Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1919 — Page 8
THE ITOIAXAPOLIS NEWS, SATTHDAT, JlUGHST f, 191'9.
aftMi
teatmm of
Ttt« aeatie
^ mrmsiam Onmmn ^ b|Ui4 f-oni
sj#nt •T.t
. 3 <*»• «* tom»to««
» B«t tto pQstofllw wm , Bii« Mr and Mrs. Clark $ot atad atp a iwr ak* ia&4& 1 ^a£« horrvmea some axtra Maakets ! Mrs. Clark aad tarter wo wsder\Btoo4 mitr Aa J have ladkated, wo
mi !*» •'**« fa the heates path
*Mr eenrfeta, aad Sleke aMied
I to look after <»ar comfimrt the heat he I eoBld. aad 1*0 aey that he dfft a good
Lf tTI ’ Joh e< It, «r when wm »% teat arrived
at the of the ^pcf^ wa«»B’8 joiime> wo foissd ottfsel'vea at what appeal^ to tw a niee. eon^ortabie i cahte. It had bees a btmk faetae for B^hem at a MMurhy lead nine aad had aa4.tfdled ap a hft for oar stay fa i^o^yfBtafaat In a uen* story, rnay-
yee why I said "It apfo t»* alee smd corafortahle.'* '■r* V to k-t out of that sprtek # ^h ^kht of t» fa It we
duired
Th*i ^sohj*e?hs# eramped. Aiwther
Sm* eo'ir^'T'nded middlo
year- the ekhEtocKa*4sal»^ e«eept hta^
orw
war eettfitioos.
TO THE iCENERY Hat Ptak 14^ MncompaJigrt, afi AiMig Country Th^t Hot Pm* Fourth of July Story.
t ■
the dudwo t thahlkl^ u was ao dOd attiiafte •M ku hut uw •t Its sts ^-thawast was
uapaHjWicia ‘*amn arhma Wmm the and ru
hi pu^oalan, TIu Int the I^B»rt% { m» in »d, wmto
■yy It
f
eeat kent'
o»t of oiaee and that mede Ed
and C^av awe After we had stretehed i.oe» MkB a 'hit and temped arooad at the new Aefenery sopner worn leady aad eo iwere we Th» m*a| lasted eocne tfiue and then we *atk«d aad talked mitll it wan tifne to «o to bed. It doeeo*t ket ds,!t CP there until tfa Bdarfy tfane to jFet V9 Then, to w^ up the Fourth, we tmd f*rewurfcs—that ta, a araeklinc p^fte fire fa the store that stood hi the middle of the dhifiik room, VMng room and hedromn. Bea^, the Are was to keep aa worm, tor It ie pretty eool up there anteas you have keen oaed to it shout fortr yaara I left my pajamaa down at bake City, as I had a haadi that I wottldn*t seed 'em. I didn't. AH I took off when I turned te was my
cost and boots
Mounted on Burrow
We wei« up wftii the atm the next
mornlnk and after a good hreakfsst. set out for the tnincs aad tha niotm> tahi top. And a ffaia bmudi of "rongh
we made. Paul drew a burro
ha gft
flMT
Morty good now." said Bill as ■ed moam tOn-hBl. '^excogt a eowjphMia up here a pteea irhwe sides Mi *sr. flpeet yoifn hare fMiC dsesmuMBSi *Mua #s%ur r>ihja
mfi^
walk serose ^em for Che slip off down Into the
»wos*® aiUir
^15Se; ih iSf Uro vagpu
imbsni.
l»^w»fea ' Mhiisarty
IdMl, hdi d'W sinj^wg
:sun
g dance Oil tha i haiher
its was Fesonis note. »3PthS®t : JlHsf f
aite»* but 1
rust as
whgi the
the out
ihuch telly irate
he dena nnattr Bill Hardy a hones were-not
If thtf
Hmt, too. I
hut X*ra a notion hm tiMatahas wss
•‘ m prMiably wagon rolled frost of the
h»i ws made prefara*
Thla we at last IBte prorislone and
Hswsfs were w, for thcro and bise. I
, naanes now but soum fe m'd out Like weeing
Apiakisg aapea Itares. -
«•
axMamiMm from ths s«®f ^ could eithw ride
or walk without ehanglag hte position If he wfadied to dismount all be had to do was to stand op and the burro went ott. There's imly one troubie about go* ing any plaee cm a uhrro and that to, nmat of the time you baec to walk be*
hind him to get him to go.
Up the fraTi and down the, trail we went, lllFMgh the timber andPoehr the •itde rock; now and then ao close to the edge of a predplee that it made you dixsy. I had had a little expert* eaoe once before in Mexico, ao I let my horse do exactly as he pteeuwd. He knew more shout it than I did and that wouldn't necessarily be paying blm a great oomplimmit Sometimes w« eouldn't eee any trail aad thought we would have to turn back, but the horeee found a way up or down, as tt hap-
pened to be.
BeMdea, Maagama was on ahead on foot. He was our guide and a delightful companion and clever fellow he proved to be. When we stopped oceaMonaily to tec ths horoes rest, he told us all about the minee aad the moun tains He knew every foot of then for that was his business. Born in Chi cage Ocitlege man. School of mluee Engineer and prewpeetor. Yro. he knew all about ft and He «aid there werrfew places better then the Sen Juan either
for minerste or ecenery.
WfsNetf Scenery.
Bed had comfe out Juet for the scenery which had been promised him by others in the party who were on a business trip They detiversd the goods that morning, he said And what a uleture! the narrow trail we gased aiffoss the gulch where other mountatas tow-
1" was ente^ Mnwi two
Ylro outside wagon wheel
. MeeiiMg te woo that the hptt^ of wggjjttgit e mfie right etroight naT^wp were aB very witling to get
Sill teok Che outllt acroso
. _ _ had g b(f notion to uralk all fito mat the wmr. When the elide
it had eeverod the trail
49 a "diigi of about flfMr feet but
and dynamtt* it had
though there wee
one# to jB&e the trail
ft aoval teparfenee for Rooetors tag mwttfh aaow on the / ao we started a little oMeby enowhaJUng each other apoot didn't last tang for wottr
soon we were all pufllng-<-whewT-«nd
IS we were toe near that gulch.
Fourth of July Bti»ry.
tketi when we had started o». Bill Haidr told me a Fourth of July story. MgplNi you've hoard It, but ft was new ta me. A few yean age before ekery* fted" up out there, a Mg Fourth ikm worn planneg at Chtray, a >y Vflntog eamp, over in the next eetmtr from Imke <Hly. Tone of enow were hroufrht down from the mountalne and sMBM, for some roal winter ecenmi and sports wore to be among the fea-
tures.
Old Joe BtUings, a crlasled and galviftteed mtaer. decided to come down. Ita dida't botiier to fnoutre what was on Che imiMfwn, having more of a hankerte* tB *kHMi some fMiero over at the IL T. B. aafoon " And t^re he stayed he got ali llckered ujpi. The "forfWwoft* was too much for aim and bein'* of a peaesehle nature he dsMded to take ft Ittite eftoose ta the back room. Ha woke up ta an hour or eo and went
t as tba
er^ tagfa. white down tbMr stapes came tmturefe rfvuiets. eeektag their way to the iar^ m ta the vaBey. lAke t^er threads aome of them seemed, so ^away they were. Again when aome indMvud tneuntaia aide seught to bar their progresia mrer Omy dsodied, failing hundreds of feet, th^ spray giliteatag IQh! adtemoud-eteddsd ve8 to the bright ronMght. At other ptaoea fsllmi iwowed where angry anowaUdea had torn thair way fato the vaBey bMow. But it was a smmaer morning and wldle saute of the dfscant uDow-capped peaks seemed to Crown, the columbine aad other Mright mountain Ikmms amSed a wMconie. With the *p«rfunie from the pines eaaro also muaic Crom the Meatlzur lambs that scampmed aboac with the flodka on the graaay Wmwa. Nature's symidumy Ktad O' makes ytm At last we passed the timber Une and thee the dtmMsg waa rough. Scanettmes we had to tKsmounc and walk aiong the rodky traiL , Fhuaiy we reached tlm eabte at the mine we tmta set out Co visit aad there we rested and had om* dlnaer A Burosaad teet Carther on waa the rtdee Xteter ta tiie day, Haagsma, Boc, Faat and myself set oat. sad, riding, walkfmr and 8<»aeCi]»ea a1raom crawling, at tost I was at tlw “top of tha world.” ^ NoBiingnesa. IWssbinetsB star] Mra Flhasllt thlafcs of netkisg bat ctoOMS" Skid ths erltSeal womsa. "Tes," sawsted tbs awa whs obmnres ■npsrgcisay, "And after ssitng her oosnamd ter bsItrooBi or bathlBg ttoseh 1 ahooid asy that wbsa aba tbiSks of dothes aba thtnks at asst ta aethiag.”
TELEGRAMS ARE SENf TO ~ HOOSIERS IN CONGRESS Protoots Regigtered Propoeeti Increase in FroH^ Ra^a on Sand and Qravel. l^degrams were sent Fritey to Senators New ai^ Watson aad to BegoneentaChre Wm R. Wood. Tenth district, and Everett A. Saundms. represwitlng the Fifth distrlet, protesting against ao increase to fnfght rates on sand and gravel which te understood to be a part of the raBroad admiziistratton's plan to obtain BKRe revenue. Suggestions to abofft 1.SB0 sand and gravel prodocers te the United ^ates to protest to their rm^ reaestarives in the congress also were carried in lettm-s mailed hy B. Guy Sutton, executive aecreCary of the national aaaoeiatlon. They ateo are urged to protest directly to the railroad admlntetration. The aetkm followed an eantasnge of telegrams betwemi Mr. Satt<m and Edward Chambers, director of trafllc for the railroad admlidstration. The messages to the mmnbers of the congress assert that further tnersase in tin freight rates on sand and gravel would be ruinous for the producers and ateo would work a hardship on contrSetora The menages sent to the producers indicate that the increase ta freight rates on sand aad grave! will be IS per east. If it is ma^ Mr. Sutton ateo says the producera have borne more than riieir riiare of the burden of war fireight ratea and that further advanro would prove dlsaatrous.
FHOTOFl.A'r*. a
J^tSrnmJO
u.
.0 main strsut
r
•ut into ar.
MtaWteUtag was St its higl
'^Iteg-fone!” Joe howled ta amasemrai. ' Her* I come down to eelehrato M Fpiir^, anAdamned if I fuitti't slept
tig Ckriatates.^
lull started to tsll something else. Clay hagan talking to him about a
"plow-ottt” up ouTthe sWe of a mountata acroas the gulch t couldn't see an automobile up there, but just then f tumbted to the fact that what he meant was aeraething on the side of a mounMte which indicates where mineral de* pOMls n»y be found Then Clay talked abaitt mining for two hours and you
Jhoad him off Not strange.
VWmurh, fof minmny Kbins were scat* ttesd all around over the htlls and 'every now and then we pabsed a mill
a tftw.
Only ■ Btoro. By aad by we came to Capital rit%'. ftmte buror* Only a store and the stock ms pretty tow, tor 1 mw only a coupie of packMtee of cigarette tobacco in a
pg&gB' wagr mawiing fid ftSa ^^4 trftMWlw ta
other garmeeta r we tarrtita
dsY ftleture taken.
oht#
us higher %it the tratt.”
^t
0m
western
guidft
ft UHift'^teuiar in kafiw hustaem. »a irr have an o*.otug to tell you moea ha me a tm of link will iatenwt you July ride was not
all tha w
It
. for .. - taiM and
but
and it
•va
only out thmnk tlthuasmte of ^And th*
a
ISIS FIRST RiiLF REXT WEEK MARSARITA FISHER
AS A FIERY. IMPETSOUS ITAUAR BEAIH IR “THE TIGER LILY’! ■A ■' Daggen and dagger gfauices-—coniles and wiles —fiistols and purchase money—erases, dangling earrings and all tiie quaint witdb^es of the Italian costume. Those are a few of the weapons used by and against *The Tlger-Ly^.**
ALSO^CHRISTY COMEDY
You hook
A» Young Aw
You Feel?
Try dite dsplo ftenswls--*
**A tlule CRBMB/bIXIATA
Unit
iMttiy lets the atel If roe sevd ester, wvery Biwror«e<«*»cMS awv-
leilr evw lb* ehMkt hetero tin ercew It «vite dm ms elm that tb* fllai sf teee
gewdar fiwr eh,
crImb ELCAYA YmrAouhr haw EhCAYA mndhm woM U for y0mn
fa /tee of as d 60a
j9mmC.Ctwmi8tAoA§M CHBMBteefa Bkeyaleegv
Bfitera fhee Fswdar
HillteGMndm. IfttrYodi
naps
ro—iQ
WICK O’THS PicrURSS
1 V.7-\*A ►A7i*;.W;H.VU?MN..
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday
HAROLD LLOYD in “COUNT YOUR CHANGE” LIBERTY »QuiNTkTTE | amERiIaN HARMONISTS
‘Music That is Town Talk‘
PATHE NEWS WORLD EVENTS
AHOMMI aotmeo mmimmmttmFmsiPfeaameym
All through the ages the m‘eate8t mystery set before men has been to understand “me way of a woman.’’ The finer way~the truer way—is exemplified in this stoiy of love, devotion and sacrifice to family pride and tradition. Miss Talmadge’s delineation of the whole-souled heroine is one
naage
you will long remember Gaumont Weekly
Fletcher Manologue
//WEL 1L BRST HALF yilHcinilDrai next week
ai
JU!i\JI!i1b 1 WHOOr AFRAID OF WORK ?
ALL WEEK Starting Today
tTimeEv
* K
Mown at 10c
