I have never built one of those, but if the spar stock is of equal length, then yes. make a scarf shaped or angled cut for the splice. Try to offset the splices, that is try not to have them one on top of the other. Put an overlapping brace on the splice. If the spar stock is long enough, make the splice as far out the outboard wing as you can, then cut to length. This gives you solid wood at the wing center where most of the stress is. If you have similar size balsa stock on hand, I think it's worth it to replace the spar stock and make the splices as far out on the wing as you can. When I scratch build Ringmasters, I always use leading edge stock full length and splice it out towards the outboard tip. Ringmasters that are built from original Sterling kits are notorious for being fragile at the wing center joint in even the lightest crash, and that is because they were trying to produce the kit is an short a box as possible, (for cost cutting reasons) and that meant short balsa stock splicing wing leading edges, spars and trailing edges.
The Pathfinder is one of the kits in my stash and is a fine flying airplane. There is volumes written about modifying and improving many, many airplanes out there, but I can't remember much be written on improving the Pathfinder. Gordan Delaney did a great job designing it Just build it straight and as light as practical, bolt on a reliable power plant and it will do the job for you.
Good luck and have fun,
Dan McEntee