Evening Star Newspaper, November 15, 1925, Page 100

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D, NOVEMBER 1 PART 5 Grotesque and Serious Adventures Are Found Among the Chinese set_horigontally Instead of perpéndicu- | away. However, they did not know 3 [ . larly w®h the earth. the =all ma | the a Inveshgators Who BO!“C Under the “rs ah i s % = standing up &t right snies from the | The cideis then offered to zive us % A -“#::v ‘p"'“\,\'_;:’_"\‘ '\‘;“n‘ kS ‘":‘;;‘.:F“;”” i wheel. This is a great economy of | gutdes. We would hardly have had s STEEL.| NTED O0ODEN ¢ K ES - K o 1l ! ver the D h indmill conra o go if Big Wang had not ! Surface in Effort to Solve Perpetual AND HUGE PAPER 1ANTERNS | - | requiring o Bigh tower (0 allow the | Come 1o Gh Recheris with (he franias ; 5 safl to clear the ground. that he would escape from the vilaga 2 = 23 - SAW US OUT OF THE - . . « he high round were heaps of w ere go and overtake s Puzzle of Orient Meet With Thr;]ung e o heromasiIrIsd fales o upomrra L s iSOt seme i3 y E % e . i 7 ‘;:nulb:‘lodml:\ woven mnn: or 1._.:‘ | with steel-pointed .;.....7»" v|>|\\n‘~mmluq Experiences—Hobnobbing With Brig- 7 : Bl P e Bk it U | S e e wenre - / f | . Nowhere ix there a more upsiand- ||y 20 yards when their leaders stepped — - M / 4 | almost fiercely independ. lot of | 1, and demanded 32 each for their “ands in Their Own Garb—Mule Pull- : / 7 hinf fgropie ™ than " hese "t makers 00 | L0 WhER T frew inaignant o p B 3 a7 &N | Shantung. Far back in Chines is- | their i ce thev scurried hack man and Chinese Flivver—An Qutcast A7 / i (i NN {ory'.-the throne gat poasession of the | e the vilese and cloned the more sal indusiry as its special source of || vent hack. knocked and velled. hut 2 Q v i 4 \ X f revanue, About the time Columbus | 1 ¥ ri DK Koo N e e in the palt Country. ! N N, [ Aiscovered America a minister of state | Jpo o STAT L E e aering Mate with : b ] 3 | who had risen from poverty in ShAN- | o inen of anre Aivection < tung “through the civil service saved | "o if8 00 RN SEECIEE Lt e & Seldom have experiences in much | I e said 1. collaciing myself 1 /L i il ) 1 WhAL: e ol Bans an b roman o | om. taking whatever ‘turnings mest an unusual combinatton fallen 1o |and dropping down from my uncom. s \ Jeith) it el atal tariitbrm annity o theiout | ol s o us Often we thad o the lot of a single individual as | fortahie saddle. “that my mules have V. 7 J £ | put .of ‘the Shanting salt-mak e e o e Quplanterne hese racountad by Jnpsef Washing- |acted very disconrteonsiy in aitempi 3 G R\ - | that the peopla of his nat v g s g o oo e v An HAll. in a series of four |Ing to force an entrance into the i 3 f \ | might have cheap salt e i s, Nrticlee. of which the following Is |abode of the knightly suardians of l R | “Ihis arrangement continued through | franed Aetllements 1o aslc for direc e firai. For bis advantures in [ virtne and order. ~Rui t(hey are &l i n y A the Ming dvnasty and wax respecied | oms 10 EoRD e e it anenalism were auita ns unigs A8 | 1eady humbled. On their behalf. ane z W by the alien Manchu dynasty which | Ahouted réplies from the intide whic paein travel and eventually I on mine, I apologize. Mulschaser (as 3 /i 1 S i A \ followed. Then came Yuan Rhih-kai, ||l every ease proved to he ini fm. A& An American newspaper |Chinase call their Cskinners), fnd 4 F and his*forelgn loan. secured upon the 0% I fan. into a position of sxtraordl- | another inn at once. Thia one, von 1 imperial salt revenie. Ax a remulr, APOUl midnight we stiick a car ry . influsnce in the “aMairs of . | <ee. in nccupied by the honorable mili- \ y | {Torelgners_were put in chargeof the 504 ook the nairow iowpaih alone g(“, ¢ary gentlemen. N g i ! ' revenue callections. Thess man haq [ Mlde. Then the deniey sinmbe However grim the facts of the R SRR TR E ~ { N reapect for the old Ming emperars 214 sprained its s The two e gace. Mr. Hall's irvepressible humor | gy had overcome their feallng of A % ’ 2 ¥ | concension. They were dstermiied 1o | {00TER T2 40l LN e garried him into a succession of | ol & i 4 enforce the imposi aqually wipan all | INE with the donkes: S opned 1o the umorous situations—in truth. the 1" jn4aeq. vnu are weleome. Forelgn : a \ X W mitproducing regions. Feling aver | IR S NTLLY hole “country revealed 1ol 10 L rinonber rald m Niile ohen Wit 2 ; 2 ) N "L fi @ Bim through a humorous lens. Ap- | 4\ pnner military cap and 8am Rrowne % = \ R And then rame the whaop of Rig Wang, as swesl tn onr sars as the ropriately. therefore. hé entitled | o) “stapping forward. “hui why pre. R i racent haok upen China ~Tn the I stepping forwar ; A voice of an angel. His gresting was L RIS ormang pbuln oy 3 of & biinding wet anow caught us as VO of an angel Hie &y Land of the Laughing Buddha.' et Yo ARl thislian iha - g f BT ” Y 7 | we net out for tha barrowman’s native Youre a_ sorry bunch How he acquirsd the quaint I will withdraw and leave vou to “l\! A Y 4 2 | 14 % the matter was coming 1o a head A when we arrived in the salt diatrict. vl s by | A Iast touch of Winter in the form i il - kv .. B Pl o + And without further words he roped flor-de-plime of +-Upion, Close> 1a v dinner. gentlemen.” | said 2 ’;"“ , [Village. Fighting our way -over dr #xplained hy Mr, Hall balow. A a 4 poi—come: in. You shall pe v g ~ 1861 he represenied an news . service, a Sin ted by bandits, 1 went into the agency. and English | dir(-floor kitchen-dining room and sat ) 5 i : ” R i Sanl Bapin ol Clie sty ehin sipine. room ara o \ ) / : QUR smiinlion subsided. o Japan . mense fellow with a high fur cap and R antirely oo much heard for a pure BY UPTON CLOSE. :'.l"'l',',:::.'r'.":'m F::""“j’; ‘.;‘.‘L‘F,x:':",‘ii 2 " 4 3 T Y / found that wa wers suspectad of heing V:n’v‘l.nx A young the 1ime whan the Japanese cavern with chap.sticks. apparsntiy v 1l | aplea for the revenue eolisctora. A SENET o ven shontsd the nenetration” of Shantung was | nndistracted hy my arriva ; village commine meating to AIRCUSS (pa hov 1o me. developing inte A" problem &f xwvon yaung fellow.” he hellowed 2 aur arrival wae called in the thatched (Gaing ant. T racognized Wesian, o International ‘moment 1 was|.p..e same nondles.” And hefors | e 7 7 2 schonk w t1endsd the of the twn Amaricans at that tim ¥ traveling about this anetent | " SORC IR TR LIS oAl hie > 7y, X 2 f | roof schonhonee atten O Nl province in Chiness clothing by mule. | (oS BEPLES 08 N0 O tare me. s P 4 gathering without Invitation and an. 'he =alt revenue service. e Al litter. muie hack. or the plensian whesl. " N > ~— Amavarsd 10 convines the sidars that i Gemenayisimirprise barrow. eating native fond. and sieep. | Ohl” exclalmed ane of my eacerts < ! ceiveda tremendon : Ing in native homes or inns. Squat. ~Mr. Forelgner. mee: our chief. Mr. 5 ZE Z we wars their friends. hut anly half By b hit 1 gathered that the Shar ting In the eveninge on the meick | Lao. the Forsigner:™ and a hearty > : |.-m~un-n fung =alt workers, reinforced hy peas kang" amonk a crowd of travelers,| lnugh went around the room at this] (o pay aver one of the amaothest | 4 pThey would take ue &t our word |anis and armed with new Japaness with a ean.oil | Pun 5 : (hay xa it ingisted that we phss rifles had descended upon his statian & dg::flt‘\hp -::::J:::n:.’ql:.';‘:'; S Why do veu eall your chief “The [roadbeds in the porld mags it dron on to the next village for the night. ai Sheep-Horn Inlet, on the month haard many talas of brigands Foreigner 2 [ asked s SAACHN e s datentatin 3 é = They were likewixe unwilling that ihe Yellow River. killed or bound h Some of these | was able 1o verifv.| “Wall. look at that beurd:-and he|“OUQE dapaness fonfEoaied me o ¥ Wane, their fellow-townaman. should guards. looted his ‘safe. pui hin for outlawe persist in Shantung. as in speaks Japanese, vou know. He apeny [, SU0 5 - (0 SERRTC ZODKIRE. T = ercort us further, ax it would appear astilde a horse and fired a fusilade Sicily. in spite of an ancient civiliza- many vears in Formosa. Rut he's| 8 SEECC tn neighhoring communes that they of shots above hic head while he rFaces fion.. They: 'are usudlive of ithe [FKabln | a: résular felldw Sust (he same! C O e . Ix | were not keeping faith in a pact which out of the country e Hood type In China—villaina of one Wikare are vou goibg. BHrotha why 1 should show it. My eountr Entaring the place in this unusualy whose families & monopolized that | level. There are twe more wavs [ had heen made agninat the foreigner. The ] e thing' had hapfened in seneration and heroas of the next. o anked when he had Anished his | e naver recognivad sanr anvaraignry | MANNr. 1 was . unchallenged. In a|indusiry for generations of doing nearly everything often They forcad nx out by seeing ta |1 avers mit station for » Much of the folklore. drama and | reai . il ¥ iny Chine {aurant in the mArket | Tlenaily the tide is depended upon | times one is nx good ax anather and | that we could get no food or lodgings. disiance down the coa S fietion of the Chinese literaturs is To Kao-mi. by veur grace’ I re. o ik o coithb e disiriet, owned hy the uncle of a stu-| o fill the huge dryinz vats., hut here |in many instances Chinese culture There happened 1o he 1o strange har Chancing this (n have arrived in i huilt np around the “Redheards” and | piiag Who?—Uncle Sam." Aent friend. T changed into the Enro-[and there mav he <ean flocks of the | has econventionalizad the opposite rowmen with a donkey in the village | | was able tn ..4;« the stary o their exploits. Ting-chall” he bellowed. and A rag S o e, my Fng. PeAN clothas which | had with me ctrange windmill pumpe used to [ wayx from that used by ua DAL RIENL, who agTeed Lo take.us an | salt renellion o the pres A.few of these romantic outlaws ged fellow saluted Ses that thit|lish vers poor. Will von teach me As [ was hoarding a n-h;‘mvpm- raise the seawater (o the drying Chinese windmille, #ar instance, are to the Nexi town. some eight miles (Capyrizht, 18780 n['F: strong :‘y:.“r'l.lnp'.- u'hn'ha\ -n: Yoling iellon sk mafe cornuct (Ol EneiEns Noniton s teomiBinanst :::Mr-n_w 1 was confrontad hy Yuina o of axtortionats of- | jan AR = oto. ficials—alwaye axiat, and thair num.| K0 But dont let th s i Ah " he sald. after the nsusl in s . 5 hers are greatly Augmenied durin, ot {NCVOL &) You pétutnsin A gnore L2 No, romfortable style than veu came. periode of unséttied administration. J Africa " ably.” 1 sald Up to recent times thess outlnws Al “I eame very comfortably sald. . have had special reapect for foreign in S o Arisarloh United .RIII you bed at Chiness house- . e Wy s Occupie nvoy From Rome 1L (he Iast several vears the squabbles 3 ‘What part vou come from?" b By e i yendur g e el naal, Rt i foihe e O e il | He sucked in hix breath a moment BY HINDA BURKE, brown leather cushions and green|the controversy this past Summer|gation, with ofices over a grace Tapanese have wipad our much of the et B el tewace] Del) os WRAC YONC 88 ow 4 fringes. and candelabra of bronze.|over the furnishings of our White |Atore. Old-timare vet remember the praferential réapact of the Chiness . I dond know. Bpell. pieans. Yamamoto!™ 1 chided. ““That isn't HE centuries crashed togethel. Jpic fa the Ghly room whersin pic , haron. a courtly. cultured gentlemar for the stranger within their gates. Today if vou showld turn up the aporiamaniike. Any cluea von get to Whsn the noan Whistle e are hung at this writing—Roman | HOUse. an Ameriean artist pronounc | (o "eoot in height. as he promenaded : vecords of the Japanese occupationalimy past | will be glad to slucidate hlew the force of American | picryres, by ofd masters, of cathedrals | ing the présent arrangements as “af- | with cane and maonocle. down AMost noticeably was this the case in 3 + forces, wherever they are kept @and Byt it ia going hevend the ethies of workmen parked themselves gig'o e Ane o vind R AHE the famous train hold-up of American 4 T will guarantee that they are Kant sscrat servics tn Ak & man 1n dis promptly with their dinner Roman Arch. with a gitmpee of the |jonial furnishing threughout snggest A young ltalian has laen giving tauriste in southern Shantung. And ! somewhere, unieas the earthquake close his future - And 1 left him paile right in the midet of the IX- ryipad Farnm-through the vigia. Ona | oy in Meu of the presani ane of [Mme hix conception of good manner on.one af my axcursions I ran inte J and fire destrovad them). vou wonld | there sucking in hié breath tesnth eenfnry. or thereahouta. and ganeral difference may be noted he- |ty (SO0 SRe | Prok which mav serce as zuide for all Lan Yang-ren. ar “the Foreigner.” as find. “Hall, o Saf. City: Enywhers:| Refore leaving Tsingtao | recelved | the Lion of i Marke. 10nping An | (wean there pictures and the pictures | "LIgiS FEES BRG BECIOTS. o G T nnat acanirs gand manners he was dubbed. ane of the brigand . | Country, 1" 8 A Aressed Chiness word that a friend: and rrusted fel | antique madallion ovar the marble | of the ofher embassier: thesa are |, Rt 18 vour 4 ®lby imitating other peaple.” save he chiefs concernad in that avil axploit of p clothes. Wouldn't show pRasport. |low investigaior.. Yu :Ming-en. WAs | frame of the open fireplacs in the mostly, ax deseribed. of cathadrals and | **5F0 B RIS 8o i ] 71t must all come from the heart. It 1323. Watch him. Y." | down with.amalipox 1n & villagh A 1he | hallroom. gazed down upon an in- | ather architecture and of grocexsions, |yt AN TR ex wan 80 1T TN B TS (R 0T S e I wae fraveling from Chefos. the A little later the Japanese. whoe |northwear part of the: PrOMOROrY . congruous assemblage. The forego- | while émhassien of other nations dis. [ (8 RACE PR “EREe AE e MAr | o 5oy 50000 oceion. it must he he lovely old harbor on the Guif of name was Yamamoto. returned to Dairainlfx ar Wethaten—two walled ' jnz refers to the new Ttallan em- | plavsvHieflv kings. queens, heroes and | o t. standardizing is, oh, #6 Théneto- | CANte it makes me more comforiahle Chihli, directly southward acrose the me. “You know I'pton Clore?" he | ejties connected by a high brdge— [ Lasev in ita last siages of conatr | nen; it-would Aeem that the ital-| 00 W00 f'"’h"- Ty 1t | —but not just 1o show my manners promontory. 1 100k a mule litter. the asked. “In ha American man?" set out to fetch him. tion: but the place ix new only ox | jana™ Ate < heduty worshipers rather [ q0U% SRTLERIME UL showldent. . SO L T 0 gaod manners. If 1 ser Primitive form of Pullman traval Rome tifie.préviouniy T-had decited|” The - ‘Hast UiMIon s pAriegbrly | rexards 14 &rorser parth than hero worshipers. ey “kmow how at: tha Jidiiag | 1ady standing in A street car. ana On the third day out 1 emerged that reams of raports fled in the prosparous in iLis disiricl. wanted to | “We did not hring the hricks and | On tHe wall of the antercom of the e Muew BOWS AEd Imtar | Rive her a seat. it in not to show ms from mountaine. The muies sighted Siate Deparimeni would have leas charge me outragsously for animals. mortar over from lialv. Innghed | chancery. the only place where a por. | SmOasey: in all ihie gorgeoun Inter- | BUE Q008 TN 0 TR T SO T A town among the poplars helow. and influence In saving Shantung 1o %o 1 fell hack on the wheelharrow. leonarda Vilelll secretary of ihe | (rait in af vét hung. is & portrait of TIXNE. as described. there s mot a | PNITECE (0 MAS BEGRE TUT IR T enlivensd by the proapect of an sarly China than a few torles in American China‘s “ffvver.” Traval by wheel emhassy. with a gleam in his dark.|the- king, life size and halflength, a JICHI0E noie: diferant per inga fror | thAn mine. and an it would make me midday rest and meal siruck ont on nawapapers. | aent some articlea ae- barrow consists of mlternately walking Italian evex. Rut ax regards the em- tall hlonde man with mustache. ~ A f0d FERNCE. TUKS And bangings r0m |\ comtortable ta ait and ses he: theiroi. The muleteer. who had hean oraty oy friend. 0. B Powall,|and stng sidewisec-or wgih feat | halllahmant and furnishings of the | gresn: scarf crosses diagonally over togethar by a master hand. ihe hanqi. | Standing when T am hetir able griding along hehind. eracking his “ditor of the Shanghai Weakly Re. stiick Stralght out before one-on tha ' adifice. all are from the past. trans- his broad chest under silvar-looped e Dy e et P 001 | And his Tittle -diacourse AW gnpress long Whip at every hush, gave chase. view, the same Powell who was A Narrow hanch heside the gremt squeal- poried across as from Itnlian | cords, thé cgllar of silver and gold. UL L MRS 8 SABIS OF Q00 me more than the volume of Livd cursing the mules roundly for mud prominent American captive in the ing wheal. The barrow man halances Fiime and palaces the coat of fark blue. with trousers Prownish koid. painied with red | Choiarfeids leters 10 hie <o tartles. Thev went like Anything hut RidnAping case. Under the stocies| wWith his handa; but. pushes with a What was vonr outsiandiis, firei of lighter ahade of the same color. He | T0teR and - conventional desan of \huiain he sets forth a complicated fuiidturtiée, howeyer. 1..crawled out I put the words “Up (los” as an cloth belt passed over his thoulders impression of Ameriea™’ was asked stands rect. gravely = holding the JFEER BAC CIERER SN0 COTVRL (8% | acatem af etiquette for uss in im 0B ihe fhafie. not knawing whether it PTON CLOSE (JOSEF WASH. | Fo 0 O hare T was and hooked on alther shaft. of the new Ambassador. appointed in 'sword of state ax if guarding the en. } cirouiar pa heavy, golden frame, | Pressing the court WAS safer to jummp or ride. INGTON HALL). CORRESPOND- Powell ran them as the author's| MoAt barrow man have their pace, March, Nobile Giacomo di Martine. trance to- the chancery. Over thia /4. 0 and ehony candelabrs, all rich. | ADd A _voung weman. formerly cor Suddenly wa crashed through a traf ENT. MEMBER OF THE EX- |name undet the title. Thev svalved physical and mental. which an earth. “Oh. the size he exclaimed in | chancery. outside. is the incription. Bronse and ehony can Sitier or mign | Merted with fhe American eonsula fic Jam on the road. upsetting an PLORERS' CLUB AND LECTUR. |into “Upton Close.” and the name has auake could not change. My motive fones of wonder. spreading his hand< ' Regia Cancellaria.” freely tranalated |0 hues ‘nowhive s glitter or hiEh | garvice, just returned from five ven s PR Jeveral wheelharrows and | ER ON PACIFIC ASIA AT THE |stuck 1o me since. The Japaneas i | power on (Rt occason wan différent. far apart “We came atrote tne don | he MIngA fusiomanc, Senat avh tng | UL BEC 08 S0, 0 be ahding iy CHL RO e i = ' right shaft of my ewn 5 Al ¢ | ik . car | He wan & I giant who had tinent from Seattle to New York. six e ce 18 ¥ 2 L New overing o & she ferms : UNIVERSITY OF WASHIN: thorities wera vary keen to discover great genial g Toh aduientin Das rallet topned By | Bngiind conncitntes, What & ! convevance snapped and deacribed an & ~ 3 3 pedt g dave” He lion adorned in rellef, toppe 4 new angle of vision are abnve my hend as (he Hiier toned | TON. heloriptalotine matcnal enienicder Hionmes 4B ey Sty EIEBMENT R g 41U e AL DA Ak the roval crown and the head of the (hat our excellent Piigrim forefathers "y g ™ (nprasaion on rotirnie hotiom side up. With a scramble 1| of their penetrntion to reach the out- man shipping. Later he became Of course. vour corvespondent ex- Lipn of St. Mark's R ith Snem Ihe nutlon' hutimome. ehe sav was that eve managed 10 1and upon the back of |mules out of vour sight. Go and|mias werl major domo In a German home. Big tolled 1taly. in Al Ainceritv. for her | The interior court of the rdifice s beauty belonge o the devil—while | pdy was wearing a mask 1 miss the front mule. and in this fashion|get him a kitten.donkey to ride on I know of no conntryman of that| Wang had made money In Tsingiao, <upremacy In art. music and heauty "‘L‘:"‘\X:I“‘:".:h\.m:::l':':d‘)‘")':_Y'_:f:'":' e - HbWhrE: KIbWed Before bl ALes trh- e < ,"'| expression onraliar we weni into tawn. the litier.car atill |And two or thres coolies to earry his | pame. 1 1 TR Why— | i y vel apparentlv failing to mAke a vi b i A oware. § ) aces. And I miss the cheerful crer riding. with ihe haggage in the roof. | luggas And 1o me. “You won't|ann ..,;}. ithiullsrenlied "y :',',': X"?:',,,,"I\ 'yl;l,‘f:m\:‘l(:‘:‘;d ‘:2:\'":,': e autaida the Ambassa- the day—not ae brilliantly blue as an :"""\".\ turn, even on the Sabbath jngs:’ evan my servant would neve Without slackening speed. my muie | nead to pay for them. o it will be| “Oh, very had man.” waid Yamamoto. patrimony and he taok to the wheal. dor’s aindy. Vitetti laughed, “‘He ia|Italian sky. but carrying the sugge ARG e ! A, fait to wish me. ‘Buon gioin . swerved .into the Arat inn doorway | all the same to vou. Suppoge you And ont for me. Jap- | harrew. cvazy about America.” he explained | fion “‘ m"mfl":"”‘”. :‘::"::1’:‘ :“' .h,',. “m"";";,':"‘ ,';ml"“{' i "'I';..“";”: maor ning \‘\, are growing tan eon ’ w, utterly disregarding wag 2 bit diseane f . £33 2 e 3 g i3 B Akl Alnla. Creeping up the walls, v osphers of n A meéretal in Ameriean. tn drah and on. In the narrow doorway. however.| was hronght about. although at the Why don't van inquire of tha | ha vahiels with ite Joad of lugsage. | <rdar appraciated the 1iitle tribuie :t'nfl:n’nm“w',.}]{("h';(”:,':::,h':fi.',', anid | National Capital, on their phrtion of Terity seeme (o me lon Blaiani—when with the -wrecked litter jammed |same time rathar glad to he rid of arican Conenlar Sarvice.” T asked. o B nnh -1 fro erican correspondent. R 810 1 t £ & hiibble Burhi Againet the daorpoat. we stopped. The | the mulas, My mule chaser waa i | res n-u"r.‘ln-m- - ot e o etk onbiiaen T e e i e ione 18 “(he | Side. roofed portions are ‘paved with ment: one must understand the | Rut the new Ambasmador from I1a sentry - pounced upon the mulsteer, | teara, how He_ alected 1o stav (cane® oA L ORI EL4®N land of haauty. A lund where humbie 164 tiling and decorated with huge Italian temperament and understand | intrigued hy size and speed. as quned . ol &es hiding e e heir hehte | with | vARes in green jade effect. also an. art to find jov therain. The Prince | from. his voung secretare. 1 o am thelr flith under glorious trees. boga fzhermen R anlle outlined againat | Que marble fragments. and a foun- | Caetani. Ambassado ot America’s 8b: perhaps, we ail i rushad at us, children ceassd their """’:'-"""‘( o il ihat ihe | fain in the center. ~An ol¢ Roman |Martino. engineer ol- | nead perspective In order to appreciate | shuttle-cock games 10 follow us. peas. Sky ° and ““; . « axaggerated | LOMD of heavy carved marble stands to | dier. was chief creator of new one another—clasping hands acroes ante atAred at us and asked our des. ::’;“;":'-V:M":"“"'”:“‘”“’ '“M -}\: fsher. | ©N® Side the former occupant, ome | habitation. selecting the site, design- | the sea CInhron, tha unlyBtal stietingDUAR: | T L D OTRatioh. oD Uk iRbFR TS - ik wnll ie. “Per Vellazia“—for the sake of heauty only, a land where the \ HEN we had covered 10 miles [ ignorant and humble appreciate realized my miriake. Here was beanty for its own sake the Jack Dempser of the walking During the World War when the world! [ was about to siacken when foreign officers were in Washington he offared 1o give me a boost on tha | the Ttalian officers in their close- [ harrow. this not o count against me fitting ccarier hreeches and hlack |In the racs. Here he gt my pride velvet capse amhroidéred in gold |and 1 refused to give in. |were 2 gift tn the avae -weary of the Ry nightfall Wang. the harrow. | 4rah monatony of khaki. And some imAn. And 1 had gone the length of ,of our American nficers are recom- the county. 1 wae glad to aquat | mending a return to the ald army an the kang and have my food | Dlie And hrass bhuttons for improv brought ta me on A tray. Othar|Mment of the marale of the army: war Kueats came In. montly foot fravelars | 1% '3 &Tim business, a1 hest. and may with their hedding and several extra ' Need & gleam of hiue and gl paira of cloth ahoas on their. backst N thit new Italian Embassy Build. A group of grizzied home.comers from . N8 the interior ix a revelation of Manchuria. bearing 1n & tine cofffn PASt glories of different periods. The | the Danes of A fellow townaman who inner doors. transported from talian | " ‘o palaces. are works of art In them. | o dieq dunifes el ——nerinks: | seives. decorated on the panels by old | 4 sters. The blue and white Cippo- i ingk actors, a diatrict headman, | P4 : o "an el drug peddier with a auppie |10 marble columns {n the main hall i"f “Aour” and “‘molasses” (opinm) are alao from palaces, while a cream | | | {atream heds, often losing the trall, we | the crippled burro onto one side of the | were overjoyed when about sundown Barrow and sat the four of us on the we reached the shelier of the mud other and wheeled the whole walls, P Wi to the home of one of his frisnds in the nearest village. Out of the salt area we iopped ir ever, when the only inn of the . Uillaga to rest. One dav a hleading town refused s shelter. Big Wanz horse stumbied down the main sires half-clothed for tatically Impossible,” the pian of co | necticut avenne in its davs of fashior rhle atnircase. with heavy carved and porphia neediss, and professional | M37 5 3o i gAmblara. | balusirades. win it way to regions o i 2hove. And all the place is piled and | Ritting on the kame listening (o the |} lgleq with objacth of antigue art,| i not ae vat Arrangad—all awaliting the | exit of overalla—Venetian tables of | the period of Louis IV, and Floren. | tine tahles of the period of the renalssance. bronze candelabra. an- tique Persian and Turkish rugs,; statues and pictures, The baliroom (at_the moment an impromptu lunch hall for workmem is a glory of crim- | son damask and dull gold; the furni ture gold and red, hangings of crim- | e in i | son damask, and the painted walls :"P:‘m}:r_n\)mzlmlz of h_un‘ln: he‘rnlr"uz | of mingled’ reddish and ecru tints. ! ¥ nnkeeper (0 an ‘lsolated | ¢ the farem and near the celling ' temple ontgide of the town wall to o patnting of go dle. The man did not wish to as | % & freaco painting of goddeases and Sume the reaponstbility, very great In | CoPMS with flower garlands. and over ! THE NEW ROYAL ITALIAN EMBASSY, AT SIXTEENTH AND FULLER STREETS NORTHWEST. " the open- fireplace of dim. old marhie Coperight by Harria_k- Fwine. = 2 CMna_of & death in hik hostélry.. | the ancient medallion. aforesatd tnp.!,_ hoor e 24 2 % 3 | A® aoon Ar we were ahle to’ travel | ped hy the Lion of 8i. Marke. who wae hot on the trail. and began | with his animale. and [ consoled him | Yamamoio came back to the original|on the harrow. we ast out in a north % | Roran warrior or aristocrat, gather|ing the edifice and supervising selec 0O-oh! Give It-Back. slapping him about the padded shoul. | by PAving him far the entire trip. subject of contraveray easterly Airection for Tengchow, the | o fed unto hix gods and gone to the. un- | tion of the decorations and furnish. | 4 - ders. *xox o It he announced, “vou do not|fairy port on the gulf. where 'Gen.|T[THF lbrary is paneled in wainut!known. the tomb to serve ax recep-|ingh. As engineer. he Iaid.out the Old-Man—Lady. coul SugEgs me * % % % i o How - PASSROrt, vou cannot go in| Wu Pel-fu was born. Our route tonk |- two-thiFds 6f the way up, the re.| tAcle for palms. { minex In the mounfaine of Italy dur. 8 QUATier to get wheee me familc is . ' [ THREW my hedding bag over the | Taingiao, [ un through the mosi Provperous Part - painder coversd e - eed L ! "An Ttalian grevhoind came dasb: ing the war. showing how the Italian | TA4dx “Cer@iniy, my poor ‘man VOCIFEROUR moh of ruans i L hack of the Httté Kitten-donkey [ Undoubtedly, ha piannsd 1n del|af Ahanmiung. and ane of the words '™ red and &old gz Cypen the acens, ‘hut. At sight | temperament may comhine artist, sol.| Ner4’s A quarter. Where ix vour fam orowded out of the eating hall and got ssivide. e set out, thel with me ax xoon -a« we crossed the . most produetive agricultural districta, Progade. And golden candelabra gleam |of n atranger. stopped Atill And | dier and diplomat. It seeme, in a 1Y A PRi atext the gate, ‘and aurrounded ue ' C0Olles hehind me and two ragged |border of the former leasad territors. | just them in the verdure of early |from the ‘walls; brightening the mom. | statueaque as the marble forms about. | way, a matter of regrat that he lefi| ©O1d Man—At the movies. They ware réssed in aix or seven bandil guarda oting carbines, siouch- | Bu | sispped off the train one atation | Spring. [ber walmut effect. The furniture 1#| “Hello." called Vitetti, but the !his okt hefdra completion of his mas. . species of uniform. military. police | IN& along in the rear. | oo soon INK Adross gountry five' 'From Tengchow we headed due |of carved walnut. cushionsd in brown | princely heast, disdaining the Amer. | terpisce: but we all remember ihe Glad to Obey. , train_conductors, Atudents, and even | The Chinese at Kao-mi were stirred imiles. | reached the village of Li|west toward the Yallow. River. delta: leather: medieval monke may - have | lean lingo, held his pose until we |faréwell ball laat February in the un Teacher (to tardy pupil—Why are “Roy Scotuts=—no one of-them. howevar, by rumors that Tian's government | Txwen. just inxide the Japanese juris-| we wera ao0on out of the fertlle coun- | rested on' those chairs, carrying on | passed on. 3 | finished butiding. vou late? « pssessing a compleie ontfAt of an m-;i:\ l“:klnz was nfrn;naq;& llwx‘mn’- diction. PRI ¢ ‘lfl_‘"and l'\'mn a r]u\rrflr\ nalnx fat r;n—\th-_"rgl;\‘: Of 16AFNINg in the dark ages. | * x ok 3 Ttaly must take pride in her Amer Tardy Pupil—T saw & sign— ev All ‘wors long wonden | tize .lapan's poaition in Shantung. | o ating Alternately of salt. marshes & dining room s fnished wi | $ H fcAn Dost. eracting a palace for its| Teacher—Wall. what has the sign :::gw:-h centaining rough knives, | headed for Taingtas to discover what FTER a hasty meal of duck's exen | and gravel, hroken At intervals hy | effect of marbalized. i=hed with an | /LIS magnificent Intarmixture of icAn pos ing a ¥ & greenish walls, ) habitation. It is a far ery from the got to do with it? and some of them carried Six shontare |’ could. nnd bean curd, | left at dawn in a | meky crags. Thers is an ccaginnal | the hangings of dim grean and. geld, periods and nationalities daacribad | g3 of Baron Fava, farmer Minister | Pupil—It said “gahoo! abesd, gn ‘amd ancient carbines. On the train, riding toward Kiao.|rickshaw for Tsingtao. town of .prosperous salt-gatherers, 'and the furniture.old oak with light|in the furnishings i¢ a reminder of | from [aly, then represented by a le- | siow." tales of the prolatarian company, fell aslesp. In the night 1 awnke with a chill. to And myself uneavered. ‘The next morning [ had eve Aymp- tom of the influenza or ‘“‘small plague” as the Chinese call it, though it has killed & milllon or two of them. Wang insisted that 1 lie quiet, vol nnteering (o go alone and fetch Yu. Two days later he brought Yu in on hi8 barrow and we lay side by side on the Inn kang, recovering. Yu told 1

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