Aered, * started for the day. [= EDNA FERBER ILLUSTRATIONS BY CLARK AGNEW. f Copyright by Doubleday, Page & Co. WNU Service, (Continued from last week.) SYNOPSIS J FEE ; of mouth. CHAPTER lL—Introducing “So Big” | (Dirk DeJong) in his infancy. And his mother, Selina DeJong, daughter of Simeon Peake, gambler and gentleman of fortune. Her life, to young woman- hood in Chicago in 1888, has been un- conventional, somewhat seamy, but generally enjoyable. At school her chum is Julie Hempel, daughter of August Hempel, butcher. Simeon is killed in a quarrel that is not his own, and Selina, nineteen years old and practically destitute, becomes a school- teacher. CHAPTER II—Selina secures a posi- tion as teacher at the High Prairie school, in the outskirts of Chicago, living at the home of a truck farmer, Klaas Pool. In Roelf, twelve years old, son of Klaas, Selina perceives a kindred spirit, a lover of beauty, like herself. Shivering and tempted though she was, Selina had set her will against it. “I won't go down,” she said to herself, shaking with the cold. “I won't come down to dressing behind the kitchen stove like a—like a peas- ant in one of those dreadful Russian novels. . . . That sounds stuck up and horrid. . . . The Pools are good and kind and decent.. . . But I won’t come down to huddling behind the stove with a bundle of underwear in my arms. Oh, dear, this corset’s like a casing of ice. “But I won't dress behind the kitch- en stove!” declared Selina, glaring meanwhile at that hollow pretense, the drum. She even stuck her tongue out at it (only nineteen, remember!). When she thought back, yeas later, on that period of her High Frairie experience, stoves seemed to figure with absurd prominence in her mem- ory. That might well he. A stove changed the whale course of her life. From the first, the schoolhouse stove was her bete noir. Out of the welter of that first year it stood, huge and menacing, a black tyrant. The High Prairie schoolhouse in which Se- lina taught was a little more than a mile up the road beyond the Pool farm. She came to know that road in all its moods—ice-locked, drifted with snow, wallowing in mud. School began at half-past eight. After her first week Selina had the mathematics of her early morning reduced to the least common denominator. Up at six. A plunge into the frigid gar- ments; breakfast of bread, cheese, sometimes bacon, always rye coffee without cream or sugar. On with the cloak, muffler, hood, mittens, galoshes. The lunch box in bad weather. Up the road to the schoolhouse, battling the prairie wind that whipped the tears into the eyes, plowing the drifts, slipping on the hard ruts and icy ridges in dry weather. Excellent at nineteen. As she flew down the road ~