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When she came to tell how she had fallen upon Sam while he slept the old man was betrayed into a sharp movement. "What for you do that?" he demanded. Bela came to a pause and hung her head. Tears dropped on her hands. "I don' know," she murmured. "He look so pretty sleepin' on the sand so pretty! Moon shine in his face. I am pain in my heart. Don' know w'at to do, want him so bad.

"Well, what you want say?" demanded Bela. Big Jack stood up straight and brought his heels together. He had been a soldier in his time. He felt that it was a great moment. An honest bluntness gave him dignity. "I got to open this matter," he said, "before each man speaks for himself." He glanced at his companions. "If any man here thinks he can explain it better, let him speak out."

"Are you as crazy as they say?" demanded Musq'oosis. "Yes, I am crazy," she stammered. "No, I am not crazy. I will go crazy if I stay here. You are a bad friend to me. You not tell me that white woman is after my man. I got go to-night!" "Oh, hell!" said Musq'oosis. "Give me back my promise!" begged Bela. "I got go now." "Go to bed," said Musq'oosis. "We talk quiet to-morrow. I want sleep now.

When the work of taking Elsa in hand began in earnest, Irma used Erös Béla as her chief weapon of attack.

The sergeant saluted smartly, replying, with a broad smile, that everything was in order. A child by nature, Bela Moshi had developed into a smart and efficient soldier without losing the simple characteristics of the African native.

It is but twenty kilometres to Pirot, near the Bulgarian frontier, whither my companion has purposed to accompany me, but we are forced to change this programme and remain at Bela Palanka. It rains hard all night, converting the unassuming Nissava into a roaring yellow torrent, and the streets of the little Balkan village into mud- holes. It is still raining on Sunday morning, and as Mr.

Indeed, for a brief while it looked as though the Bolshevist forces of the Ukraine and Russia would effect a junction with the troops of Bela Kuhn and shatter eastern Europe to shreds. To such dangerous extent did the Supreme Council indirectly abet the Bolshevist peace-breakers against the Rumanians and Czechoslovak allies.

Bela chased him back to his seat, belabouring his back soundly with a broom-handle. The company looked on a little scandalized. They knew by instinct the close connection between love and horse-play. The party broke up early. Up to to-night every man had felt that he had an equal chance, but now Bela was making distinctions.

Béla swore a loud and angry oath, and Andor, who was closely watching each player in this moving little drama, saw that Klara's olive skin had taken on a greenish hue, and that her gloved hands fastened almost convulsively over the handle of her parasol. "But I tell you .

"What for you come over here?" she demanded. "I not tell you to." "Oh, I took a chance," said the trader coolly. At the same time his wicked, dancing little eyes informed her that he knew very well she had asked him over. The sanguine Mahooley was no celibate, and he cared not who knew it. "You think 'cause you the trader you do w'at you like," said Bela mockingly.