VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON LUCKY LAWRENCES Copyright by Kathleen Norris By CHAPTER I HE Lawrence family, although In the best sense of the word pi­ oneers, had not come to the Golden West by means of covered wagons. They had left their Boston moor­ ings, like the gentlefolk of means and leisure that they were. In the year of our Lord 1849, and had sailed elegantly for Rio, for Buenos Aires, and around the Horn. They had loitered In Valparaiso and In Lima for some weeks, taking things easily. In a leisurely day, and had In due time come up the stormy coast of California, and bad dropped anchor In the opalescent harbor of peaceful Yerba Buena. For San Francisco had been still familiarly known as Yerba Buena, then, and the blue waters of the bay had lapped the strand at Mont­ gomery street. The globe trotters, magnificent Philip Lawrence and his frail, Indian-shawled, pretty wife, bad remained on the ship for a few days, for the settlement on shore promised small comfort for tourists. Early In their second week, how­ ever, they had been obliged to seek lodging ashore. This was for two reasons, one important, one ridic­ ulous. The Important reason was that an heir to the Lawrences was about to be born. The absurd rea­ son was that some preposterous person had discovered gold, or had pretended to, at a place called Sut­ ter Creek, and that every one In Yerba Buena bad promptly lost his senses. Philip and Abigail Lawrence nat­ urally did not lose their senses. They were rich anyway; they were above this undignified scramble for lucre. Philip had an income of three thousand a year, and Abigail’s father owned five sailing vessels, including this very Abby Baldwin in which they had made their won­ derful honeymoon trip. But the sailors, and Indeed the officials of the Abby Baldwin, bad felt differently. They were not above acquiring fortunes, and they had Instantly deserted the ship and made for the gold region. The ru­ mor of gold, spreading like prairie fire between breakfast and the noon dinner, had found the ship emptied by sunset Philip and Abigail nad signaled a Chinese crab catcher, and in bls little shallop with stained brown sails he had rowed them and their carpet bags ashore. They had gone to "the French­ woman's," a quaint-looking adobe bouse on a hill, with an upper bal­ cony and shutters. There were no windows, but there were tents of mosquito netting over the bed, and the bare Boors were clean. Down­ stairs was merely a level of dim arcades, earthen-floored and smell­ ing of spilled wine, where men lounged on benches, and where the Frenchwoman herself tended the bar. But the upstairs room bad been comfortable enough and Abigail had eaten a shore meal of fish stew, dumplings, fresh soft black figs, sour bread, and thin wine, with some appetite. This would do for the present, she had said. But one could not live quite like a savage, after all, and Immediately after breakfast to­ morrow Philip must find a really nice place, and a nurse. If not, then they would have to go back to the ship. Philip had returned flushed, dis­ tressed, and annoyed from bis search the next morning; he had returned flushed, distressed, and in­ creasingly annoyed from the searches of the following days. The Frenchwoman’s was not only the best. It appeared to be the only pos­ sible place for Abigail to stay, and to contemplate a confinement there, with the noise and drinking and the smell of wine below stairs, and with T WNU Barrios KATHLEEN NORRIS nobody but whiskered old Madame Bouvier to attend her, was mad­ ness. Desperate, Philip had rented a spanking team and a loose­ wheeled buggy and had begun to drive about the adjoining country looking for shelter. Abigail had covered passionate pages with the story of their adven­ tures, and had put the letters Into the canvas flap of her trunk, under the pasted picture of the little girl with the rope of roses. Some day they would get home again, Philip, she, and the baby, and what a story they would have to tell I Meanwhile, fifty miles southeast of foggy Yerba Buena, they had found refuge on a rancho. It was managed by a widow, one Señora Castellazo, who lived farther south In another hacienda, and was will­ ing to rent this one to the strangers. It had contained no furnishings whatsoever when the Lawrences had moved in. But many trips to the Abby Bald­ win had pretty well transformed the dismal place. Philip, breath­ lessly grateful that somehow, with the aid of a Mormon doctor from Benicia and the care of two stolid, wall-eyed Mexican women, Abigail had actually brought forth a first­ born daughter, had made no com­ plaints. He had had carted down wagon loads of chairs, carpets, china, bed linen, books—all the per­ sonal possessions of himself and his bride. A bride I Poor Abigail had laughed forlornly on the first anniversary of her wedding day. It had found her weak and weary, stretched on a mattress on the floor of one of the cool rooms, with a burning August day hammering away at the spread level acres of the rancho outside. Beside her had been Annie Sarah. They bad brought her in hot dusty grapes, and hot dusty figs, and warm wine, and finally goat’s milk, to solace her in her ordeaL Except for that, neither Mexican woman had volunteered anything. They had watched the frightened, doubt­ ful, breathless struggle apathetical­ ly, until their oily brown hands had actually grasped Annie Sarah. After that they had seemed capa­ ble enough. Anyway, it had been gotten over, somehow, and Abigail had been free to cry a little, thinking of her room at home in an orderly, shaded Mas­ sachusetts village, with Ma's laven­ der-scented linen on the smooth bed, roses In a green glass vase on the bureau, and the lace curtains blowing softly in and out of the opened upstairs windows. Lilacs, trembling grass, and Grandpa’s grave in the graveyard, and dough­ nuts and currant jelly—oh, dear I As soon as the baby and the mother were well upon the road to normal living, Philip and Abigail had seriously discussed going home. Then old Señora Castellazo bad died, and her sons bad wished to dispose of the Santa Clara hacien­ da. Four hundred acres for nine hundred dollars. Philip had con­ sidered it a wise investment There was fruit—some fruit—there al­ ready, there were sheep and cattle included in the sale price. If figs and grapes would grow there, why not other fruits—peaches and pears? He would take bis wife and daughter back to New England, be promised, on the first suitable ship; It would be a long bard trip for a woman with a baby, but the journey across the plains would be worse, and there was no further hope of the Abby Baldwin. No, upon consideration It had seemed to Philip that this sunshiny, sheltered flat region, well Inland, was the coming district, and that by bolding onto this property ten years, fifteen years, be and Abigail could not fall to be among the pros­ perous pioneers of the new world. Philip was one of the men who bad shot dead the gold crnze with an epigram: "a flash In the pan.” Meanwhile Fanny Lucy had been born. “Look here, young lady, aren’t there any boys where you came from?*' Philip bad said, half serious, halt teasing, as be held his second daughter in his arms. Abigail had ,ooked at him anxiously. But be had not been really angry. Only It had been rather trying that a fine ship had left for South America and eastern ports on the very next day. She had delayed so long In San Francisco harbor that Philip and Abigail bad really hoped to be able to sail on her. But Fan­ ny Lucy bad delayed, too, and bad unconsciously affected her parents’ destinies thereby. For letters had gone to Boston on that ship, and letters, four months later, somehow had strug­ gled overland in answer. The re­ spective families of Abigail and Philip bad been perfectly delighted at their venture, and wrote that they were certainly envious of the dwellers in a country where there was no snow, no thunderstorms, and no poverty. Abigail wrote glowing accounts of her new life to the family at borne. She and Philip were going to build a really nice frame house, with bay windows, a bathroom, and a cupola. Everything they touched prospered; people called them "the Lucky Lawrer es.” A Love-Tale FULL OF SURPRISES • By One of America’s Best-Loved Woman Novelists Kathleen Norris • Read this first installment of The Lucky Lawrences and follow the story as it appears in this paper And Abigail had eight daughters and one son, and the girls all mar­ ried, during the last Sixties and early Seventies, in a land in which women were still rare and prized. San Francisco grew like a mush­ room, and Philip might have opened a thousand doors to great wealth, bad he been a man to see. But he closed one after the other with his own hand, and went blindly on in an Infatuation of satisfaction with his rolling acres, his miles of fruit trees, the growing family over which he ruled supreme. Some of the girls went east when they married, some lived In San Francisco or Stockton, some died. It was not a salubrious day for pio­ neer women, with one out of every seven dying In childbirth. Some were poor, opening boarding houses, scrimping In lonely cross­ road villages. The one son, Patterson Law­ rence, duly married, too, and lived In the house with which his par­ ents had replaced the old adobe hacienda. Abigail, and after her her daugh­ ter-in-law, in their fervor to en­ courage shade In that hot, dry country, planted everything upon which they could put their hands, close to the house. They did not foresee that the pampas grass and the verbena trees, the peppers and roses and evergreens, would grow closer, thicker, darker every year. For thirty years the House of Lawrence had been In eclipse, and the garden showed It Acre by acre old Philip Lawrence and his son Patterson had watched their fortunes decline; the old pioneer of the Yerba Buena days lived to see the end of the century, and the end of bis own prosperity, and died, leaving what remained in hands even less capable than his own. For Patterson Lawrence was a poet, who lived merely to gather worthless old books about him, to dream over the painstaking pen­ ning of insignificant essays, which were rarely printed and for which he was never paid. At forty he married a poet’s daughter, who had been precari­ ously existing for ail her sixteen years upon bread, water, and the “Sonnets from the Portuguese,” in a shanty on Rincon hllL Edltha, before her early death, brought to the House of Lawrence two sons and three daughters. Sixteen when she married, ten years later, when Ariel was born, she quietly, hap­ pily expired, to music, as It were. For Patterson had been reading poetry to her, the four older chil­ dren, by some miracle, quiet and occupied down by the creek, and Ariel in her mother’s arms taking a fourth-day view of life, when death came. "She looks as If she were listen­ ing, Pat! She’s going to be a great poet, and make all our fortunes I” Edltha had said. And one minute later she had slipped away, leav­ ing the prophecy to gild little Ariel's childhood. The widowed elderly father did the best he could for them all until his oldest son was nearly eighteen and Gail a capable, bustling house manager two years younger. Then the big guns began to boom across the water, the service flags flashed in answer upon many a quiet flag pole In Cllpperavllle, and Patterson Lawrence, fifty-eight years old, put a copy of Keats in one pocket and a copy of Shelley tn the other and hurried off to die of flu tn over­ crowded Washington, just as sure as bls loyal children were sure that he was helping his country and doing the patriotic thing. Then Phil and Gail bad to shoul­ der the burden. Gall Lawrence was supremely the girl for the job. 8be was squarely built, womanly at sixteen, brimming with Interests, activities, ambitions, and enthual asms. By this time tbe once lucky Lawrences had almost no money. Phil bad all but finished high school, and all the friends, rela­ tives. snd neighbors said that cer­ tainly a bright, fine boy like that ought to complete his course. But as Phil and Gall quite simply agreed, meals were more Important than education. So Phil stopped nls schooling and went to work at the Iron Works, and Gail, upon being offered a Job In the public library, accepted It gratefully. They scrambled along In the dis­ reputable old bouse very happily; They were always laughing, sing­ ing, going on picnics; they were passionately devoted to each other, and everyone was sure that they would get along splendidly. Were they not the last of the Lucky Law­ rences? Surest of all was Gall, the resolute, undaunted, optimistic mother and sla­ ter, cook, nurse and lawmaker in one. Life bad been a story to Gall, for a few years, and she had turned a fresh page eagerly every day. She and Edith were going to marry de­ lightful men, and Phil should marry, too. And Sammy should live in Edith's house and Ariel In Gall's, and Ariel should write wonderful poetry. There would be plenty of money for everything, as there al­ ways bad been . . . soon. But somehow it had not worked out that way. Gall bad grown a little more sober, a little thinner, as tbe years had slipped by; they had all grown shabbier. Even to her, poverty began to seem a serious matter. Phil, to her concern, had never quite seen the joke of being poor and being orphaned. He had always been brief, worried, and unrespon­ sive when Gall had tried to drag him into her dreams. And Edith hated poverty, too; It hurt her pride. She had grjwn quieter, book­ ish, Intellectual, something of a recluse. Sammy had done nothing except slide through his shoes and get **D minus” marks In bls studies. And Ariel was completely spoiled. They had all hailed her as a poet before she could fairly write. She did write poetry, and that was enough Ho Had Rowed Them and Thole Carpet Bags Ashore. for Cllppersvllle. Cllpperavllle was not critical. The Challenge pub­ lished everything Ariel wrote. And Ariel was discontented, proud, and unmanageable. Her twenty-third birthday found Gall a quick-witted, eager, capable girl, secretly a little bit scared and doubtful, but outwardly gay, irre­ sponsible, and pleasant to look at— like all the Lawrences. Even the boys never seemed to go through lumpy or spotty phases, but were clean - skinned and bright - eyed through boyhood as through baby­ hood. Tbe older four had tawny < k hair, which bad tumbled all ,,»er tbelr heads as children, but which on xxaslons could be made to take more fitting positions. Ariel was different: frail, pink­ cheeked, and cream-skinned, with frightened big haxel eyes and a small mouth. Ariel's hair was corn- silk gold. (TO BS OONTINUMD.) ___ _