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Show TWO PROVO ( UTAH) DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1940 SECTION TWO PAGE V'OnT TrvT fL OUT OUR WAY By Williams v y v Ja a c-La h tl K I ' A U U-u L U, 7 ; i rTLrrrrv . .-L.-.. r: - r GOOD OOSH, CULY-A 'TAlU'T -TUST, WZ3 r- -...i.. -1 Every Ar,... ,w.,.nc .., no.r, FELLOW CAM EVER ACLG TO RECOVER. frtry-. run.i n.-.v,-i i-ut.!.,.,s H'hvi-iv MnmiTi e j -MAKE A COVVC-OV PRCiA A LOT CP J ' , I j PuMi-h.Ni iy tl,. h,i.i cri.wrnt.-i.. so Pourh rir-t j WHO GETS INTO A ''EM TH&T FINALLY" 7- '1 Wt nr.- t, I'rov.i. Itr.n. VNrfJ a-rond flan mutter A-A-v I "IT "s.C 4CCCnC V MAiil A CfllVROV' Ar S ; v j. like this.' y V ':-' j JT?r A t , J Ci'.u.an. Moot ttuthnmn. Nntlonnt AdvertlmnK rrpre- ,t X -s - f ''-.yJ. C'" " ") ft.,. fr.r.. ('n ( N-.Pr ra Audit Ituieau ul 1 , V- ' , , ' - J , vv .V' 'f ' :""r- Ihro.-.i-.ri !1 ,,.:,..n !-..,, -i.v rurrt.r tn l'(,.h c.mniv. e rent ', ' v 7 -: ' I -j" - 'S -; ,' "?.. -- vi'7' th.ljir.J- ,,, ,..,;,. j i ,.,r ,U m..l.lt. t.l n.tvHurf; li. .4 th -f. 4 , i- ' ' .", V.'u-j : -1 N I I IT L --w' . : ) . -o 'M; .v - &r- jlrW ,iv. r, i-, , ,-., ,....-.,.a i. i- . ..;....,,. i it..... t..-1'..uN. i .a JLX:vr L i , I ' ',.'...'. f t !..;. 1' ill r oii. I tl.at ..t ( th n.lv coil... mem in f , - ' U , X V "s, " ( " " ' , I Hon tn lyp- ll;ie liter c v tip.ui u e''-0ittg'ly fiUt.I with i Nun,1 but tOUt . i u i 1 . II if Iter Development As fruit ;tiil t ol hatt .t c lull that, acco)(un!.'; to a v: 1 J i At t 1 1 culture, it is u.o n taount.aiii n .'iijii; Out the county can Jt. in this season: it is the home tion of learning in the in term doublet! its enrollment durine, university now ranks in ft..) c.-.i,t. T,ij,t.ibl. off- a;.. i. n.-tivo of cunU-nipt. -lioc!.-- f .r 7 V, : . . v . ' vAWV' J V ' v I the nations co!lej.'e.-; aii.l utnversitios. I ' 1 nation's colleges and universities. t urtherruore this lmtitulion lountieii uy pire builder t xtends its influence to many woild. During the l vear and summei to 3002 students from 3'J .staU:s ami five The far-reacliinir influence of to the fact that it is the L. 1). S. Church university and partly to the educational prestige it has built up in the 05 years since it was founded. Graduates of B. Y. U. are occupying occupy-ing higli positions in the fit his of statesmanship, law, the sciences, the arts, and relieious activity in many sections of the. continent. In givinp; his first instructions, Brigham Young1 insisted in-sisted that the institution provide sound training for earning earn-ing a living and creating a home, and lie stressed the need of developing character and spirituality at all times. Nearly 1700 courses in 38 departments provide liberal vocational and professional education leading to success in more than 150 occupations. For perhaps 1500 Utah county young men and women it means a convenient place to obtain standard, nationally accredited college work at relatively low cost. To thousands of adults it presents opportunities to continue their development develop-ment through adult education lectures, extension classes, Leadership Week, and the. arts courses. The university helps make Utah Valley a center for music, art and literature. From the dollar-and cent view)K)int B. Y. U. is one of the most important institutions of the county. According to figures prey an d by the Provo Chamber of Commerce, the wealth it brings to this area includes an annual faculty payroll of .? 110,000, an annual material expenditure of 5?Co,000 and an annual expenditure by students coming in from outside of $0 18,000. On the basis of these figures B. Y. U. brings a total economic benefit of .$1,118,000 to this section. . Therefore, Provo and Utah county will watch with interest in-terest the opening of the big church school for its GGth year cm September 20, 21 and 23. Ford Endorses Wendell Wiilkie . DETROIT, Sept. 12 Fold today endorsed "Willkie, Republican nominee, as a man v to do exactly what he M'.l'i - Henry Wendell Li. presidential ho "means says and fs competent to do it without evasion evas-ion or excuse.". "Mr. Willkie ir a bll:- w A I ''.' tj , r f jf ,V e ; . -hi , - XA v ?M . - i . x : - , () lutv.' iiKM-fy opon us; Kir w' an- . - i , vv s , ' r . . ' ' ' . 7 r for Utah's Best Crop fa!.'(.;i ami ail the rovvni wealth in, Utah county is aain reminded lil iii.r by the department, of ajri-' ajri-' ;h'i icultural county of the iuter- I urt.ud of another (listinciion rt-.':. ' X ; '"Ti . : . : J '.ri'-- w7 proti'i ol anotner aisiincuou of the largest private institu-juntain institu-juntain ree;ion. Having almost. the Tliirties, Crijdiam Yoiin.ic with the uip.'r 13 per cent of jrreat cm- 1 arts of th" , it jrave training foreign count ries. the institution is due partly and understands what this country coun-try needs first and needs most," the motor magnate said. "The economic eco-nomic question is paramount, it is the basis of defense, prosperity, and everything, else. Until the country gets back to work aT.d earns good wages it is not in a position to do anything properly. "Mr. Wilikie lias had practical business experience and knows this." private institu- 7u's Jf , " JS '( ; - -i Having almost tJ- SS,r (ioiim Somewhere? f ''' v .x jv.?A'A -i3r- A y,y y - - o - . A - ' , '--if ' ' " : - 'A: ' :zy-..ji. i ' : ' "A .,',,.. ' A,''' -V ; " , ',' . ' - '. - - c.jft ti t w srcic.. me On The Sunny Side r.v Next hearing MAUY KI.LKN CAIN best to taking a trip is the experiences of an- other who has thoroughly enjoyed a vacation of travel. We were re cently privileged to hear Mrs. E. J. Duckett tell ot her tri: through Canada 32. K)-mile and the Northwest. The party went by way of Seattle Se-attle and l'ortland, then by boat to Victoria. "I have always loved the ocean," airs. Duckett said, "and everywhere every-where we looked we e.tuld see tne ocean. Most everything there is typically English it wan almost hue going home to England." They found the August weather cool there, although one day's temperature reached SO in the shade and people were suffering from the heat. It was their hottest hot-test day since 1917. Canada's loyally to England was manifest everywhere throughout through-out Canada, Mrs. UucKett explained. explain-ed. Every Canadian must register regis-ter for service of some kind, and the large cities were filled with army and navy men preparing for war. Not only young men, but men with three or lour children are in the rajiks. They attended a concert for soldiets. where they heard the national na-tional anthems of America, England, Eng-land, and Canada, as well as several sev-eral new patriotic songs. And despite war preparations, Victoria was gay with beautiful, bright flowers, English holly and ivy growing in every available space, and English flags were flying everywhere. They witnessed the launching of a submarine chaser from the Victoria wharf, and saw a boat leave for a 20-day journey to China; they were surprised to 1 -- ' 1) II V UWMr, '''' '' v.' ' VV'' ( . ' V 1 - . ' '' HECOE5 ARE MAPS-NOT PORN FSA Instrumental In Solving Problems of Missouri Farmers II V 1511 VCt: CA'l'lXJN Daily Herald Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON, Sept. 12 The problem growing out cf the famous fa-mous "hunger march'' of landless land-less sharecroppers, and tenants in southeast Missouri a year and a half ago i.s in a fair way to being solved, because all hands involved sat down and discussed their troubles trou-bles in a democratic American manner. This hunger march was a rising ris-ing of several hunured farm families fam-ilies who had nothing to do and no place to go. It raised a lot of angry passions, scared the landlords land-lords and business people of the neighborhood, drew the eager attention at-tention of the Communists, and looked like a ready source of trouble trou-ble for many years to come. Today the thing' is being worked out. The Farm Security AcVminis-tration AcVminis-tration has had a lot to do with it, and so has Gov. Eloyd Crow Stark's Missouri administration; so, too, have the landlords and the homeless 'croppers directly involved. in-volved. IS A AltliANOKS FA KM LEASES East winter Governor StarK named a committee 'representing all of those groups to figure out a solution. This committee drew up a program aimed to put the landless folk on their own feet, so they could both be self-supporting and could furnish the seasonal sea-sonal farm labor which the "boot-heel" "boot-heel" area of southeastern Missouri Miss-ouri annually needs to get out its cotton. Most interesting part of the programbecause pro-grambecause it shows the cooperation co-operation which was obtained from everybody concerned is probably the part which deals with the effort to stabilize the farm labor supply. Here is the way that is being handled: For a given family, the Farm see oil stations located out in the water to supply boats with oil and gasoline. In anchorage was the small old boat "Tilikum," which bore the inscription: "Left Victoria May 27, 1901 on a trip around the world. Donated by Messrs A Eyiord Greenwich Yacht club, London, England. Returned July 1, 1930. Through the efforts of the Victoria and Island publicity publici-ty bureau. Traveled 40,000 miles manned by a captain and one seaman." sea-man." At Thetis lake they enjoyed a champion's swimming tournament. tourna-ment. And they saw many free bathing reports. They found the Japanese Tea Gardens very lovely. At LJeaeon 11:11 Park they watched elderly men play checkers on a huge checkerboard which was made oi blocks set into the ground. The large checkers are lifted Ly means of a handle, and the player must walk around to move his 'men.' I'enderay Gardens fascinate the children, because there the trees have been trimmed to resemble different birds and animals, then just beyond Is an elaborate tea garden, and Stanley Park covets nine acres. I l. e massive stores were of Interest In-terest to them, many of which, Mrs. Duckett explains are seven stories with a basement and sub-baseme-nt. And the street ear service serv-ice to the resorts for a six-cent fare would le something most of us would appreciate. Bicycle are numerous, and many of theni are bmlt-for-tvvo type. The boat which took them to Vancouver was filled to capacity, bands played, and soldiers sang patriotic songs. There they marveled mar-veled at the "Fairyland" which is the term used for the Neon-light shop streets, some of which ae ten miles long. Picture show theaters the-aters are subject to a $50 fine if they sell tickets to children who Security Administration people go to a cotton-farm landlord and ask for a 10-year lease on a small tract of ground - maybe three acres, maybe five, sometimes as much as 10. Getting the lease, the FSA locates the family on the land and loans it enough money for a house. By contracting for the homes In quantity and cutting out all the frills, it is able to construct con-struct decent four-room homes for about $450 apiece. The family pays off this FSA loan over 10 years at a rate of about $50 a year. The landlord gets no rent, but at the end of the 10 years the house belongs to him. Meanwhile, the family has enough land to raise garden truck, keep chickens, and support a cow and a few pigs. These support it during the slack season it gets its cash income by hiring out a.s farm labor during the brief periods per-iods when the region needs a large supply of casual workers. 15AD FEELING CONK That's only part of the program, of course. It is now taking care of approximately 1500 families. A number of other families have been put on full-sized farms, with loans to enable them to make a start. A couple of "labor camps" on the California-migrant model are about to he put into operation. opera-tion. Interesting about the whole business are two points: first, the problem of supplying .southeast Missouri with its necessary seasonal sea-sonal labor supply without forcing forc-ing a few thousand families into wandering pauperism is apparently apparent-ly being solved; and second, the bad feeling of the early days i3 vanishing and landlords, tenants, state officials, and the federal government have worked out among them a program which is enlisting the cooperation of everybody every-body Involved. are not accompanied by adults, after 6 p. m. Posted on a bulletin Mrs. Duckett Duck-ett saw a water-stained letter with the notation: "This letter was on a ship that was wrecked." On another board was posted the requests for electricians and other workmen. As last as these positions posi-tions are tilled, the notices were removed to be replaced with others. 'lite Vancouver Fair, and tl parade which preeotleU the opening, open-ing, were indescribably inuto-ne and interesting. Aiitoitg the thiaigs which was most enjoyable lor ileeily was the two-hour o!serva-ttijit o!serva-ttijit bus trip; the eleven-hour boat tr.p all around the Gulf islands, and the 24 mile bus trip to Car-do Car-do vu, Hay, and the visit to the .Parliamentary buildings and the museum. "Tie view from the Ganzalas observatory is it signt that 1 shall never forget," Mrs. Duckett said. 'iJtey also visited the Hudson Bay observation tower, and climbed Mt. Tolmic. On the boat they saw six refugee refu-gee children, the youngest of whom was about four. And everywhere every-where they saw Red Cross workers work-ers collecting funds for war relief. re-lief. 'The Salvation Army is also very active in Canada. Mrs. Duckett said: "In Canada one does not hear even a suggestion sug-gestion that Germany will take England." WOMAN KILLED NAM PA, Ida., Sept. 12 (CD A freak auto-truck collision today was blamed for the death of Mrs. Julia McCollum, 22. of Nampa. An automobile struck the rear wheel of a light pick-up truck, spinning it around to strike Mrs. McCollum a.3 she stepped from the curbing. Canyon county authorities authori-ties reported she died from a broken neck. LAKE VIEW ?.:r.s. SAiirn siiayv Reporter Phone 018-R-S A very successful opening party of the Mutual was held Tuesday Tues-day evening at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Johnson on the spacious lawns. Readings were given by Mrs. Lila Judd and Robert Rob-ert Olsen. Community singing was enjoyed and games under the direction di-rection of Elvin Bunnell and Mrs. Helen Oveson was the diversion, after which a melon bu.-t was enjoyed en-joyed by sixty present. A number of ladies met at the work and business session Tuesday Tues-day afternoon and made fjuilt for the association, lits. Helen Oveson and Erlva Williamson sang a duet, with Mrs. La Von H.trward as accompanist at .the piano. Mrs. Chrissie Madsen gave a retold story. Delicious refreshments refresh-ments were served. The whole community of Lake View are in sympathy witli Paul Craig through the deatli of his wife Emm, who parsed away Wednesday afternoon at the Utah Valley hospital, having her husband hus-band and two .small children atter a short nines;?. Mrs. Alma Jotgensen left for Salt Lake to be at the bedside of her daughter Mrs. Ada Crossman who recently underwent an operation opera-tion at the Holy Cross hospital and is now at the home of her mother-in-law Mrs. Grace Cross-man Cross-man where she is suffering with after effects of the operation and neuritis. All wish her a bpeedy recovery. Radio Service Worker Honored Word has been received of the acceptance of Melvin S. Draper, radio service man at Royle's Radio fr Appliance company, as a member mem-ber of the Radio Manufacturer's Service, a national organization of radio service men sponsored by the Philco Radio and Television corporation. cor-poration. To be accepted into this organi zation rs considered a genuine tribute to any radio service man, according to R. M. S. officials. Cranium Crackers U.'S. LABOR LEADERS Here are the names of five prominent- American labor union leaders. Can j'ou tell wiiat union each is associated with ? It isn't necessary to give the full name of the union; the trade is enough. 1. Daniel J. Tobin. 2. Harry Bridges. 3. A. Philip Randolph. 4. John L. Lewis. 5. William Hutcheson. Answers on Page Four, Sec. Two SERIAL STORY LOVE OM li:sTiatl)Ar Morlc lfnU the low BMiptite ...it tu fistht Ik I.ruirie lire, fturli.it turrit may l irnpi.rd. lip la herrf.t tfhrn ke rpallien the l.lnxe hau not i-pnchrct tarrlc'n elnim. With the lire itlmottt whipped, n nuddta uindMlvrm Mweepj in from the rnit, toMMe rlaminir KraN nero,. the creek. The rnin panNeis to the north. It Carrie ham not left her clutm Mite mar bet trapped, CHAPTER X TT still was dark when Carrie, her heart pounding in her throat, dressed and started across the prairie to Taylor's. To the tast, the fire was etched red sigainst the blackness where the night met the land. Carrie, watching it as she stumbled along, Imagined it grew brighter, came more swiftly toward her. Carrie never knew just how she Iound Taylor's soddy, except that suddenly the house loomed up a Llack bleb in the night. She ran the last hundred yaids, reached the door, pounded loudly, calling, "Mrs. Taylor! Mr. Taylor!" Then there was a stirring inside and a shuffling of feet and big Ed's voice boomed through the open Window, "Who's there?" Carrie did not answer. The last the" remembered was that some-ooe) some-ooe) -was bending over her and that she was lying down and that the fire on the horizon had turned, suddenly, into utter blackness. TY7ITII night, the realization of Carrie's peril overwhelmed Mark. The wind that had roared in on the first wings of the storm was spent now, but the after-blow after-blow was still strong. It whipped and eddied and fanned the flames until tire fghting was almost hopeless. Mark looked behind once, saw the wind had dropped blazing tufts of grass where he had just beaten out the fire! He was certain it had leaped Hock Creek. It must have, in the first tornadic push of that storm. Yet there -was no way of knowing. After the first, sudden shock of the storm was over, the men had resumed their hopeless battle. They fought the fire with sacks, beat to shreds, with broken shovels. Faces were black with smoke, scorched. Mark straightened straight-ened up once, paused in his beating, beat-ing, and felt his feet blistered in his boots. Someone was calling them together. to-gether. They, could not stop the fire on this sid2 of Rock Creek. It had leaped the creek. They were going to backfire, to try to stop it on the other side. And then Mark recognized the voice! Ed Taylor's! Taylor? What was Taylor doing here? Taylor, who thould Lave 1 AA Ve Must Determine to Do Utmost to Keep American Idea Alive Louis Adamic Fourth of 24 articles oa "Our Country," written exclusively for NEA Service and The Herald by the nation's most famous authors. HY LOFIS ADAMIC' "The Native" Return." "My America; Lands," etc. Author of In the current woild crisis, the dated States will scarcely be worth defending as a place and a .sovemgn state unless we as a people and a Government also determine to do our utmost, immediately im-mediately and in the long run, to keep ahve and enhance the Ameri can Idea. r - To me the anything elsi the body of n'ot)le have la genual weliare, lmeriy. uu; puis-un oi iwi .n.. -a.,, ; . the Ann m an Dream, the Promise of Amiitoi, the A met iean Way. j i mean the thoughts, emotions and dom:! of i 1 people on thin continent tnat run like a char ! I stream thioin our history from Plymouth Rock ! ' to Elli-? Island, and that aimed for a better life ! -" 1 than seemed possible anywhere else on earth. 1 I mean the Mayflower Concordant, the Declara- ' tion of Independence, the Gettysburg Address, and the teats in the eyes of millions of immigrants from ; j more than a score of countries during the last bO i.e.;. AddlrtiO years as they passed me muiuc oi umy, v. whose pedestal are struck these words: c.iw ,.,. vour tired, vour poor, The wretched' refuse of your teeming shote, Your huddled masaea yearning to breathe free, Send these, the homeless, the tempest-tost to me; I lift my lamp beside the golden door. There will be danger, I fear, in this period of stress that Americanism Amer-icanism will be defined and interpreted too narrowly by the elements in our population which bv virtue of their numbers and priority largely dominate the life of the United States. The danger will be that the idea of Americanism will become Ej. air., as it was during the first World War, too insistently national- rsf the no-lonfirer-true Idea that the United em: uum .-, " ... States is preponderantly an extension of the Briti; Anglo-Saxon tradition. q,i,.h nnt innniiRtif A ntdo-A mericanism will not It will leave out tens of millions .,,tn w.m nnd daughters who are hut who come or item from Poland, the Balkans, the Near and Far East, Mexico, and Airna. And leaving them out, it is apt to weaken their current eagerness to add their energies to the defense effort. Americanism must be stated or re-stated so it will be all-inclusive, all-inclusive, as something that is the monopoly of no one strain in this country, but a happy concentration of some of the best aspirations and pendencies of humanity at its best nearly everywhere at one time" or another. Americanism, as I see it, is a movement away from primitive racism, fear and nationalism, herd instincts and mentality and superiority su-periority and snobbery; a movement toward freedom, creativeness, a universal or pan-human culture. A comparison of the two America of today is made by Mary Roberts IUnehart In the next article of thl series on "Our Country. SLVIL CARRIERS EXEMPT BOISE, Ida., Sept. 12 (CP) Idaho rural mail carriers need not pay the commercial license fee for automobiles used in their work, District Judge C. E. Winstead THE LIME been with the women; Taylor, who should have taken Carrie and his wife to town at the first sign of danger. Suddenly, Mark realized that Ed Taylor, of course, would be fighting the fire. Taylor lived on Rock Creek. The firer had swept toward his home' Irom the start. Taylor would be one of the first to light it. But where was Carrie? Car-rie? With a shudder Mark thought of her. He groped through the smoke in the direction of Taylor's voice, approached a grizzled, commanding command-ing figure. It was big Ed. The men were gathering around him. Taylor was speaking. "If we catch it in the slew grass, we're all right. If we don't " He stopped, recognizing Mark. "Mark, for God's sake, have you seen the women?" "Have you seen the women?" Together they asked the same question, almost in the same breath, seemed to stagger there with the knowledge neither Jsnew. "Have I have I seen 'em?" Taylor rallied. "No, ain't you, Mark? Last I seen 'em was this morning after Carrie came." "Carrie? She reached your place?" Mark cut in excitedly. "Ych, she reached it 'n that's about all, Mark. Fainted cold at the door. First thing we knew about the fire was then. We got her to, an I hiked out. I tuld them, then, to hold off going to town unless it got worse, but to keep the team handy. God, Mark, they rnust've got out by this time." TUT Mark Deuel knew what Ed Taylor feared, what he was thinking, what both of them were thinking but were cfraid to say. Instinctively, the men recognized the truth in each other's laces and shrank from it. Perhaps the women had not escaped at all! The quiet of the day micht have put them off guard. Ed had told them to keep the team handy to go into town if the fire should become worse. But it hadn't become worse. It had slowed down, instead, and the women, watching across the creek, must have noticed that. Then the storm had struck, undoing un-doing in five seoonds the work of the whole day, carrying the flames clear across Rock Creek and straight toward the homesteaders. Had the women become panicky in that first frightful moment? Were they able to handle the horses and get them hitched up in the wind and lightning? Had they started to town on foot, or were they even now caught in j u N L L v4 Li J . ' v. "From Many United Kt rites is more an idea than And by the American idea I mem ideal and practices which different ll. -d vaiiouslv: democracy, euuaiity. in Isles and the be all-inclusive. of immigrants and their American- not of the Anglo-Saxon strain, central Europe, Scandinavia, Italy, wrote in a memorandum opinion today. The -decision favored L"-e A. Wheeler, Emrnett mail carrier, who filed suit on behalf of Idaho rural mail carriers to determine whether they need only pay the regular $5 auto license fee- BY PAUL FRIGGENS COPYRIGHT. NfcA 6E.SVIGE. INC the hell of that shifting, evtr-widening evtr-widening prairie fire? TN that moment Ed Taylor was yelling for a horse. A boy came running with one out of the darkness and Mark swung up into the saddle. There was only one horse, the boy shouted, the others had broken away in the storm. Big Ed was yelling, "Mark, find the women if it's the last thing you do!" Mark kicked the horse into a run, raced into the darkness to circle the lire and cross Rock Creek below the point where the flames leaped the stream. As he rode, he realized suddenly the odds against him. In the darkness he could not hope to find Carrie and Mrs. Taylor, since they would not take the usual road t town along the creek. It would be too late to try that route now. But he could find out if they'd left with the team. If the wagon was gone, it would mean the women had escaped. It Was two miles sround the fire's edge to the crossing below Carrie's. Mark splashM his horse into the cool, shallow water, would have dashed across, but the horse, foam-flecked, thirsty, forced iU head down and drank feverishly. To Mark that pause seemed interminable. Seconds later lie was splashing up the o titer side and along the creek bank toward Carrie's. With breathless satisfaction he noted the fire was burning slower in the creek bottom, choking somewhat on the thickness of the tali, green slew grass. But it was gaining a headway, nevertheless, was less than a quarter mile from the soddy, probably even eloper to Taylor's. Mark swung up the little knoll to Carrie's soddy, and knew instantly she was not there. Quickly, Mark turned his horse away from the soddy, raced that last mile across the prairie to Taylor's claim. He saw the dim outlines of Taylor's soddy and makeshift barn. The fire was much closer here, advancing swiftly in the short, dry grass. He galloped up to the soddy, slid off his horse, shouted: "Carrie! "Car-rie! Mrs. Taylor!" There was r.o answer. Mark felt a sudden, vast relief. They were gone! They had escaped! Then he saw the wason, overturned, over-turned, by the dugout cellar. Frantic, he ran toward it, on tj the-barn. With a sudden, sickening sicken-ing sensation he raw the storm hod ripped the corner off, taken part of the barn roof. The horstj were still tied in their stalls. (Te Be Ccul.-iut-d |