Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 28, Decatur, Adams County, 2 February 1927 — Page 3

" Understanding Heart BvPtTERBHYNE | — ' TIIF action so far , T a youns ranger, Is trans(!arls " ’ lhP San Dimas National R P ,e,ve. Chief Hanger Casey .. him and tells him to beware 1 ’"' ll harms'Monica Dale. who tb «/lookout on Bogus Peak. Gar- *>’’ Sod hv telephone the next n, that Robert I -re Mason, an ' TZ” is being hunted with I Shnunts Monica Is a friend of so Casey does not phone her . -innears at Monica’s gate in a kuon ’PP? . ( h(d hiin an( j ! STbwandl riding out shoots the who aretraillng him. [ t£ to the sheriff She killed ■ L dogs because she thought they . Xe Tasingdeer. He and his men ,i up to the lookout station and i Monica treats them to moonshine. 'I liter thev- leave the thought of hav- / ;« killed the dogs brings tears to : her mm. The new ranger appears J introduces himself as Anthony Firbnd. He talks to her, not knowii. that Mason is inside. He loses his heart to her and pities her for h» r lonelv life. i “ow CO ON WITH THE STORY. A consciousness of being in the presence of an unusual woman eni reloped Anthony Garland. He was I got a common man nor a dull man. 3 ad Monica’s obvious intelligence, her I quiet dignity, her poise, so palpalrty tiniral. the impelling force of a unique personality stimulated his in- ‘ terest in her mightily. She titillated his alert sensitiveness to the undent- : onstratively beautiful. Alluring yet childishly passionless, she impressed him as one distinctly 1 virginal; he admired her courage and i self-reliance in dwelling alone on Bogus: he thrilled to her wistful , reaming to improve her mind and her ' economic condition. But principally she aroused in him that quality which is man's most priceless heritage, if women only knew i an eagerness for the display of chivalry— both characteristic of men hi whom other masculine qualities way be all too unlovely. Os course she must be the loneliest girl in the world. Only twenty-one! She would never be lovelier that? she was now. in her maidenly naturalness and simplicity, and arrayed in that cheap blue chambray wash dress. A rerse from Gray’s Elegy came to his | mind; Full many a gem of purest ray serene. The dark, unfathomed caves of ocean bear. Ml many a flower Is born to blush unseen, And waste its sweetness on the . desert air. Ills long, inquiring, and wholly impersonal appraisal of her became just i little embarrassing, and to distract his attention she essayed an apology for entertaining him in her front yard. ‘Not that my cabin isn't clean and orderly.” she was assuring him that blunt dir.-i.-ta~.st fctt&j » charming, “hut ’’ CHAPTER 7 "I understand perfectly. I didn't expect to be invited in.” Garland interrupted smilingly. ”1 didn't know you were unchaperoned or I would hare ta'ephoned and asked permision to call.” Tm not at all apprehensive of you, •Jr. Garland, ft's just a habit I have -a protective measure until I know you better. Jem Scully came by one day. He'd fighting a fire all ®oming t and was hungry and thirsty, ” I invited him in for luncheon. He accepted—and who should ride up w a social call but the chief ranger and his cat of a wife. Jem was horribly embarrassed -he's such a shy H thing—and when he rode away Mrs. Chief Ranger assumed her prerogative of her fortv vears and a wural tendency toward virtue to lec- . m on my indiscretion. ore said folks would talk about - nn» - ■ wasn '* more careful of the S Folks ,Ihl - * sho led the p rigat^e -" Monica smiled her j, .. y . sweet - slightly twisted, fiiv ,!■ smile. “She was a she I OI ?. an for 80 ,nn£! - 1 suppose in,l a°" ■’ll I ’ e ' P Shp a<l never w a neighbor.” '®mense and contemptuous, 1 dare answered sympathetically. •oLi°L ked poor 0,(1 ,Tem Scully momh> lle >, never wou3(l look ,n on «S«l. en pasatog by ’’’ Monica are you telling me all this*” maiX you apppar to a you ' U hpar “H any- ' hear it ? 1 prefer that y°« should It correctly.” day. I ] ar Rirl, 1 heard it all yesteryon tn .„ mai , Inp ' curious to meet tha* u hat ,here ia about yon ° rts of the - chief as the i lO bave you dismissed kont °n Bogus.” "You 'nriv Dale . laUßhe *l mirtWesslv. Christian LJu* aaßured it wasn't ri) bliln’t n g o ? arlt v Mr ' Gar 'and. They Place. Th P , an yhody else to take my tractive tn a ary isn 1 aufhcfenUy atman ~ an<l ‘be chief IBv *ork J 1 ? consc ientious about M-worna* — of courae , onlv a !hl> darkn.7 d , Btand ,he «olitude, ’he covotec 8 and tbe ailence—when ’he peaks ot aren y'P-yiping across tanthVr, JL each other, and she"ie woods " ' screaming through P' l ’’ i 'm° ny then 1 Ms' f ‘ rßt asking per'Mted jjj s l Pßtl tfulfy loaded and a ranger 1 )?/' F™’ ll force of habit ’he match hcAi. ea L ef . ul ’ y extinguished Jronned th P P * in,n three pieces. w 11 * 4 th em £dn, e ?i, On the *™ un d and '° u are a b tne beel of his boot. * On )an," h e F y remarkable young arsy decided aloud. “Yes. you 0111 genti/ntV v ** y °" were quite an yourself,” S he chided

jhlm. "TTow old nro you? Thirty?" . “Twenty-eight.” “You haven't, any business wasting, your life on such a lonely, Ul-pald job) as the Forest Service hh! to offer you.” — "It's far belter than being n pinfeather lawyer starving to death in n city while waiting for <1 tents who never appear—or who, If they do appear, haven't enough' money to pay me my fee. Besides, I htul tuberculoaim I had to get out of the city.”. "Oh, I'm sorry!" ”1 don’t suppose I hud it any worse than ninety-eight, percent of my fel-j low men and women have it. It was 'chronic —upper lobes of both lungs—and it didn't liother me until I began to suffer from luck of nutrition" "And wits the legal life as bad as all that, Mr. Garland? Or shall I call you Anthony—no. Tony. I like that better.” "So do I. I hope we're going to bo good frlnds and neighbors, so by all means let us dispense with formality, Monica! Yes. the legal business was not onlv as lm<l as all that, but worse. When I started an exclusive diet of coffee and sinkers the littje T. R. bugs knocked tne down an\l kept mo down.” "You poor old Tony boy!" “A doctor told mo I had to go to a warm, dry climate. \IIo recommended Arizona, anti I secured a Job os forest guard in the Cocopah National Forest. It was pretty hard going for the first month, but after I drew my first month's pay and invested It all in blankets and diversified grub, it was really astounding the wav the chinks in mv superstructure began to fill up. Down in the t'oeopahf they used to call mo Tony the T.unger. They quit pint the past two years, however." He smiled. "It wasn't healthy for them—and the exercise did me a world of good." “ITI get you a glass of milk-half milk and half cream." Monica suggested. “Would you like a little jolt of very fine moonshine whisky in it? It'll do you a lot of good,” she added ragrtly. "Thanks. I'd like it very much. Is the moonshine your own product?" “Heavens, no! Vncle Charley Canfield.'who lives over on the other side of Dogwood Flats, makes it from a recipe that’s been in the family for generations. Ho gives me ten gallons every year, and I keep it on hand for make bite and other emergencies. AVe have forest fires here every year, and when the fire-fighters are all worn out and ready to drop from exhaustion. I send a few large canteens of it down to them." “And it’s a life-saver too,” he agreed, out of the depths of his own vast experience in fighting fires. “The government doesn't furnish it and it's imnossible to get it now. but in the cld days a wise fire-warden always regarded a case of whisky as part of -his fire-fighting equipment.” The*girl went into her cabin and emerged presently with the tnllk and cream in a tall glass and a smaller glass brimming with moonshine Ahisky. The ranger sipped the whiskv. "Whoever Vncle Charley is, he's entitled to my -espect. Monica. This mountain deA is as smooth as your own fair cheek." “You're different.T said Monica s’mplv. “Fill your canteen-with it. It’s only for vistors and puddings and ogc-nogs for sick, folks.” “I think you’re the angel of Bogus," he declared, ag be poured the liquor into the milk. t;„- wodwhj In this EsuEtry tm*I'm a bogus angel." “Well, I do not” « “V.liv should you? Anybody can see you're not an old womnn.” He chuckled at her wit. “1 m sure the men swear by you. Monica. “And I swear by them. The only friends I have are men. and I have yet to meet one who wouldn t protect me and be a real friend in time of need.” She sighed. “Tony, what are you going to do when you get old?” "I supiKise I’ll be cremated in a forest fire and save funeral expenses. “But surely you're not going to be a ranver all your days." “I hope not. I have ambitions to become chief forester.” . “And go down to the forestry office In San Francisco? AVell. that’s a good job. Tony. It pays about six thousand a vear. doesn’t if?” He nodded. "Meanwhile I'm saving seme mohey. I never want to go down to the city again and risk being hungry.” “Still, it must be a wonderful place," the girl breathed “Immense and contemptuous,” he reminded her. Monica bent upon him a tolerant little smile. “But. wonderful, just the same. Tony?” “Perhaps. But I think it would be very cruel to you. so young, so unspoiled, so unsophisticated THianks for the milk and whisky. Monica. By the way, I brought about three hundred books wtith me, and I subscribe to half a dezen of the best magazines. Would you care t<o have the magazines when I have finished with them?" "Oh. goody! Os course I would. And if you don't mind, we’ll trade books.” “The deal is closed” "Fog’s lifting rapidly. Excuse me while I take a squint at my job. ’ She hastened into her cabin and emerged presently with a long telescope ofl a triiipod. set it up in the yard and swung it in a wide arc from north to south. “Nothing except a camp-fire about five miles down the valley alongside the creek." “Some Round Valley Indians fishing.” he elucidated. “I saw quite a cavalcade of them coming in last night. They camped in Tantrum Meadows.” She glanced at hinr brightly. “Suppose we have a concert.” she suggested. “The music from the thedansant at the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco will bo on the air now." CHAPTER 8. Garland agreed readily, and Monica entered her cabin. Once inside, she; peered out at him through the scrim curtains on her window and smiled to see him step quickly to the telescope and sweep th P country to the fog level. “You're a nice boy,” she solilo'quized, “but you’re up here under / *

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY,

FARMERS'INSTITUTE MONMOUTH, FEBRUARY 3, 1927. MORNING SESSION—9:3O Devotional n,. v 3 slater, Hoagland S. School Making Country Life Better Mrs. Pfendler, Action, Indiana Recitation * p,. ar i sb« “ts Sow Martha ami Hhlaa Middling Farm Shop and Care of Farm Machinery C. C. Fisher, Winchester Recitation Harriet Kunkel Appointment <»f Committees. AFTERNOON SESSION—I:3O School Reading Rverett RMgtetM Recitation Helen Death Mosic Sawyer's Room The Church ami School ' .. C. C. Fisher Ifveitation Mareile Johnson Piano Solo R u th Falk County Agent Busche. Woman's Part in Farm Organizations Mrs. Pfendler Recitat'loa f! Eileen Jackson Report of Committees. • EVENING SESSION—7:OO Monmouth Orchestra. Dialogue—"Hiring a First-Class Man" "th and Bth Grades Music Monmouth Girls Quartet Playet . . Martha C. Fuhrman. Everett Singleton Music Chas. Chase and Miss Melctiing Tdk Prof. Graham i'qln Margaret Body Reading Catherine Weidler PRIZES—Corn and Cakes White Corn Ist S2.'io 2nd fI.SO 3rd 11.00 Yellow Corn Ist ... $2.00 2nd $1.50 3rd SI.OO Corn raised in Root township. 1926, by man or boy. Cakes—Light and Dark Light Cake Ist SI.OO 2nd 75c 3rdsoc Dark Cake 15t31.00 2nd 75c 3rd 50c Competition open to all women and girls in Root township. Junior Class—Girls 18 years old and under. Senior Class —Women over 18 years old. BIG BASKET DINNER COME, EVERYBODY CAL KUNKEL. Chairman. MRS. FANNY CHRISTEN, Secretary

I false pretenses and I’ll bet a ripe I peach you’ll stay till sundown. Three ! men and a good-sized boy couldn't get you away from that telescope after 1 . the fog has lifted completely, and' while there's light enough to see by.' . “Evidently you didn’t meet the sher-1 1 iff and his posse, or you'd know the 1 . uselessness of your sight-seeing. I 1 think, young man. I'll give you a had . ten minutes and then send you 1 home!” '| She tuned in the radio, opened the I window and rejoined her visitor under I the sugar-piue. For half an hour they I listened to the music, and unlike more ‘ sophisticated patrons of this newest ' twentieth-century wizardry, they for- ‘ bore to vilifty the announcer, not- ' withstanding the fact that like all ' radio announcers he deemed himself 1 a bit of a jvit and was too ornate and verbose in his mode of expression. Garland observed that the radio was one of the more expensive mod--1 els and, l%cause lie had planned to • buy one for himself when the price 1 ■ of radios should take the long-expect-] ed tumble, he ventured to ask her the ■, cost of it. ret hf €<»\TiM Fn» ™ 1 '*- ■ INI’! 1-. > • arrangement with King Features Syndicate. Inc o Indiana-Kentucky Auto License Feud Settled . • Indianapolis, Ind. Feb. 2.—(United PTess) —Settlement of the Long drawn out Indiana-Kentucky auto license feud has been reached, Frederick E. Schortemeier, secretary of state, announced today, following receipts of word from Kentucky to that effect. Solution of the problem came with assurances from Kentucky that Indiana trucks and commercial vehicles ,

<Pgijy Farm Business ■ 3 goes more smoothly when all i I money received is deposited in j bank. When all bills are paid I St by check. When buildings are < ; kept insured. When borrowing l’| is done at the bank. When I S ' valuable papers are locked up j'i in the bank vaults. When surplus money earns more money a in certificates of deposit. This bank wants the business of I 7 farmers. | Bank G fiapiial and Surplus Q120.000.01i r PggqturttadiQiia * z

will be premitted to operate to and from Kentucky without having Kentucky license plates. Schortemeier was informed that the 'present Kentucky law requiring KenI tueky plates for peasure and commercial vehicles running in and out of that state will not be eforced until the : Kentvcky.court of appeals hands down a decision in a ease now pending. It was explained that if the constitutionality of the act is upheld, the law will be enforced only in cases of foreign trucks doing intera-state busln- ■ ess in Kentucky. I < See classified column for good used cars.2Bt2 RED PEPPER HEAT QUICKEST RELIEF FOR RHEUMATISM Red Pepper Rub takes the “ouch” from sore.'-stiff, aching joints. It canI not hurt you, and it certainly stops that old rheumatism torture at once. , When you are suffering so you can hardly get around, just try Red Pepper Rub and you will have the quickest relief known. Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating beat as red Pepper Rub you will feel the tingling heat, [ft three minutes it warms the sore spot through and through. Pain and soreness are gone. Ask any good druggist for a jar of Rowles Red Pepper Rub. Be sure to get the genuine, with the name Rowles on each package.

Lincoln Day To Be Observed In Legislature Indiana polls, Ind. Feb. 2.—f United Press) —Committees have been aje olnted in both houses of'the legislature to work out a Lincoln Day program for presentation in Ui<- House on Saturday, February 12th. Oswald Ryan, Anderson, has beeti I mentioned as speaker. ■ 1 o——■—— — Hornsby May Sue St. Louis Club For Dividends ! St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 2 — (United Press) — Rogers Hornsby, deposed manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, may sue the club for jack dividends on bis stock Wm. Fahey, Hornsny’s attorney said today. Fahey said he would again discuss the situation with Sam Breadon, Cardinal president, before taking any definite action. The threat of legal action to force payment of back dividends followed declaration of only a 10 per cent dividend when $1f,0.000 was set asid« for a sinking fund. New York. Feb. 2.— (United Press) —Rogers Hornsby will have to dispose of his stock in the St. Ixiuls ball club or give up his $40,000 a year job with

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thn Noxy Ynu|< Giants, according to f'hartes a Stoneham, Pre-Ident of tin* | club. “Them In no ebanco that the deal • brought Hoi nt bj to New YOl k | will Im called off and It ho doesn’t adjust his bUHiness affairs satisfactorily, the New Yotk Club will be the loser," Stoneham said. Asthma No cure for It, but welcome relief is often brought by— I VICKS ▼ Vapoßub _ Over 17 Milium Jut • I »••./ • -'irlf NIGHT COUGHS Stopped in 15 Minutes Almost always coughing is caused by an irritated and inflamed Un oat] 'or bronchial tubq,s, whieix cough ; syrups and patent medicines do not I touch. But a famous physician's i prescription recently discovered call- ] ed Thoxine goes direct to the cause, telieves the inflamed membranes and stops the cough almost instantly, one] swallow does the work and Ute remarkable thing about it is that it contains no dope, chloroform or harmful drugs. Once used you will never be without it. Pleasant taste. Safe for children. 35c, 60c and SI.OO. Holthouse Drug Co.

THREE

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