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THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1942 THE STORY SO FAR: As a rancher. Clay Morgan knows he must fight rus tlers. But he doesn’t like the methods used against them by big ranchers like Ben Herendeen. Determined to play a lone hand rather than a crooked one, he defends the rustler. Ollie Jacks, when he is freed after his trial for stealing Herendeen's cattle. Herendeen prom ises to leave Jacks alone as long as he doesn't try to leave town. Morgan and his nine-year-old daughter, Janet, go to the cemetery where his wife is burled. Although two women, Catherine Grant and Ann McGarrah. are in love with him. Morgan cannot forget his wife, who died hating him and believing she should have married Herendeen. On their way back to town they see Ollie Jacks ride away. So it Is no surprise when Morgan learns a little later that Jacks has been killed. Herendeen had kept his word and no mere. Now continue with the story. chapter in Clay Morgan ate breakfast by lamplight and was in the saddle be fore day crossed the eastern hills. Harry Jump and Cap Vermilye were at roundup in the Haycreek Hills, leaving only Mose, too old for such riding, and the Mexican cook, Pan cho, on the ranch. Morgan said to Mose: “I'll probably be back after dark. Put some new crosspieces on the front gate—it's coming apart,” and set forth southward across his range. At this elevation the night air was sharp enough to bite through his vest and cotton shirt. The big bay horse shot away on a run. Mor gan let him have his run. Mogul’s rim lay two miles north, behind him. The ranch house and its corrals and barns sat at the foot of the rising Mogul Hills, which ran straight south along the base of these hills, following the ruts of a casual road, Clay Morgan took his way. To his left, a half mile, an other string of hills lifted up, so creating the long and narrow valley he followed. This was his range, emerging slowly from the ink-gray twilight. When first sunlight burst across the eastern peaks Morgan was six miles down the valley and at the end of his own range. A small ridge lay in front of him at the summit he reined in to have his look at the round bowl of Govern ment Valley. Ducking in and out of the small ravines of the land he came upon cattle and young stuff occasionally grazing, herding these before him and throwing them back toward the roundup crew. Three men were working this section—Charley Hill house and two other Three Pines hands. He drove his small collec tion of beef into the held bunch and started on another circle, Hillhouse accompanying him. Around ten o’clock, having dragged the north end of the range, all of them start ed the held bunch back for the main roundup. The sun was a copper-red flare in the middle sky and the dust began to thicken behind the herd. Morgan dropped back to the drag, throwing his neckpiece over his nose. Charley Hillhouse motioned one of the other men to take his place and joined Morgan and made his first speech in two hours. “I been thinkin’ over last night, Clay. Hard to figure.” “Let it slide, Charley.” Charley Hillhouse retorted, “It won’t slide,” and stared before him. He was a compact, capable man, not given to much talk the type to worry a lot of things around in his head, to reach his own answers and hold his own conclusions. Herendeen and his men cleared the Haycreek Hills of the last straggling stock Gurd Grant cleaned up the edge of the Potholes and came in. Running W had scoured Fanolango Pass, and at twilight this day the job was done, the brands segregat ed and held in separate herds. Aft er supper Morgan started Harry Jump back to the Mogul range with the Long Seven beef, and the Crow foot and Running W cuts went away, lumbering shadows in the moon light, the scrape of feet and the click of those long horns and the plaintive “Baw” of the last calf rid ing back through the night-still air. Dust and heat were gone and the campfire’s flame, so still was this air, tapered upward to blue-yellow, almost stationary point. Charley Hillhousc, who was wagon boss, said: “We’ll move over and work the Antelope Plains tomorrow.” The cook swore around the shad ows, harnessing his team. After wards the mess wagon went bump ing away on its four-hour ride, to be ready on the Antelope Plains by daybreak. Lying on his blanket, head athwart the seat of his saddle, Clay Morgan listened to the dry groaning of the wagon wheels fade into this enormous night. He rolled a cigarette and savored its keen smell. Stars crowded the sky they washed that limitless sweep of black with a diamond-glitter, all down to the black horizon’s edge, until they seemed to fall below the rim of a flat world. Here and there in the pine summits coyotes began to hark up their mourning plaint. Hillhouse and Clay Morgan and Lige White sat by the fire, their cheeks sharply, taciturnly graved by light and shadows and men lay blan keted in the background, weary and relaxed and cradled by their inward thinking. Herendeen walked forward from the shadows to stand high above this sprawled group. He tossed a sage stem into the fire and watched the pale and heatless flame rise. He was across from Clay Mor gan his eyes searched the crowd. The edges of his vest fell away from the rounds of his shoulders and the deep stretch of his chest his big ness was all in proportion, legs and arms and torso it was a muscular bigness, a bigness of thick bones. “Lige,” he said, “I hear there’s a new’ homesteader come to the spring Jim Spackman used to squat on.” “I heard so,” said Lige White. “We’ll warn him out of there to morrow,” said Herendeen. But when he stopped talking Clay Mor gan knew he wasn’t finished. Her endeen’s thoughts were on his face, for everybody to see. “Or maybe we’ve got some great big soul in this crowd whose heart bleeds for people like that. Seems to be a hell of a lot of charity around here lately.” Morgan swayed forward to lift a burning sage stem from the fire its oil-bright glow flickered against his cheeks, against his eyes. This silence held its waiting and its re serve. Morgan tossed the sage stem back into the fire, drawing a sharp glance from Charley Hillhouse. Lige White uncomfortably crossed his feet. Gurd Grant crouched by the blaze and revealed nothing on his scrupulously neutral face. Morgan relaxed gently on his shoulder blades and pillowed his head against the saddle. He said nothing but he saw the changing expression on Her endeen's cheeks. Herendeen had braced himself for trouble, he had maneuvered this talk around to make a break but nothing hap pened and he stood a moment, un certain and displeased, and after wards walked away. Instead of turning west to his own ranch, Herendeen traveled due south toward a low range of hills which separated Running W from Three Pines. An hour’s ride brought him within sight of a far-shining light, which »was the mark of a home steader’s cabin against the hills but when he came upon the homestead er’s cabin, drifting into the heavy shadows at the base of these hills, a dog began to bark and suddenly the light died. He reined in before the cabin, feeling his contempt for the evident fear which had caused the homesteader to kill the light. They were all alike, these homesteaders, little men crawling as near the range as they dared, sticking their plows into the unplowcd soil and slowly starving while the sun burnt up their crops and ruined the land ever afterward for graze. He could not tolerate this breed, or their sun blackened wives, or their tow-head ed children. He sent his deep, blunt call at the shack. “Hey come out here.” They were talking, inside. A boy’s voice said, “Pa, don’t go.” A woman was talking, quickly and with sup pressed excitement. The door squealed open and somebody stood in its black square, speechless. “What you doing here?” demand ed Herendeen. “This place is on Lige White’s range. We drove Jim Spackman away from it last year.” “You Lige White?” said a man in a dim, drawn tone. “What the hell is that to you? My name’s Herendeen and I asked you a question.” “Oh,” said the man. “I’m Jack Gale. I bought Jim Spackman’s rights to this place.” “He never had any rights to sell.” “He built the house, Mr. Heren deen.” Then the man added, quiet ly, “It’s free land, ain’t it? I under stood it was. I also understood Mr. White wouldn’t mind.” Herendeen was nettled by the ar gument. “You damned nesters are all alike, trying to stand on this free land business. You stick your plow into it and ruin it, and starve to death, and steal cattle to keep your kids alive, and move away. We’re not in the game of providin’ meat to nesters.” Gale’s wife called from the in terior of the house. “Jack, come in here. Come in.” Herendeen heard her run over the floor. She caught hold of her husband and these two were gently wrestling around the doorway with Gale saying, “Now, Allie, stop it—stop it.” But she pulled him inside and slammed the door. A child, very young, began to cry in a thin, startled rhythm. Herendeen pushed his horse over the yard, bound away for his ranch. As he followed the net of trails i He sent his deep, blunt call at the shack, “Hey—come out here.** leading upward to the Mogul, Hack Breathitt had no cares and no se rious thoughts. This was a fine, warm day. Ahead of him on the pine-shadowed trail occasional gold en shafts of sunlight slanted through the tree tops. Here and there a swirl of dust showed where an an telope had been a moment before. The silence was thick and held its rank scent of resin and at intervals Hack sang incomplete bits of such songs as he knew, the sound of that going out around him in widening waves. Dusk caught him in this rough land, still without any thought of direction at full dark he turned a bend of the trail and saw firelight pulse against the side of a near-by ravine. The fire, he found, was at the base of a bare rock wall running up the side of Mogul. There wasn’t any body within the range of firelight, but Hack reined in and held his seat, knowing that somebody had stepped into the shadows and was watching him. A moment later Pete Borders came forward. “You make enough racket to raise the dead, Hack. Pull off your saddle if you ain’t goin’ any place.” Hack said, indolently amused: “Now where would I be goin’?” He stepped to the ground and relieved the horse of its gear. He watered it, put it out on picket he had his own frying pan and coffeepot and presently was crouched at the fire with Borders. Borders said: “Nothin’ new?” “A man,” reflected Breathitt, “that never goes any place never hears anything.” He tossed a fresh stick into the fire, the flare of it heightening the rusty shine of his hair. He had a dry, smart face double wrinkles crossed his forehead. His eyes, on the edge of being green, were nar row-bright. He had been watching the livid heart of the flame, but his head rose and his eyes stared into the surrounding darkness. He was a tight, close-listening shape and presently he rose and stepped into the shadows. Somebody rode along the near-ty trail slowly, and stopped. Hack Breathitt held his position, too clear of conscience to move. He poised the cigarette between his fingers, hearing the rider poke up the ravine. The rider said, “Just me—just old Parr Gentry lookin’ for horses.” He came to the fire, this owner of the livery stable in War Pass. He rolled in the saddle, staring down at Hack Breathitt a long moment be fore recognizing him. “Why, hello, Hack. Didn’t know I’d find you on this side of the Mogul. Thought you liked the other side best.” “Any side's all right,” drawled Breathitt. Parr Gentry shifted his weight again, a little heavy to find comfort in his saddle. His face, by firelight, was round and solid-fleshed and darkly dull. His eyes rummaged this little clearing and saw Pete Bor ders’ saddle and blanket on the far edge of the fire—and the two horses picketed near the spring. Breathitt realized Gentry knew Borders’ horse. He held his silence, he took a long drag on the cigarette. “Late for you, ain’t it, Parr?” “Been draggin’ this section all day lookin’ for horses. You seen a band around here?” “Wild ones? They’d be clear to the top of Mogul in this weather.” “Lookin’ for tracks,” murmured Gentry. “Thought they might come down for water. Well, I’ll be goin’. Long way to War Pass.” He wheeled about, groaning softly as he went away. Pete Borders stepped into the light. His face showed its smart disbelief. “He’s been chasin’ horses long enough to know they ain’t down here. And he wasn’t pointed for War Pass when he left, either.” Aft erwards he added: “Didn’t want to show myself. Won’t do you any good to be seen campin’ with me, old boy.” “He saw your horse.” Borders shook his head. He set tled in his blanket, just beyond the light the fire died away and a small breeze rolled down the face of Mogul. (TO BE CONTINUED) Keep it up—don’t let up—keep buying Defense Stamps and War Bonds to help preserve our demo cratic way of life. High Quality West Virginia COAL LUMP EGG STOKER See me before placing your order. R. E. Tripplehorn Phone 396-W WE PAY FOR HORSES $6.00 COWS $4.00 (of size and condition) Call ALLEN COUNTY FERTILIZER 23221—LIMA, OHIO Revert* Tel. Chargee E. G. Beeheieb, Inc. THE BLUFFTON NEWS, BLUFFTON. OHIO OHIO’S HISTORIC SHRHNES Town talk and she got 75 pounds for canning o yeah how do they think we can make preserves and what we gonna do with all the cherries coming on I stood in line at Lima last week for three hours talk about saving tires and gas and then make us go over there for permits never canned that before but I’ll try it this year. And congratulations Bluffton’s corps of volunteers who handled the canning sugar rationing so efficient ly after a flood of protests resulted in establishing a branch of the county rationing system here. Ap plications for canning sugar were handled on an average of from five to ten minutes each with no stand ing in line—thanks to the large number of registrars who were ready to handle the business. Handling of the canning sugar rationing was ample evidence that Bluffton can administer its rationing problems locally and should serve as an example for any future problems of wartime distribution. If you shy away from the number 13—forget it, is the advice of J. J. Luginbuhl, Beaverdam hardware dealer and former Western Ohio in terurban conductor. J. J. told us one the other day that for a com bination of 13’s is hard to beat. Here ’tis: It was way back in the year 1913, train No. 13, Car No. 13 left Findlay station at 9:13 a. m. with 13 passengers on his run to Piqua. Strange to say there was no accident, no trolley trouble and no mad faces all day. Oh yes, we might also mention that it was on Friday, the 13th. If you know your peonies perhaps you can help A. E. Lichtenwalter out of a troublesome situation. Some time ago Lich, whose hobby is flower gardening, bought four peony bulbs. For three of them he paid a quarter each but for the fourth one, an Augusta Deserte he went all out and laid $6 on the line. Unfortunately the bulbs became mix ed and looked as much alike as four peas in a pod—but wait until they bloom, thought Lich, then we’ll know which is which. Well the peonies are in bloom and still look as much alike as the aforementioned four peas. So which one is Augusta? Lynn Carmack, young son of Geo. Carmack of the Star theatre is hav ing his hands full explaining the origin of a big black eye. There’s no mistaking the “shiner” but truth of the matter is that it came when he was struck by an iron shoe in a friendly game of horseshoe pitching. It’s a hard summer for Canadians traveling in the U. S. this year, says E. B. Betzner of Kitchener, Ontario, formerly of Bluffton who is visiting here this week. Due to wartime regulations, Canadians are not per mitted to take money with them out side of that country. He was able to get to Bluffton by accompanying his daughter, resident of a Buffalo suburb, who was driving thru to Missouri. It’s a picture of Tine McGriff’s barbership exhibited in the News window this week that is attracting attention of the oidtimers. The pic ture is believed to have been taken more than forty years ago when the barbershop was located where the dining room of the Long restaurant now stands. Recognized in the pic ture are McGriff, with the late Moses Steiner in the barber chair. SB Campus Martius Museum, Marietta Thousands of Ohio travelers and tourists from other states annually visit the Campus Martius Museum at Marietta, pictured above. “Campus Martius’’ was the name given by the Ohio Company to its fortified home soon after the landing at Marietta in 1788. the first permanent settlement in the Northwest Territory. A section of the original fortification is enclosed in a wing of the museum, equipped with furniture used by the early pioneers. This and many other historic spots and points of interest are described in a booklet “Enjoy Yourself in Ohio, copy of which may be had bv mailing request to Ohio Development and I ubhcity Commission, Wyandotte Building, Columbus, Ohio. I® Forest Mumma is the young bar ber working at the second chair. Cleo Smith now of Lima is the “shine ’em up” boy. The photo was left at the office by Albert Reichen bach who also brought a picture of the Hotel Russell destroyed by fire in 1919. While in Lima the other day to obtain his permit for canning sugar Dr. Gordon Bixel found himself in a dilemma. He would either find him self forced to pay a fine because of overstaying his time at the parking meter or lose his place in the long line of people in Lima to get their sugar certificates. After waiting for two hours he decided not to lose his place in the line and take chances on the fine. Finally he could stand it no longer and forcing his way to the front of the line asked the coordinator why the ra tioning could not be done in Bluff ton. The protests began to fly in so rapidly that the Lima center made arrangements for a local office. P.S. Gordon paid the fine. The most recent convert to the village coin collecting fraternity is Bill Edwards. Already he has Lin coln and Indian head penny collec tors books almost completely filled in. How many of you ever read the radio column in the Cleveland Plain Dealer written by Robert S. Ste phan? Stephan is a former Bluff ton boy and a native of this com munity. His father, the late Charley Stephan, about 40 years ago was proprietor of Bluffton’s Stevens Hotel, later the Hotel Russell that stood on the site now occupied by the Citizens National Bank. Th hotel was destroyed in what was probably th town's most disastrous fire back in 1919. George Swank, popular Bluffton athlete, is working as a meat cut ter at the Bigler Bros. Meat Market. This is a slightly different version his future position as biology in structor at the Boys Industrial Schoo) at Lancaster where he will also do some cutting, the difference being that the instruments and sub jects of dissection are not the same as in his present position. George will also coach at the state institu tion serving as head football coach, assistant basketball and baseball coach and physical education teach er. The position begins in the middle of July. It surely seems familiar to see W. A. Howe walking across the Bluffton college campus where he is teaching English courses this sum mer. Since he has been mayor of the town and instructor at the high school for the past eight years we had almost forgotten that he had luen an English professor at the college for more than a decade. James Fett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clair Fett left Monday for Dear born, Mich., where he will work at the Henry Ford Trade school for the summer. Jim says that he could work in the office as a typist and clerk if he wanted to but that he doesn’t particularly relish punching Your Own Judgment Will Tell You: More people go to CHEVROLET DEMERS FOR SERVICE than to any other dealer organization because for years more people have purchased Chevrolets than any other make of car. because for years more people have purchased used cars from Chevrolet dealers than from any other dealer organization. because Chevrolet dealers specialize in giving skilled, de pendable service on all makes of cars and trucks. Originator and Outstanding Leader “CAR CONSERVATION PLAN Fly with the Navy as an Officer Unmarried High School graduates or College Men, 18 to 26, inclusive, are eligible. Your Navy offers the world’s finest aviation training on land, at sea, in the air Squadrons, sponsored by schools, clubs, towns are now being formed so that buddies may fly together. Aviation at Its Best—Navy Aviation NAVY OFFICERS and MOVIES of NAVY AVIATION AND THE FLEET MEMORIAL HALL, LIMA *OHIO STEINER CHEVROLET SALES BLUFFTON, OHIO PAGE SEVEN a typewriter eight hours a day. He will room with Dale Grismore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alan Grismore, west of town, who is also working at the Ford plant. Dr. C. Henry Smith, of Campus Drive, is having cjuite a time with an over prolific apple tree. The green apples have been falling off in large quantities and the moment he cleans them off the sidewalk they are replaced by dozens more which drop with almost staccato like reg ularity. Mayor Howe says that peas right out of the garden surely taste good. Ever since last Thursday the mayor and his family have been enjoying this leguminous type vegetable rais ed in his own home garden. The profit must be in the turnover, but at least there’s one embryo mer chant in Bluffton who’s content to do business on a basis that leaves nothing for the overhead or profits. Bruce Hauenstein, seven-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Armin Hauenstein, Monday was selling a cool-ade mix ture that cost him five cents for the same price. When queried about his profit, he remarked, “Well, at least I’m not losing any money.” Ohio farmers will plant 49,000 acres of sugar beets in 1942, an increase of 8,000 acres over last year. The average annual sugar beet acreage in Ohio from 1928 to 1933 was 25,000 acres. la NAVY AVIATION NIGHT Monday 7:45 P. M. June 15th FOR “SERVICE THAT SATISFIES- SERVICE THAT SAVES” heck and Rotate Tires 2 Get Regular Lubri cation Service Engine-Car buretor—Battery Test Brakes E Check Steering and Wheel Alignment 0 Check Clutch, Trans mission, Rear Axle Check Cooling System o Protect and Pre u sene Finish