The Case of Edith Cavell A Study of the Rights of Non-Combatants
THE Case of Edith Cavell. A Study of the Rights of Non-Combatants. BY JAMES M. BECK, _Former Assistant Attorney-General of the United States, and Author of "The Evidence in the Case."_ (_Reprinted from "New York Times."_) G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, NEW YORK AND LONDON.
hedges close to Lenox Hall and the girls listened anxiously.
"Human," whispered Jane, "and rather dainty. Hardly a masculine foot
to that light touch. Don't be alarmed, Dozia. We are two to one and
evidently that other one is a female." She said this with assumed
confidence, for she feared Dozia might turn and run at any moment.
They were almost in the little grove and it was between there and
the boxwood that touched the side porch of Lenox that this hidden
thing must be. Jane was by no means as brave as her carefree manner
indicated, and every time she held a bush from brushing Dozia's face
she took occasion to listen intently for vagrant noises.
Stumbling over low underbrush in their rubber soled tennis shoes was
not like walking out in the open, and just as Dozia breathed a sigh
of relief that the landscape gardening went no further, a wild
scream, shrill and piercing, cut the night like an arrow!
Speechless, the girls stood terrified, while the wail seemed to
linger suspended somewhere!
"Oh, what was it?" gasped Dozia, but Jane clung to her arm in
silence.
The next instant a clanging of chains and rattling of metals broke
out from Lenox Hall.
THE Case of Edith Cavell. A Study of the Rights of Non-Combatants. BY JAMES M. BECK, _Former Assistant Attorney-General of the United States, and Author of "The Evidence in the Case."_ (_Reprinted from "New York Times."_) G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, NEW YORK AND LONDON.