A Mystery Story for Girls
By
ROY J. SNELL
The Reilly & Lee Co.
Chicago
COPYRIGHT 1937
BY
THE REILLY & LEE CO.
PRINTED IN THE U. S. A.
Mary Hughes had walked the entirelength of the long dock at Anchorage,Alaska. Now, having rounded a great pile ofmerchandise, tents, tractors, groceries, hammers,axes, and boxes of chocolate bars shecame quite suddenly upon the oddest littleman she had ever seen. Even for a girl in herlate teens, Mary was short and slender. Thisman was no larger than she.
“A Japanese,” she thought as her surprisedeyes took in his tight-fitting black suit, hisstiff collar and bright tie. “But no, a Japwouldn’t look like that.” She was puzzled andcurious. At that particular moment, she hadnothing to do but indulge her curiosity.
Together with hundreds of other “home-seekers”—shesmiled as she thought of herselfas a home-seeker—she had been dumped intothe bleak Arctic morning. Some of the goodsthat were being hoisted by a long steel cranefrom the depths of a ship, belonged to Mary,to Mark her brother, and to Florence