marie VAN VOR ULUSTPATIQ coPYMCfrrer the BOBBi-rtrimiiLCOftPAirY SYNOPSIS. 15 Le Comte de Sabron, captain of French cavalry, takes to hla quarters to raise by hand a motherless Irish terrier pup, and names It Pltchoune. He dines with the Marquise d'Escllsnac and meets Miss Ju lia Redmond, American heiress. He Is or dered to Algiers but is not allowed to take servants or dops. Miss Redmond takes care of Pltchoune, who, longing for his master, runs away from her. The marquise plans to marry Julia to the Duo de Tremont. Pltchoune follows Sabron to Algiers, dog and master meet, and Sabron pus permission to keep his dog with him. The Due de Tremont finds the American heiress capricious. Sabron, wounded in an engagement, falls Into the dry bed of a river and Is watched over by Pltchoune. After a horrible nluht and day Pltchoune leaves him. Tremont takes Julia and the marquise lo Algiers In his yacht but has doubts about Julia's Red Cross mission. After long search Aulla gets trace of Sa bron's whereabouts. Julia fnr.the mo ment turns matchmaker In behalf of Tre mont. Hammet Abou tells the Mar quise where he thinks Sabron may be found. Tremont decides to go with Ham met Abou to find Sabron. Pltchoune finds a village, twelve hours journey away, and somehow makes Katou Annl understand his master's desperate plight. Sabron Is rescued by the village men but grows Weaker without proper care. CHAPTER XXIII. Two Love Stories. If It had not been for her absorbing thought of Sabron, Julia would have reveled In the desert and the new ex periences. As It was, its charm and magic and the fact that he traveled Dver it helped her to endure the Inter val. In the deep Impenetrable silence she eeeraed to hear her future speak to her. She believed that it would either be a Wonderfully happy one, or a hope lessly withered life. "Julia, I cannot ride any farther! exclaimed the comtesse. She was an excellent horsewoman and had ridden all her life, but her riding of late had consisted of a can ter in the Bois de Boulogne at noon and it was sometimes hard to follow Julia's tireless gallops toward an ever flisappearing goal, "Forgiv" me," said Miss Redmond, and brought her horse up to her friend's side. It was the cool of the day, of the fourteenth day since Tremont had left Aiglets and the seventh day of Julia's excursion. A fresh wind blew from the west, lifting their veils from their relmets and bringing the fragrance of the mimosa Into whose scanty forest they had ridden. The sky paled to ward sunset, and the evening star, second in glory only to the moon, hung over the west. Although both women kt.ew per fectly well the reason for this excur sion and its Importance, not one word had been spoken between them of Sabron and Tremont other than a natural interest and anxiety. They might have been two hospital nurses awaiting their patients. They halted their horses, looking over toward the western horizon and Its mystery. "The star shines over their caravan," mused Madame de la Maine (Julia had not thought Therese poetical), "as though to lead them home." Madame de la Maine turned her face and Julia Baw tears in her eyes. The Frenchwoman's control wat usually perfect, she treated most things with mocking gayety. The bright softness of her eyes touched Julia. "Therese!" exclaimed the Ameri can girl. "It Is only fourteen days!" i Madame de la Maine laughed. There was a break in her voice. "Only four teen days," she repeated, "and any one of those days may mean death!" She threw back her head, touched her stallion, and flew away like light, and it was Julia who first drew rein. "Therese! Therese! We cannot go any farther!" "Lady!" said Azrael. He drew his big black horse up beside them. "We must go back to the tents." Madame de la Maine pointed with her whip toward the horizon. "It is cruel! It ever recedes!" "Tell me, Julia, of Monsieur de Sabron," asked Madame de la Maine abruptly. "There Is nothing to tell, Therese." "You don't trust me?" "Do you think (hat really?" In the tent where Azrael served them their meal, under the celling of Turkish red with Its Arabic charac- ters in clear white, Julia and Madame de la Maine sat while their coffee was served them by a Syrian servant "A girl does not come Into the Sa- hara and watch like a sentinel, does not suffer as you have suffered, ma chere, without there being something to tell." "It Is true," said Miss Redmond, "and would you be with me, Therese, If I did not trust you? And what de you want me to tell?" she added naively. The comtesse laughed. "Vous etes cbarmante, Julia!"' "I met Monsieur de Sabron," said Julia slowly, "not many months ago In Tarascon. I saw him several times, and then he went away." "And then?" urged Madame de la Maine eagerly. "He left his little dog, Pltchoune, with me, and Pltchoune ran after his master, to Marseilles, flinging himself Into the water, and was rescued by the sailors. I wrote about It to Mon' sieur de Sabron, and he answered me from the desert, the night before he went Into battle." "And t' at's all?" urged Madame de la Maine. "That's all," said Miss Redmond. She drank her coffee. "You tell a love story very badly, ma chere." "Is it a love story?" "Have you come to Africa for char ity? Voyons!" Julia was silent. A great reserve seemed to seize her heart, to stifle her as the poverty of her love story struck her. She sat turning her coffee-spoon between her fingers, her eyes downcast. She had very little to tell. She might never have any more to tell. Yet this was her love story. But the presence of Sabron was so real, and she saw his eyes clearly looking upon her as she had seen them often; heard the sound of hiB voice that meant but one thing and the words of Bis letter came back to her. She remembered her letter to him, rescued from the field where he had fallen. She raised her eyes to the Comtesse de la Maine, and there was an appeal In them. The Frenchwoman leaned over and kissed Julia. She asked nothing more. She had not learned her lessons in discretion to no purpose. At night they sat out in the moon light, white as day, and the radiance over the sands was like the snow flowers. Wrapped in their warm cov erings, Julia and Therese de la Maine lay on the rugs before the door of their tent, and above their heads shone the stars so low that It seemed as though their hands could snatch them from the sky. At a little dis tance their servants sat around the dying fire, and there came to them the plaintive song of Azrael, as he led their singing: , And who can give again the love of yes terday? Can a whirlwind replace the sand after It IS BCflx xGrcQ ' What can heal the heart that Allah has smitten? Can the mirage form again when there are no eyes to see? "I was married," said Madame de la Maine, "when'l was sixteen." Julia drew a little nearer and smiled to herself In the shadow. This would be a real love story. "I had just come out of the con vent. We lived in an old chateau, older than the history of your coun try, ma chere, and I had no dot. Rob ert de Tremont and I used to play to gether in the allees of the park, on the terrace. When his mother brought him over when she called on my grandmother, he teased me horribly because the weeds grew between the to bed, and I went down to the lowt terrace where the weeds grew ii plenty, and told Robert. Somehow, did not expect him to make fun, al though we always joked about every thing until this night. It was aftei nine o'clock." The comtesse swept one hand to ward the desert. "A moon like this only not like this ma chere. There was never but that moon to me foi many years. "I thought at first that Bob would kill me he grew so white and terrible. He seemed suddenly to have aged ten years. I will never forget his cry as It rang out in the night 'You will marry that old man when we love each oth er?' I had never known it until then. "We were only children, but he grew suddenly old. I knew it then," said Madame de la Maine Intensely, "I knew it then." She waited for a long time. - Over the face of the desert there seemed to be nothing but one veil of light The silence grew so intense, so deep; the Arabs had stopped singing, but the heart fairly echoed, and Julia grew meditative before her eyes the cara van she waited for seemed to come out of the moonlit mist, rocking, rocking- the camels and the huddled figures of the riders, their shadows cast upon the sand. And now Tremont would be forever changed in her mind. A man who had suffered from his youth, a warm-hearted boy, defrauded of his early love. It seemed to her that he was a charming figure to lead Sabron. "Therese," she murmured, "won't you tell me?" "They thought I had gone to bed," said the Comtesse de la Maine, "and I went back to my room by a little stair case, seldom used, and I found myself alone, and I knew what life was and what it meant to be poor." "But," interrupted Julia, horrified, "girls are not sold in the twentieth century." "They are sometimes in France, my dear. Robert was only seventeen. His father laughed at him, threatened to send him to South America. We were victims." "It was the harvest moon," con' tlnued Madame de la Maine gently, "and it shone on us every night until my wedding day. Then the duke kept his threat and sent Robert out of France. He continued his studies in England and went into the army , of Africa." There was a silence again. "I did not see him until last year,' said Madame de la Maine, "after my husband died." CHAPTER XXIV. The Meeting. Under the sun, under the starry nights Tremont, with his burden, jour neyed toward the north. The halts were distasteful to him, and although he was forced to rest he would rather have been cursed with sleeplessness and have journeyed on and on. He rode his camel like a Bedouin; he grew brown like the Bedouins and under the hot breezes, swaying on his desert ship, he sank into dreamy, moody and melancholy reveries, like the wander ing men of the Sahara, and felt him self part of the desolation, as they were. "What will be, will be!" Hammet Abou said to him a hundred times, and Tremont wondered: "Will Charles live to see Algiers?" Sabron journeyed in a litter carried between six mules, and they traveled slowly, slowly. Tremont rode by the sick man's side day after day. Not once did the soldier for any length of time regain his reason. He would pass from coma to delirium, and many times Tremont thought he had ceased to breathe. Slender, emaciated under his covers, Sabron lay like the image of a soldier In wax a wounded man carried as a votive offering to the altars of desert warfare. (TO BE CONTINUED.) AIRE FUIH ARE FIGHTING 10 LOST PROVINCE OF LORRAINE Edward B. Clark Describes a Visit to the French Trenches Near Nancy Noise of the Batteries Is Terrific Men Live Under ground Day in and Day Out, Yet Keep Their Spirits Above Ground Sees War and Peace Side by Side. By EDWARD B. CLARK. (Staff Correspondent of the Western Newspaper Union.) At Lorraine's battle front. Nancy, In French Lorraine, is the city at which I left the train to make my way under military g u 1 d -ance to the bat tle front. This town of France is only a few miles distant from where the troops of the re public and the troops of the empire are at grips along one of the most hot ly contested fronts in this world war. It is the am bition of the French army to take German hold it for all time. German took this province away from France in 1870, and France wants to take It back. It is probable that the French soldiers here have an added spirit for the fighting be cause fair Lorraine, their one-time possession, is the prize at stake. It was not my thought that I should see any of the real battling until I reached the actual front, but strange ly enough perhaps I saw fighting of a kind which 15 years ago could not Dave been witnessed, and I saw it Edward B. Clark. Lorraine and to never know where one of the things is going to drop. The noise is terrific, and while all the batteries along the front may be firing at something miles away, the hearer and the onlook er does not know this necessarily, but if he suspects it and thinks that dan ger is remote he has full realization that a variation of an inch or two to the right or to the left of the muz zle of one of the big guns will change the direction of the fire so that the next projectile may land In his lap. We reached the firing line. Now, if people have any idea that on the mod ern battlefield, except on the occasions of charges and countercharges, there are thousands upon thousands o( men in view, the idea may as well be fore gone. There are two big armies In the field here, and yet you don't see them,, so to speak, Individually. The soldiers of France and Germany here are either covered by the dense woods or elaeihey are underground 'like so many thousands of ribbits in their burrows. The cannonading is terrific and yet it Is difficult unless you happen to be at the exact point where the shells fall, to tell what all the row is about. In this section of the coun try the French biplanes and the Ger man taubes make their high and lofty excursions for the purpose of detect ing some point in the enemy's line which It Is considered the part of war wisdom to bombard. It may be a blockhouse hidden in the woods but commanding some pathway through the trees, which has been discovered by the sky pilot. When such is the case the artillery will open as accu trom a hotel window in the big city of Nancy. The windows of my room rately as possible upon the spot des- At Night They Sat Out in the Moon light. stones of our terrace. He was very rude. "Throughout our childhood, until I was sixteen, we teased each other and fought and quarreled." "This is not a love-affair, Therese," said Miss Redmond. "There are all kinds, ma chere, as there are all temperaments," said Madame de la Maine. "At Assump tionthat is our great feast, Julia the Feast of Mary It comes In Au gustat Assumption, Monsieur de la Maine came to talk with my grand mother. He was forty years old, and bald Bob and I made fun of bis few hairs, like the children In the Holy Bible." Julia put out her hand and took the hand of Madame de la Maine gently. She was getting so far from a love affair. "I married Monsieur de la Maine in six weeks," said Therese. "Oh," breathed Miss Redmond, "hor rible!" Madame de la Maine pressed Julia's hand. "When It was decided between my grandmother and the comte, I escaped at night, after they thought I bad gene Things That Have Been Condemned. If we banished from our tables all the commodities which like pota toes have been condemned In print our diet wouM be decidedly monoto nous. "Food faddists are most aggres sive persons," Henry Labouchere once complained. "In my time I have known them preach that we should give up meat, tobacco, alcohol, soup, starch (Including bread and potatoes), salt. tomatoes, bananas, strawberries and bath buns. I have also witnessed movements for giving up boots, waist coats, hats, overcoats, carpets, feather beds, spring mattresses, cold baths. linen clothes, woolen clothes, sleeping more than six hours, sleeping less than nine hours and lighting fires at the bottom." Some Lost Motion. A Philadelphia mathematician has figured it out that the telephone com panies lose 125 hours' work every day through the use of the word "please" by all operators and patrons. Another has discovered that the froth on the beer pays the freight But as yet no one has estimated the total horse power wasted in swallowing cigarette moke and forcing it through the nose Instead of blowing It from the mouth. Newark News. Scandinavian Housekeeping. In Scandinavia the peasant wom en who worked all day In the fields, have bad tbelr tireless methods of cooking for a long time. While break fast was cooking, the pot containing the stew for dinner was brought to a boil then placed Inside a second pot and the whole snugly ensconced between the feather beds, still warm from the night's occupancy. Some of these women bad a loosned hearts- stone and r. bole beneath. faced east I was at the top of the hotel. The view before me was un broken to the hills eastward under whose shadow the German troops are lying. Seated by the window just be fore sunset I heard in quick succes sion the reports of a fusillade. I looked out and in the air at a distance of perhaps a mile a German taube was wheeling and dodging In the midst of showers of shrapnel. There were 29 shells fired in less than as many seconds at least so it seemed. The projectiles burst about the flying machine seemingly only a few yards away from it and yet so far as I could discover it withstood tile hall unhurt Watches a Cloud Battle. As each shell burst a wreath of light smoke formed, perfect in con tour, and as sightly as all things are which follow the curvet: lines of beau ty. There was not a breath of air stir ring, and the crowns of smoke touched by the setting sun were like halos. There were 29 shells fired, and each gave forth its wreath of smoke, and the last one had burst before the smoke crown gave the least sign of disintegration. It was a war sight, but It was appealing. The German taube finally turned and planed down behind the hill and was lost to my eight. I knew that it went well within the German lines, but whether its crew of two men es caped injury or not, I do not know The French were content perhaps that their battery had driven the enemy back into his own lines and had pre vented the dropping of bombs into the streets of Nancy, or perhaps the tak ing of observations which might have been of assistance to the Ioe. It was the next day after this cloud battle scene that I went to the front. It Is not far from Nancy to the firing line, and long before you come to the place where the shells are fired you get to the place where the shells drop. It could not have been more than four miles out of town before the pound ing of the guns hit my ears and hit them in a most unpleasant way. When the tenderfoot goes forth to war the tenderness of his feet is likely to find companionship with the tenderness of his heart. In other words, the heart sinks Into the boots where the feet ire. Notts Is Terrific The trouble with the Infernal shell ing as far as It affects the man who is going forth to see it, Is that you Big French Guns In Action. ignated by the flying machine scout, and then after the shells have rained for a while there will be an advance of Infantry to capture the position. Labyrinths cf Barbed Wire. It did not seem possible to me that there was so much barbed wire In this big world of ours as is strung along through the woods and fields of this part of France. It Is a deadly wire, for It has more prickles than any burr that grows in the fields, and these prickles are of steel. The wire is strung into labyrinths through which it is impossible to thread one's way except under guidance. Back of these mazes of barbed wire are the trenches, and In these trenches are the soldiers of France, although you do not know It until you drop down into their midst. Here they are with their periscopes watching and waiting in the lull times for a chance to pick off a foeman who is looking through his periscope in a trench some hundreds of yards away. This Is like squirrel shooting. Probably not more than seven or eight men are killed in 21 hours by this sharpshootlng process, but the soldiers indulge in it all the time in order to make their enemy keep under ground, and if they can, to make them keep their hearts underground with them. Keep Up Their Spirits. I do not understand how men can live underground day in and day out and keep their spirits aboveground. The French are doing it, however, and I suppose by the same token that the Germans are doing it also. Once in a while they get surcease from stag nation by an order to charge. It is an event, the effect of which in buoy- ance of spirits lasts for weeks, when one side of the other takes a single trench from the enemy and holds It. There Is a curious looking telescope In use in the French trenches. At first sight I thought it was a silver mounted flute, for it looks like a flute more than anything else. Instead of looking through the "flute" lengthwise you look though it "sldewlse," and In It you see mirrored the rough line which shows the outer edge of the Ger man Intrench ments, but you don't see any Germans unless you watch care fully for a long time. Then you see a little movement perhaps and then a rifle at your right or left speaks, and then you know that possibly there la a dead or ft wounded man In the trench you see to your front We went out of the field trenches and made our way back into the wood' My army officer companion asked me bow much I knew about woodcraft1 Pecause of a life given over to a con siderable extent to natural history pursuits which had carried me into the wilderness on many occasions, I said that I thought I knew s little something of the forest and of "signs and seasons." Then the officer asked me to let him know if I discovered anything that looked unusual as we walked through the lights and shades of the birch forest I put all my senses to work and tried to detect some symptom that everything was not just as it should be In an ordinary wood. I sensed' nothing out of the ordinary, and was just about to say so when my knee struck something hard and I looked down. I was staring straight into the muzzle of a huge naval gun emplaced at an angle of about thirty degrees. A Well-Concealed Gun. ThiB gun was in an "underground house." For a distance of at least two feet back of the muzzle the gun was shrouded with a green growth which completely concealed it. The house had a roof, but green things were growing upon it and there was absolutely nothing to tell that under the cover was a gun pit. We entered the house by means of some concealed steps and there we found a detach ment of men ready to make the gun speak when a returning air scout should give the gunners directions as to just where to let a shell drop. It was while I was in this gun pit that rapid firing was heard at the ex treme edge of the wood. The can nonading was from a French battery engaged in driving off a German aero plane which unquestionably was seek ing to locate this big gun which had caused trouble in the German lines, but whose position the enemy had been unable exactly to determine. The next day from a rock rising al most sheer to a height of nearly seven hundred feet I looked through the clear air toward Metz, the capital ot German Lorraine, which with Its cir cling fortresses is the prize most cov eted by the French. The artillery of the republic emplaced on a ridge to the right and a little in advance of this position has succeeded in reach ing with Its shells one of the most formidable forts standing guard over Metz. When the French break down, It they can break down, the defenses; of Metz, an army will spring from thej ground and advance toward the Ger man goal of its ambition. Metz, how ever, while really only a few miles away, is a long ways oft, because be tween the outermost French lines and the city of desire lies a German army, and right here on this line within the next few days or weeks, or per haps even months, there is sure to come fighting of a quality so fierce as to put all other fighting along this 600-mile line Into the class with things tame. Views the Battlefield. From where I stood there is a bird's eye view of a great battlefield. We made an early start in order to be able to climb this needle-like rock be fore the sun was high. This hill is called MouBBon, and on its crown there is a chapel built In the eleventh century and which affords a fair and commanding mark for the enemy's ar tillery. The Germans for some rea son or other have left this pinnacle alone for the main part On occasions they send shells over it, and today was one ot the ocacslons. A shell passed over my head while I was climbing the rock. I heard Its whiz zing distinctly, and Instinctively I crouched, much to the amusement of the French army officer who stood at my side. "The thing you hear," he said, "never hits you. It's half a mile past you before you hoar the sound." In climbing the hill of Mousson there are many places where one 1b out from under cover. Walking up the hill was difficult, but running was more than difficult, and yet I had to run be tween the covered points. On this hill we were within range, not only of shell fire but of small rifle fire, and the Journey up and down had its un pleasant moments. When half-way down this Rock ot Mousson the cannonading grew louder. The truth was that a new battery had opened, one much nearer to us than the guns which had been thundering before. We looked down from the hill side to the village of Pont-a-Mousson which lay nestling at our feet. Into the village the shells were pounding. All that we could see was clouds ot dust and smoke mingled as we knew with mortar, stone fragments, and the ground powder of plaster. Short Ereathlng Space. We reached the foot of the hill, en tered a military automobile, and were whirled into Pont-a-Mousson. The cannonading had ceased and the vil lagers, men, women and children, again going about the streets. No one knew, however, when the fusillade would begin again. It did begin again, not long after we left the town, and 20 people met their death inside of an hour from the time the first gun spoke. Pont-a-Mousson Is not far from Metz. The same river supplies water to botb. cities. One is in France and the oth er is In Germany. The French say that before the snow flies again both cities will be In France, and that both will belong to France for all time. I do not know whether this will prove true or not, but I io know that all along this line tr - French are fight ing with a doub' strengthened heart,, and perhaps v !h a doubly strength ened ferocity. They want Lorraine, and Lorralm ihey are going to get it valor can w n it