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Show 2 THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1907. <== OUR CHILDREN'S PAGE a New . Pe _ 3 a =~ AG sag Aba Zivre cE ; eee? jin move take not should minutes {ive hia fe story one } It telling the govof adventure, tale a thrilling was in Indians figuring and scouts ernment eshalirbreadth. were There plo the winhthe fight bleod-curdling and s The | © . the ww surrender to having me ‘"}red broke! been to have seemed' ter wat white quipped and beiter the | braver id red disapt had nowdritt un grein with ended st [he ior h ral was river and pond the on jee reScouts the mountain, the in [Teast the to ; : : owin { ‘ waspring and horseflesh to orting : , KAU , are given having provisions other Wl BOMIAMLY | ¢¢ NOS Sol old Wf smite red of the siege long the during out his touch under warmed all things euie clent so} for shone va ronormin having, un Saturday. the bright, of backbone the iat d man rae 2 ri ) iZut then nom the ‘ had Fairies Moon rt 3 = \ a of Z noses closed their the that moments wiser--Kkept brief few ie being his by himself timing stories, promptu three; Gurmes the by agreed for: it was watch, a + rem Fae t a oe And -- er oe take VO you do > 1 n an A off, ‘im , - . a. off, > : z 5 iS ces bey" ‘im Vake harm! " no " e Fritz BY Pitz MAUD waste orphan and WALKER: little without deathsof his: the German. friends. parents -he the) to ill the his) ts she Pot sad he, and bewaltl does luek about look soon will following ie appeal apologizing for his delay in opening! the shop The sail-a huge thing all' bundled up and wound round with| rope-was dragged from the corner by sweet face of Fritz, with its blue baby eyes and soft clinging flaxen curls "Where came you from, lad? . Fritz was 1roWw celing stronger, hav- own the Conqueror, for by and the skippe would be toa attend to his present business, should the n fall Into the hands by he old to and it of his given got us the an) You are no bad man maker. who he "at beat me. too.' full) like meso, his ile house he can't | in my angry "UM i furious And wand speak that when hands," tones. skin sail "Ti I get vowed the him: alive,"ker sailmaker so it was flog that him old him. agaitha wife declared" litle til} Fritz in {little / boy half dead from of surprise skipper cried merrily, f up in the sail that night and) bosom round liking lad which- « as will my jolly as eyes the old pretty; ever the he'll fair | tears from my eyes whispered have the fairies Conqueror | caves in and: feed skipper father's hi Ne no pight erhead dua Little Vhat are | te do too weak front want of breath does the Boy the gather home is put sights and a me opportunity They ll take ordered | starvings of the mighty ocean. Lach day) ness of the corner, discovered it empty "Where's that fool?" he roared, leap-! ing from the table and hurrying to} the outhouse, where Fritz slept. Back | he came immediately, declaring that! new sail for his erafl. Az barguin-) ing for it, he told the old anwaaced that he would veturn with several of his wailors that evening and get the! found "You go to the shop and ri to the young fool as soon as hands on nim," said the old tle - | i; : { } | | , i I 1.8 | i f ' : $ shop sail, and board. of which tied the in the sailmaker should be shape to ship. duly be to buy a wrapped carried, on the for was "heggarly the brat" knocking becoming impaticnee of was at the strenuous, those on not to darkly Well, roof-tree; to bed, he'll see? If quote his the mate, old skipper. then in turn "S$ Boy very gentle OU husband SOON ae ade ham to meet the sez you into" theit the vou. water of. blue and love! No more beatings nor| will you , suffer, and no Vo) * awity from. this; so must do With | Then I waked up, but the beauti- Uf 8 ‘Phen been there It was no dream. sir.| Well, the very next day you came | was in the shop serubbing. the floor! when you entered hope shot) through my heart ond. tis tened LO! your talk with (re old sailmak You | came from the sea-the. sea! YOu} should! looked like au ordinary eee eee man, as but - the ._| nothing) to grow rich treating today to cause the old woman to have) this way, my friend?" any auepicion of iny intention { The sailmaker forgot That evening, 46 soon. as cits had! time ana hustled about, the bad day lis the at boy customers in Fritz for bowing i the. and | law, Prince Louis of Orle: ner in shame, und went te also sent her brother, Duke hei fetch to Bavaria, the Hotel St. Paul. But had ‘ scarcely is reached : Juvissyy royal children when he was overtaken with arn children.) but si of aberration advantage of his mind con- aban- whou muse for the withthe ce eames took the = ri (sane eae eerie a kits ane TactETG TOTtE I a aa Sf put myself into or HOWE p. shi smiling your rour _ the tn head pillow, bis dre ATi if he's been quite home toward his has fuRsed ROSBeN.,: on : ; i a And If he Pats dity ee ae broken obeys Nis parents Yesabns* rulf j i Why. between you an® med Not one of those bad fads At night-time will he sfe I look Ilke rubbed € wa storm- It or his not, hand 2 ve 7 and fairy : sh dilion ment across! spoke | to the| of | Valois. Katherine mae aan was hardened ave a real sea : Ther anyone any vision ‘ else It other Thad might your person in my break friendship." And they a delicious a Secret no id' Goodae oy aL SHin aaueo) a Hix. ne‘er a tHl the story They'd! | laugh at {[t, maybe. - But I-I-I1 , you're my little mascot." And you're my sea-fairy | whispered Fritz. "No, I would naughty mamnia: : you word. ; tell bed spapA hi he skipper faded bl without it into to escape he had proclaimed from the imposed herself the ness for the pretty imprison- upen pent Then she assumed hey cntidis 0 ean eS mad her king's and re- the Ranecol of alddenitond Katherine, who child he pressed his lips to his fatt. | was just in her teen Vor this beaujeurly hair, rising quickly to see that) tiful daughter Lsabeau became very ne one Was watehing him A genth ambitious, negotlatingwith Kifie Henand loving heart was in his bedy of of England regarding his tak| coarse exterior, line Katherine: as ur wanes ._ "We're pards-if not fairies," he, But the roval husband was not easjsald a few moments later, ‘Bul ne ver) ily won, Henry demanded . dower of andiife theus bis. hi whether 1 jyiands oe Se f fe : : his you anyone en of selwol ye i = adele Bad. aie sea fairies were to come disguised. 1 nade up my mind that T was to be taken away from here by you, but | also knew that vou did not understand anything abeut it So T had to figure out a way in whien IT might pul lessons rul - will cover frightened Dlankets he-tvembles But it he Ea Wai. skip-} think extremity lithe. ETAT you Phen will these wwf Leings, ap Be Be OES as And! ae ein es the' hradt-* = ¢ } the you precari-| the royal children even after theit and provisions were stopped by a 7 been kept standing several minutes. Waiting on a common sallmaker was} in his line. "Kot in himmel!"' roared per, entering the shop. "Do a has failed disobeyed And Litth: Boy tis wound door | not for merey and whispering to "Il soom be} his veuaiinaa Lisa and pay more HOU see: sonie dreadful faces About hix pillow. prowl Hell hear some dreadful: noises: A sereech. a squeal, a howl! Be jn have died ef hunger MBraRITT and rind rane + ee shop outside bowing avithout, begging taking the punishment, himself all the while: But' the child did not murmur) the bad treatment on this dav he And And At The sailmaker went into the shop! and unbolted the door to find the skip-' per and his men there, the former in} no gentle humor, seeing that. he had times. against been aie or denoting the if Thfoughoul As All day long Fritz planned = and planned, going about his work In such anoabstracted way that the old frau; fell upon him and beat him severa!| a = to : be in legs,' the'!come <« ii different manner, a mnapner in, whieh there could be no Leeann ire of his again falling into the hands of the' erue! sallmaker and his ugly old frau.! One day a skipper caime to the lit-- was Corel 1 ah tu q Kaeerts a is er at anode of i aneant "th ut ts suddenly ad ly Ch naries aie BPP eral recoverct life of both ease and employment began for F'ritz He was allowed to/} learn all about the management of| the vessel, but never permitted to do! any of the sailor's drudgery. The, skipper said he should some day be-| | ) i health again seized sulering at negicct, sad ars Of out in the cold shedhouse where | Wan stvaw, ne j na he ONG CRnEL rent times the most cruel hardships of hun-. 4nd [sabeau DALE es ane ocdsn a nes were seP' ger and filthy. surroundings, for Queen Pretty soon a soft hand wiped the Isabeau, her mother, had deserted her| be- | voice; and and yey the skipper had Fritz with him, chat-| ful voice was gone and [ did not again ting and telling "fish stories' to amuse, feel the soft hand wiping away m) thec little fellow, who got was "‘on at first sex-) tears someone But my maybe face was dry, and [ but who soon his sea knew an angel-had VWhen Sf d. an it the king's residence of retirement,| by a troop of men-at-arms by order of + : ‘ Qype rc . > the Hotel St. Paul, where hex roval the Duke of Burgundy The dauphin sire was confined during his continand his voyal were at ones eq and terrible spells of madness.!corted back to the king, their Pasir Here thé little princess, in the com-) who kept them in his own charge : pany of her brothers and sister, spent But a few years later Charles was Beare iene fact teri ' f rolls old | ng ecu him with us Good luck attend. E O ous con-lition, due to excesses and an ostravagant manner of living, and her; the common) was yy other s reputation copnject for shameless gossip through-| out the kingdom : = Katherine's carly years were passed! sh was -tele- myself - Sf, but /Perliins: Grandpa. out Katherine of Valois, voungest child{veason and became once nove the of Charle VI es Fra mice, Was born! master of his ow calm Hearing of Oct, 27, 1407, at Paris, France. a | his changed ates and fearing hi ccems to have been born under an un-| punishment of her, the wieked Isabeau lucky star, for at the time of hei birt fled from Paris with her brother-in- . to lils feet, and e Twins say Perkins grandma dirty, lanc,.a up the coming Bricktop. in the tramyp. ragred blear-eyed, a walked shale Briektop at' While oceasional low whose dog, great cam: they when heard be growl could house yards of the Pera in the woodas lodged to Wateh fi food nPUuUALre allowed your sailors to carr me off: he "asked his gool old friend, whose) UN-) wonderfully softened had uature der the influence of his little mascot.! "Well, well, my son, you . have -never ; told me why, so how should I ee | a d to stagecr and that some meat and drink be served to| Will you have to do the heavy work| iyo joosdess and unnatural Isabeau his ims iscov' in-the mate's cabin. Aj that-is now killing you. Come, wake va during this time Ques Ieabenu room was arranged for Fritz, | Up.and be of good cheer, Pray to thy iT itering the eae ave erie clean little bed and Pleasant) Father In heaven to hurry the sea eeaiarail; ce hee husband's Brothers. and Surroiadines Av high: tide: that night) fairies to you. They will come in dis-| Fe dering the money In a reckless they set: sail and were soon on the) &uise; but you will know them. : gars oie her children sufferca jamong the sailors. Then the skipper) was called, and Fritz, breathing deep-| ly and smiling at those round him, was pointed out to the ee captain "Wo -ho,. hol: * Whi sort of joke has the old hound lowed op us now?" the little oni after thi ~ Then the had) suffocation, went hoisted weather atter rolled from the folds of canvas: He} tried to stagger to his feet, but' was) too weak from want of breath to -do| |'so. at onee. | Many oaths be. -held, \We'll:take be our mascot the} | much to be thankful for that the-old) | sinners never set eyes on bim again. | ‘That night the sailors On board the j Conduerot began to unroll the new sail preparatory to hoisting it in place of oe old one. .To their astonishment "| Ie eu I'm be nadpa wife! air, sir." of aM, for want Fritz.)die orphan the little slave, ; tere - had he given the order | poor Rage tee is ey pee v rae ‘eyes; "searching, the darkor tempers grew and waxed fleree, Say, Sr omens (Woll {for us.) said) pt ay oes & ~_e hey searched in vain at this pub-| the skippe ‘Here's a new safl to; seaa oeBut whey, PAR seatan Batby beaten his escape) and make Lo t tone Deo = sail- s ial ae Story oe a ie skippet ightec ms pipe and se er sel I ‘to A my himsel : ahe : "It's this way," began the little fel-| tes ' "one pee a : ee T Ps I rible iting fro he old wife, 2 a atnt As nite ae ak ‘ ‘ | asleep wh crying in m pillow o he must i later his crawl-inside,". explained Frits. "They ar s ») erry i were at thei upper and merry with their mugs of beer, so IT was not afraia) they'd see me. ‘They always sit at the table so long. But I had just got in: Gape vha . side-the sail when you camic Oh, but jt was close in there. | though | must) . overtaken onnyou ur th set. oryLlh ay. dog good his what do him et ut "lake too do. him promp qui be nd old ad towards the dark corner where | ‘he driver. and owey OS rattled over) os " } : ier, » Ver Fritz, pe ays sat on the floor to parthe conuirs tow ul a " pier, the oti er WANCOD ne Seauty tare and called out| t¥9,S8allors ‘waiting outside. the shop) narshiy eo . | for. their. master. "GE bo the shop, thou voung fool, | fter the skipper had departed the; < : 2 sivas 3 & "s oo : and don all night about moving old. sallmakei and his: frau bes am a wu ‘i X-} wr search of the neighborhoed for thei') meant ito: to be his master,so fon the enough to-eat ih arr Dushcmes of?straw 1es. PEC OVERS ' t prevent publi € ' ] y* iis ad of bound And that inelee get you did how "But sail? asked-the skipper, becoming in-| terested. s1 loosened the ropes.so that I might and) a ‘pallet to: eleep "on. the ped slecyes his ONE OU at you. that t thatwill) Ne the childre i ie of till {he ir «A he on go-ahead) are y ture il show life of. cboeegod: mat Py) Cas { owl place: a his cot ueens the three carried out at}ing filled tis hing with good sea air, ‘mast ol, or the wait of Ure sail, the orde who stopped and replied: "I came in the sail, sir, as the : lilors somtimes called Frity Lo epi iy the bill, : : Oh, please take me away with you, for One day as Fritz sat on deck talking} The heaviest sail of our) size Tever| [ saw: you this morning and I knew) to the skipper his faee was full Of! helped to lift," said one of the sailors.| that you would be kind in the heart. | happiness. Do you know why I rolled to helping anotner, declared price of the meal une wicked pair enjoyment did not notice the little orphan's ab- | Hitt the onil into a cart that stood there} sence till ‘a heavy Knocking k came i i at for the purpose. Then the last the shop door Then the ee eens speaker sprang into the cart beside Ms, the" dA; wore: ‘on, the. heart' of} Mitle Fritz Decame very heavy 2nd sad, and ‘he began to: plan on-some mode) of eseapt He knew that to:-run awa 18 At it Bricktop of hands his) from tramp blood: and Move (rainy lowe hile that 1 : t Ica Tr eaten Ye FR , cee the fo round: eit-oft: ou eat : se im § tramp Emin , most a mind fion't, ‘ prisone. the of. Vou' mie .on ‘hard out|.teo shell hour. an Half them an' too them, keep to. mean. hin Httle) beat) und i- treated wife od Se ~ Y : Butz, imposing heavy tasks upon th child and-aliowing:. him . ‘only hall! - Come: verself error , lbown ge so let him Bricktop obeyed stioaxept ha i ~- ~ - ~- the safilmaker and his wife were gay over their plentiful supper of meat,| ‘The old dog must) have sauerkraut, potatoes, cheese and beer, Slich=Wés BUTea| o1 & wiae ueal table , extra weigit in canvas." near. the cheerful fireplace. In the oh if he did he live with'an- old sallmalk« ity .a, citys by sea. Both the old sailmaker and e Fairies. ; finished' his supper-some crusts of black bread and a serap of cheese ‘any pe crept from the kitchen corner while| boy, After pwent Sea lonely io hell Gut squaw . His : at breve the : aE a : an. . 3 : 5 i . ew quite drawn has And now to come offiecr for n please Way, of The oI er his of him. in himself stationed had tramp h -- ~~ ih about hes too t trickt tr- 4 i ght i the : , . 0 } per a : pes Bricktop, os TON a asthe Re Mf wihiishoarsely ut ee Brick "Oh, summer | was The time going through. the; Into perfume the let fairies alr OW childrer helit Bricktop move mot he did when ind i ‘ . awful her of thoughts Bettie. peered there) a sudden Of raining. {ft was it} and carried wind south air; then, ag the in to proceed sisters to his motioning : ; a 7 era Sw ¢ ; " } | 2 Pe . . fear sudden a with her filling goblin left-a) to their in the woods was heard was a seaj there oul to sea-for 1ustily his finished trick After round walk to started him, of front os ¥ E . : : ; 5 , ba . ‘ ; panted beast!" wild a beast-a "ITU's left u to their woods ‘the tn heard" danger) no was moon-there the on ( grandfathes tors obstacle threatening and hideous the ; 5 E ; : j 3 ely. ag breathing and fvrlend rave F You' thrust= tram the © fut path his in mind also reverted to he lioness - roav- | Lettle, whose strange . sound-perhaps again y freely. breathing {in : i ? . « ‘ ) « > Sa % 7 ind oT Felton we : in protect by} Vv Bric! Fr top had nj is aul rmoand orth sprung! just had that spook sister's as| fast as vun t away bad |,ing..-They the with up wound -story: the Then ‘ : bee ‘ ‘ 0 i i t z 5 of keepsure hope re shak and instantly the - collat shall what brother, "Oh, a tree. from them) informed Bettie could--so» prisoners) they their sleeping | fairies putting ae a . : : Ms 5. : . pea sprung} we do?" there -treetop. a from into a dark cave where, after an hour,|-when turn should wher if i ; ing a gruff voice saying in and roughly . : ‘ ; ee : : = 11 I resect k la dog' the es I tolup try youngster,.don't my ‘Come, the | answer could. Briek before But regular - spook| goblin-a horrible be allow-|a to begged and awoke they °- kids?" value bluff. me. - Out with wour pockets-" his hidfrom had come beast terrible In) eyes of fire. and bat's wings by means} with the moon from ;ed to depart ‘and about two " finish the command not he a But. had way, the by place--whieh, hole} ing for some about looked they never | vain fairies, The airship their , of of the to speak not in money, distress ~ from | dollars of Sign fir the. At was} hide, | served him as a poor shelter-and might they which into to do so, | Or "¢ cave para permitted ill-disposed, e three ~ aoht ve i Ld! idsiext by a dirty vines the piteous exclamations | humiliation of being p; iitnane the > three] approaching up to them.) j rather. dubiously place opened She} but no such> to ivere the from them leueding Pricktop tramp, * said the great dog the Twins, the | of fear srr in still ‘stood now who ppen) chilren, the at Jook to paused Bettic wheats ‘they | ca of a high cliff, (edge protected he how ef think ‘And ephihe? Newfoundland splendid a ard WE wierd | he came sabi As road. Ralid, @arried- sricktop's in lift Itself into the airytwateh wrehip sawothe enthusiastically. Bettie eried |us,° flerceness that With-a tramp te im a | upon to droop let was which weil, his the! heard.-in was oa low > whine when away. the foreigners carrying. "till Lettie; declared indeed,' "Yes, The behold ‘to terrible most his doubts} Was fashion, explaining: ‘The thre children | begging woods at their left.) Bettie loudly applaud-) Bricktop and rescue our to ggzie Came of cluteh his loosening ‘-| (ramp, might he reception the regarding from! directton in that quickly looked to) Bettie began then ed Li tlie's story; death ty almost frightened off, ery- | were to fight the animal began | top, stranger two-footed the from come,|ceive had noise a: strange so which put|} She as woe," of yarn her "spin withagain here me we do ‘im | Never "Take time same at the out wanted!ing so‘much he fricndship whose the bushes; through peering that her|and'there, it by saying it." She prefaced "Pre we call him that T vote him. no}out yeu I'll da an' off, *im Take oftf needed. unmelt- |} and with were still heavy Which famlliar the with deal should story tector and| harm.' Getthe cried doggie!" 1 old "An of shade deep a in being It should | ed > snow, In= fact, them things about. } , | } } the name. the as ‘Protector And the for fearing really Bricktop, chasing} smiles breath, aw in ert Dee) a pair of trees-gleamed the jem opened She themselves of be " b Known became dog old runnow was blood for life tramp''s had come) which of fear looks the way eves snimal now were they woods the in chapter His ee a - - Oo0re v ‘ ; : chief Perces Nez trail, on squaw his great Jost Une wood When the eve ‘Wold i ant NOW gals." rosev-cheeked Wo under-) exactly not did Twins' The they but language, "man's. the sland brother their reb to meant he knew came) that deflanee of look the: from eves as he replied Bricktop''s linto and way your on go betler "You'd pos\s for my trouble save yourself mvself them kL. need session ) -asrnd self, ' ] t ie -e, ne a This Hus hese j pt a me tise Ivhe tot Lene drink from. bloated face i at parged ne 1ddressinge: sai he pare what:vou Rriektop sto person yer on fe of need fnenehs a reliewir sleathe fillin':.of: his fer trouble ive an' P: Ff is ae ey ; ' his too: cloth hi Ra iy E 5 dethe As it breathed who anyone winds the on came fragratce lictous man Mars the and man carth oa the dre Ww and nostrils their opened they fairtes The pleasure great vith it t erl 1e in ' * tal 2 & of from the depths suddenly came nan road the of side at the shrubbery ome 1 wa he Plainty them aecoste tnd ont -evil-lookin a.'most id trdimp a iol ‘ ws Ags wargece keeping close to their side. of ot almost clear Ma hr | vind-which ) : : perfume the blowing-with ren honey. as sweet flower, certain a sicep to fall upon a deep lich caused AVING Ae vhere hand his Crom nine mak dor] -t ran him from fe t old the rascal whipped deg the Althoush Tne . aia pe i i i ine Laon eni gels eLSIKaed te ‘ , thei on farted ehildven Phe friend four-footed tve\ their: te Pelt : CUI old one ‘ ayn some "ne HE to te the on doggie Cole oa i J1ie rere tle 4 1 nurs: ‘ aera im chin 5 Py Ox i, they cid nos a Ran _ mannet Mars he » tmny he "Wells 4 aire to net ' foe i moo - before minute 7a "faces their ave) fellow!" old a beautiful ‘What Briek-) declared a dandy!" he's My. to him.) to come dee the mviting top, Welly) was half him: andomeeting come. tronv?' hered-vou old chappie stroking) and down stooping asked, he comno "He's bnek, cold dog the plain, | Musthave mongrel--that's mon en oP aaatlh ae O° Pron / ny e ‘4 se # a i powerful a The) i \ < = wf iia \7 a ce "FE ) -« = hy Natt ns Fairies Moon the destroy to. al Wd Mel to; decided EPwit 1 the le tc 7 the story, au fairy followed Lettie : 5 . : a Bricktop. ‘ I j the on laid were which of day, | scenes the for grandmotn 50 to Mmelr. ling t ording tru rT ie i hi t ‘ ‘lt sg to the < tha t mn oo n, nh ui int thes ly (ot, were and besutiful most & be ing narrates heuld | tle road t before started. ret fruits and flowers ith vere phere morn im the f too muddy become rivulets laughing ind Heol babbling ; ina' by bal nis _ Carpeted between mursed thell igeested bell "Yowd, the that oft moe grecn living t trip ie ed d the as mother walkwhen une no fairies' feet made ex the needs horve "The ihe: count: Caccordof azure alr Carth on i ingg so long up tabled been he ercise rearimagination) ing also to. Lettic ding hat ik 4 walking "Oh, hillsun-kissed the on themselves ed get into| to longi Bricktop, declared of grace and fe bas HET ya country! tops the Te ‘ -rubbe hig a most tiries, Loon the welt yeaul 1 nee road . ! invenan But indeed race beau Walk for noerni i s with company in earth the i qr in landed day one Mars from Lt man ought and moon the on airship. in ¥ rama TE se ay LW i! (tact) Jd rial ebm 2 { Sy 19 Friend. lthat DAVIS HELENA By SQUAW. THE ina ma Find Twins the and Bricktop > bets well, father,"'| not tell! about-about-the| sleep forthe your luck and world.) our) smiled at each other, for; eret lay in their oe one else might share. ---7s>-_-_ Conundrums. When When jwolese | are thre are lovers? needles like er mcnmuserimés When garments? Us rejected. discon-| hy "does an ii-ntiseg-°uress. serntets a pug dog's face? Because {t is full of wrinkied: such proportion his bride that reject his offer with so miueh tion of Henry he swore of France her father to and have. and significance with Isabeau was obliged to which she had courted fervor But this rejectouched his pride and Katherine mother Resides from or ‘drive the throne satisfying his am- Pbition the young king was really deeply in love with the Princess Katherine. whom he had seen. twice and found to be most charming. For two years he waged war against family of Katherine agree his his terms of marriage with Kagherine of Valo adored princess. rae ‘marrlage tieaty called tor certain rety sion France. and the was foreed: to to he under the provinees and whole soverelenimmediate possesname of regent." |