The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 23, 1926, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE —— | ‘ This’ll Slow Him Up Some | “TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1926 now, however, it won't be news. It will be too com. | My mon, too every-day an affair to be given mention. | An Independent Newspaper We hardly realize now how useful the airplane is, THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ! ve, (Established 1873) ud to prove, Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at. Bismarck, as second class mail matter. H George D. Mann.. -.+»President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year, seeeoeees Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)............. Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota... Member Audit Bureau of Circul: Angel Child ! A Philadelphia lad, aged seven, whose mother calls him “angel child,” has been taken into juvenile court for the second time within a month for fighting | neighbors’ hoys. He is accused of malicious mis- chief. ' A mother puts her son under an awful handicap | when she labels him “angel child” and-lets him hear | it. This particular lad, however, apparently is fast i on the way to become an upstanding citizen in spite Member of The Associated | of the epithet. | > ~ with MARY LOWELL. Later he sie fee cerabitnvion ot eaclthatls entitled te, fe She needn't worry about him. The boy’ to worry | Chae Oe, Soe eee Beas ad on of all news dispatches credited | shout would be a boy whi that he was called | AMUEL CHURCH, 8 to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also | waieel anit shel aR ii ake TORE abo: ie with 8. EL Ci HL BEGIN NERE TODAY- HENRY RAXD, 55, a business | , mi found murdered in a hotel in Grafton. Police rit woman's handkerchief and the yellow stub of a theater ticket. JIMMY RAND, his non goes to MANSFIELD, where the theater in, The stub ix traced to OLGA MAYNARD, a cabarét singer. Jimmy meets and falln in love {crouched outside, hardly daring to |breathe, could hear what he was saying: “Huh. . . . Yeah... . W gettin’ ready to pull my freigh ‘There was a long silence, during which Jimmy imagined the unknown on the other end of the wire was [talking to Jensen. It Jenyen’s drunken rumble resumed: | “Yeah, she’s here... . Well, I might take her along with me, an’ if she ain't agreeable I can dump her off some place. The Kid's gonna bring the car tonight. uh? No, I don’t think I don’t think she likes me too much.” He laughed loudly at something that must have amused hi ‘Huh? % . No, not me. J’m /not bumpin’ of! ey woman. It ain’t in my line. hat do I care is she does tell? Tl be over the border. . ‘ho, you? No, not a chante. know a thing. Not a fall 8? Again he stopped talking, and Jimmy found himself trying to piéce together the fragments of conversa- tion, to imagine what the other man he inh to Jensen. {He hi jensen say: Rand?” and his nerves tingled at the mention of his name. That Je: I'm a tite the local news of spontaneous origin published here- ; Teele a casi and. mincbder= in. All rights of republication of all other matter se stands, herein are also reserved, Olga ‘elle police the stab Mean pene 7 N i might have come.into possession Foreign Representatives \ debi AaNs of a aan who “picked her up” | é ' Ina Detroit court a mother was appointed to pass | t lights bef the murde: CHICAGD KOCAN PAYNE COMPANY org | itulizment upon her son, who was brought, before | Thaiay receives saystarioun Warn Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | the law charged with drunkenness, | Ines to leave Manaflold and later © PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITiL “You probably know hest what should be done | nen NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. | with him,” the judge told the weman, who had com- | With Jimmy, and Mary en- : ees Church gets Mary's (Official City, State and County Newspaper) i plained that her son came home drunk and abused roimee to marry him. eee ethene bia raat Sete in ‘went. on, evn . Sure, she I know where to i . take me ‘eah, Charilie’s most of th’ ‘ners do, you know, even fairy b: \hers) that he never noticed what | was doing, and before anyone could | stop him, he had dyed Mister Bun- sao i : 8 and whiskers green. loge goin’ awa; is What tor? ey 4 i ‘They worked all afternoon, Nancy |x; _ a . | Oh, you're thinkin’ of it. . . . Naw, end tice and Mister Rubadab and|NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY); teh you: sho dont knw a thing. the March Hare did, trying to get CHAPTER XLVI jYou’re all right. Safe as a bug in that dye of. Divis, if he had been a little quick-:@ rug. Ha-ha.” Jensen laughed up- But come off it didn’t, and ff you/er in turning, might have seen Rand{roariously. see a rabbit with bright green ears!in time to duck the blow that was| By “she” Jimmy felt certain Jen- and a green mustache anywhere this{aimed at his head with the heavy sen wi referring to Olga Maynard. spring or summer, you'll know justj/andiron knob. |He assumed that Jensen wanted to AN EMBARRASS!| QUESTION Although I in’t know why, Jer! Hathaway inspired me with confi- dence, I wasn't nearly as blue as | when I came into the restaurant. I ‘our money tome until you xet another job, “Why didn’t into i red by way of explanation, \ Old Laws—And Men Miss Mabel Vernon, executive secretary of the National Woman's party, and Miss Margaret Whit- temore, first vice president, are making a motor car campaign tour for “more women in Congress.” “Many of our present laws, handed down from ancient times, mock at women,” says Miss Vernon. She goes on to cite one case in point, as follows: A-weman who supported herself, a worthless hus- band and their children by washing was injured when struck by an automobile. One of her legs had to be amputated. She brought suit against the driver for $10,000. Indications were that a very good settlement might be made in her favor, as the culpability of the driver had been proved. \ Then she was notified that her husband had set- tled the case out of court for $300, This was possible on the grounds that her injury deprived her husband of her services in the home, to which, under the law, he was entitled, without regard to his own responsi- bility. cut that sum to $10,000 is penny pinching. The woman received no part of the $300. The hus-| There are 27 circuit judges in the United States, band used part of it to obtain a divorce and scon | drawing a salary of $8,500 a year, and 131 district married another woman. j Judges, receiving $7,500 a year. The proposed cut- There’s some merit in what you say, Miss Vernon. | ting of the salary provisions in the bill amounts to $790,000, not a very large item for a four billion " Endangers Commins: ie [doles ee in compensating its federal judges. Senator Cummins probably will face Senator | e fedetal judiciary should not be measured in Brookhart in the Iowa primaries if the Senate up-|terms of dollars and cents. The fact that they holds the report of the elections committee and} need more money in order to maintain a living stand- | ousts his cclleague. There is real dissatisfaction in | ard commensurate with their office is incontestable. the corn belt this year and Brockhart is a past mas-| A salary of $15,000 is not too much, and congress ter in capitalizing discontent. Cummins is rated as | should grant it. a conservative by modern standards, although a few years ago he was dubbed a progressive and even trotted with La Folletté, Moses E. Clapp of Minne- | ‘sota, and others. Today, however, the progressive | wing of the republican party has moved too fast for | him and he finds himself on middle ground, leaning more to the conservatives than to the progressives. Pp ; her. | amy and “Olga out one « i " Vs 1 nig! see a man ey A Letter To A Boy Le es : ee or 60 days would be about recomalaeae tr the man who Here is a letter to a boy, to a boy about to. quit | i sf ie atub, he an one \s 4 i Lai inally 5 . The ind his cor A “let the high school and go to work on a milling machine. | | But oe pan seamat and placed the Sable eneaben "Liew ddey: vee | Kid do it, Wm leavin’ tonight: -, "The ete ate “A pena 4 joy on probation. Too bad. ize hi iy tare ¢ | Sure, he can. . . . He should t ‘The boy ix a'sophomore. He has failed in school spe ME eat Y ognize his police picture as that | Fin nat night. when he took a shot just once, in the last examinations. His parents | Church, motoring with Mary, thi Just ‘a bum break, that’s « haye a little money, not much, but are willing to Waki | runs over a dog. His heartless- Yeah, 1 got the-dough. The ake "Le : ‘ 3 | aking Up H ness causes her to break their me. . 4s Yeah, one make ‘a’ few sacrifices in order to. see their son; Now the War Department is wrathy because it is | engagement, Mary writes a let- : And say, don’t forget. thraugh college. reported that certain aviation officers are surrep. | ter, explaining, but the office boy soon as you hear from me down Here is the letter: ies i ay | forgets to mail it. | im Mexico, don’t forget to send the Paras cre lettet: |titiously doing all they can to further Col. Billy | ‘jimmy gets a phone call from rest of it. Five grand. . . . And “Bear Frank: a | Mitchell’s ideas about the air service. Oiga, saying she has found Jen- [8#y, don't, fad ole sified dhe I have just heard of your decision to quit school; Gradually the idea is penetrating at the capital. | . os 2h tt nc ancte. Her upaterions | i cooked. Seer i but perhaps I should not call it a decision, because | Some day the War Department may wake up and! ; H disappearance becomes a news- lian” at bother about Rand. The I believe you are merely drifting out of school on! discover that almost every man who knows anything | per eensation: a. parry I get hint 2" you give: him: time. the first little adverse wave that struck you. | about flying wants to do his work, under a compe- | when he seddealy see Kid Divis, 'So,” Jimmy was thinking as the “That is a very bad move, Frank. You'll regret tent flyer, not under a swivel-chair general who has | 2 known intimate wf Jensen's, ere erie it CAE, ay that Jong and often. It is your first big mistake. (never heen farther from the ground than the eight! | Precelte Mees gibt ir ey gad me that night. Now 1 wonder “If you let the first little wave that strikes you floor of the Willard Hotel. lonely house. He goen inside and | Why? i wonder who it is that’s wash you over, these waves are going to knock you! eRe from a darkened hallway sees Ae eee saving. down time after time, as long as yeu live. | : ee ae ee atncan: tae une WEa Se ce, Bw “But, if you put your foot down now, with the de- : __ Piffle Be answer the telep! won't get away. termination to ‘fight it out along this line if it takes! Washington, writes Charles P. Stewart, has a new Noemie! st oot omer tir all summer’ you will have beaten these waves for all | burning question, a new critical issue that cannot be moves swiftly into the room time. jsettled. It is: do cabinet members’ wives take pre- Jensen has just left. “Taking the easiest way doesn't pay, Frank. We cedence over congresswomen at social functions ? | seni all have to do things we don't like to do, every day.| Kingdoms may rise and wane, great moral and po- | You will find that your work at the milling m | iticad issues may arise to tax every energy of the chine has a fly in it, too—then where will you turn,;Ration’s most construetive statesmen; but always what will you do? ; j there will be some members of the government who “You say you want to be earning, you are coming | Will find time to worry about a thing like that. into a man’s estate, you do not want to be depend- | ae Fae | felt as oe T had a host about me, . " ‘i ii | for with Mamie and Jimmy and now ent. You say you will go to night school for your Wasted Effort Mr, Hathaway, I knew thet Sb ime further education, and en working. ; London beauty experts solemnly announce that, | 1 had someone to go to if I got into ” was Mr Hathaway's com- “But you won’t go to night school. You won't £0 since the short skirt is here to stay, they will set) "qUpIC. pnt, and by his'tone 1 knew that A 4 3 enn ee 2 : bias . ‘ I trusted Jerry Hathaway imme@| Jint had girls s office that to night school six months. Yeu're quitting high} about it to make the feminine ankle more beautiful. ately, ‘and,L could see that Jimmy | not eoalatel seusraelagiaei school—you'll quit night school, too. Which sounds like gilding refined gold. Take a| thought hé was ubout all there, was| I confess I was angry and burt. “You won't go to night school because the real} stroll down the avenue of any American city any} \"sitm'really_ glad I'm out of they it impossible for James Costello. to reason for your quitting school is that you have!fine day and ask yourself if the average feminine piste; ae grits ee v heal | take mayne his sd 1 Say in i i sfyi ated it from the first, but it pi my mind t k him the moment Mr. eer Mt. pee bare failed. mine a man'al “MHI needs any benutifying | good money und I, presume if some, Hathaway left us. I was glad that q a thing like this had, not happened, I! our spaghetti came in at that mo- qualities, Frank. But courage in the face of failure! A would have stayed there a while! ment, for it gave me a chance to be does. | Now comes Budd Reeve of Buxton, N. D., with} tonger. : silent and I was afraid if T spoke 1 : {the following proposition: “For $10,000 under the} “I eon Bellare um ab ct plu would burst into tears. Spiri Vashii i 4 3 | my, was when I left home, and| Jim noticed that I was very quiet eee pee enn oat wee eae that weekly, pay. cheek from” the|and he knew why but he refrained without expense to the government.”—Page Vol- stead. Beaux Arts stood between me and] from making any comment. starvati j ‘Jerry Hathaway excused himself “Judy,” said Jimmy Costello, when the coffee appeared. He, too, ovsly. “Do you realize that you've; felt the coldness of the atmosphere. got on awfully welt? Think of the ill T bring your money, girls that have been turned out on the streets as you might have been. When | think of that outfit over there and how they treated you und {will probably treat other girls as they come, I just want to Ko and wipe up the floor with all of them. As it is, you found a good friend in Mamie who took you into her home and heart. And, just when you couldn't stand it any longer I tae onto the stage an now Jerry’ll After handling the United States senate a few years, President Coolidge should not find it hard to tame the Smoky Mountain wild cat that has been sent to him to increase the corps of White House smiled his approval. wal pets. ‘ou are in good hands. } the best thing about the s restaurant. Men d women like her smile. Too bad she’s not able to have her voice cultivated.” (Copyright, 1926, ‘A Service, Ine.) TOMORROW: A Man's Protec eaux Art | Editorial Comment | A Federal Judge Deserves $15,000 (Chicago Tribune) A bill seeking to raise the salaries of federal [ judges from $7,500 and $8,500 a year to $15,000 is pending in congress. Judiciary committee mem- bers seek to curtail the raise, making the new salary $10,000. Federal judges deserve $15,000 a year. To gether, | cleared off my shoes? I'm all ‘Come on, 8.” it right down, sir! Rubadub, motioning to chair, when they arrived. e So’ Mister Bunny sat down, and who it is and exactly how it hap-| As it was, he was too slow, and) get her out of town so she could not pened. he didn’t know what bit him. Jim-;expose him in this kidnaping busi- (To Be Continued) my brought down his crude weaponiness, (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) |with crushing force. It hit Divis on| He shifted his weight a little, re- ; a the head; just behind the ear. He jlieving his cramped muscles. A slumped forward in his chair, his! board creaked ominously, He held arms sprawled grotesquely on the |his breath, waiting . . . ready to table, completely “out.’ \meet Jensen should he rush out of Jimmy sprang to Olga’s side. \the room. im!" she breathed. “Thank| Jensen, the ‘receiver at God!” heard it. Still keeping the He fished a knife out of his pocket’ ment clapped to the side of hi and with swift strokes cut the cord{he turned questioningly around and ‘that kept, her prisoner in the chair.'pecred out at the blackness of the hat did they doto you”. he hall. ays 2 whispered. “No, don’t tell me yet.{ “Wait a minute,” he said. Then Vait.”” {after a long pause: ‘That you, Be careful about how you look into} Her head fell forward on his breast | Kid rc S a mirror. Looking too much is liable} as he half lifted her ta’her feet. She le waited what seemed to Jimmy to discourage you, was close to fainting. He cased her'an interminably long time before he — back into. the . chair,’ patted her| turned back again to the phone. Hound dogs sit around’ and howl! wrists to start the sluggish circu-!Jimmy breathed a sigh of relief as he at the moon,.bpt calamity howlers |lation, whispered in her ear: heard him say, “All right, go ahead. sit around and howl at nothing. “Olga, brace up. Pull yourself to-| Thought I heard something in the — gether. You ean't-go to picces just{hall. This house so old. . . giv The weather Seems to be perfect] yet—not yet. Please,” me the creeps ... hoards squeakin’. only during those months having a] She managed to lift her head. “I'm. Go ahet “2 in them, - all right, [ think. But Jim, how| “Well, all right, chief. Be good did you get here. How did you--"|... can’t ‘he good be careful. Ha.” Many a woman standing in front] “Sh-h-h, not now. Here.” He ran|His deep, grunting laugh filled the of a shop window has merely stopped | swiftly and noiselessly over to Kid] room with raucous sound. to reflect. Divis, who was still sprawled out| “I will... . You bet . Don't _— across the table, Lifting him inj forget about the dough, now. . . . Monday was wash day once. Now|his arts,’ Jimmy laid him down on|Soon’s you hear from me. . Yeah. 4t is the day on which we have the} the fees. From hip pocket he| Might do a job for you again some garage man put the auto back to-| pulled out an automatic pistol. time. . « this blows over... . All ” he sai Olga. “Take|right. . . . "Bye." — ‘this and, wateh him. If he moves,| dimmy could hear the metallic If a man’s face is his fortune some | you-cover him, and if necessary don’t; click as Jensen replaced the receiver of us are in debt. Testase to shoot him.” on its hook. He rose heavily from his chair. A match flared as he lit said Mister “Jim, I can't, 8 big barber One of the hard. things about farm-|_ “You do as. 1 say,” he commanded. ing is resisting the temptation to . ina tone Jess brusque: “Come, § § quit and go fishing with the worms} now, just sit here and hold it. I'm Mister Rubadub covered him up with] you dig up. going upstairs to see if I can tind a big white cover, and then x ‘ ut who's talking to Jensen. reached around for the shaving-sodp| Don’t get mad at a cross friend. ‘ou take this, then.” She held to dather Mister Bunny’s ears “ind | His children may be sick or his wife|out the ‘pisto) to him. “You'll need nose and all around his whisker: may be reducing. tt ee at jo, T've still got ' thi der | brandished the broken anidron. | He looked, half pityingly, at Di i stret ‘unconscious on the it roten—hitting him to flatten himself against the wall,.and through his mind flashed a memo: rainy . himself against an- the betray- ing board ‘squeaked rain, loudly. He could hear Jensén stop. “Who's that’ ame his voice. floor.!Then, in a loud store, “Kid, that was. from j you? behind like that—but the only thing | came out of the room in a He'll come to, I think. j Sudden ‘rush, and loomed up in front He moved toward the door. “Don't ;of Rand like a monstrous giant, the forget,” “he. cautioned.. “Keep him largeness of his figure.:emphasized covered and if:he makes a threaten-|by the darkne: : » ing move, shoot. And if. Jensen And then he saw, and Jimmy swung should happen to. come, down, shoot! the andiron straight at hi him the minute he appears in the But Jensen, unlike Di door. Take no chances. {to meet the attack. Her face blanched. If Jensen) should come *down 7 coul mean only one thing—that Jimmy-| would’not., . . she whispered, but he was Old Grandaddy Frog had hopped into Scrub-Up Land, and now he was all finished and ready to hop out _ But instead of getting the shaving powder, he grabbed the can of green Spring clothes look fine on 8! id shook it all over the shaving | people but don’t feel so well on slen- i « de jomes. ° Fi talki d (most bar- ight, 1926, NEA Service, ‘Ine.) again. Not that he ever needed much bar- be ring! For Grandaddy has neither hair, fur nor feathers to be trimmed, and he has no beard or mustache to be barbered or a tail to be combed and. clipped. About the onl; thing that Gran- daddy does need is a new coat. But when he’s ready to go to the Land- Where-Spring-Is-Coming, he does need that badly. I am sure if you had to hide deep down in the mud at the bottom of the pond and stay there all winter to keep from freez- ing, you'd need a new coat too, by pring. But Rubadub, the fairyman of | Serub-Up Land, doesn’t eyen have to ‘finish a new coat for him. Mind yo the old frog gentleman gets it h self! He doesn't buy it, or steal it, or find it, or borrow either. grows it, right on hi: ck! ay He just peels his muddy old brown wrinkled coat right off his back and there's a new one underneath, as ead. 3, had time le flung uy arm and the heavy metal kn truck hard, unyielding flesh, With amazing quickness he had jgtabbed the andiron and wrested it. from. Jimmy's grasp. A loud crash jon the stairs below told Jimmy that Again Jimmy was out in that dim-|he had flung it away. ‘ly lighted ‘hall, his feet padding | Jensen's ‘hand went behind him noiselessly over the thin carpet. Up-!and when he. straightened Jimmy stairs he could still hear the mumble |saw glinting steel. of Jensen's voice speaking over the; “Now, you young mug, I'm going telEe ieathed {thanks | Whee Went Ten ah? eta en e a’ prayer o nks| where! want you, el jow'd you that he had found Olga in time, Where : if A Dollar Down and a Dollar a Week (Duluth Herald) \ The growth of the installment plan af buying is | not the least amazing phenomenon of these amazing | times. A financial concern estimates that this country SE a aca tao to whi git here? Divis?” ee RR EN, ARS. If Senator Brookhart is ousted what will become pf Senator Cummins? Will the senate swaltow Brookhart to save the political hide of Cummins? A pclitieal development of no small interest to the great northwest is in the making. - “Good Boy, “Wash” Washington I. James is just rounding out his for- | ty-second year of ‘tgetting his. man.” Desperate characters, have clubbed him over the head and) pumped lead into his body, but “Wash” James is still there, the guardian of law’and order and Nem- esis of crooks. At 75 “Wash” James is a little battered and worn from long service. He doesn’t watch over a big city, ut the fact that he is police chief at so small a place as, Himgham, Mass,, needn't make any difference. ‘The all important fact is that “Wash” James is effi- cient, honest and brave. Congratulations, Officer James! A Airplanes ded Monroe, La., tells how an ait-j brought the situation about: the dealers who sell on orig “beeen. when ak tain service in an electrical su- \is buying, “on easy payments,” articles of use and : luxury totaling the staggering sum of $3,293,411,878. 'This includes only automobiles, washing machines, | vacuum cleaners, phonographs, furniture, pianos, | jewelry and radio sets. It does not include fur coats ‘and othr wearing apparel, the sale of which on the j installment plan grows amazingly. Is it a blessing, or a curse? i : It may be either, and probably it is something of | both. As an encouragement to business, no doubt. the installment plan is doing much good. It is mak- ing it possible to sell gocds that could not and would | not be sold without it, and of course that helps deal- ,ers and manufacturers and those who work for\them, | But no doubt, too, it is helping some people to buy more than they can afford to buy and more than they will be able to pay for if the slightest adversity | hits them, and when it goes that far it containg ele- |ments of danger. | ‘The remedy for the dangers that obviously inhere fresh and green as new grass—and a new white waistcoat also, right up to his cl But this year there had been a rusty spot on Gradaddy’s new coa He rubbed it and scraped it with his finger, and did everything he could, but it’ wouldn’t budge. ‘0 Land to see if Mister Rubadub, the fairyman, could take it off with tur- pentine or Fairyland Special Cleaner or something. But still it wouldn't budge, so Mis- ter Rubadub 1) just put a drop or two of green dye on i and that will fix it all hunky-dor: So he put the green dye on it and Grandaddy’s Frog's coat was fixed, and off went the frog gentleman as leased as Punch and as proud as sir, ‘And. that was the end of him, for this story isn’t about him at all. it’s about the can of green dye that Mister Rubadub forgot to set back on his. shelf exactly where it belonged. ~ Scarcely had Mister Frog turned in the system seems to lie with those who have the installment plan. If after » few disastrous experiences they learn the corner by the little secret bush that mari the place where Scrub- Up Land nd the rest of the re \s first ein, Mi ter Benjamin th enquire. "Atte junny, esquire. , ‘that came the Twins, who always ‘went slong with the March Hare to help him, in case some of the cus- have well and ro- ng-clean he had hopped into Serub-Up}; and Olga sat watching. ‘yp another that he mulght in some way learn, who was talking ~ to” Jensen over the phone. =) + je PER ok Hi Fhey had met once before and he had more than held his own, sidea, there was that heavy andiron knob. If he should need tt. rg He clutched it tightly in his right hand. Then silently he mounted the dark stairs, Dark except for a nar- row strip illuminated by a beam of Hight from’ the room where Divis lay _ He hesitated just before. comii If Jensen ha to de look he surely wot e passed. and listened. + Jensen's voice sounded - far A bably coming, Jimmy con- a from Pyar ae tated the e upper hall, ter, pulled Musee wittly pa i< y and silent creeping. journe; Jensen had not thought, heeau: still a m9 to ed. ng, he stood a moment wi 4 fous } im, just oe I Y ntly, uy aad. had no fear of Jensen now.{ see his shadow as} Jimmy made no answer. {eyes for nothing, thoughts for noth- He had ting, save that iver in Jensen’ Son rane ly his taut muscles im ina i anched himself strate y menacing stee] and with his hat hes to tear it from Jensen's grip. ith all ‘his despairi it he tugged at the othe: jing it back ‘on the wrist, u: of the punishing blows Jen ‘raining on his lowered head. | And then Jensen, in” profane jagony. released his hold. The wea- 'pon went clattering to the fiteor. Jimmy saw sudden hope, and. the revolver, driven by his | shot through j tered on the (To ty | relei Be- | ita foot, cing ee the" railiny irs below. ' Continued) i

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