Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 60, Decatur, Adams County, 11 March 1939 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DAILY DEMOCRAT DECATUR Published Every Evening Eavept Munday by TH* DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Inearporatod Bntared at th* Decatur. Ind Prat O*M M laoond Claw Matter I. H Heller— Preeideat V R Holtbouee. dec f. * Hue Mgr Dick D. Heller —.Vice President SubMftption Rates: •ingle copies f .01 One week. by earner .10 One year, by earner 1.00 Ono mouth. by mail .33 Three mouths, by maU — 1.00 Eli months, by mall 1.7 b One year, by mail 3.00 One year, at otDce ME Prices quoted are within a radius of 100 mile* Elsewhere 33.30 one year. Advertising Retos made known on Application. National Adver. KeprrsentaUve BCHKERBR * CO. 13 Lexington Avenue. New York 33 Eaat Wacker Drive. Chicago Chartar Member of Tbe Indiana League of Home DaiUea Representative Evans talked a lot during tbe legislative session and maybe there was a system iu bis madness He was married the day before the session adjourned ’ and it might have been his last chance to show the boys who was boon. I'acle dam s bonds are higher today than probably auy time iu history. Bonds which sold lor Situ* a year ago are quoted as high as 311 V. au increase of 10 percent. ah though interest rates have been cut. America is solid and so Is tbe goverumeut Announcement has already been made that the i»4O auto license plates will be aluminum ou blaik. |.<MHg if:- advautagt* <>f easily seen at night. Manufacture of the plates has already started, a step iu tbe ever going cycle oi the world carryiug ou regardless of wbat happens Business showed a decided pickup in Decatur this week. Stimulus tbe many newspaper advertising was adding to shopping through and merchants consider the week one of the best since the holidays. Good days are ahead aud tha spring season should bring its increases, together with better limes. The Chamber of Commerce will sponsor the Ear-tier a Short Course tn this city next January, it is a forward step in community cooperwtion aud will result in much good. The directors are to be commended in underwriting the school which will be supervised by Purdue university aud other agricultural loaders. Have you taken notice to the stock market pages in the newspapers? Stocks arc going up, earnings have beeu good the past art days and as the market is a barometer of What'S ahead, business will cutitmue to climb. Industry Is getting ready for a productive 1U33 aud another month will ace the payrolls Increased Most of the bills passed by the legislature have bet n signed by tbe governor and those with an emtu-geucy clause are now etteetivc. Gov. Townsend in rcimirkiug about the reduced budget bill cautioned. “1 hope the people will bear tu mind that necesaurily some services will be seriously curtailed " Government is like ll». individual, If it does not have the money, it cunuot buy what money will buy. Indications are that the Wagner. Lultor Act will Im- amended in congross It should be With agitation stirring throughout the counity againat certain provisions of the bill, it seems that if we air to got together, revive Industry and help employment. that we should remove existing hand leaps It does I not mean that the law is wrong to amecl it ter sfter •’! our la>x art man-made and human nature
I can vrr. Even the constitution has beau smetided 33 Hums Governor Townsend did not take ~ tbe rols of dictator during the session of the legialature He come t , out a bigger man than ever. He | stood lor the heat interests of tbe I people. did not let the political ■ scrap tn the house Interfere with i his g<«>d Judgement and today la admired more than before. Hr le j respected for hie sincerity aud I stand for the people Hoosiers like his style end he will always hold ( a warm place in the hearts of I I those who consider these upright * * qua'.iiies In their public officials. I ™ ■ - We listened with greet Interest I to the paper read by ttuperlntend- ' ent Eno W Lankenau before the Rotary club, explaining the Fixed . Weekly Wage Plan, which the employes of the Decatur Work* of ! the General Electric voted to accept in,October I»S< It l« still operative aud employes arc satisfied with H At first the plan was I tried out for six month* tn 1934 ' and first quarter of 1937. Employee were paid a fixed amount without lay-offs and overtime if they worked more than a certain num- ' ber of hours iu a six mouth period It is one of the unique wage scale plans used In tbe country, outstanding tor its success and agreeable to the more than 37 percent of the employes who voted to accept it. Always a leader in labor , relations aud social legislation, the General Electric company is known tor its fair and considerate treatment of employes and its ever ready desire to improve conditions I The wage plan used at the Deca- , I tur works is recognised a* one of L the best iu the country. SPRINGTIME IN THE HOOSIERLAND As signs of spring begin to be I “aeen in Indiana, even those Hoosiers who have spent part of the I wiut-i out of ill-- slate or intend I > to visit one of the great fair* this i summer wonder why they ever ! leave the laud of xiuuia aud the tulip tree, of iuley and the Wabash. < For soon there'll come those fresh spring days that put pep tu i your luug*. aud make you flex your muscles, aud set you iu tuue • with uaiure. aud make you work like the old harry. Aud thus, days will lie followed . by ibe laxy stretch spring fever lime, when contenttuent Is iu ord-1 er. and you think of sitting out iu the old boat fishing and dreaming. ' and mayhap on week-ends you I really can do justice to the luxury of loafing. !' Home of us complain aiiout Indiana weather, but it certainly doer 1 not give us much to complain about. A few cold days last January and February, a couple of brief hold «|h-lls dunug th* mid-summer of : IS.is and that's alamt all during I the last twelve mouths. Yea. the old Hoosierland lias a pretiy satisfactory climate when all is said and don- And there's no other season in Indiana that quite comes up to the standards set by the Indiana spring. — Jouruul Gaxctte, 8080 NEWS Jnc lullowmg people spent Sunday afternoon aud evening at th© home of Mr. and Mrs. B T Welker: Mr. and Mrs Earl Welker of Wren. Ohio, Mr. and Mr*. Harley Welker, of Van Wort, Ohio. Joaa Mosier and Miaa Ethel Welker of < Payne. Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Prunm-r and son Joe. Mr. .nd Mrs. Gron* Tope and family. Miss Mary Girod. Marion Burke aud Gordon Welker. Mr*. Viola Mfllc rof near Convoy, Ohio, spent Monday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Miljcr. Mr. and Mrs. David Jones. Mr. and Mrs Albert t'oppess of near Monroe spent Wednesday evening with Mr. and .Mr*. H. G. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Groce Tope. Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Welker were dinner guest* Wednemtay, ui the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred liter. I Shvets Nt .xii, it, lb. "hit** Paragon Bond type-< writing paper 55c. The De-1 catur Democrat Co. if
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, MARCH If. 1999-
-- ■ -Il aafca*—.,, .isMbiarm i ■* -mfc—Jßmlr— '■ II —» 'Mtn IMW «—• “SPRING BREAK-UP!" «* a '*i/ f
Summary Os Some Os The New Laws
By Walter A Shead, (Special Correspondent tor Daily Democrat) Indianapolis—During these next tow day* we will endeavor to give to the jreople of Indiana a true piei ture of the accomplishment* of the 91*1 general aaaeuihljr. A Republican controlled pres* i throughout bid tana of <<>arae. may Im* exprenaed to. and will, endeavor to befuddle the public nuud by attempting to place upou the *h»uldei* of the Democratic party every tin of omission and every ain of louitniMion which can belaid at the door of the general a*seinbly. In commenting upon the aeaaiou Wednesday. Governor M. Clifford Townsend, made this observation. "1 am not afraid of a bully or a coward, nor of a sincere aggressive opponent, but there is no common ground upon which responsible persons or a party can meet irresponsibility." And that is the problem which fact-d the administration throughout the 61 days of the general assembly in dealing with the Republican majority In the house of representatives. There was uo lead ershtp which could speak for the house majority, and every agreement as to program had to be made with individuals which lasted just until another group or another individual had a different idea and abbrogated that agreement. Thu* there could not be a definite program developed on constructive legislation because of 1 this irresponsibility which was manifest in the house throughout the session. A total of Sib bills, exclusive of resolutions, were introduced dur- i ing the session, of which &m> originated iu the house and 332 in the j •mate. The house passed 47 sen-; ate bills and the senate passed 137 I’-sise bll*. a total of 1»4 Ulis pas« ed by both houses Up lo dale. 39 house bill* and 16 senate bills have been signed by the governor I and two measures became law . without his signature, or a total ; of 47 bills, out of the 114 passed, j have now become law. 137 still' remain to he an d ujhju by the j chief executive, it is within the i power i>t the governor to refuse to accept any of these hill* He may veto them, let them die by the i so-railed pocket veto, that is. refusal to accept them, or he may j sign them Unless Ue doos sign them, however, none of these 137 j bills can become law. Among the important measurer , which have already been signed is j the bill which exempts the munici pally owned properties from the payment of all taxes except gross , income lax. Anot her tm|K»rtaul measure j which bus becu signed extends the ’ s'ato milk rontrol law until June 1 lull. This measure was imrodm- ( ul by Senator Lurry Biaudou. Democrat, of Auburn. A more or less important bill, introduced by Beuster William Lew. Democrat, of I‘rlue.cton. and which is a safety measure in the nine district, inquire* the sealing ci ab«ud?u»d gg'.Uoua of cogl to eliminate the danger of gas explosion*.
I A measure which will save pub , lie utilities of the stale a good i many thousand dollars will pet mit these utilities to refund their . obligation* at new or lower Inter-' est rates and to provide for purchase or lease of other utility prop- ' erty under more favorable terms all with the approval of the public service commission hi many instance* public utilities arc still carrying their borrowing* of fund ed debat at a hgb interest rate and since during the past tow years interest rate* on loan* have beeu materially reduced, the new provisions of the utility act will be of great financial benefit to the utilities. This bill was introduced by tieuator Fred Eichhorn, Democrat of Gary. Another measure ha* become law. which was introduced by Senator Charles Bedwell. Democrat, of Sullivan, and it restrict* mortgage exemptions to residents of Indiana It was pointed out recently by the Indiana Taxpayers Asaocitaion that there are approximately 7.000 properties tn Indiana owned by resident* of other states on which these people have takau advantage of the fl.uuo mortgage exemption under the Indiana law Mo»t of these propertie* consist of cottages at the Indiana lake resorts and In many instance* arc not worth much more than the *I.OOO mortgage exemption : hence, tney are paying little or no taxes The Indiana Taxpayers Association estimate* that this bill alone will mean the collection of approximately *2f.o.o<M> in taxes from then out of state resident* who come to Indian* for their recreation. Among the house bill* which have now become law i* the measure introduced by Representative Dun Bower, Democrat, of Indian- . spoil*, which provides that expect- i ant mothers receive the standard test for syphilli*. And another j health measure, also introduced l by Representative Bower, authorixns the state health department . ito spend (75.000 tor the purchase I»f pneumonia. diphtheria, typhoid and smallpox serums (or distrtbu Don to the poor An emergency i measure was also passed during the latter days of the seasiou. and which has already been signed, to provide tor the immediate purchase of 62V,000 worth, in addition to the 176.0U0. of pneumonia serum to i combat tile liidunuxa epidemic which ha* beeu sweeping t)>e , I state. Another measure which ha* boi come a law and which it I* estimated will save the state approximately * trillion dollar* annually ,In poor relief expenditure*, provide* that persons obtaining poor 1 relief tniisi have lived in Indiana three year* and tn the township , out year. This measure wa* in- 1 troduced by RcprcacntaUvu Man . ford Ferguson. Democrat of Con- 1 nersvlUc. I Much hat beeu Mid in the Re publican newspapers about the hlgliest budget In the history of .judiatia. Titi-y do not. however. ; point out to the public generally i that out at th* S 3 uiUHon dtdlgr tiw **«roximpMly it million , dollar* I* dlstribu»e«'»o local com I miuuue* throughout the state, and 1 I
I that as a result of this distribution, local property taxes have been reduced eO million dollar* Neither do they point out that of the bal ante of 46 million dollars. 15 mil-i lion dollar* is used tor state high- j way purposes. leaving a balance i for all other state purpose* of 31' million dollar*. They do not point out that of this 31 million dollar* I approximately 19 million dollar* is collected by various board* and com in I** ions from tee* paid by th* profession* and the trade* which these board* serve and is ao way raised from taxes. This leave* a balance of about 13 million del-| lai* for all other state purpose* And speaking of budget*. Indiana I* just a piker. 1 would like to give you some budget* from other state* a* taken from an Associated Press story. And here are some of the budget*. New York Slate. 4415.033.000; Minnesota. 579.0vv.00U; Massachusetts. 619v.Ovo.OiHi; North Carolina 6154.360.0U0; Georgia. 6100.OUO.UOU; Maryland. 495.000.0e0; California. 4557.000.000; Wisconsin. 666.750,000. with a 431.500.000 deficit. And mind you most of all these state* have a tremendous bonded indebtedness. For instance, the story further say* that the bonded debt of the state of Illinois is 6166.675.000. The story further stay* that the deficit* in state budgets are a* follows: North Dakota. 64.0V0,000. Vermont. 6600,000: Minnesota. 44 495.000; Rhode Island 63.350.Ota>; Georgia. 61l.000.ou0; Texas. 619.ttu0.00u; Colorado. 67.500.0uu; and South Carolina. 63.7U0.0U0. And so Indiana, with an expected balance of more than 63.0U0.U00 in It* budget at the end of the biennial period i» in A-l shape tn comparison to other stale*, and its I budget is small In comparison One of the measures Introduced in the bouse throughout the session would have clipped the power lof the state tax board with referlenca to local budget*. Hut through . the intervention of thv liemocratie • minority in the bouse, and aided considerably by Harry Miesse, secretary of the Indians Taxpayer* Aaaoclatloii. the bill wa* detea ted , I' was pointed out that under the I present lew the s'at a tax board ha* saved the taxpayer* of IndiI ana more than 6'0.0u0,V00 in mduc- ; nous fiom their published budget* and only tost year, according lo Mr Miesse. 611.000.000 was sbsvrd from local budget* It was to prevent passage of stores of bills . like this one which took the eternal vigilance of ths Democrat* hi Hvum and benaU and of the heads of stale departments. And It will be remembord that the Republican speaker of the House, the Houorshle Janie* M Knapp, reproved the member* of hl* party when he warned that they hud Introduced bill* which j would have Increased th* cost of ( government between six and seven | 'ullllmi dollar* aud would have i created some twenty-tour new I boards and comiiHusion* in the state house. o Candid Camera* st College Toledo. O.—fUR)- College cn dlt now is b«lttg given at the Unlver--1 si'y of Toledo fur caudAl-camcr* ■ Work -Ownership of a camera and ificeeM to « darkroom at* requisites j tor the course, which combine* lecture* with denoutratioM.
i* —— - • - ■ • Anuweni To Te#t Quertionti Bdow ar* the an*war* to th* Teat yiMMUwa* pristad oa PM* Two ,-^*— * 1. No. 3. Utah. 3. Fort Dearborn 4. Woodrow Wilson. 6 O*e. E. Mount Evai**t. Q. Alpha. E. Am per ' age mH am '-ponog*. ». Billy Conn by deciaiu*. 1* No. ~ . o Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE ‘ — ♦ <J When one receives a fmvnal invitaliou. and l* very busy, would* t it be oil right to pbou* th* boats** one's accvpiawc*? A. Nevar A foimal invßa'iow requires an answer cn note paper. Mceptaace m regret* written m the (bird person. y Should one aay. "What a cun-. iiing gow*. Mi* M»rtln“7 A. No. If it seetns necessary at sli to mak* comments about Mis. Martin s gown. aaj> ' What a IteauU-. fill tor pretty I guwa.'' Q When should th* boat aU duwa at the table? A. The best should be th* last! cersou to take hl* seat — — 0 TWENTY YEARS * AGO TODAY o 4 March 11—Mr* J. 8. Peterwa named member of the *tate Woman'* Franchise League. The Rainbow division, th* flgb.lug t.'nd will arrive la New York
KIT
CSAPTBB XXIV at Ju»t as safety beckoned the Fremont m<n in the upper region* of ths green Sacramento valley, they lost three of their few remaining; horse*. The animal* went mad at V* Ta, ‘* ft >“* head* high, the skeleton creature* I tore madiy o< in the direruon of the Arm: lean River. Amongst them r. ird Ficnii/Uts undid huAter. I rroveau. “Hl go after him," v<2unt,«red IM rosier, how Fremont lov, d Proveau. After a while Kit and Fremont climbed a hul but saw no auru of ■ either Derosier of Proveau. “* Derosier i* lost in tbs: **”’• “’ d Fremont uneasilv. They rreehed the river, town*! •si sUU deranged from the suffer-1 ing and starvation. “ Wh *t deliciously warm water." 1a “ K°“»< swimming.” Kit. This is Fsbru&rjr.* But Towne tore off hi* buckskins end plunged blithely into the icy mountain torrent, protesting it was summer and he ws* suffenng from the heat. In despair they watched his bony body buffetad from rock ??J? 6 * and rescued him at last, b.eeriing and uaconsciou*. a mile down the river. And when Derosier wandered at law into camp, he too, had guns K 1 n av ? ****" * on * »n hour," he sulked, not knowing he had been missing for ilay*. A / ,w . 4a> * laUr Dorosier again wandered off—never to be hrerd from again. Pr * u “. th* artist, not knowing the others had halted to seareh for Derosier and rescue Towne walked* alone down the rwer. Preuss never earned a gun. Leaving the unfortunate Towne for the others to care for. Kit and Fre- ■ I mont hurried after Preu** They followed hi* trail along the river bank. They reached a\mouldarng fire. "Preu**! Preu**!" shouted Fremont joyously. To their horror a naked Indian 1 appeared in ths willow*, stared at them and vanished. . Nl|r ?‘ com ”* They ra turned la desperation t* camp. F or food they baked long slender acorn*, better suited to the palau* of the , bsoramento Indian*. Day* later they earns upon Preus*, who afooL and with only a small nceket knife. ; had subsisted on »mal! roots and ‘• r «« fittts which It* insisted had a pleasantly seid tarn*." And now the valley grew warmer and orang* ti nU d With wida-lippsd i California noppies. Village, of In < Hian* fled before the gha-tly pro- ’ cession of skeleton men leading 1 skeleton horse*. Nearly all their horse* had been killed for food. Na- 1 tiva runner* probably carried word . of t hem to Butte r’a Fort. For along the willow-dripping ! bank camo a broad-shouldered, stocky, »maxing figure, ndmg lik* , a blue-eyed king amid a retinue of Indian* and Kanaka*. ' Halloo!" shouted th* stranger, i but no stranger at all to Kit. ■ ut !! r o eria<l - < Fremont, it is Sutter.” The ayes of all war* wet. . toU b ' * ll brought me ' to California,” said Sutter to Fra- ' mont *a ha regaled hi* famished ' guest* with roast v, n i.on .nd bread and broiled aalmon. and ' brandy and wine of hi* own nuikine ' an hour later in th* adobe confine* ’ of Sutter’* Fort. «*««*• | . ? *•’ a Par«4i«e, and 1 1 have found it ao " * 1 Sutter told wtth pnda of to. 1 nauaic-. polity North and south < waat sad east of hw attatchad hi* 1 1
YOUR CHILDREnThEaMh#Th* moat |>ilc*La*a poesaaal- n th«i K . . child I* grs>d health the foqadatlon of happin. “‘‘"*'M GUI Ih-iUcc Buitaui al Waai.tngtjo * ““I mltatlve little- booklet on the subject -Child o'* 1 ' parent ahould have ° Just solid the coupon bnlow with a dime < ‘-U' COUPON HERE .... P. M. K*rby. Otr*«t*r, D«pL B 117, Daily Democrat'* Service Bur** u , 1013 Thirteenth Street. Washmon. 0. C Here * • dime <carefully wrapped! tur »> t luld Health, which mad U> ' ‘"W tx. NA M E STRUCT and No “ n MTAT^— . ’ I am a taader of th* Decnlur Daily D*« w< , . “O'
auout May l*t it is aunouacod Ted Nlvtioi* vs NobieavtUe take* chnea* of the Morri* Mor* hare Mclhodlst* of Adam*. Alias. Dekalb. Well* aud Bi*aben counties .«•* b<udmg a Uitce-dav seaatou here with Bishop Nntioiaou of Oh* -ago on Itw program General Ludandortf aay* M will ake Germany a rentnry to recover iftom th* world war. i New lax h* provide* ail real .state must be apprataud al "fair cash value.** 1 Household Scrapbook j By Roberta Lee J ICisarnng Flat S<lv*e Flat silver caa b* <l«au*d very I quickly and wttboat doing aay harm to tbe ailver. if it is covnrad with tour mIH and boiled for three minutes. Thl* Uuattneu: usually piovus i*ry effective. Lcnger Cooking Voal inquires longer c.xjkLug tuaa beet, because it ba* lea* fat aad more cuuaectiv* titsun. AddiUoaai
own land, reaching out mil* after mile, a vast kingdom in th* wilder new. Sutter, the alien, had entered California in lU9 witheight Kansikas, an Indian servant bought from Kit Carson, and a bulldog Hi* own native wisdom and ebarm had beguiled the *u*piciou* Mexican authorities into presenting him with thia CtUifornia municipality. Now. in hi* forges, iron wa* glowing to be beaten into plow share* »r.d wheel*. Wheat from bi* own field* wa* being ground in hi* gramenea. Win* wa* being pres.'—d from Butter'* grape*. Huies from hi* own vast hero* were being tanned in the courtyard to chip east ; around the Horn. And Butter, who ' wa* to vastiy rich, shook bw bo.d | head over their euffenugs and had i the weak and deranged put to bed to be cared for. and sent out haunchm of roast meat to thoea who were straggling down the nw. And finding that Fremont wa* graving for the loss of hia famoua • ra ? Pr ?’* au - |oat - P’raps, to »ira >n California a nanwleae strain of splendid wild horse*— Sutter presented Premont with an iron-gray become still more famed. KI Toro—th* Bull of Uia Sacransento." "H* will be called Sacramento, Mter tht* haven.” said p reraonL F remont found Sutter a man of hi*own thoughts. They conferred together so that even Kit eould not near. Nor did he mind greatly, for hi* mmd was not attentive to ambition but to duty. to.M L,,ut,n *'>L Mexico* Jrnld on California U .Upping. Aeh. * r “‘ h J 0 **® I '*! PSvery ship 5? r awa F, tot" twenty to forty thousand hide* and one hundred thousand dollar* worth of mil ha* been made in sixteen month*. The <’.' l ! , i7 ka " a ara l *ff>"’’>ng to enter California - -nearly fifty immigrant* already thia year. The American* w ton™.* 1 ( ' all . f , O,n ‘ a would be willing to nae...." "You are certain. Sutter’ Certain they want American rutet" "Ja. Thomas O. l-arkin, our Amencan consul at Monterey, sav* to. and ao think* Vallejo and other Mexican* of the upper class The* would lik. to ma and Americas trad* eater. Cafr R Or^i W “ “**’? Und * r H P ai " and "I think it could bo arranced. SXJS .—“to-. m eo *Uacture. A^Su* u< ’** ronveraation* there mom d n w eri *. h « I . <>w Fromont. Out of *ueb talk would <mna dream* that ended with the rrs.h C.“orX“ d tr,D1 * armi * “ Kit’* thought rimed to such talk and turned to Josefa in Tao*. SuttoFJ r 'i'* f . 1,4 1 eu tha •«P lo rora IWt th. l u« Z Ort 'i •iown rn’mi” , L OMU “’ l a “F t * at «- mrmbered a* a boy trapper with •ptain Ewing Young, <tead now thra* year*. They crossed th* MotJ?a c rt Kil had a * d with *°wej Kit, a* once he had to Young, continued Bt th* vary California. eaSp* as ‘ ar,,aoß made wly w^to^’ llr to th * l l mWatwarning, appeared two haggard ’“**'*■ On* a
n ’■ , n .| ... '•’P »bth u Car * «’ Hm*, Inst.-du-, o <(iw ■ <I,U P - - -U..1 , " *“ U« n or onion. Arttsu * eM-( baa >' , l’.\ ....... . -v— TODAV i COMMON — nutu-ruu, • .Jgg lime** ■
The man »p<., f T thr trembhn* chdd "Three were levm cf wi‘» -L • • » man , t WS Uw Anirrie. u S-e i c "l‘ r ~T - , J u* snd * . pur ) f *.Kai»d, teiag n. uf.se ■SB •tter*. . . |n Hl. r.agr»thr b j wept A- K • .v I to actma. "With ro.r p. --M to leave. tr. -• -..rvM , pit v »*ved • r ... ; , s gg I Teo wen .r r..4t> | where ir the »s»u. es , I.very r»- • -rr-MH tiodey .I.;,;.1 ■ v i - h:» • ,r. - ■ , -j *.-- k.u e- .. j ... f ■ ■ hi* !ton Prrvr M "I'll go with >nu hH " Without another v*ri 1 sprung to their ho.-Me Pn mur.t* t.. • *ar«. them so. "Thmk at u. t»e a** ■ r * . -er women from * 1..- , h* ex. V.i.le.' eveu, .L tr »«. tw' -• HN i. anon and j' the Ariuma de*ert they narrow def.e n: . ' ».r , -h, ■ ■ the ch:,.l „ out having -try I'.a; k.-te.i - and at dawn rod* »<*ir. MM “Ahl” bre. hrd Kit. horve a* he • ghted orer • rise tl.» ■ ■ p dian tepee*. Tying their hor»r. •hey hnnel* »r d urr.. >-■ ■ r.r for* then, were 'he n-ve* ,r, r.- . dian*. "Well eharg* ttwar." kit, *nd Kit and >r.’i*O with rifle, jr* . u u. us on dian eamp. Rut ning they *•*• :r.e ter war whoop; M "Give ’em Green R.verl* JJI Th* startled M>,agM Kit knew they w ,:j thsi men were prvbab: followed army of infuriated would never o. ur to two men would charge ei asant. Shouting ted>»n» A few paused to fir* A ye'i-M arrow grated uodey e dsngleH from hi* buekakie Two Indian* l»y dy ■ t :m M9 *r» fled oei horse* <r •f’*- ■ hundred •»»age* v*i> eh* 4 - “Take tbeir *calp«." erodedgp “or th* boy* will n*«er he'i-188 Godey ran to the tea on*, to their horror riwi'td th* ghastly «ealpirg yr sprang to hi* feet ■nd h> wling like • wdlf. O lock appeared »ti »r’ieot UM crone, who »hi'«k her •t l.od-y »n i ■ w i’cd •‘7'he whole thing IMt pletely unnarvrd " h.l ter in shocked tone* to lirrao.™ But they forgo' remorWJß they found th* l.idiw of the Puente’s r’r'y riddl'd • » r W| and mutiliated. And naked bodie* of th* t« • staked to th* ground , Jjg Thirfiy hour* after h' left on their search they ret whipping like Mvagw “JM the stolen horse. '*e.'ort themGodey’s nfle daii*;«d ■ two aealp*. Th* pair cu- l - IT® W
