HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1946-06-06, Page 2t 4e. t
TUR BNG POINT
/2 Mary irniay Taylor
SYNOPSIS
CFIA1'TP111CI: Jim advises Sher-
win to run away. Old Mac learns
Stenhart and Sherwin are
cousins, and that Stenhart's testi-
mony also sent Sherwin to prison.
CHAPTER XII
The moon was rising over the
top of the mountains as Sherwin
swung himself out of the saddle.
They had left the road and were on
a mountain trail; great trees sur-
rounded then!, their spreading
boughs making a dense shade
through which the rising moon
shot, here and there, an arrow-
head of light. MacDowell led, and,
as they advanced, the almost imper•
eeptible trail grew 'rarrowcr, tree
trunks of gigantic size locked
them in; far off was the sound of
rushing water, a mere murmur at
their ears.
"Walk slow," Mac cautioned
hint, "th' path's mighty narrow in
front now an' a mite treacherous.
We're coming to the edge of a
precipice, ain't nothing to save you
if you fall."
"I hear water somewhere," said
Sherwin.
"Mighty pretty little cascade be-
low us, 'bout two hundred feet. It's
too far down for th' moonlight to
strike it yet—mind th' turn !tow—
there, you can see tis drop, it's
mighty steep."
* * *
They stood on a narrow ledge.
Some convulsion of nature had
long ago ripped out the side of the
slope. Behind them was a bit of
sheer rock; on either side the great
trees stopped and there was only a
narrow path at the edge of a deep
ravine. Far down a turbulent little
river roared over the broken rocks
and tumbled from a high cliff into
the depth below. The moonlight
revealed a sheer precipice with
nothing reaching out from it but
sne old, gnarled tree.
"A mighty bad place to slip,"
Sherwin said musingly; "easy to
thrust a man over there—to his
death!"
Old Mac grunted. "Mighty easy
—but you ain't goin' to get th'e
chance, he's too lame a duck to get
this far!"
Sherwin felt the hot blood. burn
in his face; how easily the old man
had read his mind!
Mac stopped now and pointed,
ignoring what he had just said.
"Th' cabin's hid in there -among
them trees. I built it most forty
years ago. I hadn't no health those
days; doe said I'd got to live out,
up here in the redwoods, so I
knocked up tit' shack. There used
to be mighty good shootin' an'
fishin'. It's stood weather better'n
I expected. There ain't anybody
knows about it —except Jane; she
saw it once, I fetched her up here.
You can camp- here safe enough
till I bring you word where Cut-
ler's gone.
* * *
Sherwin, looking ahead into the
dense shadows of the mountain-
side, saw a light. Both men stood
still, electrified.
"By gosh!" Mac caught at his
,companion's arm and gripped it,
listening. "I'm darned if Jordan
ain't up here—sure as shooting" he
whispered.
"In your cabin r Sherwin smiled
grimly, loosening his pistol in the
Moulder holster.
MacDowell cautioned him to si-
lence with a gesture and they both
crept forward. As they did so,
Sherwin discerned the outline of a
little cabin set under a sycamore.
A rectangle of light appeared, the
door was open! Softly, step by
step, the two men approached,
keeping in the shadow. Sherwin
slipped behind the house and look-
ed in the window. A man was sit•
ting on the floor, smoking and
reading a newspaper by the light of
a candle. It was the outlaw! Sher-
win signaled to MacDowell and the
old man came softly over and look-
ed in. The man was an easy mark,
but they did not shoot, both loved
fair play too well, Making a sign
to Mac, Sherwin went quickly to-
ward the thicker shadows of the
trees in front of the cabin, theta,
deliberately and slowly, he began
totramp down dry twigs and make
the noise a man might make in
carelessly approaching from the
woods back of the ravine. The
sounds reached. the rustlers ears.
He extinguished the candle and
stepped outside the door,
"That you, Kenny?"
For answer Sherwin sprang for-
ward, pistol In hand, and old Mac
emerged from behind the cabin
with a roar.
"We've got you now, you
skunk!" he shouted.
The outlaw dodged, dropped to
his knees, rolled over like a ball
and went spinning down the slope.-
Sherwin's bullet speeding after
him. A sailing cloud suddenly oh•
scured the moon and, in the dark-
ness, a gun flashed below them and
a bullet whistled past: They heard
a scrambling fall. Sherwin fired
again into the dark. a man cursed
and silence followed:
"Darn that cloud, f can't see a
thing! old Mac whispered. "You
think Jordan's down there, Sher-
win?"
* * A
Sherwin, who had gone to the
edge of the ravine and came back
after the last shot, answered as
softly. "Yes! 1 can hear him
scramble—I'nt hanged if I know
how he got away without falling
over the precipice! There comes
the noon—back out of range or
he'll pick you off, MacDowell1"
They both stepped back into the
shadow of the cabin and waited,
expecting a rush by Jordan and his
confederates, but nothing happen-
ed. Far below them they heard a
twig snap and some gravel slide.
"Corrin', I reckon!" Mac whis-
pered.
Sherwin shook his head. "Still
going, the same man. Very likely
he's gone for help."
"That's true, ain't any use stayin'
here to be shot atl" As he spoke
he felt his way into the cabin.
"Want to risk lighting the can-
dle?" Sherwin asked him from the
door. "I've got matches."
"Nope! We'd be targets sure
then. I can see from th' noon.
Where you goia'?"
•
"I'm going to stay here."
"You'll have to give th' cabin up,
son; you'd have a batch of them
rustlers to fight—if he comes
bac!,"
* * 1
'And the sheriff on the 'Mad,"
Sherwin replied gritnly.
"That's true!" Mac thought a
moment. "I say, Sherwin, you'd
better just keep under the trees for
th' night an' skip at daybreak. The
posse'll be most likely tired an'
restin'. You'll get some hours
start anyways."
Sherwin nodded. He had other
plans, but he would not tell them.
He grasped the old man's hand.
"Come, I'm going to sec you off
safe with the horses, then I'll conte
back here quietly."
Mac protested, grumbling, but
be finally 'let the younger man ac-
company hint to the road. His tame
arm still made the old man more
or less awkward. Sherwin helped
him get the two horses and saw
trim mount.
"You skip at daybreak," Mac
said kindly, and leaned from the
saddle to hold out his hand again.
"I don't believe you did it; he
ended brusquely.
Sherwin wrung his hand and
stood under the trees, watching
him go. The old man's blunt sym-
pathy and active help had touched
him to the quick. He watched until
the old figure in the saddle and the
two horses became mere specks on
the white road toward Las
Palomas.
(To be "ontinucd)
ISSUE 23-1945
NATIONAL CLOTHING COLLECTION
Send what you can
to your local collection: centre
JUNE 17 - 27
„sALAB
ac
EAGLE, ILL, REPORTS TO POLtCE
Maybe his "mama done tole" the American bald eagle
lean photo
above that when you're in trouble, call a cop. Anyway, after
circling the town for hours, the bird, ill and exhausted, dropped
into the back yard of the Port Washington, N. Y., police head-
quarters. Lie's pictured held by James Callaghan, Roosevelt Bird
Sanctuary warden, who said the bird had probably eaten polluted
fish. Mr. Eagle got a dose of castor oil.
CHRONICLES
of GINGER FARM
By .
Gwendoline P. Clarke
* * •
Well, I could write what I think
about the railway strike, the ship-
yard strike or the coalminers'
strike—but I certainly ant not
going to—you can read all you
want to know in the news—and if
you do it will probably leave you
just as bewildered and distressed as
it does us. A. strike is such an
awful thing—as one columnist put
it—"In a strike everyone loses,
even the strikers."
* *
But out in the country, where
everything is fresh, green and
growing after that wonderful rain;
or working in the garden, or among
the chickens, onecan forget for
awhile how easy it is for inert, who
should know better, to stir up strife
and unrest among those people
who have been caught in a net of
their own weaving. In the garden,
as I work among the flowers and
shrubs, the only unhappy thing
is a robin who has her nest in a
small spruce tree at the back of the
border, Poor Mother Robin—and
yet I have been out in the garden
so much lately you would think
she would know by now that I
wouldn't hurt her fledglings. How-
ever she evidently doesn't like the
look of me for she flies to a nearby
apple tree every time I appear, and
there she sits, chirping and scolding,
as long as I stay around,
* * *
1 ant beginning to realize to my
sorrow that a garden is one thing
that can't be neglected with im-
punity. Last spring, when I was
really very worried about Partner's
health, and about getting Bob home
from overseas, I gave little time or
attention to the garden. As a re-
sult, the shrubs, weeds and grass
have surely had one great old time
trying to sec which could choke
the other out. The grass and the
snowberry, bush were definitely in
the lead, but now I really believe
I have them both in check. Part-
ner and I work outside every night
until it is too dark to sec—Partner
at the grass and I at the flowers
and shrubs.
But oh, that snowberry shrub!
Garden Notes
By GORDON L. SMITH
Keep Them Growing
The real secret of crispness and
garden freshness is quick growth,
This is especially true of leafy and
root types. Lettuce that has been
checked in its growth period, or
carrots or young beets, and then
start to grew again are almost sure
to be tougher or woodier than they
should be. The reason is simple.
Once growth slows down for any
reason the roots or leaves start to
toughen and dry out, with the re -
result that crispness and tenderness
soon disappear. Even if quick
growth is resumed again there is
liable to be a lowering of the high,
fresh quality one has a right to
associate with vegetables grown
right at the kitchen. door.
Cultivation Important
Cultivation IP ` June will kill
weeds which might become really
troublesome in July, and it will
break up soil which would bake
hard and be impossible to wort;
after the sem really turns warm
If the lawn is kept regularly mown
in June, at least once a week itt the
moist parts of Canada, then we
will really have something worth
taking the neighbours out to see
later on. The old warning of a
stitch in 'tine saving nine • really
holds good for garucring too and
espcially so with such jobs as
weeding, cu'ltivatioi and thinning
and last but not least, for protect-
ive steps against disease or pests.
Have you any in your garden? If
you have then you will know what
a fight I've been having. If you
haven't, then don't let a snowberry
bush come within a mile of you.
It sends out runners that come up
where you least want or expect
them. If you try digging out a big
root you have to follow those run-
ners all over the place, even to the
lawn itself. And to think that I,
of my own free will, once planted
snowberry bushes in my border!
* * *
I just love shrubs—all but snow-
berry—but there is ,this against
them, If a slirub dies—as' it may
well do if there arc many rabbits
around—then it leaves a rather un-
sightly bare space that is hard to
fill. To grow another shrub in its
place takes time. Then, too, if one
has too many shrubs one's space
for growing flowers is naturally
restricted. For that reason Daugh-
ter said one time when she was
house—"Mother, for goodness sake
don't grow any more shrubs!"
Well, I am doing away with quite
a few, but there are still others I
would like. St metime I hope to
get a tamarisk, a smoke tree and
a butterfly bush. In the meantime
we have the usual run of good old
annuals—zinnias, snapdragons, pet-
unias, salvia, French marigolds,
pansies and geraniums.
Disappearing Act
British textile scientists have in-
vented a fabfic that completely
disappears in soap and water. It
is used for weaving into woolen
cloth so that it may be washed
out afterward to produce an extra
fine lightweight material.
Sunday School
Lesson
Working With Christ
Mark 6:7-13; Luke 10:1,2,14:25-27,
Golden Text.—And he that tak-
eth not his cross, and followeth
after me,is not worthy of me.—
Matthew 10:35.
Message' to• The Disciples
There is no doubt that the going
fortl of the disciples two by two is
meant to teach us the advantages
of Christian compan,, to .all who
labor for Christ.
The disciples were to go forth
just as they were without making
any provision whatsoever. They
were to live a life of absolute trust.
in God Whowouldnot suffer them
to want. They were not to go
from house to house seeking where
they would fare best. They were
to be grateful for the simplest fare
where offered willingly, faintaining
a spirit of restraint and self-denial
The Gift of Healing •
The apostles were to call men to
repentance, 11 beseech then to
inwardly to God and outwardly
from the errors of their ways. An-
ointing with oil ,as a medium of
which the miraculous gift of heal-
healing would foster faith in those
to whom it was applied. The an-
ointing was the outward sign with
which the miraculous gift of heal-
ing was accompanied.
Christ's Harvest of Souls
Christ and his little band of fol-
lowers were few to do the great
work of gathering this multitude of
needy souls for God. Therefore He
exhorted His disciples to pray for
more laborers to help gather in the
harvest of souls.
True Disciples
Supreme affection for and alleg-
iance to Christ are absolutely es-
sential to true discipleship. Jesus
declared that no one is worthy of
Him who loves father and mother,
son or daughter more than he
loves Christ. The nearest and
dearest must be forsaken, and op-
posed, and offended, if need be, to
follow Christ.
Love to parents is one of the
first requirements of ethics; love
of life, one of the strongest laws of
nature; but even these must not
come into competition with the
claims of Jesus. Sacrificial' dis-
cipleship is imperative. As Christ
sacrificed Himself for our salvat-
ion so we must sacrifice ourselves
in His service.
Modern Girls' Feet
Bigger Than Mothers'
The feet of today's young lady
are getting bigger and bigger,
mainly because of the soft, slipper-•
like shoes she wears, the Chiropo-
dist Society of New Jersey was
told by Dr. Jonas C. Morris of
Audubon.
A survey of shoe retailers show-
ed the younger set with feet two to
three sizes larger than their moth-
ers',he said.
"If this continues", he said,
"when they reach the age of 25,
t: :y will wear size 10 1-2 E in-
stead of the five A their mothers
used to wear."
A Busy Bird
There's a baby 'born in the
United States every 11'/a seconds,
according to the census bureau. It
reported the stork so etutsped the
grins reaper that the country's
population increased about 154 an
hour all last year, The total is
more than 140500,000 now.
IT MEANS A LOT when
the meal includes Maxwell
House. This marvellous
coffee is extra delicious
because it contains choice
Latin-American coffees
the finest the world pro-
duces.
Von Will p:nJoy Stilylaa At
The St. Regis Rotel
l'OItON'1'O
• lever? Room with Itnlh
Shower and Telephone
• Slagle, 5250 up —
Double;. 53.50 up•..
• boos! Food, Dining nun Dane-
Ing Nightly.
Sherbeurne nl Carlton
Tel. RA 9136
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