Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 October 1949 — Page 5

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THURSDAY, OCT. 6, 1949

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES : PAGE: 5.3"

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; SYNOPSIS: Escaping from Bristol Town and Cromwellian ~ Eagiand in a wine barrel, Harry Morgan, the pirstete be bo shop upon them. ahd to sumteh up|the enemy were running up from NO PARKING WORRIES—PLENTY OF FREE PARKING SPACE ON OUR DRIVE-IN along with a New Englander named Enoch Jackman, a | “Back-to-back!” roared Dun- he beash. girl Kate Pyne and others. The little boat in which they (bar, his gray mane tossing In the| paar Saad oe beet ra narrowly death has just now sighted land. Now go on |strong on-shore breeze like a tat-| bo. , He attackers and, with the story—~— tered gonfalon. “A Dunb ,| after discharging their arque- : ; CHAPTER FIVE s Come on, “ye murderin’ de’ils! Maless cans ghargiog 1m. A “GOD SMITE ME if ever I put to sea again” Bellowing in| Morgan crouched in his private|, AMODg the dew-soaked ferns sheer delight, Morgan jumped into clear, dark brown water and, Fetreat, debated a sudden charge| Jackman was trembling like a aided by Enoch Jackman, hauled their boat into shallower water. against the enemy's flank—such Tghtened dog. “I allow we'd Stiffly, because of lohg confinement aboard the gig, the men an unexpected assault might dis-| Dest take to our heels. Yon poor : tumbled out onto gray-white sands and went tottering over to the concert the attackers enough to| devils are done for. spring and there gulped the first really fresh water they had tasted|turn the tide—but a second glance Morgan shook his dark, round . in nearly three months, from sleep-sodden eyes warned head. “No use. The Spaniards, 5 Using Dunbar’s Scottish bonnet | His siight frame, though, was well| that such a move would prove(t00, have dogs, hear 'em?” { for lack of a muscled and proportioned. futile. boucaniers cast- {

better. receptacle, The and wAYe, Bute pick | Morgan dipped water for Kate. “Klaas and Pedro,” Phallelaways were outnumbered by five] 1f We move far they'll NOT ONE CENT DOWN ——— SMA LL PAYMENTS T0 FIT YOUR NEEDS The gig’s company dined well{designated his other companions. or six to one and still more of | : 2 r

* that night on baked plantains, . s = = = Pm 3 - boiled cabbage palm, and roasted] THE ENC of the Th NS crabs, topped off with oranges boucan hunters lay in the depths 3 a Et ERE ~ and plenty of caremita plums. [of a small valley situated a scant ~ ED NE EE

Once the last spark of the fire half league to westward of the had been extinguished, Throston, lagoon. Doubloon described this Dunbar and Jackman retired to/land as the northern coast of doubtful comforts afforded by a Hispaniola. * pile of dried ferns, heaped by the| .Phalle, the buccaneer leader, wind in the lee of a long-dead/Waved expressive hands and cedar. poured-out a torernt of Basque-| As for Kate Pyne, she withdrew accented French. “We hunt wild slightly, then, falling on thin|cattle. For this terrain Doubloon| knees, prayed earnestly and hap-|and I were not enough, so we ask| pily for all of half an hour. |Pedro and Klaas to join us.” He, Shortly after his companions ‘2u8hed happily. “It is good that| had fallen into the leaden slumber YOU €Ome just mow. Only yesof exhaustion, Morgan adopted '°T9ay we have commenced to|

{slay les vaches. We shall hunt a long-decided upon precaution|s and silently deserted the com-| together, hein? Then when our!

mon encampment to nest up, Parca and your ltitle vessel are

{full of boucan we all sail for nearly a hundred yards distant, in a small gully sheltered from view .Crtu8a. Unless, of course, first]

{we see a vaisseau make signal) nd ae by a dense growth of for trade.”

The savann ored by the Eventually he lapsed into a fit-/cattle were we mg Boao ful slumber from which, almost naturally cleared meadows in the! immediately it seemed, he|gyrrounding forests of cedar, oak, | emerged, trembling, blinking inmahogany and gri-gri trees... the gask, wi Ysteuing hard. Were By midday 30-odd cattle lay some hounds haying or was he dead. on the bright en and afflicted by a touch of the sun? |blood-splashed Tight Sree Alll Those were hounds and they through the afternoon fly-haunted| were raising a furious, deep- piles of purple-red flesh grew and throated clamor quite nearby, /grew, but not too rapidly because | leaving no doubt that the beasts/ the boucan hunters hacked off had discovered Jackman’'s campioply the most select meat. and were baying it. | At nightfall the hunters, im-| Now above the racket he could mensely fatigued, but well satis-| distinguish the deep voices of|fied, had packed into carop above! Dunbar and Jackman raising a a ton of meat and covered it belated, “Call off your dogs, fer with broad banana palm fronds. God's sake! Only a parcel of| Klaas disappeared into the bush poor, shipwrecked people. {but soon came striding back car-| “You're English—so are We, rying a small keg of Barbadoes Pray don’t harm us.” {rum over a naked, sunburnt] “We're not English,” rasped| shoulder. { the speaker. “We own no na-| “Ye've a main fine idea there,” tion.” grinned Jackman. “I ain't tasted “Klaas! Pedro! Come out, but/a thing but water in nigh a

stand ready to blow these fools month.” Nv aay | Half coconut shells. speedily

Carrying naked cutlasses and Were passed about and even more cocked pistols, two more men|SPERALY emiplied, deal of ‘hand materialized. | flourishing described how strips Kate Pyne emitted a fright 0 three or. four feet long ened wail. “Oh-h. In God's com-|; 3 naif an inch thick were laid | passion spare us, noble sirs.” l5.rogg strong racks fashioned of “We ain't no ‘noble sirs,’ so yer|thick green branches; some of can stow that caterwauling.” these stood already rigged at the The Englishman in the calfskin far end of camp. The strips, heav- IL THRU ; R | jerkin strode forward and, injly salted and lashed around 8 S contempt, surveyed the knot of|green-wood rods, were revolved

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Morgan laughed In friendly bones, and offal, thus creating al fashion. “Ye’re no mirrors o’ thick and greasy smoke. hostility on the strangers’ part. .panions knew what they were He suddenly offered his hand to/about. Beef marrow certainly did | : Re the Englishman and gave his|fine things to a man’s innards; : Na LESS S 00 Reduction = For Sale The Frenchman began to laugh. |secluded spot, where in compli-| He who called himself Doubloon ance with his self-imposed but|

fashion yer own selves.” | If the smoking process was y uw [skillfully executed the boucan! : : * {meat would gradually take on a| THE ENGLISHMAN, a short|,. id red hue, much the same color| yellow-bearded rascal who lacked ,; .,rneq beef. Its taste was so an ear, spat resoundingly. “Stow (,, superior to the ordinary salted | yer sauce, ye blasted Tug-mut-iyea¢ found ina vessel's “harness name. his blood leaped, singing a| a = yy EE : i 1 | ET ——_ % \ [3% 7 or me ' = : N 2 N Ly Oe ! ol SE bors { n : BNN 3 \N 1,4 \ \ : ‘Ie : 5 3 = ' = NY pS = | ti \ \ A : A » mate, the which should stand ye sleep. \ \ in . 2 RE 0 ite \ A NY 1 a: ni Ti (4 EE gems ¢ of . Excise tudes Nan, then, ye'd best meet Jackman mumbled but, oddly, 5 \ 3 ; = {1,138 Hou — = : ii our Brethren.” leno h, Har eem NA - = : - fn : : a en] ' As might have been expected, | ng Ty seemed Suddenty, \ i \ Ti ris . mle : ! en wl a —1\ = ” :

The Frenchman proved in no| “Gladly, an you've the mind! hurry to accept Morgan's fist. Ato» Morgan hiccoughed, grinning! short, bandy-legged fellow With foqlishly, “But what of flames?| N SEL N == i TTT black beady eyes and a curiousig, jarge a fire might be seen.”| NWN \ = T0101 CORE ELE coppery tint underlying the tan| > \ - N = ete bd d dirt lated on his vis-| a&8ed yellow heard dripping, da : age In Pg however, he ex-|SPilt rum. and" water, Doubjoon| \ E En posed irregular yellow tusks of | Waved a careless hand. “A pox]

hing! _ion caution, pile on the wood, | Ee Sonishingly goed {Harry boy. Ain't none but the Looking Phalle straight in the|Brethren this far east'ards.” | eye, Morgan indicated his com-| Every atom of Harry Morgan's panions. “Eight men count more|Will-power was required to guide|

than four—what do you think?” his uncertain bare feet toward aj

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castaways. “Wot a poke 0’ bleed-lon the rack from time to time, Yl [1] 6:30 ing ragpickers! Blow me, Phalle,isome two feet above a thick bed, 4 4d if we come across a moidore’s of hot coals upon which, period-| worth o' loot among the lot!” |ically, the boucan hunters cast ton.” He turned to Morgan. “You|cask” that ships would cruise far I wi’ the black pate, wWot’s your off their courses to lay in a stock. | business?” | 2 = = CO As briefly as he might, Morgan| ApTER A BIT the raw Bar-| Mi MM a described the Prosperous and her padoes rum really got to work, | AG/ C / RR OR ill-starred cruise, but left Jack-|and soon the hunters commenced . - man to tell of the gig’s aimlessi{to bawl out such wild and ob-| . wanderings; all of which the scene songs that Kate Pyne hur- 1949 ADMIRAL Englishman translated into a riedly retired to the depths of her| weird natois of mingled French, palm-leaf ajupa and prayed for Dutch and, surprisingly enough,|their salvation. { . TELEVISION Portuguese. | It would appear, thought Mor-| Ae Morgan sensed a fading ~f gan, that Phalle and his com- i ". ; ! The other stared a moment. strange wild music in his ears.| “In the Brother'ood they calls me By the light of some dying fire Doubloon Bill,” he touched his he waved his half coconut shell.| flaming yellow beard, “and that’lll “Bring wood! Harree. All night | ‘ave to' do. This ’ere’s my matelot,|let us sing and dance and tell Phalle, and our leader.” tales.” Bill spat. “Ye ‘ave quick wit,|now inflexible rule, he decided to in good stead in these ‘ere lati-| “Harry! Wait. Doan’ go!" magically, to have disappeared Klaas proved to be of Nether-| | lands — but was far from from the face of the earth. typical. Here was no blond, blue- . hs and phlegmatic mariner. The gled a little “distance into a \ =. \ . i — = blood of the Spanish occupation|thicket before the ground, Hu eel EE wnt ass Ti = ee ® & was writted broad across lean,|SWooped up at him and he, im i KERR 1A : . 7 somber and vicious appearing fea-| Collapsed into a sudden stupor. | : A Wht Liddy ' A NAT ERIN o a tures that had suffered terribly| Probably because the hunting, Ey 0 1h Ee ! z

Cursing softly, Jackman strug-|

from smallpox—the half of one|dogs, too, had gorged themselves | eyelid had been eaten away. itorpid, neither roused until it| fo Pedro, the Portuguese’s smooth, was really too late. Their mas-! 2 almost hairless face was domi-|ters had only time to cast one| : = al 7 : 2X nated by dark, liquid eyes more, terror-stricken glance at a circle D AYLIGHT I= : 2 - - resembling a girl's than those of of leather and steel-clad figures! Lis : > = al : a youth nearing Throston’s age.) closing swiftly and relentlessly in| Pl CTURE a Cars Dae Ea Gon : = Fe a [= A= aa CE TA

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