Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1927-1929, December 13, 1928, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ted noad
(jiaiis we Kuew tiie a im j '»a*
tlcaily surrounded. The Onondaga,
glistening with sweat and ferocious
for closer fighting, yelled In my ear;
“ They say we shall die like brave
men I"
I did not desire to be slaughtered
as the uselessly heroic never appealed
counted for only a portion of our dead to me. But the Dlnwold girl was
cooped up Inside the devilish circle
and wounded.
As Bound Paw and 1 fell back and there are certain things a man
through the woods on the right of the must always do. She was of my race
road and risked death at every step and I was especially bound to find
from the fire of our own men, I caught her. With the Onondaga the case wss
a glimpse of General Braddock, tils different. He had a fa ir chance of
horse was down and he wag striking a winning clear of the terrible mistake,
man with the flat of his sword to and I urged him to do so. He asked
drive him from the shelter of a tree me i f 1 would keep wltb him. and when
where the fellow bad very sensibly I answered that I must find the witch-
taken refuge.
woman he whooped hoarsely and took
An aide supplied the commander the lead In a line that ran parallel
Y ffH E X anoth er C hristm as
with a fresh mount. Just us young to the blood-soaked road.
’ ’ rolls around—and another
We heard the drums sound the re­
Washington, bare-headed, his eyes
—and a n oth ei— your fam ily
blazing, reined In bis fruntic horse und treat and knew that Braddock was
will still be enjoying this beau­
loudly urged, "Get them out of this dead or bad lost bis haughty pride.
_ss»ysMssa_
tiful and sensible gift.
We beard the firing down the line as
slaughter-pent Into the woods 1"
» » 3 ♦ 5
m J h H
6 7 I 9 'o n I»
I 9 i o n 11 1)14
2
,0
0
0
,0
0
0
f
a
m
i
li
e
s
h
ave
the
enemy
attacked
llalket'a
men
at
"By G— d, I’m commander here, air I
» 3 14 ’S »6 ’ 7 18 ' 9
151617 »119 i u U
>011111314 >5 *
Atwater Kent Radio, Many of
111314 » 5 * 0 2 7 *
They’lh fight here I
We must ad­ the baggage-train, and from the les­
»7 >«»930 3»
»930
them made their purchases last
vance!” roared the general, hla heavy sening volume of the return fire we
Christmas. "We felt this was
face suffused with anger. "You d—d knew our losses must be tremendous,
made wholly by Atwater Kent
sheep, close op I Close up there!” or else the ammunition was falling.
the thing that would please the
At the time Braddock ordered the
in th e w orld’s largest radio
The last to a squad of met, who were
w h ole h o u seh o ld — now we
factory—as big as a 15-acre field!
trying to tree themselves. And he retreat to be sounded only a third of
knou,” they say.
wus riding them down to gel back Into the army was le ft We learned that
M odern battery sets, too
You,
too,
want
entertainment
the road to be slaughtered like sheep. much afterward. The smoke made it
*We haven’t electricity, but we
without trouble. You want to
Sir Peter llalket, who with four hun­ Impossible to see clearly, and the indi­
want good up-to-date radio just
hear good music and good talks
dred men was guarding the baggage vidual combats between rangers and
the same.” Of course— and no
—you always get what you want
train, came through the thick smoke savages served to confuse further our
from "the radio that keeps on
reason why you shouldn’t have
and yelled a request that the men be sense of direction. I remember the
Onondaga giving a mighty grunt as
working.”
it! Atwater Kent battery sets
ordered to find shelter.
• R a d io ’ s T ru e s t V o ic e "
have th e 1929 refin em en ts.
"Damnation I" thundered the gen­ be crashed bis ax through the bead
All-electric
Atwater Kent Radio Speak«
ersi Models E , F-2, E-3,
You’ll
recognize
them
when
you
eral. "D id I lead his majesty’s reg­ of a Huron who bumped into ns. 1
If you have electricity from a
•ante qualitv. different la
recall
mechanically
stavlDg
In
another
ulars out here to hide from a parcel
listen.
Your
choice
o
f
two
mod­
tiie . Each 922.
central station, there are several
of naked red beggars? Advance! We red skull with the butt of my loaded
els—one
for
average
conditions,
Atwater
Kent
models
you
can
must advance I” Then he was raging rifle. And then to my surprise both
one for unusual "distance.”
ope rate rightfromalampsockct.
the Indian and I were In the road,
Either hind— all-elcctric or
If you prefer an a ll-in -o n e
surrounded by the dead and dying,
battery—gives you the best in
cabinet set, with receiver and
and those who fired blindly, and more
radio at a moderate price. See
speaker combined, the dealer
often killed a friend than they wound­
ed a foe.
an Atwater Kent dealer about
will let you try the wonderfully
“These men are fools!” cried the
that Christmas radio—Now!
compact Model 52. They’re all
Battery Sets, 8 3 3 —872
Onondaga, dodging a blow from a
MODEL 40
Solid mahogany cabinets. Panels
On the otr — every Sunday n ig h t—Atw atar Kar.t Radio H our— lútan in i
musket swung by a madman. “ The
F o r 110-120 volt, 50-60 cycle niiematiM
satin-finished in gold. FuLIeVHIoffi
current. Requires six A. C. tubes sad
D ia l. Model 48. 953; Model 49,
woods 1 The woods I”
one rectifying tube, 981 (without tube»;.
extra-powerful, |7 2. Prices do not
A T W A T E R KENT M A N U F A C T U R IN G C O M P A N Y
But now we were In the road It was
Model 41 D . C. set, |91 (without tabes).
include tubes or batteries.
4 7 Ö I W iaaahickon Ave.
A . A tw a ta r R a n t, Proa.
P h ila d e lp h ia , Pa.
most difficult to leave It without be­
ing shot In the back; yet to remain In
N ew Irish C oinage
the frenzied crowd meant death w ith­ S cien tists U n ab le to
The ancient Irish harp w ill replace
out a chance to strike back. We were
D o A w ay W ith Fogs the profile of the king on the new
only a short distance above the bag-
W A N T S Y O U R FURS
On a small scale and in favorable coinage of the Irish Frpe Stnte. The
gage-traln, and toward it we began i circumstances fog can be dispelled, principal features of the Industrial
L ib eral G r a d in g .
B ig profit« for you!
P a y in g t o p - n o t c h p rice« t o r 50 years. Fur
making our way. Guns were spurting hut all known methods are too costly and sporting life of the country and
m a rk et b o o m in g . S e n d to d a y fo r price list.
flame from the bushes at our feet. for commercial use, and so could not Its cultural development are repre­
M c M illa n Fur
T ra p p ers’ G u id
& W ool Co.
The guards were pointing their mus­ he applied on the vast scale on which sented. But S t Patrick, the national
FREE t o sh ip p e r s
Minneapolis. Mum.
kets high and firing thtD volleys Into many fogs occur, even were they of apostle, has not been remembered In
.WE PAY YOU ’’ OÍS' S P O T CASH
the foliage. Once the retreat was proved use. A great deal of time and designing the new coinage of the
sounded a panic had seized upon the labor has been seriously expended In realm. A horse, a bull and a hen with
survivors, and In a stumbling, insane i he effort to suppress fog. The Lon­ a brood represent agriculture. A sal­ W. N. U., PORTLAND, NO. 50-19».
rush those who could walk mnde a don county council has from time to mon and woodcock represent sport A
last attempt to reach the river.
lime given some encouragement to va­ round tower nnd a wolfhound symbo­
O vercom ing D isease
The howling of the Indians In­ rious schemes presented, but all have lize the ancient dignity of Ireland.
Statistics show that the length of
creased in volume as they realized failed. No less a distinguished scien- New currency notes nnd coins w ill not
the average human life Is steadily In­
the extent of their unexpected i tlst than Sir Oliver Lodge hns strug- be In circulation for a few months yet. creasing and Is much greater than It
triumph. A few hours back the fort j gled with this problem and he thought
was half a century or a century ago.
Indians had flatly refused to follow I he had solved it, but practical demon­
Of course this does not mean that the
The E ighth One
Beaujeu, and now they were lusting stration of his electrical scheme
average Individual Is healthier or
Office Manager.—Here, this w ill
like demons to kill, k ill, until not an I failed. Various suggestions have been
never do! Why Is It you are late for stronger. The Increase Is due chiefly
With the Ancient Forest Closely Englishman was left alive. The sav-
I made to clear aviation landing places, your very first morning's work?
to the conquest of disease, control of
Hemming In the Road, With No Foe ages, observing the mad fear now pos­
but all have been discarded and the
epidemics,
better infant care, etc.
sir.
New
Office
Boy—I
’m
sorry,
Vleible, the Army Wae at Helpless sessing the army, grew bolder and
j solution of the problem seems to be There are eight In our family and
as a Blind Man.
began to appear from behind the ! no nearer than it ever was.
the alarm was set fo r seven.
Put It or Taka It
down on those delinquents, whose great trees, from under the grape and
Bob—What did you do when Mabel
yeurs of training were being swept pea-vines, an(l through the tall grass.
said you were odd?
V alue of Cool Mind.
uside hy the Instinct of self-preserva­ Gory hands darted out to seize some
B ill—I told her I would get even.
If a man keeps cool, he commands
dead
or
dying
man
and
drag
him
Into
tion. “ Curse you I Get back there 1”
himself and others.—Chicago News.
the
cover.
The
best
equipped
and
And the fini of his sword beat them
proudest army England had ever sent
Cost L ittle to Produce
soundly over head and shoulders.
As a rule, m ilk Is
to North America was a rabble of
Most people never know the sweet
The
approximate cost of the pro­
Washington wheeled, his horse crazy men.
about the best food
contentment of becoming thoroughly duction of 2-cenf stamps per thousand
bumping Into Sir Peter'a mount, and
fo r
children,
but
Captain Orme of the regulars, and
fatigued.
is fi’,-2 cents.
either lo that gentlemnn, or In apos­
there are times when
Captain Stewart of the Virginia rifle­
they are much better
trophe to the whole terrible situation, men, aided by another American of­
he cried :
off w ithout IL
It
ficer I did not know, came through
"By G— d I My Virginians shan't be the mass bearing a heavy figure. It
should always be le ft
off
when
children
slaughtered!"
Wltb that be was was General Braddock and he was
plunging through the smoke to the puffing for breath and wag wounded
show
by
feverish,
edge of (be growth where Bound Paw through the chest.
fre tfu l or cross spells, by bad breath,
and I, and some riflemen, were treeing
coated tongue, sallow skin, indiges­
•Braddock’s k ille d !
Braddock’s
ourselves, lie shouted, “ Captain Wag­
tion, biliousness, etc., that their stom­
killed I” was the despairing cry raised
goner, tree yourself! Clear this side
ach and bowels are out of order.
as the commander was carried to the
of the road 1“
In cases like this, California Fig
rear.
Syrup never falls to work wonders, by
Captain Waggoner raised his hand
"B ally the fools at the ford," the quick and gentle way i t removes
and penetrated deeper Into the
gasped the commander.
all the souring waste which Is caus­
growth. Eighty men, all excellent rifle
“ Braddock’s killed I" howled a d rill ing the trouble, regulates the stom­
shuts, streamed after him. The Unon-
sergeant, although he must have ach and bowels and gives these or­
duga and I kepi abreast of the cap­
heard his general speak.
gans tone and strength so they con­
tain. He did not attempt to make hla
And he danced up and down until tinue to act normally of their own ac­
voice heard above the Infernal din,
but |H>tnted to the rising ground, on red hands shot out from the bushes cord. Children love Its rich, fru ity
the brow of which extended a fallen and caught him hy the ankles and flavor and It's purely vegetable and
harmless, even fo r babies.
tree that must have measured at the lerked him from our sig h t
Colonel \\ ashlngtnn now had all
Millions of mothers have proved Its
least five feet In diameter. Once be­
hind that stout barricade I knew Wag­ the riflemen fighting I d the ludian m erit and re lia b ility In over 50 years
goner’s men would stain clear that fashion, and only his maneuver saved of steadily increasing use. A Western
side of the road, and then could circle the army from being annihilated. As mother, Mrs. May Snavriy, Montrose,
around the head of the army and It was, four hundred and fifty officers California, says: "M y little g irl, Ed­
drive the savages from the terrible and men were dead, slain outright, na's. tendency to constipation was a
ravine. Now we were In the tra p ; und nearly as many more wounded. problem to me u ntil I began giving
General Braddock's solution was the Out of elghty-nine commissioned of­ her California Fig Syrup. I t helped
only one. The army must advance. ficers sixty-three were killed or her right away nnd soon her stomach
We lost three men by the enemy by wounded ; and not a field-officer had and bowels were acting perfectly.
Lean Virginians Since then I've never had to have any
gaining the h ill; and then the cmzy escaped unhurt
mob In the roud poured a volley Into front behind trees were shouting en­ advice about her bowels. I have al­
couragement to oue another and call­ so used California Fig Syrup w ith
our rear that killed fifty men I
A few remained ou the hill for ing for the regulars to fall back out my little boy, w ith equal success.”
The nurse tells you to take-Bayer Aspirin because she knows
To be sure o f getting the genuine,
safety's sake. The rest took their of the way and cross the river. B
safe. Doctors have told her so. It has no effect on the heart*0
luck below In the woods, striving to was the first time our riflemen nnd which physicians endorse, alwnys ask
England's
carefully
drilled
regulars
take
it to stop a headache or check a cold. For almost ui»nt
for
California
Fig
Syrup
by
the
fu
ll
keep on the outskirts of the enemy’s
relief of neuralgia, neuritis, rheumatism; even lumbago.
line. The Ouondnga and I fell hack, had gone Into battle together.,and a l ­ name.
ready the colonlnla were discovering
sure it s Bayer—the genuine Aspirin. At druggists, with JVf a
fighting from tree to tree and striving
they were belter men for forest fight
Jew els in Chaldean Tomb
directions for its many uses.
to reach the wagon train. The after­
Ing.
Rings of gold und silver, inlaid gold
Aspirin 1« the trad# mark of B a y ** M anufactM
noon was wea.Ing away and from the
(TO B E C O N T IN U E D .)
of Moooectticacldeater of Salleylicacid .
en rosettes and small animal figures
of the precious metal were among ar­
0<.XXXX m X k XX>< h ><X>< h > 0 0 0 0 < m X h X ^ > 0 0 0 < k > 0 0< m X>< m X h >0< m X>< h X> o o o o
ticles found in the tomb of the Suro-
erial queen Shub-Ad. unearthed re­
cently by members of the jo in t expe­
dition of the museum of Philadelphia
Gluttony a vice? Not so to the riv­ he must swallow a fish ro large that nnd the British museum, says Popular
er gull of black tipped wings In the In Its new position It destroys bis Mechanics Magazine. The Jewelry Is
Northwest It awoops down and aerial balance and down he goes to over five thousand years old and adds
* tr s n ilr r »
n tic u r a
snnte*.e« fish from the very bands of the waves. The Indians of the North­ to the Interest of the discoveries In
in»l p r e v e r .
nnglers and. fighting off thousands of west have a legend that a giant ones recent expeditions to Cr of the Chai-
in Ihr
J ° ’, r ,la ir
Its fellows, proves that gluttony Is a became so annoyed with the winged dees.
’^ ‘thCuticura Ointment
virtue enabling the one that can most robbers that he caught a whole flock
M aasagaA ove the scale» o f dirt and
speedily swallow to survive. Whole of them Into hla campfire Hence, they
Two Birds W ith One Ston e
thicks ot these bold and rt I Ideas birds say, the blaek tipped wings.
to settea poo with Cuticura Soap to
Sue— So you always serve dough
dandrrfniy the ha,r and rejtore it)
hover around the salmon tlrliers and
nuts when Fred calls?
c I caof » arul vigor.
watch their twitching lines sunk deep
I'.thel—Yea, that'a the way I try to
Poor Ladder to C lim b On
In the Columbia, says a writer In the
remind him of rings and dough nt the
*
t o r t h e eR tea
R are r.
Portland Oregonian, and HP w ill some
"Popular nothing!" exclaimed a same tim e ’—True Story Magazine.
times strike for the flopping prize
young actress wbo was discussing a
T*'01"’
SoJJ ewrr-
Plie victor must swallow quickly ss rival player with a friend. "Why. the
A man always credits himself with
S h .,in< S ,„ k ».Vr.
tie darts upward heating off the fiuffet
loosest run she ever had was lo 6«; Irmness and charges tha other fel
tng* of h it g r w lj rh u lt. Sometime? t «hx-king."
I low with obstinacy.
A Romance oS Braddock’s Defeat
By Hugh Pendexter
lllu itra tio n i b y
I r w in M yers
O h p y rltfh t
by
Hugh
P en d extn r.
WNU Mnrvluu
C H A P T E R IX— C ontinued
—27—
"They are charging u s l” cried the
Ononduga. And sounding bla war-
whoop he fired at the figures now
sw iftly bounding forward.
I also fired and stopped a savage.
But I did not believe the alfulr would
amount to anything more than an ex­
change of shots between the scouts
nntU I recognized Captain Beaujeu at
thp bead of a mixed force of French
and Indians. On the breast of his
fringed huntlng-shlrt was a silver
gorget, a pleasing target had I not
emptied my rifle at the snvage.
A moment after I fired, Beaujeu
halted and waved his bat above his
head, and the Indians scattered to left
and right. I would have believed the
enemy was retreating had not the
Canadians and regulars remained to
hold the road against us.
While I wus reloading, Mr. Gordon
o f the engineers came up and wus the
first of the regulars to behold the ene­
my. It seemed to be a most foolhardy
thing for two hundred Frenchman to
dispute the Duquesne roud ngulnst our
proud army. I began to realize we
were In for something more than a
skirmish when a heavy fire opened on
us from ahead and from both sides.
Bound Paw and I both hugged the
ground and retired to the right.
A terrific howling and yelling was
started by the savages, a sinister
chorus thut encompas-sed the roud for
some dlstunce. Guge's troops seemed
to be confused by the fiendish clamor
and the Invisibility of the foe. The
men staggered under the cruel fire,
then rullied and began emptying their
muskets In volleys. But there was
nothing to shoot at except the slim
French force ahead. Before they could
fall back from the Jaws of the trap.
8L C lair’s working force came up on
the run to pile confusion on confusion.
Gage felt the reinforcements behind
him and ordered his men to charge
straight ahead and eliminate the
Frenchmen. The head of his column
was speedily wiped out, and the rest
were suilly staggered by the fierce
fire.
A gun was rushed up to support the
pioneers, uud at the third discharge
o f the piece, Beaujeu fell dead, dying
gallantly us became a Chevalier of
St. Louis. Captain Dunins took his
place, and for a while the fighting was
stubbornly maintained by both sides,
w ith neither, apparently, securing any
distinct advantage, but with the Eng
llsb sustaining heavy punishment
General Braddock persisted In sending
heavy masses of men up the road,
whereas he should have fallen hack
until he could have cleared the woods
on both rides of the road.
During this portion of the fight, the
Ononduga and I shifted about und
took turns firing, and taking care thut
one of our rifles should be loaded at
all times. On three different occa­
sions we were charged by small bunds
of suvuges, but the second unexpected
shot from behind the same tree al­
ways spoiled the attack and sent the
red man back to where the killing wus
easier.
Then Braddock’s mechanical dis­
cipline begun to give ground before
the marksmanship of the enemy. We
seuled our fate by remaining astrad­
dle the ravine. Bruddock. furious al­
most to the point of Incoherency,
pushed Burton forward with the van
guard, thus making the congestion
worse: for the roud was but twelve
feet wide.
Burton formed tils troops under a
most galling fire und had Just finished
the difficult maneuver when Gage's
forces fell back rapidly to form be­
hind him.
Then occurred the definite shift In
our faring. We hud been sustaining
terrible punishment, the penalty of
being caught In column, but we had
the superiority of uumbers to permit
heavy losses. But now the two regi­
ments became budly mixed and stum
bled about In the smoke-tilled road
like sheep. There wus smoke every
where. The woods were choked with
It, the road wus blotted out at times
by IL Sheets of fire rippled along the
very edges of the narrow way. The
two regltneutal colors were advanced
In opposite directions. The officers
were being picked off at au alarming
rrte, and the regulars had not been
taught self dependence.
Some of the enemy's guns were
thrust from the foliage Into the very
faces of the victims.
There were
many soldiers In that battle who did
not see un Indian. Down the line
they were delivering their tire at two
hundred yards, thereby throwing It
away. With the ancient forest closely
hemming In the road, with no foe vis­
ible the army was as helpless as a
blind man.
It has been repeutedly charged
agulu Bruddock that he bud no flank
era out on the Wednesday afternoon
of July ninth
Such statements are
untrue We had flankers out a hull
dred yards or more on hath sides at
the army, hut we did not scout tar
enough ahead of the army
There
was no ambuscade, however
Once
the fighting commenced. the Hunkers
were shot down by the haphazard vol
leys of our own artillery llow many
Englishmen and provincials England
killed that day Will never he known
but the French and thelt ullics ac­
■ t il
—MCMILLAN
This Mother
Had Problem
tafe i t /
J»
F ’c
Dainty Feeding Not Possible With Gull