Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 251, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 February 1923 — Page 8

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Alice of Old Vincennes By Maurice Thompson COPYRIGHT. 190 8. BY ALICE LEE THOMPSON

Begin Here GASPARD ROUSSILLON, a French trader, and his wife settled in Vincennes on the Wabash in the seventies. ALICE and JEAN were the adopted children of the ROUSSILLON'S. PERE BERET a Catholic priest, takes a fatherly interest in Alice and RENE DE RONVILLE. a handsome young man who is deeply in love w til her. A bottle of fine brandy sent as a present to LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR ABBOTT ia stolen by LONG HAIR, an Indian. He escapes after being badly shot and is discovered next momine by Alice, who binds his wounds with her apron string. # Go on with the story. HIS hiding place was cunningly chosen, save that the mire troubled him, letting him down by slow degrees and threatening to engulf him bodily, and he was now too weak to extricate himself. He lifted his head and glared. His face was grimy, his hair matted with mud. Alice, although brave enougli and quite accustomed to startling experiences, uttered a cry when she saw those snaky eyes glistening amid the shadows. But Jean was quick to recognize Long-Hair; he had often seen him about town, a figure not to be forgotten. “They’ve been hunting him everywhere,” he said in a half whisper to Alice, clutching the skirt of her dress. “It’s Long-Hair, the Indian who stole the brandy; I know him.” Alice recoiled a pace or two. “Let’s go back and tell 'em.” Jean added, still whispering, "they want to kill him; Oncle Jazon said so. Come on!” He gave her dress a jerk; but she did not move any farther back; she was looking at the blood oozing from a wound in the Indian’s leg. “He is shot, he is hurt, Jean, we must help him,” she presently said, recovering her self-control, yet still pale. “We must get him out of that bad place.” Jean caught Alice’s merciful spirit with sympathetic readiness, and showed immediate willingness to aid her. It was a difficult thing to do; but there was a wi.. and of course a way. They had knives with which they cut willows to make a standing place on the mud. While they were doing this they spoke friendly words to Long-Hair, who understood French a little, and at last they got hold of his arms, tugged, rested, tugged again, and finaliy managed to help him to a dry place, still under the willows, where he could lie more at ease. Jean carried water in his cap with which they washed the wound and the stolid savage face. Then Alice tore up her cotton apron, in which she had hoped to bear home a load of lilies, and with the strips bound the wound very neatly. It took a long time, during which the Indian remained silent and apparently quite indifferent. Long-Hair was a man of superior physique, tall, straight, with the muscles of a Vulcan; and while he lay etretched on the ground half clad and motionless, he would have been a model for an heroic figure in bronze. Yet from every lineament there came a strange repelling influence, like that from a snake. Alice felt almost unbearable disgust while doing her merciful task; but she bravely persevered until It was finished. It was now late in the afternoon, and the sun would be setting before they could reach home. "We must harry back, Jean,” Alice said, turning to depart. “It will be all we Can do to reach the other side in daylight. I’m thinking that they’ll be out hunting for us too, if we don’t tnove right lively. Come.” She gave the Indian another glance when she had taken but a step. He grunted and held up something in his hand—something that shone with a dull yellow light. It was a small, oval, gold locket which she had always worn in her bosom. She sprang and snatched it from his palm. "Thank you,” she exclaimed, smiling gratefully. “I am so glad you found It.” The chain by which the locket had hung was broken, doubtless by some movement while dragging Long-Hair out of the mud, and the lid hay srpung open, exposing a miniature portrait of Alice, painted when she was a little child, probably not 2 years old. It was a sweet baby face, archly bright, almost surrounded with a fluff of golden hair. The neck and the upper line of the plump shoulders, with a trace of richly delicate lace and a

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string of pearls, gave somehow a suggestion of patrician daintiness. Long-Hair looked keenly into Alice’s eyes, when she stooped to take the locket from his hand, but said nothing. She and Jean now hurried away, and. so vigorously did they paddle the pirogue, that the sky was yet red in the west when they reached home and duly received their expected scolding from Madame Roussillon. Alice Sealed Jean's lips as to their adventure; for she had made up her mnd to save Long-Hair if possible, and she felt sure that the only way to do it would be to trust no one but Father Beret. It turned out that Long-Hair’s wound was neither a broken bone nor a cut artery. The iiesb of his leg, midway between the hipe and the knee, was pierced; the bullet had bored a neat hole clean through. Father Beret took the case in hand, and with no little surgical skill proceeded to set the big Indian upon his feet again. The affair had to be cleverly managed. Food, medicines and clothing were surreptitiously borne across the river; a bed of grass was kept fresh under Long-Hair's back; bis wound was regularly dressed; and finally his weapons —a tomahawk, a knife, a strong bow and a quiver of arrows—which he had hidden on the night of his bold theft, were brought to him. “Now go and sin no more.” said good Father Beret, but he well knew that his words were mere puffs of articulate Bind in the ear of the grim and silent savage, who limped away with an air of stately dignity into the wilderness. A load fell from Alice’s mind when Father Beret Informed her of LongHair’s recovery and departure. Day and night the dread left some of the men should find out his hiding place and kill him had depressed and worried her. And now, when it was all over, there still hovered like an elusive shadow in her consciousness a vague haunting impression of the iAcident’s immense significance as an influence in her life. To feel that she ha’ savp'i a man from death was a new sensation of itself; but the man and the circumstances were picturesque:, they invited imagination; they furnished an atmosphere of romance dear to all young and healthy natures, and somehow stirred her soul with a strange appeal. Long-Hair's imperturable calmness, his stolid, immobile countenance, the mysterious reptilian gleam of his shiftly black eyes, and the soulless expression always lurking in them, kept a fascinating hold on the girl’s memory. They blended curiously with the impressions left by the romances she had read in B. Roussillon’s mildewed books. Long-Hair was not a young man; but it would have been impossible to guess near his age. His form and face showed long experience and immeasurable vigor. Alice remembered with a shuddering sensation the look he grave her when she took the iocket from his hand. It was of but a second’s duration, yet it seemed to search every nook of her being with its subtle power. Romancers have made much of their Indian heroes, picturing them as models of manly beauty and nobility; but all fiction must be taken with liberal pinches of salt. The plain truth Is that dark savages of the pure blood often do possess the mag netlsm of perfect physical development and unfathomable mental strangeness; but real beauty they never have. Their innate repulsiveness is so great that, like the snake's charm, it may fascinate; yet an in describable, haunting disgust goes with it. And, after all, if Alice had been asked to tell just how she felt toward the Indian she had labored so hard to save, she would promptly have said: “I loathe him as I do a toad!” Nor would Father Beret, put to the same test, have made a sub stantiallv different confession. His work, to do which his life went as fuel to fire, was training the souls of Indians for the reception of divine grace: but experience had not changed his first impression of savageg character. When he traveled in the wilderness he carried the Word and the Cross: but hewas also armed with a gun and two good pistols, not to mention a dangerous knife. The rumor prevailed that Father Beret could drive a nail at sixty yards with his rifle, and at twenty snuff a candle with either of his pistols.

CHAPTER IV Governor Abbott probably never so much as heard of the dame Jeanne of French bandy sent to him by his creole friend In New Orleans. He had been gone from Vincennes several months when the hatteau arrived, having been recalled to Detroit by the British authorities: and he never returned. Meantime the little post with Us quaint cabins and its dllap idated block-house, called Ft. .Sack'd lie, by sunning drowsily by the river in a blissful state of helpless j ness from the military point of view 1 There was no garrison; the two or | three pieces of artillery, abandoned | and exposed, gathered rust and cob- | webs, while the pickets of the stocki ade, decaying and loosened in the ground by winter freezes and summer rains, leaned In all directions, a picture of decay and inefficiency. The inhabitants of the town, numbering about six hundred, lived very' much as pleased them, without any regular municipal government, each family its own tribe, each man a law unto himself; yet for mutual protection, they all kept In touch and had certain common rights which were religiously respected and defended faithfully. A large pasturing ground was fenced in where the goats and little black cows of the villagers browsed as one herd, while the patches of wheat, corn and vegetables were not Inclosed at all. A few of the thriftier and more important citizens, however, had separate estates of some magnitude, surrounding their residences. kept up with care, and, if the time and place be taken Into account, with considerable show of taste. Monsieur Gaspard Roussillon was looked upon as the aristocrat par excellence of Vincennes, notwithstand ing the fact that his name bore no suggestion of noble or titled ancestry. In- was rich and in a measure educated; moreover the successful man’s patent of leadership, a commanding flgurrf and a suave manner, came alwayjjto his assistance when a crisis pri'Unted itself. He traded shrewdly.

DOINGS OF THE DUFFS—

( Tom is out in Y , hf\s Y/sav, lena, i made out 7 )( f /Yu THE KITCHEN AGAIN Y A LIST OF SOME OF MV \ f BUT, MR. DUFF. DIO \ J°H WES, SHE TALKING TO THE ) QUT ABOUT 7 FAVOR IT £ DISHES-1 WISH \ 1 f VOUR WIFE USED )I 1 J KNOWS WHAT MAID-HE’S SEEMS / HAV | NG -THAT -) YOU WOULD KEEP THEM ) > TO COOK THESE )Z_X \ | LIKE ! /' WELL I'M AFRAID To have a Lot / policeman in jl in mimo when Vol ( things for. You ) v t nx Too twfSE (TO TELL HER.” // THE KITCHEN I \ARE PLANNING A MEALT A IIRIGHTA , U ( BEFORE I CAME P 1 =' 9/ ( THINGS SHE WILL ' I * ’’’ I'M

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THEM DAYS IS GONE FOREVER—

r > i’t- —-.y —;-x- I "tl * p- 'j —' * *"' ~~y~.rr.-rw— ~rwr~ —■ I ■ .J 11 - *— I —j " •{- g j —yr -T" I’M A-- 1 HM6 AXL IOOMQU - FAT l UKt ’EM - THEVTCe SO THCM PAYS IS eeeri— GONE FOREVER!

V-\ CVrACktO CVMNK 9>- LOST N iQ 1 . A " S WHEN CLAN” HANSOA4 LOST TWTSTEBM aJSBm' GAMES CHECKERS AT SMUCKERS STORE TODAY HE ALSO LOST 1

much to his own profit, but invariably with tho excellent result that the man white or Indian, with whom he did business felt himself especially fa vored in the transaction. By the ex ercise of firmness, prudence, vast assumption, florid eloquence and a kind ty liberality he had greatly endeared himself to the people; so that in the absence of a military commander he came naturally to bo regarded as the chief of the town, Mo’sieu’ le malre.

OUT OUR WAY—By WILLIAMS

THE OLD HOME TOWN—By STANLEY

He returned from his extended trading expedition about the middle of July, bringing, as was his invariable rule, a gift, for Alice. This time it was a small, thin disc of white flint, with a hole in tho center through which a beaded cord of sinew was looped. Tho edge of the disc was beautifully notched and the whole surface polished so that it shone like glass, while t!4 beads, made of very small segment, yf porcupine quills,

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were variously dyed making a curiously gaudy show of bright colors. “There now, m cheite, Is something worth fifty times its weight In gold,” said M. Roussillon when he presented the noekvaoe to his foster daughter with pardonable self satisfaction. “It is a sacred charm-string given me by an old heathen who would sell his soul for a pint of cheap rum. He solemnly informed me that whoever wore it; could not by any pos-

Lena Would Play Safe

( C J ( W] ~ / Dovoowant J i r CL,c k J V J WUAT Y Y TUty ARETT ax* aamoi AES TUEY mPIN 1 j ) TUfcY’PE' SIWPIV WAiANG J IHiE TUAY ■ ——/ A* S / { - . .'-■siY ~

“Listen To The Mocking Bird”

Mold THAT \ READERS A ET> rr o ß A POSE = y'look TEE' X WTUTHaT I ouJ aoW LIKE V’sTEPPED our ' SHOVEL LEV’LL ' IX> * Qkl m , OF TvV PYRAMIDS fl FlkiE YOvJ — Is v. YOU WVTU ORDERS \ ONE -TVJO— // MV/ GooD \ To SPADE fcp * ! -Tell the scholarly M their i srr°sY p oR y editor of your esteemed spring! ? CHROkiICLE THAT I WILL \ GLADLY GIYE HiM A \ i SIGNED ARTICLE ok3 MY i f&k ESVP'tUU EXPEDIfiOkI j sfjfiW KAitJoff CAMBRAt”— w * A * g * YlCß

Ribility be killed by an enemy.” Alice kissed M. Roulsslllon. “It’s so curious and beautiful,” she said, holding It up and drawing the variegated string through her fingers. Then, with her misclevous laugh, she added: “and I'm glad It Is so powerful against one's enemy: I’ll wear It whenever I go where Adrienne , Bourcier is, see if I don’t!” “Is she your enemy? What’s up between you and la petite Adrienne,

FRECKIaES AND HIS FRIENDS—By BLOSSER

OUR BOARDING HOUSE—By AHERN

eh?*’ M. Roussillon lightly demanded. “You were always the beat of good friends, I thought. What’s happened?” “Oh, we are good friends,” said Alice, quickly, “very good friends, indeed; I was but chaffing.” “Good friends, but enemies: that’s how It Is with women. Who’s the young man that’s caused the coolness? I could guess, maybe!” He laughed and winked knowingly. “May

WEDNESDAY, FEB. 28, 1923

—By ALLMAN

—By AL Pu^EN

I be bo bold as to name him at a venture?” "Yes, if yon ’ll be sure to mention Monsieur Rene de Renville.” ho gayly answered. “Who but he oould work Adrienne up into a perfect green mist of jealousy?” “He would need an accomplice, I should imagine: a young lady of some beauty and a good deal of heartlessnese.” (To Bo CoattaxudJ