Show I A DOG ROBBERS CHARGE BYP Y BLAcK What says I 0 rats says I the bloke busted you in the jaw md ye didnt do nothln to im You aint no goood I says and I lays in and knocks the kid about goood Now says I when I was through will ye lick that bloke or will I pound you again So we hunts up that bloke tho was a heap bigger than Sammy and I seen it was a square do and Sammy knocked im out in the tenth round Spe If It hadnt been for that lrckln that I gave Sammy Owen that made im fight most desperate that kid would have been a disgrace to the ward ro he would I tell ye fellers there wont be no monkey business with Lieutenant Sammy Owen from Vest Point cause I seen to that when Sammy was so high m I was champion cham-pion lightweIght of the ward 1 was the makin of Sammy and he thinks the world 01 me see In the long lingering twilight of m evening of midsummer a number of troopers sat on the long porch of the wooden barracks Out pn tIle parade ground retreat being comfortably over and the days work done the band wa gatIHred about the flagstaff playing away the heat of the sun and welcoming welcom-ing the cool shades of night Spud lfurphy was the especial object of interest in-terest to the men in that a new lieutenant tenant had joined the troop that day md Spud was It seined well acquainted ac-quainted with the young officers lam ily history Even the first sergeant Sl far relaxed his dignity as to step out from the orderly room and ask a question ques-tion or two of the bulletheaded bright eyed soldier from New York City Twas this way said Murphy my father and Sammys father was pals one and when I was a tough young fellow fighting my way through the Id ward I took to Sammy who was a ittle kid and educated him in the ways md manners of men as is men Twas me who learned him to put up his little Sets first But say old Owen was a 1 1b Julu he was and went in for hem a politician and got made an alderman md waltzed in the boodle for all has 1 h-as worth My father hadnt that kind of getup So when old man Owen got rich as a Jew we dldnt mix no more with the crowd see Sammy l1e goes away to a dude school and Ills dad he goes to congress and they pulls out from our block and moves up town though say the Owens Is always our ward boys an wes proud of them SW Then I enlists in this her bloomln troop Say thats nine years ago but them buys in New York remembers me still and whats the matter with the time they give men when I go back on ave to see them Say twas great Sammy goes to West Point md here lie comes He thinks the world of mt does Sammy A tall Olin man with the straps of a second lieutenant came out from the lIst house a bachelors quarters on of 1icf1S row and crossed the parade round comin directly toward the barracks Its him crIed Murphy in suppressed sup-pressed excitement Id know his mfash red hair a mile off Gee TQ think that little Sammy would ever grow up to be my lieutenant The oflicer passed the length of the porch saluted by the men and entered the orderly room to which the first sergeant preceded him In a few mln utfS Spud Murphy was called and Cft his comrades complacently exptCt antHow How do you do Murphy Mid Owen noddln1 and Spud felt chilled In the seclusion of the orderly room he thought with a sense of aggrieveincnt the new lieutenant his old protege of the block might have condescended t > shake hands The trooper stood however at attention and eyed the new titlcrn curiously The lieutenant I neat himself strl1gl1tOlU years Qf stern training at thc military academy lad given him that soldierly bearing whkh Is a West Pointer can never lose entirely Hc ivae well set uP but to Rpud Murphys critical ce accustomed to the clean and wholesome face colors of the plain troopers the dead dull gray of Owens cheek their sunken panness the wateriness of his uncertaIn uncer-taIn nervous eyes were as a cold cloth on the soldiers enthusiasm over his old friends rise in station Owen pricked at the blotting pad of the desk before which he sat pricked aimlesslY witla long and twitching fingers Murphy said he I have asked thh sergeant about detailing a man to look after my horses and so on He has suggested you Would you be willing Jt wHl be a considerable help of course as far as money is concerned to you Spud squirmed Ever ofiCer has his dogruhbr 01 servant but such details aie not those which the smarter aol diplS aspire to gain There is something some-thing menial about the position which ic tr many a man offensive Spud had lila opinion of dogruhbers in general He was therefore about to reject tlll offer peremptorily when the young officer looked at him with an appeal in his eyes which closed Spuds lips 11 have been m Murphy 11e said slowly or I 5ho ld have joined four months afro I an1 not quite well yet and II should lice some one nota completely a stranger about me for a tme at least Spuds memory at the sound and lcnn or the appeal flashed back to CiUS long past when the man now his oliher cane to him as a little Ihlnlng boy for protection always cheerfully acorded These dogrubbing details aint mst m-st if Sanll1eutenant he said but 111111 help you out TIle sergeant grinned for Spuds bluntness of speech as traditional In the troop but Owen smiled faintly and his eyes shot up at Murphy with a passing gleam of kindness 15 the old familiar mannrilm tIIckerd flamellke from the ding embers of his borhoo firsThank Thank you hI said as if greatly relieved and passed out The troop doubtless had many sneers to cast upon Spud lurphys abandon mUlt of principle but It was not a safe thing to speak too plaInly before lieN lie-N w Yrkers face Spud therefore disdaining xplanation assumed charge next d of Owens horse took his supper and reported duty at the lieutenants lieu-tenants cuarters in the evening for orders He was amazed to find the ot cer 11 different creature His cheeP was flushed his ee was bright he was filling his room with the music of his h1st as he moved about and he greeted Spud with gay familiarity He talked grrlously Qf old times of the sidewalks of his childhood he laughed boisterously at remembrance of his great fght the penalty of losing which would have been a severe thrashing from Spud Murphy ought to have ben delighted He was at first indeed but the voice of Own was too hilarious his words too tumultuous In their outpouring out-pouring his laugh too boisterous Ten eas of garrison and camp had made the trooper a stickler for etiquette He oww 11 wel that such fnlarlt 0 ith an ordinary bucksnldler was cut of plae He knt ery well that that familiaritY wus the worst of all possIble things for discIpline and order Therefore h1 waxed cold and eyed the loquacious subaleran closely rheu he took the big glass of whisky offered to him drank It stnding wih punctilious respt and withdrew a god deal worried wor-ried in his mInd as to the future of a officer in whom for the glonr and honor of the old ward he felt the greatest great-est interest He drink he muttered a he crossed the parade to barracks That little devil Sa taken to drnkln O htI And long oter taps he dogrbbe lay awakc frowning at the mosquito bar over him The worst thing is he pondered the Kid didnt get that dos at the I club like an officer and a gentleman HI swallows his mPHrhlp 1 lr him self in his roo Sammys a lOne fisherman fish-erman and theyre 10 good He was at Owens quarters before reveille The lieutenant lay on the sit tngroom lounge his blouse open breathing stentorlousl He had not ben to bed On the door beside him lay an empty botte His fingers hang lag lifelessly to the floor semed to feel for H Spud shook him silently but wIth little effect The servant ran to the hydrant in the a and came back with a bucket of water which he sluice vigorously over the lieutenants face and chest Il put another coat on hIm somehow gave him a fie sip of liquor and hustled him out on the parade just in time to report his troop present and set down to morning stables sta-bles blesThis here rackets got to be I stopped said Murphy i either Sammy I Sam-my Owen or mes going to face New York again and hold up our heads In I the war Gee Hell be under arrest In a week at this rate From that day Spud Murphy went about his new work with an altogether unusual reticence and with a faithful I devotion hich was noel He seldom now declaimed as he had been wont to declaim on the valor and virtues of j his beloved clts inhabitants among whom he reckoned dearest hIs erstwhile erst-while neighbors the prosperous Owens But i the new lieutenants name was I mentioned jn his hearing his quIck eye turned sharply on the speaker and his I big ears coked up lIke a terriers He j heard little said against his master and protege for Owen attended to his routine duties and did not attempt radical rad-ical reforms after the manner of some ambitious johnnlescomeIateh Grad ualy a feeling of pity spread in the troop for the youngster who was so quiet and courteous yet so nervous at times and always so grafaced and unhealthy looking As for his fellow ofcers they found that in spite of his apparent delicacy Owen could do faIrly faIr-ly well all things that they did He rode shot danced boxed played poker or billiards with that decent average success which excites neither comment nor jealous He never drank and was methodical in his duties so that his colonel thought well of him as a man I who in time would make a model ron mental quartermaster or fill some such place where rivers were never ex pccted to be jet on fire But Spud THing home in these days to his old father a saloonkeeper in the dearly loved ward grew menda clously heroic in his descriptions of Sammys successes Hesn honor to us all said Spud and well be prouder proud-er of him some day even than of his father I hear old Ow ns to so to the senate He may be president yet and Samn he a general in tIme if the saints allow a war Hooray for the old ward Its men we breed there I Spud ginned sardonically as he wrote but how proud old Murphy was to show that letter acoss the bar to his ancient chum the member from the district Owen senior blew his nose violently vi-olently when he red it and straightened straight-ened up like a youngster He slipped a 20 bill In an envelope with an encour aging line to Spud suggesting that his agns pul In Washington might do something some-thing for an old friends son Spud spent the money honorably with the boys across the post traders bar but asked for no help through Washington Twill break the old mans hear thought he when the truths known Little Dr May who was known to ofcers and men alike so immediately appropriate was the nickname as the Kid was then the contract surgeon or citizen doctor attached to the post He was smoking his last pipe be let llimselr go He had hoped the nm life on the plains would help uim to freedom butSpud Murphy alone knew of the hopeless lonely light 1 th 1 bachelors qUarters He kept on lngSave me doctor save me The doctor spoke fo Spud who stooa off in the shadows watching Owen with a curious mingling on his broad face of pity sorrow contempt and aharpe Had he been like this before the Kid ase Twice sad Spud Not so bad but Ic had the worst tIme leplng it dark Tonight I was sure he was ausgesplele so lllye tIle thing up and I goes for you e Suddenly the man in the bed rose up with a screech hiS eyes reflecting hur 101 Instant Slud pounced 01 him and clapped a land on his month that I the sound might not penelte unfriendly I un-friendly ears He and theKld held the maniac down until the rJIXYSII iasaed Then May took a sringe from his pocket filled it and bared the patents tients arm tents Murphy he said after I while when the injection was raking effect why have you said nothing oC this Su fir Murphy answered he was once like a little brother o me when he was a kid In our ward Twould be eternal disgrace to the old man thats going to be our s lator and to all the boys and to my fath > land I l-and to me If lIe was bobtailelthat is got the G B him being officer and gentleman see W1ti think the world I of the Owenses seeThe see-The doctor looked at 111m curiQusl He had In his library a olum 11 dipsomania dip-somania others on heredity Sonic idea of the fight before the leutenant dawned upon him and een he shivered a lte at the thought of what Owen had ahead passed trough hidmmg his habit yet every moment fearing tftec tion and shame and open disgrace Amid do you expect to cute din of i he thoughtfully asked of the trust dogrubber Spuds face gloomed Im fond of a good thing on pay day doctor with the boys but jnl this here miserable racket Ie sworn off What t elI My rlghteu examlJle a3ut no good He breaks out 1 spells and there alnt no knowing when Sam niya going to brcale OUt Thats the worst Some day hell do it at the I wrong tme when 1 aint aroun ant then itl breale the old man heart He looked at the now sleeping officer in despaIr Wish hed get shot before It becomes known he muttered fiercely Doc for the boys will do anything you ask Doctor this Is for medont give It away Cure him Hes a good sort The Kid hummed gently Did the senator drnhard Murphy when he was trading In politics in that sweet land youre so fond ofnie wadh Why sure sir they all did said Spud but he took it like a maim And his father I suppose said the Kid grimly took It like a man and his and this pour devil Is the result Murphy my lad when you say your prayers or tel your heads or whatever you do pray that drinking may again become fahionableIn he Interests or Lieutenant Owen And in the meantime mean-time before he wakes and gets the blues you had better corral his cartridges cart-ridges I done that said Spud though it might b betel that way too Xo Murphy said the Kid That would be a had expose Soldiers must fill other people with bullets but should scrupulously respect their own persons The Kid respected private Spuds anxiety anx-Iety to save the unhappy lieutenant from dismissal He watched over Owens attack or malaria personally so that even that critical outbreak nf the manias passed unnoticed by the adjutant of men In a week Owen was back with the troop aver and thinner thin-ner Quieter and graver than ever hut with the same nerous courteousness whlch made his troopers as also his comrades regard him with a pitying liking The little doctor and Owen had a long private talk and It Is to be suased the Kid dabbled In nostra outside the regular pharmacy of the faculty for he and Owen took together four weeks leave of absence and the doctor brought the leutenant back to Spud looking hetter than ever he had since the craving had burst upon him Take him Murphy said the Kid confidently and you can let him have the run of the pistol cartridges The blessing of the ward Is on you said Spud with great Joy and thereafter there-after permitted hlmslf to mingle as freely I as in former days with time troop to talte his regular break at the post traders and to discuss the glories of the ward and of the Owen family as magnioquent as before Again tic old saloonkeeper receIved a later from his son which he showed to the senator sena-tor and again was the old lawmakers heart borne up wIthin him a he dreamed of gloryreal glory not of the political order whose hollowness he knewfor his boy For war nas In the air the Maine went don and then war come That war Was sIx m nth after the Kid had brought Owen back tp duty During the lat three of these the soul of Murphy Mur-phy ha been possessed with doubt Something was wrong with his charge just what 1w could not say I was not the old troublenot once hind the un holy thirst contumimed the omeerthat onsumel eeme l indeed to have left him throgh I the BtU doctors radical cure wllat ever it may mae been A something I of alteration wa In the eyeand step of Ule lieutenant Now lie was listless lIe took no part in social gatherings he avoided any more duty tan was ab solutely necessary Before when not incapacitated by his vice le had ben a burning student Indefatigable nl helping his troop to si rank in the regiment Books no longer interested him nor drills He cad not whether his men were marlsmen or sharpshooter sharpshoot-er Spud took heart of grace and wrote to the Kid who had ben sent to another station and the Kid rplie a I little anxious but hopefully I 1n changing his inherent nature in I one direction said he It is possible i 1at other traits may havu been wea ened but it is probable he will be his busy self again in time So long as the great object was attained by my cure I real dont care much about the rest But Spud did The troop was cray with delight at gettn the route for Cuba Owen disguised his own feelings froM every one but not from the watchful attendant Bully Spud ime4te etg moanedl hcle dont want to go rUd The dogrubber raged 1d it is to be feared Chat when In attendance on his matpr In the eclusion of the laters quarters things passed which had better bet-ter fitted the long gone days when they were only big boy and little boy on the block amid Spud had forced the child to i light or be thrashed I resuled in I Owens thrusting nside his lstesmess for a time and moving around with mme enthusiasm In the preparatans for departure Time dogrb bel howeYer was grievously embittered in heart as he watched the leutnants condlon By gee said he I asked him to cure him of drink but not to take all tie spirit out of him What tl A cowards worse than other thing Thent came about that t on a very r I 1jf i T11 4r31tL 3 T1 1 t i j 1 H SPUD R f WAS FELLED BY TEE SABER m fore turning in one night when a knock came to the outer door of his quarters Opening It the light of the ramp fell upon Spud lurphs face Doctor said the dognrbbr qullt h Lieutenant Owens Hlmlght bad i C come and see him The Kid put away the lamp askel sonic questons put a few things In his pokets and stepped off to Owens quarters at the end Qf the row somewhat some-what isolated from the rest Oven had the house all to himself Spud followed live paces behind as was seemly At the house he gained on the doctor and spoke heitatnsly Doctor rel soon see for ourelf and Its no use lying about it Ifi Its not agnst the rules and regla drink Ions will ye keep It tu yourself Its Dr May whire on his heel and stared at the man Xo one had ever Sn Lieutenant Owen drink He whirled again and entered and Spud Murphy followed 1im On the edge of the bed sat the un Imppy oung olcer shaking horribly while great drops 01 perpirliol trickled 10wn his cheek His face rs asimemm horror His eyes were full of a pitiful Doctor hI Mie and Iottmrej tn the KId save me For Gojs ruke save me The ceanshaen plump rsines of the Kids cheeks were in strong contract con-tract to the gray leanues of Owen As great was the difference between his cool firnel and Owens norrible unstrung condition Get back into bed ad the doctor doc-tor and tel me what all this Is i about Then followed a wretched ghastly scene as the young officer with shah voice and weak tears chattered lag tea chattrcl In cherenU He told of his last car at West PoInt where time ice Jd got 101d firmly of hm how he hul i ape detecton martehously nd how wlmeim on his lee afer graduation lIe had I hot day in the aferoon a ship strange In those waters crept closely in to the I Cuban coast She steJmed slowly along her bulwarks lined with watchful armed men whose wide gray cmpaig hats topped her Ede The silver beach I stretched a shining ribbon along the edge of the San and great clouds of surf sparkled In the sun as time waves brpke Pg the coralqeefs a little out I from he hOe Thb land wftimm lay like a garden of the nods as green as I fruitful to all semlng as peaceful A net of jungle of tailng thomy vine I and tropical bush with bamboos and banyans and clumps of cocoa palms I reached back from time beach rising gently until some mies Inland the dark ridge of the hills loomed In the I horizon No sound came fr1p1 the lan no foes foe-s himself as Hie ship drifted gen i thy In and then lay still some hundreds of yards from b1rl Swifty from her sides two long boats uere lowered and each was tilled with n1en with carbine ammuniion hpl nrlT nl t I LieutenentPaukmwjll take charge of bottt No1 Lieutenant Owen of No 2 said the commanding officer You have your instructions gentlemen GOOd luck to you In an hour or two I shall expect you back with the information and the scouts Boat No 1 was lying reedy and impatient Im-patient when Mr Pauks swung himself in the stern Give way men fd he See if we cant beat the other bat ashore Now I then he added to the Cuban at the tier look out for the reef Id as soon get there d1 ag wet I Vher Is No2 a soldier queried as they hot forward I Lieutenant Owen said the commanding com-manding officer impatiently what Istle Is-tle matter Your men arc all in the A voice from the stern of the boat spoke up gently sedate and respectful aH ned be yet with a curious note In The things is all wih me lieutenant I Theres nothing left behind It said Owen started at Spuds rebuke a re I I luke only to his ears and In his turn swung over and seated himself in the ster close to his attendant Give way he sid but there inca no jolly appeal to his squtd to beat the others The men looked fretful as they note the start the others had Them fellows has the luck one growled They wi be 1i ashore Sppd had a corer of his eye on Owens fam2e In the crowded small boat their shoulders touched The ot ceTs face was gray his form trembled ThIs Is black rin thought Spud Black ruin and disgrace for hdm and the ward I Iif I dared I He watohed the men furtively One i man nudged another and both looked at Owen and sneered Spud ground his teeth and marked them for future slaughter They know theysee I he inwardly inward-ly graned and well be eternally dig graced 01 Sammy Sam If only I could give you a jolly good hiding to waIte you up He slipped a hand to a hip pocket I I and hal drew somethIng from I but shoved I back again with great distress dis-tress of face Whats tv be lone Dn the Kid docor Shall I bUrt ho cum 0101 this Is the den sure The other boat wus drawing away I ahead for their officer was cheering I the oarmen on He waved from his i place In the etern a hand to Owen and I cried baclt gaily Youre not in It Owen The men looked at Owen He made no response There was a certain honor In being first to set foot on the shore but the soldiers aw disgustedly that their officer did not desire I Danger was there and hehe funked i That was the sudden thought that sprang to each mans mind and they looked blackly at him i Spud moved in the boat andlng np so tat he hid the leutenant while lie stooped on some pr tense THe held out a black bottle and whl lered angrily J Drink Sammy drink and God forgive I for-give us both i The lieutenant looked at him In sod I den horror It was as tough Qes guardian angel who had watched for long should abandon his task and as 6ume a demons for I YouYOU want me to Drink and say nothing said poor I Spud for if fghtings to be done that Kid doctors ruined you for it Drink I And he drank quickly and deeply He handed the bottle back to Spud vho shipped J away In a mInute Owens onface flushed and his eye brightened He stood up and spoke to the men amid bade the rowers to pull He was more like himself and their faces brightened coedPull boys he said and well beat I those fellows for an their start luIhy he whlperel as he sat down again give me that bottle Spud moaned but the first step was taken He passed I over and again the oUler drank and this time he kept the flask Over the blue water they skimmed The reef was near Two to one in Vs we beat you Owen sang Pauls Done Give way men Owen cried and the men laughed Spud brightened up The poison was working He knew I what the doctor would say but bade the morrow begone JJnough to live bravely through the dmiy At the roof a false turn at the tier nearly capzc Pauks boat and Owen galnel and passed them They cleared the surf they ran high on the white shore They formed as sllrmlshers twenty yards apart and plunged Into the jungle without waiting for the other boat These were almost Immediately after them howeyer yet Owen had time to stoP and In the shelter of a bush gulp another drink The blood dashed through his veins Blood filled his yes He was a new man from the HstlS5 craven aim hour ago Danger certain tihtm was before him and he kimev and welcomed it Spud was by him and was astonished I the doctor hall been there the Kid could have told the dorubber that his mater had been returned nervously to a boyish condition condi-tion and the liquor would act 01 him as It would on a boy who had never touched I before But Spud was almost al-most scared so red were Owens cheeks so full of vivacity his manner as he led his men now following him with cheerful cheer-ful amazement In the jungle the two boatloads joined and completed a skirmish skir-mish line of some fifty men They panted onward Crsh From in front of tem came a sudden volley Down yelled Pauks Down an steady Hetur the fire lying Down they went and the Spanish bullets bul-lets hew over their heads They fired back at the puffs of smoke but Owen stood up waving his sword Pauks was his senior and called out to him Owen they are In force and must be in riepHs Ve should draw back to the boat for further orders until the gunboats shell them out What do you say Owcn was hidden from view for a moment Vhen he appeared again he had finished the fateful bottle and had I thrown It and discretion away Nonsense he cried They arc only Spaniard anyway At them boys Cease firing Forward Double lame Commence ring The men obeyed cheering amid gained gain-ed twenty yards by the rush when they went down again and peppered away Again Owen commanded and again they rushed Now they gained a rise and saw ahead of them a little way saw the mounds of a row of rUle pits Owen yelled Pauls I is mad nes to take them with our force They must be shelled A blistering volley of Uauser bullets streamed from b hind the emthworks and dlowncd Owens reply The men lying down escaped injury and at once Owemms voice was again at them in a frenzy Damn em Forward Commence firing Paulis was oerbornc The spirit of Owen had permeated the men They were laughing and swearing and cheerIng cheer-Ing and melding a grand series of rushes with ever now and lien a gap of more than the ordered twenty yards in the line The daring thins had its Immedlat effect A Spaniard bounced up flom back of the rileplts and cashed into thc further jungle another and another followed Owen saw what his mens cool fire had done and their steady advance against greatly entrenched en-trenched odds Pauls could not control the men They were laughingly cheer hag Owen a they loaded and tired Someone on the far right sang out Hes all right Whos all right Owe Oh the sidewalks of New York That there shoUld be so much devilment devil-ment In a pint of whisky The Spaniards were flustered evidently evi-dently Such work was unexpected A strip of nearly clear ground some sixty yamds broad separated the demoniacal Americans from them and the Spanish fire faltered and flickered I was too late to go back Pauks was borne away In thp pypipTpn J Now boys forward Chare Owen yelled and the men with a wild yell rose and followed him The Spaniards Span-iards broke and scrambled any way at all out of their pits and ran Owen was awa ahead of his Half wa away men way across a Iauser bullet struck him but I he plunged on with a crazy cry Spud was after like another bullet The lieutenant rushed ahead blindly One ofcer of the Spaniards mad with rage was defending the trench almost by himself At him Owen ran pistol and sword in hand His foot slipped anc slpped I and he fell at the ofcers feet who I madly furious raised a cavalry saber to dispatch his foe Spud saw and aped God forgive me His life will be on my head The dognb er ran forward at thc charge and a felled by the saber falling back upon Owen In a moment more It was all ever and the Amen cans held the position Paults was bewildered I was madness mad-ness said he but by Jlngs it was slrious Are you hurt Owen Owen looked up mist He was lleeding from a bad wound in the il sPc tst ne shoulder and was sick TIme effects of the poison were passIng Off I I dont quite know he said What what imas happened I Youre stunned old man said Pauks but I say I didnt think you had It In you That was fine Do you I know this man saved your life I saw I I all He ran clean in and caught the saber Lets look Its your sexTant Isnt It I Owen looked and Murphy feebly I opened his eyes and looked back at his old pet of the blofI Time lgnlhber glanced around with a faint grin of I triumph I I The old ward breeds men he said and dontont none of you guys forget for-get i Owen took his hand Is it bad Spud he whispered Its taps MurphY whispered back with a squeeze of the hand Is you hurt much I guess so I think my shoulders smashed all to pieces Then Its all rightai rIght said Spud faintly You 1 leave the army with heaps of glorretured for wounds andandthey cat say you was It tward Sammy The ward will bust itself with shoutn But you Spud cried Owen is great distress il Thats all right said Spud now very feebly Tel my old manto set em upfor the gang They wont forget for-get me Sammy Yes I See the Kid doctor again andget anotherofthemures Ithought theworldfO Sammy |