The evening world. Newspaper, October 30, 1919, Page 29

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The Ev By il Influence of . Cities! Rey. Thomas B. Gregory Coy 0, by Tae Bross Pabilchiag 9, (Tue New York Brening Wetld @ * Go Out of the Cities Into the Towns and Open Places and Find There Faith | 3 in Humanity Once More. | y HERE are causes aud cxuses—bottom: causes and surface causes. It} May be weil to bear thiv fact In mind in thinking of the present great conflict between labor and capital In the mean time, remember that there is room in the United States alone, leaving out Alaska and the islands, for the ‘entire population of the globe. ‘The State of Texas, if populated as Belgium was before the war, would bold the present population of the whole country, We thus see that there is etill plenty of room in Uncle the congestion bei onfined to the big towns, while the anything but crowded. ‘The steady drift from the country to the city is a fact ee passed over lightly, It explains the “Iliad of all our we | ‘Thé big city—every big city—is a menace to humanity. It has always | veen wo, it always will bd so. Tt was old Jerusalem that destroyed the | civilization of Judea; it was Rome that destroyed the Republic of the! Soipios; it was Athens and Corinth (hat ruined Greece; it was Babylon and | Nineveh thai wiped out the great civilization “between the rivers;” and it js Berlin, Vienna, Paris, London, New York and Chicago that are doing for ws what the above-mentioned cities did to the ancient humanity. There is no doubt about it, and those who do not see it have read his- Sam's domain, countryside is | | that must not | tery with but little proft It is not necesnary to dwelt 1 influence of the big city upon human life and character, In € city there are, of course, many splendid peopic, but the inevitable influence of elty conditions upon all who are subjected (o them is invariably fatal to the ideals from which must Come the insniretion of oll {ruc and lasting progress | City Nfe cloapens our estimate of human, worth and sacredness, hard- ens the heart, narrows the sympathies, and to a very great extent predi: Doses to wrong living | Yor all this there is a rem and the remedy is to be found in the VILLAGE-SYSTHM OF MANUFACTURE. Instead of packing the factories together in great cities scatter them throughout the countryside. Let the workers live {n real homes around the plants, where they will flowers, fruits, plenty of alr and sunshine, and, best of all, the bene- Uftlag influence of Nature without which the souls of men per- sted recetver. hay fit o There ie lund enough to give every one a home, and a garden, and an abundance of Weht ond alr, thus enabling us to touch the earth and be! really alive | Thus wontd we solve not only the threatening problema of the big | city but the problem of labor and capital and every other problem that is harassing us, | Your Sweetheart’s Reveated by His! Characteristics Henduriting O rrrrrerrrrreeereeenreearrrnnnnn Below is given the analysis of the handwriting sent in by sincere young women who di 0 learn more about their sweetheart . by The Prow Pub! Co, (The New York Evening World.) who really foves. ne ther driginal, sense of honor nt rather weak|not ageressive. Decent living but| nol great wealth, Your characters do not yt thinking of me He spends lavishly ut times, litte ts one persons Indications a then economiaes more than any one |that eventually he will make an am. | Knows. Judge that he iy deliberate, vitious marriage. ‘ regarding matrimony. Tactful, sym- Biol pathetic, tely affectionate netic, Herutely aif at wn me Renta SOME respects secre- ive. rortenc iT m1 e M.D. K. -- Goneral charncter Im] succeamtal one aula het u . Sense of humor, Will! jolly, good nstured. Susceptible asigsin noise ievorble ee” ma to appearance, ally led, Good |Rayh noise. Pisoni vagant, eomewhat puts M. R. Ne—-He ix determined and exacting. Combines a certain JAMAICA—Beasilive, ve gra- \ clots Cevemoniousness with stern: i fined, social, hor Si Vovtends business succenr. Affec: | money at one time, then tlonate in’ a Demands the sharply. Pleasant but not cetios of : ble to spend | ee ey oon mse before others. AON. HOU, Mt Vorn ath » mouth | 4 \ ather close ed, though ap- but affections ‘unstable, 4a phionily talkative. No temperament. Never. quarrels. No R id tan Re EL cd (orce, Suited to cievical work i HOME i | THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1 PAGE Can You Beat It! By Maurice Ketten | KEEP AN EY! OUT FOR THE SORS . 1 Lu Ger THE KALE \ WHAT ARE THEY DOING ! aes STAY THERE lu GET NIM > KEEPING THe So Lonc | V. A. W.—He is generous and common sense, Quietly ambitious. | Iliw greatest assets are adaptability, | tact, activity, and his lead contr his heart. FRANCIS H. W., Staten Island—- A model young man, but lacks poise and initiative, lxcellent clerk or | bookkeeper. | a sai mountain height, Roth the boy and , | y : he girl showed t ms 0 sul, Bs Vewoite ig affectionate, trant |} YSTERY, Love and War—a story of thrills |} pie £' howe she slams of the hasty. Jtimps at conclusions. Im in vivi i . . i Mat bape hsip Bee, oe aeeatke. | i = in vivid colors against the Lowering ceaseless vinl, tho constant dread oh cl ’ hat their lives would be wiped out A. A.\A—ils pragrensive. To keep bei ony of the snow capped Alps! Ina before their mission could be ace his love you must advance with him. ||, Swift rush of action, Evelyn Erith and Kay Feaeel news pivndlog with thelnete Qualities for success, Independe ; ; ‘, cer nos nae i nag Qualities for suocens. | Independent | | McKay of The Secret Service are carried browns of the forenl. | Thetr “tacos , » i; e. In. Nes see ope were pinched and dr » skin clined to, care moro, for fia, career | peruen perane, oe hy attacks, foiling |P Sireteiea tut acroes th bones, eee. ermany’s Plan o ‘or’ y 4 parchmentlike and _ w The in- Sense will overcome habits > Conquest visible invasion of the Germans was i — - driving them nearer and nearer to . H., Brooklyn.—Any one 5 x AN ode am eye, Be sent Copyright, 1918, by George IL. Doran Company. the edge of the cliff, And #0 @ sec- three years’ constant visiting) lack | Copyright, 1918-2919, by invernatiqnal Magezine Qumpany, r ond week began. The drive had Shree, yonzy socateny vielting) task! petite Baye rere ly forced them from the hilly western A little tactful indifference on your| go Atte iti, young and beautitul war works ia uke Cousor's cttico In New York, interoepie e WOOUS, custward and inexorably tox part might loosea his tongue and | foe “a kil hay Mckay, ab Aucneas ward that lovel belt of shaggy forest, { H i. dies lenatt 1 ‘ and | eee a ane eae, man Se C4 serub growth, and art bowlder- bring matters to a definite hea ; doy) ‘hy ‘chatee Miss Mriue Mods atrewn table-land wl there was A ea ice ee 4 Sad probably no water, nothing Tiving to . ‘ ‘ -| Kill for. food, and only : kind, but @ little tlhougitiess, affec- | Ca pote? inex beyond whore 8 tiong somewhat uncertain, for hes] ¢ int io Wik ath eraeh wen ining not yet sure of himself in anything, | q cure for . if , \ hims ny re Cade a cure tor plockolism, aad to somewhere below under its blanket of though he is not without force, At| deve f Niner Gs sald Ihe trot af dlaniaed Cares Alpine mist times evasi Must develop’ more. battle weeks later thoy aurive in Bwitserland, cross over the wire and oato Mount ~ On the fourth day, still crowded out Me Bde Lo ace deve Wough heh ht The teak an american Ward and toward the ragged edge of DAISY a‘, H. Jersey A ba In the forest who says he is Number Two Hundred and Thirty in the the mountain world, they found, for not care for poetry or classical | United Mt h lap Sink, ond be bee Gree wounded by the Usman the first time no water to fill their music, Rather inclined to bachelor | hen ho entered the forest to come to the aid of and Mies Erith. bottles, Realizing their plight, Me md to bache 13 ottles, Re ne Me- life, Some business ability, Likes . Kay turned desperately westward, travelling more as a change than CHAPTER VOL carelessly reaching for the rifle that /4) 4 Spade ° | 2 ee of facing pursuit, ranging the now nar what be will learn (Continued,) pant leaning aguinst the @ Of ow forest in hopes of an opportunity — . ene h urwnite, oO bres tb ugh the clos x | ol DODO H.—Is not strong willed, 18] RN the silence which ensued “none touch it!" said McKay in a [O,braak through the closing line of pot domineering. Lacks concentra- velyn Erith, who had been ly- Jow: but distinct voice; and the words 7yy0) t) proved to be a deadline that tion, Generous, ng affection ing between them on her stom- galvanized the extended arm and it y. hid CRA ISALARUAT T GhGiIaae a a ach, her chin propped up on Shot out, grasping tho ritie, as the faced; shadowy figures, half wee Bee Geindtoa ions 226 tn eee ee cine ee eee pe acit MAN himself dropped out of Hight Be> sometimes mer’ ea and divinad 6. Would t & devoted hus- | hind the rock fiitted everywhere through the open I. Affect refined, slinple,;On one arm to a sitting posture. A terrible stillness fell upon the woods beyond them, Atd at night = |} Instantly Gray shrank back, white pluce; there was not a sound, not @ «necklace of flres—hundreds of them | L sheot lifting his mutilated movement -barred the west to them, curving hand in its sliffened and bloody ragw; — Suddenly the girl pointed at @ outward like the blade of a fla ning Do ou (he girl gasped out her agoniaed shadow that moved between the soinyj.ar, on the fifth day McKay. ‘ rocks—and the crash of McKay's pig- jying in his blanket be the gir) you forgive me! It was tol deafened them, told her that if they found no water Know? unsy of me Then, aguinst the daugling glory of that day they must the urrier tt all right,” said Gray, the the west a dark shape ered UD, pigeon £0. 119, by Tas Me 0. j;eolur coming back to his face; but clutching a wavering rifle, reelin The wat v blanke a» New Yor Evening World) tho girl in her exeitement of self- there against the rosy glare an im a ane r slmly. Wha td yan foun (Oe | yepvoach and contrition begged to be stant; and the girl turned her sick pe had just said to her meant the be ut oe {allowed to dress the mutilated hand eyes ‘aside as McKay's pistol spoke ginning of the end, Sho understood Whit the otkaloid drug 1a) whieh her own careless movement again, perfectly, But her voice was sweet coffee caltod almost erushed, Like a shadow cast by hell the black and undisturbed as she answered 3, On whal mountain were tl dh, I et my ha nd on pia form swayed, quivered, sank away him, and they quietly disevssed the ments vevelved by Moses wounded fingers and rested my full outward into the blinding light that chances of discovering water in some ial Amorienn Gyialon radeits Oughtn't he to let us dress shone across the world. sunken hole among the outer ledges the wor silitude record at_ once?" Presently a tnkling sound came up and bowlders whither they were be no iy 1 com mand of the ante But Gr y 8 pluck waa adamant, and from the fog-shrouded depths--the ing slowly and hoplossly forced. A A aN ene ee dered tah dlamiaalnd the falling rifle striking ledge after lodge Noon found them suit searchin 4 the prevent we nit uther glanpe ave- until the receding sound grew fainter for some ket of stale rain water : be Iyn out of clear blue eyes. And more distant, and finally was ! ly did they discover the 341i ae jiyp clear ate " unt, ¢ ly was but once only did they discover 1 rom what: counting: won Mie) Then Gray fone ne Being & IY heard no mo sli¢htes: trace of moisture—a eruat Caudle Burehage made A ee eee ee oe ee vat | BUL that was the only sound thoy Of sliine in a rocky basin, and trom port. jowest to] And, as he stood there, Evelyn's OM the chia brink, propped from need 1 Sa eeiatull port a clo a} eal alain nee the depths by 4 tuft,of alpine roses in that tolled aimlessly tafully » “he Pilgrim's} “I touches his rifle, shoot! full bloom, his blue’ eyes wide open, UP the rock, on sgt tae) - ‘ Quiek, Kay!" & blue hole just betwoen “hem, and fie slime axa een eerie ent 18 the Hama | MeKay's right hand fell into his bis Pancha pend freed from jta yt : side pocket—where one of his auto- camouflage, Iving palm upward and OF oy noon, resting in th material ave artic |matios lay. He levelled It as he quite uninjured on the grass sh ‘ ced her Ips were bleed ves mude? eu it, hidden within the side Sh oa pease oy ne-—and turned away, sharply, TO VESTERDAY'S 1 of his coat i 4 CHAPTER Yul, able to endure her. torture, ‘ a uh hand is not wounded NOTHPR week had passed weomed to und 4 h y QUESTIONS. wreathed the girh “If he touches his sealer at " titer movement Jeane High nevvity; 3 Malne: 4, {rifle he Is a Boche week of alert waltiiy, OF Celia} nero he ® . 83 to o, Anantung; 7,| MekKay's wead nodded almost im- sudden alarms = of in gerna with his back to a uw Criccis; 6, plawis % boomerang perceptibly, Gray's back Was still apes and shadows that dog leans whor hia iaster U, bia: N 16, Hoppe ; 2, Dumas, turned, but one hand was extended, lurked along the woodwdys of that “I think, she sald with an e(ort IT'S TAKING HIy ) A LONG Time Te Ger Tat icace! “we should release our pigeon now: McKay wrote on time the date and time of day; and @ word more to say that they had, now, scarcely any chance, He added, towever, that others ought to try because’ there was ho longer any doubt in his mind that the Boche were still ocoupled with some gigantic work along the Swiss border in the hborhood of Mount ‘Terrible; and that the Swiss Government, if not abetting, at least Was cognizant of the Boohe activities. This message he rolled into a quill, fastened it, took the bird, and tossed it westward Into the air. Then, as they watched, the pigeon stood up and stretched its neck sky ward. ‘The sun flashed on its wings am it wheeled; then awept westward nto a long straight course, Neither she nor MeKay had spoken. ‘The latter stood staring down at the Atch of ferns into which the cage rolled. And it was some time be- fore hin dull eyes noticed that there was grass growing there, too—swale grass, which he had not before seen arid eastern region. an hour later he waited for to come up along side of him. he sald, “this is swale are following. the girl "Yellow-ha marah-grass we And little wild creatures have made or . runway through It as though there were-a drinking-place—some- where"— He forced himself to look up at her at her dry, blood-blackened |tpa: “Lean on me,” he whispered, threw his arm around her. And Po, slowly, together, they came through the swale to a living spring. and A dead roe-decr lay there—stiftened into an indesoribable attitude of agony where it had fallen writhing in the aw nd its terrible convulsions had torn up and flattened the grass and ferns a0 “O) here are where at tle furry the water ‘There was a ticker of brown wings 4 bird alighted at the’ pool, peered fearlessly right and left, drank, bent its head to drink again, fell forward twitching and beating the with f en the litte bird lay sti. ere was a fallen tree—not long which in its earthward crash another smaller tres, partly Jatter ao that it leaned over a dry gully dit Goda!" dead whispered the girl, birds lying every- "yw edge! And Jit dead-all dead at Here dead leaves had drifted deep. And here these two cam id crept in among the withered branches and lay down among the fallen leaves, a long while they lay iotiontest n she moved, turned over, and ped into hig arms, ! cat tree that had fallen had sken off a foot above ground, ‘The ed a a dry gully Langle that it seemed as vuch would push it over, oliage wax xtill green end ! although ‘the mesh of reots wih wero all axpoxed noted this in a dull way, think- 1L GO ano ) HELP NIN ine | SAW BuraLar, Croina in MA BRY'S Sone Kick IN MR DRY, CIDER ing always of water. And presendy, acarcely knowing whit he was doing, be pluced both arms againat the lean- ing trunk and began to push. felt the leaning tree sway earthward, Then into the pain and confusion of bis clouding = mind pnething finshed with a daxgling streak of light the flare-up of dying meme and he hurled himself against the leaning tree. And ft lowly sank, lying level and uprooted, And in the Wack bed of the” roots lay darkling @ little pool of water, The girl's eyes unclosed on his, Her face and tips were dripping un- der the sopping, icy sponge of green moss with which he was bathing her slowly and washing out her mouth and tongue, Into her throat he squeezed the water, drop by drop only It was late in the afternoon before ho dared lot her drink During the night #he slept an hour or two, awoke to ask for water, then alep. again, only to awnke to the craving that he always aatistied, Refore sunrise he took his pack, took both her shoos from her feet, tore some rags from the lining of her skirt and from hie own cout, and leaving her asleep, went out into the grey dusk of morning. When he again caine to the pol- soned spring he unslung his pack and, volding It by both straps, dramged it through marsh grasa and fern, out through the fringe of saplings, out through low acrub and brake and over moss and lichens to the edge of the precipice beyond And here on # serubby bush he left fragments of thelr garments entan- ami with his hybnailed heels he broke crumbling edges of rock and stnaahed the moss and stunted growth and tore a path among the Alpino roses which clothed the chaam’s treacherous edie, #0 that it might ‘ mas wi veh a heavy object hud plunged down into the gulf below Such bowlders as he could stir from their beds and roll over he dislodged and pushed out, listening to them aa they crashel downward, tearing the ‘aswy face until, striking some awhelf, they bounded out into lower space. Now in stamped the rough shoes in moss and soil and drove hia own ironshod feet wher ever lichen or earth would retain the imprint. All the footprints pointed one way and ended a: the chusm's edge. And there, als ert the wicker cage, and one of his pistols, too-—the last and most denporate effort to deceive. for, near it, he flung the cartridge belt with ity amamunition Intact—on the chance that the Roche would believe the visible signs, because only a dy- ing man would For they niuat be he dad "prepared for oruaet trall of two p ccc alures-wthriven by agony and mad nos to thelr own destruction Sho wag still asleep when he cane once more to Lhe bed of leaves be- this bruised he imprints of path her twe vidence thom-—this ied human ddie Ki day. the Knglish speaking peoples H The Evening World's Klub 1919, by The Frees Publisning Co. Conducted by Eleanor Schorer = The Future Revealed in Hallowe'en Games. i ALLOWE'EN. What a wealth of mystery and awe hangs about @at Hallowe'en night {s the night of wonder and witchery among time when spells abound and secrete Korner (The New York Meening World.) of Bur and America, It io are revesled and the future up the window blinds, eo to speak, for a brief invtant “od allows as to peek In, But one who would know their fate must perform certaim eere- monies without which nothing will de disclosed To know who among your friends will be the firat to wed/ eit in a circle around « bottle, each with a needle in one hand a ae in will the other, The first peron to thread be the first to marry. the needle after a given Even if it is not your lot to be the first to marry, you will afl marry some day and it would be fun to know at least the initial of your ay partner’s name, Go you set to carving the alphabet on the surfage of, Pumpkin “shell. him with a large pin volving on its en ‘Thia done, biindfold the seeker after informati and send him toward the pumpkin shell whioh i ge- ‘The letter through which the pin penetrates will ®e & fatal one for the bilndfolded boy or girt. ‘Then if you woukt go deeper and know whether the spouse tp to be chosen from among the company, if may be decided by tying the to the stems of apples and duckt should, of course, be two separate r them In a tub of water. %, one containing the apples named after the giris and the other thone named for the boys. You may not be successful in capturing an apple. rz not destined to link your future with that of any one case a handful of paper lettors taken up at random and @oattered the surface of the water may form the name. While you are inquiring, why not find out in which month nuptials will bo performed? If you have twelve candles you ean do Light the candles and set them on the floor at a fai other. Then take tarns Lyon 4 over them, on the very first candle that happen that you will blow ou’ In that case, the month will be January; distance from, ta time, Ie Biower eek the boy who third candle will wed in March; the girl who extinguishes the will be a June bride, and, so on. A barrel bh ui candies and cai calm, amoeth, peppery, sweet or unfortunate, pend the hoop from a rafter or chandelier and set it spinning. atand around, hold your heads wp and snap for & taste of the hope your teeth do not close over a bit of pepper or a mouthful hung at intervals with pieces of dread, . lew wn tell infallably whether your per wr Maem 5 9 ‘The way to tell is to oms- ‘Then a ot tallow: ‘They have a most unpleasant flavor and omen, Take rather @ nibble of the candy, apple or bread. After which you've but to watch closely and patiently for the prophecies to come true. | Cousin -Eleanor’s Klub COUSIN ELEANOR. > Kolumn Dear Kidefie Kivh Members: ‘The great ont-of-doors was made for girls as well as for boys, Girls can have just as much fun and bene- fit from a day's tramp as boys, per- haps even a little more because, a) rule, the recreation is more of a nov- elty to them, On second thought, this may not be quite true The out-of- doors is like a great, big, universal friend whose charm grows upon one with association and who becomes | And + endeared to us through long a¢- quuinta With every new visit to her blue-ceilinged, green-carpeted home we find new beauties, not only tween the fallen trees, An not awakaned when he cov’ dry ad brought to her the broth made from the birds. Ali the morning he worked at his | basin, which, fed by some deep-seated | and living #pring, now overflowed | «1 trickled down into tle dry gully low By noon he had a pool as large and deep ax a bathtub; and he came and wot down beside her under the fallen mas of branches ‘where she lay watching the bubble up and clear itself of the clouded silt, And, even a8 he was speaking, o far voice cried through the woods distant, sinister as the harsh ac m of @ hawk that has made Ite kill, Then nother voice shouted, hoarse with triumph; oth nawered, near) and far; the forest was full of the | heavy, ominous inds.* For the} ocho were gathering in eastward from the wooded western nila, and! their sustained clamor filed the air] tik the unclean racket of vultures sighting domination and cager to feed. iMoKay laid hig loaded pistol beside him “Dear Yellow-balr,” he whispered, She smiled up at him, “If thi think wo died there on the edge of the precipice, then you and [ should live. If they doubt it they will me i through these woods, And it iin't likely that we shhil live very long.” Vreaently, within the feld of his | vision, something moved—® man go- Westward among the trees, his | slung over his shoulder nd | jawed 11 there were others . plodding stolidly back toward the western for- | ests of Les Erruct—forms halt between trees, none near, and only two who passed within hearing, the | trample of their heavy feet loud among the fallon leaves, their guttural | vol distinct. And, as they swung | westward, rifles slung, pipes alight, | and with the air of surly hun ' homeward hound after a successful ki r unted, lying close under their roc branches, heard them boasting thelr work and of the a b their quarry had died of (heir agony at the spring which drove them to that death in the depths of the awful gulf beyond, "And that," shouted one, atifling with laughter, “I should Ike to have ‘ It Is all I hove to regret of this jagd—and I did not ace the wilde die! ‘The other Boche “Put what a pity to leave that roe- leer lying there, Such good meat poisoned! Schade, immer achadet good meat like that CHAPTER IX, HE girl sat bolt upright on bed of dead leaves, still con- fused by sleep, her ears ring- ing with the loud, hard voice was less cheer ner which had awakened her to con- sciousness of pain and hunger once again. . Not! ten feet from her, between whew )}she lay under the branches of in Nature's appearance but In her” character and in her works, cae Each year the American girl is get~ 5 ting “chummler* with the wide World. he Is “roughing It in camgae, and on the bike. It is making he? healthier and prettier than dhe “hawis ever been before and that is amyiaery & go01 doal, ‘Those pilgrnneges int the open in company with other gi are making her a “good fellow” tn hest sense of the phrase, while she learns to be refreshingly self-depems dent and formation, ‘The Girt Scouts and organization of the sort have certainly doute thei hare toward creating the outdoors wirl, This ia “Girl Scout Week” when each of us is given an equal portunity with the other to exp} 1} and show our appreele” all they have do “iy Cousin Eleanor, penny mh “HALLOWE'EN.” viele Now uhat Hallowe'en # here, sim All the kiddies are gay; ber Ruying fanny-faced pumpking, To seare the people away. © But in tho night is best of tum, axe To duok for apples gay? ma, For all the kiddies like apples, And eat vhem wight avway, ane Ry ANNA KBLLY of Brocka: aa OCTOBER DRAWING AND PAINT.” ING CONTEST. ey Subject: “Autumn Flowers.” !N prizes of four Thrift Stampa * AG will be awarded tem Kiddie” Klub. members, ages from. alte to fifiven, Inclusive, who make 62 drawings ov paintings ‘ata an flowers, from the parent %, tifleaty a0 saying thats he work original and has not been copied must Accompany each. drawing vor painting. Victuves may be done with . oluved crayour, ol} paints or wal Contestants mlist state name, ame address and gertiticate number, +8 Address Cousin Eleanor, Pventme World Kiddie Klub, No, 68 Park Rew, N York City ¥ nteat closes Nov. 1. HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB AN OBTAIN YOUR PIN, Hoxtnnt number the coupons 540-541 = M4. ang, Heanor. Eves once’ Bin” vcd ida eb with fn whieh you mite atate your AGH AND ADDRESS. All children up to at exe may Locome memb: bur eventos WIth & niives Klub Pin and membership cortifiont COUPON NO. 539 a, @ fallen tree and the edge of ‘ precipice beyond, full in the moral sunlight stood two mea in the ’ of Swiss mounta\neers ‘nih One of them from a note was reading alomd! metallic volee; the other, swinging two dirty fags, signalled the messi OUL across the World of mountains Ae it was read to him in that nesta nasal Berlin dlatect of a Prusmieiy» junker i466 “In the staubbach Valley no trates: » bave been discoveredy® continued the tall, square-shouldere’ reader in bis deliberate vol “Ttehey, bsolutely necessary that the bodied of these two Amer Kay Mekay and and all thelr papers, Jotning to th slight rAN BEC nents belon: yed without the remaining, “It in ordered also tha their bodies redies jaw gathers a fund of aseful 1Ds,y " i ok in a slow, decini yas (

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