FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99  
100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   >>  
The pasting was not a work of art, but it was effective. The corner of the box was plastered over with sheets of white paper, in which there was no break. "If I get out of the box without cracking, tearing, or disturbing the paper you have pasted on, without moving it in any way, you'll admit that you're wrong, won't you?" asked Joe, as he prepared to do the trick again. "Yes," was the answer. "I will. But I've got you sewed up!" "Pasted up would be a better word," returned Joe, with a smile. "But that remains to be seen." The box was placed in position, and Joe took his place in it. The lid was slammed down, locked, and the rope was knotted about it. The two men who had done the pasting assisted in this. Then the curtains were drawn, and Helen and the firemen took their places. There was a period of waiting. The tense suspense of the audience was manifest. Even Jim Tracy and Bill Watson, veteran circus men though they were, seemed a bit worried. The man who had claimed the ten thousand dollars and his companion seemed a bit ill at ease. Then, suddenly, the curtains parted and Joe Strong stood in plain view, outside the box, bowing to the applause that greeted him. When it had subsided, he said: "Will you two gentlemen kindly look at the paper seals you placed on one corner of the box? If they are unbroken and undisturbed I take it you have lost. Kindly look and announce what you find." The men shuffled to the case and bent down over the corner that was covered with the pasted sheets. Look as they did, they could find no evidences of a break or tear in the paper. And it had not been removed and put back again. The men admitted that. "Then you have to admit that I didn't get out of the box by means of a secret panel in that corner, don't you?" asked Joe, when the two had asserted that the paper was intact. "Yes, I guess you win," said the first man. "But there's some trick about it!" "Oh, I admit that!" laughed Joe. "It is a trick, and if you discover it you get ten thousand dollars. But not to-night. Red Cross is richer by a hundred dollars." "Um!" grumbled the man, as he walked off, and many in the audience laughed. Joe had won. The circus performance went on to its usual exciting close in the chariot races, and when preparations were being made to travel on to the next city, Helen had a chance to speak to Joe. "It was a narrow escape," she said. "Just what it was!" he replied. "If
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99  
100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   >>  



Top keywords:

corner

 

dollars

 

thousand

 

circus

 

laughed

 

audience

 

pasting

 

curtains

 
sheets
 

pasted


admitted

 

unbroken

 

announce

 

Kindly

 

secret

 

shuffled

 

undisturbed

 
covered
 

removed

 

evidences


chariot
 

preparations

 

exciting

 

travel

 

escape

 

replied

 

narrow

 

chance

 

performance

 

asserted


intact

 

discover

 

grumbled

 
walked
 

hundred

 
kindly
 

richer

 

returned

 

Pasted

 

remains


locked

 
knotted
 
slammed
 
position
 

answer

 

cracking

 
plastered
 

effective

 

tearing

 

disturbing