ft r 1 mmsim rIhinni sitae I! i k, jnrTir)-rnx Mm ir. k i nriw! rr- 1MB a ju i ii i mi m i r ww m l m t- i r i ws w w u t v i Ti -n - r Ai u - 1L 1 -EX FONTAINE and Ceclle Reneau were married at Valenciennes In France after one of the strangest, wildest courtships in the records of Kurope. They met at ::in In the evening In Brus sels nhe never having seen him before and nt n::i on the same evening they were mar ried at Valenciennes, sixty-five miles away A MSB the courtship, the proposal, and the acceptance having taken place In an automobile running at the rate of over forty miles an hour. After a short honeymoon trip In tle auto, a fleeting visit to Paris, the young couple re turned to their home "n Brussels and were forgiven. The elopement saved Ceclle Renenu from marrying I'-ml Ricard, a French ndventurer from Paris with whom f;ie liml arranged to inn away, when For talne and his au tomobile Intervened. The glil, only five months out of a convent, met Rlcsrd at the cathedral of Hte. Oudulo and St. Mlchele early In Man-h. The man, a Parisian of good family, disgraced nt home for outrageous behavior, had fled to Brussels where, with a little money and his big touring car, he had entered upon a career of recklessness and licentiousness. The opportunity to address Ceclle Reneau offered Itself after early mass onp morning In March, -When a shower came up Just as the congregation was dispersing and the unsophisticated and beautiful girl fled back Into the arch under the unfinished tower of the great cathedral for shel ter. Ricard saw her, and, approaching, otTered to tage her to her home In his covered car. The man's easy style and his handsome face made a deep Impression upon the beuutlful girl, and when he deposited her at the door of her home In the Rue de la J"orch her heart was in a flutter that the handsome man should have paid such at tention to her a slmplo young girl with no knowledge of the world. Several times during the next week she saw the handsome adventurer flashing past In his big touring car, nd each time she watched with Increased Interest, but neither time did he atop or attempt to address her. Two weeks later, when she was leaving the Galerle St Hube rt one morning, he approached her. smiling, with hat In hand, and spoke courteously t her, asking her permis sion to seek sn Introduction. His seeming modesty and his fine manners made a deep Impression upon ber, and she granted the permission. Two evenings later, accompanied by one of the reckless young men of the city, he called upon her and waa pre sented. The girl, flattered and excited over the attentions of the handsome Frenchman, was raised into ecstasy, from which she was cast down when her brother, Emtl. raved nd forbade her ever to see Ricard again, telling her be as a disreputable and a person unfit to be seen in her society. The opposition of the brother served only as a breese to (an the embers Inta flame, and, evening after evening. gap nam mje -'.r ?sr i 1 "" Jwiw Mk!ir' 'rfr ' - ' iroRKl'. and the speed of the flying car diminished. jr V '"35 iRLyrs ' ' "O." screamed the girl, "you are not Paul!" jcSX xVjP " 'so' " np " ' nm no'- ' have stolen you to save - SIS!NsS VV Jt sS 'rom him. lie Is a blackguard." jT.- : ' j S?$2 N. "How dxre you?" she sobbed, breaking down. "How C, :' """y? ' dare you! We were to have Wen married this night." ftrfmc- v V V V r0LlT!L " Vr"" "''''I dryly. " 1 heard him tell It to a crowd -a.Mpv - Jt-"! " of ruffians In n public place." -2i x st' V J, The girl shnd.b-rcd. sobbed, and shrunk from him. t y- ' Wins Her Consent to Wedding. T v ' X t ' S&!sZ"' js"". " Msten," said tlie limn. " 1 would take you home nw T Un!' J& 'l1 JJJJ0r but ,h Kroun'r'1 would t;ilk of you and try to ruin your '"W-uJS" mmmtr I K ' ' irrr'" reputation. He already has told that he Intended to trie)- IX . the girl slipped out of the house to meet the man and ride with him In his automobile. After a foitnight the horri fied members of her family learned of these clandestine meetings, und the storm broke about ilie beautiful head of the fair girl. She wept and defied them all, declaring Ricard the soul of hooor. and avowing her intention of re maining true to him through any or all things. The brother and her father and mother stormed, and Implored, and threatened, but the rfirl remained firm. She declared she would wed the handsome Frenchman despite them all. Worried by Frenchman's Influence. About that time It was thai. Alex. Fontaine, one of the richest and bet known bachelors of Brussels, saw from a distance the f;ir gill and lost his heart, to her. He Is a man 38 years of age. i.nd she was but 18 at her last birth day anniversary. Fontaine, waiting the opportunity to meet her, saw with anger and sorrow her friendship for Ricard and the growing Influence of the fascinating Frenchman over the Innocent girl. Without speaking a word to any one. he sought the opportunity to force a duel upon the Frenchman an opportunity that never came. On May 14 Fontaine was In the garage on the Place de la Brouckore, attending to some repalrr to his big csr, when his attention suddenly was arrested by a conversa tion In the next stall. He heard distinctly the voice of Ricard talking to a professional chauffeur, gloatingly an nouncing that his machine must be In perfect condition, as he Intended to elope that night with one of the most beau tiful girls in all Belgium, and the daughter of one of the wealthiest families In Brussels. " 1 will take her to Paris a few weeks." said the French man. " Then If the family does not pay me ' hand somely " Fontaine, under his car, felt the cold blooded shrug he could not see. " She will not be my wife," continued the Frenchman. " My family would not recognize the daughter of a trades man. She thinks we are to be married, but I have It ar ranged witti a magistrate at Valenciennes. He will tell her the bans were published two weeks ago. I shall not tell her It is necessary to have the written consent of her parents. She will have no legal claim upon me and the family will pay " Fontaine struggled to resist the temptation to spring out and throttle the Frenchman. Then he determined that he must save the girl at all costs, und a bold plan to outwit the Frenchman flashed Into his mind. Before the sound of Ricard's steps had ceased to echo Fontaine had leaped Into his car and was rushing toward the house of Ceclle Reneau. With scant ceremony he demanded to see Henri Ren eau. the father. "I have come for our written consent to marry your daughter," he said. "What?" demand -d the angry father. "You do Vnow her. That Is an Insult!" " Listen!" said Fontaine, sternly, pushing the father back Into his chair. " If I do not marry her that black guard Ricard will. She already has left the house to flee with him. He Intends to go through a mock ceremony with her. I must get her away from him, or beat him to Valen ciennes and stop the wedding. He already has spread the story that he Is going to elope with her through the city. It Is by this time known In the cafes and clubs. " I must marry her myself and put him to ridicule and afterwards I will bring her back to you, and we can be married according to the rites of the church." For a few minutes more they talked, Fontaine insisting that, to save the girl from the scoundrel, and to drive Ricard from the town by ridicule, he must win the girl, whom he never had seen. The father finally, torn by excitement and anger, wrote the consent, and Fontaine, leaping into his auto, rode away. Smashes Would-Be Eloper's Car. Through streets .ind boulevards Fontaine Hashed in his big car. and, finally, at fl o'clock In the evening, he saw Ricard coining slowly down the Rue Foohe-aux-Ioups. He pulled one lever, braced himself In the tar, ail the huge machine leaped forward at terrific speed. Ricard shouted a warning, but, like a battering ram, the heavier car of Fontaine crashed Into his auto and smashed It Into a mass of wreckage. " A thousand pardons," said Fontaine, calmly, as he lighted a clgaret. "Curse you!" yelled Ricard. "Curse you! You have ruined my car and I must be In Valenciennes at 0 o'clock." The name of the town stirred Fontaine to action. " Perhaps I could let you have my car," he suggested. " Liet me have It, and I will pay you well. I have not a minute to lose. I must meet a lady at the Martyr's mon ,Ument In fifteen minutes." Without warning Fontaine's car suddenly sprang for ward, whirled and slid along the wooden pavement, and turned away at high tpeed, leaving the astonished Ricard standing amazed at the wreck. Fontaine had learned everything he wished to know the place of rendezvous. Darkness was beginning to fall, and Fontaine, pulling his leathern cap over his forehead and slipping on his goggles, sped his car at thunderous pace down the Rue Neuve. As he approached the monu ment he' slowed and tolled up to the sidewalk. A lithe, slender girl sprang out from the doorway, In which she had stood concealed, and ran the machine, jumping In. "O, Paul," she said, "I was so afraid. You were so late." "I had an accident," he said grimly, as he shoved for ward the levers and started the car. "Sit by me In the front seat. We are going rapidly." r Exposes the Villain's Plot. The car shot out of the city past the Bchaerheck sta tion, then turned sharply down grade to the south along the Waterloo road the same road over which the British officers rushed when the boom of cannon Interrupted the ball on the night before Waterloo. With a lurch and a swing that sent the fair girl swaying against the stern man, crouching over the levers, the car swung down the embankment and Into the road down the valley of the B'-nne. The moon had come up and cast Its mellow light over the plain where Napoleon lost the world. The car swayed and lurched perilously. The fair hair of the beau tiful girl blew across the face of the man and he trembled. " O, Paul," she said as she clung close to him, " you are so strange tonight. I am afraid." The car was rushing wildly across the valley where Wellington's squares steod when the White Horse brigade broke Itself agatnxt them. The. village of Waterloo was rushing forward to meet them. " Paul," she said. " O. Paul I am scared." The man boht lower over the levers. They had come twelve miles In less thin thirty minutes, and the car, gain ing speed with every mile, rushed on across the blood washed field towards France and the south. Suddenly the man threw back his cap, jerked off the you Into a false inn n-!-ic Illegal without the consent of your father. It must be that I marry you: making him the laughing stock if ho dares talk which he will not when you are my w ife." " But he will follow us and prevent the wedding," said the sobbing girl. " Besides, I do not know you." " He will follow at his risk." said the man JTumly. But bo has bribed the magistrate to perform a false mar riage. You and I must go through that marriage ceremony tonight then neither of them will dare talk for fear of exposure of their criminal plot and we can return to Brussels and be married." The car was rolling rapidly through the beautiful valley below Waterloo. The girl sobbed hysterically while the man tried to comfort her. He told her everything, of hlm s If. his love and of Ricard. Wrien he finished she 1 ioked up. " But would you marry a girl who has been so foolish whose reputation may be forever ruined by tonight?" " 1 would." ho said as !Te pressed a lever and sent the car leaping forward. 1 Behind them, evidently a mile away, they heard the whir and pounding of another auto. "He Is coming." said Fontaine grimly. "We must beat him to Valenciennes. If he reaches there first he will make his bribed magistrate refuse to perform the cere mony and then circulate the story that we were together and ruin your reputation." " He must not bo there first," said the glrL " Beat him there and I will love you." " We will win," said the man. Big Machines in Wild Race. Before the girl could speak again Fontaine had thrown the levers forward and the car waa leaping forward at terrific speed! Lk'88 than a mile behind them the girl, looking back, could see Ricard's car rushing down towards them. Then commenced the race for the frontier and for a rlde, Through Nlvelles, nine miles from Waterloo, the big automoblk shot, waking the sleeping villagers, and before they could rush to their doors to see what was passing Ricard's borrowed car rushed like the wind through the village streets. Down the valley ag.tin and by the narrow, winding road through the meadows the two cars plunged. The big au tomobile leaped and lurched like a thing alive. The girl, crouched low on the seat, clung on and shut her eyes as the flying car rushed around corners on two wheels, and, when It straightened out and shot like a meteor down the straight stretches she clutched Fontaine by the arm and screamed into hs ear: " For my honor do not let him catch us." " He shall not," said the grim man bent low over the bars. Lights were flashing ahead. Already the sound of the pounding car behind was lost. Like a meteor the huge green car shot through Mons the twenty-three miles of crooked road from Nlvelles to Mons hau been covered In thirty-eight minutes. i Crossing the bridge to the southeast of Mons the couple narrowly escaped a collision with an overturned market wagon and, three minutes later, Ricard's car smashed Into the same obstacle. He lost five minutes be fore he could start again, and then his steering wheel and levers were bent. Already the fleeing ones bad gained four miles. Wins the Race and a Bride. The lights of Iour, off to tlie left, went backwards like blurs, and the great car, singing a rhythmic melody, rushed along the level road overlooking the beautiful val ley of the Kscout. The sound of pursuit was entirely lost, but the girl, in an agony of fear, urged greater speed, screaming " Faster, faster," when they were whirling over unknown roads at almost a mile a minute. There were lights ahead and then Ceclle, looking back, saw the pursuing car two miles behind. Like a bullet the leading car hummed by the sentry post at the frontier and gaining greater impetus for the final dash leapt forward toward the goal. Tho sentries, aroused by the first passing, stopped the second cur and Ricard lost Ave more minutes fatal min utes. Kven while he was protesting with the sentries Fon taine's car rolled, with lessening speed. Into Valenciennes. FiVe minutes later Alex Fontaine and Ceclle Reneau the pcrmi.ssion of the fath'T was read and the magistrate per formed the ceremony were married." i As they stepped from the house of the magistrate to return to Brussels another automobile started to slow up In front of the house, the occupant saw the couple de scending the steps, an t, whirling his car, he turned away south towards Paris. Two days later Alex and Cecils Wi rt' married in church st TtruSMelm. '