he Stumps A COMPLETE NOVELETTE of Good 'T'imber “Jes’ so!” he smiled. shares, yes, indeed! wag an’ onery, back in our times to he'p ary side. too ‘ yeah all these heah! Lo Me Pree ie “Hit’ my little | mean Civil War Now, I'm too ole to fight, so I grubbed out these I couldn’t do no | a defective away and 18 were let out and hauled in by a reel | operated by elecrtric motor. splice, four of | with about three miles of wire broke flew about the niles before |the wire became entangled in a tree. | A farmer telephoned the news to the Due to kites Defective Flues and Overheated Stoves Stoves, stovepipes, and chimneys, if = aa improperly installed practice in hundreds of localities to fire the woods regularly, This re- or carelessly used, always constitute a fire menace. By Raymond S. Spears Re at Be You i aerological station, but before the Stoves and stovepipes should be placed Sults in killing of thousands of small 1 id 3 Aili Bean on party sent out to recover the kites at a good distance from the walls and tress needed to continue the forest in Old Drew Nuckle was mad; for was no place left to sell sang or | pieces of gold, but saved his WORRY voir it. to chat Lawsal could reach them some negroes had woodwork and usually a piece of iron | the future and also injures a large years, and years, grim greed had led | herbs; revenue officers were more ac- | for him for the day when he should Mobhv HCBhY yo'all will sort of wrecked the first one and stolen the or tin, or preferably asbestos, should |#@mount of- marketable timber. Fur- him into the depths of selfishness, | tive, cutting off the market for their | need it again. ihink o2 me; all crippled wp AL no cloth Which was later found in nine be used to cover the nearest surface, | thermore, such burning destroys a grasping for other men’s lands and |erops of grain and fruit by destroying | They watched Old Drow and bis reount, Henin’ make yo’ sites!” pieces in various cabins. The other If iron or tin is used an air space | large amount of rich vegetable fertil- money; his cunning had enabled him |moonshine stills. Everything that | Young helpers grubbing out the old| «pdeed the Hoven romamibes. sho three kites when the first one was should separate it from the wall or |iZer. to lead his neighbors in the mountains | was purchased “outside” began to go: Stumps and dragging them down to cried, and as she turned Tier horse to seperated from them, escaped and woodwork. Cattle and hogs in hardwood stands into desperate financial straits to his | up and up—sugar, coffee, four, salt Bis cabin, which was beside the new gallop to find ter man’ she called flew about three miles farther. Dur- Stoves and stovepipes should be put and hogs in long-leaf pines keep the advantage. his hands a great fortune, able him to profit recognize the presence of the fortune in the 2400 rough mouniain acres o the Range 4 Lots. Now Old Drew wandered up and down the mountain crying: “A skun log floats! floats!” said Old Drew's was the direct punishment of his sins which were many and varied; other . ~Jeople said that it was his ignorance which |in had fallen upon him; others even more philosophical, declared that if He had at last, held in but he lacked the knowledge that would en- by it—or even to A skun log madness 3 Old Drew hadn’t been ignorant he wouldn't utensils, all manufactured leather and rubber boots and hats. Poverty among the people grew so [little gasoline machine. knew that old Drew Nuckle had col- the « wire and, out intense that nothing else could be| Old Drew Nuckle’s industry and lected black walnut for tens of thou- hinds, f | thought about. Old Drew had taken perseverence never flagged. He put|sands of rifle butts and barrel grips, : his departure—and the people had |himself in possession of all the old he laughed aloud with joy. It was/|. Touired io other things to think about, which [black walnut stumps and chunks on just so! He rode out, then, and gath- were, as they supposed, much more [that side of the mountains for miles and the like, as well as all cooking fabrics, bile stage now carried the mail ¢ which the Legeres drove their o Contract road, over which the automo- “I'm a coming right back Drew!” ind wn When Tip Leigere heard the thing that Sal-Bet had devined, and when he ered young men to guard that great The boy grasped burned The mule became so entangled in the wire that the help f three men and release him. ing the flight, however, the wire be- came entagled with a boy and a mule plowing in a field. three kites were finally caught in an- other tree which was dismantled by up solidly. In general, stovepipes forest from being restocked. Dam- should not pass through wooden par-|@8e from insects can be reduced by cutting t¥mber at the proper time of year and by utilizing lightning-killed | trees without delay, since they har- bor destructive pests. Cattle destroy should placed | the praductive leaf mulch which Chimneys should be | Keeps the trees growing during long, If | dry spells. All large openings where titions or through ceilings, and in case such installation can not be avoided, a metal thimble, which can be purchased from any tinsmith or stove The 'a tile insulator around the pipe. his dealer, or be examined periodically for cracks. important. and miles around. Old fields were hoop of chunks, stittne. Knots and the negroes. The two remaining kites | cracks occur in a chimney they should | light comes through into the forest Old Drew Nuckle, however, returned | rubbed out, new cut-overs cleaned, pieces, so that they would be pre- again escaped flew about three miles | be filled with plaster or cement at |Should be filled with younger trees. in the winter that followed. He looked | even old fences replaced by new, and [served against any raiders. farther andianded in enews the tallest | once, as fire often creeps through |Fully stocked woods contin little or ten years younger; he walked with |the abandoned ruins of log cabins Then he rode down to the railroad | PIRe trees in the region. Thé third | such cracks to the woodwork. Cracks |NO grass, but afford full shade, which s | brisk footsteps; he had a strange light | Were taxed, seeking the waste for station, and when he returned, he kite had a meteorogravh attached [that may be dangerous and that might | Prevents the soil drying out and keeps his eyes—madness, but not the|which Old Drew would pay. reallpronsns a telegram ‘oiterire. a Lortnne which was recovered undamaged. A |not otherwise be found can be dis-|the trees growing. old insanity. Not once did he say |money. for Old Drew’s collection of old pieces heavy yan 9ame on, however, and the | covered by building a smudge in the TT ——— “A skun log floats!” Instead he cried: At the last, adults were bringing in of black walnut, fit especially for two remaining kites were broken up |stove and placing a board or wet N Bl k Bl “Boys! They wouldn't take me for |0ld timber on their wagons or even making rifle butts and hand grips. and finally abandoned. sack over the chimney. Smoke will ew aC ouses have committed so many sins and that | warring, but I kin he’p! I kin he'p!” | strapped across the saddles of their And with that message old Drew's _—_— then be forced out of the cracks. ems i i aq i ne a > " pry oy azior . 2 "Ses. ol av Sona whi 2 “hi wa oO ‘ roanines 3 sv chie SW “pd av sin was ignorance, anyhow. Crazy? Crazier than ever! Poor |horses, glad to have the pennies which | ing opened up a little more.’ He 0 for the Good Old All chimneys and stovepipes should Some chic new blouses have been Accordingly, Old Drew became the|Old Drew had something wrong in his | the madman would give them. could see a brighter light. He felt | / be cleaned regularly to remove the developed in black this season. Black subject : rarnine of ane VHe: : Hep anh wi How a a ove $ : : S00t ¢ or inflammable material subject and the warning of many |head, somewhere. A laugh went up, ow long old Drew would have | }at he had been doing :omething to Days oot and other inflammable material {1,00 and net are used for claboratc mountain sermons in the white |but Drew persisted in saying that they | gone on collecting those chunks no help that may have got inio them. A bion I Im 1 1 ith 3 . : % de : ylouses o Knee ength, worn w church, the block schoolhouse, and in| could all help, up there in the moun- [one could tell. Somewhere, somehow, ’ og the revivals. He came tc the meet-|tains. ings and his shrill, weird voice would He set the example for them; he he had caught one fleeting fact in { welter of ideas and opportunities t} “I cayn’t shoot none, he 1at ’ he shook his head, “but I kin he’p make rifles, yes, When There Were No Buttons to Push chimney can best be cleaned by means of pieces of metal (such as scrap tin), | SKirts of satin or silk. Many are made limbs of an evergreen tree, or a bun-|of black indecdy.” georgette or crepe de chine. rise uncannily at the services as he [went out into the clearings and old |8rew up with the outbreak of the big No one laughed now when they Will you tell us, Mr. Genius, where | dle of brush attached to a rope, chain Black cotton blouses are also very shouted: cutovers and gathered up chunks of | War. Somehow, his mad mind hati |peard him say that. They pitied him; |We're heading for these days—we|oOr wire, and worked up and down in|. 4 Black organdie waists are “A skun log floats! A skun log|old stumps that stood in the fields |seized upon the fact of one real need they remembered, too, that he had Common, funny humans, with our |the chimney from the top. A flue hole trimmed with collars of white organ- floats!” the pieces of wood that had set and |in the world crisis. He had set about spent all his money, keeping them in [queer and freakish ways? In baby |Should never be filled with old cloths | oy aa er : All this petty little knowledge, | weather hardened while all the rest|trving to supply that need. He had salt and sugar and coffee, trying with | flats you tucks us, when the shades of {Or other inflammable material, but me while biacl foted BW blouses trickery, craft and perseverence in|of the stumps and roots decayed. He |&athered thousands upon thousands all his feeble mind’s micht to atone |evening fall, in abed that has a mir- | ¢hould be covered in a secure manner have collars of white batiste or or- greed had come to that one phrase | had lost his mind, people reminded |0f chunks, ev one of black walnut, for the things that he had neglected |ror—one that hung upon the wall. | With a metal flue-stop. gandie. and fact. He would take his little|/one another, in a dicker over 2400 Some whole stumps, wind polished to do in the de of his youthful years, | Then you've taken old-time pantries,{ = — ——— hatchet in bark-peeling time, and ross |acres of land where black walnut |roots and knots. there in the mountains. where a fat man could rot get, and P : Ww d Need This Household Necessity the bark from hardwoods, gums, |grew in fine stand. Now he gathered He had them, but his poor enfeebled ey you've fitted them up snugly ana rotecting 00a- Stoy’s Handy Capper and Spread- beeches, sugar-woods. He would stand | pieces of black walnut stumps, gnarled | mind did not tell him what to do with . ¥ vou've called them kitchenet. In our er. Caps all size bottles without the poles in the sunshine and carry | boles and knots and roots. He dug them. He was like the young, un- Fill m the Front adjustments. Nickled and polish- them, in the autumn to see them float in Clinch river, or any cof the tribu- tary creeks and runs. escaped vas now all that intelligence. Because Sal-Bet Legere was of good A fact that had his ignorance remained of his heart and her man Tip was willing. she gave Old Drew a cabin to live in and kept him eating. Really, the old man was happier than he had ever been before. Fear of) not making money, fear of being beaten in a bar- Zain, fear of poverty had given way at least to sheer contentment of knowing one thing, the thing that had made him mad! So now he rambled up and down telling everyone what was no longer a secret. Time had been when pos- session of such a secret would have led him to the meanest and most des- picable of expedients to prevent oth- ers from knowing and profiting by it. Now his mad mind rejoiced in telling it to all, which was a complete re- versal of habit of thought and mind. He had a madness for giving away what had been a precious secret! So little by little the tendency to help else brighter in Drew Nuckle’s darkened soul. From a flickering sparkle, it widened and deepened till he would carry his hat full of berries down to the pupil district school and give to each child and to the teacher a sweet hand- ful to go with the pone lunches. He carried bushels of nuts to that wret- ched cabins of the poverty-stricken, where dwelt a stupidity denser than his own madness. He returned to the his own chilhood and mink, coon, musk-rats and other furs with wire snares and dead- falls, and somehow managed to trade them off for the benefit of some one else. The jeers and delight with which ngorle had greeted the downfall of the old nilint way now to pity and wonder, as they saw his before their counted it most remarkable nomenon of his change of mind. Once mad, mad! liked Old Drew better insane than however. No feared him now, and he was more welcome than someone became seven- craftiness of caught gave gen- and phe- erosity’ grow eves, the always People sane, one many a man who despised his weak- and hated him for what he had Away down in the madness was something that he membered the old days and acts and W When he met someone whom he had misused of old, would turn his head away, like a caught or kill- He avoided the people from he had taken profits, whose lands he had lawed away, or whom he had beaten in unfair trades. Yet to the children of these families ¢h always showed special favor. He brought them wild fruits and nuts, and gave them hints for catching fish or trapping fur. day in summer, war began, he disappeared. His cabin on the Gospel and Litera- ture lot was abandoned. He had been seen on the new Contract road going down grade out of the mountains, just at dusl, but whither he was going none could tell or know. Days lengthened into weeks ana months, and people decided that Old Drew had fallen into some deep river eddy, or he had wandered up into the mountains where he had died, per- haps from sickness, perhaps from in- ness been. which showed re- ashamed of them. = ing stealing chickens sheep. whom One early when the big jury. As he belonged to no one, no one went to seek him. Hard times came on all the mouniain people. turn them out with pickax and shovel, and toted them down to his Gospel and Literature Lot cabin, piece by piece. Some of the chunks were no longer than his forearm; others large and heavy that he had to up- end them over and over, or roll them down to his front yard. “What are yo’ doin’, Drew? would ask. “I'm he'pin’ in the war!” the old man would reply, not pausing in his efforts. “I'm a he’pin’!” There was a laugh in every time Prew Nuckle made his reply. The old man had somehow picked up the no- tion that he was helping wage war for civilization, liberty and oppressed nations by gathering the material fit for a snag-stump fence. He was not satisfied to work alone, at that. When he went mad he had had seve- ral thousands of dollars buried in the ground, and long time neither nor anyone else could find the money. Now he brought out mys- gold, silver, nickel and cop- coins. were SO people for a he terious per Shrewdly he held silence about the source of his supply, and no could follow him io where tapped his hidden hoard. He kelp gathering those ridiculous chunks of wood. Old Drew’s madness was a boon to one he hired his mountain neighbors; the pennies and small silver which paid the little children for gathering black walnut chunks salted many a dinner, got raisings for many a mess of hot bread and added necessities to many a pov- erty stricken cabin. The unfeeling laughed as they gazed at! that gnarled, black heap of walnut chun ks raising in Old Nuckle’s yard. From a little pile, like a section of stump fence, it till it covéred vards, then square rods. The mass increased till it was cabin, and finally, till it was as big as the famous Marble palace over on Holston. I'rom a few score chucks, it grew until there were fairly hundreds of cords of chunks, to of acres of cut-over lands had con- tributed. Only black walnut were in the mass. Old Drew Nuckle knew woods, none better. He could recognize by feel the smooth, beauti- ful texture in the blackest night when some shimmering, Drew erew square as large as a which thousands pieces mountain fugitive from justice dickered with him; he knew the swell of a shaving of walnut from any other kind ef wood; light knot or weight bole, he was not to be fooled. “What yo’ goin’ to with it?” a man asked. dead- do “I'm gwine to he’p fight in the war!” Old Drew grinned. “But how are yo’ goin’ to he'p fight war with that stuff?’ the man persisted. Old Drew puzzled to find an answer. The observers saw his face twitching and his tongue wrapping itself around, trying to put forth the answer that clove in his throat. He could not answer. Out of the days before he was insane had lingered the old reticence—he could not betray this secret of industry, much wanted ‘to, strong had been the habit of silence that he had lost the power of clear expression. The Legeres, in the mad his as he SO their friendliness ‘ried to stop Old Drew from spending all his money which he began now to recover from its hiding places. He re- fused to take their advice. Instead, he begged them to take money in re- for the hundreds of unrotted black walnut stumps up onto the Range 4 lots. Out of the pity in Markets for their timber closed; the prices of furs came away down; there their hearts, they took the 10-cent, 50-cent and dollar silver pieces, even woman gasped, old man had suh, Drew! make rifles!” trained robin with the insinct to bu a nest, gathering bushels and bushe his idea. was based on the sales of walnut tr could not remember what he had hs in mind. “He's like a get money enough to buy a farm, ar then forgets what he wants the go for, and he keeps on saving, and sa never knowing when he has he when to miser who sets out ing, enough, or thought. One day she heard a 19 stop! st rumor. Son have some fun with Old Drew. were going down to the old Sal-Bet knew that tl young scoundrels would do what the It seemed to he rage around. were talking about. it. Teasing the crazy old man was |@ military ’ common enough of hemstitching or solid embroidery, “It’s his wn wood!” she agreed | ending in tailored arrowheads. Thess with one youth. “You have no right |are narrow at the top, but widen to- to burn (rr wards the bottom when designed for “Yah—hit's no count—old sticks an’ | the bolero suit. py ~ “ ~ nt ” stumps!” she was told. “Hit'd be fun Lingerie “Fronts to see it blaze up, an’ Old Drew roar- Lingerie fronts come in organdie see 1t 1aze D, al 1 ( £ in’, tearin’ around -» fine batiste and net. The organdie in’, tear a nd— “He'd sure kill somebody,” she sug frequently colored, but the ba- ted tiste and net are almost! gested. “Shucks!” the youth retorted. “He |ecru. A novelty is the « ain’t got no gun ? of oreandie desiecned for ain't = gun “Well, T have!” she exclaimed. “I'm | silk frock or red organdie dress : 5 5 e : : : mm} « . 3 nll « . v 1 ¢ 1 8 eoin’ down there, an’ I'll shoot any |The sash is 3501¢ yarately from VOuns undrel I find tryin to burn |the vest, though both are trimmed Old Dre w’s wood pile!” alike with the same lace or pleatings ( Trews { . The 0°11 r choot cleoves h: She had a rifle of her own, a The vogue or short leev 1 i oht « y ‘ Far makine a ce caliber, which her husband had given 1ght about : d for making a set her to shoot at wild turkeys and [of the trimmed “front” and a pair oi squirrels and other game. She took sleeve puffs to match, which can be it and started on her horse down the sewed into the short sleeve of the road, with her belt of ammunition. [coat or frock to lengthen it or mezely | She found Old Drew sitting on the |give it a lingerie finish. In the lin sunny side of his heap of chunks, |&¢ rie cla eyelet embroidery holds fondling a piece about seven inches wide and shaned like th folded wing of a bird. purty! Hit’s a purty!” h “Yas, sul “Hit’s a was mumbling to himself. kit's a purty!” his dreams. “Some young scoundrel hyar's a rifle, if they try hit!” 99 “Burn my wood pile? stupidly. “I ain’t got no wood pile She grappled with the fact of the wild young men were going to They man’s place and build a fire in one end of the great snag pile, and set back and enjoy seeing the old man romp and to be a wanton shame, but she could not see her way clear to preventing 20 inches long, “ello, Drew!” she roused him fron | ‘lowed they’d burn yo’ wood pile, an’ he repeated | Arn ild Jt] of twigs and mud and grass and other material, spreading it along all the an . beam of a barn, but not understanding] YOU May call them’ whe you like, a building. gilet, vestee, blousette, waistcoat or So Sal-Bet Leigere wondered about guimpe, but you must have one or two if your wardrobe is to be i ; anywhere near complete. It will be that the old fellow must have some : ' ; oF : . : : : : worn ont only with the spring suit incentive, somewhere, to start him 1 : Yr but : I : : : : or the suit dress, but with the sepa- gathering those chunks. Little by lit- ! . ; 3 rate sports coat and tuxedo sweater. tle, she applied the shrewdness in- And 4] . {“¢ is Tod ; . . \ And the variety of “fronts” is legion. herited from her father, Old Crumby, : " o the ; + : “irst of all there is the dressy a first at one point, then at another. Hic} ok ; ‘ : : fair which turns 16 plainest’ suit Black walnut, in long timber was rt De i : into a 1ing of elegance. The very valuable, of course. Her own fortune |!” g : ee ar y latest material for these is pique ee treated in many odd ways. logs. But here was a vast mass of j : : mere little chunks. Old Drew had pafa| cat very long in the manner of Louis as high as five cents a dozen for wal- XV and made from colored pique nut pieces, no larger than her wrist | White, vellow or green. Arohesque and hand. He had reccived an im- | Stitchery in black oF Maroon silk ay pulse somewhere, he had seen an on- be emproidered in jet or steel, with portunity—seized it, worked it out, and | Puttons to match. now he had forgotten what it was. Ie Blouse “Fronts” A heavy crepe de chine makes vd to the tailored suit. These are very ef 1d fective id with black v- Raffia and Wd | enliven the silk often cut like broidered panel in when embroidered or appli oilcloth kid qued or leather. with the One a blouse, front. 1e 1€ cashmere, with black oileloth buttonholes and jet buttons. For wear with the jaunty striped wash silk blouscttes, with Brown ished off with a Windsor tie. Roman Buster collais, to be fin 6 wy | Same use are gay sr | vestees, with wide tached or separate. Linen touch by horizontal a high place. © .| Tale of a Scientist’s ¥ Kite S| The Weather Bureau of Agriculture great deal of valuable information for the Department of cathered a during and Navy ators ’, | war and for mail service : viation since but, Lawse! I got this yeah cnunks|that time by means of kites to which —Ilook’t Mis’ Legere! Yo’ kin have |is attached a self-recording instrument this yeah one, ‘count of yo’ bein’ goed | the meteorograph. Some nf the difficul- to me. See—fo’ yo’ rifle, an’ hyar, fo’ |{ies experienced are shown by an in- yo’ hand grip—when yo’ fight them |cident that occurred March 16th at as—them as ain’ peaceable to'd we’-| Leesburg, Ga. In order ic attain the yp aroun the shrewd mountair uns, an’ rowdy “Wha-wha—" almost forgotten, “yac Hit’s so! as she saw what the Yo’-ail’'s he’pin height desired, a number of kites had 1 | heen sent up tandem. They consisted of storng wooden frames about 7x7xs Each kite was covered with about 12 yards of fine and were attached to fine piano wire. They » | feet. cambric of the Coat considered It may be blouse fronts of a dressy character for patent embroideries waistcoats, which are em- of the most stunning of waistcoats is of white piping, little | Eaton and bolero suits there are smart | many | For the striped rdle and sash at- makes gilets of a sports nature and is given rows comfort covered you so "twill be Mr. you, let tor, or a lions, or locality to where almost happen ha It has taken the same time, There: have (there's Genius, the have a reached Ss you rub) made us push a button—hokus pokus on bathtub. And today, so we've dis- the quite—you have made our parlor table abed at night. la carte? another a thing is all in a and days work for the dromedary, or a ¢ deliver everything as 1 to often nany been forty passenger automobiles, a as 11 working at the portation needs of a single production care ror you So we ash 60 seven- trucks busy at the same time fireplace in the parlor, with its com- rip our flat apart, why not just use serving tables us all live a Most private automobile transporta- tion companies would throw up their hands in despair if they were called |in upon in a hurry to haul a boa constrie- family of a man-eating tiger from one charges intact in body and spirit. transportation company on the Pacific coast, where nothing is unusual where every celebrity comes some time, that already come to pass. lands irom Injury ed. Made ¢o last. Price $1.50 with 1-2 gross caps; hardwood mallet 75¢c extra; extra caps 35c per gross; Parcel post 10c extra. DIRECTIONS for USING Place cap on bottle, hold cap- per on the sa me, and using wooden mallet or hammer, give one or two strokes when cap ison. To use old caps, strike have That known popularly young growth in the woods, as “brush,” is some- limit. thing to be rid of, is a prevalent but mistaken conception, since, as for- estry specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture point out, ) . p i in itself long slightly with spreader end of cap- a forest cannot maintain itself long per, corrugations up without reproduction. For the sake Manufactured By A. F:STOY, 1828 Franiford Ave. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Phone, Kens. 2594 x — - of getting a scattering of green gr is the short-sighted the spring, it their Jut and could trans auto Send Agents Wanted. 2455 Oakdale St., I'hem To Us By Post. We May Save Them for You By Re-treading, Double Expert Double- treading or Vulcanizing Write for further REPAIR CO. | 1 PHILADELPHIA, PA. All Work Guaranteed BELLI. 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