Ihe Omaha Sunday What Per Royal -; .A , SI-. V t . - luL , i i 'M-tfi-; i ; '?- . - v v.vUf wit 'v Hef Royal Highnets the Infanta Eulalla of Sapin. By H. R. H. The Infanta Eulalia, Aunt of the King of Spain In Hw Nw Book "Court Llf from Within," Published by Dodd, Mead & Co. T'irrHBN my mother died I was ablo a to get wholly clear of the for ; malltlea of Court life, and I left the. Palais to rent an apartment for my self, where X could live' like a private person with my maids, without even a lady-ln-waltlng. I bought a tew acres of land on the seashore of my beloved Nor mandy, and built myself a Summer cot tage cooled by the happy breezes that I bad known as a child. And here I can say and do and think and write what I please, untroubled by the prohibitions of crowned heads, who can enforce no com mand on me and Impose no punishment elcept to deny me -an entrance to Courts from which I have been only too ' Cad to escape. 1 . 'When my first little book was about to pel published the King of Spain wired me 1 that t Could not publish it without his consent I repudiated that control of my liberty, and they threatened to de prlve me of my title and the small ln - come that comes with It I was puttied to know what they would decide to call Qt, if not "the In fanta Eulalla." and I was Interested to ' set If the King would set a precedent lor fleprtrtng the "Inviolable Royal family of Its titles and Its property by legislative enactment He decided, wisely, to let the matter drop, and I heard so laore of it It Is my final realisation of freedom that I celebrate now in these pages. I have escaped, mind and body, from my gilded cage. It has taken a lifetime, but It was worth tt I have no respect for anything In the world except intelligence. I lire la France because it is the most Intelligent of all the countries I have known. I have seen the world waking to the feet that the rule of money is no better than the rule of rank, except when It is more intelligent;, and I can foresee the day. when the Inequalities of property Will have no more authority than the in equalities of rank to oppress mankind. I read and write to keep my own intelli gence In health ty exercising it And I am frald of no critic except the one who bay And my Intelligence feeble, with a prison pallor, la spite of its Joy in its escape. - . . . - It was during my years of travel in Europe that I was offered the opportun ity .of going to Atnsiica to represent the Throne of Spain at the World's Fair that ' was to be held In Chicago to commemor ate the four hundredth anniversary of Columbus's discovery. I accepted the In ltatlos with Joy. I bad no lonser my childish idea that if I could only take a boat and sail to America I should be really free,- but I had still in my mind the household saying that I was "only fit for America." and I felt sure that I should like the great democracy, and I was eager to see it. When we picked up our pilot off Bandy Hook I was on the upper deck, prome nading happily in the chill wind In light clothes, and the pilot remarked to cne of the boat's officers that it "was dan- L.l:..;illjBt . gerous for that young girl" to be exposed In such a way to such weather. He was told . that I was "the Spanish Infanta, and he laughed uproariously at the Idea, and the more seriously the officer as sured him of it the more he enjoyed the Joke. I. saw him looking at me and laughing, so I Inquired what was the matter, and when I found out I wae slightly puzzled. ' His amusement proved to be typical of my whole reception in the United States. As one of the newspapers pat It, they had expected a "big, dark Span ish' princess with a black mustache," and It was with a tickled surprise that they found me "like, any of the girls you see walking down, . Fifth avenue." Their pleased curiosity was reflected in the ac counts that the reporters gave of me. No conceivable personal detail escaped them. One reporter even discovered that I had a gold crown on one of my back teeth, and I was mystified to know how he could have seen it Surely my smile was not so broad' as all that! I tried myself before a mirror. No! By no possible grimace could I expose that tooth. I remained mystified. I do still. The amusement however, was not al together on their side. The newspapers had not prepared me tor this familiar but kindly tone of the American press, and the people of European countries had not the simple benevolence of the curi osity that brought the smiling crowds to greet me in the United States. The American young girl is the spoiled darl Ing ot the nation, and they were all as willing to spoil me and I was willing to be spoiledby their almost affectionate and chivalrous desire to give me "a good time." I cannot pretend that I saw anything at all of the problems of government In the country nothing of the poverty, of the industrial exploitation, of the inequal ities of opportunity and the control by the moneyed classes, of which we have since come to hear so much in all the kingdoms and republics and democra cies of this changing world. I was merely a caller in the parlor. I knew nothing of the family life in the house, much less of the difficulties below-etalra. We did not land at New York, but at Jersey City, where a special train was waiting to carry us to Washington. It would have taken us in Spain twenty four hours to go the distance: we cov , ered it in five hours, and I did not feel shaken, in Spain If luncheon had been served us on the train it would have been "to kill time;" here it was served us "to save, time." One was struck at once by the busy ness of the life and its efficiency. We had been caught up by an organltatlon that transported um. fed us, housed us, delivered us . into the . hands ot a host Or at the doors' of an entertainment, re turned us to our hotel, took us on excur sions, provided us with drives, protected us from intniflloa. conducted us through crowds, intelligently, suavely, without any httch.' comfortably, almost Invisibly, with a foresight tbat seemed to provide for every contingency .that could happen. ? n 1 iidhn hinkx of Very Amusing Experiences in America Told by the Spanish Infanta Eula lia in Her New Book, "Court Life from Within" and to be prepared Tor any change ot plan that we could wish. And the spectacle of the life through , which we hurried had. the same sir ot taring conquered the material agents of existence to the same end namely, that every one should get as much as possible done in a day with as little friction as possible in the mechanical means of do ing it From tome of the Americans whom I have seen abroad I bad not got a very happy Impression, and now I understand why. They had been out of their element; they had left at home their reason for being. The women, tor example, were less con spicuously dresved than some I had seen in Paris, and less nervously self-assert Ive; and the men were more easy and more natural. They were not on the de fensive among foreigners whom they felt to be critical or whom they desired to . Impress. They were not blatant nor apologetic. They were happy. Intelligent, hospitable and altogether engaging. I found no one with whom conversa tion was not Instantly possible, and the - volubility of my conversation was a mat ter ot amuse! comment with our suite. The truth was' thafl was not only sym pathetically Interested in all I saw and eager to talk about it I was also at once aware of the friendliness of the eyes that watched and listened, and I talked, and my vis-a-vis talked, without any awk wardness of restraint There were no royal "monkey tricks" expected of me. I was unable to dance though I often longed to because I . was on an official visit and questions oi precedence wouia nave made it necei aary tor me to choose the most impor- . tant personage In the room as my part ner or take the risk of offending him. And the most -important person at a dance Is not always the best dancer. But I was not et apart on a dais, as I would have been at home "always on a stand, like a harp," as I usd to complain enq i enjoyed my eelt. I felt that 1 was really meeting the people whom I met I was not merely royalty; I was a sort of na tional guest whom every one tried to Interest and enter tain. One accepted as an inevitable part of one's public charac ter the army of re porters and photog raphers who sur- - rounded us at every official appearance. They were not in trusive, and having learned that I could not give Interviews they did net try to . get any. Toe good will of the crowds, who were as omni present as the newspaper men, was always delightful. They gathered, of course, merely out of curiosity, but their stares were not, as in other countries, either awed or Inimical or Just curious. They greeted you, as they might their own representatives, with amiable smiles and cheers, waving their hand kerchiefs. In the thronged streets of the expo sition they could not be held back by our police escort, who struggled with them good-naturedly as thev. good-naturedly. Soine Very Queer Jobs TOT all the tasks warships are called I urne nave to ao with war and the dettruction of ' human life and .property. A couple of French, warships were sent out into the Mediterranean some years ago to wage war against a school of porpoises which were doing an Immense amount of damage to the fishing .industry, io those waters. After three days' hostilities, during which quick-firing guns were used with considerable effect, the vessels returned to port "triumphant, having practi- ' cally annihilated tho enemy, A year cr two ago a warship pt Great Britain's Aus- ' trallan fleet was given the strange Job of capturing or destroying a mysterious sea monster which had been Copyright 1815, by th Star Company. Great Britain Bee Magazine Pag 'jx, th pressed in upon us, and one could not I "Wf: m 1 ' help but accept their pressure with a I . . , ', A Al .;.!: !' '. smile. It was all quite human and Jolly f m ' and Inoffensive a democratic crowd, Ji. t 1 " democratically unrestrained in its inter- Hx1 - ' " , , , ' f est in everything and everybody. When I. , ;' ' r 1 I v' I was complimented on the popular lnv V, ' ' ..'?'',' pression which I seemed to make I could I J I L I reply, quite truthfully, that If the Amer- ' t 11 ' : " ' leans liked me it must be becaus3 they , Jj I '. " f could see how I liked them. I liked f J i -'I'- . them immensely. r f I tt They seemed all prosperous and all I . . J happy. We had no begging letters and .' ; i P petitions for alms thrown into our car- v " , riage, such as would have overwhelmed f : '.. i us at home. We did not meet any ot ' ' s t those affected excesses of deference to s '' "': : ! royalty which would have been so out I " .".! . .: of place in a country where there is no f , - : i i f Crown. If people crowded to see us, ou; I , ' 1 ; , i ! h ot curiosity, I could not complain; 1 was 6 - ...... - j f -7 ' ' King Alfonso XIII. of Spain, j . . r tha Infanta's Nephew, Who f J V i Threatened to Deprive U t"' , I Her of Her Title Z-H-' , v is : ) ' M and Allowances. !('', ' y - Vj, X y . -" s i -7 I . ' 'i It . '- .;;V-..;n r,- J:K--r'f. .... .,;v;i ' f ' - j (- ' - . . v .. , ... The Infanta I ,,.! r "r 'V,v: ' ? ' . ' ,,V ' r 'i . " ,..t!;. EuUlta' i ' ,JrT-Tr1.TTt v:T T "r: " 1 J' r$$'T "f "r t'f Salon:ofHer H";Vf,"f k t ; ' . I Present I - , ;i f! r. . : ' . ' . . I -i 1 i! a i Home. I. - - .: - ffi 'MwrnMMH, r. s .v - -.-... - . rmr - - r L. .... .. (W --.. -J (..,.. . . - i , . ... ... t- " ( - r- ' 1 . I t-t . I j e i. - -i a ' I 7 i 4 . t i iv k f s ........ S .... . . . . . . . The Royal Palace, Madrid, Where the Infanta Eulalia Formerly Enjoyed Apartment., Wa Excluded for Expressing Herself Too liberally. Just aa curious to see them. They were not ruder-end I hope I was not Any one who makes a royal visit to any country must see it superficially; and if I wrote here tbat President Cleve land and his beautiful wife were charm ing hosts, that the country around Wash ington reminded me of England, that the lake front in Chicago (which was about a:i ot Chicago that I really saw) waa on to under- reported oft the Falkland cent German naval defeat . . It Is pretty safe to say that the officers, if not the crew, entertained grave doubts of the actual existence of the frightful creature which had been described; it was too terrifying, hideous, gigantic and ferocious. But shortly after the ship arrived in the Waters where the monster was supposed to lie in wait for vessels, the officer of the watch described a strange-looking beast making toward his ship, and it was Immediately guessed tbat this must be the substance ot all the alarming tales. And a pretty good subbtance it proved, too. An attack was made upon It, and efter some hours' Bgb,tlng w'.th harpoons and quick-firers, the mysterious Rlshta Rrvi I r : ... L ; .) 3 j " j' ; . ' I . i ' t V . - .... .V-sJV-, .-.., . . , ; t.v v. . ! . "ft.. - t i ;1 " sf ( : J;. ' ' -y-Yi'V ' . : J L 'A ) handsome, that New York was New York, and the Hudson River the Hudson River I should not relieve my mind ot anything that even Lewis Carroll's con versational walrus would have eared to And 1 hould-aot Interest even myself by writing it . , 1 had come to America 'as a person distinguished, by Intellect instead' of merely, by birth, I might have been very Warship Have Done Islands, the scene of the re. proud ot the crowds that came to see me, and my contact with American life might have been aa illumi nating experience worth detailing. As it was, my apparent popular ity could mean nothing to me personally, and ny experiences, though pleasant can mean from Which She nothing to any one else. . Nothing had happened to change my belief that my publlo life as a royal personage waa a busy futility. And when our steamship drew away from the shores of New York, and all the farewells bad been said, and the last cheers ot the last crowd had sounded. I was at once aad to watch a land recede that I felt I should never see again, and glad to be alone with my own thoughts and tree tft lay .off my publlo chapter. monster, which proved to be- sea-elephant between thirteen and fourteen yards long, was slaughtered and taken aboard. ;-.(,.' Some years ago the Norwegian government sent oat a powerful little fleet of warships, armed with mines, torpedoes and quick-firing guns, to exterminate a .vast horde of seals which was denuding the sea on the north west coast of all Huh life. But the government hadTeekoned upon tens ot thou sands of seals, whereas there were millions. 80 un ending was their number that the fleet had eventually to admit itself defeated, with the Joss of one man and two slightly wounded, owing . to an accident and to .."retire la order." having exhausted its entire supply of ammunition.