DISTINCTIVE BO PROGRAMS On Your Radio "FRIENDSHIP TOWN" FRIDAY, 8:00 P. M., C.5.T. NBC Coast to Coast Network Vaseline RIO. U. ?. PAT. OFF. PREPARATIONS COUNT VON LUCKNER Count von Luck m er, noted German f*?a raider, who spins yarns of the seven seas in the nulla series ??Ad venturing with Count von Lurkner.*' Will Show How Crop Estimates Are Made Crop Reporting Board Will Take Listeners Behind the Scenes. Listeners will be taken behind the scenes to hear an explanation of how the government Crop Reporting Board prepares the estimates of crop and live stoek production which its members announce regularly in the National Farm and Home Hour when W. I<\ Callander, chairman of the board, speaks in the Department period of the National Farm and Home* Hour on Tuesday, January 12. Callander will describe graphically how the Board analyzes statistics collected from 300,000 farmers, and from this mass of data makes the monthly estimates which are con sidered the most authoritative in the world. ? ? ? For stockmen, a group of three economists will explain the recent course of prices for beef cattle, hogs, and sheep, in tlie program of Wednesday, January 'i3. ? ? ? The Federal Farm Board will con tinue its series of talks during "1932 setting forth the progress made in various lines of co-operative organ ization. ? ? ? Future Farmers will hear their special monthly program on Mon day, January 11, and on Saturday, January 1G, there will be a broad cast of tho monthly program by the National Orange. ? ? ? Thirty-two measures of music writ ten during the closing announce ment of the National Farm an-i Home' Hour, is the speed record of Harry Kogen, director of the Home steaders orchestra. As the announ cer began, Kogen became aware of the fact that two of his violinists did not have the music for the "Homesteaders* Waltz.** tho closing theme number. Kogen wrote and finished it in the nick of time. * * * Aiming to stress the Importance of forest fire prevention, the United States Fores' service will broadcast the second in a series of dramatic skits on Thursday, January 14. "With Uncle Sam*s Forest Rangers" features episodes in the life of an ??old ranger" and Its youthful cub ossistant. ? ? * The Future Farmers of America will present their regular monthly broadcast in the National Farm and Home Hour on Monday, January 11, featuring news of Future Farmers activities and talks by the'r leaders Heart of the North THE STORY Six bandits hold up the steam er. Midnight Sun. on the Mac kenzie. kill Jimmy Montgomery, and escape with gold dust and furs. At the Mounted Police post at Fort Endurance. Sergt. Alan Baker disputes with his Incom petent superior. Inspector Hask ell. regarding plans for the cap ture of the bandits. Baker starts out In the police launch with five men. At the MacMillan trading post. Joyce MacMillan is thrilled at the arrival of the police launch. She had expected to mar ry Baker, and hid been ntunned at news that he was to marry Elizabeth Spaulding. Stolen furr are found on the MacMillan place and evidence points to Joyce's father. Joyce defends him. Alan leads his expedition up the Big Alooska and catches sight of the bandits. Compelled by Haskell's foolish order* -.o divide the party, Alan is at a disadvantage. CHAPTER IV ? Continued They splashed out of the pond and into the flags. In a frantic effort to I roach the lake edge. The marsh reeds clutched at them, tripped them, wrapped around their legs. Savagely they tore their way on through to get into the clear in time to help Larry stop those bandits. As he swung his clubbed rifle, smashing a pathway in front of him, Alan heard a lone gun cr-aa-ck over on the lake, and heard the snarl of half a dozen repeating weapons an swering it like an echo. They drowned, they overwhelmed it. . . . The lone gun did not speak again. It seemed hours to him that he fought and tore through the dense flags, to reach the open and help a comrade who was standing up against six rifles. Before he broke through to the clear, the uneven battle had ended. As he burst out to the lake edge, he had a glimpse of the police canoe drifting helplessly out In the middle; and across at the far side he saw two long blurred objects just en tering the deep-water channel. Numbed and dazed at those six men escaping, there was a moment when Alan could only realize that his patrol had failed. That those criminals had vanished into the twilight and were lost in this watery wilderness, with pursuit utterly hopeless now. In the next moment he heard a sound, a sound like & groaning voice calling his name. It drew his eyes to the drifting* police craft. What was It doing out there? Like a flash he understood what Larry had done. When the bandits started across the lake to escape, Larry must have seen he could never stop them In the semi darkness except at point-blank range. In the police canoe he must have come fearlessly out at them, alone. This first deadly volley had got him. That groaning voice was Larry's. Bill mme bursting through to the clear. Alan whirled on him: "Bill ! They got Larry. He's wounded. Hard hit. Here . . ." Tossing Bill his belt-gun and broken rifle, he ran out Into breast-deep water and struck out powerfully for the drifting canoe. By a provident mercy he reached It In time. With half a dozen holes spouting water into it, the craft was filling, tilting, about to overturn. Larry lay at the bottom of It, writh ing In pain. By heroic struggles, swimming, push ing a dead-weight ahead of him, Alan got the craft Into shoal water, put his hand under its keel then, and kept It at!dat. lie dragged It to the bank just as Bill came splashing around the lake edge to join him. "Alan! What happened? Where' d they go?** "They got away. They're gone ? gone. Forget it. Ilelp me. Bill ? with I. ry ? w Together they bent over their bleed ing. stricken comrade, and together they lifted him tenderly ashore. CHAPTER V The Broken Sword By the light of an electric torch Alan cat away Larry's clothing and examined his wounds. Larry had been shot twice, and both wounds were fear some. One bullet, a ricocheting slug, had struck him squarely In the knee, cruelly shattering the bones. The sec ond had pierced his chest high up. Just beneath the shoulder, and had passed entirely through his body. Steeling himself to the ordeal, Alan worked desperately with tourniquet and tiny medicine kit till he had stanched the bleeding. Before he fin ished, Larry was rousing faintly from the bullet shock. Half an hour later, when Alan had done- all he could and BUI had man aged to patch the canoe, they turned their faces toward home. In defeat. In Borrow, In an anguish over Larry. Alan picked bin cp In his arms, by William Byron Mowery? (WNU Service.) Copyright by William Byron Mo we nr. ' gently and tenderly, trying to keep that fatal bleeding from starting afresh. With Bill following him, stag gering under the weight of canoe, guns and pack, he headed back toward the Alooska branch. For an hour they stumbled along, plowed through bog and mire, groped through the tall impending flags. It was an hour of darkness, of blind heroic struggle. But they reached the Alooska branch at last and set the canoe to water ; and makiug Larry a soft bed of flags, they began their sorrowful Journey. With no sleep In more than flfty hours, with all that long hard chase behind them, they were on the verge of exhaustion, and could make no time. Their hands were raw with blisters from paddle work: their faces were bleeding from insect bites; their whole bodies ached intolerably. They were muddied, wet. gaunt with hunger, heart-sick froin the disgraceful failure of their patrol. But they refused to stop or rest ; Larry had to he taken home quickly; the hours were a mat ter of life or death to him. With dogged courage they drove them selves on. With his spirits at so low an ebb. the picture of that fur park in Dave MacMillan's shed rose before Alan's eyes, and lie foresaw the inevitable consequences to flow from that dis covery. In his exhaustion, with all the buoyancy of hope drained out of him, he no longer could feel th.it some how he was going to get Joyce's fa *?<?/ - They Refused to Stop or Rest. ther off lightly. He must take Dave Into Endurance and enter charge: and now, with these bandits escaped, Dave would bear the whole brunt of the law's retribution. He felt that all the rest of his life he would be haunted by the memory of Joyce's pale face, frightened und. anguished. In the cold gray dawn of yesterday. In this whole miserable business ? Jimmy Montgomery dead, Larry In the shadow of death, thnt tragedy hover ing over innocent Joyce MacMlllan, the bandits escaped and the patrol dis graced ? In all this evil-starred affair, only one thought held any comfort for Alnn. It was a vengeful thought, born of a savage and vengeful mood. He held a sword now over Inspector Has kell. Haskell had ordered this patrol to be split. Out of his Ignorance and jealous anger, he had issued that crazy order, and it had wrecked the patrol. His gross incompetence, which here tofore had been only a vague charge hard to prove, now stood out glaringly, in all Its inescapable guilt. Alan swore to wield this sword In his hand. By mid-afternoon of that Intermin able day they came to the Ilrst strag gling trees at the Thal-Azzah edge. At deep twilight they reached the Alooska Forks and the anchored launch. Pedneault had just returned from his useless trip up the south branch. In a few words he understood all that had happened. With one glance at his ' spent and staggering partners, he took their heavy burden from their shoul j ders. Alan flung himself down besjde Bill, driven to the limit of human endur ance. His last waking thought was the grim satisfaction of knowing that he held a sword over his guilty ar rogant officer and could bring him to account at last. ? ? ? ? ? ? ? In his cabin Inspector Haskell sat behind his desk, waiting for Alan Baker to come in nnd report. He was thinking, thinking hard; and f??r all his self-control his nerves were i;impy. Over In a corner Whipple sat at the table, pretending to write but In reality waiting there, as Haskell had bidden him. Something cold had gripped Haskell half an hour ago when | he saw the patrol returning without the six bandits and with Constable | Younge desperately wounded. He knew the details of that patrol al ready: Whipple had come up and pri vately told him. How the bandits had headed for the Tlial-Az/.ah, as Br.ker had warned. How Raker bad run those six to earth and cormered them, i How Pedneault and the other two con stables had been r hundred ami forty ! miles away during that crucial hour. ! As he knew, this crime was the most I spectacular in years along the Three J Rivers. The defeat administered to the police was the most stinging in a decade. This incident would have re verberations at headquarters. Suoer- i intendent Williamson would Invrtti- j pate. The very first question of that j veteran old officer would be : "Why in h ? 1 did you order Hake.- ; to divide that patrol? Splitting up his j detail that way ? didn't you realize I that neither party would be able to i handle those criminals?" Not deluding himself. Haskell knew he was caught. He kr?w he had j made a capital mistake In a Force where n man's first mistake Is usually ; his last. In these thirty minutes all j bis prospects of promotion In service, : of smashing Alan Raker, of swinging Elizabeth Spauldlng to himself, had ! come tumbling down like a house of cards, and he was thoroughly fright ened. It would spell finis to his career If the facts of the patrol became known. The blame of this shameful defeat lay squarely at his door. Baker surely realized that : Raker surely was going to use that sword against him. It was war now, open and avowed war between them. Step by step, logic led hrni to the one and only recourse he had. If Wil liamson ever found out be had or dered that patrol split, lie was sunk. Therefore Williamson must not fiiiJ out. There was a way to keep him from knowing the facts. Haskell tried to still his conscience by thinking that Raker had wanted the patrol to fall. If that was so, then this measure was exactly what the sergeant had coming to him. He ought to be smashed, and smashed hard. . . , You've got to fight fire with fire. . . . Stil! In his muddied and torn uni form. Alan came down the slope toward Haskell's cabin, intending to bludgeon some hard and fast terms out of the guilty inspector or shoot a complaint over his head to Superin tendent Williamson. If Haskell did not give In to his demands, he meant to send a half-breed runner to the Royal Signal corps station at Resolu tion and flash a message to the division commander that would start an avalanche. Over at Mrs. Drummond's house where Joyce had gone, candles were gleaming In the windows. Across at Father Claverly's tiny hospital, Larry Yonnge lay fighting for his life. Up the slope at barracks Dave MacMlllan was locked In the police "butter-tub,** charged with being accomplice to rob bery and murder. Joyce had reported secretly: "Alan, I talked with him. He Isn't guilty! He never had heard a whisper ahout these bandits, till I told him. He couldn't have deceived me!" That same Impression had been Alan's ? "He couldn't have deceived me." There was something behind thfit pack of furs which liadn*t come to light yet and which would explain those damning circumstances. It was his conviction that Pave Mac Mlllan was not guilty at all. He meant to put up a fight for Dave. It was easy to resolve that, but the actual job was the hardest thing he had attempted in his whole life. The only way under heaven of clearing Dave was to capture the guilty men and either wring a confession out of thorn or hold out king's evidence as a lure and get them started talking against each other. Which way would they try to es cape? They'd go east when they left the Thal-Azzah. They'd go across the Great Karren3 to Hudson's bay and try to pick up passage on a fishing smack, or go east and south toward The Pas In Manitoba. There was only one route leading east out of the Thal Azzah, and they'd have to take it. It was an old Tinneh trade route, the Inconnu river. Alan meani: to lead a patrol to the Inconnn. As he strode into the cabin, he saw Haskell waiting for him, coolly smok ing a cigarette. It seemed to Alan that the man actually did not realize that his Ignorant orders had wrecked the patrol and that the whole blame and shame of It lay at his door. (TO BE CONTINUED.) New York State Led New York state was the first stat? to license motor vehicles, beginning 1b 1901 and collecting $934 that year. KILL COLD GERMS NAVAP YAPOR Clears head instantly. Stops cold sprecding. Sprinkle your | hcndkerchief during the day ? your piliow at night. Learned Men Poor Speller* A professor who misspelled ten of the U? words submittal won a spell - ins bee held by Harvard faculty mem bers. Kver.v word was misspelled at least once by thp professors. Such words as "all right," "desiccate" and "niece" were among the outstanding stickers. A Nagging Backache May Warn of Kidney or Bladder Irregularities A persistent barkachc. with bladder irregularities and a tired, nervous, depressed feeling may warn of some dis ordered kidney or bladder con dition. Users everywhere rely on Doan*s Pills. Praised for more than 50 years by grateful users the country over. Sold by ill druggists. I A MIMETIC FOR JNEKIDNiyS Money and Disposition Cora ? Would you marry a man for his money? Dora ? Not exactly. But I'd want my husband to have a lovely dispo sition, and if he didn't have money he'd very likely be worried and ill natured. ? Kansas City Star. Denver Mother Tells Story Nature controls all the functions of our digestive organs ex cept one. We have control over that, and it's the function that causes the most trouble. See that your chil dren form regular bowel habits, and at the first sign of bad breath, coated tongue, biliousness or constipation, give them a little California Fig Syrup. It regulates the bowels and stomach and gives these organs tone and strength so they continue to act as Nature intends them to. It helps build up and strengthen pale, listless, underweight children. Children love its rich, fruity taste and it's purely vegetable, so you can give it as often as your child's appetite lags or he seems feverish, cross or fretful. Leading physicians have endorsed it for C>0 years, and its overwhelming sales record of over four million bot tles a year shows how mothers de pend on It. A "Western mother, Mrs. R. W. Stewart, 4112 Raritan St., Denver, Colorado, says: "Raymond was terribly pulled down by consti pation. He got weak, fretful and cross, had no appetite or energy and food seemed to sour in his stomach. California Fig Syrup had him romp ing and playing again In Just a few days, and soon he was back to nor mal weight, looking better than he had looked In months.'* Protect your child from imitations of California Fig Syrup. The mark of the genuine is the word "Cali fornia" on the carton. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM mowm Dandruff Stop* H*lr FaiUi InMrt* Color i?d a*?tTto?mV ^ SHAMPOO ? Id?d for dm in connection with Pirkcr'tHairBal?m.MBk?tha hair ?oft and fluffy. 60 cent* by mail oratdniir fiata. Hiacox Chemical Work*, t*atchoffue. N.Y. W. N. U., ATLANTA. NO. 2-1932.

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