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‘The Bismarck Tribune fe Fi wervevsreeretiiniit} An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune | Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- {| tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as > second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN, President and Publisher: Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .. Daily by mail per year (in marck) .. Daily by ma: outside Bismarck Daily by mail outside of North Dakota .. esses 6 Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three years . Weekly ty mail outside of North Dakota, per year .. se. 1.50 - 67.20 s- 7.20 y ) Weekly by mail in Canada, per | Member of Audit Bureau of | Circulation | Member of The Associated Press | The Associated Press is exclusively | entitled to the use for republication | of all news dispatches credited to it| or not otherwise credited in this: newspaper and also the local news of | spontaneous origin published herein. | All rights of republication of all other | matter herein are also reserved. | (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ~ Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER | (incorporated) | CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON | | The Issue Has Changed | The battle over what steps the gov- | ernment shall take to relieve the dis- tress of those who are unable to care | for themselves illustrates one of the} pitfalls into which the non-political | mind of President Hoover has led him | on numerous occasions. i In 1930, when the drouth hit Ar-/| kansas and other parts of the south,| there was a long-drawn battle on the} question of whether the federal gov-/ ernment should dip into its funds to| aid the people who were suffering} there. Technically the government won a victory and bitter comment was} "| What “the white house” might bet- F | Can it be that the mind of man is _.|and pay for them? ‘ ee RE AR ISL D NIN STENO N s | justify levity, but the administration stand is so ridiculous it deserves com- ment. The warning to Glassford em-} phasizes just how silly men can get under heavy pressure and puts the | president in an unfair light before the |nation. It may cause the ribald to [recall his famous remark about “two {cars in every garage and a chicken in fevery pot.” | INTERNATIONAL, |, DIPLOMACY ter have said to the veterans is: “You ; Will find the pickings slim. We won't let you starve but bread and water \¥ ill be the principal ration.” This would have gotten more re- sults than the cold, blank bluff made to men in a mood to call it. i 7, ree cl AS “OFFICE Too Much Progre: KICKED OUT creating new devices at a faster rate | than the general public can absorb Comparison of the bonded indebted- hess of many of our large cities and @ recent announcement by the West- | inghouse Electric company would make | it seem so. This nation’s greatest metropolis is | groaning under the burden of debt imposed upon it to build the subways needed to solve a pressing transporta- tion problem. They handle millions of passengers daily and do it well, al- though the noise, pushing, and general clatter may be alarming to folks from the prairie country. Now the engineers of one of the na-| tion's industrial giants are proposing | a brand new form of transportation which, in theory at least, makes the high-speed subway seem as antiquated as the ox-cart. It consists of an adaptation of the moving sidewalk idea, except that (915 ---~: 1 FACE IS FAMILIARL~ HAVENT WE MET th Gilbert Swan FASHION-WORSHIP New York, June 9.—Notes on noth- ing in particular and everything in general .. . Many of those seemingry devout ahurch goers observed in the swankier Fifth Avenue pews on Sun- day mornings turn out to be at least {two other fellows from the cloak-and- suit belt. It became the custom a number of years ago for fashion spies to join the congregations of so-called “so- ciety churches.” Between hymns and sermons they would note what the Blue Book folk were wearing. Even eye would rove to a nearby hat and frock. Within a week copies are headed for Kansas City, San Francisco and stops south and north. * % * And Tony Sarg, most widely known of puppet makers, admits that he started making toys because the Eng- lish town in which he was born had no toyships. Whereas Bill Vallee, who must live in the shadow of his crooning brother, Rudy, now labors on a New York newspaper... . Since Rudy is out of town a great deal, Bill dwells in lone luxury in Rudy's elab- orate apartment ... Even as certain tabloids were worrying about the sad Plight of Hannah Williams after her creck-up with Roger Kahn, the form- er stage entertainer was reported | contracted to the Park Casino and} was dwelling in the not-inexpensive Hotel Pierre... * Ok Ok SHE SPEAKS TO CONQUER Variety, theatrical magazine, re- ports a rising tide of women custom- seats are provided for passengers. It 7 moves continuously, at high speed, and never stops. Passengers get on by first boarding | loading platforms which stop at in- tervals of 50 seconds and, between} times, reach a speed comparable to| that of the express platform which parallels it. The same system is used to take them off. Power is provided by motors beneath the tracks at in- tervals of 1,000 feet. No one ever Signed letters pertaining to personal Address Dr. William Brady, CURE OF NAVEL HERNIA PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. in care of this newspaper, }think but are not afraid to say what they think. How can we best help to stop this useless, cruel animal ex- Perimentation? (S. R. D.) ers in speakeasies . . . Growing edi- torial, one wag comments: “They used to say a woman talks too much, now they say she speaks too much!” .. » However, there is one ultra-ultra Answer—I cannot comprehend why|whisper-low, frequented largely by an intelligent woman, especially the] women of the smart set, where each jmother of children, should want to|Monday afternoon profits are turned |stop it, My plea was not to stop ex-|over to some pet society charity . . perimentation, but to get suitable hu-] And Jack Osterman tells of the as heads were bowed in prayer, cal 1 tdidier and th> ee school andjmiles between Mon! : staty your WABCS? i 1Oise, reaching the towns of aod x # ® \sur-Matz and Mareuil. Little pi THE GRAVY YARDS {ress was made elsewhere. That portion of New York which goes to bed with the rising sun us- ually winds up at one of three eat- ing places for coffee and sandwiches —Dave's Blue Room, Reuben’s’ or Lindy's. They are Broadway’s celeb: Qf rity-haunted gravy yards. Gossip ©0:-| toes must have gotten tired of wai- umnists spend their last waking hours| ing in line. trying to find dirt at immaculately x * # clean tables. A federal man says it is amazing Anyhow, one would assume that/that people don’t recognize counter- there would be heated and bitter riv-| feit money as soon as they sce it. alry among the owners. Instead ot| Maybe it's because they see so little which Lindy and Dave, of Saturday | of the genuine. aaa gather their AISA it Lieaty ad * and dine at Reubens’ and it an overflow crowd, he frequently rec-} Hungary and Czechoslovakia about ommends Dave's. | tariff barriers and the depression, it + # |looks as if they might change the The saddest blow my bump of sen-|name of the “Blue Danube” to the timentality has received in many a| “Danube Blues. month was contained in a brief news e * % , ‘ dispatch under a San Francisco date-| John Barry Ryan, poet ani oe line, announcing the passing of Coffee | talist, says he worked four years pol- Dan’s. When Mason Street was “the| ishing up nine lines in one of his uptown tenderloin” and Lew Purcell’s’| poems. But we'll bet he would have tuned up the first hot Negro band| given up after the second year if he these old ears had ever heard, it he fear been a poet and not a capi- le custom wind up the night 5 with ‘ham and eggs at Gottes Danis | (Copyright, 1992, NEA Service, Inc.) pt Arn SSS there to be awakened by the din of ; FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: > Barbs | ‘The man who robbed the Younss- town soup kitchen of bread and tom=- > * After all the hullabaloo in Austria, wooden hammers on tables and silver- ware on water glasses. * e # And an anonymous contributor sends me an ancient clipping which begins: “Riverside Drive was brilliant ae the lamps of returning bicycl- ts”... Wonder what a nice tandem would set you back? TODAY tS THE ~: ANNIVERSARY AMERICANS ENGAGED One June 9, 1918, the battle of the Oise, staged at midnight the day be- fore, followed along the French lines until it. reached American troops near Veuilly. The Yanks were successful in repulsing German troops here. “» British positions, however, were not so fortunate between Villers-Bre- tonneaux and Arras. Paris again feit the tremble of bursting shells from long range guns far behind the Ger- jman material for it. mother who wanted her son to become (Copyright John F. Dille Co.) a radio star. So each morning she ad- — The person with a fiery temper man front lines. is easily put out. Germans advanced about four tubing which are inserted vertically so that the first piece comes at the outer border of the upright or rectus made that funds were appropriated to! provide food for livestock rather than human beings. Actually, however, it was a defeat for the idea which Hoo- yer espoused on principle. No longer ago than the opening of the present session of congress last December the president was emphatic in his opposition to appropriation of | public funds to meet emergency hu- | man demand. He maintained that) viewpoint until after Speaker Garner| offered his relief bill in the house. Then came Hoover's about-face. He reversed his former position and of- fered a rival plan. It is different from Garner's in many important details and is not as broad. Quite probably it is a better one. But the fact re- mains that it ignores the principle for which the president previously con tended. Politically speaking, he wa: My little boy now three years old developed a navel hernia when three months old, writes an eastern cor- respondent. On the advice of our physician I proceeded with the sam= | me! ti vhich yor = Se ee eri, race Son de | pnucea yiwamathor Misi uasdl eee eath scribed in a recent talk. It grew the protrusion, the earlier it is ap-| _ {Worse until after a few weeks it was] plied the better the chance of a nat-! & the size of a large walnut. A surgeon)ural cure. It is seldom that a natura’ |who happened to see the child as- bebo iloctanr peaneveaie pd iia see sured me it would be necessary to s tend of thouzht by other editors | (operate. He said it was impossible for |i8 applied in the first few months a They are published without regard |/a hernia as large as that to be cured Hedionesd ag is often effected in} eth She tie eee || in any other way. (The surgeon a h Th . | iy with The Tribune's policies. would. Nevecieler. plenty 102 x a RR Eos = | hernias, in children ana adults, are; New York's ‘Farm Relief’ [being cured nowadays in ways which (Washington Star) | ever ready operators have yet to 2 |learn.) Gov. Roosevelt's “back-to-the-farm” |” hesnite this, the correspondent con- ‘plan for partial relief of some of the | tinues, I took him to another phy- | Woes of unemployment in the indus-|sician. He instructed me in the | trial cities will be watched with inter- | method a pee oes st throug ry. Itis put-/&°ther. He agreed that the met st throughout the country. It is put | had used would probably not help waits more than 50 seconds for a ride. The nub of the whole business is that the new system is said to be j cheaper, both to build and to operate, than any of the present systems now in use. There can be no question that, er at least, it is much better. Sue directly over the navel and draws| = the rectus muscles toward the median i line. Bele (©0072 or hea somes we.” ~ = (OP YEAR BRIDE | it bring a layer of skin or soft tis-| BEGIN HERE TODAY : ied mene “Just a minute there!” the police- '| Editorial Comment man called. Dan and Cherry halted. “Do you live in this building?” the policeman demanded. “No.” friends because her wealthy p: ents consider most of the other young peopl: inferior. She has become a “Then what have you been doing there?” 7 | “Why, officer, we're looking for QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | ti 7 : 3 an apartment. Stopped to see if Your Daily 2,600 iz id D: j there were any for rent but we How many calories does a’ woman | E 4 didn’t like the looks of the place—" of 50 need, when she does very little| “Oh, you didn’t? Hear any com- work. I mean the amount necessary | motion while you were in there?” to keep the body machine going. (Mrs | “No sir.” J.C. K) lz “Sure of that?” Answer—2,600. This is the mean of , “Why, yes. I'm sure we didn't measurements and estimates by var- hear anything. Is something | ious nutrition authorities, | = wrong? Has anything happened?” | in the elty editor trying to find him, i SMITH, 2 has escaped jail and tor wants Dan to fi 1 mith'a sweet an interview. Dan drive to the apartment where Inez is staying, He enters, prom: ining to returm in 10 porerers rato ys epererwer=1=) | willing to fight but not to die for his} views. The significant thing is that the is-| sue now is not whether the govern- | ment should provide funds to feed the hungry but how it shall go about it. * * Ok | And right here it seems fair to point out a happening which Mr. Hoover | may regard as a mistake later on. He has threatened to fire the po- lice chief of Washington for aiding the veterans’ bonus marchers in find- | ing food and shelter, the inference be- } ing that such soft-hearted activity must stop. 1 There is no question but what the | bonus march is ill-advised and that | those who participate in it are not entitled to caviar and fricasseed chicken, The question presented, how- | ever, is whether they should be left | to starve, | Pat Hurley, Hoover's secretary of | war, refused to loan the demonstra- tors army tents and Police Chief |at least an elementary knowledge of | directs it is effective in drawing the Glassford assisted them in arranging; shelter, That started the whole busi-| ness and it may be that Glassford’s/ find themselves more helpless than|and the constant application of ad-) head is on the block for lese majesty.| fish out of water. For while a bare jhesive plaster. In the belt Dr. Brun- The evident intention was to dis- | courage the veterans from remaining | in Washington, but the adoption oa such tactics proves only that, Hurley} was never a buck private. He seems, unfamiliar with the “where do we go} from here” spirit. Or maybe he has | forgotten it. At any rate, his action} was a boomerang and the march to| Washington now is on in earnest. | xe Difficult as the situation presented | is, it seems that “the white house”! might have kept its own counsel un- til it figured out what to do about it. From the human angle, of course, it is utterly inconceivable that the bonus marchers will be permitted to starve. Not only would this outrage the social consciousness of the nation but it would be politically inadvisable. | Hoover's campaign would not be! helped any by daily reports of cas- ualty lists from the veterans’ encamp- ment and pictures ‘in the newspapers showing the emaciated forms of the victims. And besides, some of them * might collapse and die on the white house steps in full view of the large staff of newspaper correspondents as- signed there. ** & Apparently grasping at a straw, the effort has been made to brand the whole business as a “Red” demonstra- tion and doubtless the marchers are not feeling any too kindly toward a set-up in which their bellies grow thinner and thinner, but they will be too smart to say so. * * * ‘The plight of these men and of the nation, not to mention the political Plight of the president, is too real to ting into practice, in a small way, one of the most widely held theories con- jcerning the disposition of the hun- dreds of thousands of families left iso- ated and destitute in the cities by \the receding tide of employment, who are wholly dependent now upon char- ity for food and other bare essentials of life. The plan in New York, fi- nanced by the state and local relief organizations, is for the rental of what are termed “subsistence farms”—the rental paid from public funds—and for | the eventual transfer to these farms of what the governor calls “a substan- ‘al portion” of the families left des- tute in the cities. “It is a plan that can give to some ;@ foothold and confidence again in a civilization which has hurled them as & machine does part of a belt,” said the governor. It might be added, however, that it is a plan capable of working terrific hardship and distress upon the trai planted families unless it is admin tered with extreme care. One of the precautions adopted at the outset in New York is to select, in the begin- ning, only those families recently come from the farm and who possess farming. One of the dangers to be avoided is the enticement of city-bred families to the farm, where they would living can be gained from the soil by those who have learned some of the secrets of nature’s alchemy, it is a living gained by toil that never ends. An ignorant man can be as helpless on the farm as in the city, and the disillusionment after fond dreams of riches from the earth is more than} often bitter and painful. There are millions of farmers today, born and bred on the farm, who are destitute and bankrupt. ironically inquire of Gov. Roosevelt when there will be announced a plan for the transfer to the cities of the farmers who. by state aid and public funds, will be given some employment to eke out a bare existence during the time of trouble. It might be argued that if it is logical to transfer the| unemployed of the cities to the farms, it would be as logical to “accompany the movement by a transfer of farm- ers to the city. But it would be unfair to dispose of Gov. Roosevelt's scheme in that man- | ner and to predict for it only failure. The advantage of the destitute farmer over his destitute cousin of the city is that the farmer usually has, at any rate, food. If the great state of New York were able to institute a plan of state farm tenantry on a large scale, with the idea merely of augmenting other relief work, the experiment would at least produce figures of the relative cost of supporting idle men and women in the country and in the city. REPORT POSTOFFICE THIEF McClusky, N. D.—Two packages have been stolen from the postoffice boxes within the last week, one of which was recovered. The other, be- Meved to be a graduation present for @ local girl, has not been located. The thief threw one package into one of the postmaster's flower beds. It was found several days after it was stol- en, by one of the boys of the neigh- borhood, and returned to the post-, office. They might; matters any; that the pressure of the padded coin or disc served merely to |trusion back into place and then by pinching the muscles together and strapping securely with adhesive ‘plaster, hold it back in place in- |definitely. This I did, as he showed |! ime, for several months, and I am |glad to say that the cure is now |i |complete. (Mrs. S. R.) The muscles of importance in. this treatment are the pair of rectus muscles which lie one on either side }of the midline and extend straight up| jand down.. With strips of adhesive plaster applied crosswise above and below the navel, one can keep these muscles pulled together. But adhesive plaster is likely to ex- jcoriate the skin and in any case must |be freshly applied every few days, } and the mother may fail to get it on jin such a way as to keep the muscles | drawn together. * Dr. Frank E. Brundage, Buffale | | Pediatrist, designed a special belt for | \this purpose, and when used as h? muscles together and keeping thet: | together, and it eliminates the unde- | \sirable features of the padded button dage instructs the mother to make three pieces of hollow soft rubber We the day's work or play is done and always keep the habit in control, it’s consoling and, I believe. harmless. tion: “It serves to remind us that we | cannot apply animal experimentation. to human physiology.” are one of the doctors who not only Well, It's Consoling Some time ago you gave an instruc- keep the muscles of the abdominal |tive talk on the disadvantage of; wall spread apart.. He explained that noses renee ne ie ae |the better w is t yush the pro-| e vor ing. j | Gainian cbaske > pine you have done so we missed it...) (M. B.) Answer—If you wait till you are; grown up (age 25 years) and have a/ large flock of pipes and a good sup- | ply of ‘baccy and reserve your smok- | § ing for the hour of relaxation afte: Experimentation I thank you for this sentence in| jyour talk about animal experimenta- | § Evidently you STICKERS CREAAALITHIDNU CPVAAAAISLILNU Three names of girls are hidden in the top line and three names of boys are hid- den in the bottom line. See if you can form them, using allof the lettersbutonce. | | The TOTAL ECLIPSE of the SUN, ON TIN CAN ISLAND Go THE south pacific) ENDED ON THE OAY BEFORE IT STARIED: OcTOSER | Mihy, ty GEL TN I Brows nervoun a apartment to find hi NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER III OME of the names above the mal boxes tilted tipsily so that they were difficult to read. Others lacked identification of any sort. Cherry nowhere searched the list but could she find the name “Baker. It must be there, though. “Baker” Unless he'd found the place he'd have come was what Dan had said. back. But there was no such name on the list of tenants of the apartment. The girl turned uncertainly. The exterior of the building had proven squard en- trance way in which she stood was Brown walls with hidcous panels of scenic wall paper on either side. Finger marks smudging the woodwork. deceptive. .The small soiled and down-at-heel. The simulated tile floor in need o! soap and water. What should she do? Cherry's fears were rising. urchin, glass panel. She drew back the door. “Do you know if some people named Baker live here?” she asked, The urchin nodded. Traces o! some sticky stuff showed on his cheeks, The blue stare of impassive eyes regarded her, but the child did not speak. “Can you tell me where to find them?” The urchin pointed a sticky fin- ger to the door at the left. Through the glass portion of the door a short flight of stairs was revealed. Evidently it led to a hall. Somehow the child on the door. It opened, She went up the steps gingerly and found herself in a long passage. There was a dim yellow light bal way down the hall. Its meager rays showed doors on either side—prob- ably a dozen of them. Gray day- light filtered through a window on the landing where the stairs turned. The thing to do now would be to knock at one of these doors and’ ask where the Bakers lived. Cherry took two steps forward— and drew back in dismay. There were voices, men’s voices, raised and angry, behind the nearest door on the right. f ee HE voices continued. them others. Oh, there was no doubt that the men, were angry. Suddenly Cherry heard the clatter of a key , turning in a lock. They were com- ing! In panic, blindly, the girl ran up the stairs and turned at the land- ing, She heard the door open be low and the men came out. Breath- Jess, she flattened herself against the wall, qt was at that instant that a grimy capless and wearing a sweater too large for him, appeared on the other side of the outer door and stared at the girl through the| reassured Cherry. It couldn't be such a dread- ful place if there were children about. Timidly she put a hand grew louder than the 1 Now they were gone but she dared not go down. Stealthily Cherry crept up tho stairs to the \second floor, She must find some- one to help her. She must find Dan! Marshaling all her courage, Cherry stepped forward. She raised a hand and knocked at the door before her. She could never remember the rest. The deafening roar of a gun's report, the sharp, stinging sensation in her arm, her own shriek—they seemed all to have happened at once. Out of the darkness she was able, vaguely, to hear voices. One that was familiar. A pleasant voice. Whose was it? Cherry opened her eyes, “That's the girl, Cherry! ing better now?” Why, it was Dan who was bend- ing over her! He seemed to have his arm about her, “Dan—what happened?” “Never mind about that now. Here, see if you can drink this.” He held a gli to her lips. It was sharp, biting stuff that stung her throat but she drank it. Dan's face looked worried. What was the matter? Suddenly Cherry began to re- member things. That drive down strange streets—Inez. Somebody whom Dan must find—waiting out- side in the car— Cherry felt a knife-like twinge of pain in her left arm. A little moan escaped her Ips. Then she saw that the arm was bandaged and there were blotches of red on the white. cloth, Fright widened her eyes. “Dan—?” she began but was in- terrupted, “Listen, honey, do you think you can stand up if 1 put my arm Feel- One of Cherry asked slowly, “Dan—what happened 2” Phillips’ tone and manner were completely convincing. With a shrug and noncommittal exclama- tion the policeman dismissed them and entered the building, followed by his companion. Neither Cherry nor Phillips gave the younger man @ second glance. They hurried across the street to the roadster. As Dan was starting the engine the girl said, “Oh, Dan— my purse!” “Can't go back now,” he told her, “Not with that flat-foot there! Af- ter I get you in a doctor's office I'll come back for it.” Cherry's arm burned painfully, Two great tear drops, unbidden, slid down her cheek. Firmly she gripped her teeth, resolving not to ery out, Twice Dani's eyes left the road to catch sidelong glimpses of the girl’s white face, Each time he in- creased the roadster’s speed. Ten minutes later he was ushering her into a physician’s office, “It's her left arm,” he told the doctor. “Gun went off accidentally. We tried to stop the bleeding with @ tourniquet.” - e Fo another 10 minutes there was She was lying on a davenport in activity—tense and efficient—in @ room she had never seen before./the small office. Cherry's courage Strange faces were peering at her.|foresook her as the wound was Several women, @ half-grown girl, probed and cleansed. The bullet the grimy urchin she had seen| had torn the flesh of her upper arm downstairs and two men. It was/in an ugly, jagged line but had not not an attractive room and they lodged there, Were not attractive faces. Her arm] “A quarter of an inch deeper and ached, this would have been serious,” the ‘Try it, Cherry," Dan prompted. | physician told them, His name was “I'll help you.” Dr. Ryland and, Obediently she tried to rise, The throbbing pain made her awkward. | school which hung on the wall, he Phillips lifted her, carefully and|had been practicing Jess than four gently. When she was on her feet|years. “The bullet barely missed she leaned against him. an artery. Your tourniquet was a “I—I can make ft!” she said, The|#Plendid idea. Jt might have saved girl’s voice was almost a whisper, | her life.” Sho took a step unsteadily, nites that Bone’ Be. went on, “Wait—here’s your coat.” ebtemene Tee Rite TH tt toe cee ei! “y » HEY managed to get it around Lag weapon finish T her, one arm in its sleeve and Peed yy over roe gear ea the other hanging loose. One of the painful,” he told the girl, “but I women helped Dan, Then, slowly don’t think you're going to have pas Painfully, they made for the any trouble with it. The dressing oor, need hange d It had been one of the rooms on i poy drag Lots of pee the second floor in which Cherry He talked on until Phillips inter. had found herself. They reached rupted. “Listen, Doc,” he said, the hall. ‘There Phillips picked the] «couta 1 use your phone fora min girl up and carried her in bis arms ute?” down the stairs, Not until they had “Why, certainly.” Teached the entrance way did hel noo ticked up the instrument, set her down, “ gave a number. “City desk,” he <fuct hurt much now?” he asked. said brasquely and then @ moment It’s pretty sore,” she admitted. “Ba “Was tt—a gun that went off?” | pier “bates? This is Phillipa. Bay, Phillips nodded. “Might haveliy° ‘Gat? king to Inex Mal- been a look-out or just some crazy I WHAT?! Win good story. Shall drunk, Whoever did it was gone at did you say—?” when I got there, The main thing,| Both of the listeners turned. child, is to get you to a doctor’s| There was something in Dan's ques- office.” tion that was electrifying. Spell- They left the building. Suddenly | bound, they watched and seemed to Phillips brushed around the girl |e the youth’s whole body go limp. and a little in front of her. “! “No!” he exclaimed. “Oh, my close to me!” he marmured. “And|God—no!” The words were not a let me do the talking!” denial, not even disbelief, around you? We want to get you to @ doctor. Here, let’s see if you can make it!” ee? and a youth, Not six yards away, coming to-| Slowly he turned and set down ward them, was a blue-coated officer | the instrument, A (To Be Continued)