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Updated: May 12, 2025


"I'd better rouse Joe and let him keep track of one, in case they should separate." A touch on Joe Duncan's shoulder served to arouse him, though he was in a deep sleep. He sat up, demanding: "What is it? Are we torpedoed?" "No, but we may be," was Blake's low answer. "Keep quiet and follow me. Secor and Labenstein have both gone up on deck, I think. We'd better follow."

"Enough of this!" broke in the captain. "You are our prisoners, and you may be thankful you are alive," and he tapped his big automatic pistol significantly. "March!" he ordered. Labenstein and Secor picked up the boxes of exposed film containing the army views and went out of the hut followed by some of the soldiers.

"Though I can't imagine what Secor and Labenstein, if those two fellows are really here, could want of them." "Maybe they just picked them up on the chance that they would give away some of the American army secrets," suggested Charlie. "And they would show our boys were drilling, fighting, and all that.

And as luck would have it, we came on the scene at the same time." "I wish we'd been a little ahead of time," complained Macaroni. "Then we might have gotten back with our films." "No use crying over a broken milk bottle," remarked Joe. "That's right," Blake said. "Anyhow, there we were and there Secor and his German friend were when the others came and " "Here we are now!" finished Joe grimly.

If it were the real thing, now, I'd shoot; but I'm going to save the film on the chance of getting a sub or a torpedo. This is a sort of bluff on the part of you and me, anyhow. Blake wanted to get us out of the cabin while he tackled Secor, I reckon. What his game is I don't know."

And then Blake looked across No Man's Land that debatable ground between the two hostile forces as though to pierce what lay beyond, back of the trenches which were held by the Germans, though, at this point, the enemy was not in sight. "Could it, by any chance, have been Secor and Labenstein who got our films?" asked Joe. "Very possible," agreed Blake.

"You have been working hard of late, and I imagine the boys will have something to discuss that will be of great interest to you," added Mrs. Butler with a knowing smile. "W-e-l-l," answered Tad. "If you think I ought to, of course I will. "What are you going to do?" "I am going out to take tea with Mrs. Secor. I will leave your supper in the oven and you can help yourself.

But he accepted Lieutenant Secor as a co-worker, on the latter's representation that he, too, was a friend of Germany, or rather, as the Frenchman made Labenstein think, was willing to become so for a sum of money. So the two seemingly worked together. "And it was thus you knew us," said the lieutenant to the boys.

This change was made on March 3, 1890. Judging by results, it has been amply justified. The institution is doing a large and splendid work. In the Educational Review for May, 1908, Mr. W. B. Secor had an article under the caption, "Credit for Quality in the Secondary School." Mr.

I didn't believe it possible that Secor could be in with this German, but perhaps he is, and maybe he'll betray his own countrymen. Either one may give the signal, but if they do we'll be ready for them. No more moving pictures for us, boys, until we get to the war front. We've got to be on this other job!" "But hadn't we better tell Captain Merceau?" asked Charlie.

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