(.Continued) C h a p te r X It those vague characteristics called (variously) magnetism, manner, gruce, distinction, attractiveness, fascination, go to make up th a t nebulous quality known ns c h a rm ; and If the possessor of that quality Is accounted fortunate in his equipment fo r that which the class-day orators style the battle of life, then D irk D ejon g was a lucky lad and life lay promisingly before him. Undoubtedly he bad I t ; and undoubt­ edly It did. H e was not one to talk a great deal. Perhaps that was one of his most charming qualities. H e listened so welL O lder men especially said he was a sm art young feller and would make his m ark. This, surprisingly enough, a fte r a conversation to which he had contributed not a word other than "Tea,” or "No,” or, "Perhaps you’re right, sir,” In the proper places. It was during those careless years of D irk ’s boyhood between nine and fifteen that Selina changed the DeJong acres from a worn-out and down-at- heel truck farm whose scant products brought a second-rate price In a sec­ ond-rate m arket to a prosperous and blooming vegetable garden whose out­ put was sougbt a year In udvance by the South W a ter street commission merchants. These sis or seven years o f relent less labor had been no showy success with Selina posing grandly as the New Woman In Business. No, It had been a painful, grubbing, heart-breaking process as Is uny' project that depends on the actual soil fo r Its realization. She drove herself pitilessly. She lit­ erally' tore a living out of the earth w ith her two bare hands. Yet there was nothing pitiable about this small energetic woman of thirty-five or forty with her fine soft dark eyes, her clean- cut Jaw-line, her shabby decent clothes that were so likely to be spattered with the mud of the road or fields, her exquisite nuee w ith the fanny little w rinkle across the bridge when she laughed. Rather, there was something splendid about her I something rich, prophetic. I t was the spleudor and richness that achievement imparts It la doubtful that she ever could have succeeded w ithout the money borrowed from August H e n ip e l; w ith­ out his shrewd counsel. She told him thia, som etim es.' H e denied It. "Easier, yes. But you would have found a way, Selina. Some way. Julie, no. But you, yes. You are like that. Me, too. Say, plenty fellers that was butch­ ers with me tw enty yeurs ago over on North C lark street are butuhers yet, cutting off a steak or a chop.” D irk had hla tasks on the farm. Se- Una saw to that. But they were not heavy. By the tim e he returned from school the rough work of the day w a i over. H la food was always hot, ap­ petizing, p len tiful. T he house was neat, comfortable. Selina had Installed a bathroom— one of the two bathrooms In High P rairie. The neighborhood was still rocking w ith the sho< a of tills when It was Inform ed by Jan tbaf Selina and D irk ate w ith candles light­ ed on the supper table. High P ra irie slapped Its thigh and bowled with m irth, “Cabbages Is b eau tiful,” said old Klaus Pool when he heard this. "Cab- huge« Is beautiful I betcha.” Selina, during the years o f the boy’s adolescence, had never urged him to a decision about his future. That, she decided, would come. As the farm prospered and the pressure of neces­ sity lifte d she tried, In various In­ genious ways, to extract from him some unconscious sign of definite preference for thia calling, that pro­ fession. * U n til D irk was sixteen she bad been content to let him develop as naturally as possible, and to absorb Impressions unconsciously from tbe traps site so guilefully le ft about him. T here was a shed which he was free to use as a workshop, fitted up with all sorts of tools. H e did not use It much, a fte r tbe first few weeks. He was pleasantly and m ildly Interested In all things; held by none. Selina bad thought of Roelf when they were fitting up the workshop. The Pools bad heard from Roelf Just once since bis flight from the farm. A letter hud come from Prance. Selfha bad never heard from him. But one day yeurs later she had come running to D irk w ith an Illus­ trated magazine In her hand. “L o o k !’’ she pried, and pointed to a picture. H e had rarely seen her so ex­ cited, so stirred. The Illustration showed a photographic reproduction of a piece of sculpture— a woman's fig­ ure. I t was called The Seine. A t.gure sinuous, snake-like, graceful, re­ volting beautiful, terrible. The face alluring, insatiable, generous, treach­ erous, all at once. I t was the Seine that fed the fe rtile valley land; the Seine that claimed a thousand bloated lifeless floating Things.; the red-eyed hag of 1798; the dimpling coquette of 1650. Beneath the Illustration a line or two— R oelf Pool. . . . Sulon. . . . American. . . . fu tu re .. . . . "It's R o e lf!” Selina had cried. "Roelf. L ittle R oelf Pool I’’ Tears in her eyes D irk had been politely Inter­ ested. But then he hnd never known him, really. H e had heard his mother speak of him, hut— At seventeen D irk nnd Selina talked o f the year to come. H e was going to At Eighteen It Had Been Midwest U niversity for D irk. a university. But to w hat university? And w hat did he w ant to study? We-e-11, hard to say. K ind of a general course, wasn’t there? “O il,” Selina had said. "Yes. Gen­ eral. Or course. If a person wanted to be an architect, why, I suppose Cor­ nell would he the place. O r H arvard fo r law. O r Boston Tech for engineer­ ing, or— ” Oh, yeh. If a fellow wanted any of those things. Good Idea, though.* to take a kind o f general course until you • und out exactly w hat you wanted to do. Languages and lite ra tu re and that kind of thing. At eighteen, It had been Midwest university for D irk High Prairie beard that D irk DeJong was going away to college. A neighbor’s son said, “Going to Wisconsin? Agricul­ tural course there." "M y gosh, no I” D irk had answered. H e told this to Selina, laughing. But she had not laughed. "I'd like to take that course myself, if you must know. They say it’s won­ derful.” She looked at hltn, suddenly. “D irk , you wouldn't like to take It, would yon? To go to Madison, I mean. la that what you'd like?” H e stared. "M e ! No! . . f Un­ less yon want me to, mother. Then I would, gladly. I hate your working like this, on the farm , w hile I go ofT to school. It mnkes me feel kind of rotten, having my mother working for me. The other fellows— *' “I'm doing the work I ’m Interested ICE CREAM to pl< as- y< ong and ohl nl:ke must be perfectly flas< red with tbe finest fruit flavors. lee cream psr ex­ cellence—that means ours—must be properly frozen. Delicious, cooling and refreshing, it always revives tbe fatigued end often re­ lieves headache, C la rk’s Confectionery in, for the person I lo re beet m the world. I'd he lost— unhappy— without the farm . I f the city creep# up on me here, us they predict It w ill. I don't know whut 1 shall do." “Just you wait till I'm successful. Then there’D he no more working for you.” "W hat do you mean by ‘successful,’ Sobig?" She bad not called him that In years. Bat now the old nickname came to her longue perhaps because they were speaking o f his future, his •uccess. "W hat do you mean by *auc- cessful,’ Sobig?” “Rich. Lots of money." “No, no, D irk I N o ! T h a t’s not suc­ cess. Roelf— the thing R oelf does— th a t’s success.'' “Oh, well, I f you have money enough you can buy the things he makes, and have 'em. T h a t’s almost as good Isn't It?" D irk commenced his studies at M id­ west university In the antumn of 1909. His first year was none too agreeable, as is usually the case in first yeurs. He got on well, though. Before the end of the first semester he was popu­ lar. H e hnd great natural charm of manner The men liked him. and the A P R IL 15 1925 Have YOUR EYES Examined F. M, French & Son Jewelers, Optometrists Travel Planning Albany, Oregon you. There's the spare room, ah' quiet and cool. She could do as she liked." M attle came one Friday night. It was the end of October, nnd Indian summer, the moat beautiful time of the year on the Illinois prairie. About the countryside for miles was the look of bounteousness, of plenty, of prophecy fulfilled as when a beautiful and fe rtile woman having borne her children and found them good, now FURNITURE • DEPARTMENT* when your wants are in this line. Our stock is 1 attractive in both design and price. We call your special attention to-the , LUXE PAG E 3 ' ^'hy suffer from headaches? ¡i We want you to investigate our DE •RURAL EN TER PR ISE BEDSPRING ; built for comfort and durability H ILL < Oregon ' sits serene-eyed, grp clous, ample girls, too. H e rarely “cut” a class. H e bosomed, satisfied. would have felt that thia was unfair In to the face of M attle Schwengauer and disloyal to his mother. 9otae of there came a certain glory. When his fellow students Joked about this the and Selina clasped hands Selina faithfulness to his classes. “ Person stared at her rather curiously, as would think you were an Unclassi­ though startled. A fte rw ard she said fied," they said. to D irk , aside; "But I thought you T he Unclasslfleds were made up, said she was ugly I” o f earnest and for the most part, “ Well, she Is, or— well, Isn’t she?” rather middle-aged students whose “Look ut h er!” education was a delayed blooming. M attle Schwengauer was talking to They usually were not enrolled for a Meen a B ras« tbe hou^eworker. She full course, or were taking double was standing w ith her hands on her work feverishly. ample hips, her fine head thrown back, The professors found them a shade her eyes alight, her lips smiling so too euger. perhaps; too In q u irin g ; de­ that you saw her strong square teeth. manding too much. They stayed a fte r Something had amused M attle. She class and asked Innumerable ques­ laughed. It was the laugh of a young tions. They bristled w ith interroga­ girl, care-free, relaxed, at esse. tion. T hey were prone to hold forth F o r two days M attle did as she in the classroom, “ W ell, I have found pleased, which meant she helped pall It to be the case In my experience vegetables In tbe garden, m ilk the that— " cows, saddle the horses; rode them • But the professor preferred to do w ithout a saddle In the pasture. the lecturing himself. I f there was “ I t got so I hated to do all those to be uny experience related It should things on the farm ," she said, laugh­ come from the teacher's platform , not ing a little shamefacedly. " I guess the student's chair. It was hecuuse I had to. But now It In his first year D irk made the al­ comes buck to me and I enjoy It be­ most fa ta l mistake o f being rather cause It ’s natural to me; 1 suppose. friendly w ith one of these OnclgMl- Anyway, I ’m having a- grand time, rteds— a fem ale Unclassified, a large, Mrs. DeJong. The grandest time I good-humored, plump girl, about th ir­ ever had in my life." H e r fane was ty-eight. with a shiny skin which she rad iant and almost beautiful. “I f you want me to believe that," never powdered and thick h air that exuded a disagreeable odor o f oil said Selina, "you'll come ugaln.” B ut M a ttle Schwengauer never did She was sympathetic and Jolly, but her clothes were a fright, the Classi­ come again. K arly the next week one of the uni­ fieds would have told you. and no m at­ ter how cold the day there was- al­ versity students approached D irk . He ways a half-moon of stain showing was a Junior, very Influential In his under her armpits. She had a really clast, and a member of the fratern ity fine mind, quick, eager, balanced, al­ to which D irk was practically pledged. most Judicial. She knew Just which A decidedly desirable f r a t “ Say, look here, DeJong, I want to references were valuable, which use­ less. H e r name was Hchwefigauer— ta la to you a minute. Uh, you've got to cut out that g irl— Swlnegour or M attle Schwengauer. T e r rib le ! She and D irk got In the way o f whatever her name Is— or It's all off walking out of the classroom together, w ith the fellows In the f r a t " "W h a t d'you mean! Cut o ut! across the campus. She told him W hat's the m atter w ith her7” something of herself. “M a tte r! She’s Unclassified. Isn't “ Your people fa rm e rs !” Surprised she looked at his well-cut clothes, his she! And do you know wbat the story slim, strong, unmarked hands, his is? She told It herself ah an economy smart shoei and cap. “W hy, so are hint to a girl who was working her She bathes wltti her mine. Iow a." She pronounced It way through. Iowuy. “I lived on the farm all my union suit end white stockings on to life till I was twenty-seven. I always save laundry soap. Scrubs 'em os h er! wanted to go away to school, but we '8 the God's tru th .” Intu D irk's mind there flashed a pic­ never had tbe money and I couldn't come to town to earn because I was ture of this large girl In her tight the ohlest. and Ma was sickly after knitted union suit and her white stock < Em m a— that's the youngest— there are Ings sitting in a tub h alf full of w ater nine of us— was bom. Ma was and scrubbing them and herself sim­ anxious I should go and Pa was w ill­ ultaneously. A comic picture, and a ing, but It couldn't he. No fault of revolting one. Pathetic, too, hut he theirs. One year the summer would would not admit that. “Im agine 1” the fra t brother-to-be bo so hot, w ith no rain hardly from sirring till fa ll, and the corn would was saying. “W e ll, we can't have a fellow who goes around with a girl Just dry up on the stalke. like paper The next year It would be so wet the like that. You got to cut her out, see! seed would rot In tbe ground. Ms Completely. The fellahs won't stand died when I was twenty-nlx. T he for It." D irk had a mental picture of himself kids were all pretty well grown up striking s nohle attitude and saying. by that time. Pa married again In a year. 1 came to Chicago about Ave “W on't stand for It. h u h ! She's worth more th in the whole caboodle of you years ago. . I'v e done all kinds put together And you can all go to of work. I guess, except digging la a coal mine. I'd have done that If I'd b— 1!" Instead he said, vaguely, “Oh. Well. had to." Uh— ” .she told him all this Ingenuously, D irk changed hla sent In the class­ simply. D irk felt drawn tow ard her. room, avoided M attle ’s eyes, shot out sorry fo r her. His was a nature quick o f tbe door the minute class was over. to sympathy. One day he saw her coming toward H e told his mother about her. him on the campus and he sensed that S elin a was deeply In terested and ahe Intended to stop and speak to stirred. "Do you think she’d spend him— chide him laughingly, perhaps some Saturday and Sunday here with H e quickened his pare, swerved a lit­ ua on. the farm ? She could come with tle to one aide, and as he passed lifted you on F riday and go tae k Sunday hla cap and nodded, keeping b it ryes night I f she wanted to. O r stay until I , ^ , 7 , ; h; , d O ut of the tail of h it M o u flaj; jp o raJn g and go beck w ith ' —for vacation journeys D e p e n d u p o n y o u r lo ca l S o u th e r n P acific agent for aid in com puting your vacation plan«. It’s high tim e to be thinking about them. A nd he is thoroughly informed. H e can advise you intelligently about vacation spots o f especial charm and how best to reach them. He'll gladly supply you w ith all booklets and com plete, accurate inform ation regarding Fares Schedules Routes Reservations, etc. Your local agent is eager to serve you. Southern Pacific C . P . M O O D Y , Agent Rhone 226 eye he could see h e r standing a mo­ eyes were nllve. T h e ir clothe« were ment Irresolutely in the path. of some Indefinite dark stuff, brown or He got Into the fra tern ity . T he fe l­ drab gray; their h air lifeless; thetr lahs liked him from the first. Selina hands long, bony, unvltal They had said once or twice, “ W hy don't you seen classes and classes and classes. bring that nlre M attle home with you A roomful of fresh young faces th a t again some tim e toon? Such a nice appeared briefly only to be replaced girl— woman, rather. A fine mind, too. by another roomful o f fresh yoüng She’ll make something of herself. i faces like round svhit^ pendl maries You’ll see. Bring her next week, h’m?" manipulated m om entarily on a slats, D irk shuffled, coughed, looked away only to be sponged off to give way to “Oh. I dunno. Haven't seen her lately. other round w hite marks. O f the tw o Guess she’s busy w ith another crowd, women one— thé elder— was occasion­ or something." ally likely to flare Into sudden life ; He tried not to think of what he had a flame In the ashes of a hurned-out done, for he was honestly ashamed grate. She had hlim or and a certain T errib ly ashamed. 8o he said to him ­ enustte w it, qualities that had man­ self, "Oh, what of It'I” and hid his aged miraculously to survive even the shame. deadly and numbing effects of th irty A month la te r SeltDa again aald. “1 years In the classroom. A fine mind, wish you’d Invite M attle for Thanks­ and lnoclastlc, hampered by the re­ giving dinner Unless she’s going strictions o f a conventional community home, which I doubt. We’ll hHve tu r­ and the soul of a congenital spinster. key and pumpkin pie and all tbe rest Under the guidance of these D irk o f It. She’ll love It.’’ chafed and grew restless. Miss Ru- "M attle? ” H e had actually forgot­ phernls Holllngswood hod a way of emphuslzlng every third or fifth sylla­ ten her name. “Yes, of course. Isn’t that right? ble, bringing her voice down hard on M attle Schwengauer?” It. “Oh, her. Un— w ell— I haven't been H e found him self waiting for that seeing her lately.” emphasis and shrinking from It as “Ob, D irk , you haven't quurrelew from « sledge-hammer blow. It hurt w ith that nice girl I" his head. H e decided to have It out. “Listen, Miss Lodge droned. She approached mother. T here are a lot of different a word w ith a maddening uh-uh-ul(-nh. crowds at the U, see? And M attle In the uh-uh-uh-uh face of the uh-uh- doesn't belong to any of 'em. You (Continued on page 6) wouldn’t understand, but It's like this. 3he— she’s smart and Jolly sod every­ thing, but sha Just doesn't belong. Be I p ’ASH PA ID lo r false teeth, den- Ing friends w ith a girl Ilka that doesn’t I w-*' tai g old, platinum and discard«! get you anywhere Beeldes, she Isn’t 1 jew elry. Hoke Sm elting and Refining s girl. She’s a middle-aged wonjan, ! Ce.. Otsego, Mich, when you come to think of It." “ Doesn’t get yon anywhere !’’ 3e Whin we reanmtnend K R Y P - Una's tone was cool and even. Then, ns the hoy's gaze did not meet here: T O K G L A S S E S . 7°“ “ «Y "Why, D irk Dejong. M attie Sch4en- rest assured that we are recom­ guner Is one of my reasons for sending mending tbe best bi local that you to a university. She’s what I call optical science bas produced. part of a university education. Just For fourteen years Kryptok* talking to her Is learning something valuable. I don’t mean that you have given the eyeglass wearer w-oaldn't naturally prefer pretty young service and satisfaction. girls of your own age to go around with, and all. It would be' queer if von didn't. But this M a ttle — why, she’s life. Do you remember tbat story of when she washed dishes In the kosher restaurant over on T w elfth street and the proprietor used to rent out dishes and cutlery for Irish and Italia n neighborhood weddings where they had pork and goodness knows what all, and then use them next day In the restaurant, sgstn for the kosher customers?" Selina wrote M attia, Inviting her to the farm fo r Thanksgiving, sad M at- tie ^answered g ratefully, declining. “I shall always remenibet you,” she wrote In that letter, “w ith love.” C h a p te r X I Throughout D irk ’s Freshman year there were, for him. no heartening. Inform al, mellow talks before the wood-fire In the book-lined study of some professor whose wisdom was such a m ixture of claaalc lore and modernism ss to he an Inspiration to hla listeners Midwest profeasors de­ livered tb alr lectures In the claasroorn as they had been delivering them In the past ten or tw enty years and as they would deliver them until death or a trustees’ meeting should remove them. T he younger prefesnors and In­ structors In natty grey suits and brightly colored ties made a point of being uopedantlc In the classroom and rather overdid It. They po«ed as be­ ing one of the fe llo w s ; would dashing ly use a bit of slang to rrsste a laugh from the boys and an adoring titte r from the girls. D irk somehow pre­ ferred the pedants to there When these had to give an Inform al ta lk to the man before some university event they would start by saying, “ Now lis­ ten, fellahs— " A t the dniicea they were not abeve “ rushing“ the pretty coeds. T w o of D irk 's clsssee were coo- ductad by women profeaaora They were well on toward middle age. or past I t ; desiccated women Only their E. C. Mead«, Optometrist H. Albro, " “ “'••“ Sp’ f f d » ALBANY O R EGO N. Amor A. Tussing LAWYER AND NOTARY HÀL9XY, O kkooh DELBERT STARR Funeral Director and Li­ censed Embalm or Efficient Service. Motor Hearts. Ladv A tten dan t B ro w n sv ille...._____________ Oregon w . L W R IG H T Mortician A Funeral Director Halsev and Harrisburg« C a ll D. T a y l o r , Halsey, or W. L. f t M M l , H arriahorg BARBER SHOP First-class W o rk J. W. S TE P H E N S O N .