Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, June 20, 1941, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Friday, June 20, 1941
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Paqe 6
^eSMOKyy^Tj
bv~ÀLAN Lt MAY
1
Easy Home Short hand Course
4
INSTALLMENT 14
Dusty King and Lew Cordon had built
tip a vast string of ranches. King was
killed by his powerful and unscrupulous
competitor. Ben Thorpe.
Bill Roper.
King's adopted son. was determined to
avenge his death tn spite of the opposi-
THE STORY SO FAR:
Wile» to find him
They were attacked
lion of his sweetheart. Jody Gordon,
•nd her father. After wiping Thorpe
by some ot Thorpe's men hiding In Rop-
er a shack. Wilce escaped, but Jody
out of Texas. Roper conducted a great
was captured. Roper was approaching
raid upon Thorpe's vast herds in Mon­
one ot his own shacks when he no­
tana.
Unable to reconcile her father
ticed outposts keeping a caretui watch
with Roper. Jody set out with Shoshone
i •
• a e
main unskilled nt a disadvantage
in Job seeking. And if you long to
t liter some fascinating field fash­
ion, buying, advertising remem­
ber, shorthund usually opens the
door. It is fun to practice it.
* -c
J Hl.Phillipr p
THE NEW BUNKER IHI.IS
• a a
Fit yourself for well paid worltl Our IS-
pass shorthand manual gives IS easy
step-by-step lessons, dozens of short
forms, tips on acquiring professional
speed. Send for your copy to:
("W e muil 6» realhtic about ibul
MWrd 'attack.' Il can begin anywhere
in the u eilern hemn/ihere. If you ucul
to shoot until you see the uhilei «»/
lheir e»es at at Hunker Hill sou will
never hnote uhat hit you."— I*re»i<lenl
Kootevvlt.1
CHAPTER XIX—Continued
| listen to her and they had a row. ing the time. Yet he knew very
To Roper's right surprisingly So then the only tiling she could I definitely that dawn was Just two
Bunker Hill may be in Iceland—
close, a rifle spoke, once only. Roper think of was to come to you. She’s i hours away.
Boston may be far at sea,
could neither see the man who had got some notion of trying to get you 1
He shook Shoshone Wilce. The lit­ Concord Bridge may be a structure
fired nor guess his target He waited and her old man together again.” tle man groaned once, then came
Beyond visibility;
five minutes, gun ready, then stood '
“A fine chance!”
full awake with the sudden response Distance in this war la shrinking
up and moved his pony down-slope i
“That's what I told her. But ; of an animal.
And it quite disturbs our sleep
into a shallow draw in which it was she—”
Without the snow the rock-like im- To regard the North Church belfry
hidden by the brush. Moving cau- |
“Why in God's name,” Roper ' penetrability of the overcast sky
As upon the briny deep.
tiouslv, he proceeded north along
flared at him again, “didn't you go 1 would have made the night utterly
the cut seeking the position of the
after help?”
black, but the ghostly pallor of the
II
man who had fired.
“I figured I'd get strung up for snow had the effect of faintly modi­ Paul Revere once watched for lan-
Through the hillside brush a figure
fying the darkness. The eye might
terns
moved, crouching so low that his sure." Shoshone said flatly, “if I
possibly have made out a moving
From
a
farnous Chnrlcstown
dark shape resembled a bear. Aft­ went and told Gordon what I’d done.
dark shape at ten yards; beyond
shore—
er a moment Bill Roper was able to I wanted to come for you. but nat-
that there was nothing but a muf­ But he now needs long-range glasses
make out that the approaching man urally I didn't know whcre you’d
went The only thing I could figure fling blackness.
That will take in Labrador;
carried a light carbine.
"You lead out.” Roper said. His He must watch a lot of steeples
The man with the carbine moved out I better try to ghost around
On some Arctic stretch of land
swiftly down the hillside, sliding on these hills and maybe whittle 'em voice was instinctively hushed, even
at this distance from the enemy. And must look tor signals flashing
the hard crust of the snow, but sur­ down to my size."
“You say there are seven men in "You’ve had more chance to study
From some Indian coral strand.
prisingly silent in the brush.
The watched man dropped into the the cabin,” Roper asked at last; the lay than me."
Ill
ravine, angling toward the bend “two wounded?”
Shoshone Wilce delayed. “Bill,” he
Shoshone nodded. "They ain’t all said, "I lay thinking about this time Now "the muffied oars" must cover
where Roper stood.
Bill Roper
pulled himself out of the gully. He in the cabin all of the time. Seems for a long time, after you was
Lots of distance, wild and rough.
was crouched in dense brush, gun in like they must have had the girl tell asleep."
A dogged stubbornness And the epic Charlestown rowboat
hand, as the scout appeared below 'em that she come here to meet came into his tone. “I figure we
Must do ocean-going stuff;
him.
you.
Naturally they’d think you can probably take the cabin. And if Paul was once a local rider—
Roper stood up.
"Steady,” he knew she was coming. Most likely we take the cabin without fighting
And we owe a lot to him.
said.
they figure that if I ain't dead I’m we’ve got a chance to get away But But he now must get around more—
The man in the draw jumped as carrying you word that will bring if so much as one shot is fired—Bill,
And must teach his horse to swim!
if he had been struck; but as ht you here a-kiting. So they're hold­ the outposts will close like a b'ar
raised his hands he straightened SO ing her there now until they see if trap. I don't see no way we can
IV
that Roper saw his face.
they can't get you. I ain’t watched ever get clear.”
Now he stands beside his saddle
His captive was Shoshone Wilce.
By the sudden frozen silence, Sho-
And he wonders what to do
“By God.” said Shoshone. “I was
shone Wilce was able to sense Bill As he keeps an eye on Dakar
never so glad to see anybody in my
Roper's anger.
Trinidad and Suez, too;
life!”
“I wish to God,” Bill Roper said As he watches for new doings
Roper’s voice bit like frosty ice.
With that classic "eagle search."
at last "I had Hat Crick Tommy
“You know where she is?”
j here, or Tex Long; or even the very He may catch a warning glimmer
"Yeah.” said Shoshone. “Yeah, I
From a Madagascar church.
! greenest kid cowboy that's riding
know where she is.”
[ the range with them, somewhere to-
Roper dropped into the gully to
V
| night. I need one other man for this
snarl close into Shoshone’s face. “Is
j job. It wouldn’t take an especially Mystic once was in New England,
she alive? Is she all right?”
i brave man, or smart man, nor a
But who thinks it there today?
"Oh, yeah, sure,” Wilce assured
i real good gunfighter. I just need Medford cocks now crow in Iceland
him. “She’s alive, all right Don’t
one fairly good man. But I haven't
Or perhaps in Baffin Bay;
seem like she's hurt any. I—”
| even got that!”
It was one o'clock, they tell us.
"Don't seem like?” Roper repeat­
When Paul got to Lexington . .
“Bill, I only claim—look. Bill: I
ed. “Damn your hide, where is
But the journey was a land trip—
ain’t afraid of 'em. I only—”
she?”
And was not an ocean run.
“Bill, seems like them buzzards
“You ain’t afraid.” Bill Roper re­
have her down there at that cabin,
peated; "no—not much. But when
VI
and won’t leave her loose.
the guns spoke, you left a girl down
It
was
two
o
’
clock
at Concord-
“Who won’t?”
under her horse in the snow—maybe
Then a Massachusetts place—
“Bill. I don’t know who.’
hurt, maybe dead—and you ran for
Not a village in the Azores
"Well, how the devil did she get
your life.”
Or a borough near Cape Race;
there?”
When Bill Roper had said that,
Paul heard
"Me," Shoshone said. He met Rop­
both were utterly still, while a man Then the flocks that
bleating
er’s eye bleakly. Obviously, he knew
might have counted a hundred.
Were all flocks quite close at band
that he was in trouble here,
Shoshone's voice was flat and dead. Never flocks in far-off Narvik
brought her."
“Is that the way it looks to you?”
Or some spot off Newfoundland.
"Why in all-”
"Look at it yourself."
“She would have come anyway.
“Then,” Shoshone said, “I guess
VII
Bill. She was dead set on locating
there ain’t anything more to say.” Middlesex was then non-shifting.
you. She didn't have nobody else to
He stood up.
ride with her. I figured you'd soon­
Not transferable each week;
“They’re taking an awful
"There's this to say,” Bill Roper It was not in mldatlantic
er Td try to bring her direct to
chance,” Roper said.
said. "You’re going to work with
you, so somebody would be with
And 'twas not in Martinique!
her, than have her wandering loose those fellers for fifteen years with- me tonight because I haven't got Distance isn't what it once was—
anybody else. You’re going to do
around the country by herself, . A out knowing how they work.”
Now our shores, so we hear.
‘ exactly what I say. and when I say, Can be somewhere close to China.
bartender in Miles told me you
"They’re taking an awful chance,” without any back talk or question.
were here, and we rode here, And
Crete, Suez or Finlstere.
Roper said, iron death in his eye. I You make one slip tonight and the
then—and then—”
"If I rode in here, warned, with West won't hold you, nor the world
"Well, then—what?"
L' ENVOI
my wild bunch—”
won't hold you, and you’ll answer to
“As I come into the valley," Sho-
So to wait to "see the whites of“
"It ain’t such a bad chance they’re me in the end. You hear me?”
shone said, “seemed to me like
Hostile eyes brands you a dope—
taking,”
Shoshone
contradicted.
“Okay,” Shoshone said in the Unless you are tensely squinting
something was wrong. But I couldn’t
“Night and day their outposts are
same flat, dead voice.
make out what We come up to the
Through a big Lick telescope;
out Two men can check the whole
cabin careful and slow, in the dark.
"One thing more,” Roper said. So we give Revere the curtain
country daytimes, so they can see
But they seen us coming and they
As a far out-dated lad
you coming twenty miles. You only "If we make a quiet job, we’U try
laid for us, I guess. Before we
And
we shoot his horse quite
to
go
out
slow
and
quiet
the
three
got here because you come up
knew what had busted, they gunned
blithely—
through the timber to the south, on of us together. Otherwise, you take
her pony down, and they drilled
But it leaves us pretty sad!
the trail from Miles—the last way Jody’s lead rope and ride like heli.
mine twice so bad that I bad to turn
• • •
Six
miles
below
here,
near
the
creek,
they’d figure you’d come. Nights
him loose. Most likely he's dead
The trouble is that too many
there are more men on lookout than there’s a kind of a brush corral.
by now. I—” Shoshone hesitated.
that, near as I can make out and You and the girl will wait for me Americans think of an unlimited
“And you run out and left her,”
their lookout is strongest just be­ there. Wait for me until daylight emergency as meaning tire trouble
Bill filled in for him.
during a week-end auto trip, a slight
fore dawn—I suppose Iron Dog begins to come; then go on.”
“Bill, I swear. I wouldn’t have
They moved down into the valley traffic congestion on the way to the
taught ’em that trick in the old days,
done nothing like that, not for no
always striking just before daylight, of the Fork, walking fast. When they bathing beach or a shortage of auto
amount. Thing was, they was all
and now they can’t get it out of had dropped into the bed of Fork parking space for the hired hands.
around me; I couldn't see where to
• • •
their heads. Night and day they got Creek itself they moved northward,
shoot or who they was. I figured
ponies saddled. If ever they spot­ following its windings, for what
A
blackout
may
be tried in New
first it was your own boys, mak­
ted your wild bunch riding in, they’d seemed a long way; but no sign of York soon. It is going to be a terri­
ing a mistake, and after I seen it
approaching dawn yet showed, and ble order for the average New York­
be almighty hard to catch.”
wasn’t, I just figured to keep in a
“If only,” Roper said, "the wild Roper felt that they had plenty of er to have to find the delicatessen
fighting position, you might say, and
bunch was going to ride in! But it time. As they at last passed the and drug store in the dark.
close in first chance. Only—"
point where the cabin stood, invisi-
isn
’t”
“Only you never saw any chance,”
“Maybe there's some way we ble in the dark, Shoshone indicated
The Nazis have perfected the art
Roper said with contempt.
its location with raised arm; but of jumping out of planes, but the
"Well, no; there’s seven of ’em could fake it, so they'd give up and
they moved on fifty yards farther, so time will come when they will have
down there. Bill, and they keep an clear out I figure they'd leave the
that they might approach the cabin to solve the problem of Jumping
awful steady watch. And I been girl behind if ever they set out to from the north.
back.
scouting ’em steady ever since. run.”
Cautiously now, Shoshone climbed
"I’m going down and smoke ’em
Sometimes I get in a long shot at
the bank, silent as the Indians with CANDIDATES FOR THE FIRING
one or another of ’em. This car­ out,” Roper said through his teeth.
whom he had spent his youth. Turn­
SQUAD
bine don’t carry so very good, but "Pm going to smoke ’em out before ing, he gripped Bill Roper’s arm. j
I plugged two of ’em; don't know the sun ever comes up again, and
I’m very sick of lots of things,
His words were whispered close to |
you’re going to help me.”
how bad.”
But of nothing more today
Shoshone nodded. “If we tackled Roper’s ear.
“How do you know she wasn’t
Than golf stars striding four abreast
"One of the night guards is out
To the camera man’s "Okay!"
shot or hurt when her horse went ’em just before daylight, when the
about five hundred
• • •
down?” Roper demanded. “By God, outpost is strong and the cabin is that-a-way,
yards.” he whispered; “about in line ’
Shoshone, if you let anything hap­ weak—”
What America needs more than
with
where
you
see
that
big
dead
!
They talked it over for a long
pen to that girl—”
anything else is a good flve-cent
"They let her walk outside some­ time. In the hidden gulch where pine.”
dime.
Roper could see no dead pine. It
• • •
times during the day,” Shoshone Shoshone had been holing up they
said. “That's how I seen she's all made coffee and cooked meat, and annoyed him that Shoshone’s eyes
Elmer Twitchell can’t help won­
were better than his own—as good
completed their plans.
right.”
dering how long it is going to take
“We can get in,” was Shoshone’s as the eyes of an Indian, or a lynx. ( radio advertisers to realize that
"Can you make out who the bunch
verdict
at
last.
"We
can
get in, and
“I’ll leave my carbine standing nothing loses them more customers
down there is?”
“I figure they’re some Thorpe gun we can take the cabin. But God just outside the door,” Shoshone than having the war commentators
squad, out after your scalp. I figure knows how we’re ever going to get said. “I only want it for later, after abruptly turn from the latest crisis
we’ve took to the horses.”
they was laying to gun you. And out.”
into a spiel on hair tonics, shoe pol
’Tve got a plan for that,” Roper
now that they got the girl, I figure
“That’s all right,” Roper said. ishes and spinach dressings.
that they aim to hold her for bait, said.
“But you remember this: If there’s
• * •
He wouldn’t tell Shoshone what It any trouble in the cabin, you stand
kind of.”
’DELAYED IN TRANSIT’
Shoshone fell silent, and Roper, was.
and fight! Because if you don’t. I’ll
Whenever I zoom up an elevator,
deep in thought, let him rest
turn and plug you myself, if it takes
I get there first—my stomach later!
my last shot to do it.”
CHAPTER XX
“You’re most likely right,” Roper
—Lee A. Cavalier.
said morosely at last. “There’s four
“Okay.”
• • •
There were no stars when Roper
ar five of these Thorpe war parties
Roper went ahead now, walking
The North Carolina, Just launched,
out after me; and this could easy be roused himself in his blankets, and boldly across the snow. Better, he is the first battleship built by this
one. But of all the infernal luck I he had no mechanical means of tell- thought, to simulate the casual ap­ country in 18 years. And yet Uncle
ever saw—What did Jody want with
proach of friends than to depend Sam would resent it if called a dope.
THIS it A
me? Did she tell you?”
upon a hope of complete surprise.
a s a
"Thorpe has made up his mind
As he raised his hand to the door
’’In-Laws and Canned Dinners
to kill her old man,” Shoshone said.
a strange thrill of dread momen­ Cause High Divorce Rate, Says
“I went and told her, because I
tarily stirred him at the thought that Judge.”—Headline. Bunk. Judges
thought you’d want her to know, ao
Jody Gordon was inside — with are the cause of the high divorce
aha could maybe look out for him
whom?
rate.
some. But the old man wouldn’t
MAK Of fINE fICTlON
(TO BE CONTINUED)
KKAIIEK NOMK SKRVICB
117 Minna St.
San Francisco, Calif.
Enclose 10 cents in coin for your
copy of SELF INSTRUCTION IN
SHORTHAND.
IAREAMING of a good secreta-
' rial job and doing something
about it!
As shorthand may ao easily ba
leaim d at home, no girl need re­
Age of Plants, Animals
I'liNoiight thoughts
The thoughts that come often
unsought, and, as it were, drop
into tiie mind, are commonly the
most valuable of any we have, and
therefore should be secured, be­
cause they seldom return aguin.—
Locke.
Plants exceed animals in the
length of their lives and, surpris­
ingly enough, in the shortness of
their lives also. Parrots belong to
the century group; elephants may
attain an age of two centuries. A
good record for the animals, but
on the plant side we have the Cali­
fornia Sequoia trees living for 50
centuries.
At the other extreme are some
Driven by Thought
bacteria which have a life cycle
A spur in the head is worth two
of only 20 minutes, shorter than
in the heels.
any animal's life.
A
SHE KNOWS...
• Ho* cookies escape from the cookie
Jsr . . . and biscuits disappear when
Clabber Girl is used . . . You pay leas
but use no more.
CLABBER
GIRL
• ‘Baking Powder •
Poetry a Demi-God
No Need of Whip
The basis ot poetry is language,
which is material only on one side.
It is a demi god.—Emerson.
Flattery is the bridle and sad­
dle with which you may drive th*
vain man.
Short World
I Is not long. The created world
Think not thy time is short in I is but a smnll parenthesis in eter-
this world, since the world itself | nity.—Sir Thomas Browne.
I SMOKE CAMELS.
THEY'RE EASY ON
MY THROAT,
f
►
EXTRA MILD.
►
E
AND THE FLAVOR.
IS SWELL
OOLF CHAMPION
BEN HOGAN
28% LESS NICOTINE
«O .n-e^naenc
Of them-accorai»» w
...
scientific testa of the smoke itse /
ft A U r I
UH IVI L L
THE CIGARETTE OF
«0BTUEB TOBACCOS
<