12 Y THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JUNE 23, 1918. In the Centennial Year of Mexican Independence Night Ceremony of Ringing Again That Historic Liberty Bell (Continued from Preceding Page) . temptations of either effete civiliza tion or more ordinary degeneracy. Tehuantepec town spreads over the hills on two sides of the river. The architecture is characteristically Mex ican, chiefly adobe houses facing nar row streets centering in a plaza which is also a . market place. There are some beautiful groves of cocoanut palms and banana trees near by. The railroad cuts through the town and bridges the river. The churches oc cupy prominent cites and show in terior evidences of poverty. Town of Tehuantepec. ' Among the inhabitants, who are of the Zapotecan tribe, tracing them selves back with unmixed blood to before the Aztec days, the women are largely preponderant in numbers. The fact is, the women of Tehuantepec are far-famed for beauty of figure and face. They are of a light brown color, clear complexion, good features and intelligent countenances. They stand erect, carry their bundles or water jars on their heads, are clean and comely, which is the exception and not the rule in Mexican natives. The women of Tehuantepec are the Leads of the family; they are the bus iness men; they, run the shops and stores and in the market they do the buying and selling. They have for years been pursuing all the occuna k tions our own "new woman" has only lately undertaken to break ", into. saw no signs of any suffrage move- ; nient and heard no cries that sounded like "We want votes but if there is ny place in the world where women - aught to get votes for thi asking, if :ney really want them, this is the jpot. lehuantcpec women further more have the reputation of being moaest, auectionate, devoted and constant, and many are the talcs told ot lonesome foreigners hired to mat rmionial entanglements through their rapturous wiles. - Dress Makes the Girl The dress that stamps a person as hailing from Tehuantepec consists of a skirt ot dark-figured cloth finished at the bottom with a deeo white. fluted ruffle and a sleeveless jacket of similar ngured Dut ditterent colored cloth cut low at the neck and reach ing to the waist.- These jackets are beautifully embroidered, sometimes entirely by hand, but more usually merely hand-stitched on a sewing ma chine (the American sewing machine, by the way, being the furniture piece de resistance in nearly every Mexican household). When they raise their arms or stoop over, the jacket and skirt fail to connect This ' costume is usually, but not always, topped off wun a peculiar nead dress, likewise of fluted white lace or embroidery, which I am at a, loss to describe ex- "f, Mia l IG3CIUU1CS B Mane Antoinette collar in two pieces, one piece pulled up over the head and the other dropped to the middle of the backy v . :.vv7:: Those who axe able deck them selves out with necklace of either coral or gold beads set off with Amer ican gold coins, preferably the $2.50 or $5 denm . atians. It is related that originally these chains were linked up with solid gold slugs, for whictr the thrifty 49ers crossing the isthmus during the California fever, volunteered to substitute the more ar tistic and beautiful gold coins in each case with a substantial profit to themselves and thua establish the fashion in necklace, which has per- dyrtd i?Lthi day- I persuaded one of the Tehuantepec belles to part with the corals she was wearing, and some of our party bought gold beads, but not in the same way, off the wearer's neck.'?,.;. -..-;; Enterprise of the Tradesman. i Although I can prove an alibi for myself, I will not mention names, but this story is well attested ami can h verified. Ah enterprising Tehuante-I pec tradeswoman' offend for sale dazzling chain of gold beads,' but as I the price seemed prohibitive, and i brought no bidders, she divided the! cnam into three pieces and , offered one of them for $10. One of our party had a 10-dollar bill changed into silver and starting at $5 went for the chain as if it were on the auction block by holding out his coins and adding a half dollar at a time until he got up to $9.50, where the parley ing seemed to reach the point where there was nothing to arbitrate. Final ly as a compromise he agreed to put in the other half dollar antl huw at the original price on condition that two more beads be added to the! chain. His chuckling and . crowing j over the achievement in making, the ' saleswoman come across even to j ' that extent, however, soon gave way to misgivings.and when later the ' purchase was exposed to the acid I test, the unfeeling jeweler imparted1 the confidential information that the! beads were 18-carat brass, but so I skillfully coated with gold wash as j to. deceive any one not an expert 1 Reverse Rules of Modesty. ! What I have described thus in de- j tail is the women's dress, the men i being clad in the ordinary attire and ! me cauaren, wnen ciad at an, were miniatures of their elders, '.here is this peculiar modification in Tehuan tepec of our rule of modesty that public nakedness is accorded to the 'ittle boys only, while the infant girls nust be covered, no matter how scantily. The same rule applies to the elders when they go bathing in . the river. The men swim around quite au naturelle while women dis play abbreviated bathing suits which : would cause consternation rather than envy on an Atlantic City bath ing beach. .;''. 1 In our, honor as a party of visiting newspaper men, a grand ball was ar ranged for our evening's- entertain ment Our whole party under escort and headed by a band of native musi cians marched from the station through the town, forming a proces r'on which for bizarre effect would ! ve outshown the centennial parades ii Mexico City. We brought up at a I rge enclosed building of ; bamboo r id thatched roof construction, dimly I htedy lanterns and furnished !y with a few chairs along two sMcg. I could not make out for what i tie building was used ordinarily, but saw a couple of chickens roosting in far corner. Natives Dance the Two-Step. Our native orchestra established itself on one side of the room and we made ourselves at home on the other, while gradually the belles of the ball gathered decked out in all their finery. ' They first gave us an exhi bition of their native dance, which is very pleasing to the eye, five couples going through the steps and poses. The dancers kept at a little distance from one another passing back and forth with rhythmical move ments of arms and body as well as feet, remotely suggestive of the bal ancing in our quadrilles. The sur prise part of the party came when the music swung into a waltz and then into a two-step, and the Tehuantepec girls accepted the to them unintelli gible invitation extended by the vis itors to trip the light fantastic, ac cording to the rules of our own ball room games. And it may be said that these barefooted women dancing on a dirt floor proved thatjhey could go through the mazes of a waltz and pace the two-step with a grace and skill not only unexpected in the shadows of a little Indian town nest ling under the tropics, but calculated to put to a real test our own best dancers if they entered in competi tion. One number not on the program should come in at least for a mention a real earthquake that was pulled off in the middle of the performance apparently for our delectation. This was an up-and-down earthquake and very perceptible, the tremor of the ground lasting quite a few seconds. It attracted momentary attention, but did not extinguish the lights and the natives, accustomed to the seisimic demonstrations, went right along with their mirth and music as if nothing had happened. ,vThe next day brought us the final adventure -among' these interesting people. A little boy about 11 years old accosted as he was coming out of school with Spanish school books under his arm, had been very accom modating in answering questions and showing some of us around, and had pursued the acquaintance by coming down to our train. He disclosed the information that he had never been on a railway car, and although less than 20 miles from the Pacific, had never seen the ocean, much less an ocean steamer. Just as we were pull ing out some one asked him if he would like to come along, and receiv ing an affirmative reply, quickly got permission from an uncle who was standing near, and swung him on to the step. We could see the ominous looks on the faces of the crowd as they saw the boy apparently kid naped before their very eyes. The bold, bad white men who wanted to take the beads they were wearing from their necks had seized and swal lowed up little Maximo, just as Cortez had done with their forefath ers a few centuries before, and as some band of ruthless invaders had done periodically ever since. His Return a Miracle. But Maximo was by no means dis consolate; on the contrary, he was all eyes, ears and amazement The in terior of the train was to him like Fairyland. He manifested no distrust nor apprehension. Why should he care where he went? He had a. loose blouse shirt of black and white check and a pair of cotton trousers, probably all the wardrobe he ever owned at one time, and he was going to see the world. Upen-mouthed and awe-in spired, he gazed at the waves as they rolled in; he watched the big majestic ships at the wharf and saw one of them sail out beyond the horizon. He went through the warehouses and puzzled over the electric cranes with colossal loads balanced in midair. He sat in our dining car at luncheon and ate strange foods; he answered ques tions and asked more of them. He picked up a short acquaintance with some of the youngsters who lived in this harbor town, and he climbed aboard the train homeward bound with the air of a child having been to his first picnic. It was a short run to Tehuantepec, and as we went ''( .?K ' Norman C. Gault ATTORNEY AT LAW. i ,758-9 Omaha National Bank Building. through the town Maximo pushed his way out upon the platform where he could see nis friends easier than they could catch sight of him as we passed. It was their turn for astonishment again, and we could hear the exclama tions, "Why, there he is." "He is really coming back." "Look at Maxi mo I" ' And when the boy was safely redeposited at the railway station,, it was a certainty trom the way tney jostled around him that he would be a seven-day wonder in Tehuantepec, where, for all I know, he is still re counting his strange experiences of that day. ' Y. K. I R. J. MADDEN Graduate Creighton Law Callege Practicing Attorney in Omaha Since 1913 At Present Police Judge A. A. McLaughlin i i i i j WM. A. SCHALL m I l SMITH, SCHALL & HOWELL, 937 Omaha National Bank BIdg. Mr. McLaughlin was born on May 13, 1868, on a farm in Hamilton "County, Iowa, where his parents," natives of Ohio, had settled in 1856. He wag educated in the country schools and Iowa state college at Ames, graduating with the class of 1889. He studied law in the yniversity of Michigan at Ann Arbor, and grad uated therefrom in June, 1892, He was admitted to the bar of Iowa on October 5, 1892," and thereafter en v gaged in the general practice of the law in Des Moines. On March 1, 1903, he became assistant attorney for the Chicago & Northwestern Railway company of Iowa and continued in such capacity until October 1, 1912, , during all of said time engaging also in general practice. On October 1, 1912. he came to Omaha to is--sume the duties of attorney for the Chicago & North western Railway Co. for the state pf Nebraska,, At f present Ass't GenSolicitor with headquarters at Chi cago, retaining general supervision for South Pakota, Wyoming, Minnesota and Nebraska. . v ' John Wharton , If anyone was asked tohoose from Omaha's business men an example of what a poor boy can do in this great country of ours he could safely pick out Attorney John C. Wharton, former post master of the city. Reared on an Illinois farm, of people who ere much nearer the poor station in life than the rich, Mr. Wharton found time to attend the public schools and later made the opportunity to attend college. He carried off the class honors as valedictorian and after graduation opened law offices, be coming state's attorney of Mercer county, Illinois, in the first year of his practice. It was in 1888 that he came to Omaha, where he practiced law for. many years, the only interruption 4o his business being when he was appointed postmaster of Omaha. Early in life Mr. Wharton realized that the west was bound to grow And invested his spare earnings in land, some of his in vestments having returned to him with such good profit that he is well' off today. As an example of what perseverance, faith fulness to public and private trust in him, and an intensive study of his profession will do for a man in the west, Mr. Wharton stands forward in the front rank of successful business men. '' ' " 'iy: ' ' ' " " pfyfrjA ftf rV;v ' v i Raymond T. Coffey Attorney at Law City Natl Bank BuBAi Graduate of Notre Dame University; Creighton Law School Engaged in General Practice for Last 5 Years Specializing in Corporation Law r John L Webster ATTORNEY AT LAW ' EUnding forth as a strong, powerful personality, John Lee Webiter pr. ents a varied character to his fellow citizens of Omaha. In his profession ha represents a masterful mind, with power and determination to dissect and con quer the problem before him and he has been for years a leader among tha at torneys of Omaha and Nebraska. Prominent as he is as a lawyer of the highest caliber. Mr. Webster tat tha' role of a painstaking investigator and student has made himself a leader la ail -lines of art, philosophy, and nn the broadening one's m nd to the h h.r hip., 3 ot -life. Ha la the founder of tha Friends of Art Association to cultivate a lova for art among Omaha people and is also founder of tha Pallmpset Club, a group ef professional and business men who meet to hear distinguished literary, acieniifie nd philosophical masters talk on the subjects. Mr. Webster is not one who does not find-time from his Fturii to be ortive In his life. Born in Harrison county, Ohio, in 1847, he graduated from Union college as Bachelor of Arts and in 1893 was given an LL.D. degree there. Re be- ' Kan the prert ee of Jaw in 18t8 in Ohio and came to imtlin . . 1 ;. a member of the legislature here three years later and was chairman of the Ne braska constitutional convention in 1875, a meeting which he had dona much to bring about. He has been prominent in republican politie.il circle f-r y-r. h- - " been endorsed for vice president by the Nebraska republican convention fat 1904. Some of the most prominent cases which Mr. Webster has fought out in the courts are the famous maximum railroad rate eases, the bank guaranty law eases and the Omaha water works litigation.' One of the interesting pieces of leg is- , lation won by him was in favor of the Standing Bear and Pnnca Ina-ma. and s nee ' his winning it there have been numbers ef cases decided on the precedent -established. . ... Prominent wher-ver ther are gatherinifs diwass'i civic welfir- rr m---,, " ef art and culture, John Lee Webster stands as an artlet whose lova for the beau- t " if ...1 1 kUM 1. . -1 1 iH M ttu..tlH, A 1uI.It... mhh iSjjS.i: i' ri nnob act lit"- ifitn cl5 U