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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1934)
PAOE EIGHT THE EVENING HERALD. KLAMATH PALLS. OREGON April 21. 1934 5 QdmjWc Runaway QtL KATHARINE HAVILAND-TAYLOR KUIN TOD A I PAHMTO. aaaSaaaaa IT-rar. U voulh. waraa Nt lb palatini , rinriita haaia af lllloanlra JIN Irll.l.U. Taa aaa al tltlf Raullaliaiaa . Mi Bepvant alrl. I'ahlltO ItnnVVa Bulking pi ala parrnta. W ken 8 J?ara old he ran arrar from ANIitfl.A, 4ka ar-arflraa old crnaa , la arkoaa rare fcr waa Ir-fl. Ilitw Ikra fce kaa llvrd nllk Nnitltin KOVEK. a Myalrrloaa Individual . wko kae ee-ea brlfrr dara. Plf-la'a a-almaae-d rtlla and tkrlr aaaahfrr, bH'l KbLK. nrrlvo 1kr Florida koaao. Pahllio ara Katrlla and almoaf at onp fnlla la lova with krr. lie keara Field tell kla dnna-ktpr he la planning aaaaqnerade parly la ker konor. NOW OO ON WITH THE STOnT CHAPTER V I7STELLE wild rather shyly J sho stopped to the dock, "I think yon run this boat beauti fully." ''You are very kind," Pabllto an- wered In an undertone that was little rouRh. . He looked up at her a slender figure with wind- whipped skirts on the dock above : him. Estolle'a Raze mot bis clear, Bow dorkenod, blue eyes. It was a curious feeling she bad about this young man, she roallrod. She did like him so very much and yet he had hardly hoard his voice, She had never before had any feel' Ins that was at all like this. Only a second she looked into Pabllto's eyes, although It seemed long to her. Short as It had ac tually been, it was too long for Jim Field. "Come along, child," he said a trifle shortly. His women must not forget their social plane. His own forgetting was another matter. "You needn't thank the servants for their services," he stated with a not too pleasant smile as they node their way toward land. "I'd much rather," Estelle an swered in the gentle manner which always made her seem a little shy. Some time, she reflected, when she knew her father better she would explain to him that she felt an obligation to thank those who made ber life pleasanter by attend ing her because of the very tact that it was not necessary and be cause so many people forgot such things. She did not know then how successfully and brutally her father could silence words he did not wish to hear. "Some of your mothers non sense," he said acidly after a short mirthless laugh. Estelle revealed her surprise by a sudden change of expression. "Well, never mind! Field added shortly. He did not want the girl who looked as Norma had to show, as Norma had, the fact that she was startled and amazed. A little later Estelle asked her mother's maid to learn the name of the young man who had run the "Silver Dart" that afternoon. As she did this Pabllto, on a soap box, was telling Noyes about ber. Noyes was troubled. It might- be young affair but to Pabllto It was evidently most real. Pabllto was a bit Incoherent and there was a flush under his deep. tan. Noyes remembered the feeling. "I'm going to town," he stated and stood up. Pabllto wondered what bad made Noyes decide to go to town. He had been quite drunk only two days before. Al most invariably at least a week of sobriety and sometimes a month "nme between Noyes trips to town. He watched Noyes off a dork hade that swayed against the su rer and gold of the still, twilight- echoing waters. Sober, Noyes poled a flat boat well; drunk, be clung obstinately to the pole and came home wet, both without and within. , , Pabllto decided that he would go for Noyes at 10 or 1L Meantime be could sit alone in the silence. For Hie first time in his life he did not want Noyes with him. He thought of the afternoon and the way Estelle hsd smiled at him. Suddenly he decided, "111 go to that party!" He knew a way to creep into the grounds and. nuked, he could talk with ber as ha never could without a mask. a mockery when he came back to earth. "I've been nervous oddly nerv ous this season," Noyes went on. "Everyone." he continued, "has these moments of feeling an im pending doom. 1'hey may be caused by a sluggish liver or an underdone pork chop but one al ways thinks tbls particular mood may be a premonition of what is to happen some hour next week." "We've done well this season," Pabllto said slowly. "That we' is kind," Noyes mur mured. "No. What could I have done without you? I don't forget even If you do." ' ' "I have given you some educa tion, some tastes, and an example of what a gentleman may become," Noyes said. "But as capital 1 don't know bow tar these- things will take you." "Without you I would have bad nothing," Pabllto said and then he went Into the shack to set a pot of water on the stove, to kindle and light the Are and to measure coffee. They would have tor their evening meal fried eggs and bacon and some coarse bread. And down the way a bit. a black boy In white linen was probably offering to Estcllo Field food from a dish that rested oa a twinkling sliver tray. He had high walla to scale. Pabllto knew, but the young are not dismayed by such thoughts. In some ways he reckoned and he had done a deal of reckoning he had everything that Field could never give his daughter. True, the things he had were diffl cult to diagram so that the eyes of the world could read them, and Estelle's gentle rearing would keep her from sensing that which Pabllto had that her father so com pletely lacked. Estelle's mother would and did know the differ ence, Pabllto was sure. Her tired eyes told this. (XVT on the rounded, higher end of the island facing toward the open sea Noyes started to rise and then thought better of it Running away always branded one as being afraid and being afraid told the onlooker that one had reason tor tear. Noyes own triumphant es cape from justice had been made by settling in the land wherein there was a hot search for him A boat was heading toward his island now. He lifted his head a bit and waited Jauntily. Some one in the stern sang out 'Give us a band, will you? En gine trouble!" Noyes called over bis shoulder, "Pabllto!" Then., as casually as he could, he got up to stroll toward the shack and Into it He had recognized the man at the wheel of that boat and he was certain the man bad recognized him. Years before Noyes and tbls newcomer had bid against one an other in New York and Philadel phia auction rooms. Noyes didnt think Jeffries would speak of hav ing seen him but he couldn't be sure. In the shack he stood cower ing in a dark corner, eyes fixed on the stove from which rose the thick, blue-gray fumes of burning bacon. After a bit he moved rather numbly across the room to shift the skillet The smoke made him cough. He stifled the cough and again crept to the shadowed corner. (To Be ContJnneri) OUT OUR WAY By J. R. William. J OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern i LOOK AT HIM I 1 6ET VEH? WELL, SONS HAVE V'-Ylji Him all ready, and nightmares. Tool whv L WY, IN THE SHORT TIME IT DO MOTHERS GIT A GUY ALL. ?" nlV,fa TAKES ME TO GET READY- DRESSED UP AN' THEN "SEE lvA C5AXE ON HIM A IF TH'GAS IS TURNED OFF UNDER a W$-V MOTHERS- NIGHTMARE " TH' WATER HEATER-SEE IF TH' M U CELLAR WINDERS IS ALL CLOSEO- I V -VH '? V LOCK ALL TH' WINDERS AN' TH'SIOE WtfJvJh AN' BACK DOORS-6EE IF TH' llW fflv FURNACE HAS GOT ENOUGH COAL vl'hV' " IN IT AN"-WELL.THEN EVERY" THIN6S WAV BUT ME! HEROES ARE MADE MOT BORN. T, . MtKa.Tt-JBg' SURE TO MAKE AN tvYPOSING SPLA&H IN SUAUOYV WATEIS-ShOT MOOPLE CAN SET AWBOOVS TRAFFIC TICKET FIXED MAS A TJRAG UKE A TRACTOR, 1 REMEIAttR THE TIME YOU TRIED TO SMOOTH A POLICE .TAS TOR HENNESSV -YES VOL) AND THE 3LVDoE WERE COLLEGE XM . UP-T- TV1 KKWTUIWA tnD M-)l 1 1 -UU UUH-BEING OLD-HOME WEEK, HE CORKED YOU THREE tAVS IN THE -5UG 4 ' ff" UO MARKET, TO jMARKET, TO BUY A FAT. MEN A M f iu l mm: 1 if V Ilk 1 IV 1 k J V M a r"-T I Oa A f t A tV ' a CVI SALESMAN SAM By Small rOO fA MMO IF I SLAP o K't HGP.OIM' FSR "W LP.ST yeti plAMO ACOUMO Ci)HIL ,P . ROUMD-UPJ TH' Wife. Tries THIS - fi P.ece?---- X TO IT'.Trl' MI-JOSH! t WISH I SOPT PeOft- . SHE'D HURM UP. T TH' LCFT' Vv CXS.T OOIU" ' ' TVT LL BK TMIRTV. TH' t-WoSUS IS PRS.TTW GOOD. CBMTs TO SOU, -SIR. I HUH wwy, SWS. KIM -SiWo-S srv-s-V'1NTMikii. am' SHe's a kwock . li M TU' SCA(-iS r5 Z s fj Ic BEVreft'N 2.SO, 1'v.LoeTcHAlJ htt - ir- '"fc-aaaaaa-C C lH ! MWWC. mC I IM U t Ml Off. J BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES By Martin T"AMN!" Noyes murmured, pol- Ing his way toward the tracks which he would follow toward the mainland and town. What chance had Pabllto to get anything ot that sort? The boy was unusually decent, fairly well educated and anselflsh. But those assets, Noyes knew, would count for little. ' Damn evotythlnE!" he said loudly and clearly. He couldn't bear the thought of Pabllto being hurt that way. Slowly he consid ered the fact that he could per haps make Pabllto Independent. But he knew that, though he could perhaps make Pabllto Independent something that was better than his drinking halt would not let him Id tbls, even for Pabllto. ' "Is It fair!" he domanded even -more loudly. Then, shame-faced, he pulled the Sat boat hlnh on a sandy beach. He bad no sympathy with flies that buized on window panes. He himself, and with rea son, bad not done much buzzing on the cosmic pane, but the thought of Pabllto being hurt Noyes burrled toward Jake's Dump as If his devil were at his heels Instead of ahead of him. nPHB southern season was draw- "- (ng to a close. Boon the camps would be closed and birds and men would make their way northward. The sun would grow steadily hot ter and the motions of those who remained would be slower and Nor rls Noyes would not be afraid to wander Key West, when be liked, by day, "I'm glad Bummer's coming," INoyoa said one night Pabllto was not glad. 8he would be going north; perhaps the next season the Fields would go abroad or to Bouth America and visit the camp tor only a week or so If at all. Then Pabllto would have only , bis dreams of her and the blunt, cold Wta that. made, dreams such Health Programs Stressed by Woman Henrietta Morris, health edu cation director of the Oregon tu- oercuiosis nospital, gave a talk to faculty members of the Klam ath Union high school last week and outlined alternative health programs to be started when pos sible. Mrs. Morris declared students snouid be given a four year health course if possible have physical education work daily In gymnasium witn study being given in the different home rooms. Surgeons grafted pupils from the eyes ot an animal to the op tic nerve of a boy who was born without pupils 22 years ago'; the boy, Frank Bentz, recently was graduated from the University of Wisconsin law school. Cattle cannot live in the steamy hot lowlands of New Guinea, so small herd of dairy cattle has been transported Into the moun tains by airplane and Is doing well. Christmas and New Year's are the only universal holidays. Flapper Fanny Says MOW ,WM Oi.VTO VCT-& GET TrVS THWid SVRM6rT , TrtEWE's A VOmo.Kt TVWS PLACE YcSl TAVHrV ME "TO, VIVO OOTcWT CWCVK Ot riHti TV' LMTV WY& MO - AV VUr VOMOT Mc T'WtP IN NV FEED ' aOME FAttCY WMUCLE'3,W WtCE'iAn.V tii TPAT OrV.rJUT OO TO CAREFVA. ,WLVE -rE cOONOEO SO MEAN Ntf AWFO. fc v- , : ' A T006H WV,lV? WEU. ,TWf. TW' wwy X LVW.E 'EM TH HAROER TA COOVl , CR0M6Li TWECtitl THERE'S TW' CA&N WUiE &JT ,VOOVt TVVEREVre SOMH . PEOPLE THEWE , SBiESKL OT 'EM I CtE '. MTO'e.E WERE TOO VATE - WASH TUBBS n r By Crnna WE'RE NOT CUTTERS.. 1 ? r-y When the old man an6Rilv ordered wash and w psv rack to the ranch. he had no idea thev WOULD STAV ONLY LOW6 EH006H TO 6ET plAHKETS ma 00,, 7 now vjot's Mihe BAMDirs escapi THIS BRIGHT 60IM& SOUTH, DlOl IDEA OF THEV? BUT LOOK V VOURS? J THEIR TRACKS, Wi 7 'S V THEV CAM6 FRO ( v 1 THE WEST. Jfil nrr 'SAV' "ATlS RlbHt THEV CAME FROM OVER BV TH" BADL SURE, AND THEV PR06ABLV DOUBLEdN CCK TO THB SAMC PLACE. THEN, SINCE WE LOST THEIR TRAIL AND COULDNT LEARN WHERE THEV WEHT, LCI a rINW OUT WMfcKk 1H&V CAME FROM. L 3 OBOVl AT'S A HONEV. WHY A IT STANDS T' REASON THSV'LL BE EASIER TO FOLLOW 60IN' TP A J HOLD-UP THAN BONN IN' AWAV J l l-KUM UWa.i FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS By Blosser aMPOPTANT NEWS FLASH !! JEREMIAH SCUTTLE BY THE LAW!.' YES.SIR...THEY CAUGHT MR. SCUTTLE THIS MORNINC.'BOARDING A BOAT... HE WAS IN AN AWFUL HURRY! HELL PROB ABLY GET ABOUT SIXTEEN YEARS... AND X'D LIKE TO SEE HIM DO THAT IN A HURRY ! 'tx Y AN' HERE'S TH' FELLA WHO CAUGHT HIM.TfcU GUYS! HE TOLD THE SHERIFF WHERE HE . THOUGHT SCUTTLE MIGHT BE...AKID,6VRE ENOUGH, T7 ?n HE WAS! AtV.OSSIE.mTHAT WAtWT 6UPP066D TO GET AROUND! GIVE THE SHERIFF CREDIT.., HE TOOK ALL THE CHANCES ...BESIDSS, IT MAY GET HIM A P00M0TION..AND IF I HAD DONE IT, IT WOULDNT HAVE MEANT A THINC TO ANYONE A 6SCRET IN I YOUR HANDS 18 JUST ABOUT A3 4 safe as a jytyi RHINOCEROS f X TIED wrTH J t DENTAL ) FLOSS J J ' i know rr.,.TOuiRE always talking! IF EVERYBODY ELSE IN TOwM WAS SUDDENLY STRICKEN DEAF AND DUMB ' 1 1 rKUWDLT WOULD BB SIX OR EIGHT WEEKS BEFORE Y13UP FIND IT OUT ! r i Zrtt FIND IT OUT!' - tiVfJ I Modest freckles! scornino tub heros crown... he wont bver need an . ELASTIC HAT BAND THE NEWF ANGLES MOM'N POP By Cowan Girls pensive before marriage are usually ex-pensive suer HUOCY.ME.N1. MY LITTLE. WIFE o ALONE, AMD THAT J YEGGS IN THE. HOLrsb. II I 4Wi IP HEM TUC VXttK. LFAOWFT) THAT THE. CONVrCT AT WINDY'S HOUSE, THERE. WAS A WtLO DASHl LOOK', WNT THAT HIM.COMIN' UP THE STREET S- LET m WAJT.i MOLT) YDUP T'o MV WIFE! F VOU TO MOCH A3 FLICK Ahl" HAVE tT FIPE.',! SOrAEONCS ISHC'6 CAP TOCEO 1 ( EyELA'iH,I'U. MASSAGE XOUO "V -A. BEHIND MtMl -v HIM I V SKULL SOME MORE.WITH THIS J-aaiia.' aaaaiaraMfcrtwBwaBaaaaaaaappaa f r . i maffUge.