Evening Republican, Volume 20, Number 196, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 August 1916 — Page 2

The Red Mirage

A Story of the French Legion in Algiers

CHAPTER XX —Continued. —l9-5-The clear eyes darkened. Gabrielle Smith did not take the extended hands. Her own were clasped before her. “I have come to plead with you. Madame Arnaud—not to judge.” “And if I promise you—if I tell you that I will do all that lies tn my power—” “Then my errand is accomplished.” Sylvia’s hands dropped. It struck her that this woman had a mean soul, coarsened with rough contact with the world. She could not rise to the high altitudes of forgiveness and reconciliation. She could only grasp the material things of life. Sylvia caught a glance of her own reflection in the glass opposite, and she saw how ethereal her own beauty had become. After all, beauty is the outward and visible sign. Suddenly her name was called — roughly yet piteously—and her eyes Sink. “That’s my husband,” she said gravely. “Even in his delirium he is always calling for me. The dying are sacred, are they not? We must forgive them as we forgive the dead.” “Yes,” Gabrielle assented. “I must go to him. But I will do What I have promised. I—l will atone

Tor him. Perhaps It may soothe him—comfort him to think that the wrong he has done has been righted—don’t you think?” ’ "Perhaps.” But Gabrielle Smith did not seem to see the extended hand. There was a hard line about the fine mouth, and without greeting—almost as though goaded by an impatient contempt —she went out of the open French windows Into the brazen glare of the afternoon. Sylvia Arnaud watched the slight upright figure vanish Into the archway beyond the courtyard. She was vaguely disconcerted—like an actress left suddenly without her cue—and beneath the tranquil consciousness of virtue there stirred the old hatred, the old mistrust. In tiie sickroom all was still again. The blinds were drawn, and in the green-tinted shadows Desire’s face showed like a white light She went softly over to his bedside and sat

down, looking at him. His eyes were closed and he appeared to sleep. A cold wonder crept over her. He had changed so completely in those few months of their married life that the change ceased to be terrible. This ■was not the man whose fleeting, unknown fascination had caught her restless fancy—not even the man she had grown weary of. He was nothing—a mere husk of something that had once been. Still, as she sat there and looked back on those months, many things became triumphantly clear to her. She understood why she had grown weary, and why weariness had changed to nausea. He was a bad man. He bad sinned; he had let another suffer for him, and had pursued his victim with a relentless hatred. Her woman’s instinct had recognized the evil and had passed Judgment. Beside him Richard Farquhar’s figure gleamed in the limelight of her imagination —a chevalier of the old school, quixotic and romantic. But she did not love him. Perhaps there was even somewhere in her a vague contempt—at least, a slightly patronizing pity strengthened by the knowledge that now his salvation was in her hands. Her thoughts passed on from him to the implacable, ruthless man who had come back to her out of the jaws of death, and to whom she was going with the surrender of her whole self. And as she thought of him invisible hands tore down the veil, and she saw the picture that he had painted of her—saw it and shrank from it even though she knew that it was the insignia of his power.

Ilesite's eyes opened. They rested full on her face, and in their recognition, their pathetic, helpless worship she regained herself and the heights of her virtue. She bent qyer him. “Are you better, Desire?” “Sylvia.” His hand! groped feebly for hers. She touched it kindly. She would not reproach him. She was forgiving him. He was going to die. And then she would be free. She did not think of her freedom. It was like a hidden pulse—beating persistently, feverishly. “I heard you call,” she said. “Is there anything want? The nurse will be back in a moment” He caressed her hand with an infinite tenderness. “They are going to shoot him at daybreak,” he said very gently “And then all will be well, will it not? You will forget him. You will learn to understand —everything. We shall begin a new life together in a new world, my wife. There will be no shadow between us where we are going—” She shrank from him, half in horror, half In vague fear. He was dying, and be seemed so sure. He did not ask for forgiveness; there was no remorse in his sunken eyes—rather a ,grave,- serene pity. His band still held hers. There was a power in its weakness which terrified her; she felt as though she would never be able to

By I. A. R. WYLIE

(All rights reserved. The Bobbs-Merrill Co.)

“Sylvia—you will not leave me? I feel as though I could rest with you beside me. You will stay?” “Yes —yes.” “I have loved you so greatly, my wife. I have been down to hell for love of you, and now I am fighting my way back —to you—to the light Love is stronger than sin—than death —than God himself —” His voice trailed off again, his eyelids dropped, hiding the pale light of ecstatic delirium. The nurse entered on tiptoe. “There is a man—a soldier —in the drawing room, madame,” she whispered. “He brings a message for madame —it must be delivered at once. I will keep watch while madame is gone.” She nodded. He had sent for her. She was going to him. Nothing mattered now. She had waited long enough. The little fragile chain of self-control had snapped. She was going to him —now, cost what it would. Yet out-

wardly she was quite calm as she pushed aside the curtains. Only the uneven color of her cheeks might have betrayed her. “Yes?” she said interrogatively. The legionary standing against the light turned and clapped his heels together. “A letter, madame, to be delivered in your hands.” “I thank you.” Her voice sounded gentle, graciously courteous. She tore open the letter with steady fingers. “Will you takj back a message from me?”, she asked. “Such are my orders, madame.” "Will you tell Colonel Destinn ‘Yes’?”

“Is that all madame?” “That Is all.” < Yet he remained motionless, watching her. “Madame, I have another message. It is for another lady—a Mademoiselle Gabrielle, who is Madame’s companion.” “From whom?” “From a comrade who dies at daybreak.”

She caught her breath inaudibly. The pulse stopped for a moment. In the full course of her reckless purpose something gripped and held her —a poignant suspicion, an emotion that was like Jealousy. “Mademoiselle Gabrielle is not here,” she said slowly. “If you give me the message I will deliver it.” “It is verbal.” "I will deliver it exactly.” He looked at her. She did not like his face. There was an imperturbable- arrogance in his eyes which offended her. _ .ft... “The message is a simple one. My comrade said to me: “Tell her that her faith In me made many things possible. Tell her that the reality was more beautiful than the mirage.’ ” “A strange message.” She tried to laugh, but the laugh shook and broke off. ‘*l shall endeavor to remember.” “My comrade will thank you, madame.”

He saluted and turned to go. But on the threshold of the wide-open windows he halted. He seemed to be looking at something, and suddenly, to her angry amhzement, he stopped and picked up a silver frame from the bric-a-brac on the low table. “What are you doing?” she demanded imperatively. He faced her with an ease and decision that startled her. “Who is this, madame?” "Are you mad? Shall I have to report you to your colonel?” She glanced at the photograph which he held toward her. Against her will, forced by an indescribable fascination, her eyes rose again to his face. And suddenly the pulse stood still, drowned

“Who Is This, Madame?”

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

tn a rushing flood of incoherent terrors. "That was my brother." She used the past tense for the first time with that deadly sense of conviction. The legionary unfastened his tunic and drew out something, which he laid quietly on the table beside her. “Then this belongs to you,” he said simply. Mechanically she took up the little locket and opened it. Inside was the thing she knew that she would find, her own miniature —a valueless, amateurish effort done in her schoolgirl years for her adored comrade. “I knew him as Philip Grey, madame. He gave it me nearly two years ago—when he was dying.” “Then—he is dead?” He made a grave pitying movement of assent.

“He was my friend, madame. He belonged to my company. He was not strong, and one day out in the desert he gave way. He went mad, I think—mad with exhaustion and4hlrst He disobeyed orders, and they gave him a double burden. He broke down, and they left him out there —in the desert.” “How long ago?” “As I have said —nearly two years. It was Colonel Destlnn’s great forced march south —one hundred and fifty kilometers in three days. Many of us died on the road.” j She laughed suddenly. She had the I odd feeling that there was a third person in the room—a black faceless shadow that had laughed with her. She had to make a great effort to regain her composure. “Yes —and then?” “Afterward they allowed me to go back and fetch his body. I did not know his real name, but he had given me the locket, and it occurred to me that if ever his people knew they would be glad that he had not been left out there —alone. He lies in the Legion’s cemetery —Philip Grey, No. 3112.”

“Yes—l remember—thank you.” She did not see him go She dressed quickly and went out into the courtyard. A voice called her by name with monotonous persistency, but she didn’t hear it. There was a woman with flowers to sell standing hesitantly in the passage, but she did not see her. She had grown deaf and blind to the present. She was looking back along the road she had come, and she saw the fate she had Invoked stalking invisible beside her. “Sylvia! Sylvia!” The flower-girl still stood in the shadowy passage. Imperturbably, with inscrutable eyes, she watched Sylvia Arnaud’s figure stand out for a moment against the sunlit avenue and disappear. “Sylvia!” “Philip Grey, No. 8112, Legion Etrangere.”

Sylvia knelt, with clasped hands, and gazed at the roughly-cut letters. Around her and above her a sea of crosses lifted up their gaunt black arms—hundreds upon hundreds, In the voiceless identical supplication of forgotten things. She prayed softly. She did not cry. She felt herself surrounded with a peace that was above tears. Little by little the flood was flowing back on its old course. She was thinking what she should say to Destinn when he came to claim her. She would rise up and point to this piteous untended mound. “This lies between us,” she would say to him. She would not curse him. In expiation she -would claim Richard Farquhar’s life. She would go back to her husband'; she •would take up the broken threads and weave them to the perfect pattern. She would carry with her the memory of that brief glimpse of her own soul, of her own love. The dead are not in vain—it was a beautiful thought—

Steps sounded on the gravel pathway. She looked up, but it was not Destinn who came toward her. It was the flower-seller, her basket crowded wkh fresh blossoms. “Roses, madame? Roses to offer to the dear dead?” “Ah, yes, I thank you. Give me all that you have.” —r She covered the low mound with gorgeous red and gold. The beauty of it —of this chance —lifted her grief on soft wings to a gentle, almost happy resignation. She said, smilingly, “I shall come every day, and every day you must bring me all your flowers." She wondered what it was—what had come over her. Something had happened. There had been a sharp, insignificant little pain between her shoulders —a mere nothing. She caught her breath; it hurt her, and she turned slowly, her eyes wide open with a childish amazement “What has happened?” The woman opposite her said nothing. Her face, through the rising mist, was blank, unreadable. Sylvia put her fingers to her ftps—she did not know why she had done so; she saw now that there was blood on her fingers. She remembered that she had kissed one of the roses. Perhaps it had bled. She tried to turn back again. Her limbs were curiously heavy—almost leaden. Then she dropped, face downward, amid the scattered roses. (TO BE CONTINUED.)

Evidently Feared for Minister.

“It is a great help in my parish,” says Canon Tupper-Carey of York. England, "to go to the public houses and play cards with the men so as to get to know them. Of course, it is very unpleasant sometimes when a drunken man puts his arms round your, neck." He remembers once visiting a public house in Leeds and a man coming up and saying: "I’m surprised to see you here, Mr. Carey.” “Why should I not come here as much as you?” answered the canon. "I have not made a beast of myself." "Well," replied the man, 'Ton haven’t so tar."

“SHOOT TO KILL,” RANGER'S MOTTO, RULES BORDER

Hard-Riding, Tireless Handful of Men Slay 286 Bandits in Ten Months. METE OUT JUSTICE SWIRLY Hold Sway Throughout the Lone Star State —How They Ended the Career of Mercedes Raider— Worst Feared Man in Northern Mexico. Now this is the law of the border— Shoot first, shoot fast, shoot straight; To h with law and order On the rim of the Lone Star state!

Brownsville, Tex—Not even the wildest dime novel thrillers of Washington square artists of imagination, not even Zane Grey at his best, could reproduce in black and white the actual conditions on the Texas border today and expect to be believed. Facts and figures theriiselves are incredible. Right here in the Brownsville district, for example, which today has a civilian population several times smaller than its military, no less than 286 Mexicans, most of them proved bandits, have been slain in the past ten months. In that time, too, more than fifty American soldiers have been killed by bandits, seven American women have been attacked, and many more Widowed, and the Texas ranger rides, a lone figure in short khaki jacket, boots, spurs and wide-brimmed Stetson, grim menace personified, on his tireless patrol of the Rio Grande. Only Fifty Rangers in the District. There now are, including the New York division, upward of 40,0 X) brown faced, khaki-clad soldiers in the lower Rio Grande valley. And there are about fifty rangers. Tell a Mexican bad man that a company of soldiers' are on his trail and he will laugh and mysteriously disappear in the ever-convenient and dense brush. Tell him a ranger is after him and he will blanch, cross himself with a muttered “Dios mio,” and, spurring his caballo, put as many leagues as possible between himself and his relentless pursuer.

The Texas ranger is the worst-feared man in northern Mexico today. His law is that of the pearl-handled frontier .45 that hangs lop-sided from his four-inch-wide, cartridge-studded belt. He shoots first and asks questions afterward. His jurisdiction extends unhampered from one end of Texas to the other, but there are more of him in the Brownsville section than in any otherjfpart of the state. Many and fearsome are the tales told of the rangers. They are whispered about camp fires at night as the mesquite burns dimly; they are mooted softly about in the back rooms of cantinas and monte, houses; they are spoken of but seldom in public when there is a chance for a ranger to be near enough to hear. When Mercedes Was Raided.

Last fall there was a bandit raid in the vicinity of Mercedes, about forty miles up the river from Brownsville. Mercedes is a nice little town with an honest government and some beautiful parks. It is peopled by Irrigation farmers from Nebraska and lowa. The bandits raided a ranch three miles from the town, killed a rancher, carried away his wife and made their es-cape-all but one. That one, hotly pursued, galloped into the Mexican quarter of Mercedes and hid in a poolroom. Hiding under a pool table the palsied man heard three rangers enter the place. He fieard them order the poolroom keeper to deliver him. And he heard the poolroom keeper, his friend —for the bandit had been born and raised in Mercedes—commit the fatal error of denying knowledge of his whereabouts. Ten minutes later a tiny but grim procession started up the rqad toward

MAKES SUFFRAGIST CARTOONS

Mrs. Nina E. Allender, cartoonist for the Suffragist, official organ, of the Congressional Union for the Woman’s party, believes she is the only woman political cartoonist in the United States. Her work is a feature of this suffrage publication whose circulation has increased by leaps and bounds since the feminist movement has gained headway. yy----

SEACOAST TRENCHES IN FLANDERS

Photograph shows the remarkable construction of German trenches on the sands of a beach on the extreme seacoast of Flanders. Bodmproof shelters have also been built out of timber work, and sand and sand bags.

Donner, eight miles away. The three rangers were there, one leading, the Other two bringing up the rear. Between them stumbled the terror-strick-en bandit, the poolroom keeper, the poolroom keeper’s son, a Mexican who swept out the place for a dally wage and another Mexican who had been playing on the table under which the bandit had hidden. Ranger Justice Swift. The rangers said nothing. Nobody asked them where they were bound. Citizens vanished from the streets and road as if by magic. And the next morning five bodies were found, each of them with a bullet neatly drilled through his scalp, two miles beyond the city limits. Implacable ranger justice had done Its work. There have been no raids since near the beautiful little settlement of Mercedes. Bapdits shun the place as though it were the habitat of yellow fever. The difference between the Texas ranger and the soldier is simple and convincing. It was explained succinctly to me by a tall, sombreroed stockman. -.—; “It ain’t that the soldiers aren’t any less brave,” he said; “it’s just this: The soldiers only know how to shoot when they’re told, but the ranger never knows. when to stop shooting. There’s just' bnte way you can scare a Mexican —kill him. And there’ve been a powerful lot of ’em scared In these parts of late.” - Z

Governor Ferguson of Texas recently increased by more than treble the force of rangers In recognition of the work they did in the Brownsville region last fall and early this year. They have been given a distinctive uniform, consisting of short jacket, tall stock boots, huge spurs, wide-brimmed hat and black trousers that are tucked in the boots. Their guns are uniform —long barreled .45 Colts, most of them with the sight filed off, for a Ranger never aims from the shoulder when he shoots. He fires from the hip, and most of them are past masters of the art Of “fanning," or rapidly thumbing the hammer of a gun instead of using the trigger. For this the trigger must be removed. One of the newspaper contingent with the New York troops alighted from the train at Harlingen, the junction for Brownsville, and espied a tall, rangy individual whom he surmised to be a ranger standing on the platform. He walked up to him. He took off his hat. When he spoke his speech was very, very respectful and very, very timid. “Please, sir,” he said, quaveringly,. “are you a Texas ranger?” “Uh!” answered the ranger affirmatively. “Yes, sir, thank you, sir,” replied the newspaper man, gracefully, and backed precipitately toward the train. “Gimme the shivers,” he affirmed when he had sunk safely to the cushions. «

BEST PHONE VOICES IN U. S.

American Doctor Points at Vocal Qualities Lacked by British Users of the Telephone. » London.—An American physician visiting in London has discovered that the American voice is better adapted to the use of the telephone than the British voice. To this defect in the British vocal chords he ascribes the much maligned telephone service of London. “Americans have not pretty soft voices, but their vocal chords are tuned correctly for telephoning/’ said the, doctor. “British voices ate not. They seem to lack the timbre necessary for carrying over the wires.' “It is often remarked that American women are given to talking loudly in restaurants and other places. As a matter of fact, they do not talk any louder than their English sisters, but their voices have a carrying quality which is sometimes rather trying. However, it makes telephone using a pleasure for the Americans, whereas for Britons the phone is alw’ays more or less an Instrument of torture.”

Freed to Join the Army.

Hutchinson, Kan. —Eight inmates of the state reformatory here were granted their final discharges recently by the state board of corrections in order that they might enlist in the National Guard and regular army for service in Mexico. All are boys who were on parole already or would soon have been eligible for parole. Two of the discharges were granted directly by Governor Capper.

TOWN REFEREE QUITS JOB

Human Encyclopedia Would Not Tell What Process Would Rid One of Fleas. Connellsville, Pa. — An editor who is* the Connellsville “Walnut 750,” when Information is wanted on any subject and who has settled more barroom bets than any other newspaper man in history, has passed up that end of his job. During a busy afternoon, when he straightened out disputants as to whether the Mills hotel was in Seventh avenue or. Sixth, in New York; supplied the date on which the statue of Zachariah Connell was erected on the old Fourth ward school building; settled a dispute as to whether Pittsburgh had distanced Cleveland since the 1900 census, and. gave the batting averagei of Scrappy Bill Joyce the last year he was with the old Senators, he was appealed to by a femnine inquirer: “Will you tell me how to get rid of fleas?” the musical voice asked over the telephone. Not wishing to give offense by suggesting that she first catch her flea and then squeeze it gently between two blocks of wood, he suggested that she write the information bureau at Washington, D. C., if table salt failed to do the work.

NAVAL MILITIA LEARN ROPES

Men of the naval militia of Manhattan lined up on deck of the U. S. S. Kentucky shortly before she pulled up anchor and sailed for mobilization grounds near Block Island. Four thousand five hundred militia sailors sent from seventeen states are now participating In-naval maneuvers near the Block Island mobilization base. The battleships on board of which the navy’s civilian reserves have gone to sea are all units of the Atlantic reserve fleet, under command of Rear Admirat John M. Helm, U. S. N. During the cruise the militiamen will be paired with bluejackets of the regular service of corresponding grades and it will be the duty Of each bluejacket to instruct the civilian comrade in the duties that the militiamen would have to perform in the event the naval militia were called Into active service .in time of war. Target practice with the main as well as the secondary batteries of the ships will be a feature of the work during the next two weeks. Torpedo exercises have also been Included In the program, It Is said, as well as searchlight drills and landing exercises. A battle problem may bring the maneuvers to a close.