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; ' | f r By Beulah CoalMining Co. at Beu- lah, N. D. Steady work. Apply at mine or t*Bismarck office in Haggart Building. WANTED—Two neat appearing young men. to, travel, Salary and commission. Apply between 6:and 8-p. m. or 8 and 10 p.'m. ‘John McGovern, Grand, Pa- Hotel, 2-1. WANTED—Hay. camp cook. Must be cap- able of baking bread. Apply at once at Wachter's Transfer Co,, office. »7-21-1wk HELP WANTED—FEMALE girl for] general housework, Highest wages - tor really competent applicant. Apply to George F.. Will at Will's Seed pebvehe ara WANTED—Experiencéd girl for general housework, Prominent position at high- Apply W. .E. Lahr. 504 7-23-' housework. H. J. Wo WANTED—Private dancing teacher. Write 113, cate TribGne, 7-22-3t. 4 - ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT —Large pleasant room” with private, family, _ Gentleman only, | 705 h_St. ‘Telephone 938, _ 7-22-8 RENT—Room in modern house. _ ot FOR Gentlemen: only. 311 Second S| FOR RENT—Oné large unfurnished front rooin in’ modern house, Call 223 12th St. a 7-26-2t FOR RENT—Furnished room for light _hougekeeping.. “Phone 5361. 7-22-38 ice modern housekeeping rooms in Varney ‘flats, 7-24-3t FOR SALE OR REN HOUSES AND FLAT! fol FOR BAL galow pf 5.raoms and screenéd-in ‘Poteh warage tainly is a beauty, : $3500. Modern bungalow--of..6 rooms and bath, furnished: ugeteraplock of, groun east:front. ,A Bargain at $5,000. $10 cash, 4 p A modern house .pf:.10 rooms: and: batb; 100. cash; balance on “Holihan. hot water heal easy terms.” Telephone 45. Ist .Dopr Kat of Post Office, : br Ave ‘Th4-2t FOR -SALE—¢era0m modern house, east front, for $250.,"0n terms; 6-room’ mod- ern house, abdyt,new. for $4000., on \ terms; 7-room.modern -houge, including or 000., on liberal terms; 5-roam: partly modern house for $1800., well jloeated; eight-room house, other’ builditiga:and 10 lots at a bar- gall nice wouse, chicken house, well and 6 acres ‘of ground for $2900. on terms. Geo. M. Register. 7-20-1wi FOR RENT—Modern three-room furnish- ed apartment for light housekeepin: _Phone_852,_F. W. Murphy. 7-23 FOR SALE—New house for sale at corner of Fifteenth.and Avenue A by HH. _O'Connell, Phone 803. FOR RENT—Small house at 819 Cal) 845. WANTED TO RENT by Aug. 15th, 5- or 6-room modern: house by. family of five. 413 3rd ‘St:, or phone 589X. ‘7-26-)wk AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE—New Overland: Four. car. Driven 1500 miles A bargain if taken at once. Phone: 621. , Tn 6 ‘OR SALE—1 Overland, modél 90, excel lent: condition, Sell cheap. Address 76 Tribune. - *) 5-22-tf eed LOST AND FOUND LOST, STRAYED, :OR STOLENZ1 bay mare. Swingy. shoulder,” 1. bay gelding branded with-| |, 1 y mare brande with ||, 1. black mare, 1 black gelding, Please notify Harry Wassemaar, Ban! of N. D. 7-24-3t' nder ‘on left shoulder: white star on hese, ne St. 7-24-3t LOST—Sitm ‘ba: 8-3, white foot, Roy Mull Bg. es hardwood open land, aome good merchantable ‘timber, plenty — building materia), on. State Highway, 5 -miles good Jakes; fine hunting. If you want a fatm. sphere crop. faljures are unknown, this {s the place for Pi acre; ‘Terms: ash;.’bal equal -annual payments. | Hudson Agency, Aitkin, Minn. eh: nd OWMLEN, Ive Gor] AWEW:SUGGESTION FOR] DUR VACATION i (1S: M@s DRAKE | Listen! CHARLEY SPWOLEC, A FRIEND OF MINE. 1S GOING ON AN AUTO TMP =, SUST HE AND HIS WIFE - KE ITED |", BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE Sounds igual V8 TO GO ALONG; HE HAS. A BIG CAR _ANO WQS TAE uy | ez Bacie? I Thoucur | BRE WAS AWAY ‘OW.A vacations WHEN THEY DROVE THE HUNS | No American Who Took Part in the Capture of Berzy Will Ever Forget the Thrill. The fall of the plateau south of Soissons .and the “thrust across the Chateau-Thierry, road sealed the fate of the great Marne salient. The lads of} the Twenty-eighth infantry, First division, made this success possible by their grim tenacity in driving the Germans put of Berzy after being re- peatedly repulsed in their brave ef- forts to take the place. But, despite every effort, the grim walls -of Berzy still loomed ahead be- yond: the shell-pocked strip of upland ag.the summer twilight faded from the sky, Through the night its guns, like those _of..a‘ beleaguered fortress, .con- tinued to flame. In It stood at bay the last German garrison of that “plateau ‘south of Sofssons,” with the whole ‘western front of ‘the Marne salient’pinned upon it, which had for so long held a- black menace over Paris, wig Now and: then there is a man who days of ‘Jesse James, but Gen. Bequ- mont, B; Buck js not! one of them. ‘As the second hand of bis watch from R. 'R, town, 1-mile ta school, near|'marked- 80 qminutes. past. 8 and the! ated, barrage fell, General Buck stretched his .long “legs ‘out 4n ‘front: of the first wave, advised his’ men: iano: mincing FOR SALE—Improved farm. 140 acter! 4 poches this time, and led off the with good buildings, 1 mile west of Menoken, N.'D. “Address owner. ; 14, H,. Rohlen, Bozeman, ‘RADE—For land, ‘Mon- 14-2Wk. FOR SALE OR tA and stock of Renters! merchandise, er , coward il Weite OM, 5W\;| throughi-the cracks of aplit walls and will leas building. Scnmidt,- . D. of Kidder coun- $30 an| streaming rush across the open. . They followed—who would not with atore| 8uch.@ teader? On and on they went the hot muzzles. that flamed behind fallen masses of masonry, on past those muzzles, yelling, cursing, A.C. Baul’ | strileing down with swinging blows the MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE—One Aultman-Taylor thresh- ing rig aud 8-bottom P..& 0, plow, 30-60 gas engine and 42-64 'separator, in first- class condition. Aiso several good-work fiorses. Newell Blexrud, Regan, N. D. ete T-23-1Wk: piece bedroom suite, new,! ‘1 waterheater, 8-piece din- ‘ash bench with FOR SALE Aecrotn Bt e—new, 1 room pul Qi two tubs, 1 Mahogany. resser. Call 37 ‘Ave, A, or/phone 525W. ___7-23-1wk FOR SALE—Two fine corner lots on pay- ed street; one’ 100x150 and one 75x140. Finest residence lots in ithe city. A. J. __ Ostrander. 4-2! OR SALE—Plumbing, Heating and Electrical business, established 12 yea Can reduce:stock to suit. Box 97, En- derlin, N. D. FOR SALE mi gasoline pump with six barrel tank. Address Box 324, Bismarck. 7-22-1w. NED TO BUY—Four burner gas WANTED th oven. Cail No, 108 Tribu desperately resisting Germans behind; on’ by the massive quadgangle of buildings in the western edge of the village, past the ravished church and down the crooked main street untll they pulled up where the raad pitched down into the Crise valley and against the last eastern walls of the hamlet on which pattered bullets from the German nests clear beyond the valley. —Joseph Mills Hanson in the Home Sector. That Troublesome Apostrophe. The woman living next door to the 7-24-2wk | schoolhous® was a spinster of uncertajn street] age. And she seemed to put in most of her time watching the schoolhouse so that she could find some reason for’ complaints. Many had come and many 6-24-tf| had been settled In a way that had FO yoir and water pump. Phone 1 ‘DRESSMAK' 13 2nd St. Phor $4. per da: — ‘WORK WANTED __ WANTED—By young man, place to work after 6 orcicck Yor board and 7-22-1wk | school. “¢34x.] one. During a ball game in the school 7-24-1WK) yard ‘several of the boys had occupied R SALE—6-liole Jewel range, reser-| caused sorrow ta the boys of the And this spring came a new as their grand stand seats the roof ot the lady-next-door’s chicken house. The principal was inclined to stand room. ‘Write 114, care Tribune. 7-24-1wk | with the boys,.so she made their pun- ——S “Parle ‘@ City of “Old Clo.” Not only ére-new- Starting {n-all quarters, b cleaners are, filling thelr windows with Obviously. madame is making econo- mies, remarks a ‘writef in the contl- She ‘must be as smart as. usual, but as: dress. costs. more than ever, -she| of a misplaced apostrophe. , ft goes| er was wise.—Indianapolis News. sells everything she-can before out of fashion, apd’ thus manages to balance.her accounts: ” x ‘The <‘chand ~dtabits: walks eta more. diligently: than ever, dismal chant may be heard: all day-long. -He eaalty Sills lis hig-black ag.. Clothes, like: money “bills, are now constantly, changing hands, and they are worn to the thread by their auccessive wearers: ee ° BS. ENGE, D.C. Ph. C Chiropractor : Consultation Free e" Suite 9, 11—Lucas Blopk—Phone 200 } ftocks-and ‘cloaks for sale.| read, ishment very light. They were to write a note of apology to the woman. The note, was written and dispatched one Paris just now Js full of “old clo’.”| morning. ‘That afternoon brought a ‘ardrobe dealers} fiery spinster to-the building: She sald but even the} the ote was insult added to outrage. The principal took the note and “We, the ‘boys of the N—— school, offer our apology for sitting on the old ~hen's ‘house during our’ ball rental edition of: the London Mall.| game last Friday.” : The boys safd it was all the fault ‘The teach- Locomotive’s Low Rank. the Rated. according to their efficiency, ard] the locomotive stands at the bottom with ‘an average efficiency of 6 per cent, followed by the compound ton: condensing engine, 10 per cent; the compound condensing engine, includ- ing boiler, 13 per cent, and the Parsons turbine, Including the boiler 17 per cent.. When we come to the internal combustion engine there is a decided jump, ‘The automobile motor is .cred- {ted with'23.per cent, the airplane mo- tor with 27 per cent, the coal gas sta- tionary engine with 90.per cent, and the average Diese! engine with $4 fer conceals @ timid heart behind’a long, . of Oxford street, London. drooping ‘mustache end the general ap-,| foundations, have. been cleared and pearance (of a: western’ sheriff of the’ concrete to ‘a deptli of about eighteen 7-26-1wk | words. to follow him and get the] cent On reaching ‘that modern de velopment in which the Internal com-' bustion and the steam engine ‘are com- bined, we.get for the Still engine an efficiency (actually obtained) of 41 per cent, and Doctor Dawson sets down the probable future efficiency. of the StiN-Diesel combination at 44.5 per cent. Cost of Marriage in Austria. The high cost of marriage is caus ing general discontent in Austria, ac cording to a Vienna newspaper re- ceived in New York. The cost of mar- riage now 1s 240,000 crowns for the bride alone. This is equivalent to about $6,000, counting the crown as worth 2% cents, This amount would buy 32,000 crowns worth of dresses, Mnen 44,000 crowns’ and furniture 164,000 crowns. In Austria it is cus- tomary: for the bride to furnish the house as well ‘as provide her trous- seat, London Road to Last a Century. A system of road-making, which is described as likely to last 100 years, hasbeen. adopred by Marylbone, bo ‘ough cht” In “Fepaving a ‘ portior ‘The’ old inches. 1s being, put down. On this wooden blocks with» one coating of; creosote and two of tar are being “4 Speedy Antelope. _ Roy Chapman Andrews, a Mongolian explorer and: traveler, Ig bringing to this country a specimen of an ante- lope which he xays can easily cover sixty miles np bone Looking Ahead. The Lover—I must get my flance a birthday present. What would you sug- gest? ‘The Oyuic—Ob, a stickpin or a ciga- rétte case—something you can use when she breaks off with you and sends it back, Compositors. Exra—Well, all the heroes have. pe turned from war. Martha—But, say, Ee, who are those beroxlypbics® FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS that sounds Susplclous to Us, Alek! WUAT DOES Tr SAY ON NER SPoon TAS? YA KNOW Witty ite SAY. cn Yours* Tae? | k , Avo TRIP AND | ' sev RE ALL ALL I. DOES Wr SAY Tat. VILGETIFOR 4 Noy Rootes AWAY. Alr Photography. No camera has probably been devel: | ‘J*oped so rapidly as the curious appa- “patus_used In photographing from aloft. The ordinary cameras ore of little use for work at high altitudes. The height plays curious ‘tricks upon the camera, A;picture taken from a height of a few hundred feet may be hazy, while if the photographer riges several thousand feet the earth may appear perfectly distinct. The latest forms of aero camera are often six feet in length and amust be equipped with many delicate adjustments unknown to ordinary ap- paratus. It is held by means of han- dies at the.sides and rested (for it is very heavy) on the edge of the air- plane.—Boys’ Life, Houseboat’ on Land. The houslug shortage in Cincinnati 1s presenting some wnique problems to the building: commissioner, George ;Hauser, The owner: of. 1 houseboat on the Ohio river:asked: permission to transfer the‘eabin of his bont to.a foundation. which 6 has. prepared on Southside avenue, In the summer he plans to restore it to the boat, thus jusing the cabin as‘an ‘all-year-round home. ‘The purchaser of a ‘number, of discarded cottages: built: for the:gov- ernment nitrate plant at Ancor,--near Cincinnati, ‘has applied fora permit to bring them into the cityand erect them into flat buildings /by atranging | them three on ‘top of each other. . He contends that this can be done with safety and convenience. Fixing the Blame. “Here, there!” yelled Constable Sam T. Slackputter, the redoubtable sleuth of Petunia. “You knocked that there innocent ‘bystander down ‘while he was peroozing along about his business, ran over him, stopped, backed up, and pass- | ed athwart, as it were, of him again, What: in ‘fire do you mean by such| doin's?” “Why—doggone it!” fending motorist, “he knew me, knew, } the name of this car, and knew, too, that this Is the first time I've ever driv’ this'n or any other, and yet, dad- burn him, he went and got right in the ; wav !"—Kansas City Star. ———— Noe wise | JANE SUNS” ON IY. “FROM MAMA" “eed the of.) which physical condition played not a AWE SAS ouven’! ——— feady to jump fo and play—anything:” “Always?” She looked at him quiz- cally. “He was blind asa bat. “You bet— In season and out of season.” you must tiave.a splendid conatitu- tion. . ¢ I. baxe--but:J don't ahuse Jt. 1 want to Inst.” This had a queer mean- ing, he nas . BY to explain, To his, surprise she said, quite tm- HENRY BEACH pulaively: “I do believe that’s sure.” Beavevesvereesereeeeseeeenenenee | Copyrigtis; by Doubleday Page&@Oo, * SYNOPSIB, PART I.—His star pitcher definitely 4 of the game, through illness, Tris Ford, manager of the famous baseball team, the: Glant-Killera, secures Barney Lar! brilliant twirler, but eccentric and di pated, and after @ nerve-shattering 80n the Glant-Killera win the pennant in the American, league. Gamblers, without apparent reason, bet Heavily against the Giant-Killers, In| the :worl ship: games ‘with. the “Phillt Pud's mall nope Rebs net elated 's main hope at 18 is before the; first game. * ‘The cynical man answered? “If she Ia the stenog of one of them Pittsburgh -milionaires. At'e the kind’ of a suite you'd:expect-to find her In. Get me?” ‘ ‘ ‘There .was a coarse langh, which changed in the. middle into an expres- sion of concern. What happened was swift. if iWin, Shote sald something {n the gambler’s ear and neatly slapped his face, ‘The gambler, raging, Jumped to his feet, scattering glasses and. chips, which went, clattering to the floor, and tugde a viclous-pasg at the Interloper. With the: celerity:of dodging a wild pitch, Win: Shute. avoided the first, | and, catching the gambler off his bal: | ance, floored-bim,with @ pretty upper- cut. Then,,the. gambler, blind with rage, selzed a: whisky bottle from the wreckage. But before he could.use, it his arms were.pinioued:from behind and Shute :wes) pushed out of the “You dido’t hear?’ asked Shote, :bis smoking room;, a4 face horror-stricken. ‘As the. loss:in ram: and.glnssware,| “Oh, 2 dldnit»bear.-verbatim what Generously estimated, was made good, | Was ‘said: about:.me,” she explained, and as the-smoking-room steward was | her stone @ Altde..berd...“But 1. can properly rewarded fér his future.reti-| (waging. Men are such -brutes—most cence; the episode did not come off. | men. And I wanted you to know that clatly before the captain. But unof-| [—I Mked what you did, no matter fleinily, through the human wireless | What others say about ft, I must go system, the story went, all over the | 00W.” ship. In ts trdvel tt became embel-| She slipped away, lenving Win shed with the ship's doctor's account, | happy and angry, turnabout; happy at based on personal observation, of.| her unexpected tender of gratitude, Jamer’. arrival on the ship—dead | angry at the man who had flabbed. drook, » But happiness soon took the ascend- The story did not get to Miss Riley { ancy. In big’ ltroited experience ‘he 4n expurgated: form.. An uncompll- | hado’t much to compare ft with, ex- mentary. remurk had been made about | cept breaking Into the majors the her—“Oh, nothing of uny consequence | very summer he graduated from col- bless. your heart, no!"—and “Janes” | lexe. This, on second thought, seemed had thonght himself called upon -to}] a most unhappy comparison, as Miss defend her with:his tists, Idiotic boy! | Riley didn't care for baseball. Win Shute, in his wholesome and Then she could never care for a pro- Innocent view of things, belleved that | fessional ball player! He hadn't the ‘unfortunate affair in the smoking | thought. of it before, but now, : for room xwould: be hushed up. Having | some {mperative reason. that he didn’ Alberally rewarded the steward for the | try. to analyze, the idea forced itself trouble that had been caused him, and] upon him, .If she couldn't care, what thinking.that “those present” would | then?. treet the episode from the standpoint “We land at: Gibraltar tomorrow.” of the least sald the quickest forgot-| Win Shute heard a passing, remark, ten, Win went about in high .spirite,, and suddenly. it dawned on him that 8 if nothing had. bappened—headed | the day he once had looked forward to straight for Miss Riley. most keenly, but which be ‘had al- They were getting on famously. To-'| most forgotten, was at hand. At last gether they had won many of the] he could move against his enemies! events in the sports, and at ship's ten- | Now he could establish his Identity! nis, which required agility and a sure, But something ‘held him back. Miss quick grip on: the elusive ropen rings, 7 Riley wasn't fond. of ‘baseball! She they were in.the finnls to be played | had come to Iike “Mr. James,” but that morning. Miss Riley evulin't'] would she, a “real swell,” ever look have avoided seeing him had sbe been | with favor upon Win Shute, profes- so minded. They won, and were pro- | sional ball player?: He shook his head claimed champions of the sea—aty gioomily. 1 least of that part of It dominated by} Looking upon the much-advertised the steamship Colonia. tock next day, he wasn’t at all impa- It had been a hard-fought match. In| tient to leave the ship. “Golng ashore?” inquired a voice at his side. It was Jed Mansel, the wire- less operator. Her ‘Touch Gave. Him an Odd Thrift. And for emphasis.she rested, her hand | for 1 moment on his sleeve, Her touch.gave him an.edd thrill, Miss Riley got up to go to her state- room, and then, a8 if under the spell of impulsiveness, added quite shyly: “It was good of. you to take my.part In the smoking room.” small part. Miss Riley rather ainused Win as they were resting in steamer | chairs on the boat deck by saying: “You seem to be pretty fit.” “Fit?” His tone bad tn it a saute | | oyt show of enthusiasm. “Why, not Join me? T know the spot and the ways of the native holdup artists. I'll act as guide if you say so—glad to.” Never before had Jerroid Mansel of- fered to do him a favor. Their only contact after the, first day's consulta- tion over the wireless messages had come tn rivalry over Miss Riley’s time. Now the hero of the Regent was brim- ful of friendliness. Win Shute’s sus- picions, already sufficiently aroused regarding Mansel, were considerably augmented by this urgent invitation. But he smiled as he might have done in facing a pitcher who had something “on” him, “Thank you—T've no time for sight- seeing. I have some business to at- tend to here.” Win Shute was off the ship among the very first—before the wireless op- erator; he saw to that. He hired a conveyance and ordered the driver to make tracks for the cable office. “If you get there before anybody from the ship I'll give you double fare!” promised ‘Shute—and he had to, He wrote ont a long message to Tris Ford, explaining in detail what had happened to him and how he had done of. sarcasm, “I'm always 6t—always BY BLOSSER OUeee+) ” IT DoES* ? Ou, FELLAS, ROOT A SPOON Too. his best to communicate by wireless, * and how he stood over the operator FROM WcYEL. while he sent it. ‘Then he asked how long {t would take to get an answer. “From two to six hours,” was the reply. “I'll. wait,” announced Shute. “But don't you want to see the fortifications?” asked the operator. “You will have ample time.” “I want to see nothing except the reply to that message,” replied Shute, sitting down and making himself com- fortable for a long wait. After six hours of waiting, the oper- ator handed him a cable dispatch. It | read: “Ford out of town. Report to Amer- {ean consul, Naples. Do you need money?” | ‘It was signed by the club’s secre- tary. too late, but he.dido't try, “S'pose so,” answered Shute with- | PAGE SEVE) He cabled in answer to address.bim A of the consul at Naples. He did ‘Det ask ifor mohey, ‘And he;went back to the ship ip no hilarious frame: 6f mind. Hts team had lost the world’s championship—the plot’ against, ‘him had been thoroughly. successful! And he was no nearer spotting: his» en- einies than he was before going ashore. ball! This seemed, to.cap.the clmax, Strange how values change {n a voy- age across the Atlantic, doctor and the wireless operator in close confab, Win Shute was not cu- rious until he caught: «1s: “The Glant-killers lost. Dispatch, and you won. when we get paid off.” 1 see by the Tul pay you Jed Mansel. “1 made quite a killing, Cleaned up two théusand dollars.” “Two thousand?” repeated the doc- tor, “You were lucky.” “Not lucky—wise,” sel, winking slyly. “I knew that one of the Glant-killers’ best men couldn't play.” * Win Shute was certain, The wire- ess operator was a crook. He was a party to the devilish conspiracy that had drugged and put him away on the ship! Rage such as he had never felt in all lls life consumed him, He could not curb hls desire to hurl himself up- ov Mansel and beat hini to Insensibill- ty. But as he was on his toes to spring, a restraining hand was laid upon his arm, It was Miss Riley, to you, please?” Reluctantly Win Shute turned from his enemy, He and Miss Riley walked along the deck unt! they were out of hearing of everybody. “I looked for, you before the pass engers went ashore,” she said, “You see,” she went on, then faltered— “you see—I wanted to ask a favor of you.” She stopped. The ship's mystery ‘unaccountably| flashed across Win's mind! But he} didn’t pause a second In replying: “Sure! Ask something hard., Wish: 1 could do a real big favor for: you.” “You can, IT have a queer feeling that something ts going to happen. It’s perfectly silly, of course, but— {f. something should, will you look af- ter mother? She 1s so devoted to me and so dependent on me that I don't know. what she ——” Again she fal- tered. br “I sure wilt—and look after you, tao,” answered Win. “That's so good of you. But don't trouble about me. It’s mother I'm “May I speak & worrled about.” Then with a look of unconcealed admiration she concluded: ' “But [feel better now. It seemed to me ‘that, you were the only one on the ship that I could go to—the had one I wanted to trust mother 0." Notwithstanding the bitter disap- pointment of the day, Win- Shute went Iinto-dinner that night with a heart as buoyant as a toy. balloon. He was planning a ‘walk and a talk by. southern moonlight with Miss Riley. i But all evening she paced. the deck fo earnest conversation with Jerrold Mansel. Win Shute figured out to his own satisfaction why things were thus, He knew that: Miss Riley was receiving wireless messages—he had seen Man- sel hand ‘her more than one—and Shute decided that the operator was Rage, Such as He Had Never Felt In All His Life, Consumed Him. taking this means to keep tin touch with her, Whereas a steward would carry Marconigrams to other passen- gers, Jed Mansel Jnvariably delivered Miss Riley’s messages himself, Nat- urally this attention would be recog- nized by an appreciative person like Miss Riley. : That Jerrold Mansel was: downright crooked, there wasn’t much doubt. But Win had :to admit ‘that his; proof was far from conclusive. Tris Ford's wireless was a fake—but there was the possibility. of faking somewhere along the line of transmission. Man- sel had bet heavily against the Giant- killers—but so had thousands of oth- er persons. The operator's remar] about the player who. would be mi: from the line-up was strong circum- stantial evidence against him—and still it could. have been a “second guess;” he might have heard after the sertes that one of the best men had been out of the game. Certainly there wasn’t enough solid proof: to warrant Win Shute in denouncing the wireless operators>~ i (To be continued), ws And Miss Ritey didn't ‘care for .base- : Aboard ship: he ran-upon the ship's | the .doctor’s : - “My tip was pretty good,” admitted © corrected Man- ”