Motion Picture Magazine (Aug 1923-Jan 1924)

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^-MOTION PICTU InCJI I MAGAZINE a small handful were sullen that the young hero was returning. One of these was Phillip, then King, and the brother of Don John. The other was old General Mendoza who, tho he loved the young John, loved his daughter so well that he would have preferred John dead than his daughter's shining faith in his destroyed, which event the unsanguine old soldier foresaw without a doubt. And the third was the Princess Eboli, who fostered a secret and sinister wisdom, to the effect that this youth was one whom a greater love than any she had to offer had snatched from her. Better that he should be dead, she thought, than that he should live to taunt her with the flashing of his strong, straight limbs, the lift of his brilliant head, the light in his eyes when he looked at that little paleface, Dolores Mendoza, who was constantly following him with her great, pool-like eyes. It would have been a day of unalloyed triumph for Dolores, if it had not been for her father's pronouncement made that morning. "Don John returns at the head of his army tonight," he said, and by the quick irradiation of her face he knew again how much this meant to her ; "and tomorrow," her father continued, "you are to enter the convent of Los Huelgos where you will be safe from the world . . . and from him." Dolores looked at him and her eyes made the old soldier vaguely uncomfortable. "Father," she said, "do you think that walls of stone or mandates of Kings have power against such a love as ours. John has come back to me from the very teeth of Death, now Life shall not keep him from me." "You go to Los Huelgos tomorrow, madam," said the old man, "and if in this intervening night Don John attempts to cross your threshold I shall kill him where he stands. That is a soldier's oath." The hour was late when Dolores, dressed in Inez' gown, stole into the sleepingchambers of Don John. For the instant they clung together, locked, in love. Their eyes alone had told the story before. Dolores, one of the crowd to welcome him home, had stood alone for him. She and she only had been there on that wall, welcoming him back, who had come back for her. There, in his arms, Dolores told him of her father's plot to separate them, and how that the next morning she was to be rushed to a Convent nevermore to abide in the World. John was wroth. "We will fly to Granada where I am ruler," he said, "and there I shall lead back an army against this King and his tin soldiers who refuse their men arms when they are in sore distress and steal away our loves when our backs are turned." But Dolores pleaded with him to remember his oath of fealty to Phillip as King of Spain. "If only I may be with you," the girl said, "once I return to my own domain I shall be kept a prisoner until I am taken to Los Huelgos at break of day." It was rrranged between them that Dolores should be locked in an inner room of John's apartment and that in the morning they should flee the country. A lover's impetuosity. An hour later, when John returned, it was with Phillip his brother who, suspicious of he knew not what, had insisted that he hold counsel with his brother in his brother's chambers, an honor, it may be added that the King had never before conferred upon Don John. And in that room, with Dolores locked within, the quarrel took place which pre I There is Beauty in Every Jar TO gain and retain the charm of a perfect complexion, to achieve the beauty of a clear, wholesome skin, begin today the regular use of Ingram's Milkweed Cream — there is beauty in every jar. More than a cleanser, more than a powder base, more than a protection for the skin, Ingram's Milkweed Cream, you will find, is an actual beautifier of the complexion. No other cream is just like it. 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