Evening Star Newspaper, April 24, 1921, Page 61

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MAGAZINE SECTION : =* : FICTION | | hf/ %unfl;m %iaf “ FEATURES i | — Part 4—8 Pages WASHINGTON, D. (., SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 24, 1921 ! ? Lenin’s Dream of a Great Russian Empire, a Vision of Desolation & shop. Every- | more or less assimilated ginto the . ive |operation of the ideal government.| = — = (duma was only a talk ; HE czar is dead! | Long live iH":" e e Dl Gl e jehanta | [ thing points 1o the necessity of an hon- | country and they are waiting for ! the czar: to_exercise his will. | N American Engineer, for Months a Prisoner of the Bolshevists, Grapnically | e e o | REnT(Con fon o it bkt Nickolas Romanoff no longer | Whereas Kerensky had only talked. [ not eMcient. and when its Droponents the lieht of reigns in his stead, and spares no |{dnbe of" The capiiaiiate - Atcord: | | Describes His Impresswns in a Land Grovelmg Beneath the Shadow of German | Bt i i o8 Baa il | Russia: il e frrcs ey | . % &S | these former allied € ies who have of the bolshevists ta effort to ty the lives of Rus- ingly_ he immediately prof'\’eded to ex- - i | emort to tsranaize Sesmiinatelallitheicapltalistaimnanaiay) Impenallsm and Ruled by a Ruthless Autocrat—After Three _ancl a H@.l{ Years L atcemy Joinea Thred army n manyeases in Lenin is the prime minister of jop of this. but forgot that the peas- correct the troubies of Russia are tionai battalions. They arc stronger the Russian Socialist Federated So- .ant, fundamentally, is a capitalist also.| | L & d H' C 11 A S 11 I g Tll = Wll b 3 1 Th P Jabout as effective as the attempts of a | people than the Russians, and will vict Republic. Upon the shoulders| When some one’protested that the| enin an 15 Lolleagues AAre Dtill Imposing 1heir Wi 24 Violence—The Present [ lachemiths meipes o repatr & wriet: | BAYS Something to sav in (heMutura < .. | Russian peasant was not ripe for too 2 3 = A Rupsia. Seven out of the eigh i- of this modern Atlas rests the weight raum:flal Shanie af onceEEnn l_r_\ | D - 1““,‘ h with one blow from a sledge ham- ] erres 4“ Ay I:»rvr:«-‘:l i Kud\'l:: ‘u::‘- of Russian statesmanship. He is the [plicd: ~We must impose our will by | [ estruction. | Imer. But sooner or later the owner of | Whose escort 1 went to prisom we guardian of the government of |violence and terrorism. Russia must S | |the watch will understand that a more ¢ither Austrians or Germans. g few —_— —_—— —— of the higher officials also in ti red skilled mechanfe is necessary tarmy are German. 1 was almost cap. and xall, where hand in hand the dread! The situation has aiready passed the|tured by a detachment of cavalty D e and children | {1a8€ When assistance from outside can | commanded by a German generdl. In Rl iy ‘\-”{-hnlm- of any use. The various ed mis- | ssia the belief is prevalengl that e e e Minatend of | Sions have had the success that usually ! some of the very highest powers in o avens o aereuiiural Tand, where | Attends a mediation between a husband | the red army were once on thgfier- rosperous ntented farmers harvest | And wif id they received the thanks | man imperial general staff. Eoipel ont T i | usually accorded to donors of good ad- | In Moscow there is a Germam'con- \cres of desolation, where:t D ants he salvation of Russia must | sy) Germany, however, will deny e enily Gon hat few food supplics rom within, | any ial relations with Russia vill ke v bwithiantte let study this condition | Nevertheless. it was very easy for he same instinct as onceatata 1 believe the present Eov- | our German servant to obtain an in hel nt to be just about the WOrst|terview with the representative of ible, but if I had the power | his country in Moscow, and he was on Instead of happy,. contented Reta! are thonsintori familis| broken set it this minute with a scratch | his way home to Berlin in two days & ants” He be rebuilt fundamentally; before we| L——— workmen and peasants" He it is| b, FRORIE fandamentany; bfere U1 who sees that the poor, down-trod- |sauls of the peasants must be changed den proletariat gets what is good |to see our way. The basic principles | for them. He also se that his own 'of capitalism are so incorrect as to hej dreams are wndisturbed by the trou- | irremediable. We must destroy cap-| bles ot ne Russian people. Lenin ita’ism even if it takes forty years is the czar of all czars and ruins the present-da i Fsuinilaliniasistocat by crandchildren must reap the benefits and an autocrat by inclinati f bolshevism. i has a university education and is re-; That was almost three and a half| markably clever. He always made a | Y€ars ago, and Lenin and his colleagues | hobby of the revelutionary move- are still their will by ment. and even in his student d | violence. nducting an | Zot into trouble for his activities says he, but i illimitable experimen {he omits to add that millions of the a secret revolutionary society e nut ; : T ATy - o Russia and | Russian people have succumbed to the 1. never 10 be reanited. Fathers have | ©f pen [ certainiy should not do| What could be more obvious than T e g u f that experiment. which h . ted. 180 By e e s hieh adve. | fumes of that experiment, w as seen executed, mot n 0 unless ater hea he_part; S ronisn yllho e ana create another one. To destroy the | the vast field of Russia® cated social improvement by violence also wasted most of Russia's re in London. and afterward in Switzer- | Sources. “This is just the beginning, land. s Lenin. The present destruction is Soon after the revolution in 19 ently only the overture to the. the German government acted at the | opera of endless experiment. Yes. that psychological moment and arranged ' is Lenin, the dictator of soviet Russia. for the return of Lenin and his able | The bolshevists believed that their lieutenant, Trotsky. into Russia. This ¢€1ance had come to create heaven upon rth: and surely no country could be Zovernment at the present time would only precipitate ruin into riot At the present time tiere is a fair Maced in barracks, houses i -ommandcered. In: | ies producing boots, clothing or other | ssent everything is chaos and the | sopulation wears old army clothes and | about as purposeless as the dead | i | s I also had the power ml the intention of Germany to exploit | | degree of order in Russia—please d The Game of Quoits. laugh—I mean it—I speak in|-~HE game of quo terms of what order was in Ru _’I ZHERIE R Ol SR DO, at th best of times and 1 remind played in the streets of Jam You that whatever lawlessness there |town, St Marys City. Port Tobacca, -aves before the autumn winds. Trans- ortation and communica are al- Lotter adapted to a trial of any such nost dead. The press is paralyzed, all{ 1S now is caused by the government! Dumfries and Piscataway. ancient sweeping change as bolshevism im- wews is disseminated by order of the|and not by the people. The govern- |, wn i yigewater Virg |1 ied. The population was used to | overnment. Every one is ed to| ment an absolute stranglehold | (WhY 1% ginia and autocracy and to hardships. There wbor for the state. upon the people. This is partly | Maryland. by the early citizens of { was unlimited natural wealth and the “This is only a beginning.” maintained by the red army, the sol- | those plades. 1t was no doubt played in. This riotous orgy of devastation is | diers of which receive priority in the stab rd jrevolutionary party was very exten- ard or the barn {sive only a heginning that | schedule of rations. T discredit the | % Briefly speaking. their platform was; = diabniical post-impressionist pesti-|idea of another revolution. All the!©f Southern and castern homes more it S At e = el nce. _'lml.\l‘,.\l-m was caused by Le- | food. clothing and arms are n the | than a century byfore Americans be- i he et hould Ay e n. Some will that it cannot be as | possession of t administration. ties of owner and operator of all the| property, institutions and functions ! that g0 to make up a modern civilized | ration. There should be no such, things as private property or indi-, 3 an to pcla ot In- AG as all that, but I know. becanse 1| The day may soon come when the| St L0 think of a Declaration of in as there and saw i fred army will be highly dissatisfied | d¢Pendence. White men in buckskin “And what s going to be the outcome | with its conditions and the current | clothes and coonskin caps. and In- ¢ all this?" vou ask. FEvery one asis!reports would lend color to that pos- | dians, almost nake £ . me question. In my first arficle ity. but if the red army were S ainost naked, lovked Sy s £he vidual rights. The individual would | M X e players toss = h s waid, ““He is an audacious individual | to suddenly turn and capture Moscow 3 ossed the horseshoes and only be obliged to supply his labor oo Would_ confiqently predict. the f6- | Tthink 1t would be o yery’ unforta. | 9id or did not “ring” the “hob { andithe statolshould supplyAthelreat of Russia.” It is a country of such | nate situation. 1 think the soviet| QUOItS came to the American colo- jNo man would be ‘ablc to make a tartling incongruities and e to . fear from | N€S With the first of the hardy pio | profit from the results of his labor. There would be no poverty and no plutocrats. Every one would have three meais a day and all the luxuries that the law aliows—always except- ding month I spent in Russia lessen- { 2 my confidence to correctly analyze | he situation. If T attempt A green rev®lution on the part of the peassnts in their refusal to grow neers from tne rufgpl regions of Eng- land, and esp. * e s from the borderiand of England and Scotland. Be.ore the days «f gun- powder quoi was #o popular in those who came at all it is ach suc- [ government | 1 Communism is the kernel of the * % % % TER 18 DGE| ; . TRoTSKY. IN THE CE Y own experiences in .my flight! SICX: e 1T ST AN THLESSNESS !‘\ before and final capture by bol-| LIRSTIN AND RUTH FRENCH REIGN 'OF PERROR. AND HEAD OF THE COMMITTEE. IN BLOOD- THIS BODY OUTSTRIPS THE COMMITTEE OF PUBLIC SAFETY OF THE rhe name will quite possibly be hanged from the present—- socialist Ru: n republic. i | { row more food than their own require- | { | England that the subjects of kings ing card-playing, of course; that is = AEm o b Ll L illegal, because some one might lose | e e e e i0s | began to neglect the practice of arch- Somctng | THE REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE. THE DREADED EXECUTORS OF LENIN AND| is restored Russia will have new life. | §T¥, and King Bdward 111 and Kink Richard I1 prohibited the playing o. quoits that men and youths shouhl 3 v the | PUT in more time on archery. A r- lerated soviet"—simply to the | P 3 aow Ply | tongued and bitter-penned old re- former named Ascham wrote a book shevist soldiers are still vivid in my = T e el hat miany mer nam.:d ; imind; only death Qgelf can erase s of the elements of the present gov- |t 1547, and among other things sel | them. and I believe them typical, soj 808 of all imagiable merchandise |tion and treachery attained. 1t was|were passing like bats out of a cav ernment will remain. 1 think the | S2%% -10- his musty pages Is that Y 2 2 for transshipment to the railway. sublime. | Suddenly a Russian courier rode u Deasants will retai landsand the | [Quolins "be oo vile Eor chelars {1 retell them. The scenes in the railway yards | * % % x ang told us to jump on any of tk ureswillgheverive= | o) bEobably smeani-ehuk i Sas e | In Omsk, during the latter days of | were indescribable. Thousands of | passing sleighs.” They were alread turn. Also there will always be a g:;‘:,g“’ e played only by commou “HE officers sold the clothing and | (02L 08020 SU8 [ managed to get seat on a camel hump o saddler thousands from cold and starvation. | and was very glad to ride. In the hope of better treatment TWeRLY of us managed to keep pret ty much together. It was very col (worse could not be thought possible) | and. very dark and the roads wer atrociou Frequently we wer: thrown off and narrowly escaped th great deal of nationalization in Ru: sia. The railways. telegraphs. mines. forests. water powers, public utilities and theaters will be owned by the ination. There may also evolve some system of state control of the neces- i sities “of life. In other words. I would say that the next revolution in Russia will more likely be a rev- = 1 | refugees with their scanty posses- | October, one -had the impression off (L BCE, My hd1ed together in small ! rations while the men died by | the calm before the storm. The avail- | £,20 ¥ €05 U foReiner ta Stall | thought that there might still be a‘d":fr‘::;m”‘ oy e hance of returning home by way of| Gra ¥ vabious allieq mis- ) S and Petrograd. The weather ! sions withdrew from Omsk. with the | they deserted to the red army by 1 . THE AUTO-|was calm and glorious, but seemed to! €xception of a remnant of the British | whole units. | There have been internationai matches between quoiters, and in the $0s wide publicity was given in the newspapers 1o a quoit match between Billy Hodson, the champion of all Englasd,. and Jimmy McLaren, the champion of the United States. Me- Laren was a resident of Newark. | |01 seignorial te | | e Z hare our tense expectancy. railway mission, to which I belonged, | Fe ate o Go- | horses’ feet i ek N. J.. and was a Scotchman by birth. AMER. WHO HOLDs | SM08 "r JE2e, SR imors that | dotabled to assist in the evicuation | We started cast at noon on Norl Wken one's feet became very col olution of <he overnmen: than a| il "0f course. means that he was THAT THE RUSSIAN PEOPLE MUST | Deniken was advancing rapidly upon | of the city. % JAter many long halts | one could run beside the slcigh for DU RISt A e CTAMEDL | 4 ‘Scotchman at the moment of bis | death. Jimmy McLaren represented | the Stars and Stripes. The gentiemen | played themselves to a tie, and con- cluded., that neither was the better would | We &rr mile or two. We began to wonde BE RULED WITH 4 « \D. | Moscow and that Yudinitch was about < : 3 TH A STRONG HAND. remain and defend the city till the |to consider things. The locomotive | how far we might go that night, wha | Kolchak announced that h i - NG 1 yepe | L0 €apture Petrograd from the north. ! S HE IS LIVING UP TO THIS BELIEF. | 3D = ‘last. His generals refused his or- i department was working very slUR-|we might eat and where we migh i | sponse to the necessities of the sit- uation. I' Now there is another phase that I wish to emphasize while we are and that has | PIAYer= — {We know' that Trotsky had fust visit- 2 | ed his troops on the Ural froht aud . ders, the stampede commence gishly and an inspection of the -T® |gjcep. "I thought how nice it woulc Kolchak and his staff went out in the -pair shops revealed bolshevism {pe [f T could find a stable and lie dowd stroke of the Germans was effective we decided that the next act would in _achieving the bolshevist coup b | Spreading rapidly > : dealing in futurit ’ Tt - 8P | stage the grand finale. night. preading rapidly. ; in the straw beside the horses. e, : There are writers on the game of Trotsky and their co-adventurers had | {8in_of winter descended with dra-|commenced to come through in dis- | mifted 1o Procect, bl 1 SERE EGC | slowly proceeded.” The progress a: B who are not writers. who insist that Ty A heir go adventuters had | [o%ic’ suddenness. Simultaneously | orsanized units. They were heaten before we received the semaphore 10 | the days passed must have been mor: 3 * % ko this géme_is descended from ancient impose their theories and to conducs | We received the startling news that|by their own indiffcrence and the o east D U nore con- | encouraging for the reds than for us : ~ERMANY also is in distress. She; 9iSCUSBh@wing, and the enthusiastic TRt seetall cout s ent the military situation was hopeless | momentum of their retreat was work- | Where trgfiic was much e (W ntert dizcovereat thats thefibor: ! s = quoit, 10 believe that their game Z and that the city must be abandoned ing up into a rout. Suddenly every- gested. ' |y | shevists already had their agents ir H is close to Russia. They are com-| nad tifis $lassic origin_will tell vou ot e s within a rnnnxxm,h e ;»,m_u: went to p‘llt‘-vcs alml the C ne For N:I‘! a::dd:o:n::za\‘:f:ig:;,ido:o’l “white” territory and that we- hac 2 panions in adversity amd there is mat’ “finue of the “Discus Thr = , Lenin w - Da,s and night the incessant flood | fusion was appalling—the v ast | ten ver v we di ANy 3 5 g 2 sikd yron, copies and pictures of RET of il Leain was's droamer.; D0f S0 R ELL bt through the | word in chacs. The Homanoff regime | travel at all. - And fmally, we aban-|1oc8 the unconscious victims of thef much sympathy between them. Each | g, ¥ oy r Qs oor e A B repre- He lived abroad for years and|strcets—horses. oxen, sleighs, wago camels, motor lorries, with their car lanfied C lawic/ ' by,_Anne Jordan can supply the other’s greatest re-|sents a Greek youth playing at quoits o : Pached there uire. What is = 3 ;| when that game was voung. and were countless heart-breaking miles a hat is Russia and Germany | 00 40 ron sented strength in hurl- of stagnation, and after a two-day jwere to fall into each other's arms?| ing rather than skill in putting. wait we found that there had been | ¥g § 3 jJust think of it: was outdone a thousand ways in the | doned the train fabricated nebulous theories as to the classic heights that bribery, corrup- | It was almost dark and the sleighs | Before Atchinsk was reached there a most disastrous explosion. A dyna- N R e eI 1 2 ) F | mite train standing in the station ] » B e s v i i rs. had been rather indiscreet and, as a ; & wealth; Germany has eomparatively ashions in Flowe: result, fifteen or twenty cars in the |1ittle. The Russians are not a manu-|7T"HERE are fashions in many ficturipg people. whereas the Ger- things besides clothes. One finds trains standing on paraliel tracks had been destroved. The wreckage caught fire and this mercifully made the best of a bad job. In ordinary times ‘it would probably rank as one of the 5 world’s great disasters. Here, how- ever, it was only another unfortunate cpisode in an already annoying situ- ation. - center of each of some twelve refugee | mans are highly trained as manufac- | turers. The Russians are incapable of | ; s A |organization and in this the Germans | 008 in conversation. cof D are unsurpassed. Germany requires|and epithets, fashions in walking, in el LT .. | markets and Russia requires material. | architecture. in furniture, in medi- A TYPICAL RUSSIAN WORKER.|Germany requires an outlet for her|cine and in a great number of HE IS A MINER, AND HIS FOLLOW- | encrgy and her efficiency. while Rus- | things. NG QF THE SOVIET PRINCIPLE sia requires the stabilizing influence i | et b e s e There are fashions in flowers and fashions in words and phrases, fash- 18 ; i A T : = When we arrived the dead were|HAS VIRTUALLY CAUSED A CE : | went to an American woman named : While the poor old man was try-, claimed, rapturously TR 4 4 A CE : now there is a revival of the older N i Scott!” t to his head that after| “Jean, I'm just what that rich..red- (Piled up like cordwood. There were N IN : PR cTIoN oF | _Before the war the German business s 3 Mrs. Scott! [:ingitoigetiitiinto s h Justiw = hundreds of them, but they were| 0% 1V THE ODUCTION OF { 1an had permeated to every part of | fashions in flowers. New houses are H i Scott? Oh, boy-eee!” enthus- | all the new owners were not going | head squab's looking for. Lead me ] 3 R e e The Abbe Constantin | -drs Scottz Oh, boy : | o' turn ‘Him Gway from his beloved | atter, Loy. 11l show the girl a good | uCKier than the injured who ‘still| COAL IN RUSSIA. Russia. Hie business methods arebuilt in the sivle of houses of 200 s s st & i S Miss Percival spied the supper | time. T've just been waiting for & | iV who could got possibly re- ! well established. An amazi mb. s BY Lupoviz maLEvy. || “Paul® exclaimed’the matemal poor. Mism Percnal spied (e SRS (it Whets Moo reud Lo See”her | ceive medical attentilh TS beane Diecas Laim s liabic fo bt | ramussiansiican hpeaioiGernaanliand e ErLtE 00, S R ST | this_ Mrs. Scott?* | being young and impressionable, was | husband work.” But all well ordered cyclones mist | LOTCCT 40 Y Ve sac e great quantities of German machinery | (a0 those. Furniture is made in = e e “euch—only she and her | holding forih in the shadows, Lrying | “Too proud to see her husband|have their moment of calm before | P [r'tme first place, I maintain that the |have been used in Russia. The re-|the patterns of chairs and tables HE dear old Abbe Constantin | g ' eP"\iE Bettina Percival, are the | to decide which of the two' sisters | work.” Th= phrase lodged in Jean's|the climax. Russian population’ is not yet fitted for | Pair parts are much in demand now.|and sofas of the long ago. And trotted aimlessly doWn the | best-looking poulets. in or afound | was the prettier. | Adam's apple. Even when he fell| On an ascending plateau to our left. | modern democratic self-government. 1|as also are renewals of the machines |more men and Women are talking big road that wound before | gay Paree.” As they ate Mrs Scott explained to| #omersaults in love with Bettina, and erst or so away, one could see the {speak of the 120,000,000 peasants who|During the great war the Russian |today of grandma's favorite flower > . = . e he with him, he refused to speak be- | same interminabl ; ; ity 2 ‘. ‘My son!” from the shocked count- | the cure that her father had owned a|% . P e stream of trans- { comprise vastly the majority of the popu- | armie: tured about a milli ajand grandma’s flower garden tham the castle of Longueval. He | 2uryd s cause he didn't want to- be an ap- | Port en route to Krasnoya B F ) i : Zicapinpesisbputiaoiiison o s v X i m ess. silver mine, over which there was a | [UIGe Be, (WL WAOL A9 be a0 An- noyarsk. lation and of whom about 100,000,000 are | quarter Germans and Austrians. Many { B2ve touched in such “themes for stopped when he reached the gates, “They say she begged in the streets | Jawgyit, and it was only and read the posters fixed on the)of New York a year ago, or rode met Mr. Scott and he loaned her| il e el bareback a horse in a circus. But 8he's | money {o fight the suit that she| o reputed to have more money than a cieared the title. Hence the story that( snguevel domain. The oid estate.| poodle has fleas. And easy On the she had begged in New York H * k% % lilliterate. It will be a long time before el b many vears. X DDENLY & these people can think in terms of gov- ‘,“fu”":: aeponets :{"":““A“'Z = :f:“e:_’jl The worid is being brightened by Soiaaid = : NLY a mounted courier rode | crnment. They are individudlly iner- | *USeid and most were Der-| flowers that were held in high es- ¢ Paris. He came to bid his god- to the head of the column, which | fectual and collectively incapablé of co- | Mitted a fair “amount of liberty.|teem a century or centuries ago. but | H?!er the cure, farewell. | aradualyiwaveraatiinia pasicior lordinated effort. The population of | Thousands of them are still in Russia! which lost cast. or lost vogue.with which, for centuries, had remained in- | eyes—you tell-er-phone: I'm in the o pay Mr. Scott for lending her| Bettina had had her own way too &ocha panic of inde-i pratatl CTUYleis Taman auag. |and most of the little present manu- | garden makers and florists. and Suf- G fini cecelvers money she had invited him to marry | [90% 10 be squeamish over details |cision and slowly came to rest as the|mire incapable of sustaining the solid | facturing is done by these Germans|fered a long period of neglect. e eivcus jumper: Paul, do remem- | her. ailver mine and all, and he had | She arrived at the curate while Jean | courier rode down the. lines. Soon two |Structure of autonomy. The old imperial [and Austrians. They have become | they are coming back. You h cival's husband! Give up his army | carcer? Not Jean. He started to SL Z the sale of the tact, was to be divided. The abbe heaved a sigh. How could | per AN uTacy The cure is copted The cire dent=t was | Was there. Taking Jean's hand, she and see such old-fashioned things a | ber your vocabulary. accepted. | The circus rider story was| Was there. Taking J lines commenced to form and moved it 3 . > ) . idle 50T And vith reat r B e Constantin. 2 i move bhachelor's buttons, fuchsias, gémni- new mistress hope to grace these | present. jL1oE oesip, with [heir ‘great! “Monsieur le cure, I have a confes-[oR in opposite directions. Then the ums. phlox, sweet williams, pas®i halls as the late marquis had done?| But the cure had not been listen- | wealth they wanted to do good. The abbe had been cure of Longue- | ing. These Americans would they |cure should have buckets of kale to val for thirty years. He felt like a | not be Protestants? No more would distribute—there must be no poor at he baptize children at Lougueval. His Longueval. sion to make to you I'm in love—|climax, came. - G - i S - Qlnolivhocks.” honeysuckle. R b y Vs, n e 2 e 4 5 b e 3 whballs. b wreath, man 1 love, loves me. But he thinks| W watchel it all from our coupe|f * : s S . i £ m;r!‘r'ub:,m\~ehr‘ne:.a,"1“uxnro:m sick kitten trying to read “Welcom dar B Ca BT s et ing it - o e i & e ©n the mat when the door had he.vn‘pnolrl( w:(;‘1::03;1“:;,t:::fl;o:r;l(yfg;':: While the old abbe pinched h Beca uselLve aotimoneyiichm ol IRty = dnw:wanr:‘:::;ndena whln;eu m.hgh; i o | |ameraum Tor painter * brusn,“mari- EAREas T e ace CRatle T At N *land tried to listen, they slipped All 1 wanteis to be his little side- | ton % o niwehacy d ; SEbadey . i S % It was the day of the sale. The | His old heart was heavy. 2 nis | F- G, (meaning parting gitt) of two ! iick, o follow him in_his © Side- | tea while waiting for the semaphore, pur and mignomette. o abbe started to the nearby town,| The next evening the abbe and hi | thousand francs for his poor, and with | Now, make Jean confess—Jdean dg, 25 wfi expected to go forward any eh-e e 45 Souvigny, to find zbout the forthcom- | godson. Jean Reynaud. a lieutenant | faint rustle of red hair they were| you love me?" —Jean, | momefit. ers that .‘,“"‘, vam‘k . m“ (= K ng sale. He met the Countess de | in the artillery, were sitting down to | gone | e ea . The forward locomotive whistled, the favor. Mr'n‘::‘"r”g:" ept themsalves 5 s second answered, but we did not start. 3 N .y - avardens and her son Paul | 2 modest supper when a coach rattled SGOT Lo 1 among his barking artil- | % Slick about, M. 1o Curer invited | up to the door, and two YOURE Wom- |11y onoe more. Was tormented by a | the Hetle oetar ¢ MY 80" smiled ) A ‘wergrant With a banjo was. singing i, who knew the ropes of | en in traveling costumes descended gweet face. Bettina, hack among the A month 1ater all the now comfort | Take Me Back to Dear Old Blighty. . | the back vards and even the Fon: yards of unpretentious people=und they have led a more or less Enm- Paris. “M. de Lar is coming to | upon them. dukes and princes who sought her sil- | able poor of Longueval turned Through the windows on our right the i F - 3 > O b ais B out to tell us about it now. Ah. here he| “Howdy do. please sir. my name's yer mine and hand. vcirncd for the witness'the wedding of (he rich Mixg | Same stream of transport that had be- ?fi‘.‘(mn’r"?armha'cvu:m(rhdc':sou:{xrm' comes. Well. did the mater get in Scott—3Mrs. Scott. 1 just bought this | country quiet again. Soon Longue- | Percival, who had turned —down | COMe So familiar through so many weeks A 3 ; Coming mow. ihte Chaile on_the auction™ | castie, and T wanted to give the priest | val saw again the Americans. Count | princes and nobles to marry the peas- | Stretched into the distance. : ' . L oY %of sardens in the citiegand “Not a ehance.” said the new ar-|a chance to gaze on his new parish- ' Paul, hearing that his old school | ant-born Jean. wodson of the Athe| Suddenly some one remarked, “A Rus- | " e mding their beautiful blodl t» eival. “The whole shooting match ‘joners.” | chum, Jean, was a daily visitor, ex- ' Constantin. ian officer has just thrown his sword | - over the bank.” Several more followed | his example. Perhaps they had decided ! to enter Krasnoyarsk unarmed. On going to the door of the carrianeJ those big-style country homes WBich are called “villas™ and “estates They Jumped Every Minuge. THE fall in the price of sugmr: Kingdon Gould to say at a dimner we were surprised to see, about fifty yards ahead, a horseman with a revol- who disarmed every ‘one coming | turn of the road. A _steadil: ; increasing npile of rifles, bz}'onem‘! 2 ¥ : S - A | part x:;":: ‘;:\x;l'::;a and other equivmenl: - i A : 4 : | *“Thank goodness we're getting back To prevent the intrusion of curious! to normalcy. Wasn't it terrible, the - 2 . individuals, a guard had. been placed | , faag 5 -] | way prices kept jumping up aué up Y : on the vestibule door. But a Russian | : e iR ot e Vi, soldier obtained admittance and we| | - i Gt - { “They used to tell a story last-gear A | could hardly fail to notice that his tunic | - . s F 1| labopt.a golfer who went into g=5th was festooned with great rosettes of red : . . e ue s‘hknn l‘hrop h-mli cm::: ;‘ (lh'- ozen silk golf shirt pattern: < ibbon. The “Red" soldier announced, We have arrived”; some one replied, - : ; : price to be $150. . “How nicc!” Even then it required o o . || *The poor golfer was led into o . Z several seconds to absord the fact that ; : i L & dressing room and measured carefuily || for vis shirts. Afterward the sales- we had been captured by soldiers of v the Russian Socialist Federated Soviet man helped him on with his coat and Republic. There began my personal con- . i . : vest, ushered him to the door and tact with bolshevism, upon which m: said with a genial smile: ;‘mm:» are based. i < 2 ““Thank you, sir. And the shicts As the ruin of Russia proceeds peace | &4 - e - S will be ready Monday a week, witn- Lenin and his lieutenants sit in the : e 3 N out fail, price $210. net < Kremlin and dream their poppy-colored But.' faltered the golfer—but you dreams of Paradise. It is only a de- said $180 before. tail in their general scheme that mil- ‘Ah’ said the salesman with a lions of their fellow countrymen perish smile, but that was ten minutes from gold, hunger and diseasq just to ! . : 3 ® . feed the fanaticism of these lotus-eat- % by R 4 5 —_—— Tow lunatice + The Best of All. OMER RODEHEAVER, the sing- ussia while these superczars bask ing evangelist, prefaced a song j in the aura of their own cgotism? 1|}~ service to Troy workingmen with this should like to convey the impression S & v £ 2 : 80 | exhortation: that bolshevism is not a success. It is 8 belong to the best trade unien in ik ATk & AND what about the realities of R 4 destructive 'and not creative. ~Instead | ks : . < ol | the ‘world, men—the one that has of 2 land flowing with milk and honey. A BUST OF DANTON, WHOM HE STRIVES ' given you.fi{ty-two holidays & yeam | there is only a wilderness of worniwood . TO EMULATE. ; w&.&#r X - > _d . « 5 . e

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