= IG. EDNA FERBER ILLUSTRATIONS BY CLARK AGNEW. Co ht by Doubleday, e & Ce. WNU Service, ». (Continued from last week.) SYNOPSIS BR ilpteducing “So Bi k DeJong) in his infancy. And his her, Selina DeJong, daughter of n Fawis, gambler and gentleman er life, to young woman- in Chioago in 1888, has been un- éonventional, somewhat seamy, but 1ly Shioyebie t school her am Julie Hempel, @aughter of st Hempel, butcher. Simeon is in a quarrel that is not his own, : lina, nineteen years old and isiicaly destitute, becomes a school- CHAPTER JI—Selina secures a posi- gion as teacher at the High Prairie ool, in the outskirts of Chicago, fying at the home of a truck farmer, Pool. In Roelf, twelve years , son of Klaas, Belina perceives a fizared spirit, a lover of beauty, like CHAPTER IIIL.—The monotonous life & country school-teacher at that ®, is Selina’s, brightened somewhat the companionship of the sensitive, artistic boy Roelf. CHAPTER ]IV.—Selina hears gossip cerning the affection of the “Widow Fasricovers,’ rich and good-looking. for Pervus DeJong, poor truck farmer, who is insensible to the widow's at- tions. For a community “sociable” lina Jiepares a lunch basket, dainty, ut not of ample proportions, which is uctioned,” according to custom. The smallness of the lunch box excites deri- n, and in a sense of fun the bidding ) mes spirited, DeJong finally secur- it for $10, a ridiculously high price. Over their lunch basket, whic elina nd DeJong share together, the school- Seacher arranges to instruct the good- PAatures farmer, whose education has neglected. CHAPTER V.—Propinquity, in their itions of “teacher” and “pupil,” and lina’s loneliness in her uncongenial urroundings, lead to mutual affection. ervus Delong wins Selina’s consent $0 be his wife. CHAPTER VI—Selina becomes Mrs. eJong, a “farmer's wife,” with all the rdships unavoidable at that time. irk is born. Selina (of Vermont stock, businesslike. and shrewd) har plans for building ue the farm, which re ridiculed by her husband. Maartje ool, Klaas’ wife, dies, and after the requisite decent interval Klaas marries he “Widow Paarlenberg.” The boy oelf, sixteen years old now, leaves is home. to make his way to France and study, his ambition being to be- ome a sculptor. CHAPTER VIL-—Dirk is eight years @1d when his father dies. Selina, faced with the necessity of making a living for her boy and herself. rises to the sion, and, with Dirk, takesa truck- fos of vegetables to the Chicago mar- . A woman selling in the market place is an innovation frowned upon. CHAPTER VIIL.—As a disposer of the vegetables from her truck Selina is a flat failure, buyers being shy of dealing with her. To a commission dealer she sells part of her gtock. On the way home she peddies from door to door, with indifferent success. A J 0)ceman demands her license. She as none, and during the ensuing alter- cation Selina's girlhood chum, Julie empel, now Julie Arnold, recognizes er. CHAPTER IX.—August Hempel, risen to prominence and wealth in the busi- ness world, arranges to assist Selina in making the farm something more of a paving proposition. Selina grate- fully accepts his help, for Dirk's sake. CHAPTER X.—Selina achieves the success with the farm which she knew was possible, her financial troubles ending. At eighteen Dirk enters Mid- west university. CHAPTER XI—Dirk goes to Cornell university, intending to make architec- ture his life work, and on graduation enters the office of a firm of Chicago architects. Paula Arnold, daughter of Julie, enters his life. He would marry her, but she has a craving for wealth and takes Theodore Storm, millionaire, for her husband. The World war begins. CHAPTER XIIL.—Paula, despite her marriage and motherhood, continues interested in Dirk, their friendship be- inning to cause gossip. She urges Birk to give up the profession of archi- tecture and enter business for the eater financial reward possible. Dirk ton, feeling his mother would not approve of the change. - She interrupted him with a little ery. “I know I did. I know I did.” Suddenly she raised a warning finger. Her eyes were luminous, prophetic. “Dirk, you can’t desert her like that!” “Desert who?” He was startled. “Beauty! Self-expression. What- ever you want to call it. You wait! She’ll turn on you some day. Some day you’ll want her, and she won’t be there.” Inwardly he had been resentful of this bedside conversation with his mother. She made little of him, he thought, while outsiders appreciated his success. He had said. “So big,” measuring a tiny space between thumb and forefinger in answer to her half- playful question, but he had not hon- estly meant it. He thought her ridicu- tously old-fashioned now in her view- point, and certainly unreasonable. But the would not quarrel with her. “You wait, too, Mother,” he sald pow, smiling. “Some day your way- ward son will be a real success. Wait ti11 the millions .roll in. Then we'll see.” She lay down, turned her back de- liberately upon him, pulled the covers up about her. “Shall 1 turn out your and open the windows?” “Meena’ll do it. She always does. Just call her. . . . Good-night.” He knew that he had come to be a rather big man in his world. Influ- ence had helped. He knew that, too. But he shut his mind to much of Paula’s maneuvering and wire-pulling —vefused to acknowledge that her lean, dark, eager fingers had manipu- light, Mother, jated the mechanism that ordered his career. Paula herself was wise enough to know that to hold him she must not Jet him feel indebted to her. She knew that the debtor hates his creditor. She lay awake at night planning for kim. scheming for his advancement. then suggested these schemes to Lim so Geftly as to make him think he himself hed devised them. She had even rea- tized of late that their growing inti- wacy might handicap him If openly commented on. But now she must see him dally, or speak to him. Her tele- phone was a private wire leading only to her own bedroom. She called him the first thing in the morning; the last thing at night. Her voice, when she spoke to him, was an organ transformed; low, vi- brant, with a timbre in its tone that would have made it unrecognizable to an outsider. Her words were com- | monplace enough, but pregnant and meaningful for her. “What did you do today? Did you have a good day? . . Why didn’t you call me? . . . Did you follow up that suggestion you made about Kennedy? 1 thank it’s a wonderful idea, don’t you? You’re a wonderful man, Dirk; did you know that? . . . I miss you. Do youl . . . When? Why not lunch? . . . Oh, not if you have a business appoint- ment. How about five o'clock? «. +»! +» No, not there. Oh, I don’t know. It's so public Yes. . . Goodby. . . . Good- night. . . . Good-night. es They began to meet rather furtively, in out-of-the-way places. They would lunch in department store restaurants where none of their friends ever came. They spent off afternoon hours in the | dim, close atmosphere of the motion- ' picture palaces, sitting in the back row, seeing nothing of the film, talk- | ing in eager whispers that failed to annoy the scattered devotees in the nitddle of the house. When they drove it was on obscure streets. Paula had grown very beautiful, her | world thought. There was about her ! the aura, the glow, the roseate exhala- | tion that surrounds the woman in ' love. | Frequently she irritated Dirk. At | such times he grew quieter than ever; more reserved. As he involuntarily withdrew she advanced. Sometimes he thought he hated her—her hot, eager hands, her glowing, asking eyes, ner thin, red mouth, her sallow, heart- shaped, exquisite face, her perfumed slothing, her air of ownership. That was it! Her possessiveness. Some- times Dirk wondered what Theodore Storm thought and knew behind that | impassive flabby white mask of his. Dirk met plenty of other girls. Paula was clever enough to see to that. She asked them to share her box at the opera. She had them at her dinners. She affected great in- difference to their effect on him. She suffered when he talked to ore of them. “Dirk, why don’t you take out that nice Farnham girl?” “Is she nice?” “Well, isn’t she? You were talking | to her long enough at the Kirks’ | dance. What were you talking about?” “Books.” “Oh. Books. She's awfully nice and intelligent, isn’t she? A lovely girl!” She was suddenly happy. Books, The Farnham girl was a nice girl. She was the kind of girl one should fall in love with and doesn't. The Farnham girl was one of many well- bred Chicago girls of her day and class. Fine, honest, clear-headed, frank, capable, good-looking in an in- definite and unarresting sort of way. Hair-colored hair, good teeth, good enough eyes, clear skin, sensible me- dium hands and feet; skated well, danced well, talked well. Read the books you had read. A companion- able girl. Loads of money but never spoke of it. Traveled. Her hand met yours firmly—and it was just a hand. At the contact no current dart- ed through you, sending its shaft with a little zing to your heart. But when Paula showed you a book her arm, as she stood next you, would somehow fit into the curve of yours and you were conscious of the feel of ner soft slim side against you. He knew many girls. There was a distinct type known as the North Shore girl. Slim, tall, exquisite; a little fine nose, a high, sweet, slight- ly nasal voice, ear rings, a cigarette, luncheon at Huyler’'s All these girls looked amazingly alike, Dirk thought; talked very much alike. They all spoke French with a pretty good ac- cent; danced Intricate symbolic dances; read the new books; had the same patter. They prefaced, inter- larded, concluded their remarks to each other with, “My deah!” It ex- pressed, for them, surprise, sympathy, amusement, ridicule, horror, resigna- | tion. “My deah! You should have seen her! My deeah !”—horror. Their slang was almost identical with that used by the girls working in his office. “She’s a good kid,” they said, speak- ing in admiration of another girl. They made a fetish of frankness. In a day when everyone talked in screaming headlines they kmew it was necessary to red-ink their remarks in. order to get them noticed at all. The word rot was replaced by garbage and gar- bage gave way to the ultimate swill. One no longer said “How shocking!” but, “How perfectly obscene!” The words, spoken in their gweet clear ; voices, fell nonchalantly from their | pretty lips. All very fearless and un- inhibited and fre That, they told veu, was the main thing. Sometimes Dirk wished they wouldn't work s0 | hard at their play. They were for- ever getting up pageants and plays and large festivals for charity; Vene- tian fetes, Oriental bazaars, charity balls. In the programme performance of these many of them sang better. acted better, danced better than most professional performers, but the whole thing always lacked the flavor, some- how, of professional performance. im these affairs they lavisdied thousands in costnmes and decorations, receiv- ing in return other thousands which they soberly turned over to the cause. They found nothing ludicroas in this. Spasmodically they -went into husi- ness or semi-professional ventures, ge- fying the conventions. I'wula did ‘uw too. She or one of her friends were forever opening blouse shops: starting Gifte Shopp~s: burgeoning into tea rooms decors ed in crude green and vermilion and orange and black; an- nouncing their affiliation with an ad- vertising agency. These adventures blossomed, withered, died. They were the result of post-war restlessness. Many of these girls had worked in- defatigably during the 1917-1918 pe- riod: had driven sevice cars. man- aged ambulances, nursed, scrubbed. conducted canteens. They missed the excitement. the satisfaction of achieve- ment. They found Dirk fair game, resent- ed Paula's proprietorship. Susans and | Junes and Kates and Bettys and Sal. | lys—plain old-fashioned names modern, erotic misses—they talked to for ! Dirk, danced with him, rode with him, . flirted with him. - His very unattain- ableness gave him piquancy. That Paula Storm had him fast. He didn't care a hoot about girls. “Oh, Mr. DeJong,” they said, “your name's Dirk, isn’t it? What a slick name! What does it mean?” “Nothing, I suppose. name. My people—my father's peo- ! ple—were Dutch, you know.” “A dirk’s a sort of sword, isn’t it, or poniard? Anyway, it sounds very keen and cruel and fatal—Dirk.” Ee would flush a little (one of his assets) and smile, and look at them, and say nothing. He found that to be &ll that was necessary. He got on enormously. Between the girls he met in society and the girls that worked in his of- fice there existed a similarity that struck and amused Dirk. He said, “Take a letter, Miss Roach,” to a slim young creature as exquisite as the girl with whom he had danced the day before; or ridden or played tennis or bridge. Their very clothes were fault- less imitations. They even used the same perfume. He wondered, idly, how they did it. They were eighteen, nineteen, twenty, and their faces and bodies and desires and natural equip- ment made their presence in a business office a paradox, an absurdity. Yet they were capable, too, in a mechanical | sort of way. Theirs were mechanical jobs. They were lovely creatures with the minds of fourteen-year-old chil- dren. Their hair was shining, perfect- ly undulated, as fine and glossy and tenderly curling as a young child's. Their breasts were flat, their figures singularly sexless like that of a very i young boy. ‘They were wise with the wisdom of the serpent. Their legs were slim and sturdy. Their mouths were pouting, soft, pink, the lower lip a little curled back, petal-wise, like the moist mouth of a baby that has just finished nursing. Their eyes were wide apart, empty, knowledgeous. They managed their private affairs like generals. They were cool, remote, disdainful. They reduced their boys to desperation. They were brigands, desperadoes, pirates, taking all, giving little. They came, for the most part, from sordid homes, yet they knew, in some miraculous way, all the fine arts that Paula knew and practiced. They were corsetless, pliant, bewilder- ing, lovely, dangerous. Among them Dirk worked immune, aloof, untouched. He would have been surprised to learn that he was known among them as Frosty. They admired and resented him. Not one that did not secretly dream of the day when he would call her into his office, shut the door, and say, “Loretta” (their names were burbankian monstrosities, born of grafting the original appella- tion onto their own idea of beauty in nomenclature — hence Loretta, Imo- gene, Nadine, Natalie, Ardella), “Lor- etta, I have watched you for a long, long time and you must have noticed how deeply I admire you.” It wasn't impossible. Those things happen. The movies had taught them that. Dirk, all unconscious of their pitiless all-absorbing scrutiny, would have been still further appalled to learn how fully aware they were of his personal and private affairs. They knew about Paula, for example. They admired and resented her, too. They despised her for the way in which she openly displayed her feeling for him (how they knew this was a miracle and a mystery, for she almost never came into the office and disguised all her telephone talks with him). They thought he was grand ‘to his mother. Selina had been in his office twice, per- + Italian furniture, with Paula’s aid. It’s a Dutch : aig had spent five minutes chatting socia- bly with Ethelinda Quinn, who had the face of a Da Vinci cherub and the goul of a man-eating shark. Selina always talked to everyone. She enjoyed listening to street car con- ductors, washwomen, janitors, land- ladies, clerks, doormen, chauffeurs, po- licemen. Something about her made them talk. They opened to her as flowers to the sun. They sensed her interest, her liking. As they talked Selina would exclaim, “You don’t say! Well, thet terrible!” Her eyes would be bright with sympathy. Selina had said, on entering Dirk's office, “My land! I don’t see how you can work among those pretty creatures snd not be a sultan. I'm going to ask some of them down to the farm over Sunday.” : “Don’t, Mother! They wouldn't un- derstand. I scarcely see them. They're just part of the office equipment.” Afterward. Ethelinda Quinn had passed expert opinion. ten times the guts that Frosty’s got. 1 like her fine. rible hat! But say. it didn’t look fun- ay on her, did it? Anybody else in that geivp would look comical. but she’s the kind that could walk off wilh anything. 1 don't know. She's got what [I call an air. It beats styic. Nice, too. She said I was a pres Httle thing. Can yon beat it! At thay &e's wight’ | cernly yam.” All unconscious, “Take a letter, Miss | Quinn,” suid Dirk half un hour later In thie midst of this fiery furnace o femininity Dirk walked Paula, the North shore girls, well-bre and professional business women |. occasionally met in the course business, the enticing littie nywphs hi encountered in his own office, ali prac ticed on him their warm and perfumed Wo; “Say, she’s got | haps. - On one of- these oecasions she | tell her that he would be comfortable on the big couch in the living room, or that he would take a room at the Uni- ¢ versity club. She always declined. She would take a room in a hotel, some: times north, sometimes south. Her holiday before her, she would go off roaming gaily as a small boy on a Saturday morning, with the day stretching gorgeously and adventure gomely ahead of him, sallies down the street without plan or appointment, knowing that richness in one form ot another lies before him for the choos ing. A sociable woman, Selina, savor ing life, she liked the lights, the color. the rush, the noise. Her years of grinding work, with her face pressed down to the very soil itself. had failed to kill her zest for living. She prowied into the city’s foreign quarters— Italian, Greek, Chinese, Jewish. She loved the Michigan boulevard and State street shop windows in which haughty waxed ladies in giitter- “Ing evening gowns postured, fingers elegantly crooked as they held a fan, a rose, a program, meanwhile smiling Did You set her ter. condescendingiy out upon an envious worid flattening its nose against the plate giass barrier. She penetrated the Black belt, where Chicago's vast and growing negro pop- uniation shifted and moved and stretched its great limbs ominousiy. reaching out and out in pretest and overfiowing the bounds that irked it. Her serene face. and her quiet rannner, her bland Interest and friendly .look protected her. They thought her a ' social worker, perhaps; one of the unscorcled | uplifters. She bought and read the ' Independent, the negro newspaper in | which herb doctors advertised magic ! roots. She even sent the twenty-five cents required for a box of these, ‘ charmed by thelr names—Adam and ' Eve wiles. He nioved among them cool and | ' queror, Jezebel Roots, Grains of Para- | dise. serene. Perhaps Lis sudden success had had sowetliing to do with this and his quiet ambition for further suc cess. For he really was accounted sdccessful now, even In the spectacu lar whirl of Chicago's meteoric finan cial constellation. North-side mammas regarded his income, his career, and his future with eyes of respect and | i wily speculation. There was always u neat little pile of invitations in the mail that lay on the correct little con- sole in the correct little apartment ministered by the correct little Jap on the correct North-side street near (but not too near) the lake, and overlook- ing it. The apartment had been furnished Together she and Dirk bad gone to interior decorators. “But you've got to use your own taste, too.” Paula had said, “to give it the iadividual touch.” The ajar ment was furnished in a good deal o the finish a dar cak or walnut, the whole massive an yet somehow unconvincing, The effeet ~ was soniber without being impressive, | There were long carved tables on |! which an ash tray seemed a desecra- | tion; great chairs roomy enough for lolling, yet in which you did not re lax; dull silver candlesticks; ves: ments; Dante’s saturnine features sneering down upon you from a cor | rect cabinet, books. bedroom, dining-room, kitchen, and u cubby-hole for the Jap. Dirk did not spend much of his time in the place. His upward climb was a treadmill, really. His office, the apart- ment, a dinner, a dance. His contacts were monotonous, and too few, His oflice was a great splendid of- fice in a great splendid office building in LaSalle street. He drove back and forth in a motor car along the boule- vards. His social engagements lay north. LaSalle street bounded him on the west, Lake Michigan on the east, Jackson boulevard on the south, Lake Forest on the north. He might have lived a thousand miles away for all he knew of the rest of Chicago—the mighty, roaring, sweltering, pushing, screaming, magnificent hideous steel giant that was Chicago. Selina had had no hand in the fur- nishing of his apartment. When it was finished Dirk had brought her in tri- umph to see it. “Well,” he had said, “what do you think of it, Mother?” She had stood in the center of the There were not { room, a small plain figure in the midst of these massive somber carved tables, chairs, chests. A little smile had quirked the corner of her mouth. “I think it’s as cosy as a cathedral.” Sometimes Selina remonstrated with him, though of late she had taken on a strange reticence. She no longer asked him about the furnishings of the houses he visited, or the exotic food he ate at splendid dinners. The farm flourished. The great steel mills and factories to the south were closing in upon her but had not yet set iron foot on her rich green acres. She was rath- er famous now for the quality of her farm products and her pens. You saw “DeJong asparagus” on the menu at the Blackstone and the Drake hotels. Sometimes Dirk’s friends twitted him about this and he did not always ac- knowledge that the similarity of names was not a coincidence. “Dirk, you seem to sce no one but just these people,” Selina told him in} one of her infrequent rebukes. “You don’t get the full flavor of life. You've got to have a vulgar curiosliy bout people and things. All kinds of pco- in the same little circle, over and over and over.” “Haven't time. Can't afford to take the time. “You can’t afford not to.” Sometimes Selina came into town for a week or ten days at a stretch, and indulged in what she called an orgy. At such times Julie Arnold would invite her to occupy one of the guest rooms at the Arnold house, or | many | Tiny foyer, large living-room. roots, Master of the Woods, Dragon’s Blood, High John the Con- “Look here, Mother,” Dirk would protest, “you can’t wander around like that. It isn’t safe. This isn’t High Prairie, you know. If you want to go round I'll get Saki to drive you.” “That would be nice,” she said, mild- ly. But she never availed herself of this offer. She would go over to South Water street, changed now, and swollen to such proportions that it threatened to burst its confines. She liked to stroll I, [1 i j : / / Nl ia Hy i (/ She Liked to Stroll Along the Crowder Sidewalks. along the crowded sidewalks, lined with crates and boxes and barrels of fruits, vegetables, poultry. Swarthy foreign faces predominated now. Where the red-faced overalled men had been she now saw lean muscular lads in old army shirts and khaki pants and scuffed puttees wheeling trucks, load- ing boxes, charging down the street in huge rumbling auto vans. Their faces were hard, their talk terse, Any one of these, she reflected, was more vital, mere native, functioned more usefully and honestly than her successful son, Dirk DeJong. “Where 'r’ “In ‘th’ ol’ “Tough.” “Best you can get.” “Keep ‘em.” beans?” beanery.” (Continued next week.) Failures Caused by Lack of Initiative One of the greatest improvements of the automobile is the self-starter, now found on all but the cheapest kinds of cars, which need to be cranked by hand. The device suggests the reflection that a very large proportion of the hu- man family require something of like nature. They lack initiative, voluntary ef- fort; they need cranking in the form of orders or directions before doing anything worth while. ‘The men and women who succeed best in life and get the most out of it are of the self-starter type. They don’t wait to be told or advised what ple. All kinds of things. You revolve ' to undertake, but proceed of their own accord to do things. The great inventors, such as Illison, | are all of this sort, says the Sacra- Dirk would offer her his bedroom and : mento Bee. They are originators, not mere followers or imitators, and they rank among the chief benefactors of the world. So it is in business, literature, art, the various industries, and, in fact, all occupations. Success in each is de- pendent chiefly upon originality or in- itiative. TRAPPING ANIMALS. Much has been said ‘about trapping, much has been done in regard to bet- ter trapping laws, but still a lot more remains to be done. What we should have is a humane way of trapping. When an animal is caught in a trap it will free itself by gnawing its foot off, or twisting its leg off. In the latter case, it must of necessity pull out its own sinews. Just imagine the agony that will impel an animal to endure such pain! An animal caught in a trap in extremely cold weather is like- ly to freeze to death before the trap- per ends its agony. The trapper, without sympathy sets out traps that in some sections require three or four days to reach on his rounds. The an- imals that do not succeed in gnawing themselves free suffer indescribable torture. A trapper accidentally caught in one of his own traps if in the big wilds, but fortunate enough to be res- cued before death arrives, knows the fierce agony of being held by the re- lentless iron jaws, miles from human habitation, with death staring him in the face. To prevent animals escap- ing from the ordinary single-jaw trap, a frightful double-jaw trap has been invented, so that it can never pull out the part held between the double jaws of the trap, but said traps are prohib- ited in Massachusetts. Many animals have been caught by the only foot they possessed, the other three feet having been lost in former traps. Beaver, caught in traps sunk in shallow water in the runways that lead to their houses, frequently lose all their paws in their battle for life. The spring-pole method of capturing animals is used to prevent them from escaping by self-mutilation. It con- sists of a flexible sapling bent down- ward and held in that position by an easily unloosened contrivance, and the trap is fastened to the sapling by a chain. When the animal is caught its struggles to free itself unloose the ar- rangement that holds the sapling down, whereupon the trap and animal caught therein are jerked upward. Perhaps the animal hangs in this cru- el position for several days before death. Bears are caught by the paw in a heavy trap, fastened by a chain to a log that can be freely dragged about, barring entanglement, which will prevent the animal going too far away. The savage teeth of the trap hold the paw. Meantime the trapper has an opportunity to shoot his quar- ry at leisure. But it must be emphasized that the practice of trapping, however limited the indulgence, has a deteriorating ef- fect on the moral character of all who engage in such a cruel pursuit or pas- 1 time. : The liberty allowed either a youth, or an adult,’ is an absolute power | which always corrupts unmistakably. | Boys develop either a love or a hate for animals, according to the direction their teaching takes. The boy who has been taught to respect and care for an animal will develop a sense of responsibility and a degree of moral exaltation that are humanizing to a high degree. Animals will regard him in turn as their benefactor. The list of pet animals we may have is a long cone. If a Shetland pony, a don- key or a goat, be too large, then the cat, the fax, the woodchuck, hens, ducks, opossums, the raccoon, the rab- bit, the squirrel, pigeons, pheasants, parrccs and partridge. The trappers deal in torture for cash, the manufacturer sells luxuri- ous, torture-tainted articles for cash, the dealer connects the trade and its horrors with his customers for cash, the woman buys these dreadful arti- cles for cash, to gratify her vanity. Thus thirty millions of tortured ani- mals are yearly sacrificed for the sake of selfishness, greed and vanity. Furs, if we must have them, should be taken by discarding the processes of torture. Any one of a humane dis- position must be filled with infinite sadness to walk along any of the prin- cipal avenues of our cities in winter and see the thousands of furs worn, knowing with what terrible cruelty such furs are obtained. Under State law in Massachusetts, all traps must be removed at the close of the open season on fur-bearing ani- mals.—By James A. Peck, in Our Dumb Animals. ‘Real Estate Transfers. William L. Foster, et al, to Beryl F. Riddles, tract in State College; $800. Mary A. Crider, et bar, to Ray F. Bullock, tract in Liberty township; $5,000. W. S. Furst, et al, Exr., to James C. Furst, tract in Bellefonte; $1. W. S. Furst, et ux, to J. T. Storch, tract in Bellefonte; $1. J. T. Storch, et ux, to James C. Furst, tract in Bellefonte; $1. Harry Reese, et ux, to Emma C. Dann, tract in Spring township; $600. Paul R. Emerick, et ux, to Mary A. Martin, tract in Walker township; $825. Irving G. Foster, et ux, to Newton C. Neth, tract in Ferguson township; 1. Irvin R. Walker, et ux, to Esther A. Neidigh, tract in Ferguson township; $550. Howard W. Stover, et ux, to C. L. Eyster, tract in Penn township; $1700. James I. McClure to Thersia Mec- Clure, tract in Bellefonte; $1. F. B. Bower, et ux, to John A. Boy - er, tract in Haines township; $350. W. Bright Bitner to John F. Mye.s, tract in Gregg township; $200. Trustees of the Presbyterian church of Pine Grove Mills, to William H. Fry, tract in Ferguson township; $4,600. Donald Snyder, et ux, to Marion J. McCulley, tract in Spring township; $600. J. Howard Musser, et ux, to Fred J. Holber, tract in State College; $1,500. Russell Miller, et ux, to Samuel Coble, et ux, tract in Spring township; $200. Anna T. H. Henszey, et bar, to Alumni Association of Upsilon Chap- ter of Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity, tract in State College; $2,400.