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fjuwrn |^rnc/H T VllCUTfNANT ^ / ^PATDBRIENJ A i. Af r #/ WM J - * " SYNOPSIS. . nnd found J"st , bofore In wntchl: _ f CHAPTER I?Introductory. Pat O'Rrfen 1" their tracks w Jr * tell a of hla purpoae in writing ihaAatofy window, even tho - W ef bi. adventures. ^ ' v*;*hnt.the nttracti CHAPTER II?Telia of hl^pT?tm?nt^ln ()ne ?f my chh & the Royal flying 101 pa. rui^ training In . , Canailu und hta IranalufeldfFiance.|0r mo- these days was ci Uv# duty. catch a fly, put 1 w CHAPTER 11SJIS*?h i Ibea'flghta In which (there were pleW be brought J^wit two Uvrumu alrpimnea . , . , . r and his Hi?W light in which he warn House), and Kit (1 brougnt d^wn wounded wltliln the Uer- conic down and K "Sr. 'Zf * "" ? plrtun cl myself ! }} CJISIVtER IV?Discover, ,h? ""i"' "'I'1 'TZ ^ ^ laltal Starr btsrburouHly hum tec tea' th# Bpldftt \Ml8 finout J t>, .^hy wounded and devotejPTIi?V-?h?f- ttincs when tlllr * *"./< ?a to reatorlng thoae wirn. .aught b# * . . . PV */turned to the llrlng lineflF \V-Miieaeea tempted to Sec \ TMftgiigilS n*ht^5 j'1** Ldouu i but perhaps the . guided me sufel J '* (IfclAPTEi^VSryre -Is taken to the of- WQg guarding, to? ilceW prlaon>arnt) b^.Ooortral. There he * ?* \ 1 begXSttadamilnK^da escape. By great aAc- flips, for I Ulvta. * ,m fce^Bg^iuKer^aave and hide, away fflPs never did stl '* '? ?o aUaraMMpna #r hia?1- ? ? L ; y * . . amusement. m * CHAPTER vKdl?.i'<>Q(l?i at?i a map of | . V- lenSany and JuaVrmlf-an hour later te ! The house wa k >lt on a train bound foV a prison camp books?III fact, <1 5 i Oarmany. He leaps through a window , ,' * v bile the ttnln la traveling at a rata of to brnrles I think 1 ? wilea i? V',r , were all written CHAPTER Vn-For nine days he . crawls through. Germany. hiding during French. I could the daY, trayellrig at night, guided by the ? > ^ ,\m\m.ru una BUUHiHting on row vegetables. very nun- r renci ' I 'fn'OOven 76 inlles he for* reaching Lux- a little headwny V 'i ADlDlirK. // CHAPTER VIII?For nine days more he th? books all 8C ? Struggles on .In a weakened condition and I gave It Ul>. \ ^trough Luxemburg In the direction of though that I I % from beginning 1 CHAPTER IX?He endures terrible Now Vcir\ Hit.m1i hardships, Bwitns rivers while delirious ... , from hunger, living like n hunted animal rived jlist about V Stnd on the eighteenth day after Jumping clunwl ii?VUriil / from the train he crosses Ipto Belgium. ? . , . , forested me, nnd ' CHAPTER X?When well on hie way bull s? ?r?>s, whl< -m Ntbrough Belgium he Iir* befriended one , , plghtfrby a Elattilst) peasant, who feeds ">uch euro as it r ?.hlm hnd directs htm to a man in a Bel- an m>-to-dnt?> son glan city Who will helfkjiljn to get a pass- " S< ? tmrt from laugldng w CHAPTER XI?By. mingling with Bel- count of Zluiinc glan peasants he manages to elude <J?r- bpi.,,, Ix-nclwxl f< man soldiers and reaches the Belgian city . 1 where he finds the home of the man from umpire, ami it h whom he expects hein much Interest th CHAPTER XII-Huyllger forges a pass- !nm 11 ,n" n ST ln f?*port for O'Brien and promises to assist happened?pel a ? nlin int getting into Holland. Later Huy- current Item <>< 1 ltger atid his associates demand an ex . , 'i orbtfant sum for their services and had at thnt time, M ntf*n br*fckB wlth tUem- i I rummaged tl "From my place of concealment I fre- from cellar to ga Mb qently saw huge carts being pushed something to en ape through the streets gathering potato three year of \v peelings, refuse of cabbage a^J^slmllar c*'ss ?hing that II food remnants, which. In Ameldbra. are the man out fP considered garbage and destroyed. In , thirsty with Belgium they were using this "gar- n?t 8 drop to di rbage" to make their bread out of, and I was tempted while the Idea may sound revolting to K? to church one us, the fact Is that the Germans have Judgment told nn brought these things down to such a risk. Of course, |T science that the bread they make this My something way Ih really very good to eat. I know know bow man; r It would have been like cake to me there or what ml when I was In need of food; indeed I UP that Idea. Vwould hnve eaten the "garbage" dl- During all the t rect, let alone the bread. In this house I sn L Although, rs I hnve said, I sufferad and that was a < I greatly from hunger while occupying Thut same often >\ xr.i8 nouse, tnere were one or two frights of my yi things I observed through the keyhole I hnd been gaz or from the windows which made ma as usual when 1 . laugh, and some of the incidents thnt the street the m 4 occurred during my voluntary linprls- man soldiers. It K J onment w??re really funny. many, hut there f| From the keyhole I could see, for In- ndnd that Gei stance, a shop window on the other imlirtdng down t / J Bide of the street, several houses down stairs and peeke< < / the block. All day long German sol- and sure enough / dlers would be pasflng In front of the funtry was com house and I noticed thnt practically accompanied bj every one of them would stop In front truck. I hadn't l of this store window and look In. Or- they were cotulr . tcaslonnlly a soldier on duty bent would the possibilities hurry past, hut I think nine out of ten me more or less K of them were sufficiently Interested to ered how I coul ) ' apend at least a minute, and some of - by chance I wai them three or four minutes gazing at after. The idea *>l whatever was being exhibited in that cellar appealed window, although I noticed that tt practical; there 5\ failed to attract the Belgians. plenty of places I \ I have a considerable streak of curl- and cases where I oslty in me, and I couldn't help won- himself, but, as i i / derlng what It could be In thnt window hot hei.eve that f ' which almost without exception would arise. a- a _ ? - - ? ? - -- vt-iii<-u to interest wrmnn soldiers but The marching fulled to hold the Belgians, and after I could hear the conjuring my brains for a while on the In a moment I problem I came to the conclusion that the keyhole throi ?m the shop must have been a hook-shop jng. and the window contained German "Hult 1** magazines, which, naturally enough, At the word of would be of the greatest Interest to * Junior officer t the Germans but of none to the Bel- tentlon right In f / glnns. I waited no long I At any rate I r solved that as soon as stairs I flew lnt< \ night came I ?.*uld go out and In- although It was vestlgate the window. When I got the the only light ct flswer 1 laugh?<jl fio loud that I was Whlch led to tl '*ht the 198 Vent I must have at- found a satisfat , . of the neighbors, the extreme real w,n<*ow had the presence MQL, ? quantities of door of the v^ni ~ *vns a butcher that If the soldtai y toUglMinclpal things |h9y would be'm V " / Kdvusage. The B fugitive behtoi ' h It con- were fipm. ' In the *-Hjr doclslort.tr "" tiad b fu BOO ? /' THE LANCASTER I i k V * V oat what wag going on. BL I If Huyllger had revealed my hiding I I 1 place to the Huns, as I was now conI I Rl I fldent he had. I felt that there was lit >, the destiny of those ^ ^ ps weakened and the ' ? ifPer (him my lust for "I Floured I Could Put- Up a Qood a well supplied with . Fight." me of the eholeest 11- tip prospect of their overlooking me. [ ever saw?but they Thev would search th? house from top either In Flemish or to bottom and. If necessary, raze It to read no I* lemlsh and the ground, before tney wxiqjd give up i. I might have made the search. TO escape from the house with the latter, but through the backyard through the Iron smed too deep for me grating," which I had no doubt I could 1 here was one thing force, seemed to be the logical thing did read and reread to do, hut the chances were that the to epd ; that was a Huns had thrown a tjordon around the 1 winch must have ar- entire block befofe the squad was sent the time war was de. the" house. The (term a us do these 1 things in this ii> things I* an efficient manner always, particularly i . They take nothing for granted, h 1 studied with a: Vy one chance seemed to W to stand ?'C.l fail possibly could re. I couldn't refrain Pnt ,n fho hope, that the officer Tn hen 1 came to irn ac- charge might possibly come to the conrtnan (of the Cubs) c.wSlou that he hud arrived at the ir some .spat with the house too lute-?that the bird hud afforded me just us flown. ree years after It had My position tri that wtne cellar was ps in or*;?than some anything put a comfortable one. ltuts P world-wide interest i aQd mice were scurrying ucrosa the floor and the smashing and crashing he house many times Rolug bn overhead was anything but irret In my search for 1 promising. Evidently those soldiers t, hut the harvest of Imagined that I ought to be biding la ar had made any sue- | the walls, for It sounded as though ine impossible. I was they were tearing off the walnscottlng. In the ocean In a boat the picture molding and. In fact, water everywhere hut . everything that they could tear or pull Ink. i apart. I while In the city to Before very long they would finish Sunday, hut my better thelr"%eurch upstairs and would come i It would he a useless 1 down to - the basement. What they someone would surely , would do when they discovered the to me and I didn't j wine 1 had no Idea. Perhaps they j Germans would be would let themselves loose on It an<] gnt Duppea, bo I gave pte uif niy chance. With a bottle ol i wine In each hand 1 figured I could put time I was concealed up n Kood "Kb* ,n the dark, especially tw but one automobile HS 1 wus becoming more and more acQerman staff oflicer's. customed to It and could beglu to dlsloon I had oue of the tlngulsh things here and there, where?ung life "B when they entered the pitchy (larking out of the keyhole ??8v,f ;h?* cH,?r- they wouId be afl t heard coming down b,,nd 1,8 bat8 1,1 the sun' ensured tread of (Jer- j Perhaps It was twenty minutes bedldn't sound like very 'ori> 1 heard what sounded like my was no doubt In my d?*th-knell to me; the soldiers were rroan soldiers were co?'l|tg down the cellar steps! 1 he street I went uje clutched a wine bottle In each hand :1 through the window and waited with hated breath, n squad of German In* I ramp. Irnmp! Tramp. In a moIng down the street nw'"' v would be in ,he cr,lar r a military motor prol' 1 could almost hear my heart the slightest Idea that heating. The mice scurried across the ig after me. but still flo,,r b>' ,hw "rores- Khtened no of the situation gave doubt b>' ,he vibration and noise made alarm, and I consld- by the ?>*"cenilli?g soldiers. Some of tl make inv escape If th* creatures ran across me where I the man they were Hlood between two wine cases, but I <.f Mill I..* i.. oil... waH much interested In biirir?r to "me" an"the mi.at *H,ue to l'ay any Httentl,,n to m,ce' must have been Trump! Tramp! "Halt!" Again among the wine kegs an given In German, and ala till'II could conceal though I did not underatand It I am I nrntter ,,f f??"l did ??'" ? <" ??T)r word of It. beany such contingency <*?"* ' It resulted In the soldiers turning right atxiut face, marching up the ? 1,11^ atalrs again, through the hall and out soldiers came nearer, _ . ? ' . , of* the front door and away I in at the next house. ' would see them pass 1 cou,(1 har(,|y believe my ears. It ugh which I was Look- almost too good to be true that they could have given up the search Just as they were about to come upon command shouted by the,r <?uarr>' but ",,less my earH de" he squad came to at- *e,ved ,nw thot wua what they bad 'ront of the house! done. ;er. Running down the ,Tb* possibility thnt the whole thing > the wine cellar and m,?h, ''J* " "'* "?> not escape almost pitch dark- In?* a,,d 1 ? ' *?? cellar for wring from a grating U"\\ y !" 17 7 "'T"1" he backyard?I soon <n,,v df??"f'd before I ventured to uory hiding place In '? of the cellar. I had the slightest sound which f of mind to leave the " ""U\ th* P *" of a ^try l cellar Ajar, figuring, 1 "" rs f?uml a closed door* N!" >" "rl"? ? to feel ore apt to search for lhat ,b"-v bml l"(lr,,,! u?' ?he'hui?U 1 It than If the door 1 ,"1 "of believe that a German (Mneer would ^ so considerate of IiIh s a. "h to try to trap me rather than ' taSM ,, hKd MtVrfde.ndc.Bfc.d I b. rltyblrM bl, ? th?t I ...-there, n,- for r ttnd only Just ~ Mk wine * took off my shoes and crept softly - ... ... 'and ulnu 'v in ilu. r-..ll..w ~ ?1 - ?BW8, LANCASTER, 8. C. \ pipes havelng been torn off. and pgas fixtures, cooking utensils and everything else which contained even the Rinnllest proportion of the metals L the Gerqiaus bo badly needed had been A I taken from the kitchen. I walked u|>- mm , stairs now with more confluence, feel- I E | Ing tolerably assured that the soldiers | hadn't been after me at all, but had |,0 | been, merely "collecting metal and I othpr nlaterlals which they expected hn an elaborate dwelling house like the j " \ orfe in which J was concealed to yield, j N,' [ Later I heard that the Germans have .trfkeh practically every ounce of brass, , copper and wool they could lay their hands on In Belgium. Even the brass out of pianos has been ruthlessly re- j >WI rndved, the serious damage done to ' I ? ?> Valuable property by the removal of ?? only un iuslgnlffcant proportion of ?? | metal never being taken Into consld- . an(j ration. I learned, top, that all dogs > (i i oyir1 fourttien hprties lilgh had been ' seized by the Gemma's* This furnished ; ' ll,u ' ? blts.of speculation- nfunngrthe Belgians am' :,(1 ns to vrtiat use the. Germans were put- he ting the anluinls to, the general lm- ure, i '! presslon apparently being that they in,nun were being used for food 1 \ absorb) This, ho "ever, seemed much less his su! likely to me thun that they were being redly i employed as dispatch dogs In the t.ase. trenches, the same as we use them on |tel | oun side of the line. They might posr sibly kill the dogs and use their skins _ _" for leather and their carcasses for tal- " "" low," Ifht I feel'quite sure that the wi'h a Huns are by no means so short of food ''u'n a tlwit they have to eat dogs yd awhile, him wi Indeed, I want to repeat here what! "Ah< I have mentioned before; If anyone has of the the "Idea that this war can be won by basins starving the Huns, he hadn't the slight- |jes tj, est l<Jea how well provt? d the Ger- c.o;ist mans are In that respect. They have cbnsfifered their food needs In connec* j. ,jlts tlon with their resources for several ' years to come und they have gone at sn,lt< " It In such a methodical, systematic ,u"us 1 way, taking Intft consideration every "Tin possible c? .iffTngeiwy/ * that provided 'he rot there Is not an absolute crop failure, to sile there Isn't the slightest doubt. In waul i mind that they can last for y?!^rs, und |,,,mb 1 the worst rtf It Is they are very cock- fronf sure about It themselves. !....' i UiliPP , It Is true that the German soldiers imvjn? want peace. As I watched them , I through the keyhole in thJ| door 1 J"' * thought how unfavorably t'ney com- ' pared with our men. Theyvinnrched nubk along the-street without lauliw-r. with- 'he lei out joking, Without singing- It was and cr Quito apparent that the war is tolling ho wisl on them. I don't helteve I saw 11 single "llo Gorman soldior who didn't look as If homb-l he had lost his best friend?and he of i probably had. * ' guns At the same time there Is a big difference?certainly a difference of sev- " " ernl years?between wishing the war ?' n<)' wus over and giving up, and I don't metal believe the German rank and file any more than their lenders have the slightest Idea at this time of giving up at But to return to my experience ^BE while mnceuled In th6 house. After the visit of the soldiers, which left ! the house In a wretched condition, 1 , decided that I would continue my Jour- | uey towurdb the frontier, particularly i us I had gotten all 1 could out of lluy- ^^B llger, or rather he had gotten all he 1 I was going to get out of me. ^Bl ? During my concealment In the house I had made various sorties Into the , city at night, and I was beginning to ^^B feel more comfortable even when German soldiers were about. Through the keyhole I had studied very closely the gait of the Belgians, the Btl i slovenly droop that characterized most "W1 of them, and their general appearance, | and I felt that In my own dirty and un- EKgtJ shaven condition I must have looked * ^$3 as much like the average poor Belgian kl as a man could. The only thing that was against me was my height. I was several Inches taller than even the tallest Belgians. 1 had often thought that red hair would have gone good with my name, hut now ?>f i was mighty glad tlutt I was not so endowed, for red-haired Belgians are ^^1 about as rare as German charity. Continued Next Friday.) ^B|l BRFGES OFTEN HOMBEI) k] BY BRITISH AIR FORCES Do Much Damage to the l,arge _ Stores of German Ammunition 0 m London, Oct. 3.?Perils risked by British airmen in night bombing of Bruges, u most important German M?l submarine base in Belgium. are JLE graphically described i?y ('apt. Paul Itewshec. I> S. ('., of tlte British royal air force. Bruges has been subjected ^^B to air attacks so often that it is now ^^1 considered one of the best defended ^^B cities on the western front. ^^1 "The pilot and observer of a Brit-' ish light bombing machine proceed-{ , ing to Bruges have usually no d.til culty In finding their way, as a hazel ^^B of light from tile ?e:i pell li trK > ? M ? I n?'pn 20 or 30 miles off," the captain writes. "As they draw nearer they K. I see a maze of 1 f? or 10 searchlights' moving restlessly over the town. looking for some machine whose en- wl gine has been heard. Suddenly, they ^^B see the red flnsh of a bursting hojnh Bsj (and then another .and another. At ^^B ' o*c?j; chrtfns of hrtdlant emerald-eol, '^ed balls of fire pour upwards in -seltygy lines, tilling the sky wjtb ifipti b.ul?les of light. The'machine ^^1 &^i-?Jlrlted up, however, and y?ra^t- ^^B lights and shell-fire dic ^^^J ^kthey are drawing nearer, BL^? sJj[ ;1 J ?p Vei&hed 90 Pounds Before ^erjjnai x ^ Now lecommend* it to necTriends < ' _ a ^ "l don't need I'crunu aHr more, ^WOldn nm nil wrll. 1 luive talN^n six * " * tlli'H. I nrlKlirtl ninety iiimuilt fore ! started with IVruna. "1 O ^ is just as poor niul nii nrnkly. ^ ^ x OO i<l kIo-ii up hniicN ?f ficr n. ik wells such a ciiukIi anj^ndt- ^ _j IK, anil (mliiiii nut cat wO lliitiK' ^QlJUClS >w since takliiK I'erwfm I wrlKh C ie hundred u i>if <lilrly-tl\r V unds. All hjjri r i e P d S said I vura nrvrrjn1! ?vcii. l was just Mlna^VJnrit Khadow^XTlia vc surely rccom- 21 N. Gold Swv Gi snttc^'Tour IVrunsi to many of Mich. \ ^ fficnds, and tin y arc usin^ it. 11> her letter will recommend I'friinti, for I tells in convincing ? so thankful for what it has benefits she receive nr for me.*' runa. Sold Kveeywhere l.b|iild or Tiihl e observer crawls through a! tween the two shi loor into the nose of the ma-'ter. examines his bomb-hannle, I "Suddenly his 's justs the bomb-dropping sight. | range. He pushes kneels, a heaviiy muffled tig-'slowly, pulls it bar n his little wooden cock pit, pushes it forwart feet ovei nothing, he is so again. From hehil tl in watching the ground that ( lick and clatter rrounditigs seem to liim per- bombs, normal; he is entirely at his! "He shouts to and one huge wii ow, he sees the black line of the stars as the nal which he is using as a round and away f He turns the pilot to the left shells and searehl wave of his right hand, and plosion of the hot gain to the right, and stops j "Gazing downwi th an uplifted arm. j sees at the edge < ?ad he can see the dark mass1 spurt of flame wl town, and to the left the long away. Two other of the docks. Far to the left water where lie d< e dark line of the Hclcian inmiiino ??wi ?.?? and over Ostende and Zee- hurst on the sheds move the sentinel search-' white sheet of flan Itruges lies dark and dim, shed, and fading s ing a brief rest from its tumul- glare. An ainmi light. ' been blown up. ? observer waves his hand, and | bursts across tl ir of the engines dies awav in crowded basins, lo nee, as the machine dives to of white smoke ts target. He unstraps his wrought destructi* li a mile and leans far o\ < . th?* ly with the hurstin looking down *o the shining hundreds of green of the dock, absorbed in f??l- ing in swaying < the course of the little metal ground, and pour the sight. It touches the wings on both side and crosses them. With a of ribbons the sear vesture, he guides the pilot to thrown up. and I "t. and the bar sweeps round wands of light whi osses. the section of the quav pattern all around lies to<? ?'J< tire flushes round t che^^^^jj^Vot and holds his to the machine no ever in s Hundreds orous barrage. It mans stand watting at their ing din, but throui machine puns* searchlight?-, has heard the thi) FM-tt ball machine but be thinks liomhs below. He hing save the passage of the the pilot and lau bar across the black mass he- sweep to and fro, I 1m. green balls bubble flash of-the whole ""The ma'rjyi^o rr vj _ l^w_ r^ through a mamst JJ,C8-*'X-fl ^rP' The attack home, and on the d _ _ ^ ammunition sheds EL 'n hanies. and wat ^^ the battered sides 1 The airmen IIv hi fi.AI'l/^ w 1 *h their oonsci ^JfVyXltV^ Rk done, and leave \ search lights still \ M*ny thousands of ery quarter of wom^n suffering from pX late!" womatily trouble, have beenb&efitedbytheuse TRIED SIX TP of Cardhi, the woman s B~s tonic, acaprding toylcltcrs Pt^. Ml'UDER. we receivr, similar to this one from flits. Z.V-Spell, 1.^ Of llayne, N. C. '*1 could Rfek '.Initios Canter. In< not stand op my feet, and ( der of a Won just sufier^d terribly," Kshe says. ''As my suf- flPjk \ irgii fering was great, and he had tried other reme- ti?. , w dies, Dr. ?naa us |^B gel Cardui. ?. . I be^an been on trail six improving, aqd it cured for the allowed nm me. I kno\jr, and my |^B doctor know$. what Car- ^ u i,9nn ?< hPr ?" dui did for rae, for my north of hero in . nerves and health were Cantor was disoha about gone." |k lntton nt Abingdon, Va.. t\ 'n>1 attom? J* infort jb% h n B| ho* had no mialll mediately upon tx mB QC K M gfl 9 H tor ftl HP H SSJwg Hv9 H my. When 'he S Abingdon f< _ I tor could neither i ie Woman 3 Tonic is nmv s:ii,i ,o be The Canter ca J. , wide attention. Ft She writes further: 4,I rB| . .1 j-j . ... resulted i nhung am in splendid health .. . k. ? , . . A candomtwork. I led I V owe it tojbardui. for I w|s ^ "f ln In dreadful condition.- k aPP II you a?e nervous, run. ^ 1 ,,,c down anfl weak, or suffef. ""r"IR m from headache, backache, ,<>r waM ofTpmI a ' etc., ev?ry month, try , LT VPars ^iprisonnu Cardui, Thousands of ?hnt he w, women traise this medl- 1,1 ' ' " - "air cine forjthe good it has Prlaon self-coin done them, and many- PV d'd. nn' eomr physiciaas win have used V"'her wan eleetn Cardui succ isfully with '"c crime nnd pt< their women patients, for a:' connection wltl years, endorse thisTnedl- 4 Cine. Think what it me?.is o\F DKAD AMKI to be in sptendid health, ^ like Mrs. Spell. Give -uritv Cardui a trial. ' 'L~ . Ail Druggists IV 1 Sfl- ??? , MPr c fr ^ mA&* AGE THRKi l.olir, "aixl Rapids, 1 lite Miss I.ohr words of the d^rom I'ert l-'nH" \ tting stiiinNyt Wa? \ ,< Ight' registers tht the lever forward k again, and attain ^ 1. and again and nd there eotaies t he of 14 dropping the pilot to turn ng climbs toward machine sweeps H ? rom th< welter of ights that the exults will bring, arcl, the observerjf the quay a red. bicli slowly diev s follow, in the estroyers a^l sub- % i more and* more in the fhiddle. A ic bursts from one low ly leaves a red inition store has-The other bomlr le wharves and living huge cloudswhere they havo-' in. Simultaneous- . g of the first bnmh balls come streamcurves from tlx upwards pa^ .the 's. Like a na chlights hav fill thews'' ch we*" the ma - ^ ... he^town. Jhise- <> w hursts tlir'Tlanifs an awe-inspir? gh it. the observei id of the bu?synjj. scrambles back to gbs. Searchlight*^ fantastic strings of upwards, and thf s seem to fill ttaeJ >ars off honiewnJ V rntn of has been pressed! ocks of Hruges the*, are shattered am? er is pouring into of the submarines. i?nie, well content ousness of dutyfar behind the* rainly scouting evthe heavens?too ? -IES FOR ? . IS NOW ERE*" lie ted for the Mue% ihii, Discharged * r -~r iia Court. .y^ in Co. .1. ?After having times for his in? rder of Mrs. Maude-. ' one several jnilen \pril, 1H15, Jame^? rged l>y the Wash- .C lit court in session; A"hen the prosecut- Z ned the court that /* denee to offer. Ira? ' >ina released ("anon to jt>in the ars placetl in jail >ur years ago Can pad nor write. II well educated, ise has attracte; ?ur or the six trial juries. Twoi*^" * V/ ?were for conv. i the ilrst dejc^ the supreme couj se was ordered s sixth trial Ci compromise of ft >nt but re' tiuld rather die than spend a ,-lcted for a or ; nil. His bro >oute<y In 191f ineraf*d Jam j h the murde < k Jvft.'* ILC