Tuesday, January 29, 1924 THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON Page Three (v We BROWN MOUSE By HERBERT QUICK niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimi.iiimiiiii; (Croyrlgtt by The Bobbe-Merrlll Company) 1" SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I Jennie Woodruff con temptuously refuses to marry Jim Ir win, young farm hand, because of his financial condition and poor prospects. He Is intellectually above his station, and has advanced ideas concerning the possibilities of expert school teaching, lor which he la ridiculed by many. CHAPTER II. More as a Joke than otherwise Jim la selected as teacher of the Woodruff district school. CHAPTER III. Jim, In his new posi tion, sets out to make stanch friends cf his pupils, especially two boys, New ton Bronson and "Buddy" Simms, the latter the son of a shiftless farmer. Colonel Woodruff, Jennie's father, has little faith In Jim's ideas of improving rural educational methods. He nick names him the "Brown Mouse," In il lustration of an anecdote. CHAPTER IV. Jim's conduct of the school, where he endeavors to teach the children the wonders of nature and some of the scientific methods of arming, as well as "book learning," Is condemned. CHAPTER V. Jennie Woodruff Is nominted for the position of county superintendent of schools. The school board grows bitter in Its opposition to Jim and his innovations. CHAPTER VI. At a public meeting Jim roundly condemns the methods of teaching In the rural schools, and makes no friend thereby. CHAPTER VII. A delegation of prominent women condemn Jim's meth ods of teaching, but he Is stoutly de fended by his pupils, especially Newton Bronson. CHAPTER VIII. Jim has Christmas dinner at Colonel Woodruff's, and lis tening to him, Jennie begins to do some thinking concerning his ability and hie prospects. CHAPTER IX. In the evening Jim, as well as he knows how, courts Jen nie, without, however, making much progress, though Bhe is quickly losing her poor opinion of him. CHAPTER X. Jennie, elected county superintendent of schools, receives so many complaints from . people of the district concerning Jim's methods of teaching that she finds herself com pelled formally to ask for his resigna tion. After she has left, Jim is visited by Colonel Woodruff, who strongly urges him to refuse to resign, and offers to back him. Jim agrees to atick, for a while at least, CHAPTER XI. A meeting of the school board, which had been gathered to "get" Jim, is confronted by Jennie, who upholds him. He conducts an ex amination of his pupils at the meet ing, to prove that he is not neglecting their "book learning" by the introduc tion of other subjects which he con siders of Importance. ' The splendid showing made by the children converts many, who had doubted, to his views. CHAPTER XII. The novel Ideas which Jim has Introduced have been talked about outside the county, and he is visited by Professor Withers, ex tension lecturer at the state university, who invites him to deliver an addresi at the next annual meeting of the Farmers' institute. CHAPTER XIII. Professor Withers Is Impressed by many of the innova tions made by Irwin, and so informs Colonel Woodruff and Jennie, some what to the astonishment of both. The colonel suggests to Jim that he (the colonel) sek election to the school board, replacing Cornelius Bonner, Im placable enemy of Jim Irwin. , CHAPTER XIV A Minor Casts Half a Vote. March came In like neither a lion nor a lamb, but was scarcely a week old before the wild ducks had begun to score the sky above Branson's slew looking for open water and badly harvested cornfields. Wild geese, too, honked from on high as If In wonder ; that these great prairies on which thelj I forefathers had been wont fearlessly ' to alight had been changed into a dis ' gusting expanse of farms. Colonel I Woodruffs hired man, Pete, stopped 'Newton Bronson and Raymond Simms as they tramped across the colonel's pasture, gun in hand, trying to make themselves believe that the shooting was good. 1 "This ain't no country to hunt in," said he. "Did either of you fellows ever have any real duck-shooting?" "The mountings," said Raymond, "air poor places for ducks." "Not big enough water," suggested Pete. "Some wood-ducks, I suppose?" "Along the creeks and rivers, yes, seh," said Raymond, "but nothing to depend on." "I've never been nowhere," said Newton, "except once to Minnesotu and and that wasn't In the shooting season." A year ago Newton would hare boasted of having "bummed" his way to Faribault. His hesitant speech was a proof of the embarrassment hli new respectability sometimes Inflicted upon him. "I used to shoot ducks for the mar ket at Spirit Lake," said Pete. "I know Fred Gilbert just as well as I know you, BntThat'j all over, now. You've 'gotto go fur now To el shootfngwhere the farmers won't drive you off, that It costs nine dollars 1o "I think we'll have" fine shooting on the slew in a few days," said N'ewton. "Humph l" scoffed Pete, "t give you my word, if I hadn't promised the colonel I'd stay with him another year, Id take a side-door Pullman for the Sand Hills of Nebraska or the Devil's lake country tomorrow if I had a j gun. "If it wasn't for a pasel of things that keep me hyeh," said Raymond, "I'd like to go, too." "The colonel," said rete, "needs me. ne neeus uie iu me cmnuu lumuuv, What's the matter of your ol man, Newt? What for does he vote for that Bonner, and throw down an old neigh bor 7 "I can't do anything with him !" ex claimed Nesvton Irritably. "He's all tangled up with Peterson and Bonner." "Well," said Pete, "If he'd just stay at home it would help some. If he' votes for Bonner, it'll be just about a stand-off." "He never misses vote 1" said Newton despairingly. "Can't you cripple him some way?" asked Pete jocularly. 'iDarned funny when a boy o' your age can't control his father's vote! So long!" "I wish I could vote!" grumbled Newton. "I wish I could! We know a lot more about the school, and Jim Irwin bein' a good teacher than dad does and we can't vote. Why can't folks vote when they are interested In an election, and know about the is sues. It's tyranny that you and I cun't vote." "I reckon," said Raymond, the con servative, "that the old-time people that bxed it thataway knowed best." "Rats !" sneered Newton, the icono clast. "Why, Callsta knows more about the election of school director than dad knows." "That don't seem reasonable," pro tested Raymond. "She's prejudyced, I reckon, in favor of Mr. Jim Irwin." "Well, dad's prejudiced against htm er, no, he hain't either. He likes Jim. He's just prejudiced against giving up his old notions. No, he hain't neither I guess he's only prejudiced against seeming to give up some old notions he seemed to have once! And the kids in school would be prejudiced right, anyhow !" "Paw says he'll be on hand prompt," said Raymond. "But he had to be p'swnded right much. Paw's proud and he can't read." "Sometimes I think the more people read the less sense they've got," said Newton. "I wish I could tie dad up! I wish I could get snakebit, and make him go for the doctor!" The boys crossed the ridge to the wooded valley in which nestled the Simms cabin. They found Mrs. Simms greatly exercised In her mind because young McGeehee had been found play ing with some blue vitriol used by Raymond in his school work on the treatment of seed potatoes for scab. "His hands was all blue with it," said she. "Do you reckon, Mr. New ton, that it'll plzen him?" "Did he swallow any of it?" asked Newton. "Nah !" said McGeehee scornfully. Newton reassured Mrs. Simms, and went away pensive. Jim Irwin's meth ods had already accomplished much In preparing Newton and Raymond for citizenship. He had shown them the fact that voting really has some re lation to H'e. At present, however, the new wine In the old bottles was causing Newton to forget his filial duty, and his respect for his father. He wished he could lock hira up in the bam so he couldn't go to the school election. He wished he could become 111 or poisoned with blue vitriol or something so his father would be obliged to go for a doctor, He wished well, why couldn't he get sick? Newton mended his pace, and looked happier. "I'll fix him !" said he to himself. "What time's the election, Ez?" asked Mrs. Bronson at breakfast. "I'm goiii' at four o'clock," said Ezra. "And I don't want to hear any more from any one" looking at New ton "about the election. It's none of the business of the women an' boys." Newton took this reproof In an un expectedly submissive spirit. In fact, he exhibited his very best side to the family that morning, like one going on a long Journey, or about to be married off, or engaged in some deep dark plot. "I s'pose you're off trampin' the slews at the sight of a flock of ducks four miles off as usual?" stated Mr. Bronson clinllenglngly. "I thought," said Newton, "that I'd get a lot of raisin bait ready for the pocket-gophers In the lower meadow. They'll be throwing up their mounds by the first of April." "Not them," said Mr. Bronson, some what mollified, "not before May. Where'd you get the raisin Idee?" "We learned It in school," answered Newton. "Jim had me study a bulletin on the control and eradication of poclcet-gophers. You use raisins with strychnine in 'em and it tells how." "Some fool notion, 1 s'pose," said Mr. Bronson, rising. "But go ahead If you're careful about handlin' the strychnine." Newton spent the time from twelve thirty to half after two In watching the clock ; and twenty minutes to three found him In the woodshed, pen knife In hand, a small vial of strych nine crystal before him, a saucer of raisins at his right hand, and another exactly like It, partially filled with gopher bait raisins into whU-h a min ute crystal of strychnine had Ieen In serted on the point of the knife. At three-thirty Newton went Into the house and lay djjwn 05 the Jiorje najr sofa, faying to his mother 'that he felt kind o' ifunny and thought he'd lie down i while. At three-forty he heard his father's voice in the kitchen and knew that his sire was preparing to start for the scene of battle, A groan Issued from" S'ewton's lips a gruesome groan. But his father's voice from the kitchen door betrayed no agitation. He was scolding the horses as they stood tied to the hltch-ing-post, in tones that showed no knowledge of ' his son's distressed moans. "Whafa the matter T It was Mewton's little sister who asked the Question. Even though re- garuea as a pure tuaner vi mna.tr belleve, such sounds were terrible. "Oh, sister, sister I" howled Newton, "run and tell 'em that brother's dy ing!" Fanny disappeared In a manner which expressed her balanced feelings she felt that her brother was mak ing believe, but for all that, something awful was the matter. So she went rather slowly to the kitchen door, and casually remarked that Newton was dying on the sofa In the sitting-room. "You little fraud!" said her father. "Why, Fanny!" said her mother and ran into the sitting-room whence In a moment, with a cry that was al most a scream, she summoned her hus band, who responded at the top of his speed. Newton was groaning and in con vulsions. Horrible grimaces contorted his face, his Jaws were set, his arms and legs drawn up, and his muscles tense. "What's the matter?" His father's voice was stern as well as full of anx iety. "What's the matter, boy?" "Oh !" cried Newton. "Oh 1 Oh I Oh !" "Newtle, Newtle!" cried his mother, "where are you in pain? Tell mother, Newtle!" "Oh," groaned Newtie, relaxing, "I feel awful!" "What you been eating?" interro gated his father.- . "Nothing," replied Newton. "I saw you eatin' dinner," said his father. Again Newton was convulsed by strong spasms, and again his groans filled the hearts of his parents with terror. "That's all I've eaten," said he when his spasms had passed, "except a few raisins. I was putting strychnine In 'em" "Oh, heavens!" cried his mother. " "Heavens! He's Poisoned!" "He's poisoned 1 Drive for the doctor, Ezra I Drive !" Mr. Bronson forgot all about the election forgot everything save anti dotes and speed. He leaped toward the door. As he passed out, he shout ed, "Give him an emetic!" He tore the hitching straps from the posts, jumped Into the buggy, gave the spir ited horses their heads, and fled toward town. Just at the town limits, he met the doctor in Sheriff Dllly's automo bile, the sheriff himself at the steer ing wheel. Mr. Bronson signaled them to stop, Ignoring the fact that they were making similar signs to him. "We're just starting for your place," said the doctor. "Your wife got me on the phone." "Thank God!" replied Bronson. "Don't fool any time away on me. Drive !" "Get In here, Ez," said the sheriff. "Doc knows how to drive, and I'll come on with your team. They need a slow drive to cool 'em off." "Why didn't you phone me?" asked the doctor. "Never thought of It," replied Bron son. "I hain't had the phone only a few years. Drive fuster 1" "Isn't your mother here, Jim?" she asked. "I've been looking all over the crowd and can't see her.". "She isn't here," answered Jim. "I was In hopes that when she broke loone and went to your Christmas dinner she would stay loose but she went home and settled back Into her rut." "Too bad," said Jennie. "She'd have had a nice time if she had come." "Yes," said Jim, "I believe she would." "I want help," said Jennie. "Our hamper is terribly heavy. Please!" It was rather obvious to Mrs. Bonner that Jennie was throwing herself at Jim's head, but that was an article of the Bonner family creed since the de cision which closed the hearing at the court house. It must be admitted that the young county superintendent found tasks which kept the school master very close to her side. "Sit down, Jim," said Mrs. Woodruff, "you've earned a bite of what .we've got. It's good enough, what there Is of it, and there's enough of it, such as It jar: "I'm sorry," said Jim, "but I've prior engagement." "Why, Jim 1" protested Jennie. "I've been counting on you. Don't desert mer "I'm awfully sorry," said Jim, "but I promised. I'll see you later." One might have thought, Judging by the colonel's quizzical smile, that he was pleased, at Jennie's loss of ber former swain. "We'll have to Invite him longer ahead of time," said he. "He's getting to be in demand." Jim seemed to be In demand a fact that Jennie confirmed by observation. He received a dozen invitations as he passed the groups seated on the grass one of them from Mrs. Cornelius Bonner, who saw no particular point In advertising dlsgruntlement The cnuuren rau w uiu, wu uuu w bands; young girls gave him sisterly smiles and such trifles as chicken drumsticks, pieces of cake and like tid bits. His passage to the numerous group at a square table under a big burr oak was quite an ovation an ovation of the significance of which he was himself quite unaware. But Jennie the daughter of a poli tician and a promising one herself Jennie sensed the fact that Jim Irwin had won something from the people of the Woodruff district in the way of deference. Still he was the gangling, Llncolnlan, Ill-dressed, over-stricken Jim Irwin of old, but Jennie had no longer the feeling that one's standing was somewhat compromised by asso ciation with him. He had begun to put on something more significant than clothes, some thing which he had possessed all the time, but which became valid only as it was publicly apprehended. He was clearly the central figure of his group, in which she recognized the Bronsons those queer children from Tennessee, the Simmses, the Talcotts, the Han sens, the Hamms and Colonel Wood ruffs hired man, Pete, whose other name Is not recorded. Jim sat down between Bettlna Han sen, a flaxen-haired young Brunhilde of seventeen, and Callsta Simms Jennie saw him do It, while listening to Wilbur Smythe's account of the ex acting nature of the big law practice he was building up and would have been glad to exchange places with Bettlna. The repast drew to a close ; and over by the burr oak the crowd had grown to a circle surrounding Jim Irwin. "He seems to be making an ad dress," said Wilbur Smythe. "Well, Wilbur," replied the colonel, 'you had the first shot at us. Suppose we move over and see what's under discussion." As they approached the group, they heard Jim Irwin answering something which Ezra Bronson had said. "You think so, Ezra," said he, "and It seems reasonable that big cream eries like those at Omaha, Sioux City, Des Moines and the other centrallzer points can make butter cheaper than we would do here but we've the fig ures that show that they aren't eco nomical." "They can't make good butter, for one thing," said Newton Bronson cock lly. "Why can't they?" asked Olaf Han sen, the father of Bettlna. "Well," said Newton, "they have to have so much cream that they've got to ship it so far that it gets rotten on the way, and they have to renovate It with lime and other ingredients be fore they can churn it." "Well," said Raymond Simms, "I reckon they sell their butter fo' all It's wuth; an' they cain't get within from foah to seven cents a pound as much fo' It as the farmers' creameries in Wisconsin and Minnesota get fo' theirs." . "That's a fact, Olaf." said Jim. "I'm Sorry,"- said Jim, "but I've a Prior Engagement." "I want to cet there, or I would," answered the doctor. "Don't worry. From what your wife told me over the phone I don't believe the boy's eaten any more strychnine than I have and probably not so much." "He was alive, then?" "Alive and making an argument against taking the emetic," replied the doctor. "But I guess she got It down hlin." Thus reassured,. Mr. Bronson was calm, even If somewhnt tragic In calm ness, when he entered the death cham ber with the doctor. Newton was sit ting up, his eyes wet, and his face pale. His mother had won the argu ment, and Newton had lost his dinner. Haakon Peterson occupied an arm chair. "What's all this?" asked the doctor. "How are you feeling, Newt? Any pnln?" "i iii all rljrlit," sold Newton. "Don't give me any more o' that nasty stuff I" "No," said the doctor, "but if you don't tell me Just what you've been eating, and doing, and pulling off on us, I'll use this" and the doctor ex hibited a huge stomach pump. "What'll you do with that?" asked Newton faintly. Job Printing SEE US When in need of any thing in the line of neat and attractive Printing. "i ii put iiiis aown into your hold, and unload youi that's what I'll do." "Is the election over, Mr. Peterson?' asked Newton. "Yes," answered Mr. Peterson, "and the votes counted." "Who's elected?" asked Newton. "Colonel Woodruff," answered Mr. Peterson. "The vote was twelve to eleven." "Well, dad," said Newton, "I s'pose you'll be sore, but the only way I could see to get In half a vote for Colonel Woodruff was to get poisoned and send you after the doctor. If you'd gone, It would 'a' been a tie, anyhow, and probably you'd 'a' persuaded some body to change to Bonner. That's what's the matter with me. I killed your vote. Now, you can do whatever you like to me but I'm sorry I scared mother." Ezra Bronson seized Newton by the throat, but his fingers failed to close. "Don't pinch, dud," said Newton. "I've been using that neck an' it's tired." Mr. Bronson dropped his hands to his sides, glared at his son for a moment and breathed a sigh of relief. "Why, you darned Infernal little fool," said he. "I've a notion to take a hamestrap to you ! If I'd been there the vote would have been eleven to thirteen I" "There was plenty wotes there for the colonel, if he needed 'em," said Haakon, whose politician's mind was already fully adjusted to the changed conditions. "Ay tank the Woodruff district will have a junanlmous school board from dls time on once more. Colonel Woodruff Is just the man we have needed." "I'm with you there," said Bronson. "And as for you, young man, if one or both of them horses is hurt by the run I give them, I'll lick you within an Inch of your life Here conies Dilly driving 'em now I guess they're all right. I wouldn't want to drive a good team to death for any young hoodlum like him All right, how much do I owe you. Doc?" (To be continued) IT PAYS TO READ Forehanded People Inside of the vault of the bank are located the individvual Safe Deposit Boxes main tained for those forehanded people who want the BEST OF PROTECTION for their valuables. Bonds, stocks, insurance policies, mortgages, records, receipts, jewelry, trink ets, etc, deserve better protection than they receive when kept in an office safe, tin box or hidden away somewhere. This bank has these Safe Deposit Boxes for rent at the rate of two dollars a year and up, according to the size of the box.. It offers you the opportunity to keep your valuables where it keeps its own. Rent a Safe Deposit Box today, for the number now vacant is limited. , , , , Farmers and Stockgrowers National Bank HEPPNER, Thomson Bros. OUR STORE is head quarters for seasonable merchandise. We can feed and clothe the whole family from soup to nuts and from hats to shoes t See our line of Suits and Overcoats for Men and Boys GERMAN RELIEF WORK Funds Co veted Will Be Spent In America, Says Major 1 , GeMAllefT ! Official word from MajorgfJefjl Henry T. Allen, riat'(gal cWr$djL jt. tpe American committee ir rww 01 German M!4re9. ZS$2&& week at headquarters, 715 Corbetfr building, PorUanj., i that all money collected in this c6u5try will be used to buy foodstuffs in AQoerioa for ship ment to Germapy. There the mater ials will be distributed by the Ameri can Quakers, who have organised to do this great work. ' General Allen also wirod the Oregon headquarters that relief funds are be ing collected in Berlin and Bremen and other places for aiding women and children. This is vouched for by, American investigators thefe. In Portland, the German-speaking members of 26 churches of all denom inations and of 28 societies, following action taken at a mp meeting at the outBet of this cafhpalgfi, hvve con tributed Beveral thousand dollars to-' ward this relief fund. It is also an nounced that they have been collect ing relief funds regularly for at least three years to alleviate suffering in their native land. In a state-wide collection, authorized by officials of the Catholic churches to Oregon, a substantial sum waif feal ir.ed on Sunday. Every Catholic church In the state participated. j . Portland labor unions have been subscribing various sums, also, and the Central council there has a spe cial committee of union members working on solicitation, fpUff&lp? for mal indorsement of the ciffiptfigh. THE HERALD ADS 1 I i I s OREGON 3