CHAPTER XIII—Continued De \ op held notes on him as security for business that he transacted through his ofMice—properties I could not af- ford to have in my name, He thought I would not dare to sell his notes, he having so much information about me, No use going into the ugly details. He woke up too late to find out that his transactions were with me—the com- pany he was dealing with was mine— he sold my property to me. It was I who bought from him what he hdd no right to sell, I stopped payment on the checks he held, I had his notes, agd he was holding—the bag." “But how could you? That's not eight. You couldn't do that.” “Why not?” asked Pastano. “I was cleverer than he, What could he do? What could he say? I called in his notes. Either he had to pay me, or I would sell them to his bank for discount. He put in his stone stock— sound property—and recovered his notes, Then he found all his debts due on the same day. He lost seven- teen accounts in one afternoon—busl- ness taken right out of his office, He sold car and yesterday he mort- gaged his house. And today-—unless it's stopped—he's going to be In- dicted.” Ernestine got to her feet, “But, Ruby—how can you to Loring? He does know about you—" “Yery little,” answered evenly. “Fragments—nothing whole, Part of this deal—part of that. Klis own activities will shine much worse in court than his connections with me. Do you think I am fool enough to put myself in jeopardy with a man like Loring? Ernestine made a little moan, and he began to speak quickly, vehemently, with a strange sternness and justice in his face, “He came to me—he sought nection—he was eager for any He offered to do things for me wouldn't let him do. He was well pald, and he didn’t play the game. His fees were big—business was thrown to him from a dozen directions Inac- la years of his fife, both red 1 a short time ag nent to the me ore a mon- ah Par- lef of the Cor he The mon nt was made p sible » iroprint ed hy congress, 1 $1,500 for the pur- but this i came into being through the Mrs whom in ap pose some time ago, efforts of Lena Banks ts comple of a debt a patriotic woman, of C1 Okla. for resented the wche, { tion rej paying of gratitude. ago Mrs lived near Cache, One « fell il and lapsed Into a coma from which her family feared she would not Chief Quan ah, who was their neighbor, came In while the mother was Ill, Looking at her, he turned to Mrs. Banks’ father and sald: “Al right, judge, you wait. Me be pretty quick Mounting hi rode away, but returned short time with some native medicine which he administered. Then he re- mained by the white woman's bedside until recovery Quanah died February 23, 1011, and was buried on a high knoll in an In- dian near C Several years ago Mrs. Banks visited the cem- etery and found that the Indian chief's grave was unmarked, although a large memorial had been placed over the grave of Cynthia Ann Parker, his mother, a short distance away. The white woman who remembered with gratitude how the Indian had saved her mother's life immediately began to work on the project of erecting memorial over his grave. She enlisted the aid of the Oklahoma senators and congressmen and after many vicissi- tudes saw her ambition realized in the monument which now marks Quanah Parker's grave. The story of this Indian leader is one of the most romantic in all Amer- jean history. Although he was a great war chief of one of the wildest tribes of the plaing, Quanah was not a full. binoded Indian. He was the son of an Indian father and a white mother. Tie story goes back to the early thir fies when John Nathaniel Parker led a party of settlers Into Comanche county in Texas, Associated with him were several brothers with thelr wives, sons and married daughters, For two years they lived in peace In thelr new home, Then, oie morning when most of the men were in the field, about 600 Comanche warriors swooped down upon their fort, de- stroyed it, killed most of the colo nists who remained and carried off a number of women and children, Among the captives were a girl of nine, Cynthia Ann Parker, and her six-year-old brother, John, One day In 1800 Major L. 8 ("Sul") Ross of the Texas forces attacked a Comanche village at the head of the Pease river, The Indians, taken by surprise, scattered In all directions. Many years Banks’ parents y lay her mother roecnyYer, back 8 horse he within a was assured, cemetery ache, x She was di md been killed. they had all qd ie Parker story and thoug woman might be the Ann, They her ter, Prairie with them. During her captivity her parents had died. Her uncle, Col. lsase Par- ker, took her to his hom e¢ and then her story became known. After the Par ker raid she was carried to the hunt- ing grounds of the Comar Wichita OR aped. Texans were familiar with the hit perhaps this Cynthia daugh- Texas long-lost and her back to took Flower, iwches in the Tew learned their lane guage, adopted their customs, forgot her native tongue, and became bronzed and featured like an Indian. When she became of marriageable age--probably about her fifteenth year-she the wife of Chief Nacona, one of the most noted and warlike men of the tribe. Three chil. dren were born to her, little Prairie Fiower and the two boys who had escaped in the raid. One of the boys was Quanah yarker, who succeeded his father to the chieftainship. Quanah--the Phrker was added lat. er-was a leader from boyhood. In his early teens he headed a band of fear- less raiders. He stole horses from Mexicans numbering Into the thou- sands. While still quite young he be came the great war chief of the Co manche nation. Implacable, he refused to compro. mise with the whites who sought by treaty to deprive his people of their lands. Although half white, Quanah Parker was all Indian in sentiment: flercely he rejected the Medicine Lodge treaty, refusing to sign away the Indians’ rights. Gathering such kindred spirits about him, he walked out of the conference. But though he refused to sign the treaty, Quanah Parker determined no whites should pass the boundary. And when the buffalo herds of the North diminished and disappeared, he knew it would not Be long before the white men would forget the treaty and again invade In. dian land. So Quanah Parker waited and watched, and when the hunters crossed the Arkansas river, Quanah Parker knew that the time had come for war, He resolved first to attack a party of hunters who had established them. selves at an old trading post on the Canadian river, known as Adobe Walls The result was the now-famous battle mountains, the tribe, There she i eu » ad became at that place where the hunt their great Sharps buffal« cessfully withstood by Quanah’s warriors caused Qu: andl to reti first objective of Lis ca wrt time Gen, Nel in the field with a } h forced the surrende which the hostiles. repens a si But Quanah refused to For nearly a year he held vine 3 ws #184 " realizing the futility of tryin surrende further, he declared the white gave up the strug intention of man's road™ The other great Indian whose ory is to be preserved in an enduring monument is Chief Joseph of the Nes Perces, one of the greatest milita leaders ever developed on nent snd 8 man who won title of the “Indian Na Two years ago congress created a na monument in Montana, the site of the battle of the Bear's Paw in 1877 Gen. Nelson A. Miles captured Chief Joseph and his tribesmen after one of the most brilliant retreats ir the history of Indian warfare. Dur ing the last congress a bill was intro duced providing for the erection of g monument. there which would com memorate the achievements of the great Indian soldier and preserve for future generations the memory of him as a patriot and a man. Here briefly Is the achievement of Chief Joseph during that remarkable retreat: Encumbered with women and children, which he refused to desert and allow to fall into the hands o the soldiers as he might have dons several times to facilitate his flight and having a fighting force that never exceeded 300 warriors, he fought elev en engagements, five of them pitches battles of which he lost but one: It the other six skirmishes he killed 12¢ and wounded 140 of the 2.000 sol dlers who fought him, but he lost 15 killed and 88 wounded of his own peo ple. Then having distanced his pur suers and knowing that he was only 50 miles from the Canadian line ane safety (for he did not know of the ap proach of General Miles’ troops) he made the fatal mistake of stopping for a little while to give his weary tribesmen a chance for a brief rest Here in the Bear Paw mountains where the memorial to him is to erected, General Miles attacked on September 30, 1577. For five dass Joseph and his little band, greatly out numbered, withstood the attuck of Miles’ soldiers. Finally artillery was brouglit to bear upon their defenses and on October 4 Chief Joseph gave up the contest. He never fought again, his mem the poleon.” tional where