Evening Star Newspaper, May 28, 1892, Page 10

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3 ee 3 7 10 F * THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D, C, SATURDAY, MAY” 28, 1892-SIXTEEN PAGES. | Fontards, delaines, nainsooks, batistes, satin- crisis last winter I had von MANDATES OF FASHION) sizce' sre sctacr tea mants| AMERICA’S CHANCE. |gramiashomtcrs seacevaci|LIGHTNING FREAKS. —_—_—=—=—=—=—===—S—SS_—_—_—_—_—___—___ ‘WORMS THAT LIVE IN EARTH. STORY OF THE SOUTH POLE. Projects for Exploring a Country Filled With pretty and rather startling effect with sleeve- he: ‘There's capital Mystery few jackets, Blouses, corselets, braces. and Wat. | up in Germany. Many of our citizens, having i him — — s, us. @Phe “Moujike” ussian blouses are secured a small 5 to live within the office f afterward. eviden! wow THEY OITRUL—| LLEGED. a s They Should Be Modified by Good fore to be, very populne ‘mnie p ny ina | The Introduction of Corn Into Eu~ ie cedar enn tbe a invest in speen- | Incidents of the Telegraph and Eleo- toid'Slins of hin xperionon, for he foo;dir| "or runin cenioce ane So‘ or meas | onieitaten was ur coat” rans foul ', ganzes rs . “s ? Common Sense. comfortable summer gxement, and you may, it] rope Beneficial All Round, - | ftend ready toinvert in land and fe trio Fluid, Chern Brady kept up bl nighy viel sone, | S¥ SOME OP oaxpex—rorere ae ro rusin| THEKE/—ro rsvesrioary ran mocks Pom vonan make 10 up im face aver a trans and while Ido not encourage South AXATOMY—POUND FROM ICELAND TO THRANT-| FOSSILS —A COMMERCIAL OnIECT TO DESERTED, Parency. — a. confidence in your cereal Fasy mie api: stiondT chs cones anid HE SOUTH POLE H ACTIV stu A Tat FASMIOSABLE MOUITE. . | districta an products.” * meres ees — = MAS ALWAYS BEEN ATTRA TIV E COSTUMES.| | TATION MEE NOUTE. ettan (EVERYTHING FAVORS IT pthirag citer te STORIES BY OPERATIVES. | rom the tips of « western telographer, wbo| [JNTIL DR. CHARLES DARWIN MADE| A regarded as.a land of mystery aml wena and piquant ina Monjik, especially when she “It is my opinion, based on eleven years of ‘The Question of the Length of Skirts at Sum- | svts one of the quaint straw hats on her head— | The Need of the European Nations for # Ce- | Uninterrupted experience in all parts of Europe, mer Kesorts—Some Advantages of the | hats which look as though there bad beena| seal Food Supply—The Enormous Market | that this glorious country should send over From Telégraph Stations—How Two Trains oi Ie ble creatures that play so important a part | almost wholly to the imaginative. Frain—A Proty Traveling Contume-Tollets|SraPHing meh i the acon) ab the moment | hat Wil Be Opened How the erelgnere miner ith testo tds; ||T"ateny Poseurs Wore, Saved Prom | fist ah todes panos Teen | ssn Te esl of whch ha been rn |b enploer, te Boe! Win, hve for Dancers and Non-Dancers. ble with their curiously shaped crowns, seven | Should Be Taught the Value of Our Corn. rect as to go into towns argue and | Destruction by a Lucky Bolt of Lightning. | ™doubted from the wild and woolly west. bodien, y being passed through their | cumnavigated it, marking it= outi inches and more in height, and the general convince the small dealers, educate’ the baker, ““In my early experience with the telegraph upon their charts. But the fo made one of the group of story tellers, he play- his stndy of earth woryas no acquaint-| Upto the present day what har boon ing an important part in the incident, and as | ance was had by science with the work of these | about the continent of the his veracity has never been questioned, the tale | i “itten * as limited A Lightning Hair Cut—Scaring Tramps Away cin . ‘ * business,” said he, ‘Iwas located ata place} Earth worms are distributed thronghont the | line, walled at all points wit effect will be to give the summer girl the look and in turn secure these as missionaries. The; ed *nleann 7 pla ! ra rong! . t all points with i Bpectal Correspondence of The Fvening Star. of a rejuvenated fairy godmother—a very good B.C. F, DEWEY, WHO | should attend the fairs, confer with ‘millers, — IGHTNING AND = oe oe small a entire world, being found even on the most re- | fringed with fields of ioe, bos New Yonx, May 27, 1892, | character for her to assume, by the way, for, has for eleven years | “nd if possible visit large mam cen- b electricity have, since | ticket favel ee pear] = cn — Meter; | mote islands. Although land animale they are | attempt to pongtrate into th /< eietin with her dainty sunshade for a wand, she is eee TO ays easily able to perform wonderful tricks with Jew the styles, if the) the «tont hearts of stray young men who drift styles will follow me!” | into watering places to see what there is to be s ters, as Meissen, Essen, Chemnitz, &c., where- been European corre- | over numbers are at work. spondent for some of} “To do this wo must secure men who can talk the most prominent | the language, know the habits, aspirations, idio- the days of William | could be classed among towns as being |" ® Sense semi-aquatic. Whereas exposure to | happens that this strnge J, Penn, always been, sy- | thirty miles from nowhere, What little busi- | dry air for a few hours is fatal to them, they |a® Europe and baving an w . ° ness was done was on account of a mining vil-| have been kept alive in water for several | square miles, is altoget! twice ax big 1 t nonymous, To the Un- | iage some thirty miles back in the moutial "ee exclaimed a well-known | seen. . vuliar sectional notions of the ji n , , the mountains. | months. They are nocturnal in their habits, | That it will remain » mach Indy of fashion, by which, Amorican papers; and | 75) 0 can anticipate every objec- initicted =the most epdyreauy ees a. Hat could | andat night maybe seen crawling about. in | likely, beoanse po tons ately directed ye deccegresenbrer a oe Sons saree | om Tendily answer every question and picture ee tan rT em ee ee | ieee mrieabecd, naalig with Gece tote hetachod Ss tak ! ae most of that time, | with some degree of enthusiasm its advantay a. thunder storm “Ono i ° vel omen prov she was not willing to I sre crass se weantag’ [amtbsoetie—In vaeck aroee unete Gotame ter telegraph office, Dut | ycqine. Right, after a day of the most sultry | in their burrows, Their bodies are armed with oe Areghegra a wan seh waieg ee FRCS) is ona id Pree enh Ak get ir er vtanti- | Weather that I'had experienced for months, I| short bristles, by of which they cling to is not likely to ¥ ds of ES ton. During his long] education and experience, able to teach’ on the statistics will substanti-| was detained at my office on account of de-| their holes, so that it is difficult to drag them tack of funds, others will . residence in Berlin as 4 | farthest reaching phases ‘of the problem and ate the fact that no| layed trains, A continuous roll of thunder, | out, , - hain riba eage me place is safer. . Many | accompanied by sharp flashes of lightning in her wh pogo wwspaper correspond- | impress i pact am 1 Aisceny sage decueel ent pmlc! aaigak Pad. varied are the| t2¢ distance, warned me of an spproaching These worms commonly lie for hours together . mE, cat be hes been On| “\isncu agente, and euch only, can profitably’ ni storm. I fretted and stormed, as f wanted to | Close beneath thegnouths of their burrows, «o | thet the objects t ms friendly terms with| and faithfully represent the Shedieae ak stories told of th®} get to my boarding shanty,about a quarter of a | that their heads can just be seen by looking | HOP of the ante most of the fficials ntry. | st ‘ % 3 perfor by heavenly currents, bat] imile up country ‘ore the storm | do’ it of theirs causes their de- | Seient impc ost prominent ot in that country. | status of this mighty land and insure the suc-| fTe*ks performed by ts, but] mile up the road, before the down. ‘This habit of th ficient importance t ‘Talking with a reporter of Tae Star today he | cess of this venture. seldom is there a fatality attached to the tale. | broke. I was acing Sank: in my chair musing | *truction to an enormous extent, inasmuch as | PON. and de trouble with such dis- obedience is that it is very likely to result dis astrously unless the best be inclined to consider om over the events that had b @ thrushes, blackbirds and other feathered crea- | '™Y PYTpe of judgment goes with gave some very interesting facts concerning the ee tho Austrians, Swise and | Detweer. the manufactured and natural mauidadlly a veins broke hie p nein wie | cases tik thaws Sobeeas ant dioew thos ear] = it Nodoubt « farbion progress of the efforts of Secretary Rusk to | ter F Tet punetiions bat erat cmaziable, | electricity there appears, from close observa- | "+ “Hold up your hands, quick? their holes in large numbers, especially in the may in most cases hs open up market for American corn in Ger-| to reason, particularly when addressed in their | 9 to be a sort of affection, and under cover | “Glancing up I saw a huge revolver pointed | morning. It is probable that they lie near the xhibiting goo- b po Tterndnens, +“ lly nothing more r judiciously modified, many by teaching the Germans how to make | own vernacular, of the slightest storm mutual exchanges of con- | through ihe little window in the wall. through | *¥rface for the sake of warmth. They do not | §Tpical @ re my Just as easily as it may and eat corn bread. “What has been done of lato in this matter? | fidencos are usually indulged in by them. Se ee ena so Debded Bn oted sana | Se coe contnt ete eee ee saw | comced’ with os be ridiculously exag- x It is generally conceded that Mr. Rusk struck Mery oe =~ = Soe that Se eee cS Modern devices, of course, have brought | comply with the command, especially the latter | arth they line their barrows with leaves, | little study of gested. Kh fo with pied 4 great idea when he laid out this work, and the | 24 but few months on the continen frequently | {Pout this state of affairs, but the most per-| injunction, my chair swung around, my head <anke mseecall siniciaie poe eee ood _ dross as with many But the hotel veranda is not the exclusive | full importance of it will be better understood | accompanied Col. Murphy to German official | Went assurances cannot convince the timid of | struck on the edge of the table and unconscious | he body of a large earth worm consists of | Sfurda ser neon are other things in life, the | kingdom of the modish maid with ber russet | bY the light of Mr. Dewey's experience, who bas re and have had occasion to observe his . - Seldom indeed will the veteran tel a, | “When T regained my wits T found myself | ‘Tom 100 to 200 rings or segments, each fur- | ** n. In no other more common sense ¥0U | shoes, Mother Hubbard hat, Bfonjik blouse, | been studying the cereal question. aortemtsane iat GaTeats oil cnetall |e Werame ett ee the Morse ZimEem the Hoor of the" outer walling room | niehed with minate bristles iy moa of = a aoe can get into it themore | cornet skirt, puffed sleeves and red sunshade. | ya ryren teen to cereal Tacation Of | expectations, akaton mons tie eraseck onorie-sar oe tia Pound band and foot, with a tall, ungainly look- | well-developed muscular system the animal can | (eq ofS, gules avorable will be the result. Tuke, for in- ‘Tes cleaio maa, ee bas Sse more Greek T contend that we can no longer afford to ignore | “How can this be done? Simply enough. In | heaviest storms, while the young aspirant for | yeqcvow standing Liga g ta gag gi can crawl backward as well as forward, and, when its tail is fixed in the mouth of its hole, it LAVA AND SXOW, Paddock, who have | beating heart rather’ thin how the white | something treme tSunins aud ‘thunder were | can retreat into the latter with extraordinary | _Now, voleanoos are built o stance, this question of the short skirt or the our chances in the international relations of the | ™y opinion Congress = to be liberal on this | telegraphic fame will sit ha storm with cornet skirt with demi-train. While there can how to construe Latin ventences better than she eg ane oink. Messrs. Hatch does the ‘silly chat of eollege boys, who would | Present. | When the supplies were not beyond | j i the prodacts . alk ‘i tion, | done so much good in thisand kindred matters, | feather to his companions by deserting bis rapidity. It hasa mouth and throa? as well as | of their own eruption, nch one eontes be no doubt that for dressy costumes tmtended | rather meet_a young man well up in| Within the past quarter of a century the export | #hould co-operate, as thoy have always dons | post. ating . Amimep mis oe oa one: agizzard, which grinds the food swallowed. | debris piled around a sent. tase nate of fort we. for the hotel veranda, for calling | algeben than | Mbletics, | i alee einere: | trade has grown to large proportionsand I have | hitherto, with the Secretary, Gen. Rusk, and | "It frequently occurs that the dense humidity | “All at once my trained ear caught the sound | The gizzard generally contains small. stones, | varrsne y nal vertices wd or for t ide the graceful demi-| sd. her great soul is not above, re-| had most exceptional chances in my wanderings | complete the good work so admirably begun. | prevailing just previous to a storm, coupled | of the telegraph sounder, and tercing wy, head | WHICH sresupposed to be taken in for the pur-| in this polar region strate of emey riin ee in will keep ite hold upon fayor during the | J0icing | at the | prospect of a ball, | throughout Europe to observe ite progress. —_>—. with a heavy downfall of rain, will entice the | | poreoi . “sade poso of assisting digestion. Earthworme breathe | intervals must ie betwene the eet falling at train will hoop r although she doesn’t dance round dances. Her i Perceived a man at my desk working away at | through their ski cial or- als must lie between the lavers of ashes ary hang onplnaPeayctioy tag oy : ; poser 9: ep a, Baby Sue, istrongest electrical currents from the wires, i ‘ ir skin, possessing no apecial or-| and Inne. denen i summer. yet for the tennis ground, wire | omy circles are those found inher geometry,| Mion tie Baw Fock’ Gan. and for the time being “‘kills” their usefulness. | ™¥ key. He wore a mask, but this did not dis- | gans of reepiratio: ey have no eyes, and the | the y, Prop iceneponey yore fo toed that vn of ‘ll sorte & skirt | bat she loves to look on, and in my fourth illus: | ‘When first our exportera sent whoat abroad | #¥0m the New York Sun town I overtook a| It is during one of these storms that the elce- | tite the fact that he was a young man. "As the | two sexes are united in the eame individual, | woeruaanie elerta would quickly: melt the mow hs grace abil ce has | AOR Tshow you the classic mis in alle and | they did so oneonsignment. ‘The shippers were |. eae shia Redstart bok tic waves are felt, coming and going, and what | vharacters were ticked off and cume tomy ears Although they are entirely blind taey are sensi-| Wve thes mie eb thls Rot ts race at all « feathers, as she appears at tl turday night i | Woman carr} arms. rae) : S> new he was feeling bi to the locatic i obe al is ir out by voles feathers, as abe appenrsat the Saturday, night | agreenble to pay unusual commiations to Liver-| Too wn, parctoctod, wonex cua’ strat hat ana | wanger there isis then most immninent. It was ing his way as ion | tive enough tolight to be able to distinguish be- | quite ie ond tacks : uring one of these lulls in. business, up in the | 2 the delayed trains, I also noticed that he | tween day and might ‘Thus they eseape many it was easy enough to identify her as a moun- big Operating room of the Woster? Unies | frequently arose and made. wee of the ground | dangers which wenld threston cies frees nn laver a few inches thick be nprena? ee? Telegraph office recently, that several expert | "ite from the switchboard, which cut off the | nal animals that prey upon them. “They do not pre pool, Hamburg and Antwerp houses. This led toa market for this commodity. Pretty soon Y the conditions became reversed and our mer- | taineer’s wife. I drew my horse down to a walk modishness, but the classic miss is a dangerous best non-cond rival all the same. Her powers of fascination and no one knows it| may not be so swift and sure, but they are subtle " main office in which was located the trait : oven, mectton love unex Sow dw . sure, y oon s rer te the chavarterel | mad ellarall to telographers gathered around one of the “quad in which was located the train run- any sense of hearing. Dr. Darwin ti e mow beneath. This Ggergeny eertne| OS ‘they are low. ‘She is full of quaint fancies bemrtheioog Pecrchoced Stak avateiee oe [trea take the bundle on the saddle | ieieersphe eeeeacebeceteg experioncer wish ner of the division. At frequent intervals sharp | found that they took not the least notice of the aa omen wg wo 1A mnajesty © glittering shears| foun. And then san Week call oticag cn net | cargo had reached its Festination. Other bulky thunderbolts, fire balls and other electric phe- | fracks of lightning would re-echo through. the | shrill notes from a metal whistle and they were | otually woaled np tn itt ® crust of lava. It is t marses of pure in din the moui “It’s Baby Sue,” she said, as she passed it up. | mdert : room as they struck the arrester on the switch. | “indifferent to shouts.” Their of emell baby.,” Well, Fl be careful of her. |" ‘°° numerous to mention. Bat the man worked on totally oblivious of his | ia very feeble, but they perceive very well by | fei nickal feos hea see ceheaer 0 . surroundings, touch. is ain flat and close: | ftepose is dangerous to her; rest fatal. “She is |! amua Sons ice Dont abciad tp ekesa, | “Gwin arteo yencs* One of the humorous stories told had for its | “Suddenly T caught the drift of what he was | doveloped ft is outial chcthey: Seager el | the autarct ways, wach as with foot oa a ek she lacks her charm when she | enterprising merchants, and the result is now a| ‘She's protty heavy for such a long walk.” | central figure a telegrapher named Bogardus. | sending out over the wire and was horrified to| much pain when injured as they seem to ex- | * it of feminine tog-| which the ultra-fashionable girl does not. She | ticles, such as bacon, lard and meat of alll de- needs movement to display her good points, | {¢T#Ptions, were placed on the European markets them off in differe : bas files wi 4] ” is i in| learn that he was trying to manipulate the | press by their conto: ‘ — ” anelsand tabliere thin «um- large clientage for these specialties. jun walked over ten miles with her | “Bogy,” as he is called for short, is known in | lear ‘ving ato the | press by their contortions. ses from the fact that. they alum syed cam too. toommelver smeicably fad mi sult ton we teterane, Kany oa already. but T felt T had to doit Jim, he's} she tlograph profession gfrom Boston to. San {ran ordem wo at to cause a wigck. Traine No cagoeaic a eno) grlses from the fact that ther aline, Ait Sorte of ruchingy pleating, Duly, ral ra made, and whatever expenses the ex Or ee Francisco and from NeW Orleans to Toronto, | up the road from my station and he was send-| Earth worms are omnivorous. ‘They swallow oo Bag ronnie py flings anv ae Beciets maar Dave: Beal. 0 “My man, sah, Thoy'sdun got him in jail] (nwt | He posscmed @ roving disposition, « | ing out orders with a cool steady hand to, train | quantitiés of earth continually, out of which “Now, while I have recapitulated all this, I] fur moonshinin’, and the Lawd only knows | tnut was bleak as Go the walena a7 fake a siding about ten miles east of Medi-| they extract any digestible matter which it may Sonam conan. ’ ° ine Hat and to train 48 to pass 47 at the regu- In all probabil In the initial illustration will be seen a very want to say that one of the greatest problems | When he'll be free. I jest knowed he'd near die | though “Bogy” at one time was. one ae Li regu-|contain. They also consume balf-decayed | _ I all probability an investigution of the rock Pretty outdoor costume in glace serge, with a ever undertaken was the recent if he couldn't hev one last look at Sue. finest operators in the business these thre de- | twa testa, which wore hee eae, teown the | eaves of all kinds, except a few which have an | f0Tmations of the antarctic continént would Bleoveless jacket, which has one dart on each INTRODUCTION OF INDIAN conN TO KxEDT| g Tee <Uild, was wrapped up in a faded old | fects kept him always on*the tramp and from | engersand express matter, together very hear | U"Pleasant taste of are too tough. From euch | tell a wonderful story of its history in gon es ad binant ee eaies abe EUROPE. like'a log in my arms. and, I suppord, sound attaining any. postion of trust or prominence | my station , leaves they chiefly obtain their sustenance. | past. Tt haa been ascert 3 in show the princess gown, plastron like. At the “The cereal, in iteslf 00 meritorious and eco- | asl [lad caarisd hie a ally ‘ec Gnore be: | is now in a Chicago hospital | | “<q could easily hear the sounder, and from | They pass the winter season either singly or | fossil deposits, discovered in north Greenland ‘waist line there isa tub and button to hold the Jacket, but, if so desired, the fronts may be left yuite Open; but to warrant this the cut should Beipecttct. The beck pieces cross one over the other below the wnist, for which purpose you should cut them larger than the pattern. The ©urves should be bordered with bias «trips of ‘the material, but to keep them from drawing must sew on a strip cut straight and pleated thecurves. The skirt is made princess and : al, in } i rounding up a career that should have been a| his orders © rolled up with others into a ball at the bottom | and elsewhere in the not di-tant neigh>erkon nomic, is being introduced at the most oppor- | fore I raised the veil to get a peep at her face. | bright one, an expert telereapber and rahe hein | of their’ barrows, which during that time of | of the north pols thet tn one ea norond One glance told me that she was dead. pert telegrap! thoroughly familiar rmert tune time. Previous to the Franco-German | “U\fiy Coman, your baby is dead!” Iex- @ following occurred in the days when | with train running. Every now and then the | Y°8T 87 closed at the top. They devote much | enjoyed a climate « pproaching the tropic war Europe was much divided on economic | claimed’ as I made the diseore - Bogy, was in his prime. He had recently | wrecker would raise his hand from the key as a | thelr attention to leaven, decayed | That region is proved by such evidence to have questions. ‘Then our country and its social and | "ah dha Gael wat night” sae been “fired” from the New York offices and for | more severe stroke of lightning would come in | *¥g# and small refuse of all sorts for the pur- | been at one time covered with #laxuriant vege particularly commercial system were not so] = prot ae . replied. | bread and butter bud drifted out on to a rail-| Sver the wire, but he wes too intent uj his | Pose of plugging w their holes and to line the | tation. Where at present all is ice and demas fumiliat to the business community of Europe, | \f'ze got tortake her to the jail and let Jim | TO0d centering in Pittsburg, to sober up and | deadly work to desist, “The tramp of heary ‘upper parte of the latter. tion varied forms of animal and r and even less to the body politic. Our pioneers | see her.” Pore clo Jim. He siene ered Date | S29 new start. Ho was always careful of his | boots on the platform outside told me thet the | 70 accomplish this object they work hard] flourished. It sccms incommerce were equally unfamiliar with Bu. | @,heF. Pore ole Jim, He done loved Baby Personal appearance and while be could shave | conten lated wreck was an organized scheme | Gathering such materials, often protecting | conditions at one or m rope’s needs, customs and habits, consequently | if ‘he didu't dn nee her afore she Wea Faien® | bimself, the cutting of his own hair was an im-| for robbing the express company and parson, | the mouths of their burrows with litthe heaps of i plain, and in order to sectre the true cor- COSTUME FOR DEBUTANTE. many of them foundered on the rocks of iguor-|" ghe wiped the tears away as she walked | Pomibility. Pittebuirg, some thirty miles from | gers. Muttered curses frequentiy came from | "tones, when they cannot obtain leaves, ¢ train the buck breadths especially must be] Many young girls really get their first glimpee | ance. ‘aloae: Pee horse, looking cp now and then | the little station he was at, was the nearest Ssotman at ths key as his plans for wrecking the | *°- Such heaps of smooth, rounded an enormous land mass in that part of the much gored. The corsage should be lined as “he ir| ‘Persistent efforts and the march of time, | Pne trertle no looking up now | an i | Place wherein he could have the tonsorial feat | train would meet with obstacles in the shape of | ™Y frequently be seen on’ gravel world, which has since sunk to the bottom of the tatinetie. and the skirt with thin woolen | Of 87 life while at summer resorts, dance their | wich uyally overcome any aiffcultien, largely | Stthe bundle in my arms, and jai, “TnenPehs | Performed. To go to the city menut another | pertinent questions from operators up the line, | #4¥ Who was interosted in the habits of worms | ren. Yt'was clothed with tras sel.centung: hed BiafloF the whole costume may be lined with Erst waltz at a hotel hop and then go back to | inftuenced the political and eoeial organization | {$9 the little dead body froméuy hana” ten, | ‘PF and consequent discharge, and “Boge” | who wouldn't follow the new order of things | 08 o0e occasion removed the little heap of | many flowing tivers lilled with fees and’ oad feta. At the bottom of the skirt you should | town and go through the form of making «| of Europe since 1871, and together with the in-| derly kissed the white, cold face and said knew this only too wel!, But his hair grew; the | without fully understanding their import. stones from the mouths of several holes, and | alive with beasta, Birds and insects. a false 4 3 ikely the pes vicinity of the south pole. Sei ticks, | the opinion that millions of vears ago there wns bles A hem of lin fifteen inches deep | debut in the winter festivities. Hence, vou will in international rtesies have bt it] ss a: i | Weather became hot and he fretted and fumed. cleared the surface of the nd for some ‘the stuff and lining. not be unwilling to examme a very pretty ball | ue to the threshold of new probleme nee ane Ts, stranger, fur yer kindness’! The comments of the railroad men didn'tadd| || FEAR OF A HORRIBLE WRECK. inches all around. On the following night she THE LOST CONTINENT. ; gown for a young miss, shown in the last illus-| «The first to see clearly and distinetly present | ay Shs nentt cate ae ice qeaby Sue. I | to his comfort. ‘Oy mind was ina horrible whirl any I fre- | went out with a lantern and saw the worms,| This vanished country was, perhaps, nota tration, It may be made up either in tulle, | duties and future powsibilitiea were such wise 7 Late one afternoon after a very hot day a| quently strained at my bindings to my | With their tails fixed in their burrows, dragging | continent. It may have been « mighty archi- ° Pel thunder storm of remarkable inteneity eame up | feeds voces Data cccas seseetuar ddim the stones inward with their mouths. After | pelago. Whichever it was it afforded oppor- MEETS ES = New York, Senator Paddock, Representative Seer and the lightning played hide und seck among | warned me to be careful or my life would not | °° 2ights some of the holes had eight or nine | tanities for travel and distribution to numero <miecdciiilintadd: aah Gobca a: Hatch anda few others,who, taking the bull by The Science of Ventilatie: the relays, sounders end switchboard in iy not | small stones over them; after four nights one species of land animals and fresh- ben From Hysiene. the horns—to use a national phrase—decided on | From the Contemporary Review. “Bogy’s” little ten by ten office. Every minute | be worth much. On account of the trains being | had thirty and another thirty-four stones. which now are common to Austral tot cee tion Mr. Gladstone—who | what is destined to live in history as one of the | The healthy atmosphere ins room is one in | the storm increased in intensity and the elec-| behind time I knew they would be pushed to| One stone, which had been dragged over the - ii 7 s . mort patriotic measures—the introduction of | which the air is changed to the extent of 3,000 | trical display was grandly sublime. As the | their utmost speed by the engineers and if they | gravel walk to the mouth of a burrow, weighed | of the ‘Southerr, mene has not heard of the Grand Old Man's wood- | Thats Pecrnto the people of Lurope cubic feet per hour per adult inmate. The air | cracks of the bolts on the switchboard became | &%me together the wreck would be a horrible | two ounces, which proves how strong worms cutting exploits? Among famous devotees of ce wanes a auiaiebae: admitted ainal taenkd” Waser more frequent and the finshes more luminous | ORC; are. Sometimes they show greater strength by gauze or thin silk, set off with a lace corsclet. "| ‘men as Secretary Rusk, Mr. F.'B. Thurber of | Bis Pore Sue! Pore ole Jf theory will account satixfactorily for the existence of these i v - : pit fri “The storm continued to increase In force | displacing ¥ ccectneen, Selenging to the Neat Pale ait Donden the latter aurea cele} “‘A8a matter of fact Germpiny, for instance, | long anit is fresh, is of course preferable to | giNOs; nots bit frightenod. conelnled to pat) 9 Beal after, peal of thunder reechood over Moxarbutiet near petneen aes mag ele oye nr brated forhis fdhing partice. ‘Thomas Warton, | M@0# well do without it, Tadmit that she, in cold air in winter, but in some way the air must | aave his instruments from burning up in case | aN above the little station. Still the wrecker | the night. It is not known what advantage the scchabonek teehee aeeeean : nthor of “The History of Modern Poetry, | common with Austria, England and other | be brought in if we are to continue in health. | the lightning bocame too strong. af the key kept steadily at work weaving his web | worms derive from plugging up the mouths of | Snd peculiar interest attaches vo this lest nena, ettten to be focad | drinking vin tke. | countries, still clings to antiquated notions and | There are various ways of doing this. One isby| On the instant he applicd the plug, a bolt of | vice of mingled satisfaction and deviiel glee: | er noues.of from piling stones over them, | nent. ‘There are many rv: ~ crns—a taste which he shaved with | habits. The former is particularly to admitting cold air xo that it is directed upward | lightning struck a telegraph pole about fifty | in ne i matter all Take Pence, | but presumably itis done fora protection against | that the higher forms of life represented be sear mae inter. Charles Lamb | ¢¥erything which has stood the test of time, on | toward the ceiling. where the air of a room is at | feet from the office and the surplus electricity | |,” “Ah, that fives the matter all tight. | Forty. | enemies, as wall as to keep out the cold night | the mammuls—apes, cata, dogs, leurs, hnarmee was un admirer of London, and never wearied | the principle let well enough alone. Since | the highest temperature; the cold strenm is then puaiai ig Gis switchboard over the wire aed pti ee are go together. Tell S Sy aewee TO WE rit wonder-| oxen, &c.—originated there. Geologiste trace of wandering abont the streets. Without Lon- | 1872, however, she has changed in many re- in its ge a8 it falls to the lower § kn wires peyotian the men to spread out up-— — aot ave a Pree ney —! & a lopment of animal creation, ‘pects. The increase in her population, stag- for breathing. But in large rooms, to | shock threw him on the fi He 2 i ~ fossil remains ertegs be -escll an cosuaage as antes dation in business and ever-growing taxes bate | utilizeat its best this current, there should bein | stunned him. Shaking himself together he got | 4 “He never finished the sentence. A blinding | and by ewallowing it — drab: 7 at i re » ‘ : Sin he e8et | flash at the switchboard, a shrick from the which they find buried in t frequented alley for Skiddaw and Helvel- | Compelled her to look for buriness abroad. Like | the skirting outlets communicating with a senna cine aay scene fae wrecker and the office appeared to be one mass CA LIVE CHEAPLY, but there are gaps in the stor - the Seandinavians, the Germans are a frugal, | heated upeast fine, which will draw away the | 8! z i y ordinary | tell, and most important of then topoti and’ Ht was down Fleet treet that he | uduatiows and modest peuple, not inventive, | heavy ain near the foor. In cauce where there | Hbere mas w peculiar odor in tho litle room | of fame. | My guard rushed from the balding | | There plenty of organic matter fn ordinary | ps0 at the cho of tse momanis och Lis daily Walt, Ghich, puitg: te the tries | Perheps, but largely imitative, "Once con: isheating by hot water coils the cold air may | that “ogy” could not elearly account’ for, but froe and pulled fysol? through the door. ‘The | en aa rect we wel ae | During that epoch here were 0 mammals of tasks he made compulsory om himself, was a | Yinced of a good investment no prejadices will | be brought in at or near the floor level and | Concluded it camo from the burned silk and little statton was en dry as tleder, the oil from | M227 e8e* and larvw of insects, as well as | Reptiles ruled creation, many of them of gigan= 4 really curious performance. First. every post | Keep them from embracing the chance. passed through the ho: water coils—the outlet | wax, that made up the covering for the office | ty tratmnen's lamps added to the combustible | mali living and dead creatures. There are| tic size, attaining a lencth of eighty feet oF TRAVELING COSTUME. required to be touched as he passed it, new it | _ “Oh, ves; there are suspicions to be removed, | for vitiated air being in or near the ceiling— wie nad just suoceeded in piitting his office to| ature of its make-up, and ina moment flames | certain SS eS SS eee ee el worous, walle others A qnaint but stylish outing costume is repre-| was a point of honor to step exactly in the | *etional jealousics, manifold objections—the | to a heated upcast fine. 4 li it, afer sacking 2 | were breaking out in every part. tropics posses trap-like bladders, beau- | of carnivorous habits, equipped with natural ith loud cries several of the wrecker's con- | tifully constructed for catching minute subter-| weapons astonishingly formidable, fed upom we . - “ . a product of different minds—éc., to be straight-| The great desideratum in the admission of | ‘ights and had returned to it, after making a Seated in the second pictire. wie a Oe ae oe ee ice cries ar ee ae ets | ened out, and this can be accomplished without | fresh air is to cut it up into very fine streams, | ‘emporexy connection where’ the had) ¢.jcrates dached. toward the Iittle rooms te pail | Tanean animals. Earth worms eagerly devour | them. While scme | made up in any striped material tosuit the taste, | {PPT to be employed in order tereach the | difficulty by one who is familiar with their | something in the way water is cut up in pase. | struck, when « train drew up for orders, their leader out, but the heat drove them byck, |78¥ meat and dead worms, Although they | swam in the seas, and others yet flew in. the Belted in with a broad leather elt, with a jacket | oor with one particular foot. Godolphin, the | habits, aspirations, resources and needs. Ger- ing through the fine rose of a watering can. ore rusalem” {routed the conductor as | ind as voices wore heard up the country road | Usually live near the surface of the ground, | air. They were all wiped off the face of the of the same material: made exsetly like a bit of | statesman, spent much of his spare time in the | MANY, a# a matter of fact. needs annually not | It has been found that air admitted through | he caught sight of “Bogy.” “Where's your) (OM toward the station they all disappeared | Yet they burrow to a considerable depth during | earth quite suddenly it would seem, conditions Masculine attire. ride the broad turn-down it, Pepe, ike W ‘d Jess than one-fifth of her cereal supplies from | a tube or orifice of equal sectional area through- | hair?” . . ie | i long-continued dry weather and _ severe | climatic and otherwise that were unfavorable to eollar there should be worn a dainty linen collar | focKPits | Pove, like, Wittam TIT, was fond of | somewhere. - out enters as a cold draft, but if the inlet | | ““Bogy,” inaffright, clapped his hands to his | i the darkness, cold, ‘They have been discovered as far Gown | them having arrived. In the strain immedi. or ruche of some sort, with same finish for | minor poets, whiled away his evenings at a low| “Hitherto she hag imported rye from Russia | be through a series of small ‘truncated ecnos, | head and with a startled ejaculation rushed for ‘THE TRAGEDY AVERTED. as eight feet. The burrows run euff*. While it may tions of men’s attire di i s 4 . oe lieu- | ately covering their remains are discovered rue that these imita-| hie house in Long Acre, chatting with an | &"deven from Canada. Since thedeath of Alex-| the smallez section outward, the larger in- | the little mirror hanging in a rear corner of the| “A man named ‘Humpy' Logan untied my | larly or a litile obliquely and are Hed with «| those of numerons familion uf a. clus of ame at become every young | G14 soldier and his shrewish helprate. | der IT and William I the relations between the | ward, with a wire gauze on the inside, the | oltice. One look was enough. | ““Bogy” hadn't legs, as my hands were useless on account of | thin layer of fine, dark-colored earth voided by | mals entirely different, which gave suck to their Perwon, yet they suit some styles of the summer ‘ two countries have ‘become very strained, and | current is so cut up and diffused that the draft | ** much hair as a month-old baby, and strange | !°5* ‘ i i the worms. young. Where did the latter come from? girl to perfection, lending the quant and | fii transformed limseit from a politicien into | OF lato largely aggravated, by ussia's domestic | is not felt. By analogy a mass of water en-|torelate the clectric laine had not fazed his | the great nambuess occasioned by the tightness | “Me Norma a tas cee eompact and | Whereas the evolution of the reptiles from their dashing favor wihich is greatly relished by their | {\s Ghthusmstie farmer, and ‘the reader”. here | and foreign policy. The political ascendancy | tering throngh a narrow canal drives all before | ‘calp_in the slightest. The knock-down blow | of tho throngs, and I quickly explained the | guooth, closely fitting the worm’s body. — It | early types can be observed step by step im mo- ume oe i . Cee eee en ecole Mente sete | of Germany, the aspirations of the Balkan prov. | itand cutsachannel for itvelf, but the same | old Jupiter had given him had driven the | situation to him. He hunted up a lump and strengthens the walls of the burrow, which may | cessive layers af fossiliferous deposits. the mam-= aaa ee eee nioee Hoe anita the cananay | inees, the reformation of the continent and | quantity pasting over a large surface of ground | thought of his hair for the moment out of his d s track and avound the curve in | be likened to a tunnel lined with cement, and | malk, some of them of great dimensions, appear Sean: the fered eae at the poldice! eaceint, | southern Europe generally has stirred the gall | gently irvigates it. Another important’ point | mind. and until the conductor's surprised cry : Tewung the lantern upon | saves the occupant’s skin from being scratched. | alllat once, and in vast numbers, fally formed. eee Tie Sines the dei ae eeecches | Of the Muskovite, and as there are at present | is not to let the passage of the alr be. at” too | hndreached him he thought his hair still needed | the train coming the straight piece of | Often the hole terminates in a small enlarge-| Evidently they must have nrvived fre ee aa ene eh ceriee of carrots in | Qo atrong men at the helm of affairs in Tussin, | great a velocity. ‘The gentler tho flow the | cutting. track to the station in the other direction. “My | ment or chdmber, where one or more worms | where else. tertch theyehould be boiked.E {°8*C* €° | and as the Germans, now powerful in political Bete “DEXTER” THOROUGHLY SCARED. lantern was not seen by the engineer, but the | nase the winter. These chambers are lined | mammals were devel ——_+0+—___. She Took the Trick. Wordaworth, Dickens and Longfellow were | Organization, will not #ubmit to coercion, the : : - commercial relations between these neighbors immense pedestrians. | Wordsworth did the | aa ee anit fare eee burning station acted asa. danger signal and | B® eo Another good story was told, the local sur-| {nu trufy drew up at the station the with little stones and seefls, to prevent contact | processes of ‘evolution. roundings being at the little telegraph «tation | totally iguoranPof the danges they Teepe with the surrounding cold soil.” After swallow- | necessarily required ; iting it ; 4 Vashi ~ Ps ing carth, whether for making its burrow or for | time—millions of vears, m major part of his writing in va sie s | eas this particdlar time if wes the most ist party one evening last | ®t Benning, just outside of Washington. At intent upon helping to subdue th Seni, tho wporin baines ta ths antes to v of the wat shown a small room, the heme of a fey | %d happy measure—the introduction of Indian North Meridian ‘street home, which | ‘he time of the occurrence of the incident herein | flames. “Tw ve words explained the sita- | {er 554; Smead X “This,” sai corn. By this means united Germany is offered ie stated an operator by the name of Brady was meer and a group of passengers complished in some part tattered books. “This,” said the servant y a , . was attended by a number of society people r Duakinathaccd cccaaunit oe toda “ay abeoe " t maid, ‘tis master's library, but his study is | 9 Competitive article. which, even in prosperous a In on duty nights and none loved a practical joke oa th ref : stants submerged beneath the out of doors.” Dickens liked the sights of a | Sa8ons, must continue to effect the economic | M4 some whist players. One young Indy whose | Lotter than he. A constant lounger around the | Founded wie ea ge - London walk and was also fond of'a tramp | Testion, ‘which is the cheapest,’ in point of | enthusiastic admiration of the game was | office was an old darkey by the name of Poin-| MY story, pa agemeng e —- on the sea downs. Carlyle invertaly price and nutriment. greater than her ability to play it was paired | dexter and a big lazy companion named Julius. So m would have been an easy covered several miles before beginning ALL WILL BE GOOD CUSTOMERS. with a confirmed whist player addicted to the | Numerous plans were devised to make these i . “The engineers of both trains with their con- idea b; : work and — enjoyed riding inside an| “Although the army of Germany, half a mil- | use of ners At one point of the game, when | :Wo worthies steer clear of the office without | , “rhe engineers of both trains with th finally The earth thus voir y worms, if spread 3 _ en| : “ i formal; i laces in | masees above theory wesunie! the for omnibary while Nistor Tiago preferred the | ion picked men with healthy bodies, will un) iwi Met Pay, ude cards om he board in| Ted thos Julius would ‘bo nisl. for two or | Backed to the next riding, followed by 47, and | ous wouror ag”? Nova yorm sm imont Pinot in| ence of Une nace e ainaae ee hes Patel. Neecmeather could detain | Buckle | goubtedly become a solid customer, there yet | Uicated thats high trump wae desirable, her | nd ae en bu «Dexter,”” as he was called for | the tangle was straightened out. a ai fossils that will tell the story of from his fifteen minutes’ constitutional be- ota jer said: “Now, don’t send a boy to the brevity sake, always turned up at nightfall and| ‘“The next day the remains of the would-be fore breakfast, and Macaulay was likewise a Pe agar Giaek Ws lind: bes sea} left with the break of day. wrecker were found in the ruins of the station, | carried on unceasingly, great walker, always accompanied. however, ; opalation, s ane eae tocar bat When it was ox: | left ve telegraph office proper was a small par-| m4 tho railrond company's physician, after | being continually b ; i ‘ Sak caper’ Nests | out tins pentane ak Ea ible wages, cents | the phrave away in hot memore for Tovase we. | titioned-off apartment fromthe waiting foom | Holding an autopsy, declared ehut "the man had mg eed lees fy meng poe fry Pp ir-eg Po tock "an munch interest ae a ckud ta’ their | © 4x whose’ frugal 2 Later in the evening it was her last play, and a | for passengers and contained one chair On | only been stunned by the light Md thea | passed through the worms Didly. It is sete, | ‘The following facts loaned from the Stand 5 safety. Sir Walter Scott's chief pursuits were of, t witt i high tramp was necessary to take the trick. _A | the evening in question, « terride, storm broke | boomed to a crisp. Inated that on an average acre of arable land | @rd and also from Modern Sovivty for Deceme riding and coursing; his dogs and he appear | Pe, mo power tang ot neon, eapogeal ple ag ae le, “Dexter” included, took refuge in the | _‘“In- all my experience with than ten tons of earth are annually | ber 19, 1891, are curious and interosting in con —— in the same piece of sculpture, testifying to lege en fig erbiey bredeengr gest Considerable of the down-pouring rain | ¥88 the luckiest bolt that ever hk ,”” | swallowed by worms and bi it to the sur-| nection with the death of the late Duke of DANCE TOILET. his habits. Later in life he patronized gar- ee ee ee gai enter ‘Mia’ door, aad wen swept by | Stid the narrator as he finished his tale, “‘and| face. The importance of the work © prancing Saxe, the poet, once said that people went to | deuing, in which the American historian, Ban- er- | time, ee tte the Hebe * I. A | the lucky stars of the people on those two trains | plished by them in this fashion cannot be over- | MPerce es ; croft, lias since borne him company. Milton | many ecg y core saleabiadly bx hn eapenheen oh atten: ; the ‘When the queen conferred the title of Duke the springs to play. to pray and to pay; he also | ‘ought relaxation in the companionship of the — Fighting Con a oa wet t i : the young prince it was re- fncluded in his list to dance, to dan “pealing orgun,” and Byron amused himself by is! the Kansas Trav » aosoctatica hack ‘ae places a Pe a “That title brings ill Iuck.’ It had drive, to eat and enchant, to fib and to flirt. | shooting at a piece of money fixed ina stick, mdlons oe C pi paar t hand ‘te Sreecaghend The “Long-Felt Want.” 4 But, asa rule, no sign is hung on the wall that | and practiced this more persistently than he — mcansing Congresmans a rgbiady knew this | From Judge. carries more joy to the young heart than “Hop | ever did anything else. Of present celebrities, you personal his epithet, “commercial tramps,” and have tonight.” 80, no doubt, you will be glad to| Mr. Chamberlain is an amateur horticulturist, poor iven orders for the distribution of of haves look at «stylish ball costume, which I| Sir John Lubbock passes the ‘moments in and Is not matter | the resolutions in every hotel of the fourth dis- Present in the third illustration. This hand-| studying his ants and bees, M Kk trict patronized by traveling men. some dress ix made up ina moire pekin. The | yachting among the Hebrides and many of ——_+e«—__—- front breadth is cut straight and the sides on | nobility have @ pronounced fancy for horse ‘the cross, so as to attain the effect shown. ‘The | racing. vessel Dack pieces are also cut very bias and pleated at ——6 filled with the top. The bottom of the skirt is with Why Lost People Walk im Circles. top, have s and the skirt is lined with blue merveil- | prom Pearson's Weekly. the sand four-tenths Jeux. There is fichu of blue silk muslin, V-] “The fact that people lost on a desert or in a shape front and back, and the Wattcau fold of i silk muslin starts from the point of the cut out, | forest invariably walk in a circle is due to The deep belt of blue ribbon is set off i i 1 q if i ili with byscinths. I: hooks at the back, The | Carefal measurements of a series of skeletons of e wide, turt-covered sleeves are mae of the yekin sud hare large have shown that only 10 per cont bad the begn calculated that ornaments of ¢ uslin caught in , hegte oa weighing 368 pounds, Suiddle with bows of biue satin ribbon. The | ower limbs equal im sos ha cae acre of garden patch, about skirt will uced a balayeuse. Speaking of the | the right limb longer than tof, iman cre of corn feld. Dr. ‘Wattean pleat deo quaceat wae ies tell So he 55 per cent the left leg was the longer. The ‘tention to the fact that archmologists all sorts of effects which conceal | result of one limb being longer than the other \ pnegeeay ap ge mee | ‘the figure, such as the blouses worn unbelted, | will naturally be that person will, uncon- : \ boards nod Fenn kh ction paletots and pelerines. The scioualy, take a longer step with the longer ana Thora boch Dusted by Shave Boneale Siiztby many s monstroney, bat tn eplio of | limb, and consoreently will trend to the sight way the of ancient ruins Bard names it is sure to ry of | or to the left, according as the left or right Apes y og to ing costumes, an hour when the air is apt] is the longer’ unlew the tendeney to deviation ‘worms abound in Tosland nat your fresh. It is % garment corrected by the eye, bat for driving and early | The oft ing more frequently the antarctic regions. They _— race course it does very as is evidenced by measurement of the m4 m4 suns om cbsbernte tolls. Fees hiore frequently to the right than to the left, ee iy SUMMER DRESSES AND LACE. end this cone is quite borne out by thet Se. T note that summer dresses threaten to havea | Sper v*lniy tee tolded. a bee ‘20, 1888, great profusion of lace about thom—berthef; | meartrement of the arma, it is found thet in| patent Bt, 1688, Bibs, jabots and cascndes on the corsages, | 72 percent the right arm is longer than the anything 4 flounces and tabliers on the skirts and also ince | eft: while in 24 per cont the let arm is the | could get, it effects ~ Kt bis is et 5 i i Hi ti

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