MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, THURSDAY, JAN. 17, 1929 epared by the National Geographic Society, Washington, D. C.) ISKRA, in Algeria, nearly 200 miles back from the edge of the Mediterranean, is a typical oasis town of the near Sahara. nd it are clustered other oases, group making up Ziban. a short distance from the Eu- anized coast, the traveler may stretches on south and east for y hundreds of miles. e oasis of Biskra is six miles possesses 170,000 date palms, be- tamarind, fig, and orange trees, likewise possesses what is ed to be the most perfect climate e world from November till May. enial temperature, clear sky and iant vegetation are indisputable s, and its dry atmosphere makes rticularly curative for pulmonary Ses. Sometimes seventeen or een months pass without a er, and yet there is a never-fail- upply of delicious cold water natural wells throughout the oasis. ere are five villages in this island p sand-sea, and the outlying oases iliah and Geddecha also belong iskra. The Arab villages and yillages des negres are built of ried mud, with doors and flat of palmwood. Among the ruins Biskra, where before the new lvas constructed the French forti- he old Kasbah existing at their hl, are a heap of Roman blocks olumns, which are all that re- of the Roman outpost of Ad am. The French village is clus- around Fort Saint Germain, i for a gallant officer killed dur- he Zaatcha insurrection of 1849, vhich is capable of sheltering hole civil population. fre is a pretty public garden, feathery pepper trees make 2. nt shade, a church, a mosque, of shops, a handsome casino bfficers’ club, and three good of which the principal one, oyal hotel, is said to be the h Algeria. It is certainly a de- 1 surprise. to find in the Sahara bl with every appointment of e and comfort. hrket Place I< Fascinating. sit to the market place during rning is one of the sights of vn and oriental in every tone. ng groups of bronze-legged Ins, in brown and white camel’s- 1rnouses, are selling cous-cous, eppers and, of course, dates. bs of fresh grass and green bar- thistles are heaped in one cor- the inclosure, Moorish slippers id a pile of red fezzes there, bvenirs for the tourist not lack- or a few francs one may pur- set of graceful gazelle horns, rious knives and Arabian guns he collector. An ebon negress \g oranges, an Arab boy in a and not much else, carries a f purple fruit in green leaves, oaks, burnouses, turbans, and s, purple, blue, deep red, and white all erushed together, kaleidoscopic color in the shed square. Bags of henna for staining the nails in Arab send forth their pungent odor, aroma of coffee and cigarettes air. A Kabyle girl in red ittooed bluely as to her fore- 1 cheeks, stained yellow as to er tips, passes, cigarette in her bangles and anklets clank- he goes. e a Moorish cafe a row of lean in their white burnouses, mnly crouched, two of them r grave game of chess but the nothing to perfection, without of boredom or a gesture of ce, a state of dreamy delight apparently by habit of mind, ition of Arabian Keyf. Two antinieres go , briskly along, ind them glide two Sisters of There, | he the life of the great desert | Street in a Sahara Oasis Town. of-rose whiffed on the air, as one of these oriental gilded youths walks by, and one is reminded of what an Arabian courier once said: “In my country, if a man have perfume on his clothes, it makes scandal!” Street of the Ouled-Nails. There is a mysterious charm in the quiet night as one goes “slumming” | in the street of the Ouled-Nails. The stars are intensely bright overhead, | and the briskness, purity, and sweet- ness of the ai. beggar description. ‘Passing into the street of the Ouled- Nails is a sudden ‘ransition to much life, color and noise, the street itself full of Arabs, young and old, while on matting outside nearly every door sit the Ouled-Nail girls, drinking coffee, smoking cigarettes, and chattering what is presumably Biskran slang at any halting passers-by. The Ouled-Nails, sometimes called Almees, are girls from an oasis at some distance from Biskra, and of mixed Arabian and negro blood. They are more remarkable for their singu- larity of costume and grace of dancing than for the rigidity of their morals. Their faces are daubed with tar and saffron to accentuate the color of the Afric sun; tattooing in blue is quite la mode, and their hair, mixed with wool and stiffened with grease and tar, hangs in ebon loops about the face. They wear loose gowns of bright cotton, and gold and silver coin, coral, and filagree in barbarie abundance, sometimes twenty pounds of silver being carried in the shape of bangles, anklets, chains, and massive girdles. One sits in a brightly lighted, low, white building and sips Arabian coffee while some of the girls dance their peculiar desert dances. If Biskra is the political and social center of the Ziban, and the Ziban is the group of prosperous oases, vil- lages extending from the foot of the Aures mountains to the Chott-Mel- ghir, the religious capital is Sidi- Okba. Sidi-Okba is an oasis distant twenty kilometers from Biskra, and is named for that old warrior who, at the head of a small body of Arab cavalry, went forth to conquer Africa in the sixtieth year of the Hedjira. When he had extended his conquest from Egypt to Tangier, he spurred his horse into the Atlantic, declaring that only such a barrier could prevent him | from forcing every nation beyond it | who knew not God to worship Him only or die. In a revolt of the Ber-| bers he was killed, A. D. 641, and when the Arabs had reconquered the | Ziban their leaders was buried in the | oasis which bears his name, Going to Sidi-Okba. | The track across the desert to Sidi- Okba is practical for carriages. Most of the turbaned drivers gallop their! three horses harnessed abreast over | the hummocks of sand and tufts of | sage-brush till the passengers beg for | slower pace. Soon after leaving Bis-| kra the road crosses a stony tract a| quarter of a mile broad, with a deep | stream in the center, the Oued-Biskra, and emerges on the desert. The tiny’ oasis of Beliah is passed on the right, | the dome of a marahout’s tomb shin-| ing among its trees. The long, low- | lying line $f the palms of Sidi-Okba is in the distance; the Aures mountains rise in golden and rose glory, the] deep clefts in their side blue and mys-| terious. at intervals, and the scarlet rug, the! copper pan, the fire. and its group are dashes of bright color in the yellow- | browns of earth and camp, canopied always with the dazzling blue of the sky. Herds of camels feed on the dry sage-brush of the plain, and the baby camels trot by their mothers in coltish fashion. Five other oases are passed, Chet- nah, Droh, Sidi-Khabil, Seriana, and Garta, and at length one approaches the mud wall which surrounds the sacred oasis. Four thousand Arabs live in this village, and the mud Occasionally a tall figure in | e and dark-blue or pale- | De, with crimson fez and gold- ered jacket, passes, and the nd white teeth flash down rlance. Occasionally, too, | ion of genuine attar' houses are thickly packed, the streets narrow and indescribably dirty, with rivulets of muddy water running down the center. The tiny shops are open to the street, in eastern fashion, and behind their wares the -cross-legged merchants sit in stoic indifference. LOCK PROTEC1S RAZED HOTEL BAR Court Refuses to Lift Ban on Famed Inn. Milwaukee, Wis.—By a peculiar quirk of fate, enforcement of the pro- hibition laws {is preserving the bar- room of the Kirby hotel, among the last vestiges of old Milwaukee, and the city’s oldest hostelry. A federal padlock protects the bar- room while the remainder of the old structure has been razed to make way for an office building. The Lincoln hotel barroom also has been preserved by a padlock. Around it, however, an office building is be- ing built. The space occupied by the sealed barroom will be a court. The Federal court refused to lift the pad- locks, fastened because of liquor vio- lations. The Kirby hotel, built in 1844, was a political rendezvous, and many ca- reers began and ended in the coun- cils it housed. Abraham Lincoln. Horace Greeley, Ulysses S. Grant, Wil- liam T. Sherman, Phil Sheridan, Rob- ert Ingersoll and Roscoe Conklin were among the many famous persons whose names were on its registers. Abner Kirby, once mayor of Mil- waukee, was ths early owner. He designated his 36 rooms by names. Faded newspaper clippings tell of his sending newlyweds to “Paradise,” the bridal! suite, and ineébriates to the room called *‘Hell.” He had bellboys walk through the halls regularly snif- fing for gas. Kirby boasted of the comforts eof his hotel with the slogan, “Wake me up when Kirby dies,” which he had embroidered on napkins and stamped upon menu cards and stationery. The city council has been no more successful in removing padlocked structures than have private con- cerns. The city widened Cedar street to relieve downtown traffic. The court refused to lift its order on a closed place so that it could be re- moved for the street widening. Church Kissing Cult Gallipolis, Ohio.—That kissing is one of the essentials of salvation is the doctrine preached by a cult here, as revealed in a court appeal filed with Probate Judge John G. Evans by an excommunicated member of ‘the church. The sect has been responsible for breaking up several homes and is now on the verge of shattering another happy family. The pastor of the flock, who is blind, is charged with teaching his flock that promiscuous kissing is hightly desirable and nec- essary to escape damnation. Married men kiss other men’s wives and married women do not hesitate to kiss other men, it is charged. The man who gave the information to the court said he was “read out” of the church because he refused to kiss the women. of the congregation. He also said that he knocked down one mem- ber of the church who attempted to kiss his wife. “Tar Heel” Farmers Raleigh, N. C.—As a farm industry in North Carolina, beekeeping is a $2,500,000 enterprise. C. L. Sams, state agricultural ex- tension specialist, says the honey alone is valued at that figure. Twelve years ago it was worth only $468,- 914.16. At that time there were only 20 farmers who had 100 or more col- onies, and not a person in the state devoted full time to the industry. A total of 164.956 colonies produced 4,262,856 pounds of honey. This year there are 214,945 colonies of bees in North Carolina and they produced nearly 14,000,000 pounds of honey. Due to improved conditions the increase of 61,000 colonies boosted production nearly 10.000.000 pounds. Rich Stone Age Find Vernon, France.—A Stone-age tomb. discovered in the valley of Epte, France, is proclaimed as one of the richest finds of the kind ip recent vears. It contained a grear quantity of human bones, broken utensils. chipped flints and other articles of historic interest, belonging apparently to the Neolithic period. Kept on Trying Newark, N. J.—Joseph C. Braelow is a firm believer in the principle that if you don’t succeed try again. Once he got a city job after taking 15 civil- service examinations. He passed them all—in fact, was first eight times, but somebody else was appointed after the first 14 tests. Now he is buying a seat on the New York stock exchange. EHH HHH HH Groups of Bedouin tents are passed Thieves Steal 54 Hens Leave Orders for More Haverstraw, N. Y.—Louis Hoyt, of Haverstraw, reported to the police that thieves raided his hen coop at daybreak, car- ried off fifty-six hens, and left a mean note scrawled on a piece of paper saying that they would be back for the young chickens when they had grown ap. “Fatten them up and we will be back I(ater,” the note read Hoyt said the thieves also took two large bags of corn to feed the hens. He said if they came back he would have a shot: gun ready and a burglar alarm rigged ap in his hen house. {ezesesetelocetototatocesosocatotosososesaseserererezeserotazecoceces FE HH HOE Is Revealed by Suit . ‘greeted each other with the friendli- Do Well With Bees Two Strings to Her Bow By LILLIACE M. MITCHELL (Copyright.) S000 009600 ¢JF I had a chance at two men the way you have,” said Marie bitter- ly, “it wouldn’t take me long to de- cide to say yes to one of them—and leave one for some other girl.” Ellen stared at her friend. “But you see, I've known both of them ever since I was a child and sometimes I think it's one and then again I think it’s the other.” Her blue eyes cloud- ed for a moment and then she smiled. “But I know that I'll know—pretty soon—" she paused. “I believe that you know right now and are just—" Ellen looked aggrieved. “Truly, I don’t. But I know that—" “Bother!” interrupted Marie and slammed out of the house. It was Saturday afternoon and EI- len began preparing for the evening. Tom always took her to dinner down- town on Saturday nights and then they usually went to a show while they were still downtown. And §o on Saturday afternoons Ellen always washed her hair and manicured her nails with extra care for Tom, who, although he never said anything con- cerning her personal appearance, al- ways had the air of regarding her critically as she stood in the hall. She and Tom and David McGuire had all gone to school at the little red schoolhouse which lay equidistant be- tween their three hemes. Tom had gone to the city where he had made a definite success in the bond business ‘which his uncle had founded some forty years before, while David Me- Guire had stayed back in Hillstown, where he worked hard on the farm all summer and slaved all winter at the little model of the potato-hiller he was trying to perfect. That evening she was drawing on her white gloves under the affectionate vet critical eyes of Tom when David ‘McGuire was announced. The men ness that their school days warranted; yet, Ellen thought, there was a reserve on the part of each. Tom wore his clothes well and was entirely at ease; David, however, was ‘plainly from the country. It was decided that they should all dine together and Ellen found as they .drove downtown in the taxi that Tom had ordered that she had ample oceca- ‘sion to look at the two men together. .She thought of the two proposals, so like the men who had made them. “I—I can’t give you much now, honey—except love,” David said as they had stood under a tree laden with cherry blossoms, “but some day the potato hiller will work out and :then—then—” his eyes had looked far away over the hills. Tom’s proposal had tome while they stood waiting for a taxicab after the theater: “I think a whole lot of you, Ellen, and with your looks and my money we'll just make the little old town hum—I can give you every- thing !”’ . Everything—and nothing! Tonight she would decide. She felt it instinctively. At dinner she said little. Tom did the ordering easily and she saw that David McGuire was delighted to be relieved of the duty. David was plainly distressed by the silverware and Ellen found that he watched her eagerly to see which should be picked up first. Between courses Tom said: “Ever study psychology, Dave?” David shook his head. “I'm much interested in it,” Tom went on easily, “psychology, mental sciences, Freudian theories and all of that. TI believe that a man can get on faster in the world if he knows a good deal about the workings of the minds of the men with whom he deals. Take MODERN TREASURE CHEST By KATHERINE G. CORNELL Director of the Kelvinator Domestic Institute HAT has become of the \X/ emergency shelf once so important in the house- wife’s estimation? That whose boxes and tins and jars and bottles were dedicated to the day when company might descend up- on us unexpectedly and find us with a cupboard as bare as Old Mother Hubbard’s, has gone the way of the horse and buggy and the tallow candle. In these days of electricity and swift travel, com- pany is never unexpected. In place of the emergency shelf we have that modern treasure chest of the up-to-date housewife, the perfectly constructed electric refrigera Within the cool depths © reliable aid to good house such a supply of good thin be kept all so fresh and invite that were a queen to come visiting unheralded some fine day, her hostess would be in no way dis- concerted. Hospitality is no longer the stilted, formal thing it once was. Casual entertaining is far more de- lightful and more suited to our modern way of living, and only on high days and holidays does the old elaborate entertainment which entailed so much anxious prepara- tion now prevail Always Ready for Guests There are no anxious moments about refreshments when friends drop in for an evening at bridge in the household which has in- stalled one of these modern treas- ure chests in the kitchen. Its store of good things is always ready for just such occasions, and al- most at a moment's notice the hostess is ready to set forth a Dutch lunch of unimpeachable de- liciousness; or she may offer sand- wiches and fruit punch on the porch while her guests listen in to some radio program. ® Sunday evening supper, too, in the treasure chest home, becomes one of the most delightfully in- formal affairs one could wish to give or attend. There are always shelf, . S, oe Zs (op ¢ a — L ) “JY (~~ of — LE) H SESE =i ENC ee © Sa p08 IN CN" / a few cold, cooked vegetables] fresh and sweet for a week; a pack- which may be quickly transform-| et of cream cheese, and one or ed into a tasty salad with the aid| two small jars of some more pun- of the mayonnaise jar and a few| gent variety—all these and other leaves of lettuce. And cheese ome-| handy staples may be given a cor- let, or a fish Newburg, or chicken| ner in that modern treasure chest, a la King, each a feast in itself,| to come forth cold and fine and is a small matter when it is so| ready to add a distinctive touch to convenient to keep the electric re-| the quickly made salad or sand- frigerator stocked with the ingre-| wich or sweet. . dients for making these tempting Fish Newburg Recipe dishes. Fish Newburg is one of the tas- ~ Saves on Food Bills tiest of hot dishes. To make it . use a can of tuna fish, crab meat It is an economy, too, to have| and shrimp, or lobster, crab meat a supply of easily and quickly pre-| and salmon, or any combination of pared foods on hand. One may| fish that you prefer. Open the cans, buy with so much better judgment| drain and flake the fish in not too when not hurrying to meet an| small pieces. Make a white sauce emergency, and often it is possible| jittle richer than usual, and turn to pick up bargains or to buy more| jn the fish, simmer till hot, then cheaply in quantities. fold in a well beaten egg yolk, The electric refrigerator pro-| a dash of mace, and if you have vides a place for everything that| it, two tablespoonsfuls of sherry one may require for emergency| flavor. Do not cook after the fla- repasts—a can or two of fish, or| vor has been added. Serve hot on chicken—or mushrooms; a jar of| toast or in patty shells. Lemon pickled lamb’s tongue; a small| juice may be substituted for the bottle of maraschino cherries and| sherry flavor, adding just a table- one of pimiento; an extra bottle| spoonful of it after removing the of cream, which vou can keep! fish from the fire. NEW GOWNS “One of the fascinating experiences about going to the theater at this time of the year has very little to do with play or plot,” observes a modern lady, “who knowns.” There are still very few theatrical offerings that conscious woman—and how few wo- men aren’t clothes-conscious,” adds the writer concerning this subject. Whether the stage has toned itself The new fabrics may be responsible for equalizing the glazed and fabrics that will stand forth in the trying light of the theater. Perhaps this may be partly due to the fact characters. me, for instance: when a‘*fellow comes into the office with a bit of money to invest T can usually tell to a ‘t’ wheth- | | er he is interested in public utilities— | | in industrials or rails. I wateh him —that’s all—just watch him and see where his eyes travel. After I know that 1 mention different sums of money until I see, by the flicker of ! his eye, how much he wants to invest. | | Most people are rather reticent about | | mentioning a certain sum of money. | | Without knowing how much they want to put up it’s hard for me to tell what suggestion to make in order for them to get the most return for their money. What's this, waiter—” he broke off im- patiently, and his face grew red. “I told you well done—well done. Do you understand English? Look at the red blood running out of that meat!” He pointed a finger shaking with wrath toward the silver platter before him. And Ellen knew! It didn’t make any difference about manners or mon- ey or anything else. It was dispo- sition that counted. David was look- | eyes and kept telling Tom that he liked his meat rare anyhow. And on Sunday morning when she |Predatory-animal the top of a hill, and the cherry blos- soms in the spring—oh, Marie, you |fect. must come to visit us next spring!” “And—and you're not going to mar- |Stroyed, and hawks, owls, ry Tom?” amazement spread over | Weasels, : cats were exterminated there would Ellen shook her blond head and her |be little difficulty in maintaining a eyes grew soft. “I guess I've always |sufficient supply of wild game and loved Davey—only I didn’t know it— |&ame birds on our farms, fields and Marie’s face. you know I said yesterday I'd know pretty soon—I must have known right then—subconsciously,” she ended, us- | ing one of the very terms that Tom had liked so well as she spoke of her |smaller in size. er to us for quite some time. man, David McGuire. ing at the confused waiter with sorry |transmitted to Congress by Secretary heart ache with envy. but oh, how becoming and smart! ENEMIES OF tain lions and bobcats, according to a statement made by the United States |the chicks in the .brooder, start the Bureau of Biological Survey. The |stove. This will give you time to see coyote is described as the most de-|if everything is working correctly and structive of all the animal highway- | give you a chance to regulate the men, for it not only kills but it is re- |thermostat. sponsible for the spreading of disease |brooder house for the first week among livestock and human beings, | should be 95 degrees. such as rabies and tularemia. More |thermometer about two inches from the floor and at the outer edge of the ed by hunters of the Biological Sur-|hover. than 1,000,000 coyotes have been kill- vey during the past 12 years. A report on the whole predatory |indicators you have with regard to animal control situation has been |proper temperature. When they en- 1 circle the brooder stove at the outer of Agriculture Jardine to back up his edge of the hover with bodied flatten- ed, the heat is just right. control campaign. |stand with their mouths open they met Marie at church she told her, He recommends annual appropria- |are too hot and if they pile in a hud- “We're going to live on the farm, on tions of $1,378,700 for the next ten suggestion for a ten year cooperative years to carry the program into ef- If all these animals could be de- Crows, streams. down to the level of everyday-ness or strong, husky chicks, but possibly a whether we have gradually become | higger one is to raise them. Wheth- used to gayer and more startling ap-|er or not you will be successful de- parel, seems to be neither here nor| pends, to a great extent, upon the at- there. But there has been a change. | tention you give to the details. standards of | have a good brooder house. For the clothes worn on the stage and off the average poultry raiser it should be stage as those brilliant shimmery|of such size and weight so that it things of rayon and silk, or rayon and may be readily moved from one place wool, look equally well in the spot-ito another. A brooder house ten by light or in the more subdued light of | {welve will very nicely take care of one’s own home. No longer is it ne- 1300 chicks and provide plenty of cessary to resort to outre’ materials, | yoom for the pullets after the cocker- artificially brightened ! els are removed when broiler size. that some of the leading New York | able house is that it can be moved to stores have recently inaugurated de-|new ground each year. [partments especially destined to out-' chicks have run on the same range The first few weeks are’ commonly fit and costume our leading dramatic | several seasons they seem to have re- known as the critical period and a At the theaters or at moved certain elements from the |Zreat deal depends upon the feed and musical comedies on Broadway, one ground and often times contaminate sees dozens of gowns that make the the soil. Soil contamination is a real Simple gowns, | danger. Better chicks can practically { always be raised on new ground. { house, clean it and the equipment in | your spare time and give the walls 7 ia coat of whitewash containing some CIVILIZATION 2.5 disinfectant. Set up the stoves ——— | so if any of the parts are missing or Thirty million dollars worth of worn eut you have plenty of time to livestock and game is being destroyed | replace them. annually by wolves, coyotes, moun-|readiness when needed. dle it is too low or you are troubled with floor drafts: skunks and roving house [incubator or in baby chick shipping boxes until they are 48 hours old when ready to receive their first feed. Before putting them into the brooder, | | Years old; gray Mare, 10 years old; spread newspaper over the litter and forests, and on rivers, lakes and |sprinkle some Check Starter to which a small amount of granite grit has been added on the paper. Putting the | $5, cash; on all sums of $5 or over, a are seavrru lave a Brooder House ~All Ready for Baby Chicks Ahead of Time : | don't off Shills tn the dlothest pvr: : On ¥en Some Joriiis th the clothes Chicks Should Receive Feel vave ‘usually little room for nourish When Placed in Brooder. ment so ordinarily a great many die after the yolk has been absorbed. It is a real problem to hatch Ths bap aay 2 oma anes the Put the chicks in the brooder late in the afternoon. Place a half inch mesh wire or a galvanized iron ring or tar paper around the hover, allow- ing enough room for the chicks to get away from the direct heat when they so desire. This makes it im- possible for the chicks to get into the corners of the house and become cold or chilled. The fence should be mov- ed out each day giving the chicks more space so that by the fourth day they have the run of the brooder. Chicks must be fed when they are put in the brooder house. For the first few weeks they should be receiv- ing nothing but a soft easily digested mash. Feed a good Chick Starter, After the preferably an oatmeal base mash. One of the first essentials is fo Sanitation Important The big advantage of a small port- care you give the chicks during that time. : Formerly everything was blamed on the war and now every cough is promptly set down as the flu.—Chiec- ago Post. If you already .have the brooder Foolish question: Have you kept your New Year’s Resolutions? PUBLIC SALE of Valuable PERSONAL PROPERTY The undersigned will offer for Pub- lic Sale at his residence two miles east of Sand Patch, Larimer Town- ship on TUESDAY, JAN. 29, 1929 Beginning at 12:30 P. M. The following described personal property: Dump Hay Rake, Hay Wagon and Ladder, low 3 inch tread Farm Wa- gon, 2 seated Spring Wagon with top, Sleigh, Log Sled, Buggy Pole, Wagon Box, Oliver Chilled Plow No. 40, Shovel Plow, Spring Tooth Har- row, Flying Dutchman Manure Spreader, Champion Drill Press, $ Cross Cut Saws, Lot of Bars, Lumber Chains, Boom Chains, Rufflock Feed Chick Starter Chains, Grab Hooks, Cant Hooks, Tt is best to hold the cHicks in the |Singletrees, 2 2-Horse Spreaders, 2 1-Horse Spreaders, Doubletrees, Spring Wagon Harness, Collars, Bridles, Lot of Hammers, roan Mare, Have everything in Two days before you expect to put The temperature in the Place the The chicks themselves are the best If they 2 Cows, 2 head young Cattle, 3 Pigs, Lot of Chickens. TERMS: 90 days. All sums under The new dollar bill is going to be [chicks on paper will help to teach |note with approved security is re- It has looked small- [them what is feed and avoid their |quired. filling up on litter. Litter eaters |38-2t S. W. KEEFER Th A Ro Bradd ~ Huen P Must law W.N. Copyright | THE CHAPTER J— epen-handed gen Virginia gentlen Brond is serving for the army un reparing for tl ugquesne. Alexandria from where, posing as secured valuable “idock, bred to Et to realize the im Brond is sent ba also bearing a Croghan, Englist dians. CHAPTER IL~ and fellow scout chief, and they they fall in with man, Balsar Cro {The party encou tlers threatening Dinwold, whom | craft. Brond say | &irl disappears. t CHAPTER II1- message to Crogl easiness at the to the English George Washin from bullying I worsts a bully Flsie Dinwold. scouting expedit and leaves with joins them. . CHAPTER 1V- scouting party b ‘defended appare! {Brond and Crom {the cabin. The “1 |A French officer iin the door. Crom {Brond takes the iescapes during t (tive is Lieutenar sends him as a {to Braddock’'s cs way Lo Duquesne + CHAPTER V-— to enter the for iresolves to visit a woman sachem She is friendly scouts, as Frenc come to Allaqul French officer, | known at Duqu to win over Alls ‘cause, but he f ment, Brond f dressed as a me protection. The found the Engli to the French. U aped from Cror TC stopped. CHAPTER V Brond while he cept Beauvais, killed the Frenc ‘caped from hin ‘them, and the quippa’s town. C quieting news |of Braddock’s al {lish officers unde ing, and Bradd ‘advice of the separated from |! comed by Allaq !man. Leaving hi English army, reach Duquesne lecome, Beaujeu, « {believing him a {learns Beauvais (having killed F the other Frenc 1izes he is in de {to get away at CHAPTER VI by Beaujeu to ‘recognized and « ‘as an English | Round Paw. | Elsie, Brond esc having destroyé {gould reach, to the water, Bro ‘with a message ‘of danger of an “Turtle Creek” , with Elsie, a g traveling, he tal the army, in the | Paw, Cromit, ‘through safely CHAPTER V | party of pursul { trail. The girl i limit of her end iried by Brond. | cabin of a trade | his help to star {ing the cabin s: iaway, but Elsie cefense of the beating off the {the woods they | ginia forest fig {turning from a ! CHAPTER IX tale of demorali | lish regulars. | party and they | refuses to seek | sisting on "tayi | dangers. Brad l warning of dan {Colonel Washi his misgivings expedition. Atts ractically invis ish regulars fusion. A disco when Braddock and his Virgini emy, preventing nds a place of fights his way Then Brond co Elsie Dinwold, and believing ! hamlet he find whose charge I tells Brond Els and Brond at o! -| There he meé Josephine Ilew Elsie and give geeks her, an his quest whe whispers, “Oh, Jack!”