Copyright 1928-1934, Harold Titus, WNU Bervice, SYNOPSIS Ben Elliott—from “Yonder"—arrives at the little lumbering town of Tincup accompanied by Don Stuart, old, very sick man, whom he has befriended. He signalizes his coming by defeating Bull Duval, “king of the river,” and town bully, in a log-birling contest Nicholas Brandon the town's leading citizen, resents Stuart's presence. He tries to force him to leave town and Ellfott, resenting the act, knocks him down. Elliott Is arrested. CHAPTER I1I—Continued wlf— “Oh . . . That! I don't know. 1 didn't ask; I forgot it. I wasn't inter- ested in your fine. We can take care of that. 1 was Interested in out about you nut-cracker you are” The young gray eyes were studying the old blue ones closely, now, “I found out,” Able continued. “He says you're no In the pause the justice chuckled softly. “He says you're absolutely no good to yourself or anybody else, He tells me that you know more about logging and sawmills than any man your age has a right to know and he's seen a lot of men. He says you can make the worst crew that ever Infested a shanty eat out of your hand. what it is to be tired or afraid, , . . And then he says again that you're no use on earth, so far as he can tell!" & " good, now and rubbed his chin. Able went on: as one of the prize young men In come home there's nothing you'll do. You can do anything, he says, but you won't. I asked him why and he sald he guessed it was because everything they had to offer you was too simple, which I transiated to mean that they haven't a good, tough hickory nut to offer you.” The other's rather embarrassed smile faded. “Was he . . . mad?™ “Was he really sore at me?” “Mad like anybody else would be, I take It, if they they thought a time." “I'm sorry! he asked. I think a lot of Mr, Bridger. He certainly has been white with me. I've tried, Judge. Honest, I've tried to give 'em all I had bur . ., . But he's right. The war upset me, like a lot of others. on the ground yet. After the big show “Likely. yet,” Able said gravely. “Being a justice in Tincup? “No. Not that. My real job—my real, for an estate. The McManus estate, which is nothing doors, Trying to operate hang on as other m stuff away is my particular hard nut And it's a chore, Elliott.” it to a profit and administrator so young man has looked at him that way since I can remember. That's why I telephoned Bridger: because I'm about worn out trying to crack a hard put. That's why I'm here, “Maybe, from what Bridger told me, crack at this nut, . , After a moment he repeated: “You might, possibly, Thé fact ls, I'm through, Elliott. Job all I had. I'm at my wit's end and the estate's at its rope's end. We're licked, as we stand now, and the truth is that maybe, perhaps, possibly I might do a right fair job of begging you to come and help me!” ment, and then continued: “Come over by the window. Now, here's the lay-out,"~—spreading the map on the gill. “Here's the raliroad, main line. This Is Hoot Owl siding with our mill. Twenty men, there, some living in shanties and the boarding house tak- ing care of the rest. It's a long, nar- row strip, you see; seventy-six forties uncut. Four miles of slash to north of the mill. Our raliroad goes up through the chopping, so. We've an old coffee-pot of twenty-ton rod engine and freight cars, all more or less ready for junk. Here's the camp now and we're cutting on the second forty north. Got thirty-odd hands there that pass for men, “Harrington was handling it for me. Man named Buller's millwright and a fellow named Ruppert's boss at camp. Harrington's gone—driven out-—and we're in the soup!” He paused and looked at Elliott, whose keen eyes were studying the detall of the map. “It's a haywire outfit. The locomo- tive broke down yesterday and unless the boys get her working, the mill will be out of logs in a week, The mill itself is a grand old ruin but saws, after a fashion. The lumber in the yards 1s mortgaged up to the last cull plece, there's not enough in the bank to meet interest and pay-roll and there's no boss on the job." Elliott looked at the old man, “You sald it was as pretty of hardwood as ever stood If so, why's It in this Jam?" Able ture and whispered sharply one word: “Brandon!” his hands deep Into pockets, “Brandon, eh?” He nodded. out on the stories I'd heard. . So the toboggan! Why?" Able shrugged. “Probably beccuse itself out of his hands for And, besides, there are other reasons, “Six years ago 1 was made adminis trator of this estate and to keep the carrying charges from eating it up, 1 started to operate. There wasn't a chance to sell the stumpage to any- body but Brandon. Nobody's going to put thelr money Into a devil-ridden There are too many side Nick. sell the stumpage to Brandon at his Maybe, if it had been mine, I'd have sold; but the owner of this timber is an orphan girl and « B “But every man I've put on to run some good ones there. They can’t get Juller, the millwright, Thomas, the camp cook, Blaine, who's barn boss, are the only three men you can count on. Brandon spies the good men who come along to it that his Bull Duval drives ‘em And this marter of “Until now he hasn't been able to I've managed to hold out jut he's watch- the first of the year I'm golng to be With an. munity will be complete |” “And what makes you think,” Elliott “that I've got a chance to put Able did not hesitate: “Because you have youth and a lik- tough nuts!” He did not rose, “Son"-—putting a hand on his shoul man I know. you will He says you can do it if I'm asking you, now, as an will Ben Elliott did not reply at once. when debating with himself and pre. He “When do we start? he asked. The justice swallowed. “You ready now? Without knowing “l know enough. It's good timber It was just before whistle time next morning at the Hoot Owl mill “Who's th’ young feller with Abie?” “New boss.” “Him? The trimmerman spat and leaned further forward for a better look at Ben Elllott as he stood talking to the sawyer in the gloom of early day. “Say . . . Ain't he the lad that Brandon?" “Th’ same.” “Well I'll be 4-4! Only a kid. He may be a good hand on a birlin' log He llkes 'em young, Nick does , . . and ‘specially after this one took such pains to make himself unpopular with Mister Nick!” “Yup. He'll be duck soup for Bran- don all right!” The hand of the millwright's watch approached the hour. The sawyer pulled the signal cord. The big shaft commenced to turn and from machine td machine went Buller while Able and Ben watched, examining belting, grease cups, seeing that live rollers ran stead- fly and true. The pulleys turned slow. ly for a full five minutes and then as the cracked whistle atop the boller house cackled its message that another working day had begun, the carriage swept forward and the saw snarled its way into a good maple log. Elliott stirred on his feet. It was the way a mill should start, anyhow, But after that beginning the pro- cedure was not so good, The sawyer was not quick in making decisions Twice in a half dozen logs his slabs were thick to the point of waste; he did mot turn one particularly good plece as soon as he should to grade hig lumber to the highest point. | The setter, too, was mediocre, The deck man loafed and let the bull chain fill up and stop even when his deck was half empty. The mill crew was not happy. They appeared to be men working for a cause they felt was lost. Ben went with Buller, then, from man to man and watched each do his work. In the yard they passed logs rolled “Much len asked, eyelng them, “Not much coming there's a lot of in now, it standing,” Buller came in: some of it. He had too many things to think about, Harrington did. though. 1 guess. He'll probably figure for what we have Market's up, pay a fancy to offer him.” Then he went to the particular prob lem confronting them. With the loco motive lald up the steady supply logs from camp to mill would be cut off, Snow was falling lightly, now, might be days distant, To log the mill by trucks was imprac- he declared, and unless the rail- road equipment could be put in work- ing condition they might be forced to shut down. Fortunately a reserve log high beside the pond. “We'll have to break out this one man. Picking up = peavey he led the way toward that high bank of maple, beech and birch logs. Ben followed, watching the foreman as he surveyed the face of the deck and shook his head dubiously. “Try the big birch first,” Buller sald to the pond man, They engaged the peaveys: they heaved. away easily and hooks of thelr The log rolied jumbered down the Another . . . and still another, each coming arately and starting no movement of others above them, Buller spat. “That d-—n beech butt's in tight,” his peavey pick. “Try her, Jim; now be careful. When she comes, the whole deck’ll move in a hurry.” They heaved to no result. With a sharp “Now!” they heaved again, but the beech, nestling in the face of the deck at the height of a man’s hip, re “Hold on! Give you a hand" Ben “Here, take this end, moving in Elllott.” toward the the facade of the deck. “No, go on back. I'll do the risk. taking for this lay-out for a while.” Buller made no reply but grinned The pond man looked at Ben approv- ingly and spat on his hands. Peavey hooks bit the log's ends again; a pea- vey point, with all Ben Elliott's strength bearing on it, pried beneath “Now. . . . Together!” He lifted his weight from the ground, His peavey handle ben® “Look out!" Buller's voice was shrill on the warning as .novement sent Ben Elliott swinging to the right. The key stick popped out, all but upon Ben. The logs above seltied with a heavy mutter and then with that thunderous, ringing, booming sound of hardwood in motion, they rolled upon him. Elliott had dropped his peavey, leaped nimbly over the beech as it struck the ground and bounced on its way to the water. He hopped to the first log and spurned it with his one foot, landed on the following with both, hesitated a split instant and stepped to yet another. Arms spread, balancing carefully. watching those logs as a boxer watches his opponent's blows, he went up that zooming, boom. ing avalanche as It came down. He danced to the left ss the end of one stick swung out to clout him to a pulp. He ran rapidly over three that lum- bered down beneath him and paused. Two came riding together, one atop the other, a moving barrier as high as his waist. Bulier opened his lips in a cry of warning but thrusting out one hand, touching the topmost of the pair éver so lightly, Ben vaulted over, land. ing on another that rolled and grum- bled behind the two. Crevasses be tween logs opened and closed before him. Sticks popped out of the tremen- dous pressure and rolled down slant wise, imperiling him. He did not run rapidly, At times he seemed to move with painful, with dangerous delibera- tion. But he was watching the logs and his chances and did not make a move until he was certain of where he was going. Slowly the deck settled. Half of what had been piled logs now bobbed and swayed and rolled in the pond The rest, reduced from the height to exhaust, but If Elliott heard this he gave no indication. “Now, If Buller can't get that loco. motive going by noon,” he sald to the pale and visibly shaken Able, “we'll telegraph for a new spider. No use taking more chances. Come on, Buller, let's look at the stuff you've got piled.” Blinking, the millwright followed him, “'Y G—d4!" muttered the pond man, “Slick shod, he went over that face! Slick shod! 'Y G4!" An hour later the mill stood silent for five minutes while a broken con- In that In- terval every man on the job had heard the story. “Y G—d! Slick shod!" man sald again and again, Like a watermelon on ice!” the pond “Cool? When they started the head sawyer and it seemed as though stayed in the log more con. stantly than it had before, ag if the mill functioned with greater smooth ness, as If something In the nature of cperience, CHAPTER III Not so in the camp where men and horses tolled to make decks of logs by g trees Finns, Nearly half the crew stolid, uncommunicative good enough workmen but difli- cult to speed up. “Aren't there any good men Jeft loose around here? Ben asked Able on his first trip to town, “Old Tim Jeffers Is the only man who's stood out against Nick and he's the best logger these woods have ever seen but he doesn't like Brandon, can't work for him and Is so disgusted that he's quit the timber and settled down on & Marm. He hasn't set foot In a camp for three years and swears he never will again. Neither will he be run out of the country. “That's part of the hard shell of this nut, Ben: lack of good men who've got the sand to stick here and work for anybody but Brandon” The next morning—Sunday—DBen sat over a table in his tiny office working with paper and pencil when Bird-Eye Blaine burst in. “The Bull's bere!” the little Irish- man exclaimed ip a whisper, closing the door behind him hastily. “Th Bull's here . . . "nd wearin’ his river boots I” “Th' Bull!" Bird-Eye repeated and swallowed. “He's come, lolke he's come to other camps. He'll have eviry domned Finlander ‘nd Injun hitting th’ road to escape him Ben shoved back his chair then. “What's this?" “Ah, it's Brandon thut's Bint him! He's Misther Brandon's pet bull ‘nd he'll clane this camp av men loike he's done many a time before! He's wear- in' river boots 'nd swillin® whisky I" “Where?” Elliott got to his feet. “In th’ men's camp, —gesticulating with his thumb. “He's just now come in ‘nd they're commencin’ to sift cut, th' domned yellow bellies TO BE CONTINUED. were Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, Involving Panama Canal The Hay-Pauncefote treaty of 10801 was signed long before there was 8 Panama canal in existence and did not give England free use of the Panama eanal, notes a writer in the Detroit News, It replaced the Clayton-Bulwer treaty of 1850 as an Anglo-American agreement of policy concerning an isthmian canal, then supposed to be fived ns across Niearagua. Public feel ing for some years had been growing sore over the Clayton-Bulwer treaty's restriction on the Independent action of the United States, and there was grave fear lest congress might abro- gate that treaty by open violence, a great blow to future amicable action President McKinley in his annual message for 1808 declared that the Negotiations were opened with Great Britaln and a draft treaty was sen: by the President to the senate in Feb ruary, 1000, providing for the con struction of a canal, to be permanently seutralized. Disputes in the senate f new treaty, ratified as the Hay Before the opening of the Panama canal in 1014 there was a controversy 1912, exempting American vessels en action, this exemption of American ships from the canal tolls was repealed. Quakers in World War The Friends, or Quakers, did not ing the Worid war, but rendered Inval- uable service In relleving distress, pro viding food, clothing and hospital «up plies. 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