Germans, and soon drove them back beyond the Hun lines, though perhaps not before the enemy aviators had made the observations desired.
"Well, they didn't see much," remarked Jack. "As far as any real damage was done to Paris it doesn't count, from a military stand-point."
"No, you're right," agreed Tom. "Of course they have killed some noncombatants, but that seems to be the Boche's principal form of amusement. As for getting any nearer to the capture of Paris this way, he might as well throw beans at the pyramids. It's probably done for the moral, or immoral, effect."
And this seemed to be the view taken of it by the Paris and London papers. The method of bombardment, however, remained a mystery, and a baffling one. This was a point the military authorities wished to clear up. To that end it was much to be desired that fragments of the shell should be found. And to find them, if possible, a careful search was made, not only in the ruins of the Rue Lafayette, but at the other two places where the explosions had occurred.
In no place, however, was a large enough fragment found to justify any conclusive theories, and the Parisians were forced to wait