MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1929 A Romance of Braddock: Defeat Sh Dy | Wi Hu6H PENDEXTER © a: Mustrations lawn Myers by Copyright by Hugh Pendexter. > THE STORY CHAPTER ljiDoverfendd by the open-handed ‘generosity of his father, Virginia gentleman, young Webster Brond is serving as a stqut. and spy for the army under General Braddock reparing for the advance on Fort uquesne.” He has just returned to Alexandria from a visit to the fort, where, posing as a Frenchman, he nas secured valuable information. Brad- dock, bred to European warfare, fails to realize the importance of the news. aiso bearing a message to George Croghan, English emissary among the Indians. chief, and they set out. On the way they fall in with a typical backswoods- "The party encounters a group of 'set- craft. Brond saves her from them. The girl disappears. CHAPTER III—Webster delivers his message to Croghan, who expresses un- easiness at the apathy of the Indians to the English cause. Young Col George Yashington rescues Brond from bullying: English soldiers. He worsts a bully .n a fight, and finds Elsie Dinwold. Brond is sent on a scouting expedition to Fort Duquesne, ard leaves with: Round Paw. Cromit Joins them. CHAPTER 1V—They find a French scouting party besieging an old cabin ‘defended apparently by a single man. Brond and Cromit make their way to the cabin. The “man” is Elsie Dinwold. |A French officer and an Indian break iin the door. Cromit kills the Indian and {Brond takes the Frenchman alive. Elgi® escapes during the fight: Brond’'s cap- tive is Lieutenant Beauvais. The scout sends him as a prisoner, with Cromit, to Braddock’s camp, again taking his ne, and to seek Elsie. way to Duques CHAPTER V—Carrying out his plan |to enter the fort unquéstioned, Brond resolves to visit an Indian town which a woman sachem, Allaquippa, controls. She is friendly to the English. The scouts, as French, are plainly unwel- come to Allaquippa. Brond French officer, - to win over «Allaquippa to the French cause, but he fails. To his astonish- ‘ment, Dinwold, dressed as a man; under Allaquippa’s |protection. The girl tells him ‘she has {found the English cruel, and is going to the French. Unable to dissuade her, Brond tells her of his mission to Du- 'quesne, and she promises ndt to be- (tray him. They learn Beauvais has es- jcaped from Cromit and is on his way to Duquesne. ‘Brond realizes he must be’ stopped. CHAPTER VI—Cromit comes to Brond while he is waiting to inter- ‘cept Beauvais, and tells hi he has killed the Frenchman after He had es- icaped from him, Round Paw joins them, and the three return to Alla- quippa’s town. Cromit has brought dis- ‘quieting news of the demoralization iof Braddock’s army, none of the Eng- {lish officers understanding woods fight- ing, and Braddock fiercely resenting ‘advice of the “Provincials.” Cromit, separated from his two friends, is wel- jcomed by Allaquippa as an English- iman. Leaving him to carry news to the !English army, Brond and Round Paw {reach Duquesne. Brond is made wel- come, Beaujeu, commander of the fort, believing him a loyal Frenchman. He |learns ‘Beauvais is not dead, Cromit ‘having killed Falest, taking him for {the other French officer, Brond real- {izes he is in deadly peril. He decides [to get away at once, and tells Elsie, who has come to the fort with Beau- vais, but it is too late. CHAPTER VII—At |by Beaujeu to his officers RBrond is jrecognized and denounced by Beauvais as an English spy. He is rescued by | Round Paw. With the Indian, and | Elsie, Brond escapes by the river, Elsie having destroyed all the canoes she {could reach, to delay pursuit. Leaving the water, Brond sends Round Paw with a message to the army warning of danger of ambush if they take the “Turtle Creek” route to the fort. Then, with Elsie, a great handicap to swift | traveling, he takes a different route to |the army, in" the hope that either Round !Paw, Cromit, or himself, will get ‘through safely with the warning. CHAPTER VIII—Brond realizes a (party of pursuing Indians is on their trail. The girl, having reached the limit of her endurance, has to be car- ried by Brond. They make for the cabin of a trader, Frazier, hoping with his help to stand off pursuers. Reach- ing the cabin safely, they find Frazier away, but Elsie helps greatly in ‘the defense of the place. They succeed in beating off the attacking Indians, and during a heavy rain, which saves them, escape. Klsie's bravery and loyalty make a deep impression on Brond. In the woods they meet a veteran Vir- ginia forest fighter, Stephen Gist, re- turning from a scouting expedition. CHAPTER IX—Gist repeats Cromit’'s tale of demoralization among the Eng- lish regulars. Round Paw joins the party and they. reach the army. Elsie refuses to seek safety in the rear, in- sisting on -taying and sharing Brond’s Fradaack | OTe ii rongs of danger. Bron thine Washington, who confesses the success of the expedition. Atiacked in Bi forest by ractically invisible ene y heh regulars are thrown into con- fusion. A disorderly retreat begins when Braddock is killed. Washington and his Virginians hold back the en- emy, preventing annihilation. Brond finds a place of safety for Elsie. Round Paw and Cromit are both killed, Brond, badly wounded, escaping with the other fugitives. He is unable to find Eisle in the confusion. CHAPTER X—The provinces are stunned by the news of the disaster. ‘the English army is withdrawn to iNew York, leaving the provincials to |hold back the victorious savages, {drunk with victory. Brond recovers from his wounds and joins in the de- fense of the frontier. The situation is not relieved until General Forbes {fights his way through to Duquesne. Then Brond continues his search for | Blgie Dinwold, realizing Je loves he i s love r . ‘and believing h gel 1m . He a dinner given {There he Josephine | Blsie and se=ks her, his quest whispers, back!” She has befriended given her a home. Brond and finds a happy ending of when Elsie, in his arms, “Oh, mister. You've come CHAPTER IL—Brond joins his friend | |and. fellow scout, Round ‘Paw, Indian ; tiers threatening a young girl, Elsie | Dinwold, whom they accuse of witch- | Brond is sent back to Fort Duquesne, | dd 5 CHAPTER X The Long Trail Ends It was thirteen days after the bat- tle that Dunbar the Tardy arrived at Fort Cumberland on Will’s creek with’ three hundred wounded soldiers. It is impossible to picture the amaze ment and consternation that smoth- ered the colonies when it was definite ly known that the army had been de- feated and broken. There had been ; no concern in the public mind as to | the outcome of the campaign. man, Balsar Cromit, who joins them.’ The first uncertain news was re- ceived by Colonel James Innes, com- mander at Fort Cumberland, This was on July eleventh, two days after the battle. He immediately started expresses to the neighboring provinces to announce his grave fear that the army had met with reverses. While these messengers were carrying the astounding news the wagoners, who had first fled the bloody field, were beginning to reach the outlying settle- ments. Governor Morris was at Car- lisle when a half-starved, half-mad wagoner flogged his exhausted mount into the settlement and began crying out that Braddock had been defeated. that ‘the entire army had been anni- hilated, and that he, the wagoner, was the only surviver.: Fix 5 The provinces were stunned. On the sixteenth , another . messenger brought: further details. General Brad- dock was dead and had been buried at Great Meadows on the fourteenth, and the army and Dunbar’s wagons had passed over his grave to hide it from the savages. On the day this man brought his dismal budget, Gov- ernor Morris sent out a call for the assembly to meet him in Philadelphia on the twenty-third, so as to permit Dunbar to take the offensive ang. pre- vent the triumphant enemy. from over- running our frontiers and from bring- ing the ax to the eastern settlements. Dunbar promptly announced his de- termination to be done with forest fichting; and he marched his twelve. hundred soldiers to Philadelphia and: left three hundred wounded men at. Will’s creek. His army went into camp on Society hill, and in vain did Governor Morris urge him to send a few men to patrol the Susquehanna. Enough refugees came in to swell the army to fifteen hundred, and without raising his hand to protect the border Dunbar the Tardy sailed with this’ force for New York in October. . Stupefaction was replaced by dis- may as this, the only fighting force in the south, was withdrawn, In very truth were the colonies aroused to’ the realization that they must protect themselves by doing their own fight-’ ing, and no longer depend upon over-’ seas armies, Once Dunbar’s inten- tions to withdraw from the province became known, Governor Dinwiddie] urged Pennsylvania and Maryland to. unite with Virginia in building a’ strong fort at the Great crossing or on Great Meadows. This wise plan for protecting the border came to nothing because of the colonies’ in- ability to overcome factional jealous- jes and to agree as to the division of the expense, labor and the like. So we drifted into three years of rapine and slaughtet. 1 reached Carlisle the day after Governor Morris started for Philadel- phia. My wounds, aggravated by ex- posure, forced .me to travel slowly; and my efforts to find some trace of th. Dinwold girl permitted many sur- ‘vivors to pass me. Mine was old news when I did arrive. In Carlisle 1 fell in with three rangers who were cut off from the ford when the final rout filled the narrow road. They were forced to advance north, or close to Duquesne, to escape the savages They had concealed themselves in the woods near the Allegheny, and from what they had observed I learned how five hundred of Pontiac’s Ottawas had quarreled with the French over the division of the booty, and had thrown back the ax and had killed and scalped two Frenchmen very close to the spot where my informants were hiding. 1 recovered from my wounds and became active in preparing a defense against the red swarms we knew would soon be upon us. As rapidly as possible’ a string of forts was bulit from the Delaware and Susquehanna to the Potomac. There were Fort Bedford at Hea’s Town, Fort Ligonia on the site of the old Indian town of Loyal Hanna in Westmoreland coun- ty, Fort Loudon at the foot of Blue mountain, Fort Lowther at Carlisle and Chambers’ fort a few miles west of that town. And there were other forts, as well as numerous small blockhouses, erect- ed. during the next three years. For two months after the battle of the Monongahela we worked feverishly, taking advantage of the brief period the Indians required to themselves that the war path te the east was unpbstructed. Then the storm began to break. The first blow struck by the raiders was in Cumberland county, and soon the ax was taking toll on the Susque- hanna. A large body of Indians camped thirty miles above Harris ferry and killed on both sides of the river. In October a mixed force of French and Indians was burning and scalping within forty miles of the ferry. Settlers were frantically flee- ing to the east, or doggedly forting themselves on learning that escape was cut off. I went out with forty- five men from the ferry and helped bury fourteen mangled bodies. Great cove was destroyed. By December, the Indians were on the Lehigh behind the Blue moun- tains, where they killed a hundred people and burned many cabins. Beth- lehem prepared to resist an attack. At about the same time another band penetrated to the Schuylkill in B&Fks county and did devil’s work. For fifty miles around Easton the country was devastated. So widespread were the activities of the savages that hun- dreds of people fled inte the Jerseys. some carrying their household goods and driving their cattle;' others vain- | ly offering half of all they possessed in an effort to save something. It was a characteristic of this un- equal fighting that the Irdians took but few prisoners. Thirty-six houses and the church at Gnadenhutten were burned, although Lieutenant Brown and a company of rangers forted themselves in the church and held it until it was fired. The Juniata was visited early in January and many people were murdered within two or three miles of Fort Patterson. Even the back districts of Chester and Philadelphia counties were en- dangered, and four hundred German farmers from the latter county marched into Philadelphia city and demanded that the assembly grant them some protection. These settlers should have remembered how men of their race defeated Joseph Seely, Berks county candidate for sheriff, in the October election, because he favored military training. Throughout the winter, the savages | continued very active, which was un- usual, as during the snow months the frontier always had experienced a re- lief from attacks ang had slept sound- ly. The woods from the Juniata to Shamokin were, filled with. ferocious red men, who killed and burned. In the latter part of the month a hun- dred Indians at Kittanning, includ- ing not a few who had been loyal to England until the defeat on the Mon- ongahela, left to raid the Coocoche- ague settlements and forts Shirley and Littleton. 1 was one of those who rode ahead to spread the alarm, and 1 experienced enough thrills to last me several lifetimes. And so the bloody story might go on through volumes, Settlements in flames and the rough roads crowded with terrified families. Scarcely a night could one scan the horizons and not see the red flares that told of some cabin or hamlet being wiped out. Not until Gen. John Forbes’ ex- pedition in the summer of 1758, when he marched to Duquesne with fifty- eight hundred men and a thousand wagons, did we begin to have a rest from the butcheries. But General Forbes would have nothing to do with the ill-fated Braddock road and wise- ly followed the central path through Carlisle, Shippensburg, and over Laurel mountain. The long rifles were proving their worth and were soon to take Canada from the French. During all this strife and these mis erable scenes, I endeavored to do my share in exacting a penalty from the red men, For two weeks 1 worked with Captain Jack, the Black Hunter of the Juniata. But when that river was harried he became such a mad- man and would take such foolhardy risks that I left his band. Yet we made some rare killings in the short time we were together. The danger was Dever sO great, however, as to cause me to forget, the Dinwold girl In my dreams and in my waking hours I could see her tugging at young Morgan’s hand and striving to come back and face the trouble out in my company. At night 1 would awake with her voice in my ears, calling me “mister.” Once 1 dreamed we were with the baggage ‘train and she was saying “Kiss me.” 1 required many a bloody foray against Shawnee and traitorous Dela- ware to wash that last dream thin. So there was never a day, when I was meeting with some one new, that 1 did not make diligent inquiry for her. But so many families had been ex- terminated, so many pedigrees ended, that only by ehance could I hope for news from the witch-girl. An elfish boyish creature in reality, but my Separation from her translated her into some symbol of the border, some- thing fearfully desirable. It became a mania with me to find her, and yet my place was on the frontier. On relief sallies, on retreats and on scouting trips, I asked of all I met if they knew of one called Daniel Morgan. Some professed to have met him, but none knew about a young woman dressed as a man. At the end of my service’ with General Forbes I was as ignorant as to whether she be alive or dead as I had been when I recovered my wits at the edge of the clearing along the Allegheny, where the dead hung from the twelve torture-stakes. And I missed the Onondaga. God only knows how I missed him and his brave heart when on some lonely faring. I missed Cronit in a lesser ' degree. and often wished his terrible convince hands’ could hélp me ‘decide some uneven argument. Aye, 1 missed them. Put it was Round Paw of the Wolf clan whose absence ate into my soul. Red or white, never was there a stronger comrade than he. The lone- ly Monongahela sings his requiem, hut in my heart he shall ever have a high place. Many a good comrade have I had in my day, but none so dear to my memory as the Wolf man, Gone to meet his particular god as has many another, and all because one man did not understand, Worn by incessant hardships and seriously troubled by the old arrow wound in my arm, I returned to Car- lisle, uncertain as to what I should do next. The settlers were preparing to follow General Forbes’ army and make a new ‘beginning along some pleasant stream. But I, the last of the House of the Open Hand, had no desire to build a cabin and take root in one spot. The strange unrest, which had been only satisfied by the turmoil of border warfare, reduced me to a sad state of nerves. How could 1 ever be content on one creek or in one valley, with the merories of . the Monongahela haunting me? With the vision of that small wistful face staring back at me, I rode a skeleton of a horse into Carlisle. Perhaps it was a weakness of spirit that impelled me to surrender to the: sudden longing to visit my old home and once more look through the gate of my father’s garden. [I scarcely re member my mother, but perhaps this longing was the divine calling of the maternal in me. Like my horse, I was scarcely more than a skeleton. I borrowed a suitable horse of a stranger and did not marvel at ‘his trust in me. At times I assured my- self it was but a whim, that J would soon be doubling on my tracks and seeking service in the north; and yet I rode on. ~The memories stirred up by the jour- ney were painful. Unlike that other visit, the Onondaga was no longer my companion; and yet at times I’ fancied he walked at my stirrup, his’ chest showing the fresh white paint’ of the round paw of the wolf. In my more rational moments 1 felt old: and out of place. It was when I brooded over the witch-girl’s disap-’ pearance that I felt a great empti-. ness of heart which made all the: plans of youth but little account. I. had no wish to look on Josephine: again and tell her poor Busby’s fare-: well message; and yet something drew me to the town. I followed the roundabout Susque-. hanna road and passed by the ruins. of many a cabin. It was not the most: direct route, but it pleased me to fool myself with the thought 1 would never continue as far as Alexandria. However, I did persevere, and an astounding thing happened to me and. expelled my apathy and left me quiv-. ering with a new purpose. The On-: ondaga would have said it was my orenda working for me. A white man would have said it was luck. It all happened at a hamlet on the Mary-: land line where” a dozen men were listening to a rugged fellow’s plea for volunteers to serve as riflemen in the expedition soon to be made: against Canada. Weary of war, weary of myself, and finding solace: only in my strange dreams, I would have passed by with deaf ears had not his rude eloquence compelled my attention while he cried out: “Sick of it? Who ain’t sick of it? But how will it be stopped unless: your rifles help stop it? I tell you we've got ’em running now. You've had a bellyful of fighting? Who aint? 1 thought I had a bellyful at Brad- dock’s battle. I've thought I bad more’n enough during the last three: years. But I've been Ilarning all: these years; l’arning that if we want . a job well done we must do it our- selves. Men, it’s the long rifle, and not the Brown Bess what's going to put a stop to the Injun deviltries, And if yow’ll go along with me Pl! lead only as long as I can keep ahead. When any other feller can lead faster. he takes my place and I take his orders.” I reined in and stared at the fellow closely. There was something reminis- cent in the strong young face. He was quick to see me and my travel- stained forest garb, and he called out over the heads of his audience: “Welcome, friend. . You look like ag you was used to woods fighting.” “I’ve had my share of it; from Brad- dock down to Forbes and much in be- tween.” “But you're not through yet? Ycur long rifle still shoots?” “It still shoots. I am not through until the job is finished.” He pointed me out as a wholesome ,example, and embarrassed me by ex- : tolling my high spirit. Whereas I was ‘sick of Indians, sick of hardships. 1 had but one desire; to spread my . blanket back of the Carlisle house .and close to the sleepy lap-lap of the Potomac and rest there one night, and ‘perchance dream of Busby and other playmates, I backed my horse away .and waited until the young man had finished his talk and had secured half a dozen names or marks on his mus- ter-roll, Then 1 dismounted and Joined him and drew him aside, and said: “You'll be Daniel Morgan, at one time a wagoner in Braddock’s army.” “Dead center. But I don’t know you from Adam, friend. You have mighty little meat on your bones.” “] threw you on to a horse at the lower ford of the Monongahela on July ninth, three years ago.” “H—1! I remember. The man fight- ing beside the tall Injun!” “There was a young person with you—" “A gal in breeches. Elsie Dinwold, she gave her name. She had the grit of any man | ever see.” “Had?” 1 repeated, a deathly faint- ness stealing through my gaunt frame. “And still has, I'll guarantee, if she’s kept out of danger and didn’t git sculped. Lord! But she did try desperate hard to git off that hoss and git back to the fighting!” “Man, where is she? Where did you leave her? Why don’t you say something when you talk?” [I cried. And I placed my hands on his shoulders and shook him. He grinned broadly and showed no resentment at my manners. “Where she is I cannot say. Rut she went to Alexandria. [I gathered from her talk—and she talked mighty little—that some one she used to know, and liked a heap, lived there once. But you'll be signing up as a rileman for northern work?” I mounted before bothering to answer him, Then I called back: “That must come later. I must fin ish a journey first.” And though it was dark and my horse was weary I rode on. A skeleton of a man on a worn- out horse. No leisurely riding now. 1 would not have: eaten, nor ‘slept. if not for my mount. I had but one de- sire—to strike into the old postroad and finish the distance at a smash- ing gallop. The poor brute was bad- ly used up when I did leave Shooter’s hill behind me I reined in. Now that I had arrived and would soon know all, I experienced a strange timidity. Three years had passed. No soldiers now enlivened Alexandria; and 1 knew the drowsy calm of the town would never suit her. She had gone away long before this; or—and this was a most disturbing thought —she had found some one who uap- preciated her, and had married. Be- yond all doubt she had come to the belief that I was dead. Now that I had talked with young Morgan I could not forgive my stu- pendous folly in neglecting to seek her on the banks of the Potomac. Yet I had reasoned logically enough —she was never one to seek refuge in Alexandria. She was born of the frontier and border blood was in her veins. She would feel as much out of place in Alexandria as the fair Josephine would feel on the lonely shore of the Monongahela. I clucked to my horse and | rode down the King’s road, and the dust scuffed up by my tired mount’s feet lazily drifted on to the meadow grass and settled and spoiled its sheen: just ‘as it had when I watched the gren- adiers march up the same road on Braddock’s fatal business. The town had changed none. There were the same slim and fat chimneys. the same quaint roofs of different patterns, and the double row ot Lom bardy poplars before the Carlisle house. There were the windows of the blue-and-white room, where Brad- dock had drunk his wine and rightly had berated the colonies for their lack of zeal, The new warehouse on Point Lumley, at the foot of Duke street, was complete and already showing the mellow influence of the weather. On the wharf were sev- eral guns, brought over by Braddock and left behind because of their cum- bersome weight. But no gay uni- forms decorated the approach to the Royal George and Gadsby’s; no guards awed the natives by their precise maneuvers in the market-place. I dismounted to be less conspicu- ous, ‘and with my long rifle under my arm led my patient animal to the House of the Open Hand. And here I received a sharp surprise. The garden beyond the gate was trim and orderly. The fountain was cleaned out, and the yellow-topped mustard was destroyed. The roof of the grape arbor had been repaired; and the grounds reflected the tidy content my father had so dearly loved. The place was inhabited. 1 turned away, feeling greatly de- pressed. Now I knew 1 had come on a fool's errand. The witch-girl—a bit of thistledown before the wind— had drifted on. I had no heart to see the front of the house, and would have returned to the market-place to bait my mount and ride away had not a woman emerged from the door to stare at me for a second. I was for hurrying on, but she called me by name and came running after me as fast as her flounces and petticoats would permit. “1 knew you! F knew you, Webster .Brond! Your tall figure would be- tray you anywhere!” she cried, ex- tending both hands. “Josephine!” I mumbled. “Mistress Hewitt, wife of Carter ‘ Hewitt,” she corrected, and relin- .quished my hands to drop me a cour- . tesy. “You must come in and tell me . Where you have been and what you have been doing. Mr. Hewitt will be back any time now. He rode to . Annapolis.” + So poor Busby’s message would never be delivered. Relieved of that ‘sad errand, there was no call for me to tarry, I mumbled something : about being in a desperate hurry, but she seemed to be possessed even to the point of unwomanliness. For she ‘ fairly danced before me, her blue eyes sparkling with mischief; and she insisted: “You must come in, mister. You just must.” “Why do you speak like that?” 1 whispered. “Why do you call me ‘mister’ ?” And 1 grasped her hands and . gripped them til' her savage. “No; I'll tell you nothing out here ‘in the road,” she cried. “A vestry- man will be rebuking us. Besides, it’s not comely that you should hold my hands. Come I” 1 x grimace re- | minded me I was not handling a red | the cool doorway. In the hall I halted and cautiously seated myself in a spindle-legged chair, and demanded: “Now tell me.” “Oh, Webster, it would be so ro- mantic if you weren't so stupidly mat- ter-of-fact. Why shouldn’t T call you ‘mister’ ?” 3 “Josephine, the devil's in you. Have you anything to say or not?” I rose as if to leave With a sigh at having. her game cut short she primly began: “l have a young ward. a refugee from the Braddock rout. She came bere in a most scandalous condition —dressed as a man! She gave your name and said you would come to find her. She gave me your name, but she always speaks of you as ‘mister.’ How is that for mighty re- spect?” “And now? tered. . “Why, now she should be in the garden, gathering posies for the table. You see Mr. Hewitt bought this place three days after Braddock and poor Busby marched away. He was a con- firmed bachelor. He lived here alone until our marriage a year ago this summer. Mistress Elsie from the be: ginning would come here to walk in the garden because it had been your home. It promised a rare scandal. Mr. Hewitt appealed to me in great alarm. 1 had to marry the poor man, or else banish the wild thipg. Now it’s perfectly proper for her to walk in the garden as much as she will. I've lost my interest in you, Webster. You know the way down the hall?” An idiotic question. The door, open- ing into the garden, was the one had passed through thousands of times in the old days. “You've been good to her, Joseph- ine. You must have been mighty good Waere is she?” | mut- to her, or she would never have stayed.” “Rubbish! 1 couldn’t have driven her away. She was always looking for ‘mister’ to come. She would have made a camp in the ~arden and lived like an Indian.” Then with much sad- ness she added: “I hate that word— Indian. You understand, Webster— I'm sorry.” “His last words, Joe,” 1 blundered, giving her Busby’s message after all. “Go find her,” she brokenly whispered. And as 1 made down the hall I saw her hand traveling up the You've Come Back!” “Oh, Mister! balustrade, clinging te it tightly to aid her weary feet. But sorrow was not for me this day. | was selfishly alive with the joy of anticipation. [I burst through the doorway as if pursued by Pontiac himself. Next I came to a plunging halt and found myself bowing awk- wardly before a dainty creature in flounces . and lace. “I beg your pardon,” | stammered “1 was looking for a young lady—" “Oh, mister! You've come back!” she sobbed. And the armful of flowers was dropped and a miracle was worked; for I found the lovely thing in my arms, her voice whimper ing over and over: “Oh, miste. You've come back!” [THE END.) The New Testament The New Testament has done more | toward creating a race of noble men and’ women than all the books of the world put together.—Sir Walter Scott. Duty and Faith The descent of duty is ever fol- lowed by the ascent of faith—Dr. J. B. Shaw. Justice Triumphs Man 1s unjust, but God is just; and justice finally triumphs.—Longfellow. For Religion’s Sake I say the whole earth and all the stars in the sky are for religion's sake.—Walt Whitman. A Faithful Man A man of faith is one who trusts God. A faithful man is one whom God can trust.—D. T. Christian’s Commission Why run? Suffering is a part and parcel of the Christian's commission. —J. W. Lee. From on High Power from on high- made those sunburned fishermen irresistible,—J. W. Lee. 1 released her, and followed ner | under the grinning mask and through | Page Seven genes EEE 5 ¢ She Was Hunting : : a Hero : . "By AD SCHUSTER : B.9.9.9.00 00000 090000000000 00 (Copyright.) ¢ J HAVE no objection to your be- ing athletic and independent,” Caroline’s mother spoke slowly, “but doesn’t it strike you that you are in- tolerant of those who have other tastes?” “Maybe 80,” the girl answered lightly. “But this I know. I am going West to the mountalns. I am going to see big strong men who fear noth- ing and who are of a different breed than those T have known. I am going to escape from the sissies and the highbrows and when I come back I —well, maybe I will have entirely re- formed.” Caroline, in the mountain cabin, waited for the hero of the open spaces and the first man she saw, other than old Abe Potter, who with his wife owned the retreat, was Le- roy Boone. Boone was tall and slen- der. He wore nose glasses and spoke in a low voice. Except for his woods- man’s clothes he looked like a college man. Caroline was disappointed and yet Leroy was the only man within sight.” “I have been waiting to meet a man of the West,” she said, giving him one of her best smiles. “I want to learn all about the customs and people.” “It is probable you will find us muck like the men of any other place.” He was amused at her en- thusiasm. “You don’t understand. I come from a little town in the East. I am vigorous and independent, in a place where girls are quiet and ladylike and men are studious and timid. I wish to forget books and science, and live with the trees and the hills. When I meet a man I want him toc be a miner, hunter, or even a stage rob- ber. Can’t you see?” The man of the West removed his spectacles, drew out a handkerchief and cleaned the lenses with delibera- tion. “They don’t rob stages out here any more,” he said, .“and most of the cow- boys have gone in the movies.” After a moment of deliberation he added, “Maybe, by hunting long enough, I could scare you up a man whose fa- ther.had been a cattle-rustler?” “I see,” Caroline was offended. “You do not understand. But if life is so unexciting here why are you in the mountains?” 1) “I might be a tourist like yourself but I'm not. You see I work for the biological survey.” “Mercy that’s a queer thing to have in the hills! It means college educa- tion and books; that you are a stu- dent and not a real wild westerner after all. I didn’t think,” she caught herself before confessing she did not think his appearance was promising and continued, “I didn’t think it would be so difficult to meet the kind of men I've read about.” When Leroy Boone ceme by again he brought her a rare flower he had found on the trail and again he smiled oddly when he saw she was not pleased. “Your western man,” he said, “the one you have pictured, would not have picked a flower and carried it so care- fully. No—I think he would have been shooting the lights out of a sa- loon or rescuing a leather-skirted girl from the hands of the villainous fore- man of a rival ranch. It's too bad there isn’t a motion picture house up here.” He went his way, walking leisurely as a man with plenty of time. : “He’s angry because I didn’t thank him for his flower,” Caroline decided. “Well, as soon as he understands I do not wish biological surveyors bring- ing me posies, I will be better satis- fied. I can see plenty of men like him at home.” And when she returned to the cabin she said nothing to the Pot- ters of the man who had no place in her picture or scheme. Several times more the girl met him and at last she admitted to her- self there was something in his quiet, almost tolerant manner that attracted her even while it exasperated. But she would not surrender. She had taken the superior attitude and until he proved himself a hero, worthy of his environment, she would continue disdainful. By the time she. came to leave they were as well acquainted as the peculiarly strained situation would allow. “I am sorry you are going,” he said, “sorry because I will miss you and because you should stay long enough to get the real values of our West.” Was the man going to propose? And what would she say? Caroline felt suddenly her values had changed and that she was going to miss him, Then came that tantalizing smile and the banter which enraged her. “If I were the sort you have been looking for I would kidnap you, throw you over a horse and take you to the parson. But as it is, I can only ” “Say good-by,” finished Caroline and she hastened to the cabin vow- ing she would be glad to forget this man who had no right to pretend to be of her West. As Abe Potter drove her over to the station he mentioned Boone, “He works for the biological sur- vey,” he said, drawing the words out importantly. “They hires him to hunt mountain lions. Last week he got five in one day!” For five minutes Caroline was gaf- lent. Then timidly she said, “Mr. Pot- ter, turn around and drive me back. | Pm going to stay another week.” | »