X Friday, May 30, 1941 SOUTHERN OREGON MINER Paqe^ INSTALLMENT 11 Dusty King and Lew Gordon had built bp a vast string of ranches in the West. King was killed by hi* powerful and un­ scrupulous competitor. Ben Thorpe Bill Roper. King's adopted son. was deter­ mined to avenge his death in spite of • < CHAPTER XV—Continued When Lew Gordon spoke, his voice was so quiet that its very stillness carried threat of imminent destruc­ tion. “Bill Roper sent a man to you?” "I didn't say that. He's a man who was with Bill Roper in the Texas Rustlers' War; he doesn't seem to be in the Montana raids.” "Who was it?" Lew Gordon rum­ bled. "What's his name?" “Shoshone Wilce.” "Wilce! I know that name. I know it well. I'd rope and drag him in a second, if I caught him talking to you!” "This man has talked with Ben Thorpe in Dodge.” Jody told her father. "A lot of strange news is working down to Thorpe from up here in Montana. Some bands of rustlers are slashing up and down Montana throwing lead and leather into the Thorpe outfits under Lash- am; they say he’s badly hurt al­ ready—nobody will know how badly until the winter breaks." Her father waited, his eyes angry “The word from Dodge explains half the trouble that King-Gordon is up against." Jody said. "Thorpe can’t believe that one lone cowboy, deserted by everyone who should have been his friend, could manage to smash his Texas holdings, and go on to cut away his herds in Montana. He thought that we were backing Billy Roper in the Texas Rustlers' War. And he believes that we’re backing him now.” “Well?” Lew Gordon said. "You mean to say you came all this way to tell me that?” "Ben Thorpe means to kill you.” Lew Gordon's face showed no change of expression. But he did not reply at once. "I don’t doubt it,” he said at last; "what would you expect? You bring war into a range and anybody is likely to go down." Jody's face was white. "You know what's at the bottom of all the trouble we’re having,” her father said. “You know as well as I do that two years of nothing but trouble lays square at the door of BiU Roper.” Jody sprang up to face him. “I certainly do not know anything of the kind!" she answered him. Lew Gordon stared at her. "It’s an everlasting shame upon the cow country that Dusty King's killers are still in their saddles. I teU you. BiUy Roper is the only man I've seen with courage enough to—” And now her father angered as she had seldom seen him anger. "You’U teH me nothing!” he roared. "Rop­ er! I'm sick of hearing his name—a dirty outlaw whelp that knows noth­ ing but kiU and burn and raid!” Jody's eyes narrowed and filled with tears. "You may as weU know this,” she told her father. "The day that BiUy Roper dies I want to die too.” For a moment Lew Gordon seemed bewildered; he stared at his daughter as if the devil had come up through the floor. The girl who faced him was entirely strange to him. He heard her say, "If you had stayed by him, as Dusty King would have done, Thorpe would have been whipped and through, long ago.” “Child,” he said queerly, "what are you talking about?” "If you'd only take Billy Roper back into King-Gordon—” "That’ll never happen while I live,” her father said flatly. A silence feU between them, pres­ ently broken by the girl. "He asked me to ride with him once, when he first took the outlaw trail. I wish I had. To the last day I Uve, I'll wish I’d ridden with him then. And now I’ll teU you something more. If ever he asks me again, I'll go." For several moments he stared at her, more shaken than he had been since the death of Dusty King. Then his face congested, and he rose up on his boot heels to tower over the girl. "By God," he said, his voice un­ steady with the repression he put upon it, "that closes the deal! I’ve kept my riders of? him because of Dusty King, and I let him run on and on, rousing up a range war that has close to busted King-Gordon. But when it comes to tampering with you—it’s the end! I’m through, you hear me?” He caught up his battered sombre­ ro, and his spurs rang as he turned toward the door. "Dad, what are you going to do?” “Thorpe has a reward on Bill Rop­ er’s head. King-Gordon is going to double that reward.” He went storming out, his face black and violent with portent of war. For several moments Jody Gor­ don stood motionless where he had left her. Then she turned and went out of the house to the long shed­ like stable. Shoshone Wilce was loitering there In the shadow of the rear wall, an uneasy and restless figure. “Did you find out where Billy Rop­ er can be reached?” Jody demand­ ed. THE STORY SO FAR: the opposition of his sweetheart. Jody Gordon, and her father. Daring raids upon Thorpe's Texas holdings wiped him out of the state. Roper then prepared for a great raid upon the vast herds on Thorpe's Montana ranches Several • « "Yes, mam. I kind of did. I guess; and I got to be getting on there. Miss Gordon. If you'll just give me any message you want me to take. I'd sure like to be pulling out of here, before—” “All right. You be here with two good horses just after dark." "If you could just as leave give me the message now. I’d sure like to—*’ "There is no message. I'm going with you to Bill Roper.” Shoshone Wilce looked like a man entrapped. "I can't do it! Your fa­ ther—I just won’t do it. Miss Gor­ don!" “All right. I'll make the ride by myself.” "Hey, look! You can't—” "Bill Roper isn't going to like this. Wilce.” Shoshone studied her scarchingly, but found nothing to reassure him. It was in his mind that this girl would do exactly as she said. “My "I’d sure like to be pulling out of here before—" life ain’t worth a nickel, either way,” he almost whimpered. “You be here with the horses," Jody said. She turned and went into the house, leaving Shoshone Wilce standing unhappy and uncertain, an­ kle deep in the wet snow. CHAPTER XVI The rounding up of the wild bunch of riders lost Roper a few days; but within the week Bill Roper and Tex Long rode into the plains of the Lit­ tle Dry. Here around a spluttering fire the riders crouched in their sodden blan­ kets, like Indians, while Roper gave out his orders. Thirty-two men and six outlaw leaders were now in the field against Walk Lasham's power­ ful Montana outfits in the Great Raid. Roper’s first move had been to split his renegade riders into five bunches under the leaders that he knew—Tex Long, Lee Hamish, Dave Shannon, Dry Camp Pierce and him­ self. Hat Crick Tommy he sent to Miles City in search of further word from Jody Gordon; Hat Crick would later rejoin Roper as messenger and scout. It was Roper's plan that he and Tex Long, with twelve men between them, should make the most daring raid of all; a raid upon the big herds which Lasham held between the headwaters of Timber Creek and the Little Dry. Of all the ranges in which the wild bunch was inter­ ested, this was the nearest Miles City—the most accessible, the most closely watched, the best protected. How many cattle he could transfer from this range to the starving Ca­ nadian Sioux, Roper did not know; but it was his hope to raise such a conspicuous and stubborn disturb­ ance as would mask the operations of the rest of the wild bunch, and permit Pierce to work unimpeded. “The fourteen of us will split sev­ en ways,” Roper told them now. "I figure Lasham’s look-out camp for this range is about twelve miles southeast We’ll comb every way but that way. I’m not telling you how to gather stock. Hunt ’em like you know how to hunt ’em. Move out one day’s ride, spotting your cow bunches. Next day pick ’em up and work ’em this way. And on the third day throw your gather against a coulee or something where one man can hold ’em, and the oth­ er man of each pair ride back and meet me here. I figure this range is heavy with cattle. I don’t see any reason why two good men can’t thousand Indiana had gathered near the Canadian border to take every beef that was driven across. Shoshone Wllee. one of Roper's men. told Jody that her fa­ ther's life was in danger, so she rode to warn him He was surprised to see her. » • easy throw together three hundred head in a couple of days. That gives us a nice bunch of anyway two thousand. The more the better —but with two thousand we’ll make our drive.” They slept that night under the slowly falling snow. Roper himself made cotTee and routed out his rid­ ers two hours before the first light. They caught their horses in the dark, with hands that fumbled the stiff­ ened ropes; then split off in pairs to comb the range. For two days Roper watched the enemy camp while the snow held on, piling a deeper und deeper mat; then on the third day he returned to the rendezvous as the roundup men began straggling in. Tex Long was the first one back. "This range is plumb solid with stock.” Tex declared. "How many head do you figure me and Kid Johnson scraped up. just us two?” "Well." Roper grunted, "upwards of a dozen—I should hope." "Better’n six hundred head! Lord Almighty. BiU! Figuring they’re worth twenty dollars apiece, and al­ lowing that all the other boys do as good, we're liable to get out of here with around eighty thousand dollars w?rth of cattle! You realize that?" But Roper was thinking of the let­ ter in his pocket; the appeal of a girl who needed him in some unknown way. and who did not even know why he couldn’t come. All the next day they worked to throw the little bunches together into a trail herd. Not all of them had done as weU as Tex Long and Kid Johnson, but most of them had done weU enough. And then, at last, the first herd privateered in the Great Raid began to roll.z A long unstead­ ily moving river of cattle poured northward, a dark welter in the thin­ ning faU of the snow. White-faces mostly, blocky and heavy, well win tered on the prairie hay—Roper counted two thousand six hundred odd! Pressed hard by the heavy force of cowboys, the cattle bawled but humped along northward into the valley of the Prairie Elk. Rounding up within a day's ride of Miles City itself. Roper’s men had taken this herd almost out of the very corrals of Lasham's outposts; | and yet, so far as any of them knew, that swift-moving drive repre­ sented a harder blow than had ever i been struck a cattleman in a single ; raid. In aD their months of effort the winter wild bunch had been un- , able to achieve an equal reprisal upon Lasham, and now they could hardly believe their own success. [ They forced the cattle hard, driv- ■ ing through the clogging snow at a rate incredible to men accustomed to handling market herds. The cattle that broke the way . through the snow kept dropping | back, blown and tired; but as fast as they failed, others were forced for­ ward to take their places. Long­ horned, stag-legged steers of the old j Texas strain fought the riders, I breaking the heavy column repeat­ edly in their wild-eyed thrusts for liberty, and these were allowed to get away. Gaunt, weak cattle lagged back, unable to keep up even under the snapping rope ends of the tail riders; they also were allowed to drop out. promptly forgotten. Yet, in that first day, the side rider» swept in enough north-roaming cat­ tle to more than make up the loss. Roper went with the herd as fai as Circle Horse Creek; but when they had forded the shallows, crash­ ing through the rotten ice, he turned i back. With him he took four men I who he believed would do what he said. The cattle were moving more slowly now, plodding doggedly through the heavy going; Tex Long and the remaining eight men could hold them to their way. What was needed now was work of a different kind, and Roper thought he knew how that was to be done. It was his intention to fight a rear guard action—not only for this first herd, which would be delivered with­ in the week to the Indians who would spirit it away, but for the protec­ tion of all the rest of the wild bunch raiding to westward. But now as he neared the head oi the Little Dry, a rider came drop­ ping down a long slope upon a racing horse. His carbine was held above his ragged sombrero in sign of peace; and as he came near they saw that it was Hat Crick Tommy. Roper jumped his horse out to meet Hat Crick. "What is it? Is there any word? Did she—” Tommy's face was haggard with fatigue. "She’s gone!” he jerked out. “She’s been to Miles City—and now she's gone!” "Gone? Gone where?” "Nobody knows. She’s missing- disappeared—strayed or lost or rus­ tled, I don't know which! Her fa­ ther’s wild crazy, and every K-G outfit in the north is combing the trails—” Roper sat staring for a full hall minute. Then his hands fumbled for his reata, shook out the loop. “Turn that roan pony! I’ve got to have a fresh horse ...” (TO BE CONTINUED) Easy to Make the Fin-On Way. ’A PICNICKING WE WILL GO . . (See Recipes Below) IT’S PICNIC TIME! THIS WEEK'S MENU The soft, sunny days of late May and early June tempt even Uie most conscientious to turn their barks on work, and, since "the only way to get rid of a temptation Is to yield to it,” a picnic is the answer! One reason for the nation-wide popularity of picnics is that they're easy on the lady of the house . . . sliced tomatoes and green onions for salad . . . corn - on - the - cob, if a vegeta­ ble is wanted ("roasting ears" may be cooked in hot coals, allowing 20 minutes to a half hour for the best flavor) . . . taste-tempting cheeseburgers . . . lemonade, milk or coffee, or all three . . . and dessert—it’s as simple as that! No dishes to wash afterward . . . no table linen for the laundry bag ... in fact, it's almost a case of “no work and all play!" For that "something hot” which is a picnic "must." I suggest plump, juicy cheeseburgers. If you're pic­ nicking in the woods, your array of 'burgers probably won't look like the above picture, but they’ll no doubt taste the same. If you are Mitcrtaining the family or guests at a "back yard" supper, you can serve a large tray of cheeseburgers with assorted relishes, shoe-string pota­ toes, and tall glasses of milk or iced tea—they’ll love the combination! •Cheeseburgers With Piquant Sauce. 2 pounds ground beef *6 cup milk 1 teaspoon salt Dash pepper Ys pound American cheese Ye pound butter 8 buttered buns Mix ground beef with milk, salt and pepper. Form 8 patties of meat about 3 inches in diameter. Cut 8 slices of cheese slightly smaller than size of meat patties. Melt butter in skillet and fry patties slowly for about 10 to 15 minutes, turning sev­ eral times during the cooking pe­ riod. Place on buttered toasted buns, spread with piquant sauce and top with a slice of cheese. (If pre­ pared indoors, place under broiler flame until cheese begins to melt). Serves 8. Piquant Sauce. H cup chili sauce Ys cup pickle relish 1 tablespoon prepared mustard, or 1 tablespoon horseradish Mix all ingredients together well. If a more highly seasoned sauce is preferred, a teaspoon of Worcester­ shire sauce may be added. Or you may want to try fried eggs and hamburger, sandwich style. Cook hamburgers, set aside to keep hot. Fry eggs in same skillet, and serve eggs atop the hamburgers. LYNN SAYS: When hamburgers are included in the picnic menu, form the pat­ ties of ground meat, mixed with minced onion and seasoning, be­ fore you leave home. Place be­ tween waxed paper, and they’re ready to cook when the fire is ready. Hash goes upstage when it Is used as a bun filler. Scoop out rolls, (leftover or fresh) butter insides and pile full of savory cooked hash. Brush top with melted butter or gravy and bake 15 minutes in moderate oven. Ideal for out-of-door suppers. To "dress-up” your picnic bill- of-fare, there are colorful oilcloth and/or paper tablecloths and nap­ kins. You can find them designed to carry out nearly any theme you so desire. And, as an added tip, In case you’re planning to spread an oilcloth covering on the ground, attach it to a pair of old curtain rollers. They’ll pre­ vent even the strongest wind from blowing it away! Good news for picnic lovers are the new “lunch” kits. In them you’ll find two one-quart vacuum bottles, plus a metal lunch box. The bottles carry their own cups, nested within their screw tops. The nicest thing, however, is the leg which converts the inside lid into a table. Bonfire Banquet •Cheeseburgers With Piquant Sauce Sliced Tomatoes and Green Onions Raw Carrots Potatoes or Green Corn, Roasted over Hot Coals Cup Cakes, Pie (not juicy, please) or Fruit Coffee or Milk in a Thermos, or Lemonado •Recipe given. lovely that •'Impossible" H OW old sofa becomes when you put n bright new slip cover on ill And you cun easily mukc, your­ self, the smartest of slip covers, see Exact details of cutting and sewing thia slip cover arc described and diagrammed In our 32 page booklet. Also tells how to cover and trim different types of chairs. Tips on fabrics, colors. Send tor your copy to: header home service 11? Minna »L San Fraaelsco, CalU Enclose 10 cents In coin tor your copy of HOW TO MAKE S1JP COVERS. Here are more let’s-have-a-plcnlc suggestions: Cale Slaw. (To Make "On Location”) 3 cups finely shredded cabbage H cup mayonnaise 3 tablespoons french dressing 2 tablespoons thick cream Mix the mayonnaise, french dress­ ing and cream together and mix Into the cabbage just before serving. Add more salt if necessary. Old-Fashioned Potato Salad. 4 cups diced, boiled potatoes 3 hard-cooked eggs, chopped t« cup finely minced sweet pickle 2 to 4 tablespoons minced onion Y* cup pimiento, chopped Salt, pepper and celery salt 1 cup cooked salad dressing 2 tablespoons mayonnaise Mix all ingredients together light- ly. Let stand, chilling, for at least 1 hour. If desired, the onion and po­ tato may be mar­ inated over night In french dress­ ing before being mixed with other Ingredients. Variations: Meats, such as diced tongue, ham or frankfurters may be added to the standard recipe, and seasonings of chives and green pep­ per may be included. Marshmallow-Graham Cracker Dessert Sandwich. For each person, allow milk chocolate candy bar. 2 graham crackers and 2 marshmallows. Toast marshmallows, then place them on the chocolate candy that is on one graham cracker. Put the second graham cracker on top and it Is ready to eat. The marshmallows should be hot and soft. While your picnic group may be addicted to frankfurters In their own sweet, natural style, you might like to try a new trick. Split the large frankfurters down their middles, spread with rich, brown prepared mustard, fill with chopped sweet pickle and turn them over to the “cooking department” to broil. They'll prove over so popular! Here's a good one to cook In a kettle: put in one potato for each person, and cover with water. When potatoes are almost tender, add frankfurters (enough for everybody) and heat thoroughly. With buttered buns, ketchup, and perhaps some fresh fruit for dessert, you have a simple and extremely tasty picnic meal. • • • If it’s ice cream you’re planning for dessert. I'd suggest you use an ice cream freez­ er (little son can do the grinding before “starting” time), or pack re­ frigerator - made ice cream in dry Ice. Here's a rec­ ipe for a favorite that should please everyone. Chocolate Ice Cream. 1 square unsweetened chocolate Y> cup sweetened condensed milk % cup water >/2 teaspoon powdered mace Mt cup whipping cream Melt chocolate in top of double boiler. Add sweetened condensed milk and stir over boiling water for five minutes until mixture thickens. Add water and mix well. Chill thor­ oughly. Add mace. Whip cream to custard-like consistency and fold into chilled mixture. Pour Into freezing pan. Place in freezing unit of refrigerator. After mixture is about half frozen, remove from re­ frigerator. Scrape mixture from sides and bottom of pan. Beat until smooth, but not until melted Smooth out and replace in freezing unit until frozen for serving Serves 6. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) Effect of Study As some insects are said to de­ rive their color from the leaf upon which they food, so do minds of men assume their hue from the studies which they select for it.— Lady Blessington. (FEMALE PAIN) WITH WEAK, CRANKY NERVOUS FEELINGS — You women who suffer pain of Irreg­ ular periods and are nervous, cranky due to monthly functional disturb­ ances should find Lydia K. Pink­ barn's Vegetable Compound limply marvrloui to relieve such annoying symptoms. Plnkham’e Compound Is made especially tor women to help relieve such distressing feelings and thua help them go smiling thru such "difficult da ys. "Over 1.000,000 women hnve reported remarkable benefits. ^WORTIl TRYING 1 Any drugstore.^ WNU—13 22 41 $ $ $ $ 11 $ 11 i i i i t i i We Can All Be EXPERT • In bringing us buying Information, as to prices that are being asked for who! we Intend to buy, and as to the quality wo can expect, the advertising columns of this newspaper perform a worth while service which saves us many dollars a year. • It Is a good habit to form, the habit of consulting the advertisements every time we make a purchase, though we have already decided |ust what wo want and where wo are going to buy It It gives us the most priceless foaling In the worldi the fooling of being adequately prepared. • When wo go Into a store, prepared beforehand with knowledge of what Is offered and at what price, we go as an expert buyer, filled with self-confi­ dence. It Is a pleasant feeling to have, Iho feeling of adequacy. Most of the unhappiness In the world can bo traced to a lack of this feeling. 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