily transported by bees shipped from Europe to America as was | proved during the past summer when live bees carrying living mites arriv- ed in Washington from Scotland. The disease is evidently a serious source of loss to bee-keepers of the British Isles. It was first observed in 1904 in the Isle of Wight, whence came the name, and in succeeding years it has spread with considerable rapidity to all paris of Great Britain.