Evening Star Newspaper, January 30, 1892, Page 8

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¥. 8 THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C, SATURDAY, JANUARY 30, 1892-SIXTEEN PAGES. SS = — — persons of distinction Cage edge Sood oe oe The sculpts — io | nip wet pa Doge — Y ie is an unusually NECESs| POR MILITIA, "i f ments to perpetuate their memory. ore bear record to this day, in form GOSSIP OF THE STAGE. obtainl drug. habit me PLAY NG POLIC __ | ite Bit—sometn: thousands—-and ety a ¥ nw B\ ‘UL. | smallest of them that has been found measures | carvings representing the ocean deity, of the become so common among theatrical people r nm three feet in height. They are all very much | gratitude of successful contestants in these is difficult to understand, unless it is because | eke i Country Should Haves War alike, each being the upper haif of a human | annual egg races. ; < $2 GRY cctore and actresses are called upon i ‘2 Deo. 24, Capt. PF. V. Greene in the Century. : ‘ figure, cut off at the hina The faces are of an TOWERS AND BURIAL PLATFORMS. Theatrical and Social .Stara Sepa-| te vere when plage pepe Judge Miller Talks Al the Casee ’ e | Outside of ite legal duties to the state and 4 Strange Land in the Midst of the | civarring type, with, heavy brows, long nose! Among the most interesting monuments on - housed tahteed of odeoelint to np catia al fudge Miller Talks About nation the militia bas well defined status in South Seas. cat fat on don eeae to bold the crown, All | Easter Island are round towers built upon rated by the Footlighta, kinds of weather to a draughty theater and in the Police Court. ; _ the mititary policy which has grown opine the effigies, upon being placed in position, were | projecting bluffs, usually surmountin g burial play e pert trying in the exti both men- ry 32 centary of experience, and which, while not _— — adorned with massive crowns of red tufa, some-| platforms which are filled with human re- tally Uns . Yet itis absolutely true 59 28 | Prescribed in any statute, is quite permanently = . . times weighing as much as three tons and meas-| mains. At these points men were kept con-| WHERE THE LINE 1S DRAWN. | that many of ee Ty 38 established. This system comprises, first, © A VANISHED RACE'S RELICS. | tring twelve fect in diameter. Tho burial | steraly on the apo tee turtles, which fur- incurable slaves to the morphine end opium | prppon Op 5 SENTENCES. 1, | cumuaekc om en acee . platforms were usually near the beach, so that ished much of the food supply. Ina number = habit. AIL nantes ihn suentip ter alee memati moe l =x the images could look out upon the sea. | They | of places along the shore are discovered artificial | one watr for the Actors’ Fund and the Row It BRILLIANT CAREER BLIGHTED. re ey pro ae What An Expedition to Easter Island Has | wero constructed of rough pieces of rock ordi- ielions in the hard rock, which must have ‘wilt Ca: Not many years ago there was @ prom- 2 9 lians, to serve as a training school for officers Discovered—T: of Wood Which Teil with a facing of cut stones neatly joined, | been excavated at a cost of great Inbor. They ey a oe eee en Ome | alee Sal belly Sacuk 8 fr vaceis (eeseent Me 12luay Bite massa eo asana inch a akoumadh 6 86 and to provide anucleus for the lange armies of Ite Hint amp Statues of Stone ee ea ta ied gOS EO ESL ue fait cht tt Sebelilven teat Gay were | car SEN TA Rey OT a ae, ee ally teak entgeain. |W ness—Few Realize the Extent to Which the bal “ necessary in time ef war; second, the lery— in dried grass and iaid at ful tide is full, a1 it is believe a eal at i “Burial Platforms and a Vast Necropolis. | fonyth with their heads toward the ocean, Be- | tavisng ae ae tee keeping fish. On one People and the Terrible Results. the gitts fate Inid at her fect she might! Game is Played—Writers and Their Sala aw to pr the civil authorities im neath one platform was discovered a vault con- | occasion. when the expedition was engaged in we reached a pinnacle seldom attained Dy | arles—How the Drawings Are Conducted. ntaining order. to serve me @ see- ae taining @ vast number of skulle closely “packed | uncovering a particularly ancient tomb and in | special Correspondence of The Evening Star. CoML toe tic ee armed, bee bow : 62 ondary training school for officers and ‘Written for The Evening Star. together. From the fact that all of these | removing bones thereform, a young native as- cou =e Pal without the belo fren Lrg —. 7) toactat decisive points on the outbreak of crania were those of adults it is presumed that | sisting the party uttered a howl of despair and New York, January 29, 1892. | men oe 'e Inughed to herself often to = 3 hostilities; third, large ar ot cael HAT HAS ALWAYS | they were trophies of a war. The largest plat- | became prastraved with grief at the eight of & COMMOTION HAS | What fools she made of them, Ww Poor girl. ROVIDING A JURY oes ca! reer .* coma | been regarded as an | form is 540 feet long, 9 feet wide and 8 feet | skull which he claimed to recognize as that of alata! aah amore. the trouble to stop and_thinl cee aa aha: Goal { period of d | high. It was ornamented with fifteen gigantic | his greatgrand-father. He made such a dis- 4 she would have understood that she was the : ‘ om tho, regular army and the island of mystery an: pete all of which are now thrown down on | turbance that the relic was restored to its rest- going to,in consequence me ‘and the men who whi: pered of their love relieved the Criminal a pon whom tall the bard fighting ender, Ress. Beet 2. | shatr Seaed, Wali etewns ining acax b ing place, whereupon the afflicted youth dried ot @ scheme to bring | and devotion to ner were simply laying a trap : Court of considerable s the cohquering of a. peace, aft cently ‘explored DY | ‘The image makers were a privileged class | his eyes and intimated that he wae willing to together women of for ber orotism and vanity, into which she | more business than was ry won of ,the regular army and an expedition of the | and their profession descended from father to | let the elrull go, together with the whole lot of fashionable society and | Pai niar ange” A Weli-known playwright and | anticipated and even tory shows that this militas Smithsonian Institu- | son. For some reason, which in all proba-| remains belonging to his family, in considera- women of the stage. | ter ceed her and fell in love er = tlic henriabeaf Sits j which hep etaee nee wee peo ay oun e It of | bility will forever remain amystery, their work | tion of the moderate sum of €2. So the bones Sa at ig | rereaps thin was the first true love ye bad ra cases ik parolees ar pests relving j__ ‘ion. with the result of | as suddenly discontinued, never to be re-| were taken by the unsympathetic explorers, The object aimed at over known, but vanity had sown the seeds of | : involving violations of » | 6 | ee gp ye sy, throwing a food of | sumed. ‘he statues in all stages of completion | and he was not paid a cent for consolation. ® worthy charity—to | vice and i ee en ae an the policy law has ! cor ee ee ee is well atnaand to light upon its history | at the workshops and those abandoned on the| The natives believe that gnomes, ghouls and raise money for tlie | Darwricht diet eer nappy, till the YY proved a saving of sev- | proved practically without dissent. In the tte ANE nd the origin of the | rons to the coust indicate that the labor was| goblins inhabit the inaccessible’ caves and actors’ fund. A great | finally to morphine: te wos formetaloess, Thess | Gee eral weeks and given : mit wars each of the three Dranches, \ sw marvels of bumen | Sriinar’ colamite? Bet ceo a ne erite, | Riches in the rocks, prowling abo always of the fair has been projected. | who knew her when ale wan a bright pretty i the upper court that 8. P. Dickixsox & Co, ; age militia and the ‘volunteer =°=o\ gis, handiwork found there. | the reason why. Respecting the cause of the | bones of deceased hermen, which were sup- The plan is to hold it | 87! w ald scarcely. know oe — \ much more time to dis- tarermy custiont Ae tata Sao em This far-off spot in the | destruction and overthrow of these monuments, | posed to exert a mysterious influence over the in the vast Madison | S7Oving abit of opiam smoking aor reg 1 (WAL pose of the cases sent Managers. pp dpe ppp had = SRGS midet of the vast Pa-| ® very Se ale oats Oe sopitge OF athe deep. Each fisherman ws! square Garden about two monthe hence, | ostot tire of getiaoee * in from the grand jury of volunteers, who, at Buena Vista and elec. es Gees ee Me vastine bs sehen mastic Sieh | CYS, aliens, which was for ueriy ponaler on |Site meee Kept ‘up perpetually in the eaven | With 5th avenue belles and stago beau- ‘A SAD CASE. Foom. |The work of hearing this class of cascs | then these backers havo to come to the rescue, | "here, rendered ‘most nilant and admige —— Fcc Rider Haggard of the | Easter Inland. It is said to have originated | being tended as zealously as was the celestial |ties on duty alongside each other in| 4 few years ago young actress had made | Daturally fails upon the Police Court jury sys- | The gamo, he said. is #0 w rded that t service, the officers of thiese vol- imaginary kingdom of Kor, once ; *, ers ad ely bales e! 8f a numerous population and afterward an im- | With band of warriors which was defeated in | flame of Zoroaster, because they could only be| the booths. Two questions presented them- quite a name for herself in her profession, but | tem and during the past fow weeks Judge Mil- e nO crookedness all writ 1 largely gained their milf- | : : iasve oh he Welivened by a cain bana training in ‘the militia. In the civil fmense cemetery. its thousands of rocky caverns | =< bagel a | Lighted spain! by ce eae eee ee - selves at the outeet: Firstly, would what are | to the public she was better known asa writer | ler bas heard many such cases and sent many cme vb axe at ite ‘outbreak, the copied ee a ener ot Rettaring Seat, Beem. | hay had captared and the custten obtsined | sake vuich tear tocsmct occupied by small | Called our “society” girls—daughters of pre-| of poems. She was a benuty. too, with her | of the offenders to jail. ‘The trials of the chses hsccieg Se;the iss chs aah an iaoh a waved from nation, ‘and communication Bo trae baacias Samos Eascer Isand, whichhes | such favor that enemies slain in battle were | household gods of cock Piss vosa caine ee | tentions wealth and setylo—amociate with | force” att golden hair, while her person-| have enlightened the court as to the magni- Paget ag ee to long been a pazzie to. ethnologists and sta- | 3 Re! mort it and the north was maintained by them earned a pretty large salary. For in- | the militia w York and New ey it | 8 one or two cents are mate of the poorest | stance, he said a writer who is not old in the | #* dificult to ov@Pestimate the value of the of | people in the city, who play in anticipation of | business will collect from 25 to 50 n day and | “T¥ice thus rendered in gaining time for the . also devoured. Finally it came about | tistically made and had eyes of obsidian. actresses even ina charitable cause? That point | ality was agreeable and fascinating. Suc con- ee Dea et week hate Sees | Os cone eatadaan napster cian thence |e quadrupeds scem to have been indigenous | was settled definitely iast Monday, when an ex- | tracted the morphine havit, within « few y Percececat, Reeweat, tascriptions in an ancteat | scivial chacges were made weet with a simallar | to the'ate a except certain species of rodents. | perimental “‘high ten” was held at the Holland | became a slave to,it and quickly drifted ou: of | peop | organization of the volunteer tnt language, which tell many surprising things. | Toto" jay Terson who displeased the king was | La Perouse found no domestic animals there, | House. Five hundred women, half of them | the theatrical world and away from all wio | getting the enormous sum cf 100 fer 1" The | his cuumn sion is 20 per cent or $10. ana if be ag ay ie armies by whom enn eae Sa meaesiraees omelets | iad Gc nsarihes and guokied. “hare core| Gar left behind three sheep. two goats and two | actresses and half not, were invited. Actresses | knew her. At last accounte she was a wreck in | result of the business in court shove that the | turns his papers over to @ “runner” be pays edo, nee Measaies ok 5 erentsmmennter | a. cadauste whare okitizan ware’ aatan by Pigs. In the ruined tombs and pintforms my- | responded numerously, and thoy mace up «| the lowest depths, haunting the Chinese dens | policy men possess x great deal of money back, | the latter 10 per cent of his earnings or $1, and f gncTe.war the militia will doubtless taformstion, have been brought away. their parents simply for the gratification of an | riads of rats of great size find a refage. Ihe | fine-looking and politely bet assemblage, | of vice that intest the city, devoting the rem-| ing, and from the fact that thoy command so | if he takes them himself hie salare for the day | Przades ara ert, At the outbreak ite teas ee en ren een Ot Stem | cabsalttey eppetion Bulco are found today Of | bese nin neon gnawed by them and their | But “society” was not there. ‘Ihe names of | nant of her dissolute lite to a creature lower | much cash capital it his o:ton been remarsen | # $10 Pleats of thea are mallise ee Pointe na nae kiments will be sent to dectaive ee ee ee eee Oe ONY | catedtel alas on ahick Mire le:reman ts | Gran often discovered inside of the ekulls, | ome of our femaie swells had been obtained as | sud more dissolute than herself. Veshaps the | that the chances are decidedly ageinst, the | jail sentence for teat colary eithousit there are Prmamiced reese URtil volunteers can be Giety-tee square miles. Easter Island ence | Diiive that thoceanis of individuals were natures toa general commendation of the | saddest case of all is that of a bright and popu- | player and in favor of those who are not sup- | others who do not care to’ tke that risk, aud | OR* Dlished then tuit Places. Atter that is ao- a ee Fl ceed ba Geen alts coe rece peaclas SEAL, fair, but their owners were not at the high tea, | lar actress not mauy years ago the leading | posed to Le known in the business. many of them have quit the business for fear | fomPlishud thes can render greater service by ee eee ere earen Seeman OF cag eidlinee an evans tom vomling Wik proper So itseems that our swell women and our | lady of a down-town stock company. Some of THE EXTENT OF THE POLICY PLAYING. of punishment. There are several hundred | ents and trae ee meets > Resales of expending geese during woleutis | TS i bodies of victina Up tan recete 2 landed by passing vessels. Aquatic birds of | actresses, speaking generally, remain separated | her earlier work gave promise of enduring Judge Miller in the hearing of so many | 70W8Plased by the policy player, the numbers | [iow Aid ‘tue cisseunimating “their military ae See Shes ween Seed fae Aeeiing: plates |e LS cannlialiom’ provetled thet ie citer the kind known as “noddies” are so tame that | by a row of footlights. ‘The fair will, there- | fame, but she became a worshiper at the shrine res Ba sar idea of | @2Si2g from 1 to 78, and each row has ments. At mo previews waten ate ee ee ae Se Seen erecting | endams sow enrciciog echnawietgs bowing | Gn ak sit on the shoulders of the natives. | fore. be held with the actresses on one sido of | Of tiorphia, Ina short time she retired for- | eases ins become possessed of a good idea of , the smest common among them being | has wo had sions en eae car history in tae nage Bc Bi nos island is oe | consumed “long pig” when they were young | Marine turtles abound and occupy a prominent | the counters and the swell women on the other. |¢ver from ‘the stage. Illness wus the cause | tho conduct and extent of the trafic in this aby row, 1-2-3," “nigger row, 4-11-44," and & body of militia capable Recropolis. Notmerely cay | % tude of the business, in which collections as low : - of rendering eflicient service at the begined | and describe the process of cooking employed. | piace in the native traditions, being irequently wind; Gates a ue noe. ascribed, but knowing ones shake their heads | city, and speaking to a Stan reporter the other | “razor row, 24-63. of hostilities, or so many men availed ~ 4 Stetson ee ee aan commits offs Meee peters one Fepeadeuted «fit Biergtyre anon therecal The second question. and. it remains un- | ®84 Whisper: “Insanity! Gay he said he wae confident that the daily | | The officer assured the reporter that the war | So /urliges. of so many ‘aranen tak oe the ruins of =smew tombe se eotetete l imazs ans hg eoculion fet ateas Toc |e Es aneeina ot Cony dah te eee Mite Aes ie ANOTHER UNHAPPY WRETCH plays amount to at least 35,000 and often, he | on the policy people would continue in the fu- - ‘The huge quantities of human remains found, tes that the one called “Tahiri” was the | by diving, and giant eels are fished for in the | *lved, is whether actresses are cir : tion pot a Sol eesti sey vil phanar as last built. Its workmanship was exceptional co fine, as may be seen to this day, and it was i for & period covering many hundreds of tended that theseventy-foot image in the crater 9 thusiasm, for officers of volunteers spect as to their conduct and companionship | "nO hes delivered bis reason to drink and | (hought.e Rroat deal more: “There is but «| fure ae Up oF ‘antl the jal is filed with policy soe ag thas i8 true, much remaine to be Tonchos infest the caves, the full-grown ones | willeerveat the fair with actresses wu ree | “7u6® 19 & man whooo name bas wppeared in the judge, “and in court they say that, thets | weitere. ye ee chs int es, the fully ‘ ; . “an t thes ; of the ineasuring two inches in length, with antenne | uoioriously ill famed No dispute an to the | the papers a great deal of late. He is a hope- | hooks amount to from s25 te Soo 3 ~ On & previous : n many of A SCENE AT THE HEADQUARTERS. page it has been shown that th workshop should stand upon it Everything | to correspond. relative numbers of good und bad women on | less paretic and for some years was constantly | these writers are new in the bu: Itisa| Few persons in this city have ever visited the | the militin is about 4 cents p o ~o meng being in readiness, a great cannibal banquet woaline wakieee: the stage is revived. The puipable fact is that | iu the care of an attendant. When he first | business that should be broken up. It cannot : Pop was given by the powerful tribe of Vinapu. ‘ some actresses are just as vood as the best of | became afflicted with the disea Unfortunately, the ‘wife of the of this | The tablets of wood sirendy referred to are | Somen in private life and thal some are as bed | wa permitiod te go about n ° contributes bat one fone eres tribe, who herseif belonged to the Tongariki | *mong the most remarkable objecta found ona, can be.’ ‘The fair ie to be under the general | pleased, he was constantly attended by a young | ward ending the business here. It will be Lik | institution, Detective Raff visited there a It is evident that the gencrst i clan, was shglited in the division of the “long | Easter Island. They are inscribed with picto- | control of four of our most highly rexpceted | physician, both in the eupacity of nurse ana | water deomeine on eons oer along time it | few years ago when he went south on police govern- ‘ go wh ment should give a Ia: portion, pig.” not receiving tke rib roest «¥ other se- | graphic characters go beautifully executed that | theatrical managers--A. ML. Palmer Frank W. | medical adviser. “he, dotnet graduate | will cramble and fall. It will not only decrease ; business. Speaking toa Stam reporter he eaid in a lected portion which she was entitled to by | : | headquarters of the firms in Louisville and | tion, and that in the es where the milit he | be done by c ests, but systema: ‘a wind can ne eee 2 3 —— ale | Frankfort and studied the workings of those | 0st thoroughly organized the general yoverne eraht ae : couple its donation with more rigid ‘ * : e | Fynger, Daniel Frohman and Charles W. | from one of the New York hospitals and_had | the number of writers, but it will narrow the | that he reached Lonisville about ¢wo houre be- ion tay bas one aa a, oe her rauk according to Easter Island etiquette. | Modern iumerice, Hetech Hee wees sane | Thoman ‘They are understood to have amured | practiced for some years fe eset Nene Eo | ears of operafore in all ts branches and the | fore the evening drawing wae to occur.” About| the toree ts whan senpert at esas ot Enraged at the insalt, she went back toher| With no better tools ther oleiling polate | Mrs. Kendal, Mra. Booth, Miss Cayvan and | ind town. He cane to New You eo woes result will be the accomplishment of the de- | 4:45 o'clock ho heard a bell in the tower of a present it divides its 1momey among the stains own clan, which rose in a body to defend Ricsbisbet ties sidan eee actresses of unimpeachable record, and | practice, but found it was not so easy | sired end. | large hall ringing and everybody on the streets | Sooording to their eapressniation tata Sariki honor. Bloody wars followed, during | fined to the royal family, the chicfe of the six | WHO have promived hearty assistance in the | for an unknown physician to. make a living THE BUSINESS MATERIALLY LESSENED. Se Bee ee ees enn ft Gel guinas of the Sestinen of ae ee which the platforms were wrecked and the seks wihsee's tai, that no infamous actress shall Le put be-| bere, eo he engaged as attendant on the| «here ie mas sound. Being told by policeman that at | (ySuriee® of 8 force ¥ istricts, the sons of tue chic! and the prieste. - a a . ere is no t,” continued the judge, | \; ignal ‘the plat he followed th iy » pro’ 1 only that thes statues thrown down, and thus were these ex- | 7), ople were obliged by law to assemble | *4¢ them — Now, between the extremes of| paretic, wio bad at one time been an ‘that th a me. | ree Mgeel for ae yers Te which {force 4 reported “organized and uni- tracrdinary works ruined. z boebee were Qtnges 27 hsaati the | Ro¢dness and badness in our actresses those | actor. Though the man was known to ¢ vigorou® prosecutions and punish- | crowd and eoon reached a large hall, in which | rormed” to the extont of 100 men for e ae Se re Raryone oF hearin | tO qualities merge into each other gradually, | be hopeiessiy insane he was permitted | ment of offenders has materially lessened the | several hundred men, women and children bad wery RASTER ISLAND STATUES. THE ANCIENT GOVERNMENT. tablets rend. ‘This occasion, called the “Fenst y Was the most important fes- | 84 where shali the line of acceptance and ¢ - Senator and Kep e. r ment to have his own way in a great measure, | business. The convictions and sentences have | Congregated and each had pencil end paper in might well perp ge ay —~4 and both physician and patient spent uight | demonstrated that the vigorous prosecution of | their hand. the number of men present in — fully 1) tee dive in aeiting the theaters and afterward | the cases has cansed the police to be more | A8 soon as the hour hand was on the figure 5 | .0, and equipped and instructed in deillend fhe dives in search of amusement. ‘They drauk | energetic. The imposition of jail sentences | 8d the minace hand denoted the exact hour a fle practice, as determined by its own in- freely and occasionally visited the opium dens, | frightens off the writers, and iio doubt the Potigy Se! Inoarnt Serwont aud Uist | spscters acceding 60 contin Adiamennen : maple one | C#tleriticism. ‘There is go: big Mere they snduiged in the pastime known as | profits are much smaller ‘than they were, even | folde le was Lanpugare Rogemed Po RE unt of . it sculptors whose art has perished with | Tuled by @ clicf, whose wutiiority | (ri sean buen rep dition got the key | sithough it ie hoped that the tuct will nut ct | “mitung the pipe” the doctor mouerstag ane | 1f the business is still in operation. The nume | there was a large giass wheel, and in which was | Contribution Aout uantcont Rone ‘art of this nearly vanished race has | by plying him with edeadente “Tnedition ass |fect the monetary prosperity of the euter-| paticue till Le’ was senucles, ‘The resuit was | ber of writers seems to be dwindling down. oe & Package of seventy-cight numbers. | provided €200,000 for this Purpose, which was | verlag sarge saly in the shape of suck | teat catt-orcen inkl cae Seas ee ee that within alt yeur the ex-actor’s case was | Those who wrote the game months ago were | The wheel was turned a the boy wath- | Pi" " Statues, but on the very of nd, W seve e fost remarkable of the tombs are| The ancient government was an arbitrary | of the Tablets,” mpor! Coe ; ; eigatornn built of rough and hewn | monarch, the people being governed by an he- | tival of the year not even war being allowed to — aot Oe eee ae Stones, which were formerly surmounted by | reditary king, whose person was sacred. Into | interfere with it, When, in 1863, th ny | list of the actresses who attend hi statues. These statues, which now | Titers! F f Niars captured and carried away the king and | Ht of the netresses who. aite Deeera eee ceaeicred cee ee nic 2y | six diotu lela the hand wan’ divided, each belug | 1a persons in authority, there was no one left | #8 Subjected to close scrutin Shion r ‘: Per cent of its total revenue and 2% cente d “ons atthe Aomek THE FOUR HUNDRED AND THE Press. 8s hopeless as ever, wile the young doctor had | men of apparent respectability. They dressed | drew a slip of paper contait pumber. The | per unit of the populatio ‘that dat Smages of m; hical a pote aren | tate ‘liege : pan Peroepenias ditlene That ation of New York soci er which we | *¢duited all his vices. well and did not belong to the more ignorant | Umber was recorded by one of the clerks and | P r 0 et ae . animals, faces, birds, | ilegor overbs ditio’ > iety date present 114 per cent of th shes. 4c. Within the caves, and on the walls | end cellings of houses built of slabs of stone, Gre painted the most curious frescocs in similar esigns with red, black, and white pigments. WORKSHOPS OF THE ScULProns. a Be 4 Rata was then handed to another clerk, who turned | {°° : otal revenue would Iuting to the land whence he came. One of the | have nicknamed the Four Hundred, and upon Ape pg eee ae Saree ne ae navies greeoy it to the audience. It was ings coseeh to be lotion oad “oe elim ‘foe cen : ae ‘ which we expend so much of good-natured | | ® Fe eee eno | onlyte ba bboseaied! by ceed of the lower ele- | Seen and distinguished in all parts of the large | are sot necessary; but something more fe pect i prat pecame known to Onr | ridicule, has resorted to quite theatrical |‘ morphine and opium habit and men who ment, aa well as women and children, In my | hall, and when the clerk exhibited it the men, | So.) than the 400,000; we ann, th of 1 ee sata GU RAl derete. Cee eer aaa | seadbioce Gla dee tagtsig’tinelt ese atene she | awe Kad aallrige srith fis claves fas that even | opinion the business eanuot be carried on suc- | Women and children used their paper and pen- | Cont srite rossua, which the foderal govern: | growing close together along the borders of | Several annual series of Delmonico balis. auch | when not under the iutluence of the drag ther | Ccostuilt: gine tae people. _ Whoa | $5 00 record it. One after another the mum. | seat now cdbaribeies te the mine die Gai Upin the mountains are found the work- | i fee reale vo abet tees met overhead und the | the Patrisrehs, tho Junior Putricrchs and | arc irresponsible. Lying seems to be the most | the managers have to go to the slums for opareea drawn pele — which failed in the last Cougress provided for shops of the sculptors who carved the great | branches were lnced together muscles. | the Matriarchs, vegan 10 be indulged in by | marked texture of the victim's moraldestraction | Tougie aud rowdies and the most Speer Sci the eek ka tie oo ing be said there | 22 nual appropriation of $1,000,000, a sum Stone images out of the volcanic rock. Inside | Heke was the builder of these rouds, and it was | these imitation ‘aristocrats the city edito: of) attirst. He wiil lie where the truth will serve | People they cannot hope to carry on the busi- cap euky Saabs, suandsnre meneun ” ere | which would doubtless be suflicient, and which oe ah . poprastane| - FEATHER HATS. | he who sat in the place of honor in'the middle | the daily newspapers were supplied with invie | better, and axa proof o: this a tory is told of a | Ness $o succesftcly aewnen they bad. intelli Bacon es tus Geapies Gasoline at the same time is not only easily within ite oatties Seaterian ubae tha coiasosenny S| fooms Sather toscn.. ‘They acknowledged the |p TNO eat = hei Led @ every diree- | Hous upon which to send reporters. On exch | young actor whose erratic attempts at manages | BeDt people to conduct affairs. Slestened chard posing Syren fe num-| means, but less in these statue factories, where the effigies may be | from father toson. They eau ceante “ae The ips contri occasion there has been a press committee, | ment once caused the town te amile aha his RESULT OF THE PROSECUTIONS. The ba a rer to. telegraph operators | population than it pal — 2S - nny ere ee the | put to death aay ae lane eecing caoeeaee beneath iis plu ub tbe wabol ths ‘and | Ciarged with the creditors to weep. He was a gnest at a dinner in the building, who sent the result off in 1 ; g “The prosecutions have had a wonderful ef- | cipher, each fi ving the oor haw ears alter 1908, without receiving any ade- H . These chief — paper mes ei and particulars “xe with a host of triends who had known him from | ¢._. = to aatie Pens Sate Bie Veentvnegy number having | Quate return. taken away. i The lagect or = pote lar fontberhats 5 de ie Geek cea hay on phe Bulb ep ae rar Rene ied People for publication. ‘The reporters wear | hiv boyhood. He had for some time Leen | fet on the business and but few intelligent | tts own cipher, so that it was almost impossible : mas as futrotioced ah ; _ i i to tap the wires to any advantage. RTS am EBT aad Agu prrer Ryan a plippiio ay that | Gveuing dress, ure introduced to the beiles, | kuown to have cuntracted the morphine habiz, | Wen can be found who are willing to risk a jail P. THE RESIDENCE IN EUROPE FAD. po pe cep eee complctal Thee are | by their quarrela. “In 165 Murata, the lart of | casts?,Jaland would bout in during those | fhe sumptuous suppers. Lint this ix | door of the dendly drug. In the course of the | more dexperate the game gets and the more the | Pen, and on strings in the candy shop. win which they were designed to adorn. tunate savages being doomed to spend the rest | His brotier fell in love with a giti who could | Their business manager, as_neo! M ; create 5 dows there are any number of lottery tickets. Sound Sense From Wand McAllister. i ‘y eaptered and aed away by | happy d legend of Hotu-Ma sa | done, of course. fur the direct j.urpose | evening he began to reiate anadventure whi h, | fair dealing is €liminated the easier it is to ry rn [or a Speman Gorey mont — the Peruvians, together with all the chasfeand rn tecalieg oat ek ek wie, ot keeping the Four Hundred in pubiicity. | he claimed, tad betallen him while Heutenant | break it ups for the players if not paid thet er ae The growing tendency of our countrymen pod tedy to he transported to the burial plat- | ost of the other able-bodied men, the untor-| farto the westward, being a powerval chiet, | Tbey enjoy that kind of thing very much. | in the Un, Siutes navy during w trip abroad. | hits will complain and at the same tine many WHAT A BABY 18, ANYWaY. y everybody | ‘Ihe whole story was imaginary: and ¢ and countrywomen as soon as they have ec- of them will be willing to appear in court juired fortune is to leave us and seck to make ister. It]at the table knew it. tle knew th Pie Tie eronre. came, her qrenta eon | oninre ‘Owalens Seas SP > hy See | cadens Maeecintees Sie k, thi il of prepar- | 2t, yet he kept on with bis story as thoagh he | in their power to keep out of coart aes tobe deplored. They should hear were finally released all save two died of small- | accept. him on condition that he would walk | tion and control. But it wili be a sury rise to | believed all present hud faith init, His mar-| “One remarkable feature of the gam London Tid-Bits bas just awarded a two- on oy Sond erase pox on their voyage back to the island. The | around the isiand without stopping to rest or | MOst renders that he ts accused, aw an oUte Tages would fill a court record. yet he never | judge continued, “is tuat nearly every guinea prize for the “Best Definition of a | °*" Country and endeavor to improve, develop disease, being carried ashore, almost wiped out /teep, While he was doing the circuit she | 0 4 quarrel, of getting «living out of this eia- | udes tue trouble to get m divorce, (Ne nce | ei eee one Lunt neRelY eve r Baby.” The prize definition was rather in- | #4 enlarge tho society of their native Iand, the population, which at present numbers only | ¢loyed with Hotu-Matua's brother, \A war fol. oe cr molests him. Hy is free from interierence of | ignoraut class; the very people who catl least sdgitiiask Get unas OF ictomees foster the elegancies of life here, seck their the popul Poon ei a EL SL ee Hr kt | ule daw ue tar as!hus responsivality gous, aud the | afford to lose money. it may be that others | Significant, br = TF then, |@toyment at home and build up for them- xtraordivary tales wore told by early ex- | 00°, and Hoty Macan defeats. ‘They | signing his article every Sunday, and with no | ouly punishment that cau be acted oat to him | play the game andT have me deals thee they | doubtedly bright. Herein areafew of them selves a reputation and name to th to lorers of Easter Island and its int took two big eanoes, each ninety feet in length, | Concealment of 'w liberal compensation. Be- | for his muwdoiugs, which in auotuer would be | do, but they don't find, their wey ietore aoe quoted: * F * boquent ivan was ite mesue | | with $00 followers. ‘Oriv, the jilted loyer, came | Youd that, however, the charge hae now been | most paiprble eres, it incarceration in_an | witnestox aad that ie. pros ble tue co ae tee A thing we are expected to kiss and look asit | ‘ir children. The principle of equality im- thet a be hip steered, by | aiong in disguise, and wiien they got @ cancer | pubiished that he receives pay from the Astra, | suonae nasluas ate: that fate ivouus uy. before | that those of tue ‘heticr. class ea’ trace of their days at work on the guano deporits. | not decide between bim und suothet uitor. | kuows, has for years been War. They were cruelly treated, and of the few who | Finally she told the other fellow tat she would | ®as he who looked after every de t came off to thi ished that he receives m dane ns ; ne bets who play are | we enjoyed it planted in them as Americans should deter Giant twelve fect high. “Ihe savages are’ all | Mons! disgu x the rocks aud tourdered | Vanderbilts and others whose entertsinments | him at this very waited upon at their homes or places of busi- tess them from going abroad permanently to plead Of more than gigantic size,” be saya, “the | cvery-one he could cota chance at At inceah | he manages. ‘Thus we haven new crostien ia : ass where their dealings axe more secret. | | A crying evil you only aggravate by putting | jem, 1s 5." peep eogene men averaging twelve fect in height and broad | Hota-Matun caught him ina net and pounded | aiuusements—that of the society impressario. NATURE'S DEATH TRAP. There is one class of writers who rent rooms in | down. from those who wicld their social poser in proportion. The tallest men on beard the | him to death.” Whether uil this is true or not, DANCING FADS IN YoRg. i taiitieidaii uncut rome vere plea hen Congregate and make | 4 necessity—in order to keep ‘up the supply | If they go inden with gold they will certainly Temmgl could pars between the legs of these | there seems to be no doubt tht Easter dsland | ‘The Four Hundred aro peculiar in one thing jaek-Shaped Cavern Partly Filled With fo eae the roe a apoat the alley allday | o¢ 744-Bits senduns of the futare, attract u certain amount of attention, and the fend The wocliath ithout bending their | was originally colonized by Maiayo-Polynesian | reisting to their thentriea amwnamec ‘They oe have uch fascination fot womeaf tetris] The most extensive employer of female | imuumerable sycophants that line the highways ads. e women can t compare i H - 1 Fi the i lent. . x" ‘i soon with the men, as they are not common! = = demand that somebody shall dance before yo ofa my pond aired ak t in th atter making their play they remain about the | labor. ir they wil Faker me paser Tady Bouneifal = ANCIENT wovsz. WONDERFUL MONUMENTS OF ANTIQUI them newly and strangely. They hada s fomembere: at in the past sum-| alleys to learn the result rather than go to| A troublesome compendium of great possi- | their English charities they will Tf fe now known that the first process in Wonderfnl monuments of antiquity are seat-| of liking for the skirt denses whicy theo: mer agents of the Smithsonian Institution col- | work and earn an honest dollar. This is prob- | bilttiee a A ag i one of these images wasto select asuit- able rock and sketch upon it the outline of oo The front of it was then farred into shape and dnished, the last work Being to ent the back loose. It was then fthe crater and lowered to the ¥ @ system of chocks and wedges, Toad was made to the intended destination and covered with seaweeds, and ‘over this the colossus was dragged with hempen tered all through Polynesia, and there is hardly | giris brought over to us. Next, they tock with | lected in Meegher county some well-preserved ably the most common practice among the! A pleasure to two, a nuisance to every other hex seh oan teas heen 7 © group of islands on which the explorer can- | avidity to Carmencita and several of Ler kind | bones of aninuls belonging to ages long passed, que che a ae is so con- | body and a necessity to the world. chase everything that royalty makes, be its not find great works, architectural and cther- | "0d went in partics to seo them at the beer | There also have beea discoveries in the anme | Utd the police have a better chance toeateh | "A“native of all countries, who speaks the | portiere,screeu or bed quilt, for which they are grew gardens. But thie week we have an illustration : ’ them, for the witnesses are in sight, and many | language of none. sew pegmpertdeng mpm ends ~ tone A wise, of peoples who passed uway ages ago. In | Of the fickleness of fashion’s favor, Carmencita | County of caves beautified with stalactite and | ot them when questioned will give all the in-| A mute of thing that requires a mighty lot | London ther Lire @ lordly mansion and a reti- the Friendly Isinnds are the graves of the Tui-| has returned after tour of the country aud | Stalagmite. But on December 2 last Geo. W. | formation they possess. 4 Tongas—nineteen truncated pyri of attentior ue of servants, and the: Yor ids, each | the spectators contain never one of her former | Van Horne is reported to have made the raost OX THE LOOKOUT FoR THE POLICE. About twenty-two inches of coo and wriggle, | tack of coucting. tend nn begins the erduous fect uquare a height of twenty-five fect. The stones of the base and rising tothe | admirers from among tie ranks of the Me- s task of courting. toadving and fawning on the Mich they are composed are huge, blocks of | fore, wo are left without a dancing fad, and | ®*Y® 08 the Dry range of mountains, twenty- | shown, have men about the alley on the look- | ‘28 8PParatus for milk and automatic alarm to | eced bevond. their capectations att nesting . ‘ « ‘i , ‘is writhe and scream, filled with suction and test- | F, $ times suc- iallsitex “poopie. “duet foe thom etonc te wonderful discovery yet recorded. It ising ‘Most of these writers, as the testimony has | ¥ English nobility. If clever they a! 7 Tegulate supply. pablo to them Fopes by as many men as were needed. fore Concrete, many of them eighteen feet | more than one theatrical mannger is ready and | ive miles northwest of White Sulphur Springs, | out for the police, but even they are not ematt The nee caller, noonday crawler, mid- a nn’ oo pot ote ay? long and weighing twenty tone. They were | willing to make good this deficiency it he only | Ou December 18 a party of explorers, consist- | enough to prevent the vigilant officers from | night brawier. . never gain « real sucial footing—euch « one in cut three miles away and itis mystery how | could devise a way. ‘There would be moncy in ing of the discoverer, Seth Butterfield, and the | Teaching the house in time tomake a successful |" the magic by which the gods transform they could have been transported for such «| it. Augustin é 4 which they ean feel secure. once Imported a troupe nal ; | raid. In these aliey policy shops the furniture | a house into abome, D : wealth of this distance, ‘The construction of these pyramids | of @ucing Natitch girls, Dut the chappios | Re% J+ C- pute iaiod the cave. They | cenecally consists ofa table hat store and oe | a eee that bears the whole world | comity wontd ‘Tring’ eek cbaueee tear | extended over @ period of 1,250 yt ‘They | of the Knickerbocker and Calumet Clubs | Were equipped with lights and tape lines, and | Grawings are received twice w dey, and if the | of wedded joys and cares on itslittle shoulders. | land. "We Tequire the charities of our rich peo- are overgrown by dese forests of banyan and | voted them deucedly dull, dontcher know, | of tho visit and ite resulta Mr. Lenbart thus | shane sea trance the hits are paid. Father's rival in mother's love. a other trees. The Tui-fongas were hereditary | After this failure to make the oricncal | Writes: Me hb than E. 5 high priests. According to law they could only | style of dancing pleasing to usof the new | “tie mouth of the cave is from two to three peripatetic writers who go around to barber The Turn of the Worm. jd make abroad: for here you have an in- marry the daughters of the king. ‘Their sons | world no manager seemed bold enough to iry | feet wide and six feet long, located on the | shops, back alley gates and houses and in From the New York Commercial Advertiser, i | Became priests, while their daughters were | again, although traveler after traveler returned | southeast mide, near tho top of « pocket in the | eve: | brought up to the duti of vestal virgins. | with glowing accounts of the voluptuousness of | Mountain. The cave is almost the sha ofa ‘The intter served in the temples and were not | Nast fndiantand: Avation daueing women. It| flask, thiety-four feet deop, the cotreoe g tend | ened gee drawings. ‘This ts the | esta zee! sapgoeat doy with a bag full of permitted to marry. In 1868 the last of the | wonid seem, therefore, thut New York is in- | sixty-two feet long and thirty fect wide, Wa | more dangerous class of the two, because it is | “itculars are on ine. They are in « burry paiunes am rae vanes sane ‘Tui-Tongas died. clined to stick to di + whose supple limbs | speak of the bottom of the cave. but mexn the | more difficult to detect them and bring them | and the starap clerk is requested to “got a gai dividualit; there you are painful oat to you. Hero you conceivable way get at the players and| It is the rush hour at . | gather in their nickels, dimes and tiollere and the stamp window. ¥ your food works; there, if very you are pointed out as the rich American who -~ A . i : u ct ~ : has paved his way with gold by giving, out of Cen tet necuural ruing of Java surpase those | are not always content to remain planted on | top of the debris and vast amouat of bones of | to justice, and it ie rect te impossible to pro- | On” and “shake ‘em up.’ arson y, Broved by the fact thnt the remains | of Central America. AtChandi-Sewaare found | mother eurth, bat wives nny Seed a | a Which fill the space of the bottom. cure witnesses agninst them, <j Through one of the swinging doors enters | Pan} wna ech “me est tah vast —a of the islanders obtained from the tombs show | the remains of what was once an asembiage tendency to fly off at a tangent. tis known that the cave, mstead of being THE SYSTEN OF BOOKKEEPING. ®bdeauteous being with under her | English so carefully foster,” On their finger them to have been of only medium size, the | or two hundred and ninety-six templ:s, ar- adorned with crystals and stalactite and stalag- “The f bookke ras armandaletterin her snugly gloved right ends they soon havea list*of your cheri biggest skeletons measuring less than six feet. | ranged in five parallelograms, one ins.de of A NEW IMPORTATION. mite, is a regular earnel honse, and evidently tem of bookkeeping of the policy | hang, - J » mond ‘They were brutally treated by the whites who | the other. in the center of all ifte to quality their accepting nd make nt a large tem-| | However, we are threatened by an importa- | has cen a death irap for ages to the uneus | People ia a remarkable one, and is the best I | ns walks directly to the window, lays the | £1 f°. 2 “to those ho mer- * first visited them, being shot down mercilessly | pie in the shape of @ cross, surrouried by | tion of another lot of oriontal dancers. ‘his | pecting beasts of plain nud forest. 1 have ever secu,” the judge continued, “The | package down upon itsedge, and with slam. | 0" 3 bonne cuamvunning inaaheel* aeahel ee aeeer raceme than indulging » weakness | Forty Sights of stops, richly ‘ornamented with | tine they are Arablaneod the ersten tease | Pee eee eee forest. 3 writer has a square piece of tin, on which reste | bent emile asks the young man "within Cons ; lor petty thieving. : c " many be pinnen ie e wg . Unquestionabiy clear a pasmage for you quite up ‘These natives attach no moral delinquency | Hiybty varios to che ery apartments. | admits that they have not pretty faces, but are |e Pipe thet Fentarea y awallowing auy Liv-| the paper cry reanig dyes eats anne lrerd [gre roe Sal to the Prince of Wales, and will maintain you to the crime of stealing. They had a god of | porobods, consisting of © central draw nice | Absolutely ugly to look af, tuken one’ by one, | US ath of thin desteoren cueat, i brink. | The | arupes eee eee! a tn near him as loug as you iavishly shower it om thieving and succesaful thefts were believed to | feet in diamotcr, arcand which ism triple che, | When their features are in repase. Dut, ol” poner gh rsrahenson sc hundoutorpiey Merdieamag Poaglne Sul Aumbers plored ce toe che nicat| owrnen ance the nent maill.gn to Malou?” | is enhjeots, be wimeming your Prodigality,, be accomplished under his patronage, those | of seventy-two towers: the whole Duilding be- | sym be, wait until you see thetn at their work; | Po*ed of limestone rock somewhat on an incline, | he wrlve * played on the top sheet ni > b < * but when you come to an: position: i i t the depression being at its widest purt. Along | it is transterred to@nother sheet by means of a| ‘Why, you're in the office; t to | yo ii ot then : pho committed such offenses being only de-| ing 620 feet square and 100 feet high. In the Rae taceoece tae ene ee 2a Dealt | SS clear Ada deRneid enter ae hen ae | enor ee Paper, aud at the close of the | know that. When will this packegs sat aecess Conaceeepent aak waa ate ae HERS TEE QUAREYIS® WAS DOSE. tected when their acts were not sanctioned by | wallsare niches containing 4U0 cross-iegged the apectater ie onrvind auny by thatmesean at | %0 200 bow the bullalo or sik passing tant may | day's ook the Seherborn on sotal of hia | <j toll you, mina I Gen'tEnow where iste” | Gugiy your ishividesl, wasting week aaa ‘The interior of the volcanic crater is cut into | the divinity. The thief who was caught did | Soares larger than life. The amount of bevee | the 8p: fis Freie the pinta aca | when the trall was slippery Cit $ on aunt, | collection, the amountor hie pereentage and| “In north New York.” ee ee ergpes bone Prrraces, one above the other, where the quarry- | Rot lose the respect of his friends, Dut was | ifor-and sil expended upon the pyramids of | eeHiug Manifested! He forgets the placa and | When the trail w Salippery oe say | coledion, the emtuatot Ni areas “Ia ports Kew ¥e : Soeel pun thonn ana hos tealienenenaen log of these sione giants was done. Outside of | subject to retaliation in a peculiar form. “In | M#b0r and skill expended upon the pyra Pd ee cena atte Tee OBLy fOr Mh | real tate the ante Teese eee RiecEe | tas, Tumbers plared. One sheet he retains, | “Itt g ape fey necc to keep you there. The same wealth ‘the crater, on the west side of the mountain, is | ease of detection he was cblignd to subunit to eins nde keel eee Fequired to ‘com oe oe ions, Tae ory to believe that at pee are winter | managers, and when the returasof ther race H [eae opel Doce seven tas ecuaaees a ice oa Sooty mainsbOp. where 155 statues are to be | being beaten and otherwise abused by the in-| Pista ‘this sculptared temple in ‘the = the mouth of the cave is entirel ith | ings are made he has every number played on P 3 geen, incloding those which stand at the foct ot | jured party and was ‘not permitted tooffer | Fitcrior of ‘Jura. Forty! miles” sours | afe called Arabine ““Ouled-Nales,” but probir irely covered with | ings piny Fi 80 i the er prod form for yourself your own little circle and i snow, so that the unsuspect: al him and the player produces the slip or ticket < 4 fhe volcano, ready for removal to the plat-| any resistance, though he might be the| west of Samerang, on the same Talend, is | DIY Shat_ will be ottened: for! American 06. | ror ite famine Baar eee anime ‘Passing hg spots x rayaee ba y e make your postion a brillant one, have somes Se ee eer eens tee mngateada | Strcense._ Thee Teeble uguinst the etrovg seq | a2 extensive plateau covered with the ruins of | Sal tory: fashioa’ with © api jMupes in| diverging s few inches to ‘the south, slide | Chance for # mistake.” They are handed out and with maddening | js smaller, it is to many minds more attracting vé ~~ rol be a 9 FR se endl emer ore pope phate ed. to 1h would | wmPles, to reach which, four ning mani WaY® | front of each. ‘The native musicians are'at the | through the snow and be swallowed alive. PLAYERS SHOULD BE PUNISHED. Geliberation she sticks them one by one upon | equally a® brilliant, not #0 buried up and est feland, which were found to number 555. Most|summon the aid of the entire com. of nearly four hundred | back and their shrill flageolets, accompanied |, Many animals, doubtless, were killed by be-| In conclusion the j@dge suggested that an |e Package. The line has dwindiod dows ae vered with ceremouial, but vastly more en- i 1,000 steps. Trac 2 ing suspended by the head and fore part ef the ms five men and the boy. oa : th ‘your eity the: sear the rms al ity. i ustom permitted th ‘are ere, the: by the inevitable ton:-tom, furnish the instru- = amendment to the present law punishing play- |» 's “4 joyable. You grow with your city and ites Setone being lft handing: shat seas ees | Reabesd to ieese hi wife oenother man | eee oar tery aa cf tuemLecorated | misnta malo while those bested othe aisglon ik, Fle ming wersbriaezuy aise see tet | eros well an wrliots for, promciog theihesea | eset cting up the Teton, nom "abe F- | chy: you ae banging on fo nebodys onthe are scattered over the plain toward thevilloes | for. a. etated ” term. th men and ates er & ADM AND HEAD DANCE. -) a ; ~ 3 con 5 of Vaiba, ail lyteg face wemnbaeery This lates omen, particularly the latter, were tattooed | 28¥ the ruins of forts, palaces, baths, temples killed by the fall. But there are also evi-| business would ‘New York. have the desired effect and nd aqueducts are to besceneverywhere. Like- | At first the slow and monotonous chant is | dences that Jan: bout end the f seems strange, insamuch as they could | 1m elaborate patterns with sharp-pointed fish | Wise Ail through Polynesia’ ‘are stupendece is - “rel garry ml permngelie aol [hace ele pee somewhat } but gradually it increases | pit with sufficient powers remaining to fow ns would risk playing 5 or 10 cents | omewhere out west.” uy bere 8 been bauled in such # fashion, one feed brmenenp hi een on her TA = fe- | ruins, illustrating the science and tasto of past in aera dancers, ape more than Their bodies to remote ‘corners of the ca wher it meant 8 possible satencs of not more | “Never heard of it” Reeta wedten aun tos eeteen ote ee ae ee two at one time, redouble their voluptuons | there perish from wounds and starvation. | tham one year's imprisonment in jail. te paras, Carrie wrote from there and for- Siar cnehaied heeamee Or tess ‘easily worked with | ok tights. ‘Themen threw stones cite man] 720 pia seca gray - faces rocking. naa ba Movements, tho | Some of the largest skulls and skeletons of buf- DETECTIVE BLOCK'S EXPERIENCES. Got to put the state.” rude stone implements. One of the imagea|velous accuracy from the band, and thei =a 8. N., the results of whoes e gold tinsel and spangles of their costumes | ‘#l0es ould soot dean Dears the marks of cutting tools about Were pointed with nothing more formid- | 7Home0n. LU peen'etabodied 1 an eek sparkle. in, the ‘oft light of the tapere which bones in the bortcagtazmine the depth of the Shroat. and local traditions say that it belonged | able than sharpened sections of calabash until | retort py the Smithsonian Instituddos, ker in the air, stirred by the movement of | Pone cave, as we did not ‘No, not that Cohoes, It's another Cohoes t have the necessary tools for making such ex- to & powerful clan, which was finally defeated | they found that flakes of volcanic glass inflicted {hetr akirts and draperies. Now and then a | bave tie nepeaary tools foe war, tors ‘ vere wounds. In front of each dwellii -_——_ bare foot comes to view, but the clouds of sight Shop off its head. Sarees oeearie“s * | Sosa meeemtenien ines with stone slabsr An Elaborate Machine, white tulle which envelop the dancers veil their Pattee stall, sveral elk, bear the food to be cooked was put into this primi-| When the hour is struck an reversed body. hands and tive oven and covered over with damp earth to | movement is produced and the whole strac-| toaing rovereee, boar bangles, act the part "Daring the winter months large sea-birds ot | te seems alive. |The artista Tene |panacmenthors ain ore a the winter mon 200-1 = charge pope an - arloas species vii the island in vast nutabers an ides of the last Judgment. A ernst | We have had all sorts of dancers, and P uacle ; tempt to accomplish it. Picture to yourself for bi yurposes. Their favorite spots of | *ngels sound the trumpet at the four cardinal | se tora real novelty; but, after ell it what this country would be, ‘all resort are two tiny ialands a few hnudred yards | poluts, and flames issue from the openings in peaienpe Go aegis ten eae ber rich men—simply « second Ireland. from. the shore. Here the first eggs of the turrets placed to the right and left. The|and Calumet Clubs ‘They can pay for Eeeoeees. oe thon, should you decry seckoty. here, which season each year are laid, end in ancient times Eternal Father looks around him and gestures Doras, the champagne and the Sowers. be a at really a part of the blood of ‘bation? the occasion was made one of festival. Accord- | as if he intended to judge the world. who sit in the smoke of the visible ‘at ‘The yee | of ambition! What is man ing to the custom, the person who was sofor-| Asoul advances and takos ite stand before | sic must abide by the decision of roreh perce without A component part of society. tunate as to secure the firs: egg from the little | the Arbiter. It is the soul of the impenitent —_ They pronouns he ‘“ ricate has is competition to outdo your neighbor, to ap- islands and returned with it unbroken became | sinner. His career is wanting and he is con- an fre abarnn Fa Min =o ae bn eee more teeing tecvomonth, Re wat mapped |sfatpeanens upon tet crernara ati | Sa en Barwon Eclogs eed | ae ik Seren serena, Sots heuaepaee mse 1g twelvomon! was ou ry = to have won the approval of the Great Spirit of | and hasis him heating intone ‘Next MORPHIA HABIT AMONG STAGE TOLER, store’ is man without competition, without the 4 had an a time what wouid this tions of food, &c., from "s on the werd “go from “dressed, indifferently fed, ail intent on THEY REPRESENTED PERSONS OF DISTINCTION. caly anstteeboen ae Sear “ ca. Ts wsed to be supposed that these stone giants | It was a zo-as-you-please race, a te read. were gods, but it is now kuown they represen | bis own route over the oliffs and , fe in Bow

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