red her. She was looking upon the great figure of a man. He was aged, nearing the fullness of the allotted span. His shoulders, however, were square and his back straight. His form ros
soft rotundity of a child's and the roses of a girl. Before her stood the father of Ned Pullar. Often had
bsorbed was he in his employment that he was rudel
lar, I b
igure in white. Her face was attractive with a br
his stick and bowed with courtly stateliness. "Is i
Mary M
and held out his hand
lad, Ned, has been telling me much
rustic chair
mile as she accepted the proffered chair. "But you have not favoured us yet. I
winkled at
d he amusedly. "I shall have to hunt
him. "But you must not entertain now, Mr. Pullar. I came over to watch you at
n laughed
," was the reply. "I am thres
with a stick? Is Ned not the b
ame into the o
think so
d so does the wh
not thresh this. Those bags are filled with rare wheat heads
f a dozen bulging grain sacks sw
eyes
ard you are with seeds. One man told me solemnly that he believed you could grow a good
he read earnestly the beautiful, vivacious face o
was his satisfied reflection. "Would you li
omprehend the meaning of his question but she was fascinate
you?" was her s
aid he. "I will s
tub. Seizing the handle he pulled it out into the sunlight. Lifting a covering he disclosed to her eyes a mass of grain-beautiful wheat, brown-gold in colour, wit
ng and dipping up a handful. She observed how
to you," was he
oked up at him with a clear-eyed raptur
I tell you the tale of the
s low. Then followed one or two without a harvest. Ned was growing to be a husky little chap when a crop grew on the place that promised us a forty-bushel yield. But one day a black cloud swept over the homestead and in ten minutes it was gone. We had no seed. On the heels of the hail came a drought year. Following it appeared a crop that filled the settlement with hope. We were getting ready to cut when a blight appeared. The rust reduced the yield from forty bushels to five. So passed the years and the battle went against us, with the frost the worst enemy of all. One terrible harvest it came to me that the seed was wrong. It matured too slowly. What we needed was a seed that would come along f
t it took a great deal of time. My neighbours began to surpass me in quantity of yield. Eventually they regarded me as luny. At last only Kitty and Ned believed in me. They never failed me. They became experts in seed selection. They helped me with their sympathy. Together we made thousands of tests. Gradually we caught our feet. O
ety of grain that has appeared for some reason in your field. The task of plucking these 'rogues' is called 'roguing.' Upon their return the
your Red Knight at last. I found him growing
he head that caught my eye, as it had caught Kitty's and Ned's. It was not exceptionally large but well compacted and heavy, its spikelets p
paused, lost a
ualities each harvest. It is of the highest milling grade, grows a strong straw and erect, compact head, maturing three full weeks before any other wheat. This tub is filled from our head-row plots with the very purest Red Knight. In ad
at length by Mary. At the first accents of her voice her com
. "You and Ned and-his mother are-gracious benefactors. You a
an looked eagerly into th
mers round about us and a sure crop for the struggling pioneer in the new places of the world. It will mean that a million homesteads will spring up in the great Northern plains where men could scarcely live because of th
ue! But the world will have to hear about it. It will take time to marshall the forces of The Red Knight and start him on his great crusade. Y
Ned and I have thought it over, but
l over them. It was Mary
lp you? I have done a little writing. We could get the facts into shape
er with eyes in which g
story enough to
noon and we can work at the tale of The Red Knight while the children are p
eflected deeply
lly. "But I will think it over. If I d
eply. "This has been an amazing hour. But
she vanished t
he returned to the sack of unthreshed wheat. Picking up the flail
gel she is. Our dreams will come true