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———— By Ruth Snyder. © Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Company. DY GRACE MAC- KENZIE, the modern Diana, in New York. To know, the name sug- is those in the ygests adventure and thrills. All of us love adventure. All of us the thrills of the unex- crave thrills Pected, the thrill of the unknown, the thrill of excitement and possible dan ger. But it is not possible for all to seek and satisfy these longings. To but a few do the big udventures of life come. And to woman—very seldom. It has taken us a few hundred years ‘to realize that woman can and will do the many hazardous things that com- mon belief once credited to man alone. Lady Grace MacKenzie ts one of the fortunate. Nature has endowed her with no- Ie) madic longings and the ways and means to gratify them. She has ) spent the last fifteen years in almost continual travel. She has circled the globe three times. places with bis game bunting poss!- There are few bilities which she has not at some time visited. Africa has With its lion hunts. called to her wanderlust nature, lured her The tropics have Before Lady MacKenzie started on Por excitement. She owned and ran ranches in Crook County, Wyo- . These ranches were forty miles from the nearest railroad and 500 i Mpiles from the nearest city of any ze. There wasn’t a horse on any of these ranches which she did not break herself. “If [ had those cowboys see I was afraid of anything,” she is quoted as saying, “it would have been fatal. . . + Often I've got on an un- broken horse when I was so scared Phat I couldn't see his head. But I Jetayed on. Sometimes in the busy Wgeason I would be in the saddle fitty ours at a time.’ Then Lady MacKenzie sold he> Fanch and started off for adventures new. Bhe decided to explore the Tana Breaking Horses on Her Five Western Ranches Gave Her Thirst for Greater Excitement, Which She Has Found in Shooting Big Game and Exploring Jungles and Rivers of the Tropics Some of the Flamingoes Photographed un- der Great Difficulties by Lady MacKenzie on Her Recent Visit to the Bahamas. THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1922. A Modern DianaWho Lives on Adventuré HOW LADY MAC KENZIE FOR 15 YEARS HAS TRAVELLED WORLD TO FIND NEW THRILLS ¢ Shot Africa. River tn East Africa, The one of the most tr Tana Is herous rivers in the world. It is full of waterfalls and dan. rlpools, is, The ‘ous ray river is lined for miles on*both sides with heavy papyrus swamps, At other places the forests are so dense that travel possible gnly by literally, climbing over the tops of trees. On this exploration she captured many trophies which seem sea creditable to a woman. Nine te trophies—including sume of the rarest Specimens of heads and skins of ani- mals which have ¢ ben seen There were thirty-two lion heads and skins, a pair of horns in the world, nearly 400 zebra e largest bui ‘alo skins, five rhinoceros heads and skins of more than 1,500 leopards, cheetahs and other animals. Lady MacKenzie also has five elephants to her credit Ong night Le put her hi “We were in a boma, or b’ relates in her story. MacKenzie almost nd ona lion lind,” she "We had bheea tor the lons to waiting three come to the placed ba At last we ap} in hunter through t loophole In t h 1 co! too, went this shut off hand to part t afd T ma wall of ald eateh ough had & ter clutched my hand lion throug fe leaves we ha of the boma a lioness » and my ru shot Lady MacKenzie and Her “Safari” Eest African Expedition to Explore the Tana River, on Her With all this amazing data and his- tory of this mode mand, one Immediately would expect to find in Lady Mackenzie a gian tess of uncommon strength and physique. In physian stature—you La MacKenzi 4 not unlike the loss of the chase. But in manner rd personality ehe 1s « AY the an to her suite of rooms in New York woud iIspel any contrary impr ion, ered hos id gently bids a me. A a long brown healthy arin indicates a chair. A dis- tly feminine costume flushes be- The Boat From Which Lady MacKenzie. Photograpled the Flamingoes. Baker, voice of her latest trip in search tracks of Livingston and of photographs of tire flamingoes Stanley. The Ife so appeals to her “Tile has been the most feartul, that If she fs away from it for two most wearing trip—both physically Months at a time she beconfts so rest- and mer that we have yet un- !€88 and bored ehe must be off dertaken, The mosquitoes in the More Bahamas, where we went for our “It 18 @ life which appeals to photographs, are can't gen your mouth without get- she aftirins, "love the wild pl ting mouthful. And that's no of the world and the people who yarn, And then, too, wo had to wade in them through inud—thick mud Ike cement for the love of udventure. hefore we could get near enough to since the moving’ picture game the birds tg ¥ feet still ache from !t."" go off to take pictures of t “Just how did you get these pho- Places ysd that those less fortui * she was May be able to see these inaci places of tographs’of the flamingoes 1 sible sand We started off from Nassau and Wworld."’ hundred and fifty or ash remote went ubout one This last trip to the Bahamas dred iniles out In the ocean undertaken primarily to get pict we anchored. We then set out of the flamingoes but, at the s: ill boats until we reached a time, Lady MacKenzie has colle ere it was bottomed boats. These the nttomed 1 mangrove to deceive flat t ‘country and its natives so ered with she may write of t ats we « a hint the flamingoes The flamingoes 1 ese mangrove swamps natives. who pushed title through marriage. reek were aiso ve Then these boats bite parscnalld covered with this n these trips, Is as k once me sb thick that you more than anything else ever could,” aces live At first I used to travel Now, has notograph them, My developed so amazingly, I want to hese nate ces. the was ures ame cted necessary to remarkable and interesting data of that » Ba- hamas and stories of its natives. Lady MacKenzie holds her English Her husband, not connected with ly interested in 4 to crawi along It took hou ; we bad to craw) along. 1 hOUrS them ap she herself. Lady MacKenzie to go near enough to photograp go ANGE ERONE \ eravy was born in Spain but of American ve hiraa, Parents. Perhaps her Spanish blood “The ngoes are beautiful birds rhe :8 accounts for her nomadic tastes Their pl age is flame pink It giistens in the sun like metal. They “It 18 not, of course, possible for Stand about five to six feet high. In ¢very Woman like myself to forsake the daytime they snap their beaks #ll else and seek adventure in fare away lands,’ she declares, ‘“‘But— in a manner amazingly like calling to their ind for all weneral cu eis the than they do a towethe: young puppies mothers, At night they 6 love of the ope I am porfectly sure that tf women in ‘vated and fostered more n, & the world like a band T clarton and tt at of the drum advantage would be gained not fife. To get anywhere r for them tndividually, but for the natives } ta wade waist whole gene.ation of women to a tht) th ‘ mud. It would expand their minds, F ud A 1 lines of thought, give es and then it was jet « t of expression and But all t lis fou nah them blgger, more generous, madic life do not Jessen the ar more whe enthuelasm of this follower in the nature is a wonderful tonto," \ e-wouled and happler—for \