Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1924-1994, September 19, 1940, Image 2
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They are rccom h mended the country over. Ask your 0 neighbor! a feYsWiO iTiIHJ I I I I ni I w S ki The Honorable Uncle Lancy By ETHEL HUESTON O Bobbs-MtfHll Ca WNU CHAPTER Xlll—Continued —l4 The truck pulled into the camp grounds where a space had been reserved and roped off for it. The girls still stared through the little darkened windows. “Girls,” Helen whispered sudden ly. ‘‘Lookl It’s the wrong rally! There’s Brother Wilkie on the plat form. There’s Len Hardesty stand ing on the steps.” “Why, Ben’s brought us to the wrong rally!” said Adele, “You’d think he would know it by this time!" “He must be drunk,” said Helen. “I’ll tell him.” They ran to the front of the truck and banged furiously on the small locked doors that separated the driver’s seat from the body. They called, softly at first, then as loudly as they could scream, “Beni Ben Baldy! Oh, Ben!” Still no reply. “Uncle Lancy’ll fire Ben Baldy for this,” said Adele. “Aunt Olympia’ll strangle him,” said Limpy. They climbed back to their nar row perches and peered interested ly through the small high windows to witness the Republican rally. Adele’s eyes clung to Len Hardes ty’s lean face, where he stood alert ly on the steps that led to the plat form. Len Hardesty had been on intent lookout for the sound truck. There It camel There it was! A faint sem blance of a smile softened his set features. A stroke of genius! It wouldn’t win the Governor many votes perhaps, but it would certainly make talk, and better still, it would create laughter. It would embarrass Sloppy. It would show Olympia he wasn’t to be sneezed at. “Here’s the truck,” he wrote on a card and passed it up to the Gov ernor. “Be ready with the lights,” he said to the engineer who stood beside him. The Governor finished his para graph. Then he paused dramatical ly. “My friends,” he bellowed sud denly, “we have charged that your representative in the Senate of the United States —Alencon Delaporte Slopshire—is a careless, indifferent, inefficient man I Too careless, too inefficient, to be trusted to safeguard the rights of this sovereign state I We have been challenged to produce Eroof of that charge! Tonight, we ring that proof! . . . Do you be lieve —is any child innocent enough to believe—that a man who cannot protect his own property, cannot preserve his own rights, cannot safeguard his own interests, can be trusted to safeguard the property, the rights, the interests of our sov ereign state! Ladies and gentlemen, on this night of all nights in this campaign, at this crucial moment, Senator Slopshire has shown himself so careless, so inefficient, that he has allowed his own campaign sound truck to be driven off under his very nosel Ladies and gentlemen—this is our proof! We give you the Slop shire Sound Truck! It stands before you!” Immediately floodlights from all over the park were flashed on that silent tomb, the Senator’s sound truck. The girls crouched down out of sight below the small windows. Spike O’Connor, stern, unsmiling, accepted his honors with a stiff bow. A roar went up from the crowd, hand-clapping, cheers; and boos for Slopshire. When the applause had somewhat subsided, the Governor went on; “Here, my friends, you have ac tual, physical, incontrovertible proof of our charge of inefficiency. In the face of this testimony, what can be •aid of the Senator’s sagacity, his senatorial watch-care of our state’s rights, his guardianship of the sa cred privilege of our common citi eenship? Tonight—at this hour —Sen- ator Slopshire is supposed to be making an intensive drive for votes In this state, addressing gathered crowds through the microphone of this sound truck. This is the truck that carries his valuable papers, his books, his files, his notes; as well as his loud-speaking equipment. Can you trust a man who can’t take care of his own property, to take care of yours? “Ah, ladies and gentlemen, in the Holy Book of our Fathers, in Divine Scripture, what is declared to be the fate of those wicked and slothful servants, who, not being faithful in •mall things, cannot be trusted with greater things? Is it to him these words were spoken, ‘Well done, thou good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things?’ Ah, no! That wicked and slothful servant, careless, ineffi cient, faithless in small things, is to be cast into the outer darkness and there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. “But this Good Book of Guidance offers counsel and advice for all; yea, even to the wicked and sloth ful servant, faithless in small things! Come back with me to Proverbs, and read this admonition. ‘Go to the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways and be wise.’ . . . Go to the ant, Senator Slopshire, consider her ways, and be wise.” Limpy could stand no more, “diva me that mikal” alia said paa HOUSTON HOME JOURNAL. PERRY, OEORUIA sionately. “I’ll tell them a thing or two.” And as the roar of applause died down, suddenly the tomb of ineffi ciency found voice and spoke. Lim py, standing tense and rigid between the cabinets, bawled bravely into the microphone. “Ladies and gentlemen! Listen to me a minute! It’s the most out rageous lie I ever heard!” Startled silence gripped the crowd. Was this a plant? At any rate, it was dramatic. All eyes were riveted to the truck. “I'm Limpy Rutherford, and Sen ator Slopshire’s my uncle and there never lived a better uncle than my Uncle Lancy, This is the most des picable outrage I ever heard of!” Len Hardesty collapsed on the bot tom step. “Oh, my God, he swiped the kid with it!” he groaned. “My Uncle Lancy is the most hon orable, most gentlemanly, most— conscientious person that ever lived. I’ve lived with him a year and I ought to know. And he’s efficient, too. He’s terribly efficient. I know his car hasn’t run out of gas since we’ve been here, and that’s effi cient. “And he’s a good Senator, too. Everybody in the Senate just loves Uncle Lancy; even Republicans love him—all the important ones, that amount to anything. McNary just dotes on him, he said so himself. And Vandenberg thinks everything in the world of Uncle Lancy. He told me if Uncle Lancy was a Re publican he’d be presidential tim ber. And Uncle Lancy’s a good Christian, too, I don’t care if he is a senator! “I know all about the Scripture! I was brought up on the Bible; the real Bible. Would my Uncle Lancy stoop to stealing Brother Wilkie’s sound truck—and commit thievery —just to win a few votes? Certain ly not! He wouldn’t think of it! Do you think for one minute my Uncle Lancy would steal Brother Wilkie’s brats?” “Oh, Limpy, don’t say brats!” moaned Helen. “I mean children,” Limpy correct ed herself hastily. “He wouldn’t do it, anyhow. He wouldn’t soil his fingers with them! He’s too much of a gentleman and too much of a Christian and too good a senator. And even though I’m a Republican myself, if I had a vote, do you know who I’d vote for? I’d vote for Uncle Lancy—that’s who! I’d vote for him a thousand times if I could and go to jail for it, and it would be worth it, too. I’d be glad to go to jail for Uncle Lancy. He—he’s a —swell—guy.” Tears began welling to Limpy’s eyes. A lump rose in her throat. She struggled on. “My Uncle Lan cy is—just—swell.” Limpy collapsed in a passion of tears on the floor of the truck. Helen grabbed Limpy. Adele grabbed the microphone. Suddenly her low, even voice swept over the crowd, still gripped in awed, electrical silence. “My sister is perfectly right. Every word she said is the gospel truth. I’m Adele.” “Oh, my God, he got them all!” gasped Len Hardesty, and started for the truck. “I have never been so shocked in my life,” continued Adele. Our preachers in lowa wouldn’t do it! That’s not the kind of preachers we have. And if Brother Wilkie is so fond of the Scripture, he’d better read up on that handwriting on the wall business; if he doesn’t see handwriting tonight, he will next Tuesday!” “Play, you idiots!” roared Broth er Wilkie, and the band swept, too late, into the cheerful strains of “Don’t you weep for me.” But already the crowd had moved away from the platform and was massing around the sound truck, once more standing silent, grim and tomblike. Reporters nosed closer, closer. Cameras turned on it from every direction. Light bulbs ex ploded. Len Hardesty pushed his way through. He beat on the door of the truck. “Adele! Open this door! Come out of that truck!” Adele opened the door. Light flashed about her, cameras clicked, the crowd roared. Adele, wide-eyed, damp curls clustering about her pale face, slim bare legs shivering beneath the short damp cape, stood clearly revealed. Helen, with the weeping Limpy in her arms, was behind her. Len took one look. “Adele!” he roared. “Get back in that truck and put on your clothes.” “We haven’t any clothes,” said Adele pathetically. “They stole our clothes, too.” Her teeth chattered nervously. “We’re half-frozen.” And she slammed the door. Len Hardesty flung himself against it, facing the cheering, laughing crowd. He was haggard and wild-eyed. The crowd, too, was beginning to mutter, almost menacingly. This, definitely, was carrying things too far, even in a mud-slinging cam paign. And then, from the distance, came the roar of approaching motors, the shriek of sirens, the scream of po lice whistles. Nearer, nearer! “Oh, my God, it’s the police!” groaned Len Hardesty. “Well, they’ll get into this truck over my dead body!” And he planted himself more firm ly against the door of the truck, both arms outstretched, a figure of grim defiance. CHAPTER XIV It was the police—a thoroughly outraged and vengeful police escort, reinforced by a dozen or more ad ditional officers from Uncle Lancy’s big rally. The escort was offended to the depths of its being. It is true, it had not been in the imme diate vicinity of the commission of this crime against law and order. Still, it had been detailed to the Senator for the campaign, and to have three girls and a sound truck kidnaped from under its nose, as it were, was certainly going to make talk. It might even instigate an In vestigation. The roaring onsweep of motors was the noisy approach of the Sen ator and Aunt Olympia, in pursuit of their children. Aunt Olympia never forgave her subconscious for not affording her some premonition of what was to happen that fateful night. A beaming Madonna with a clear conscience and red face, she had ac companied the Senator on his last trek; received with him the plaud its of the crowds, accepted bouquets, and at Millsville dimpled rosily over the handsome evening bag present y ‘ 1 r Aunt Olympia ed with a good deal of ceremony. She listened attentively to the Sena tor’s speeches, applauding good points, the incarnation of devoted wifeliness and temporary mother hood. Eventually they arrived at the last round-up, Trentfare. There she received her fourth bouquet, the oth ers being left out of sight on the floor of the automobile. She didn’t mind at all because the girls were late. “God knows they need a rest from all the speech-making,” she thought leniently. “They’ll get here in time for the wind-up—in those costumes —looking like angels. They’ll be a sensation. They’ll cinch every float er for miles around.” She smiled, she shook hands, she acknowledged introductions and took bows, and then fluttered down in her chair with modest decorum. But she couldn’t help keeping watch for the girls. Her fond eyes yearned for the blessed sight of them, in those works of art. Just as the Senator was getting well launched in what was to be the climactic closing speech of the campaign, suddenly the haggard face of Ben Baldy appeared at the side door of the platform. He waved grimy hands toward Aunt Olympia, he shook his head, he scowled. Someone seated near the door whis pered to him. A message trickled along the front row until it reached Aunt Olympia. “He wants to speak to you.” Even then Aunt Olympia was not startled. It was the girls, of course; probably wanting to know whether they should come right on or wait until the Senator had finished. She rose, carrying the huge bouquet, and tiptoed over the feet of the front row honor guests on the platform, whispering apologies, until she reached the door. With a big, soiled finger Ben mo tioned her to come a little farther. “Mis’ Slopshire,” he whispered tersely. “They swiped our girls.” Olympia drew herself together into her familiar posture of hauteur. “Baldy, have you been drinking?” “I wish to God I had been,” he answered, in a voice both evasive and devout. “Brother Wilkie done it. They swiped the sound truck and the girls along with it while I was snatching a bite. A cop brought me in a side car.” > “Brother Wilkie—swiped—” she said quaveringly, her knees going week. “Republicans, anyhow. And rushed ’em off seventy miles an hour—to the other rally.” “Where axe the girls, Bea, where are my girls?” she demanded, het voice going swiftly crescendo. “They’re swiped.” “But where are they now? What’s happened to them?” “They’re still swiped.” Aunt Olympia was game to the depths of her being. Even to this catastrophe, she arose with rampant resourcefulness. “We must head off the Senator,” she said. 4 ‘Pie’ 11 kill Brother Wilkia for this! . . . Wait here, Baldy. I’ll go down front and catch his eye.” The Senator, working up to one of his best points, was a good deal surprised to see a pale and grim lipped Olympia appear before him below the speaker’s stand. Her rightful place was in a good posi tion on the platform. But even a pale Olympia gave him courage. Not a bad idea, getting down there where he could catch her glare. Olympia, who had a stimulating ef fect on perfect strangers, was al most intoxicating to the Senator. ( He went on, with greater elo quence. In the burst of applause that followed the paragraph, he glanced complacently down for a beam of approval. Imagine his amazement to see Olympia silent ly weeping, swabbing at her under chin. The Senator tried desperate ly to recall if he had said anything of a pathetic nature to arouse her emotions, but there had been no pathos in this speech; this was a fighting speech and Olympia never cried over fights. He gazed at her distractedly. Falteringly he took up the next paragraph, but he couldn’t get his mind off Olympia, sobbing silently almost beneath his feet. “Clap, boys,” he whispered to those behind him on the packed plat form. Accepting the cue, they broke into hearty applause, and the audience joined willingly enough. Taking ad vantage of this interval, the Sena tor leaned over the rostrum. “What’s the matter?” “The Republicans stole the chil dren. Kidnaped them. They’ve got the children.” “What!” She nodded her head, tears streaming down a face in which the last vestige of rose had faded, even to her lips. “Stole them. Got them. All of them.” The Senator rose to dramatic heights of which even Olympia had never dreamed he was capable. He towered to a height which was real ly impressive for his somewhat slight stature. He raised his hand for silence. He leaned forward again. “What did you say, my dear?” he asked, clearly. “Brother Wilkie stole our truck and kidnaped our children. They took them to the other rally.” The Senator raised both arm*. Mild though he was supposed to be, the united Opposition would have quailed before his look at that mo ment. “My friends,” he said, and there was the venom of murder in hii voice. As for the sweating throngs this being a decided innovation in r campaign which had not been dull an almost unearthly silence gripped it. “My friends, I came here tonigh prepared to answer briefly, decisive ly, every issue that has been raised in this campaign. But my campaigi is ended at this moment. I shall not continue my sipeech. I am obliged to leave you. I have jus learned that the Opposition, reduced in their extremity to dastardly deeds of violence, have stolen those | three children who are dearer to my wife and me than our very lives. They have taken our children. La dies and gentlemen, I relinquish the campaign; I leave it in your hands. For myself, I go to rescue our girls from this act of wanton depravity. Let your votes fall where they may.” He leaped nimbly down from the platform and put his arm around Olympia. The audience waited in taut silence, anticipating some fur ther, exciting denouement. But Jim Allen, the state chairman, did not wait. He, too, leaped from the plat form and caught the Senator by the arm. “Senator, for God’s sake, you can’t do that!” he said. 44 You can’t walk out on us! You’ll offend every Democrat in the state. The kids will be all right. Nobody’ll hurt ’em. But we’ve got every county chair man in the state here; we’ve got committees from every club; they’ll never forgive you.” The Senator drew himself up. “Unhand me, Jim,” he said thick ly- “ You can’t go, Senator; I won’t permit it; I’ve worked too hard on this!” The Senator let go of Olympia. He took his glasses carefully in his left hand. He doubled his right fist, rose toweringly on his toes—Jim was a tall man—and delivered a surprisingly straight, clean upper cut to Jim Allen’s face. Jim Allen, felled more by surprise than by the force of the blow, sank to the floor. “Come, Olympia!” said the Sena tor, gently, replacing his glasses. Olympia, even in this crisis, did not forget that she was a lady. As she stepped, carefully, though blind ed with weeping, over the prostrate form of Jim Allen, she hesitated long enough to murmur, “So sor ry, Jim!” And the Senator led her away. The crowd waited . . . There would be another act, of course . . . On the whole, it was well-pleased. The constituents had had three months of speechmaking and band music and handshaking. A kidnap ing was something new. So th«j waited. (TO BE CONTINUES# I"I I "T I Me Another • A General Q U i z The Questions 1. What city is thought to be the oldest in the world that is still inhabited? 2. What American statesman was known as “the Great Pacifi cator”? 3. Buonarotti is the surname of what great Italian artist? 4. What is meant by the French phrase “Je suis pret”? 5. With what is the science of metrology concerned weather rocks and their formation, or weights and measures? 6. What is an eon? 7. What is meant by the Penta teuch? 8. Which of these colors has the highest light-reflecting quality: canary yellow, silver gray or white? 9. Who were Aramis, Porthos and Athos? 10. In speaking of a woman in charge of a post office, which is the correct title to use, “postmis* tress” or “postmaster”? The Answers 1. Damascus. 2. Henry Clay was known as t Great Pacificator.” 3. Michelangelo. 4. I am ready. 5. Weights and measures. 6. An immeasurable period of time. 7. The first five books of the Old Testament. 8. White. 9. The Three Musketeers in Du mas’ novel “The Three Musket eers.” 10. Either is correct, but “post mistress” is not official. The post office department recognizes only one title—postmaster. To Check Constipation Get at Its Cause! If constipation has you down so you feel heavy, tired and dopey, it’s time you did something about it. And something more than just taking a physic! You should get at the cause of the trouble. If you eat the super-refined food most people eat, the chances are the difficulty is simple-you don’t get enough “bulk.” And “bulk” doesn’t mean heavy food. It’s a kind of food that isn’t con sumed in the body, but leaves a soft “bulky ” mass in the intestines. If this common form of con stipation is your trouble, eat Kellogg’s All-Bran regularly, and drink plenty of water. All-Bran isn’t a medicine—it’s a crunchy, toasted cereal. And it will help you not only to get regular but to keep regular. Made by Kellogg’s in Battle Creek. If your condition is chronic, it is wise to consult physician. The Low-Down Stingo—l fell off a 32-foot ladder yesterday. Bingo—And you were not killed? Stingo—l fell off the third step. if RHEUMATIC PAIN iff MUC6IST Our Patience How patiently you hear him groan, how glad the case is not your own. TO CHECK Ik Ql A i |N 7° ays f*j,666 ” LIQUID OR TABLETS Refuge in Foe When fails our dearest friend, there may be refuge with our dir est foe. j S P E CIaX bargains] WHEN you see the specials of our merchants announced in the columns of this paper you can depend on them. They mean bargains for you. • They are offered by merchants who are not afraid to announce their prices or the quality of the merchandise they offer.