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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1922)
THE OEEGON SUNDAY - tTOUKNATi, P0BTLAN7V STTNDAY MORNING, ATOuar srr, iraa. 4 n y 4 ' "V - v " ' "f " i' ' ' - x T " ; . r v :& i'rsf iVeii7s of the Wild Romance of Daredevil Fern Andrews, Illinois Beauty, Condemned as a Spy by Germans, Saved by Becoming a Baron's Bride in a Lion's Cage Hi J ft l ' ll ' j! : " ' " - ftMitV y 'ir-'-ST'ttM Autographed Photosrraph Sent by Fern Andrews to Bird Millman, the Famous Tight-Wire Performer. "Fussy" Was Her Favorite Nickname. SNARED in a net ot lore nd war and intrigue, jailed in a lion's den, sen tenced to be shot as a ipy, separated from her American home by firs thousand miles of blazing land and smoking sea, her sweetheart slain, her .heart brOken, her brain throbbing to but one thooght tha desire to Uts! pretty Tern Andrews, blue eyed daughter of an Illinois farmer, cheated the firing squad by a "cage wedding" to a Bohensollern baron! This most amazing romance ot the World War has been an international secret. Not a doxen people knew that Fern Andrea, movie star; Baroness von Weichs, divorced wife of a Prussian nobleman, and little Fern Andrews, ot Watseka, EL were all three one and the same, until recent cables from Berlin carried the rumor of the death of Pern Andrea In an airplane accident. The report was later denied, but the cir cumstance established her identity. Then Bird Millman, the beautiful tight wire walker of circus and theatre lame, who was Fern Andrews chum and patron tor years, though scouting rumors of her death, consented to reveal the story of her protegee's remarkable wedding. It is told on this page for the first time. Fern Andrews was feeding chickens, tanking cows, riding ponies and doing the "giant swing" In the barn on her father's farm in Illinois until, a few years before the war, the circus came to town. She went to Watseka in a wagon with. th rest ' of the folks to see "the grandest show on earth." Fern, being a tomboy, liked the acrobats best Especially did she admire Hiss Bird Millman, queen "of the air." who danced a fox-trot on a tight wire better than most people 60 It oa the ballroom floor. Fera knew some stouts herself. She believed she could walk a wire. The next day she sneaked off to Watseka all by, herself, found Miss Millman. 4id her stuff" and won that artist approtaL When the cir cus left Watseka, Fern left with it : In a year the little Illinois farm girl was a fun-fledged performer. Among her IntV mate circus friends she was j known, as Fussy She was pretty, she wsa suppU, she was graceful; above all, she had a heart that knew no fear. Fera, tried tricks that made even Miss Millman fn. . And Tern taly giggled. She declared there was no thrill in the world comparable to skip ping along a steel thread above the heads of ten thousand staring, gasping people. The Bird Millman troupe went abroad in the Summer of 1914. It was touring Germany when Europe plunged head first into war. In the mad scramble of tourists to get 4ut ot Germany trains choked, each station a fighting mob, troops pouring to the front oVet every road and track, red tape tightened, steamship sailings can-, celed, families and friends torn apart Fern Andrews became separated from the rest of the troupe. Bird Millman returned to America, uncertain whether the girl was alive or dead. But Fern was alive. She was very much alive. The lines were too closely drawn for her to get out ot Germany at first, buc they were not too closely drawn to bar love. By the time a month had passed Fern Andrews didn't want to leave Ger many. Romance had come to her in two flaming dark eyes,: a sun -tanned face, and a hot French heart beating under the mas querade of an overcoat of Prussian gray. Miss Millman, who heard the story much later, remembers his name only as Jean. He was in the French Secret Service, smuggled serosa the border by his Govern ment in the first days of the war on an Important and perilous mission. He met Fern Andrews, confided in her, and she loved him. The disguised Frenchman was sot Fern Andrews only suitor. Her beauty and her daring had won German hearts as well, and the aristocrat. Baron von Weichs, was the most smitten of all. He was not young, bat he loved her. ardently be wanted to marry her. And Fern Andrews did not re pulse his suit. . She smiled upon hinu Sha told him she would marry' him. They bo came engaged. , Why r There is so written record of the workings of . Fern Andrews heart. But it is known that the Baron von Weichs was a Hohenjollern; that he was a blood kit ot the then "All Highest; that he knew as tew men in Germany knew what plots . and plans were going forward in the war . councils ... at , Potsdam. And the 4 Baron loved; Fern Andrews. Better men than barons have hidden nothing from women -' they loved. 1 -.i - It ts also known that for Fern Andrews there was one man and one man only. V strangest ever a woman occupied. The wholesale arrests carried out by the German police in the first days of the war had filled the Jails. There was no room left. There Was no pro- -vision made for the detention ot women spies. ' As a makeshift. Fern Andrews was taken to the Thiergarten, -Berlin's, great amuse- ment pafk. The zoological gardens had been emptied of animals. Fern Andrews . was led to the lion's cage, and there, where the kins; of beasts had paced and dreamed of t jungle kills, the little American girl crouched through the days and nights pre ceding the date for her execution. A guard patrolled the cage. People came ' to stare at heito marvel at the white face and the blue eyes pressed so close to the bars. And Fern Andrews, staring back st them with the fear of death ever pres ent in her heart Fern Andrews staked her latt hope on an appeal to one man She was allowed to send a message to v- V it 1 , Fern Andrews Attired as an Awiatrix. He was Jean of the flaming brown eyes andHhe hot French heart.; And Fern had no confidences that were not Jean's also. Jean himself had but one love and one allegiance France. j " It was a desperate game this blue-eyed daughter of an Illinois farmer, this supple little American acrobat, played in the late Summer ot 1914 there on the Belgian bor der, within earshot of the thunder of guns. his secret wireless Outfit. Fern, seeking him. was ar rested. Both were sent to Berlin under guard. The trials were swift and rutb lesi. Jean, found guilty, was Sen tenced Jo death. At sunrise he crumpled, under the volley oi a fir. Ing' sauad. When Fern got; the news she fainted. The light had among swarming hordes of gray, in little t gone out of her life. . She might have pre ferred death herself In that moment. Gal it ts very hard to die. When her own trial followed, and aha. too, was convicted as a spy and ; sentenced to be shot, she stared at her accusers with ghastly eyes. Her ; heart was broken, but there stm burned in her the primitive fwqt to tight for her tife at an costs. They led her back to her j?risoa Cia X - - X i.- -1., rf" Jr.' , towns where no man trusted his neighbor and every bush and wair might sneuer an enemy.-- v?ff',v .. . -j . It was 'a desperate game with a Gar 1 man. baron who loved her on one end of the see-saw and the Frenchman she loved ron the otherand It was a game that had to end in tragedy. It came with a crash. ;-. .The police surprised Jean, red-handed, with Baron Ton Richtofen, Brother of the German Ace, with Whom Fern Andrews Was Flying When the Plane FelL The Fliers Escaped Injury. Baron von Weichs, the man who loved her, but the man she had betrayed, that she wanted to see him that if he wanted to see her in this life this was his last op portunity. -The Baron came. He fen once more CbpjtUM. 1932. tr lBtaraaOoval Ttatun awvl Xa. QpfX Btfsda Sis&ts under the spell of the blue eyes. He forV gave her. But he protested that he had not the power to stay her sentence. There was but one chance if she would marry , him, if she would become the wife of a blood relative of Kaiser Wllhelm, not even Prussian militarism might touch her. And he, the Baron a noble and a gentleman he would agree that the marriage should be no more than a marriage of form. He would give her a divorce whenever she asked it. And so, crouched In the lion's cage iri the heart of Berlin, with a sollder's bayonet but a few feet away, with the groom clasp lng her hand through the steel bars, .with a minister standing in the graveled walk. Fern Andrews, of Watseka, Illinois, be came the bride of Baron von Weichs, scion of the house ot Hohenzollern. The marriage was announced to ' the Kaiser. It was the "All Highest' himself who ordered her release, conditional on the promise that she would remain a neutral. And Fern Andrews kept her promise. All through the war, while she was interned In Germany, she lifted neither voice nor 0 hand either tor or against that 'country. And until Sfter the armistice she remained the Baron's wits in name. So long aa she was Baroness von Weichs she wsi a Ger man citizen And entitled to the protection of the Prussian empire. It she had dW . voroed him, if she had become little Fern Andrews again, the first night might hare seen the police battering ather door -her v arrest, her retrial on the old charge, her conviction and her execution by the marks men she had foiled. Bat once the war was over Fern An drews. Baroness yon Weichs, asked the Baron for her freedom. And the Baron kept his word. A divorce was granted, the took the name of Fern Andrea, she went Into pictures. America has heard ot her more than once since then, though she never has returned to this country. Back la Watseka, the people who knew her as a tow-headed tonv boy, have, gazed in admiration at pictures ot Fern Andrea, dare-devil of the screen. And they recognized in this new star the same little girl who used to "skin the cat In the barn on the Andrews farm. Then came a cable. . Fern Andrea, It wsa reported from Berlin, was killed in an awl plane crash on the Fourth of July while flying with Baron von Richtofen, a brother of the famous German "ace." It appeared that destiny had written a tragic climax to Fern Andrews career. Then came the cheerful contradiction. t Before that, however. Bird Mfilraan con sented to an Interview and revealed, for the first time, bow Fern Andrews, farmer's daughter, became a "lion's cage bride" Lei cheat a firing sauad, - ' . A i