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4 ‘rHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1935 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper } THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER : State, City and County Official Newspaper —_ (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, 8. D., and} @ntered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. a : President and Publisher Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons Secretary and Treasurer Editor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .............+ Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year. ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use for republica- tion of all news dixpatches 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, ” Respect for the Flag “Americans insulted in Italy,” says a Tribune headline over a story telling how a mob in Padua, Italy, stripped American flags from a motor car occupied by citizens of this country. The natural reaction to this would be indignation that Mus- solini’s followers failed to show the proper respect due our national emblem. Wars have been fought on such provocation. But a more sensible attitude would be to wonder what those flags were doing on the automobile of our neighbors from Min- nesota traveling abroad. If they were intended as a decoration this fact represented lack of respect on the part of the tourists. If they were there as a matter of protection it was a woeful demonstration of American ineptitude and lack of psychological understanding. The visitors might better have appealed to the authorities, for with all Italy in a state of tense emotionalism anything was liable to upset the populace. The fact that both the police and crowd became apologetic when they learned that the machine was occupied by American citizens demonstrates that there was no essential ill will behind the act. As the symbol of this nation the flag deserves the greatest respect—and Americans should take the lead in showing it. To place it in a position where it is liable to be insulted casts as much onus upon the person who displays it as upon others, per- haps less educated, who fail to display the consideration which it merits. Un-American Distinction An Italian woman living in New York and working at the somewhat humble trade of dress finisher was hurt in an acci- dent on an elevated railway some little time ago. She sued for damages and was awarded $10,000. The railroad appealed the case, with the rather surprising argument that this sum was out of all proportion for a woman in her “social class.” The appellate court has finally passed on this appeal, and— naturally enough—has tossed it out of court. Its opinion remarks caustically that “medical science has never demon- strated that persons of alleged inferior social position suffer any less from injuries than those of putative or assumed social superiority.” This constitutes a neat little slap on the wrist for the rail- road’s lawyers, and we hope they take it to heart. This, after| all, is America, and America is a democracy, and it is still our proudest boast that class distinctions do not count with us. Whoever thought up that appeal has a poor understanding of what America really is. | ! Farewell to Arms Only a few more important football games remain to be played this sea- fon. On the major fronts the moleskins—they are silk panties now—have | been hung up for another year. Only the Thanksgiving Day contests andj the echoes of the lengthening list of post-season frays remain to delight the’ gridiron fan. As a general thing he can join the hot-stove league and discuss the wars that have just closed or the prospects for coming campaigns. This also is a good time to take a look at the entire football picture andj to view it in a detached manner—if we can. One thing stands out above all others. That is the way in which the sport has been commercialized, even in the colleges, | Another is the fact that the youth of average physique and ability has| been crowded from the scene. His place has been taken by huskier young men, recruited by scouting systems and loyal alumni, The result of this has been more thrilling contests and greater attend- llce; more profit at the box-office. There seems nothing against it except the vague and feeble protests against the abandonment of amateurism, and that long ago has become a dead letter. Not all of the lads who play college football are paid to do so, of course, but most of them are and everyone knows it. But the system carries within itself the seeds of its own destruction. ‘The popularity of football is based largely on the fact that it is a hard, rough, body-contact game which thousands of Americans have liked to PLAY. Added to that is its acquisition of social status. To see the game has become fhe accepted thing. But the popularity of a sport is determined by the attitude on the sand- Jots of America. If the kids of this or the next generation abandon football for some more intriguing game the gridiron sport is doomed, just as foot George D. Mann i | Behind ! the Scenes | | Washington By RODNEY DUTCHER PWA Isn't Quite 100 Per Cent Am- erlean . . . Ickes Puts Across a Rum Deal... and Takes a Sly Thrust at Critics ... U.S, Treasury Has No Standing in Vienna. . . “Foreigners Hold Oklahoma’s Top Jobs, By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Washington, Nov. 25.—()—If you snooped through all the thousands of PWA projects over the country you might find a hundred or more in- stances where contragtors or subcon- tractors had used small supplies of building materials purchased abroad. Orders for relatively infinitesimal supplies of German steel and French cement have caused recent furore. But other nations have also done their modest bit. England, for instance, has sold a small amount of steel, a larger amount of a certain metal netting used to sustain plaster and some other build- ing materials. Sometimes contractors buy foreign goods to get a cheaper price and sometimes because they prefer the quality. Sometimes for both reasons. It will be harder to buy them for that reason, as a result of recent agitation, unless Secretary Ickes formally de- cides American producers are trying to soak the public through collusive bids, 'Twas a Rummy Deal Few know it, but Ickes stood out firmly against purchase of German goods months before the present is- sue arose. His PWA and his Bureau of Territories and Insular Possessions co-operated in a Virgin Islands rehab- ilitation scheme which included a government corporation’s purchase of @ sugar mill and a rum distillery. The distillery had been built by an American and the corporation con- tracted to buy up all his equipment. Suddenly 1000 barrels, of German manufacture, appeared on the docks down there. The distillery owner in- sisted the government take them over as part of the contract. Everybody agreed they were better rum barrels than could be bought in the Unitec States and some officials urged ac- ceptance. Ickes put his foot down and refused. ts The distillery man swore he would never deal with the government again as long as he lived. (In Ickes office are a dozen small bottles of government-sponsored Vir- gin Islands rum of various ages, never touched and alleged to be unfit for human consumption. But certain of- ficials recently received a large sam- ple of this rum, aged 16 months, which many true petriots agreed was as good as any foreign brand of West In- dian rum aged five or six years.) ee ® An All-American Trophy “Thank you, ladies!” exclaimed Ickes dryly as a messenger, at the be- ginning of his press conference on German steel, brought in a tall tennis trophy recently won by the PWA team in an interdepartmental tournament. “That,” he explained, “is American silver, made by American workmen, engraved by American engravers and resting on a base of American ebony.” Our Credit Is No Good The administration contention that the United States Treasury is the soundest financial institution in the world received a setback recently—in Austria. The Department of Agriculture had been buying cattle and horses for ex- perimental purposes. The Austrian government had rounded up the ani- mals and received a check for several thousand dollars in payment. The official Vienna bank promptly turned back the check—it wasn’t on any of their “accredited banks.” The American legation had to get very busy before the matter was straight- ened out. * ok O® They’re All “Foreigners” Oklahoma the other day celebrated the 28th anniversary of her statehood. On the word of Oklahoma Patrick J. Hurley, former secretary of war. Oklahoma has never had a native- born governor or U. 8. senator and at this time none of her congressmen 1s native born. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) ayy Restoration of normal business and normal business profits is far sounder and far preferable to tem- porary and risky war profits.—Sec- racing, horse racing and bicycle racing, once the rage in America, were sup- planted by other kinds of contests. A Great New Service Flights of the giant clipper ships from the American mainland to Asia have become so commonplace lately that they have merited little attention fm the news. These great craft have flown back and forth with considerable regularity the last few months, each time without incident. On the basis of present performance, they are as safe and reliable as surface vessels. Nevertheless, Saturday's flight of the China clipper is important since it marks the opening of transpacific aerial navigation on a commercial basis. The Graf Zeppelin crossed the Pacific non-stop on its world flight. We have long known that it could be done. But to begin the doing of it regu- larly and as a matter of routine is a different matter. The globe again is shrunken in size. Communities on the other side of the world are merely hours away now, instead of days. Statistics reveal that federal employes, if laid end to end, would reach halfway across the country. .As it is, however, they reach only to Wash- iw ce 9% > “For two weeks, Prsident Roosevelt has been fussing with the budget.” It's only » question of time until G. O. P. adherents dub him & fuss-budget. a ae - _ Bally Rand advises Reading, Pa., club how to encourage growth of ideas among the city’s youth. One prime method, for instance, is a fan dance. : oe Selassie’s troops march to the front to the strains of “Bt, Louls Blues.” ‘Whe German goose-step may have a rival in the Ethiopian shuffle, ge Mel : doesn’t go td the movies. : self.” ‘That's easy; he probably . eee ‘current news, it still seems tobe playiig the role. Fae 2 8 24 businessmen are trying to figure out ‘A curent screen lover says, “Sometimes I wonder how I even stand my- “@hina played football 2,000 years before the birth of Christ.” From, Consti is whether this is really a retary of State Cordell Hull. * * OK | I’ve got an offer to make pictures ‘in Hollywood, but I think movies }can be made right here in the east | just as good as in California —Al ‘ Woods, New York producer. | kk O* | Every element necessary for na- |tional recovery, save one, exists. Long range confidence in the future ‘is lacking—Charles R. Hook, Middle- town, O., steel executive. * * * There are three criteria of a stomach that is up to its job; a mind free from fog, an abdomen free from discomfort, and a sleep free from dreams.—Dr. T. Wingate Todd, Cleve- land. | * * * ‘The way to learn how to do a thing better is to study how it has been done before. That's the way to study history—by noting evolution- ary processes.—Henry Ford. ee We can't go back to horse-and- buggy days in these times of speedy motor cars and expect to drive effici- ently.—Judge T. V. Holland, Kansas ee ¥ , As long as politics interferes, or the sweatshop, government projects, or troubles—W. B. Stout, head of the Society of boa Engineers. It is a gross calumny against the City. Mo., as he fined one-arm driver. | other hangovers of the old system > .Jprevail; we will always have labor tution to represent it as only the protector of property. It is a pro- Another Question THINK OF THE NEW DEAL NOW? WHAT 18 THE NEw DEAL Now? ACTION (Drake Register) The board of county commissioners of McHenry county have gone on record as being opposed to further purchase of land in this county by the federal government to be added to the “Lower Souris Project.” This project, located in the vicinity of Upham, is sponsored by the bio- logical bureau, and is in the nature of @ duck marsh and is expected to pro- vide a breeding place for these birds in future years, Much land has been purchased in the county for this pro- ject and now the federal officials find that they need more acres. In opposing the sale of additional land to the federal government, the McHenry county commissioners state that the land along the Mouse river is among the most fertile and pro- ductive land of the county and is sorely needed by the ranchers of this district. For the government to take this land would injure the ranchers, and in some cases make it necessary for them to quit business because of lack of hay meadows. The commis- sioners further state that much land would thus be removed from the tax rolls, thus crippling the county finan- cially. If the contentions of the board of county commissioners are true, then the efforts to prevent the further sale of land to the federal government should have the backing of all citizens of the county. Without a doubt one of the greatest needs of the present time is to have as much property as possible (income producing property) on the tax rolls so as to distribute the tax burden. If the land the gov- Reprinted to show what they say. We may or may not agree with them, ernment proposes to purchase has been paying its share of taxes, then there is no doubt but that we want it to remain in the hands of individ- ual owners and on the tax rolls of the county. THE HOME’S RESPONSIBILITY: Detroit (Mich.) News When a child goes wrong, usually his home is to blame. That is some- thing for parents to consider. Professor Lowell J. Carr, of the University of Michigan department of sociology, says that disorganized home life causes more child delinquency than bad neighborhood environment. He was reporting the result of a sur- vey conducted in Ann Arbor. A broken home, a home in which husband and wife are separated or in disagreement, a home in which there is lack of harmony between parents and children is a prolific source of bad social conduct of young people. Such a home is more frequently the cause of juvenile delinquency than bad neighborhood associations. And an improper home environ- ment is pretty certain to be a re- peater in turning out children who become antisocial. When a home pro- duces one delinquent, Professor Carr declares, it is times more likely than the average to have a second child go wrong. The United States department of commerce also has been doing some surveying in the same field, It re- ported recently that of 62,251 prison- ers brought into court in 45 states during 1934, there were more of 19 years than of any other age. The meaning of that is that the girls and boys who were called “de- HORIZONTAL 1 Soldier | Military Hero Answer to Previous Puszie EIMPIRIE|S|S! —e are still ——. 18 Swift. 19 Withered. MIEINIEIN] Al president of OIE RELIAITIHIE! the U. 8. A. AGIALLINEETIOIPE] °° Gu wer 11 Therefore, FOTIEIOMNEISISE) § —— ip. 13 Quadrille If OB 21 Female horse. reg [AIS tc} S$] 22Gale. 14 Burdes i 23 He was presi- = AIRISIE!S! dent two —, ‘15 Musical com IREBUISIE|S INC! 25 Sleeveless position. TIRIAMNCIHIOIt Ic I coat. 17To handle. [SIAIGIEMMOIPIAIL|SMESITIAIR] 26 Cavity. 18 Long tooth. [TIUEIRMETIUINIE SMAIUIRIA) 27 Stor: 19-To halt, AIDIDIRIE SIS! IFIAISITILINIG) 22 Pigeon. 20 Driving command. 21 Officer below ship’s captain. 36 To rage. 36 Floating ice. 37 Perforates. 38 Hail! 22 To sob. 39 Race tipster. 24 Corpse. 40 Italian river. 25 Box. 41 Musical note. 26 Hairy. 42 Certain. Missile 43 Strife. ‘weapon. 44 Daring. 29To sharpen. 45 To fend off. | 30Gibbon. 46 Fern seeds. 31To runaway. 47 Balance. 33 Plait. Serene. 34 iz 4 48 He was a i | i tector of rights, and the rights of the; by, former secretary of state; least and the lowllest among us. quite | as much as anyone.—Bainbridge Col- | | 29 Owl's cry. 32 Molten rock. 33 Air passage. 34 Company. 36To wade through. VERTICAL 1 Above. 2 Canters. 3 Christmas. 4 Sneaky. 5 Southeast. 6 Roof material. 37 Edge. 39 Bulb flow 40 To analyze. 42 To classify. 43 To staly. 44Genus of cattle. 45 Was victoriou 46 Compass point 473.1416. Mnquents” while they were in their unfortunate homes, became criminals at about the age that they left home. It is a sad progress and indicates the need to study every means to safe- guard and improve the nation’s homes if the nation’s youth is to be saved to worthy living and usefulness. Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. Dr. Brady will answer disease or diagnosis, Write Brady in care of The Tribun stamped, self-addressed enve! juestions pertaining to health but not jetters briefly and in ink. Address Dr. All queries must be accompanied by a | ' RAW APPLE DIET FOR ENTERITIS doctor, I suppose, would reluct to broadcast the theraputic value it might tend to sequestrate him. A news- Hartwich reported in Munchener medizinische ted 46 cases of intestinal trouble, including dysentery and paratyphoid with raw apple y satisfaction. The grated raw applies is given as the exclusive nutriment for from & pound to more than three pounds . It usually satisfies both hunger and thirst, necessary. to give some tea during the night patient happens to be extremely dehydrated by loss of water. The the diarrhea and in infectious intestinal dis- s0on disappear. , same journal Dr. Elisabeth Urbanitsky, doubtless never dreaming you folks, describes her favorable experiences with the Heisler- testinal disturbances of nurslings, The Heisler-Moro diet than the exclusive diet of grated ripe peeled raw apple. Num- tricians Europe, if not in this country, had employed this success for intestinal disorders of children beyond the prompted Dr. Urbanitsky to try it on the wee babies. available the year round, she used @ pure apple . To nurslings three or four months old she gave a ful of apple powder to the bottle, and milk mixture with about 1% teaspoonfuls ‘feeding. It proved efficacious in acute and subacute nutritional disturbances, infectious enteritis, and intoxications of intestinal origin. Generally improvement occurred on the second or third day, some- times the apple had to be given for only a day. Next thing you know, we'll be prescribing green apples for Johnny's bellyache. Medicine making strides. I have no explanation for the good effects of the raw apple diet. Try it sometimes and tell me about it. A pound of grated fresh ripe raw peeled apple yields 300 calories, a fair amount of vitamins A, B, C and G, a dish of iron, calclum, phosphorus, sodium, potassium, manganese, sulphur, and a moderate amount of cellulose or wood fiber, Really it is difficult to understand why doctors should not like apples. I go for apple pie without any cinnamon on it and for apple sauce without any sugar in it, but please excuse me from having anything to do with an apple that unblushingly comes to table without any skin on it. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Oily Com; My complexion would be all right only there seems to be an excess of oil eel over my nose and cheeks, Please tell me how to correct this. (Mrs. J. E.) Answer—Mop over nose and cheeks night and morning with a solution of ten grains of resorcin in the ounce of toilet water or diluted alcohol. Send stamped envelope bearing your address for monograph on care of the com- plexion. Craving ‘ My son, nine months old, seems to have a great craving for grit, such as eggshells and loosened lime or plaster from the walls. Is this dangerous, if he eats such things when he isn’t watched? (Mrs. M. A.) Answer—No. Pica, as the odd craving or appetite is called, is com- mon in infants and they get over it in a few months. You should see that the baby’s diet is sufficiently varied. You can obtain valuable pamphlets on infant and child care by writing the Children’s Bureau, Labor Department, Wwe , D. C. I have @ booklet here “The Brady Baby Book” which may give you some useful suggestions. For a copy send ten cents coin and stamped envelope bearing your address. Raw Egg Not So Nourishing ‘Which is more nourishing or strengthening, soft boiled, hard boiled, fried, poached or raw egg? If raw egg, should it be swallowed whole or beaten up? (0. G.) Answer—Egg cooked as you prefer is rather more completely and readily digested than raw egg. (Copyright 1935, John F. Dille Co.) EN.-E © 1938 NEA Service, Inc, BER SSS88g288 ge iti Spe berraeliat 5 5 i } BEGIN HERE TODAY JEAN DUNN, ALD MONTAGUE, lawyer, dela: when BO! fomebile calesma: him. Feather meets SANDY a car. LARRY GLENN, federal a: He learns al and a Larry believes the was armored, ere armored geen alone to investizate. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXVI HE little valley opened about 100 yards from Pulaski road. led downward, swinging sharply to the left and then to the right again in a bar- ren region that seemed almost out of sight of the main highway, Bobby could see nothing but the bleak, grimy The driveway desert-like. On hillocks, The driveway kept on going down hill; and at last it made one more turn and came out io queer little hollow. At-the other side, a few rods away, there was a precipitous bank, crowned by a long row of gone-to-seed dwell- ings: on the right hand anu op the left a similar bank hemmed the place in. And in the center of the hollow there was a long, ancient building of red brick with a time-stained roof of galvanised fron. é “A brick yard!” suddenly. That, obviously, clear that tl wh thing wove tial gate at the point wi ‘aris three or four cars were parked. eee A® Bobby drove up, a man got up from a seat beside the gate, He tet himself out and strolled up to Bobby’s car with insolent slowness, his thumbs hooked in bis belt. He wore no coat, and his vest was unbut- toned: and beneath his left arm- pit the black butt of a revolver, tucked away in a shoulder hol- ster, was plainly visible. “What do you want?” he asked, Bobby did his best to look con-| stolen fused and lost. “Why,” he said, “I was look- ing for a short-cut over to—to Grand River boulevard. I thought this was it.” “Well, it isn’t,” said the msn, | fully He looked at the building with what he hoped was just the right degree “Ob,” said Bobby. of innocent interest. “What this?” : the man, secretary te DON- oe MOREY WAL im, asks be Re 'S whese business connection Sospeanese Bowez ¢, {citement, not unmixed with an in an te leeate WINGY LI '- $8, Can le bout | self-congratulation. He had found ‘were car Bob- said Bobby was what the place had been—once. It was perfectly clear that no bricks had been made here for many a year. But it was equally central building was still in use. A freshly-painted black chimney rose trom the far- ther end, with a wisp of smoke threading its way up toward the evening sky: and surrounding the there was a new, business-like fence of woven wire, feet high, with barbed-wire strands on the top and a substan- e the ay entered, Inside this gate “Never mind what it 1s,” said “This's @ private road, and you're trespassing. Scram!” Hg casually moved his vest back, to give Bobby » better look at the revolver. Bobby grinned suddenly. “Okay, partner,” he said. He backed up and swung around, while the guard stood watching him with sullen suspicion. Then, casting a last glance at the erstwhile brick plant, Bobby drove up the roadway to Pulaski road again. On his way back to town Bobby was the prey of a pleasurable ex- before we got there, but we did get plenty of fingerprints. Today 1 got the identifications back from Washington, end I want you to know about them. “To begin with, your friend Lewis—the man who so kindly put * that bond deal in your way—is a known criminal. He used to be a confidence man, out west—special- ized in selling bogus oil and gold stocks, and did time in Colorado for swindling, some siz or eight even more pleasurable feeling of something queer, that was certain; ‘something almighty queer, tucked away in that inaccessible hollow, surrounded . by an unclimbable fence and guarded by & surly watchman with a revolver. Was this the place Mark Hopkins and |of the ‘hot’ securities that the gang MacFarlane had visited the after | picks up in its travels.” noon before? eee ‘The reddish dust on Hopkine’ car | ARRY went on, “But that isn’t testified that they had gone along the most important part. It’s Pulaski road back of the steel | this chap Harkins I wanted to tell mill; and if they had done that. | yoy about, because he’s been seeing this queer place back in the hollow | more or less of Jean. I guess. seemed to be the only conceivable) «we got his prints out of that Goal. ‘ayy, o* apartment, too, and sent them in. eatery th sees ree And it develops that he’s » gunman lar to an old doughnut that’s the from Oklahoma. He did a term in place Larry Glenn's looking for. the Oklahoma pen for robbery a Hed I, better tell Larry about it |fe™ Years ago Came out on parole right off—or should I try to find |la*t summer, and fe Yelloves te ive eo jacl m gang out something more before I do?! shortly thereafter. His assoclation Gosh, I wish I could get just @ lit-} Fit rewis, of course, . proves that tle more dope before 1 tell him.11, joined it. Maybe I can. Waiting another anythis “So that’s who he fs. You can ce a ae re night.” |see, now, can’t you, why I hate to Anyhow, I'll go see him tonight.” see Jean even listing him among Hip zaturned the Ont ce the. SNe) her casual acquaintances? Fortu- nately, no more than that. But even so—" “I'm not so sure,” said Bobby bank robbers, Since then he’a been one of Jackson’s right-hand men. And this may interest you—it seems ‘he specializes in disposing ing. Larry was still in. He greet- ed Bob warmly and invited him to have dinner with him. eee Tue ate at a pleasant little res- taurant near the federal build. ing, and there Bobby guilefully told Larry just enough about Merk Hop- kins’ mysterious trip to whet the federal man’s interest. He did not tell bim of having found the pecu- Mar building in the hollow off Pu- laski road, but he told him enough to convince him that he was on the trail of something. “That’s fine,” said Larry. “As soon as you get anything definite, let me know so I can get some of our men working on it. You see. Bobby—all I want from you ts just @ hint; no more than that. We can run it down. If our suspicions She said she'd been seeing quite a lot of him. I'm—” he paused, and grew red—"T'm afraid she’s getting sort of infatuated with ttm.” Larry looked worried. “TN tell her,” he said grimly. . “It'd be terrible if she let herself led with a man like that. coming back to Dover?” “Next week, I guess.” said Bobby. “Well, there’s a breathing space,” said Larry. “It’s a cinch Harkins won't be showing up around here for a while yet, That outfit knows by this time that Dover is hot.” He shook his head thoughtful! “T. ought to have warued her soon as I found out she'd been a witness for him.” he mused. Bobby Yooked up anxiously. “How was that?” he asked. Larry told him bow Jean had gone to the police station to give Sandy an alib! for the Friday afternoon of the payrol) holdup. Bobby wrinkled his forehead in & desperate effort to remember. “Hey, wait!” he said. “Some thing’s screwy somewhere. If she got the afternoon off the day I went in to see Montague . . .Larry, he pat was a Thursday, not a Fri- day)” Thureday! Are you dead cer. tein?” may be rather dangerous. and I don’t want you to rup any risk of * began to eat. Larry carved off a| “Of course I am.” bite of steak and ate it thought-| Larry's lips tightened. ; then he laid down bis fork} “We've got yo let Jean know who this man fs, the moment she. gets back,” he said grimly. “We can't let her go on drifting toward trou- ble any longer—” But fate was against him. For when Jean returned, Larry Glenn was to be far away—and she re- fused even to listen to: Bobby's at- tempt to warn ber. : Be Continued) fidentially. “['m going to tell you something that you're not really entitled to know about,” he said. “I wouldn’ is iD. “We raided the apartment your (riends the Lewlses were occupy: ing,” sald Larry. “They'd got out! = (To a » » » e “4