Thursday, December 10, 1936
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
============*===*=*
Ask Me Another
©
A General Quiz
© Bell Syndicate.— WNU Service.
«====================
1. In what zone do the trade
winds blow?
2 What is meant by the gloam
ing?
3. In printing, what is a font?
4. What is a virtuoso?
5. Of what is gingham made?
6. Where was Gilead?
7. What does anthropoid mean?
8. About how long was a cubit?
9. Into what body of water does
the Ganges flow?
10. In music, what is a triad?
11. Was Lafayette ever captured
in battle?
12. Did women vote in some states
before the Federal amendment
granted them suffrage?
Answers
1. The torrid.
2. Dusk.
3. A complete assortment of type
of a particular kind.
4. A master, in some art.
5. Cotton.
6. East of the Jordan.
7. Man-like.
8. 18 to 20 inches.
9. The Bay of Bengal.
10. A chord of three tones.
11. Yes, while defending the iron,
tier of France.
12. Yes.
Husband Your Energy
If you are tempted to be angry,
pause a moment and still the
rising activities. Deal in the same
way with the tendency to be an
noyed, resentful, or depressed.
Remember that if you spare your
self these useless expenditures of
force, you husband and increase
your energy.—Dresser.
Quick, Safe Relief
For Eyes Irritated
By Exposure
To Sun, Wind
and Dust —
The Three Guards
A good character, good habits,
and iron industry are impregnable
to the assaults of all the ill-luck
that fools ever dreamed of.—
Joseph Addison.
Beware Coughs
from common colds
That Hang On
No matter how many medicines
you have tried for your cough, chest
cold or bronchial Irritation, you can
get relief now with Creomulsion.
Serious trouble may be brewing and
you cannot afford to take a chance
with anything less than Creomul-
slon, which goes right to the seat
of the trouble to aid nature to
soothe and heal the inflamed mem
branes as the germ-laden phlegm
is loosened and expelled.
Even If other remedies have
failed, don’t be discouraged, your
druggist is authorized to guarantee
Creomulsion and to refund your
money If you are not satisfied with
results from the very first bottle.
Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.)
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
REMEDIES
Rheumatism—Arthritis—Neuritis
Lumbago, Muscular Aches & Pains
HEILMANN'S FORMULA NO. 99
Sold for 25 years. $2 bottle—3 for $5.
Prepaid. Guaranteed. Write for booklet.
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SINGLE
GUNLOCK
-RANCH-
FRANK H. SPEARMAN
■
Copyright Frank H. Spearman
WNU Service
CHAPTER XIV—Continued
—20—
“What’s the matter?” stormed Den-
Ison, wild with the delay.
“Just a minute,” muttered Parda-
loe. "Forgot something.
Be right
back.”
Pardaloe spurred back to the jail
onice while his companions counted
time. He rejoined them after three
minutes that seemed to Denison thir
ty. "For God's sake! Are you ready
now?” Denison chopped off the words
furiously.
“All set. Bill,” returned Pardaloe
peacefully. “You hustled me so, I got
the wrong hat, boy.”
Denison was waspish with impa-
tlence. “Man alive, what difference
does It make what hat you wear?” he
demanded testily.
"A whole lot of difference,” returned
Pardaloe with warmth. “Had on my
new hat. It might git plugged.”
Three men rode with Denison that
night—Pardaloe, Bob Scott, and Frying
Pan. The ponies were fresh and the
men eager. They stopped at Gunlock.
A light was still burning In the living
room of the ranch house.
When the men pulled up In the yard,
Denison sprang from the saddle, ran
to the door, and knocked.
“Who's there?” were the low words
from within.
“Is that yon, Jane? It's Bill.”
She flung the door open. "Bill,” she
cried, “what are you doing here?”
"I think I’m needed here. How’s
Henry Sawdy?”
"Oh, he's badly wounded, Bill. How
did you know?"
“Bob Scott and John Frying Pan
have strict orders to bring me ranch
news of the kind that came today.”
“Ben Page rode in to get Dr. Carpy.”
“Tell me quickly, dear, what hap
pened this afternoon," he urged.
"McCrossen rode out to get some
things, so he said. It was sitting here
sewing. Bill, when in walked McCros
sen. He said he was going away for
good. I said I wished him luck.”
Jane hesitated a moment. "He asked
me to kiss him good-by. I said no. He
•got angry and swore he'd take as many
as he wanted. I tried to run to the
front door. He caught me. and I was
lighting him In his arms when Henry
Sawdy walked in at the kitchen door.
“Henry told him to let go of me.
That man acted like a tiger.
"He turned on Sawdy. ‘Get out of
here, Sawdy,’ he shouted. I begged
Sawdy to protect me. He drew his
gun !
“ Let go that girl !' Sawdy said.
“McCrossen turned on Henry, his
gun in his hand.
“Henry didn't dare Are for fear of
hitting me. McCrossen tired point-
blank at Henry, and he fell In a heap.
I screamed, tore myself loose, and ran
out the front door and hid behind a
tree. McCrossen walked out as cool
as could be. put up his gun. mounted
and rode away. Bill, I'm glad you’re
here! I don't feel safe a minute!”
He comforted her as best he could.
“I must see how bad Henry Is hurt,
then I'm off with Pardaloe and Bob
Scott after McCrossen. He's running
off steers tonight.”
With Jane, he went to the bed on
which Sawdy had been laid. Sawdy
looked pleasantly surprised as Jane
held tip the lamp and he saw Denison.
“Well, Bill." he said coolly, "the old
foreman ts shootin’ us up today."
“Henry, where are you hit?"
"In the side. Bill, but It ain't over-
serious. You see, McCrossen—”
"Jane told me, Henry. Don't waste
any strength talking."
“When I seen his game to hold Jane
for a shield. I made up my mind to
drop at his tirst shot—”
"You did a good Job. Now keep
quiet."
He told Sawdy of the word he had
from the Indians that a bunch of two-
and three year-olds were to be run
off that night ; that George Plenty Bear
was watching in the hills, and that he,
Denison, and Pardaloe hoped to pick
up the trail without much delay.
Over the rim of the hills a full moon
was rising Into a cloudless sky. Jane,
with tightened lips, her heart pounding
In her throat, her straining eyes tear-
less, stood in the open doorway watch
ing the ghostly figures of the four
horsemen silhouetted against the sky,
as they made their way up the ridge
that led to the hill divide.
conjectured wrongly that the cattle
had been driven past this point.
Working carefully downstream
through clumps of willows and alders
along the benches, Scott pushed ahead
to locate the phantom Frying Pan. The
lone Indian after a time came down
from the hills. He was taciturn. “No
body go by,” was all he said.
Denison questioned him closely with
out shaking his certainty that neither
cattle nor horsemen had passed down
the east bank. The west bank, where
the pursuers were now halted, was
impassable for cattle.
“They’ve taken another trail,” Bob,”
declared Denison to Scott. “There’s
an overgrown trail through the timber
to the south. It’s a long way around
and rough, and they took It to throw
off pursuit. But that may beat them
yet.”
“How so?”
“They’ve got to double back, lower
downstream to strike Deep Creek
again with the cattle. We’ll play It so,
anyway. It's Into the brush for us.
We can’t cross the horses here. If
I'm wrong, and they’re above us yet.
It's safer to stick to this side, any
way."
"Where can they strike the creek?"
“About a mile above the old
bridge."
“How we goin' to get to them?"
“We’ve got to cross that bridge.”
Scott smiled a sickly smile. “That
bridge’s been failin’ to pieces for 10
years.”
“John,” said Denison to Frying Pan,
“feel out the scrub for us. Let's go!”
The riding was rough and the pace
through the chaparral grueling. The
four men reached a point where the
creek bottom opened from a canyon
out on low, rough country, and the
rising moon shed more light.
“We're a mile yet above the bridge,”
said Denison. “You and John ride up
the canyon wall a ways, Bob, and take
another look,” he suggested.
The Indians came back with news.
“There’s somethin’ looks like what’s
left of a camptire near the bridge—”
“Push on !” exclaimed Denison.
“They may have halted there."
The riding grew worse. Thickets be
came almost impassable. There never
Their Hands Went Haltingly Up.
had been a trail down the west bank,
and the job called for dogged en
durance.
Scratched and torn, the four reached
nn open breathing space where rock
and shale ended the fight through the
scrub. The moon, clearing the moun
tain peaks, revealed, at n distance be
low, the abandoned bridge. Not far
from it, Denison could discern embers
of the campfire Frying Pan had re
ported.
“Where there's been a fire, there's
been men,” said Denison. “They may
be there yet. But we've got to watch
both sides of the creek. Suppose you.
Bob, and Frying Pan get over to the
east bank—”
“How?”
“The bridge."
Scott grinned but shook his head.
“There's ten feet of plankin' gone In
one place from the floor of the old
bridge Nobody enn cross that. We
could maybe crawl across in the day
time—not now."
“We’ve got to get across somehow,"
insisted Denison. "Bob, is there any
place up or down the creek where you
and John can get over?”
“Not with horses.”
“Well, we must stop the cattle and
whoever’s with ’em. I'll get over, some
how, after you. Where's the planking
off the bridge?"
“The east end."
“That's bad. No matter—dust along.
Two shots from you will bring me
over. Anyway, you stop anybody that
comes along with the beef. We'll leave
the horses here with Pardaloe. and
while you're getting over I'll try to
find out who these fellows are below
at the fire. Bill,” he turned to Pard
aloe—“if I need you. I’ll whistle."
"O. K.," assented the lanky Pard
aloe.
Slipping off his horse and taking his
rifle, Denison crept, crawled, and
From the moment Denison and his rolled down the slope towards the dy
companions crossed the divide, they ing tire. For a little way he could be
seen and heard. Then he vanished into
were riding Into enemy country.
Frying Pan was asked to strike the shadows.
Denison, though anxious to get at
farther down and aerosa the reserva
tion; the rendezvous had been fixed what lay ahead of him. was forced to
work down the slope slowly. Within a
. at a point on Deep Creek.
With the hills behind them. Denison, long earshot of the dying fire, he
Scott, and Pardaloe made their way thought he heard voices. Since the
[ down the creek breaks to the bench men were still there, renewed caution
I lands. They were aware of a rough was called for. Creeping over a sandy
cattle trail along the east bank of the bit of bottomland, dragging his rifle
creek, but the night, as they halted on after him, he could hear the voices
the creek bench, was silent. Denison quite plainly.
He made out two voices, but this
gave no assurance that one or more
men might not be asleep.
Flattening on the sand, he listened.
The fire and the men were not over
fifty feet away. Denison could hear
their words. They were talking Eng
lish, though one voice was guttural and |
revealed a Mexican. As they were ob
viously waiting for someone who had
failed to appear, cold, and too lazy to .
keep up their fire, Denison made no
bones about intruding on the pair and
whoever might be with them.
The first the two men heard from
him was a low but plain command:
“Pitch up, boys !"
The startled' pair jumped to their
feet. “Up ! Put ’em up,” came a sharp
er order. Their nands went haltingly
up. They looked around to see where
the voice came from, and while they
looked they heard a short whistle and
saw a man emerge from the chaparral
not twenty feet away.
“Who the hell are you?” demanded
the smaller man of the pair, with a
bluster. His voice betrayed him to
Denison.
“I'm here, same as yon are, to meet
some cattle coming down the creek,”
returned Denison. “I'm going to help
you, Clubfoot. Hands up. Damn you,
keep ’em where they are!" While he
spoke, he heard Pardaloe cluttering
through the thicket. "Bill,” he added,
as Pardaloe appeared, “bring down the
horses, will you?
“These boys are waiting for the cat
tle, same as we are," explained Den
ison when Pardaloe reappeared. “We
don’t need four hands on the job. Take
their guns. Tie ’em up till we get
straight.”
Pardaloe, tying the mounts, stamped
forward, gun In hand. He searched the
pair, while Clubfoot protested pro
fanely at the outrage.
“I'm here to take over cattle that
belong to me—bought and paid for,”
stormed the butcher.
Before Pardaloe had finishod rop
ing the butcher and his helper, a shot
was heard from far across the creek.
Denison started almost as if the bullet
had struck him.
While he listened with every nerve
on edge, a complete silence followed.
It was not a fight. Was it a signal?
Almost five minutes passed when a
second shot rang into the night, Den
ison tried to read the riddle. The first
shot had come from a revolver ; the
second, sharper and less open, had
come from a rifle. It all dawned on
Denison—they were signal shots.
He whirled toward Pardaloe. “Hand
me Clubfoot’s gun, Bill,” he said. Se
curing the gun, he fired it twice in the
air.
“Some guesswork here, Clubfoot,"
he remarked, emptying and tossing the
gun on the ground. “I don't know
whether your answer was to be one or
two.”
Scarcely were the words out of his
mouth, when a spatter of revolver
shots rang across the creek.
“Bill,” exclaimed Denison, “that's a
fight. If these birds make you the
least trouble, shoot ’em. I’m going
over."
“How you goin' over?” called Par
daloe.
“Quickest way I can. Bill,” he
shouted. “The bridge.”
He was running for his horse.
“You're crazy. It’ll drop you a hun
dred feet, man !” shouted Pardaloe.
“Watch your prisoners!"
Denison was galloping away.
Pardaloe. petrified, watched the dis
appearing horseman. Nothing hut the
sharp echo on his ears of flying hoofs
convinced him he was not dreaming,
for he never would have believed sober
Bill Denison would take so slender a
chance of getting across the creek
alive. The clatter of hoofs grew
fainter. At times they ceased, and the
old frontiersman's breath choked him.
Then, as If In answer to his straining
ears, came the hollow sound of hoof-
beats on wood. Denison had reached
the bridge.
An instant later there came into
Pardaloe’s sight, in the distant moon
light, the ghostlike figure of a horse
flying across the rotten bridge. Par
daloe divined at once that the pony
had thrown his rider. Then, of a sud
den, the riderless beast whirled with
a spring and, as if somehow guided,
shot ahead again—he was a third of
the way over.
Pardaloe's Jaws came together
squarely and comfortably, for he now
understood. Denison was on that
horse, clinging to its back like a pan
ther.
But there was still the east-end
plank gap to cross. Scott had said the
big one was ten feet, but he had not
seen it for a year. It might easily be
twelve or fifteen feet; suppose it were
twenty?
With Denison more than halfway
across, the clatter of hoofs grew faint
er. One, two, three rifle shots rang
out In fairly quick succession.
The rider was out of sight. Pardaloe
ran to higher ground. Try as he
would, he could not see a thing on the
bridge. But now and again he could
hear the faint hoofbeats. They ceased.
Then there was a silence ; then ■ faint,
distant shout.
To this day the gap that Denison
jumped has never been measured.
The reckless rider had been spotted
when he was less than halfway across.
McCrossen, riding behind the cattle,
had galloped forward when Rebstock
ahead was Intercepted and questioned
by Scott. The half-breed's gun signals
had been taken by Rebstock as an at- |
tack, and he had fired back. Before
either side really knew what it was all
about, they were exchanging shots.
But the Instant McCrossen saw the
horse dashing along the rotten bridge,
his sixth sense of danger guessed the
rider for an enemy, and without a mo
ment's hesitation he trained a rifle o»
him and fired.
(TO BE CO^iTlNTEDi
Several Standby Designs
"Ts
190
EWING CIRCLE fans
S
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The slick princess frock, Pat
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© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
AT
LAST
A COUGH RELIEF—THAT
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ARE YOU ONLY A
THREE-QUARTER WIFE?
are certain things a
woman has to put up with and
T HERE
be a good sport.
Men, because they are men, can
never understand a three-quarter
wife—a wife who is all love and
kindness three weeks in a month
and a hell cat the rest of the time.
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FOR COLDS
Nature can more quickly expel Infection when
aided by internal medication of recognized merit
Says:
Seeing Happiness
Happiness is the gift of seeing
the good things of life in such high
relief that the rest is unimportant.
Approve not of him who com
mends everything you say.
When a man with an air as if it
were natural to him to give orders
is found, it isn’t long before the
meek put him in a position to do
it.
If you have savage opinions,
people will be hypocritical to you
to keep on good terms.
Philosopher's Task
It is the work of a philosopher
to be every day subduing passions
and laying aside prejudices.
When a boy gets up to his ears
in love he is more careful about
washing them.
The well-bred man keeps his be
liefs out of his conversation.
Nature doesn't eliminate fool
ishness. Civilized man has to
learn how, some day.
Using Abilities
The art of being able to make
wins esteem, and confers more
reputation than real merit.
What men say when they are
angry is either the blazing truth
or very unreliable.
Seiicon Tablets
HAVE RECOGNIZED MERIT
Reading Gives Power
He that loves reading has ev
erything within his reach. He has
but to desire, and he may possess
himself of every species of wis
dom to judge power to perform.—
William Godwin.
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