GRATITUDE OF MRS. HATCH sacl — By G. B. DUNHAM (® by Short Story Pub, Co.) EN MORRISON, the big bluffer of the sheriff's office, with his understudy, the junior deputy, was sent out into the country, a matter of fifty miles or so, to make an arrest on an indictment for rust- ling cattle. He brought in his man alive, but unconsclous, pretty well bruised, and with a dent in his oc- ciput about the size and shape of the butt of the deputy’s revolver. Now, the sheriff's office had been down on its luck all summer, and it was of a plece with the rest that the grand jury, just then in annual session, instead of commending the success of Morrison, should listen Instead to the prosecuting attorney and to a witness whom he hurried in from the back country, and find a true blll against Benjamin Morrison and William Judd, “tffat they did, upon the sald 20th day of August, assgfilt with intent to kill one Job Hatch, contrary to the law in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth aforesaid.” The sole remaining deputy turned the key upon his associates, and for a time the sher- iff’s office was woefully short-handed, for the chief said, “If the public rather pay my men for keeping the jail full in that way, it's all the same to me, and less trouble, but I'll not appoint another man.” The incarcerated deputies were in- dignant, but not alarmed. They had. on their return, given a straightfor- ward account of the circumstances at- tending the Injury to Hatch, which statement they repeated without devi ation at the trial. The sheriff sald the thing was a dirty political trick of the county attorney. The attorney sald he was sure of securing a conviction, and the prosecuting witness, pending the trial, said nothing. There were no dilatory motions from either side in facet both urged a speedy trial— and the case came up within ten days after the indictment. During this In. terval the condition of the unfortunate man at the hospital was unchanged He lay unconscious and without speech, His wife never left him but when went before the jury, and her name appeared upon the indict. ment as prosecuting witness, Morrison and Judd scarcely recog nized the gravity of thelr situation until they were brought into court upon the day of trial. That it was to be no perfunctory prosecution was evidenced by the attendance of an emininet attorney, “imported,” as the defense phrased It, “to hamstring the fury.” he she Jury being finally secured by the usual practice of carefully exclud ing everybody who knew anything about the case, I found myself one of the twelve men duly sworn to hear the prisoners at Then ing lawyer with the keen eye and the soft volce, whose habit it was to work Jurors as the potter works his clay gave us his opening statement. “Gentlemen,” he said, “I should not be In this case at all but for a wom an’'s tears. A great wrong has been done. You cannot right it—no one can. What you can do, and what we expect you to do, is to punish the wrong-doers. We shall prove to you that the officers went to the house of this poor man, sought a quarrel with him, beat him unmercifully and brought him down here to die. We shall prove this by his wife, who saw it, whose presence did not deter these rufians, whose tears at length pre valled on me to prosecute this suit.” Repiying to this opening, the de fense saidito the jury “In a neighbor- ing city a big Mock, some twelve stories high, bears the name of the opposing counsel. It was not built with woman's tears. The twenty farms he owns were never bought with tears. He works for cash only, and in advance, and In this Instance the cash comes from the coffers of a po- litical committee. We shall show that the unfortunate man was hurt by an accident resulting from his own bad temper, and to which the defendants were not in any manner contributory.” After the evidence of the attending surgeon, who declined to swear that the blow was or was not struck with a revolver, Mrs, Hatch was put on the stand. Her story was this: Only one man came to her house—Morrison He found Hateh at home, and, without showing his papers or stating his busi. ness, interfered with the ranchman’s treatment of a viclous cow. Hatch was unarmed and no physical match for Morrison. After some altercation be ran toward the house; Morrison overtook him and felled him with a blow on the back of the head. Upon cross-examination Mrs. Hatch contradicted herself In some minor matters and broke down, But she was solid as a rock on the main fact--that her husband was struck down by the officer. Throughout her testimony Morrison gave the closest attention, and, If I could read the expression on his face. it was one of doubt and sur prise. He looked net like a man hear ing the faithful account of his own misdeed. but as If he were hearing a shocking story for the first time. | made n mental note In Morrison's fa. vor, but Inter. when he himself testi. fied | rubbed It ott and went over to the woman's side. The court will always caution jurors against coming to a conclusion before \he evidence is in. But In this case * the bar. the visit I came to several, all of them errone- ous, In the course of the trial, The testimony of Morrison and Judd was as different as possible from that of Mrs. Hatch. According to thelr statement, which the ingenuity of op- posing counsel tried In vain to break or shake, they had not reached Hatch's house when they met him in the road. In a country where every man knows and values a good horse they had at once noticed the fine mount of Hateh, and had engaged him In a conversa- tion which ultimated in a horse race, with twenty dollars up, between Hatch and Judd. “I'll give you a good beating.” shout: ed Hatch, as Morrison started them down a strip of level highway. But his fine-looking horse was just a bit too fat to go up against Judd's wiry broncho, and he was beaten by a short length, Seeing which, Hatch hit his horse upon the head with the quirt, causing him to rear and fall upon his rider, That was the whole story the men had to tell-—suceinet, complete, but not convincing. Over and over, on Cross examination it was repeated by both men like a well learned lesson. Look- Ing and listening, I make up my mind that this evidence was false; ergo, the woman's was true, After the arguments of counsel and the verbal fireworks of the imported lawyer, who never made arguments, but always and everywhere stump- speeches, the learned judge charged us at great length to find the defend ants gulity If they were gullty, and not guilty if they were innocent, and we were locked up. In the jury room Judd, of course, was acquitted on the first ballot. The feeling was strong, but not unanimous, against Morrison. He had a friend or two who were stout In his defense, They urged that Morrison might kill a man on occasion—had done so per- haps—but never from behind, There was much argument and no agreement until, late In the evening, contrary to every rule of law and In ontempt of court, some new evidence was submitted to the jury. It came In the form of a note to me from my friend the doctor, shoved under the door of the jury room behind the balliff’s back. It read as follows: George .—At noon today Dr. Mars. ton and myself operated on Job Hatch It was only one chance In & hundred that the man would stand it, but as he could not possi. bly recover without it, we took that chance, and lost, He died within an hour. After trepanning he spoke a number of words Indicating excite. ment, The only connected sentence was: “I'll give you a good beating.” I thought you ought to know WILL Those were exactly the words testl fled as used by Hatch at the worse race, and the note, thrown into jury, turned the balance in favor of Morrison, and was acquitted In another part of the West, years later, I long wagon journey with Morrison. 1 came know his nature well, and proved on many occasions. under the tars, when ampfires bgrned low, 1 said without prelude: “Ben, who killed Job Hatch?" “His wife.” he also made a to brave worth summer to him After a slience, “Are you sure?” “I saw it. I went out there to ar m and he was beating his wife, As I rode up grabbed the gun from his holster and hit him. It was i+ chance blow, but woman was frenzied and it felled him like an ox He got about what he deserved and | told the woman that I'd see her through. Of course, any Jury would have cleared her on the facts, but she had been a girl well connected and sald she'd rather die than have her peo ple know, So | did what I did” “But,” I cried, “what was the ocen ‘asion for her bad faith? Why did she try to fasten the deed on you? After another pause and the light ing of another pipe Ben replied slow. iy: “1 don’t know. 1 have tried to follow a good many trails into a wom- an's mind, but they are always blind trails. They lead dowhere. My guess is that she tried to do me up because I went there to arrest her husband for a thief. No sooner was he gone than she began to idealize him, and she was as flerce against me in his defense as she had heen against him In her own That's my guess, but all I absolutely Know Is that she seemed very grate ful to me for my promise to shield her And two days after I got the worst joit of my life when 1 was locked up to answer her charges.” “You must have known before the trial came on,” sald I, “what the wom- an meant to testify. Why not then have given the court the facts? Why did you stand by ber in spite of her self? No answer, I wanted to get from him an avowal that he thought he had done a brave and genercus thing, “Supposing you had been convicted on her testimony?" I persisted. But Morrison nly sald quietly, “Then you would be waking this jour ney alone” rest hi she the Satan Leading On? The Rev. Mr. Potter, after he had retired from the ministry, continued to attend the First Presbyterian church of Greenwood. He was a saintly man and one time he, with his large family entered the church, Just as the congregation was singing “Hold the Fort” "It was at the verse which goes “See the mighty host advancing, Satan ‘ending on” that the entire family, led iy the father, came in und was sented, The situation was so novel that there were many smiles in the audience. ~In- dianapolis News. . The Kitchen Cabinet (&), 1986, Western Newspaper Union.) continuously when to be and when If you want to be happy, you must learn deaf, when to be dumb to be blind GOOD THINGS TO EAT It have planning to something different occasionally and always nutritions and wholesome, Oftentimes a most tasty dish may be put to gether, quite hy necessity, whieh we remember Is “the mother of Invention.” When the watermelon served several times and Is somewhat dulled, try pretty pink fruit cut into longs, cubes or Into balls with a po tato scoop; sdd diced pears and an equal bulk of finely cut tender cel ery. Mix with go good salad dressing, or marinate with a French dressing and when serving add the boiled mayonnaise, Serve on lettuce. To matoes, pears. and celery Is another well-liked combination. If one Is us ing yellow as the color note, the vel low tomatoes may be used. The small pear-shaped ones make attractive salad, Baked Ham.—Have a three-inch cen. ter cut of well-cured ham. Parboll if too salty and stick a dozen cloves into the fat of the ham, Spread with peanut butter, ndd a bit of water and place In a glow oven for an hour. Re. move from the add brown gar with a teaspoonful of mustard, and spread over the ham to the depth of an inch, Pour arvund it fresh sweet milk and put back to bake an. other in rather a slow thought and food, tnkes good heen its delight using the straws, ob- has aven, hour or two if not baked In a hot oven, The long, slow cooking makes the ham tender. Summer squush, dipped and us does makes an nice change from the way of serving it. Coffee Cake Take well-rizsen bread cooked one egeplant, a good cupful better, add one half-cupful of short. and if no milk was used In the bread, balf cupful of milk. Mix well with flour, k add little possi Cut | in of of sugar, nead ing as flour as twice, then place rover | Use Just moisten and brown sugar, 3 kne oven, if liked, when wding going the with raisins before the A roll which is quick to rise is the trefoil or Make | them no longer than g walnut and put inta top milk, clover leaf rolls three together Being when sery woell-preased they rise quickly if sllowed to gem pans and anti] light, they as feathers, haked, riage wili be as ligh! Good Sandwich Fillings. One prepare tions and make appetizing fll can strange combing of nl sandwiches small bits of most leftover out any Peanut mixed butter with a little whipped well liked by who enjoy butter. Sweet Sand wiches.-—~Chop a half cupful of raising, | me cupful of walnuts, a fourth of a | cupful of grated coconut, a table | spoonful of grated chocolate ; mix with thick sweet cream. Green chopped fine and mixed with mayon aaise. Figs and puts or dates finely chopped and mixed. Nuts and raisins | shopped fine, i Orange marmalade, Jelly, maple sugar, with browned almonds, finely chopped. Equal parts of grat #1 Swiss cheese and nuts, chopped Dutch cheese mixed with chopped ives or with preserved currants, | Finely chopped celery with mayon anise, Ham mixed with chopped pickles | and celery. Equal parts of ham, wlery and mayoonaise. Cold roast | chicken, roast beef, or cooked oysters shopped fine and well seasoned with solled dressing, i Cream cheese and barde-due, adding a bit of cream to the cheese to softer | it. Crean in thous peanut olives grated | | Quince Jelly, chopped walnut meats | Lettuce leaves and Cream cheese, French lettuce, dressing and chopped onion and a very thin slice of cucumber, all moistened with well seasoned mayonnaise, One cupful of cold roast chicken, three olives, one pickle, a tablespoon. ful of capers, all minced fine and mixed with mayonnaise, Hard-bolled eggs and water cress, finely chopped, mixed with softened butter, Caviar and lemon julce. meat and mayonnaise. Cucumber, grated onion and mayon. naise, Olives, pimentoes, chopped, on lettuce with mayonnaise, Grated cheese, seasoned with salt cayenne, mustard and anchovy paste. Cheese with chopped olives and plekles added, Murnschino cherries, nutments chopped. Cottage or cream cheese and chopped cherries, Cream cheese, chives and chopped green peppers. Lobster IENER'S LOOKOUT is sot really its name at all It ” fire lookout tation on the Mountain in Rocky Mountain National Park ind Waiter Kiend® is the watch for forest Walter is unique top of Twi Sisters man fires of Nevertheless utlook For right across Tahosa Valley the i as! Face of Longs Peak, * Rockies.” And it 1% enacted last winter the grim strug and mountain that ied the mountaineers the That dread East Face Agnes Vallle and Walter Dut altitude killed Agnes Vaille after summit was won, Walter Klener for life and Herbert Sortland in an at rescue. And from his lofty exrie on the Twin Msters Kiener looks out after day and night after night on these very places, (Pleture No. 8) tocky Mountain Is the most popu. Inr of all the national parks. Tabosa Valley, at the foot of Longs’ Peak. is its south entrance, Tahosa's cup on the east: the rest of the vast granite heap is the park boundary. Hundreds each sea. son climb the Risters for the magnif- cent view, the alpine flowers, the fan- tastic timberiine, This season thou- sands Instead of hundreds have worn deep the steep and narrow trall. It is the Twin Sisters plus Kiener, Kiener's « looms sheer E is there Between man of world did not Kiencr, ®top and the storm suri faust a aad | to death oe temp aay in It taineers to Ir the Lake sheer, {oer Or ge It from Chasm in mw nil fseoent sti believed be Impossible of Princeton Sitice then Vis nour 1922 made ascent eral times by shows the of the It fs wd se ARs enver IEE Career chamber of : Et i rade Mountain club Walter Kiener established fustly bo hefore oon YORrs ngo. in the frequently Migs Vallle Agnes VYaille, left ing He has Colorado done much ing Rockles been the compa Elinor Riener Denver Saturd 3 a mt Timberline Cabin (11.300 the regular trail). At 0 a8 m. the two climbers left for Chasm Lake and Miss Eppich returned to Tahosa Valley Darkness found the two climbers only part way up the East Face. After a favorable day the thermometer had dropped to 14 below and the wind bad risen. They decided climb up rather than down. They reached the summit at 4 a. m, Monday There is no shelter there; they had | to keep moving. The regular trail down Is on the west slope. They chose a shorter route down the north Few have been over it, even They had both used it By 9:30 they had T00 feet, 3 es vaid ano T al Sunday at ©} Coopnt Peel {0 in summer, There is no trail. descended about At this point, the most dificuit of thrilled by the herale. Tuhosa—Land of the Dwellers her footing and slid down over rocks | She assured > 11.438 (No. 2). the north Twin, His sheltered cabin is hidden from sight. Longs Peak rises to 14.255 feet. glaciers, It 1868-—nand then with great diculty from the west and by way of The Notch, Youngsters competent guides. About a thousand visitors n year make the ascent. But veen made, The famous East Face of Long Peak i { i i { i ’ With Kiener's help she though unbroken | Kiener left her for help at 10:80 | a. m He reached Timberlige Cabin | There he found a relief Herbert Sortland, son, Oscar Brown, Leaving Oscar Brown to keep the fire going, Kiener At 11.800 SRortland, twenty-three years of age, could not keep up and was sent back, Kiener and Christian ~he had given up hope of returning alive—reached Agnes Vallle at 4:30. She was dead--und had been for was impossi! ed to the yall Then it Sortiand wi Casey Rockw Andrews, Jack ledge and vain t timberline others-——risked thelr the search that was sit He Tm “Ed 1 hursday Cou Not Vaille’s body ut a It 13,300 be reached of about iK ’ {eet an elevation the north slope, 2 feet edge of the East Face, and abeut 50 feet above the perpetual snowdrift on the edge of Boulderfield—which in plain sight from the valley, sug gests a flying bird, and is s “The Dove” Two back of the is skis were the joint The body was strapped to these skis and carried with the aid of ski poles. Eight men carried the body across Boulderfield, relays taking part at frequent inter vals. Further down a toboggan could be used, At Timberline Cabin flattered the American Flag, worn and frayed from the winter storms, Agnes Vaille had done patriotic service overseas dur ing the World War. They took down Old Glory and lald It across her body. And so came back Agnes Vallle Walter Kilener, badiy frost-bitien Denver for medical treatment; sev. eral operations were found necessary. Agnes Vallle's father paid the hos. pital bills. The national park service gave him the lookout station, The body of Walter Sortland was not found until February Z5--In the Valley, within a stones throw of the main road and of shelter, Kicners official gaze must pass over the spot several times a day. And he cannot look at Longs Peak without seeing “The Dove” Master Craftsman Either the burglars In France have exquisite sensibilities or the pross agents are adepts at the profession. Consider the case of a burglar who broke Into a house, packed up all the valuables ready to take nway, and then found that the tefant was no other than the famous Moe, Dufious, un lady whom he had seen any times gyrating behind the foolizhts nt the theater, Stricken with cromorse, he thereupon left everything he had planned to take, and added this note: “I would not for anything in the world give you pain. But you must permit me to carry off some photographs, | Your radiant beauty and your equal | goodness of heart will forgive this | petty Iarceny.” | = _ Heazy Inheritance Tax Perhaps the oldest and cortaimy the | most drastic of inheritance tux laws in | the world Is that of the lgorot tribes | of the Philippines. When an Ignrot tribesman dies, half his property Is gold off and the proceeds used to de fray the cost of a canav or wake. Tha cadaver being smoked into a mummy in a burial chair, sits hy and views the orgy, one of wine and feasting anid utter abandonment to the carnal peas. nres-—gave nlone abuse of virtue, which is not known to the Igorote and if per. petruted would entail the death pen. alty. Ameriean government is the sole uplifting Influence awongst these tribes,