The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969, October 14, 1921, Image 8

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    O
O
«hooting dnya when tide man was
young. So It mine about that when
I hiu's train sto|>t>ei| at Cheyenne, he
found a telegram waiting him:
“ Any relation to I »an F alling o f the
Umpqua divide?"
Dan had never heard o f the Urnp- j
qua divide, hut he couldn't douut hut
By F. A. I V A L K E R
that the sender o f the wire referred
to hla grandfather. He wired In the |
affirmative. The head o f the Chamber
W H A T A M AX KKADS.
o f Commerce received the wire, rend
It, thrust It Into his d e s k , and In the
OMEONE has said that Charles E.
face of a really Important piece o f |
Hughes, tlui secretary of state, did
business proceeded to forget nil nhotit | not read uovels or verse while he was
It. Tims It came about that, except at the university, and that he was so
f o r one thine, I>an Calling would have absorbed In scleuee as to miss all the
probably stepped off the train at his poetry and romance of college life.
destination wholly unheralded and un- 1 T o disprove this statement the li­
met. The one thing that changed hla 1 brarian o f the John Hay library at
destiny was that at a meeting o f a the recent commencement of Hrown
certain widely known fraternal order university showed In u glass case the
the next night, Hie Chamber of C o m ­ very books that Mr. Hughes hud taken
merce crossed trails with the Frontier out. They Included the regular novel-
In the person of another old resident * lata that everybody Is supiwised to
O | cltlc ocean.
who had Ids home in the furthest read, ami such poets us Tennyson and
reaches o f the Umpqua divide. The Longfellow.
Llnkvllle.
SYNOPSIS.
* • »
Time was when Llnkvllle was one latter asked the former to come up !
W arned hy hla p h ysician that he
o f the principal towns of Oregon. Dun for a few days’ shooting— the deer be­
Variety In reading Is Just ns neces­
h i s not m ore than six m o n th ! to
remembered the place because some ing fatter and more numerous than I sary us variety In food.
live. F a llin g alta d espon d en tly on a
of the time-yellowed letters his grand­ any previous season since the days o f
Some good people did not under­
park bench, w on d erin g w here he
father had sent him had been mailed the grizzlies.
should spend th ose six m onths. A
stand this when they objected to nov­
frien d ly squ irrel p ra ctica lly decides
“T o o busy, I’m afraid,” the Cham­ els on principle us frivilous and a
at a town thut bore this name. Hut
the m atter fo r him. I lls blood Is
he couldn't dud Llnkvllle on the map. ber o f Commerce had replied. “ Hut waste of"time.
p ioneer blood , and be d ecid es to
Later he was to know the reason— Lennox— that reminds me. Do you
A celebrated ninn of science of the
end his d a y s In the fo r e sts o f O r e ­
that the town, balf-way between the remember obi Dan Fulling?”
gon. M em orise o f tils g ra n d fa th e r
lutter part of the Nineteenth century
and a d eep love fo r all thing* o f
sage plains and the mountains, had
Lennox probed back Into the years used to And himself losing Interest In
the wild help him In reach in g a
pros|>ered
and
changed
Its
name.
He
for
n single Instant, straightened out his work every now and then. When
decision.
remembered that It was located on all the kinks of his memory In less this took place he would shut lilmself
one of those great fresh water lakes time thnn the wind straightens out up with a great supply o f dime novels
o f southern Oregon - so. giving lip that the folds o f a flag, and turned n most and read nothing else for a week. Then
CHAPTER I—Continued.
search, he began to look for lakes. He Interested face. “ Kenietnher him I” he he would go hack to his laboratory as
— 2—
The squirrel was very close to him, found them In plenty—vast, unmeas­ exclaimed. “ I should say I do.” The fresh as ever.
* * *
and Ihm seemed to know hy Instinct ured lakes thut seemed to he distrib­ middle-aged man half-closed his pierc­
On the other hand, a certain French
that tho movement of a single muscle uted without reason or Reuse over the ing, gray eyes.
Listen, Steele,” he said, “ I saw Dan novelist, whenever he found lilmself
would give him nwny. So he sat as If whole southern end o f the state. Near
ho were posing before a photogra­ the Klamath lakes, seemingly the Fnlllng make n bet once. I was Just In need o f a mental rest used to read
pher’» camera. The fact that ho war most Imposing o f all the fresh-water n kid, but I wake up in my sleep to the Crlmlnnl Code.
Charles Darwin ns he grew’ older
able to do It Is In Itself Important. It lakes that the map revealed, he found marvel at It. We had a full long
Is considerably easier to exercise a city named Klamulh Falls. He put glimpse o f a black-tall hounding up a lost all Interest In poetry, hut found
long slope. It was Just a spike-buck, recreation In novels with good lively
with dumb hell» for live minutes than the name down In Ids notebook.
The map showed a particularly and Dnn Falling said he could take plots that held his attention.
to »it absolutely without motion for
One reason why detective stories nre
the same length of time. Hunters high, far-spreading range o f moun­ the left-hand spike off with one shot
nnd naturalist» acquire the art with tain* due west of the cHy.-'i>/'<yursP Ijaini hla old Sharpe's. Three o f us so popular with nil sorts o f renders Is
training. It was therefore rather cu­ thPy were the Cascades; the mnp said bet him— the whole thing In less than because they ap[>enl to the love of
With the next shot, mystery which Is almost universal.
rious that I »an succeeded so w ell the so very plainly. Then Dan knew lie two seconds.
* * •
first time he tried It. He had sense wju» getting home. Ills grandfather heM get the deer. He won tlie bet,
It hns been said of Poe that he
enough to frlnx llrst, before he froze. liiid lived ami trapped and died In arc! now If I ever forget Dnn Falling,
would hove made a good detective be­
Thus he didn't put such u severe these »nine wooded hills. Finally he I want to die.”
“ You’re Just the man I’m looking cause of his gift for fitting together
located nnd recorded the name o f the
»train on Ills muscles.
The squirrel, after ten seconds had largest city ofj the main "railroad line for, then. You’re not going out till the a criminal mystery. The Idea was
day after tomorrow?”
thnt he would have been nble to take
elapsed, stood on Ids haunches to see that was adjacent to llie Cascades.
“ No.”
The preparation for his departure
crlmlnnl puzzles to pieces ns well ns
better. First he looked a long lime
“ On the limited, hitting here tomors put them together. One side o f his
with his left eye. Then he turned his took many days. He read mnny hooks
head nnd looked very carefully with on flora and fauna. He bought abort­ row morning, there’s a grandson of work kept him Interested In the other.
When a boy Is at school or College
his right. Then he hacked off a short ing equipment. Knowing the usual Dnn Falling. His name Is Dnn Fnll-
distance and tried to gel a focus with ratio between the respective pleasures trig, too, ami he ivnrits to go up to your f,ls rending Is divided Into two sorts
both. Then he came some half-dozen of anticipation and realization, he did place to hunt. Stay all summer and —“ voluntary” and “ Involuntary.” He
not hurry himself at all. And one pay hoard."
steps nearer.
rea ls for pleasure and he rends for
Lennox's eyes said flint lie couldn’t business.
A moment before lie had been cer­ midnight he Imurded a west-hound
believe It wns true. After a while Ills
tain that a living creature— In fact truln.
As nobody’s education Is ever fin­
He snt for a long time In the vesti­ tongue spoke, too. “ (¡nod Lord,” he ished the sume division should mark
one of the most terrible and powerful
living creatures In the world—had bule of the sleeping enr, thinking in said. “ I used to foller Dan around— later life.
* * *
been sitting on the park bench. Now nntlelpaHon o f this Him I adventure o f like old Shng. before he died, followed
Snowbird. Of course he can come.
Ids poor little brain was completely
Mrs. Asquith In her celebrated
But he can't pay board.”
fiddled, lie was entirely ready to be­
“ Autobiography" tells how she be­
It wns rather characteristic of the longed to n Rort of society the mem­
lieve that Ids eyes bail deceived him. \
mountain men—that the grandson of bers o f which agreed to do an hour’s
Bushy-tall drew off a little further, i
Dan Falling couldn’t possibly pay serious rending every day.
fully convinced at Inst that Ids hopes j
hoard. Hut Steele knew the ways of
o f a nut from a child's hnml were
Doctor Johnson said that If n man
cities nnd o f men. nnd he only smiled. rend any subject for an hour dally he
blasted. Hut lie turned to look once I
“ He won't come, then,” he explained. could not help becoming "learned.” Ills
more. The figure still sat utterly In- !
"Anyway, have that out with him at own great difficulty was that lie was
ert. Ami all at once he forgot his de­
the end o f Ids stay. He wants fish­ unsystematic.
vouring hunger In the face of an over-
ing. nnd you’ve got that In the North
whelming curiosity.
By rending certain things for recre­
fork. Moreover, you're a thousand ation ninl at the same time following
He came somewhat nearer and
miles
hack—”
looked a long time. Then he made a |
n eortrse laid down In advance, n per­
"Only one hundred, If you must son gets the nddlthmal benefit o f dis­
half-circle almut the bench, turning j
know. Hut Steele—do you suppose cipline.
his head as lie moved. He was more
he's the man Ids grandfather was be­
puzzled thnn ever, hut he was no !
In the Eighteenth century they
fore him —that all the Fallings have thought nothing of rending through
longer afraid. Ills curiosity had he- .
been since the first days of the Ore­ Ilomer, Virgil nnd Shnkespenre once
come so Intense Hint no room for fear |
gon trail? If he Is— well, my hat's n year. No wonder they were able to
was left. And then he sprang upon j
off to ldm before he steps off the think In those days.
the park bench.
train."
( C o p y r t s h t . )
Ihin moved then. The movement
The mountaineer's bronzed fare was
consisted of a sudden heightening o f |
earnest and Intent In the bright lights j |J 1111111111111111II llll IIII llllllllII IIIIIIIIIIIHJf
the light In Ids eyes. Hut the squir­
o f the club. Steele thought he had
rel didn't see It. It takes n muscular
known his breed. Now he began to | THE GIRL ON THE JOB |
response to be visible to the eyes of
have doubts of his own knowledge. S
How to Succeed—How to Get
E
the wild things.
Ahead—How to Make Good
E
“ He won’t he; don't count on It,” he —
The squirrel crept slowly along the
I said humbly. “ The Fallings have done
bench, stopping to sniff, stopping to
| much for lids region, nnd I'm glad | B y J E S S I E R O B E R T S I
stare with one eye nnd another. Just
enough to do n little to pay It hack, siiimiiimimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin
devoured from head to tall w ith curi­
hut don't count much on this eastern
osity. And then he leaped on I bin's
hoy. lie's lived In rltlos; besides, he's j T It A I N 1 X (* S A I . I :s W O M i :X
kiit-e.
a sick man. lie said so In Ids wire. |
He was quite convinced, hy ndw.
You ought to know It before you take
Hint this warm perch on which he
I small village In New England. I hnd
him In.”
stood was the most singular and in­
some chintz to get, and she was a real
The
bronzed
face
changed;
possibly
teresting object o f Ids young life. It H e C o u l d n ’t F i n d L i n k v i l l e on the M a p
a shadow o f disappointment came In­ help In finding something, though the
was true that he was faintly worried
stock was necessarily limited. Hut she
by the smell that reached his nostrils. his life. He was rather tremulous nnd to Ids eyes. “ A lunger, eh?" Lennox had taste, and n sense o f color, and
repeated.
“
Yes—
It's
true
thnt
If
he'd
But all It really did was further to In­ exultant ns he sunk down Into Ids
been like the other Fallings, he'd never she was Interested.
cite his curiosity. He followed the berth.
I found that she had graduated that
have been thnt. Why, Steele, jou
leg up to the hip and then perched on
He saw to It tliat at least a meas­ couldn’t have given that obi man a year from high school, and gone Into
the elbow. And an Instant more he ure o f preparation was made for his
the store to earn money during the
was {hiking a cold nose Into Dan’s coming. That night a long wire went cold If you'd tied him In the Hogue summer, and that she meant to go to
river overnight. Of course you couldn't
neck.
out to the Chamber o f Commerce o f count on the line keeping up forever. the city nnd try for the position of
But If the squirrel was excited by j one o f the larger southern Oregon
Hut I'll take him, for the memory of saleswoman In one o f the large depart­
developments. Its amazement cities. In It, he told the date o f his
nil 0
ment stores. She asked me what I
Ids grandfnther.”
w as n hing comparisi to I inn’s. It arrival and asked certain directional
thought of her chances.
“
You're
not
afraid
to?"
had 1>een the most astounding tnel- i He wanted to kn
Hie name o f seine
I advised her to go to the highest-
“ Afraid, h—1! lie can't Infi-ct those
»lent In the man’s life, lie i«at still. 1 mountain ranche
two strapping children o f mine. Snow- class store o f the kind she wished to
t ngl'i!)£ Willt rblight. And In a single might find board
blrd weighs one hundred and twenty work for.
il i 1 ration he knew he had mnlnder of the summer
i >
flash of InsT
i
a ml the fall,
"Take a lot o f pains with your ap­
people at i H t lie 1 The further bue k from the paths of pounds and Is hard ns steel. Never pearance. Remember that you are not
among h
knew
a
sick
day
In
her
life.
And
you
iO
woUId
knew where
spend Ms last I men, he wrote. the
t
greater would be
only npplytng for the Job that Is now
»lx m
1 his pleasure. At I he signed the wire know Bill, o f course."
open to you, when you nre Ignorant
Ills Oly
remlfnt lier had been a witti his full nnti e : Dan Fulling, with
and untrained, hut for the Job In the
haute r n ml trupper and front'Irrsmnn ; a Henry In the n Idille, and it "H I" at
future when you have got your train­
D
i
s
a
p
p
o
i
n
t
m
e
n
t
t
u
r
n
e
d
in
to
In 1 r'erta In V11ist hut little kno wn 1 >re
the end.
ing and when y->u know your possibili­
r a p t u r e at aight o f the wild
Roll f, »rest. 11li *«>n had moved to the
He ti«unlly dW f t sign Ills name In
ties."
c
o
u
n
t
r
y
a
n
d
t
h
r
o
u
g
h
w
a
r
m
In
Dnn'«
east«Mn citi . hut
1 garret quite this man ler. The people of
There are splendid opportunities for
w elcom e
a c c o r d e d b y Silas
ho oh 1 me ment oos and Gltrheapotla did not have particular-
there
saleswomen nowadays. It Is one of
L
e
n
n
o
x
,
D
e
n
F
a
ili
n
g
's
h
ost,
vage day«►
curios 1 from th
—a few , ly vlvbl memori« « o f Dan’s gramlfa-
the big professions now open to wom­
c h a r a c t e r i z e th e n e x t i m t e l l -
claws and f*vt h, and a frngtnent o f nn ther. But It ml bt be that a legend
en.
But It Is a difficult one, with
m
e
n
!
o
f
this
s
t
o
r
y
.
M had
d diary. The call
bail Conte to him . o f the gray, stralglit frontiersman who
much competition nnd nn almost rnd-
at la st T enden ot the :h he w a s , i was his ancestor had still survived In I
j less amount o f training. It requires
I ■ r. would g» hi k to t >se fo r i-s ts . the».» remote Oregon wilds. The use
tT O UK U P N T IN F I l D .)
| hard w .rk and natural aptitude. I
Inst six tn< itlis of life j o f the full name would do no harm,
to spend h
think the girl I met that day Is going
lid creature that made i Instead o f hurting. It
ong the
Porpoise ■ Fast Swimmer.
a Positive
to succeed. She hod the right Idea and
them tl ielr home.
1 Inspl1 ration. Tl e Chamber o f c oin*
Tliere is another mammal that Is so the lor»* for It. too. B\t don't th'n’;.
-------
I men e o f the hu«y little Oregon d ty fast no one has ever I«-©» able to find when you hear of the big salaries and
CHAPTER h .
! wns not usuali y exceptionally Int«*r- out how fast be Is. This Is the por-
I
fu i o;■ i«> rtu totb -s In th a t p ro -
—
j est«v1 In strav 1
• ' - thnt want«-«1 fi I dse. The p-'i: -e cun d«> stunts la fesslon, that you can get thi^e without
The dinner hoiir fou nd Dnn Fading ! hourding id io e
*
Its front o f the fn-r. «t le nt that travel« «leservtng them
»Copyright.)
In the public lib rary iaf Glich eapulls. ! bustirie«* was f ruling country li.ittica the bounding wave and when he la (
nd the ! for -ntvhardlsts In the pleasant r ivi'r through after several hours «.f clown-
— ----- O ■ —
asking the girl who
' è
A Sarcasm .
desk If be might look i• t maps of Ore- ! vail« y a. Hut It happened that the iv- Ing he flirt« his tail and nonchalantly
"Ton must admit that your polltl?*
g«»n. II# rvnienilXT0<1 that hla grand- dpi«*tit o f the « 1re was one o f the old- «I*ee.!a beyond the !• Tir ol. The j.»r-
father had lived In southern Oregon. c»t resident«, s frontiersman himself, poise will do Ms trlvks under the how , antagonist u«es g.md English.”
" l ie ought to." replied Senator Sor-
H e I.x>ked along the bott ti .if his mar nnd It wn* one o f the tradition« of the o f a nine knot cargo tramp or a ‘.'2-
1 I e Is
the ghnm. ’’HI« Idea» are so slight that
and discovered a whole empire, rang
Old West that friendships weie not knot ocean grevt
tng from gigantic sage plains to the soon forgotten.
I*an Falling I had antelope In that he sets hts pace ac- he doesn't have to think about any-
1 thing but the grammar."
been a legend In the old trapping and vordlng to the s{ ■ ed of*the pursue!.
©sat to dense forests along th.» I’s
Som ething to
T hink A b o u t
J
_
S
SCHOOL DAYS
^//1 ^
JA-)
. b e i-
Ab«, wwaqwilo«* ir *
•
THE ROMANCE OF WORDS
JACK.
x i rH IL E this name Is, of
W
course, the diminutive of
John—or, rather, the Anglicised
form o f the French Jacques—
It appears In English In a num­
ber o f ways which apparently
lmve no connectl .011 with the
name. Among these may he men­
tioned boot-jack, lack-knife, lum­
ber-jack, black-jack, Union-Jack
and Juek-tnr.
The reason for this usage Is
because tbe proper name or
nickname, “ Jack,” has for many
years past been applied In Eng­
land to servants or luborers as
a class.
Jack Is a handy nnd
easy name for a waiter or a
caddy, or a groom, much ns ninny
Americans apply
the
name
George to any negro porter. For
this reason, many uppl lances
which nre subject to rough usage
or which perform the tasks of
a laborer are known by the
prefix "Jack," with a noun which
designates the use to which they
nre put. The expression "Jack
of all trades" la another ex­
emplification of the same usage,
while the »uhstltutlon o f the
name "Jack” for the “ knave” In
a pack o f cards Is an Indication
o f the hard usage which Hds gen­
tleman undergoes nt the bunds
of the queen, king nnd ace.
(C o p y rig h t.)
k W w w w
----- o ---------
T ill* la a difficult w o rld Indeed
A n d p eop le a re hard to suit.
T h e m an th at p la y s the vtolln
1* a bore to the m an w ith a llute.
F A V O R IT E
D IS H E S .
t w HEN It comes to cooking for tho
V V family, the housemother does
Indeed have a hard time to suit all
members, If they are not normal lu
their apjietltes.
A p p l e a n d B a n a n a S a la d .
Scoop out apple balls, cover with
lemon juice, nnd prepare banana balls,
using a small French potato cutter.
Heap on head lettuce, sprinkle with
paprika and serve with n highly sea­
soned French dressing or a rich may­
onnaise.
H o n e y M ousae.
Heat one cupful o f well-flavored
honey. Rent four eggs slightly nnd
pour the hot honey over them. Cook
until »mooth and thick ; when cooked
add a pint o f cream, whipped. I*ut the
mixture Into n mold, pack In salt nnd
Ico and let stand three or four hours.
T om atoes W it h Ham.
Cut
medium-sized
tomatoes
In
halves, dip in seasoned flour and fry
brown on both sides. Fry In unother
frying pun as many small round slices
o f hum as there are halves of toma­
toes. Droll the ham until crisp. Place
a slice o f ham on the tomato and pour
over the hum gravy. Serve sprinkled
with chopped parsley.
C a r r o t s a la Poulette.
LYRICS OF LIFE
By DOUGLAS MALLOCH
THE
EASY
CURE.
a little hurt today,
\ rOU I had
know It by your face,
A hurt you hoped to hide away.
And yet It left a trace.
Yon tried to weur the usual smile,
Yet futllely you tried—
Thnt little trouble all tbe while
Was hurting you Inside.
My, my. I wish thnt money, too,
Would earn the Interest
That ordinary troubles do
We carry In our brenst!
Inside ourselves deposited
They grow and grow and grow,
Hut not In gold—a load o f lead
Is all we ever know.
Now, I've a simple little plan
I've used with little Ills,
I’ m glad to tell to any ninn
Who's blue around the gills«
Just ask yourself: “ This little ache.
This trouble, anyhow,
Just how much difference will It make
A year or so from now?"
What was It thnt you used to want?
What was It made you sore?—
Your woes a year ago you can t
Remember any morel
The thought o f troubles you forgot
Will cut the new In half;
And then. I bet, as like as not
You « i ll not smile— hut laugh!
(C o p y rig h t.)
--------- O---------
THE Ctmn .1 CHETO
? 0 rxvw n y "‘K i n d y
queer
- ' r e
I tk in U
Upon tUia runny et-rtk
Vken I consider *ki<3k
k e e le d
skoea
I ju »5 t c o u l d
m ir tk
a k r ie U _ y itk
Wash and scrn|>e eight medium-sized
carrots. Cut them Into thin slices,
cook lu ti small amount of salted
boiling water with one thinly sliced
onion; season with pepper.
When
tender add two tahlespoonfuls of but­
ter mixed with flour, stirring constant­
ly, and Just before serving stir In the
well-beaten yolks of two eggs. Serve
as soon as the eggs are cooked.
Strin g
Beans
W ith
Beurre
N olr.
Prepare n quart o f beans cut Into
Inch pieces. Cook in boiling salted
water; drain nnd place on a hot dish.
Pour over the following sauce; Melt
one-fourth o f n cupful of butter until
a delicate hrown, add four tablespoon­
fuls o f vinegar; when hot pour over
the beans and serve at once. Salt pork
cut In small dice anil fried until brown
may be used In |>laee o f butter for this
dish. Pour the fat, with the bits ot
browned pork over the beans.
C h i c k e n J e ll y Sa la d .
Soften one-half cupful of gelatin In
three tahlespoonfuls of cold water.
Add one cupful o f chicken broth, salt,
pepper, onion Juice and celery snlt to
taste. T o one cupful each of cooked
chicken nnd celery arranged In layers
add the gelatin nnd also slices of
hard-cooked egg. Let harden slightly
and add another layer until nil Is
used. Chill and when firm nnmold
and serve with mayonnaise dressing
on lettuce.
This may he raotded In Individual
molds, making a most attractive snJad.
Delm onico
Peach
P u d d in g .
Turn a pint can o f peaches Info a
pudding dish. Scald two cupfuls o f
milk In a double holler. Mix t«-o and
one-half tahlespoonfuls of cornstarch
with three tahlespoonfuls of sugar
anil one-half teaapooaful of salt. Stir
Info the hot m ilk; cook, stirring until
•
conk for fifteen mlnntes. Heat th >
f two egg»
id a tiW ’
f‘
' a - r nd «tlr t*nf tb^ hot
mixture. Whpu the egg 1» set |
over the peaches. Beat the white« >f
the eggs very light, add four table-
spoonfuls o f sugar, spread over the
pudding. Dredge with a ten»pi»onful
of sugar and hake In a tm-derate oven
to cook the rm>r’ ngue. Serve hot or
cold.
i*a.
Unie
^•tem
M
N«ws;ai3#
«t
c