HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY. DEC. 22, 1927. PAGE THREE RLACICSHEEP! W u Meredith Nickolaon napry jay vJUr Y KICjHT CHAELES SCRIBNER3 SONS - RELEASED THRU FUBUSHERS AUTOCASTER. SERVES and their stress of mind and heart ', band killed himself. "It broke Philip's heart; it broke Isabel Perry recommend a life of crime, ad venture, romance and excitement a cure for Archibald Bennett's nerves. Ar chie goes to Bailey Harbor to inveatigate a bouse for hi sister and spends the night in in empty nouse. He la awakened by footsteps during the night; the intruder fires at him and misses. Archie fires in re turn. He doesn't know whether he has killed or only wounded the man, but fear ing the publicity, plans to make his es cape. In his flight he meets 'The Govern or" a master mind criminal who mistakes aim for a fellow criminal. Archie, afraid to tell tne truth, falls In with "The Got- ernor." A series of events leads him to believe he has shot Putney Congdon the owner of the house. They proceed to New York, where they are visited by Julia, the Governor's sister. Archie promises her he will stick with the Governor through the strange phase she claims he is passing inrougn. wane strolling in- the park, Ar chie sees airs. Congdon with her two chil dren, and is witness to the kidnapping of the little girl, Edith. He learns from the Governor that the father-in-law of Mrs. Congdon a very wealthy man is engaged in the clrculalton of counterfeit twenty dollar gold pieces. - They go to Rochester: where the Governor receives a letter from Ruth, the girl he loves, in which she tells him he may be able to serve her. At a dance at Ruth's home Archie meets Isabel and they are reconciled. Archie and the Governor promise to find Edith Congdon and whisk her away to Isabel's camp. They secure work on Eliphalet Congdon's farm, where Edith has been taken. They learn that Putney Congdon the man Archie shot is also there. While Archie is teaching Edith to ride the Gov ernor kidnaps her. When Putney Congdon leaves the farm, Archie follows him. Ihey become friendly and Archie agrees to go with Putney to Huddleston, where they meet the Governor. The Governor tells Archie that Carey, Isa bel's cousin, has blocked the camp and they are unable to get supplies. Isabel and Ruth attempt to run the blockade. They are run down by Carey's launch and the canoe overturns. Archie, Leery and the Governor, on the way to the camp, rescue them. The next day the Gov ernor's tug runs through with a cargo of supplies. That same evening the Governor leads his group of men against Carey in the effort to drive him out. In the assault which followed, the Governor is shot and seriousdly wounded. When Dr. Mosgrove finally return ed from the Governor's bedside, he eyed the waiting eru. quizzically, apparently in.mensely amused about something. "What, does all this mean?" he whispered. "Pirates in these waters where I've been summering for yearsl Men shot and police not notified! A girl doctor attending the easel May I trouble you for your name, sir?" Archie replied with all possible dignity that his name was Ashton Comly, and demanded a professional opinion as to the sick man's chances of recovery. The doctor became in stantly serious. "The bullet pierced the, right chest wall and of course there was imme diate and copious hemorrhage. You needn't trouble about the delay in getting a doctor; nature went to work at once, forming clots that plugged automatically the gaping mouth of the severed vessels. You men were fortunate to find Dr. Reynolds; she has handled the case admirably." "Thank you," cried Archie. "Oh, tjhank you for that! And one thing more; would you advise me to sum mon the patient's sister?" ' "Yes. There being always the un certainties, I should certainly do so. I'll run up in my launch this eve ning." One of the questions that troubled Archie not a little was how the detec tive was to be disposed of. Leary grinned broadly when Archie gave voice to his thoughts. "Ole Governor don't do nothin' like anybody else; that chap ain't no de tective; he's a gun man we sent to chum with Carey." Archie bared his head to the cool morning air. It was almost too much to learn that Briggs, who had so gal lantly played the part of a govern ment detective was really an ally, shrewdly introduced into the Gov ernor's strategy to awaken fear in Eliphalet Congdon. Achie went at once to the Huddles ton Btation, where he satisfied him self that the lonely agent knew noth ing of the transactions of the night. He drew from his waist coat the envelope the Governor's sister had given him the night she dined in the New York house, and tore it open. In a flowing hand which expressed some thing of the grace and charm of the woman who had given it to him in cir cumstances so remarkable, he read: Mrs. Julia Van Doren Graybill, until October 1, Southhampton, L. I." It was the Van Doren thut burnt Itself into Archie's consciousness. ' It was'an old name of honornble con notation, one with which he had been familiar all his life. It waB chiseled In the wall of the church near the pew held for a hundred years by his own family; it was a name of djgnity, as sociated with the best traditions of Manhattan Island; and this, presum ably, was the Governor's name. Graybill was unfamiliar, and this puz zled him, for he knew and could place half a dozen Van Dorens, probably relatives In some degree of the Gov ernor, but he recalled no woman of the family who had married a Gray bill. "Regret that I must act on my promise of several weeks ago and use the address given in confidence. En couraged to believe that the patient will recover. Suggest, however, that you come at once." He and Congdon wore at the sup per table when he received the an swers "Thank you. I am Just leaving. J. V. D. G." Archie was not permitted to enter the sick room, but from time to time he received assurances that the pa tient's condtilon was "satisfactory," and at intervals Dr. Reynolds recited with professional brevity data as to temperature, respiration and the like. At eleven o'clock Archie saw the Heart 0' Dreams launch approaching Huddleston and leaving Congdon to answer any cnll from the Governor's bedside, hurried to meet it, Ruth and Isabel had crossed alone was manifest before they landed. "I felt it; I knew that it would come!" cried Ruth. "If only you hadn't gone there! It wasn't worth the sacrifice." The obligation to cheer them raised his own spirits as he explained the nature of the Governor's injury while they sat on the hotel veranda. He described the fight at the barricade with reservations, mentioning not at all the fact that a man had died as the result. They understood as fully as ne that the whole affair must be suffered to slip into oblivion as quick ly as possible. "The complications are so endless!" exclaimed Isabel with a sigh. "In that mass of mail you delivered last night I found a letter from Mrs, Congdon saying that she would ar rive today almost at once, in fact!" "The prospect is wholly pleasing!" he exclaimed, looking at his watch. "I've played 'the very devil in the Congdons' affairs. I suppose I should lift my hat politely as she steps from the train and tell her that I'm the brute who attempted to make her a widow. She will of course recognize me instantly as the gentleman who escaped with her in a taxi after the kidnaping of her dauhgter." And there's the train now, and you must permit me to satisfy Mrs. Congdon that her husband is in mood for immediate reconciliation be fore I break the news that he is1 here." Mrs. Putney Congdon more than justified the impression he had form ed of her in their encounter in Cen tral Park by the manner in which she heard his story. He told it with all brevity on the station platform. It was so incredible that it was not until he described his journey to Hud dleston in Puti.ey s company that she was able to see. any humor in the series of events that had led them all into the north. "Poor dear Putney! And he does n't know yet that you nearly killed him!" 'Oh, there are a lot of things he doesn't know. Your father-in-law has given his solemn promise that he will not again attempt to mehdle in your affairs. The umbrella that symbolized his tyranny is at the bottom of the lake and if he should die you and your children wouldn't be thrown up on charity." This is all too wonderful to be true,", she exclaimed. "After all the misery I've endured it can't be possi ble that happiness is just ahead of me. Tell me everything." "In due season you shall know all. Just now I haven't the. heart to keep you from your husband, and I'm go ing to send him to you immediately. And I shrink from telling a man I like so much that I tried to kill him not so long ago, I'm going to turn that agreeable business over to you!" Archie was beset with many fears as he waited the arrival of Mrs. Gray bill. His utter ignorance of any de tails touching the life of his friend seemed now to rise before him like a fog which he was afraid to penetrate. And there was Ruth, with her happi ness hanging in the balance; she was in love with a man of whom she knew nothing; indeed the mystery that en folded him was a part of his fascina tion for her, no doubt; and if in the Governor's past life there was any thing that made marriage with a young woman of Ruth's fineness and sweetness hazardous, the sooner it was known the better. But when he caught sight of Mrs. Graybill in the vestibule of the train his apprehen sions vanished. The poise, the seren ity of temper, the unquestioning ac ceptance of the fate that played upon her life, which he had felt at their first meeting struck him anew. "Our patient is doing well. The news is all good," he said at once. "Cfelt that it would be; I couldn't believe that this was the end!" Putney and his wife had moved to Heart 0' Dreams for a few days. It would be a second honeymoon, Put ney said. Mrs. Graybill was intro duced into the hotel without embar rassment. She won Dr. Reynolds' heart by the brevity of her questions, and expressed her satisfaction with everything that had been done. When she came down to the dining-room for luncheon she avoided all reference to the sick man. In her way she was as remarkable as the Governor him self. "I've never been in these parts be fore," Julia remarked to Archie; "I should be glad if you'd show me the beach. We might take a walk a little later." The hor in which he waited for her tried his soul. The Governor was the one man who had ever roused in him a deep affection and the dread of finding that under his flippancy, his half-earnest, Ralf-boyish make believe devotion to the folk of the undorworld, he was really an irre deemable rogue, tortured him, "I'm going to ask you to bear with me," said Mrs. Graybill when they reached the shoro, "if I seem to be making this as easy for myself as possible. I know that my brother cares a great deal for you, He sent mo little notes now and then he al ways did that, though the intervals were sometimes long; I know that he would want you to know. Things have reached a point where if he lives he will tell you himself, "My brother is Philip Van Doren, and there were just the two of us. An unusual sympathy bound us to gether from childhood, and there was never a closer tie between brother and sister. I married his most in timate friend. My husband betrayed him; it was the breach of a trust in which they were jointly liable. It was not merely a theft, it was a gross, dastardly thing, without a sin gle mitigating circumstance. My hus- his spirit! It destroyed his generous faith in all men. He was a brilliant student in college and promised to go far in the law; but he felt keenly the dishonor. The financial part of it he of course took care of; that was the least of it. There was always strain of mysticism in him; and he had gone deeply into astrloogy and things like that; and when the dark hour came he pretended to find con solation in them. He was born under an evil star, he said, and would not be free from its spell until he had passed through a spirit of servitude. It sounds like insanity, but it was only a grim ironic distortion of his reason. He said that if honor was so poor a thing he would seek a world that knew no honor. I dread to think how he has spent these years! "In one of his brief messages he spoke of a young woman who had in terested him, but I never can tell when he's serious " Archie met the question promptly. "A charming young girl, Ruth Has tings, whose antecedents and connec tions are the best. You need have no fears on that score. You shall see her, very soon." She permitted him to describe the meeting with Ruth and Isabel at Rochester, and her face betrayed re lief and pleasure as he made it clear that the Governor's romance was in no way discreditable. It is curious, and in his own way of looking at things may be signifi cant, that your telegram reached me on the day following the seventh an niversary of the beginning of his exile. He looked forward to the seventh anniversary as marking the end of the dark influences; he believed there would be a vast change in his affairs. "If he only lives!" he exclaimed. "Is it possible that her can ever step back into the world he left?" "You may be sure he has planned a return, with marriage at the very threshold." Then God grant that he may live!' he said fervently. The following evening, after Dr. Mosgrave's visit had left their hopes high, Archie carried her to Heart 0' Dreams. Happiness shone in the stars over the northern waters, Put- ney Congdon and his wife were en joying to the full peace that followed upon the storms of their married life. Isabel gave Archie no opportunity to speak to her alone, and he found her aloofness dismaying. She made a candid confession to Mrs. Congdon, with Putney and Archie standing by. "With malice aforethought I prac ticed my vampirish arts upon these two men! And, Alice, the cruelest thing you could do would be to for give me! I couldn't bear it. I flirted with Mr. Congdon; not only that but I took advantage of his distress over his father's efforts to estrange you two to counsel him to lead a reck less, devil-may-care existence. And I tried the same thing on Mr. Ben nett, only he was much more sus ceptible than your husband and took me more seriously. I want you, one and all, to be sure that I hate myself most cordially!" "The end justified the means, I thjnk," said Mrs. Congdon. "I found a friend I'm not going to lose as one result," said Putney. "And if the sick man across the bay re covers I hope I have another lifelong friend there." "Oh, it'a all so strange!" cried Mrs. Congdon. "One might think that we must suffer tribulation before we know what perfect happiness is! Is it possible that you'll ever settle down again?" "That depends " Archie remarked glancing meaningfully at Isabel, a glance which Mrs. Congdon detected and appraised with that prescience which makes every woman a match maker. On the eighth day Dr. Mosgrove an nounced that his visits were no long er necessary; he ran up to Huddles ton, he told Archie, for the pleasure of meeting the agreeable people he found there. The Governor was mak ing an extraordinary recovery, and the bracing northern air would soon set him up. Dr. Mosgrove had made a careful examination of Carey, and recom mended that he be sent to a sanator ium for treatment. Perky undertook to carry him to a private institution near Chicago suggested by the doctor, and this became another of the series of strange errands that fell to the lot of the Arthur B. Grover. Elipha let Congdon had been importuning Archie to release him, but it had seemed wise to give the erratic mil lionaire more time in which to medi tate upon his sins. When the tug returned Archie found that the old gentleman had taken advantage of a day's parole in Chicago to do considerable shopping. In, a new suit of clothes he really looked, as Perky said, like a white man; but the change in him was not merely as to his outward person. He opened a bag on deck and displayed with pride a pearl necklace he had purchased for his daughter-in-law, a handsome watch for young Edith and another for his grandson, whom Mrs. Congdon had left with a friend h the East. Though so many vistas were bright ening, Archie was still trouDlea oy Isabel a persistent refusal to see him alone, or to give him any opportunity to break down the barriers she had raised against him. "You are running away from me!" he said sternly. "And that's not fair." "Oh, this is my busiest day! You mustn't think a place like this runs automatically." "I think nothing of the kind. But your studied efforts to escape from me are embarrassing. Ruth, the Congdons, Mrs. Graybill everybody is noticing it!" ' "Certain matters Bre one's personal affairs," she answered. Really, I must ask you to excuse me." "I refuse to be snubbed again! You are trampling me under foot, and I refuse to be stepped on any more. I wish to assure you, Miss Perry, that my love for you is not to be spurned with impunity! " "Please be careful! Those girls over there are watching us" "A wonderful opportunity for them to see a desperate man making love; an invaluable part of their education! Ihey will never forget how I fell up on my knees and declared myself!" Oh, you wouldn't! You really wouldn't! You forget that these chil dren are highly impressionable!" "So am I, and extremely sensitive. It would be fine if you'd join me in a little walk. If you refuse I shall follow you the rest of the day sing ing. The Governor and I did a good deal of singing in our travels and " As he filled his lungs as though about to burst into song she hastily turned toward the wood. "You seem to forget that I'm mis tress here while you're merely a guest! I hate to say it, but you're in serious danger of becoming a nui sance." "You're not resentful and hateful enough yet to frighten me away. 'He either fears his fate too much, Or his deserts are small, That dares not put it to th touch to gain or lose it all.' "I Insist that I love you. That's the only thing that matters!" "Except," she corrected, "your cheerful assumption that I recipro cate the feelig, when" "You call it an affair! Calamity would be a better term for it," This silenced him for some time. As she walked before him, carrying her head high, his heart ached with love for her. It would be beat per haps not to urge her further; to wait until the camp closed and then see her in a different environment. It might be Vhat his sister would ar range this for him, and he took cour age from the thought. Continued next Your Gift Photo Those who desire photos before Christ mas please call at the earliest possible moment. Ask about our Portrait Gift Certificates. . See our gifts in the Art De partment. Bogg's Photo-Art McMurdoBldg. StllCliO Main Street Heppner, Oregon telephone or an extension telephone For Year Round k Owe Convenience To vaifp ctr mnrriM' it will heln lighten household duties and bring friends and relatives within voice reach. For the young folks it makes the home a clearing house for social engagements. With friends and relatives nearby and in distant places a means of closer personal ties. r 1 Adequate telephone service in the home is a constant source of conven ience to every member of the family an aid and protection in times of emer gency or danger. In the spirit of the season, let your thoughcfulness be expressed by giving this year 'round convenience and pleas ure in the home. Our business office is ready to serve you. THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY INION PACIFIC STAGES, INC. fisrsln d. lux. tbtorfkchSerm between R)R11AND-PEND1ETQN Nmw Schtdalm Efftctiv Stpt. Sth WESTBOUND It. Arlinctms liiloa.as. lfcffp.tn. Arrival Timt Thttm Point!, THE DALLES ties p. sb. p.m. HOOD RIVER XiSfp.m. 4ie p.m. MULTNOMAH FALLS p. m. I:M p.m. PORTLAND tUfp.sn. 7iiep.m. EASTBOUND It. Arllnta 1:M p. m. Sift p. ssu Arrival Timm Thmu Point Ml UMATILLA KSf p. an. f.li p. sb. PENDLETON 4:10 p. m. ii:f p. us. Connection tt Pendleton with Pendleton-Walla Walla Stages MOTOR COACHES tIAVIi ArUnitoo Hotal See Railroad Agent at various points en route for tickets and information UNION PACIFIC STAGES. INC. QUALITY PLUS SERVICE DON'T FORGET--- says wise old Santa, that gifts are fine, but after all, the way to a man's heart is the stomach and the feast is a very important part of the holiday celebration. We have a store full of goodies awaiting your order. Phone or come in either way you'll receive the best of service. A FINE ASSORTMENT OF CHRISTMAS CANDIES Chocolates in Gift Boxes. Fancy French and Hard Mixed in Bulk. See us for that Christmas Tree order. Phelps Grocery Company PHONE 53 FOUR-WIHEEL BRAKES FOR, AMERICA'S FASTEST FOUR, DODGE BROTHERS ADD NEW EQUIPMENT AT NO INCREASE IN PRICE Four-wheel brakes of the latest and most efficient Steeldraulic type now insure deceleration equal to the amazing accelera tion of America's Fastest Four! Swift, time-saving travel is now made still safer by i"rrasfd braking efficiency. Step on the brake pedal and feel the positive, cushioned braking, absolutely uniform on all four wheels. At 875 for the Sedan, f. o. b. Detroit, this famous Four with complete factory equipment, represents the smartest, swift est, sturdiest, low-cost trans portation money can buy. The car is roomy yet compact. Turns in a 38-foot street parks in 17lz feet of curb space yet provides ample room and ex ceptional comfort for five adults. Spring length 85 of wheclb.ise the longest in its ptice class. Mile-a-minute performance! 25 miles to the gallon at 25 miles per hour! A brilliant performer by every standard a sturdy car from end to end. A Four of striking beauty smartly finished tastefully ap pointed luxuriously uphol steredlong, low and grace, fully designed. A car you can drive for years because in every detail it is built the good Dodge way carefully and accurately of materials that pass Dodge Brothers high and critical standards. Six months in public service, this Four has already won as proud a name for itself as any product ever built by Dodge Brothers. After stern trial, it has been accepted as a values genuine and trustworthy value. And now with four-wheel brakes at no extra cost, you can buy it 1-jiow-ing that money has no greater buying power in the field of transportation. Cohn Auto Co. Heppner, Ore. Dodge Brothers, I nc