r Tues'day, February 6, 1923 THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON PAGE THREE ' TheJOY of LIVING SIDNEY GOWING IllmtnuiocM by Ellsworth Young Copyright 19M ty Sidney Cowing (Continued from last week) SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I.-Dlsliking the prospect of a month's visit to her austere aunt, Lady Krythea Lambe, at Jervaulx abbey, and lier cousin, Alexander Lambe, Almee, vi vacious daughter of the Very Reverend Viscount Scroope, Is In a rebellious mood. CHAPTER Il.-She wanders Into the park, there encountering a strange youth in trouble with a motorcycle. He laugh ingly Introduces himself as "Billy," Amer ican. The two cement the acquaintance ty a ride on the motorcycle, the, "Flying Sphinx," and part. With Georgina Ber bers, her cousin, Almee sets out for Jer vaulx. On the way she decides that Geor gina shall impersonate her at Jervaulx, while she goes on a holiday. Georgina's horrified protest is unavailing. CHAPTER III. Happy in her new free dom, Almee again meets "Billy." He tells l,er his name is Spencer, and she gives hers as Amy Snooks, at presest "out of a Job." Billy offers to take her into part nership in selling the Sphinx. In a spirit of madcap adventure, she accepts. The two proceed to the town of Stanhoe, tak ing separate lodgings in Ivy cottage. CHAPTER IV. That night Almee visits Georgina and learns that the deception has not been discovered. By her dominant personality she compels Georgina to con tinue the subterfuge. CHAPTER V.-On a trial spin next day on the Sphinx, with Billy, Aimee almost collides with a carriage in which are her aunt, Georgina and Alexander. The pair escape unrecognized. CHAPTER VI. Georgina learns that Lord Scroope is coming to visit Lady Ery thea and, realizing what will happen on his arrival, is In hopeless bewilderment CHAPTER VII. While Almee is secretly visiting Georgina at Jervaulx, the place is burglarized. Aimee escapes. CHAPTER VIII.-Georgina learns, with much relief, that Almee has got away, CHAPTER IX. Police Inspector Panke decides that the robbery Is the work of "Jack the Climber" and "Calamity Kate," noted thieves, who travel on a motorcy cle. CHAPTER X Action and More. Billy Spencer, sitting In his austere ly furnished bedroom, looked unusu ally thoughtful. The night was still young, but his candle was not lit The whole house, Indeed, was in darkness. He sat on the window sill and stared out Into the night. At last he wan dered back to the bedside, his hands thrust In his pockets. "The partner," he said pensively, "'has got something on her mind. A follow doesn't need any X-rays to see that." His Hps curled down at the corners. "I'd give a lot to know what it Is. I hate to seem Inquisitive. But I'd linte a lot worse to have anything hap pen to the pnrtner. An' I cnn sure smell trouble coming. She doesn't fear man or devil. But that isn't al ways goln' to help a girl. There's times when It's more useful to call up a husky with big feet like me. "She'd sure be mad If she thought I was interfering. And she can get mad the partner. Gee I but she's great! The dinkiest thing that ever happened. But I don't like the way things are framing." He stood for a while, as If listen lng; then sighed and lay down on the lied, fully dressed. In twenty seconds lie was asleep, breathing regularly and easily. You Cannot SEE it, HEAR it or DODGE it There are no "Stop, Look and Listen" signs to warn you against, dangers of fire, theft or accident. You cannot see or hear the loss that may await you to morrow. But you can prevent the loss that follows the un fortunate eventualities that surround all business. Insure today do not worry for tomorrow. This agency fepresnts the1 oldest and strongest companies and solicits your full confidence. Consult us as you would your lawyer, without obligation. May we help you TODAY? L. E. VAN MARTER Phone Main 352 Dick Robnett Practical horseshoer AT CALMUS' SHOP Special attention given to lame andin terfering horses. I Guarantee Satisfaction. Give me a Trial It was a doglike sleep, of wrucn some men hold the faculty, and very doglike was the manner In which Billy roused himself some hours later. In a moment he was broad awake, and swinging his legs off the bed, sat lis tening with cocked ears. He moved swiftly to the window and peered out. There was nothing to be seen. Billy remained where he was for some sec onds, all his senses alert. Then, with a gesture of decision, he snatched up his cap, heaved himself out of the window, and climbed down the trellis. He came silently under Almee's bedroom window, glanced up at the open casement, took a little nickel torch from his vest pocket, and bent down. Shading tha glow with his hand, he examined the soft soil be- There Were Five Little Shoe Prints Visible. neath the window. There were five unmistakable neat little shoe-prints visible; the first pair deep and point ing Inwards to the wall, the others leading outwards. Billy at once ran noiselessly round to the garden gate and peered up and down the lane. No one visible. He returned quickly, got a rake from the shed, and carefully raked over the footprints ; also those beneath his own window. Then he made for the gate, and, after a moment's thought, un locked the shed where the Flying Sphinx reposed. He wheeled the cycle out, freeing the engine, and tip toed softly down the path with It. Not till he was clear of the lane and well out on the high road did Billy start the Sphinx, and then only at a very gentle pace. At an easy seven miles an hour he ambled along the road, heading for Jervaulx abbey. It would have surprised Almee Scroope considerably had she guessed for one moment how far Billy was abreast of affairs. The carefree, in souciant Billy, who seemed to live for nothing but the Sphinx, was Infinitely more wideawake than people gave him credit for. The cool blue eyes missed very little; the brain behind them was able to connect facts to gether shrewdly. Almee had not the faintest suspi cion that anybody at Ivy cottage knew she had made an unconventional exll by the window the night before. Billy, however, was perfectly well aware of the fact. Early that same morning, before setting off for Syderford, he had observed the footprints beneath her window, which, to a keen eye, told plainly that Almee had dropped from the trellis, and later on had re gained her room by the same path. Clearly the partner had made a mid night excursion for a very definite oh- Heppner Hotel Building Ject; people do not roam the country side In the small hours tor nothing. The Incident of the carriage on the Stanhoe road puzzled Billy; he had mentioned the carriage casually to Mrs. Sunning saying nothing about the collision and learned that It could belong to none other than Lady Ery thea of Jervaulx abbey. He was told a good deal about that establishment. It was easier to start Mrs. Sunning talking than to stop her. Obviously, Amy had something to fear from Jervaulx ; something that bound her to secrecy, and led her to run risks. It annoyed Billy that she should have anything to fear what ever. "Sometimes," said Billy to himself, as the lodge gates of Jervaulx came In sight, "a broncho Ally with the spring blood in her will get doin' stunts an' galloping among the gopher holes. When they do that they're liable to fall an' break a caunon-bone. It's the same with her. If she doesn't want me, why she doesn't. But if she does, I'm going to be right there." lie dismounted some little distance short of the park entrance. The dark pile of the abbey was visible, a quar ter of a mile across the grasslands. Billy paused and reflected. The Journey could be nothing more than a scouting expedition. He wished very much that he had been closer on Al moe's tracks. Just then he observed a light flash out In one of the abbey windows. Faint, tlntlnnabulutory sounds were borne to him upon the night breeze the clanging of a bell. lie watched the house with alert and thoughtful eyes. In a few mo ments two dim figures became visible, moving swiftly. An imaginative on looker might have thought them to be goblins, gamboling across the sward. But they kept an uncommonly straight line, crossing the park and bending for a point a few hundred yards to Billy's right. Two people running swiftly. Billy followed them with his eyes. The foremost was long-Ilmhed, scud ding along with giant strides. The other, close behind, moved no less swiftly, but it was a figure of vague outlines, apparently wearing a cloak or dust-coat. They vanished from sight against the park fence where the lane turned. "If that ain't a hold-up," said Billy, starting away from the fence, "there never was one yet!" He heard the cough and splutter of a starting motorcycle under tall trees far up the lane. For one moment he listened, than made a dash for the Sphinx. "A get-away I" said Billy. "My Job !" He threw his leg over the Sphinx and whirred off round the corner. He lifted his chin and gave a Joyous laugh, like the bay of a hound. The lust of the hunter was In his blood. Tha rider ahead, already aware thnt he was being chased, let out Uis ma chine at breakneck speed. Tta ray from Billy's lamp showed him a man crouching low between the handle bars, his arms spread like the wings of a bat. On tha pillion behind crouched a small, muffled figure. "Give up I" shouted Billy, as he overtook them. "You can't make It. I've got you I" A hand stretched out from the fig ure on the pillion, and emitted a hark ing flash of Are. It dazzled Billy for tha moment. Something zipped through his hair; automatically his left hand tightened on the valve-lifter and the Sphinx slowed, allowing the other cycle to shoot ahead. Billy made a lurid remark, and at once Increased speed again to closa with the fugitives. Right ahead the lane forked on to the main road, and thither the driver of the other cycle was obviously heading. But tha lights of a car were In sight, approaching rapidly on the road. The rider of the cycle had evidently no ambition to meet It ; at the last moment ho swerved left and continued along tha narrow lane. Billy laughed aloud. "The guy's cornered himself I" he thought. "He's taken the blind alley. Me for him !" The lane was very rutty and nnaven. The cycle ahead had vanished round a bend; Billy, shutting off his engine, swung round It Immediately after ward. As he did so he heard a crash. The driver of the othar cycle, realiz ing too late that he was In a cul-de-sac, had swerved, braked violently, and came thoroughly to grief. Billy sprang from the Sphinx, let AWJXGTON AND HKI'PXF.H STAGE TO HEPPNER a. m. p. m. Arlington Lv 9:00 2:00 Cecil Lt 10:20 3:20 Morgan Lr 10:35 3:35 lone Lt n:05 4:05 Lexington Lt 11:30 4:30 Heppner Ar 11:65 4:65 TO ARLINQTON Heppner Lt 9:00 4:00 Lexington Lt 9:25 4:25 lone Lt 9:50 4:50 Morgan Lt 10:05 6:05 Cecil Lt 10:35 6:35 Arlington Ar 11:65 6:55 WE SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE O. H. McPlierrin R. E. Burke ting her fall on her side wltn the headlight still glowing. Tha other cycle lay prostrate; a small heap was huddled beside it on the grass. The taller man, the driver, was Just staggering to his feet when Billy ran at him. The cyclist whipped out a repenting pistol. A gun, at night, and In the hands of a shaken man, Is much less certain than a flst with six feet of activity behind it. Billy's left dashed the pis tol band aside, the bullet spat lm- poteutly Into the air, and his right came with a terrific upper-cut beneath the man's chin, lifting him off his feet to fall inert. As he came down, something skipped and rolled awny from him along the grass. In the ray of the Sphinx's headlight. With the swift Instinct for loot Billy pounced upon it a sumptuous looking little casa of leather, with a clasp. Billy thrust It In his pocket and turned to the fallen man, who lay with closed eyes and his head moving faintly from side to side. "Mighty slow with a gun," said Billy, stooping over him. "I'm going over you for the rest of tha goods, Bud." A moan from the other malefactor, lying by the fallen cycle, Interrupted him. So pathetic and treble a monn was It that Billy started and Jerked himself upright, stnring. "Lordy!" he gaspad, with remorse and concern. "It's a woman I" The discovery was disconcerting enough. But a thought shot through his brain that nearly paralyzed Billy. What woman was It? He hurried to her side. She had already raised herself on one hand and seamed trying feebly to get up. Billy stooped over her. "Much hurt?" he stammered. "Here" At that moment the fallen driver recovered and stirred. Billy turned his head toward him, with a quick Instinct tha danger lay closer at hand. The woman's hand was grasping a stone, and, as Billy turned, she brought her arm round with a swot'p, swift as a striking snake. The chunk He Fell aa an Ox Falls. of rock crashed full on the side of Billy's head. lie fell as an ox falls, and lay still. The woman staggered to her f set and ran to her prostrate companion. "He's got his!" she panted. "You hurt, Jake?" She helped the man to rise. He stood dazedly for a moment ; the spi nal Jar from a knock-out undar the point of the chin is terrlllc, but evan escent. "Look lively an' beat It!" gasped the woman, hauling the motorcycle upright with surprising ease. "See If the bulglne'll run we'll have the cops here next I" "Got to settle with blm !" said the man thickly, glancing at the prostrate Billy. "He's all In, I tell you. Oct her going!" The man wrenched tha motorcycle round, and fumbled at the feed and controls with nervous fingers. While he did so the woman snatched up an other stone, and, running to the Sphinx,, hnmnierert. on. the ngjne and the levets. She had dealt threeor four lusty strokes when the other motorcycle came spitting and wob bling past her. The woman rnn to it and swung hersalf up deftly behind. "Let her out. We'll clear yet !" The motorcycle, coughing and miss ing fire badly, trundled back down the lane the way It had come. Jack the Climber leaned to the handla-bars, Calamity Kate, her arms tight round him, settled herself on the pillion. Together they whirred away Into the darkness. CHAPTER XI Confession. It was very dark and vary quiet at the lane's end when Billy at last stirred, and, after an Interval of slowly returning consciousness, man aged to raise himself dizzily to a sit ting position. He pressed his hands to the side of his head and ranialned for awhile motionless, conscious of n damp warmth under his left palm. His eyes dwelt on a white, chalky stone, as big as a doubled flst, that lay on the grass beside him. Events began to reconnect themselvas In a bruin that still buzzed faintly. "A granite skull," murmured Billy, not without a touch of pride, "isn't altogether a disadvantage In an argu ment." lie looked about him thoughtfully. Not far away something gleamed In a rut a small repeating pistol. Ills late opponents had evidently left in too much of a hurry to take an in ventory of their effects, "She must lur-e dropped that when the machine crashed," thought Billy. "She loos?d It at nie when I was rid ing up. Lucky for nie she hadn't lt Just now. Some girl !" He heaved himself to his foot un steadily, made for a ditch where there was a glitter of water, and bathed tha tender side of his head. The water revived him ; save for u cut under bis hair, no serious damage was done, though the blow might easily have cracked a weaker skull. "I don't see that I shine much, ovar this Job," said Billy despondently; "they sure handed it to me. Got right under my guard. Never thought of a woman sharing in a hold-up; an' jet 1 guess It's been done before." Ha picked up the pistol, wns about to pocket It, but altered his mind and flung lt In the ditch. The other auto matic was nowhere to be seen. Billy walked towards the Sphinx, the head lamp of which was now In darkness. Ills hand swung against a largo lump projecting from the slda of his coat, lie halted and dragged out the lenther case, Billy had forgotten lis exist ence. "Why, here's something saved from the wreck!" ha exclaimed. "They couldn't have seen me get lt !" (Continued on Page Five) Kirk Bus & Transfer Co. Wm. M. KIRK, Proprietor We Thank you for past patronage and solicit a continuance.of the same. Our best service is for you. Leave orders at Case Furniture Co. or Phone Main 664 Leave Orders at Hotel Patrick. BAGGAGE. EXPRESS.- FREIGHT. COUHTRY TRIPS & GENERAL HAULING The Well Dressed Man Is Admired and Respected Let us put your clothes in good condition Lloyd Hutchinson Tailoring Clean lean68 WE BUY POULTRY Highest Prices paid for Chickens, Turkeys, Ducks and Geese delivered at our poultry yards in Heppner. Cornett & Merritt, Heppner, Oregon Phone Main 615 Heppner Herald $2.00 per Year J NOTICE OF FIXAL SETTI.EMKXT. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned as administrator of the estate of C. F. Williams, deceased, has duly filed his Final Account in said estate in the County Court of Morrow County, Oregon, and that Wednesday, the 14th day of Feb ruary, 1923, at eleven o'clock in the forenoon of said day, and the County Court room in the County Court House at Heppner, in said County and State, has been duly appointed by the said Court as the time and place for the proving of the same and hearing of any objections thereto. Dated this 10th day of January 1923. W. P. MAHONBY, Administrator of the Estate 38-42 of C. F.Williams, Deceased. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of an execution duly issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow coun ty by the Clerk of said Court on the 8th day of January, 1923, pursuant to a judgment duly rendered and en tered In said Court on the 3rd day of March, 1922, In a certain action in said Court wherein Julian Rauch, was plaintiff and Frank Avers, and J. B. Coxen, were defendants, and in which action the plaintiff recovered judgment against tho said defendants for the sum of $500.00, with inter est thereon from tho 11th day of January, 1920, at tho rate of eight per cent per annum, loss tho sum or $14 0.49 paid thereon February 20th, 1922, for tho further sum of $50.00, attorney's fees and $21.00 cost and disbursements of said action, I will on Thursday, tho 8th day of Feb ruary, 1923, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon of said day at the front door of the Court Hoik in the city of Heppner, Morrow coun ty, Oregon, sell at public auction to tho highest bidder for cash, the fol lowing described real property, sit uated in Morrow county, Oregon, to- wit: The South half of the North east quarter of Section 17 In Township 2 South of Range 2( East of Willamette Meridian. The said real property Is taken and levied upon as the property of the de fendant, J. B. Coxen, and the said sale Is made subject to confirmation by the said Court. Dated this 9th day of January, 1923. GEO. McDUFFEB. 37-41 Sheriff.