a — By Charles Neville Buck I WARE Cumberlands RES A With Illustrations from Photographs of Scenes in the Play, “sc ‘ EN ——— (Copyright, to13. by W, J. Want & Co.) 0 SYNOPSIS. —— On Misery creek Sally Miller finds George Lescott, a Iandacape painter, un- conscious. Jesse Purvy of the Hollman clan has been shot and Samson is sus- pected of the crime. Bamson denies it. The shooting breaks the truce in Hollman-South feud. Lescott discovers artistfc ability in Samson. Samson thrashes Tamarack Spicer and denounces him as the “truce-buster’ who shot Purvy, Samson tells the South clan that he is &oing to leave the mountains. Lescott goes home to New York. Samson bids Spicer and Sally farewell and follows. In much of city ways Drennie Lescolt per. suades Wilfred Horton, her lettante lover, to do a man's work in » world, Prompted by her love Sally te 18 her- self to write, Horton throws } the business world and becomes well hated by predatory flnanclers and politi- clans. At a Bohemian resort Samson meets Willlam Farbish, asite, and Horton's enemy spires with others to make ous, and succeeds. Farbish and Samson together at club's shooting lodge. and forces rupture, expecting Samson and so rid the politica of the crusader ' and thrashes the Farbish con. Horton jeal- brings imo CHAPTER Xl—Continued. and befriended me. I had never known any life except that of the Cumberland mountains. Until I met Miss Lescott. I had never known a woman of your world. was good to me. She saw that in spite of my roughness and ignorance | wanted te learn, and she taught me. You chose to misunderstand, and dis- liked me. These men saw that, and believed that, if they could make you insult me, they could make me kill you. As to your part, they succeeded I didn't see fit to oblige them, but, now that I've settled with them, I'm willing to give you satisfaction. Do we fight now and shake hands after ward, or do we shake hands fighting 7” mountaineer, “Good God!” he exclaimed at last “And you are the man 1 undertook to criticize!” ' “Yeu ain't answered my question,” suggested Samson South. “South, if you are willing to shake hands with me I shall be gra may as well admit that, if had You could hardly have succeeded in mak ing me feel smaller. 1 have played into their hands. I have been a damned fool. 1 have riddled my own self. respect—and if you can afford to ac- offering you both.” “I'm right glad to hear that” the mountain boy, gravely vy you I'd just as lef shake hands fight. . . . But just now I've 80 to the telephone.” The booth was in the and, as Horton waited, he the number for which calling. Wilfred's face once more flushed with the old prejudice. Could it be that Samson meant to tell Adri. enne Lescott what had transpired? Was he, after all, the braggart who boasted of his fights? And, if not. was it Samson's custom to call her up every evening for a good-night message? the hall, but, after a few turned, “I'm glad you liked the show ‘oa the mountaineer was saying. “No. nothing special is happening here— except that the ducks are plentiful. Yes, 1 like it fine. « Mr. Horton's here. Wait a minute-f Euess maybe he'd like to talk to you” The Kentuckian beckoned to Hor. ton, and, as he surrendered the re. celver, left the room. He was think. ing with a smile of the unconscious humor with which the girl's voice hag Just come across the wire: “lI knew that if You two met each other you would become friends.” “1 reckon,” said Samson, ruefully, when Horton joined him, “we'd better look around and see how bad those fellows are hurt in there. They may need a doctor.” And the two went back to find several startled servants assisting to their beds the disabled combatants, and the next morning their inquiries elicited the informa- tion that the gentlemen were all “able to be about, but were breakfasting in their rooms.” Such as looked from their windows that morning saw an unexpected olf. max, when the car of Mr. Wilfred Horton drove away from the club car rying the man whom they had hoped to see killed and the man they had hoped to see kill him. The two ap peared to be in excellent spirits and thoroughly congenial as the car rolled out of sight, and the gentlemen who were left behind decided that, In view of the circumstances, the “extraordi- nary spree” of last night had best go unadvertised into anclent history, CHAPTER XII. said told as got to same room. recognized Samson was minutes, re The second year of a new order brings fewer radical changes than the first. Samson's work began to forge out of the ranks of the ordinary and to show symptoms of a quality which would some day give it distinction, | Heretofore his instructors had held him rigidly to the lHmitations of black | and white, but now they took off the | bonds and permitted him the colorful delight of attempting to express him- self from the palette, It was like per- mitting a natural poet to leave prose { and play with prosody, | One day Adrienne looked up from a | sheaf of his very creditable landscape studies to inquire suddenly: { “Samson, are You a rich man of a | poor one?” | He laughed. “So rich,” he told her, “that unless I can turn some of this stuff into money within a year or two I shall have to g0 back to hoeing corn.” She nodded gravely, "Hasn't it occurred to you,” she demanded, “that in a way you are { wasting your gifts? They were talk- ing about you the other evening-—sev- eral painters. They all said that you should be doing portraits.” The Kentuckian smiled. His mas- ters had been telling him the same | thing. He had fallen in love with art | through the appeal of the skies and | hills. He had followed its call at the | proselyting of George Lescott, who | painted only landscape, Portraiture seemed a less artistic form of expres- sion. He said so. “That may all be { conceded, “but you can £0 on with your landscapes and let your por- | traits pay the way. And,” she added, { “since I am very vain and moderately rich, 1 hereby commission you to paint me, just as soon as you learn ! how.” very true.” she i Farbish had simply dropped out. Bit piracy had | leaked, and he knew that his | ness was ended and that we | pocketbooks would no | his profligate demands, * ® * ® * wv * Sally bad started to school i saw her old sorrel mare making its | way to and from the general direction i of i i {No one knew how Sally's bone's rift morbidly sensitive and a woman i girls in short skirts, and the girls were more ady anced than she { But she, too, meant to have “Varnin’~ { a8 much of it as was necessary to sat | And yet, { { the the “fotched-on™ ‘college” thought her the | voraciously ambitious pupil they | 0 fast did she learn. But her studies : { had again been interru | Grover, her teacher, riding over one THE For a moment she sald nothing, then shook her head again. “Issue your orders,” he insisted, “1 am waiting to obey.” She hesitated again, slowly: “Have your hair cut. It's the one uncivilized thing about you." For an instant Samson's face hard- ened, “No,” he said: “1 don't care tg do that.” “Oh, very well!” she laughed lightly. “In that event, of course, you shouldn't do it.” But her smile faded, and after ft moment he explained: “You see, it wouldn't do.” “What do you mean? “lI mean that I've got to keep some- thing as It was to remind me of a prior claim on my lite.” For an. instant the girl's face cloud then said, ed and grew deeply troubled. “You don: mean,” she asked, with than she had meant to show, or real- ized she was showing—"you don't mean ® hat you still adhere to ideas of | the vendetta?" Then she broke off | with a laugh, a rather nervous laugh. | "Of course not,” she answered her | self. “That would be too absurd!” | “Would it?" asked Samson, simply. He glanced at hig watch, “Two min- | utes up,” he announced. “The model] | By the | way, may 1 drive with you tomorrow | afternoon?” The next afternoon Bamson ran up the street steps of tha Lescott house | and rang the bell, and a few moments later Adrienne appeared. The CAr was | waiting outside, and, as tha girl came down the stairs in motor coat and veil, she paused and her fingers on the as she below with his The well shaped head was no longer marred by the mane was under the trans the change the seemed bolder and higher, and to her thinking the strength of the purposeful features was enhanced, the man looked at the man who stood i close cropped. and influence of a point which meant an aban donment of something akin to prin. | ciple ! She nothing, but as she took inn greeting her fingers his own in handclasp more said hand al Late that evening, when Samson re. | studio, he found a mis- and, as he took his eyes fell on the postmark dated from Hixon Kentucky, the man slowly climbed the it out It was Aas his hand with a strange sense of mis had deserted, met in the road empty “jolt wagon” followed by a ragged cortege of mounted men and women, whose faces were still brious with the effort mourning. Her question elicited the information that they were from the “buryin'" ler of » ® - * * . . Towards the end of that year Sam. son undertook his portrait of Adri enne Lescott. The work was nearing completion, but it had been agreed { that the girl herself a peep at the canvas was ready to unveil condition Often, as fred Horton idled in them, and often George Lescott came criticize, and left without eriticiz ing. The girl was impatient for the day when she, too, was to see the ple. ture, concerning which the three men maintained so profound a #ecrecy. Bhe it in ske posed. to picture would show her not only fea- tures and expression. but the i estimate of herself. | “Do you know. said one day, { coming out from behind his easel and | studying her, through half-closed ayes, i “I never really began to know You un- | til now? Analyzing you-~studying you {in this fashion, not by your words, but | by your expression your pose, the | very unconscious essence of your per. | sonality~—thege things are illuminat. ing.” “Although I am not | she said with a smile, | studying you, too. he painting you,” “I have been | As you stand there before your canvas your own person ality is revealed—and | have not been entirely unobservant myself.” | “And under the X-ray scrutiny of { this profound analysis,” he sald with a laugh, “do you like me?" “Walt and see,” she retorted. "At all events”-—he spoke gravely. “you must try to like me a little, be. cause I am not what 1 was. The per. son that I am is largely the creature of your own fashioning. Of course you bad very raw material to work with, and you can't make a slik purse of"—he broke off and emiled-—"well, of me, but in time you may at least get me mercerized a little” For no visible reason she flushed, and her next question came a trifle eagerly : “Do you mean | you?” “Influenced me, Drennie?” he re peated. “You have done more than that. You have painted me out and painted me over.” She shook her head, and in her eyes danced a lght of subtle coquetry, “There are things | have tried to do, and failed,” she told him. His eyes showed surprise. “Perhaps,” he a dense, and you may have to tell bluntly what | know thatsyou ¥ have influenced -” am me am to do. But you have only to tell me.” i i The letter was written in the hand of Brother Spencer Through its faulty diction ran a plain. | | for Samson, though there was no word Of or criticism. It was plain Was sent as a matter of cour who, having proved an Apostate, scarcely merited such congid eration It informed him that old Spicer Bouth had been "mighty pore I¥.,” but was now better, barring the breaking of age. Everyone was “tol erable.” Then came the announce. ment which the letter had been writ tent to convey, The term of the South-Hollman truce had ended, and it had been for an indefinite period “Some your folks of repre that it teay to one renewed of thought thes they to give you a say." wrote | the informant. “But they decided that it couldn't hardly make no difference to you, since you have left the moun- tains, and if you cared anything abott it, you knew the time, and could of here Hoping this finds you well.” i Samson's face ciouded. He threw the soiled and scribbled missive down on the table and sat with unseesing eyes fixed on the studio wall. So, they | had cast him out of their councils! | They already thought of him as one | who had been. i In that passionate rush of feeling | everything that had happened since he had left Misery seemed artificial! and dreamlike. He longed for the realities that were forfeited. He want. ed to press himself close to the great, gray shoulders of rock that broke through the greenery like glants tear ing off soft raiment. Those were his people back there. He should be run- | ning with the wolf pack, not coursing with beagles. He had been telling himself that he was loyal and now he realized that he was drifting like the lotus eaters. He rose and paced the floor, with teeth and hande clenched and the Sweat atanding out on his forehead. His advisers had of late been urging him to go to Paris. He had refused, and his unconfessed reason had been that in Paris he could not answer a sudden call. He would go back to them now and compel them to admit his leadership. Then his eyes fell on the unfinished portrait of Adrienne. The face gazed at him with ite grave sweetness; its fragrant subtlety and its fine-grained delicacy. Her pictured lips were si lently arguing for the life he had found among strangers, and her vie. tory would have been an easy one, but for the fact that just now his con science seemed to be, on the other side. Samson's civilization two years old-—a thin veneer over a cen- tury of feutlalism-—and now the cen tury was thundering its call of blood bondage. But, as the man struggled over the dilemma. the pendulum swung back. The hundred years had left, also, a heritage of quickness and been bitterness to resent injury and injus- tice. His own people had cast him out. They had branded him as the deserter; they felt no need of him or his counsel. Very well, {et them have it so. His problem had been settled for him. His Gordian knot wae cut, Sally and his uncle alone had his address. This letter, casting him out, must have been authorized by them, Brother Spencer acting merely as amanuensis. They, too, had repudi- ated him-—and, If that were true, ex. cept for the graves of his parents, the hills had no tie to hold him, bis face on his crossed arms, his shoulders heaved in an agony of believe in me ef hell froze!” with his clenched fists. of ye. I'm done!” But it was easier to say the words than to cut the ties that were knotted about his heart. With a rankling soul, the mountain cer left New York brief note, telling her that he was go- ing to cross the ocean pride forbade his pleading for her con. He plunged into the art life of the “other ciously He was trying to learn much-—and to forget much One sunny afternoon when Samson in Quartier Latin for eight or nine months the concierge of his lodgings handed him, through the cour, the as he passed an envelope ad of | he lodg As he read it he felt a glow urprige uri cott and, wheeling skily to his where he to pack Adri- { had written that and her mother and Wilfred Horton were sail ing him nless he were too bu ¥, eet their steamer Within two he was bound for Lucerne to cross the Italian frontier by the walters Lake Maggiore A few weeks rienne were standing together by moonlight the ruin: the Coli The junketing about Italy had retraced his step began ghie enne for Naples, and commanded to n hours slate-blue of later Samson and Ad fr Of Beum i His Eyes Fell on the Postmark. been charming, and now in that circle of sepia softness and broken columns he looked at her and sudden asked Limself: “Just what does she mean to you?” If he had never asked himself that Question before he knew now that it must some day be answered Friend ship had been a good and seemingly a sullicient definition. Now he was not ; 80 sure that it could remain so Then his thoughts went back to a cabin in the hills and a girl in calico He heard a voice like the voice of a song bird saying through tears “1 couldn't live withou® ye, Samson . a I jest couldn't do hit!” For a moment he was sick of his life It seemed that there stood before him, | in that place of historic wraiths and | memories, a girl, her eyes sad, but loyal, and without reproof. “You look,” said Adrienne. studying his countenance in the pallor of the, moonlight, “as though you were see | ing ghosts.” “1 am,” sald Samson. “Let's go.” Adrienne had not yet seen her por trait. Samson had needed a few hours | of finishing when he left New York. | Iy done away from the model. So it was | natural that when the party reached Paris Adrienne should soon insist on crossing the Pont d’Alexandrs 111 to his studio near the “Boule Mich” for an’ inspection of her commissioned canvas For a while she wandered about the businesslike place, littered with the gear of the painter's eraft. It was, in 4 way, a form of mind-reading, for Samson's brush was the tongue of his soul. The girl's eyes grew thoughtful as she saw that he still drew the leering. saturnine face of Jim Asberry. He bad not outgrown hate, then? But she said nothing until he brought out and set on an easel her own portrait. For a moment she gasped with sheer delight for the colorful mastery of the among his portfolios and stacked can vases until his return. In a few min utes she discovered one of those ef forts which she called his “rebellious pletures.” | These were such things as he paint ted, using no model except memory | perhaps, not for the making of finished | pletures, but merely to give outlet to | his feelings; an outlet which | men might have found in talk { This particular canvas was roughly { blocked in, and it was elementally simple, but each brush stroke had been thrown against the surface with | the concentrated fire and energy of a blow, except the strokes that had painted the face, and there the brush had seemed to kiss the canvas The picture showed eo barefooted girl, standing, in barbaric simplicity of dress, in the glare of the arena, while & gaunt lon crouched eyeing her. Her head was lifted as though she wero | Hstening to faraway music In the | eyes was indomitable courage. That i eanvas once a declaration of love, and a miserere Adrienne set it up beside her own portrait, and as she studied the two with her chin rest on her gloved hand, her eyes Now she knew in her own it had been paint the mind was at ing what she missed more beautiful likeness | ed with all the admiration of the heart-—and this other was She replaced the sketch where and Samson return ing found her busy with litt Seine from Sally! la gketr hes 1 W Hort Wilfred rail of the ning from Europe hold off me MID served my hrown in some wearer the goal?” beave and bartion reflection in rl} d at the oily of ihe girl k i O11) cheeriess Atlantic found her head the leaden and somber tones y 3 her eyes. She shook wearily ‘I'm not knew,” she said he ‘1 wish 1 T mently worth it, Wilfred Let me go t of your life can't read her own heart; utterly selfish to decide upon her own life ™ “I= it" foreboding me ou he the alter question with all, | was a you — and South — you on the doormat marked ‘Platonic friendship? Have you done that, Drennje?” She looked up into his own were wide and honest an pain TO BE CONTIN put that Ye f Ha ir leet wiped Her very eyes, d ED) Man Seems to Have Much to Recommend It He was a lively old chap of past seventy at a lobster palace table with a glass of plain water for tipple "Of course,” he was saying to the Younger men with him. “I am pot as ; long for this world as you chaps are, | if you live to be as old as 1 am. but I have a satisfaction in life that you haven't I know, because when 1 War in my forties every time | had anything the matter with me 1 got scared “1 was afraid that either t would that it wag some lingering discase that Nor was | slone Every man of my age had the same feeling. ! think that comes to most men when they life a burdex my “Youth's carelessness lasts only a time and a man mighty goon begins to wonder what will hap- stay in good shape When a man ATTORNEYS, D. » rexvwmy ATTORNEY AVeaw BELLAPOWTR En Glos Bards of Coun Bouse i | i i Sb 8800400000000 00000000 00 88a bbb Abb ALE less again. Most of what will happen has happened and he is through with it, and what is to happen next doesn't make much diferenre because in the nature of things it cent last long whatever it is and the finality comes a8 a resting spell and a cessation from the worries of the flesh “lI know some old men who don't take the same view of themselves that I do, and 1 am sorry for them. be Cause a man owes it to himself 1 think, to quit bothering about giving up when he knows he bas to do it whether or no.” Pleasure in One's Work. Pleasure in work produces a sym: pathetic, teachable mental attitude to ward the task. It makes the atten tion involuntary, and eases the strain of attending. It stops the nervous leaks of worry. One of the secrets of lasting well is to avold getting stale and tired and in a mental rut. Pleas ure gives a sense of freedom that is a rest, as a wide road rests the driver. To know a thing thoroughly and at tain mastership in it, one must be drawn back to it repeatedly by its at tractions, and must ind one's powers technique, and she would have been hard to please had she not been de lighted with the conception of her self mirrored in the canvas. face through which the soul showed, and the soul was strong and flawless. The girl's personality radiated from the canvas—and yet— A disappointed litthe look crossed and clouded her eyes. She was conscious of an in definable catch of pain at her heart. Samson stepped forward, and his waiting eyes, too, were disappointed. “You don't like ft, Drennie? he anxiously questioned. But she emiled in answer, and declared: “1 love it." He wert out a few telephone for ber to minutes later to Mrs. Lescott, and evoked and trained by its inspiration. ~Prof. Edward D. Jones, In Engineer. ing Magazine. 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