Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
OUR NAKED NEIGHBORS) S23 sc ee ee ne oe AT TEE METER contrasting strongly with the richly productive im a Japanese City. Gunpowder Wagone. : — or plains of ‘the cane P2BBAPS THE MOST INTERESTING OF | From the wimiagton News Curious Peoples of Uncle Sam’s New| illusions which besct" the eye of the traveler | JaDanowe festivals is that called the ‘Feast Setinniel W. Gookin was a man of large stat- ss : who journeys over them. hays t day a | of Lanterns,” which is celebrated about Sep-| Ure. In manner he was quiet, always polite Sister Republics. distant thistle field is as Iike as not to be trans- | tember 1 of each year. It is actually nothing | 04 obliging, but always impressing those who Sp ee hag ad while a wel ‘more nor less than s formal reception given | “*me in contact with him with a consciousness 28 on the appeafance of his nerve, reliance. SAVAGES OF THE SOUTE. |i rp? tarmaen, Minas ary constantly |S eect tee deed sad toe tines: onion NEVER WAS A TANNER. SENORAS ¥ SENORITAS All About Love and Marriage in the |; expected to go into his : wife's family and live with them. Land of the Mericans. HOW THEY MARRY. After oman hat gone through the bear but ness, has wasted his substance in taking HOME LIFE IN MEXICO. | ature wite's relatives to parties and bas gone in view, frequently offerings delusive it |#0n thousands of people flock into Nagueaki| On one occasion, while running on the rosd, | over in Galena kind old men straighten up, through the inane custom of visiting oe Sse ty wile moran ches oeieateet bgekesd neighboring country to take part in — from Philadelphia to | sweep their canes proudly before a the of hor family he finds that }orees never. ceremony, in attire. 9 was nearing the grade | statue of Gen. Grant and talk of the days when Mexican Courtship and the Bear Act—House- | has something to do before he can get married. Nudity Thetr Prime Characteristic—Fucgans omiscon gn are wed keeping Among the People—Queer Rules of | Divorce is common in Mexico than with d there is little chance for Etiquette—The Athens of Mexico and Ite | 7th, Us am wedding. Two months before MEXICAN KITCHEN. Pretty Girle—How the Aztecs Make Love. the wedding an announcement of it must! ‘The holes at the top are for the fire and th be. registered at the cathedral and the abner 4 NEARLY ALL NAKED. Upon the first day of the feast the ghosts of | CTossing of the road leading to Dumont’s pier, Who Maintain Eternal Fires—The Feather | _{f there is one characteristic which generally ms cigerisdass exes to leave the spirit | ©" the Delaware river, » few miles above this Indians and the Wonderful Robes They | distinguishes these aborigines of tho nether |land in order tosevieit their homes upon | “ity, he saw two loaded powder wagons ap- ‘Wear—Giants of Patagonia, Continent it is their nakedness. In the forests | earth. On this dar the head of each family, in | Prosehing the railroad. The foremost team h side holes furnish the dranght and form a re- of the upper Amazon one finds the tribes, both | his best apparel, sits in the reception room of had become ‘unmanageable and wae running | tle enthusiasm of the man whose memory ther iniienesinne riest must register it in the civil court. Out- men and women, habitually wearing no ‘other away, follo Special Correanondence of The Evening Star. Hite the court door the names. of the couple | ceptecle for the ashes. You light your charcoal | ~WoNCERNING THE NATIVE POPULA-| costume than that in which they were born. | ‘is#house.the entrances to which are all thrown | “™2y, followed by the second team. cherish, When any one mentions the story at Engineer Gooki: Gvapatasana, Mexico, August 15, 10. . ees epat ‘pons balletin ‘and best there for | at ¢ = ¢ top and as at the front and {222 | Utions of the South American republics with | Not even the breech-clout or apron is consid- | P®®- At frequent intervals he bows cere- in calculated that he would HIs CITY IS THE ATH! jedding, monionsly an meet one of those wagons at the necessary. Even in frigid Terra del ly and utters words of welcome, in | Ty ‘and then | iron about the stove, and the cooking utensils | Which Uncle Sam has recently entered into | Fuego, been said, nudi ion. | order that as thoy enter Slacker Po sir brakes in those days, and if age ‘art | as to be SS cues nd the cooking utensils : pallspgie 1ego, as has been said, nudity is the fashion. that the spirits as they enter may not feel he slackened bis speed he might avoid the frst ‘ As soon as the young are weaned they aro per- | th , center of the republic, and sand people I don't suppose that there is a sin- | has taken pains to collect a good deal of intor- | mitted to take care of themcives, und, ut coco | eemelves to be neglected. This procedure is | wagon to collide with the secsed one, though it is little known in : t t carried on far into the night, especially by such | A collision meant an explosion, rlexth to him- i ; here ie an eet oe and Adoubt whether | esting information. Not the least extra- et een ee eres Deddbics ak ieee, eatocwes | Oo the Sremaes can sean Somme hee the United States the city boiled, soups are meats aro fried, and,in | O"linary of these peoples is the unique race | the voung of the vicuna aud geennen tnd for | Spirits to receive. That wor ne Tae but one chance of escape. contains 100,000 inhabitants fact, ‘© first-class dinner is prepared ‘on | Which inhabits the great island called Terra del ostrich eggs. = On the second day all the spirits are sup- — Pend aa nerenee hie , outrun the and has one of the finest charcoal by means of pans of red clay of the | Fuego, or “Land of Fire,” at the southern end However, there is one very notable exception | Po*ed to have arrived, and the household tem- innit of the first team or per- theaters on the American gelor of bricks, and these pots and pans range | of the continent. claimed jointly by Chili and | to this rule of nakedness found among the nee He (esmalleabinet apartment which is to be | ePt bet ately, Gave te ont cuted, 3 iseneel Ge in size from a butter plate tos dish pan and | the Argentine. It was given this name by | tive# of Venezucla and Guiana, who are beyond | found in the house of every believer in Buddha, ow throttle -— oldest cities of Mexico, and up until a year or two ago ff was several hundred miles away from a rail- a wi from anegg cup to an apple-butter kettle. comparison the most beautifully dressed peo- | *¢t *p2rt for the use of the dead) is gaily deco- | *™ f th i Magellan because of the fires that were kept ‘ A stranded fireman, who had a ride Many of the stoves have haif's dozen openings, P Me teed athe dalicecie | from Philadelphia to Wilminntcn se nut read. It isa city of wealth and culture. It has the finest-looking men and the prettiest ple, civilized or otherwise, in the world. They | Tate with flowers and filled with choice stores and in these half a dozen charcoal fires | eternally burning along the shore, never bei we st | Of fruit, rice, tea, . . i o e spirit-chamber is atiached, hold bij to 2 ‘ 101 cago, can give a per- florcest savages known in the world, with no | and — = of hcnmnas of lovely | Festival. ee eee ee ‘That was the most thrilling experience of | fect history of Gen. Grant's life, He bas told A ber of dishes at the same time, ‘The Iturbide | forehends to speak of, their hair growing down : girls of oursister republic, and there is no Gid and made, F Detter place than hero for the study of the doos ail its cooking this way, and such a thing | tomary food is half-putrid fish, veal and whale | by hunting but they keep and seine parrots | dead continues throughout the whole of the She was teen and felt the old engine jump | and E. A. Collins, both practical tanners, formed senorita in all her caprices and all her beauty. only on the fire and there has to bea fire for n nD 1 my life. I saw the wagons Gookin | it to a cor: dent for the Herald. < r very effectively their tawny throata. Not only | themselves after the Japanese BONS AS BOON AS in respondent for Hotel, which is the biggest hotel in Mexico, | to their eyebrows. Their favorite and cus-| 5°, els way ot 01 Tae cig, cooking ranges would bo a curiosity. | meat thrown up by the seaalong the coast about | and many Kinds of wild birds tor the same pur- | #¢ond day and the greater part of the third. |®* if she was trring to shake herself loose frock co-partnership in Bethel, Clermont county, The women of eastern Mexico have round, hs history tells that the man who received the guiding sword of the confederate army at Ap- Pomattox Court House more than twenty-«lk each dish, if the cook wishes to havea num- n. do they obtain’ the material for such garments | feasting of the living with the spirits of the | 2d and made ready to jump off. I beard the | “It was in 1841,” he said, “that J. R. Grant The Mexican cook usu as n great number thecars. The t he Ohio, lo of friends. She kee; fi with her in | C&P¢ Horn during the frightfal storms that as- | POS, plucking them regulariy once a year. UT THE NIGHT OF THE THIRD DAT surely ‘would biave left m Beet est purpose aes Levee ore ig Er oY plump faces. Their noses are inclined to thick- the kitchen, anda man can rely upon keeping | Stil that bleak and hospitable strand. From See aa {s the time appoihted when tho ghosts must re-| " “Gookin's eve JOHN CHAPMAN OF RAMAPO, 3 Were fixed on the crossing. | #¢e this by reading ghe dissolution notice 1 have ness and their complexions are often sallow. sort of an Aztec boarding house when he | timo to time the corpses of wrecked sailors —— ‘urn to their places in the spirit laud, and as | His countenance, except for the fiasll of bs | taken from the Gelens Genie ot April, 1833, enters into his contract with his cook. afford them much-relished feasts without the | such N ich | the evening draws on the people, young and | ¢F¢ and the compression of his lips, was as im- | Some time in 1841 they shi ® quantity of about the plaza you find faces that might have of the house are quite as quecr as the kitehen. | Ghinste is cascode, cfg, Mmnth, for the | From the New York Sun. bright bancet and deck out the graves with | oot in te eee aoe arace were ovidentiy | ing business as on their account. During the served as models for Praxitiles. Their hair is The houses are, you know, all built around a | the: go about. practically naked, wearing omy | ,,J¢ W8s & iate boat crossing the Erie ferry, and | Fight paper are lighted na dhe gus’ hace amity | et their re, but would ther mai over’? winter of 1841 and 182 Mr. Collins went to Ge- —- £-e ny Siero nee mane court, which serves asa stable for the horse skin or other fur hung over one | there were only throe or four passengers in the | and the darkness Somes one Tine Sere |. “On they came, running as horses wild with | lena to look after the firm's interests. Galena whichyreach below her waist. The Mexican and the place for keeping the carringe or | shoulder and always on the windward side. A | Men's cabin. One of them wasa thin man with | and illumination is made as beautiful and bril- | fright only can run, and on we sped as if try- | then was « business point of great promise, and So a Spich may bea beautiful garden. There are | Fuczan woman will sell you this garment off | a long linen duster and a tall white hat. Al-- | lisntas possible, so that the last view of the | 186 tO meet them, collide with and explode the | While there he came’ te the enchean than a ti om . = > a load of powder. Great Scott, bow those | Would be a good place to establich = business, washes it several times © week and goes from FROM WEST MEXICO. often galleries running around this court, upon | her back any time aud trudge off perfeetiy | though there were many vacant seats, this pas" | eatth taken by ‘the departing spirite may be | "960 Re) the public bath with it streaming down her | Atthis last ceremony there must be six wit-| which the second-stary. rooms open ant an | Nude but quive content through a raging snow. Weare anes aemeeee inspection of the in- | Plcasing and happy. porsce did run? Ithad guiy ‘ecu s minute or | # there was no leather store in the city. He 1g dow: 1 i pond pes - two since we first saw the wagons. It scemed | Concluded to do so, provided bis should: id her back. You will see | nesses, and if these must be the priest who | some houses you will find a fountain playing in | 8quall. . - Toward midnight, as the time for departure ~ “ 01 » pre partner, women with their hair hanging in this way in pamoaed Se ‘non ceremony. Feound a |i ‘The rocise are all frenveed invtesd of pa- HOW THE FUEGANS LIVE. terior, wont to the far corner of the cabin and | draws nigh, the male portion of the people | Te Spocmmnae ee ce ipl nd the ana with this sea fs {_ §*~ " say Mexican city, and the custom is ae common | TO? r americans who hed married Mexi- | Pered end their floors are all of tiles or bricks | ‘These Fucgans livein holes under the ground, sat down in a spat next to fat man with a big | form hemiasives into Processtona, every indk | Ootid "The spect’ Tote Tan around the | And with thie end in view Mc. © iting bout boop a op beaten ‘abge, dark, liqaia | can girls, tnd an “American has to go through eee OF bostde. If they are of brick the | ewvered over with brush, bark and wild cab.| Valise. Damboo pole about tex feet | AKON closed. ghey apparentiy at the | upon the condition that Mr. Grant coincided A inted and yor nil find but little +, m ‘ and fall of soul. They are frank and honest, | 8 third wedding in addition to the above two. carpet ‘upon them.onlyastripinfroutof thebet | bage loaves. In the center of each dwelling, | “3ehn Chapman of Ramapo!” exclaimed the y torrents of fire pouring | Tossing together. The second tcam was so| With him. This he did and in 1642 Mr. Colltes . be it he is ti in wil i which is entered inclined t |. a fire | SP&re man. “How are you tonigh The fat Waldle. praceadl Se carry te th | close that its horses and wagon must be piled | Temoved to Galena with bis family, opened his as fast as two co A - th i its way out through a hole. in th The | said: the land whence they came. — * 0 conduc’ nnery in Ohio, emanset Bi Spe tte Merion mersre 2 | Src watch toes Sines ise | CaO See nenae Se eee gtin | san Churmmmot ours, ours a th fort he hom of he ending team | M,C ous ie ula sedge neck of the bride aca’ groaas ‘andi ‘the groom | YOU may use in the place of your Anger | guished, ‘because the people now ne tay ot Medainth ee th sper signet tenia bore otrack St the, crossing I shut my | them to the tannery in Bethel to be returned ese petra bape ap ewig ah tee <ebie cepa esl nts | camera ont ie ee they coul Cnc | *% quite well tonight. ese boats are made of plaited straw, and | eyes in horror to await the collision aud the ex- | t0 Galena in fuishel leather, ‘This wee dene ives the bride money as. sign that s! . a oe “ t | oN - o r less elaborate models of the ordi- | plosion which I was sure would follow. The | for some ‘Then the unfinished stock was your breakiust you will “do well if you| reproduce it. It is supposed that they brought | |, “Not John Chapman of Ramapo?” said the | are more or vagy te a aed nos oak go|have a table cioth, and you will find | it originally, centuries ago, from some volesno | thin man, apparently much surprised. “Why, | nary native craft. Each is decorated with flags fain flow over the crossing in safety. The first sont 0 Galena and there finished. The frm tone a eh noe at eatery in the city at | itconsista of little more than chocolate and | in the Cordillerus. ‘Thelt sabterranes Novccee et Well, T cusses I foo I. amt | ong mrenrere Sid hes 8 stock of provisions | wo. ‘We hod pamea bettors Ot ben een [Gan be nage mmr} oat nen eeceneremhs eats So ti obs = | bras Sour Siuusr wil beste Ged a ball | sori ooreicarear ic ts ee cc eee Inimed he fat man. TO” “HO AM!" Jand money on beard—the ‘money for the fer-| Torx, .w <hed Passed between the two wagons | Galena it was E. A Colline & Co 1888, Meeps bictetins camek cane pucern dozen boiled dishes, beans and dessert, and you | order to sconoutize warmth. | In every cance, | e=cisimed the fat certsinty;to be sure!” reptiea | Fisge of the Styx, | The size of these straw boats | AST happened) ne omnes back to note what | bosinene there an heed aw wey BY ery. . will be expected to eat the beans whether you | also, @ _ perenni laze is kept up on . , oir, 3 te y ; 2 to 10 or 30 fect in length, and are > foe ve my arcoping fo ant Ge nines aia | eke anything eles or nok. After dinner you|s dey Sdoring in the middie? for’ cone | the thin mae, “Dat, seetaet bow coala be | all prov waive <4 A. Collins continuing the business th pi of i with one or more lanterns toenable | ,--2e UFst team was A pesenpct mpd gored Poy ; i - | Mill smoke ® cigarette with the family, and | venience when a fiching or trading ex-| much mistaken? Why, if I had gone on with | ‘he spirit crew to stece than cance creck, with ta een the west aide of the | 68 ts = 5h Geaen” Spare, fa beside then’ and T'ves for | {ter supper. if you foliow the ‘exemple | cursion is to be made. ‘The childrewseckact | what I had on. my mint J, wpuld have (been | The processions having reached the shores of | {7% th the wagon overturned. It had| “Now, J. R. yy a aay men standing bes ee ee ae ck that temly, fom) Wil go 7 9 7 tek | cuir ie tokeep tp ceric Recently discov- | mortified bevond meusure! I was 60 sure you | the buy and. the lanterss on beard’ tle ctenn been so near that the horses, turning suddenly UTM A fort of w poct. He wrote the dissolu- pir ng 6 P| er Peet toe Cn Ga) Get a tre country, | Ferg John Chapman of Ramapo. a boats Laving been trimmed and. lighted, the | '®,2/0id the rushing train, had upset the wagon. poli wendh Mange pt dD ge = bride and Stata homne ter the house of | YOU Will look in vain for spring anattresses. | and Argentine miners Lave gone there with | |, "‘fistekes like that frequently happen,” said | fragile Lars are launched upon the watery and | speed." Gookin “Lew fa beanmngton at full ‘meus peter teeerted : the bride's’ mother or. to the establishment | YU will gotobed with a candle andthe chances | troops for protection. The latwer have numer. a ye said the thin man. “Tt is not |S ,8¥AY into the western sea, carrying the | CPocy j Gookin, eons eo encion hes ian Gur partnership wes ret tena” of the groom. There is no bridal tour and the | 97@, that you will be troubled with fleas. | ous encounters with the natives, killing them take I deplore so much. The thought | slars'go to rot ca eyed where, the sun and | that was done his ne . paige © gave outand be was With all this yqu will nevertheless sleep lixe a | Without quarter, like wild beasts. Many an | the ight | stars go to rest and where is situate that glori- ee ee eee ee: | aed gos GU Maden meany pinean Wings | renee cagedibed bet pane against these’ sav. | of the mortification I would have suffered if I | ous’ Sy piri i ife. It is not till now, ho irl. While | Mixed up with theso little inconveniences that | ages, who have uever been subdued, though | had gone on and done what I had on my mind (+2 git ana where the spirits of all good | 2@!Ped from the engi: has any sort of an ownershi 88 the time in happy oblivion. LOTT gt GARE ip “ oe Minced miaverbers and then found that you were not John Chap-| ‘the men bps VERY RAPID TELEGRAPHING. you will say that Mexican life is after all as| reduced in numbers. About 40,000 of them tre ; | ‘The myriad hghts of the boats scattered far baled oper Leflore ad = pepe meen Pleasant as any in the world. supposed to remain. Not long ago in the | man of Ramapo is what annoys me. Mercy!” | and wide, dancing upon the aight amed uring the ete ieee Straits of Magellan a ship of the Pacific Steam | The fat man bowed. . Rater, make @ scene, viewed from a distance, of | | Three Thousand Words in One Minute, oon . oe Temained at 71 er home and he pa Navigation Company ced up a naked British ‘Yes, indeed,” continued the thin man. “I| almost fairy enchantnent. ‘Lhe cries of the | From the New York Times. sailor, whose five companions, survivors fi don’t know what made me pause on this ocea- the wreck of a British ‘barque, bad been sion, for I always go right up to John and bg,the Fucgans. This man was saved to amuse | without ceremony stv: ‘Loan colin oe the women and children, who beat him con-| tomorrow.’ Now, if Thad done that tonight. | people flying hither and. thiti in wild excite- | 3 stantly to make him dance. When rescued he | and. after you hid loaned me the dollar, Thad | ment, blended with the shadows of the “hight, | Rovel Society of Canada, is well worthy of ex- Was a mass of sores and bruises, eee that - laid es John Chapman of | form altogether a picture impossible to desersbe, | tended notice. The subject of Mr. Gisborne's exuines Seseie Wi EG cece Ramapo, Just soe how deadly Thea tication and which leaves upon the memory an im-| remarks was automatic and multiplex te- Not less interesting than the Fuegans are the | tg think of it!” is STagorin, = Of sonte wild, weird phantas-| tcgraphy. mained at his, and though he was her legal husband he did not even dare to visit her. HOME LIFE IX MEXICO. There is little home life in Mexico. Thereisno word in the language which expresses our idea of home. The Mexican house has no fireside nor base-burner stove around which the fami people, 1 nting of the priests, the sound | The valuable paper read by Mr. Gisborne of ef Songs the music of hamisens, the naked | Ottawa, electrician to the dominion govern- (except the girdle cioth) bronzed figures of the | ment, at the recent Montreal meeting of the — Unfortunately the rules of the so- gathers, and the people lack that home char- aborigines of Ecuador, who use against their | The fat man assured him. with a smile, that | “8° sepa ciety prevent the publication of its manuscripts x ‘THE MODEST SENORITA. acteristic which is such important enemies and in the capture of game arrows | there would have been no occasion whatever She Could and She Couldn't. betore the minutes of the meeting are printed, Mexican girls have none of the freedom of | tiement among the Anglo-Saxons and the Ger. tipped with a mysterious poison of unknown | £0f mortification on that score. a 4 and for this reason the Times is not in posses- our American maidens. Until within a year or | mans. They are more like the French and origin, which is sure aud sudden death to man | ,,“’Tuanks! thanks!” exclaimed the thin man. Soe conld Ang and she could play. sion of ail the statements made. ‘The fer facta so the daaghter of « Mexican gentleman never | th o _iatiane | — = [Mexican ‘ssoraiity or beast. These dendly weapons are fired from | “You are very ki But I don't know as I She could while t teers tnought of going out on the street alone, and you see few girls riding or walking without | mone the lower classes it ie notorious blowpipes ten feet in length, and are effective | Nght to accept it sven until tomorrow. If you ata distance of 150 feet. Among these people | Were only John Chapman of Kamapo, now! given here were obtained from an English sentleman who is now stopping at the Astor i i an is Ves | YOU are exceedingly like him in looks and man- 2 could play the patron aul Fou i their mothers, their sunie or dome ugly old | SSctmcting® partion, and. among ths, higher A Prox rere-a-rere, ifn woman is ticedof her busband she gives Thefat wau bowed, but the smile wae | But she ectidn Tati she wewtaart stem griindep lished phe map or ducnna. The foreign residents of Mexico breerenel per pening rotey rh letor Pro-| The common people, the peons or the | a plant reserabling the stramony, by drinking The boat was now nearing her slip. aelees Mr. Gisborne showed that the late improve-| wEvER WoREED at TE CURRIER's rmve City have taught more freedom, but the girls [ort mberp epeed st. One of our mis, | Peasants of Mexico, have customs of their own, | which the Delphic priests of old sought in fears of still stick to their duennas and none of them are allowed to receiye gentlemen callers. They are backward in the presence of men ing mortified ‘She could walk eight miles a day ments have rendered it quite ible ¢ d i cegaince = “aa Pospvle forthe | Mr. Spare laughed and went on with bis ont tacas told mae at 6 cae cit; | 8nd, as far as Tean see, they have as strong a | tion for their oractlar utterances, “The bins had gone at, you as John Apa play tennis caarat h telegraph to compete successfully with the - - Sw i age trunsforms the man into an idiot, and the | Chapman of Ramapo are groundless," waid the = were logitiniate and tho farcontage in Metics | meet many 4 foun. ii? aid mons Csory | rife artce tain, "Another eutloue Curent tan, bands wilful hethcugheaade | Te ** Ti ae and they have neither urknown cor- | Tit vers undoubtedly pigs ‘Girls are so | Where I go walking along hand in nand or with | Prevalent in the same region obliges @ man Pitaprirdtteepclaemeeens ad ;omorrow caper e e Respondents nor boarding school firtations. | So1.30q before marriage tat. they do not | ine arm of the man thrown around the waist of | when his wife ls confined to go to ~ dah Tish te wile nad Sened ‘The giles aro brought up at home| inien how to take care off themesives cud aftec | the woman, and the two looking into sch |bed himeslf and reo atl the | ccumeen sua Srabbed his valles and urried and 8 favorite pet name for them is| Uorriage theydo as they please, Of course | Other's eves as lovingly as ever Romeo gazed at | attentions ordinarily due toa female in child- | 0” deck, looking back once or twice to eco i postal service, thus emphasizing the frequently | °FY- “During their business connection im expressed opinion that the tims foxigo ter’ the | Galena,” be said, “they removed their tannery Combination of both services in the hands of | from Bethel to Portsmouth, Ohio. That town, the government. He said that Postmaster Gen- | you know, is on the Ohio river, so the erai Wonumaker had taken the initiative in this | for shipping and receiving freight were mach 5 , matter and thet the experience gained bad | enbanced by the change. Mr. Collins, thoug! Gaited, Somat ate cae oan see ce c _— 2 - | birth. To Ecuador belong the Galapagos | the thin man was in pursuit. He wasn't. She conld swim and she could row, already justified the course adopted some years | kept the store at 83 Main street, i littlo chickens and Sid girls are famillarly called jp gia fener ppoaling thyaga ee ae craze | Islands, in the Pacific, which form a strecge | He sat still and watched the fat man as he dis. She coald always have a hea, ogo by the British goverumece™” J Me, Gusnh eponed bi oom sow? a pollas or grown chickens Itis needless tosay | Mey Ste the world, over; but their ideas of “i| of the Madonna ont of their blue rebosas, | Volcanic group, crossed by the line of tre eared across the gangplank. Then he aie ead Mr. Gisborne stuted that 3.000 words per | old stone court house at the foot of that the Mexican. dade as a rule prefers the pol- | "500 iva ours. Americans who bare ‘AMezicea | which they drape so picturesquely around theis | eatiator. ‘They are perfectly barren and unin mopping his forehead with a red hand- She could Jangh ant she vould prance, miuute Lad been trenemitted by a roundabout | street, on the east sido of Main, and continued lites. ‘The men have their nickuames as well as aiuie thas mas aah hel; ts, | Leads and shoulders, They do not care much | babited, save by extraordinary reptiles and kerchief. She could play « gamecf chance, copper-wired line 355 mites in length between | there for some time, 8.8. Grant, @ younger the girls, and they are known as gallos or gal- | Tyce (el! me that they make good helpmeets. | Pomitoea, but theis costume, consisting of this | birds which are found nowhere else in the| “Its singular, nowadays, how tight the But she couldn't aud she wouldu't New York and Washington, and 800 words over | brother of the general, charge of the linos, and this. strange to say. is a Mexican ex- | City er eee ee ora mneee after mar- | shawl, achemise and a skirt, though very plain, | World. | Of twenty-five sorts of land birds se- | Money market is,” said he. Make a pie. similar wire 1,000 miles in length between | business for his father. He been with ression meaning young or old roosters. This, | ToS" thoalh toy have not bees peruitind to | is by no means unbecoming, and they forbs ono | cured there by Darwin on the occasica ct tis = unseen cee aaa arabia New York and Chicago, and that 600 words per | Mr. Collins in the store for. some years Tesecer, is not so much different from our own my my ws hie bet a tua oes ot | of the most attractive festures of the popula- | Visit all bat one were poesia tothe little| CHICAGO AS A SUMMER RESORT. penn pe aulsh wi ee minute had been transmitted by repeaters to |and mastered the business. He continued custom. for do we not contemptuously apply | 40 in public before, and they ‘ta tion. The women are said tobe very true to | *tchipelago. Most remarkable among the rep- + : places berond that distance. As a sequence to | in till 1857, when his health failing the name “oll rooster” to the man we taink | ‘heir houses - ee the men, and though marriage is often too ex- | tiles wore gigantic tortoises. which grew to 700 Apples Baked on tho Tree, T confess; 13 paper vee “The Inception of Electrical | Orvil it, & younger brother, came on po Snell gt papen Benet p Shas s Bh phen QUEER MEXICAN ETIQUETTE. msive & luxury for them to indulge in they | OF $00 pounds ench in weight. ‘These last have | From the Chicazo Tribune, Aucust 11. She could scold and she covld ‘font, Science and the Evolution of Telegraphy,” read | and was placed in charge, I think, in Au- img terms for girls that of the duck. Mexican social customs are much different | live together as trne to one another as though | been almost exterminated by sailors, who ha’ It was hot Sunday. Few people in Chicago She couid ery Id pout, before the Royal Society five or six years ago, 1859. A little later, in September, U, MEXica’ COURTSHIP. from ours. At every railroad station I have | ther had been tied by the church and the | mde practice of stopping at the islands to | wilt dispato the statement, Lat chat won ST Mee Mr. Gisborne exprened the opinion that toc |S..~then Captain Grant,” came up” Ww The senorita matures much earlier than her | stopped I have sen grown men rush into each |coUrt "Both man and woman work to support | }Fovisio® their ships with. turtle exh, the | Wit spate the ets ? 9 ‘ most successfnl telegraph companies of the | Galena from St. Louis, staying « few weeks, io sumer 2 bs PP x the family, and here, as in America, the woman | 8imals being too unwieldy to clude capture. | ciently hot to bake appleson the tree a few She could talk of chureh a‘fairs, future would abandon their present system of | and while there made arrangements to occupy American sister. She is as old at thirteen as | other's arms and press cae cheeks = ther often does the most of the work. Sbe literally ALONG TRE AMAZON. may reasonably question. J. H. Hammill, who But knew naug! cares; ® multiplying of wires in favor of the one or | # house on the hili then in course of erection. our girls r-o at eightzen, and the law provides — ar hug a = = makes the bread of the family, and a great part | Many strange race types most surprising to | Tesides ona farm at 95th street and Western Sul I'm sure that noue compares two wires now sufficient to transmit the entire | So in March, 1960, be removed trom St. Louis that she may be married at fourteen. at | ecb 0! Se - = 7 | of her life is taken up in bending over a stone avenue, said yesterday: mith sweet Nan; business of Canada between any important | to Galena with his family and took piace ia twenty-five ae begins to verge on old maiden- | embracing and rubbing their cheeks one | TA 7'7oing or grindiag tortillas’. Out of Te | te ethnologist are found along the Amazon | venue, y' Even if she coudn't bake centers, with time enough and to spare, store. I do not know what’ particn hood and at thirty she is pasve. Mexican | S6uinst the other. They throw Kisses at | isn corn soaked in lime watcr she makes the | 90d its tributaries. On the high slopes of the Bi eee noe rerct the slope ot Bine Pape pee pga He also showed that by the late inventions | ular dutics were assigned him there, but be women age very rapidiy—wires are old and fat | One another, as they part, and they have | mush for the corn cakes of the family, and her | Andes dwell people who make a practice of aad Sef Baa es Ye all Gas Aiscorniocs of tht oe a oe eee which ho described a ‘message of 10) words | went about guictly, attending faithtully to Bi thicty-tive—and isce but few women with bg Moe rns 3 re er mep-aee | = fe are life iscertainly one of hardship, though it | chopping off the heads of their enemies and b ser ribs lake bows The Lin oa e 9 ‘Bar Harbor could be transmitted for 25 cents with a whatever be was upon to do, sometimes fray hair. Mexican marriages are often ar- | ‘0 their lips and throwing a whole handfal | 12018 ¢o be one of love, Preserving them for ornamental uses. The | Others, went tothe anchor on fei =———+o+ Base. | margin ot profit for 1,000 miles’ distance. Fir | indoors and sometimes on the streste, In thas Fauged by the pareutsand « Mexican courtship phe Cae ee Faaxe G. Ounrenren. | process emplored in the preparation of these farm tn the afternoon to sock: oboing foenke That Lake in the Desert. acted ieee eee ee = ay lg ‘s hollow mockery as far as the young man is ——_—_<oo___ weird trophies is quite un art in itself, the head E Thas- noth : From the Sen Frencisco Chron‘e’ ceived from telegraph companies an itizen, reticent, an: Foe Sheet ara eh ge an) Pe ges Ae ea Se STORY OF A. 7. STEWART. baie Heeealy boned Goat As tole epriv0d | toe gan weie tated ent, titty tee sonnel | ccteeat aren ed the glare of | Poste! service that the volume of business was at firs and w iy “ were baked, and, filling their i of the ckull. For this purpose the throat is | te sun were bi * = < Feady for the accomplishment of his estimates. os ot rise tu receive you, and the strangers here 5 brought them to the house. The apples were | the sun in one of the hottest places earth, sof. Bai Philadel nec (thor yim a tanko the first ‘calls. The | people you | call ‘apo nn | It fe Better to Keep Stock Moving Than | *iced around with a knife and the skin isdrawn baked about one-third through and tea sa puke apraageen Sai ae! Iphia and other gen- ; off over tne skull, with care to keep uninjured | baked ine ney | George W. Durbrow. manager of the salt worke { tlemen in the room expressed highly favorable eches, with «line of silver buttons down | dfop their work the moment you come in, and a the mouth, nose and other feature, ‘Nest, te | #el¥,the same flavor of those baked in’ an tical importah : 5 fy st Salton, has come to San Francisco for @ | Opinions as to the prac ce of Mr. con= their legs, bis 250 felt, hat with a rim as big as | *hey are ‘ullof politeexpressions. They always} I remember walking one morning, years ago, | the skin being turned right side out, it is filled | °YS" . ae s i Ps Gisborne’s views and the novelty of the inven- plary ine high degree. He was fen even deer aw cheney po beny a BTS theif house as yours and an invitation | into A. T. Stowart's retail dry goods establish: | with hot gravel, which nukes it ahefain ese oe ties eitasatin Gh tia eee anes lure 1 LEE eae bran’ 38% | tions to which he referred. The. inventions | regular attendant of the'M. £ Church wies Cae ae che ee malden's wintow. Hore | jyEcicdu at my house, at some seeet the mene | Ment on Broadway while the old. gentieman | heated gravel is pat in itat intervals until the of the surface is Daked, and whon cut he favor | water in, the marah—ake, if jou preteroea, | 26 Of AmcFican and Canadian origin, the “au. | his family. And all stories about his drinking for hoare the looks aud sigha, : of which 1 had never heard. before. ‘The Mex-| Was making his usval round of the various | Be! bie shrunk to The appear dace air att Of | is like that of an apple baked in an oven. The | deuly coused to rise, Cadosbiedie irene a | Pe eae ee re pions ged ot iy me sidewalk, never letting his eves tara away from | iateqivefew dinner partiesand teasand lanch- | counters, says Matthew Maruhall in the New | 3 Re%-born bab ishingly grotesque, end much | ®PbIes sa ask preg ead oad mee [oe omens | Tyetink, if ie Just about | otuer that of an inventor in the employ of the im Gelena were the window. Ho does this day aiter day and | C84 are usually con: med to the family. Every | York Sun. In the course of it he came up to Pleamure is derived from hanging it by its long | rome PO ph gs slab Et (ionamin and stand in ochallot | dominion government at Ottawa. An A. M. Haines, night after night until the family take notice | ¥oman of the Ls classes, d hee carrinants t¢ | the place where I was standing, and, after hur- | black hair froma a rafter in the house for the | ST¢¢™ sheet of water, averaging at that point from | #2, tfansmitter and receiver are simplicity , now living of his devotioa and inquire into his bank ac- | hare her box at the operaan erearriage,and | riediy saluting me, he began’ catechising the | family to jeer at and abuso now and thon, ee ee oe cipuiven | tatucaS0 testes ee fag | itself. The transwnitter is worked by ® perfo- , foreman in the countand bis character. If they approve of | Youcan see lex phen atom iternoon driv- salesman in attendance. Taking up one arti- AMONG CANNIBALS. Candies Which Will Not Keep Well. cai ts het Eoodea bab econ depth. dog | Tated paper band passing over a dram. A plain bere in Chieny ry the match the maiden shortly appears at the | #9 on the Paseo. You know that haif of the a 7 ip on Gu the tower “Ahaca duel te iba} | Comfectioner's Cleck in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. byoeeier hb Salice aan aye ey paper band also passes over the drum ‘the worked for Window, and as love grows hot she comes out | °#'Tiages are not paid for, but you enjoy the | cle he said: “How much are you selling those with the | _ES8Ppose some people think candy is a com. | pF water, The Halton lake, threo wide naj | Feceiver. | An inker gives the dots, dashes, &c., time the lived in and fans berself on the second-story balcony. ase ee Cae te [eee nae, Deairrroe wiht | oor © ases Lents ull ca yea eoueal : Teseeees as’ an average depth of two and a” bait of the well-known Morse system. "The Keele the republican This, however. is never before the young go well?” “Not very well, sir.” “Pat them | biggest ornaments of a certain kind known. ivgany bie Seas thavacnio af the chess Alors’ | feet: < Zu dion lowes’ pert of the = an ig | interchangeable way wire muitiplex system” or '88,I am not Man has been tantalized by a week or so down to 25 cents. How much are these?” | In babyhood both men and women have their | y —- 4 2 Sout Beh atv wates Sheri a lett thy very elaborate. Galena bed « gavel of walking up and down before her window, taking up another article. ‘Seventy-five cents, | lower lips and the lobes of their ears pierced | Stands contain candy that has seen honorable ita: i seabed ahaloiter ce a Seal the © | It was the sentiment of the meeting that a identical bench on which and he has to continue this walking often for sir.” Are they going well?” | ‘Slowly, sir.” | with holes, in which are thrust pieces of wood. | service, so far as length of timo is concerned. = a on satu-/ new era of cl months before he gets inside the house. This ke them 50 cents. And these? are mee gee ret these, wooden adornments | But the taste in candy changes like any other | tnd common, saltto be 10 ver tong, “Ges | hand, when companies can send 100 words for at thacaniny here.” And silke oe bripeeres bigger pre bigger, until an adult or- | tashion, and the dealer in candy finds thet hie see, there is a crust of sulphate of soda cight flashed walking and posing and sighing is known here x is about to deny a jucre Gorn to the | warcy are not salable all the Fear round, and | or ten inches thick all around the basin get | ot the dream of an enthusiast, but the practi- | statement of history, “Gen. Grant never worked by the phrase, “Playing bear,” and this bear act has to be done by every beau. The cents.” “How do they seli at that?” well.sir.” : on through the entire stock displayed ox the | shouldateand a io deat a} , cal deduction of & veteran lectricin, who | st the tannimg ‘or currying Business fn FB elt lahore Forks is redler PA ts Goren S oy — Foe dau rcseate a < ga ea ey a — —_ a the | then a deposit ——_ Under this is twenty Proves his interesting statements by an abund- | or anywhere else at any time. I heard the gen- low has to spend before he can know decidedly look, he good-humoredly turned to meand said: | beautiful, as the French say, and such is the | Goats are cold weather candics. and | water, which ioontis ek eines coer cent of | Anco of figures. As stated, the "United “States | eral himself say in answer to © question abena as to whether he is going to make any impres- cit s of no uve ta Keep goods up so high, that | inexorabie fasiionamong these anthtopophngi. | ths agmend fer teens enter camaies and | water, T por cent The heat te ae eal ances | government has taken the initiative on thisside | tanning thathe had never worked un hous ot sion whatever. Once begun it has to be kept customers will not buy them, and the worst ofall | In thet country a young man who desires to | {r'ther waria ‘oenthon, foeTeet) Gamuniabed | up to 37 por cent. ful. When the sun is ehis: | ofthe Atantic in the matter of adopting these | the Business in bis fe. "And nother fect up day aiter day, whether it rains or shines, ee Eines tithes heh ae mde the | take a wife must rst submit himself to « | impossible to dieplay’ hand canes ioe ys tag beieutivioestaumelioesneet perspiration | DOW a7atems. tema nd woe wy iy it of ring igs whi are slow tful i ! wy tie eo bold om fon a mart Tha bat | oS ahutera owe armlt woven of pas | ntact oe? Sow Maga tnade ot | newer Sint. but jut” wal US Sermons in One Sontenen ity Fee bat tee ores wll have fon. ra to clans them out af ark sacrifice and | leaves. ‘Then, under supervision of his elders, | been kept a couple of dere Aes in eninge | cloud Tr eae eae ee Barto the day, Grant, the tanner,’ in spite of his own declare bad aS better Ku gconneoncell owe Stewart | he plunges both arma as far as ho can into a | pegin ta. change, and the, transformation. fs | suaiight the surtnce of ‘the Inke is aantonieal ithe death of Miller Willis, the Georgia evan- ee eee yea er ki man ture, whatever he may have uri! QT a id. 4 - t? Vhei - Incked in knowledge ‘of architectare and pic: | Seve Kererss ge png, ante | The insects et most of the hurd molssste'made, lobeier ang | unease, When the o grest clouds of varer | Sst revives, many interesting stories con WHEN ORANT ENTERED TEE ARNT. : tures, and ‘he was the. prince of shopkeey- |eording to the terms of the ‘trial; he iust | Sadi itd t nig eeeeamee made, lobules and | minutes you can sse-that is erarber | cerning his life and methods. He was cer-| “Capt Grant mes bat de hewmen Galena, Ponape fel gph oscar tne Of the public in dry goods, but whenthe did he | 2and,without moving for an hour, submitting | fy made up with, molaseos does not iat very | fon’ Petal items eee od invectifeted | tainly She quoerest charncter thatover pessched from the time he went there in March, 1880, ress, but she not waste much | 0! public in dry le, bat = with absolute stoicism the bites of the en- | Jong when the weather is warm. Marshmallows the other day. Close to the in the Gospel at a meeting—at which it time on her morning tole After « breakfast Got out of the scrape by appealing toits avarice. | raged oreatutos. If he enduces tho test hei | an Fchocolatce tee ceed eee ers | the other day. C ‘dimainis 4 say the eal of the z cnekan Men, und more so women, dearly love bargains | entitled toa bride, otherwiso he must waite | : : — minishing to 105 | place he was generally found. His pure and | the call of the for men, whem ofa cup of chocolate and s roll sho puts ona| sii'will buy things beeduse they are than 4, a4 -o | {lways in pretty general demand. Cream bon- | and 102 in greater depths. The ” model for all. But| Fort Sumter was fired © meeting was Mother Hubbard and s pair of slippers and | ‘hon they will nor buy them beeause they are | car and.then undergo it again. There aro | ons keep very well in the hot months, and tho and the fills are perfectiy safe, I think. From the | B0ly life, however, was a ae called to raises company, st which meeting. loafe about until dinner or the seound break. | "Gn they, will not buy, them because they are | still trgbes descended from the augient Incas | fruit eandios come Out with she Mery ana ee point of the track nearest the lake to the | *?0ut his Ay wn Tietast | Geant wes calles upon te tesslds te tania fast. which comes at noon. I don’t think. as | Pr‘ iSarted the asctal leson thata litle lose at | yuck bandage the heads of their children so | part with the eummor. ‘The softer candy dec | Poets edge is about 2,000 feet, and in this | StTangers in the streets, ~ learned the useful lesson that little loss at | that they assume a conical form. Funnily | cone : “. in front of them, would announce some start- | the chair he made a few remarks, calling stten~ Tule. that she is the best housekeeper in the | ns yo, Sanliat tn SCOMAaie. ta y, Yjare sold summer, and there is aj there is arise of ten feet. Besides, the em- of the e great one at | enough, the brain does not seom to suffe: s text and then disappear, leaving the man | tion to the ‘of the Union, the duty Paint and. pomase. °F obo queens. averse 10] the end, and iaado his losses aa ‘be did his | nccst the brain does not TONY | together ia. tion monte ay o3hyTetly | bankment is ix forts, inches higher, so | OPS men to preach the sersion to is bey |citises, and told thoes, whe, thong st ue with flour in every crowd I enter and | Profits, small and quickly. INDIANS OF THE GREAT WooDs. August. Sometimes they find a market carlier | feet more before the rails” could “be ap~ AS occasion stopped wetiona which Sere the bev of ake, soldier, "as there are many red cheeks made so by other 7 SE In Paraguay live the ferocious Indians of the | and later, but not often. ‘There are more men | wet. The popular belief that the overflow bes aadionien tenon 1: | that meeting were made by B. bese fot Po yoo tlse A on A Sea Trip for Health. Papa gli Dosee pions por: Frho buy candies than womenas arule. Idon't | made a lake out of dry land isaway off. Salton | Sanger and a This night | Weshburue ae oe that only the mantilla was uscd asa headdress | From the London Sledical Recorder. y a “Goeat Wants,” wieb aly | Tiger ehotver this nabip tepwat ali diendots na basin iss very damp marsh, and is as much | ‘BY soul shall be required of thee!” Wi eae ond aie Tale isa scart of white or black lace. and itis | | Whenexhaustion bas gone so far as to pro- | f6w days ngo masancred every soul in civil-|Tshould say that it didn’ in the shopping dis: | a 18 & ver This fs not the first time Ihave | Vanished. Bat « year afterward be met the cecaeate tte Pitt Soa one iceeetazees, and s shew! combined, | duce a condition of positive breskdown with-| ized village of 600 people. Betore long they | trict but in the businoes portion of the city you | wees ask ds the hasta Aiea hae per a ge a pny Baer eee sate nae of them in Mexico City and | out any special orgunic lesion a sea trip is in| will be annihilated and superb territory will | would be surprised to findhow many men ninke | we hed. hessy rates nd a ena ee ayy company. In May (Capt, Grant socompanied {hey are sell the common, headdress here, | most casos to be preferred to any. alterrative, | Be open to settlement. Tt le covered "wilh the the proctibe provalont among the youse crack, | pure and in seven Bours there was two and s | nya ghoutad ate cere es ones | ee epee ay aca where Paris . ons rovalent a S our te mash. reeells ny ie. 5 commend Fs coming. in tnd Paris bonnets and. ‘bats tre | The pationt hs the advantages of perpetual pe iblartanoghenrligete one reed bat the stendy old Dusiness men, who woulde't | Cu opto Rne del Teas bees Se regiment, of Peieh the “History ‘of Lilinele eB. taking ite place. | These Mexican girls wear | carriage exercise without the irksomencss of | Picrosting ‘birds and beesisn Ihe tress neg | be supposed. to caro anything tor sweets, are Published that the railway rane over’ thin by tytn ee any — 4 @ full account, His subsequent life emai We fz. their bas I Tiprsiued poatareand without it initatin t| largely ofthe "moat precious wood partic quite hupeless victims of the candy habit fait at Salton and inliable to drop oatof wight. | sg win ir, be. gamed. a crowded Tony ight | Scinge are not only known to thle nation, Dee é “ See ‘a few hours cl ts th not float in water, , it does nothing: kind. down ‘Men ‘known whole world. be: dress it up in a sort of @ Greek knot on the | of night air and alternations of drysces and | ta'the bisek seme ineeweoh tnd” eee ‘Needed the Money. t well neartne track ince Benoed through | Cy ein the Willis opened foetuses | ad the general,” contineed Me. back of pay age ag _ in Sprmoees of stmoaphore are Looe unknown =m this region Sree ee eens vives, ‘From the New York Advertiser. the toughest clay I ever saw.” but the His figure ta ¢ garments at. Spare, same kind, —y- efter be’ long braids their ‘They are very | at sea and a recovery may in such cases usually | falling in a cataract which surpasses tracted rapping ence high cmisense as ho wee when: proud of their hair, but are especially | be predicted as following almost certainly » magnificence. In the neighborhood of this| The truth of this story cannot be vouched| ~ How Be Stood Thess OF load on the floor with his s the quiet citizen = private soldier's of their hands end They have | fow weeks on shipboard. But it is to the middle- futertall no human dwellings are to be found, | for, aa it ia told by a young insurance agent prom mata eee y piggy bg blue’ overcoat while in the lenther tiful hands, soft, plump and finely formed, | aged maz more than all others that a holiday | because the natives believe the demon of | whose reputation for veracity is not the best in | From Texas sirtings, “There won't bea man in this house alive in| store. ‘The lastleaw of was in 1889 sa areas euung qn iis | afeea recommended. fn the great majorly tty years from Pr _Aind be camamed | during the sanvass for, President when his bons — heels —g bars the door and went out ate the night. Stents focend ite oyink—iy These shoes make the Mexican walk a evetieenping wen be a ed ubere dispatches were one, and the result is you find but a fow Jeane man ono stash ent, wien! rercerts J Tr Housekeeping is carried on here in a much Bove boas mages & FS tf different style than with us. It is necessary to - pown ‘at reputiiean meot- have about three times as many servants, and {The above are facte within the intention of we, the servants are ne about the work a.m loft for the east be- which thoy do as if they belonged to the castes about deing gustan tat of India. Your cook will never make the bed, ens = nor will the chambermaid go into the kitchen. iat If you can get her to wait upon the table z£ i E i il i £ | 4 a i £ s & & i" Hl Hy if : i i ie uf Au i i eH] Hi i i i