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0 ‘ i The ‘Bismar An_ Independent Newspaper { THE STATE'S OLDEST 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 .,....$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marck) ... Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail outside Dakota Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 2.50) Weekly by mail in state, three WEB cesccccsccess aesseece Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ...... sccceee 150 Weekly by mail in Canada, per YEAT ..cceseeceeseeseeeeeeeeeee 200 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 tne local news of spontancous origin published hérein. 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 A Reasonable Request ‘There is just a hint of pathos in the request of Col. Charles A. Lind- bergh that his second son be permit- ted the obscurity which should be the birthright of every child. One of the finest, bravest gentlemen of our gen- eration, the colonel seeks for this child, who must mean a great deal to him indeed, the right to live his own life without having news pho- tographers, reporters and special writers under foot at every turn. It is not to be expected that the re- quest will be honored completely but certainly Col. Lindbergh deserves the consideration for which he has asked and the public will not resent it if little more is heard of the new Lind- bergh baby. It will be willing enough, in view of the suffering through which the Lone Eagle and his wife recently have passed, to accept no news as good news. Not in many years has the birth of any child been greeted with such} general public satisfaction as is the | case with this new arrival. Never before in the history of America has a birth attracted such interest and pleasure. The reason, of course, is plain. No other couple in our times is half so well loved as Charles and Anne. When they were dragged by tragedy into depths such as few parents have plumbed, the heart of America went with them. Now happiness returns, for every mother knows that Charles and Anne will no longer be quite so sad as they were before their second son arrived. His tiny fingers clutching at her breast will cause Mrs. Lindbergh to think of the future rather than of the past. His coos and gurgles will dim, at least a little, the memory of that other childish voice now stilled in death. This child, by his very presence, will accomplish for the Lindberghs something which all the rest of the world was unable to do. With the strength of a giant, he drapes a cur- tain over the past and offers himself as something for them to think about. For the Lindberghs there could be | no better remedy, for this child is nature's prescription to heal a wound which would not have responded half So well to any other treatment. Doubtful Judgment It is doubtful if Iowa farmers are using the best of judgment in at- tempting to prevent by force the marketing of farm products in the Sioux City area. That they have the courage of their convictions and an ardent de- sire to improve conditions is to their ¢redit but that they will accomplish their ends by the methods now being used is by no means certain. The situation there is complicated, of course, by a price battle between dairymen and milk distributors and possibly when that matter is adjusted the practice of blockading roads and of preventing farm shipments by force will vanish. The method attempted cannot be @ffective long because it is only na- tural to meet force with force and the law is against the blockaders. But @ still more cogent reason is that ‘What farmers everywhere need is co- operation rather than coercion. ck Tribune the cane would be seriously misun- derstood. But everywhere we think of solid- ity and dignity when we think of which are supposed to make for suc- cess in that difficult profession. The financiers who acquire reputations as Wags are few and far between. A ‘good many of them might have secret yearnings in that direction but they suppress them for the good of the cause and to protect their positions. Bankers, like other folks, have to think of what other people will say jabout them. | But Harper Joy disregards these traditions and curbs upon an ebul- lent nature. With many of his cli- ents away on vacations, the invest- ment banking business is none too {good in summer anyway. And so he dons his clownish regalia and takes to the sawdust trail. Under the guise of @ professional fun-maker he casts aside the things of his daily routine and has his own good time doing it. Who is there to say that he doesn’t Profit by it; that his spirit is not en- riched and his outlook on life straightened by this excursion into the land of make-believe? Who can say that he is not a better banker by reason of this indulgence of a sense of humor? It is a saving grace which bankers have all too seldom. And who can say that other bank- ers will not envy him? Possibly if a census were taken we might find many a banker with a secret craving to be a successful singer, or a guide in a forest, or a circus barker, or the loquacious conductor of a rubberneck wagon. Bankers, like other persons, must have their secret passions, Harper Joy is bold enough to have no shame | for his. Why should he have? Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. They | (New York Times) Human annals show no parallel to the unselfishness, the abnegation, the utter devotion which They are now exhibiting in behalf of Mr. Hoover. Who are they? The persons, groups and associations undesignated who are now “rigging” the stock market; who are now, as Mr. Will Rogers sus- pecis, buying and selling among | themselves, in order to hasten the return of prosperity, in order to as- sure Mr. Hoover's reelection. Consider the simply astonishing extent to which They must be loving |Mr. Hoover more than They love | themselves. It is nearly three years | {since the crash, and in that time) They have not lifted a finger to help theiselv With an indifference | truly sublime They have seen their stock holdings sag toward the van- ishing point, their bonds and mort- gages melt away, their banks failing by the thousands, their entire fiscal | Structure under pressure. They have seen the existence of the nationai currency in peril, and have heard the collapse of the dollar spoken of as & matter of days only. All about them They have seen men of great wealth reduced to penury, and in the | probate news They have read of great| jestates ground to fragments. |. Yet all this time They knew what j had to be done in order to stave off | destruction. The only way of escape ; Was to halt the fall in prices, reverse | the fatal trend, and bring back pros- |perity. But did They make any en- deavor to lift prices by buying and selling among themselves in Wall treet? Did They make any attempt to rig the market at a time when | They would have had the best wishes of the vast majority of the American people for their success? It is on record that They did not. Even the talk of revolution did not galvanize Them into action. It has been proved in the radical publica- tions that They are the masters in jcontrol of the present economic and social system; yet They stood su- pircly by while that system was ap- | Parently breaking up. They did noth- ing to raise prices while the number of unemployed in the country mount- ed to four million, to six million, to eight million, to ten million. Being far from stupid, They must have realized the grave threat to our en- tire social structure in this enormous and ever-expanding mass of idle workers. Being literate, with plenty! of time on their hands for reading ioe Papers and the magazines, They must have been aware how close ' They stood to the Edge of the Preci- pice, how hard They were beset by Catastrophe, Collapse and Ruin. Yet They made no move to bring back Prosperity by manipulating things in Wall Street. Then it became a question of re- electing Mr. Hoover, and an extraor- dinary change came. The lethargy from which They could not be wrenched by consideration for them- selves, their wives and children, their class interests, their country, dropped from them as if by magic when They bethought themselves of Mr. Hoover. Once it was a question of insuring the success of the Republican ticket. who would be the weakling to doubt or the craven to pause? As one man They leaped to their telephones and began buying and selling among themselves, with results now famil- far. In this rush to do for Mr. Hoo- ver what They would not do for themselves we have one of the su- Dreme examples of unselfishness in all history. Educated men are wont to boast of emancipation from the anthropo- morphic God of their fathers. But men have remained anthropomorphic at heart, as is shown by the ease with which we invoke “They” as the ex- planation of prosperity and depres- sion. Good times and bad do not come from the complex interplay of Vast impersonal economic and social forces. Always it must be ‘They who ordain panics and create booms as it best pleases Themselves. —____ TYPHUS SERUM jurgeon | fat, San you suggest how to reduce banking. Those are the essentials {phobia, meaning rabies in man. CONCERN PLACES STEEL ORDER- Signed letters pertaining to personal ink. Address Dr. William Brady, THE HYDROPHOBIA LEGEND Your volunteer committee of one begs to report progress in the hydro- phobia situation, Hydrophobia, the chairman of the committee believes, is{ akin to this de-press-on malady which has supplanted high tension and nerve exhaustion in the affectation of the Yankee nation. It may be that there; are millions out of work, but that is lions out of work in this country, and what's more they are determined to stay out of work, even if they have to go to jail to do so. Only an occa-; sional poor sap goes to jail to achieve ; his inalienable American privilege. When the occasional culprit does take | the rap, a hundred thousand of us other work dodgers breathe easy for a while. The only notable difference | that I can determine between the mil lions now out of work and the mil-/ lions normally out of work is that the | present loafers are amateurs at the game, whereas we regular loafers or white collar men are professionals. | Then, too, the amateurs are too hon-| est—or too dumb—to do as we do. They do as we say. We say honest! toil is a noble thing. And so it is it you can arrange the system so that the other fellow will keep on thinking it is so. Some months ago this column came out unequivocally opposed to rabies as a human institution. In other words I declared, asserted and asseverated | that there is no such thing as ee | the same time I conceded that rabies prevails among domestic and wild an- imals. I based my stand on the lack) of scientific proof of the occurrence of such disease in man. It has never been satisfactorily proved by the ac- cepted criterion, Koch's law—that is, no one has been able to show that a! characteristic disease can be produced by inoculating a normal animal with virus obtained in cultures from an an- imal that has the disease. Then, too, the laboratory diagnosis of rabies in animals or man hinges on the obser- vation of rather vague “Negri bodies” | in the brain tissue, and sometimes; good pathologists disagree on the diag- nosis in a given instance, one believ- ing he sees the Negri bodies, the other being as positive they are not pres-, ent. So far as alleged cases of human! rabies are concerned, the best physi-/ cians who have been privileged to ob- serve such cases usually disagree on the diagnosis. So there we are. But mark you, if I were bitten or wounded or scratched by an animal presumed to be rabid, I'd want to have the benefit of the doubt. I'd want the animal confined under competent veterinary observa- tion for two weeks; if the veterinary surgeon assured me at the end of that period that the animal presented no suspicious sign or symptom of illness, I'd forget it. If the veterinary sur- geon could not be positive, I'd want to have the Pasteur anti-rabies treat- ment started immediately. If the an- imal were not captured and there was any question of rabies, I'd want the anti-rabies injections right away. If the animal were killed, I'd want the head immediately packed in ice and sent at once to the pathologist desig- nated by the local health authority, or if such a patiological laboratory were maintained’ in the community then the head could be taken there without bothering to pack it in ice; and I'd hevigd the poco Selig eee if pathologist's re were positive, or saved for some one who might need it more if the report were negative. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Goat's Milk s 1. What is chief difference between. cow’s milk and goat's milk. 2. Does goat's milk digest quicker? 3. Does coffee drinking injure the heart? Answer—1, Goat's milk is richer in fat and in albumin. 2. It digests at least as readily as cow’s milk. 3. Ex- cessive coffee drinking may overstim- ulate the heart. Ordinarily a moder- ate amount of coffee is good for the heart. Change of Life T am 45 years old, 65 inches tall and weigh 205 pounds, Have been told change of life causes this excessive ill effects? I have a kidney | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVIGE By William Brady, M. D. diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. ndings will convince any- — tempt for all of us he: holds, this bailar and cattle thief?” The quiet gray eyes rested for a moment on the maior’s face, “I'll “See if you can unr, t damned thing while I get jeer Py . (To Be Costtanetd ers, old ship.lanterns and picturesque League stal anchors. if - body that it with et ry => PEA yee Ln A New York surgeon succeeded But it’s the old lady at the Lloyd’s in grafting a small bone taken Harbor Light with whom I'd like to > from the back to the head of s change places for a year. 7a patient. If he could only reverse ‘There's a nice Nttle story about © for our politicians: her. For many a year, the tale goes, (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) her boy was the lighthouse keeper.} The administration has waited for He died. Not long afterward, the}S0me miracle to come about to ab-/ here are about 800 different kinds government decided to change the/S0rb the unemployed and unemploy-| or wood known to the timber trade. gt of lighthouse location from the point to| ment has risen to a total in excess the mid-channel. The old house re-|©f 10,000,000.—Senator Robert F. . mained at the point—a charming| Wagner of New York. I IC KE Rp A) Place with something of Cape Cod se * and something of Normandy and| In 1852 Engels wrote to Marx that something of itself. The old lady|the great day was approaching. In stayed. The government allows her | 1853 he wrote again that France was to live there. She rows “to shore” |0n the verge of ruin, that the revo- for her supplies. lution was a matter of months. What You'll see her knitting of after-|the Communists of today forget is noons on the quaint porch, with its|that Marx and Engels constantly re- you cc i surrounding wall of huge stone; | vised their theories as fast as they dach, so 25 to fornia 14 ; walking her two dogs along the beach| Were contradicted by facts—Emile me cluttered with clam diggers; attend- | Vandervelde, Belgian Socialist leader. NEWS NOTE: ing to @ garden that struggles with ph ad sandy soil. Here is peace and color-| I am only a follower of Lenin and THE RISING STOCK ful panorama of boats and water—|my aim is to be a follower worthy of ed MARKET HAS CAUSED here is complete detachment and a ee ‘ ol ee ree 4 t A BOOM IN NIGHT kinship with the elements! reat, the Tr was a drop e CLUS TRADE. sea, while Lenin was a whole ocean. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:) Te re) DAY —Joseph Stalin, Soviet dictator. Fre. U.S PATO. si * # A BP F ‘We propose to say to the president Pv gn tS THE a+ that there will be no more class leg- : ‘ islation.—John Nance Garner, speak- | er of the House. eee h ji " The Republican platform is badly [2 * | written, opportunistic, confused and true cd a its devotion to private BRITISH PUSH FORWARD —_ | PropertyNorman Thomas, Socialist On Aug. 18, 1918, British forces in | "Nee for President. the Lys salient pushed forward on a he five-mile front near Bailleul, storm- Barbs | Me ing Outtersteene just before night- | ¢—————————_- fall, The American home is the last American troops in Lorraine con-| word in efficiency and comfort, an tinued their advance in the vicinity | architect proudly states. The only ae of Frapelle, which they had taken the | thing left to do to it is to find some- MORE FROM JOBBER- day before. thing to keep the family in it. German general orders taken from biglittne oti ed iii y a o! e | ene pagar sete pee aes Tight-| the recent rise in stock values | jabout the sound—but the Empire| "® bs e ditgne an | accomplished one fine thing. It | State building still wags a hazy warn-|*"my to retire to positions many) stopped talk of changing the ing firiger that New York is still| Miles back of the lines then held, name of the bears to toreadors there; that escape is momentary; German losses in the five spring) because of the way they handled that you'll be back there soon. end summer offensives and the con-| the bulls. But on the piers, “the natives” seem | St@nt battering of the rapidly increas- sk ® to care little. Old white beards and| iE Allied armies had reduced Ger-) The Cincinnati ball club was or- \ health and hygiene, not to disease big, bronzed fellows are out with|™82 manpower to the lowest point/ganized in 1868, an expert tells us.| A clinging vine is never a walle t flashlights and nets, luring squids, |*!0¢ the beginning of the war. And Just one look at the National! flower. ace is of the aa run ies ne 7 core y Plum gut” or the big weakf! ee ee erence catch that came in the night before. Bonus riots and world crisis may age or the change of life has nothing | scream from the front pages, the fish- to do with it. erfolk and the boat folk go about in- H Gaining Weight quiring: “What retin. song takin’ e 4 T am 22 years old, 66 inches tall and | today, worms or fiddlers?” if | weigh 108 pounds. I read of a person | a weap ¢, a ted 85 Oo e gaining 14 pounds under insulin in- SS e jection. Could I take such treat-| “Captain Hen” is among the first ey > Lo by TOM GILL ! ments and what are they? (Mrs,} Characters you're pleased to meet. His poor Meaiciac % ' W. B.) dock is at Greenport. Once a prize- (COPYRIGHT 1931, BY INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE (0, INC. ~? DISTRIBUIED BY KING FEATURES ‘SYNDICATE, INC. { Answer—Yes, if your physician is{ fighter and a football star, Captain = aa up to date. The insulin is usually| Hen would Brena pol stead SYNOPSIS p nothing new. There are always mil: oe len creel ied oi bart Bed with « deep /GrawL” ‘Soa worllise How. Ted Radcliffe is called to Verdi, a ‘ appetite and enjoyment of food as| he missed being an actor. His solici- small village on the Mexican border, ' well as its assimilation. tousness has a small town neighborly by Bob Harkness, his late father’s (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) quality. He worries about your ice friend. Radcliffe Senior had lost a z and your comfort; about your bait fortune in Mexico years before. At and your supplies. He'll look after a party given by Major Blount of your phone calls and your telegrams; the U. S. Army, Ted meets Paco | behing epee intimate tips on good Morales, ruling power of Mexico, ' Tt was at Captain Hen’s dock that] 24 his beautiful niece, Adela. Mo- ' the Harry Richman yacht exploded. pool ror) killed wa ae The tragic accident is a tourist's item. nage tenare ren Sasa The very spot is marked. And Uncle to reveal his hidesway. El Coyote fs Hen preaches precaution as he fills steals from the rich, particularly the gasoline tank. Somehow New Morales, and gives to the poor. As i ch ease? | York has made you forget that there Major Blount announces that the fa 2 = are kindly, friendly, philosophical Un- U.S. igece4 a mn in the search } “ cle Hens spread over the nation’s for the it, Bob arrives. VACATION DAYS countrysides, New York, Aug. 17.—Notes from the ee * CHAPTER VII vacation log of a columnist: The blue-| Back from the docks, the “million- ek d. “Th: } fish of Long Island Sound can now |@ire parrots” retire to a squawking old But Dr. Price interrupted. ae H go back to school. Ike Walton’s little|98¢, 1m the back yard of Joe-Joe's. or teh Eine Bieab iM estece aoe i " = Joe’s is a rendezvous for the yachting if you don’t mind my saying so. runnerup, Gilbert, is no lopger pisca-|and fishing crowd. Bright orange What have we to do with El Coyote torial public enemy No. 1. against the blue waters, it perches at so long as he keeps away from prop- And the impertinent sword fish that thes tp ae anne Spare a stairs, ; erty on ie side of Siete It’s just % lors from the gilded yachts of makin; jlount’s cavalry a private slapped my face with a wavelet may! the rich have parked their pets there.| detective agency for Morales.” e be delighted to learn that I have had | Tp, is a 26-year-old ; f sa ; Se ee ee The major was non-committal. to call off that daylight duel near} the pet of the Astor yacht. ‘There's “AN that or may not be true. Te Montauk Point and get back to work.|® linguistic parrot that traveled de| Al! [fat may or may aut be trae. luxe on the Whitney floating palace. ed a + 7 There’s another from the Vanderbilt for the boys. Personally, I don’t ” ‘ Several hours out of New York,| poat, together with a collection of give a single damn one way or an- with the 45-foot Dreamer bobbing | white mice, tiny monkeys, cats, haws- other, but running him down will oer add a little variety to life.” “That’s no good reason,” objected | VW A the doctor. ater W ay act Don Bob smiled, “It’s the best of ‘ reasons, Price. Man hunting has al- | ways been a popular sport. Besides, ee pee esp ERAN att | Answer to Previous Puzzle 24 Battering we all believe that our mysterious ‘oyote, masked and spurred, doorway ot enone 1 machine. Coyote is an American, and why his two guns at his side. | 7 Longed. 26 Chief of shales Pe ricans have the fun - | % organized of killing him?” at s. 2 2 SR Se ea wheel labor. “Will they catch him?” asked| “He seems to go in for melodrama] tell him tonight,” he said at last, ingredient. 27 Watered silk. Adela, and Belasco stuff,” commented the} and slowly walked across on ea ulated. se Pe “ major. to where Radcliffe stood beside yes ria 30 Firat official saat a8 to that” Dr. Price con-) price shook his head. “Not a bit|Adela Morale’s chair, For a time portation. sidered a moment. “They may not rice shook his head. jot 2 bit he looked thoughtfully at th a 17 Derby. IAI Le speaker in the catch him, my dear, but in any case| Of it, But he knows the effect of 0 POV ap iagn aca ae rip 18 Cold north- BIE IRIT MEL IAIC] Republican I think it means the end of El|that sort of thing on both his ene-|*T!ul figure, the sweep of the Ww y Ol UMEESIU! presidential 2 mies and friends, Lord, it| Shoulders, the giant column of his erly wind. ve UI lee Coyote. izes the imagination! Remember |eck and thick, close-cropped hair. 20 Summit. RUG! re ae “How? Several voices asked in| ines, 10s imagination! Remember |rr— ‘stepped forward and laid his FA ales 33 Hoax. unison, 1. [beat thet cee hand lightly on Ted’s shoulder 22 Coa . 34 Egg of a “Well, it makes the odds against] °"", 7ees. “Rotten luck I had to be out of 23 Seles! tase him too strong. The Mexican sol-| uae happened?” asked Rad- unea qiked ae attack thing . . - 1 cliffe, 3 Som 25Therefore. | 51Constellation. 6 Thing. 36 Pedal digit. diers weren't really se a ad en nec eae imperative, Then this little girl came eas wander, 53 Ventilator 7 Atmosphere 40 Lampoon. actually sympathize with him, for 2 er,” Price explained, “is one! to my rescue, and Aunt Clara prom- 27 Door rui 54Exclamation. $To erack. 41 Beverage. ¢ after all, they are peons, and it is}day when every Mexican goes tolised to see that ‘you wouldn't be 29 Eecentric Berle plant | a Providad. 43 Merriment. the peons that El Coyote has always|church, if he has to walk twenty! bored tonight.” ° sire Foret 44 Heathen. befriended. But for our soldiers the|miles to make,it, That morning the| F wheel. 57 Acqujesced. 10 Rodent. “aa chase will be just a game, and they] little church over at Rio Dulce was Ae Eye bees treated like an old | eer Fer ak, 12 God of love. Ge mapiet, will give tongue like a pack of| jammed. All morning the bells had | {rignd because everyone remembers | 33The dafsy. — 61To break. 279 testify, Beat hounds smelling blood.” been ringing. Then, just before|G#d I was telling Miss Morales | ab tie G3Sun god. 15 United States 52 Land “Of "Il get him,” added] services, a horse galloped he | little about him. You'd have lov 37Second note. 64 Preposition. 52 Land measure course we'll get him, if galloped up to the him.” He looked for confirmation at | 38 Headdress 65 Fairy and Canada 53 Festival the major confidently. “So far as|door and E} Coyote, masked and Don Bob. “Wouldn't she?” + * pin. 66 Enriched have agreed to 54 Pertaining the merits of your disagreement go, | spurred, stood in the doorway with| 0°! oe ae ae 39 Behold. 67 Melodious. sign a treaty to air, I haven't an opinion in the world. his two guns at his side. Five thou-| “All women had a way of loving | 40 Let it stand. z on the —— 56 Conjunction, El Coyote may be a noble protector| sand pesos on his head, and there: your father—he was extremely lov- | aire scene. VERTICAL —Vaterway? ‘58 Vulgar fellow, of the poor or just a plain cattle|he stood alone! He walked slowly| able. , ay. A3.To run away. 1 Afraid. 18 Middle. 59 Stream thief. Alt I know is I’m under orders| down the long aisle, laid an offering] Something in the man’s voice { 45 Born, 2 Close. 19 Resinous obstruction. to run down a bandit gang, and, be-|of gold pesos before the little altar|made Radcliffe look down at the 47 Conclusion. 3 Channel. spbstance. 60To marry. lieve me, I welcome any changejatd as quietly walked out. Not ajerect figure beside him. A sudden 48 Yellow matter. 4 Railroad. 22 Bird of the 62 To accomplish. from drill and monotony.” man moved, Not one raised handt| flood of memory swept over him. 49 Toward. 5 Ireland. night. 65 Italian river. “Have you heard of last night’s|What 2 gesture that was, eh?|He remembered hearing of the man mae Sinead Cae a ps a murder, Bob?” asked the doctor. Bravado and melodrama, if you| who had loved his mother once and ret fie ea epee fn fed “No” want, but it meant that in every|who later, when she married his NF “A peon gave information on the|Peon hut along the border a secret| father, had disappeared into the PT TT NGI | ae iG bandit and collected Morale’s thou-| Prayer was raised that day for his|West. He realized now who that - SSS sand dollars. That same night he| safety, and the effect is, as Sefior}man had been. Yet it seemed un- ia Na was found by a squad of Mexican|Morales points out, the soldiers|real and unbelievably sad that this SS soldiers dead in the trail” aren't half eager to find him, and|man with graying hair had once w@ Don Bob nodded thoughttully.|"0 one is willing to give informa-|loved and suffered and been young. “That would happen, of course, Did| tion.” So, for a queer, swift moment those the Coyote leave any souvenir?” The major expanded his broad|*W° men looked at each other, each Again Morale: id expressive| chest. “Well, legends and white|°oscious that he held in his brain hands, “That is niost interesting.| horses won't annoy my boys very|* knowledge that could bring the The soldiers found Lopez’s body deeply.” : gas pain, , just below where the road pitches} «jjo" " ‘he girl broke the silence, “It’s down from the mesa. They dis- “They'it sgree thei Sete ane been long weeks since you came to am be mounted. Picture, my friends, that] the brave and blundering manner of |‘%¢ hacienda, Bob, Don’t dare for- bet stag oe silent in ve mola, all good soldiers.” Set pees next Saturday is our Fiesta looking down on one who the night] «: es 4 of the Rains. And brin ir ten- : before had guided them to the band- fect eae f apeak With deeper | derfoot giant.” hts it camp, In black bight pe stood observed Aunt Clara, and led tee Don Bob smiled and hurried there, Then from the cliff someone! suests to the drawing room, across the room to help Aunt Clara laughed, and there they see on his with the bridge tables. ; white horse El Coyote watching] | But as the major passed through d them. He waved, he laughed again,| the hall, Don Bob's hand closed on “The man who invented these that jester, he threw down a hand.| the old soldier's arm. “Ted hasn't salt-collspeing tables was an enemy ful of the gold coins he had taken, |heard?” he asked in a low tone, basalt Aunt Clara cing or and he was gone. Is it not con-| “Not a word.” yielded the table to Don Bod.