OCR Text |
Show Murray Eale, Murray, Utah fine eyes; he bowed them to the doors, their eyeglasses quivered. He was likely, on their departure, to crumple their carefully worded notice and throw it on the floor. Sabra, though she made short work of the visiting Venuses nnd ran their notice nnd, If necessary, carefully rewrote it. would A 'mighty !" he "God groan nt noonday dinner. "The olllce wus full of Venuses this Like a swarm of overmorning. stuffed locusts." Sabra was nt the bead cf many of these Ucltermetit movements. Also If there could be said to he anything so formal as society In Osage, Subra Cravat was the lender of It. She was the first to electrify the ladles of the Twentletti Century Culture club by serving thorn Waldorf salad that abominable mixture of apple cubes, chopped nuts, whipped cream, and mayonnaise. Tlie club fell upon It with Utile cries irtid murmurs. Thereafter It was served nt club meetings until O.sage husbands, returning home to supper after a day's work, nnd being offered this salvage from the feast, would pusi It aside with masculine contempt for Its contents and rour, "I can't eat this stuff. Fix me some bacon and eggs." From this culinary and social triumph Subra proceeded to pineapsalad, the ple and niarshmallovv recipe for which had been sent her by Donna In the Kast. Its Indirect effects were fatal. When It again became her turn to act as hostess to the members of the club she made her preparations for the afternoon meeting, held at the grisly hour of half past two. Itefrcshmeuts were Invariably served at four. With all arrangements ninde, she was confronted by Kuby I'.ig Klk with the astounding statement that this was a great Indian festival day (September, and the com dances were on) and Hint she must go to the reservation In time for the Mescal ceremony. "You can't go," said Sabra, flatly. Mldduy dinner wns over. Yancey had returned to the olllce. Clm was lounging In the hnmmock on the porch. For answer Kuby turned and walked with her stutely. irritating step Into her own rc tn Just off the kitchen and closed the door. "Well," shouted Sabra In the tones of Felice Venable herself, "If you do go you needn't come back." She marched out to the front porch, where the sight of the lounging (Tin only aggravated her annoyance. "This ends It. That girl has got to leave." "What girl?" "Kuby. Twenty women this afternoon, and she says she's going to the reservation. They'll be here nt half past two." It was rather Incoherent, but Clm. surprisingly enough, seemed to understand. "I'.ut sf!o told you n month ago." "Told me what? How do you know?" "I'.ecanse she told me she told Von. ever so long ago." "Maybe she did. She never it again. I can't be expected to remember every time the Indians told have one of the powwows. her she couldn't go. She's In there getting ready. Well, this ends It. She needn't come buck." She flounced out of the kitchen. There stood a mild mannered young Indian girl unknown to her. "What do you want?" "1 nm here." the girl answered, composedly, "to t.ike Ituby I'.ig F.Ik's place this nfiernoon. I am Cherokee. She told me to come." She plucked Kuby'S blue and while chocked gingham kitchen apron off the book behind the Joor ami tied It around her waist. "Well!" gasped Sabra. relieved, but still angry. Through the kitchen window she saw Cim hitching up Ihe two pinto to the racy littlo yellow phaeton that Yancey had bought. She must run out nnd tell him before be left, lie bad She was glad be was clearing out. She liked having the inen folk out of the way when afternoon company was due. d.ior opened. The girl Kuby' Ib-came out. appearance was She wore h dress of nmur.tng. white doeskin banging straight from shoulders to ankles, and n soft nnd pliable a velvet. The hem wn fringed. Front sleeves, collar In an Intricate were finely hcob-pattern that was none like etn broidery than bcadit g. On tier feel were i easin in ivory white nnd lis evuuisitely bended as the dross It was the r..he t a prim-ess- , er dark Indian eyes were nllve. lcr seemed to e,o.y In contrast with the garment. The girl wns, for the moment. a'i'iovt beautiful, "Hello. Therr:i Jump. . . , Tbi I Thercs i Jump She ,,i my work th;s i.,v. I have told tier. I will be bok (..morrow morning" She Walked slowly out of Hie house .y vvay of the kllchin r he yard with ber ..v n ioros soled dragging slip A s'ati of suspicion cut Sabra She flew (. ward the barn Clm drove out ',l H e phaeton it ii. I p'titos lie i tin. In. ban woman In her white d'S'sl iu dto IPs shone, ruorumus lie fled bis bend ns though to servant sent from Kansas. She ran the paper alone, as she wished It run. She ordered the house as she wished It. She very nearly run the town of Osage. She was a power In And Yancey was the territory. gone. Sabra bad refused to compromise with life, and life had taken matters out of ber hands. Donna was away at an eastern school Miss Dlgnum'g finishing on the Hudson. Yancey had op- posed that, of course. It had been Subra s uiea to senu uonnu eusi to sehooi. "Kast?" Yancey had said. "Kansas City?" "Certainly not." tnuctvpott "Oh Chicago." "I menn New York." utii-atioi- v "You're crazy." "I don't expect yon to approve. I suppose you'd like ber to go to nn Indian school. Donna's an unusual girl. She's not a beauty nnd never will be, but she's brilliant, byy Irwlt Myors ' W.AJ.U " DE.ri.vicE. CHAPTER X Continued 1- 6Sabra built a white frame house in the style of tlie day, with turrets, towers, minarets, cupolas, find scroll work. There was a stained glass window In the hull. In purple and red and green and yellow, whirl), confronting the entering caller, gave him the look of being suddenly stricken with bubonic plague. There were parlor, sitting room, dining room, kitchen on the flrnt flour; four bedrooms on the second floor, nnd a bathroom, bathtub, actually, with n a toilet,, and n marble withstand with varicose veins. In the cellar there was a hot nlr furnace. "As long as we're, building nnd furnishing, " Sabrn said, "It might as well be the best," She had gone about planning the house, nnd furnishing It, with her customary energy und capability. With It all she found time to do her work on the Wigwam for without her the paper would hnve been run to the ground in six months. Osage bad long since ceased to consider It queer that she, a woman, and the wife of one of Its most prominent citizens, should go to work every morning like a man. Subra, In common with the other housewives of the community, employed an Indian girl as a house servant. There was no other kind of help available. After her hideous experience with Arita she had been careful to get Indian girls older, more settled, though She preferred this was dlfllciilt. Osage girls. These married young, often before they had finished their Studies lit the Indian school. Ituby l!ig F.Ik bad been with Sabra now for three years. , curious, big, silent girl of about twenty-twalmost handsome one of six children n large family fur nn (sage. Sabrn was somewhat taken aback, after the girl had been with ber for some mouths, to learn that she already bud been twice mar ried. "What became of your husbands, Ituby?" "I Med." She had n manner that bordered on the Insolent. Sabra put It down to Indian dignity. When she walked she scuffed her feet ever so little, and this, for some Inexplicable reason, seemed to add Insolence to ber bearing. "Oh, do f your feet. Ituby! I hurt scudle when you walk." The girl made no reply. Went on scuttling. Subra discovered that she was lame; the left leg wns slJghtly shorter than the right. fcbe did not limp ir. rather, hiil the tendency to limp by the Irritating sliding sound. Her walk was straight, leisurely, measured. Sabra was terribly embarrassed ; apologized to the Indian girl. The girl only looked at her and said Sabrn repressed a little nothing. shUer. She bad neer got accustomed to the Indians. full-siz- well-to-d- o Ituhy's father. I'.ig Klk. bad been chief of the Os.ige tribe by election fur ten years, and though be no longer held this highest olllce, was a ninn much looked up to In the Osugo nation, lie had sent his six children nnd actually bis fat wife to the Indian sehooi, but he himself steadfastly refused to speak a word (if F.ngllsh, though be knew enough of the lnnguni.-e- . He conversed In Osage, and when necessary used tin Interpreter. It was a kind of stubborn Indian pride in blm. It was his enduring challenge to the white man, "You have not defeated me." It slowly dawned on Sabrn that young (Tin was always to be foetid lolling In the kitchen, talking to liuby. Iluby, she discovered to tier horror, was leaching (Tin Id speak Osage. A diilietilt language to the white, he seemed to hae a natural aptitude for It. Slie came upon them, their bends dose together over the kitchen table, laughing and talking nnd sinking. Hat ber. liuby I'.ig lllk wa singing a song with a curious rhvtbui. and (to Sabra's car. nt Ica-t- ) no melody. Citn was trying to follow tlie strange gutturals, slurs, nod accents, bis eyes fixed on Iluby s face. Ills own expression utterly lib gorbod, rapt. "What are you doing? What Is this?" The Indian girl's face look on Its customary expression of proud disdain. She roe. "Tench nm sotig," she said; which was ijtiecr, for she Spoke English perfectly. "Well, I tintst say. Cimarron Crn-tnt- t grandeur. Tlie use of It had become an Indian religious rite. Like a fury Sabra advanced to the table, snutched up the round button of soft green. "I'eyote!" She whirled on Clm. "What are you doing with this thing?" (Tin's eyes cast down sullenly. Ills hands In his pockets, he leaned against the wall, very limp, very bored, very Infuriating and Insolent. "Iluby was Just teaching me one of tlie Mesciil ceremony songs. Darned Interesting. It's the last song. They sing It at sunrise when they're Just about all in. (Joes like this," To Sabra's horror he began nn eerie song as he stood there leaning against the kitchen wall, his eyes half closed. "Stop HI" screamed Subra. With the gesture of a tragedy queen she motioned him out of the kitchen. He obeyed with very bad grace. Ids going more annoying, In its manner, than his staying. Sabra followed him, silently. Suddenly she realized she hated his walk, and knew why. lie walked with a queer little springing gait, on the very soles of his feet. It came over her that It always had annoyed her. She remembered that some one hud told her what 1'ete laughingly ITtchlyn, the old Indian scout, lounging on bis street corner, bad said about young (Tin: "Kvery time 1 see that young down the (Tmaron Cravat street I expect to hear a twig snap. Walks like a story hook Injun." In the privacy of the sitting room Sabra confronted her son, the bit of peyote still crushed In her hand. "So you've come to this! I'm ashamed of you !' "Come to what?" She opened her hand to show the button of pulpy green crushed In her palm. "I'eyote. A son of mine. I'd rather .:ee you (lend " "Oh, for heaven's sake, mom don't get r.ibllcal. like dad. To bear you a person would think you'd found me drugged In a Chinese opium den." "I think I'd almost rather." "It's nothing but a miserable little piece of cactus. And what was I doing but sitting In the kitchen listening to Ituby tell how ber fa- ther" "I should think n man of almost eighteen could tind something better to do than sit In a kitchen in the middle of the day talking to nn Indian girl. Where's your pride!" Cim's eyes were still cast down. He still lounged insolently, his hands In his pockets. "How about these stories you've told me all your life about the love you southerners had for your servants and how old Angle was like a second mother to you?" "They were different: They knew their place." He raised the heavy eyelids then and lifted his flue liend with the menacing look that she knew so well In bis father. "You're right. They are different. In the Hrst place, Kuby Isn't nn Indian hired girl. She Is the daughter of an Osnire chief." "Osage fiddlesticks! What of It?" "Iluby I'.ig Elk Is Ju.t as Important a person In the Osage tuition as Alice Kooscvcll Is In Wash-Ington.- "Now, listen here, Cimarron ('rival! I've beard about enough. A h't of dirty Indians! Just yu march yourself down to the Wigwam olllce, young man, and don't you ever again let me catch you talking In that disrespectful mall ner about the daughter of the Pro blent of the fulled States. And If I ever bear that you've eaten a bile of this miserable stuff" she held out ber Tin rut. shaking a little, the mescal button crushed In tier palm 'Til have your father thrush you within an Inch of our life, big as you re. As it is, he shall bear of this." I'.ut Yancey, in being told, only looked thoughtful and a little sad 'It's your own fault. Sabra. You'i.-tumishall live the that the life you've planned for Mm Instead of the one l.o wants. So he's trying to es.av Into a dream life. I. Ike the Indians. It's all the same thing." "I don't kn.nv what ..on're talkknow, ing about. I don't think either." "The Indians started to cat peyote flfier the w lilies had taken their religious nnd splrlicil ami decent physical life away from them. 'Man cannot live by bread alone.' He has got to have dream, or life Is unendurable. So the Indian turned to the peyote. lie finds peace nnd comfort and beauty In his dre.itns." A darted horrible suspicion through Sabrn. "Yancey Cravat, bain yon lie nodded bis magnificent head slowly, sa lly, "Many times. Many times." d lv When know your father Is expert ing you down nt the of lice" She stopped. Her quick eye bad leaped to the table where lay the little round pevotn dik or mescal button which Is the lunhlsli of the Indian, She had heard shout It; kt;ev how prevalent nniotiu the Indian tribes from Nebraska down to Mexico bad become the habit of rutins this little buttonlike top of a Mexican rnifn plant. In shape a disk iibont nn Inch nnd a half In CHAPTER XI diameter nnd a quarter of an Inch thbk the nicscjil or peytc gave the was nineteen. Donna fifteen. rater a strange feeling of .gbincss, CMM tiow Sabra lived quite dispelled pain nnd fallen', caused alone In the new bouse on Kihokch visions of marvelous beauty and street, except for a colored woman yii ever" that's what she Is. Iirilllant. I don't mean Intellectual. You needn't smile. I mean that she's got the ambition and the Insight anil the foresight, too, of a woman of twice her age." "I'm sorry to bear that." "I'm not. She's like mamma In many ways, only she's got Intelligence and drive. She doesn't get along with the glrls bere Maurine Turket and Gazelle Slaughter and Jewel Itiggs mid Czarina McKee, and those. She's different, They go switching up and down avenue. They'll marry one of these tobacco-chewinloafers and settle down like vegetables. Well, she won't. I'll see to that." "doing to marry her off to an eastern potentate nt fifteen?" "You wait. You'll see. She knows what she wants. She'll get It. too." "Sure It Isn't you who knows what yon want her to want?" Hut Sabra had sent her off to Miss Pignum's on a diet of prunes Paw-husk- ii N, to Her Way Thing of Thinkirg, Monstrous. Yet This niem-tinne- and prisms that even ber high old grandmother Felice Venable approved. (Tm, walking the prairies beyond Osage with th.it peculiar light step ol bis, bis eyes cast down; prowling the draws and sprawling upon the clay banks of the rivers that ran so red through the lied Man's territory, said that be wanted to be a geologist, lie spoke of the Colo ratio school cif mines. He worked In the Wigwam oltice and haled It. He could pi a case of type more quickly and completely than a drunken tramp printer. F.veti Jesse liickey. bis mournful mustache more drooping than ever, protested to Yancey, "She can't make a newspaper man out of that kid." be said. ".Vol in a million years. Newspaper men are horn, not made. (Tm, be Just naturally hates news, let alone a newspaper ollice. He was born without an arm or something. You can't grow It if you haven't got It." "I know It." said Yancev. wearily "He'll find n way out." Tor the first time a rival news paper nourished 111 Ihe town of Osage. The town Was scarcely large enough to support two d.iily ttpatters, but Yancey's political tude so often was at variance with the feeling of the territory tlclans Hint the new daily, shod and dishonest though it was. and owned body and soul by terrl torlal Interests, achieved a degree of popularity. Sahnt, unable to dictate Dip po Icy of Ihe Wigwam with Yancey lit Its head, bad to content herself with the management of Its median bid workings iiiiil wi!h its in.rias. ingly Important social nnd dub col umns. tsage swarnieil with comtlotl.es. lodges. Knight of This nnd Sisters of That. The ITiilotualhean and Ihe Twentieth Century clubs began to g.i in for Civic I'.eltermelit. nti'l no ll,ige tiler, b nit or professional man was safe from cajoljrg and unattracin shirtwaists and tive female sUrts and 'Ci ed to this or that bis name petition (with a contribution. What pier '"l feel that you can che. Mr. Hefner. f course, m a en breathe ,,vp!y. At that ). k In Ms hur business m m . f oe S.ibta ran ncro.s the jar d (hie They planted shrubs about Ihe hand was nt ,er breast ns though cinder strewn environ ef the S id an Indian nrror t ad pier, c I tn l Slid the Kiity depots 1 I ef one ha foot Iluby cream Ii agitated for the Immediate paving Wldte tooirasin on He bugry fep of t'jiwhiiikit a venuee (it wan"i j Cim held mil his 'fee hand. done) The I ndie of ti e Eastern S.ihra h .0 e t'.i in. Pamirs. Star. The Venus lodge. Sisters of "Where sre viol ColngV liehcl.iih. Daughters of the Soiilh-wct- . "I'm driving lluly out to the They mme Into ti e Wigwirn at ion " oHice With liotice i be printed about lodge suppers ami ebunh so j "No. you're not No, you're ti.il," on band in futile c,., ciahle Mrntigety enough, they i she pet on the hi! gey w i ( I. MS though Were likely to st;v longi r and tol ,y ft il for.o S!,p chut more fnely if Yancey tin ! not j to Step ber i gi.it y Sabrn wem there to them knew she tuns) t ot Subra was polite but hus.nrssM o before tics Indian w om n - hefof .n Yef fhi thlf'g W as, l, f x encountered In of lo ber own tj ,er flee hours, p.et Yancey mad hn-seley of if.ti.linf. rnoe.sir.-unn r it mstiM r n utterly rlcrniing. He nud-- r more help If tbnn be cou'd t:ei And Kuril t It It as nlnoist function., breathing With lim ft lie tnndp tt.,1 isin.it.1 II .bit gets the ,cM of t,,e men. fni bite eg d Women Maty a nan who WorVd t. cotiitootiptio-eway feel that ti'"v mere r'val-nn- d .' II rough colter I no werkln? In ductive lie lla.tered them song Wat through. Here Are Champion Man and Women, Washington, Wonn, Pa.-- Tb w Jury ln VashT ton county demonstrated tht It could be as fair , . ,nJilnu. ofMn was complaining against Joe Fabls Saulr. and button "....v.. j IlirO Af iv ' Y tJ In ln Z w . vase v S n A few minutes later Mnl Wozolck wns herself defeai nut In another case, chanSt, with violation of the 1Iq" laws. AJury of twelve wo,. en convicted the woman. 00XXOOOOOCko'J his way to the BettlementtTl v" 1 '. port to the authorities. Meanwhile the fishing Fuji Maru, Capt K. Fnji. passed within three miles of stranded party and saw their nals. Kailima swam out sampan and a member of thee?' accompanied him back to thebai" with lines ln their teeth. They t a raft to convey the nonswim?;" and the six men readied KahiKx- Dy the sampan. ' The McQuIrk family of Jopiln, Mo. that is the mother and two Actually In grown daughters, who hold the record for about 22 weeks the past five years they hnve covered r2,500 miles In this way, spanning the country from New Orleans to Canada and from Los Angeles to New Jersey. hitch-hikin- Seven Lepers Near Death at Sea cliff, which had never been scaled. Thrilling Adventure Overtakes Fishing Party. From the leper settlement at Kalaupnpa, Island of Molokal, conies a tale of heroism Involving seven men In peril at sea. the desperate rescue of one who fell overboard, and the scaling of a precipitous cliff 2.0(H) feet high by one of their number In search of aid, after the boat had beached In an almost Inaccessible spot on the rocky shore of Molokal. This was going on while air and surface vessels of the United States navy and ships and planes of the Interlsland Steam Navigation company nnd Interlsland Airways were searching for the missing men. Five men left Kulaupupa to go t sloop, tempofishing In an rarily rigged and without a keel. After they had been missing a few hours apprehension was felt at the settlement, and two other men set out In a rowboat equipped Willi a power outboard motor to search for them. Sloop Unmanageable. The sloop proved unmanageable when It encountered an unexpected strong east wind. William Kulama wus washed overboard by a heavy sen and was rescued by Henry Kavvewchl, who leaped Into the sea from the drifting boat and placed line around Kalaimi. The sloop began to leak badly. They made no headway toward Kalaupapa. Kahuna, at the helm, finally steered for the beach at Kamiinawann. and by combined luck and skill struck an Inlet through the reef about 20 feet wide, through which the bout was beached In a heavy surf. The five men, one of whom could not swim, were stranded between the raging se.i and the precipitous Laws Allows Horse One Bite, One Kick I.os Angeles, Following the old rule that a dog Is entitled to one Idle, a court here went a step further and ruled that a horse cannot be denied a single nibble, or for that matter, one kick but of dealer it the ran ashore himself through the surf carrying a small line, Intending to fasten It to driftwood to help the party aboard. On this lifeline the entire party reached the rescue boat, and Kallima, with all aboard, attempted to return to Kalaupapa. The overloaded boat filled with water and began to sink. I'unee also was unable to swim. He clung to the sinking boat whiU3 I'aul Knculall and Kallima helped Klhn, the other nonswlmmer, to Kallima then administered shore. artificial respiration to Klha while the others returned to rescue Punee. The parly remained all night on the bench without food or water. In the morning Kneualll volunteered to climb the cliff and attempt to reach the settlement overland to bring aid. After a desperate attempt he reached the top and made Hunt by Two Generations Fails; New One Begun. Halifax. N. S. While the company which Is digging Into the heart Oak island, in t.f bay, guards the secret that Its electric drills muy be disclosing nnd keeps the curious away from the Island where the lute Captain Kldd Is said to have burled boxes of treasure, another search for gold and silver Is going quietly on In the three foot walls of one of the oldest houses In Chester. On the top of a bill, the great rambling house of the Kobinson family overlooks Oak Island and Mahone bay with Its :t(u Islands. The house has an Interesting history. For somewhere in Ihe thick walls there Is said to be buried the treasure of Michael Smith, a GerMa-bo- tree-studde- Chester wasn't even village when Michael begun the erection of bis bouse. The American Civil war wns then raging and ships often put In nt Chester for shelter or provisions or to seek safety from the enemy. And mostly they came ill no peaceful mood. Armed men looted the hencoops, the NhoepfohU nnd the pigpens, and Went away with everything they could carry, so that soon the farm kicked, and lost tlie suit. Wealthy Brothers Seek) Seclusion in Monaster N. Syracuse, Y. - a im,- On ' quest Charles Hope Schentzer tf his two brothers, Paul and Willi ,; of this city, have gone to Etw t Tired of the beetle life of the 5, . social whirl of the millionaire 1 the brothers have decided to rtj' J to a monastery. $ Thirty years ago their fx ' was poleaxing cattle In tlie paet.;' yards of Chicago. A rough if chap, he had no pretensions to if ' ciety of the "boiled shirt tre' clubs. But he had ambition for hU inborn son. At the time the uifi; was born the famous Hope .' mond was ln the news, and Scnes ' son Charlei EV-nEngland to boy u .: he Intended to a "christening prs rer christened his went to stone, which rv the Infant as I ent." He failed, came bark home, a: devoted his life to his boy. Twx other sons were born, and all thrw were given the advantane of eds? cation, A few years bro he die nnd left the three boys a rom $15,000,000. I "Vni Charles f;f tea Pro sick of It t". Schentr.er says. "And are trying to buy a monastery f Europe." Seek Treasure Buried by his wcnltli. a riding stable, charging that a horse be bad rented from Martin had to bite his band. The Judge rule.) that Cold-steimust show that Martin's hurst was of a habitual vicious tialnre. The Junk dealer foiibJTt prove that the horse ft.ii) previously bitten d Rescue Boat Sinks. Kallima. realizing that one of stranded party could not swim, tities of Spanish doubloons and silver and species and who died without Indicating where he had bidden In cast off article, sought i"2."t from Frank Martin, op crator arrived about sunset and anchored about TO yards off shore, fearing to come closer In the pounding surf. man who was known to have quan- not both. Harry fbildsti ln, Kallima and Kanekoa WTIllnni Punee, In the outboard motor bont, Honolulu, Hawaii. r poll-sli- 00IKXKoJ Men Convict Hitch-Hiker- s ers got In the way Misej 4 of burying The great house of Michael Ss was well under way. The vafle ' which a company of could hnve been barracked, waiif Ing rased with slate. Its walls three feet thick. Then one n. Ing fishermen returning In their tie boats reported a sinister k&j Ing veisel nt the entrance of buy. 'hut day Michael Siuilft. wealthiest resident, discharged i workmen early. A neighbor,!: Ing from a nearby house, sat ' gleams of luntern light eM; from nn uncovered window. It led the cellar many tunes im last came to rest. Then the ous one heard the clicking I chisel against stone. Never after Hint night did tnH men or neighbors see Mitt Smith sjiend any of the gulden M from his secret hoard. And that night he lived a life of :H penurious frugality. He adopt" son, and full of years, he died, ti he never told what be had with his treasure. M The son. nnd Inter turn, fulled to locate the Now the great grandson of original Smith has taken op C hunt, more In the spirit of s mnnshlp than because he succeed where two geiieratlcW & failed lar, In t--f ," i r 111 nrr Formal Pa jama Cotum Smallest Nation Not Worried by Debts sl-l- meet-tings- , i !. ec . b.-- r lu-- 1 ! res-er- 1 t!; b'e . v I Licchemlein Untroubled by Taxe and Armi Parley. s.s-e- d n small sum to pay for a dvke to bold back the waters of the l;hi!so, but the rest of the cost of their government Is paid by the The smallest Fur.v primes of Liechtenstein, who are Washington. pcan principality, overlooked In nil among t lie largest property holders debt liegoliiitiotn becini'-It lias tin In A a matter of fact, Europe. ib I t. and omitted front all arms their properly holding In Ihe rest conference berimso no of Europe nre grcnter tbnn the i;i size Man. ling army, U prtH the of little Liechtenstein. u H.Iy country Europe In report a sntst.,ntin treasury Mirplu on Lawn nn. this in ef the fact !,,it Landing II ha no Pilot $25 Liechtenstein, fve sm;are mi!c Tuc..,, Arir- ..- nnding bis airsmaller than the Pistri. t of ColumIn Ihe yard of a sororltv bia, is. a piece of Austria about plane boue nn. making n dale with one t thirty rtiiln e.i'-- from Lake Con of Ihe gill est Alfred A. Ilurgln. s' ar.cn, on the batiks of the Chine, The K'.tMi Inhabitant pass in.,s f NsMle. aviator, ?.'... Il'ldgin Ilisis1e, it , foref.,1 their time In agricultural ..ili, . land ng. but John livvver, chief of though there I considerable wrv. police, ,h (,a((t nn(j lei d a e. much of jt it, ,.,ir!e,l b hired ,er,J the stunt was prenr A'i eric.i-- i rotten, nnTcd. He caused lludgin's nrret Liechtenstein lis been t'tider a city ordinance prohibiting ftee front wars. ItigbJ Insingularly the ,iv the pi rat hm of motor Vehicles of heavy tfooj, movement In (,,, without tnuftler, and the fiver was World war, Me remained filled f: 1. r bet ntteni,t m n The aviator wnnfed to Inke oft , nr wn from the j,.,. sorority bouse vnrd. but the Llecbtit.stein army of tnen the chief rnade hlni hnve the Jo'tir.) the AnIt!in rrmy In b.inb d otits,ie tbe rit y limits. phmo it d'pien'tjc nut," prunsii, e ta', wtli.ii I r I Fine ' assJT "II X Li J-f- rp 7'" !,, I1' ! l M hv .. 1 h Set-tlir- I'nt lie ,e. hi(tiMeuer arrhed (' l ite f.r t, b ,) rer,,e, Wilh.oif l.,v,e.. fre-- a Ci,rL Tb lotniit fit,, arte fro-- (i Wi)r-sfl.,ong ( ,rM j,n,e. p..,.,. slot ;, re ti e ntvo-- . , Plane Com raqle r, r !,.. wt;.. m, IV,. .e.eMrin i ft In the last ij ,rnrs of t ,,;,r,-I;se- a PVl)p . w,,re 1)iry Born in Steel Plant, He Labori There SI Yeart Worcester. ' e catI'-re- . f,i,ily - of nf'er fm Ma-- . a within ntrri and wire nre bad destrovedplant the In lsr,, be retired after tiDuorts service. patr-h-l- Con-bu- i ttIP firm while fr The went to work be a Hill n boy. Mber day JPart pf Now that formal fo tutiHi nre making their r"" l,:,n', known in moonlight summer opera, designers rf to It Hint they are styled subtle elegances wl'ltti the . . ... . H.e glamorous ociiuij i" of mode. In the renlin ( i. i....i. ii. ...... i rw.iiiiiiii more of Ing than the alliance Inee with velvet especially costume as here pictured Worth creation. " h ; |