Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 48, Number 226, Decatur, Adams County, 26 September 1950 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DBCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT PnMtokad Every Evaatag Esemrt h*to By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. tScOfybratod „ „ tMIRfIJM <te tMjtotat. tod, Net ORB* M 1. H. MW Vfca-Prertd** fl. * HoKIMMA - ~ Trtetetete M Mill 11 Adams Ono year. H; Ma MMta, MM: * aaMhe. •»-»- c - wu - °~ ,w> By Cagfiae. M <*M* wr weak. Stasia copies, 4 casta

Ptmaibly tbe tert way to Mtp ■■■■ar hue* umM tail dristoes to to remember the lastfa at MtWMa Mark Purcell, the wearter sag* at Ruabville. will toe* Ma l»o poptriartty if hie dire prediction! for a IMI winter come true. ——■o —-o— , •enator Jenaer ahould apologise to General Manhall and the* IM eonntry won't care if b* aarris* on a word battle with Draw Rhto a a Strasse • acting. Stray dafl* ■Mould be reported to local IMUS officiate or to vetertaariaflt, to * precast ion against the sgemril of rabies. Veterinarians say that disease carrier* are roaming the Matora side at the county and should be appreMMM W* ■Would make every effort to stamp out rabies. O '' - O' 1 -■— Old Jack Frost was abend rt schedule aM node the taSdscape ‘ will show the effect of bis annual visit The season's first frost will bring an early harvest and curtail the tomato canning business. Cara and sgybanas will probably tail below thA rosy harvest estimates made a few weeks ago. _■ -o— —o— During the false "prosperity’' days of the IMS's. bank faitares ran more than one a day. Now, a person seldom hears of a bank fsHnee. and then there Is Huie - Jobs to depositors, because of the insurance carried on deposits up to 110.000. The only failures in. Indiana the past, couple of years" cSine from theft and cbeck-kitlug scbemes ope rat ad by bank offh tote* similar to the Spencerville conspiracy. ■* If you wewld like to own a itpwu sad ruh H according to your own fancy, just write a check for Me.OO" and buy lhe village of Itamble Bee, Aril. With Ms 225 acres and some 14 buildtaas. including a poet office, trailer camp. IKuor stare and water systeih. It can be bought for the above amount Iterated Sb miles north of Phoedta, It would give you a > piece to spend the winter month-, plus the title of being mayor of the town Moi s bad deal, we'd say for an adventure o .-teEvery township weald be heap erf in daM if the aeM legMaturc repeals the moratorium on road bonds. There is a move on in the state. backed by a Ho.aoa cam paign fund, in favor of the repeal

Swallowing Food Wrong Way

By Merman M. Rundesew. M.O. ONE of the most fr-quent arcid««t« Involving roaag rMkiren to that Os swallojvijiA "tl»>—wron« i. ay" and thereby getting food inTo tbe windpipe <>r lungs. » sftaetton vii' b may. at times, edaks »®rions illness or even death Parents tan do inurh to pre vent these disasters simply by re I trainins from giving youngsters foods that are hard to rhw. Chip dren under, five ran handle most "dt fomis well, hut they still have to learn to t hen hard foods su< h_ as peapnts. < >*». popcorn, and raw fruits and vegetables, such as apples ami turnips 1 ntll they do. all such things should be- kept from them. A recent study showed that pea Hitts were responsible for the dis ficulty io four out of five iPafaHces with the other foods mentioned ■lmre recounting for the other eases. I ' Os <Pur«e. epildren alm? have « te*den<y to put almost any hard olQe< f into the moiffh. Kits nf t»mr pieces of rubber, orange nevi uUd ,io«t a I sbjei t* have all" hern toend in the tunas Nuts Uni hard • ogetables, however, are (the most dangeroua slin e they often break .nto similplflts during tiJ" ditempt to remove them. Fprtupatply, ntauy objects ean hr removed from J-itg; »itb !» brou> bosedl'i i ion. tube wM» a nght that can he pee-

Ws Mltove ta good roads and favrfv hwiMtag butter ones to the tuft ettdaf of tnuMy available for tbe projects. However. It Is our bdflrt that roads and highways should be built by those who use them. If more money to needed for road construction, track license fees rttaaM bo increased and gasoline t«Mh haunted The widow weiMtok wba rivae th town ta a UioMrt bMM dad does not have M oatoatoMte Shouldn't be expeeted tn pay for roads over which She Steer travels. The members st the legislature, including those to be elected in November, should vote against this scheme to heap the road buildtag cost on farm and home owners. o -v-o - A Now Outlook: ■ TberO to d new outlook ta the World on the problem of war and peace. This can be seen In the reported Intention of Secretary ot State Dean Acheson to devote most of bis attention to tbe United Naltoea General Assembly. It can be seen in tbe 'careful statement of Andrei Y. Vlsblnsky. Russian foreign minister, that tbe UN is faced now with tbe task of preventing • new war and that tbe Soviet Inion is attaching tbe greatest Importance to tbe UN World attention has been focused on Korea and the UN. In Korea, armed aggression has been met. tor the first time tn history, by the opposition of a duly constituted international authority With effective military action. In the UM. the Security Council has been sewn to act swiftly and positively in the absence of the Soviet delegation, and then to bog down In procedural obstcuctorn bn the return of that delegation. tn tbe General Assembly the United State* and other nations have put forth proposal* tor new positions, new |tositive actions to prevent War. while the Soviet Union has brought forth its familiar. worn, oft-rejected program The powers seeking to estab lish genuine international action have the Intiatlve The day may be • approaching when peace no longer will deprud on the purchase ot Russian cooperation. Rnaala may he confronted with a world situation offering no other feasible course. The possibility, though the odds against it may seem large is worth taw comMinent of oar wisest V. zX ” ~~' diplomacy to an effort to clpitaliae tbe Korea incident in a reali* ti< pr<<ram for peace In the lulled Nation*.

f ed toltv the iungs tProsith the wimb ■ pipe This Is not a simple proved • I .ire and. when the foreign body is ri one which breaks into ever smaller >' and smaller pieces it may he ali most ImpowelMe to get it all: In <trli eases, it is not unusual 1 for pneumonia to deve iop or for I the long to collapse Either con|<iition may be eatremely serious. i Immediate symptoms of "sronc- ■ way swallowing" are choking, rSm'xblng. and.blueness of the skin ’ Tkven. the child may seem to be all L right but. within a few weeks. I rsstghlng develop*, tpeh wheeling ifhd*. usually, fever It may be many I weak* before tbe child recovers completely even with hospitalisation and the best medical care. Tbvts parents should make every effort 'to prevent children front ontiMg tklMs into their mouths I ami. above all. avoid giving them • hard foods QUtRTION* AND ANSWERS I C. (' : Is penicillin nt. benefit in I i hronlc appendicitis aud gallldad ! drr Infection? Answer I know of no evidence i that penicillin la of any partlfuI lar value in the-treatment of these court It lons If appt udb ms Is present, ah operalion is usually iteec-sary . ftalp'toddri disease may be treati rd sal later* nelly with diet tn most * a * hi orbr- tti(»hin» ‘y, ofura . mm r» i ■ ipursa. i 4

ANn GFT ITI r -w-l * l **s—X^'Ajr«Z /V * JD AC hZ

1 HommAoW I fly fl—flffTM LM ~ j — Ffwrttog When making plain whit* frosting tor a caka, add about two tablespoons of cornstarch and use teas sugar. This saves sugar, and th* frorttog win reauta thicker and softer. It to MpaciaHy good for fruit cakes. Improwdu Marek Maootbwueu and gloaateess can be awre euaily secured, when ironiug starched pteees. by stirring tbe starch three or four tine* ■ Mie boiling with U'-peraffta candle ' ■ ’ ' ' Shoe Mato* Oil and greaae stains earn lie removed from brown oe taa shoes by applying lemon jufee •— j——* | Modern StiqiMtU | By ROBERTA ÜBfl g O Q. When a waiter in a hotel dining room brings a dish for me to l<u>k at. what am I supposed Ui say or do? A. By this act. the uniter is merely asking yoitr approval of the dish. If it Is as you ordered, you nod your head yes. and he then serves-it If something is wrong,

SHADOW on thefiANGE a.fox«

CHAPTER TWENTY NINE

CARRADINE Sung oack the covers and Drought ms lean legs to the floor, ms teet tumbled lor •lipper* and thrust into them, ana ne stood up. He wore a long white nightgown, ariolher man might nave looked ridiculous in It. He crossed to the Bureau and lined the tamp and ms shadow flung itself acrons the floor and angled up the watt He said. "In nere.” and led the way to the Mg book* lined room. He set the lamp upon the centering table and waved Ives toward the sola "Sit down." "t'U stand." Ive* said. He'd taken the gun from the Bureau before he'd followed the colonel. He thrust the gun into tU holster and folded his arms The colonel took a chair. The colonel said. "1 don’t suppose you remember Texas?" Ives shook his head, and the colonel said. "You were Dorn there. You were atxnA tw<*whenyoucame north. Thai was twenty-three years ago" - Ives said. "Yes?" Carradir.e s eyes closed: he leaned back in the chair and his voice dropped. “A lot of us were leaving Texas; the graze had thinned out and we had gone looking for new range,.That'ahlstory of a sort, and 1 suppose you know it. Some like John Chisum headed into New Mexico. Some like Goodnight went to Colorado. We didn't believe at first that stock could winter tn Montana, but we discovered we were wrong. My boy. Dove, rode up here and scouted this range and built the first dwelling on Hammer." Ives’ started. "Tana's father ?" "Tana’s father." The colonel's voice trailed away; the colonel looked back across the years and his face turned bitter. "Tana was born here; that was why she was Hamed Montana. Dave left nls little family in tbe'north and came back to Texas to report, and we got ready for the Mg move We threw our herd tn with a neighbor’s who was also trailing north." Me opened his eyes "A widower named Jim Ives'* Ives said. "My father. I guessed that much from something Tom Feather said.” Carradinc nodded. "We put both herds under the shine road brand. And we headed them north..." He paused: again his wards pained him; Ives could see that The colonel Mid silent, and that left the picture lor Ives to complete for him elf. hut be hud known Icxaa men all ul lua days;

—ITIII atoM fIMMMAY. MNltMb

you tell him quietly either to change It or send it back to the kitchen. Os course this tart la done only for serious cause. 4. When the double-ring survled to to be need at a wedding, who should buy the two rings? A. The bridegroom, of ctmrae. luys the ring for hie bride, and the bride should buy the one for the bridegroom. Q. What should a girl say when being Introduced ta a young man? * A. “How do you do?“ is suffi<<ent. trawtfur trite Bertha Frans, executor of the Franklin Frans estate, authorised to accept the sum Os 11.925 In settlement of loss and transfer title of automobile Io tbe New York Underwriters Insurance company Cause Dismissed On motion of the plaintiff the cause of The American Diet Steam company vs James Stonerook, doing business as the Home Laundry, is dismissed. Marriage License Samuel Green. Marion. 0.. mid lead Anne Brleker, Green Camp. (L tf-Ven Have gsmetning To Bei'j Try A Dsmscrai Want Ad—lt Fay* ,

ne nao neard ot the great migra- . non. Dust and noise, the snouting , ot men snd the clatter ot horn and hoot as the longhorns nad been flushed from the thicket* snd st. aped into trail nerds Ropes popping and chuck-wagons creaking. and the remembered names from forgotten campfires — Reeks Bluff ford and Colbert's Ferry and Kiamicht Valley. Spanish fever and irate Kansas grangers guarding their borders with resdy shotguns. The great rivers—the Red. the Cimarron, the Canadian—horns tossed above racing waters, and tbe nameless .graves' on the far banks. Bedded cattle tn the starshine and the coyote's lonely cry. sad the night-Mfderr voice staving ot stampede. "Git along, Utile dogies. for you know Montand will tie yous MW Mme .. “ BmnewMee ill that migration lay the rtddW M a# of his days And now that door tong closed was about to be opened, and Ives felt an UMeadMesa within himself, Mt a nead to sit down, but stilt ho stood. "We had trouble In the Nations," Carradins'* votee suddenly droned. ■'Trail wolves hit at u* and some men died, and after that suspicion was bam* One among is took long rides at night, and the suspicion was that M was dr intimate of the men whvfd struck at the herd. Finally we put MM Oh trial He was Jim Ives' Segundo. a man of doubtful antecedents. 1 think that you call Mm friend. Mdrco Stoll." Stoll!" Ivea said and remem ■ bored that Stofl had been a cowboy, but atm there was ne Atting Stoll into this tale of the cotonet’a Anger edged the eetonel'a voice. "I was for tipping up a wagon tongue and hanging Mm. Dave was of the same mind. We were equally convinced of his guilt But still the evidence was flimsy. Jim Ives pleaded for Stoll, snd what Jhn lacked In elqquenoe he made up sh atn&rity, and when the vote wks taken it was decided that stall would be punished and banished 1 named the punishment Fifty lashes with him tied to a Wagon wheel." "Stoll—’” Ives said again, and Stoll turned leaner and younger tn hia mind and stood spread-eagled against the wheel, hia wrists lashed and the whip rising and falling, the camplire lighting the acene, and the bedded bcM out upon the flats Slackness against blackness. "We drew straw* to see who'd mete out the punishment. And now I shall show you irony. The man who d argued lor SloUs Ide was

terM Mm Nmm4 Moiwger Os Store Beras, Bep*. M—Leslie Btaehey, it- of Boras, has boon nawad an ■■eager of the Ortwva Kroger store. eEeetlve at once. He for®eriy weebed in tbe local Kruger store and tor the past tour aoMbs has taken maaagors iratotag ta Kroger stores ta Indiana anl Ohio. He Is a veteran of World War II and la married. G.O.P. CoMrMtioMl Nommeo Visits Hflr« Ross Adair, fourth district nominee for congroea os the Republteaa ticket was a Decafur visitor today. Adair spent several hours, accompanied by district chairman Harry Easex. calltag on local business tnen Adair resides la Fort Wayne where he practice* taw. He came to Fort Wayne from Afbton where he spent hto youth. Adair saM that he would make no prediction an tbe outcome of th* election tart •toted that he was thoroughly enjoying the campaign Picture Operetta Cott la Magazine

Htudent* and Instructors of the Decatur high school music and pageant department have, now become experts ta their field—expert enough to endorse certain productions. In the October Isene <rf the UdtrcnIhmsl Musk- magasine a picture M the "Princess of Virginia" cast, last spring's operetta ta tbe high sebooi. appeared, stems with the notation that lhe high school endorsed tbe book and music of the production. Leogeotee Physicion Is Doctor Os Year French I—-' Ind. kept. N. - (UP! Dr. Jehu WHttam Rtrangv. Loogootee Was named Indiana's "general pruet it loner rt the ywtr’ ' today. — ! Strange. 74. waa httaored at tbe lOlsi annual convention of the Indiana state medical association. Ltlthongh he lost const of them, yecords showed he delivered more than 5.M* babies tn nearly 50 ' rent* of medical service. The Golden Spike ceremony st " Promontory. Utah. May I*. 1*49. Hiiarked completion of the first transcontinental rail line. Ksstern. Central. Mountan. and 1 Pacific standard time solves were i established at noon. Nov. 13. IM3

tne man who drew the short s»r*w ' Jim Ives had laid on with the whip, and Stoll was sent stumbling mto the night." Ives tMught ot Tamerlane* S«.reet and Gory Lund lacing him. and t « shotgun of Marco Stotl mtlrr. ng Lund; ne thought ot this a.~ ot Btotl speaking to mm throifgn cm ja>> window; and ne thought thea that that stranger. Jim Ives. wM had been nls father, had bequeathed him one thing: Stoll'a friendship. And yet M wondered, recalling StdfT* anger tonight. < He said. "Ro that's why SUM w*a toM never to set foot oa Hammer.** "He came to Tamerlane after the lowa was built. He had moMy and he'd grown 100 tat for riding, so he opened a drug store. Somewhere in the years between Texa* and Montana, he’d learned that budaeat. It Mto always been my MNet that ma awney edm* from raided herds, and though Ito* nhsww no animosity toward me» I've wanted no part of Maroo StolL The man ia a thief." Ives remembered tbe flfty lashee and said, "He took the medicine of om, anyway." __ Carradine cloned hia eyes again. "That should have been the end of it. the whipping and his going m the night But It Whs Mly the beginning ot trouble that grew between Dave and Jim Ives, and al* ways there was talk of whether justice or injustice had been meted out They were both young; they were both hot-headed; Fee tried to remember that, and to remember, too. that the MB Mtortened mart tempera But there was a WgM when they drew gUM and only tbe crew's quickness kept them from shooting each other. As it was, a couple of bullets flew." A thin hand raised, and CarMdiM teuetied the Mar upon Ms forehead, and Ivta knew mM hew the colonel had eome by that near. Carradine said, "The next day we divided the herd and Jim Ives went hl* separate way." And now there eame back to Ives that fretful night with the bedded Mfd toning and two men faetng «ne* acrons a ire, temper to them, the violence bub* bling high and spilling over, and he knew than where his fear had had its beginning. Always wMn cattle towed, the fear had come back, but now It had a meaning to It and was banished, and he felt Strangely free for the Br*t lime Ul his (toys. tTo Ke Conliaard>

Tran M’s letter On Merines Fer Sele Latter Is On Sala Ta Highest Bidder Waahlngtog. Sept «B-(UF> — Rep. Gordon U Mettotatagh. R, Cal., put up for sale to the highest bidder today the letter ta which President Truman look his nowfamous crack at th* martite corp* McDonough said ha will turn over the prnceeda to the marine corp* league, the marine veteran* organisation that demanded and got from Mr. Truman both written and personal apologies. McDonough put a 110.000 valuation on the letter in an application to insure It. He sair he already has been offered for It a sum "running to four figure*."-rife will consider no bids of loss than «I.M» Mr. Truman wrote McDonough in reply to the congressman's proposal that the presMenl give the marine corps a tagger role In the defense setup, placing Hs commandant on the Joint chiefs of statt. The president, who had been liesieged with simitar proposal*, cracked back that the marine corp* wa* and win be the navy’* police force. He complained that the corps had a propaganda machine almost equal to Stalta’*. McDonough Interted the letter quietly In the appendix to th* eohgresslonal record. When somebody dug it out and published tt several days later the marine corps league hit the ceiling. MtINUnWCK SHOUT TlTlsri: An Ordinance -J«MU'«rAiuK CVrtit of Materiel I .Xflce—wry to Furnlvte Water f<» At>r MuMivlnlom of TM of l>u- < ImiiarM. HE IT fcy the $’<»•»• m«»n Council of the C4t> of ihreutuS’, Itttftnhte AM f'khOWH. L. Krom and after pa*»air* •< this any pefnrm, per»4»n«, flrma br enfTwiwrtfonM #♦*!«»*< iW* Water l>rnHrinwni of the City of t-tecatur, Indiana to furnish wa<ei to aay new i»wb-AlviiH*»r> ’of the CK* •»f I »e* ff f wr. tifdrawa etMH jMky oaehrilf of the coM of niteferia! ne<'rN«ary to conytriH r new water malnß to euppiy any —id new add'1, This twMHnaWf * will he in full force nnd effect. <»a and after ht pa mb ape. approval by the Mayor and due publication. fttuly adopted this l»lh day nt deptember, i 960. John «. |MMH» Frrffitlin* t#ffi< er ATTKHf H.JffflMi iwrwW • lark-Treasurer .approved by me thi« 19th day of September, Jwha w. IMS• Mayor aTTsISt H. lerwea <«raa»d ierk-Treateurer PEf’T i< <H‘T 3 Mmbmb Feltowi rsft degree at 7:3* p m Tuesday. Hept 3*. 225b3tx Itarold Mcmni*. W M

ir -""“Fi a KANE a} 1 -WALLPAPIR- 1) J 15* «. SECOND ST. y 1

CHAPTER THIRTY CARRADINE said. "W* stopped it Dodge. We'd seen no town Maes we’d left Texas, so we planned to rest tor a day. Jim Ives had got there the night before I don't ee • F • “ WMW UMW mmpflre talk egatm the tall tales st Texas men. and ae the aid names rang in Ivor mind—Frant Street and Boot Hill and Hell's Half Acre and the Lone Star dance naU. Texas men crowding thetr Horses into IM ptaaa where the glaeeed-tn ceaLotl tompe spread their brilliaaee Barreto o' water placed along the stregt in cam of tie... barber ehope <.. soft-opohee mershet* ... a proecMr’s voice raised in a saloon, raised to the old hymns. "Fm not sure," leas saM. "We gave our men part of . thetr pay oa the flats ot the Arkansas snd drew straws again, thia time co sow toheM stay with the herd while the others otoitad Dodge. Seme om warned whiskey and some wanted cards and tease wealed women. But Dave had a different deotfe. He waa a man with a wife and d cMM wattmg tor him in Montana. AN he wanted was to know haw it felt to steep in a bed. after thorn MgMs en the trail. He rode into Dodge to get a hotel room. He got one. He never camo out of it alive." Ives said. "Mareo moor* "No," carradlM aaM. "Jim Ivom* bi tbe sttoneo the lamp’o flame nomod to Mb to ita chimney, and tM eM sear stood cat upon Car—Baton wouAam rOKiinc • rmiiMNf hw wnmww was brittle with pain. “Cm ofl my crew dropped in at the hotel to pass a word or two with Dave that night,- M said. "Tom Feather. There were guna, and the eoand of them drew the marshal st Dodge to Dave Carvadtitoo rooM He found Dave daa< a Rua to his hand, and Jim Ives dead, and Tom Feather shot to dolt ribbons. Feather never recovered from that ntgM, so we never knew the whole truth. But we pleeed ft out after making inquiries, iveo carte Molting for Dave, and at combe he cam* with anger in him. Feather moot have »Mad with Dave.”

Ive* said,. "And that'* haw 1 cam* to Hammer f" "With Ivo* dead, hi/’trew had nothing to do hut drift," the colunei said. “That left s two-year-

M*<te* to bswwy ntvrtk That tbs undersigned has teen awpslated Administrator *f the e*Mt« of Jobs H. Yager tats of Adams County, ■ecoaaed. The estate Is prubwbty *° V *" l-ee latter. Administrate* Newer T. rie**ee. Attorney wave — ■ www Beßeady For All Kinds of Weather L*4 M R*v* yaw garments wNv ' y Frilly »RV OLBAMfIRB RMwn HF

| an gy aiO u*f wtog MOOriWruic TOUJT 91 W*— 1 YOWi !Ed* ,— sritadtoE'sflkto? I ebbs* I sum IRAKIS W.HW«r E Ito S tote St. “Wlwes pain* I* nrt a s*ds 3 Ju LAROtR lOTUt 1 for enaier pouring WIDER BOTTLE COLLAR a lor earner handling E— Ahtrays fo*k tor... reoth for d I MTN* *UACM WWW WO ONBSBW 000*1

old child with nobody s eare. 1 took you. Yea. Chat s now you camo to Hammer. And that's why ypu grew up nere. I took Jim Ives' herd on with me. It paidYor your support." l«oa said. "But an the while you’ve bated me." Carradine said, "Tve tried to be stranger than that. You had no •art ■ *hoa happtmad a MR* But N yo« ohs omift to m» Jim Ivor picture, took in any mirror Every time I*w looked at you. rvd eeea Jim 1«M aftve snd Dare carradine dead." ivea aaM slowly. "And Tana knew..." ami BMV M undemtoOd the things she’d left wordless last night, and now he knew that she was lost to him forever. "Your father and hers," CarradtM said. Ives sat down. He put his elboWs upon his knees and his face is hia hands. He sat Uke this for h Nng time, and then he ssid, "I'U be going now. I owe you more than I owe any man. I'll never trouble you again." Carradine said, "Theto* still that matter ot the (orh hundred lolKr bitt" Ives said. "Who sent ft to you I" Carradtos toads a gesture.with his iutoda. "How should I know? Ths MMertL perhaps. They preto sbly sdppoaM.yaa earns home to help MOi irs M sM dsvtoe, Avidtag the enemy." tvsd Shook Md head. "EMsha Lund taaft a suhtto mAI M was sortMMM Stoa.** He paused, the aaaw aaaw to Mm without his titling "gtagf" "Ferbaps gtoß hates me," CsrratoM SOM "W he Ms no reason to Rale you Or was Brule wafttag tor Me? He could have •rdR to MM in the anger ot the mitoioto* ' \. IrM said, "I don't know." Otovfldtae tootled at Ives; art*dtad «vaa Ma aid imperious deft, snd he aatdc ."I've told you the truth about what happened on the trail so that your judgment of me cad he honest. Yes, I despise the natac ot Ivo* But 1 do my own gunning." toes said, ’"Then we've finished with our talk. I came for the key to the bunkhouse. There's no reasod for you to hold Benedict.” Carradine said. "Perhaps I might play at dividing the enemy. I’ve got Benedteat 1 eould keep him.

TUESDAY SEPTEMBER M. 1K«

B*m*srn* Wan* Art* Bring R««Mte VOTEIS! Yea cbr refliirter Mill October » for Novetober 7 election by calliaK or contacting the fellDwifltf koUaiMl Miller. St. Mary s; Abwb BarkhoHer, Berne; Margaret Rohrer, Berne; Eleaaee SaySer. Geneva; NMa IMtaeh. Deeatar; Mrs. Dale Death. Decatar; GeraM Wwarda, Hhie Creek; Eli Cartiu Eagle. Waahinxton. Theae people will be glad to regiator yo*L regardless of pwlitUal affiliatton. Adam* Csunty RspiAllcstt Cam. Pd Polit Advt.

Tana s at Klisha Lund's." ives said. "SM offered to tw hostage until Benedict was returned." Carradine said, 'Tana!” and bis scar flamed. “Are they using women as weapons, Nr?" "It was Tana’s choice," Ives said. He extended his hand. “The key ?" Carradine stood up. nis, nightgown flapping about his ankles. He walked from the room and Ives heard a bureau drawer creak open. Tbe colonel returned, the key In Ms hand; he gave the key to Ivea The eotonet said, "Tell Harry I said to let him go." The colonel mustered fierceness, but It was Mtlow. "Be damned sure that Tana gets back here safely!" Ivea said. “1 will," and started for the door. He took a last glance back: Carradine was standing in the center of the room, his hands before him and his face empty, like a -aaa stricken Mind. • • • adw the Sombre in tbe flrto daylight, Uto two of Them, and here they rested their saddles after the tong ride from Hammer, ami Rod Benedict angled a leg around his saddlehorn and flshed out th*wUUdflgs. He built a smoke. and offered Durham and paper* to Ives, but Ivea shook his head. He favored a pipe. Benedict got the tobaeco burning and looked less tense than be had. He said. "I never really felt safe, not even when w® passed through the gate. TM colonel isn't going to be happy •bout thta" He looked st Ives. "You're a glum-looklng specimen this fine morning, Doc." Ivea saM, "We’d better move on." Benedict frowned: tbe frown took the boyishness out of him and gave him a grave maturity. "Must be you bucked tbe colonel to get that bunkhouse unlocked." M s*hd. -That couldn't have been easy. I’m beholden to you." lyes looked toward tbe river; the fltst light was like sm<*« upon tbe waters. Ive*' feed wks Weak with hi* thinking: hip face wM dead. He had been rootles* for a long, long time, but not like this, not with the last tie cut. He said. "You can do something for me. Rod. when you get the chance. You can lay your hands on Brule. I want to talk to that gentleman. I want vory much to talk to him." Benedict nodded. “You'U get that chance." tTo So C'vMliHucdJ Mpae