8Y EDNA. FERBER ILLUSTRATIONS BY CLARK AGNEW, Copyright by Doubleday, Pags & Co. WNU Service, (Continued frem last week.) SYNOPSIS CHAPTER L—Introducing “So Bi {Dirk DeJong) in his infancy. And his jrother, Selina DeJong, daughter of imeon Peake, gambler and gentleman of fortune, er life, to young woman- hood in Chicago in 1888, has been un- conventional, somewhat seamy, but generally enjoyable. ft school her chum is Julie Hempel, daughter of {August Hempel, butcher. Simeon is illed in a quarrel that is not his own, and Selina, nineteen years old and Tasiicatly destitute, becomes a school- eacher. CHAPTER II—Selina secures a posi- tion as teacher at the High Prairie hool, in the outskirts ,of Chicago, jving at the home of a tfuck farmer, laas Pool. In Roelf, twelve years old, son of Klaas, Selina perceives a Jundrea spirit, a lover of beauty, like erself. CHAPTER II1.—The monotonous life of a country school-teacher at that time, is Selina’s, brightened somewhat by the companionship ot the sensitive, artistic boy Roelf. Adam Ooms’ glance swept the hall until it reached the tall figure tower- ing in the doorway—reached it, and rested there. His gimlet eyes seemed to bore their way into Pervus De- Jong's steady stare. He raised his right arm aloft, brandishing the potato masher. The whole room fixed its gaze on the blond head in the doorway. “Speak up! Young men of High Prairie! Heh, you, Pervus DeJong! ‘WhatmIbidwhatmIbidwhatmlbid }” “Fifty cents!” The bid came from Gerrit Pon at the other end of the hall. A dashing offer, as a start, in this dis- trict where one dollar often repre- sented the profits on a whole load of market truck brought to the city. Crash! went the potato masher. “Fifty cents I'm bid. Who'll make it seventy-five? Who'll make it seventy- five?” “Sixty!” Johannes Ambuul, a wid- ower, his age more than the sum of his bid. “Seventy!” Gerrit Pon. Adam Ooms whispered it—hissed it. “S-s-s-seventy. Ladies and gents, 1 wouldn't repeat out loud sucha figger. I would be ashamed. Look at this ‘basket, gents, and then you can say . . . Ssseventy!” “Seventy-five!” the cautious Am- buul. Scarlet, flooding her face, belied the widow's outward air of composure. Pervus DeJong, standing beside Selina, viewed the proceedings with an air of detachment. High Prairie was looking at him expectantly, openly. The widow bit her. red lip, tossed her head. Per- wus DeJong returned the auctioneer’s meaning smirk with the mild gaze of a disinterested outsider. “Gents!” Adam Ooms’ voice took on a tearful note—the tone of one who is more hurt than angry. “Gents!” Slowly, witl infinite reverence, he lift- ed one corner of the damask cloth that concealed the hamper's contents—lifted it and peered within as at a treasure. At what he saw there he started back dramatically, at once rapturous, de- spairing, amazed. He rolled his eyes. ‘He smacked his lips. He rubbed his stomach. The sort of dumb show that, since the days of the Greek drama, has been used to denote gastronomic de- flight. “Eighty!” was wrenched suddenly from Goris Von Vuuren, the nineteen- year-old fat and gluttonous son of a prosperous New Haarlem farmer. Adam Ooms rubbed brisk palms to- gether. “Now then! A dollar! A ‘dollar! It’s an insult to this basket to make it less than a dollar.” He leaned far forward over his improvised pulpit. #Did I hear you say a dollar, Pervus DeJong?’ DeJong stared, immovable, gnabashed. “Elghty-elghty-eighty-eighty -—gents! I'm going to tell you some- thing. I'm going to whisper a secret.” His lean face was veined with crafti- ness. “Gents. Listen. It isn’t chicken fn this beautiful basket. It isn’t chicken. It's”—a dramatic pause— “it’s roast duck!” He swayed back, ‘mopped his brow with his red handker- chief, held one hand high in the air. His last card. “Eighty-five!” groaned the fat Goris Non Vuuren. “Eighty-five! - Eighty-five! - Eighty- fiveeightyfiveeightyfive eighty - five! Gents! Gen-tle-men! Eighty-five once! Eighty-five—twice!” (Crash)! “Gone $0 Goris Von Vuuren for eighty-five.” A sigh went up from the assemblage; a sigh that was the wind before the storm. There followed a tornado of talk, It crackled and thundered. The rich Widow Paarlenberg would have to eat her supper with Von Vuuren’s boy, the great thick Goris. And there in the doorway, talking to teacher as if they had known each other for years, was Pervus DeJong with his money in his pocket. It was as good as a play. Adam Ooms was angry. His lean fox-like face became pinched with spite He prided himself on his antics as auc tioneer; and his chef @'oedvré ha AERP Ed brought a meager eighty-five cents, be- sides doubtless winning him the en- mity of that profitable store customer, the Widow Paarlenberg. Goris Von Vuuren came forward to claim his prize amidst shouting, clapping, laughter. The great hamper was handed down to him, Adam Ooms scuffled about among the many baskets at his feet. His nos- trils looked pinched and his skinny hands shook a little as he searched for one small object. When he stood upright once more he was smiling. His little eyes gleamed. His wooden scepter pounded for si- lence. High in one hand, balanced daintily on his finger tips, he held Selina’s little white shoe box, with its red ribbon binding it, and the plume of evergreen stuck in the ribbon. Affect- Ing great solicitude he brought it down then to read the name written on it; held it aloft again, smirking. He sald nothing. Grinning, he held it high. He turned his body at the waist from side to side, so that all might see. The eyes of those before him still held a mental picture of the huge hamper, food-packed, that had Just been handed down. The contrast was too absurd, too cruel. A ripple of laughter swept the room; rose; swelled to a roar. Adam Ooms waited with a nice sense of the dramatic until the laughter had reached its height, then held up a hand for silence. A great scraping “Ahem!” as he cleared his throat threatened to send the crowd off again, “Ladies—and gents! Here's a dainty little tidbit. - “Here's something net only for the inner man, but a feast for the eye. Well, boys, if the last lot was too much for you this lot ought to be just about right. If the food ain’t quite enough for you, you can tie the ribbon | in the lady’s hair and put the posy in | your bottonhole and there you are. !: There you are! {What's more, the lady herself goes with it. You don’t get a country girl with this hers box, gents. A city girl, you can tell by looking at it, just. And who is she? Who did up this dainty little box just big enough for two?” He inspected it again, sol- emnly, and added, as an afterthought, “If you ain’t feeling specially hungry. Who?—"” He looked about, apishly. Selina’s cheeks matched her gown. Her eyes were wide and dark with the effort she was making to force back the hot haze threatening them. Why had she mounted this wretched soap box! Why had she come to this hid- eous party! Why had she come to High Prairie! Why! . . “Miss Selina Peake, Miss Se-li-na Peake!” A hundred balloon faces pulled by a single cord turned toward her as she stood there on the box for all to see. They swam toward her. She put up a hand to push them back. “Whatm I bid! What'm I bid! What'm I bid for this here lovely little toothful, gents! Start her up!” “Five cents!” piped up old Johannes Ambuul, with a snicker. The tittering crowd broke into a guffaw. Selina was conscious of a litdle slek feeling at the pit of her stomach. Through the haze she saw the widow's face, no longer sulky, but smiling now. She saw Roelf’s dear dark head. His face was set, llke a man’s. He was coming toward her, or trying to, but the crowd wedged him in, small as he was among those great bodles. She lost sight of him. How hot it was! howhot. . . . An arm at her waist. Someone had mounted the little boxiand stood teeter- that’s who. Ing there beside hier, pressed against’ her slightly, reassuringly. Pervus De- Jong. Her head was on a level with the doorway, on the soap box, for all High Prairie to see. “Five cents I'm bid for this lovely little mouthful put up by the school teacher’s own fair hands. Five cents! Five—" “One dollar!” Pervus DeJong. The balloon faces were suddenly punctured with holes. High Prairie’s Jaw dropped with astonishment. Its mouth stood open. There was nothing plain about Selina now. Her dark head was held high, and his fair one beside It made a vivid foil. The purchase of the wine-colored cashmere was at last justified. “And ten!” cackled old Johannes Ambuul, his rheumy eyes on Selina. Art and human spitefulness struggled visibly for mastery in Adam Ooms’ face—and art won. The auctioneer triumphed over the man. The term “crowd psychology” was unknown to him, but he was artist enough to sense that some curious magic process, working through this room- ful of people, had transformed the little white box, from a thing despised and ridiculed, into an object of beauty, of value, of infinite desir ability. He now eyed it in a catalepsy of admiration, “One-ten I'm bid for this box all tied with a ribbon to match the gown of the girl who brought it. Gents, you get the ribbon, the lunch, and the girl. And only one-ten bid for all that. Gents! Gents! Remember, it ain't only a lunch—it’s a picture, It pleases the eye. Do I hear one—" “Five bits!” Barend DeRoo, of Low Prairie, in the lists. A strapping young Dutchman, the Brom Bones of the dis- trict. He drove to the Haymarket with his load of produce and played cards all night on the wagon under the gas torches while the street girls of the neighborhood assailed him in vain. Six feet three, his red face shone now like a harvest moon above the crowd. A merry, mischievous eye that laughed at Pervus DeJong and his dollar bid. “Dollar and a half!” A high clear voice—a boy's voice. Roelf. “Oh, no!” said Selina aloud. But she was unheard in the gabble. Roelf had once confided to her that he hac saved three dollars and fifty cents in the last three years. Five dollurs would purchase a set cf tools that his mind had been fixed on for months past. Selina saw Kirnaz Pccl’s look ef | astonishment changing to anger. Saw i Maartje Pool’s quick hand on his arm, restraining him. | “Two dollars!” Pervus DeJong. “And ten.” Johannes Ambuul’s cau- tious bid. “Two and a quarter.” Barend De- Roo. “Two-fifty!” Pervus DeJong. “Three dollars!” The high voice of the boy. It cracked a little on the last syllable, and the crowd laughed. “Three-three-three-three-three - three- three. Three once—" “And a half.” Pervus DeJong. “Three sixty.” “Four!” DelRoo. “And ten.” The boy’s voice was heard no more. “I wish they'd stop,” whispered Selina. “Five!” Pervus Delong. “Six!” DeRoo, his face very red. “And ten.” “Seven!” “It's only jelly sandwiches,” said Selina to DeJong, in a panic. “Eight!” Johannes Ambuul, gone mad. “Nine!” DeRoo. “Nine! Nine I'm bid! Nine-nine- nine! Who'll make it—" “Let him have it. fell a little. Don’t—" “Ten!” said Pervus DeJong. Barend DeRoo shrugged his great shoulders. “Ten-ten-ten. I hear ten-fifty. tentententen ! The cup cakes Do I hear eleven? Do Ten-ten-ten tententen- Gents! Ten once. Ten “Gone !—for Ten Dollars to Pervus ! DeJong.” twice! Gone—for ten dollars to Per- vus DeJong. And a bargain.” Adam Ooms mopped his bald head and his cheeks amd the damp spot under his chin. Ten dollars. Adam Ooms knew, as did all the countryside, this was not the sum of ten dollars merely. No basket of food, though it contained nightingales’ tongues, the golden apple of Atalanta, wines of rare-vintage, could have been adequate recompense for these ten dollars. They represented sweat and blood; toil and hardship; hours under the burning prairie sun at midday; work doggedly carried on through the drenching showers of spring; nights of restless sleep snatched an hour at a time under the sky in the Chicago market place; miles of weary travel down the rude corduroy road between High Prairie and Chica- go, now up to the hubs in mud, now blinded by dust and blowing sand. A sale at Christie’s, with a miniature going for a million, could not have met with a deeper hush, a more dramatic babble following the hush. They ate their lunch together in one corner of Adam Ooms’ hall. Selina opened the box and took out the deviled eggs, and the cup cakes that had fallen a little, and the apples, and the sandwiches sliced very, very thin. The coldly appraising eye of all High Prairie, Low Prairie, and New Haar- lem watched this sparse provender emerge from the ribbon-tied shoe box. She offered him a sandwich. It looked infinitesimal in his great paw. Sud- denly all Selina'’s agony of embarrass- ment was swept away, and she was laughing, not wildly or hysterically, but joyously and girlishly. She, sank lier little white teeth inte one of the absurd sandwiches and looked at him, expecting to find him laughing, too. But he wasn't laughing. He looked very earnest, and his blue eyes were ( fixed hard ca the bit of bread io his hand, and his face was very red and clean-shaven. He bit into the sand- wich and chewed it solemnly. And Selina thought: “Why, the dear thing! The great big dear thing! And he might have been eating breast of duck. . . . Ten dollars!” Aloud she said, “What made you do it?” He seemed not to hear her; bit ruminantly into one of the cup cakes. Suddenly: “I can’t hardly write at all, only to sign my name and like that.” “Read?” 2 “Only to spell out the words. Any- ways I don’t get time for reading. But figuring I wish I knew. ’Rithmetic. I can figger some, but those fellows in Haymarket they are too sharp for me. They do numbers in their head—like that, so quick.” Selina leaned toward him. teach you. I'll teach you.” “How do you mean, teach me?” “Evenings.” He looked down at his great cal- loused palms, then up at her. “What would you take for pay?” “Tn “Pay! I don’t want any pay.” was genuinely shocked. His face lighted up with a sudden thought. “Tell you what. start for you the fire, mornings, in the school. in a pail of water. This month, and -.-{ Januuery snd February and part of “Marcel; even, now I don't go to market you the fire. Till spring. And could come maybe three times a week. i be ashamed of, like a violent temper, She { I could And thaw the pump and bring | SONS Sometimes they fell to talking. His wife had died in the second year of their marriage, when the child was born. The child, too, had died. A girl. He was unlucky, like that. It was the same with the farm. Selina’s heart melted in pity. He would look down at the great cal-! loused hands; up at her. One of the charms of Pervus DeJong lay in the things that his eyes said and his tongue did not. Women always imagined he was about to say what he looked, but he never did. It made otherwise dull conversation with him most exciting. His was in no way a shrewd mind. His respect for Selina was almost rev- erence. But he had this advantage: he had married a woman, had lived with her for two years. She had borne him a child. Selina was a girl in ex- perience. She was a woman capable of a great deal of passion, but she did not know that. Passion was a thing no woman possessed, much less talked about. It simply did not exist, except in men, and then it was something to or a weak stomach. Dy the first of Murch he could speak a slow, careful and fairly grammatical English. He could master slmnle sums. By the middie of March the ese would cease. There was too i much work to do about the farm— i | | evenings, to Pool’s place, for lessons.” | hugeness. She felt a little rush of warmth toward him that was at once lmper- sonal and maternal. She thought again, “Why, the dear thing! great helpless big thing! How serious he is! And funny.” denly, a gay little laugh, and he, after a puzzled pause, joined her companion- ably. “Three evenings a week,” repeated Selina, then, from the depths of her ignorance. “Why, I'd love to. I'd— love to.” Chapter V The evenings turned out to be Fues- days, Thursdays, and Saturdays. Sup- per was over by six-thirty in the Pool household. Pervus was there by seven, very clean as to shirt, his hair brushed till it shone; shy, and given to drop- ping his hat and bumping against chairs, and looking solemn. Selina was torn between pity and mirth. If only - about it. he had blustered. A blustering big man puts the world on the defensive. | A gentle giant disarms It. Selina got out her McBride's gram- mar and Duffy's arithmetic, and to- gether they started to parse verbs, | paper walls, dig cisterns, and extract square roots. They found study im- possible at the oilcloth-covered kitchen table, with the Pool household eddying Jakob built a fire in the parlor stove and there they sat, teacher and pupil, their feet resting cosily on the gleaming nickel railing that encir- cled the wood burner, On the evening of the first lesson Roelf had glowered throughout sup- per and had disappeared into the work shed, whence issued a great sound of hammering, sawing, and general clat- ter. He and Selina had got into the way of spending much time together, in or out of doors. The boy wor- shiped her inarticulately. She had early discovered that he had a feeling for beauty—beauty of line, texture, color, and grouping—that was rare in one of his years. The feel of a satin ribbon in his fingers; the orange and rose of a sunset; the folds of the wine- red cashmere dress; the cadence of a spoken line, brought a look to his face that startled her. Since the gathering at Ooms’ hall he had been moody and sullen; had refused to answer when she spoke to him of his bid for her basket. Urged, ‘he would only say, “Oh, it was just fun to make old Ooms mad.” Now, with the advent of Pervus De- Jong, Roelf presented that most touch- ing and miserable of spectacles, a small boy Jealous and helpless in his Jealousy. Selina had asked him to join the tri-weekly evening lessons; had, indeed, insisted that he be a pupil in the class round the parlor stove. Roelf would not. He disappeared into his work-shed after supper; did not emerge until after DeJong's de- parture. There was something about the sight of this great creature bent laboriously over a slate, the pencil held clumsily in his huge fingers, that moved Selina strangely. Pity wracked her. If she had known to what emotion this pity was akin she might have taken away the slate and given him a tablet, and the whole course of her life would have been different. “Poor lad,” she thought. “Poor lad.” Chided herself for being amused at his childlike earn- estness. He did not make an apt pupil, though painstaking. - Selina would go over a problem or a sentence again and again, patiently, patiently. Then, suddenly, like a hand passed over his face, his smile would come, transforming it. He would smile like a child, and Selina should have been warned by the warm rush of joy that his smlle gave her. She would smile, too. He was as pleased as though he had made a fresh and wonderful discovery. “Its easy,” he would say, “when you know it once.” Like a boy. He usually went home by eight-thir- ty or nine. Often the Pools went to bed before he left. After he had gone Selina was wakeful. She would heat water and wash; brush her hair vig- orously; feeling at once buoyant and depressed. The | ; the backs of them, slowly, moistily, She laughed, sud- | He looked so helpless, so humble, so | control something. She was trying to huge; and the more pathetic for his! keep her eyes away from something. | with her mouth, lingeringly. She was i terribly frightened. She thought to i herself: “I am going crazy. I am los- i work In a gust of sympathy and found ‘had heard that Julie was to be mar- ried to a Kansas man named Arnold. {~ night work as well as day. She found -herself trying net to think about the on account it's winter, I could start , time When the lessons should” cease, 1 ' She refused to look ahead to April. One night, late in February, Selina was conscious that she was trying to She realized that she was trying not to look at his hands. She wanted, crazily, to touch them. She wanted to feel them about her throat. She want- ed to put her lips on his hands—brush ing my mind. There is something the matter with me. I wonder how I look. I must look queer.” At half-past eight she closed her book suddenly. “I'm tired. I think | it’s the spring coming on.” She smiled a little wavering smile. He : rose and stretched himself, his great arms high above his head. Selina shivered. “Two more weeks,” he said, “is the last lesson. Well, do you think I have done pretty good—well?” “Very well,” Selina replied evenly. She felt very tired. The first week in March he was Ill, and did not come. A rheumatic afflic- tion to which he was subject. It was the curse of the truck farmer. Selina's evenings were free to devote to Roelf, who glowed again. She sewed, too; ! read; helped Mrs. Pool with the house- strange rellef therein; made over an old dress; studied; wrote’all Her let- ters (few enough), even one to the | dried-apple aunts in Vermont. She no ! longer wrote to Julie Hempel, She Julie herself had not written. The first week in March passed. He did not come. Nor did he come the fol- lowing Tuesday or Thursday. She was bewildered, frightened. All that week she had a curious feeling— or succession of feelings. She was restless, listless, by turns. Period of furious activity, followed by days of inertia. It was the spring, Maartje said. Selina hoped she wasn't going to be ill. She had never felt like that before. She wanted to cry. She was irritable to the point of waspishness with the children in the schoolroom. On Saturday—the fourteenth of March—he walked In at seven. Klaas, Maartje and Roelf had driven off to a gathering at Low Prairie, leaving Selina with the pigtails and old Jakob. She had promised to make taffy for them, and was in the midst of it when hig knock sounded at the kitchen door. All the blood in her body rushed to her head; pounded there hotly. He en- tered. There slipped down over her a complete armor of calmness, of self- possession ; of glib how do you do Mr. DeJong and how are you feeling and won't you sit down and there's no fire in the parlor we'll have to sit here. He took part in the taffy pulling. Selina wondered if Geertje and Jozina would ever have done squealing. It was half-past eight before she bundled them off to bed with a plate of clipped taffy lozenges between them. She heard them scuffling and scrimmaging about In the rare freedom of their parents’ absence. Pervus DeJong and Selina sat at the kitchen table, their books spread out before them on the oilcloth. The sweet, heavy scent of fruit filled the room. Selina brought the parlor lamp into the kitchen, the better to see. It was a nickel-bellied lamp, with a yellow glass shade that cast a mellow golden glow. “You didn't go to the meeting,” primly. “Mr. and Mrs. Pool went.” “No. I didn’t go.” “Why not?” She saw him swallow. “I got through too late. We're fixing to sow tomato seeds in the hotbeds tomor- row.” Selina opened McBride's grammar. “Ahem!” a school-teacherly cough. “Now, then, we'll parse this sentence: Blucher arrived on the field of \Water- : loo just as Wellington was receiving | the last onslaught of Napoleon. ‘Just’ may be treated as a modifier of the de- pendent clause. That Is: ‘Just’ means: at the time at which. Well. Just here modifies at the time. And Wellington isthe...” This for half an hour. Selina kept her eyes resolutely on the book. His voice went on with the dry business of parsing and its deep resonance struck a response from her a8 a harp re- sponds when a hand is swept over its strings. Selina kept her eyes reso- lutely on the book. Yet she saw, as though her eyes rested on them, his large, strong hands. On the backs of them was a fine golden down that deepened at his wrists. Heavier and darker at the wrists. She found her- self praying a little for strength—for strength against this horror and wick- edness. This sin, this abomination that held her. A terrible, stark and pitiful prayer, couched in the idiom of the Bible. “Oh, God, keep my eyes and my thoughts away from him. Away from his hands. Let me keep my eyes and my thoughts away from the golden hairs on his wrists. Let me not think of his wrists. . . . “The owner of the southwest quarter sells a strip 20 rods wide along the south side of his farm. How much does he receive at $150 per acre?” He triumphed in this transaction, began the struggle with the square root of 576. Square roots agonized him. She washed the slate clean with her little sponge. He was leaning close in his effort to comprehend the flendish ttle figures that marched se tractably under Selina’s masterly pen- cll. She took it up, glibly. “The remain-- der must contain twice the product of _ the tens by the units plus the square of the units.” He blinked. - She was: breathing rather fast. The- fire in the kitchen stove snapped and cracked. “Now, then, suppose you do- that for me. We'll wipe it out. There! What must the remainder contain?” He took it up, slowly, haltingly.. The house was terribly still except for- the man’s voice. “The remainder . . .. twice . . . product . . . tens... . units . . .” A something in his voice: —a note—a timbre. She felt herself swaying queerly, as though the whole: house were gently rocking. Little de- licious agonizing shivers chased each: other, hot and cold, up her arms, down: her legs, over her spine. . . . “plus: the square of the units is the same as: the sum twice the tens . . . twice: . +. the tens . . , the tens.” His voice stopped. Selina’s eyes leaped from the book to his hands, uncontrollably. Some- thing about them startled her. They were clenched fists. Her eyes now leaped from those clenched fists to the- face of the man beside her. Her head came up, and back. Her wide, startled eyes met his. His wese a blaze of blinding blue in his tanned face. Some corner of her mind that was still work- _ ing clearly noted this. Then his hands: { unclenched. The blue blaze scorched her, enveloped her. Her cheek knew Her Cheek Knew the Harsh Cool Feel of a Man's Cheek. the harsh, cool feel of a man's cheek. She sensed ‘the potent, terrifying, pungent odor of close contact—a mix- ture of tobacco smoke, his hair, fresh- ly laundered linen, an indeflnable body smell. It was a mingling that disgusted and attracted her. She was: at once repelled and drawn. Then she felt his lips on hers and her own, in- credibly, responding eagerly, wholly to that pressure, (Continued next week.) tn mo ——— pn in —— Museum at Priestley House. Alumni chemists of The Pennsyl- vania State College who own the house on the banks of the Susquehan- na at Northumberland built about 1794 by Dr. Joseph Priestley, the Uni- tarian minister who discovered oxy- gen, are planning to build a fire-proof museum there to house the historic relics and laboratory equipment used by the pioneer chemist. The Penn State chemists bought the house in the hope that it could be moved to the college campus but this was found to be impossible. Through Dr. Gerald L. Wendt, dean of the Penn State school of chemistry and physics, the American Chemical Society has be:n invited by the Penn State chemists to celebrate the sesqui-centennial of the discovery of the oxygen at the old Priestley home during September, 11926. The society was organized at Northumberland fifty years ago. ~ ——An egg contains a large portion of albumen, intended by nature for the nourishment of the growing chick. It is for this reason that it is impossi- ble to cook an egg on top of a high mountain, for there, owing to a lesser atmospheric. pressure, the water boils at a lower temperature, and this tem- perature being under “coagulation point,” the egg never “cooks.” : ~—Get your job work done here. eave