Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 September 1949 — Page 27
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___
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: New Treatment [Show to Frost |
PAGE 27
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h His own feet were cold, and y n } come to live at (his insteps seemed to be breakthe Bois des Morts Mission until spring—a situation which is In- ing under the stricture of his ’ a (boots, and he kept on. The fear a ot love. of the blizzard grew, and he kept found dead on. The snow was thicker, harder rebellion driven against their faces by a her father, vicious wind, and they kept on,
has been killed, presumably by the Ojibway. Fearing Selene suggests to Aaron that they elope to St. Paul. Now go on and now they began to stagger a
with the story— / CHAPTER TWENTY |clearly, very coldly, “You -two HE WAS up before dawn, and Selene must have been equally could be frozen to death, here on sleepless, for when he inched down the ladder in his socks, she was the prairie. waiting for him. . Without even coffee, they swung their packs to their shoulders) THE HUR bh and crept from the house, headed eastward. They had nothing to say.|(P0t #0ft squash but hard pellets, From the bluff*he looked down through fog and darkness and Dad been just an annoyance and imagined that he could see the] & confusion, but now there was forlorn buildings of the Missiort/ New York streets in a cold day, (Pain in them as they stung his like gray shells, ‘ |say 30 above, | Already, Harge's name was, Her only fool-of-an-heiress something old and forgotten. “So! Let's go on.” [large a bundle of her Bnery, Selene fell into the long loping but Aaron carried it long with __ of a prairie gait. She kept even his pack and said convincingly, | ob tabu ot cold, perhaps of fear with him, not twittering nor ask- “Never mind, dear—don't weigh : that it do ing sympathy. Three or four miles a feather.” | He was sure tha was down
to zero now. He could not get from the Mission, they cheered as, when they had quarter-stripped pty eo ho he 2s 4 id, yo Ke
the sun rose and the prairie o¢ the ford, he had felt a quite springtime was mist-scented and ypprotherly admiration for the choir minis Jes Fe ae Ck LR. adlOiTwn Shine of Jaf legs : ’ {until she was safe, they were . e: not Aaron, though it was two months poy and girl racing together on ine ong Ph TE aed of early. The greening buffalo grass tne blue morning. fakes. was set with tiny pools, the creeks) pogtly they were jolly and tri-| His legs were aching, a fine bing melting, the sky was high ymphant. With the sunniest joy thin agony spreading up his ue. {he thought, “I'm utterly in love. essed that his They had to strip to their bare wih her! No man in all heighives, ahd he gues She would legs to ford the east branch of|,,.nmg was so lucky! She's lovely|ne no better. Stop—camp here the Isanti, but when they had 5,4 rm with her and it's a glori-|in the open? His decision migh rubbed their chilly flesh with a ous day and I can smell the earth! mean her life.
corner of a blanket, they Were ,nq tne rivers and I love her and| He put his lips close to her
| Bl oo ar JOuth of tea, hungry and we'll stop for|ear, to shout: “I'm going to keep
’ '|some tea and corn!” right on to shelter, if you can Selene, and then let's keep pound-| yy,oy nag breakfast-lunch at 11,/stand it. ’Bout blizzard strength
. r father starts! I et pie Uh—by| 10 a curving coulee, |now. Shall. I try to carry you?” the way—if you could just look! As they came out of the hollows! gre actually laughed. “Dear y y ~ they realized that the sunshine ' ’ d back now and then and sort of : {me, no! Let’s keep going, reveren help keep-an eye out for anything > BONE the sky veiled with a _gear reverend father!” that might be moving?” [film that minute by minute grew| mhen—it might have been for 1thicker. (half an hour, it might have been
They boiled their tea on a tiny : fire of buffalo chips and hastened The wind rose steadily. It {or an hour, with time and place
on—not quite so skippingly. They hummed in the dry grass which/ang bodies lost in the growing
jculed him by snapping at his
were farther from their sign- DO longer, in that drained light, white whirlpool—they lumped on,|
the chanel of the Minne- Seemed green at all. The firstigng they were not living at all, Donte le in a wash of spring/Snow-flake came from nowhere. gpg their only philosophy was, ‘prairie, like two gormorants in a It tacked comically in front of «1 die, therefore I have not died round of green ocean. |them, vanished, and was instantly| yet » As they werit on, Aaron was| followed by another, another. | Then, in exultation, they came uplifted by a countryman’s pride} Then Aaron let himself be to a rash of little willow trees in the fact that his girl, even if afraid. He let himself think ofianq what looked like the river she was not, quite so powerful as|the one word that on the prairie) beyond. It had no more shelter he, was as determined. Perhaps, Was as fearful as fire—blizzard. |than a. brushpile, but it had he thought, this was the first}: There could ‘be no blizzard is qo, Re time when her sleek yet wiry Without snow, but in half an hour| ghe flopped down, hysterical Scotch-Canadian-Sioux body had|that was coming fast enough. He! with relief, and he kissed her ever called up all its energy—ex- wanted to strike at the snow, to! frigid cheek, cold and smooth cept when she had danced alllkill it. {and memorable.
They would reach Traverse des/—eh?” Selene trembled. | nis aching feet. He tore the dead Sioux and refuge in four days, “Get some kind of refuge. But twigs—his hands trembled — out maybe three. I" dot see nny groves Shea 4/0 & hollow at the foot of a dwarf . =» e tr 0 remember what willow, He motioned PRACTICALLY, neither 0 fl.ymps of woods there were in the hold out her cloak as » bo Phy them knew the art of keepingicryel stretch to Traverse desand carefully, tearing from ia alive on the prairie. Sioux, still a hundred miles away./block a sulphur match which lit He was wearing his pilot-cloth| «gp we'll find some place—noland stuttered and stank till it overcoat and muskrat cap—both troupe,” he said cheerily. {turned from evil blue to a healthy of which seemed too warm—wit | He recalled the rule Jake had fiame, he set fire to a handful of a long scarf, his broadclothigryen him: in a storm on theigry leaves: Then the twigs caught préacher’s suit, and boots since prairie, camp at once, before you! then the branches. : it had seemed ‘too warm and t00||ogse the way. Where? There . 8 = muddy for moccasins. She Was wag only the bare grassland be-| HE DUG into his wraps for his
little and to weave. Aaron heard, too warm and sleepy and sore to/'a human veice. {wreck their trust by an ineptitude}
G snowflakes, af
forehead, his cheeks, and ridl-|, get a fire, quick, or we'll freeze. 23 (UP)—A different brand of ducts leading from the liver and Farmers of America junior dairy
nose. He saw that Selene was) |day to hav these areas account for only 5 per | |find some more wood. See if you|day ave inhabited the Evertrick had been to bring *0| shaking her head, bewildered bY| can get a fire started with what glades village which had iver. |i to 10 per cent of all cancers, {them, and in her eyes were tears wood we got.”
d [shiners. Instead of war relics and thered a few more skinny n/8* hs. ‘A glow rose behind him,(& half-ton of gold, they turned ‘They suggest that at the first
Buting due east. He could mot 8€e|inat Selene had mandged to get mash kettles.
night with her putative Count!| “What do you think we better) He scuffed the snow away with|
3 : Ay ’ : ror fond Reve | LEON'S By Sinclair Lewis : Royal Mounted | Ne : : : Of Cancer Bared Scarlet-coated Royal Canadian ; WILL BE : re . Mounted Police will present their e. (It had been enterprisingly at night. He stumbled through Ty ME . CLO SEDA from Connecticut as AP new snow, up to the gh : De Early Sidns in famous musical ride nightly dur-§ ‘ Scalping Knife for native use.) [of the hummock. The storm had tect Early Signs in : By the minute blaze, they had lulled enough for him to recog- |naccessible Places tea and dry meat ahd fai Sale. ise outlines in the fire glow. | Br Sckines : | Fairgrounds H ad out bo ets, {| He made out thicker woods, ” Satie | . thelr Tho coats under them, and more Shelter, and the fire, The CHICAGO, Sept, 33--A. method) The Fide will be the spotlight ALL DAY DUE T0 HOLDAYI OPEN MONDAY 8.70 8
ing the. first International Dairy: THIS
[Exposition Oct. 8-15 at the State SATURDAY |
they huddled together, arms about steady wall of the blizzard slack- for -detecting cancer of certain attraction of a program consistleach other, babes in the woods, ened, and he thought he heard organs playing an important role ing of 18 circus acts. The RCMP {In digestion and the secretion of group will consist of 32 black of speech. cone Be outinuh . |boay Juss Before it Nari She horses and their riders. _ his cheek|ed by arrangement with Random: Hen, | hopeless. stage, is reporte y ther outstanding shows dur-| ‘ agn = LNoks, about her he. Sonyriehi, ; Soh New For Pasi Drs. Henry M. Lemon and Walter| ing the exposition include senior| ~ "i goede 1 rs hair, he did not know whether W. Byrnes of the Boston Univer- for
————————————— {show judging of the seven dairy! s o ily School of Medicine and Bos- | it was day, evening or morning; Gold Seekers Learn | aT ark: and. the| ton City Hospital, breeds with a prize list totaling,
T ” rn | h tneir fire] TWas ‘a Still Hunt Each year about 10,000 persons $61,000 and the invitational na-| Di oe TO 70 “Got| FT. LAUDERDALE, Fla., Sept. | dle of cancer of the liver, the biletional 4-H Club and Future
CHANCE 10 SAVE SUBSTANTIALLY! LEON TAILORING CO,
In the Middle of 235 Mass, Ave. "5 rn ae
ithe pancreas. Although cancer in| cattle show. ; {
RITE'S
WILL BE
CLOSED
ALL DAY TOMORROW
I'll scrabble around and try tosouthern rebels was reported to-
[thought a refuge of goid-laden the death toll is high because this | 9 Confederate troops {region is hard to get to, the phyt go more than a| ps. aS nor dared take| An exploring band came Dak] Sicians dectares here today in the off his mittens; but, fumbling in to civilization to report the only | Journa of the American Medical
, | Association A dark, he/¢vidence they found ‘was.of moon- . the gale-channelled Techniq tin
land he turned his stiff neck to see UP distilling equipment, jars and gion of upper abdomial pain or
| 'a fire going with a small heap of| State Game Officer L. P. Har. |Joundice- the following technique) twigs. He smiled. The silken Vey discovered the “ghost village" should be followed: | Selene. wrapped in blankets, her Some time ago and thought it| A tube be Inserted down into face tiny among the clumsy folds, May have been a camp of Con-| the duodenum, which is the first {was a grizzly bear with the face federates who came into the area part of the small intestine, and) lof a wilderness-spirit. with a reported $500,000 worth the fluid removed by suction. | She was looking at the fire°f bullion. Alter the fluid has settled, the !musingly, her bare hand on one S.A lst cells obtained from it are smeared |Knee, holding the sulphur matches. Traffic Court Deals (9 shies wud Baiged, Seu which ! . i ’ A dry Birip of Bark viama upiin Folding Money Only thus be identified because they [vlsively dropped the match-block.| Times State Service |show more and larger nuclei to {It exploded among the burning! KOKOMO, Sept. 23 — Traffic the protoplasm than. in normal |twigs, scattering them, and when [court bailiff Harold Swope deals| cells. lit went out, there was nothingODly in “folding money” here| Drs. Lemon and Byrnes do {left of the fire but wormlike Since Judge Virgil Coffel started point out that it is not possible to | glows running up and down the adding an extra quarter to traffic identify the origin or type of canFics fines. } |cer by this method. But they BS. In accordance with an act of were able to diagnose cancer in | And —he felt criminal —they|ine 1949 legislature, trafic court|patients who came ill to the hoshad no more matches, and nO costs were increased $1.75. Judge| pital which was confirmed when {filint and gteel. » ,.|Coffel added the other quarter to the patients died. In their exShe was waiting, Oh, T didn’t fines to keep his bailiff out of the perience, the patients they diag{mean to—I didn’t! {small change business. {nosed had come too late for treat- | He spoke ‘with a curiously, A typical case could result in a ment." mature sweetness: “Course YOU speeding fine of $5.25 plus $11.75 This study was supported iu didn’t. Don’t worry a bit. We Tein court costs. Total-expense—$17 part by a grant from the U. 8. ge te Hitie. STALE land even money, {Public Health Service. coun - lings of comfort, he made her leur] un under the neatly tucked-in (blankets. She relaxed in sleep i {bestde’ him, and he was unafraid) | now, He must have gone to sleep. He had again no notion how [much time had passed when he was awakened by the cold and {by the strain on his arm about { her, Fuzzily outlining a hillock west of their grove was a distinct (glow. He started to cry Selene awake, with the joy of rescue, {but stopped, colder than cold. What fire-maker was this? Black |Wolf? But Black Wolf was dead, anda terror seeped from his |death and spread round Aaron. | “Got to find out,” he said | softly. | As he eased himself out of
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SEPTEMBER 24th ON ACCOUNT OF HOLIDAY
43 SOUTH ILLINOIS STREET “ALWAYS A SQUARE DEAL_AT RITES”
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as inappropriately warm in a blue fore them, without a sizable hol- ancient turnip watch and found their warm blanket-bed, he was cloth dress with a row of sil-/jow,
vered buttons, a heavy velvet | Selene was saying with a spuri- blizzard there was growing night. in about her. He left his heavy cloak trimmed with beaver, a ous courage, “Could we manage While Selene nursed the fire, he coat under her, and the cold came
{that it was only three. But in the careful to smooth the blankets|.
trimmed bootees. It would have tle sore.” ; . been a good sensible costume for| “Oh sure—soon,” he lied.
- Ch ~ . »i LS
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quilted hood, fur gloves and fur-to rest soon? My feet are a lit- dragged up all the fuel he could|paralyzing through his jacket, |get, hacking at willow boughs more suitable to a village pulpit and a small cottonwood with his than to roaring chill on a prairie| .
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