University of South Carolina Libraries
I '1 h d ^BNH ?ag^3p^ ^5 ?-i- '? g' T*^-f; i ~- i_i l^optjriqiu lAj Ijawirv. oaimcr? ?> (Conii?a?J from last w*?k) CHAPTER XI The Land of ths Drum. Alan went with Wassaquam into the front library, after the Indian had aliown Spearman out. "Tills was the man, Judah, who came for Mr. Corvet that night I was hurt?" "Yea, Alan," Wassaquam Bald. "He was the man, then, who came here twice a year, at least, to see Mr. Corvet?" "Yes." "1 was sure of It," Alan said. "Can you tell me now why he came here, Judah?" * "I hove told you I do not know," Wassaquam replied. "Hen always saw hint; Ben gave him money. I do not know why." Alan had been holding his hand over the papers which he had thrust Into hit pocket; he went back Into the ..manor library and spread them under tlVo reading lamp to examine them. Rut, ns he looked the ppges over now, he felt a chill of disappointment and chagrin. They did not contain any nai+atlve concerning Benjamin Cor- I vet's life; they did not even relate to a single event. They were no narrative at all. They were?in his first examination of them, he could not tell what they were.. They consisted In all of some dozen sheets of irregular size, some of which had been kept much longer than others, a few of which even appeared fresh and new. The three pages i which Alan thought, from their yel. lowed and worn look, must be the old' est, and which must have been kept for many years, contained only a list of names and addresses. The remain lng pages, which he counted as ten In number, contained nearly a hundred brief clippings from newspapers; the clippings hod been very carefully cut out, they had been pasted with painful regularity on the sheets, and each had been dated across Its face? dates made with many different pens and with many different Inks, hut all tn the same Irregular handwriting as the letter which Alan had received from Benjamin Corvet. Alan, ills fingers numb In his disappointment, turned and examined all r~ these pages; but they contained nothing else. Tie read one of the clippings, which was dated "Feb. 1012." "The passing away of one of the oJdest residents of Emmet county occurred at the poorfarm on Thursday Ui iucti iMi. v r?-n wcstnouse was one of four brothers brought, by their parents Into Emmet county In 1R-MI. lie established himself here ns a farmer and was well known among otir people for many years. He was nearly the last of his family, which was quite well off nt one time. Mr. Westhouse's three brothers and his father having perished In various disasters upon the lake. Tils wife died two years ago. lie Is survived by a daughter. Mrs. Arthur T'earl, of Flint." He read another: "Hallford-Spens. On Tuesday last Miss Audrey Hallford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rert HnlJford, of this nlnwoe itn Itn/T In M 1?* ? !> * *.v, ...I in in*, iiniiim ui noiy matrimony to Mr. Robert Spens, of Eacanahn. All wlah tha young couple well." . He read another: "Bor.i to Mr. and Mra. Hal French, a daughter, Saturday afternoon laet. M:kc Vera Arnhella French, at her arritai weighed seven and one-half ' pounds." i This clipping mi a dated, in Benja- J roln Corvet's hand, "Sturgeon Bay, j Wis., Aug. 1914." Alan put It aside In bewilderment and amaze and took ux> lue'n the sheet* he first had looked at. The names and addresses 011 tnese oldest, yellowed pages had been flrat Written, it was plain, all at the sume time and w'th the same pen and ink, and each sheet in the beginning had contained seven or eight names. Some of these original names and even the addresses hud been left unchanged, but most of them- had been scratched out and altered many times?other and quite different names had been substituted; the pnges had become finally h I most Illegible, crowded scrawls, rewritten again and again In Corvet'a cramped hand. Alan strained ' forward, holding the first sheet to the light. Alan seized the clippings he had looked at before and compared them wlftly with the page he had Just read ; two of the namea?Westhouse and French?were the same as those upon this list. Suddenly he grasped the other pages of the list and looked them through for his own name) but It was not there. He dropped the sheets upon the table and got up and began to stride about the room. He felt that In this list and In these dippings there must be, somehow. n/itno nno rrotinro 1 ...i? ^vuc.m "HI IK IIIHBl | relate In some way to one tiling; the.v must have deeply. Intensely eoneerned Benjamin Oorvet's dlsnppearnnee and his present fate, whatever that might be, and they must concern Alan's fate as well. But In their disconnection, their Incoherence, he could discern no common thread. What conceivable bond could there have been uniting Benjamin Corvet at once with on old man dying upon a poorfarm In Kmraet county, wherever that might he, and with a baby girl, now some two years old, ID Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin? He called Wassaquam Into the library and brought the llsta and dippings out again. "Do you know at all what theas are. i "Do You Know At All What Theoo Aro, I Juiian?" Ho Aakod. 1 them, and take them out and put them ] back. That Is all I know." i "Do you know any of these Deo i - en pie i He gave the lists to Wassaquam, who studied them through attentively, ' holding them to the lamp. 1 "No, Alan." "Have you ever heard of any of 1 their nameo beforo?" "That may be. I do not know. They are common names." "Do you know the places?" "Ties?the places. They are lake ports or little vlllnges on the lakes. I have been In most of them, Alan. Emmet county, Alan, I cumo from there. Henry comes from there, too." "Then that Is where thev hour ?i>a Drum?" "Yes, Ainu." "My father took newspapers from those places, did he not?" Wussnquam looked over the addresses again. "Yes; from all. lie took them for the shipping news, ho snld. And sometimes he cut pieces out of them?these pieces, I see now; and afterward I burne<J the papers; he wouid not let me only throw them away." "That's all you know about them. J unit II I 1 "Yes, Alan; that Is all," Alan dismissed the Indian, who, 1 stolidly methodical In the midst of ' these events, went downstairs and 1 commenced to prepare a dinner which 1 Alan knew he could not eat. Alan got l up and moved about the rooms; he went hack and looked over the lists ' and clippings once more; then he 1 moved about again. How strange a ' picture of his father did these things ' call up to him! When he had thought ' of Benjamin Corvet before, It had heen I as Sherrill liaci described him, pursued by some thought he could not " conquer, seeking relief In study, In correspondence with scientific societies, < In anything which could engross him and shut out memory. But now he I must think of him, not merely as one tryhig to rorget; what had thwarted Curvet's life was not only In the past; It was something still going on. It had amazed Sherrlll to learn that Corvet, f for twenty years, hnd kept trace of j Alan; but Corvet had kepi trace !u the t same why and with the snmo secrecy c of maDy other people?of about a t score of people. When Alan thought > of Corvet. alone in his silent house, i omit think of him as solicitous I sovut these people | as seeking for tlurtr names In the newspapers which ^ he took for that purpose, and as recording, the Changes In their lives. The | ucuiiii, i iim uiriua, mo iiiurrui{<? among these people had been of the Intensest Interest to Corvet. It was possible that none of these people knew- about Corvet; Alan had not known about him In Kansas, but had known only that some unknown person had sent money for his support. : But he appreciated that It did not matter whether tliey knew about him or not; for at some point common to all of them, the lives of these people must have touched Corvet's life. When Alan knew what had been fhat point of contact, he would know about Corvet ; he would know about himself. Alan had seen among Corvet's hooka a net of elmrfo of th? flrent Lakes. Ha went and got that now and an atlas. Opening them upon the table, he looked up the addresses given on Corvet's list. They were most of them, he found, towns about the north- ( ern end of the lake j a very few upon other lakes?Superior and Huron? 1 but most were upon or very close to ' Lako Michigan. These people lived by 1 means of the lake; they got their sustenance from It, as Corvet had lived, HUU ?o ' "i TCI l ill i I BUI U1B W ru 1 111. A1HU whh feeling like one who, bound, has been sudder^y unloosed. Prom the time when, coming to see Corvet, he had found Oorvet gone, until now, he had felt the Impossibility of explaining from anything he knew or seemed likely to learn the mystery which had surrounded himself and which had surrounded Oorvet. Hut these names and addresses I They Indeed offered something to go upon, though Luke now was forever still, and his pockets had told Alan nothing. Ho found Emmet county en the map and put his Anger eo it Spearman, iana on tne cnarc?the little towns and rlllagee, the Islands and headlands, their l%hts and their uneven shores. K feeling of "home" had come to him, which he bad not had on coming to Chicago. There were Indian names and Prench up there about the meetings [>f the great wuters. The sense that he was of these lakes, thai surge of feeling which he hud felt first In conversation with Constance Sherrtll was strengthened an hundredfold. lie gazed down at the lists of names which Benjamin Corvet had kept so carefully and so secretly; these were his father's people, too; these ragged shores and the Islnnds studding the channels were the lands where his fa cner nau spent T.ne most active part >f his life. There, then?these lists now made it certain?that events had 1 happened by which that life had been flighted. North, th%re by the meeting )f the waters, wbr the region of the wrong which waa done. "That's where I must go!" he said iloud. "That's where I must <fo 1" Constant Sherrlll, on the following ifternoon, received a telephone call from her father; he was coming home earlier than usual, he said; If she had planned to g?o out, would she wait until after he got there? The afternoon's mall was upon a stand In the hall. She turned it over, looking through It?Invitations, social notes. She picked from among them an envelope addressed to herself In a firm, clear hand, which, unfamiliar to her, still lueerly startled her, and tore It open. "Dear Miss SherrlU," she read, "I am closing, for the time being, the house which, for default of other ownership, I must call mine. The possibility that what has occurred here would cause you and your father anxlsty about me in case I went away without telling you of my intention Is the reason for this note. But it is not the only reason. I could not go away without telling you how deeply I ap-. predate tho generosity and delicacy you and your father have shown me In spite of my position here and of the Pact that I hud no claim at all upon pou. I shall not forget those, even though what happened here last night makes It impossible for ine to try to sea you agulu or even to write to you. "ALAN CONRAD." She heard her father's motor enter the drive and ran to him with the letter In her hand. "He'd written to you, then?" he said, at sight yf It. "Yes." "I had a note from him this afternoon at the olllce, asking me to hold In abeyance for the time being the trust that Ben hnd ieft me und returning the key of the house to rtie for safekeeping." "Has he already gone?" "I suppose sy; 1 don't know." "We must find out." She caught up her wraps and begun to put them on. Sherrlll hesitated, then assented; und they went round the block together to tne corvet nouse. snerrlll, after a few Instants' hesitation, took the key from tils pocket* and unlocked the door and went In. The rooms, they saw, were all In perfect order; summer covers tind been put upon the furniture; protecting clothR hud been spread over the beds upstairs. After their Inspection, they came out again nt the front ioor, ami her rather dosed It with a mapping of the spring hick. Constance, as they walked away, turned and looked back nt the old tiouse, gloomy and dark among Its newer, fresher-looking neighbors, and suddenly Rhe choked, and her eyes Eprew wet. That feeling was not for LJnele Benny the drain of days past Imd exhausted such a surge of feeling [or him. That which she could not wink away was for the boy who hod rom? to that house a few weeks ago nod for the man who Just new bad tone. (To be continued next woelrl SOVIETS KILLED 22 PRELATES Metropolitan of Kiev Gives Figures From 1917 to 1920?Nine Tortured to Death. London.?The Bolsheviki in Russia < torn 1917 to 1920 killed one metro-^ will fori (Ivp arrlihlcliniiH nnri Rirtppn 1 rishops, of whom thirteen were shot ind nine tortured to death, according o a telegram sent by Archbishop Anthony, Metropolitan of Kiev, to the krchblshop of Canterbury, says the London Times. The Metropolitan says he has no In'ormatlon concerning the year 1021. DOG HEARS MASTER BY RADIO rerrler Cuts Capers as He Recognises Owner's Voice Calling Him Over Wireless. Lexington, Kj.?An Airedale terrier in the radio receiving room of the University of Kentucky heard hla owner it Pittsburgh, Fa., call him. The own5r, F. Paul Anderson, dean of the university, was speaking from the Westnghonse brondcastlng station. The log was sleeping as Anderson's voice ?ame In. He sprang to his feet, wagged tils tall and tnen capered about the radio outfit. * Big Prlca of Littla Land. Harrlaburg, Va.?Probably the smallest transfer of real estate to be entered on record In the office of tha UUUiiiy vi?r& ucrc nna raunieu yesterday when a conveyance of twelve square feet located between two dwellings was made for a consideration of $100. The price was at the rate of $808,000 an acre, It was pointed out. The strip of land was 28 feet long and 5% inches wide. Muls Fell on Him. Greensburg, Ind.?Clarence Meltsh of this city was the victim of an unusual accident the other daj while digging a ditch here. A mule, driven by Thomas Burton, fell In the ditch at the point where Meltsh was working, and he was held prisoner by the weight of the animal unMl It was removed by fellow workmen. Meltsh offered an injured hip and a few minor bruises. ? t Her Principle. FIND ANCIENT SCRIPT Writing Similar to Chinese Discovered in ii aho. Scientists Will Explore Caves and Decipher the Writing 13c .'ore Revealing Location?M~y Find Valuable Rel ce. Boise. IdAho.?Sym'xds and signs, cmseled, It Is belle vet!. ages ago. were discovered recently o i lava rocks In a remote section of Owyhee county, southwestern Idaho. Many of the Inscriptions bear striking resemblance to Chinese alphabet characters of today, it was said, although archeo'o.. sts say they may be anywhere fro:u 400 to 30,000 years old. Discovery of the inscriptions, which are said to be a mine of archeologlcal treasure, was made by Robert Llmbert, a Boise taxidermist. Their exact location will not be made public until they are examined thoroughly this summer by a number of scientists who are coming here. The volcanic rock on which the Inscriptions are carved is scattered over a 30-acre sagebrush tint. In the im mediate vicinity are several large caves, around the entrance of which the rocks also are lnscrii ed. It Is believed these cuves n<-v?-r have been explored. Possibly, it is said, they contuln many relics of scientific value. Two distinct types of < arvlngs, Ideographic and plctographie, have been noted. Archeologists believe the Ideographic antedates by many years the plctographlc. Both systems hove been found together on one rock and near them can be discerned what appears to be a third system, supposed to antedate both of the others, but which has weathered beyond possibility of deciphering. Clear bits of this prehistoric writing are found on one huge water-worn bowlder 25 feet long, 14 feet wide and 5 feet high. Near the center is a series of triangles believed to indicate Indian tenees. nnd rw-vt ?n thom ? rows of dots and dashes, thought to be numerals. Resemblance of nanny of the Inscriptions to the characters of the Chinese alphabet was taken by some to substantiate the 11 . >ry that the North American '.ve descended from a race which i me from Asia by way of Bering straits. __ Indians now living in Idaho, when questioned regarding t! e carvings, say the more modern or plctographlc are the work of their forefathers, but they assert the others to be the work of spirits. FIRST TO COM! fi :SS FEET Favorite of Chinese Err peror, Many Centuries Ago, 8uid to Hsvs Originated the Custom. J. P. Donovan, authority on Chinese customs, in an article ?ailed "Romance In Chinese Literature," published in the Forum, writes: The ideal of beauty and the martc of gentility for a woman used to be small feet, the compression of which was cot !ir?po?ed by law but was a craze of fashion, as slender waists were at one time In England. Several accounts are given as to the origin of the custom of foot-blndlug, but probably the following Is the correct one: "It is said that Yao Ninng, the beautiful concubine of Emperor LI Yu (975 A. D.), was light und graceful In all her movements, being able to dunce with ease and elegance. She gave so much pleasure to her lord and master that he caused to be made golden lily flowers with movable petals for Yao Nlang to walk on from her apartments to the palace. To gratify the emperor till further, she compressed her feet, in order thut they might look like a Illy bud unopened, until they were three Inches long." ij; Dog Tows His Master to a ij; " Cake of Ice. Red Wing, Minn.?When eight- jj; ;j; ye?r-old Pierce SeehHCh fell inIj! to the Mississippi river, coming ;;; jji to the surface 20 feet from <!> ;i; shore, his dog plunged in and jj; ij; swam around until the hoy ij; ij! seized his hind legs. Then the ijj j jj dog towe<l its master to a float- jj; S: inf cr.ke of ice, from which ?z I: he was rescued by onlookers. H ssgeeecsoflesessooeoesssesattssoeesoso WEAK, NERVOUS, ALL RUN-DOWN Missouri Lady Suffered Until Sks Tried CardnL?Says "Result Was Snrnriwin# "?HaI Alnnv Fine, Became Normal and Healthy. Springfield back vu m weak I could hardly stand up, and I would have bearing down pains and was not well at anr time." sara Mrs B. V. Williams, wifo of a well-knows farmer on Route 6, this place. "I kept getting headaches and baring to go to bed," continues Mrs. WUllami describing the troubles from which she obtained relief through the use ol CardnL "My husband, baring heard of Cardul, proposed getting It for me. "1 saw after taking some Cardul ... that I was Improving. The result was surprising. I felt like a different person. "Idter I suffered from weakness and weak back, and felt all run-down. I did not rest well at night, I was so nervous and cross, lfy husband said he would get me some Cardul, which he did. It strengthened me ... My - doctor said I got along tine. I waa to good healthy condition. I eannot ea^too^rnuch tor it," ftMBk tin MtA y BRAILLE TYPE MOST POPULAR Work of Schools for the Blind Is -Simplified by Adoption of Uniform System. nnro ni/r mmr ??- ? iuuio iakc ruut ui- UNts Enables Blind to Receive Training Through Which They May Become Self-Supporting?Many Books Published. * Now York.?The Braille system of embossed type lins now been adopted by all schools for the blind in this country, und since 1019 no new book has been embossed In any other type. Dozens of embossed types for reading by the finger have been designed from time to time; the first practical one was devised In France 136 years , ago by Valentin Hauy. Three sysi terns retained popularity for many years, but as this mude It necessary i for the blind to learn three different ! types, the leading educators of the country decided to make one system universal, and unanimously decided on the BraUle. Much Ingenuity, effort and money have been expended In devising t^ese systems to enable the blind to read and receive training through which they may become self-supporting. All may be divided Into two groups? those composed of lines and those composed of points. In genernl the line types, which came first, were Imitations pf characters that had sur^ vlved as best adapted to reading by tne eye. The point types, the characters ot which nre merely different arrangements and numbers of similar points or dots, represent arbitrary systems Justified both as being generally more tangible than the lines, and as being writable as well as readable by the blind themselves. The point systems have gradually driven out the line types, with the exception of the Moon type^. which is so large and coarse that anybody having the least patience can learn to read with the finger. Agreed on a Midway Type. ane type adopted is called the Revised Braille, 1V4, as the British have been UBlng this type in two forms, one In full spelling and other highly contracted with fnany arbitrary abbreviations. As textbooks and literature should he models of good usage, the leading educators of the blind In this country agreed on a type between the t\fro. This American grade Is n simplified type and can be rend by anyone who knows either type. The music notations for the blind are now the same everywhere, as are the mathematical nnd the notation* wherever English is used. In this wny duplication of scores and tables may be avoided through international exchange. Already 208 different books have been published in this uniform type, The printing of embossed books for the blind began with the founding of the first school in this country in 1830. Books were made as funds were uvail- i able until 1879, when congress grunted the American Printing House for the ( wind at Loulgvlllenn annual subsidy of $10,000. This houae at once became the greatest producer of its kind In the world, and continued to be such Into the present century, when the number of blind pupils in the schools drawing upon this source for books had more than doubled. The cost of production and the Increase in demand eventually made the | output of this house Insufficient, and In the emergency several of the schools put up emergency printing presses and assisted one another. One I endowed enterprise set about manu' facturlng writing appliances and table games for the blind and selling them at less than cost. In 1919, however, congress Increased its grant to the American Printing House from $10,000 to $50,000, which made possible the enlargement and Improvement of the plant and the Increase In the number of books to each school. spreading knowledge. In a report on the work to educate the blind and distribute books among them, Edgar E. Allen,'director of the Perkins Institute and Massachusetts School for the Blind, writes: "Most schools are glad to circulate their embossed books beyond their own pupils and do so as fnr as they can. But the reading hunger of the Ivllrwl /v.Uel.U - -1.1 ~ <1 i'ii iit i vui.-tnic v*i niniii uiiifiin in rilU'll.V satisfied by circulating libraries located here and there throughout the country. Libraries and schools Interested have collected much literature, and some authors have been Induced to meet the cost of publishing a book or two In Ilrallle. "By far the largest number of blind and partly blind pupils in the United I States, as elsewhere, attend the resiI dentlal schools commonly called instl tutlons. There are now 45 such rfMiools, wltli a total attendance of about 5,000. The day-school movement started In Chicago considered all itr pupils blind, and taught them as such for years until In a few cities certain of the semi-blind were segregated and taught ns semi-sighted pupils, chiefly through the eye Instead of the Angers. "The movement for such segregation is scientifically correct, and represents a great educntlonnl advance in the *.?roner methods of renrhinc children not suffering from blindness bat from seriously defective eyesight" The secret of enjoying life Is In being able to get happiness from the simplest resources. fiver? day Is a new teacher and comes with fresh lessons for all who re willing to learn. NOTICE OF DISCHARGE On Iftth May, next I will apply to the Probate Court of Cheeterfleld T ' ^ "iTl rX===? H Hgja / \ L* Wf k I RED-TOP Extra Ply of Fabri. Price $ FOR poor roads, for he anywhere the Fisk Ret for small cars. An extra p tread of extra tough red ri built to meet exacting cond Time after time one Redordinary tires. Its distinct selection of a high-grade tir more than justifies your eh There's a Fisk Tire of exi for car, truck or HORSE OF ANOTHER COLOR Higgins is troubled with an overweening curiosity about other people's affairs. Occasionally he come3 a cropper, as, for instance, when he met JSmithers in a trolley car. "Busy, eh?" he inquired, off hand. "Yes," suid Smithers, deliberately. "Been buying a horse for my wife." "Have, eh? Well, let my give yoiu some points." "Oh, I've closed the bargain." "Not without trying him, surely? Was he sound in wind and limb?'* "He appeared to be." "Doesn't balk?" "No-o, I reckon not." "Stand without hitching?" "Y-es, I think so." I "Good gait?" But here Smithers got up to leave 1 COUNTY TA> State Ordinary County Roads Bridges Total Cheraw Marburg Orange Hill Pats Branch Pee Dee Stafford Bethel Center Point Chesterfield Parker Pine Grove Kuby hiloh Snow Hill Stafford Vaujjhan Wamble Hill Black Creek Center Center Grove Cross Roads Mt. Croghan Ruby Wexford Winzo Zion .. Buffalo Dudley Five Forks Mangum L>~ 1~ * agiMUUU Plains Zion Angelus Center Grove Clarks Jefferson | Macedonia Plains j Bay Springs Green Hill Leland Middendorf McBee Providence Sandy Run Union ' Bay Springs . Bear Creek Bethesda Juniper > Middendorf 1 Patrick Pats Branch Branch IShiloh Stafford White Oak Cat Pond Juniper Ousley* Patrick . ^ Time to Re-tire? . ^ Huk Hag. U. 8. Pat. ?j SSESSESSiSS^B^SSmESSSSSSSSSES^ 30 x 3 w ?iva? j i icau 17.85 avy loads, for hard use 1-Top cannot be equaled ly of fabric and a heavy ibber make a strong tire litions. Top has outworn three ive looks indicate your e while its extra mileage oice. fra X'flhlt? in vivo ' -MM???J the car. As he stepped off he called back to Higgins: "I neglected to mention the kind of horcs my wife wanted. It was a clothe horse." POTATO PLANTS?Million more Porto Rico and Nancy Hall Potato Plans grown from best prolific potatoes. Treated with corrosive sublimate before bedded. Immediate shipment. Dollar fifty per thousand. Shipping point. Guarantee safe arrival. G. J. Derrick, 2tp-20 Lancaster, S. C. L. H. TROTTI, Chesterfield, S. C. Dental Surgeon Office on second floor in Rosa Building. -.4 i LEVY 1921 " ; 12 milia 6 mills 6 mills 1 mill 28 mills in I 17. uj r' S * s- s- % z 1? 2. ? ? 2. 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