fcKKXMMMXXXMKXXXXKKKKftXK) 2 THE QUICKENING S X X X X X X X X FRANCIS Copytlttit, 1906, XMXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX CHAPTER III. (Continued.) Thomas Jefferson, awe-struck anil gaping, found himself foot-loose for n time In the Marlboro rotunda whllo his father talked with a man who wanted to bargain for the entire output of tho Paradise furnace by the year. Thecom merclal transaction touched him light ly; but the moving groups, the Import ed bell-boys, the tesaelated floors, fres coed celling and plush-covered furni ture those bit deeply. Could this be South Tredegar, the place that had hitherto figured chiefly to him as "court-day" town and the residence of his preacher uncle? It seemed hugely Incredible. After the conference with tho Iron buyer they crossed the street to the railway station; and again Thomas Jefferson was footloose while his fath er was closeted with some one In thi manager's office. An express train, with hissing air brakes, Solomon-magnificent sleeping cars, and a locomotive large enough to swallow whole the small affair that used to bring the once-a-day train from Atlanta, had Just backed in, and the boy took Its royal measure with cagw and curious eyes, walking slowly up i ne side of it and down the other. At the rear of the string of Pull mans was a private car, with a deep observation platform, much polished brass railing, and sundry other luxuri ous appointments, apparent even to the eye of unsophlstication. Thomas Jef ferson spelled the name In the medal lion, "Psyche" spelled It without try ing to pronounce It and then turned his attention to the people who were descending the rubber-carpeted steps and grouping themselves under the di rection of a tall man who reminded Thomas Jefferson of his Uncle Silas with an indescribable something left out of his face. "As I was about to say, General, this, station building is one of the relics. You mustn't Judge South Tredegar our new South Tredegar by this. Eh? I beg your pardon, Mrs. Vanadam? Oh, the hotel? It is Just across the Btreet, and a very good house; remark ably good. Indeed, all things consider ed. In fast, we're quite proud of the Marlboro." One of the younger women smiled. "How enthusiastic you. are, Mr. Far ley. I thought we had outgrown all that we moderns." "But, my dear Miss Elleroy, if you .Qould know what we have to bo enthu siastic about down here! Why, these mountains we've been passing through zfor the last six hours are simply so .many vast treasure-houses; coal at the stop, iron at the bottom, and enough of "both to keep the world's Industries go ing for ages! There's millions in them!" 'Thomas Jefferson overheard without understanding, but his eyes served a better purpose. Away back in the line of the Scottish Gordons there nuat have been an ancestor with the seer's gift of insight, and some drop or two of his blood had come down to this sober-faced country boy searching the faces of the excursionists for his cue of fellowship or antipathy. Por the sweet-voiced ,young woman called Miss Elleroy there was love at first sight. For a severe, besklikfd Mrs Vanadam there was awe. For the portly General with mutton-chop whis kers, overlooking eyes and the air 3f a dictator, there was awe, also, not unmingled with envy. For the tall man in the frock-coat, whose face re minded him of his Uncle Silas, there had been shrinking antagonism at the first glance which keen first impres sion was presently dulled and all but effaced by the enthusiasm, the suave tongue, and the benignant manner. Which proves that Insight, like the film of a recording camera, should have the dark shutter snapped on it If the picture is to be preserved. Thomas Jerferson made way when the party, marshaled by the enthusi ast, prepared for Its descent on the Marlboro. Afterward, the royalties having departed and a good-natured porter giving him leave, he was at lib erty to examine the wheeled palace it near-hand, and even to climb into the vestibule for a peep Inside. Therewith, castles in the air began to rear themselves, tower on wall. Here was the very sky-reaching sum mit of all things desirable; to have one's own brass-bound hotel on wheels; to come and go at will; to give curt orders to a respectful and uniformed porter, as the awe-Inspiring gentleman with the mutton-chop whis kers had done. At the highest point on the hunch ed shoulder of the mountain Thomas Jefferson twisted himself in the buggy seat for a final backward look into the valley of new marvels. The summer day was graying to Its twilight, and a light hae was stealing out of the wooded ravines and across the river. From the tall chimneys of a rolllng mlll a dense column of smoke was as cending, and at the psychological mo ment the slag flare from an iron-furnace changed the overhanging cloud Into a fiery aegis. Having no symbolism save that of Holy Writ, Thomas Jefferson's mind seized Instantly on tho figure, building far better than it knew. It was a new Exodus, with Its pillar of cloud by day and its pillar of flro by night. And its Moses though this, we may sup pose, wob beyond a boy's imagining was tho frenzied, ruthless spirit of com mercialism, named otherwise, by the multitude, Modern Progress. CHAPTER IV. If you have never had the pleasure tl meeting a Southern gentleman of the patriarchal school, I despair of bringing you well acquainted with Ma Jor Caspar Dabney until you have aummered and wintered him. But tho Dabaeya of Deer Trace flguro so lar- X X X X X LYNDE by Francta Lyndi X X ly In Thomas Jefferson's boyhood and youth as to be well-nigh elemental In these retrospective glimpses. It was about the time when Thom as Jefferson was beginning to recon sider his Idoals, with a leaning toward urass-bound palaces on wheels and dictatorial authority ovor uniformed lackeys and other of his fellow crea tures, that fata dealt tho Major Its final stab and prepared to pour wine ana on into the wound though of the balm-pouring, none could guess at tho moment of wounding. It was not in Caspar Dabney to be patient under a blow, and for a time his raglngs threatened to shake even Mammy Ju liet's loyalty than which nothing mora convincing can be said. "MIstuh Sclplo," she would say, "I'se jus' erbout wo'ed outl I done been knowln' Mawstuh Caspah ebber senco I was Or Mistis' tlah-'ooman, and T ain't nov' seen him s'o fractious ez he been senco dat letter come tellln him come get dat po' 111 gal-chlld o' Maw stuh Louis's. Seems lak he Jus' gwlno r'ar round twel he hu't somebody!" etoalnshrdlu etolan shrdlu etoaln et Sclplo, the Major's body-servant, had grown gray In the Dabney service, and he was well used to tha master's storm periods. "Doan' you trouble yo'se'f none or bout dat, Mis' Juliet. Mawstuh Majuh tekkln' hit mighty hawd 'cause Maw stuh Louis done dald. But bimeby you gwlno see him climm on his hawss un' rl'de up yondeh to whah de big steam boats comes in an'fotch dat H'l gal child home; an' den: uck uh-h! look out, nlggahs; dar ain't gwlne be nuttln' on de top side dlshyer yearth good or nough for 111 Missy. You watch what I done tol' yer erbout dat,' now!" Sciplo's prophecy, or as much of it as related to the bringing of the or phaned Ardea to Deer Trace Manor, wrought itself out speedily, as a mat ter of course. At the close of the war, Captain Louis, the Major's only son, had become, like many another hot hearted young Confederate, a self-ex-patrloted exile. On the eve of his de parture for France he had married tho Virginia maiden who had nursed him alivo after Chancellorsvllle. Major Caspar had given the bride away the war had spared no kinsman of hers to stand in this breach and when the God-speeds were said, had himself turned back to the weed-grown fields of Deer Trace Manor, embittered and hostile, swearing never to set foot out side of his home acres again while the Union should stand. For more than twenty years he kept this vow almost literally. A few of the older negroes, a mere handful of tho six score slaves of the old patriarchal days, cast in their lot with their for mer master, and with these the Major made shift thriftily, farming a little. stock-raising a little, and, unlike most of the war-broken plantation owners, clinging tenaciously to every rood of land covered by the original Dabney title-deeds. In this cenobltlc Interval, If you wanted a Dabney colt or a Dabney cow, you went, or sent, to Deer Trace Manor, on your own initiative, and you. or your deputy, never met the Major: your business was transacted with lean, lantern-Jawed Japheth Pettlgrass, the -Major's stock-and-farm foreman. And although the Dabney stock was pedigreed, you kept your wits about you; else Pettlgrass got much the bet ter of you In the trade, like the shrewd, calculating Alabama Yankee that he was. Ardea was born in Paris In the twelfth year of the exile; and the Vir ginia mother, pining always for the home land, died In tho fifteenth year. Afterward Captain Louis fought a long-drawn, losing battle, figuring bravely In his Infrequent letters to his father as a rising miniature painter. He had his little girl back and forth between his lodgings and the studio where he painted pictures that nobody would buy, and eking out a miserable existence by giving lessons In English when he was happy enough to find a pupil. The brave letters imposed on the Ma jor, as they were meant to do; and Ardea, the loyal, happening on one of them in her first Deer Trace summer, read It through with childish sobs and never thereafter opened her lips on the story of those distressful Paris days. Later she understood her father's mo tive better: how he would not be a charge on an old man rich in nothing but ruin; and the memory of the pinched childhood became a thing sa cred. How the Major, a second Rip Van yinkle, found his way to New York, and to the pier of tho Incoming French Line steamer, must always remain a mystery. But he was there, with tho fierce old eyes quenched and swlm mingand tho passionate Dabny Hps trembling strangely under tho great moustaches, when the black-frockcd little waif from tho Old World ran down the landing stage and Into his arms. Small wonder that thoy clung to each other, these two at the further extremes of three generations; or that the child opened a door In tho heart of the fierce old partisan which was locked and doubly barrod against all others. It was all new and very strange to a child whose only outlook on life had been urban and banal. She 'had never seen a mountain, and nothing more nearly approaching a forest than the parked groves of tho Bois de Boulogne. Would it be permitted that she should sometimes walk In tho woods of the first Dabney, she asked, with tho quaint French twisting of the phrases that she was never able fully to overcome. It would certainly bo permitted; more, tho Major would make her a deed to as many of the forest acres as she would care to include In her promenade. now the French-born child fltte4 ti to tho hnphasard household at Diet Trace Manor, with what struggles she cams through tho inevitable attack of homesickness, and how Mammy Jullot and every ono else potted and indulg od nor, are matters which need not bo dwolt on. But wo shall gladly bellove that sho was too sensible, even at the early and tendpr ago of 10, to bo easily spoiled. She nover forgot a summer day soon aftor her arrival when sho first saw her grandfather transformed into frenzied madman. IIo was sitting on the wide portico directing Japliath Pettlgrass, who was training the grat crlmson-ramblor rose that ran well up to tho eaves. Ardea, herself, was on tho lawn, playing with hor grandfath er's latest gift, a hugo, solemn-eyed Great Dano, so sho did not seo tho man who had dismounted at tho gato and walked up tho driveway until ho was handing his card to hor grandfather. When sho did see him, sho looked tdwlce at him; not because he was trlgly clad In brown duck and tightly- buttoned service leggings, but because ho wore his beard trimmed to a point, after the manner of tho students in tho Latin Quarter, and so was reminiscent of things freshly forsakon. Her grand fathor was on his' feet, towering abovo tho visitor as if ho woro about to fall on and crush him. "Bring youh Yankee railroad through my Holds and pastchuhs, suh? Foul tho pure ai-ah of this peaceful Gyardon of Eden with youh dust-fllngln', smoke pot locomotives? Not a rod, suh! not a foot or an Inch oveh tho Dabney lands! Do I make It plain to you, suh?" "But Major Dabnoy ono moment; this Is purely a matter of business; there Is nothing personal about it. Our company is able and willing to pay lib erally for Its right of way; and you must remember that tho coming of the railroad will treble and quadruple your land values. I am only asking you to consider tho matter In a business way, and to name your own price." "Not anotheh word, suh, or you'll make mo lose my tempahl You add insult to injury, suh, when you offeh mo youh coutemptiblo Yankee gold When I deslah to sell my birthright for youh beggahly mess of pottage, I'll send a black boy in town to infawm you, suh!" It Is conceivable that the locating on glneer of tho Great Southwestern Rail way Company was younger than ho looked; or, at all events, that his ex perience hitherto had not brought him in contact with llro-catlng gentlemen of the old school. Else he would hard ly have said what he did. "Of course, it is optional with you Major Dabney, whether you sell us our right of way peaceably or compel us to acquire It by condemnation proceedings In tho courts. As for tho rest is It possible that you don't know the war Is over?" With a roar like that of a rfladdenod lion the Major bowed himself, caught his man In a mighty wrestler's grip and flung him broadcast Into tho colous bed. The words that went with the fierce attack made Ardea crouch and shiver and take refuge behind the great dog. Japheth Pettlgrass Jumped down from his step-ladder and went to help the engineer out of the flower bed. "The old firebrand!" tho engineer was muttering under his breath when Pettlgrass reached him; but tho fore man cut him short. "You got mighty little sense, looks like, to me. Stovo up any?" "Nothing to hurt, I guess." "Well, your hawss Is waltln for y. down yonder at tho gate, and I don't b'lieve the Mnjor is allowin' to ask yo to stay to supper." When the engineer had mounted and ridden away down the pike, the fore man straightened himself and faced about The Major had dropped Into his big arm-chair . His hands shook. Pet tlgrass moved nearer and spoke so that the child should not hear. "If you run me off tho place the nex' minute, I'm goln' to tell you you ort to be tolerably 'shamed of yourse'f, Majo' Dabney. That po" little gal is scared out of a year's growln. right now." "I know, Japheth; I know. I'm an old heathen! For, lnsultln' as he was, the man was for the time bein' my guest, suh my guest!" "I'm talkln about tho little one not that railroader. So far as I know, he earned what ho got. I allowed they'd make some sort of a swap with you, so I didn't say anything when they was layln' out their lines throo' the hawss-lot and across tho lower corn field this mornln' easy, now; no more r'arln' and farln' with that thar little gal not a-knowln' which side o' the earth's goln' to cave in next!" "Laid out theyuh lines across my propo'ty? Japheth, faveh mo by riding down to the furnace and askln' Caleb Gordon if he will do mo tho honor to come up hear this evenln', If ho can. I I it's twenty yeahs and mo' since I've troubled the law cou'ts of ouh po', Yankee-ridden country with any affai ah of mlno; and now well, I don't know," with a despondent shako of tho leonino head. (To be continued.) Oh, Man! Mun! Maud Jack swears that ho would traverse seas Just to look Into my oyes. Ethel He called on you last night, as usual? Maud Not last night; ho telephone ed mo that It was raining too hard. Boston Transcript. An A r tint, Aiyway, Rival What a color Miss Smytho has to-night. I wondor If sho palnts7 Adoror (turning his wistful eyes to ward the central flguro of an admir ing circle) I don't know. Sho cer tainly draws well. Tit-Bits. naclieluro Take Wiiriiliiir! Hoees AllenlBts say that slncln men are much more liable to Insanity than married. Dobbs Sure they are! Single men are always In danger of going crazy over some woman, Boston Transcript. It Is a good thing to have naoA friends, but not to bo dominated too much or too long by their example Itev. Wm, Dickie. No man can be bravo who considers pain to be tho greatest evil of life; nor temperate who considers pleasure tha highest good, Cicero, THE QUICKENING 5 531 n u n u n x FRANCIS X CopyilrX IW6.br Francta trwU X DflKKMMXKKXXXMXXXKXXXXXXXXMX . . T. . CHAPTER II. Thomas Jefferson's twelfth summer fell In tho year 1SSC; a year momora bio In tho annuls of tho Lobanon Iron and coal region na tho llrst of epoch, and as tho year of tho groa flood. But tho horald of chango had not yet blown his trumpet In ParpdlM" Valley; and the world of russet and rreen and limestone white, spnwlInK Itself beforo the eyes of tho boy sit ting with his hands locked over his knees on tho top step of tho porch fronting the Gordon homestead.- was tho same world which, with due sea sonal variations, hud been his world from tho beginning. It was a hot July aftornoon. full month after tho rovivnl, and Thomas Jerferson was at that perilous pas8 where Satan Is said to lurk for the purposo of providing employment for tho idle. IIo was wondorlng if tho hado of tho hill oaks would bo wortii the trouble It would take to nrtich It. when his mother camo to thf open window of the living-room: a small, fair, well-preserved woman, this moth er of tho boy of 12, with light brown hair graying a llttlo at the tnmplc. and eyes remindful of vigils, of fervent beseeching, of mighty wrestlings against principalities and powers and tho rulers of the darkness of this world. "You, Thomas Jefferson," sho said, gently, but speaking as ono having au thority, "you'd better bo studying your Sunday lesson than sitting there doing nothing." "Ycs'm," said the boy, but he mado no move other than to hug his kneoH a llttlo closer. Ho wished his mother would Btop calling his "Thomas Jeffer son." To bo sure, It was his name, or at least two-thirds of It; but he liked the "Buddy" of his father, or tho "Tom-Jeff" of other people a vast deal better. Further, the thought of studying Sunday lessons bogot rebellion. At times, as during those soul-stlrring re vival weeks, now seemingly recedlrg Into a far-awny past, he had moments of yearning to bo wholly sanctified. But the miracle of transformation which he had confidently expected txi the result of his "coming thiough" was still unwrought. When John Bates or Simon Cantrell undertook to bully him, as aforetime, there was tho same in toxicating experience of all the visible world going blood-red before his e)es the same sinful desire to slay tlum. one or both. He stole a glance at tho optti window of tho living-room. Ills mother Had gone about her housework, and he could hear her singing softly, as bef t ted the still, warm day. All hym'm were beginning to have that effect, aad this ono In particular ulways rcnewud tho conflict between tho yearning (or sanctity and a desire to do something desperately wicked; the only mlddlo course lay In flight Henco, the battlo being fairly on, he stole another gUm'c at tho window, sprang afoot, and ran silently around tho house and through the peach orchard to clamber over the low stono wall which was the onlr barrier on that side between tho wil derness and the sown. Men spoke of Paradise as "tho vnl ley," though it was rather a sheltero 1 cove with Mount Lebanon for Its back ground and a semicircular rango o' oak-grown hills for Its other rampart. Splitting It endwise ran tho whltn streak of tho pike, macadamized froir the hill quarry which, a full quarter of a century beforo tho Civil War, hud furnished the stono for tho Dabniy manor-house; and paralleling tho road unevenly lay a ribbon of sliver, known to less poetic souls than Thomas Jef ferson's as Turkey Creek, but loved best by him under Its almost forgotten Indian name of Chlawassce. Beyond tho valley and Its Inclonlng hills rose the "other mountain," bluo In tho sunlight and royal purplo In tho shadows tho Cumberland: source and birthplace of tho cooling west wlnJ that was whispering softly to tho co- dars on high Lebanon. Thomas Jeffer son called the loftiest of tho purpl? distances Plsgah, picturing it as tho mountain from which Moses had look ed over Into the Promised Land. Some time ho would go and climb It and feast his eyes on tho sight of tho Ca naan beyond; yea, ho might even go down and possess the good land, If so tho Lord should not hold him back as Ho had held Moses. That was a high thought, quite In keeping with the sonso of ovorlordshlp bred of tho uppor stlInossos. To com pany with It, tho homo valley straight way began to Ideallzo Itself from Iho uplifted point of view on the mount of vision. Tho Paradise flolds wero dellcatoly-outilnod squares of vivid green or golden yellow, or tho warm red brown of tho upturned earth in tho fallow places. Tho old negro quar tors on tho Dabney grounds, many years gone to the ruin of disuse, wopi vino-grown and Invfslblo save as a spot of summer verdure; and tho manor-house itself, gray, grim and forbid ding to a small boy scurrying past It In, the deepening twilight, was now, no more than a great square roof with tho cheerful sunlight playing on It Farther down tho valley, near tho place where the whlto plko twisted It self between two of the rampart hills to escape Into the groat valley of he Tennessee, tho splIt-shlnglcd roof un der which Thomas Jefferson had eaten and slept slnco tho earliest beginning 01 memories oecamo also a part of tho high-mountain harmony; and tho ragged, red iron-ore beds on the alone above tho furnaco wore softened Into a blur of Joyous color, The iron furnace, with Its alternat- Ing smoko puff and dull red flare. struck the one Jarring note In a sym phony blown otherwise on groat na ture's organ-pipes; but to Thomas Jefferson the furnace was as much X X X X X LYNDE X part of tho Immtitublo sohemo as tho hllln or tho foiostM or tho orook whloh furnished tho niotlvo powor for Uh alr hlust Moro, It stood for him as tho summary of tho world's Industry, in tho vhtto plko was tho world's groat hlghvay, and Mnjor Dabney Its chluf citizen. Ho was knocking his buro hocls to gether and thinking idly of Major Dabnoy nnd cortaln disquieting rumors lately como to Paradise, when thn tinkling drip of tho spring Into tho pool at tho foot of his porch was Interrupt ed by a sudden splash. By shifting iv llttlo to tho right ho could seo tho spring. A girl of about his own ago. liarefooteV, and with only hor tnuglod mat of d,irk hulr for n head covering, wns llllli.g her bucket In tho pool. He broke a dry twig from tho nearest co dur and dropped It on her. "You better quit that, Tom-Joff do don. 1 taken sight o' you up thcr.," said the girl, Ignoring him otherwise. "Thut's my spring, N'nn Ilryorson," ho warned hor dlctutorlully. "Shucks! It ain't your spring any moro'n It's mine!" she retorted. "Hit on Mnjo' pabney's land." "Well, don't you muddy it none," mid Thomas Jefferson, with threaten ing emphasis. For answor to this sho put ono brown foot deep Into tho pool and wriggled her toes In tho sandy bottom. Things began to turn red for Thomas Jefferson, and n high, buzzing note. Mite tho tocsin of the. bees, sung In his oars. "Take your foot out o' that spring! Don't you mad mo, Nun Bryeraon!" ho cried. She luughod at him and flung him u. taunt. "You don't durst to get mad, Tomtny-Jeffy; you've got religion." it Is a terrible thing to ho angry in shackles. Thoro uro similes pent vol canoes, overcharged boilers and tho like but thoy uro ull Inadequate Thomas Jefferson searched for mis siles more deadly than dry twigs, found none, and fell headlong not from the rock, but from grace. Tho girl laugh ed 'mockingly and took hor foot from tho pool, not In deference to his out burst, but because tho water was Icy cold and gave her a cramp. "Now you've done It," sho remark ed. "The devil 'II shore get yo for say In that word, Tom-Jeff." There was no reply, and she stopped hack to see what had become of him. Ho was prone, writhing In agony. 8h knew the way to tho top of tho rock, and was presently crouching beside him. "Don't take on like that!" sho plead ed. "Times I cayn't he'p beln' mean: looks like I was mado thntaway. Get up and slap me, If you want to. I won't ship back." But Thomas Jefferson only ground his fuco deeper Into the thick mat of cedar needles and begged to bo lot alone. "Go away; I don't want you to talk to mo!" he groaned. "You're always making me sin! You're awfully wlck od." "'Cause I don't bolleve nil that ab-t tho woman and tho snako and the p plo and tho mun?" "You'll go to holl when you dlo, and then I guess you'll bollevo," said Thornus Jefferson, still more definitely. Sho took a red apple from tho pocket of her ragged frock and gavo It to him. "What's that for?" ho asked, sus piciously. "You oat It; It's tho kind you like off 'm tho treo right back cf Jim Stone's burn lot," sho answered. "You stolo It, Nan Hryoison!'' "Well, what If I did? You Mldn't" He bit Into It, and ho hold him In talk till It was eaten to tho core. "Have you heard tell anything now about tho new railroad ?" sho asked. Thomas Jefferson shook his bond. "I hoard Squire Hates and Major Dabney naming It one day last wek." "Well, It's shorn comln -right thoo' Paradise. I hoard tell how it was goln' to cut tho old Majo's irrasa patch plumb In two, and run right smack thoo' you-uns' peach oroh-ard." A far-away ory, long-drawn and penetrating, rose on tho mill air of tho lower slope and was blown on tho breeze to tho summit of the groxt rock. "That's maw. hollerln' for mo to got back homo wlCh that bucket o' water" said tho girl; and, as sho was descend ing tho treo ladder: "You didn't s'pl clon why I glvo you that apple, did you, Tommy-Jeff y?" "'Cause you didn't want It yourself. I reckon," said tho second Adam. "No; It was 'cauHo you said I was goln to hell and I wanted comp'ny. 1 hat applo was stolo and you knowod Thomas Jefferson Hung tho coro far vLVu.r,U, treo-toPH and shut tits r,? V. h01coul(1 c without seeing t!ntl.M J'. roso to 1,10 eoroncBt holght ho had yet attained and said. ginr you' you wcItcd' w,clted Her laugh was a screaming taunt "uouw t tho apple!" she cried; hen w,U Wl8n,t BCIlrod ot Koln to wo.'mi rd 0088 n'-y" Know you wouiai Lemmo tell you, Tom-Joff, If tho preacher had dipped mo In the creek like ho did you, I'd be I mighty t'nly wou?dr;,,an WhQt V0U ar0' X ogiK now ftngor camo t0 118 owu "You don't know what you'ro talking about, Nan Bryersonl You'ro no h ,"S motheT Knrl!,,80rab,0 llttl0 ,,cath05 StS her. yU WaBl" h0 crlcd out answer iS tS 8r'maC0 Wft8 ttU tho CHAPTER III. suddenly. Tn d that nothln c lv tt. vHaVh, unePeted is mere, ly tb overlpoked. For weeks Thorn- hb joucrinn his v. womod i th. ,re "... "? n. "tumbiM y i.euis ni Work in .v," .?' 0 across tho creek ,, tho now railroad lyJn.t, -ion to t.,o w,.vja'..s niniiiKCrs rnnl...i - ,viH t nnu mo ta It was of t J ' WJ "New HouthVSm . "'I'-iiuonf u . una nr iun.i... , .,v initi, llllllnli t.l . -MUillCkl . bring about. But thesn . Ings and cmM, " "niy. " mu rem oamo on a day t,f .;.:' in.Wi ward of merit for 71, wv, UIU IML'hli. it. ' U cause t hoy woro ,tock ni vvi i innAi,.!. . i . . ' "w U1KB l.j - MoUIlt Lohnnnn S o .i. .. HIS In ii. mo morn ntr nt n, " iiiu iinv mi .. Wing., tho tr ; 5 ThomuH Jofrorfl0n "g IIo had been tn " m Ilfll'tl It II lUIH . V. . wnn uiitfi ... Tredegar tint ,..i,.:. . ........ mi ' - MOT. . .: rami ii i. -""- quart i torlok and stucco-pm ) ft i nil rn ii' a tt l. t i "'u,vn ""ioneu. the. . en ones with Ivinv thn ..... iimi.: u . " uies: in, ij. ,,, mil-,., Ullf fcl.llu .4,. woathor. " Alnn gtt tin. . nun iiiu uiiiiriiinroii iriw town ltM nrotcnt nm t,.M jy. inero was thn Putt,. ii run riiTMi ii ii ii limit t ik...i. . " " "viuiiAin in nniui u un iiiTiiari in ..ii.t - -t uiygci rm cu uumv out nr tirniH.. fltlWtl tttttlilltw In a .. IWtt nm.l..,l m .1 a - t onco-a-tlay train that whet clanked into and out of It Thomas Jefferson had iwi limit firm iiinlri' in. 1. 1 lllirilll tltnr miMt if,n Ik j. , . -... .....v ,v ul nr. worn, rnlrv nr i1n.lv ... - - . ... ..us. u . i r had crept Into hie eoul, usiq back to tho f reshncii of th Pi-- fljiltlli nml 1 1 riml m at I. itvnii tiiiu luitaia UK Ci culm Hut now all tlila wni toll ton or to bo rcmemtareA a- llfltHHI f M tA Ant M UU.K.. unriiur picture was efface! 1. 1 I .. A .1 I. . i I II.. I I k I I.. !u mm' iq rt'uui u again in rj iy. j-or me kchiub oi him era I ......... .. . I 1 - . - mrii In I nowhere. It If nrJr i part of tho South which til " ntiustr ar tnat it cameui clan, with all the Intermedial ,4.l,rtl t.wl fim tfiwpn SI I Mioko of It as "tne uoomr u that. It was merely mat ui nr modernity lllld UHCOYetMl mntlo hasto to occupy It UU . I " . in wiititii Trviifiritr. Miens h.. fur,, (hi! wnnderlne evetoil as Jefferson, me muoajr in. vnnl.hi.il in L'lVS Mae 10 I i. ,n.n'nv in .nrlnrr litM ns a forest path, and ai cias tiikn after a sweeping BumtM! shabby lean-to awnlnn, ..nimr tinri In their room fu.,,n, " vastnesHOH In brick ana cut ma i i... iiiiiii- i-iii'n mitrncutt Bmuit wui ui miw.-- ... mi i in i ri ir nut lit in i. k trim i .aim. uropnioi m in iMitlont mule, tlnkl! theirs un ni iv nttiii ri fiinii-0 v - Htmnuo to Paradise cyci rattw i i.. i .. iimnnif mei WBfiiy III IIIIU 4MI.W..H ii Tl.tMillnrr thrflDffl tw.NuniiHinn nf the jsidewi-Wi rutfiitrnnt. ffkttt i j 1 1 l 1 1 U nitv v - a u la nr I ii o mil i aiuvii- - tl stress nir crown u..u peojilo everywhere. (To Vf conttnufil Peed IluiiKry CJilia"- it... iranr0tll nr i .nnnnn wi ru iiiuiium'd school children witn irnlifnutB R WCCK. 0U en7 Ar it nr riinif liiuj " - rtn nnn nnn tiii-micn VBII" n r.nn nunui roc proviuuiB i"" i .Liu.... nt Tniion. ... .. l,1 nnt SUPP'' . . .i.n.iran in tlon, caca rocoiviwb wnn r. . . ..iti For yoara u.o - f HUhficnueti . - mi provide, food for u - Brnwi ,u ",,, nriiiiirini ijl .1 11,11 . en ereav- iwur yviiiB ----- .. . ln nIV r I III UN i V . W ' .ll . ... II 1 II llllll lO V . to Keep nonriy ""."7 from being atnrvedtodM. .. iivcr'- . 1 Cil llllll IIUHU Unilerwru. . . .nma Of ..i.-i-.i i.i anuria W 1 ...n.ni known ns lUB ... iia imu Willi WHICH Hw .1 ..-1 TlnlnnntniOKI ... . ., gnu ,., ucoiosy, iu.. -ieniiTi la said to have made exie mnntH. - 1, It DtW"' and mercy on the Hearw "' . , r w vear: you w' .. in ' . ...in aii ne b " i uooa aooos w - heaven. cufti"'"' D - 1 4ft T ... t... In C&ll rian frnm Ilim. uuv : .t,i 4 t. mflv DO energy, tnai ;'Dr0ok the burden.-PlP mv