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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Oct 1925, p. 8

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( • " ' .-\'"' V:V'v;-A " •?' s^vy* •ti> H" <V* - x f r " f c - , ; THE MdHENRY PLAINDEALER, McHEXRY, ILL . m--w'ww^m vlht- *-"• A-T NAMELESS RIVER Copyright by th* McCall Company Py VINGIE E. ROE rNU S»rrle«. ftooomor r t m!rwofaoQoont»oooBoocooottooc^K»oa^j*yMW>w*www' """'aea x»ococ*>^aaaeaQnnftnnnnftnnnnnnnnoco,aoooauu<J^ % CHAPTER XVIII --16-- The Fighting Line at Last. Brand Fair haunted the Selwood mnoh. He hung to the %ide of the un- 4K>n"cious muu almost night and day. •„,: "What do you think, doctor?" he gifted anxiously of the medical man troucht in from Bement. / "Frankly, I don't think," said that Worthy, "these lapses, superinduced , t^1 concussion, are treacherous things. Be may recover suddenly, or he may without regaining consciousness. B'l a gamble." Bat anxious as he was to know the •fecret locked in the unconscious brain W Price Selwood, Fair had not been Idle. He and Bossick had been very busy. • Many tilings had been done, a plan arranged, secret conclaves held at %hlch grim and determined men sat their horses and pledged^ themselves to do a certain thing. Then Fair went to the cabin on Ifameless, for the longing in his heart to see Nance Allison grew with every * gassing hour. He held ber In his arms and kissed her forehead and her smooth cheeks, touched the shining coronet of her hair With reverent hands. "Sweetheart," he whispered, after the age-old fashion of lovers, "there Was never a woman like you 1 You are Ay light in dark places, my rain In the desert. Oh, Nance, what if I had never found you!" And the girl leaned on his heart in an ecstasy of love that was shot with tladness, holding fast to her trust with . desperate hands. "It's bound to come soon now," he told her, "we are organized and ready •--only waiting for Selwood, poor fellow, to regain his reason that he may tell as where to strike." "There'll be gun play and--blood," •aid Nance miserably, "and I pray God that yon will not be taken. I--I Couldn't lose you. Brand, and live. I Wouldn't dare to live--for If they kill you--Oh. thai black hatred which has Hired in .me so long. Is getting be- TimTmystrengtli to hold It I I'll go ad and turn killer, Brand If they kill yon t I know It--I feel It here--" she laid eloquent hands on her heart--"and then my-^soul will go into the pit of damnation^ ^ "Buck up," scoffed the man playfully, "we'll all come through with colors flying and see this nest of vipers caged. Then think of life on Nameless, Nance--safe and happy, with our fields and our herds and peace In all the land. I shouldn't have suggested anything else. Come--be my brave girl again, my good fighter." Obedient to his words, Nance straightened and tried to smile In the Starlight. "That's it," he said, "you're resilient as willow wood--ready with a comeback. You'll never leave the line, aweetheart, never In this world!" It was late in the night when Fair rode away. He went south, going back to look again on the quiet face of Sheriff Selwood, then on to the Deep Heart fringes to meet Bossick and Jermyn. As for Nance Allison, she was seized with a great restlessness that made inaction unbearable. "I think I'll ride the lower slopes of Mystery, Mammy," she said next morning, "and look for that black shoat that's missing. I cant afford to lose It." • The mother looked at bar with worried eyes. "You take your pappy's gun," she Bald at last "I feel to tell you so. Th* time has come." Bat the girl shook her head. *1 don't care,?Jshe said, "I can't trust myself of Tate." She kissed Sonny, ran a hand over Bud's bronze hair, and went out to the stable where she saddled Buckskin and rode away. In every likely place she looked and listened for the black shoat, but it seemed to have disappeared from the face of the earth, like the six fat steers. She followed a small ravine for longer than she had intended, sat for a while In a sunny opening high along the breast of Mystery, and sidled back toward the west again. And here it was that two men far above looked down and saw her with ejaculations of delight. "Well, if this ain't luck!" said Provine grinning, "then I'm ra liar I 1 thought this morning when Arnold handed us that last bunch of instructions that he was due for once to come oat th' little end of th' horn. I didn't see bow any human was goin' to be able to carry them out. 1 didn't think we'd ever get near enough to get her and do it on th' q. t. But she's brought herself to ust" "If she's armed," said Caldweli shortly, "it'B not time yet to crow. 1 think she'd fight.'" "Fight, h--l!" said the other, "she don't believe In fightin". She's religious. We'll pick her up too easy an' present her to th* boss with our compliments." An hour later Nance, riding along a dim trail made by the traveling hoofs Of deer, came out above a sj>rlne in a pretty glade. j She was warm and thlrsfy, so she dismounted and pushing hack her hat from her sweated forehead, knelt on the spring's lip and putting her face to the limpid water, drunk long and eagerly a foot from Buckskin's muzzle. there ol' bonnet of yours 1 didn't know how purty you was! Them eyes now --they're right blue, ain't they? An' that wide mouth--all wet where you stopped wipin' It--" 'You d--n fool!" said Caldwell disgustedly. "shut up and mind the buslness entrusted to you. Miss Allison," he said to Nance, "you're Just the person we wanted to see. We were sent tills morning to fetch you to Sky 'Line, so you may as well go along sensibly, for we'll take you anyway." Nance rose to her feet. - " "Then you'll have to take me," she said curtly, "for I'll riot ride a step with anyone from Sky Line." She swung into her saddle and struck her heels to Buckskin's sides in a forlorn hope of escape--little Buckskin, stock, slow and faithful. Provine > laughed again and dashed forward with a Ieftp of his gray Silvertip that put him alongside in a second. "Ain't no use, purty," he said, and caught her rein. He turned the little horse up the slope, Caldwell fell in close behind and in a matter of two minutes Nance Allison was a prisoner headed for Sky Line ranch. The pink flush was gone entirely from her face, leaving It'pale as wax. Her lips were faintly ashen. "Help me. Lord!" she whispered lnaudlbly, "Oh, my God, be not far from me!" * There was no fear in her, only a deep and surging anger that seemed to make her lungs labor for sufficient air. Her usually smiling lips were set together In a thin line. So, In silence, save for Provlne's occasional Jesting observations, tliey climbed the breast of the great ridge Looked and Listened Blpck Shoat. the and presently struck Into the willworn trail which led direct to Sky Line. At the broad steps to the right Nance was ordered to dismount. Provine took Buckskin and Caldwell motioned her to ascend the steps. With her head up and her mouth tight shut Nance Allison strode forward into the stronghold of her enemies. The door was open, and she saw first only a pale darkness within as she stopped on the threshold. Then, pushed forward by the foreman with a none too gentle hand, her eyes slowly became accustomed to the 6hadowy Interior and, in spite of herself, they widened with amazement at the splendor she beheld. A man was sitting on a broad couch, a cigarette In his fingers. He was a stranger to Nance, a stranger to the country, but she catalogued him swiftly as the man from New York of whom all Nameless bad heard. He was slim and fair skinned, and the gray eyes, set rather close together across the arch of the high-bridged nose, were the sharpest she had ever seen In a human. A fox she had once seen caught in a trap had had just such eyes. They were cold and appraising, with out a spark of kindness. In one of the gorgeous chairs Kate Cathrew, dressed like a princess, sat bolt upright At sight of Nance In her faded gar ments, straight and defiant In her controlled anger, her handsome face flushed beneath Its artistry. "Ah!" she said, like a vixen, "get-- out--of--that--door. Step over to the right a bit, you obscure the light. The big girl did not move. . She stood with her hat pulled down above her narrowed eyes, one hand on her hip. "If you've got anything to say to me," she said coldly, "say it." Kate Cathrew leaped to tier feet, but the man put out a hand and touched her.' As If a spring had been released she sank down, obeying that calm touch like an automaton. "Miss--ah--Allison," said Arnold, "there is no need for dramatics. Neither will they avail you. We wanted to see you--to talk business with you. So we sent for you." "So I see," said Nance, "or rather yon kidnaped me." "1 don't need them," said Nance. "I've thought for several years--about my father's death--my brother's crippled body--my missing cattle--my burned stacks--and many other things. I'm thinking now' about Sheriff Selwood-- and Bosslck's latest loss." The man's face hardened, yet a reluctant admiration drew a slight smile across It. VYou take liberties. Miss Allison. Are you not:--speaking In Jest--a little-- ah-r-afraid to speak so broadly?" Nance laughed bitterly, shifting her feet In their worn boots. . "Afraid? No--not of you--nor of your hired rustlers--nor Cattle Kate, there, with her paint and her tempers. I'm not afraid of anything but the wrath of God." . At that Arnold laughed outright. "You have something yet to learri, I see. Very well, since you do not care to think I will outline briefly your situation. You know, of course, that you are at present In the power of Sky Line ranch. Reasoning backward you will come to the conclusion that there Is a primal cause for this. Reasoning forward you will know that there is something which you can do for Sky Line, which It wants of you." "Of course," said Nance, "the whole country knows that---my flats on the river." ' • • Arnold frowned. He did not like that ans^CTT* "And how, may I ask, does the country know this?" "It knows what has happened to me for several years now--and it judges the faces of your riders and their boss." "If you please, we'll l«^»ve Mis* Cathrew out of this," said Arnold crisply. "Yes?" asked Nance. "She's been the backbone of ray troubles--under you. no doubt--and It Isn't likely I'll leave her out. If you have anything to say to me I'd advise you to say It and get It over before Nameless comes hunting me." "All Nameless may come hunting you. Miss Allison," returned the man, "hut It will not find you. Now put your wits In order. Sky Line wants (hose flats on the river--and means to have them. We don't do things by halves. What Ave undertake we finish. The liuie has come for decisive action. You have had many--ah-- hints to vacate and have foolishly disregarded theut. That Is like a woman. A man would have gone loug ago." "Not any man." Interrupted Nance, "my pappy didn't." "No?" said Arnold cruelly. "Is lie here?" Quick tears misted the girl's eyes, hut the slowly throbbing anger burned Uient out. "Yes," she said promptly, "and always will he--at the foot of our mountain--and In Bud and me. He has not yet been conquered." Arnold dropped his dead cigarette Into a (all brass receptacle, rose and stepped Into (he other room. He picked something from the desk there and came back. We come to cases," he said sharply, "I have here a properly-made-out deed, conveying to Miss Cathrew for the consideration of one dollar, the quarter-section of land herein described. lying along Nameless river, owned by the widow of John Alltson. deceased, who took up said land under the homestead act. This paper needs only the name of John Allison's widow and two. witnesses to make It a legal transfer of property. I am a notary. We can supply the witnesses --the highly important and necessary signature of John Allison's widow you will obligingly furnish--at a price." Nance swept off her hat and struck It down against her knee. A laugh broke stiffly on her tallow-whlte face. "If I could swear," she said, "I'd tell you where to go, and what 1 thought you were. You may consider yourself told as It Is." Arnold became coldly grave. "You refuse?" "What do you think I do? - Pot your wltli In order!" The mau turned and struck a bell which stood on a rosewood pedestal. Minnie Pine responded with suspicious promptness. "Send me Provine and Big Basford," said Arnold briefly, and the girl departed. The man did not speak again, nor did Nance. There came a shuffle and rattle of spur and the two Sky Line riders stood In the doorway of the room beyond. having come throrfghV^Jhe kitchen. 1 "Miss Allison," said Arnold. "I own the men of Sky Line, how or why is Paddy? RiiryTal Graham Bonner THE MONKEY'S REGRET unimportant. What I tell them to do, they do. Am I not right, men?" Provine nodded easily. » Big Basford spoke sullenly. "Yes, sir," he said. "All right. Now, my girl, consider. There Is on Sky Line a secret place--" "I've always thought so," said Nance decidedly. "Be qiliet. A place which the whole of Nameless Is not likely to find, so mysteriously is its entrance hidden. One could live there for a lifetime undiscovered--or be taken out as If on wings--" "Like Bosswlck's disappearing steers I" Arnold was exasperated, bat bakl his temper. "Exactly," he said, "if you will. Now consider again. You are a pretty fine specimen of a woman--quite likely to appeal to men--especially to men long decried feminine companionship-- like Basford there." Nance flung a glance at Basford. His sullen, lowering face set In its thicket of beard with the red-rimmed eyes above was enough to chill the heart of any woman. The great apelike body added Its own threat. Her own Intrepid spirit felt a shock of horror, but that deep anger In her left little room for fear. She seemed to hear again Brand Fair's exultant words: "You'll never leave the line, Nance, never In this world!" With a dogged courage heaving through the - anger she -looked back at Arnold. "Well?" she said. "Big Basford hasn't had a woman of his own for many moons, I know. Now--will you sign this deed--or wJU you go with Basford to Rainbow's p*>t --his blushing bride?" Nance's breast was heaving. Great breaths dilated her lungs and whistled nut again. Her hands were shut tight, the fingers on her bat brim crimping the weathered felt. She thought of her mammy--of Bud --of their long labor and the hardships they had borne. She thought of the cabin on Nameless--of its white scrubbed floors--Its homely comforts-- and all It meant to them and to her. It was her pappy's dream of emplref-- It had been hers. She thought of Brand Fair and of Sonny. Of Brand and Bud who would sure start the fire to burning In all the lonely reaches at news of her disappearance--and-- <S"I'm as good as most men," she said, "t« take care of myself. I wouldn't sign that paper to save you and all your rustler nest from eternal damnation! And that's my last word." Arnold snapped his fingers. "Enough," he said, "we'll see what a night in Rainbow's pot will do for you. Basford--my compliments. I give you the beautiful lady. Properly disciplined she'll make you a fine wife." But Big Basford shook his unkempt bead. "She's a yellow woman," he said contemptuously, "I don't want her," and his hungry eyes went helplessly toward the dark splendor of Kate Cathrew in her velvet chair. Provine surged forward, a sadden excitement in his snaky orbs. "I do," he cried, "try me!" Arnold laughed. "Good! I like an eager lover. You may guard Miss Allison Inside, and Basford shall , take the place I had Intended for you outside the Flange. We'll talk business some more tomorrow. We bid you adieu, Miss Allison. I hope by morning you will be more amenable to reason." Without a backward glance Nance turned and strode away between her guards. Resistance was useless, she well knew. "The hand of God," she said calmly, "Is ever before my face. Neither you nor yours can do me harm for the Lqrd shall preserve me from all evil, He shall preserve my soul. And He did not make me strong for nothing," site added. "1 shall leave It all to Him." (TO BB CONTINUED.) Protection for Big Game Sleeping sickness and malarial fever will perpetuate big game In Africa; the realization has been forced on hunters that they cannot defy microbes when they invade the haunts of the big mammals. "The regret of my .whole monkey life," said Larry, the monkey in the zoo, "is thatJ I cannot talk to tba children in their language. "Yes, and" Pd like to talk to the grown-ups, too. Indeed I would." "I don't regret that," said Mike, another monkey in the cage with Larry. "I'm too shy to want tp talk much." "I'm not," said Snookums," "but I don't know that I especially want to talk to the dill- Enjoyment on Tour Tony--"What sort of time Is Frank having on his motor tour?" Jim-- "Great! I've had two ^letters from him--one from a police station and "the other from a , hospital."--Qpod Hardware. . "I'm too Shy." dreo and to the grownups. "I can make the keeper understand me, and that's enough. "I can make faces at the children, and they will laugh. I enjoy that. "And I play with them, and they play with the keeper. I knock off his hat and then the people standing around the cage think It's a great joke. The keeper knows what I like to eat and what I like to do. "He knows when I am well and when I am sick, and so why should 1 want to talk to children and grownups?" „ "The keeper Is a grown-up," said Mike. "True," said Snookums, "but he Is « grown-up who understands. That's all I care about." "Of course as I said before, I'm too shy to want to talk to people," said Mike. "I don't even like to play with them. I'm veVy nervous. But, Larry, you are the friend of every one who comes to the monkey house. - "Tell us why you would like to be able to talk." "Because," asld Larry, "people don't understand us and then they tell children everything quite incorrectly. They say to the children and the children then say to e$ch other: 'jr*See the monkeys. I They are horrid a(pd they are very dirty.' " They are scratching themselves. Horrid, unattractive monkeys.' 4 "Then they will watch us perform and laugh at us because they think we're funny. ^ "We may he funny but we are not dirty. You both know as well as I do that we aren't scratching ourselves because we're horrid .and dirty, but because we are so nervous about becoming dirty that we pick off every bit of dust and dirt and sawdust that flies upon u$. "We won't let a scrap of It stay on. And, too, we often eat the salt that is on our bodies. That is good for us, but we're not dirty. "We're so nervous about being clean and we're so fussy about it that we've gained the reputation for scratching and untidiness." "I don't wonder now that you wish to have the power to talk the people's language;" said Snookums. "I didn't know people said such things." "But," daid Larry, "every time »ur good keeper gets a chance he tells people It's n o t t r u e a n shows our cleat white skin to prove this point. "Many and many the time lias he done tfiis. "Oh, he teaches the people so much they don't know, as he has bothered to find The Friend of Everyone. out, and people have a habit of saying something Is so when they have nothing in the world to give them reason for saying what they do." "Poor Larry. "No wonder you feel as you do," said Mike. "No wonder," said Snookums. "How glad I am the keeper does all he can." "So am I glad," said Mike. "And you know I am," sighed Larry. Otherwiae Engaged "Sit up an' shake hands, Wove*!* Judy commanded her dog. =i_ Rover didn't obey, and Judy repeated the command several times. The little boy next door laughed derisively. "Well, he tan do It if he to!" Judy championed hotly, jus' thinkjn' of somepin else!" wants "He's Method of Obtaining New Plant From Old A simple method of propagating th* rubber plant Is by mossing. A branch Is selected with ripe wood, or In the case of a lanky old plant with a long, bare stem the top may be rooted and cut off, in either case making use of a cluster of leaves that will make a wellshaped young plant. . M:.ke a slanting cut upward half way through the stem with a sharp As she straightened up, wiping her month with the back of her haiid, she caught a sound where had been silence I gets out, I guess," said Nance. "Heav More--the sound of something mov- I en knows 1 don't amount to much, but tag. the rattle of accoutrements, and toning quickly, still upon tier kneeB, Afe looked up into the grinning face ef Sud Provine, the frowning one of the Sky Line foreman. "By Jing!" said Provine wonderingbavin'seeo ydu outside that Not so decided, please. don't I knife. Slip a match or other small like " such words. They are^^h-- 1 stick to hold the wound open. Then crude, 1 might say." j I wrap moss around It. You can get Not half so crude as you will Jind | little sphugnum moBS from any florist the methods of Nameless when this a room where the temperature remains ot nearly 70 degrees and where there lb considerable moisture In the air; in other words, the kitchen. I am likely to be a torch foj a fire that's smoldering." "We have extinguishers," smiled Arnold. "Sky Line Is a pretty fire department, If I do say It. The thing for you to do Just now Is--think. I'll give you ten uilautes." or seedsman. It should make a knob about as big as one's fist. Tie It tn I place with string and keep It moist bat not dripping wet. In a few weeks inany new roots will have been formed JuBt above the cut. Then the moss can be removed, the stem severed at a point below the roots and the plant potted in the usual way. The operation la beet performed la Good Story, Anyway The popular story of how the Spanish province of Andalusia acquired Its name Is told by Eleanor Eisner In one of her travel books. "Early explorer* entering the province met a peasant Indolently driving a mule over a pass; they begged him to tell them the name of this sunny and pleasant land, presumably In a language or dialect of which he understood never a word. He looked them over, silent and stnlllng In the usual Spanish fashion, then, turning to his mule, called out, 'Anda, Lucia,' which simply meant '(Jo oo, Lucia'; but the strangers took It to be the name of the country, which the) registered on their rough charts as Andalusia." Diplomatic Virginia Virginia had been left for "an hour to visit Aunt Julie's new baby. Playing with baby soon palled and Virginia turned her mind to more* interesting things and In that pursuit said diplomatically to Aunt Julie: "I expect you niake the best cookies In the whole world, don't you, Aunt Julie?" ' jollying the Bridm Mrs. Newlywed--This darling little recess off the parlor Jack and I call the Love Nest. / . Visitor--Ah, a mush room. Would Have Plenty Pop Tommy and his chum, Bill, are both Inordinately fond of strawberry pop. On Tommy's birthday his grandfather gav« him a dollar. He gleefully showed It to his chain. • "Oh, boy!" exclaimed Billy, beaming from ear to ear, "twenty pope I" SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN* and INSIST I Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are noi getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proven directions. , Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100--Druggists. 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