PAGE SIX HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY. SEPT. 20, 1928. WHAT HAPPENED BEFOM Simon Judd, amateur detective, and William Dart, an undertaker, are visit ing John Drane, eccentric man of wealth, at the Drane place. Suddenly the household la shocked to find that John Drane has been murdered. The dead man is first seen by Josie, the maid, then by Amy Drane ana sunon Judd. The latter faints. Police officers call and Investigations begin. Dr. Blessington Is caned, ana after seeing the murdered John Drane. makes the astounding revelation to Amy that her "uncle" is not a man but a woman. Dr. Blessington discounts the theory of suicide, saying that Drane was defi nitely murdered. Dr. Blessington com ments on the fact that all the servants in the household of Drane are sick, and that Drane has never discharged a ser vant for 111 health. Dick Brennan, the detective, arrived to investigate the case. Brennan questions the persons In the house, asking Amy if anyone had any reason to kill her "uncle." SOW OO ON WITH THE STOBT "No; not a reason; not the slight est reason!" Amy declared with ab solute positiveness. "I can't even imagine why anyone should want to kill my uncle." "And as far as you know, there was no one in the bouse last night but your uncle, Mr. Judd here, Mr. Dart and the servants?" Brennan asked her. "I know," he added, "that you can't say whether others may not have come in unknown to you." Amy's eyes turned to Bob Carter. "Yes, I was in the house last night," Carter said. "About when. Carter?" Brennan asked. "Late," Carter said. "After eleven and before twelve. Mr. Drane said he wanted to see me; he sent Nor bert to tell me so yesterday after noon just before we went for the drive, you remember, Amy? There was no hurry, Norbert said; either last night or today would do. I rather knew what he had on his mind. I had asked him if I could marry Amy, and he had put off answering me. So last night I hap pened to pass here and I saw the lights in the library and I came in." "Ring or knock or anything?" "I went to the library door at that side of the house and knocked on the door, and Mr. Drane let me in," Bob said. "Mr. Dart was with him; no one else. I said good eve ning to Mr. Dart and Mr. Drane said we could go across the hall to the dining room for a few minutes, and we did. There's one thing I ought to tell you, I guess; just as we were going out Mr. Dart said, 'Now, remember what I told you, John; I don't approve.' It was some thing like that; he may have said l m against it or 'I won't have it' I was rather excited, you see: what Mr. Drane was going to say meant sucn a lot to me. "Naturally," agreed Brennan. "Well?" "That's about all." Carter said. "We went into the dining room and Mr. Drane talked to me awhile. It was mostly about my prospects and what I was planning to do with mv life and whether I would be willing to come to nis house to live after we were married Amy and L He said we had best travel for a year, or stay elsewhere a year. After that he wanted us here. I told him that was what Amy wanted it was the only reason she hesitated about marrying, she did not want to leave him. So he said it would be all right" "I'm so glad, Bob!" Amy cried. "I'm so glad to think he was will ing!" "And then what?" Brennan ask ed, seeing that Carter was hesitat ing. "Well, it was rather queer," Car ter said, blushing. "I thought it was rather queer then, but it does n't seem so queer now not when we know what we know now. He asked if he could kiss me." "He did?" Brennan exclaimed. "Not quite so brashly as all that," Carter said. "He laughed and laugh ed and said that if we were French he supposed we would kiss 'each other on both cheeks. I said I had been kissed, when I was given my cross. Then you won't mind if I do kiss you,' he said, and kissed me. I felt well, I felt sorry for him, that's how I felt I thought 'Poor old fellow." I knew nobody around here cared much for him, and he was getting pretty old. That sort of feeling. And now, when I know he was a woman!" 'It's bound to come out now and again," said Brennan tersely. "A woman can only stand so much without affection. The very worst i ve ever known came to it now and again. And then what did you do?" "we talked a few minutes about when the wedding might be. and I said I would have to leave that to Amy. Then he said " Carter hesitated a moment but Brennan said nothing. "He spoke about money," Carter went on. "He said he had made his will in Amy's favor and that he was leaving her everything he had. Then he said she was a good girl; he said very nice things about her and said he meant to give her outright a hundred thousand dol lars the day she was married, if I did not object I have nothing of my own, you know. He said that he thought, living in his house and having to be mistress of it. Amy should not be compelled to ask him for money. He meant for the extra expenses, the things I could not pay for. I didn't see anything wrong in that I didn't see that it had anything to do with my loving Amy. Amy knows it's not anybody's mon ey I care for. And then we shook hands and I came away." Through the library again?" Brennan asked. "No. Mr. Drane let me out by this door." "So you didn't see Mr. Dart again?" "No. I went down the driveway there and walked home." "You haven't any idea what it was Mr. Dart wanted Mr. Drane not to do?" "Not really," Carter said. "It may be they had been talking over Amy and me and Mr. Dart didn't care for me enough to have me marry Amy. Mr. Drane and Dart were old friends what they call 'cronies' almost Or it may have been giv ing Amy so much money in a lump that Dart objected to. I don't know." "But your impression was that Mr. Dart referred to the talk you were about to have with Mr. Drane ?" Brennan asked. "That's what I thought," Carter admitted. "I hadn't any doubt of it I thought to myself 'What bus iness is it of his, anyway!' I don't like him much, someway." "And now. Miss Drane," Brennan asked without a pause, "have you ever seen anything that made you think, even in the slightest degree that your uncle was a woman?" "No," Amy said without hesita tion, and immediately changed her answer to yes! "Never while he CaAJ A triumph in individual beauty ... a refreshing and radical departure front the tiresome commonplace ... a new style, a richer style, a more alluring style than the world has ever known I Only one completely new motor car style in the past twenty-four month. only one truly original and beautiful develoDment in body design and, as the whole world realises, it is the Silver Anni versary Iluick with Masterpiece Bodies by Fisher! 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"It never en tered my head, not In the very slightest But now, I can see things. He was so kind to me." "Might not an uncle be kind?" Brennan asked. . "Yes, but not In that way. Affec tionate is what I should say, prob ably. I didn't know ,you see I didn't think how a man would be, but I can see now, Mr. Brennan, that he was more like more like a mother in the way he in the way he kissed me and smoothed my hair. More like a woman, more like a mother." "Have you any reason for think ing he was your mother?" Brennan asked and Amy stared at him with wide eyes. "Uncle John my mother?" she gasped and put her fingers to her Hps as if in fear. "Oh, he couldn't be my mother he " "You knew your mother?" Bren nan asked. "You see, Miss Drane, I don't know any of the facts; I have to ask for them. Did you know your father?" Bob Carter frowned writh annnu. ance that Amy should be annoyed. He looked at her and liimui Brennan. "I can answer that," he said. 'Amy told mo all that" "Let her tell me," said Brennan but his tone was kindly. I never knew my mother." Amv said. Brennan leaned forward in his chair. "I'm not digging Into this from curiosity," he said. "I have nlentv to do without wasting time that way; my job is to find who mur dered this woman who posed as John Drane. There may never nave been a John Drane " "You bet your boots there was!" declared Simon Judd. "John Drane and me was chums, I tell you, when we was boys back there In River bank. Regular boys and no mis take, and don't you forget it, mis ter! You can prove that by me any time you want to." "There was a John Drane then," said Brennan. "You knew him." "And I knew him a blame long time, black my cats!" Simon Judd exclaimed. "Why look here John Drane was born along about when I was, along towards 1853, and we chummed together, thick as thieves, for a long time. Yes, until '83 that was when he went out West He was thirty then. All that time we hung together, me and John. Thirty years we was born together as you might say. Sure there was a John Drane! "I was going to ask you a few questions later, Brennan suggested, "Ex-cuse me for buttln' in!" Si mon Judd said with hearty good nature. "Go right ahead and I'll shut up till you want me." "I was saying Miss Drane," Bren nan said, "that I am only trying to gather some details of the life of John Drane as he was known here, and matters that might have some bearing on this murder. I know nothing, you understand, and I have to ask questions. You say you did not know your mother that means she died while you were too young to Know ner ? "Yes," Amy said. "You're about how old?" "I'm seventeen." "Do you know when your uncle to call him that came to West cote?" "Yes, I remember hearing that It was in 1892. He bought this house then. .He said not long ago he had owned it thirty-two years." "And you were not born here?" "Oh, no!" said Amy. "I was born in California. You see, I'm uncle John's brother's son's child." "What did you say?" asked Brennan, turning to Simon Judd. "I'm not saying a word," Judd said. "Ex-cuse me! I forgot my self." 'But you said something," Bren nan insisted. "What did you say?" "All I said," Simon Judd said, "was which brother?" "Well, which brother was it?" Brennan asked Amy, showing the first impatience he had shown. "It was Daniel," Amy said. "Dan iel went to California and married Mary O'Ryan there, and they had one son Thomas Drane, who was my father. He married Mary Gart ner, but just after I was born they were drowned In a flood. Some riv er overflowed and they were drown ed. Grandfather was dead then, too, and grandmother had died be fore that So I was put in an or phanage and thut was where uncle John found me." "He went to California? When was that?" "I wasn't a year old," Amy said. "It must have been In 1908. Uncle John said he had always corres ponded with father and when the letters stopped he was worried. He wasn't well that year and he thought California might do him good it was In the winter and he went West for the two reasons. He wanted the warmth and he wanted to find father If he was alive. He found only me." "And he brought you East?" "No; not right away. He found a home for me there, lovely people who were always so good to me! They raised me; Uncle John used to send them money for my ex penses and he wrote me letters " "You have some of the letters? They're in the same hand that this Uncle John writes, or did write?" "Yes, exactly the same a big, round hand," Amy said. "So then. when I was old enough, I was sent to a school near Pasadena. I stay ed there until I finished last year. Then Uncle John had me come East. He wanted me to live with him, he said." "She told me all that," Bob Car ter said. "Yes; It was not a secret," Amy said. She waited for Brennan to ask his next question. "Can you tell me anything that would throw any light on this mur der?" he asked. "I don't think so," Amy an swered. "I may think of some thing but it's all too horrible still." "You don't know anything out out the way about this William Dart?" (Continued Next Week) ST. PATRICK'S CHURCH. Rev. Thomas J. Brady. Rector. There will be mass next Sunday, Sept 23rd, in the local Catholic church at 8:30, preceded by Bene diction of the Blessed Sacrament, distribution of Holy Communion, and the hearing of confessions. The pastor will preach at this mass. Immediately after the mass he will go to the Sands where he will say mass at 10:30, and preacn. Wednesday. Friday and Saturday of this week are Ember Days and as such they are days of fast and abstinence. In view of the cooler weather prevailing these days the pastor wishes to announce that henceforth and until after the win ter months the masses on all Sun days will be at 8:30. A meeting of the Church Commit tee will take place next Saturday evening in the rectory, the purpose being to discuss important matters In the affairs of the congregation. This meeting will take place at 7:30. A large gathering assembled last Sunday In lone for the monthly mass there. There will be five Sun days in the month of September and as the pastor through Illness was not able to visit Board man, there will be mass there on the last Sunday of the month at 11 o'clock. In the home of Mr, and Mrs. Peter Slevln. The pastor contemplates a visit to Lakevlew this week on matters of business and he may not be back to Heppner until Friday morning or evening. He will be accompanied by Patrick A, Mollahan who will oper ate the auto. Young Wife: "Before we were married you said you'd be willing to go through anything for me." Husband: "So I am, dearest, but the way you hold on to your for- ' tune is a caution." f V OMAHA KANSAS Cm. DBS MOINES. ST. LOUIS CHICAGO DETROIT CINCINNATI CLEVELAND . TORONTO.... & ATLANTA PITTSBURGH... 1 WASHINGTON.. "PHILADELPHIA nf NEW YORK., TO .20 7f.M Tf.CO 81 M , M.SO . o.ao 10.2 .110.40 111-84 118.04 121. M ..1Z4.04 1.M 14S.M .1(1.70 .17.74 Sunday, Sept 30 is the last day you can go East on these exceed ingly low excursion fares. Final return limit Oct 3 1st Still time for long, economical trip. Stop overs going and returning. Full information from local agent UNION PACIFIC C DARBEE, Local Agent, Heppner, Oregon Don't Miss It! the RODEO She's Wild! Farmers & Stockgrowers National Heppner Bank Oregon union pacific-; STAGES INC. operating deluxe Stages between PORTLAND THE DALLES PENDLETON WALLA WUIA LEWISTON ndU IXTERMMAIE POfliTSl Stages leave tram ARLINGTON HOTEL Tras Packages Cmnrts4 4 FACTS- There are today about 4 00,000 farms in America using electrical service. In four states alone, elec tricity was ex tended to 21,217 additional farms during 1927. Not Dreams FIVE years ago the possibility of extending electrical service to any considerable number of farms was problematical. Yet within three years the number of electrified farms in 27 states has nearly doubled. Two hundred ways in which electrciity .can make farm ing pay greater dividends in living comfort and dollar-producing effi ciency have ben developed. Ruled by the hard-won facts of engineering science, not by theor ise or dreams, the electric light and power industry is today mak ing one of the few real contribu tions to the solution of the farm er's problem. A national rural electric project near Washington is now under taking the study of new electric labor-saving devices and the elec trical treatment of the soil and of crops to increase the productivity of farms. FACTS are the foundation on which the electric light and power companies of America have built the structure of a public service unequalled in all the rest of the world. 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