The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 17, 1932, Page 4

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The Bismarck An lewspaper Independent Ni THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by mail per year (in Bis- Daily by mail per year (in state out Daily by mail outside of North Published by The Bismarck Tribune ‘Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as Daily by carrier, per year........$7.20 Tribune|#"¢ ‘alse insinuations down the throats of the political shysters who framed this case against me.” standards. business in a tricky manner.” The Century Dictionary and Cy- Ween ssteceseessseceseecesee 6.00/ clopedia is no less definite, branding jeekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 c “One who does business Weekly by mail in » three rd Stead . he > years ..... 250| ttickily; a person without profes- Weekly by m sional honor: used chiefly of law- Dakota, per year yers.”” ‘Weekly by mail in Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively ®ntitled 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 Banner of Courage Announcement by Attorney Gen- eral-elect A. J. Gronna, Jr., of the list of assistants who will serve with him in office should obtain a favor- able reaction from the voters of the state. Two of the men who have been given appointments are well and fa- vorably known in Bismarck and the Missouri Slope area. They are Har- old D. Shaft of Bismarck and Milton K. Higgins of Mandan. Each is a young man and each has proved his ability as a lawyer, Shaft in private practice and as assistant attorney general under James Morris for the last four years, and Higgins in pri- vate practice at Mandan. Announcement that Gronna has Offered a position to P. O. Sathre, mow assistant United States district attorney for North Dakota and for- merly a state senator from the Steele-Griggs district, also will win the applause of those who feel that honest and efficient service is the first duty of public office holders. Sathre made an excellent record for independent thinking as a member of the state senate and his associates regarded him as a man of unim- peachable integrity. There can be no better indorsement for any man. The third appointee, Charles Ver- fett of Cando is less well-known ‘ere but is regarded by members of ~ bar as a man of proven ability .-aild integrity. The personal stand- ard which is his may be judged from the high caliber of the other ap- pointees. To those who do not know Gronna, the appointment of Shaft may come as something of a surprise. Shaft’s four years of service under a prede- cessor of opposite political faith might easily have turned the scales against this appointment. That such was not the case is a tribute to both Gronna and Shatt. It demonstrates, as words could not possibly do, the mental attitude with which Gronna approaches the task which the voters have delegated to him. It proves that service to the people rather than the exercise of political vindictiveness or the crea- tion of 1 personal political machine 4s his primary object. This one act rears the standard of Political courage over the office of the attorney general-elect. From a purely political standpoint the easiest ‘thing for him to do would have been ‘to make a clean sweep. Such action wwould have caused no unfavorable ‘comment and would have prevented possible attacks by those who feel that “sweep ‘em all out” is a construc- tive policy for a victor to pursue. Throughout the state as a whole, however, this rather surprising move on Gronna’s part will win more ap- plause than censure. It will be gen- erally realized that service to the public is Gronna’s aim in office. It werves notice that he will do his own thinking, make his own decisions | land discharge his own responsibili- Mes. It gives rise to confidence that ‘his name will be added to the dis- ‘tinguished list of state officers who realize that the best politics, both party and personal, is that which makes service rather than personal ition its goal. The congratulations which will icome to Gronna as the result of this : should extend, also, to the nts. On their part it shows breadth of vision and an open mind. it demonstrates that they do not 2 with any in their party who uld revive the vindictive spirit and . mtagonisms which this state the past. hold ME i ag a er cc want may be of public ‘statements on jy Wherein he is the defend- Pe ga. Webster's Unabridged also indicat- es the word is an unlovely one when uttered by a lawyer, defining it as “A trickish knave; one who carries on any business, especially legal business, in a mean and dishonest way; one without professional hon- ir.” The word is one of which lawyers ordinarily are very careful, for most lawyers know its meaning. 2 Trouble for Moscow The General Press association, European news gathering agency, recently published an article on “The New Rasputin” which asserts that a re-birth of religion is taking place on Russia's steppes and in her mountains because a new “saint” has appeared there, | Designating him as “The New Rasputin” in memory of the strange monk who was said to have wielded an eerie influence over the late Russian royal family, the article says: “He claims to be sent at the bidding of some higher power to spread the gospel throughout ‘Holy Mother Russia,’ bringing healing and peace to his sorely- tried Russian brethren. “From far and wide, in the infinite reaches of the steppes, at the mere mention of his name, the peasants came to hear the inspiring utterances of the new ‘Saint.’ And just as in Ras- putin’s time, they abase them- selves in the dust when he gives his blessing, their eyes hang up- on his lips when he preaches to them the Kingdom of Heaven as near at hand. Like Rasputin, his phenomenal powers of suggestion enable him to hold tens of thou- sands of people at one time be- neath his spell. The sick and ailing come to him in scores, to be healed by the laying-on of hands. And many other miracul- ous healings are credited to his | super-normal powers.” The affair is said to be disturb- ing the Soviet government. The man asserts he is a loyal Bolshevik and conforms, to all outward appear- ances, to the rules for good Russian citizenship laid down by the Moscow dictatorship. For that reason it is} difficult for them to take action} against him. Nevertheless, he is a menace be-| cause he stirs the people in a way which five-year plans and doctrines | of the machine age are unable to do. If the report is correct it may in- dicate the beginning of a vital blow to the Soviet system. Their doc- trine is one of materialism exclusive- ly. Things of the spirit have no place in it. Anyone who gives evi- dence of the supernatural wins no fa- vor with the Russian powers that be. In his report to the governing board of the New York Stock Ex- change, President Richard Whitney waxes enthusiastic when he says: “Past prosperity and easy profits have not weakened the spiritual fiber of the country and present adversity has steeled the national determina- tion to attain further and genuine heights of achievement in the fu- ture.” It seems that one thing the de- pression has done has been to make ‘Wall Street realize that there is such a thing as spiritual fiber. It does begin to look as though things were on the upgrade now that a miracle has been achieved. 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, The Repeal Vote (N. ¥. World-Telegram) A test of representative govern- ment was made today at the opening session of the house in the vote on outright prohibition repeal. The peo- ple voted one month ago. They voted overwhelmingly for repeal. It remained for congress to vote as the People have instructed. Congress did not. The repeal amendment lost by @ narrow margin. Repeal means repeal. It does not mean revision of the Eighteenth amendment as proposed by the Re- publican platform and President Hoover. That subterfuge was de- feated last month in so far as a na- tional election can decree. Responsibility rested with the Dem- ccrats. They control this house. They, together with progressive al- lies, control this senate. There can be no confusion as to the Democratic party’s pledge. It is distinctly not revision of the Eigh- teenth amendment. It is unqualified and unencumbered repeal through the of special state conventions. } repeal’ reso- Z 5 Ui i i them the ref In addition to: the sentative government, today's vote volved. # social and political reform issue of repre- sy racketeering, , and an economic reform the lying innuendo | to obtain upward of a billion and a If this statement frightens anyone it will be Mr. Langer’s brother law- yers, for all the dictionaries make the word shyster peculiarly applic- able to those members of the legal profession who fail to meet the ethical ‘The Tunk and Wagnalls Practical| Standard Dictionary defines a shy- ster very definitely as “A lawyer who practices in an unprofessional man- 7.20) ner; hence anyone ‘who conducts his | glandular development—these young ; erime and The Double Squeeze same rear neste tort ate self-addressed envelope is enclosed. in ink. No reply can be made to tions. PARENT VERSUS CHILD Day dreaming is all wrong when it becomes a constant or habitual state. but occasional lapses into this twi- light zone of half-consciousness are quite harmless and indeéd sometimes fruitful, inasmuch as the day-dream- er comes out of it with a brand new idea. We should think of one day dreaming as having gone fishing, and let us hope he will have good luck. Many a scientist, inventor, author, statesman or other creator has stumbled upon the solution he has long sought, in this twilight zone or semiconsciousness between sleep and waking. It doesn’t matter whether you do your fishing at dawn or in the middle of the day, the perhaps more skill or experience is required to land your catch at mid-day. Boys and girls at the age of puber- ty—twelve to eighteen—are apt to do too much day-dreaming. For two reasons. First, the physiological tor- por, hebetude or languor of this epoch of rapid growth and great Persons perhaps more than any | others, need an Iodin Ration to help /|o! them, and I am happy to send full instructions for this to any corre- spondent who asks for instructions and incloses a 3-cent stamped en- velope bearing his or her address. Second, and I hope this catches the eye of every parent, uncle, aunt, grandparent, brother, sister, teacher, nurse or kindly boss of such a mop- ing young lad or lass, at this age we are apt to be introspective, self- conscious, self-accusatory; we begin to be conscious of the sex-urge in life, and naturally curious, but un- fortunately we can’t turn to our par- ents for the sympathy, counsel and confidence we need,-so we just won- der, imagine things, develop horribly depressing convictions of guilt which, if we only knew, really have little or no foundation. Come, come, let us be fair and frank. In the great majority of let- ters I have had from boys and girls who seek only the truth about these hidden and forbidden things, only the knowledge to which they are entitled, parents come in for some well merited and bitter condemna- tion. Now I speak not alone from a com- fortable theoretical point of view but from experience in such day-dream- ing as a boy and also experience as an ordinary dub parent. As a par- ent my alibi is that my boys were all girls. I think if a man is still liv- ing with his wife when his daugh- ters, if any, come along to the age of six, ten, twelve, fifteen, eighteen, he may ease himself over a tough job by passing the buck to their mother. But if he is afflicted, let us say just for a change, with any sons, then it is strictly up to him to see to it than his little boys get the right kind of instruction, and if he him- self doesn’t feel capable or fit to teach | his son the least he can do is to deputize some one who is qualified, both by wisdom and by character, to do it for or with him. At the age of five mother should begin teaching daughter, and father should begin teaching son, the truth, and no myths or vicious fairy tales. Here I extend a cordial invitation to any boy of any age to write to me for any information, instruction or advice he thinks he should have. I promise him, absolute secrecy and the sympathy and square shooting I believe every boy needs. Of course PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady,M.D._ . Signed letters pertaining to personal health and*hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. Letters should be brief and written queries not conforming to instruc- public laundry or in the home laun- dry, is an additional disinfection. Ironing, of course, kills any germs there may be on the clothes. Grape Juice I made some grape juice, which tastes all right but whenever I take any quantity of it I seem to get sick oe. OP) Answer—If the grape juice has not fermented it should be a wholesome, | healthful beverage. If it has fer- mented you had better beware of it. Cod Liver Oil Large bottle of cod liver oil for less than half the price we have to pay at our druggist’s. According to the label, it is tested for vitamin con- tent ... Is it all right to use? (Mrs. H. A Answer—If any manufacturer's name appears on the label it is prob- ably all right, provided the manu- facturer is of known repute. Now and again we hear faint rumors of other, and cheaper, fish oils having been found satisfactory as substi- tutes for the too expensive cod liver il. . (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) Prohibition is here to stay. The | proof is the cheapness of liquor.— Izzy Einstein, author, former star/ prohibition agent. * x * You'll find we Irish writers are an ignorant lot.—William Butler Yeats, Irish poet. * oe * There is no doubt that half the present Japanese submarines are capable of making a round voyage across the Pacific, and would there- fore be able to conduct an offensive on the western seaboard of the Uni- ted States. Nor would it be impos- sible for the largest Japanese boats to menace the Panama Canal.—Hec- tor C. Bywater, British naval expert. x ee Hunger and distress know no class distinction, whether of color, creed or service, in the armed forces of the United States. Who is willing to as- sert that the hungry veteran is en- titled to preferment over his equally hungry civilian neighbor?—Donald A. Hobart, N. Y. leader of veterans opposed to the bonus. ————_-—______» if Barbs | ——+« That “typical American family,” picked by a national magazine in In- dianapolis two years ago, still is FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: maGaeor. Most people are all wrapped up in winter sports. Tl be happy to give this confiden- tial service to girls, too, if their mothers or other guardians say oke. QUESTIONS AND ANSWEES Bunk in the Laundry that clothes I have always believed in the ZS NY 4. ei | Amendment Question | HORIZONTAL = Answer_to Previous Puzzle 11 Dwells. 1 Swift, 13 Rock de 6 Brace and a clivity. half. 14Supporters of 10 Sandpiper. the erosive 12. Small theory. dulcimer. 16 Sordidness, 15 Matured. = 17To line a 17Genus of non- vessel. Polson 20 Second note, snakes, 23 Erne. 18 Above. 26 Porticoes. Fy en! eae ve 28 Old French of i coin. tal base. ALT WAIG) 30 Measure of bd 41 Indian wig- 2 Reluctant. cloth. formation, wan. 3 Writing im- 35 More concise. 24 pis ii 43 Opposite of in. plement. “ cupeare simi 25 Warbles. AS SArAELO. 4Wraths. tribes ‘ 47 Valuable mine ¢j " 26 Exists. eral ore. 6 Economics 37 Heath. 27 Orient. 48 Expected. abbr.) 38 Pace. 29 sexber of 50 Rough ex- 7To be jll. 2 Aegan ; Apollo. terior of bark. 8 Work room of ete tenant. 31 act todles 51 Sturgeon. a painter. sSReey xBB gone rcpart, 58 Occupation. 9 Designer of aie 33 Bebor 55 Animal who the White < gs anove” 34 Neuter pro- Beats. House, U S.A. 46 To agitate. sioun. Se iokives. 10To what does 48 Queen of 36 Bullen. cia the Eighteenth — heaven. 38A Blavic- burner. amendment of 49 Head of the specking ~ 2 the U 8. Con- _Fascisti. perotan VERTICAL stitution 52Golf device. 49 Half an em. 1 Packer, . refer? 54 Hastened, i iS iol THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1932 typical. stolen. * *# # : Beer may be brewing in Wash- ington, but if congress has no better luck than the average home-brewer, we may expect his apology, “It's not as good as the last batch,” to become a White House statement. * * less than that of 1910, the record year. That 200,000 was only a trifle compared with the crowd that went back for Thanksgiving dinner. * * * If it's true that 7 per cent of hu- manity does the thinking for the other 93 per cent, that leaves most of us in shape to do the kicking. see With 40,000 horses on the rac- ing tracks this year, it was just as hard as ever to pick the win- ner. xX ‘There's no friend friend—if he can sticker. (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) like an old “fix” a traffic OH, DOCTOR! New York, Dec. 17.—The “play Doc- tor,” Shakespeare to the contrary not- withstanding, is the thing! He carries in his portable type- writer, phrases for pallid productions and pulmotors for dying dramas. He is assumed to be something of a med- ical wizard who can put life in the old theater yet—and frequently does. Even as with actual patients there are neurotic conditions which can be diagnosed from a functional ‘stand- point and there are dread maladies which will never live to see a box office. * * * ALIEN ILLS Plays, like humans, change doc- tors from season to season. It all) cl The family auto has been|air to infect the audience. Thus, a| he leans, with arms akimbo and chin few years ago, you heard a great|on arms, with his eagle beak and eye deal about a' certain George Abbott.| up$n the performances. He is usu- If a play showed signs Of long life,jally as right about actors as aboul they called him in to give it further| plays, and anyone who has ever vitality. But for Abbott, such a hit! heard of his pillbox can pick out the as “Broadway,” for instance, might| spots where he entered the scene at not have been half so healthy. Where foreign productions are concerned, Sidney Howard is likely to be hailed these days. Gilbert * The back-to-the-farm drift this! Miller asked for a transfusion such| Broadway. year has brought the farm popula-|as only a Dr. Howard could perform.| players to go slightly stale after tion up to 32 million—only 200,000) Howard was asked to take a foreign| playing and playing a part. Where- scene and give it a New England accent and have the blood of the “cape country” run in its veins. So behold, “The Late Christopher Bean.” In its original state Mons. Bean was | no, more from the Boston baked bean zone than goulash is from Ireland. * * * KAUFMAN BATTING FOR... The outstanding medico of the theater at this immediate moment, however, is George Kaufman. A {playwright of no small stature, he has been called into consultation, collaboration and operation. His name keeps sneaking into qne play after another. Word goes around author, Dr. Kaufman has been on hand with his indefatigable pill box. No less an authority than Variety, the theatrical magazine, places his which 4s $7000 weekly in American money. * RK ORS ‘M. D.” MUST DIRECT man. He graduated from a good newspaperman into a better theatri- cal paragrapher. It is the hopeful noticing of sickly or impaired plays that he can inject a bit of vigorous and funny patter. Now and then, he has even assayed the role of ac- tor, as instanced by his casual per- formance in “Once in a Lifetime,” over which Ring Lardner had worked’ and sweated. Only Dr. Woollcott has! tied_him as a newspape?’™man-actor. Kaufman is one of those men who believe that M. D. stands for “must direct.” Once he’s in on a production he seeks to stand by—on and off the stage. At times he has been silly enough to put his own money into plays he thought were worth the price. On a couple of occasions he has lost the case. * % # NOSE FOR DRAMA Once a play is under way shooses to lean against the lower depends upon what virus is in the! rail of a balcony stairway. There that whereas G. Glutz appears as the; present income at seven grand—j i An interesting fellow, this Kauf- such a hit as “Dinner for Eight.” Kaufman is particularly wary when a play, having proven its suc- cess, settled down for a long run on It is the habit of some upon Dr. Kaufman, dropping by, in- jects a few acids. i Just as old newspapermen are as- sumed to have a nose for news, Kaufman is credited with a schnoz- le for the dramatic_situations He can tell them ten rows away and can dictate when they should be used. Trade Mark Reg. U.S. Pat. Of, Can You Make This ‘With These Pieces? i Kneeling Boy 2. HI-HO PUZZLE NO. 18—On his mark for today’s puzzle race is this kneeling boy, ready to give you a run for your money when you try to form his silhouette with mystic seven pieces. It looks like a hard job, but you'll find it easy. On Christmas Eve young and pretty Geraldine Foster disap- peared from the office of Dr. Humphrey Maskell, where she was employed. Mrs. Morgan, Mas- kell’s neighbor, corroborates his statement that he distributed gifts with her daughter that afternoon. | Geraldine had broken her engage- ment with Harry Armstrong. It is also learned that the mysterious Ephraim Foster, who had written Geraldine, is a woman. A black- mail note, presumably written by the missing girl, leads Police Commissioner Thatcher Colt to a deserted house on Peddler's Road. Outside a window he finds seven dead, blood-stained pigeons. The interior of the house is topsy- turvy. Colt comes upon a bloody axe and a strand of blond hair. Betty Canfield, Geraldine’s room- mate, identifies the body of a nude woman found buried a short dis- | tance away as that of the missing | gitl, A pillow case covers the head. Although the surrounding ground is dry, the grave contains a pine-scented fluid. The medical examiner states she was dead not more than 36 hours. Two bottles, similar to those seen carried away from the doctor's office by two women the day of the disappear- ance, are found near the grave. Colt learns that Geraldine’s in- heritance from her father will now 0 to her brother, Bruce. A key found in the dead girl’s apartment fits the Peddler’s Road house. CHAPTER XVII. “Ww ELL, Tony, if you are looking for motives for the murder, you have two now.”” “Two, Chief? I don’t get you.” “Yes. There is the possibility of the Virginius motive.” “Virginius?” “Yes—the father who places such store on chastity that he would kill a violated daughter. Rare in these days—but you have heard Edmund L, Foster speak twice for himself.” “I hadn’t thought of that—it doesn’t sound reasonable—and— yet——" “Ah, yes, Tony! There is always that ‘and yet!’” “But the other motive?” Defiant Young Man. | “Bruce Foster might have killed the girl to get her share of the inheritance. He would not be the first brother to do such a thing.” “That is a horrible thought—a brother to kill a sister for money?” Instead of replying, my chief told me to bring Bruce Foster in- to the office. The young man who stalked in so boldly was tall and thin but he looked strong. He had sandy hair, ruddy complexion and challenging blue eyes. In his very walk there was an air of truculence as if he were determined to prove to the world that he was not afraid of it. As the door swung shut behind him, he thrust forward 5 exposing his teeth a sai sing teeth an to Thatcher Colt: > “This is a deuce of a way to treat white people. You send my father and mother to the Morgue to look at the body of Gerry, fore they cut her up with their damned knives, but you won't let me go along wit to stand by and catch them when they fall. ‘alk about Prussianism!” “Sit down,” said Thatcher Colt ly. ruce Foster flung himself into the chair and glared defiance at the Commissioner. “Your sister has been murderd,” said Thatcher Colt, “and. you are needed right here. I know. it is a on ur parents, But the need you right now.” Pom hat for?” “y want you to tell me what you Ww “What. i know? I don't know an) er Colt shook his head. . “We'll never get anywhere that way,” he remonstrated. “Why? Do you accuse me of holding anything back” , “You thought having an affair, your father to know. So you to_settle the matter for ourself. Whom did you think she d an affair with?” The ruddy cheeks of the man turned pale. nic hy y told you that?” he de- manded. [____Guesswork._—+| ge 8 essed it,” said Thatcher Colt truthfully. “Whom did you suspect, Bruce?” The boy shrugged his shoulders. “You guessed wrong,” he an- swered stubbornly. “Where did you go when you wouldn’t tell your father and mother where you would search a Ale sister?” insisted Thatcher The boy turned his eyes away and would not answer. After watching him fo: it i silence, ‘Thatcher. Golt suddenly Pad an passed baba en ise nm he emerged, Foster with a glance. ee “Bruce, I had one report from Betty Canfield. ne used” ‘to like zou. Bes she toate a en- gagement wit rou. i to. be a fine fellow, but you turned into a hellion, a good-for- nothing fellow, all at once, Hitting nod booze pretty ce Almost lost your job as an atco1 it. at Millbrink, ‘Now don’t et there like a churl and refuse to talk to fired Didn’t yen, take to Cored ecause you ieved was leading an immoral life?” si As Bruce looked up at the Com- missioner, his face was like a min. nesinger in a medieval painting. “What has that to do murder?” he asked. Eee But Thatcher Colt was relent- “Does that refresh your. mem-|I ory?” he asked, on th ital Stas At the sight string of blue rib! Thatcher Colt. Meat him, ve his two hands seizing the shoulders ATTWhose key is that? 1 - lose key is ? door?" he demanded, ° “BO and tossed of the of the key, the key tao serdar ‘ou didn’t want | clared. “This is a deuce of a way to treat white people,” where | to with the | talked bon, the I Impassive, = by ANTHONY ABBO Copyricttr BY COviCr, FRIEDE, [NC., — DISTRIBUTED BY KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. “I never saw it before,” he de- “All right,” said Thatcher Colt, pushing the key aside. “Tell me where you went to look for your sister.” “I was just a fool,” said Bruce pee A, “ve got a bad temper and I know it. But I will tell you all about it. I knew that things "t been going well between Gerry and the fellow she was goin; to marry. The wedging was al- most here and the nearer it came the more miserable she seemed. But she wouldn’t tell me what the trouble was, nor pop, nor mom. She would make it re with Harry and everything would be all right and then the next time we saw her she was sad and blue. On Christ- mas Eve I was in New York and I called her up.. I was going to take her home with me for Christ- mas. But she was crying over the id Bruce. hone and said she didn’t happened to her. I said I pig cee right up but she told me “What time ” Colt casaully. “** ‘at??” asked “A littl ae eine, aoe two o'clock in “What did you do then?” “I just walked around th peking, in the shop windows and a a BO movie, trying to cheer “Did you b ite, ie uy anything?” when 1 é your sister was really ek euitte, where did you 8 to look for her? This is the thi you that question” e tye. altind I Under Suspicion. “I went to Harry Armstrong’ aBa meee taat rae he day’ pop le into New York an talked with you. I suspected Harry. didn’ might have i Fiyvg what ened to . L/was ve it out lian, But im, An With ten peel since I’ve hap couldn't locate Bruce Foste: his " i gral ‘the, com a is pd Sg ant tae else did you question er Colt's sombre cyes. He) A look of surpris clasped his hands. to : Elabasdt et ee his feet back and. 5 forth Briers? os he parlaboed a - (Te Be Continued Tomorrow.)

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