,'jri S$ Lj i s "i i EVENING' PUBLIC LEDGEiEPHIL'ADELPHIAV MONDAY, AUGUST 7, 1922 IB l : V 'fft ty 3 MAN fFHO CARRIED MESSAGE TO GARCIA EMERGES ' fcfl "vwd FROM OBLIVION TO GET LONG-DELAYED REWARD Vt j l I Lieut. Cel. Rewan, New Retired and fVhite-Hairedy Surprised Government Should Give Distinguished Service Cress for "Just Doing One's Duty" BUSY WRITING HISTORY OF MEXICO AND MAY PUT HIS EXPLOIT ON SCREEN Yeung Lieutenant Startled JVerld by Carrying News of declaration of Var Against Spain te Cubans in Their Jungle Fastnesses H E CARRIED the famous message te Garcia in 1893. He plunged into a dark and unknown wilderness te find a man, whose thereabouts he did net knew. Through death and desolation, through a land of swamps and tangling undergrowth, mysterious, sinister, bristling with hostile guns, he bore messages of vital significance te the happiness and freedom of a tyrant oppressed and desperate people. After experiences which beggar the wildest dreams of fiction, he dropped inta a quarter century of oblivion, te be rewarded in the end with a kind of irenic fatefullness, by a government tee long silent. And his only comment is: "What did I de te deserve it? 'Distinguished lervice' by a soldier or any one elbe is te de what he is ordered te de." Today, in iiis beautiful California tummcr home, evci looking the green depths of canyons, he is writing a histeiy of Mexico condensing ma terial enough for four bulky ol el urnes into one which, in his own Vu'Js, "Is a bigger job than any I ever tackled." His name, Lieutenant Colonel An drew Summers Rewan, retired, is unknown te three-Quarters of the citizens of this country who will rec egnize "the man who carried the message te Garcia." And mnrk it walker. An authority en the claries, a devoted student of Shakespeare and a friend of soldiers, artists, philosophers, men of nil professions he could own fe many mere attributes his modesty will net allow him te adit.lt even by indirec tion. "Recognition Medal!" he queried sig nlfknntl). "Of course. I feel honored. Km one doesn't expect medals for doing what one is ordered te de." 'My book is nil I urn ically Interested in new. it will be n soldier s history of that troubled eeuntr) and I am try I ins te slve future g-nerntiens the sort I t 1 1. .. 1.I..1. 1 I..!!-. ..111 I'.ll .. ,lAft- down te the vagaries of fate and the j ; ' ., " exigencies of governmental diplem- ' ' j!" 1 . ... icy-cven that ehninctcrizatirn of rl(,s tJireu5li his hook Is only another him would he unknown, had it net m,i (Jf measr le Cinrrln. It Is history been for the astuteness of a man mulling of a different degree, hut only v.he saw in Rewan's story a strik- In externals. ing meial for the world of business. I Rewan watt graduated from the mill ti j n it u ' ,arv n,,A'lemy nf West Point in 18V. Elbert Hubbard Gave World i,.ltIl tll rnnk of ,,-r,in,i ii11,pn,.f Story Of Rewan's Exploit the Nineteenth Infantry. And was un- known giving ever his time te study The world is enriched by its men of rcscuicefulnch'-, of calm unflinch ing ncive. Elbert Hubbard, in his famous pamphlet, realized this. And net enlv is the world enriched, but it is interested. It will be interested te knew that Lieutenant Colonel Rewan, white haired today, is characteristically the same man he was when he slept en the .stone ballast in the bottom of a pirate's open beat; when he tore his way en feet through clinging thickets; when he bravely and cun ningly picked a read of safety through a maze of enemy guns; when he da.-hed, one-half of his haz ardeus journey done, up te that amazing mnn of Hoyanie with his Jtrange scar en his forehead, which told the story of a bullet wound self- inflicted in n darker day when the cause dear te his heart seemed hope less and life net worth living when he dashed up te that .strong silent Ban, General Garcia. Lieutenant Rewan hn net chanced. Mcppt In outward appearance. Today marks the close of a stranger, after nil Mrhnps n meie i ourngeeus, trip hu has teen making for the past decode, and the beginning of the difficult return. ter the hist twelve )enis." he said tie ether d.iv. "1 have been stud.vini; the life uf tin. I mwI ,,f Mnrl.wi I Imve keen lemihi ' hundreds of histories te luppleiui in inj pergenal Ritrvcy. com pleted Kiine while nje under General Macemli I hae been weiking steadily, very (lav. smiing, compiling, clliulnat J piles of d.itii. And 1 have maleiinl jer four volumes, and 1 nin new paring them down te one- n pragmatic history W Mexico, wiitten with the nh-elute Wnuitlen that the 1'nited Males should Jpntrel cvei) thins between the Kie "fime mill the Panama Canal ; tlint Jhe should be supreme from the Arctic ucenn te the Atrato. 'The hnrdest iwrt of these twelve jers' work new lies before me the conned of londcnwitlen. Kut when my jerk is done I shall give America the hUtnry of Mexico written in fifty JM. Iliiueieft published his slilendlil jwnnie in 1S7II -and I shall elTcr the "HnNtnix f jN kind wittcn tniiii thu Jjejji;;illit of u eldlci, of a West Point n- ' rnI'1" Rewan's pictuieseue jmraer hoiae in Mill Vnlle). has f, n "' 'U hut dramatic background the "lajestj f Me,,t Tiiuialpais. The tV.ii. ?s"r Uim"" ""' the mini which e utile Ullage long age named after Its Wj me lined with toweling icd ;s Solitude of Summer Aid Him in His Werk fl 'I Milt nf unikli --.,. L,,. ..l,..!,, . " a well wniiiaiid cnmfoitnhlewhk cnmfeitnhlewhk "clmir, t)1(. ,l0 folVeitcn for twenty- n "'" "'""'fH'liig neten fiem J i"f """""t'llI,t- In that perfect '"tudc the Ktiucate of h'ls portable .Wilier ami the screaming of jay " jieie the only sounds. Kiancp t ,i,i and a few moments' ""irerwiiln,. .ii.-i... . .. , . .. . tin)... ""lusii wic uici nun jes- J soldier, the IIWI, v.he , i Ucehcl from ,lt! ,tllUe, Stn,es ,..". '""'Wied He.Mce Cfesh for ear- ,'verMnr for his gallantry at Celin. Ubm . "U'lt '-'"'"'u. abreast of the 'J- Interested ,r the policies and I 5B ''I'r ceunlr'- ls " c"' .. ' -' aviiur u.-irri n nmwiiine im '0t hU blends, and u ltforeud until 1S08 A few days before the formal declara tion of war against S-'pnln. it became cedent te authorities nt Washington that It would he vitally necessary te get into touch with the Cuban Insur gent in the Interior of the lflnnd. te learn the exact state of aiTalM there there hew much help might he depended upon from the insurrrcte natives; the be.-t plan for co-operation; the manner of campaign after the American troops landed. Sent Off te Find Garcia, But Had Ne Definite Geal It was n delicate task. Ne one knew where General Garcln, cemmander-ln-chief of the Cuhun forces In the eastern portion of the Islnnd, was stationed. After the fashion of the native war riors, he remained long In no one place. In addition, the inaccessibility of ap proach, the almost Impenetrable lines of Spanish forces, the close blockade of the Island by ships, mndc the task ap parently insurmountable. Km It had te he done. It could enlv be aetoia aeteia plished by a man of a quick, resource ful brain anil uulltmhing nerve. It leuld only be done by a man who dared make the trip alone. Garcia was somewhere in the moun tain fastnesses. , mail or telegraph cemmunlintlnn (eiild reach him, Thu situation demanded an Instant choice. And sonic one said te President Mc Kiiile,, 'There Is a fellow by the inline of Hew an who will find Garcia for jeu, If mi) body can." "I was the Instrument chosen by the War Department for leainlng mere of tin military possibilities of I'nstern C'uhn," is thu wij Hewan put It. itewnn, n lleuten.iut then, took President McKlnley's letter, addressed te Genera! Cnllxte Garcia, sealed It in an etl-skln pouch, and strapped It ncrnss his chest, and forthwith went te Kingsten,. .lamnlca. "There I placed misclf in the hands of unknown friends, ' suys tin lieu tenant colonel. ' About .'I o'clock neon, April I'll, the day President McKlnley Issued a call for lU.'.OOO eluntcers and two du.vs before formal declaration of wnr, u closed cuirlngc dashed up te the deer of the house wheic Itewnn hud unhealed himself. Itewnn leaped Inte the can luge, which was miiiii followed b, another. They dievc at a killing pnee until HI o'clock flint nicht. Tin carriage slopped and Kew-an found himself unci his In sin gent friends in inky darkness. A fliekeibig light from a hut drew them Inside for a hasty supper. Here he met Gervacle Sable, who was charged with his safe dell. cry Inte the hands of (urchi. Most of that night thc, drove nleng the silent black leads, and at the first slew peep of dawn (hey i cached the sheie. Fifty jtiiibi out en the water could he distinguished thu outlines of a small fishing smack. It was thi'lmiit of Gervacle, thu wlr, heavily mus tachioed pirate. Ne word was spoken, excepting n hearse warning fiem the pirate that they must he cntitleun: The veyngu northward across (he water would be fraught with danger Siaulh pntiels weiu eierywhcie, darling here and theie, in the mete ei less successful at tempt te wula just such pintles as Rewan's. Had Plan te Use French Flag te Foel Spaniards "It we were signaled by one of these sentinel -.hips we planned te heist the French flag and He flat In the bottom of thu beat," said the brave efflctr. "If the idea of planting a three-inch field piece en a very high nnd precipitous mountain facing the position held by the insurgents. It was an exceedingly difficult task le accomplish. Hewan went hack te the city of C'ebu, twehe tulles away utid went aboard one of our battleships there. Korrewing n block and tackle, with some heavy rope, he returned te bis ramp, dismounted the gun, tied the rope around It and, fas tening the block and tnckle te a trce, began te drag the cannon up the moun tain. Shifting from tree te tree, he gradually made the assent and mounted the piece nftcr three daj of terrific labor en the part of his whole com pany. "I recommended that Hewan be given n medal for this sen Ice, ns his un paralleled labor undoubtedly resulted In saving the lives of many of our men." i J-' B-V VX&iiiKaaBHIHHlrylKlffy'A -C-:s-eC2 jSfrn mwB mCW i . MmMMSBmmUmammmmtmm w -M. 1 HPKSa( AfEM W '1B ,. Xir- 'wd WL JBmmmtMsfim, . - mmmmm v "0 l of his energy and he finally, twelve j ears nge, handed in bis resignation. Cuban Was Toe Proud te Accept Needed Cash An entertaining sequel followed Rewan's trip across Cuba. One of the guides who made the return trip with him was Colonel Carles Hernan Hernan eo. Hernandez was te proceed te Washington, te offer his services te the Government. He knew Cuba ns possibly no ether man knew It, nnd was, consequently, n valuable man te have at that most central of hcad quarfers. Hernandez had no money when be nrrlvcd at Key West. Ner bnd Garcia when he bid Hernandez and Rewan farewell at ISayame. The Cubans had been In the meuntnlns and jungle for three years worrying Spain. Hernandez borrowed J?ir from a friend at Key West, spent $10 for a "hand-me-down" suit nnd made for the West Const of Flerida. On reach ing Tampa, almost the first mnn te grasp his hand was General Fred Funs Funs ten. Hernandez nnd he bnd fought side bv side In Cuba when Funsten was theie as a filibustering commander of artillery. "Here. Charley." cried Funsten, "is some money," and he pulled out a roll of hills, suspecting hi" friend's needs. "I expect te be i-cnt te Cuba, Gay days, tlioge. Kbnkl was net tl rule in the United States Army, at dress uniform was net in tin dlscnn And there were birds of brilliant plum age from abroad te be encountered c every band. Especially did thcae slief forth nt general reviews attaches i the then great military Powers et F.0 rope, resplendent In brilliant uniform with cocknde and feathered bcaddrca many of them ; stiff, rigid, unappreaci able except from their own classes. "Whnt was te be done? Well, it ha te be faced. Se the Cuban rode fertl en review day, en a huge American ca nlry horse twice the size, it must hai seemed te him, of the wiry little pen he rode in the field bis band-me-de trousers drawn halfway te his knect disconsolate, humiliated. But compel) sntien hovered near. He, Toe, Carried Message te Garcia in Cuban Wildt "At the pnrade grounds he sted somewhat aside and longed for th jungles. Presently there was a blare trumpets and up the field rode Miles an his staff at n gallop. And when the) enme te the group Miles rode stralgb ahead, past them all and up te lied nnndez, te whom he extended his han "The crowd knew who he was ani appreciated whnt had happened, andl great cry went up. 'The Cuban !' Tlj Lieutenant Colonel Rewan, who braved the jungles of Cuba te carry a message from America te General Garcia they were Rtlll suspicious, we were te risu nt a signal nnd give them a volley. and then run for it." If caught, their fate was inevitable. Rewan was a spy and his companions were filibusters. It meant death te all four and falluie of their mission. All day they sailed, sleeping only in snatches. At midnight they anchored within fifty jards of Gran Rincon, Cuba. With the coming of another dawn tbe made out a ragged native flguru en thu .'heie. Signals were cuhnnged. The ient aimreuehed closer in te shore until the keel crunched en the sand. A htilf naked Cuban boy, with two terrible cars from Snan nil Mauser bullets en his breast, lead them stealthily into the depths of the thicket paralleling tlie shore. Tin. next dnv. afoot, they llterall. j . . dived into the wilderness of swnuip nnu leri-M. Lp ravines, down ravines, cut ting through the underbrush ever watchful of the slceples, Spanish pickets and ilielr uniailing muskctr.. Tlit-imgl. this jungle of death they fought their wnj. pausing only alien fatigue or hunger forced them te. Out of the thein nnd cactus thicket Ihej pushed, alundy footsore, te the foothills of the Sierras. This area was full of m etched Cuban lcfugccs, On the morning of April 7. the party had begun te climb the mountains in the district of Pilon. Pushed Through Strange Trail With His Guides Strange tiers, morbidly brilliant wild flew e i s. screaming of psurets ami ether uncanny birds made the wilderness through which a rabbit might scarcely find a way a monstrous place of evil portent. The Cuban guides, however, followed carefully a blind trail. Next day the sorely tried horses whhh they had mounted slid down innumerable ravines. They weic saddle Balled, but bore their iniscrv with the fortitude of Rewan nnd his Cuban guides. They were new beend the Sierras, and halted for a meal nt a thatched shed called .lib.ire. While eutliiK. they I...,.- i..,i in? n furious clnttcr- werc iiiuii ii'i" 'j - - - ,i , ing nf horses hoofs. They all tumbled out nt the slieu. ii wu i' "". .... i :....., mi itlns. who turned Hewan lliiu ...i. v.... -. ' - ei er te an esceit or cavalry. General Ules left the party nt I.I Chine. nnd Rewan's guide, from this point en. wns a eal bind; .M'gre. i. eu- iiLmiLin Irien'.. He moved e ii-iiiiiiL i. "...-..- .......... . ... v. .. 1......1 ..Mitt, .mil file kCfOlltl nlulit nut they ramped at Kuev Arriba, about twenty miles semn ei iiajuuie. mi Gaiiia was stationed, se Rewnu had learned enreute. The following tiny tney reue, inreimii lle'ds of grass se high that their horses were hidden, 'iney were mei ey uuuij refugees. Rnynme had fallen. The refugees weic returning again te t lie ..t... f....tvt .flilfili ilmtit veurs before lllj IIUIII ttt- .' .... . .- they had been expelled by the Span ish Government. They were dirty, ragged, hut merry. 1'1... .It.it. titmilinil Ilia fmvii. t ,,11111 lllt.,J tttttlll'l v.... ........ Cuban Heg wns Hying ever Ilaynme. .Most et t Iio millillUKH were in ruins. At the deer of headquarters Rewnn wns met by General Gnrcla. And Rewnn was the first te tell the General that America nail declared wnr en Mpiiin. I cine him my letters," says Rewan slmplj . "made u short statement of uiv burlnrss and was given a glass of' rum and invited te brcakfnst. Gen eral Garcia asked me if I could Ieaic that night, nnd I answered In the nf firmatlve. In an hour our mounts wen standing before thu deer. I bade faiewell." If the journey up fe this moment had been nn important anil a dan gerous one, the return was equally Itn Itn peitiiul and doubly daugeieiiH. Return Mere Important Than His First Journey The new p.utv had for its guides Colonel Cailes Ilernnude, new post master general of Cuba, and General l.'iirlqui' Cnlliue. That evening jus' before midnight, they camped near the Cante River. At suniise next morning tin) took up the lung march again, missed the Cnute the largest river in iiha an. I then made their wn 'through tmplcnl jungle and timelier- w. iiieuiiewiami, until at i.ns .renns, they i. imped miie mum for the night. A long ride two ilavs Inter about fifty miles brought Rewan and his piutj te Riuniis.'us, wdierc they mnda preparations for the voyage from thu north coast. Fer hours their course luiil led through obstructing growth through brush, where the polseuoui gune-tree gave lasting proof of its pres ence. ".Sail had te be Improvised." said Rewan, in his story of the flight, "from hnmmeek canopies, and feed collected from the neighboring forests. About sunset en Mny ! we cut our way through the grape thicket that walls in the sea and drew n little cockle-shell of n beat from under a mangrove bush. It had a capacity of only 101 cubic feet, much tee small for our party of six. There was mnll comfort In thinking of a long and dangerous ejage nt sea in such n craft." At II o'clock that night thev nulled out under cover of darkness, leaving behind the haiber of Munati and enter ing a eheppv sea. "It Was .lcsDCIIltelv linr.l rnn ini. ntt.l the blc waves were cenllnunllv wnchim. ever the g'juunli".. wetting our stoics aim Keeping us ,imy lniliug. All night long we worked steadily without n bit of Sleep, .u (fawn the net luernin-? the man nt the helm called out 'tin vapor' a strainer." Wen Quick Recognition Frem Miles for His Deed Tty a geed piece nf luck they had over hauled a sponging steamer, with n crew of thirteen Necrnes, who carried them te Nassau. There the American Cen siil made aii.uigenientH for sending Rewnn by the schooner Fearless fe Key West, at which place he arrived four du.vs later. There the Secretary of War nnd Gen eral Miles anxiously awaited him. He made his report and later General Miles wrete te Washingten: "I recommend that First Lieutenant Andrew S. Rewan, Nineteenth ( nited Suites lufuntry, he made u lleiitenunt ioleni'1 of one of thu regiments of iiu iiiuncs. Lieutenant Rewnn made u leuriiey ncless Cuba, wns with (lie in siugent army under Lieutenant Colonel Guicin, and brought most inipertiint and Miluable information te thu Govern ment. This was a most perilous under taking, and. in my judgment, Liuuteii unt Rewnn performed tin act of heie'm and cool daring that bus rarely been excelled in the nnnnls of warfare'" And Libert llubh.nd wrete in his business sermen: "When President McKlnley gae Rewan a letter te be delivered te Garcia, Rewan took the! tetter nnd did net nsk : 'Where is he atV Hj the eternal, there is a man whose feini should be cant In deathless breu.e nnd the statue placed in cverj college of the land. It Is nut book" beok" boek" leniiiing young men need, nor Instruc- tleu about this and that, hut a stiffening , ei me vericerne which will cause them te bu loyal te a trust, te net piemptl.v, concentrate their cneigles, ,u the thing, 'Curry a message te Garcia.' " , There Is u until living in Lnsten, Pa , , who inn testlf.v that the Information secured by Hewan wns put te most practical use. lie W Krlgadicr Gen eral L, .1. McClermaud, un old, white haired man, elect, whose gait Is brisk anil active, lie smlcd ns he mused ever the common memories he had with Colonel Rewan. "I personally knew that the In formation Rewnn obtained wns put te practical Use iuimedlutelj," he ihcl.irid "I accompanied General Sh.ifnr te Cubi, as his udjtitant general In the Santiage campaign. As seen ns our fleet arrived off Snntlagn, Admiral Sampson came aboard heailquaiter's ship and both set out for Gnrelu's camp In the mountains, twenty miles away from the More. All necessary ptepaia ptepaia tlens, j en see, had been ninde for his co operation in the proposed attack en Santiage." And General McClenn.iud has further knowledge of the service Rewan ren dered his Geverutnei. in the Philip pines. His Iiravcrg Again Shown in Philippine Islands "Dilliug the Philippine iusuiiecileli it fcdl le mv let te attack the in Mirgi'iils, who weie strenglj feiiilicl en the Sudlen Mountains, (Mm," he -aid "Their position was cccidlnglj sii'iu. and it was very iietewnry for us te get ur MMJIery in position te pla.v en their fnrtlicVatleiib while the assaulting col cel uuins were forcing their way up the mountain. ".Rewan, then a captain, conceived 1 Lieutenant Rewnn received this jnudil the silver stur in July. I'JL'2. During whnt remained of the Spanish War Riiwim acquitted himself well i with (he Sith 'nited States Infuntr.v i And aftir the hhert hut decisive clash with Spain, Rewan, new a captain, j continued te reap laurels with the Kighteenth lufnnm in tin- Philippine-' 1'er u while aftir the im lileius nt I (Vbii lie was under a loud for having hiiinid a native village P.ut invistlga- I tleu later pieveil that, ns usual, he had done nothing but his dut A ( native spj had entend t. ,mi, f L10 (jegulays te minder the captain, v.ith the ColivlHieu that em e the leader was "lit of ihu will the troep.s would be itliiuwii un., Mich iliseulcr that a bund of insurgents muib.v leuld make hn.'t 1 weik of them. The spv, however, kille.l it ii'iiMiral bv mistake, nnd wlen the liiMirgcnts uriueil the.v get u w.inn ic- ii'l'il. n About tifij et the em i i wci. Uilleil; a de.en, uu luding the spv, iveie cuptiirrd, nnd thtir town was burned te ushi'K. Cuptaln Hew an was dul.v eenei nl eil fnim fine tlitititi, ..r i..' Later, he served with the Fifteenth Infantry at Fert Douglas. Utah. Hut tbeMnactlve life there Irritated a man and I'll have no use for this. When wi meet agnin, jeu can give it back te me." Kut the Cuban was pmud. le re tued the inenej. Hi-, transportation land meals were taken caie of by the arinv. Stationed at in my und nnvy heailquaiter. in WashiiiKten, he winked Miti mill dn.v nnd nldit. He was in valuable. Kut he had no menej nnd he still were his $10 baiid-ine-dewn, although lit apartments were luxurious enough, . tiud his meals extraerdlnniy, us. com pared te these he had eaten In the wilds of Cuba. Theie seemed te be no way te get money, unless be imr imr lewed It fnun his newl.v mad' fueiids in Washington. Kut pndi picvmiumI I lilm He feaicsl, ten, that lie would prejudice the cause of Culm, it he ap pealed te l be Ameiii.uis fni geld and I pei hups outrage bis emit rj men I Deling this perhil. hevviver. he be. I I aim treuiendoielv in nulai Citizens stepped lit in. en the streets vvben he, i piissul bj , The) knew he was en imprir ! tnui Government nrvlie. He be.auie al li 1 i till 1 1 lie ire. '1 ben ti.niNp. led an I.iiiii ni two .. i. .. i. .i .. t . i ... un e oniieiii t.t i-iiM inn-tc r In'iieral , Hi riilllldci leuc'iuliei s (n this dav A lep'iit of ibis, benis has luen giaphl- t ill n I I' 11 i 'Om daj nunc mi Invitation which, under the circumstances, was virtually n command te appear at a review of troops at Washington by General Milca. Cuban!' they shouted, and a few ven tured 'Vivu Cuba Llbn:' Later, when Hernandez, accompanied Miles in hla private car te Tiimpn, he heard the cry many times at wn.v -station steps some times even liefeie the name of Miles was heard And when he went back te Cuba he, tee, carriid u message Hnd It also was in Garcia. "It was the necessary information te i o-erdiiinte the alliic k of the Cuban forces and these of the Americans en Santiage " Net enlv Is the hook in progress, but Colonel Hewan (eiiieinplutes making a motion picture te be called "A Mes sinre te Garcia " "I will anept the offer of a movie icuiipaiiv. ' lie explained, "f ( yvlll I" Mint tin' pi. line le he luitde in the iniintiv in which the episode iciilly oc ec nirnd Then mh Ii a put in e will have an ediieatlenal vulue as well " Coleiii'l Rewan ireiihiires the book in whnh General Miles records the hlutery of his in hievement, und wherein he stmeM th.u the secret Information which Rew mi seemed enabled the speedy cap inie nf Sainiiige and the virtual ter ter uiiiiiiiien of the uiir "It's General Mr( 'li.ri.i.n.l i, he haul. ' who enchi .. lnn n,. He ceiu- did the sui for ihni Cil n..i maiidiil the company which work " Uu cenersl und Mm McClernmnd lend a J.euccful life in the phfuresqUtt l ,v of hiisten Colonel (j-uun und till wife spend the vvuiler at 10.'i(J Vnlluie ?i.,i,fVSu".rr.l,,w,,w'0' C,lllf" nn ue"-' tide from their Summer house in Mill Valley. Ilewun himself Is a Virxlaltn by birth jtnd a Kanran by adeptl " Pi mm Ml mi I .(' , ..titifi ', , A I Wj-tjiVM
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