Copyright 1928-198, Harold Titus. CHAPTER X-—Continued meme ] prom “What's the difficulty, Brandon? Didn't you expect to see me this morn- ing? "Why . +. +» 1... thought—" Ben stepped close and dropped his voice nearly to a whisper. “You thought I wouldn't be walking today? Was that it?" “Not walking? I don't know what you're talking about.” The older man's self-control was coming back rapidly, now that his fright had passed away, “I just came In to get matters straight between us, Brandon. Several serious things have happened to the Hoot Owl but in spite of them the Hoot Owl is booming; now, I presume, I can look for things to happen to me. Before anything does—because I'm not rash enough to be cocksure that it won't— 1 want you to get me straight.” The last vestige of his smile was gone by then. He stood spread-legged, hands locked behind his back, eyes boring into Brandon's gaze. “I'm not interested in—" “But you'll listen! You'll listen or I'll choke you until you'll beg for the opportunity to listen, Brandon! You'll listen to me this morning and it'll be the first and last time. “lI know a great deal. I can prove but little. I know that you to run me out by sending clean up my camp. Next, to cripple my operation by having a firebug touch off the mill. Next, you or some of your men stole a piston head out of the express—" “Don’t go too far, young man !™ “l1 won't. The pits of h—I] are the lnside limits for you, Brandon! “After that, you timed it nicely and blew up my trestle. You almost had us two or three times. But you flopped! The Hoot Owl is up on its knees, will be on its feet In a month If we keep going and It'll be sitting on the world by the time breakup hits us. All you've done to the job has only helped it “That's that! Next you try to get me, thinking, prebably, that if you knock the skipper off the bridge the craft will founder for certaln. You're wrong, there. You can't lick my men, because they're tuo many for you; you can’t stop the Hoot Owl by getting me out of the picture. But If you want to keep on trying, it's you own funeral I've only one thing to ask of you: try to play the white man, Brandon, and fight your own fights!" His face was dark with rage, now, and he emphasized his last words by downward thrusts of clenched hands along his thighs. Brandon smiled lightly. “You're a queer young man” he re marked. “You dream In broad day- light and with your eyes open.” “A pecullarly detailed dream. Bran- don! [I've sald all I have .to say about the job and about myself but there is another matter left to be mentioned while I'm here, I won't even utter her name in your hearing, but any man who would pull a trick like you did and involve a girl . . . Brandon, a snake's belly is sky-high compared to you I And that touched the well-springs of rage that had been dammed back un- til the moment, “You fool!” the man sald heavily. The words came like the first break in a levee; slow, sluggish words. And then, like the following toss of foam was the frothing rage in his scream. “You fool! I'll drive you out of this country! I'll hang your opera- tion up for the crows to pick! I'll string the bones of this timber and your own bones across this country!” He swung his arms lo wide, wild ges tures, He stopped, sobbing for breath. and his reeth clicked in an agony of pas sion, “Dawn? Not mention her name? Well, T will, , . She's mine, you fool, body and soul! She's been mine for years. . . Because she smiled at you, because she played with you don’t think she's interested, fool! She's" He swayed backward as Elllott lurched toward him, but their bodies did not lock, White and trembling, Ben stayed his own rush. "Nol . . . Don't want to brawl over her,” he choked. “But if you men- tion her name to me again I'm likely to lose my head and tear your hide off your carcass!” His rage was so high, so holy, that the fear It Inspired carried through Brandon's frenzy and the man stood silent, perhaps in awe. Ben relaxed, “Now,” he sald quietly, “I've just one thing to ask, Brandon. It's this: Aight your own battles !™ He turned on his heel and slammed the door behind him. CHAPTER XI Ben began unblanketing his team with the haste of high temper but be fors he had finished Able Armitage halled him from across the street and came hurrying through the rutted snow, . The old justice's face was marked That 1s, 1 Duval to you tried by an expression eof concern and he came close before he spoke. “I hear Red Bart Delaney's in town.” Ben nodded grimly. “Came to see me yesterday.” “No !" “Yeah, Took a long louk at me . « . over the sights of a rifle.” “Ben! Why, son!” Elliott laughed mirthlessly and told what had happened In the Hoor Owl chopping the day before. “So he's gotten down to the hiring of a killer!” Able looked anxiously Into Ben's face. “Son . .. It can't &0 on. Timber or no timber; success or fallure for the Hoot Owl, you've got to think of yourself!” “I'm doing that. I've been to see Brandon and tried to drive him into the open. That's all I ask of him; that he fights fair.” “And if he won't, what?" “Then I'll have to smoke him out!” Able clicked his tongue, “Benny, your way of doing things scares me! Why, this can't go on. It mustn't! It's your own affair, for sure, when he tried to shoot you dow n, but maybe, perhaps, possibly, I'm going to beg you to be careful. So long as De- laney’s In the country you've got to keep low. Get back to camp; stay there; let us pick some man 1 can trust to follow Bart and Brandon night “No.” Ben shook his head resolutely. “Tl go on about my should. I've never run yet and don't like to start any fast foot work now.” “But it's your life that's at stake, Ben! Don't be silly. That's what reck- lessness Is: downright silly! That's not like you. Why, not raking preean- tions In this thing is like monkeying with & high tension wire” “No good, Able. [I couldn't hold up my head If I hid out after the play I've made." So ALle was forced to give up after a time and shuffled up the street, draw. ing off his mitten again and rubbing his face briskly with his palm. He had only reached his office and was unlocking the door when Aunt Em, walking grimly as if with a definite pur- pose, approached. “Good morning—" he began. “Forget the palaver, Able Armitage!” the woman said sharply. “You're In trouble. So are we all, maybe. That's why I came to see you. Is It true what they say that this Red Bart Delaney has showed up here in Tincup?” “As true as disease or death or any- thing else onpleasant.” “That's what I'd heard! to guess why he's come?” Able untied his scarf and shook his head sadly, “No, Em. Your first guess will be right. And he took a shot at Benny yesterday I” “And missed, I'd Judge from the look of him just now. But if he's still here there'll be a next time; and he won't miss then. Did you do your duty and send the boy to some safe place?” Able sighed and told ber of his talk with Ben, “So you couldn't make him listen to reason!” she muttered, “Well, if you can't, I can’t. And, us falling, there's only one other who would have a ghost of a show.” “Dawn? She nodded. “Dawn could. But ghe won't. She won't go to him now, She wouldn't even listen to me talk about him, she's In such a state. She's up to the ears In love with Ben El- lott or I've got three legs! And then to have that scandalous woman do what she did and upset It all!” She sat down heavily In a chair and drew a great breath. “I don't have to ask you or any other man about Ben Elliott, Able! | know the clean and decent folks when I see ‘em. I'd bet my reputation as a Christian woman on that boy! That plece of play acting at the dance was some of Nick Brandon's work, you can bet your last red cent! 1 had to glve him a plece of my mind just for relief the other day and, goodness me, what a look he give me! Why, Able, that man’s worse than ever I thought! My, oh, my! He gave me a look that like to froze the blood right in my veins, after all the years of palaver and soft talkin’ I've listened to from him! “Well, what I'm gettin’ at is this: The boy’s in danger of bein’ murdered every minute of day and night unless he takes your advice. There's no one Do I have . oo left to try to talk him Into being care. ful but Dawn. And how am 1 going to get her to see her duty when she goes into a cryin’ fit every time his name's mentioned? Yes, sir. Every time she hears his name.” “She doesn’t yet see that the affalr was a put-up job, then?" “See? She can't see anything, Able Armitage! Put yourself in her place, Suppose you were a young girl who's had the things to bear that she has all her life; and suppose you fell In love for the first time: and suppose that young man was accused of such nastiness right in public with every- body listening and gawping? Would you stop to figure that the reason he seemed guilty was natural? That the thing was so far fetched from the truth and such a shock that he was all kerflummoxed? 1 should say you wouldn't! You'd do just what she's doin’; make yourself all sick with chills and fever by eryin'!" She twitched at the skirts of her cloak irritably and glared at the old Justice as though he were a sworn enemy instead of a friend. “Whar alls her Is shock. She aln‘t got over the shock yet and every time his name qr anything else about him is mentioned It sets her off again. She'll get over It, give her time. But then she'll be so humiliated to. think she didn't use her reason thar she won't be herself for another spell. Andshe should be herself now! There ain't any time to lose. She should patch up her mis understanding with him right today right this hour—and use her influence to persuade him to keep low. But how it’s to be done I'd like to know. For Lord's sake, Able, ain't you got a sin- gle suggestion?" The justice had been stuffing light wood Into his stove during this. Now he touched a match to the tinder, opened the drafts and stood with hands behind him, rusty overcoat unbuttoned and drooping, deep in thought “It's difficult to get anyone In her state to use reason. Maybe the shock of knowing that Ben's life is in danger would be a counter irritant to this other shock. Maybe not. If the affair of last week could be cleared up, if Dawn could be shown that this Lydia woman was only carrying out a plan jut I wonder , , * Aunt Em stiffened In her chalr, She looked hard at Able and her eyes nar rowed a trifle, “You see” girl" “Hold an, Able Armitage!” she cut in, holding up a hand in warning. “Hold on, now! I've got to think. . . . Got to think, 1 tell you! And I can't think while you carry on your gabble! You leave me alone, now. . , . Keep your tongue still They say a woman's tongue is hung in the middle and loose at both ends. . . . But . . . Yum . . ."” As she pressed one hand over her eyes her words dwindled to unintelligible mumblings. “I've got it!" she cried excitedly after a moment. “I've got it, now! You stay right here, Able! You stay until 1 came back. If it works It works, If it don't, itl] be time to talk some more!” She moved resolutely to the door, left the office and strode down the street. People of Tincup watched her pass: people she had known for years spoke to her and drew no response, not even so much as a glance or a nod. On past the bank. the post office, the pool room. « «+ «+ On beyond all the stores, on down to the depot There, on the platform, she stood a long Interval staring across the tracks to that short row of house on Section Thirty-Seven. The station agent came out of the office and looked at Em in surprise, “Hello I" he cried. “What brings you down here before" “Homer,” she cut In grimly, “In which one of them nasty places does this Lydia woman live?" “Why-why . . . Why, now should 1 know?" he evaded as a red flush crept up from his collar, “In the one at this end, 1 think. I'm not sure, of course. « « « | think she does, though. «0» She .. But he no longer had a llstener, Resolutely, slowly with something like defiant majesty, the woman crossed the tracks, with never another word to her informant and never a look to right or left. Her head was up, her mouth set, and her long nose wrinkled as If at a he resumed, “if the * * Don Stuart, old, very sick to grab, This belongs to Dawn MeMan murder charge hanging over his and Ben throws him out of camp. “to be used when the going becomes Ben refuses to open the letter, Was started with gasoline. Elliott But a definite had supposed, which the Hoot Owl builds a new bridge structure to Tincup, making the ndon compels a woman (known Delaney, notorious le In the woods, but his fall has been & ruse to killer Is proved to be Red Bart WNU Service, disgusting odor, A woman up by the stores shaded her eyes and peered at the moving figure and stared and stopped. Aunt Em Coburn, headed for Thirty-8even! Why, it couldn't be! But Aunt Em mounted the steps, She rapped at length and vigorously on the scarred panel of the door. She went within, leaving a dozen long-distance watchers to wonder, It was long before she emerged and then , . . Ah, then Tincup had a sight to see, a subject for speculation! For by Aunt Em's side moved the wom- an Lydia, collar of her fur coat high about her face as If to hide the traces of tears which hastily applied powder could not eradicate, Tears from those hard eyes? Noth- ing less! For women know women and before Aunt Em had talked to this outcast five minutes she had discov- ered the weakness In her shame, the clean spot left in her heart. And how Emma Coburn could talk! She talked that clean spot to a growing, glowing, glorious thing. She talked Lydia out of her house, across the tracks: talked her Into that slow, unashamed, almost flagrant march up the malin street ; talked her out of all but one look of misgiving at the windows of Nicholas Brandon's offices. And around the corner and in beneath the hem- locks which whispered above the snug white house. They entered, where Dawn McManus had hidden since the woman's words sent her flying from the dance hall to the sanctuary of Aunt Em's understanding arms. . - » » - . . All the way out to camp Dawn snuggled close against Able in his worn old buffalo coat. Now and again she trembled a bit; once she cried softly a few minutes. But much of the time she talked. “To think It was the man I used to call Uncle who did that thing!” she “Homer, in Which One of Them Nasty Places Does This Lydia Woman Live™ cried. “Why haven't you told me, Able?! Why haven't you warned me?” “What be’s done, what he's been, what he Is, were no things for you, Dawn, girl. I've just tried . . . to stand between you and many unpleas- ant things. You've had your share as it was.” “I could have stood this one more” she replied, stoutly enough. “It hasn't been 80 bad these last few years, know- ing that everybody thinks my father a murderer. I'd just gotten myself above that and now , . . and now .,, “What now?” Able asked gently, She looked at him through tears T0 BE CONTINUED. Hay-Wire Does Not Mean Individual In all things, New Eng- used in various parts of the country as slang. Elsewhere “hay-wire” may be synonymous with “erratic” or a “little mad.” In Dr. Frank Vizetelly's records of the vernacular the slang use of the phrase “gone hay wire” ig defined as signifying something or somebody “gone wrong" of that usage are fuily understood. “It's a hay-wire outfit” Hay wire is used In temporary repairs. The man who thus employs it Is foresighted and ingenious, but the man who habitually uses hay-wire instead of making pre manent repairs is shiftiess, The hay for the lumbermen’s horses comes bound In baies. When these bales are broken the wise teamster saves for emergencies the hay-wire which held them together. A good “toter” would not start his team on a trip without taking hay wire any more than he would set forth without an ax or a pall.—Philadelphia Inquirer, Green Tea Far East's Choice Green tea made from the unfen mented leaf Is the cholce of the Far Last and Is made entirely in China and Japan. Black from the fermented leaf Is made in India, | 0ld Timothy Stand Needs Fertilizing Early Attention Is Necessary | If Satisfactory Results | Are Obtained. Prepared by Ohlo State University Agricul. tural Extension Service —~WNU Service. It will pay to give the timothy sod some special attention this spring, In the opinion of agronomists at the Ohlo | State university, who are recommend ing a special top dressing with a nitro- genous fertilizer, Because of the fallure of many new seedings last year, it 18 expected that i i { i i BOYS! GIRLS! Read the Grape Nuts ad in anothes column of this paper and learn how to Join the Dizzy Dean Winners and win valuable free prized. —Ady. Saying's Foundation A green Christmas makes & full churchyard. (The foundation fos this saying is the fact that open win be plowed this spring will be kept for another year, The agronomists say that addl- tional hay may be secured from these meadows, when they are largely or entirely timothy, by top dressing the fleld early with 150 to 200 pounds of sulfate of ammonia or nitrate of soda, If calelum cyanamid Is used, the ap- plication should have been much earlier, Ohlo experiments indicate that, with normal rainfall in early spring, such an application will raise the yield of timothy 1,500 or 2000 pounds an acre, Nitrogenous fertilizers, however, should not be applied alone for more than one or two years for, say the agronomists, a stand of hay cannot be maintained unless phosphates and pot- ash are also supplied, A 1064 or similar analysis fertilizer is recom mended If these top dressings are con- tinued into the third year. Nitrogenous expected to yield to should farmers be seed acre, forage dressing increase timothy two bushels an with sufficient top may one desire to produce seed, Demand for timothy expected to supply for at least another year, ac- cording the university specialists, Timothy seed production in 1938 was oniy half normal; io 1834 It was one. seventh normal. Since many seedings falled last year, production in 19385 will probably be less than normal. be the seed may continue to exceed fo Wet Spots Cause of Farm Waste; Drainage Needed he drainage of wet spots in other- wise good fields Is probably the most worthy Improvement that can be made on land today, says Prof. A. M. Good- man of the New York State of Agriculture, “These wet spots not only waste seed and fertilizer,” he points out, “but they cause greater waste In plowing and harrowing. They cause planting trouble, they Interfere with cultiva- tion, and are a nuisance at harvest time, Usually a few rods small-sized drain tile, laid so that it is about two feet deep under the part of these wet holes and with a slope of four to six Inches to every 100 feet In length, is all that Is needed to clear up College of lowest such a hole, The backfill over the tile is one of the most essential things to keep In mind. The land did not drain before because the water could not get through the subsoil. Do not put this impervious subsoil back directly over the tile. Place sod, surface soll, and stubble, at least one foot deep, directly over the tile: and put the subsoil, that has come out of the bottom of the ditch near the surface of the ground. Butter Fat Content Varies Carefully checked tests show that the butter fat content of the milk from the same herd of cows varies sharply from day to day. Errors In testing can account for only about two-tenths of 1 per cent, but the actual variation Is often as much as 1 per cent from one day to another. of factors. Weather conditions have a marked effect as does the feed given the cattle. Some breeds show a pleteness of the milkings also have their effects. milk are usually lower than those of night's milk-—Pathfinder Magazine, Alfalfa Again 5,000 years. seven-inch layer of surface soll, on an | =~Hoard's Dairyman. Down the Lane the highest color and flavor. * * » use in California, 2,900,000 are oll burn- ing. . & 9 Wool production In this country last pounds, or about 9,000,000 less than In 1033, “ve A cord of wood from one acre each year, or 500 to T00 board feet, is a reasonable amount to expect from a well-stocked woodlot, . » » Skim mitk and buttermilk are rich in protein and mineral matter and make good additions to farm grains to grow and Tatten pigs, Farm families are less likely to move from place to place In New York state, than rural people not on farms or people In cities, according to a re cent study, Bilious Attacks, Dizziness “Bilious attacks” dizziness, spots before the eyes, a feeling of fullness after ordinary meals, be hing up of gas, a dull, sluggish feeling—due to constipa - are usually driven away by a dose or two of old, re. lable Thedford’s Black-Draught, “I take Black-Draught for bilious. ness, dizziness, and when I feel dull, tired and stupid,” writes Mr. M. kL. Simmons, of Pickens, 8. C. “It seems to cleanse the system and make one feel a hundred cent better.” Thousands men and women prefer this purely vegetable laxative. THEDFORD’S BLACK-DRAUGHT Consider Occasion There is a time to speak and * time to be silent. One defeats one's own ends by not observing those times. —Havelock Ellis. “T've baked j over 300 Prize Winning cakes, pies and pastries”. CLABBER GIRL BAKING POWDER SAVE MONEY! BUY DIRECT) Special Shetland Floss] ox. bali le Boucle, Womted, Germantown, Write for samples, Mall Onders Free Beastifo! Knitting Bag Offer DON HENRY CO. Dept. 5, P.O. Box 282, Chicage, I, SICK HEADACHES Indicate Acid Condition Chew one or more Milnesia Wafers and obtain relief Sond for ome weel's libers! supply—FRER SELECT PRODUCTS, inc, 4402 23rd Street, Long island City, New York MILNESIA pe ; Bika bi NE Fe, health and has . E. Noel, 17060 WATCH YOUR KIDNEYS! Be Sure They Properly Cleanse the Blood YOUR kidneys are constantly fil. tering impurities from the blood Then you may suffer nagging backache, attacks of dizziness, burning, scanty or too freguent urination, getting up at night, swollen feet and ankles, rheumatic pains; feel “all worn out” Don't delay! For the quicker you Use Doan's Pills. Doan's are for mote normal functioning of the the irritating poisons. Doan's are recommended by users the country over. Get any druggist, DOAN’S PIL WNU—4 21-3