Cumberlands By Charles Neville Buck With Illustrations from Photographs of Scenes in the Play (Copyright, sor3, by W. J. Watt & Co.) SYNOPSIS. On Misery t K. at from which he has finfls George Le cott, a er, uncouscious, and Roes for assist 104 Sadly, taking 1. ATe¢ met by Spice family, who tel has been shot the fallen Iandsca after Samso: CHAPTER Il—Continued. “l hain’t a-wantin’ ter Samson, but 1 know how about yore pap. 1 heered thet suspicion ye feels Bud vals of truce, lives had been snuffed out in the fiercely burning hate of these men whose ancestors had boen comrades, Old Spicer South und his nephew Bamson were the direct lineal descen- dants of the namer of Misery, Their Other fam- ilies, related only by marriage and close association, were, in feud align- ment, none the legs “Souths.” And beyond the ridge, where the and brooks flowed the othe: to feed Crippleshin, dwelt the the and Daltons—men strong in their vindictive fealty to the code of the vendetta By mountain standards old Spleer South was His lands had been claimed when tracts could be had for the taking, and, though he had to make his mark when there was a con tract to be signed, his instinctive mind was shrewd and far seeing. The tinkle heard for a long creek bottoms, His hillside fields were the richest and his 5 the most fertile in that country. Holliges the rich, Cross full of liquor an’ lowed he'd Jesse an’ Jim Asberry a-talkin' ter- gether jest afore yore pap was kilt.” He broke off abruptly, then added: “Ye went away from hyar last night, row through his section, bringing the of coal and timber at the rails, would yawn and awake to enrich him There were black outcroppings along veins of bituminous wealth. But to that time he looked with foreboding, just heered the an’ come look fer ye.” “Air you-all 'lowin’ thet I shot them news, son, quietly. “Ef we-all hain't son, we're plumb Purvy's folks will hit, Sam- thet hit. lowin’ shore low try ter git ye,” The boy flashed a challenge the group, which was now rein at Spicer South's yard fer eyes were but he ma sSwer. One of the men who had listened in silence now spoke: “In the fust place, Samson, we hain't a-sayin’ ye done hit. In the nex’ place, ef ye did do hit hain't a-blamin’ ye—much. lon’t lie, an’, ef they yell need us. Thet's come.” The boy sl and helped Lescott deliberately un} and kit and laid them the of the stile, and, while he peace, neither ying nor his kinsmen sat their waited, Even to Lescott about ice, iis de 1 sullen, no an- we trails why we've ip to dismount of top step held aflirming, and his der horses it was palpable shooting of Jesse Purvy, and others believed him innocent, yet the less in danger of the enemy's ven- geance, But, regardless opinion, all were alike at his back and final utterance that of ready all alike awaited his Then, in the thick ning gloom, Sam son turned at the foot of ile and faced the gathering. stood rigid, and his eyes flashed passion. seams of his the st He with wilh jeans breeches, clinched. and his voice came in a slow utter. ance through which tirobbed the ten sity of a soul-absorbing bitternes “1 knowed "bout Je bein’ shot. When a-dyin’ over thar at his a little years Jesse Purvy him an’ all ge Purvy's pap lay house 1 ws old my a shaver ten I promised my pap that I'd find out who thet man was, an’ thet I'd git ‘em both —some day So help me, God Almighty, I'm a-goin’ ter git ‘em both—some day!” boy paused and lifted one though taking an oath. “I'm a-tellin’ you-ali the truth Jut 1 didn't shoot them shoots th mornin’. 1 hain't no truce buster, gives ye my hand on hit, . .» them dawgs come hyar they'll find hand as Is me £0 right by hyar. 1 don't ‘low ter run away, an’ I don’t ‘low ter hide out. I'm a-goin’ ter stay right hyar. Thet's all I've got ter say ter ye.” For a moment there was no reply. Then the older man nodded with a gesture of relieved anxiety, “Thet's all we wants ter know, Sam- son,” he said, slowly. “Light, men an’ come in.” CHAPTER 111, In days when the Indian held the Dark and Bloody Grounds a pioneer, felling oak and poplar logs for the home he meant to establish on the banks of a purling watercourse, let his ax slip, and the cutting edge gashed his ankle. Since to the discovered be- longs the christening, that watercourse became Crippleshin, and so it is today set down on atlas pages. A few miles away, as the crow flies, but many weary leagues as a man must travel, a brother settler, racked with rheuma- tism, gave to his creek the name of Misery, The two pioneers bad come together from Virginia, as their ances tors had come before them from Scot. land. Together they had found one of the two gaps through the mountain wall, which for more than a hundred miles has no other passable rift. To gether, and as comrades, they had made their homes and founded their race. What original grievance had sprung up between their descendants none of the present generation know perhaps it was a farm line or disputed title to a pig. The primary incident was lost in the lmbo of the past; but for fifty years, with occasional inter ards of his forefathers and saw in the coming of a new regime a curtailment of personal liberty. For new-fangled ideas he held only the aversion of deep-rooted prejudice. He hoped that before the foreigner held his land and the law became a power stronger than the individual or the clan. The law was his ener y, said to him “Thou shalt when he sought to hich bruising d from scattered rock because it not,” labor bad coax: til} it power us meant, also, a ally seized and administered which undertook srsonal settlement But his eyes print, could re; the times He foresaw itable coming of that day had vat, and no longer sell illicit liquor the pe not read 1d 0 n and ought to make given up the worr That was a conces no longer be sucee power was still large factional hands, and ‘in Hollmans were the ¢ the Hollm he could t lamson, sefully fought, State ly weapon his country fice holders make no born to be be ure with courage, time to a ans In fighting mq fons reared to ped by nat tigerish from } ie hatreds and had the there cropped restiess pher and a That a matter man found his bitterest and out time spirit of t hunger for knowledge was rei appreagensior It was at this house that George in the twilight atever ight Spicer Wh enemy mo tomorrow, old South rec OgniZed as a more immediate of today One of 0 have a rude we rking knowledge of JOE getting 1ad passed Le and } cott's in wrist wa in splint, B Injuries as ch - * ® ». * * r While Spicer South and had been sustaining building up bis cousins themselves competences by the other fac or the profits of merchandise and trade So, although Spleer South could net ther read nor write, his chief enemy, Micah Hollman, was to outward seem of affairs, clansmen were rougher and more {iit with civilization on Crippleshin. A deeper scrutiny showed this seeming to be one of the strange anomalies of the mountains, Micah Hollman had eatablished him. self at Hixon, that shack town which had passed of late years from feudal county seat to the section's one point of contact with the outside world; a town where the ancient and modern orders brushed shoulders; where the new was tolerated, but dared not be come aggressive. Directly across the street from the courthouse stood an ample frame building, on whose side wall was emblazoned the legend, “Hollman's Mammoth Department Store.” That was the secret strong- hold of Hollman power. He had al ways spoken deploringly of that spirit of lawlessness which had given the mountaing a bad name, When the raliroad came to Hixon it found in Judge Hollman a “public. spirited citizen.” Incidentally, the tim- ber that it hauled and the coal that its flat cars carried down to the Blue- grass went largely to his connignees. He had go astutely anticipated coming events that, when the first scouts of capital sought options they found themselves constantly referred to Judge Hollman. No wheel, it seemed, could turn without his nod. It was natural that the genial storekeeper should become the big man of the community and inevitable that the one big man should become the dictator. His inherited place as leader of the Hollmans in the feud he had soem: ingly passed on as an obsolete pre. rogative, Yet, In business matters, he was found to drive a hard bargain, and men came to regard it the part of good policy to meet rather than com- | bat his requirements. It was essen- | tial to his purposes that the officers of the Juw in his country should be in | sympathy with him. Sympathy soon | became abject subservience. When al South had opposed Jesse Purvy in the primary as candidate for high sheriff | he was found one day lying on his face with a bullet-riddled body It may have been a coincidence which pointed to Jim Asberry, the judge's | nephew, as the assassin. At all events, | the judge's nephew a boy, and a charitable grand jury declined to indict him. in the couree of five years South adherents, who had Holman’s path, became victims of the | laurel ambuscade. The of co incidence was strained the rumor grew and persistently spread though no man would admit fathered it, that before each executions starchamber | had been held in the above | Micah Hollman's, “Mammoth Depart | ment It was said that exclusive ge attended Judge Hollman, Sheriff Purvy tain other gentlemen selected by rea marksmans} When | vietims fell South Just returned from a below,” wearing and thinking “fotehed-on” thoughts, He had am the munity by demanding the right to as- | #ist In probing and prosecuting the affair. He had then shocked the com munity into complete paralysis by re- | questing the grand jury to indict not alone the alleged assassin, but also | his employers, whom he named as Judge Hollman and Sheriff Purvy. Then he, fell under a bolt the laurel That was the first public accusation against the bland capitalist, and it car ried its prompt warniug against repetition. The judge's high and chief ally retired from went abroad only Purvy had built crossroads 25 miles road Like Hollman reputation for Wits poor several crossed | theory Slowly having of the conferences | rooms Store.” these | by ! and cer IONE were son of their ip Johbu law “fotched-on” one these had down Qi zed com LOO, from | own n office and | with a his bodyguard. i store at a the rail d won a 14 vw he ha i-hande ted H I: wer oper cha liked-—an 1 lend were legion. His enemi that he from from others w Oo nu apprehended violenes the Souths but grudges of alse in feud at only ho nursed the line Hollman-Purvy ined enough the law's dictatorship, but South ad H i elated to The ad ret power to escape hold HOG way cleavage com! of its old it thi been i ped rir ri efforts of John booth two masks hz erstwhile old their wearers could no longer hold their law-abiding phils Purvy home of the countryside out the and emblance of Joase place modious verandas orchards pists show looked over and iu frame for he, pledsant ame | stood the two build his store bined merchandise powers But back of the mountain side, « looked without impenetrable ings of too, com nial rose | with bare the place which ™ dread thickets Lad i Ivy | Twice | spat d its at | had he recovers from 7 rnlh “Ef It Maint Askin’ Too Much, Will | Ye Let Me See Ye Paint One of | Them Things?” wounds that would have taken a less charmed life. And in grisly reminder of the terror which clouded the peace of his days stood the eight-foot log stockade at the rear of the place, which the proprietor had built to shield his daily journeys between house and store. But Jesse Purvy was not deluded by his escapes. He knew that he was “marked down.” The years of strain were telling on him. ‘The robust, full-blooded face was showing deep lines; his flesh was growing flaccid; his glance tinged with quick apprehension. He told his intimates that he realized “they'd get him,” yet he sought to prolong his term of escape. Yesterday morning Jesse Purvy had risen early as usual, and, after a sat. isfying breakfast, had gone to his store to arrange for the day's busi. ness, One or two of his henchmen, seaming loafers, but in reality a body. guard, were lounging within call. A married daughter was chatting with her father while her young baby played among the barrels and cracker boxes, The daughter went to a rear win. dow and gazed up at the mountain The cloudless skies wore still in hid ing behind a curtain of mist. The woman was idly watching the vanish. Ing fog wraiths, and her father came over to her side. Then the baby cried and she stepped back. Purvy himself remained at the window. It wae a thing he did not often do. It left him exposed, but the most cautiously guarded life has its moments of re ——— laxed vigllance. He stood there pos 8ibly thirty seconds, then a sharp fu- sillade of clear reports barked out and was shattered by the hills into a long reverberation. With a hand clasped to his chest, Purvy turned, walked to the middle of the floor, and fell. The henchmen rushed to the open sash They leaped out and plunged ip the mountain, tempting the assas sin's fire, but the assassin was satin fied The mountain was again as quiet as it had been at dawn. Inside, at the stare, Jesse Purvy shifted his ter's knee and expected event “Well, they've Ar middle of the head against hi ald daugh one stating BOL rue ordinary mo beg intaineer ied home to die in dirty nn cart of The long ordained i windowles star of Jess He Gre uffer otherwi; might might on i beat and of thug At all event his IE way and Hght DACK Out qui of for 1 ¢ de school faculty ound a NOW a ich as cared to « 1 things as l Higher up ils ide tood a sm : table ruments, tate could not ng and a case of which, it was Irpass To this haven Jesse } der lord the shoulders of his dependents Here, his steadfast guardian star uryy, the mur was borne in on as hu Later | bed, eye + Die ical visitors, who rried him to Was with the table ie June modu the in his Boughts in hb naved to a white parkle in his through santly drawn blinds, and rd chorus and Aaron Hol to h ack guard i bed out of is of sald Techly, two boys 1 ich brou i 1 have they ar other what If 1 don't die, if 1 get well ar a n South is 3 live for ute long h you He 1 elther it hear Phiementeg ng mighty Purvys * Gay, § entrance Ore two ta Yer whose eves were listl black mus ifed with that follows the whose aen man scent sheriff's tituting pro ceedings independent of the chief's or The next morning this family were in party x 1} 3 Cover with the the leash The two ed between the flowering rho gentlefa dogs pine sprouts and rocks They went gingerly alertly on ungainly, feet Just as their masters were de- spairing they came to a place directly been bent back and hitched to clear | the outlook and where a boot heel | had crushed the meses. There one of them raised his nose high into the long, deep-chested bay of discovery, | George Lescott had known hospital | ity of many brands and degrees. He had been the lionized celebrity in places of fashion. He had been the guest of equally famous brother artists in the cities of two hemispheres, and, since sincere painting had been his | pole star, he had gone where his art's i wanderiust backoned He had fol lowed the lure of transitory beauty to remote sections of the world, The present trip was only one of many | like it, which had brought him into touch with varying peonles and dis. tinetive types of life. He told himself that never had he found men at once | 80 ernde and so courteous as those hosts who, facing personai perils, had still time and willinghess to regard his comfort, The coming of the kinsmen, who ! would stay until the present danger pagsed, had filled the house. The four beds in the cabin proper were full, and some slept on floor mattresses. Lescott, because a guest and wounded, was given a small room aside. Sam: son, however, sharad his quarters in order to perform any service that an Injured man might require. It had been a full and unusual day for the painter, and its incidents erowded in oa him in retrospect and drove off the ossibility of sleep, Bamson, too, eemed wakeful, and in the isolation mT TONNE re. — conversation, which almost lasted out the night. Samson went into the con- fessional. This was the first human being he had ever met to whom he could uaourden his soul, The thirst to taste what lay beyond the hills: the wanderlust that had at time him a restiveneas so poignant be agonizing: the undefined to the matters in or lo unnamed & brought as ¥ hi 0 heart beauty he | gullty silence land mountain side, | ad hithert kept locked Inacove pocket, sire * ak ana d toward the roof hands ipped her E3 lips like hout across a great ang chimney and raised them to her one who means to then she whispered so k yerself could hear Hello, Samson South!” dis tance, w (hat stood for a forgot to laugh, She and & 1a Of spac while her eves i { ! i i { ATTORFBY. APIAW MLL TR 8 CP Dard of Overt Bones Esa w. BARRIOS wails ER ATTORNEY -AP44LW All profesional busine prseptty stained A 0.2 ATTURNEYS AT LAW Eisele Broos BELLEFONYH Da bb bd db bbb IAI ABBBI LIAB D4 00800000080 She ng devotions rai ri had performed her mo That at the house ¢ South was an off day. The kinsmen who had stopped for the night stayed on through the morning aay men talked crops and tossed work in the fields, and all remained within easy call. Only young Tama. rack Spicer, a raw-boned nephew, wore Shortly after dinner he disappeared, and when the afternoon was well ad: his arm, strolled toward the stile. (TO BE CONTINUED) How Suckers Bite. One Sunday morning, on his way to church, a deacon observed a boy industriously fishing. After the lad had landed several he approached and said “My son, don't you know it is very wrong to catch fish on the Sab bath day? And, besides, it is very cruel to impale that poor, helpless beetle upon that sharp hook.” Said the boy: “Oh, say, mister, this only an imitation! It ain't a real bug.” “Bless me!” replied the dea. son. “Well, 1 thought it was a real bug!” The boy, lifting a fine string of fish out of the water, said: “So did these suckers!” Friend of the Farmer. 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