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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (April 28, 1915)
--', 'J r' -'', : ':' ....... .""rVTVT v'"""'",' TV .',.(: Jf'-V. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1915, PAGE TWO. , LA GRANDE EVENING 0BS1?K ER Stow Hat Day Wil Be. lay 1st $1.50 2.50 3.00 5.00 THE JunE BY GEORGE RANDOLPH CHESTER AND LILLIAN vCHESTEfi Catht. 1915. by Serial PubBcatfoa Got pocktion AT SHERRY'S Runs Each Wed nesday and Thiirsday SEVENTH EPISODE. The Tormentors. 1 .... . . CHAPTER I. mBB Widow OlCccfe stooped quickly : and snatched some thing from the. poor while five strungers peered Into every ab-i- urd" nook aud corner of the two rooms "and bath which comprised the Widow O'Keefe's top door suit. The object was a sinulj snapshot of June. - 1 The deserted husband of pretty June "Warner was at the ball door with his . hand reached out for the knob, and In another Instant Ned Warner and June ' would have beeu face to face! In that luBtant the Widow O'Kcefe whipped the snapsliot under her apron, and the very swiftness of the motion struck - Into the corner of Ned Warner's rest less eyes. tie turned, and be and the father of June glanced ut each other. There was something suspicious In the bent and warped and withered Widow O'Keefe and her tull slip of a son. Ned ' came abruptly from the door and re newed his search. At that very mo ment June, Just outside, had paused on the third step from the bottom to retlo the bow upon her saucy little slip- - per and to glvo it a vigorous pat to make It behave und Btny In place.' Slim young Bum my O'Kcefe walked to the window, whistling, aud glanced , out with au air- of great Indifference. On the other side of the street stood Officer Toole, and bis eyes roved anx iously from window to window of the narrow, dingy slice of a house which -was tbe Widow O'Kecfe's. At sight of Bammy Officer Toole pointed energet ically toward the door, lie waved both arma and pointod toward tbe doorway. Sammy then slipped quietly out of tbe room. June! The listless Sammy used the next quickest method - to wireless. With one noiseless spring he straddled the banister rail, whlssed around tbe curve and down to June, wbo was halfway up the stairs, Jumped oft with footstep as light as a feather, grab- -,- bed the astounded girl by the wrist nd dragged ber down the steps at the ; risk of both their necks. Sammy shov ed Jane into the second floor hall closet Sammy locked tlio door and -. atuck tbe key in bis pocket and set the springs in his thin legs to work and was sitting lastly on the top step, bored and whistling softly, when Ned . Warner and Mr. and Mrs. John Moore ; and Bobby and Iris Blethering came ' out; Bobby extremely dejected and Iris explaining . volubly that It was all . mistake. . June couldn't possibly have been her. But she most have been, after all, because Still, bow could It be? i .-: ;-.vv.) : June In the dark closet, abut off from all light and sound, stood bewildered, tier eyes distended in tbe darkness, Twhile Ned atood not two feet away from her. '. Be had paused before that arenr door, as If some delicate mag- SAILORS TOGQ netlsui had cuuglu ami n.-ni mm mure. No trace of ber anywhere; no truce of Marie, the French-Canadian maid with the high cheek bones;' no trace of the mvsterlous black Vandyked man. whom j none of them bad cared to mention to 1 the Widow O'Kcefe, Gilbert Blyc! Ned clinched his flsts, und his brow grew black n bis mind filled with the Image of that dark, handsome face with its glowing eyes aud sunve smile. That imago had never . been absent .from Ned's wind since the disappearance of bis beautiful bride. A thousand times that succession of Incidents bad flash ed upon his memory with vivid clear nessJune asleep in the Pullman draw ing room on their honeymoon trip, while he, up forward, happily smpked; the finding her gone after the train had left Tnrnvllle; the discovery that she hud been helped by the black Vandyked man to' board a local head ed to New York; Ned's chase after them in an express truin, and his train pulling nlongsldc tbem in the approach to the Grand Central station; the sight, through the windows of tbe parallel cars, of that suave strauser bending I over. June with his infernal smile, and ber smiling up at him; Blye following June's taxi in another from the station,-and Ned's fruitless pursuit in a third taxi; the chase out to Brynport that same night, when June had stolen hef clothes and Marie; the return chase, where' Ned had scon Juno and Marie step Into Blye's luxurious Union sine and whirl nwny with him! Ev erywhere that Ned had found a trace of June he had found a (race of Gil bert Blje, and he wished to ilve tor one thing to meet Blye face to face and with bis bnre bands strangle that scoundrel to death! , . A. ''Ned' became awaro of the Widow O'Keefe eying him from midway of the stairs. She was n frail looking old ' woman, with, ber gnarled hands clasped before her, but her bendy little eyes were as sharp as the unexpected fires from dull Jewels, and there was not one move of Ned's party which es caped her. Sammy, still whistling wltb overnonchalance, wob bo persistently not gazing at the closet door that it wus a wonder no ono asked for the koy. '.-, . "We're wasting our time," finally said Iris Blethering. "We're ' prob ably letting them get away." .-. And June's friend took her husband wltb her. The rest of the iwirty followed. Meanwhile Marie, disguised In tbe suffocatingly tlnht black mourning out fit of the Widow O'Kcefe, was many blocks out of the danger tsone, smoth ering In a telephone booth and calling up tbe place where June had gone to work. Mrs.- Vlllard was not In her beautiful home up the Hudson,' nor was Miss June there. They had gone Into the city, but the maid gave Marie a telephone number. Mrs. Vlllard an swered that call from a gorgeously fur nished room where half n dozen stun ningly gowned young women sat smok ing, and ber kindly face showed im mediate concern when she learned that June must not come home to the Wid ow O'Kecfe's. "Why?" she naturally wanted', to know. "Well, you're n friend of hers, aren't you?-' hesitated Marie.- ' ' .. . "Of course," smiled Mrs. Villnrd, and before her rose the fresh young face of pretty June. "Well, then 1 11 tell you." Marie lhrew her thick black veil over ber shoulder for the twentieth time, and a drop of perspiration trickled down her nose. "I'm her maid Marie,, and he tnustu't come home." "But she's already started,' worried Mrs. Vlllard. "She'a probably there by this time. Why mustn't she come homo?" : . "Has she?' And the voice of Marie cracked. ' "Oh! Goodbyi ' How am I to get ber away from there?" "Walt a mlnutel" This seemed to be no : time for asking questions. "I'll come down In my car!"- v . - "Oh, yes, do!" gasped Marie, nearly palling the transmitter off the wall "Goodbyt I have to hurry P "Walt a minute! Walt Marie! Where am I to come?" "Oh, yes!" And Marie gulped. "Ifa the Widow O Keefe'a, at the corner of Deshley street and Duck alley, right $1.00 1.50 2.00 4.00 across from Tim Courky'a saloon. Any policeman can tell you tbe place.' Hur ry!" ' And Marie, starting . another seam In the Widow O'Keefe's mourn log dress, plunged out of tbe telephone booth, battling for air, Mrs. Vlllard stood at the-phone a moment, with a musing smile growing upon her lips; then she gave the num ber of a magnificent club. The man whom a brass buttoned page brought through the marble corridors from the leather bung library to answer tbe call wore a suave smile and a black Van dyke. .v -:,'--':, .- . "This Is Mrs. Vlllard, Gilbert," came the low, sweet voice. "I have some thing very Important ' to tell "you. June." .-'" , "Ob!" Gilbert Blye stroked his black Vandyke with his . long, lean, white fingers. "I'll Join you immediately wherever yon say." "Shall I Btop at your club?" Vricase." Gilbert Blye walked out of the telephone booth, sent for his hat and sat In the reception room near the door.:' .- The family limousine of the Moorcs had no sooner rolled away from the widow's house than- Sammy O'Keefe unlocked tbe closet door in proud self approbation. - "What was it?" June asked. "Your husband, miss." And the Wld- dow O'Kcefe laughed her cackling tri umph ana rubbed her gnarled bands over, each other. "It's smRll satisfac tion be cot out of me and &amniy with his pryni' and Inquisitive" k Ned! cried June, snrt ntm Mnlvhw1 at tlie banister rali. "He was heref" 'Bight where you're standln', miss. And your father and mother and" "Paddy! Mummy!" The tears gath ered. ; :v':Mi-wr.--r ..;-;;. "Don't you mind, darllu',''- encour aged the -widow heartily. "They got nothtn' out of either Sammy or me.' Sammy, I'm proud of yon, boy. I didn't know you could lie so good, and I'll never believe anything you tell me again. ' ' And there was a couple of your friends, miss hearty soul of a yonng woman thnt never left off talk In' or laughln' or cryln' or somethln' one minute after the other and her husband, a henpecked little fellow that II be no trouble uutll he gets waked up some day; then watch out for bis kind. My Dan was that way. I could bullyrag that poor devil night and day till I -see the glint begin to come In his eye Why, darllu', what's tbe matter? ,' Sammy, you big simple ton, why don't you get Miss Junto a glass of water! And be quick, will you?"--.-. ...-...-. . - ,-.-.., Jabbering out nil her pentup excite-' ment not a word of which Juno had beard, she helped the colorless, half fainting girl up to her own rooms and J mothered around her with a solicitude which was fully as lively as her tongue and far more sincere. . June might as well have been alone for all that she was conscious of the O'Keefe ministrations. They had been here, here in these ,very rooms, Ned, her father and mother I How she long ed for theml How she wished they bad found her! And a great flood of love surged up In ber. She must see theml She must go to them at once! Shn must give np this foolish flight for a romautic ideal and be Just a girl, and return to "her own people, and" be pet--ted aud forgiven, and be clasped In Ned's strong arms, never to leave them agalnl . She rose with a wild impulse to hurry straight after them, but her knees bent under her. . She bad. not known how much thla sudden emotion had taken away her strength. The Widow O'Keefe pressed her tenderly back in her chair, and Sammy held a glass to her lips and spilled a trickle of water on her chin. She smiled at them both, for she was very fond of them; then the widow drove Sammy from the room and put June on the bed, and took off ber little shoes, and drew the blinds, and left ber alone to cry it out And the Widow O'Keefe rasped her own eyes with lumpy knuckles as she closed the door. June sat suddenly bolt upright and dried her eyes and bunted for her shoes. How bare everything looked in the room! Why, everything was gone I Ana wnere was Marie? Marie J)ad J oat turned the corner of $6.00 5.00 7.50 r 'LHH A Severe Looking Man Came Out to , ' -" Meet Them. Officer Dowd's pout when there came swiftly toward ner a. family limousine which she remembered with a Jump in her breast . ' '. , ." Suddenly there was a loud yelp of Joy from n handsome collie sitting be side the driver, aud Bouncer, who nev er left bis seat when In the city, was halfway to the curb in one spring. With a shriek Marie headed for the nearest alley, Bouncer barking happily at ber heels. .- - Five voices yelled for Jerry to stop. but It was unnecessary. That good chauffeur had used both brakes, and the MoStes, the Bletberlngs and Ned Warner all tried to crowd out of the door. While the agitated Bobby block, ed the doorway Ned rushed after Ma rie, but he suddenly found himself breastbone to breastbone with Officer Dowd. .V.v: -. ' "Excuse me," said Officer Dowd, still breasting him. "Was It. you or me that's In the road?" '-.; r.- - . "I want to speak to that young wo man!" And Ned tried to pass around Officer Dowd as "that young woman," accompanied by the leaping Bouncer, turned swiftly into a narrow alley. The last flash of her was a red and white striped stocking. "; ;'";-.'' Officer Dowd was at this' moment one of . the most awkward . men on the force. He had tried to shove around Ned, and now they met again, breast bone to breastbone. - "Get out of my way!" yelled Ned. " ''Who you orderln'!" retorted Officer Dowd. . .'..'.,.-:.' "She was a servant of mine," said Moore. - "Did she steal anything?" demanded Dowd. ; "No." . - . ; ,;-;.''; " - "Then " It's none of . my business." And Officer Dowd looked toward the alley with a twinkle dawning In his eye. Marie knew every turn and twist within teu blocks of the Corners. "Go on and speak to the lady." , They went down to tbe alley mouth and looked In. There was a wilder ness of crooked byways and no Marie visible. "Where to, sir?" asked Jerry. "The Widow O'Keefe's!" declared Ned. - ' --. .. (Continued Tomorrow) Notice of Referee's Sale. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of a decree issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Ore gon for the County of Union on the 22nd day of March, 1916, in that cer tain eult therein pending wherein Elizabeth H. Sanford is plaintiff and Leah Sanford is defendant appointing the undersigned referee to make sale 1 m m II RS!:1 Rv A if-;- a PANAMAS Prices Good Only Saturday; of the hereinafter- described lands I mentioned in said decree for the pur ipose of apportioning the same between the plaintiff and defendant and which said decree authorized and directed the undersigned, as such referee, to sell the said lands as by law pro I vided, the undersigned will on the 29th day of April, 1915, at 2 o'clock, p m. at the front door of the. County Court house in La Grande,-" Union County Oregon, sell at public sale to the highest bidder therefor for cash the following described lands men tioned in said decree, to wit r Tho East half of East hair of Northeast quarter and East half of East half of Southeast quarter of section twenty seven, township three. South, of range forty, East of Willamette Meridian in Union County, Oregon. AUGUST HUG, 1 . ; - :. Referee. . JJ. Mar, 31. Apr. 7-14-21-28. . New Way to Make Apple Dumplintis Served With Bard Sauce or Cream . and Sugar .-.-.v-' By Mrt.JanetMcKenxUHiU, Editor of w vusum .uuKing acwoi luagann Here is a new -way to make apple dumplings that will surely please every housewife, for it is not necessary to have whole apples, and the juice cannot run out and born as with apple dump lings where the apple is placed in the center and the dough turned, np around it. The biscuit part forms a crispy, shell that holds the apples and juice. .. . C Apple Dmpllais One and one-half cubs sifted flour; X teaspoonful salt; 3 level teaspoonfuls K C Baking Powder;, X cup shorten' ing; about cup milk; apples. Fill the cups of a buttered muffin pan with pared and sliced apples, sprinkle with salt and turn two or three table spoonfuls of water into each cup. Sift together, three times, the flour, salt and baking powder; work in the shortening, and mix to a soft dough 'with the milk. Drop the dough from a spoon with the apples in the cups, giving it a smooth ex terior. Let bake about twenty-five min utes. Invert the pan on a large serving dish. Put a spoonful of hard sauce above the apple in each dumpling and finish with a grating of nutmeg. ' Thto is only one of the many new, delicto and anpetixins- recipe contained In the K C Cook Book, which may beobtainedmbyaendlnc the colored certificate pocked In every 23-cent can of K C Baking Powder to the Jaqoes If ra. Co.. Chicago. Be lure tn rt th 7Kun .1 mailer can do not contain Cook' Book cer. rap) si NEW TELEPHONE DIRECTORY 1000 pounds of paper will be used in our new directory. . It will hang" on 3000 phones. It is the business and social map of the city. Is your name in it." .. If not, better get in before it is too late. , The directory as an advertising medium cannot be surpassed.' o i, " " Home Independent Telephone Co. $5.00 4.00 6.00 May 1st - Should not Feel Discouraged. So many people troubled with in digestion and constipation have been benefited by taking Chamberlains Tablets that no one should feel dis couraged who has not triven them a trail. They contain no pepsin - or other digestive ferments but strength en the stomach and enable it to per form its functions naturally; Obtain able anywhere. WHY NOT TRY PQPHAM'S ASTHMA nEuEDY Gives Prompt and Pmltlre Belief la Every I CkM. Bold by DriiKglRts. Price 1140, iFO. 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