PTGE EIGHT MEDFOTID MATE TTtlBTjyE, UEPFORD, OREGON, THTJRSDAY. OCTOBER 12, 1933. Outrageous Fortune SYNOPSIS: Neeta Bidden says the man uhom ah found euffering from to ot wmoru t her Auj band, Jimmy, and tell htm that h ttole the Van Berg emerald, and ehot Van Berg. He de.ee not believe her, but cannot duprovm the elate ment. Finally he force her to turn fver the money he had had in hte picket, and goee to the Ledlington library to read the detail ot the Van Berg eate in the paper. Ae he reade he become convinced that h did know Van Berg, and had eeen the emmraXf in hie hand. If he did not ehoot Van Berg and tteal the emerald, who didt Chapter tf JIM IN FLIGHT IN the ad he knew Try little more. The polle wr ald to hay a cine. Elmer Van Berg bad not recorered consciousness. His condition waa extremely grave. There waa no trace ot th emeralds. He aat back In the bard upright ebalr and (tared straight In front of blm. What next? He bad left Hanpicot, and no power on earth would take him back there. He would have to make that quite clear. He had bought tome tbeeta of paper, a pencil, and a couple of tamped envelop aa he came along. He wrote a few line of tbanke to Mln. A nloe little thing kind, pretty, timid. He boped tor her sake that Keeta w ain't (topping there long. It was quite easy to write to Mln. It wain't at all easy to write to Neeta. How did yon write to an un pleasant stranger who happened to be your wife, and make It perfectly dear that yon never Intended to see htr again T He couldn't Imagine how be had ever come to be mixed up with her. Or with this Van Berg affair. Ac cording to all the available evidence, be had shot Elmer Van Berg and .taken the Inca's emeralds. Unless or until he got his memory back he could neither rebut nor explain this evidence. All he could do was to try and get away from It. He might remember why be had gone to see Elmer Van Berg. He had gone to see him, and they bad talked and had drinks. That was a funny thing there was nothing In the paper about those drinks. But be remembered drinking with Elmer. That Is to say, he had remembered it It bad come and gone like a flash. Elmer standing up, with his hand on the syphon. If be could remem ber that, he ought to be able to re member the whole thing. He might remember It at any time. It was utterly damnable. He'd got to get away out of Ledlington out of tbe country If possible. It came to him that there had been so mention of those drinks, be cause they were a police clue. His finger-marks would be on tht glass that he bad used. Tbe Incident hadn't been given to the press on purpose. He leaned forward with determi nation and wrote: "I am going away. When I am in position to do so, I will come to some arrangement with you."' He signed, J. R and fastened the envelope and addressed It to Neeta. FIVE pounds Is not a very large sum. Carefully husbanded, ot course, It will go quite a long way. It you tramp the roads, sleep out, and live on bread and cheese, your lodging costs you nothing, and your food not very much. On the other hand, a toothbrush, a cake ot soap, and a raior are necessaries, and so Is a change of linen. Money melts as soon as you begin to buy clothes. How long would his suit last It he lept out In It? It was none too grand now. He pushed all these things away. He had got to get out of Ledlington, and he was lucky to have Ave pounds to take the road with. Aa be passed a newspaper shop at the corner ot the Station Road, a headline stared at him tram a yard away: ARREST NEAR IN VAN BERO CASE A mile out ot Ledlington he left tbe high road tor a footpath across fields. It took him Into a lane which climbed to an open heath. He sat down to rest on the stump ot a tree and looked about him. The day was fine, but not clear. The blue of the iky was misted over, and the us came palely through. There was a purple bloom ot heather a tar as tbe eye could see. He stared across It at the veiled horlton. A hill like a cloud stood up against Its Van Eck Chairman Shell Union Oil NEW YORK, Oot. 13. (AP) J. C. Van Sok, president of Shell Union Oil Corp., today was named ohalrman of tbe executive eommlttee, a new po sition created by the directors. R. O. A. Van Der Woud. former president of the Bhell Petroleum Corp., a fcubsidary, was named prpi Ident. W. p. Durkee, Jr., and O. H. Van tden, both connected with th Bhell Union many yeara, were made vIm presidents. rr . j . , L a WE'RE CARRYING ) OTaEaiSfe Va;4cJth perfect cum rj yZy C,..m northern edge a bill with a double top. He sat looking at It tor a lone? time, and for as long as he looked) at It there were pictures In his mind broken picture that cam and went, forming, dissolving, and re forming. When be tried to think1 about them they were gont. He waa left with a sense of things most deep ly familiar. He walked on towards th hill. , I He had bought food In Ledllngton. At mid-day n sat on a sunny slope and at. Afterwards be fell asleep and dreamed about the emeralds. It waa th aam dream every time be slept, but It was getting clearer. In the dream he always knew where the emeralds were, but as soon as he woke up th knowledge faded., Sometimes ht could hold it for a moment by shutting bis eyes and: keeping his mind empty; but as soon as he tried to keep it, It waa gons. The dream always began th sam way. He could remember the begin-; nlng Elmer's hand with tbe scar,; and the emeralds dangling from It! under tbe light eight square green stones with pearls between them. Then th dream broke up Into a! rush of colored fragment. There was a vole In a fog. There was tbe sound of a shot a long way off. There was the voice, and ther was a pic ture In his mind ot tall stone pillars with pineapple tops, and a drive that wound between tbem out of sight The voice said, "Like a kid's green beads," and,' "Nobody knows where they are." But In th dream he knew. A round room with five little windows like silts a plac where you might look tor a year and never And them. He woke up, the sun hot on his face. The dream was gone, but the hill still broke the horizon. In some strange way he associated the hill and the dream. He made a pillow of bracken for his head and lay on the alope watching the hill. Pres ently he would get to It present ly. .. . He slept again. "IT'S eleven o'clock," aid Carolina to Patsy Ann. "I'm going to bed." She went up the stairs, which ended on a tiny landing with a door on either elde. Her room was on the left, and you went down two steps to It, Both the steps and the floor ot th room were old polished boards, very wavy and uneven. The window, which, looked to the front of the house, was set In a deep embrasure. She shut tbe door and turned on the light In the lamp beside ber bed. Hazelbury West had had electric light for the last eight years and considered Itself very up to date In consequence. Caroline turned down her bed, folding the quilt carefully and lay ing It on the cbest In whloh she kept her hats. She had said she wanted to come to bed, but she wasn't really sleepy. She opened tie bottom drawer ot tbe cbest ot drawers which faced tbe window and took out a bundle of letters tied with, a twist ot pale blue knitting silk. Then she went over to the bed. Sitting down on the edge ot It, she untied the bundle and turned the letters over, Ther were not a great many ot tbem. Two th first year after Jim went out one for her birthday, and one for Christmas and two again the second year, and the third, In the fourth year he only wrote for Christmas. The pain ot that missed birthday came across the three years' Interval and hurt her still. In the fifth year there was no let ter at all. On ber birthday and on Christmas day Caroline read the old letter and tried to make believe that tbey had Just come. It was not a very successful make believe. In the sixth year there wer still no -letters. And then in th seventh year this year tbey began again. He bad written at Christmas from New York. Caroline got out the letter and read It again. It was a vry sic letter. She hugged herself a little over It It began, as all his letters had begun, "Darling Caroline"; and It was quit long. He had been building a bridge In Mexico, and he had been In Chile, and Peru, and un In wild places In ths Andes. He waa bars, Jim. He always signed Just like that: "Yours, Jim." (Copyright, till, J. B, LipptnoeH Co.)' Tht movemtntt of Jim fUndtl btcomt oltartr, Monday, Britain Planning System Like NRA LONDON, Oot. 13. (AP) The sdoptlon of the forty-tour hour week along the lines ot the American NRA In Important sections of the British Industrial world, without reductions of wages, waa foreshadowed today by announcement of an agreement of the Amalgamated Engineering Union with th Imperial Chemical Indus tries. Broken windows glased by Trow bridge Cabinet work. E BE DENVER, Oct. 13. (AP) Investi gating a report that Robert E. Swet- I S'M ATTER POP By C. M. PAYNE the FAMILY ALBUM -POLISHING THE CAR By cluyas Williams i ii ii I - :SW - rrrv U I SU( JL K.- WA Lj VifrStJ ' SPURRED ON W fMItflS WW.KS SOUND Oft ftE SlfcH4, SAtfttfERS Sfctt UftlfS WHILE W TWDS I ISWi " V 2P- W9L REyiARXS R6ftRDW4 1iM5 TCMS Tb MAK 16 HOUSE AND 5IWS HFU. SOME RflfeS, 60E5 BACK Yvgj - V M. SJip I UOK6 0F -ME CAR, g6 UP HIS fllNP THCT IT WMt 15 Htt SOME RASS 10 SARAfeE W SluDlES .. it aikaV . AD60BOlf-fO6ARASE tE6KT REAtiV NEED IT WEAWER, BECAUSE tfOIEE :. . - , -m,W-l 1 ; -fcWASaANDTlOilSHtf T&RWlf CClW), l 31 $ IWfOWUrttiay SKY 15 SAILERS PACK tb RETURNS TO 6ARA6E AND VflUXS AROUND CAR AKD - S CTWV H ZN yjfi AH ' CLOUDLESS. Slfe OHTIUN- HOUSE to CHAM6E lW- AU. SEf. fffcRS TO DKIDE& If S TOO MUDDtf VL-ic7- V W-y-Vwr JLOJ NIN6-S0ARD HEADItfo TO OLD ClOTHES EXAMINE DENT IrUEAR HE'D BEffER. TAKE if It V?! I r i-Z XXJTmH DlRECfiOMS ON CAU OF MUD 6UARD DOWN 1b THE 6ARA6E V ffrr ) iff CARPOU&H AND LEf-fHEM DO IT Ifr ) Tssm -1 -1 ti (Oapyrlght. 1633. by Tht Btl ByndloU, Inc.) . ;, 0-f2 (Copyright, 1338, by The Bet! BymUcat. Inc.) TAILSPIN TOMMY Skeeter Broadcast His Love To The World! . ZXSSi jom -TWAT ioX. ierojKfxn. lM Ji SSC-L hsuo , v"; . Sjwr tough tuCrtX"' IOORLO WAR. BIRDS CReAM Of AIRMKN-A TLE', M r -&Z nr TI.OTL e. 3 OHER.E'S AU SIS VAOtVI0N,S CH6F S6NT ME H ' WTETrONAU THMIO V HO fMDB AVIATION & POINT SHIP! W r ) SerrtJi S THE TMASURg.? OR OUVT ? IB FSRR.V A M .; FOR US LAST NISHT-- OUBlNCi TW tOASc-- BOV-- OOKT tf . NECK.. 5 Sg LOAFlN-V COUPLE OF 8UH J JS ArnLRMCtTINP-GAU 7 AND ARB NOUl D0IN6 f" THAT LOOK -Js J rZlgZ- f -v, ' 1 ) fORTUHE HUKTCRS AKR, FCLLOiOS L1K6 THCM I J K MORE TO ruRTHCR. LIKE HOME S f ZZg&fZZ. 3 tr ( BACK TO THEIR f fS HATC TO LEAVE. JrM. COWEReiAL AEBONAUTIt egrSj etOEET Pr jfMmVZ MZ& ' IfLwtt PASTURCS'JFE-ei. ' gcWTOKT ., BOUND TO WIN Danger Outside! HATH NHATTr1VTnffyHAUTTHATMX THAT THAR GALi PAPPY, THATfjV I W --Cf,BEM SNeBSTBRT HE'S 'nT JOINED I ( RUMPUS OUT jMnllJirt! kVKBDOIMM Z- Sfc-Nv I WHO I AM J AN' I'M HERE TO TELL. y W SOT A HEAD ON HtS SHOULDERS J TOGETHER VJtHAR? VTTltlrll -taSSaL - I fOU THAT THIS WEDDH' CANfT SO f S HE HAST HE LEARNED ME THAT I ' LET NO C J mM VOU CANNOT WX. H ON LESS'N IT HAS NV BLESSIN' 1 Jk -- JONlE COSBY N'LOTTft WAS MAN PUT VyOUNDS TO ME Kfnl INTERRUPT 1 f WlOLDON NOV FOLKS ,X AIN T Of VTH ONE TOOTHER T t ASUNDER'"'. r HK6 A CUTT1N' i llI Uil THIS SACRED MK, V. - f Si miTHROUSH VET T I'M HER.H VZ- I AN' r4 ON THE SPOT TO GIVE r-S . u7 -TJ V SCRAPE T- ' E?Sn wSri JpVmtiX?&''Zl T7 ST VlS TO PAV TRIBUTE TO r- V VENI A PAPPYS BL-ESSlM'J J SIRTO 1- THE NEBBSThere's EOW, HELLO, V OH-AH-HEUO' iM LAD TO OJ eSO-LLV LOOX CXjrre f bvJ.VcXi MOOBSt "V. Am A MRS. BUT Mf? k68 MR. MEBB J 1 MRS POTTS. MEET J 'kmOUJ SOD V SIKJCERe &UT IM APtSAlD THAT TMINS, BUT ITS OUST )) VtLL THLL NOU cSoR MATRIMOUM. y& ( V Ma. 6 ITT y MCS pottV I NtXOE A BIT C A FLATTEvRER.) MV LOCK WW EM 1 MEET IS OM -rwe BOCSn-MEVHR CI f" A A 7n T I PLoiaaR BUT VOWRE RISMT A COOT A CHARMING CeeATUREwAS A STURDY fSOATftrTHESEST BRINGING UP FATHER I KNT THE COUNT OVtR TO MT COMPETITOR-HBlLL TKV TO EU. HIM A WAT1CM AN' HE'LL THRCVN OOT- r- im ws r There's No Guesswork in Tribune A. B. C. Circulation Und, AO. vuppoaedly nil c Ida vic tim, bad been murdered police a&ld today they h&d aire ted two women and tlx men lor questioning. 8 wet land, an advertising man, was found dead In bed last February 8 by bis wife. There was a bullet hole In his head ana ths comor pro nounced bis death a suicide. A note to his wife said be was "go ing to Heaven and work & telegraph L. ""1 I Ik S III . i, xi Um M 1 S M3. Come A Time OT AH-MR-JlCCSl 1 WT CALLED ON THE. I I GENTLEMAN- J I Ti ' key." Swetland had been a teleg rapher and was with the signal corps in the world war. He dispatched the message sent by Gen. Jaftn J. Pershing Nov. 11. 1918, ordering that firing cease, according to Mrs. Bwet Uad. Heating costs eaa be reduced- For complete nesting service, oall Ait SchmldU 18 1663. V'ELL'. DID TOO SELL MIM A WATCH? PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 13. (AP) The government camp hotel and its I NO'.VOOtEE HE& IN THE VACTCH BOSlNE&S TOO WE WOWED ME. OMEAND EXPLAINED HOVJ NOCH BETTER . IT THAN TOOW annex on the slope of Mount Rood on the Loop highway, was destroyed by fire today. The tall, three-story wooden structure was quickly con sumed by the flames. The lodge was one of the best known resort hotels In the Pacific Northwest. It was built In 1907 and was transformed last year Into a Swiss chalet type. SO I BOUGHT Sl'JCTT OOT.EN OP THEM FOR TOO- EX-GRID STAR CRUEL IS WIFE'S COMPLAINT SEATTLB. Oct. 12. ( AP) Mrs. Virginia Tesreau filed suit Is super ior court here today for divorce from her husband, Elmer L. Tesreau, for mer University of Washington foot ball star, charging he bad "conduct ed himself In a manner constituting cruel treatment." By EDWIN ALGER By SOL HESS By George McManus if 13