LIEUTENANT O'BRIEN NEARLY STARVES AS HE CRAWLS i Synopsis.—Pat O'Brien, a residen in the American Flying corps val Flying corps in France, He engages in victor service ins the British RR 12 period service « flyers, from German flyers, O'Brien is shot down, death by a to find 1 in hi Ww in ois J It is sent to the fro which he mn it. energes io miracle, awakes a bullet hole s sent to a prison camp upon a train bound chun whil hospital, hospital, lesperate t of Momence, Ill, after seeing on the Mexican border in 1916, Canada, and after a brief train several hot fights with German Finally, in a fight with four He falls 8,000 feet and, escaping German the stay in Germany. throu thirty in a days in short iimself a at Courtral. After a CHAPTER VIL s————— Crawling Through Germany. hich 1 ma to learn how ow much long I drage waded north » and h tht came ned 1} of consisted tw SRINDGH, sofks and a vallet o shirts, n be heavy wool Cael containing seve in paper mo oF I also had perty pre : ae had stolen one room at here onal ef foots t from prison fornday or two I had carried ¢ it as T had nothing to « it I discarded it I traveled vificalties, wack my | swam an of | ght, covering in all per! haps ten miles before daylight. Then [ locuted 1m somé low bushes, lying there nll day in my wet clothes and finishing my sausage for food. That | ne the Taw* of my rations, considering couple canals that nd LIEN ingry and i over, still Myself Richt in a German Back Yard” either from swimming leep 1 mighty fortunnt it not a smoker, mehow never used tobaceo in any f repaid for Ime I have I was Wm, now fully vhatever in that partic sufferings would cers a result of habits ular, heen use tainly have been intensified now if, addition to lack of food and had had to endure a craving bacco. About my ny the sixth nizht T was so to sleep much tempted night, I knew, wns very the and 1 wearily wouldn't in give and al 1 perhaps n to rest for of wh lugged along 3 miles, I sat dow on brush le nn were shock i from driz BOM rh t when in ™ CHAPTER VIIL ret Nine Days in Luxembourg. } nn would be wise enouglt vould not, because brushes the task 8 from the troak is feeling of se- ! i 4 3 ng really nothing else 1 but it fal 3 id ) i and see whai o ad in store for me. I lay there wate top of the for more than r. 1 id time again 1 saw {it tree thie ime nt and 1 k layed me a tric in new tl ing on Kk, nie a tiently in tree was going came a loud or of the tree fall posite to the place where I lay! guessed right. Later I heard some children's volees end sgaln peering through the under brush I saw that they had brought the realize hhomy the top almost op I had s ool BCE Ww atsel Ll ana ay I felt to gee them near at hand, and know that, hungry as 1 was, I could have none of it. 1 was getting tempted to go boldly enting S80 to ghare, but I did not know | were Germans or not, and | much to I swall il gone through too food. liberty even for hunger instead. top | when darkne my 04 i f the k | : r two r. but izh the not 10 brush or with trees wie dense, and I it or someone haopen on to me, © very near to t and heard volees of men in a wagon, but I couldn't just what they were, and instinct told me I had better not come out of the o 1 4 ot woods, s turned back. had been dug, might adled a weary fugitive, but now they, too, were filled water, Once I singled out a good big tree and large beanches and thought 1 might elimb in*o it and go to sleep, but the fonger ¥ looked at it 1 realized that it would require more irs I had in my present weak 1 I condition, so didn’t at- have er with energy tl I chose a spot that looked a the rest, concluded to § people that could not st I was | chose to do so. throughout | carcely nap. into a col off for a led by sop wt len ZO Map Showing Made in Passing Belgium Line 8S of His Jou into waited on t} dawn and then pla where I might gust, s ng some with a view to findl magine my «i x he » exact nd discou ment, (OO, 8 nan hour or so later ytne upon th place where | ent the ds and I realizes yat all night | is I was try- | OR een circling the very woo way from. I thi 11 of a quarter « fn © ngtoget an ne i CHAPTER IX. | Enter Belgium. 1 wants to 14 it wa would be fi comp 1ke w have been a Godsend to me. With a name as Irish as mine, only natur a ss 41 jo 3 OR ¢ are ver fow the E54) portunit than the cows them are housed in b homes and val their fortunate © that I might nd a some place in the fields, but | travels 1 never saw a goat or a | ! and only a few cows, Several times | gearched nests for eggs, but & bods | always had beaten me to it, as { even found so much as a Cg. There was no chance of getting awn) with any “bullying” stuff in Luxem bourg. 1 knew, because the young men have not been forced into the army and are still at home, and as they ar decidedly pro-German, 1h i in ti for m cow wor O'Brien reaches Belgium and, facing starvation, he risks cap- ture by going boldly to a Belgian home and asking for aid. With an rovised weapon in his hand, he is prepared to go to any extreme in order to get food, Read about this exploit in the next instaliment, mm } I never | Im nest ° (TO BE CONTINUED.) A Canon's Daughter, Probably. From an English story: “Come and have some tea,” she cordially hoomed i Tt was not like taking things away as she passed.~Moston Transcript from old men and women or robbing