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—— 1892—SIXTEEN PAGES, 4 CARNIVAL OF NATIONS. a MAS KE D SKELETONS. have rarely made nse of any embelming THE NAMPA IMAGE. THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. D.C. SATURDAY, riavany/s, TASTE IN ORNAMENT. |Esieses totais not light the eye.” ‘The Pig an Inmatoot the Houssheld—Drink, A. Unique Ratertalnmont Proposed by Wash- | How He Finished the Statue of Washington | Reiteration of the Claim That It tee Gene PURPOSE OF ORNAMENT ROSUNDERSTOOD. . Opium. ington Lodge Elke, Irving. ime Pind. ‘The great trouble has been people have CHINA $5 A MONTH IS A FAIR SUP- oe ‘From Frank Leslie's Weekly. From the Pittsbure Com mercial Gazette. Remarkable Curiosities Unearthed 7 How the Judgment of a Good Honse-| misconceived he purpose at orasecat, It le |L port for efomily. ‘Toot ix sboct what tee | “SPOR Rircas’ masz was. ae rasnaronseo | "yz?! blind sculptor residing in Tarry-| Ina room in the Seventh Avenue Hotel From Ancient Mounds in Ohio, A FIND OF ANTIQUITIES. wife is Guided. “GOOD FORM” IN DECORATION not to to be think own au Bee oe have x make their ornamentation as extra possible. When they lacked the moaus fo have Feally handsome ornament they imitated. Or- nament is something “‘superadded to.” It must mestio animal. He, or rather she, sleeps in the vestibule and, when the house is too small Instead of their annual benefit performance the members of Washington Lodge of Elks It is one-third larger than life and reprosents Irving as sitting in an easy attitude in an arm chair, with one leg crossed over the other. In the left hand ix inelosed in a small wooden box, is an image which has excited much discussion and interest AMON scientists since its discows at the bot tom of aa artesian well in Idaho two years ago. It is in the possession of the finder, Col M. A. pared mn object attractive, not draw at- sh gecesi nigrgfie aah pines have determined this year to appeal to the ee ee —— rests re Say iooe e cohen 4 yas itself. A ceiling may become so name an yablic it naturally upon the arm o! ir. Col. Tom Bayne's regiment during war ap hey Demonstrate the Existence im Former Honest Work Always Commands Honest | handsome that it cecsee to be an ornament to | Pg Tecosnizes i Public in « novel and beautiful way. For some ‘Times of «Great Aboriginal Population in Praise—Sham and Imitation Usurp the the room. It becomes a work of art. This intelligence the inherited results of centuries weeks they have been quictly at work, assisted “I have worked on this model night and day went west in IN68, | of training. She litters twice @ year. Of her | by their wives, devghtore sho | £0r the past eighteen months,”*said John Mar-| | Speaking of the image. Col. Kinrte aid that ‘That Vicinity—Two Opposite Anthropolog- Place of Merit—What Some Eminent Orttice | Surtatcte ng ia ie foc eae mind: for an BD: | rapring, the males are fattened ond sont to | bee palette teseagrcler pa stots af “ihe | chant Menday, the blind svutptor, laying his Tapes Stee hp, UF the and pump frome Seal Types—A City of Pigmies in Peru. Have Said on the Subject—A Definition by | caused more diaplays of leck of taste than al-| the markot and the females are sold or kept for | lodge at the cereal weticn gore sessions, | band caressingly upon the plaster model. “I | °° Sle hed been drilling Sor water ab Ruskin That ie Misleading. ‘most any other condition. breeding purposes. The pig is fed at every | and the result of the deliberations has beon | ®Y Right, because night is the same as day to | Nyon peonte mnie tee for City, and processes. Instead, they hi ‘MISUSE OF THE WoRD “Tasiz” meal of the family; the rest of the day it|the perfection of arra te for a 4} ™me. WhenIcome here in the evening the w dave of the operation be Written for The Evening Star. the corpses away in caves, . Doubtioss the word “taste” is often misused. many a UNDREDS OF SKEL- etons, many of them ing the most remarkable find of antiquities ever made fn this country. Specimens illustrating the discovery have been on exhibition this week at the National Museum, but only @ few out of decaying, they 1p. years ago Dr. Ball of the Smithsonian Institu- tion visited certain burial caverns in Alaska, wrappings and bound with cords into ® com- drawn up under the chin and the faces being horribly distorted. CASTS OF CHINESE PIRATES. Not long ago the National Museum reeeived from the French government a most interest- ing series of casts. They were forty in number and were taken from the heads of as many Chinese pirates recently eaptured. These pre- | ‘Written for The Evening Star, WRITER ON “AT- feels doubtful about having the right ideas herself and has to de- Pend on some one else for help and sug- gestions she seldom has the discrimination to Harmony of colorsor proportions is frequently meant. That is something absolute, something the objct it is designed to ornament. For in- stance, taste would hardly approve of @ clock inareception room. Its ticking isa too ob- trusive hint to callers of the flight of time. Taste would also require that pictures be hung ona level with the eye of the averago sige man, not elevated to a height at which only a giraffe could inspect them. Taste would ask that they be hung as nearly as possible at a right angle forages for itself in the streets, fields, drains and on the beach. At low tide hundreds are and children gather driftwood, edible sea Lod d_grass roots, cow dung and animal ings. What they do not care to use they sell for a few copper cash or barter with neighbors and tradesmen for rice and vegetables. In this manner @ woman and several children will pro- vide all the food for a family and leave a small surplus to ted by for a rainy day. Children | four years of age will hunt up the ig when he is lost, lend the water buffalo or tend a herd of carnival of nations which is to be held in the National Rifles armory, com- different booths and other features of the car- nival over which they will have control. It is expected that the costumes of the different countries will be worn and at each booth there will be plenty of evidence of the nation it will represent. A full list of the ladies in charge and their assistants is as follows: UNITED STATES. only light I have is that from within. I bave lived eo long with my work that I know every feature, and any imperfections in it Tne height at which the head vated from the floor had next to be determined This, you must understand, is accomplished by the exact knowledge of the proportions of the human form when placed in a sitting posture, 4nd is the basis of all other calculations “Iwill now give you an example of howl modeled a single piece of the statue. It will serveasan example. Place yourself in a sit- day, when there is a dim glimmering before | to be ele- | strata through whi were compored of sixty fect of so often seen devouring seawéed, dead fish and| mencing on the 224 instant. The ladies | come out more strongly before my mind’s eye | Of lava rock, quicksand. clay. clay d ee which were fairly packed with theusands upon tractive Homes" in «| that can be learned by study. But the color of the flotsam and jetsam of the The wife | hay oy , ng the | With sand, vegetable soil and the original . aap tallerry thousands of mummies, each one swathed in recent issue of Tar | the walla the Spores inthe carpet, the orna- : a Ainaalecupand ee en | SER ae el Grow RG and have completed an organization, with fa a ies newly obtained | Pact bundle. Some of them be Drought. back Tare Bremeed g rath | toe chairs in ne rooin, she curiaan at the win: | Mov, tea fangus nd scameed, amall abelideh | Mr John Ellnger a a president and Mie | MY cyes that distracts my attention. | saints had (been etting, some of the clay from a group of an-| with him to Washington. They are not agree-| many dow—thene call for the exercise of judgment, | the tize of s peta tg ripe ike elie 7 snatcten ti Spree ge Aegenag Pep pews card nig Mer Asma way od- | the cand was chang: i had been at the well r ° " en jor flavoring pur-| pleted their arrangeinenta and made the ac | 824 with rade tools. ust was first mo i : cient mounds n Chil Lee eee ane ieee learn aed sor geo lg she os wie ce epee, 5 Zoe cmerineper ret eas | onan cages easier eee signment of those tho will have chesge of the | cled, then the chair upon which the figure wis , and ran the contents of the icothe, Ohio, and form- 4 ptr an Pp through mv hen {as it was pumped out. “1 felt the ima, -¥ my hand end sup- posed it was a twig, { ping it intoe bare | rel of water and wash Tfound it to be | the image evidentiy ofa female figure. Here it in.” Col. Kuge 0} closed the Ya ened @ wooden box and dis # half long.” be com- ‘Mrs. John C. Maxwell in charge. Assistante— hi 1 er | tim : ot baked clay of a have | datory persons were all of, them decapitated. | pick out the tasteful from the tawdry in writ-| with eine drawn from the eye and not tilted | ®heeP with almost the same saceots aa’ grOW" | ws Garvie. ayer Mle cane nee, amt BP fap dere mag in Hap ely Pg dneedig med freee hy Oo pumped fas the bomen oF Sa wet member of cbfects semred hove oe has inadonne reproduced in plaster a ten descriptions of things. forward from the wall, as is so often seen. Why a. — = = on ier ress | son; Mies Anais Dra videos, Miss Mamie Hickox, | ®n easy, natural and graceful position. You | the well. It in, md voncon, carved tote the ve = ee bperars of teas dp lied fast an they were cut off. Such horrible- | “Te ig hoped that in this teste may | this is don those who do it do not know. e wells, destroy locusts, caterpil . x, . ipment by the exploring party, = Leherralyeves looking assemblage do they form that they In picture galleries pictures hung high are, of and slugs, pull out the weeds, and in every Miss Daisy Hickox, Mrs. Joseph Ireland, Miss will observe that I pass my bands over the Tesentation of @ lit € Looking at at - < cn. Wi through a micros | see that 4 fion of the world’s fair commission. Not so | havedeen ranged ona long shelf where they be pointed out which may often determine the | course, tilted forward 0 that the eye will not be = themselves excellent horticulturists ae Plugge Hiss Lula Smith, Miss ‘Mary pay oer Oe creo pen ong St spin i yeni nee that the gen fauch on account of their value and beauty | are not exposed to public view. Not in any | “bad taste” (so-called) of @ thing, even if it | see them at an angle, buta room in s dwelling | ‘= miniature. — — _ oe — Ulmer, Miss | re ‘tolde T have mace in the ele I pee ey eeiy ave the treasures dug up excited astonish- | civilized penal institution or colony can one | may not always decide whether « thing is | is not a picture gallery. CHURCHES AND TEMPLES. Carrie . a al Ment as by reason of their immense quantity, Gemonstrating the existence in former times of @ great aboriginal population in the vicinity. Among them are pearis, not merely by scores Qnd hundreds, but by hundreds of thousand: 8 of them as big as English walnuts and behold such frightfully ferocious types of criminal physiognomy. “good taste” (so-called). And in the first place it is better to dropaltogether these terms which I have just used—good and bad taste. It is generally agreed by writers on taste th there isno such thingas “good” or ‘bad’ taste, justas there is no such thing as ‘good’ ACQUIREMENT OF TASTE A MATTER OF GROWTH. Undoubtedly the acquircment of taste is a matter of growth. Things that once pleased the eye the oye in time discards,not because they are old, for often we like old things best,but be- | So says Consul Bedloe, writing from Amoy to the Department of State. He adds: | Churches and temples cannot be owned by | ecclesiastical organizations. They are in a manner common property. Any one can hold ENGLAND. Miss Nellie Mack in charge. Assistants—Mrs. Lillie M. Mack, Miss Annie Levering of Balti- more, Miss Fannie Brawnor. Those will be as- sisted by-Master Willie Ellinger, Master Harrie anything wrong in my model Iam ena’ this means to detect it at nce. No matter how slight the difference may be, ft will not escape me, nor will the slightest roughness in the sur- face of the plaster. Of course this work can be done by me as easily in the darkness as in anaiytic al parts of the body were no hands 1 Th ; rty. A the light. Fight leg is missing from t pr Bs : | eause the eye has perceived more beauty in | Teceptions, dinner parties, picnics and mect-| Lawrence. a Raita Gh pte we bck. to re rbte Naryengwag igo be lager ge ep dlon testa; jork as u thing aay be to possess or | created. It is tobe learned. It was estab- | Barbers, dentists, physicians and story tellera| Mrs. Chas. H. Clark in charge. Assistante— | ‘2° affected. I procured one similar to tof the discovery of thie remnant of RS with Gia great malittnile of other not to ponsess beauty. it may possess much or | lished in all essentials long ago. All beauty is AN enter the place and there ply their voca- | rns" Paul Hines, Mrs. Sophie Harrison, Mrs. J. | the one I wished to produce and spread it | prebt-tore » municated to Prof. G. ta found illustrating the character and Tittle thete, as, it may bere’ beach or little | common to the artist, See a eect aT dealer eae ee een cone | Beall Misi HY Billings allay any. Shia ae: Mea pNOe ake Recent on tate Ie wee Charles Francis Adame, mode ing of this ancient people are thou- beanty. Lord Jeftren'in’ taat aednes taste an | decorator. “Lofty end graceful’ proportion, | Sealers, grocers, farmers gad other wondering . - Billings, J IY. y fends of sk Respecting them there is y Maoh mystery, inasmuch as they represent two _—-s opposite types anthropoiogicaily. of them are round and “bullet shaped,” While others have an elongated form betoken- fpee different race Scattered thickiy among remains were pieces of jaw bones, pre- by manufacture in an extraordinary fash- for which there seems to be no reasonable Sccounting. Not only the jaws of human beings, but those of many other species of animale were thus treated, the bone being cut yh so as to leave the alvoolar part in a ‘im slice holding the row of teeth. Whether was a wolf, a bear or aman whose maxil-| 5° punished. Written for The Evening MEXICAN SACRIFICIAL STONE. fingers and tecth. formerly worn by sava Among other horrors which are stored in the same establishment is the skull of a victim of the inquisition, whose skeleton was found chained in a dungeon at St. Augustine, Fla. In his despair he had scratched with his nails writings on the wall, which are legible to this day, stating why he had been accused and i There isastone altar from Mexico, With cavities hollowed out to fit the human twined around the body of tie criminal and filled with boiling water. When the Hawthorn Blossoms. you said. “When the hawthorn blossoms in the sprin ‘The grass was brown and di Just a bit of curving golden light “the enpacity of perceiving beauty” or “it is a peculiar sense or faculty of which beauty is the appropriate = as sight is that of the sense of seeing.” He alsosays: “Beauty is that which gratifies the faculty of taste and taste is that by which we are made sensible of beauty.” ‘This certainly looks like defining in a circle. Let us accept his definition of taste and find elsewhere what beauty is that we may define his definition. BEAUTY NOT AN ABSOLUTE ATTRIBUTE. It is not anything absolute and established. If it were actually and inseparately attached to certain forms, colors and proportions it would not be perceived in the most opposite forms and proportions in objects of the same de- scription by different persons. Beauty, how- ever, consists in reminding us of certain natural sympathies and objects of emotion with which they have been habitually con- nected. ‘Thus we ean understand how tho lig! often spoken of as absolute or conventiona In using taste in the ornamentation of a dwelling, a room or a wall, one should bear in mind what ornament is, Dresser gives us probably as good a definition as can be made when he said: “Ornament is that which, super- jed to utility, renders the object more ac- ptable through bestowing on it an amount of vigorous light and shade, fancy tracing and fretted vaulting are not a'Gothic patent,” it has been said, “though each cathedral, with its own crisp foliage and quaint imagery and curious penetrations and varied details, left to us throughout the length and breadth of o id as a record of the labor and zeal and love of these builders is, as it were, a sign manual, which it is forgery for ‘us to repeat. The well, however, whence they drew is open to’ us and’we may do more aud better than they since they Live shown us how and we have not all that lesson to learn for ourselves. . Beauty of all ages and epochs is ours and in our ornament we can go to Queen Anne or Queen Bess, but what we apply must be guided by taste. ——— ALL LIVED IN GLASS HOUSES, And so Every One Saw the Impropriety of when firearms were part of the one man could searcely bear testimon: against an eccentric character named Dufiield, ay who was oue night persuaded, in a good-hu- mored mood, to produce all the weapons wit which he was loaded. He drew them from the armholes of his waistcoat, from his boot legs, from his hip pockets and the back of his neck: there they tradesmen can make use of the church grounds to exhibit and sell their goods. Even gamblers ate permitted to throw dice and tempt fortune in a smali way in other games within the outer gates. Only actoraare debarred from the uni- versal privilege. ‘Y must give their street show beyond the walls. A mandarin or wealthy merchant takes a vacation, and, desiring quiet, ease and a beautiful resting place, goes with his family and servants to some temple famous for its picturesque surroundings. He sends furniture enough for comfort, has his servants do the cooking or hires the priest for the pur- pose, receives and entertains his friends and at the end of his holiday goes home. giving the furniture to the church asa token of gratitude or because it will cost more to transport it home than it wns worth, At Lam-pa-do tem- ple I found farmers’ wives covering the stone floor of the inner yard with beans, cabbage leaves and other vegetables, in order to dry and preserve these edibles for the market. At the The common belief in the United States that The higher classes, who do not exceed 5 per listrict ite dialect. ‘Lie native so-called writ- ten language 18 not a language, but an ideo- phic system and is one of the greatest_mar- vels of human genius. It evuld be applied with most as much facility to English, French and | German as it is to the numberless languages of China, Korea and Japan. CLAIKVOYANTS AND FORTUNE TELLERS gruder, Miss Waddington, Miss McEwen, Mise Howell, Mrs. F. A. King, Mrs. Kistler, Miss McGinn, Miss Davis. SPAIN. Mrs. R. F. Cardella in charge. Asxistants— Mrs. C. G. Bollinger, Mrs. Nellie Royce, Mrs. Nellie F. Prentice, Mrs. Annie Garrison, Mra G. McGuigan, Miss Cora C. Curry, Miss Cora Penfield, Miss Cora Spangler, Miss Edith Per- kins, Miss Mamie Curry members of the Potomac Relief Corps, W. C., Department of Potomac, G. A. R. GERMANY. y Ford (nee Blanche Chap- man) in charge. Assistants—Miss Cora Mc- Nelly, Miss Mamie ergman, Miss Katie Rup- ert, Mrs. Dora Berlin, Mrs. Altie Jenings, Miss Moy Lansdale, Mrs, E. K. Plant, Miss Emma Voigt. Mra. Harry Tune, Miss Nellie Tu , the Misses Eiliott. Adelaide Wilton, Miss Julia McCarthy, Miss Houts, Miss Leary. MEXICO. Mrs. Geo. D, Scott in charge. Assistante— Mrs. Frank B. Clarkson, Mrs. Gen. Hubbard, Mrs. F. H. Ayme, Mrs. M. B. Johnson, Mrs. C. Mrs. Radcliff, Mra. R. M. Bol All these ladies are | tully over the pleats. I tien bad strips of lead made, which were very pliable and which were to represent pleats in the shirt frontef my model. Laying these upon the rough clay, I spread a thick layer of new clay over them, which was afterward scraped off by tools and modeled into shape.” “It has beon a iabor of love with me,” con- tinued the blind sculptor, as his bead drooped aud tears bedimmed bis eyes. “Knowing as I did that it must end my career as an artist, 1 | have given it my undivided attention by nignt and day. during my waking hours and bas haunted my dreams at night. Now that it is finished ay life's work is finished also.” yet been decided. The claims of New York to | Irving as a representative citizen are urged by many who would like to see him honored in | that city. The people of Tarrytown are also desirous of securing this notable work of art It ts Feared That, Being Dangerous,It Will Have to Come Down. the capital of Aragon, has issued a pessimistic account Itis feared that this clock tower—a Very fine example of the kind—will have to bo pulled down. Excessive rains and floods have caused a subsidence of soil and the structure is decmed unsafe. It has been ever present with me | f ‘The question of a site for the statue has not | pres hearg ntof the Un the image nu Pacific raiiros me much in ug COrrespor entered into a | Kurtz on t Much de | fro: jence with Mr. i at firet as to n brought up weil. it was hinted f Nampa, who was Mr. hurtz or the it themselves and however, after acare tances, was dis- I mecting of the Boston Ty the image was ac- of an ancient civil- might have m Mo ands ol as the 325 feet i evidence of ite onit Of oxide of i are old. | age as nh its surface, t ath i Cite 2 bles for the t SWITZERLAND. ir town, to be placed either at “Sunny. | interests archwologists and. anthropologiets, Caged kaifeef obsidian, with rick the Kects| most different forms can ‘be equally bouutifal ‘Throwing Stones. alllizing the well sad the sean maurzman wns] Mra, Daniel E. Cahill in charge, Assistante— the oniestend of Irving, oF some public | because of the op ortunity of making eoumpart of each living buman’ sacrifice was first cut | “Peauty, sass Dreseer in his Att of Decorutive | Prom the Youth's o.uzanion. business. Mra, J.C. McGinn, Mrs. W. H. Waddington, | #tation in the village. sons between the civilization of the age it out. Also there is a gruesome collection of | Design. “is that quality of an object which de-| "Tn the di | represents and that of th " 7 EE finds in Mexico, Eh y Miss Gertie Waddington, Mrs. J. C. Cox, Miss = pat - 1 th (oadinfles) the : ; hi : ; 5 HE LEANING TOWER IN SPAIN, | *pposcs there is reason to b-lere that the scalps taken by Indians from white people, fo pe ams fies) the mind through the éqency | — onal outfit’ considered necessary in certain | all Chinese reed and write and are weil in-| Maggie T. O'Meara, Mise Sallie Fogarty, Misa| ere — valley in which the ia found conta: nee Tian center tates | cella beealy (has ceigued’ among the Greske ts | Veg Youtbfal and very acliye! westara, towax | ke’ Adee tat ooatalatone partials or sain: | meeeeitwe mene Nora ‘Torrens, Miss’ Delie reli rellow hair. Likewis laces of i ‘ of human He thinks d in some up- 1 ne Aaseres * cent of the population, receive what might be cians che po Buapn Faaar tier pair of boots made of human skin, the dried | Lut, as liuskin says, “the Greek statues are not | another in this respect, sinco all were alike | iled a good ie eoy ieee might be ; RKEY. ___ | Prom the Brandon Bucksaw. o as refused to give the nests ef a cated weana) wad in vooaec| jis the symbsl of the tees B*P*" | guilty. The author of themilitary experiences | Chinese linguage, there is no such, thing | Mise Grace Rudderforth in charge. Assist-] A committee appointed to report on the | ., ‘2. Kurtz hie refre ‘wilechibis ts anche. oe a prone omer «n a of th fa beauty is the kileapielentosery entitled “On the Border With Crook” speaks of | Every province has its own language and every iss Lilly Sheban, Miss Florence Houck, | famous Torre Nuova in the Plaza San Filipe, in | cag employed as a punishment in China, being : P3 cago in 1805. coe A Bomb Thrower. From the St. Paul Pioneer I A rather sloveniy-looking man entered Too rich’s office the other day, with a box under his arm. “Is Mr. Toorich in?" he inquired of e clerk. ‘ oe E a ‘ a ‘igh, | The construction of this leaning tower was “saga Beara was thus operated upon, the method fol- beauty which it would otherwise not possess.” i alive wei dian sic will Derringers, | 4 Bumberlese in China, The queeress indus- | Miss, MA. Stebel! and” Lani | begun im the fifteenth century. under the| “Yes. Want tosce him was the came. Evidcatly the work was _Shone the moon, from out the autumn sky. It gives to that which it, invests a new charm, | “ere leven weap Comat on uae in the ghostly line is “grave telling.” When | ortie Martin, Miss M. A. Mutchell and Little | (80st ree, Spanish, one Jewish and two| “If you pleaso,” he answered, putting the pa- done with which must have been so ex- | Village lights were fashing here and ther as color bestows upon the fower @ new love-| none of those present thought it wise to| tho average Mongolian reaches manbood’s es. | 2Y a Moorish architects. It is octagonal in form, | Pet box carefully down on a ola’ feemely thin and sharp that the marvel is how | Frost was creeping through the dusky ai liness, and as the color, cannot be said to be | criticise. tsone of hie first siubltioas te have a nice IRELAND. _ es » & and wend foto Go Savages could have obtained the necessary | é retin ot came of a Sever on the! Tha next duy, however, Todgo Tiuibad Dol | cad sondetohe erate ten er tS | wien Macy Regen te charge Andetents| #9 Oat kigh, Oto diameter and leans about 10 the oftice. fs, re could such things have been in- | “When the hawthorn biossoms, and the foam plication of ornament to objects cannot be | geld arrested and brought before him on the the requisite cash he consults Miss Mamie Douglas, Miss Fay Calvert, Miss | feet out of the perpendicular. Stone steps, 260 He'll see you,” be said a moment later, com- fox? SS So aes Wenaee & ewe ost, At to be absolutely necessary, The progress | charge of carrying concealed deadly weapons. | ‘‘vravclellors © Thee ee ne Vary T. Lloyd, Miss Katie Needham, Mise | 1%, umber, lend inside to the top gallery, | ing back into the office. cali elie tees aaa. And the bloom, as pink as April's dawn, of ornament from the days of the creeks is | The court room was packed with « very orderly | gti tae cee appresisted. bya lieve) Ge ee SL, Foenes, Mra, | Theuce® Maguificent and beautifal view is ob- | “ive slovenls-looking man entered the private Among other curiosities are tools and orna-| _n the horny cralrtree obens cut — Soren: eats eer, farm, whose, object | crowd, listening to along exordium irom tie | public at inrge or who bere ities toe James Mf ‘Mra Jobu Keleher, Ace. Jon | a aearmeirsa te ae seers eatte Of | room, stopping first aud looking back et the (mente made of copper. Doubtless they ob- point awake Agatane? cape. ike feeling of Rrakich ty ee aan fe gids by Rambling, opium smoking or other ices, | A. Madigan, sdigan, Miss Limbach, Mrs. | aud away to the north where the Pyrenees are | °°%. he said to the clerk, “be careful feined the metal in primitive manner familiar as taken in the subject of his choice.” | sensible address was concluded he enid: Oey, geomaney, clairvoyance, &. ‘The patios. | Wy, Dowuing. Mrs. de Montfredic, Miss Eile | yeon, about that box. to many savages, namely, by building a fire | “When the hawthorn blossoms, I will come.” iwval architecture addressed itself not ‘all the first witness. Call Charles O. af after receiving @ fee proportionate to | Sy eer re a line Sora ¢ | The edifice, builtof bricks, has ata distance | ‘The clerks, three in number, work @bouts piece of rock containing copper and} Ah, but that was many moons ago; ly to the sense and intellect of men, but | Brows ie. wealth of his client, consnlts his mvatic) Conn e een i» iss | 4 Moorish aspect, the face of the structure be- loug enough to take a look at the box. water upon the hot stone, thus causing | [ have watched the summers burning out, t firs: to touch the more spiritual chords | tr. Charles 0. Brown under onth stated his | bese, draws an incomprehensible diagram | Burge, Mise Minaic Nabe, My Linnie 244 | ing diapered with brick work, but the design 1k was just an ordinary paper box end had to split in fragments and release the valuable | andthe dreary winters eh and flaw of his being to excite the sympathy of his soul. | name, residence and occupation and was then | watts Points and straight lines, and announces = ae and execution are much coarser than are gen-| probably at one time contained candy. [ serene ere — foowt Kas / oe lope Watched the hawthorn in its bridal gown, Ornam ssh oot gra au teas te hice directed to show the judge and jury how the mn which it will be good luck to visit miekit n Bee e erally seen wt purely Earn, Bernewen n = contemptuous sift an m2 out into sheets. Some o! me na dere dite pal gh evel sare ° , & 5 “ <i rs. George H. Tucker it . i 1 i . jeries, battler a st ” is ects manufactured from this tasterial | 424 the loosened petals drifting down. E “Everything theirs | Primener had drawn his revolver the day pre- cemeteries und burial sites, On the 01 in charge. Assist- | various windows, galleries, ments aud | and struck the box hghtly with his hand. and found in these mounds are of strange forms, the uses of which can hardly be imagined. For {usmele, for what purpose coulda hollow metal with many perforations be intended? are things which look like small vessels of various shapes also, but likewise with a num- ber of holes in each. ‘Nota few of these are Wonderfully artistic in desicn, and the same — said of ‘Bumerous carvings in soft stone, gch as soapstone and serpentine. One of fem represents with exquisite detail a duck “When the hawthorn blossoms”- ‘That I Ustened now unto the sound. And that all the smoothly ev Of the years were sucue That the coming spring wouid bring to me More than blooming of the hawth “When the hawthorn bias Patiently; the ti When the words si Tcould think which is imitative.” tation is ornament then in truth he best is the best ornamenter and r must outrank the painter and the mak casts supersede the sculptor. What he evidently meaus is what is suggestive f nature is ornament. Ornament does not imitate. It represents, suggests, typifies. who imita the photog nme, I kuow, Il surely be fultlled From typifying nature ornament went on to embody ideas andemotions. That is why even the irreverent are awed on entering the cathe- Well, jedge.” said he, “the way he drawed is, cud, suiting the action to the n witness for the prosecution lrew a six-shooter, fuily cocked, from the holster on his hip ‘Luere was a ripple of laughter through the court room. Every one saw at ouce the ab- surdity of holding one man responsible for the misdemeanor of which»a whole community was guilty, and the trial proceeded no further. her lay fixed the pat best clothes and The grave tellers appear dressed in their ly washed and shaven. pped with books, dia- gratnx, paper anda forked rod, strangely re- sembling the divining rod with which our an- rs sought springs and veins of ore. The search begins with prayer and then comes a weary walk and talk, sometimes lasting hours. The ‘ite is finally picked out. Often two or three sites are selected, © the use of one is prevented by rnforesecn circumstances, ants—Mrs. Nellie Bliss, Miss Alice Auld, Miss Lillian Clarvoe, Miss Mamie Cook, Miss Fann! y, Miss Agnes Duify, Miss Daisy Bric lly Dei nie Eichhorn, Miss Nellie Courtney Prosie, Miss Mary drews, Miss Celia Duity, Miss Carry Tati, Misses Geddes, Maud Burnett, Dani. THE MINTY cLUa. Eart A. Keyser in charge. Assistants—E. B. Hay, Geo. A. Mason, W. D. Mack, Jos. E. jers. turrets, together ‘with designs partly Byzan- tine, partly Arabesque, demonstrates its mixed architecture. It has been stated that the leaning of the | tower was due to the caprice of the architects, but an old crack in its side and @ careful exami- nation of the foundation led to the conclusion wut it was want of care on the part of the build- The Aragonese speak of the ancient crack as an old wound in its side, of which the Torre Nuova is now dying. ‘old wound” was The same instant he gave « terrible yell, and, jumping about ten feet, pointed toward the box. A peculiar whirring sound was heard, followed at regular intervals by a “thump, thump, as of something striking against the inside of the box. ‘Boab “Dynamite Infernal machine!” yelled the three clerks + rs . a 1860, bat inone breath, and «ll three made a rush to " coe a ii eady. 1 i 7 vy 7 Ph, 4 er t1 the , bat a 1e dox whic ey struc same ing Upon a fish. This last is a pipe. Notraces | _Of that promise given long ago, Grals of the old world. . 3 ae te eee et tee and ad eet arranges | Bishop, Wm. R. Mack, E. K Plant, Chas fortunate relapse threatens to result in anen-| Tn qtr soo pte fray vy nn pcx. ; Recsemeh abate cscages an | Whenua tennis eongueenes ae, gio dicita a eee ee ECONOMY IN LITTLE THINGS, withthe owner of the land and the authorities Mrs. Clara Murph, chairman: Mise | orsunate rl Soot Saree cotert mSe Somme es America who did not smoke tobacco. and some | And the vines were black agaiust the wall. = et = bad and is then prepared to die in pene Baumgarten, Miss Carrie Baumgarten, ns + Gotion of the extrome antiquity of the deposits N albeaity Wiakcune: The idea that ornament is imitation Las bad | Take Care of the Pence and Then You Can CHINESE WORKINOMEX. escribed may be got from the fact that they Sontain no buffalo bones. When the people who built the mounds were alive the buffalo bad not yet got so far east as Obio. Evidently, from the remains they have left be- ey had no domestic animals and lived No. 2857 Arsenal street, St. Louls, ———- Even the Druggist Dispaired. From Forest and Streain. Astraight whisp of faded hair stuck out from the smail coil at the back of her head. a mighty grip on the world. Eastlake, writing thirty years ago, said: “It is an established principle in the theory of design that decora- ive art is degraded when it passes into a direct imitation of natural objects.” ‘Then he goes on to spesk of some of the ornamental mon- Spend the Pounds. From the New York Tribune. “My shoes cost me a great deal too much money,” moaned a club man to his friend the other night, as he admired his newly polsbed Workingmen in China use stimulants freely, but never toexcess. Their temperance is made all the more conspicuons by contrast with Eu- ropeans in the east, of whorn nine-tenths drink heavily and a majority drink to excess. In the . Miss E: Ganzhorn, Ruppert, ew, Miss +h, Miss F. E. Richardson, Sire. E. - Miss Lena Stein, Miss Beckie Stein, Miss SHE WON HER POINT. And Her Husband Gave Her Carte Blanche for Expenses. From the Chicago Tribune, ‘. he said, as be scowled at her over Alarmed by their yells and the din they were making Toorich and the sloveuly-looking mam rushed into the office hhat's the matter?” gasped Toorich. Dynamite!” ‘Infernal machine!” again yelled the clerka, os i a : 4 a dicating the paper box, which was «till emit- strosities of his day, which, unhappil; footwear. hospitals two-thirds of the European deaths | Annie Zeller, Mrs. Earl A. Keyser, Mise Sadie | the breakfast table. Ste Shas eae nthe a th iden oo meee a ees “Air you the druggist?” she asked. be seen even at the p “Hon edu- | ‘How mach?” asked the other. from liver, heart and Kidney disorders are of | Williams, Miss Williams. “John,” she replied featlessly. wT tins tesent she ether besaee toni, th Bome relics are expected shortly by the| ‘Iam, madam,” he replied. cated eye a literal in wood or} “I can’t get along on less than $15 a year for Be en cen ne maior TELEPHONE EXCHANGE. a Smithsonian Institution from a wonderful city of pigmies which has been discovered in Peru gm the summit of s mountain in the Andes mountain is believed by the natives to be the home of wicked spirits and ghosts, which accounts for the fact tit tever been ex- “Leadin’ druggist 0’ the city “Withoy doubt, mad: the moderndest remerdies, I jot any o” this yer bi-chlorate 0’ gold?” stone of the forms assumed by vegetable life is by no means agreeable. The truth is that un- der such circumstances nature may be typitied or symbolized, but not actually imitated. We copy the bronzes of France, the mosaics of Italy, the pottery of China, the carpets of Tur- ordinary, every day shoes; and that is only two p ‘hat does not count dancing shoes, slippers, &e. What do yours cost you; I mean your business shoes?” “Nothing,” said his friend. In corsequence of a merely nominal tariif liquors are cheaper in China than in Eu- rope or America, the drawback system enabling the merchant tu kell Holland gin or Kentucky bourbon for less in Hongkong than in Amater- dam or New York. A quart bottle of the former Mrs, R. W. Pentland in charge. Miss Mary Watt Kate MeGirr, Johnson. Assistants— Miss Mable Hermann, Miss Mattie King, Miss Gertrude FLOWER STAND. y," he said, “what kind of a breakfast do yot call this’ “I call it an excellent one,” she returned bravely. “You do!” he exclaimed. “Well, I don't! I thumps increaed in rapidity, and. suddenly @ dull tinkle was heard. ihe three clerks let out one awful, despair- ing cry, made one desperate efiort and in some managed through the door. three fell ina confused heap im the ball- Desig oi petal 27 ce aes little variety occasionally would be » Where they lay, kicking and clawing each - key with indifferent success, but, not content} — «y, 5; tees ee ordinary a ay ‘i _ | eek = 7 rd othe a entarily expecting the atl recently. According to the story | _cWe hare the brchlcride, yee. madam. We with this, we jumble, we invest ‘objects con-| (SOWING? | | about | ona ihe aime qanstity ot vane, or Scents | | Mrs. Llovd B. Brooks in charge. Assistants— | 4 good thing. Do you realize that this is the | Wr, and momentarily expecting the explo was once a race of very little people which | are Dr. Keelog’s exclusive agents. structed of one material with the form and or- "3 ; y m an q y fababited the lowlands on the Pacific coast, but they were driven to the mountains by other break ‘em o' drinkin'?” “Same thing they gives to drunkerds to namental character which should be th bute of another. tri By this means decorative art How do you manage it?” cents. ‘The opium habit is very general. Notwith- Mrs. Theo. Cornman, Mrs. George Engle, Miss Lilli Hardle, Miss Leah Schneider, Mise third morning this week that we have had corned-beef hash?” sion. Lut the explosion did not come. The slovenly- Precizel hi tanding its expense it prevails among the poor | DOU Schneider. Miss Emma paou Mise |" --Certainly, John.” 5 and, pekaag the sever of motes, aaelona Se tribes and built a walled town for protection | ‘Precise has been degraded in this community to a level Iways wear patent leather.” stand a weattas, , Muud Mills, Miss Lon Betz, Miss Marthe | 7” : ° od posers Jayenge wg against their enemies, who were cannibals. | “Does it cure drinkin’?” from which it is only now beginning to rise.” don't understand.” a8 well as the rich. The vice ix practiced ‘And that we had corned beef for dinner | B#hed works of » After being besieged foF & long time they were ther ag MECRLACE OF — AUMAN FINGERS If it does not money.” “Je 0 "way! to be safe “Makes a man hate it” ith every “Cure @ man o” chawin’ terbacker?” “Our guarantee goes bottle, and is an hypodermic syringe in every pack- “Yes, indeed. This is a most wonderful dis- will cheerfully refund the nacher’ily breaks a man o' every bad it be ever had?” Madam, the moral renovation experienced by patients submitted to this treatment 1s com- parable only to the absolute rejuvenation of the entire physical man.” “Dear me suz ! “Most cases yield to a few bottles, but it is nd take along about—' “Ill take six bottles ef you think it’ help my husband. urification and ‘Yruth and common sense must rule im orna- ment. How often have all of us seen unpro- tected statues placed on the most exposed parts of buildings. Common sense would suggest a canopy which may form a pinnacle, as on the cathedral of St. Mark's. Regarding the renais- sance vases stuck upon parapets, it has been said that if they are not intended to catch the REQUISITES OF ORNAMENTS. Common sense requires that regard should be given tothe purpose for which the orna- ment is designed, the material of which it is constructed and the object which it represents, A class of decoration peculiar to one material is misplaced when applied to another. That always is be which is simplest and least fected. Fretwork in stone loses the solidity d massiveness suitable to stone, yet the cob- web-like tracery of the stone ceiling of the chapel of Henry VII in Westminster Abbey has been highly praised. Ithas been written en- “How much does it cost you to keep your shoes as they are now?” ‘About 5 cents a day on the average.” ‘How much is that a year?” A “ round numbers.” well” you don't have to have patent leather ou save $15 in nickels for blacking and that's just about what your shoes cost you. See?” “Yes, Isee. 1s that why you wear that con- foundedly unbecoming beard and let your hair grow long, drooping on your coat collar?” “No, that is not the ‘reason, and yet I have calculated that to get shaved every other day and tip the barber every time would cost me ‘$45 a year, and to get my hair cut once a fort- night Would cost me about $6 more. I tell you there are more reasons than the artistic one for actors, authors, musicians and painters wear- largely in private life, nearly every house hav- ing one oF more “lay-outs.”' ‘The opium busi- ness is in the bands of Europeans, chiefly Brit- lah. (Its very profitable. In the past decade the opium evil has been increased and inten: fied by the morphine habit. It was introduced by a talented Engiish physician. who cured (?) the opium habit with pills of sulphate of mor- throughout the district and thence to the province. The “little pills” or “little Hong- Kong pills,” as they are’ called by the natives, are now sold by hundreds of thousands. They contain an eighth of a grain of the alkaloid and and are manufactured in England. This en- terprising proprietor has realized a handsome fortane from his novel but wicked trade. Rev. J. A. Otte, M.D., one of the most successful medical missionaries we have in the east, re- ports that these morphine pills have ruined sore than 10,000 citizens heretofore prosperous ing their hair long. Economy 1s an admirable characteristic, and I wish I could induce you in their callings. THE RECREATION OF GAMBLING. Brooke, Miss Ray Walker, Miss Humphries, Miss lcCaule Stone. ss Annie Keefe, 1, Mrs. Clarefice JACOB'S WELL. Mrs. Wm. H. Mohler in charge. Assistants— Miss E. R. Mohler, Miss Lena M. Mohler, Miss cara, Miss O. Selihausen, Miss N. Browne, hmidt, Miss R. White, Miss A. Fore- POST OFFICE. Mrs. E. B. Hay in charge. Assistants—Mrs. W. W. Clark, Mra. W. C, Smith, Miss Mand Stevens, Miss Dennis, Mrs, Dr. Newton. SUPPER HOOM. Mrs. George Ackman in charge. Assietants— Mrs. Robert J. Waiker, Mrs. Johnston, Miss yesterday and cold corned beef for supper?” “Of course, John. You wanted me to run the house as economically as I could.” ‘ex, but—" ‘ou said that the amount of meat consumed in this house would bankrupt a bank presi- dent.” “know; but I—” ‘ve been following your instructions.” “But I don't like corned beef!” “I know it. John,” she said, in a business- like way. “That's what makes it last so long. It keeps expenses down splendidly, and, if you want— he exclaimed. “I don't! Let don" Conners, Miss Platz, Mies Ida Lee. BEAN BOARD. Mrs. Ed. A. Williams in charge. Assistants— Miss Mamie Baumgarten, Miss Carrie Baum- garten, Miss Sadie Steinum, Miss Ernie Meyer, them run up! You've got too good a busi- He Was = Down Easter, but He Was Inter- And the three clerks at the dinner table that day cach told a thrilling tale of « bomb- thrower and Low by their personal beroism and physical strength they had averted « terri- ble catastrophe. What Made 1m So Couragecas. From the Chicago Tritune, = hs ? 5 phine. ‘The unfortunate Chinese patients, not a - = “And that I ought to with more He wae in a towering passion when he strode casee——" sited: and the sooner they are knocked off the | wet sponge and a little vaseline afterward, and | ble vice for the ono of which they desired to be | E- Tvler, Miss Katio Goss, Mise M sng ‘Certainly, certainly, Mary; but hang it] was looking for troul Does it make a man come home reg’lar o' | better. they're all right again. By this mea: cured, spread the praise of the new remedy a a all ‘My name is Sellers, sir! Sellers!” be ex- 4, Mr. Sellers. Have a chair,” enid or courteously. ‘No, sir, PU not have a chair!” thundered the stranger. ve come in to clean out the offic “Yer, yes,” 4 the editor calmly. “Will you stand little to one side, please? You shut the light off from my desk. The stranger was so surprised that he moved without thinking. “That's right, saidthe editor. “Stand right there. You cau get a better shot at me from ‘The ruined city is surrounded by a wall| “Madam, what is the matter with your hus-| thusiastically that “stone seems by the cun-| to practice it. In the unconsidered trifles of | The Chinese laborer loves the excitement of Miss Lena Stein, Miss Beckie Stein, Mrs. Geo. ested In the West. there. Would you mind my calling a reporter ‘Wwelve feet in height and three feet thick. In | band? ning labor of the chisel to have been robbed of | shoe polish and shaving I save about $65a year, gambling and begins the recreation in mere | P. Ganzhorn. From the Detroit Tribune. in?” the middle is a natural rock towering upward ‘Mdattec with him? Say, man, do I look like | its weight and dengity, suspended aloft as if by | enough to pay the premiums on a life hildhood. Cake peddlers and street huck- |' XECROMANCY. New Engiand is in proportion to its popula- ‘If you move [ll blow your brains out.” 200 feet, on the top of which was the citadel. | you could insult me? I’ guess orter know magic, and the fretted roof achieved with the | ance policy. Give up your little extravagances, | © z Mrs. Thos. Rudderforth in char, tion the richest part of the United States. Fro! “No intention of calling for help, I assure elevation of the summit is about 15,000 | him.” wonderful minuteness and airy security of @ | my boy, and save money. sters carry dice and a bowl and at every op- . Thos. Rudderforth in charge. Assist- = - 9 m | you,” protested the editor. “But you knot feet above the sea. As a rule these pignies ‘es, but what is the trouble with him?” cobweb.” jallly, my wise, economical and artistic | portunity start raffles, in which the entry fee | ants—Miss Anua Malcolm, Miss Gertrude Joun- | Maine to Connecticut the Country is dotted What asensation this affair will make, and I built their houses around quadrangular cour ‘Trouble? 1 guess I orter know. He's more} All must indeed admire the skill of the work- | friend, is your life insured?” asked the other. is 1 cash, about one-twelfth of a cent. On| ston, Miss Maud Keleher and Miss Jennie | with savings banks, and the bulk of the vast always try to have « reporter on hand ahont Swenty feet long by eight feet wide. tronble than the hull rest <1 the ee man, but os help (amy at it — Wong aid Sour b {01 ob tho club | overs street in the daytime canon, aroniog | Streaks. insurance wealth of the Union is owned there. | there's auy traced, it makes « better metimes the dwellings wore two stories high | they's nine of us new. ‘Trou ab’d been m tone deed * x iquore?” + 1ubsmount | may be seen groups of children and boys| "In adattion to the attractions of the various | Tom Heed tells © story of « Nebraska farmnec | With your permission. Bosses “are vabout “sine fect hicks 25 "Buh what fs hie complaint?" Sa eR Of for spall amotatof money." Arty gro |200tbe ‘bere ill ange entertainments cack | who, traveling, through Mine, happened t| tle usted til bd a young man appeared Besemente being below ground. | in’ most| | “Complaint? Look at here, now, man, doX| Yeu, itis cunsing labor; aad when that issaid | “Willyou haves drink with me now, Billy? | EF y take to dominoes and develop «| ereuing, PY, both provcssional aud amateur | stop at alittle house hanging from the side of | “20% Brown,” said the editor, “this ts Mr. Gases the rooms are not more then three | look ike a woman “at "a stand talk like this? | ail is said. ji ,rather think the drinks are on me, old | quickness of play and sight that borders on the ing signified their intention to appear in songs | ® T0Cky hill, which constituted the farm. Dur- | sellers. aLeplled ktm a monkey, an laspired sort of cement. “Ordinarily the doors ae lsens | so the world, ook aie ity er tal complaint Resa iowuripededs Ferengi neakarp woth ® eosktall and then rit go and | sara where ‘are plea cade wakes ie | ausevoral evenings te Johu Hazel of Wir |ing hie say he made many cutting eriti| isi coe “ ~ Ve. Gore than a foot in height. that’s got the complaint ‘That ornament which is not what it pretends have a sha: played fan-tan, pak-a-peo, liamsport, Pa., the widely known cornet vir- cisms upon the character of the soil and paper he hascome up to clean out the office, Tiisrocm.” Geta good account of etd ai gh-wab and other oriental games of chance. | tos, has been engaged, and many other at- |aehed the farmer whe tre . “But what's wrong with your husband—what | to be is not truly ornamental. It is s sham. * | They also combine into clubs of ten, twenty or 7 ‘ y lead the paper, double leaded. it ought te XUMMUFIED ADULTS pte tr. . The house wore roofed with at dabe ot | 20c4,be do? , Dogs he use tobseco?” ‘Stucco work is probably the sopsias Gong Pees copay gm as fifty and ny crecticel, Haliotsig the Sianile ates cps Sepa a ie in| threst your-ares fuse ie oy eS got nerve!” exclaimed “Wass'n that” aes | Boone 8 cecias te ° : = t Mone, well comented, over which earth was! “Drink?” oor ‘Pantlake sage that itwas an evil| Bir Robert Ball in bis interesting article on | Ghitwand Glamblere classed as habitual crim! Pa Norfolk and’ a5 Salers canrienes a Had bag em on epread to keep out the rain. Each room con-| “Wuse'n that” hour when stucco was invented, This ie how | the new astronomy in “The Fortnightly” | uals, the law is almost a dead letter. It enables | have arranged to attend the conse TE where might such lat aan aan te aie. Se tains a at stone in the middle, which was pre-| “Gambl he bewailed its prevalence in England waxes justifiably enthusiastic on the triumphs of | Policemen and officials to, “squeoze’, the pro-| ject is to replenish the charity and hame funds ig! derstand my business, and am an sumably used asa center table. Each court| ‘“Wuse'n that.” years ago: “Not only 1s plaster or cement pageeriogs rietor of the ming tables, which they do to | of Washi Lodge, and as the carnival will at 9 has a gateway opening into the street. The | “What?” ‘ss « covering for inferior brick work, but it is | *Pectroscopic photography in extending our | Ere'estent of avout {5 per cent of all profits, take the thie year of the regular annual ‘The stranger looked about him nervously and streets average about two feet in width. In| “Goes huntin'! boldly employed for columns, te and | knowledge of the heavens. The movements of a the law is repealed La ec Pre | theatrical entertainment heretofore given by hen atts : three of the courts were discovered holes open- pda t heaved along sigh. “Madam,” | veranda balusters in of stone. It is not | the stars ins direct line to or from us, which | and the Protemional is permitted to ply his | the lodge in aid of the charity funds, the moct “On, well, never mind; let the matter go. I ing into cirenlar rooms below ground, each six | said he, “I fear the case is hope at all an uncommon $0 008 OF uid. be | were not noticeable on merely telescopic exam- | Vocation in the open streets, and even in the | cenerous support. from the friend of tee Stas mind bb mah, and zouhe See earare feet in diameter, which were very likely util- Dorie or Corinthian shaft truncated of its base | ination, are now measured with yards attached to the churches, courts and | Crder and the public is anticipated. man to be done ap in cold blood. ized as dungeons. Several mummified adults Hew it Mi 8. official buildings. He backed out of the door and burried down Tere dug up, wrapped in some sort of wicker- eens Rater neet Nave Originated, ee Srl ep fhe staira. ‘Then the editor gaveesigh of re work. The tallest was not more than twenty- . Dr. ites at ~ fen ches in height. Although there ave| Phrases and slang terms are frequently bern ue Casts masiown tee Can, Amoy, in Chine, and now at his home in Phila- “Was he standing on the plate?” he asked. Known to be tribes of small people in Africa | of interesting episodes, as witness the follow- Butte Letter in the Anaconda (Mont. ) Standard. is said to be s charming entertainer, 2 on it. this is the first recorded discovery of » pigmy | ing: Public Administrator Murphy filed a notice | with an inexhaustible flow of epigrammatic : hour gt him there ‘Was the battery a SS ces. Peter of publication of notice tocreditors in the mat- | witticisms. working well?" ‘The National Museum bas already « very re-| nelghborkood of Move oer one ee git the ie SBpleediiy.” Hreen altace estas, of mammics, obtained | coined with the pangs of hanger: What be sects nnd your hand on the owttehr~ Semel paste cf the workd. Not least imtor- | Soin the hampst’ be maard thee —— ‘ —- them is one of = young child, which | ““-rhere in but one candi » “You could have shocked him?” Eas ir becn preserved merely by the abyecccer | fepled the ad, “but T wink Togn exchenge’ be wes stocky lightning” nee Mim ha it 2 rved merely ness of ~ ” 4 the air, no Artificial process. baving’ Geos “ror | {08,8 fowl at the next farm “These electrical Sorted to, that the very eyeballs are intact. aid the editor as he ly if it were dissected the internal or- “but I was mighty just a ‘Many races on this continent in times and even up to the present day have oy Bractive of mummitying their dead, but they