South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 214, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 1 August 1920 — Page 23
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES SUNDAY, AUGUST 1, 1920
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(LO."riXf!;i !-'!IfM PAUH i' on" f-f our r.s and bu-in's am II II acting i.o: jir r. l ' r-: r. i.f-n. i ;i hi!- I'm ;.;; i , . t . I '".i' i.'.iarv iM.v r.i iy, ;. nd mi ar:d ... will :.iki' th- 5i f it-if Ji'rtlil';ii ti'l "iiorrow - ; 1 1 r I ami follow ui to- , hi.-i ,i a: :1. 'I'm your r.eer j-oo tl.li Ilk" to. IJut, Kr,u bae to h rompany.' s-jys I. 'I N a York, but I'd I-ukr,' s;iys I, 'don't ave a dispensation or i habeas or;us .r something from l.r f-tat, u hen you r'rn h nut thit far for ri' h men and rnab f.irtors ?' ' 'I'M I have a requisition,' says f.rik. 'when I wi-nt vr into the l.r; ..- b' ttonis and broucht back I i T I 'irlrras and two mere for holdr.K up tb International? Iid ni" nd you have a search warrant rir & po.-se romitatur, when we rounded up th tu six Mpxifan row thieves Sown in HidiK'o? It's my business to ke. p order in MnJ-uJ.i county.' "Wnd it's my business as office deputy. says I, 'to .-. that bufn's I? carried on accorrlinc: to law. Iktwen ua both -vr ruht to keep' Lhintrs pretty well eb,med up.' "So, tl;e n.t day, Luke packs a blanket arid some collars and his mile lire book in a haversack, and him and me hits the breeze for New Vrk. It was a powerful lontr ride. TY o seats in the ears was too short f or six-footers like us to sleep comfortable on: and the ronduetor had to keep us from frcttln off at every town tb it had fi -story houses in i but we ;ot there finally; and r.e .'-. med to see risht away that he was riicht aTiout it. ' 'Luke.' siys I, ar o!fl?e deputy and from a law standpoint. It don't loo-; to me. lik this j!..cr is properly and legally in the jurisdiction of Mojad.i eounty. Texas.' "'From the standpoint of order. S'ivs h.e, 'it's a rn enable to answer for its sins to the properly appointed authorities from IMldad to Jerusalem.' " 'Amen. fays T. 'Rut let's turn mir trick s':dden, and ride I don't like the looks of this place." " 'Think of Pedro Johnson,' says laike, a friend of mine and yours Fhot down by one of these pilded aholitionlsts at his very door!" " 'It was nt the door of the freight tiepot.' says I. T.ut the law will not balked at a quibble like that.' 'We put up at one of them bis hotels on Hroadway. The next mornintr I Koes down about two miles t-f stairsteps to the bottom and hunts for Luke. It ain't no use. It looks like San Jacinto day in San Antone. There's a thousand folks millImr; around Jn a kind of a roofedover piara with marble pavements find trees prowinsr rU'ht out of 'em, find I sec- no more chance of finding Lake than If we was hunting each ther in the biir; pear flat down below Old Fort Kwell. Hut soon Luke and me runs together in one of the turns of them marbl? alleys. "'It ain't no use. Ibid.' Fays he. 'I uin't find no pl:c to eat at. I've b-en looking for restaurant sipns and Fmellincr for ham all over the camp. Hut I'm used to poinp; hum-ry when I have to. Now. says he, 'I'm poln? out and get a hack and ride down to the address on this Seudder card. Yon stav hero and try to hustle some Km!'. Hut I doubt, if you'll Ünd lt. 1 wish we'd brought alonp some eornmfal and bacon and beans. I'll be bark when I see this Seudder, if the trail ain't wiped out.' "So I starts foraging for breakfast. For the honor of old Mojada county I didn't want to seem green to them abolitionists, so every time I turned a corner In them marble halls I went up to the first desk or counter I see and looks round for prub. If I didn't ?o what I wanted 1 asked for something else. In about half an hour I hrd a dozen clpars. tlv story r0apnzine, and seven or ciht railroad time tables in my pocket?, and iipver a smell of coffee or bacon to point out the trail. "Once a lady sitting nt a table and Tdayinc a game kind of liko pushpin told me to pro into a closet that she called Number I went In and shut the door, and tho blamed thin-4 lit itself up. T set down on a s;ori before a shelf and waited. Thinks I. 'This is a private dining room.' Hut no waiter never came. Vhn. I prot to swe.itintc pood and V.ii-.l. I zof s nut a?:aln. ' 'Pid you pet what you wanted?' says she. " 'No. ma'am.' sivs I. 'Not n T ite 'Then there's r.o charpe, says She. " 'Tliankv. ma'am.' savs T. and T takes up the trail apain. "P.v and by I think I'll etlquette; and I picks up one them boy? J with blue clothes and yellow buttons in front, and ho lend me to what he calls the caff ay breakfast room. ,nd the first 'himr I lays my eye on! when I go in Is that boy that had shot Pedro Johnson. Tie was setting all alone at a little tahl. hitting a etr with a poon like h was afraid he'd break it. "I takes the chair aTos the table from him: and h- !ooc Insulted and j makes ä mow like he was going i to pet up. J apprehended, arreted, and in charge ef the Texas authorities, do on and hammer that er-p some more if It's The insid of It ou want. Now. what did von shoot Mr. Johnson, of Hilda d." for? "'And may I ak who you are?' says he. ' " 'You may.' fov I Tlo ahead.' ''I suppose you're or:, says this kid. without battinp his eyes. 'Hut what are you eatirp" Hero, waiter!' T o calls out. raislnc hi finger. Take this gentleman's order.' " 'A t'Cefsteak. says I, 'and some fried ergs and a can of peaches and a quart of cc-.Tee will about surMce.' "'e talk awhile about the sundries of life and then he says: 'What are you gomg that sheeting? I had to do about a right to ' nhoot that man.' says ne. 'He called j mo names that I couldn't overlook, and then he struck me. He carried A gun. too. What ei could I do?" ' 'Wo'll have to take you back to Texa.' says I. " T. like to ro hack, 'says the bov. with a kind of a grin 'if it '.van't en an occasion of th' kind. It's the Ufo I like. T'v alvayVs wanted to ride and shoot and liv in the opn ever " 'Who since I can remember. was this panp of tout with?' I rarties you took this trip asks. " 'My stepfather.' says he. 'and some business partners of his In sortie Mexican mlr.ir.g ar.d land shem es. T saw you shoo Pedr Johnson.' fays I. 'ar.d I took that poprun away from von that you did it with.- And when I di I so I noticed thre or four
Zti Order 'By
little in a row over your riprht 'Vf tow. Vo;i'w 1 tri in ruokus .-
f nr . h.-.v i.'t you ." ji-sont law and order In your city. had th'se scars ever since' The y was two Colt's .45's"that I've
I ran i -eiut-r.i '. r,' says h 'I lon't know i.ow thev (arae there.' '"Was you ever In Texas before?' says I. " 'Not th it I remember of,' says he. 'Hut I thou-jht I had when we struck the prairie country. Hut I Kues'I hadn't.' 'IIave you got a mother I askt. " 'She died U v yt ars 't':o ' s-iys he. "Sklppint; oer tin; most of what followed when Luke came back I turned the kid over to him. He had seen Scud b r and told him what he- wanted; and It seems that Seudder pot i.etive with one of th' s' telephones as soon as he left. For in about an hour afterward there comes to our hotel some of these city rant;, rs in everyday clothes that they call detectives, and marches the whole autfit of us to what they call a magistrate's court. They;accuse Luke of attempted kidnapping, and ask him what he has to say. " 'This snipe,' says Luke to the Judpe. 'shot and wilfully punctured with malief? and forethought one, of the most respected and prominent citizens of the town of Illldad, Texas, your honor. And in so doing laid himself liable to the penitence of law and order. And I hereby make claim and demand restitution of the state of New York city for the said alleged criminal; and I know he done it.' " 'Have you the usual and necessary requisition papers from the povernor of your state?' asks the judge. " 'My usual papers,' says Luke. 1151 Chili J. Ruaiel
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, 'was taken away from me at the i hot-l by thee tcentlemen who rcDpacke! for nine years; and if I don't pet 'em back there'll be mure trouble. You can ask anybody In Mojada county about Luke Summers. I don't usually need any other kind of papers for what I do "I sot' the Judge looks mad, so I steps up and says' " "Your honor, the aforesaid defendant, Mr. Luke Summers, sheriff of Mojada county, Texas, Is as tine 'a man as ever threw a rope or upheld the statutes and codicils of the greatest state in the Union. Hut be ' "The judge hits his table with a wooden hammer and asks who I am. "Ilud Oakley.' says I. 'Ollice deputy of the sheriff's othee of Mojada county, Texas. Representing,' says I, 'the Law. Luke Summers, I goes on. 'represents Order. And if your hon.r will give me about ten minutes in private talk, I'll explain the whole thing to you. and show you the equitable and legal requisition papers which I carry in my pocket.' "The Judge kind of half smiles and says ho will talk with me in his private room. In there I put the whole thing up to him in such language .as I had. and when we goes outside, he announces the verdict that the younp man is delivered into the hands of the Texas authorities; and calls the next case. "Skipping over much of what happened on the way back. I'll tell von how the thing wound up In Hildad. "When we got the prisoner in the
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f-hrrifT'fl off ce, I says to Luke: J in MoJt.1i county acre rdinc to our " 'You remember that ki-J of yo'irsvth ?r.d conycloiicp. The kid chct
! that tvo-ycar-oM that they stole i away from you when the bust-up I tome?' "Luke looks black and anirry. 1' He'd ntvt r let anybody talk to him bout that business and he never mentioned it himself. ! ' Toe the mark.' says I. 'Do you remember when he was toddling i around on the porch and fell down on a pair of Mexican spurs end cut j four little holes over his right eye? Look a the. prisoner,' says I, 'look ! at his nose "and the shape of his j head and why, you old fool, don't you know your own son? I knew him,' says I .'when he perforated Mr. Johnson at the depot.' "Luke comes over to me shaking all over. I never saw him lose his nerve before. "'Hud.' says he, 'I've never had! that boy out of my mind one day or one night since he was took away. Hut I never let on. Hut can we hold him? Can we make him stay? I'll make the best man of him that ever put his foot in a stirrup. Wait a minute,' says he. all excited and out of his mind 'I've got something here in my desk I reckon it'll hold lepal yet I've looked at it a thousand times. "Cus-to-dy of the child." says Luke. "Cus-to-dy of the chile!." We can hold him on that, can't we? Lo'mo see If I can Hnd that decree.' "Luke begins to tear his desk to pieces. '"Hold on.' says I. 'You are Order and I'm Law. You needn't look for that paper, Luke. It ain't a decree any more. It's requisition papers. It's on file In that magistrate's office in New York. I took It along; when we went, because I was office deputy and knew the law.' " 'I've got him back,' says Luke. 'He's mine apain. I never thought "'Wait a minute.' says I. 'We've got to have law and orrler. You and me have got to preserve "em both 1155 Jazx Dance Repertoire. Fox -Trot. Played by Pete Wendling. 1156 Moonlight in Mandalay. Played by Arden and Ohman. Waltz. 1157 Oh PromUo Me. bj Phil Ohman. Ballad. Played 1 158 Pretty Kitty Kelly. W by Atdcn and Ohman. dtz. Played 1159 Since You Crept InWMy Heart. Fox-Trot. Played by .Lee S. Robert and Max Kortlander. 1160 The Japanese Sandman. Fox-Trot. Played by "Zez" Confrey. 1148-What Cha Gonna Do When There Ain't no Jazz. Fox-Trot. Played by Pete Wendling. 1161 You're the Only Girl That Made Me 1 Cry. Fox-Trot. Played by Max Kortlander. $1.50 4. L r4kn. Afmln B!uk 3. Irn. 6. Whoit Balg Ar Yki Ohman. ROLLS 4. ZW$ St. 00 Lie S. Robert 1.00 Cfnpor ' '
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Ir,w was half Mxiran. anvhnw.' " (Copyright. K2U LO.YDOiV ROAD IS PAVED WITH HELMETS OF HUXS iiy sin joirx rm:vcn. In the tovnhip of Croydon, ten miles iouth of Iondon bridge, there is a s'reteh of road which used to be so muJdy as to bo almost impassible 1 times. Now it looks like the cobble-stone pavements in old American towrs. Hut every cobble i-; a helmet taken from a Hun. Tens of thousands of the helmets have bc-en used there. For practical purposes, a good coating of asphalt over the helmets would bo a givat improvement. Hut from the psychoid; if al point of view thero will always be a satisfaction t the traveler in every bump. The provincial poverm ent of Hritih Columbia has n !us d Orientals the rl.uht to- work on public works or mine on t t own hands. ThN act violates the rr.tish-Ja panesc treaty of 1911, and will be considered by the Canadian privy council. In a great law eas. , the hojse of lcrds has jus rejected th'e claim pm up by the f -mu a that the government has the ripht, I y prerogative, tfi take a man's property, use it for an indefinite period i-nd pay nothing. Long before the royal mail liner docked in New York her presence was known because of the odor of more than ont-half million strings of garlic which were being imported. ' '1,.'--'' -.- 1 51.23 1.25 1.25 1.25 r' 4-e- V. 5 .;: A.J 1.25 1.25 1.25 125 . . i1 L7 i " p " -''"-' --.',' ' '-J : "o -1. . f ' ?U 3
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