— (Continued from last week). SYNOPSIS I—-APRIL.—General factotum In the house of her sister Ina, wife of Herbert Deacon, in the small town of Warbleton Lalu Bett leads a dull, cramped existence, with which she is constantly at enmity, though apparently satisfied with her lot. She has natural 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. He 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 nenian, whom he had not seen for many years. Deacon jokes with Lulu, with subtle meaning, concerning the coming meeeting. II—-MAY.—Chiefly because of the ripple in her placid, colorless existence which the arrival of Ninian will bring, Lulu is interested and speculative, meanwhile watching with something like envy the boy-and-girl love-making of Bobby and Diana. Unexpectedly, Ninian arrives, in the absence of Herbert, at his business, and of Ina, resting. Thus he becomes acquainted with Lulu first and in a meas- ure understands her position in the house. To Lulu, Ninian is a much-traveled man of the world and even the slight interest which he takes in her is appreciated, be- cause it is something new in her life. “Dwight, darling, are yon sm» there's no danger?” “Why, none. None in the werld Whoever heard of drowning in = river?” “But you're not so very used-—" . Oh, wasn’t he? Who was it that had lived in a boat throughout youth. if not he? Ninian refused out-of-hand, lighted a cigar, and sat on a log in a perma- nent fashion. Ina'’s plump figure was fitted in the stern, the child Monona affixed, and the boat put off, how well out of water. On this pleasure ride the face of the wife was as the face of the damned. It was true that she revered her husband’s opinions above those of all other men. In politics, in science, in religion, in dentistry, she looked up to his dicta as to revelation. And was he not a magistrate? But let him take oars in hand, or shake lines or a whip above the back of any horse, and this woman would trust any other woman’s husband by preference. It was a phenomenon. Lulu was making the work last, so that she should be out of everybody's way. When the boat put off without Ninian, she felt a kind of terror and wished that he had gone. He had sat down near her, and she pretended not to see. At last Lulu understood that Ninian was deliberately choosing to remain with her. The languor of his bulk after the evening meal made no explanation for Lulu. She asked for no explanation. He had stayed. And they were alone. For Di, on a pretext of examining the flocks and herds, was leading Bobby away to the pastures, a little at a time. The sun, now fallen, had left an even, waxen sky. Leaves and ferns appeared drenched with the light just withdrawn. The hush, the warmth, the color, were charged with some in- fluence. The air of the time communi- cated itself to Lulu as intense and quiet happiness. She had not yet feit quiet with Ninian, For the first time her blind excitement in his presence ceased, and she felt curiously accus- tomed to him. To him the air of the time imparted itself in a deepening of his facile sympathy. “Do you know something?” he be- gan. “I think you have it pretty hard around here.” “I?” Lulu was genuiuely aston- ished. “Yes, sir. Do you have to work like this all the time? won't mind my asking.” “Well, I ought to work. I have a home with them. Mother, too.” “Yes, but glory! You ought to have some kind of a life of your own. You want it, too. You told me you did— that first day.” She was silent. Again he was in- vesting her with a longing which she had never really had, until he had planted that longing. She had wanted she knew not what. Now she accept- ed the dim, the romantic interest of this role. “TI guess you don’t see how it seems,” he said, “to me, coming along —a stranger so. I don’t like it.” He frowned, regarded the river, flicked away ashes, his diamond obedi- ently shining. Lulu’s look, her head drooping, had the liquid air of the look of a young girl. For the first time in her life she was feeling her helplessness. It intoxicated her. “They're very good to me,” she said. He turned. “Do you know why you think that? Because you've never had anybody really good to you. That's why.” “But they treat me good.” “They make a slave of you. Regu- lar slave.” He puffed, frowning. “D—d shame, I call it,” he said. Jer loyalty stirred Lulu. “We have our whole living" I guess you ARG LY in Myers Copyright by D. APPLETON AND COMPAN NR re by “And you earn it. I been watchinz you since I been here. Don’t you ever go anywheres?” She said: “This is the first place in—in years.” “Lord! Don’t you want to? Of course you do!” “Not so much places like this—" “] see. What you want is to get away—lIlike you'd ought to.” He re- garded her. “You've been a blamed fine-Jooking woman,” he said. She did not flush, but the faint, un- suspected Lulu spoke for her: “You must have‘been a good-look- ing man once yourself.” His laugh went ringing across the water. “You're pretty good,” he said. He regarded her approvingly. “I don't see how you do it,” he mused. “blamed if I do.” “How I do what?” “Why come back, quick like that. with what you say.” Lulu’s heart was beating painfully. The effort to hold her own in talk like this was terrifying. She had never talked in this fashion to anyene. It was as if some matter of life or death hung on her ability to speak an alien tongue. And yet, when she was most at loss, that cther Lulu, whom she bad never known anything about, seemed suddenly te speak for her. As now: . “It’s my grand education,” she said. She sat humped on the log, her beautiful hair shining in the light of the warm sky. She had thrown off her hat and the linen duster, and was in her blue gingham gown against the sky and leaves. But she sat stiffly, her feet carefully covered, her hands ill at ease, her eyes rather piteous ia their hope somehow te hold her vague own. Yet from her came theue saflicient, insouciant replies. “Education,” he said laughing heait- ity. “That’s mine, too.” He spoke a ¢reed. “I ain’t never had it and 1 ain't never missed it.” “Most folks are happy without an education,” said Lalu. “You're not very happy, though.” “Oh, no,” she said. “Well, sir,” suid Ninian, “T'll tell you what we'll do. While I'm here I'm golnz to tuke and Ina you Hid Dwight up to the city.” “To the city?” “Po a show. Dinner and a shinv. I'll give you one goad time.” “Oh!” Lulu leaned forward. “Ina and Dwight go sometimes. I never been.” “Well, just you come with me. I'll laok up what's good. You tell me just what you like to eat, and we'll ged it—" “1 haven't had anything to eat Ia years that I haven't cooked myself.” He planned for that time to come, and Lulu listened as one intensely ex- periencing every word that he uttered. Yet it was not in that future merry- making that she found her joy, but in the consciousness that he—some one— anyone—was planning like this for her. Meanwhile Di and Bobby had round- ed the corner by an old hop-house and kept on down the levee. Now that the presence of the others was with- drawn, the two looked about them dif- ferently and began themselves to give off an influence instead of being pressed upon by overpowering person- alities. Frogs were chorusing in the near swamp, and Bobby wanted one. He was off after it. But Di eventu- ally drew him back, reluctant, frog- less. He entered upon an exhaustive account of the use of frogs fer bait, and as he talked he constantly flung stones. Di grew restless. There was, she had found, a certain amount of this to be gone through before Bobby would focus on the personal. At length she was obliged to say, “Like me today?’ And then he entered upon personal talk with the same zest with which he had discussed bait. “Bobby,” said Di, “sometimes 1 think we might be married, and not wait for any old money.” They had now come that far. it was partly an authentic attraction, grown from out the old repulsion, and partly it was that they both—and es- pecially Di—so much wanted the ex- periences of attraction that they as- sumed its ways. And then each cared enough to assume the pretty role re- quired by the other, and by the occa- sion, and by the air of the time. “Would you?’ asked=Bobby—but in the subjunctive. “She said: “Yes, I will.” “It would mean running away, wouldn't it?” said Bobby, still sub- junctive. “1 suppose so. Mamma and papa | are so unreasonable.” “Di,” said Bobby, “I don’t believe you could ever be happy with me.” “phe idea! I can, too. You're go ing to be a great man—you know you are.” Bobby was silent. Of course he | knew it—but he passed it over. A | “Wouldn't it be fun to elope and | ; EAT 1 | i | i | { \ I ire 1 “Wouldn't It Be Fun to Elope ant | Surprise the Whole School?” Sait! Di, Sparkling. surprise the whole school?” said Di! sparkling. Bobby grinned appreciatively. Hu was good to look at, with his big frame, his head of rough, dark hair the sky warm upon his clear skin anc full mouth. Di suddenly announcec that she would be willing to elope now. “I've planned eloping lots of times, she said ambiguously. It flashed across the mind of Bobb; that in these plans of hers he ma; not always have been the principal and he could not he sure . . . Bu she talked in nothings, and he an swered her so. Soft cries sounded in the center o the stream, The beat, well out of th strong current, was seen to have it: oars shipped; and there sat Dwigh Herbert gently rocking the boat Dwight Herbert would. “Bertie, Bertie—please!” you hear his Ina say. Monona began to cry, and her fa ther was irritated, felt that it woul¢ ' be ignominious to desist, and did no know that he felt this. But he knew that he was annoyed, and he tool refuge in this, and picked up the oars with: “Some folks never can enjoy anything without spoiling it.” “That's what 1 was thinking,” sai | Ina, with a flash of anger. They glided toward the shore in ¢ huff. Monona found that she enjoyec erying across the water and kept f up. It was almost as good Ks at echo. Ina, steppin safe to the sands cried ungratefully that this was the last time that she would ever, eve: go with her husband anywhere. Ever Dwight Herbert, recovering, gauged the moment to require of him humor, and observed that his wedded wife was as skittish as a colt. Ina kept silence, head poised so that her full little chin showed double. Monona, who had previously hidden a cooky in her frock, now remembered it and crunched sidewise, the eyes ruminant. Moving toward them, with Di, Bobby was suddenly overtaken by the sense of disliking them all. He never had liked Dwight Herbert, his employer. Mrs. Deacon seemed to him so over- whelmingly mature that he had no idea how to treat her. And the child Monona he would like to roll in the river, Even Di He fell silent, was silent on the walk home, which was the signal for Di to tease him steadily. The little being was afraid of silence. It was too vast for her. She was like a butterfly in a dome. But against that background of ru- ined occasion, Lulu walked homeward beside Ninian. And all that night, be- side her mother who groaned in her sleep, Lulu lay tense and awake. He had walked home with her. He had told Ina and Herbert about going to the city. What did it mean? Sup- pose oh no; oh no! “Either lay still or get up and set up,” Mrs, Bett directed her at length. Iv July. When, on a warm evening a fort- | night later, Lulu descended the stairs dressed for her incredible trip to the city, she wore the white waist which she had often thought they would “use” for her if she died. And really, the waist looked as if it had been planned for the purpose, and its wide, upstanding plaited lace at throat and wrist made her neck look thinner, her forearm sharp and veined. Her hair she had “crimped” and parted in the middle, puffed high—it was so that hair had been worn in Lulu’s girlhood. “Well!” said Ina, when she saw this coiffure, and frankly examined it, head well back, tongue meditatively teasing at her lower lip. For travel Lulu was again wearing Ina’s linen duster—the old one. Ninian appeared, in a sack coat— and his diamond.. His distinctly con- vex face, its thick, rosy flesh, thick mouth and cleft chin gave Lulu once more that bold sense of looking-—not at him, for then she was shy and averted her eyes—but at his photo- graph at which she could gaze as much as she would. She looked up at him openly, fell in step beside him. Was he not taking her to the city? Ina and Dwight themselves were go- {ng because she, Lulu, had brought about this party. “Act as good as you look, Lulie,” Mrs, Bett called after them. She gave | no instructions to Ina, who was mar- | | i at everything that the men said. She | pleasantly aware that his manner was ! open to misinterpretation. it seemed. Dwight was cross. On the way to the station he might have been heard to take it up again, whatever it was, and his Ina unmistakably said: “Well, now, don’t keep it going all the way there”; and turned back to the others with some elaborate comment about the dust, thus cutting off her so-called lord from his legitimate retort. A mean advantage. The city was two hours distant, and they were to spend the night. On the train, in the double seat, Ninian be- side her among the bags, Lulu sat in the simple consciousness that the people all knew that she too had been chosen. A man and a woman were opposite, with their little boy between them. Lulu felt this woman's supe- riority of experience over her own, and smiled at her from a world of fel- lowship. But the woman lifted her eyebrows and stared and turned away, with slow and insolent winking. Ninian had a boyish pride in his knowledge of places to eat in many cities—as if he were leading certain of the tribe to a deer-run in a strange wood. Ninian to¢h his party to a downtown cafe, thca popular among business and newsnaper men. The place was below the sidewalk, was reached by a dozen marble steps, and the odor of its griadie-cakes took tie air of the street. Ninian made a great show of selecting a table, changed once, calied the waiter “my man” and rubbed soit hands on “What do you say? Shaun it be lobster?’ He ordered the dinner, instructing the waiter with painstaking gruffness. “Not that they can touch your cook- ing here, Miss Lulu,” he said, settling himself to wait, and crumbling a crust, Dwight, expanding a bit in the aura of the food, observed that Lulu was a regular chef, that was what Lulu was. He still woul. not look at Lis wife, who now remarked: “Sheff, Dwightie. Not cheff.” This was a mean alvantage, which he pretended not to hear—another mean advantage. “Ina,” said Lulu, ‘your hat’s just a little mite—no, over the other way." “Was there anything to prevent your speaking of that before?’ Ina inquired acidly. “1 started to and then somebody always said something,” said Lulu humbly. Nothing could so much as cloud Lulu's hour. any shadow. “Say, but you look tremendous to- night,” Dwight observed to her. Understanding perfectly that this as said to tease his wife, Lulu jet flushed with pleasure. She saw two women watching, sand she thought: “They're feeling sorry for Ina—no- body talking to her.” She laughed She was proof against passionately “How many folks keep going past,” she said. many times ! At length. having noted the details af «il the clothes in range. Ina’s iso- Intion nolled uven her and she ¢=t %erself to take Ninian’s attention. She therefore talked with him abeut himself. “Curious you've Nin,” she said. “Don’t say it like that,” he begged. “I might yet.” Ina laughed enjoyably. might!” she met this. “She wants everybody to get mar- ried, but she wishes 1 hadn't,” Dwight threw in with exceeding ran- Cor. They developed this theme exhaus- tively, Dwight usually speaking in the third person and always with his ghoulder turned a bit from his wife. It was inconceivable, the gusto with which they proceeded. Ina had as- sumed for the purpose an air distrait, casual, attentive to the scene about them. But gradually her cheeks be- Zan to burn, “She’ll ery,” Lulu thought in alarm, and said at random: “Ina, that hat is so pretty—ever so much prettier than the old one.” But Ina said frostily that she never saw anything the mat- ter with the old one, “Let us talk,” said Ninian low, to Lulu. “Then they'll simmer down. He went on, in an undertone, about nothing in particular. Lulu hardly heard what he said, it was so pleasant to have him talking to her in this confidential fashion; and she was never married, “Yes, you In the nick of time the lobster was served. * *® * * * * * Dinner and the play—the show, as Ninian called it. This show was “Peter Pan,” chosen by Ninian be- cause the seats cost the most of those at any theater. It was almost inde- rent to see how Dwight Herbert, the immortal soul, had warmed and melt- ed at these contacts. By the time that all was over, and they were at the hotel for supper, such was his pleasurable excitation that he was once more playful, teasing, once more the irrepressible. But now his Ina was to be won back, made it evident that she was not one lightly to over- look, and a fine firmness sat upon the little doubling chin. They discussed the play. Not one of them had understood the story. The dog-kennel part—wasn’t that the queerest thing? Nothing to do with the rest of the play. “] was for the pirates. The one with the hook—he was my style,” said Dwight, “Well, there it is again,” Ina cried. “They didn’t belong to the real play, aither.” “Oh, well,” Ninian said, “they have to put in parts, I suppose, te catch everybody. Instead of a song and dance, they do that.” ried and able to shine in her conduct, i | of an epicure. wante¢ to talk herself. | “And I didn’t understand,” said Ina, ! “why they all clapped when the prin- | AIA SACRE WIS 3%. TT cipal character ran down front and said something to the audience that time. But they all did.” Ninian thought this might have been out of compliment. Ina wished that Monona might have seen, con- fessed that the last part was so pretty that she herself would not look; and into Ina’s eyes came their loveliest ight. Lulu sat there, hearing the talk about the play. “Why couldn’t I have said that?” she thoueht as the others spoke. All that thev said seemed to her apropos, but s“e could think of nothing to add. The evening had been to her a light from heaven—how could she find anything to say? She sat in a daze of happiness, her mind hardly operative, her look moving from one to another. At last Ninian looked at her. “Sure you liked it, Miss Lulu?” “Oh, yes! TI think they all took their parts real well.” It was not enough. , an) EE a) Pm Sy on = GE Se et] | | the State excells “Why Not Say the Wedding Service?” Asked Ninian. them appealingly, knowing that she had not said enough. “You could hear everything they said,” she added. “It was—" dwindled to silence. Dwight Herbert savored his rarehit with a great show of long wrinkled dimples. “Excellent sauces they make here-- excellent,” he sald, with the frown “A- tiny wee bit more Athabasca,” he added, and they all laughed and told him that Athabasca was a lake, of courze. Of course he meant tabasco, Ina said. Their en- rertainment and their talk thie sort. for sn: her, “Well, now,” said Dwight Herbert when it was finished, “somebody dance on the table.” “Dwightie!” “Got to amuse ourselves somehow. Come, liven up. They'll begin to read the funeral service over us.” “Why not say the wedding service?” asked Ninian, In the mention of wedlock there was always something stimulating to Dwight, something of overwhelming humor. He shouted a derisive en- dorsement of this proposal. “I shouldn't object,” said Ninian. “Should you, Miss Lulu?” Lulu now burned the slow red of ber torture. They were all looking at her. She made an anguished effort to defend herself. “I don’t know it,” she said, “so I can’t say it.” Ninian leaned toward her. “I, Ninian, take thee, Lulu, to be wy wedded wife,” he pronounced. “That’s the way it goes!” “Lulu daren’t say it!” cried Dwight. Ee laughed so loudly that those at the near tables turned. And, from the fastness of her wifehood and moth- erhood Ina laughed. Really, it was ridiculous to think of Lulu that Way eV Ninian laughed, too. “Course she don’t dare say it,” he challenged. From within Lulu, that strange Lulu, that other Lulu who sometimes fought her battles, suddenly spoke out: “I, Lulu, take thee, Ninian, to be my wedded husband.” “You will?” Ninian cried. “T will,” she said, laughing tremu- ously, to prove that she, too, could join in, could be as merry as the rest. “And I will. There, by Jove, now have we entertained you, or haven't we?’ Ninian laughed and pounded his soft fist on the table. “Oh, say, honestly!” Ina was shocked. “I don’t think you ought to—holy things—what’s the matter, Dwightie ?” Dwight Herbert Deacon's eyes were staring and his face was scarlet, “Say, by George,” he said, “a civil wedding is binding in this state.” “A civil wedding? Oh, well—” Nin- fan dismissed it. “But I,” said Dwight, “happen to ie a magistrate.” They looked at one another fool- ishly. Dwight sprang up with the in- determinate idea of inquiring some- thing of some one, circled about and returned. Ina had taken his chair and sat clasping Lulu’s hand. Ninian continued to laugh. “TI never saw one done so offhand,” sald Dwight. “But what you've said is all you have to say according to law. And there don’t have to be wit- nesses say!” he said, and sat down again, (Continued next week). She looked at she | was of | | FARM NOTES. —It costs a farmer at least $50 to i grow out a calf in its first year. At { the end of the year, some farmers | have scrubs for their money; others raise pure breds and have something i worth keeping on the home farm. { —When it rains or the farm work i slacks a bit, look over the corn har- | vester and make any repairs that may | be required before it is put to use. { Also examine the silo to see if it is in i the best of condition before filling. —When the onions have matured ! and are partly dried off, pull them and ! spread them out in the shade or un- | der shelter. After a few weeks pull off the tops and store under dry, cool | conditions. Onions with fleshy necks i never keep well. —There are two classes of dirty | eggs, plain dirties, caused by dirty nests, dirty feet, etc.; and stained ‘eggs, from wet nesting material, ma- inure, and blood. Stains can be re- moved by wiping the eggs with a | damp cloth, rubbing them as little as possible. i —This is a good time to cull the ‘farm flock of sheep. The butcher : should get the ewes that have bad ud- | ders or those that have failed to breed. ‘ Base the culling process on production ‘rather than on appearance. Many a ; thin, rough looking ewe is thin be- cause she has successfully reared twin . lambs, while some of the fattest are non-producers or poor milkers. —Lancaster county leads in the ‘number of dairy cows but only by a small margin, having just 105 more dairy cows than Bradford county. ‘ Chester county is third. The report indicates that the northern section of i in dairying. The number of dairy cows at the begin- ning of the present year was a de- , crease of just one-half of one per cent. ‘over the number on the farms a year previous. —Six yearling Shopshire ewes and a Cheviot ram have lately been pur- chased by the animal husbandry de- . partment of The Pennsylvania State College, bringing the total number of pure breds in the college flock to ap- proximately two hundred head, irclud- ing the spring crop of lambs. The flock is made up of representative in- dividuals of all the major breeds in fine wool, long wool, and mutton class- es, used quite largely in winter class room work for instruction and judg- ing purposes. A number of pure breds were also used in the college ,cross-breeding experiments several . years ago, in which rams of the mut- ton breeds were crossed on Merino ' stock to determine the advisability of combining mutton and fine wool char- acters. —Our soils are rapidly becoming depleted of sulphur. The sulphur con- tent of our soils is of great import- ance. There is a heavy loss of sul- phur where there is continuous crop- ping in connection with insufficient fertilization. Combined with the loss- es of sulphur through drainage and the low original content of the soils, it appears that this loss cannot be compensated by the sulphur obtained from the atmosphere. 1t is necessary to apply fertilizers containing sul- phur to maintain the crop yields of such soils. —The use of acid phosphate is fre- quently attended by superior crops, due to the additional sulphate sup- plied in this form of fertilizer. . Gypsum, with its important content of sulphur, often adds fertility and in- i creases crop yields of soils which oth- erwise would have been materially re- duced in their productive capacity. . Under systems of live stock farm- ing, when the crops and purchased feeds are fed and the manure saved, the sulphur finds its way back to the land. In systems of grain farming it appears that some form of sulphate should be used systematically ih the | fertilizer treatment of the soil, for the purpose of maintaining therein a per- ‘ manent supply of sulphur. For permanent and increased pro- ‘ duction of farm crops, such systems of fertilization must be practiced as ! will not only supply to the soil nitro- ! gen, phosphorous and potash, but also {will add a sufficient quantity of sul- phur to meet the losses sustained by cropping and drainage. Excellent fer- | tilizers for such purposes include farm i manures, trade fertilizers, such as am- { monium sulphate, super-phosphate and | sulphate of potassium, and gypsum or | calcium sulphate. There will not be profitable produc- ! tion unless there is an ample supply | of organic matter and nitrogen in the I soil. By growing legume cover crops | these requisites may be secured in a | cheap way. A good cover crop plow- i ed under should give as much, if not i more, organic matter in the roots and | tops, per acre, than will eight tons cf { manure. Besides, a good legume cov- | er crop is able to secure from the air and place into the soil as much nitro- | gen, to the acre, as will eight tons of | manure, or 500 pounds of nitrate of soda. While it will not be as quick in action as will nitrate, nearly all the nitrogen in a cover crop will eventu- ally become available. On sbils that are light, cover crops, even non-legumes, will prevent the loss through leaching, blowing and washing of wvaluable soluble plant food. The greatest production can be obtained without manure and with fertilizers containing comparatively little nitrogen (and, therefore, less ex- pensive), if legume cover crops are systematically grown. : The liquids contain the richest and most soluble parts of the manure, the only parts in fact, that are complete- ly digested. Thé solid droppings do not cause any quick growth because they are not only low in nitrogen, but what they do contain of this element is not soluble, and thus cannot force growth at once. Nitrogen is found in our fertilizing materials in three forms—nitrate, ammonia and organic. The first is the soluble form, in which plants use this element. The oth "5 are changed more or less slowly into the nitrate or soluble form. : In a ton of liquids from a cow there are 12 pounds of nitrogen. As nitrate of soda contains 16 per cent. of nitre- gen, the liquid manure is as strong as a solution of 75 pounds of nitrate in 1925 pounds of water.