The evening world. Newspaper, May 29, 1915, Page 11

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Saturd y. May 29 British Naval Review, 1915. zu... By J.H. Cassel ORNS seta DRY. gam ngnged ST sat By H. DE VERE STACPOOLE|,| beet fone i i te ty thor of “THE BHIP OF CORAL,” Bie. Le. Pi Sys, boom | EMG ky Date ree adie es caprice; and the masquer- ers ve é Sha fe ot y aie YY to the tall pines—the fragrant pines, whose song sounds for ever ike the sea on a& distant strand—we sat down x on a bank, which in spring would be mist-blue with violeta have never kissed any one before. ‘6 you?” she asked. io on “Never loved any one?” She rested looked into my eyes. “Nevor.’ wald she, “if you had——” don’t know. Sometimes I do not know my own thoughts. Sometimes T act and do things that seem strange to me afterward. I made you meet me this morning out of caprice. [ teased you, following you aa I did to £2 Nice, dressed as I was, from caprice. fe That is not me, There is somethin va wicked and wayward in me that cannot understand. Had it not been for me you would not have killed that it of De Coligny till now; and the remembrance of him in the arms of Dr. Pons came like a gloomy stain across my mind. But it soon passed. would have fought in any case,” said I, “inevitably.” She sighed, as if relieved. iy her hands on my shoulders, and east on the sky. huge black shadows marked in the darkness by the glitter of a sentry’s bayonet or the swinging lantern of @ patrol. We passed down the long street of Charenton, and then the wheels of the carriage rumbled on the bridge that crosses the river, and we were in the true country, with great apaces of gloom marking the flelds, and marked hore and there with the dim, patient Nght of a fatmhouse window or the firefly dance of a shepherd's lantern. Up till now I had watched intently the passing objects: the houses, stray People and lights; but now there was nothing to watch but dim shades and vague shadows. Up to this I had con- j trolled thourht, forcing myself to wait without thinking for the event, but now, alone in the midst of night, with nothing to tell of the surrounding world but the rumble of the carriage wheels and the beat of the hor hoofs on the road, thought assum dominance, and would not be driven away. Nay, it returned with a sug- gestion that froze my heart, “If sho has gone to the Pavilion she will leave her carriagé in the Avenue And go there on foot—she will cross the drawbridge. Ah, yes; the draw- bridge! Woll, suppose that the draw- bridge is up! God in ven! will she see it?” of Paris \ike a tiger at bay, the dartt- ness and death in my heart, all these are in my life away back there, ing @ preture or rather a dark mii reflecting the forms of Despair, athy and Ruin, just as the water of the moat reflects the ferm fronds of the bank and the dark &reen plumage of those pine trees. Nothing could ever come right is the world again. The gloomy shaken winter long by the sald that, and the w: sad and sombre, where the aq) and the hundred other wood tures seemed banished for ever the birds, So the winter passed, one day—T had not been in the for a week—one day, following & path near the round pond I came across 4 troop of ghosts; violets growing right before mé on path side; dnd to the left amidst gem-like blue, add dis the brown last outume leaver—violets. Led by a few da warmth a million violets had vaded the old forest, grouped them- selves amidst the trees and the paths, heediess of Doath or Prussians, Even as I looked a breath @f gos bent the tree branches like” arm baod, showing @ patch of sky above and casting & ray + aun- shine on the blue flowers The Drums of War, the trampling another, 4 f armics at grip with one “He was a bad man," she sald. “He : Se ae 2 " It froze my heart, Proclumatio pou evades nmused mo—and how deserved to dle for the things ie ania; BCMA é ; 4 anh cee EB Ye WRIA BY | what time would Madame Ancelot Dfvictory, the sorrows of defeats ab about you 'to me. It was partly ou| IN nib i . 2 REY: - : f iid s {4° retire, and would she raise the draw- in « moment were banished before you at dinner.”— that account that I arranged all that; BJ Ee? Nas ier. r i ‘ t bridge? ‘ that touch of spring and the vision “And 1 dined at the Cafe de Paris this morning, so that IT might insuit) ff . sR ot I be ‘ Be ree L I knew very well ~~ 4 eee of these lovely and immortal flowers, With '@ fool.” him before those men; but I Deve r 4 : . ‘ y ‘ Aes a é bridge wan always raise: “4 torent Since thon | have seen them grow- te d thought it would end as it did’ va a. Pe a ; qf jot night: the tramp-infested forest ing amidst the ruins of Mycenae, ‘Just so, And you ran away to «4 you know,” said I, “when I - x 4 if Wes a ei jmade this necessary, And I knew Valiombrosa, at the tomb of Virgil; Nipe, Then the idea came to me— killed him it was as if the blood which| fF B - = 2 a 5 wry vi very wel at See rege Mot Doets, love wacriare ee = I shed had baptized a ne - oes ; ce : Baran Se In the habit of s wherever sun may tor os Lay a ey aaa Ite! My full love for you only awoke 3 ) Sate —_ e ‘ tats tele Still, to-night was a night in a thous tioh chelr Sombe, call Oe te . Dy st 4 " d, without "| 7 ri pst = en : sand. Old Fauchard had, through the biue violets of the shoulder with a glove. then. It was as if some spirit out of z is 4 lion to the past that had loved you for ages 4 = ‘ u aes g pany doubt, dropped into the Pay but never have these Sowers “Yes; when I was seated in the box had suddenly been born completely.” g “3 oe - : en ; eee fs talk about the great po yd of hw Aga »f God brought the past to map 0 ‘tthe opera with a lady.” she said. “I hate to think - vst! Fr . ~ nt . Z {pot my mead out SF beds 4 polraeha y as that teens ae T\ "Yes, “Who was the lady? 1 was of that. Let the past be gone forever. : : : ze J Sm | sulin came hip. voice followed there growing aesolatete isthe aeaee po. excited to see any one but you.” you Me Pea oy Mg adr " S = = P : = . wwe by the sound of the whip, The n wteps of tuln, yet unruined and with aN “She was"-—" Then I paused. preathe, You have been kept for me : * Nase al “aha mf jair struck mo in the face like 4 not a dewdrop brushed from thelr Und then I sald—why, I can never tell untouched. Oh, how I love youl” 3 i < cold hand; and, looking . joaves i . the light of Paris reflected — an, yx patiBhe was a friend of my guardies.” ft her lips iF, : ge — 2 "i . atill nee the lig! é you, there are times when the ing m the aky, paler now and more mn man becomes @ poet, as “Next morning I received your wg her beautiful from ied in’ the vast and gloomy ; wre nt hat day when, dreaming of the *hallenge. How I laughed to my- S¥¢# uP No; if te not the wind, : ee 7" circle of night h of a woman and the ot ae SFiots the eae 6aihb 4 oeand that ee eS & 1% ; 7 Tt was cloudy over Paris, but the war, T found spring ding Ta the 4 v1 peer, ss oe: r : king, and the plere- forest of mart just some “But tell me one thing. Why did was not the voice of the birds, Par ~ ; - ry : ; ? ar area Tiere and Chere, ooanting ghose of lonm abe. kant you stipulate for a delay o away it seemed now, and now near. It) > : say OC oA ees iene through the rents, ‘The moon half woman, and aneworing. to ‘nonths. before the duel? was the spinning-song of Oberthal,| ‘ = A : : . 4 r rou) Und her light touched Ubspoken question, “Wart the he laughed again. that tune, thin as @ thread of flax, ris- 7 r f ss t was Ki _—n have not seen them—1 do not knew ens" Lied flied ling Ee icy “ot af = 8 bw Cd this must be Villeneuve Whom 8 mean; they passed, may- J. . $ hap, when I was asleep; monsieur, I wanted time to—to"———_ swaddling clo’ hia marriage-bed, 5 . - . ‘ St. Georges, this long street to which a a? and his Sous i ! the trees and hedgerows have given 4° you not admire my violets?” , i hair grow. Do you like The: ami lace. The sublime and heavenly dp’ °wne drow a long pid trom her from powhere: diktesed te the ents, sleet Grenca that ever mortal Greamt, which was in te ball, The servant the Prussian cooking-pot to the gune fee sean by, when all te sald ond vit know the road te Bticlles, wen, clam ot that artens “a fi removed her hat and showed of the wood—for a w is @ living the most mysterious and beautiful. opened the door for me and told me that were to batter down Paris. done, if not by his heart? Ah! how put to-night it all seemed chan png me itwelt, rt her perfect head and the coils of echo—heard just then, the of She had taken the carriage which trey wore in the library, and I ran | have said little about my soctal I would have loved that man if be “We passed hamlets and villages, form the gorms of @ philosophy Oberthal seemed the voice of Fate pert ; there to meet them, life in Paris, but I have indicated, I had been my father! Inst we wore nearing Wich bas clung to me since dight-black hair. Ghent Corned seta, Doles, and re- {Toto.” cried Eloise; then, holding think, that tiny quardian and I were | When I left the Tulleries I remem- Etiolles, I'eould tel it by the big plilosopby | whieh, combined : nx] 1 knew quite well what had hap- turned to Parle. ‘That we discovered; me at a little distance and staring at friends of the Hmperor; and 1 men bered the fact that 1 had not eaten houses on elther side of the road, wre, wa slain In me the remains ¢ oft Cree x but be; me as though I were a ghost: “What tion it ax a strange fact, and @ fact since morning, 1 went to a cafo and i pe ae tn Toecmt non eels Mi ec eee yore ead te ee ee eond tian happened to your® that caste volumes of light on his dined after & fashion, returned Houses with walled-in gardeus nen day by day and week ee ee ever maid nip, “Lam the wood. Wishing, bo doubt, to Bnd nee t0 Wad me For months If caught @ reflection of myself in character, that bow, in cay Genolas home late and cet entered the hell Oe ree ae rtin’ ine’ long summer week the forest, the . the e - ‘am pot existent in the me, he had sent the tune to leak for sought, madly, with growing hopeless- the mirror above the fireplace, and tion, deserted by my ‘guardian, deser- play: yours. Afternoons, so that & person on the Quiet” namared aan’ aeimeohame Baron. Carl von Lich- me—tho old tune that he knew I liked 2¢#%- No sign of ber could money or for the first time I recognized the ted by every one J loved, the imago “A lady called an hour ago to see a’ hear the click of the baile QU/et, = uanui LNs ry frig he died when I put so well. It was then only that my Police unearth. She had vanished. Geeawe ie eae Hegward, White and of Napoleon aroao before me ax # monaieur” pe Parcyptygeaicc te pees Diavers: The PeBULY, Of aprin -oltat ae long: bl . , / ae " “ ‘ ” 7 ‘ he houses, the walls, th led NBook!” I auld, “This is Ettolles.” I had sald nothing about tt; I had mad. I must have seemed mad, in- _ “Never milnd me, 3 replied, “Why generally amongat ove friends some Yo had ies’ anatane ondorea ia veeyurts rotlug toward the river, ea ‘fae oe aad 7 + ee 8 even refrained from mentioning her deed, for ever wandering hither and have zou lett Etldlies? Have you any person, some hon:aly individual, some YOL0n Of Baluee, and she order the trees and shrubs, Communards might fight. io ’ Thwl os completsiy forsoten Fran, Dame I vad done cule trem ne al. tbither searibing the crowded sireata OAT ETT oe pangs Sedo when invattiictlon for a word ot _ L remember now that when I start- Suddenly, as though an adamantine kings and captaina assemble at plus and Eloise as though they had terior motive. |X was not ashamed Wit eager eyes, scarcely answering | “My friend,” said Fransius Coane eee ee er tool Theis 4 to neo Frangius and Eloise off door had ben flung noroas the road puilles, Alsace mi Saver existed. Muto, Aucelot seemed net ee sone, & yiprrieer Mad ny Stones Ry tlecieeyl piles eapg Mery Pi Pas ae lal alt alan iting Hon. or even duat tp fool imelr at the atation I had wald to the ser- barring our way, the carriage stop- talght remain, what all nas or Strange, and the Pavilion & piace to the Pavilion when it was Gress, yer “ " 4. ow F . sf nf Yant that T might go to Satuce, and ped; one of the horses had fallen a# and trumpery busine to ch bad quite Poo's man of the crowd, | drifted ‘Ah, yes," I said, ‘ar. But tell even though w May @ay nothing of ” 01 ve pelea rarornae er Soe Possible tuat Elolae might have re; about Paris, ever in tho thick of the fave lett Etiollen our troublen. “Moved by this instinct, lanat as saitkeP Ce mere It felled, by an ase. The pole was Seeinees of Tales y ned? U y a in," replied Iran- wolved to look d t “ ‘ bi 7 ting oppudite to my companion turned? ae 7 fies Nag throng, seeking the most populous ma Prussian,” rep ran- { renolved to look in and see the «Madame. waa duite young, tall, by the head of the fallec horse, deri ‘and we are returning.” cmperor, To got near the Tuileries gark at tabio—for wo had a dejeuner under nd very beautifu - the letting slip of the dragon: . filled with happinesa and extraor- On the 16th of July, at ten o'clock Returning?” was a difficult business, and even ““owhy aid ft nat blood waa streaming from ite nos. ) 10 (alka ? 2 ry v no moan hour tri Hin darsling voyage? Why poked Beit uy icisare orety dinary love, that all things earthly tp the moring, 1 Was passing across “To iny own couniry.” to pass the Cent Gardes at the gate: gooner! Quick! ‘ond me Joubert!” wre jit, (he vawue moonlight that yi, they, were ta In the C nad ever created a more lovely Were for me not. the Place de la Concurde, when a You are leaving me but once inside, thiugs were easier. sities Pea be Fi “4 . of Burope as Von der Tann's tert woman. Eyelashes lnk tis a friend of mine, I think,” roar like the sound of @ great and There was silence for a moment, ‘The Emperor bad come to Paris eeroranle Tare from the the. King of o army, , and perce sdepyince SPF § tipped with ##id L “A violinist, He staye at the distant sea broke on the summer alr, and Eloise began to weep, from the Council at Saint Cloud, hold CHAPTER XXIi11. r fsa were Mag miles “py a. those other trium: and blac ‘ointcpray eyes. An, yes; I Pavilion. And now I want to tell you It came from the direction of the “Toto, can’t you see?” the night before, J do not ki Night. rg nee, Be sharone the selde brown; ‘io totthink of them now. 1 Smething. Rue St. Honore. People were running “Ah, yes," 1 said; “I can #0 whether the Empteas accomp ight. ers Gane tanniane te br Pgs one Mei pet ce to remember that voice and = Yee across the Place de la Concorde, and everything is going from me. Don't jim or not, but he Was in the palace, © away straight aa the cro onl; ore ie etaaie expression, all It had seemed so easy, yet now it pouring from the Rue de Rivoli and cry, Eloise; 1 can see. Franzius, for- and the great hall was thronged dining-voorn Joubert,” I Ido not remember leaving Joubert; *¢ spolle of wart shouted, “the awittest horace Suddenly the flelds were around mo will Sevis , Sage said the drums I ordered a carriage to the door, and pene ne Ate talking and laugh- quick!—and @ carriage to = ee | My mind driven wigy, @eemed very difficult, told you J had never cared for another woman.” “Yeu! me, I forgot. I did not know war meant till now.” . rD The Champs Elysees behind me had wi alive with people; cab: streets was nore subdued The excitement of th OUBERT found me in the fijen to the Pavilion here, tov, though im a J matched itself agzia, soneed Burepe, ding up on the driving seats accompanied them to the station, a feel, tuke to Etlolies: You will drive ” it." anid spring. ‘rom the forest " Th ne has ccased. an: AM j Ink-every one felt, or seemed to feel, me against fate will conquer you, doves" song to the Iminortal and ever- wien’, , Tht ty Only one woman Cee Carriages, waving tel hate through wroois packed and crowded vi41 “some great good fortune Was imo,” it cried. “No to shall oppose , Behind the velle of au dead ta! i it rain, r P ‘ 7 flash. I waiked up and Ff" rey | ‘> vanquished men she who called me Toto?” again, came the storm of sound, un- cates, the crowds of excited and fever- al! Found. | Honor to France, showers Tool) ap hid ben varnien heer E Jf He ie Goad £ will CMe My. veasute; Scala tak tn Xes.” She had placed hand uke anything I had ever hoard before, stricken people, It seemed to ie that Of Muld and decowmimnn from t hed the Spirit of Eartt, was to her heart, aa though she felt @ PAIN Uniike anything I will ever Lear again; I was ina city whose inhabitants iad PAlnted skies whigh hope © ago—here hour ago--and in my Ufe til t met you. You re- were alive and white with fluttering I oame buck on foot. It was @ lone member little Eloise at Lichtenberg, fandkerchio's; and pow, again and way. and an I paased the crowded in the chateau gardens, and & bell from some village church ringi the Angelue—faint, far ower. een by the v \. inal cae 4 med the soul of weeping ‘Susie. We could bear th birds he or future for a new and more thera. wave after wave, storm after storm, at one stroke gone mad. pleasantly above fools, and, above all, toon walking the acreets unconscious France, Each bee from that atlence, all wen, 7 toh in Pari change a Suh eee te ae * and through it all the drums of & I found myself, for the first time in . re of the fact! ‘The war whick had som to blossom that ing She h rown a eae very marching regiment. masy days, able to Hote the thinks | owt o| age MOR Were MONET Oe ined to dentroy my last bope d the words ringing boring for the greater oe eg eee tegee avilion (© The Ninoty-first’ Regiment of the around mo, and to take wome interest Chaners at heart; corrupt, vielu in my eure, Then fell on me ae 1 future, each aeorn forming in ite ive in. Bhe ws living there now.’ line ¢ marching down the Rue Bt. in the The great upheaval had Mady to devour, true children of the bad brought her, perhaps, tO MY pon Delirium, or wan it the q each wheat grain ting in *, know, pe Honore, bayonets fixed, | ‘KS shaken mo in part away from 0 Second Kinpire, dencendants of ¢ » and I had been dining at 4 | wan in the forest now, thp vi dark, each grape gliobing in the ae et cokes, Vem" ald 1, laughing, "And, 9% aiied, drums beating, eepecial preoccupation, the erie cilau rogues which manipulated T had come slowly home Habt waa Miled with shapes, A form yards of the Cote 4’Or; eagh “ Trees or even a name. Yesorgny 1 ‘gre one {6 3 ‘Klolee had just tering. F was | marehii parting with Blolae asd Frangiue bud the coup d'etat, through the etreats, and she was “brane @t ine it wae Von Lichton- were laboring for the eee parce Carl Von Lichtomperg, »,ranaue and Eloise nad Just ap. them. And then through the storm obecured in part that otver grief and flung Wrance oe : om ona berm. “1 etruck at it and passed on. fil) again her ranaries and her teas with great eatutes, Now, who am ff hrivod (om tae eee ate that Frans ery uttered by # thousapd which had pursued me by parasites, One hero waiting for mat Was she leay The iron man of the bell ure house, Wolly had brought her am And my great "—tthe opened i Vow owe, BUR was with her, for now | eould ‘A Berio! A Merlin! The wreat elty had been stirred to PUitclans, France, with her fa ing Vrance? Was Btlolles but a struck at me with bis hame der the knee of Fores; drei ree, in whieh lay @ fer thr ! bring both up and introduce | “What is It?" 1 asked of & paswer- the uttermost depths, ax the groat aca {Ne neck of Germany, evened 1 wiiey on ine journey? And if she Msed bin and he turned to mist blood, halt dying, wholly vanq them romine favulous things to thease. And now » form waa running be- tears, in mad in despair, them, | Toetr love for one ansther _./ Se pe pine Prue {4 Sometimes stirred by & submarine Te had much and they wanted found J was not there what would jlo to hold me It jay forsaken by ait the Olpuspiaas vy ata" » Dr come the eur " pore, They craved for change-and she dot Would she return, OF—so was Gretel. o tripped me up WIth Demeter, my Sa Mate thas it would Ve an * Seales ‘ her foot. 1 fell vanished and 1 ~ ou ‘With Prussat’ pouple that day tn the wtren oy wor it ou? er . a Had | but nown, those ei | sale, ener went ree ome ia “Meinarck—-t 434 not hear what {A Qis ‘hal day eure Amidat (he crowd, which included the belt and rang ty her foot turned to the root of & in the forest of Wanart When you were changing .e. D radiant’ so ad to way, deafened 004 poopie, cast up fr nome of the Ereulent be 0 Vranee, ‘The horses! The horses! And the tree, turned to Vogel ure 6! ‘these three months?’ ae daned by the roar (hat now surround gnd the acute, dow it seemed hopeiens to me to peek Bn jod in beaven! are they im, Outer ppl France. at Tours, The Baron vou od me women, ruch as insulted ¢ audience, Mut l knew the piace 1 re ye aarknene betore iy my life | have seen many © received three months’ “A Werlinl A erlin'” heaven during the Terror, faces th oaw the r Viefect, Haren Ve horeea are at the door, mon « form was * gertul thing, but my Cr Wer had been dociased with Prue might have served Metsech for hia feimue He hed just shaken himeelf sour.” ‘one ot Laer with it nethins mere mii ga. Oh, fatality! picture of the fend, or Calot for bie free from hell « desen men and wae = | rushed out, eelsed my hat, whieh we je he govent 4 re} these flowers of poon aot Biemarck! At the name he war fantostic dovil-drawings (uilette lu making of down & corriaor when I the man handed me, be the =e ‘ane — aa i them jo the forest of Despair, dene of LAchionberg unrolled before Charunne, Matburin. Girorom, Kiben myeeit ou to him dur nd there wood « lowed car- , a peep r, ~ — se me 1 saw them stretching Ww the beth Trowvain, the em th mnt Tm pownll Yor « mo two powerful graye @ har. ome oe ee aan of water, 1M. edges of the pine forests, 1 heard the franemitoy from the wad jun to pay yous 7 On, to, and Joubert wae ve the 8 (Bie the & ——— Pe rallie of Mite Carl's drum aa he liy of the terre aly for ethpanae hen, Vou Toate lag the water 1 plunged i and posed oi (he water, marched betore ua, the svund that from the Halles w the others He P} ; is nak anaae's ten ae Mooi locke! Mow durk und had echoed ¢ 1 be At the word "War bald ¢ Deuven'@ tebe . How goed 7 is to romenber the pool Ot ewathen of Mbt, were . 44) Mylowl) tone from ble long sleep. . tis Ain dian dat ta tan ad | qemme borat Marnerst von Uehtouberg there just as he hed pleen ut the word As ol 9 dour Mandie pilit the form was out the form 0 ee much Kinder even pushes you tn, DOV’ no trace Hevuiution.” all the « vie of the ere ew fue at, peated ie mare, (he ie 4 bow 5 ensped ren “pte has hidden heraalf amtdet the Was gathering 19 Commune wore there thal day, ehout. whit 7 ; to Ht [hud forgotton, impeded our progrem, IPH 4nd ee b toward the ehild with the oe” J orhed. “Come” my hupe, | 60% tng Pew y war, and seady Ww ili, the etorn smvuitering ‘Tin Vue Mt Nynore was the a fais A moment inter and f ioe, Bho oalied you Tote. Vut there wae po waee of her oh 1 hed forgution tor ganee on her reine veiween bie some vid Ae in the carriage, thet wae Me el. / A hey 2 called you Toto einen, M, Aut the teem years, 24 wh Bow ant Nove the vourgestele, the ¢ weutiomen wha had temived oy ot 6 walking pare | ee tg of time. a io Marenret!™ we ae & IVI pieture & greet hand wate irewtaly 4 out of the window at the “Oe y A. ry 1 onid. “TL lowe | was frightened af iy own voles, With & wea! Hing on the ithe Boxer tes & eos, CvuMing aes juminetions, the wrutel or mm the © - 2 rr) at le ghoetliness, ond the exbe of the bul 464 Walt careaving the Oey oat vlan, the a) ‘ ree] poten oe eweet name thet came back from the bend of » child. The vend of the whe diy-viwing ot e y would ampngpad ‘eeu the bushes of the ember woot pmarek belding the hand of Kivies, os wy mee! new ruldued have ewep , 1s for we CHAPTER XXIN vg Bn A wreath of morning mist could | eww i! Chal day long wee ie the hell leer ad thn @agnad wan & thtae r) : thant We passed the geiae of Marie with 4 rinaon ves pe ounn eet ald nat have venithed more cumuictely wt Hehives iavwianbern The irs gap and to pomommer th was the ing t wore het BRuiher general ous bindrunce, and them 4 The Spirit of Barth pe now ghd hoghalenah, Some bend which wee to crush the arm Mag trast, the peated, t 4 yeet Vined with we it oP ‘ : " aad _ ss yy ar ger Gre fn promperiiy Lane ene of bt ’ luned OFOr some payee whew Gwe pour D ' be the omy from wame orudh toward the Place Vendome My WER have eondoned what 1 owe aflaire were Gwarted, tor ine mo. thet Ser, wut the eirew meul, vy the maguilude of the event **rer ‘ 6nd the furnace rons of (ue rete Bente of wanes orenta-aom Cy, Jubilant and fervrious, wale beeen o shake earth ond shy with their coanele roar end trom they to the spring, we aed le are triumphant as Ue as a tasiery oa wt the 9 voles of 6 ger, the guna a sound 0 att, tate o ond 1, orbiadered, & GOING AWAY FOK THE wweyt the heavens of the Reeon4 Many ent the vor 4 & peonie! Mh Wee Or unty, beet, end erenmed Hee orang Beis We Ged for hoot. ibeif « dusen timen | vy the enemy The iow to ures Joubert There wee atiti wae the SUMMEK? Remember The Bye off, We \ett the doure op A them from being Uruke ning World prints each week @ owt f ¥ miles before ve if one of ur ment pony Chmet'a ten Line on an inhwite en hutees Wl iguly im i; perbape it wae ter thie ve omplete uptodate novdleg ower hed wit that oo Uitte misehie dune by an a Deard 6, 0nd made wit! an. tsted with aoe me Ady at quartered themesives | 00K’ reading! Have The Eve a er agrwved ra the La md Voodeme tw there. ning World sent to your 4 1 has er there. ‘The evimeidence of mer address. a | Baas Bp ens a > eae ina,

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