THE me ns— Jet Ea 3 “THE i CRANDALLS AND THE STENDHALS HHH He By FANNIE HURST & & MAA A, 750050 ANAS 1 PPR APAI NR {mngnazaaren FYMSATS 500% 04 805 0.50 L050 ea aa] PAS BAS BAS BAL LAS Ad BAL SAL BAS PA y Joi3e ls 390390350 :90590 +90 $90 bo 05305 MINNIE VRIES (® by McC Tule Newspaper Syndicate.) VNU Bervice.) HE house of the Crandalls In Wittegar street was one of those massive brick-and-stone affairs that looked as if it had been built and passed on for a few gener- ations from father to son. And so it had, except in the case of the Crandall branch now in occupancy, it had been a case of from father to daughter. Martha Crandall had married Deep- ing Johnson in her father's home and remained there after her marriage, and after the death of the elder Cran- dall, Martha Crandall Johnson's daughter Adeline had been born in that same house, in the same stodgy, high-ceil- ing, wainscoated bedroom In which she herself was born. It was a somber house, heavy wood- work, wooden pillars between arch- ways, folding doors, long halls, pler- glasses, hot-air furnace, push window- hangings, balcony-fronted china ots, hatracks, what-nots, great bronze figures for bric-a-braec, and a bronze clock with two bronze warriors for the centerpiece on the parlor mantel. And yet withal, there was within this house, the feeling of stability, Its silent old walls had soaked into their timbers the emotions of sane, steady- going folks. You felt about house of the Crandalls that the people who Inhabit. ed it had not ma night, ¢ to speak. Crandalls, ever since Crandalls had lived there, had heen afford the substantial things of life. Jdttle Adeline Crandall grew up in that er nment, iy as if the somber old house had been a rose garden. She flitted through its halls. inced dark corridors as brilliantly as a butterfly, caught In strange netherworld environment. Her parents, d, chant of a father and Martha Crandall, to be stolid, marveled at the elect kind of brilliancy of this girl, their child, They marveled, and it was as if they warmed their icy fingers around the luminous flame of her per- sonality. She was something so alien to them and yet so incalculably fasci- nating. She had been born In the chill autumns of their lives, when Martha was for and ber husband fifty. Almost any way you le at her she wis & phenom creature in the world you would have expected to spring from the union ot two such an- gular souls at Martha and Deeping Johnson. Unconscious of the her young presence in the deep brown plush of the Crandall-Johnson environ. ment, Adeline rushed into the flush of her adolescence, By this time t clos- the de their money over- able to Johnson iviro as blithe- She dd: through its some her staid, cotton mer- her mother who had been reared rical ov ty-two yoked enon, the last ‘randall - incongruity os he Crandall-Johnsons were at the peak of the financial his- tory of all the Crandalis who had oc- cupied that house on Wittegar street. Not only had Martha into a vaster than ever accumulation of Crandall’s monies, but Deeping John- son had practically cornered the most important cotton markets In the history of the industry. When Adeline Crandall Johnson was seventeen wins heiress to seven million dollars, More than that, and with an obselete kind of solemnity of which they were totally unconscious, the pe Adeline # d picked out for her in marriage the son of another local millionaire. It was one of those predetermined affairs about which there had not been much family dis- cussion. It is doubtful if Adeline her- self, In those years when she and the fat young boy were so consciously sent to dancing school together, was even conscious of the import of what was happening. Certainly she never took Donald Dugan seriously enough to even resent him. The fact that at seventeen and eighteen they were unofficially consid- ered engaged, glanced off her bright young conscience with scarcely an im- pact. One night, however, in the great deep brown plush parlor, the young Du. gan, probably on the crest of his first flerce wave of adolence, caught her into his short round arms and kissed her wetly, patly, roundly, and with pos- sessiveness on the lips. Four weeks later Adeline Crandall Johnson eloped with her music teacher, It was one of those seven-day-won- der, local catastrophies. The town shivered. The town stood aghast, The newspapers, muted, as if stunned into semisilénce, carried news of that marriage as if they were printing the story of a death, The house of the Crandall-Johnsons might be sald to nave shivered to its very timbers, For three months the great, solemn, brown doors were closed to Adeline and her slender blond husband, Then solemnly, inevitably and rather terri- bly, with the news that Adeline was with child, they swung open, taking into the silent maw of that house on Wittegar street, the young figures of Adeline and Jacques Stendhal, Promptly It swallowed them. Promptly it engulfed them. Prompt. iy the solemnity of that environment come one of she rents of flowea around them In rivers brown as mud, The young Frenchman who had married Adeline because to him she was a flower almost too sweet to pluck, pulled in the beginning against the drag of this environment. But in the end he, too, succumb, By the time Adeline's baby girl was born, the young palr were part and parcel of the house located on Witte. gar sireet, It cannot be sald for Jacques Stend- hal that he was of the stuff that par- ents would select as the husband of a loved daughter. Ie was a frail fel low, probably in character, too. A con- stitutional dilettante, unstable by na. ture, playful, and In a way that was forever to be adorable to Adeline, de pendent upon her for decision, Then, too, he loved her. There was no doubt of that, This volatile Frenchman, full of traditions that were alien to the very life and being of Adeline, had one quality of stability that was impeccable, He loved Adeline. It was curious, but within that household, slowly, surely, steadily, as relentlessly as the progress of a Greek drama, unspoken plans for the destiny of Adeline Stendhal began to shape themselves in the mind of Martha Crandall and her husband Deeping Johnson. This began to catastrophe that had come tc them was not to be borne. This frail, blond, volatile, young outsider, with the stage-like name of Jacques Stend hal, musle teacher, was not to be en dured within the substantial walls of the Crandall mansion. And it must be admitted, time marched on, Jacques gave justification to their enormous resentments against him. He twad- dled away his After his mar- riage, his slight Income from the teach- ing of plano, fell off entirely. It was nothing for him to spend hours on end in the narrow strip of the Crandall house, girl on his knees. In vain Adeline, as If she ser menace that was forming pleaded with to either of plano instruction, or ada to some form of work vast cotton organizatie It was no purposes, Adel do-well, When the baby was three years old, a phantom of del light If was one, affairs in t} gan to sl nselves tows max. For thirty months Stendhal had not turned an earning capacity, the threats, the aspersions, the abhorrence of his par ents-in-law notwithstanding. For thirty months, until eyes were rimmed with weeping, Ad eline had Importuned, begged, And to what end? To the after these importunings, for the moment, would prom- ise, and the wuld end In of play; the father, the young their child them romping In their through the somber ro ber mansion, t the end of the that as himself days. dani sed the between the m, » his life own Be hou him to sta resume his use, ine had ever at househ rd a cli- Jacques ape th her sweet morseful SCONE We one young mother, between youth and It was a fourth year, however, that the older Crandalis did succeed in creating a schism. It was finally borne In upon even Adeline her. self that life with this play boy was unendurable: it was not only the youngster at their knees, to tinue as his Just why It was unfai er stopped to ask Con. r. Adeline herself, except, the traditions of the Crandalls and the Johnsons, must produce. It never Adeline that the fact dall-Johnsons had seven should be more than sufficient set the congenital shortcomings of Jacques, according to all occurred to ¥ When the little girl was four years to the day, Adeline consented to the divorce. Curious, but the reality of the situation never seemed to come home to Jacques. He could not take seriously the fact that this sweet girl of his life and heart was about to walk out of them. And yet she did. One year after Adeline’s incredible acquiescence to a divorce Jacques found himself back in his humble stu. dio as piano teacher, pounding out his living at the keyboard. The situation in the Crandall-John- son house had progressed. With an acquiescence which seemed to denote that the stréngth for conflict had flowed out of her heart, Adeline re. sumed life according to the dictates of her parents. Not even the prospect of their designs for an approaching marriage with Donald Dugan seemed to penetrate the icy stolidity that had encased her since her official separa- tion from Jacques Stendhal, Life resumed its even flow, She had her child, a small beauty, who was permitted by court agreement, to visit her father once every month, and Donald Dugan as eager as ever to marry her was reconciled to taking the Httle stepdaughter along with his marriage contract to Adeline. Two nights before the wedding Ad- eline, still In what seemed to be her fey mantle of reserve, walked out of the Crandall-Johnson household with her child In her arms. At ten o'clock that same night she eloped with Jacques Stendhal and was remarried to him in the office of a local magls. trate, The Stendhals, there are five of them by now, are a playful, unstable, hilari- ous group, There are a pair of solemn brown doors that remain closed against them, The Stendhals, both Jacques and Adeline, try to feel solemn dbout that. Somehow they cannot. Plan Prevention of Soil Erosion Nationwide Fight Against Evil Is Now Taking Definite Form. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture. )-WNU Service, The United States Department of Agriculture's nationwide campaign against soil erosion is now taking defi- nite form in the practical erosion-pre- vention work of the first regional erosion stations which have been es- tablished In widely separated areas from the Atlantic to the Pacific, says Dr. Henry G. Knight, chief of the bu- reau of chemistry and soils, Doctor Knight.has just returned to Washing- ton from inspection of the bureau's work In erosion prevention, sure vey, and soil fertility In the Middle West, Northwest, and Pacific Coast states, soil Farmers Interested. Doctor Knight visited the erosion stations of the department at Bethany, Mo., and at Pullman, Wash., where the necessary equipment has been installed and where sheet erosion or run-off is being measured on experimental plots, Plans for field are under way at the station recently lished in Page county, Iowa. He found that the farmers are keenly interested In the practical work.of the par- ticularly in the terracing of cultivated fields, long a successful erosion-pre- vention measure in parts of the South, but which is new to the western and middle western farmers. The need of soll erosion prevention, ays Doctor Knight, forcibly brought to the attention of Utah farm. ers by a recent cloundburst which cut great inke shore of Salt Lak operations estab stations, has heen canyons in the old acreage with del erosion of range cover he say The destruct interest In erosion prevent Sugar Bect Visld r Knight visited ¢t experiment sts Wyoming, Utah, in North ral 1kota and that in- fave 1 South Dakota. He reports 1 use of : Nebraska, Dakotas. The ago, now recom Directors of Doctor Knight, siderable Increa acreage of Crops next Kens influx of farm turned to the land dustrial depression He as the result of the rers who have re because of the In- cited the case of & single township of North Dakota in which 50 returned men from one factory have to farms. Substitution of "Ground Wheat for Corn or Milo Substitution of ground corn, mil fng mash ground or whole for hominy feed, hop or ground barley in certain feeds was approved by the Tex lege feed conference board In at the A. and M. Colle Texans re cently. This action was taken by gon of the general Interest at time in the feeding rations on account of its relatively low price as compared with other grains, it was announced Substitutions pproved for dairy feeds were 1s follows: “1. Nine teen per cent protein dairy feed with Hmestone—grotund or rolled whole whent may be substituted for hominy feed, ground whent lo or kafir In the lay. and of wheat as col gession Te of rem. this use of wheat In listed & amo the mixture, provided not more than one of these ingredients shall be re duced to less than 5 per cent. 2. Car bohydrate supplement with limestone for cows-—ground or rolled whole wheat may be substituted for finely ground milo heads, hominy feed or ground barley in amounts not to ex. ceed 20 per cent of the mixture, pro- vided not more than one of these in. gredients shall be reduced to less than B per cent.” Annuals and Biennials of Weeds Hard to Kill An Immense quantity of seed is produced hy some weeds, especially by annuals and biennials, the resuilt- ing pollution of the soil requiring years of cleaning, even if no more plants are allowed to go to seed. Many species have vigorous peren nial root systems (thisties, dandelions, ete.) which renew growth until repeat. ed destruction of the tops at every fresh appearance, starves them. Yery often weeds persist for the simple reuson that farmers will keep on reseeding thelr land with erop seeds containing weed seeds, rather than pay a little more for pure seed. Legume Inoculants slecent tests at the experiment sta- tion at Geneva, N. Y,, indicate a wide variation in the quality of legume inoc- ulants on the market, Some samples of this material were found to be worthless while many others were sat. isfactory. In the selection of com mercial materials for this purpose an investigation of the quality is desir able. It is also highly desirable to have the date stamped on the package since inoculating materials lose their value with age. New Onion Diseases Quite Destructive Ailment Causes Bulbs to Dry and Rot Eventually. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture. )-——WNU Bervic Two new onion diseases, one from Europe and the other a newcomer to the onlon Industry, have appeared in this country in recent years. J. C. Walker of the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture describes these diseases In a recently revised edition of Farmers’ Bulleton 1060.F, Onion Diseases and thelr Control, just pub- lished by the department, Growers in northwestern Oregon and near Norfolk, Va., and Louisville, Ky., have become familiar with yellowing and wilting of onion tops In the days of spring or fall as the first signs of white rot. The is known throughout Europe for its destructive. ness, It eventually bulbs to shrink and dry, so that they are un fit for consumption, Yellow dwarf, the name disease, In itself describes the effect it has on an onion crop, This disease causes greatest damage to crops grown from sets or seeds, Yellow dwarf oc. curred in Measant Valley, Jowa, as early as 1927, when plant disease pe. cialists first bes familiar with It. Since then the disease has spread toa few other states Among the other in this bulletin are smut, mildew, mold, purple blotch, pink root, rium rot, rust, dodder, root knot, neck rot, soft rot, black mold and The last four of these pri. marily damage onions in storage and in transit to market. cool disease causes the » of the other tine disbages described leaf fusa- smudge. The other dis. eases appear in the field I Bulletin 1000.F those writing the office of tion, United Siat riculture, Washing armers’ free to Inforn partment of ight Care of Calves Vea ans Imj roved ( C ow A good rood COW. 1 ™ eh are spoiled in the recalled to a ern province where dairy one breed had bee decades, gave a writer {1 Her! 1 breeding In bree The cows all she «] type and refineme hut we saw precious few from a production standpoir were all undersized and stun had been spoiled in wns sandy country, hom and there imported feed h away we visited a ir Ww ith a splendid nerd of the des that and looked oned the comp and ity we had seemed that Was pure was to buy an 00 miles sume iooked like pure 100TSR arison hetween 1% 2 wil Hike big prod the cows of the com visited He laughed every cow In his stable chased as a calf or was de cows purchased in that Good feeding from difference. We tA - st NiGGIe Wes nity. rmers in the need what fr erih cross” by Select ion of Land Barley scab is carried over the win ter in cornstalks, agd at ley plant at heading and grows until crop Is ripe. Rain and weather are necessary during heading period for the scab to develop according to R. G. Shands, University of Wisconsin. Selection of land is important, ag the creeks or rivers disease to more fogs a atmosphere than is common on land. than barley that stands upright. Don’t cut the barley until fully ripened. Barley should be sown only on land tacks the bar the the for the barles land t geems to have hat lies near due thoroughly. A Keep the weeds down If you wish to conserve the soil water supply. - - » Sweet clover will sometimes send Its roots to a depth of four feet within a year of being planted. - - » Plant soybeans if the clover or al falfa fails. This crop may be seeded up until late June with good results in a normal year, * » - Rape, because of its high protein content, 18 a desirable crop to he sown with corn that is to be used for hog- ging-off or sheeping-down, - - * Weed control is sometimes rendered difficult because neighbors neglect to do their share, and the careful farmer suffers with the rest. Co-operation is needed, . " » Soybeans require the same seedbed and cultural practices as corn, They should be planted In rows, like corn or beans, with hills 20 inches apart and two plants to the hill, ¢ «. » » An onionlike plant that grows wild along the Mediterranean coast pro- duces the safest rat poison yet known, It 1s ealled red squill and does not seri. ously endanger other anima’ life, DUBIOUS RECOMMENDATION While In Switzerland a traveler was make an ascent, thought he might as well inquiries about accompany him, was the parties “1 should say so.” ost two off without as much himself.” has come Would Take a Train An Englishwoman walked into the ce at Chicago and asked for to New York. “Do you want to go by asked the clerk. “Certainly not,” sald the Eng woman. “By train” DEPENDS ON TACKLER Juffalo?” ball over hard his i nad : he nage y often rhirks ax it st when it works, awful it 8 ph. A Regular Devil A bashful youth had been presented pper and for ten minutes he sat speechless, growing redder and embarrassed. At length the girl sald, sweetly, “And now let us talk of something else "Hummel, Hamburg. nore Not in the Budget [rate Pap i What ! You marry my daughter—why, make eno want to you don’t ugh to pay the rent! Dumbissimo-—-Well, Eloise and 1 in't expected you to charge us any WHAT } MISSILE? Mrs. Joax--liere's misses her hushand, Mr. Joax-—-What him? did she Apparently Placid Stream The river flcwing on its way Now bids our cares redouble, The waterpow'r it may display Can cause all kinds of trouble. Learned Better Marmon-Does your wife still sharp en pencils with your razor? Smythe—No, she's learned better since she started shaving her own eye brows. Needed Help! “Heavens |” exclaimed the preacher, “what's the ldea of that stream of profanity I" “Well,” replied the tough little cad dy. “after a shot like tha' awful one you just made somebody had to cuss and 1 know you didn’t dare to do It yourself.” Correction “Pop, hey, Pop!” “Don't talk that way, Oswald, Pm in the grocery business, not a foun tain clerk.” Had Reasoned It Out “What makes you think she doesn’t like yout" “She told me she thought there was a fool in every family.” “Well, what of that?" “1 had told her a moment before that 1 was an oinly child,” Okeh With Her Migs Fltt—How'd you like to take a nice tong walk in the park? Caller (enthusiastically) Oh, fine! M. Fo~Then don't let me hold you back. BOWELS need watching Let Dr. Caldwell help whenever your child is feverish or upset; or has caught cold. His simple prescription will make that bilious, headachy, cross boy or girl comfortable, happy, well in just a few hours, It soon restores the bowels to healthy regularity. It helps “break-up” a cold by keeping the bowels free from all that sickening mucus waste, You have a famous doctor's word for this laxative. Dr. Caldwell’s record of having attended over 3500 births without Toss of one mother or baby is believed unique in American medical history. Get a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin from your drugstore and Fave it ready. Then you won't have to worry when any member of your family is headachy, bilious, or constipated. Syrup Pepsin 18 good for all ages. It sweetens the bowels; increases appetlile— digestion more complete. Jassy Da. W. B. CALowewL's SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctors Family Laxative Popular College Course Colleze ct : . are In rresg HANFORD'S Balsam of Myrrh OILS ov STOPS No matter how large or sensitive, CARBOIL immediately stops throblring pein, ripens and haa worst boll often overnight. Carboll toflay from ihe, Su Soothes pain, heals bolls, sores, bites, ett. Generous box 50 cents, Spurtock-Neal Co. Nashville, Tenn, CHILDREN WITH WORMS NEED HELP QUICKLY Don’t delay a minute if your child has worms. They will destroy his health. If he grits his teeth, picks his nostrils— beware! These are worm symptoms. Disordered stom- ach 1s another. Immediately give him Frey's Ver mifuge. It has been the safe, vege- table worm medicine for 75 years. Don't wait! Buy Frey's Vermifuge at your druggist's today. Frey’s Vermifuge Expels Worms From Bad to Worse HHubby—You didn't have a rag on your back when I married you. Wife-—Yes, but I've plenty of them now. Pathfinder, He who says we will have war so long as we have uniforms is trans- posing the effect and the cause, MOTHERHOOD Norfolk, Va. -"] am glad to recommend Dr, ie Bre s Favor. HY 1. It is the ition medicine 1 have ever taken. I was weak and run. down followin Hothethood a did more for me Pe iption medicine 1 have ever taken"—Mrs, R. V. Murden, 1622 E. Olney Rd. Weir Dr. Plores’s Clinte in Dalfale, N.Y list found in weediclar rs