J1KDF0UI MAIL TKlbUXl-;, MKDl-'OKU, OJ.EUON, TL'tSlU V, i-'Ebiil 'Alii' :U, I'JU VAUK SIX BLOND (m A Now Serial SYNOPSIS: rrank Oratomt. oner bv " Mi'"o. a l. Chapter SS THE THREAT "TASY, Greene old man," cau- tloned Frank "I'd like to write hla obituary," narlod the mild Mr. Greene. Ahkln'i rolce apoke, flat with fl nallly. "She dlea wltb the others!" Green waa breathing rapidly, He turned to Frank. "I didn't get 11 that. What did he ay7" Ortega had spoken to them In English. Frank did not believe that the high-priest understood the lan guage. Yet he must have understood the substance ot what Don Raoul had told them because bis threat against Janice bad tied In wltb their discussion. He muttered to Greene, "I'll tell you later. Ortega, listen to me You're a white man. Thla native here la mad. You can aee It In hla eyea. You got her Into thla never mind us get Janice out ot this, or by God, If It's tbe last thing I do I'll get you. Get you, bear me! I know a way!" Ortega smiled uncertainly. "The girl will be all right," he said in English. "Abkln la blunlng." Again the priest spoke In level tones. "She has eaten, with these men, the food ol the Gods. She bas ainned. Yum Chao will sot accept her alive as a bride; he will take her dead as food." Ortega's face paled slightly. "No, be said. "We did not agree upon that" Grahame muttered in English, "The man Is mad, I tell you 1" Tbe high-priest's glance exam, lned Ortega coldly. "Senor Ortega," he said softly In his slurring Spanish. "Has It oc curred to you that your usefulness tn thla matter la ended? In fact, 1 am wondering about your future wortb to us." "What do you mean?" Don Raoul moistened bis Hps. "Yesterday a runner from Merlda told me that the revolution has end ed, unsuccessfully. There Is a re ward offered by the new Governor for your capture. "I do not care for the money offered," be continued contemptu ously, "but It seems that your serv ices have no value to us now." Ah- kin's voice became brittle. "Take care, man. Cama-tots is a thirsty God, and your heart would be as ac ceptablo as those of those dthers." Ortega stepped back Into the shadows. As the group filed out of the doorway, his big figure seemed queerly shrunkeu. Greene mopped hla forehead. "Whew!" ha exclaimed. "I'm wringing wet 1 wondor If I've got Cever. Botween that big slob Ortega making me hot, and that wicked looking prleat giving me tbe chills, I ahouldn't wonder. What all went on? 1 didn't get halt of IU" Frank considered. Ha wondored It be should tell Janice's press-agent all the Implications. The little fel low bad proved hie courage. He waa I little ashamed of his former an noyance with him In Hollywood. Hollywood! how remote It seemed. He decided to explain the situation to Greene In every aspect. Two heada were needed to pool, very scrap ot Information that might be ot possible value to them In their extremity. While Greene waa excitable, the chance ot hla flying off the handle must be taken. He said In as light a tone as he could muster: "Got your notebook, Greene? This Is the hottest stuff you've ever heard." Greene signed. "I wlsb 1 had It at that, only" He studied the bare of tbe window. " Myberg probably wouldn't let me use It If 1 could." Despite himself Frank smiled slightly. The little press agent'a ob session labeled blm an artist. He apoka to Greene primarily to Inform blm of the circumstances and also to piece together and clar ify the blta ot Information that were awannlng In nla own mind. "We'ro In a baJ spot. Greone," be began. "I'm atnaied at Just about everything I've seen and hoard. The people on the coast call these In terior Indians aublevadoa. Uncon quered fellows. "l)ut thoy've alwaya boon report ad as a friendly. Ignorant lot so long aa they were let alone. Occasional ly they drift (o the coast wltb blocks ol chicle chewing gum and E TO BE HELD HERE The 1035 annual convention of the Active Club International la practi cally assured tor Mrdford, Gltn L. abrlrk, president of the local Active Club, reported today following his return yitrtlay from Brattle, where ha attended a district meeting ol the organlsa-lon Saturday and Sunday. He was accompanied by William Mc . Alllstfr, International board member Cheater Huicard, local vice-president, and Kenneth Denman, .local secretary. Mr. Psbrlck reported' a succesa fJI meeting In the Puget Sound city where the session was held as a pre liminary to the annual 1014 conven tion at Spokane In a short time. The Medford delegation received encour- GODDESS by Herbert Jensen haven't gained any particular imi tation for ferocity. "Did you notice some of them were nearly white? Tbe old Span ish strain fc. persistent. That guard, for Instance, that brought the water bad ruddy hair. "Some ot them have come Into the cltlea and have been absorbed by the modern way of living. A fel low told me once that some, even, have gone to the States to be edu cated, but like our own Indians, they generally drift back to tbe jungle and lapse Into the old ways. "It just shows you what dynamite will do It aomebody provldea a fuse to touch It off. This Abkln for in stance. He was the same one I saw run away from the automobile tbo night Spin Wlnslow and I caugbt up with Janice . By the way, why wasn't Spin along on this trip?" "His arm waa still on tbe fritz," Greene explained. "He may come later, I dunno. Too late to do us any good." "You've read up on the arche ology business. When the Spaniards arrived In this country the natives were sacrificing, they say, twenty thousand young men and women a year in Mexico City alone on their altars. "Something like that la evident ly going on here." "Pleasant," muttered Greene. "I road where they took them to a cliff brink and threw them oft." Hla Hps were a little pale. "I don't like high places. I've never been In an air plane In my life." "This ahkln ahkln Is evidently a title, not a name ," continued Frank, "la doubtlescly the dynamite fuse In this locality. He must be quite a man. The jungle Is all cleaned up and the old templea re constructed better than the Pea body people have done at Cblchen Ida. But did you notice his eyes? He's mad. Mad aa a " "Yeah. What a-man," Interrupted Groene wearily. "Supposing we catch some shut-eye? They going to hurt Janice?" Frank turned hla head Into tbe shadow. "I thought so," said little Mr. Greene, "Listen Frank, and remem ber tbla: You did a foolish thing on the temple top the other night. If you get a break any kind ot a break forgot me. Forget me, will you? Take Janice and get the hell out of this place! Good night- I'm going to sleep and think about bar I n g our throats cut Pleasant dreams." GRAHAME slept fitfully,' his rest harried by fantastic visions. His shouldor wound had begun to heal and It Itched excruciatingly. As the moon sailed higher It threw Its beams against their prison. The raya filtered through the two open ings In the walls above him. He hoard Greene tossing. Finally he must have slept a little. He came awake suddenly, aa a dog awakes, senses alert but with body motionless. Some sound, he could have aworn, had broken his rest. Greene waa breathing deeply but with the regularity of the slum borer. . He placed hla feet upon the floor, and with eyelids widened, strove to pierce with his gaie the darkness that blanketed their cell oicept for the two silver patchea of moonlight, that stabbing througb the windows, sprawled one upon the wall, one upon the floor. Across the moon-patch on the floor, grldlroned with the shadows of the window bars, a faint gray tracery seemed to wriggle toward him. In an Instant he waa upon hla feet and stepped softly toward the center ot the cell. His toe touched an object: he slopped and picked It up. It waa a atone, the else of a large walnut. Tied to It was a strong white cord that lay along the noor to the wall, then up and out ot the window opening!' He tugged gontly upon It. Imme diately there was an answering double pull I He drew the cord to ward him without further resist ance, watching the window. There waa a flicker ot white at the all), and with a taint plop, a paper, rolled like a scroll, fell at his feet Ills Angers trembled slightly aa he untied the string that secured It. He unrolled the paper and found that It waa a massage ot soma kind penciled in Spanish. He held It to the taint light. It waa addressed to himself, beginning with the elab orate aalutatlon of Spanish punctil io, "Muy esttmado senor, y ml aralgo Don Francisco Grahame, , , ." It was algned Juan Pledra the lad who by thla time, had he escaped the search partlea, should have been well upon his way to the coast! (Crtrtiltl. Hnti'l Imn) A plan of sscapa smsrgts, to morrow. aging revitcnse to the Invitation Ihj group offered and Is certain next : venr's innuil rnnclava la slklert for ' Medford. The Medford club provided Rogue rtlver tlest Du-Comtce pears at the Statue banquet at which 150 repre sentatives from 10 cluba were served. 8A1.EM, Feb. 30 (AD The state banking department Is handling li quidation .tiuwta of more than aa, 000.000, A. A. Schramm said here to day. H was preparing Mi annual report which would show the prog ress mads tn liquidations, which he said were slow because of economic conditions. The department has supems on of 1 60 bsnks. of which nine are operal Inf on a restricted basis. CRATER LAKE HAS LI For several year paat, southern Oregon has been engaged In a great battle to keep Crtv.er Lake In this section, despite the magazine ac counts of Its location In northern California, any place else writers choose to establish the beautiful body of water. But while residents here were se renely thinking the battle won. with Crater Lake really located north of the California state line, where It has been made ft national park, the United States geographic board pub i Ushes a voluminous report of over eight hundred pages, and complete ly omits any mention of the lake. Of all the United States territory, one Crater Lake Is described as fol lows: Southeastern part of Annette Tsland, midway between Tamas mountain and the shore of Felice Ntralt, lat. 55 degrees, 03 minutes .6 N., long. 131 degrees, 23 minutes W., southeastern Alaska. !A copy of the handbook has been received by Supervisor Karl L. Ja nouch of the Rogue River National forest, and In It are listed decisions of the board on 25,000 names ap pearing on the maps. Origin of the various names Is also Included In Vie report. The geographic board, which t I.as . been serving as national arbiter In I matters relating to geographic names since 1890, has given careful study to pronunciations and spellings. 3 'MATTER POP " a """ " ' By C. M, Payne L r T5 O '"T 4r !S ME IT fl Wff '-- "ave N Y MAW- W ! f- . it??, rp. ( ji Kr,1 ,w e M.3tB ) ' to thh.mk- ; 'I ( To n yipiK -IH4e1c;e v mouse. )l "? JAlX of TTSAcuce-J V , fe MEoW J I VtS3'n ' MAW IS UP ON A- C- Y r-S NU tfoPL--S--Sy r--' I V . J W' V CrAiTC Am' ZaotJt ) ' iUl rSiv-pJ y se I ' I '1 l&l H..jy: j ,V y k II SM -f vCr ' (Copyright, r Th BcU Syndicate, Inc.) Vitf gfegSSe TATI.3PI1 TP'""'"' r7' " A By Hal Forrest BuiKg tdlLKINSj (OE.LI.--H1C -1F IT AIN'T ll'l fJtMO" "iSSSg erbV- EH?"106U.- HIC-ALt-RrySlSTE.R. IMMENSE OBJECTION u31t.L NOU KlNOLV SeX OBNOXIOUS- HCV?- UJHV O'OOUSU" FOR C'tfON" LE'S DRINK A TOA6T TO TH' gjsSs; lOORK'N' NO PLAY MAKES"-If "TO IGNOMINIOUS TITLE. AM 7 RertOVH VOUftSELF-' X- YOU PA'KTY- FACSCi Gitoeer fioTA6ut. black sheep wrto have sons cci: hic- sHav-- who's th' .2? poo wans CHeijS--CHiNe.se. , i consoe. your. 2j$a-j, plutocrat---i'ul.--- IN "!06T IU ASTRAY-SSSSfJjW: CHOlo D06--FRIEN' OF S-PERSON OF SREAT PROMINENCE C PRgSEISCE. OBNOIOUS")H' 2 r - 3 1 ifi' Mrtot" the 35 rrrxi VSaS vourV sivemm a drink Y'-am vaux to exaited film f and utrotsiRABLt-- 5 ft Y'-i m, PICTURES, IW., MV jW 7l D0HT DRINK, WzlAvtsfTk lTgB liTW HS. i . Wr) 11 Airn too m , IffMm vbrv W&ikr"' AWl Wl j p BOUKiJ TO Wits At The Yv;iv,--1:o-.'-.c ' " ' By Edwin Alger EANTIMB MITH BEN VJEBSTER I they WNTI NOTHEY ABOUT IT! MiSSj f JUST A SCRATCH , MR . PPiKTON T fM I O'BRIEN ,yf SO 6URE THfT I'LL. BE BENBATH THE COUCH AND N AM' IF THAT'S ASA MOORE WW PRETTY GOOD AT DOOGIN' BULLETS T MOW ARE YOU HBACK HERE IN FIFTEEN l MOMENTARY FEAR OF DISCOVERY BY LYVN'OVER THERE, i'LLTELL. f THEN. HOLD OMTD THAT BIRO MOORED JUST SURE ;! MINUTES WITH BEN , ; THE CRIMINALS. VME MUST RETRACE OUR OU RIGHT NOW HES THE BIRO MAN T BEFORE THE LIGHTS NENT OUT, HE SENT OF YOUR Q VMEBSTER , AN' THE STEPS RAPIDLY TO THE NORTH WARE- THAT TRIED TO PICK ME OFF T YOU'RE ME OVER WHERE HE COULO GET A FINE FACTS? I MYSTERY OF THE HOUSE OF THE TROPICAL. LINE -iWHEN AN' I JUST GIVE HIM SOME WOUNDED T SHOT AT ME 1 HIS ONLY MISTAKE WAS INK s STEALIN' AN' THE THE LIGHTS WENT ON TWO WOUNDED OF HIS OVNM MEDICINE rTM jpr-r-i BELIEVIN' I DIDN'T j nUJMrt 'JIMA hHIffiA K,LlIM 7.T.H.e J5oplCAl- MEN WERE ON-THE FLOOR . &V&fe; CS "' feFLTT WM'' POOR LUKE OVER HERE, MR. fcJ.A V flV 'fwt5w, If&f VAVife, I ' Vf?2Bi? V 'Mf I V SV. VJ-$X OBRIEN, THE j.( PARTON-HESBADLYj- SJ.S ' -rs If Wrli, i, tjj S Mrv Ml I 1 Pf fi AMP M Ji NEW WATCH- )- WOUNDED 1 f aT pMT '? r V iJklll I l-vVi ' -7 '& Li Wk OJT THF. KT'BBP- it i in v" t- . BvSolHess HOLO ARE. NOU AKJD MS. SLIDER CETTlloS T IT'S VERY MUCH f " : II IS THAT SO ? I'VE Glver-J t-lft .SLIDER. FREE- " , ALOIOG? i HOPE THIS FIKJE. FRlCtOOSMlP I SO WGRE KIOT f T 5EE.MS FOOLISH : HWOO INJ MANJASIKJ3 OOa WATER BUSIMESSV' I OF LOIO& STAJODIMIS IS KiOT 11-lPAlREO BY J I EvesJ SPeAVHNJ& ( FOR MEM OF YOUR AGE Vi ANJO BECAUSE IT VvASSJ'T MORE SUCCESSFUL, I1 THE VISIT OF THAT MEDDLESOME -TO EACH OTHER- TO ACT LIKE A COUPLE I TH AT Z.E PHY R.-MINJOEO , CYCLONJE-MOUTHED ' X . SOSJ OF HIS. . r-f V OF SCHOOL. BOYS SOKJ OF WIS CALL5 ME THE MAM LOHO ). pT- h---, . ' 7 -,.T V &ACKEO. UP AMD A HITCHIM1G POST FOR )JyJ K 1 S W?V4 V&J fe' -rHEBW who's i' i i ii - x y (O-a I W 4? uv ;.. Jwl RusjNiNi&THiswATeRi 1 i' xlif I I " timm ll u a aaaaasav. 1 1 II 1 r- aiuuil srrni v-- a. IV 1 I I" - - - aasaaa i I u ana jcjy j BRINGINQ UP FATHER By Oeorge McManus I K'TiJ fl iTl I ow will the. I will that 1 STfl A am da doctor rM Clad "well1, what do vou 1 1 oh. your 1 1 I DOCTOR EVER DOCTOR EVER DOT MR3.0lGOS VOUTOLCl KNOW ABOUT THAT ' DOGGIE -A H COME'THEKtS CO HERE.' IT S SENT FOR- 1 ME-TEO MAGGI e SENT FfR A IS NOT MARKS 75TH YEAR Mrs. Emma Foster, who lives on Sailing street In the Laurel hurst dis trict, celebrated her 75th birthday February 8. She was born that many years ago In Portland the daughter of William L. Toney, fa rin'wi&'n." J mijiii.h JY WS A&OUT IT- W 4 & GASOLINE ' I B,y -UM Ulll.UW73 (Copyright. 1934, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) mous pioneer and Indian fighter of j the McMinnville district, where he resided for 77 years before death ended Ails adventures, when he was 97 years of age. 1 Mrs. Foster was one of 11 chlllren born to her parents, six of whom died In Infancy or childhood. Their ptoneer father was known through out the west as farmer, boatman and Indian fighter. He was ft veteran -.' the Cay use Incran war. 1 Mrs. Foster h& lived In Medford for the past five years. Phone 543 We will haul sway rout -efuse City Sanitary Service. THE WORLD AT ITS WORST -TO BR16HTEN UP A PARTY YOU VOLUNTEER. . TO PO ONE 0V THOSE TARLOR. STUNTS, WHICH REQUIRES OTHER "THINGS A BROOM AND "RACflCALLY CLEARING- "THE ROOM OT FURNITURE, AND REALISE TOO LATE VOU'VC FORGOTTtN HOWfoDO if (Copyright, 1934, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) By GLUYAS WILLIAMS