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Show Murray Eaqje, Murray, Utah Boston Man Emphatic POISHT CIMARROM By Edna Ferber Ooprrtf ht XIII Continued iiiiililing s e her-wl- mis ,si Safest Method Is to Raise New Flock. s w$ d3T1-'Wtfci,- by Edna Tfrtrm. now life cut-ste- con-gros- li s Sa-br- e ? J ee. nee-t-iar- JT It Is generally conceded that the fowl tuberculosis germ Is not car ried In the eggs, and, therefore, eggs are perfectly safe to use. even though the hens laying thein are in the earlier stages of the disease. The tuberculosis germ Is one that Is quickly killed by heat, hence cooking would destroy such germs even if they were present. We doubt If It Is advisable to keep a flock of hens having tuber culosis to any considerable extent Avian or fowl tuberculosis affects chiefly the liver and other digestive organs. The disease Is communi cated by food or water contaminat ed by bowel discharges; hence when a large number have the dis ease, keeping the healthy looking fowls usually means perpetuation of the disease, for one by one those that have the germs In them will reach the consumptive stage and scatter more Infection. If you want to keep pullets or healthy looking young hens you should confine them to a yard that can easily be made safe by changing the top soli. Let the disinfection of the range begin nt once. There Is a tuberculin test by which the disease can be .weeded out of a flock In the course of two or three years, but unless the Hock Is a valuuhle one the better plan Is to change completely, with chicks nnd raising them on clean ground. Nebraska I i ha-ba- si. Cut Out Mm !1 r "tel g'"'l S"iits if ',; o i!ri. Mid in.i.je ;( driving i,, j Itl I,o! l ea "ti daring ti e tonsi n In. 1,11.1 wits .r.i!,l., nt r.nirt. t.o wi,.; itubti.1 sides, there the Wvutt In, r,, v l:rn in n ,.,, I l:te ef ii.r.hi.t.Hiii-try Trio y Wvitta foil Hie to m.ilvil nhoi:(. The ),,.,,. ( j,,u l to d e scrim As every rode In ira.ns i mi n.iw (I. shining roil! d l.'ai k t',.iii,s ,,f I iar. of them. ni, p.1llt.. n them in Idler of n' i. "Wyatt ii.is" Mi I.Tlng Hu ktlt'mmd nfcl thi whole of .IIM d V l. Vol) iiit od ho'l. S till k. f i!.i, n , ,. f Ccvt'fd Cresctl tt Wast Piainti ! Vy fc'in In." r .lr,i s s rr , ..- i.llt,! g ,OIiv- w n Ionise lit nil. toil n com. .i.nt s1il raihi-rare In 'shiln-i-- i. (en it;.. of I f Ver-- i fof the B in of 's;l-- it vi, is ti nk.-!- i ,ii r nr.. tie I d d ',i At tie bni ! May flow r. r i'i Niw etli I' I I Sivin In S.ihr.i Ctnvi,t . it. i.i1 t , i.,tir whet, e ih, hv p hi wi s r'i'ie. ,n of i.cm! rg. (".d ,1.1 the gli-- li Slid from whl, h they t r; it In rx emu birmi phiin. ill been ilijile S,d ig.ir gle:i II,. 1,s,.gt,t front j over S.tbta eu (fifid trimc.j j lull,). hjini) .r,.t,.t, the A t.f avtlint., pinole, j thnlrtinn of the rutiimHTrn mi Kr rims, Iti'e led op to the tu.insjon, nnd .snSetOl l lS ;i ( j;,,) enh rim, lumg! t, rii!i,ii.-.lt,.,,. pair- - hizitigly. 'ie t lit the croiiii! h d rest ff Veil i" e. we're !riit't teen luilidi-ry il..t;ir. Wr Tide me i() f n,i i' ,,,, pin vino ,n ti r ram i' ii is. f,,rte. files, Bn " i i, , tocfv lotirts. if ,o,t f ohK "Will. ,,re." mht (t , sWir-idnrue aitdro',1, fwsldier. cuiially. 'Th il s nil f cl,t Wb-t- o ."elfeirich ,) rooms h id ti-- iff nii(rrni, rp1,lii (o I g-- f..r,f I - walled." Tlic li jr llennt.tre en company's broiogi-- lalhrimii fn-- wore n l inme. rler(te boVS lithe. .i low i il v..i .os,. "IcohS thiliUV she ,. .."' -- iiiiri:i-- i! !..." Ui A nt h' 1! I v. to ,w laieli ks lie .it Ike loot i i Bnly. it I 1..vi kol.m. I i I i soil. t !,;d. v hen :,. HI fo i i In ym - ii,.iyh,e. ll'tle' cvrs they'rn not !' ' i f s li.tt Mule." You're rr,t?v li s h,im! Of a I.IH.fc mrse In rahl-iets- . thi IIS is were -- t ii. gets the pick of the Christmij cards. Already youi dealer has a complete stock. From his wide range you can choose just the right card for as each friend on your list. So shop early and mail It helps put wings on cheerfulness! 8 il tuj. B urgoyn e a CHRISTMAS CARDS YOUR LOCAL DEALERS CARRY THEM According to the poultry depart ment of the New York State College of Agriculture, feed Is about of the cost of keeping a ben, !0 pounds being required per year f- -r slightly better than overage production, hurlng the past 11 years the number of eggs per hen to pay for her cost of feed has ranged from 4S to '2 per year, avone-hal- Jewelers in Constant Warfare on the Crook Other lines of business which suf fer from holdups and sneak thievery might find It profitable to study the methods by which 4,.VK Jewelry con cerns, banded together In the Jewel ers' Security Alliance of the United Kfates, are making the operations of Jewelry crooks steadily more danger ous and less profitable. The crooks have many tricks. For example, there Is the fruit eater. If the Jeweler does not watch him carefully, he will press a stone or ring Into an apple core or a siiueered orange nnd throw the fruit Into the street for his accomplice to pick un, The gum chewer substitute a false stone for a real one and atlcks the latter, by means of gum, under the edge of the counter until be gets a chance to remove It without being discovered. The umbrella cnrrler drops valuable articles Into the um brella and so on. The alliance keeps Its member In formed about these devices, and methods for circumventing them. As a result, the rnlue of Jewelry stolen from members during 10.10 ns kept down to about ?lll.noo. which Is surely a remarkable showing. Just recently Ihe Jewelry crooks have turned kidnaper. They go early In Ihe morning to the home of a Jeweler, stick a gun In Ids ribs, force him to their car and take bltn to Ida store, where be Is made to open Ihe safe and g've up whatever articles the robbers want. This Irlck Is new, but the alliance has already developed a most Ingenious way to meet It, The crooks are smart, but the alliance exjierts appear to be Just a shade smarter. Frank A. Kail, In the Outlook an Indejiendent, f !'J. In l'.i.'!0, It Oil eraging required eggs per hen nnnually to pay her costs. About ten dozen are required per bird to pay the entire feed Cost. On this basis you can easily estimate what your own flock Is doing As with the dairy So with the poultry, this is the year to weed out the not) producers mercilessly. Fortunately, the ratio between feed and eggs Is relatively good, so that If you do cull closely and then exercise more than usual care your poultry business may come through fairly well during the next year. American Agriculturist. Watch Flock's Condition Fowls handled fretheir true condition. nre disturbed They bast by doing this at night after Hey have gone In roost. If loo fit, reduce the fiiil nnd Increase the amount of bran. If results tre still (MMir. Increase the amount of animal feed, such as meat, scraps, etc. Hens with too much fat are not In good laying condition bemuse the fat prevent the egg front passing through the egg duct It takes some experience In handling to detect the "pink of condition In a laying ben. but It I a knack that can be easily acquired, quently should be If one Is to Irnow To Cool Eggs , Adaptation of the old fashioned Iceles ctioler 10 the riMIng tif gg Is reported a having been tried successfully by I'rof. J, K. I Niilgh-ertof the poultry husbandry division, l"nlveriiy of California. . . r .,1 Date ; w of success tutr W 1 made from the National Ckk society's expedition Into ttfcrf,"u' Reports f' r,pr west, which Is endeavorinj to hi date definitely of a remote tfS tlon which undoubtedly Wf4 Lis being done by a etady of tl s' rings as found In some tlateif the ancient structures. Thiiti; will enable the scientists to fha riAl-ln.- ! "Ji ft .r, - nmnliT inJ Je - developed civilization of ClwO(' yon produced the Beaotifal Tt (Pueblo r.onito), a comniucil J , Inn of some 2)Nl pespl. before the white man let tot f American soil. The mem!s civilization which rivaled the ancient Old worla cu!::iSs which the Ilonltans appsmi'JjU,. nothing, have already to Washington from year ti f Hut always there was tli qtietIon, "How old are tbejrj minute study and comiiarliooK. rings of the timbers onnM(i old trees and slumps of tbe It Is hoped to arrive at s terj e rate (late, 7nrt .'km fV.v tki i . t. !. f; Eitrtma la Ariwu Almost any sort of sreatber sr. found within Arlzons. Seven: r. In recent months both the t low record marks for U i States were In Ariwm. Fw the maximum temperature t em Arlitona esceeils minimum of the northern regions Is In the twenties. ... t . . A s. f'-- r Tr, Waterf.n At tka rih Too mtiht not water." -Is It your water i 4 fir f here. IK ( t up show- - - J It k S " 1 t' r MM 'in " v,..i., nini'.i.M ft!l,.l Ik tr. ..Vi !t b Then 1 will water from above arrives a1, Stockholm Vart Hem. . chief to your nose i:ke Iw' yon are In love. t J T. J I titidinnfi I've gn a code Id by "Mt finder Magsitine. Vlctlm-Ix- ive - i J 1 watch your Mm BOWELS should wnmen do to keep their howrls moving freely? A doctor should know the annwcr. That Is why pure Synip lepin is so Rood (or women. It just suit their dclicata orc.ini.sm. It is the prescription of an old family doctor who has treated thousands of women patients, and who msslo apecul study of troubles. U It line for children, too. They love its taste. ihrm have it every time thnr tnngnm ore coated or their skin is sallow. Dr. Caldwell's Svmn rcpio is rnsda from freh U.tiliva Biip ( Ci Wat WOMEN: Bent Civiliw -- I JVfcst i ai in Ml :!! bod ! It betbs, pure j 1ca t f:it, are a sick headache. lulintis or slurtfish: and at the timo ahrn von are mnt apt to In constipate !, lake a little of this famous prenrripliori (a! rlnw tores il fady in InR Nl Ileal, and you'll know ay Dr. Caldwell' tSvrup rcrwm Is the lnvotilo laJuUva u over a million women! kp na. W. B. CAltmiu't a ; ' SVRUP PEPSIN A m perm and tbcr harm itiRrciiirtits. When you've Can An pet weighing five nimrea wna exhibited In Canton. Kaa by O. O. Weaver; It was laid by a Huff or tdngton ben. and was Inche asunit "the long a ay. Tree Rings to Fix of Remote "No" : y ' li Thb early shopper and Save Cost of Feed f- V Christmas Cards! ii n r ill. e ihirii a tie war f. tie In he A'nei 1. an nnd the Fngll.li bitti so be bad rniues I, iid r dvi-.bi tntyii.j Mir p.. I nhoiit bi. n,.i. tiiti."e b;ik l.i "il nm a tilft ltd h..rhteT. mi,) poiochow, I tri hi Voire. hm, U. or a ro. i 'cm; ,. t.f ad lb. e, bad lyi iiot rrd ihem Into tat Imj tiini. An nt-ielrrjM.rt bil l liMed til Ut wiiiong ii.p tnissitiit nder tlie r:tr. '"ge l ad ii tised til the hiimble Wlio-lIhlll t -- d I ci ti ) l!i,(,.nt i it Hi d 1h" Atg-n- ie ' He ih ml," S.il.f i had nh. ale -- nt nn.-c"When Berlin Buyt Paper t'mHretl.t rnv,i1 ilios be'! p on fr,,,' . n, ti e ,,,1. .M When It m li In pfi;o, J.r,v Joii cat But a jenr c,,t. drop a eo jii in a mid K t a p4. The Ohi il ..,,n Wigwaiii j. tow Is per litnhfilht Willi .l,,t a wiHideu luinoie. u. d a I'l-g will ns nn afler s'appcr W e k!y. 'I for is i (',! ,cr mother. S i' ra b d rcpl Willi vigor. ' Not at nil. Your ,1 The First Thing to Shop ' beautiful iix r are , . ." l! hi.) ln-five years since S.I bts l.ad beard news of her bus-bui'he.t for 1, Y iii.ey Cr.iv.it. And tmw. the Ps tit,. hn f,,( IM, (, ,.,, never Wis tired Ihongli I this !'i In npitn of ,u years y I k V'i ' e b o hi ar l tt nl Yatu ey dad a ill. w. a!f H.e 'Pie om,-ihji- thm-vaii- lill.S. "Th life. I!.ied ii!o re of the hi. Il ,....-- s Non-Produce- rs To limine the burlap covering nf the runlet I kept damp, water Is fed Id If by water luhlng from a qm-- i oil reservoir on top. the supply of waI'oinii mid Tracy Wvatt . i.il l.iir a train In which they ter to which Is rcgulutrd by a flout pi k t f v eastern potentate on n valve Cop(er sulphate la Introlour of l.ihoimi. line vague and duced Into the water to stay the hot very htight Washington matron, destructive elTeii of mildew on the i f i i at social prestige. mpfrssiij burlnp. with what file saw, Voh-eher opln- ' I'. n to yoiicg Viiiicev Cravat, nulte Cotlfn.f-,, t,( din Identity nd POULTRY FACTS sieit a i.iily an Attractive and very haiiisiit;ii. young nude seated beChlicu need nt lcni four square side her at ,1 country rluh luncheon, ieet per bird In small houes. "I lad In Idea Oklahoma Wn like this, I thought It was nil oil It la clnlnied that A hen a egg and diriy Indians. "There I quite a bd of oil, but rc,uh maximum sire during her we're not n! dirty." eecond j ear's lav Ins. "We?'' a "l in n Indian" Wiring the dropping board In tV I K rtiNTlNCttt) I the ben houe not only helps to control worm Infestation but keepa WorJ Hat Many Mtanlnfi The Chin word fer blessing or eg? rlcHtier. l'r"",nticei "fu." mid jfi"",JJl"'k ion i iniiii. r narier fV;pre.iig I"gg should be t ut In rrntea with Is a favorite one with the Cblm-si- ' he large rnd up In order to pre-r i pie emhrolderifia on linen tu t incusing the if rrll whrn or bavitig pjaii-- , on ti,n wMn ( tie are being hauled to martheir b.-- io s. It should be tinrne ket. rgr in miol tint tit. wind "fu" ninins blessing t.my ,), w,ii(, n ,),, Flinty ef yellow rorn n l creen ny. Thein me tloet, of rhurue. t feed answers the question of h name proiiuticlii " naviiig Inm. all written tlifferentlt nmt hut put Jeltow legs en Cockerel fur Ing uttitly difTi'tfiif nienuitigs. nmrkeiltig. It is a nialter if .lg W Hshliicfi ti S'.ar. incntnticn. tun-the- a Farmer. j the WaiM rained s, "" W.VU Sorvic hat-les- Based on years of life In the Far West among the Indians and kin pmI oH unlil .11 l Cyrus Dallln, a Boston sculptor, who has made a reputation for his "Mt, JT; wrinkle Indian studies, recently delivered an address In which he scored the cowboys and entered a plea of defense for the Indian. According to the Incidents of Inters u. il.... ,rlamK Ot speaker, the Indian has never been nlonn treated fairly by the whites of this off of the buffaloes country. If they had been, he says, btow to the Indian, there would never have been the con- death of every buffalo wajZi flicts which have taken place and death of the Indian, - "JH red man was not a "bloodthir!, ? which are blots on the white race. Mr. Dallln described early buffalo age," but "a gentleman witkiS game laws, the mull delivery system and majesty of bearlne JL Vamong wagon trains and many other ticed cow-hoy- BEST TO ".CUT OUT" TUBERCULOUS HENS noon edition iiml wab Known as e'TUpleil un entire unit sunken talis ot rare marble, most powerful newspaper In the enclosed. and balhs 21 shower was block und fifteen stories glass sipiare These bathrooms were the size of the Soul h west. When Sahra was winand high. In the huge plate-glasWhite ' servants Pinner. a practice of negro servants to wait on them. A dows on I'uwhuska avenue postured bedrooms, and the bedrooms the In town she tomade at eleven office the down the and size driving of ballrooms, waxen and coquettish, as on Jong table seating a score or more, ladies as big as an auditorium. every night, remaining there for a in J many sue!) tallies. Bowls anil fifth avenue. The daughter of Mrs. Tat Leary There was an Ice plant and cooling an hour looking over the layout, plates piled with food ,.11 down the wet galley proof of the lenjith of It. I'iles of pork, roasted (nee Crook Ncie) always caused system that could chill the air of reading the Mie A. In Indian fashion over hot embers 'quite a flutter when she came In, every room In the house, even on night's news lead, scanning In the miik In a pit In the yard, and tor accustomed though Osage was t lie "hottest Oklahoma windy day I. wires. Mer entrance wim skewered with a sharp pointed to money and the spending of It, The kitchen range looked like a nature of the passage of royalty, stick. Bowls of dried corn. Great the Beurys' lavishness was some- house In Itself, and the kitchen and when she came into the city saluted. silk looked like that of the Biltmnre, room the staff nil but fat, black ripe olives. Tini.ed lob- thing spectacular. Hand-madster. Chicken. I'iles of dead ripe underwear, the sheerest of cobweb only larger. When you entered the True, she wasn't there very much, when constrawberries. Vast plateaus of an- French model lints, dining room yon fell that here except In the sun'.ner, stockings, gel food cake covered wltb snow dresses well, In the matter of should be seated solemn diplomats gress was not in session. The sight of a woman on the fields of Icing. gowns It was no good trying to In- In gold braid signing world treaties Snhra went through the motions fluence Maude I.eary or her moth- and having their portraits painted floor of the congressional house of en ling. Sometimes she put a er. They frankly wanted beads, doing It. Sixty gardeners manned was still something of a novelty. morsel Inio her mouth and actually spangles, anil paillettes on a foun the grounds. The house servants Sentimental America had shrunk from the thought of women In acswallowed It. There was a great dation of crude color. The sales- would have peopled a village. Sahra Cravat rarely came to visit tive politics. Woman's place was clatter of knives and forks and women were polite and acquiescent, dishes. Everything was eaten out but they cocked an eyebrow at one her daughter's house, and when she In the home, and American womof one plate. Platters and bowls another. Squaw stuff. Now that did the very simplicity of her slim anhood was too exquisite a flower f were replenished. Knhra found Utle Cravat girl Felice Cravat, Ci- straight little figure In Its dark to be subjected to the harsh atmossealed beside Mrs. Big Klk. marron Cravat's daughter was difphere of the assembly floor and the committee room. On her other side was Yancey, He ferent. She Insisted on plain, was ealing ami laughing and talk smart tailored things. Sahrn stumped the state and deOklahoma veloped u surprising gift of oraing. Mrs. Big Klk was being almost state woman tennis champion. She She always said she looked a freak In tory. comically polite, solicitous. Perhaps it was not altogether pressed this tidbit, that dainty, on fluffy things like a boy dressed hor stony guest. what she said that counted In her up In girl's clothes. She' had long, favor. Her appearance must have lovn the center of the tahle, at lean, muscular nrms and a surprishad soiiiethii.g to do with it. A Intervals, were huge bowls piled ing breadth of shoulder, was slim with a sort of pastry at lifted with Hanked and practically stomachless. .slim, straight, dignilied woman, yet Her voice forcemeat. It was like fl great She bad a curious trick of holding touchingly feminine. Her white not loud, but clear. ravioli, and piles of It vanished be- her head down and looking up at neath the onslaught of appreciative you under her lashes and when she hair was shingled and beautifully waved and beneath this her soft did that you forgot her boyishness, finest s. "For Clod's sake, pretend to rat for her lashes were like fern dark eyes took on an added depth and brilliance. Her eyebrows bad something, Sahra," Yancey mur- fronds, and her eyes. In her dark mured, under Ids breath, 'it's done face, un astounding ocean gray. remained black ami thick, si ill now. They consider It an Insult. She was a good sport, too. She further enhancing her finest fea didn't seem to mind the fact that ture. Her dress was always dark, Try to eat something." She stirred the becoming, smart, and her silken anpastry and her mother, when she accompanied kles above the slim slippers with chopped meat that had been put her, wore the blanket and was on her plate. buckles were those their Jyst like any poor Kaw. In"Cood." said Mrs. Big B!k, be- stead of being one of the richest of a young girl. The aristocratic side her, and pointed at the mass of the Usages. She whs rather Marey feet and ankles. with one dusky maculate linger. In Washington she was quite a handsome for a squaw, in a big. Ins Sahra lifted her fork to her Hps Solent, slow moving way, Felice belle among the old boys In and swallowed u bit of It. It was Cravat, every one agreed, was a and even the senate. The tendinis spicy, rich, appetizing. chip of the old block, Mild bv that opposition parly tried to blackmail "Yes," she said, and thou .'ht. I am they did not mean her father. They her wiih publicity about certain unA Chip of the Old Clock. This Is killing were thinking of Yancey Cravat-o- ld being wonderful. proved items in the life of her dead Yes. it N very good. This trie. Cimarron, her grandfather, who (or missing) husband. Yancey CraMeat this snitling Is it chopped was now something of a legend In blue georgette or black crepe was vat: a two-guman, n desperado, In the midst of these mar startling or ground through a grinder'" a killer, a drunkard, a squaw man. Osage and throughout Oklahoma. e huge Indian woman beside Young CI in mid bis Osage wife had hie columns and vast corridors and Then they started on young Clin She d'd come ocher turned her evprossioiili-sgaze hail a second child - a boy ami royal hangings and his Osage Indian wife, but on Si'hra. Ponderously she shook they had called him Yancey, afler casionally, and on those occasions and I'oima were too quick fur in found the her central ileal her head from side to side In ne- the old boy. Young Yancev was n you l hem. was a iike throne hew ihlerlngly handsome mixture of apartment that gation. Ii. una Wyatt leased a handsome "Naw." she answered, politely. n doen types nnd forbears In room, standing there bet'ore the house in Impotil circle, staffed It, H 'hawed." tlian. Spanish. Flench, Southern. portraits of her son's two children. brought Tracy Wyatt's vast wealth The chiller of n fork dropped to Southwest. With that long narrow Felice and Yancey Cr:n:t. Failing and itiliuelire to hear, and planned the piate, a cla-- h among the rups face, the dolichocephalic head, peo- to possess either of the children a coup so brilliant that it routed ml saucers. Sabru Cravat had ple said he looked like the king of for her ow n, !oima i n bad ihein the enemy forever. She brought painted and hung there, one either her handsome, fainted. Spain without that dreadful Hans-bur- side brother eyed sletiy enormous She the of Cim ntiil Ids wife Buby Big F!k, jaw. Others said he was the had meant thorn to lircplnce. a gift to be Osage, Okl.1., was a city. of bis Sahra Image and the youngsters Felice and Yangrandmother. Where, scarcely two decades ago, Cravat. Still others contended that her mother, but Sahrn Cravat had cey to the house in luipont circle, refused like to them. mid had niet eve the he was his Indian mother over sky prairie and together she and Sahra gave a "I'on't you like then). Sahra dar with here a buffalo wallow, there again Insolence and nit. A third reception for them t.. which they an Indian encampment, They're the het things Invited a group so precious that it you now would come along and say, "You're ling? saw a twenty story hotel: the Sa- crii'.y. lie's old Yancey, born again Is it Segovia lias ever done. actually came. voy Bixhy. The Italian head waiter I guess you don't remember him. they're modern? I think they Sahra ami Ionii!i. exquisitely -bent from the waist and murmured There, look, that's what I mean! look iike the kids don't you'" dressed, si I In line nt the head In your ear Ids secret about the The way be closes Ms Just wonderful." "They're eyes as If of the magnificent room, r.m beveal saute with mushrooms or the he were sleepy, and then when he "Well, then';" tween I hem stood Buby Big Clk a riii build for to bouse "I'd have Caruso Sahra Jour. spaghetti does look at you straight you feel In Lit dress of creamy while doeHi con in Would them. the look woman iw from (U.i as If you'd been struck by lightCravat, irress they skin all embroidered In beads from Kihe-kahhma, lunching In the I.mils XIV ning. They say he's so smart that sitting room of the house on room with the members of the the Osi.gcH believe he's one of their No, let me come here and shoulder to hem. She was un lue , Women's State liepubliciin con. look nt t now and then. That pos.ng btiire. massive but not of. old gods come bark to earth.' o fresh would say, looking up nt him sur- feiisivfly f.,t ns wire rtianv of th way always they're Mrs. Tracy Wyatt (shf who had Osage wom..n. nnd her bla.'k abut)-d.m- i with me." those to dark Intelligent been I'oniui Cravat) hid tried to prise -hair had taken on a mist of I'll leave It t oii. Nick, oidv one of her brother's children, they were rather stir gray. Certainly adopt quickly. We Imven't iiitieh time." being herself childless, but Ciin prising, those Bather, portraits. "My d.ii'rhter In law. Mrs. CimarNbvolo Miurarlnl would say yes. atid his wife was, Segovia bad pot ron :iu bad one of t i 1'iiLy Big Cravat, of the Osage Indian he understood. No one bad much Utile well Felice he but lictcr consented to this, she was enough, tribe." time In Osage, OWa. had made a case, that Itotum Cravat, Oklathe mistake of pilntilig "My son's wife, Buby Big Klk Twenty live years earlier any. homa was agreed about that. She her In Spanish costume, mid vouio-ho- Mrs. Cimarron Cravat.'1 body who was anybody In Okla"ould git away with things that her angular contours and hoy homa bad diluted on bis or her "My sisterdt, .,w, Mrs, Cimarmi!d be sli"t Ish frame bad led lent theiosctves iii)y oilier woman a tern connect ions. Iow a, If for. When old Tracy Wyatt had to these gorgeous lace and satin ron Cravat. A full blooded Osage was Kast. Indian. . . . divorced bis wife l marry this trapping. The boy, Yimcey. bad think so. ton." Yes, indeed. We They bad been n llltte ashntned girl local refuse.! to iln- - up for i he occahad been feeling very of the Itun. Bragged about (ho much And. "How do y.itt do?" s,tJ her. Kwrv one had sion - li id. Indeed. Ii'n Inpatient Bi by. in her calm. Insolent splendor of the home from which turned against of posing nt all. way. to the had abandoned middle Segovia tliey binl ronie. For the beiielit of thosi who had hi-quickly mi l bi ilhantly, Now It was considered the height n.'i'd wife with atteliliolis and sym- caught ""I been able to encompass qu,!e li wore n but she had lint their wllh startling cif rh!r to be fible to cay that your pathy, warmth und fr'ett.liini s, w;i)i u, n pair of loose, nther grimy while the Boh. in Woman In tier native come bad In a parents through tennis p.iiits. a white woolly sweat dress Bui.y'n next iridic Appear-mic- e Ml back in coere nagoti. Cr.mdi nreiits were vitrioland that Heycame was made In a Burls gown of to l.i eve t!i" cr with n hole in th rlhow. am finally In ;n r g' t band -- while. She tuvame the rage, was was hatlrss. stories of bow she i l dcvile, un. nnd left plcinres.pio, nagged old Tiny ail through their that slim. lull. considered W ashington in disgust. ,er work be In id N bi.il. ..i!f smoked tiiatnage. They actually ...imp .i fill tii.it he h.ol been jusutVd in rig;ir. tie. Its blue gtny smoke done. No one but her loved with n dogl.ke deserting her niid taking to wife Handing f it tit, us dull red whom devotion, .on. have Induced, her CiU joui'g eve tie nhly fi,.v of color ntid f,i. lifting pt', Yet tVrlninlv be sci iied In t il e n iiew the i'iitiiie. tho w ioe ,lo g.t ll.totigli this ceremony. lease .11 ,fe. los (Ue Inches ar"ii;i I I'l'urin n, is co,iri",i, mm irg. ahve, lie opposition retired, CHAPTER r.lercoli7Prii' Keeps SkinYi in Defense of Indians Doctori famifjf laxative Your Salt Lk fw ? Headquarter! feJet . itii r.co -- t .s.. .i Iht rira jteibiinin' if tHnhtri''ll'rt" "ij,, trMxhm. 4oo mow e; -- II m 14 aiaala. Uft , houi Mar. W.N.U,VlltLal.CHy.N1 I. J. NEWHOUSJ, Otal 'A: "7Li Ih.l ""i- - .4 1 . , ih1 Y I |