PAGE TEN MT.PFORD MATI, TRIBUNE, MEDFOKI). OREGON. SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 17. 19r. A RAPID FIR! SYNOPSIS: Thi Montana Kit and Uateo Hubrxm have outwitted Sergeant Andrei and obtained en trance to the fnrt ot Duraya. They are about to blow open the gover nor't tale and recover the emerald crown ot Our Lady, etolen from the church by the governor when they are lurpriaed. The governor makee lure the crown ie late, then guce tione Atvdree. He confeeeee he thought Montana and Ruhrie were the girl, ttntita. when they tapped gently at hie gate. Chapter 21 ROSITA "npHAT girl." ald the general, "la the daughter ot Miguel Santos. She la Roalta Santos, eh? Is she be hind this deviltry? Has she beej ent tor?" "She has been sent for," said Don Luis, nodding. "Unless she baa run for her life, she should be here by this time." "This sergeant," said the general, In a gentle voice, "at the risk ot stifling himself managed at last to give the alarm. Otherwise, who knows what might have happened? For that reason, see that he's paid a hundred pesos. That's a reward for a hero. "Also, he was the tool and traitor who let danger Into the fort. Be cause of that, atrip the coat from him, tie bis hands to bis back, and flog him out of the fort and through the town till you're aeen the last of blm." A quick smile of appreciation greeted the depth and the wisdom of this Judgment. And even Ser geant Andres only rolled up bis eyes once to heaven. For he could not even conceive a beating that would not be healed and Instantly for gotten for the sake ot a hundred silver pesos. So he wss swept out st the room. The general then demanded that the acoundrels who had entered his rooms and locked the door behind them should be produced Instantly. There was no one to produce! The whole of the two rooms bad been searched, and nothing had been found. People bad even looked out the windows . . . "Did you think that they were birds, that you looked out the win dows?" shouted the general, so loudly that bia mustache was thrown Into contusion by bis cry. "No, you fools! Vou rushed into the rooms Id a crowd, and the two thieves slipped out from behind cur tains and Joined you In your search. They milled around with you, like two more bead among so many cattle. And then they sneaked away from the fort. "They are In some inn now, drink ing and laughing at the soldiers ot Duraya. The garrison of the fort becomes a laughlng-Btock. The Presi dent will hear ot this. All the army will begin to laugh at cne' " He raised his voice a bit for each of the last three words, until his bout was a hoarse scream. His officers gave back a little. He looked as though be might charge them with bis lists at'any moment, and be had been known to do such a thing before this. ' And then be saw, between two soldiers at the door, the pretty face ef Roalta, from the Inn of Miguel Santos. Some of bis rsge dis appeared at once. He bad her brought In. As be watched her walk forward, he began to forget about verytblng. Even the emeralds of Our Lady turned Into bits of green glass, so far as ha wss concerned. However, he knew that a good way Is to sound the loudest trumpet first. '"po draw soldiers from their duty, 1 that Is treason!" he thundered at ber. "Do you know the punish ment for treason?" "To be stooa against a wall and shot down," said the girl. And ahe apoke with such a quiet, even voice that Ignaclo Estrada was moved. "You have a atory to tell," be said to ber. "Every woman can at least tell Ilea. Come out with your pack ot words." "I know nothing except poor Ser geant Andres," she said. "Why do you call him 'poor" Ser geant Andres?" "They were beating him with whips as 1 came In through the i gale." "He's your lover, eh?" "To me he Is nothing." "But you come to tap at the pos tern when It's bis turn to be on guard behind It!" shouted the general. "1 never have tapped at It. He told me how to knock If 1 wanted hlrn. I never wanted him." I Boy Scout Notes Troop No. S By Armlne Lewlr Troop No. 6 met tt the Washington chool PVbrunry 13 at 7:30 p. m. The meeting tu opmJ with colors and pledging of allegiance. Roll was taken and a number ot boyt paid feet to re-register (or another year In Boom ing. During teat period Oeorge Btg ler, Bill Taylor and Dean Ford pa ad tenta, aame of the boya pausing two or three. The game period waa omitted. Instead, atorlea were told and Information given on wild ani mala and their hablta. The colors were pouted, followed by the Scout oath and the troop wai dlnmiMed. Troop No. 8 By Larry 8chte, Jr.: Troop No. 8 held regular meeting February 13 at Washington school Colors were presented and roll called. V. B. Murshall took, the good turns dona by the boys during the past week. Compared with Uft week, a great Improvement has1 been made During the week Mr. Heyisml, Scout master, took a few boys out to pass testa whl!e some of the others went swimming in the Applegate. A gnme ai played, after which, "taps" sound ROMANCf BVCVAM CVANS t One of the othceia bit his Up to the blood to keep from smiling. "Ah," said the general, "and you sold your Information to thieves? Is that It? Thieves aud murderers and you knew them and you sold the news to them?" "What did I sell?" said the girl. "The sergeant owed money to a soor man. The poor man could never meet Sergeant Andres to ask for the money that was owing. So 1 told blm to .tap on the postern and how the sergeant would answer blm. That Is all." She made a little gesture with botb bands, raising ber sboulders a trifle. Sha smiled a bit and shook her bead so that all guilt might drop away from ber. "When did you tell this?" asked the general, grimly. "A week ten days ago." "To what man?" "I never knew hie name. But be waa drinking In the inn and com plaining about Sergeant Andrea That is all." "Where Is he now?" "How can I tell, Excellency? I only see what comes Into the Inn, and he baa not come there for many days." "Friends,'' said the general, sud denly, to bis .officers, "Is she speak ing the truth?" "She Is too pretty to tell a He," answered Don Luis. The general frowned, and tba frown pulled the sbag of his black balr down over his eyes. Then he waved bis band, saying: "The rest of you leave me. Remain outside the door. 1 am going to see what the truth of this may be." He added, with a roar, "Stop yout damned smiling and get out!" The officers got out In haste, and left Ignaclo Estrada alone with the girl. He pointed to a chair. She thanked him with a little bow and slipped Into it. For a time be remained with his thoughts. Then he arose and began to pace up and down the room with his left hand on the hill of bis sword. He knew how to move his band a little so as to bring from tbe scabbard an omlnoua and a martial sound ot bumming steel. He began to marshal words like soldiers; tor he felt that he was about to attack a prize greater to blm than any rich city. ""piIE wind bad fallen from a yell x to a moan and the rain no longer whipped those aching bodies which remained rigid on the ledge under tbe wlndowa of the governor'a room. "After a lime we'll grow cold and weak enough to fall," said Rubrlz to his friend. "And then we'll climb back Insldo to make a last stand. But we'll be no good, then. It would have been bettor If we bad fought It out In the beginning, when they broke down the door." He pointed down. Below them went the llghta of a patrol. Every tew minutes those lights had been passing. The fort ot Duraya was as tensely prepared aa though a great army were about to rush to the at tack, and every man was at his post "Still wait for a little." said Mon- tana. His Jawa ached with cold as ha spoke. Tbe words came shuddering out of his throat. "We still have some part of a long chance." 'What chance?" asked Rubric. One chance brought us up to the governor's rooms. Another chance may get ua out of tba tort again. Hush! That that Is Rosltn!" There had been a slight lull In the rain again, and he heard the sweet voice of the girl, penetrant because of Its high pitch. He worked quickly along the ledge until he was under the window of the bedroom again. He could look In over the sill, while Rubrli was posted on the far ther side, whispering: "Now that he's alone there with the girl we could leap In and kill him. Mon tana. That would be worth more than slaughtering a dozen ot the soldiers " "Hush!" commanded Montana. The girl hod come Into the bed room and was looking quietly around her. Behind her moved the governor, bis eyes glittering through tbe black shagglness of the hair that still pitched from his forehead. Gen eral Estrada was excited; but the girl had In her eyes that blank look which the Kid bad seen In them once before, as though thought were mas tering her senses. She turned around and looked un at the general with those blank eyes which were seeing the future, per haps. (Copyright. UJJ, Harper 4 Brotheri) RoslU turns triltor, tomorrow. ed and meeting adjourned. Troop No. 16 By Irwin Doty: Troop No. 10 met at Howard school Monday evening, with nearly a hundred per cent attendance, scoutmaster Harold L, Larsen discussed with the bovs several Important items including the Father and Son banquet to be held February 2ft; also the National Pcoiit Jamboree, in Washington. D. C . Aug ust 31-30. Opportunities which a Scout has who attends this Jamboree were mentioned. Before adjourning Mr, Larsen pre sented to the Scouts calendars given by the Mftlford National hank. 'Vhre calendars at an Issue in rememb rance of the 35 years In which Scout ing has existed. Colors were then re tired and troop dKmived. Troop No. 18. rle Point nrnlar meeting held Thusrrtay evenim: Thr new Scoutmaster, O. W. Miller, wa In charge. Most of the meeting spent in discussing the reorganiza tion of the troop ss to its patrols etc. Meeting adjourned at 0 p. m KtNOHTON. Jinlo. Krb. lfl (Art A rouMrm ",tllon eWni the Dune sud I)nrlic. of Kent thf rovsl tifwly-v-.l!t arrived m Kiim-ion todsy irom IVrt-nu-PrliKf UsIU. NEW YGilK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK. Feb. 18 It Is 4 o'clock 1 of a droopy afternoon and a column that should have been finished hours ago la no further along than this. I ttfi i&fra9fri Tiieie intervals of mental string halt flash out of nowhere with the numbing force of lightning. Zip and there's a com plete blank. Yet somehow every columnist manages to limp In ahead of the A deadline. But ' 1 iuria. la laff nf 'UH4WI tne day la a lor.oiu fragment. He Is shipwrecked on & tatter of time, And there's the long night ahead to atare Into apace wondering If the seizure la temporary or permanent. The nightmare that clouds the hor izon of every writer Is that eternal horror: Am I written out? In the grip of such a dolor, he fattens his self pity with the most pathetic of fancies. He will pack the portman teaux and away, leaving perhaps a wistful little note: "I can't go on!" But morning paints the invariable rainbow. And he Is likely tearing Into his column and battering it out before noon. Somewhere there in analogy between such individual de spair and the mass of a glood trou bled world. One morning we awaken and It Is gone. Many of us are solaced In such paucity by a story told about Eu- S MATTER POP RRINOINO OP FATHER I MV-T5AT-4 -AU 'PICKETS ) V ! ? ? S l---3A -J jjll jPI - (Copyright, 193S. by His Btll gyndicatt, Inc ) jij TAILSPIN TOMMY A Sour Reception! . BEN WEBSTER'S CAREER & Few Questions . Rv EDWIN A P1 ...I ONLV F0U.OWIM PT-bkauce H6 AlPl TuoW MUSTfS BOCKS A MONTW W ABSOLUTELY T DO I ? ANYBODY CHEETS INSTRUCTIONS BV VJ r5 ESS tuVo, nucprt El AND MY GRUB-SAY YOU WANT ONE WITH IN THE ORCUS I POSTIN' OUR BILLS OVER YOURS- h, 9 HFSlPik ' Jf i Lu to ?no L i S AIN'T COIN' TO OFF V U ? S BUSINESS KNOWS 1 IF I HAD ANOTHER JOB I yO--Tfh TUATk SV NO V V M A JOB- ARB U? T- -f THAT ARCHIE. CHIRP IS WOULDN'T BE ) ?tif I ' ntJpuT WKriZitr, g-VN-- -H SClil A SQUARE SHOOTER. AND J? THE NEBBS Good Advice I ' RUDV UUMV OOKJ'T X r-JOT SET. I X f IF 1 HMD WEVER BOJSHT A ""S A GAMBLE f SUR.S. TS A SMBLE" 1I-QVS A VOU SELL THAT HA.VEMT GOT ) IT I'D BE OO BOCKS POOLERS JUST SUCP05E IX V iSfo'T EVERVTHlUG 1 t r ot STOCK?VOUVEC GOT EO-"3l- COUSW I AMD IC I'D WAVE: 50L.D IT 1 SOE5 DOLOIsJ ft A oAMBLE? THEOULy 616 5MAR.T A PROp,T ANJD VOO K Ne"r VvESTETSDAV 1 LUOULDrO'T HAVE THEiiE'5 AT LEAST OlFFEGLeMCE ISIWTME ! GUV MOUO - I ca,NJ'T (SO BROKE: ) ' AcO PROFIT TODAVy TUJO UJAV5 FOR. ODOS- UJHEW 1 GET I ME OO V TAHilrO& A OHOPX ( lvMS'A.Ail'f1 rf-T T?SS AMVTHIWS TO SO THROUSH LU1TH TWlS DEAL ujiviKjes. no t iVJr0v! 57 Kk. a biwoallevme for ffsr I WONOEB IF MACCIE WILL LET ME CO OUT TO-NlCHT' I WAWT TO Goto the ake-hanole-I MAKE' BALL- 7Z I- K ! Iriic-r- t K-, Crt' Si in i jSN rn gene Field. He had come to a full stop with hie column In the Chicago days and was floored. Finally In that cut-glass handwriting he sent this note to the managing editor: "I give up. There'll be no column tomor row." As he waa slipping Into his coat for Jake's around the corner a reply came: "Theres' a printer down stairs whose three children are dan gerously 111 with scarlet fever. He's not giving up." Field removed his coat and knocked out one of the best columns of his career. The most exquisite wrtlngs flower from the depths. Key wood Broun has not written a more graceful essay than the one that followed within few hours the passing of his former i wife, Ruth Hale. The finest editorial I recall was William Allen White's broken-hearted farewell to his beau- ! ttful daughter tragically killed by j fall from a horse. The greatest works I of Daudet, Proust, Heinle and Mere j dlth were ground out In the agony of pain and misery, Writers and their, art are remind ful there are no literary salons anymore.- The Richard Watson Gliders back-ln-the-yard chalet was once a cosey refuge and still later the Oliver Herfords Sunday afternoons a urea ted a long remembered charm. Every body who waa anybody came early and staid late. It was where Clssle Loftus first regaled with her now famous Impromptu mimicries. The still later Algonquin Round Table Is no more. Nearest to the salon Is Louis Bromfleld's room In that hotel. The glossiest of the sophisticates have been gathering there. But Bromfleld la soon returning to France. Not many writers stand at the head of the class In punctuation. I have a dash pox breaking out In a rash now and then timt scatters one here, one there and two for Sister Su sie. In reaching an impossible passe MAGGIE.- KIM I GO Out TO-NiCHT? I would- theres' nothing quite like the good old dash. It bridges much Ignorance. A writer perhaps heeds punctuation so little because he can always blame the proof reader. It Is his Job. And he's welcome to It, with love, kisses snd a couple of semi -colons. That Is the why of A. C. Blumen thai's block-long beige-toned car. He was on a London curb awaiting a taxt when he saw the enormous limousine purr by. He told hla taxi to follow and It did to a pretentious house skirting Hyde Park. Blumenthal top ped out and saw the limousine oc cupant was a strikingly beautiful lady. He craved her pardon and In quired: "Is It presumptlous to ask where one may purchase a car like yoxirs?" She broke Into a merry laugh "It Is not," she said, "my husband Is the head salesman. Come Inside and meet him." Blumenthal did, ani over a cup of tea the deal was closed. Likely the runner-up for the Zieg feld paslon for telephoning Is Rex Cole. He has phones In every room of his house Including the baths. 11 he has trouble getting anyone on the phone he has a special one Installed for his exclusive use. When his friends go to the hosplatl. he doesn't i send flowers but has a bedside un listed phone Installed for direct out side contacts. All of which makes a rather pat paragraph on which to ring off. (Copyright. 1935. McNaught Syndicate) War On Rats Opens. PORTLAND, Feb. 18. (AP) The city dumping grounds, trenched and , pock-marked like a miniature sector of a shell-blasted battleground will soon be the locale of a death-dealing gas attack. Hordes of rats which i have built the trenches and scratch- , ed out the holes, will be the vie- '. tlms of the deadly gas. Bythe wav- u vr E n ' YOU'VE NEVER TAKEN MY ?)iSTER OUT OMCE SimCE "omE w aS beem VlSlTlMG LS- VELL I IM))T UPON VOU TAKIMG HER OUT TO-NIGHT SUBURBAN HEIGHTS THE PARTY NEXT DOOR (Copyright, 1935. by The Bali Syndicate, Inc.) uSitufe 1 I I Z'lh mm am tfif 60ES 1b SLEEP, -WANKfOL THM "far. NEIGHBORHOOD K SO OUlXf AND PEACEFUL renewed commotion as 1he 6rimbles return because they' cant 6eT Their car oW UMLE5S 01HER cars are moved SUDDEN SHRIEKS FROM EvERV OrJE.ESPEClALlY FRED PERLEY, AS MILT 6RISSBY STARTS BACK- iN6 his car. into -Tree there he is. kathetrime- AMD HE IS COiMG TO TAKE VOU OUT- , Pf fjfea p(m I a k q ' A" p pjw laps obs THAT'9 FiME--! DIDN'T HAVE AN ESCORT FER TO-NiGht- .fwELL.- VOU ft K i MR IS AROUSED BV .SUDDEN BABBLE OF VOICES OW FRONT PORCH NFXf Door, remembers per- ARE .HAVING A PAJtfY- AFTER MUCH 6TARTIN6 OF EW 6INES AND CALUN6 BACK AND FORTH, CARS ARE MOVED ANP QlIET DESCENDS A6WN CARS BE6IN -TO FAPE INTo TS- 1AKCE - ALi EXCEPT THE WIMPLES', MRS- WIMPLE HAVIK& MISLAID A 6L0Vf. WHERE DO WANT To GO '. Hi l SV v 1 imii By GLUYAS WILLIAMS frit 6RIMBLB,AR0L06IZN6 FOR HAIIN6 10 IEAVT EARlV 600lSVS APE CALIXP AND All 15 aUIEI" A6AJN SNOOZES, BEIN6 ROUSED AIMOSf AT ONCE BV FINAL BREAKIN6 UP OF PARTY', EdER'r'&ODY SHOUfiKS WOR-BYfff 10 EUERVBDPY ELSfc WIMPLES LEftVE AT LAST. FRED TERLEV OM HIS PORCH EltQBIMS THANK 600DNESS, "THAT'S 0VR, AND ALL IS OJJIE.1 A6AIN Bv 0 M Payne By Hal Forrest Rv Snl Het By George ttlcmanuf TO THE AVE -HANDLE MAKERS' BALL ME ARM, LADY- LET'S NOT BE LATE - tt9 4)i U