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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JANUARY 18, 1925—PAR Elephant in Panic, Poised on Cliff, Nearly Brings Death to Rider Iy Dread Sloth Bear and Wild Boar Two of India’s Most Savage Animals T Repeatedly Col. Faunthorpa has ‘| gets on the elephants’ nerves to such counterfeit to decompose considerably absolutely cleared these jungles of met the charges of jungis beasts extent that they sometimes run (hoping thus to avold a close exam- | every living znimal. No doubt many and has saved Limself virtually |awey ination) and produce the faked-up |deer left the locality, but the pack by inches. He is known through- 1 once was geing on a pad ele- jackal as a young wolf. Careful exam- | must have killed a great number of out the British possessions as an | phant over some broken hill country ination of the teeth, of course, dis- |deer. After that ti turned their expert marksman E daring above a deep river bed with precipit- ’ closes the fraud to any one ho |attention to cattle and were reported hunter, and was captain of the |ous banks, and saw a bear in some has ever compared the skulls of a |to have killed forty ¥ fifty, They English rifle team for moving high gras: In order to get a shot, jackal and a wolf. then entirely disappeared targets in the 1924 Olymple |1 had to kneel on the pad, as the The Indian hyena is generally con- | The fact that wild dogs do ot tn- games. grass was high sidered, and s, sneaking and |crease in number until they becoms During his servics of more than 1 knocked the bear over and it cowardly animal and even when rid- [ o numerous as to destrov all wamhe, 23 years in India Col. Faunthorps |started yelling, which. made the ele- § den down and speared does not, as [combined with the fact that they wiil has brought down at least 90 |phant run furiously in the direction C far as my experfence goes, try¥ 1o at- | sometimes absolutely disappear from tigers and as many leopards. In of the river bank. The mahout [ tack, but T remember one instance |& locality where they have beed vefy two preceding articles he told of |managed to stop the elsphant close when T was stalking on foot in some | abundant, leads me to suspect that deadly unters with these ani- to the bank, but s he turned her rocky hills and saw a hy @ ®o into | they may be subject to soms con mals, and described the most dan- |around the bear came toward us, still ) @ hole. This hole was quite shallow | taglous or infectious diseass sus! gerous of sports, spearing leopards |screaming. I had been thrown down and when I went up to it, the hyena | &s distemper or possibly hydrophobia. from horseback. when the elephant bolted and was X% rushed at me with mouth open, wear- | Both wolves and jack3ls are known On one occasion a tiger, after |lying across the elephant's back, ? x Ing @ most unpleasant expression. | to get hydrophobia leaping upon an elephant's back, |holding on to the rope of the pad j Whether he was trying to bite me or | A pack of wild dogs will run down was shot by Col. Faunthorpe al- | with one hand and clutching my >4 g was merely trying to et away, I do |any deer and they have often beer moat at th rifle's length On rifle with the other. 'I. not know, as I shot him at a range | seen chasing even tha biggest deer ¬her occasion he avolded dis- The elephant started to retreat > K ’ \ of about one yard the sambur and the swamp deer, and aster by shooting from the hip a |backwards and actually put one hind / W / 1 - The Indian wild dog (the Red Dog |I belicve that they prefer to hunt big leopard which, springing from a |foot over the precipitous bank of the Y, of Kipling’s Jungle Book) is not a [and heavy stags—probably thess are bush, was directly in the air |river. the bed of which was full of true dog at all, but a quite distinct | more easily run down than the above hi boulders, some 30 or 40 feet below. p 3 (st shds ~ species. They are most interesting | younger and lighter ones. They i1 . I had g tuplensant ¥iston of JAnd. £/ animals and extremely destructive to | variably attack anim: n the hind BY LIEUT. COL. J. C. FAUNTHORPE, | ing on the boulders, with the ele- ’ game and sometimes to cattle A | quarters. The natives say that the (58" % AL W phant on top of me, but fortunately g native forest guard once told me that | will even attack a tiger. 1 know of o T Africa. thera are| (D¢ elephant, finding nothing under 4 = he had been attacked by a pack of [no authentic instance of this, b N I i, Anered an |her outstretched hind foot, stopped 2 wild dogs and had escaped by getting | they B undoubtedly attack e et ft" | retreating and_executed a flanking : . up into a tree, Which they then sat |leopards. .“'1' as P Ly e ovement on the top of the bank. AR 3 4 7 round for some time. I personally P. H. Clutterbuck of the Forest this te the Tact that, in the past,|BY this time the bear had died. It ; J ; bellove that these wild dogs had no | Service, who is a keen naturalist and inany books were walitin by peaple | W4S & nerve-shattering experience. L, 4 4 > intention of attacking him, but were |an accurate observer, fold me that he ho had shot ;‘n\v.,.h. but were ig- ol 7 s 4 < N acting out of curiosity. was l{n’:c: going YhYO"AKh the fa" s S0t She and o o |'T'HE Indian wild boar f= a formid- 7 *NN 3 They are at times extremely bhold |and saw e wild dogs chastng a orant of their habits and who were / A ! and display very little fear of human |leopard Jeopard took refuge so inspired by a desire to appear able animal and a solitary old ’ \ ERATY beinks. 1 saw five or six one day|a tree, where Clutte shot it and heroic and to sell thelr books. Fog is sometimes an awkward cus- 7 » £ 2 ) hre A A e ooenls hot 1 i 2 - gy . ’ 3 trotting across a piece of opcn|aiso shot several « dogs The popular idea that the gorilla er, although the chances of his ZPN i At T LAty SoTARt oy alon exwinining b tially ferocious animals, which will | great as In the case of the sloth hear. | . / dogs showed no disposition to attack | flicted by g attack the hunter unprovoked, has[A full-grown boar will stand about 7 ; ’ ) - the pig, nor did the pig show any|quarters been exploded in the writing of Carl inches high, and sometimes more, d Y A AN PR R R L e e ey e el soriatioe E. Akele and weighs more than 200 pounds. 4 close to me and I succeeded in shoot- | take 2 holes § The animals in India which are|He s a very active animal and prob- ! 74 hg one. i | o SOt cals ] dangerous to mankind may be di-|ably the bravest to be met with any- ; Wi’ \ : P S Tt to find.TF vided into three classes: those which |Wwh I have seen one charge a line "9 SEE Pl e > AiMenit (o Teie B it dangerous under any eircum-|of elephants and lterally hurl him- y A PACK of wild dogs when chasing | 4re very het o l:d f”(,’:,t ances; those which take to man-|self against one of them. { 7 3 another animal BlYe ero She | Clutterbuck succeeded in keeping on eating, and those which are dan-| The tusks of the Indian wild boar, s probably calling to esch other. The ), T saw it when it was abou gerous when wounded, when cor-|for some unknown reason, are con- A Z sound is an unmistakable one, but|sliye I saw it when 1 was #bo nered or in defense of their young.|siderably longer and thicker than = 4 2, does not in the least resemble the)| . TONE o : I know only three Indian animals | those of the European boar, although f s bark of a dog. I have seen it stated | W T 'ho PN Indian wild dog which I should be sorry to meet if[I think that in some cases the wild 5 g that when a pack arouses an animal} ° S CNC "o 5 ta In this unarmed and on foot. These are the|boars of France, Germany and Rus- R which they intend to run down they s . In this . i E . S S will send some of their number on | he is quf from the wol solitary male elephant, the sloth|sia attaln a greater size and weight. v 2 a d the India fox, the cubs of which P v wil Th, veapo v hi : ahead and drive the animal toward | and the Indian fox, the cubs o bear, and the solitary wild boar. The Indian boars weapons are his i h e |'ave Giite) EaRY. Ao xeds andlbecbme The best judges as to whether an |lower tusks, which project some 3 B O R e o | Vary fatb f5.a 4Dt thane animal is dangerous or not are the|inches from the lower jaw. A big “THE BEAR CAME TOWARD US, STILL SCREAMING. THE ELEPHANT STARTED TO RETREAT, AND PUT ONE FOOT OVER THE BANK." D 1 e reuavd uber a police officer who ha 3un peopls who live in the forests| pair of lower tusks will be about s o i = e ke i AP EOS peS s _____|evidence.” I am inclined to regard ¥ . Where these animals are found.|9 inches long but more than half Many persons are under the impres-|this length s Imbedded in the lower 1 that the Indlan tiger is the|jaw most dangerous and ferocious of tion against the upper tusk beasts, and they will be surprised|giv the lower tusk a point and to learn that the jungle m are { cutting edge as sharp as a knife, and very much more afrald of the sloth|when the boar attacks he opens his bear and the wild boar than of the |mouth and cuts upwards and side- tiger or leopard . wise with the lower tusks. The If you meet a sloth bear. it is just | wounds Inflicted are likely to be about an even chance whether he will [ poisonous, although not nearly as bad | = “| this statement as rather doubtful f r at was quite elved no provocation will stand|any stray goat, etc, that they can|offcers for reward, and there is no |or “pi-dog” which one finds in the | The red dog is most destructive to ccompany his wife over his vietim and cut him to shreds, [ find, and eating the carcasses of dead | doubt that thess people very often [Indian villages. The dog, of cOurse, | gama In the eastern portion of the | on her walks s a dog, thous We were pig-sticking one day,|cattle or other animals. The young | drew rewards on heads and skins |ic really of the wolf tri Another | forest division which borders on the | the owners child in t beating a large piece of very heavy |are usually born in holes and ravines, | which are not those of wolves at all. | godge the “Kanjars” h is to kill | Sarda River spotted deer and sambur stat lookec grass, on the left side of which was & |and the most effective method of de- It is, as a matter of fact, very diffi- | jackals, stuff out the heads with | were numerous. A big pack of wild g} did » half-grow strip of water which contained quick- | stroying them 18 to smoke them out | cyjt to tell the skull of a wolf from |chopped meat and pull out a lot of | dogs, sald to be forty of fifty strong b ad at the time sand and which a horse could not|or suffocate them with smoke in these | {hat of a large dog, the “pariah” |the hair hey then allow the |appeared there and in a few mon for this reason. We had about | earths. Quite frequently, however, : 0 men and three or four elephants in | wolves will take to man-eating, but the line. The hunters were out ahead | their drepredations are almost entire- on the flanks. One of the coolles, an |1y confined to children and babies. Eo away or go straight for you. 1In fas those inflicted by the teeth and|oig man, left the line and sat down| In the Moradabad district, of which the government reserve forests of the | claws of a leopard. on the edge of tha strip of water on|I once had charge, some wolves had - Kheri District, in_the Lucknow Di-| One not infrequently hears from| n, jaf¢ flank. earths in undulating sandy country, 9 vision of which I was recently !n|tho villagers of some bad tempered| 'y, men on the other side of the[covered with grass jungle, and car- charge, sloth bears wers numerous|oid boar which has taken up Its DO- | atar saw an old boar trot quietly |ried oft a number of children. In the and in recent years used to klll|gition in a high crop, or In a piece of | 1,y ¢ the grass and down to the edge | hot weather the villagers sieap out of ° . . Wwoun. ozen or more men nploye who &t e 3 e be e ol ™ e ock e m ove he | wol frequentl; an ortunity fn working n the forests. Last year |gases when inoffensive ~workers in |Ow man. He knocked him over in the | molt freduntly B o i ot 2 :]\’:\‘r‘g::m(r-d to be particularly | fields were f?‘”&",{“"':m:',’;,:h':crh-af'i proceeded to cut him up. The hunt- e Shnvventiatann iwhen it umerous. . ) tempered solitary a 5 ecall | ere” three in number, had to gallop |whole family goes out in the flelds igres A e in a fleld E e around the swamp, but did so. 1others frequently ta heir - E . needed for tha tiger 'group In_the |un’cld boar, which ripped him so badly | ZiRICT 58, o o b s of the ety | Bumall ‘onilaren ‘there: Betag ‘no bhs BY STERLING HEILIG. > Yo have fine museums al American Museum of Natural Mhei|in,the stomach that he died shortly|ioward the boar, who was still stand- {at home (o look after them. and PARIS, January S ; should’ bo &, consequen 4 Som tha an. o e e ridges which sepa- sculptor, 1 was golng to o 8 ¥ 3 deige 3 &ix bears, whl{;‘htwld.d not shoot at | thera was a savage plg close by. S0|™\Fhon no caw the horsemen ap- the flelds. These particular 1 pribubly Jo Dezitasn, TWho : 3 e IS n_the nelghborhood f G aras within few buslinais ft] o Uhes Knd WK Speaned i | RRG B o % ‘uyzx‘ and lives in his house to make i - s : A i . e containing ov. [ im wrxss ik 8 jtew Dushians 1} ‘.’.‘.)l;;‘: n‘tr:”;\‘:f'u.d-l»mlxv‘]:x}nd- The old e da ok oy mper (0T EHIL fiens tudies would probably have been 4 en't they good o awake inte etament reserve forests, the forest|giraight for the horse, & very fast|which were scrious, one in particular wolves and eventually got them | P eldson wenld aton me right here 3 A . 4 Yes, ves: but T think it almost our officer, & friend of m “"xw:nll z“ thoroughbred mare, and before Ily,ying penctrated the lung. We put royed X He would dispute as to the meaning % 4 - k) great art trouble in America. Ar one evening ;o !hto‘: J:nf :‘-‘ Obwr"';: could get her properly or;’ ;);»dn-nv$;1.4n| on an elephant and #ent one of | Not far away from this place | ¢ weyocess” and prove that others 5 - 1 is meant to be lived with, not stu her e ipped my en, Ut-| 1o the hospital, which was some 20 |Ganges. to which large numbers o it hers is Davidson, who began : Y { 3 ry to read your newspape peared, rushed at him, k'wflti*'d 2“{! ting a long gash right through }‘fl_ hiles nwu‘ but he died during the e traveled along the main road, ‘:uullv: .:'mrnr-ru“ x?<:_\ in the Bast 51 ;. : 0 1 K g : e rea h. over, and “Ilzmd him vn{l‘fll ‘rhtd;-‘- stout leather. 1 Killed him a fow |n.x¢ night. This was practically an | sleeping at night in the groves of | ¢ Naw York and today cannot accept 4 1o with art" ;X;.,u-nl;h?,;;:ml:; {:-\n:r}a v r‘arenwh:r: ;"‘h:: :-Ae‘:; ":«r !ln(;,n :s :-ue”vu:l;‘z;v': i ny.ru‘\nl\ad uHu-;kd as the \u...],- n.fl‘l n: w»:n"(‘na: y‘\ x»;‘-;‘:;-Xxxsw:;r:“\‘-;!" all the important commissions offered 5 E o ed put it awa m iears, vear, . w n sued he turned and | not been wounded or pursued, and | form the usual ha ! or | him the rains broke, used to make a &pe- | charged, and a spear through the|had not even heen at Tose quarters | travelers. On one occalon & Eirl, | What fs & successful sculptor? ? : stion. Or it is like looking at the cial expedition’ in order to shoot|withers settled him. | with the line of beator about ten years old, was taken Y| you would say the most successful | X 2 E outside covers of hooks and saving them. At that time of the year they | "1 have only once been charged by |~ A full-grown boar is a formidable | wolves when s'eeping with her Par- | ic tha one who gels the most great 4 : ; I have read it i Rour o4 ars particularly fond of dIgging Into | boar when on foot. I was coming|opponent even for a ftiger, and it|ents, on the way to the fair in one |orders to do portrait busts. It fits i N { Lou What 1 get? The on ant-hills and sucking out the white |pack to camp late in the evening|is generully supposed that a tiger |of these groves Jo Davidson. I saw him first at work [ [ : : right way is to sit an hour, looking te, and wh l\l dv[’lIF so can be|gzlong a little path which ran through will hesitate to tackle one, unless The story that bables are sometimes | doing Owen D. Young of the General e ¥ ¢ A at one thing." hoard at a considerable distance -n‘d the jungle. I had been out trying to|griven to do so by hunger. I only [hrought up by wolves, like Romul Electric Co. when he came abro: A i “Art has nothing te do with quan can be approached without "“2"? d'“ stalk a deer, and “’5!‘_“‘9“""8 f‘l“’ remember finding tha remains of one | and Remus, and Mowg!l in Kipling's | with Gen. Dawes and put the plan 3 tity ticulty 1 have walked up to \\fl}? N | ber-soled shoes. A Dbig boar came big boar which had been killed by | jungle Book, Is founded on fact, and | through. (Davidson has studios in s ot With his second wind Davidso 15 yards of a bear whose head Was|out of the jungle on the path about|g tiger, aithough 1 have on several|there have been two or three in- | Paris, London and New York.) The \ Sy 4 LY me strong inside an ant-hill and which Was|4p yards ahead of me, stopped and|occasions found the remains of sows | stances when such children have been |last fime, vesterday, he was carving : A : L “This idea of trying to industrialize quite iaware of my presence, appeared to be considering what he|and smaller boars. captured One case I heard of was |& marble of the Rockefeller bust s 2 0 * ¥ x5 should do next. . The big boar in question had been at of a boy, aged about eight vears, “I would not like to be Rockefel (Q¥E of my own men was very| e stood looking at each other for | killed by a tigress and had an ex- |1 think He went about on knees |ler I said idly. “He has to live on badly mauled by a bear some|What appeared to be a long time, but | ceptionally fine pair of lower tusks |and elbows and behaved quite like |mik toast” ) | “But,” 1 said, “there must bs enoux voura age. 1 was in camip at the bass | WhIch was probably in reallty only & | The kill was two days old and had | wiid animal. “Who? Rockefeller? What non- i A |artists’ so that each rich American of some hills In the Napal Bor-|few seconds. Idid not want to shoot|been entirely eaten during the pre- | ;1.1 not live long after being |5ense exclaimed the scplptor. . ; |'can have that ons picture to 1ok &t i e {ghborhood swere some [him 1f T could help it, as there was | vious night and the tigress had gone | 1% most unfortunate thing | Rockefeller eats what he wants to | . + . zome pig-sticking ground on the river |off into a strip of swamp, full of | CoPlured—a unforivaste B | eat. The two weeks I was there he B tigers, which at night used to walk nig O Fiab int T P as his recollections of his wolf life | esiopl a 1 | dean the sandy beds of the streams |a few miles away. r pro canebrake and high green reeds not | 4% T8 recotlections of h'e WO IS | was t, and up and about, and ready ! lid as scums fit. We get an ind v many artists you are goin as nothing to do w ply and demand will fix it. If You want art, vou'll get artists. They will not produce just for themselves. Artists want zn audience.” “Is our art-hungry audience in | creasing? Is not the hunger for vour |own productions a sign of t? 1 | askea | askea e hills. 1 sent my | consideration, the old hog decided |far away, where we found her in a | Would hav for his meals each day. So thats . M ¢L»""f1?, \n”?," S {-ul'. o | that he had better remove me from|very bad temper. We found, after oy *“.rh",.'",‘,;JZ‘:’,::Z‘L,,";‘;;‘,"E;:‘;?i that.” K ) A POR- tharu (aborigin 2 one of those | the path. He got a bullet in his head. | killjng her, that the big pad on one of | 0 1T, Fhe, MOst Teasonabic theoty | He nas done Sam Va n of the| TRAIT BUST OF OWEN D. YOUNG. ry Piver beds one morning and I|which knocked him out when he had |her fore fest had been cut through | 1% SSPIain Why & Female wolt Should | aldwin Locomotive Works; W. D.|— - e - walked up the next covered about half the distance be-|down to the bone by one of the boar's | HIOP & humad ¢hifd 18 to SubDose | Gyinrie, president of the New York |joscible to go on with the list. It|francs in my clothes. Do you think Finding no trace of n my |tween us. 3 tusks. . found it & relief # suckle something | BAT Amsoclation: V. K. Wellington |would fill a column.) . T gaks & TN aiRepain, 2iows, I cannot gauge it ha answered side, 1 crossed over a 7 H % % e else. T once had a cat which adopted | K60, Chinese Ambassador at Wast Who's that¥ Lipolgtedito ab 1 was young and foolish. Tt was|.Naturaily, I am tempted to think so sround, In order to return to P | ¥ THINK that, as a rule, a wild boar OLVES are charged with having | a haby squirrel, but the latter did not | EIon: Otto Kahni the fate fL 1L|tirul and distinguished head ient—time bus proved IL-but ] “Ia there ‘more art-hunger e e o S wHch atisoks a an il sony Aedimany; gersenkan dadle k[ ive sons. Sink, =58 Anatols France bi Bie tast| o et my) wifer anawersdlDEvid- )| done wery wail, 1.6, wet what 1| ronce? 4|p .‘:"Lf‘“:{ 'AVMZL'}‘::; knock him over and H:v"n‘xmsbhon. have never m-m})m Indian wolves Wolves will sometimes hunt in|years, when no other could get to ;«mmrmv;n the titne He was slan P h airy., 1| “Yes, I think so. It is the attitude of pocl of blood. A bear had | generally {nflicting & severe gash or | running in a regular pack, nor have combination. A well known hunter | him InE at a work that is not & portrait.|get mercy. the man in the street that counts, yo ked him down with its AW, | two en passant. I once saw a friend |1 ever heard of them chasing or at-|p Tndja told me that he once saw & | He has done Lord Balfour, Lord || kyew the great ginative piec: g word said, “Americans get | See—toward the art student. I de not long claws raking through scalp | of mine who was on foot With # spear | tacking an_adult humen being bY |wolf moving in a strange manner up | Northeliffe, lord Robert Cecil, Rabind- | *mas met *nia® Amcriean douthbe ARt mean toward a successtul artise. I H'-fi e -'1“:l h“z‘ then bitten Wim on | charged by a heavy pig, which liter- | daylight. The Indlan wolves, a5 & |and down in front of a amall herd |ranath Tagore, Foch, Frenc Ma- | which, giant siz is going up at| e live by their work. Ca-|f€ar You are taking it for granted e e i the Yace | 8lly threw him into the air without | rule. live In ravines and appear to £0 |of antelope. He sat down and |saryk, Paderewakl, President Wilson | Suresnes, but that other poetical con- | pacity for existence is elastic; tastes | that, because you think I am a success Nere oMl s cheek. | CULting him at all, the spear glancing |about either singly or by palrs or In | watched them. The wolf drove the | Clemenceau and 30 members of the|ception, Davidson's tribute to France, | change; desires become more exag- |L must be a great artist, while, as s ving s oeen heek” | harmlessly off the thick shield of the | families, three or more together. antelope over a ditch and out of the | peace conference “The Marne.” | gorated, or a fell asks less than |faCt, it has nothing to do with it tioges ittt > > | hide which protects a boar's shoul-| Their usual method of getting a|qjtch another wolf sprang at them * ¥ ¥ x 1t 1s & herolc figure of a woman of | When younger, as may be * * " Success proves nothing. A man striv- ey nEd Bass g up;the bed op | 0T Sometimes & iboxr which hasjuylag is to aneak avout. plakinlup | 7iao not remember whettier the ses: fact, no other artist has been |antlque Gaul, erect, strained back-| “There is a ric merican public|In& unsuccessfully may be a great oy Had b ¢ e bea of ond wolf caught the antelope or not, | | Rl o e e busts ot wer. | ward, arms uplifted in & curse, a vow | coming on now, anyhow, as your own | artist tiger tracks, when wern charged | IDIoRanE SR aails "“'b';';"d sonages so widely separated. He|an appeal for aid, a shriek of de-| - Er by the bear, which wa | ept this statement as proof that | JURRE " B0, (5 ortralt busts for|fiance. It is France, invaded. out- | * Ok x Yes, or othetwise, History Is full wolves will act in combination when | BAR, 00 (EEl BOrHel Menine. | raged, hurling back: “They shall not | (XX 7HEN a country is prosperous,”|°f it Rembrandt is a god today could disp i g He has done Miss Muriel Vander-|pass!” id Davidson, “it tends to go|it 9id 10t stop him from dying In a time, 0 t L AT bilt, Mra. Robert Goelet, Mrs. Harry | Do vou know," said Davidson ‘T|in for art. There are three stages:| €Ll et falr (o Judge :p A tre s a W 3 - ‘ne Whitney, Mrs, C. Whit found some line: old Samuel Tay- | Gy "phipey stomach, (b) insurance, | 2°t DY success. A man can paint and R e in Indin are regarded aa | Favne Whitney, Mrs. C V. Whitnow) ) "G leriage. that it it perfectiy. | (1) PmpLy stomach, (b) insurante:| sculpt, and yet say nothing. He may ot many insta ame under § pests, and & reward is gIven | pgiiar Mra. Murlel Draper, Gertrude | Think! They were written a hundred | . . < ve the greatest technique, yet ha the visible luxuries of life. And & . ye by the government for their destruc- | g7 ¢ A7 Dians Matiaars | vears ago. They run thus | SRare 15 & BRIE to W man can |JUSt @ §00od workman—not an artiat P . e B or an-aating tigers | Steln and Lady Diana Manners 1 th 1 limit to what a man can " “halia - [ Wi S £ T % 5 at all! And a man can be scarcely He has done Fedor Chaliapin, Jo- [ When France, in wrath, her glant limbs 0P | consume in motor cars, clothes, eats, |20 & scarcely T-n:‘&Tl?.»afi"(‘vxp"si::"c‘:{;z\i I"?;?:n;:r: seph Conrad, Israel Zangwill. George roared the natural outlet when you have | ADI€ 0 express himself, vet still ba an large anima E 3y 5 v v - | And, with t oath that shook air, earth e : = o more |ATHSt. Cezanna! There was an ata and killing wolves in their earths | :FHH' While Bouguereau, who did t 1 e : rawing and painting perfectly and - be free. | ture, music, hooks and so on. The a inded tiger and bringing them to the local district [ . B The French government will prob- | warld has alwevs dene fe. It s the| e & grand techniclan, was aimply nded rolls | ‘ . : ably buy “The Marne” for the Luxem- | history of Florence, of the Renals- 3;‘{’4‘{";“‘" an artist—merely & man eams, and this ! s G0 bourg—which will make it the first!sance t is not differ today | - & World’s Bread Basket Fal G great plece of American statuary in| “Have we come to such & period * % x % S X v at great state gallery. “There i= no doubt think, that . JULATIE S dni esotes aids ihe s Davidson does mot xpow It, vet,.I[America today, being the richest SNVIAY, of talent!” I muttered. perlor, in Wisconsin, which lie 4 § am convinced. I have it from outside | country, has much more chance to “A man of talent can do 1,500 miles inland, are practically | > et i Dei art hungry. Ave have not|Whatever he wants to do—because he ocean ports for the shipment of | . A TGO hSaRRLbL & Decfact Tatuve " doe# not want much. A man of gentus wheat in unbroken bulk to Liver-| 5 e NYHOW. her an American does what he can—because he alwavs pool, 5,000 miles distant, by reason 5 3 « A e o tries more than Is possible, and mere. of the Welland and Erle Canals. | 3 2 : O st Bauy T s e e 1y succeeds in doing what he can of Both cities are in connection with | e e e L e 4 | New York by water for the unbroken | oatle Sl DO R Sl % & sald, “there’s shipment of barges containing the | Bt 3 il o L S £l equivatent of 75 freight cars. . ¢ ety 7 Rsteiam sy tn Tht(y Loodoi ked = 3 “There is mo such thing as prog- Situated at the very gateway to| P 2 ¢ } : e | < ress—in art,” replied Davidson, calm- ko 1ok WHEES EBUNEry of the Northe| . : Z ; So. I supposed it natural and easy " e 1| SOMarwise. you. il beria success proves “Ahead of his time?” on top of th % to get from him some straight tip for P | Vi luth and Superior have seen E N 5 S v} o Teom “Superior was onc. of 1so00|ld 0 . : Bontyou think It Tho most suc ) inaiol have progress in sclence and hels " | < 2 cessful scluptor considers success to r xS 3 5 :‘.".mllc‘\;‘nor‘ss l;n\l:r:eal‘l:lln::;x;ngf‘ be a mere by-product! ) Slsctatoity “Flm(g:::; nra’:s:.nls"-r:mfemn' ity of more than 13,000,600 bushel o : “What about American art?” x & G Diece o pacity of more than 18,000, ushels, : " . sculpture. You cannot add to it, you Bve) e v | : asked. “Does it pay x e u eannc lf".?‘.l.,l’ m:le hp\’x“ "‘l!;w- ’:ern‘:(m\e;r-f;;]:: 5 : Davidson looked scandalized. ¥ p’;::s:lnnbo‘{' i;\‘dl&i]r; !»l a .‘"mpxfi? le» | elevator system alone possesses a ¢ : . “I doubt,” he said, “whether any- : : e : ual personality! storage capacity of simost 8,000,000 . 4 9 body ever went into art to make f 3 It 15 a fallacy to set out with the bushels. A single plant of this sys-| money out of it " % > ) assumption that there Is a scale of tem handles 6,000,000 bushels and| 3 4 “But it is a serious question” T values in art, ‘bad' to ‘good.’ All can receive, clean and reship 400 cars, sn;;l.” “A man has got to support him- AR 4 TI’;:)ISF efV:J{;r‘;\,h:xfl:\':b:}:el:h;:: l‘r;rl Blant T the Targast and astest 1n the | [NRCES. “I will answer you.” said Davidson, N %555t | ~oulpture 1s neither ‘good’ nor bad’; United States. To completely fll all 1 “what Nietzsche said about Julius & 3N L it is mine; it may bo yours. of Superior's elevators once the| - . | Caesar: ‘If he had Jived to be as old i R “It is mine because I made it. I equivalent of 600 trainloads of wheat - 3 8% X am, and if ho Enew wiat [j ’ 7 e did so because I could not do edder- is required. When the first grain 3 know, he would never have crossed ; 3 wise; it expressed something t@ me. shipment was made from Superfor a A . the Rubicon. : 1f it eppresses something in you, you boat carrying 1,000 tons was a large g I think it true of many people| # 5 will like it; and then—in an art vessel. Today boats plying to that Wwho go into art” he continued ¢ § sense—it is yours. port carry 14,000 tons. £ ‘They live the best they can. Do all . Gre Ty Sorve el WiNeANTLR 1t h § « | men live ‘well by journalism? Some o k. un Ay, 8. Dontt: calll 1t —_————— : ‘I‘wru;'ncd.\'nrlhv*hfi s anh(l others starve, il ROOEP ARG ON'E JoL ANy ane. sl Al A % » but it does not stop them—nor wou G g : it ‘bad’ Art is bey Being Helpful. ; it. 1f people are fitted for a job and | s } | baar t FCndienoaent Farmer—You young rascal, what have an inclination for it no material | Tt obman Ricetally from Succhastut doing up in my apple tree? = - % considerations will _move _them. Ly & a men to say these things. From ths A ward—Blease, sir. Tom trighten-| “THE MARNE” DAVIDSON'S |When I first came to Paris I did not| JO DAVIDSON'S BUST OF THE |very successtul, they sound modest Ing away the birds, TRIBUTE TO FRANCE. speak a word of French and had 300 LATE ANATOLE FRANCE. and almost reasonsbiel 4 ’ r