Evening Star Newspaper, June 25, 1892, Page 10

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10 AT SUMMER RESORTS. |2cSS2e3" 25-206 CLERKS UNDER ARMS. THE ARCTICELEPHANT |S. ae ae <epoe bona Costumes That Will Be Worn During See Berane ata, bt ook When Department Employes Were] it rerimen The Tramp of the Mammoth Heard Seer’ [mow ser rommcrn wruaive 484 9oRT OF m0- the Season. Called to Defend the City, Near the North Pole. dogs aod ang Pt (Geetaneosgretthegecectimeddrony a BtHE THE PERFUMED UNDERSKIRT. SENT OUT TO MEET EARLY. IT HAD HAIR AND WOOL. seyponnen HAS CEASED ONLY RE- a ceritly to be a recognized profession in india,” said an omental traveler to a Stam ‘The Wonderful Discovery of the Body of = Mammoth preci & Glacial Tee—A | writer. “A few years ago those who practiced jeans 4 deows tes us, i P the business weré divided into three classes, ase e Stlenee— 25 Raspes sen iat most important of which was that of the thugs. 4 ae They originated about 200 years ago and were Found. extremely numerous at the time when the | British first gained a foothold in that country, ‘eniisie dis ond uate sas. | Some notion may be got of the scale on which that there was yd joke pad edes MAN UN- they worked from the fact that one of them, jgreat uneasiness feltin | There are in the departments who doubtedly took as much captured a few years ago, confessed to having ’ “Powesey eggs he weer prodinnsiy oth ak intggest in an elophant | e ‘A taken part in 981 deliberate killings of human | bees that represents! However, there are other mer of 1863 n éies ed Bal ; beings. They traveled in gangs, and inasmuch | creatures besides bees that gather honey. For ~ psarrpaloyg pkasyarst ries pet ee nie “ol asthe native governments took no pains to put | example, there is the ‘honoy-wasp’ of tropical \ sar ie & It Will Leave a Trail of Savory Odor Behind the Wearer—Dainty Presses for Walking and Danciag—Stamped Foulard Pretty ow & Young Person. ‘The Recollections of One of the Clerks Who Was Mustered In—The Excitement in the Olty—How a sorfeane Got Even With Hiv Chief—The Arrival of the Fifth Corps. Bpecial Correspondence of The Eveving Star. New Yorx, June 24, 1992. 8S THE SUMMER resorts unfold their shortlved glory there will be o seramble on the part of the ultra-fasbion- them down, their vocation prospered. Each | America and the honey-making ant of Texas ~ JMaryland and Pennsyl- it 9 curiosity, amazement r minor organization in their association, con-| and , to ash Fe “ ‘of the : 4 fear which the cir- | of the ey ig | S » an Mexico. The latter # very abundant sac: Algae i en Tove etl ea emia oe nee ee Ge cus elephant arouses in | Mammoth was a mals, with «long mane on the ‘ining often 100 men, abstained from the | in the meighborhood of Ranta aa a jp he feeling that if fi PRA FE eas, the minds of our chil- | 20k; but the tail and proboscis were missing Practice of ite industry in ite own immediate | eweots it collects are high y esteemed by the ~ « bp 2), Union army under | written for The Evening Star. a tion. | (these, Were eaton by the wild beasts long before | neighborhood, which was none the lessexposed | Mexicans not only aa food, but for medicinal — >" Meade should be de- TALKS TO MOTHERS. ST ee erence | a caney Portions of the body), | The ‘tin, of | to occasional visite from other bands, so that | purposes. ‘Thereisan insect called the “tarma’ vel effects of their feated the rebel leader — — ably all stirred up in the pera eer fy Of gt the slaughter went on continually everywhere. | fn wateriug-place make- A MUSLIN: DELAINE. would push. on in this | What Ose of them ‘Seys About Bhetr Irsties |-- cig bosoms of the ttle wen | dish wool and black haira” ‘The “damp- | On? oMctal of the ast Indie Company, whe | vinous was. Jt looks Mhea giant mosquito, up, and midsummer | a the fit of her bodice, look at the hang of her | direction and endeavor to capture tho na- id ipaih . and women who beheld | ness of the spot where the animal had lain | tre Norbndda testified fn his reports thet | 8nd ite product, which it hides away in holes will be sure to bring | skirt. She certainly must have beon thinking tional capital. It was not until after the re- | ;D9z8 hear the children wooping, O my brothers, the mammoth 7,000 or |so long had in some degree destroyed the during that period '100 people were murdered | under ground, is eagerly sought by the natives its mania. It fs »| ut the plot ofa play while she was dressing. | suit of the three days’ fighting at Gettysbu You'—E_ B. Browning. | 8,000 years ago, as it coasted through the bush | hair; the entire carcass, of which Icoliected the | Wwithie less = quer etoniestMecwnl an raereente brendan There is art in drees. and, while it may be toa) tg Be eed oe D LL 0! CLES, ..| bones on this spot, was nine feet four inches qv a remedy for throat, itttle too early to pre- | degree like the Iny of Shelley's “Skylark” “un- |" known that the tension upon the oficiale |/JVHE WORLD IS FULL OF ORACLES, | near their huts or caves in France and Ger- | Ponen on this spot, Jong from the point of the | "=4e=o*. “There are giant bees in India which suspend dictexactly what that | premeditated art,” it is only so ina very slight | here was relieved and all anxiety removed as to each with his own cure—all for the ills— | many. nose to the end of the tail, without including THEY KILLED POR SPORT. combs as big as house doors from the branches manis will be, but it measure, but like all art it must be acquired by | the safety of this city. mé@htal, moral and physical—of poor humanity. | ‘That elophant which was the companion of | the tusks (which I secured subsequently); these | “It would be incorrect to imagine that the fe . Inthe Ko meien might Tine of hat | study, observation and rofiection. But the biggest scare that Washington has | It is always “easier to tell twenty what to do : . pare aa praciyempebeerrael i ever had, with possibly the salt pad of the | than be one of the twenty to do my own Did- | been extinct as a specien, but not az a genus, | their curves: these two tusks weigh 860 ponnds;| petite for blood. On the contrary, many of the woods, and the famous Keone my ie bates ante few dayr immediately following the first battle | ding.” for hundreds of years. When it was eliminated | ‘hs, petd se yar paneer a | thera belonged to the mgst intelligent and re- | from the blomoms bf the linden trees which wo pe mall safely throngh the doareeg. Bull Run, was a veer later,in the summer of 164, | I have no desire to join this army of wise | from the faunaof this earth we do not know, | which the Anat pet Laide” hick” won| spectable clases. They loved their profession, | Another novelty te which I should call the at- bor ppe enced Be Ee ae cae traits | heads; I do not profess to be a Solomon or a | except approximately within, say, eoveral cen | Toul preserved. ‘This thin was of such extra, | earted, the Killing of people as legitimate primeval man in the old world and the new has are each nine feet six inches measu along | thugs were mere brutal criminals with anap- so abundant in that region. One tribe of peo- Teer ad ee ee eee i camel ee uuste | ple in the province devotes tts attention exclu capital city. His movement was so sudden that | Suide Board to porfeotion. | But in, passing | toreats of France and Belgium when man was a | Ordinary weight that ten men found great diff-| caries of a divinity, wo that they were never | eeittibey keeing. Bee keeping is taxght in but very few, even of the trusted officials of | Along this perplexing life of ours one With her | mere mavage we do know; and we know it, be- | Culty in transporting ft to the shore. After | troubled with y gOS ” a wy in tra ; ugh of conscience on account | town te town sevd “ the goverment. had ang idea of what was g eyes open can hardly help gathering here and | cause man himself, rude and untanght as ho | Moving this down I'dug the ground in various | of their deeds. They were organized usa | {um to tows and from canton to eanton, to happen until word was brought that a : places to ascertain whether any of its bones | ising thre 0 sac. | tat country honey t o:stapte arti force’ ef rebels wat out on tho. Tth street roud | tomothers atthe beginning, iamterd ot necting | AUverBuOand: Mentone, hig lott tus the evk | WeTe buried, but chiefly in order to collet all | Cofding to serie tus event sank emreom: | fren, MONE, She ‘poorend “lawen, tread and ‘The Secretary of War, however, had evidently | 2 Mothers at the beginning, instead of nearing pracieg dope epagieere ssanramoth coup and | te hairs which the white bears had trod into | posed of ‘scouts,’ the second of “sextons,’ the-| Done beiug the most common breakfast. One feared that some movement of ihis kind might | te end, of their motherhood days, marrow bones. but in forcible drawings, etched | B¢, round while devouring the mammoth's | fiird of men whose duty it was to hold the | hey GS mony EA Pezmade, for enrly in that, year the clerks in| | The ‘ery of the children” of our timo, a6 it| on stoneand bone of the big beast itrelf—ita| tre | Athough thie was dificult from | hands of the victims while the letter’ were | prodact a requinid for home conrumyrion ona the varicus government departments were or- | comes to me, is for @ mother; not » nurse, nor | long tusks, ite stiff course hair and great trunk | {Re jrant, of | roper | instru thirty-six | (Poked to death by the stranglers, who formed tthe of it is imported. ganized into military companies ard battalions stern trainer, still lose a slave to their whims, | and ears. Sonne Of bei Nab tow davd hie week was ~ ew — hae» Ameen over continental Eur ieuiture is w remember rightly there Sore” the Garter, | buta true mother, who shall start them on their ‘THE MAMMOTH OF CENTURIES 490. completed, and I found myself in possession of | fessibn and we nadie see at Of choir pro® | very important tntustey gor | masters’ Guards, the War Department Hifies | Y°¥2ge of life as well equipped for its rocks and | _Bofore speaking of the details of the inter- |a treasure’ which amply ‘recompensed. me for | {° pes og echocimasters to pass om | d | broken. In the district of Oude alone, which sti weet and a regiment or battalion composed of Treaa- | quicksands as she is able. Thoy“have a right | esting life of thovo boreal elephants whose | the fatigues and the dangers of the journey | is 170 miles long by 100 miles broad, there. were | proiunes "300,000" naan kop yureneat Russi | ury Department clerks. In all probably about | to demand so much of the woman who £ ds | heavy tread must have often shaken the earth | and thee rable expense of the enterprise." | 974 rogular stations maintained for committing | fy. ancient Wrecks wore famous for honey 1,500 men. J in that relation with them; not wealth, advan- | along the banks of our Alaskan rivers it is well THE CENTUNIES BRIDGED. murders, making, but the bosiness is neglected by thei When Gen. Grant took command of the Army’) tages, education, or this or that, but simply to emphasize the fact that the mammoth, now| In this remarkable manner has civilized man vanes saemene op invapin. modern descendants. Corsican honey is ren- t of the Potomac and siarted to end the war he | and solely a mother, in the fall sense of extinct, tus a i i | as ; dered #0 bitter by the arbutus bi | of the Fosomacand «tarted to end the war be | and sclely » mother, iu of xtinct, and whose boues and tusks we find in | been permitted to bridge the interval of cen itty yours ago the Gouge: river bole #0 bi yy the arbutus blossoms from tention of the men folks is the perfumed under- skirt. It really sees to we asif the young ‘men are all destined this summer, if not to die like a rove in aromatic least to be eiited ‘be perfumed or sachet undarshirt is eadiy made. - All you have to do isto run bands of silk under the lace founces and stn tham full of perfume powdere—orris, verbena, lavender, Iflac—and the thing is done, and you'll leave behind yous trail of savory edors. Bat imagine the effect of several bun- dred of these snohet underukirte in a crowded ball room, in which the swaying of these gu to Conga hag fh p fames in geester abundance. It does Co though that delicate creature, the dancing dude, were really in danger of being suffocated with sweetness. At this season of the years woman's ngs, = the northland today, was almost identical in its in th : | which much of it is obtained sto be unpal- ibe ie meen At Se rere soe | ington, because he didu't intend that the enemy Sas dass anertazoee makeup and appearance with the Indian or oly or aginst Const hae Phat oe: fresh | Bonares and Caloutta was infested during five | Stable. ‘The greatest bockeopare ie the med . aoa pe torts gy | thould get betwgen Lim and tho capital, and he | horn with a baby usually insuros that he shall | Ceylon elephant of the present day. Just about | the whole ot the nurther: cond etererer | months of every year by no less than 250 boats, | are in the Untied Staton, ingle individuals i _— rota with a costume the result is | knew that in the event of any considera! beet ices ta be 5 an tt a t | the same size and weight, only differing in its | snrabs and hardy trees conld grow and upon | Which made » presence of tra: California each own from 2,000 to 12.000 swartns, pincing, ts mp aanel aiesmetien ie | force making an attemy 6 of importance, but unfortunately it does not | coat of thick, coarse hairand under wool. The the flesh of which his savage ancestors thou- | Pilgrims. WI parsengers which they farm out to the ownere of orangeries most ot inos e ee eee ton he could detach so surely bring wisdom. The most conscien- | two Bring specter of elephants are elephas In-| sands of years ago set store by. abcard, ata given signal the upon | and other fruit orchards during the blossoming and sleeves. In this costume the underekirt from his own army and send them here before | tious, as well as the most loving, may fail dicus, the Asiatic elephant and ele- ‘me fetation 3 ‘Adams calls | them, strangled them or broke their backs, and | season. One bee farm in Ran yin 7 he M ry damage could be doue. There | bly fr thoughtk or from pure jj has Africanus, the Africa: resentative. is ‘thi them the wh floating | that state furnishes 150,000 nds of honey and tight sleeres are of a rich faille francaise, A DANCING GOWN. pen Bldg AD pach cosa jerably from thoughtlessness Lager: , nm rep up to the minds’ of naturalists and | threw into stream, where c Pou _ honey awe + and puffed sleeves of ae ont | Were a good mai 1owever. who did not know | norance. Many « mother brin; baire | The mammoth (elephas prinaigenius), has been | | Corpses are too numerous at all times of the | annually. Some bee farmers have floating bee ee ete nals ab nd belt | This illustration shows a charming toilet for | how carcfully Gen. Graut had considered: the upon herself aud Inye up bitter sorrow and re- | aud still continues to ke confounded with the “2trepologists a flood of interesting and sug. ;, - i i year to excite any remark, such being to this | houses, which follow the streams to find flower- are of fine goll gimp. You may make this |® Saturday night hop, which may be made up | situation and who were uneparing in their criti- | grets for her age by the mistakes of her youth, | mastodon (mastodon giguntous). which is also at ip ps hy aden phen we be: pear caer | Gay the ordinary’ method ‘of disposing of the | ing pastures for the insecta. "This wes deve tm Gown we fn deck ad tht becbrep. © | many fms, ganzy material, the cutout boing | chm¥ oF wlint they considered his earelesmow | For in those ayn of quiet and relection with | extinct, another huge proboacilean beast | skeleton and a. past. of tho. skin aod hair at- | dead adopted by Gor People who cannot afford | Egypt thousands of ‘rears ago, min ren : : pre mg the seat of government so unpro-| the results before her, she can lool and | that closely resembled the elephants as we know | the F : to bury them. plans practiced were to | been proposed to send swarms by ship to Herat tie cide cee A (he bans there asia | ected. And when Early appeared at the very | see her errore in training, them, differing from them generically in de- | ‘bed as it stands in the museum of the Acad- fe Ly Wert ti i i ‘i i inveigie travelers to the m stations or to indies in winter. Wattenn bow with long ends. If made up ina O¥tkirts of Washington these critics bitterly | No matter what outside duties seom to be de-| tails of denution, but still resembling them | °™Y of Sciences of St. Petersburg. capiats ‘Gan Sa Selous on! easy ee pale blue a passementerie band of silver crosses | denounced the policy of taking so many men | manded of a human being, to a mother nothing | closely otherwise, Only having longer and larger ee ee night time being commonly chosen in India for the bust and meets at the back under the bow, | fom the defenses of Washington. on earth can stand before her ob! ‘ ition to her | tusks. | thus found is entirely separated now from the | making jourgeys on account of the heat of the | Tothe Eéitor of The Evening Star: ‘The laced Swiss belt is a very pretty novelty There was no time- for delay, however, and | child. There is peiing except this which can-} | The mammoth, however, is the only elephant | skin, has fallen out, except in one small area, day. Owing to the extraordinary notions of | The cleverly written papers on natural bis- in lenther of various colors. At the back and | the organizations of department exnployes were | not be done by some other person, but no one | that ranged from the temrerate zone into the | where it is still attached. Itconsists of two | fate held by the natives of the orient, this | tory in Saturday's Stam are good reading for front the two pointed edges are laced with af once ordered into service and we went ont to | living can “mother” her child. By ‘“mother-| arctic, It never appedtred in the tropics or im | gorts, common hair and. bristles, and of. each | wholesale destruction of human life occasioned jtbusy folk to whom scientific rescarch end silk cord. Onveach side there is buckle, ‘This | ‘8¢ front. Those who were here at that time| ing’ {do not. mean doing everything for his} South America or any part of the southern there are several varicties differing in length | very little remark. If a person died, it was the | prey ancy fate ub Sihpeieiion wah neh ‘a sian ue wale Cod bic well remember the intense excitement that pre- | physical welfare, such as washing and dressing | hemisphere. The mastodon, however, ranged and thickness. That which reat fixed “on | will of the Deity, and © there could be no use — <m, GSD Ware ak. camaner cosa, "ue lacing cord | Yailed all through the city and the awful | and looking after him every moment. It is| all the way down from the temperate ‘zone to | the skin is of the color of a camel, an inch and a | in stirring up an investigation of the matter, _ | Who are interested to study nature's doings and areakl belied ot tha bontan. anaiety when it was known that a skirmish had | never best, where it can be avoided, that | the tropics on both hemispheres and was com-| half long, very thick set and curled in locke, Tt PRE EOE, creations in the animal and vegetable forme of Crepous are much affected by young girls, actually taken place out on the 7th street road | mother should wear herself out physically or | mon in South America, sy life. Their every-day tat aaves one the ald wes ° is interspersed with a few bristles about three They are usually made up with a deen chicory | BY Fort Stevens. A large number of these | nervously with this care. On the contrary, if | raz MAMMOTH APPROACHED THE NonTH POLE. lanches ior of adark reddish color. Among} “The motive of the thugs in their business | trouble of “looking up’ Jus work, starts Fu on the better of the ckint croned Latics, | department clerks who went upon military possible, she should carefully keep hervelf fresh mm k es i 3 - | the separate parcels of hair brought in by Mr. | of slaughter was two fold. It was a highly | the old upon pleasant topics and recollections double puffed sleeves, deep endls and corcelets, |4UtY at thet timc ad seen service in the | For hts sake, Bodily sorvices oan be performed Fort piascag sages sas Mo tn ony ex" | Adams is some rather redder than the thort | stimulating sport to them, with e certain | and serves as well to paint the roed to aclomce the latter being invariably. trimmed with three | eld in the early part of the war, and so they | by a nurse, but the mother shonld be the sym- ‘ole northern hemisphere o' : : for the young who have aspirations that way. rows of narrow ribbon, brought down toa point ke raw recruits. We marched out | pathizer and friend, the confidant of his joys| the globe from the fortieth degree of north of plunder. In| Short time lute gentleman in the Rea HGMs cal Speed ete chon coma and with as much regularity as regular | and sorrows, the provider of his ‘and | latitude to the sixtieth degree aud often went ing ‘of six per. | BoFthern part of New Jersey who was draining ‘Gihoues off triamaiinn au the oul: pS, and performed our military duties with | the source of hi. information, 4s far north as the seventieth degree of latitude, | long. These long hairs or bristles are well ex- | sons yielded £40,000. Because the thugs con- | Miasmatic swamp on his place into a beauty From what I can‘hear even young ladies who | Sch precision as to win the commendation of ANSWERING QUESTION: for there, at least, at the mouth of the Lena) pressed in thatcrade drawing made by pre-| fined their attention to the native people, who | *Pot of lily ponds, with native water plants, adoro athletics and discuss the points of a game | fhe Sciar or velustcer mervice, I. remebey | _ The latter is by no means the least iniportant | Fiver, thé carcass Of « mammoth wa’ ombean | historic man, which was found in the lone ave | made no complaint. a long time pamed before | brakes and orchids, some of them lovely as Sates as Fenton A or slcades, quia, | Waile we were out on the 7th street road Presi- | duty. ‘The mother should keep herself not only alin daciautas hl ee | ee | oe British authorities took any active measures | $0 ak 4 To account for this extraordinary fact that eie- FOSSIL IVORY. for putting down the evil; but, when the work | ¥®*% great pond for Victoria Regia, to be ? A dent Lincoln came ont there and made a little | so well informed as to answer rightly all an- | phants 4 well Aer rg Maegan © : eae BOS bag wasn pata mt) work | at the proper tem, by a partl powder box will be much incrflonce’ even on | speech f0 us, assuring ‘ws that succor was on | werable questions of the wager, apen inind, but | Phte'it hes beset ecatety wed ete orth | ‘The immense amount of fowsil ivory which | of supp ing it was once begun, it wes | tnerged furnace. Ho hed his Illy aud the! Boating partics. ‘The reacon of thie is that com. the Way end all we would have to do would be| fresh enough to take an interest in doing wo that a tropical climate once prevailed on the | ba# been derived from tho remains of the mam- curried on with suc p 4 Of one | nd a.clump of papyrus in his hot houses. giecions amet be hapt in baremeny with the oat | hold the army in check for, a very brief | and to doit in a seus intarosting o Um, One | bank of the Yukon and the Lena, and a slight | moth is beyond reliabie statement, Tt has boon Se ao cave | Talking over his plans at dinner I remarked runeny period. His remark, of course, inspired every | who has not observed closely no idea how | deviation in the axis of the earth's pat d | taken annually large quant , tons e ‘upon the slender stems of the papyrus, wonder- Sorang, mae hte necoly a na na ared thatthe | Gne with a determination t0 do hiv duty to the | much the general intelligence of a man depends | Ser ntch,in the axis of the carth’s path aroun ote are large sul lotus | ii sevent >. the sun ha: ‘a the di ste. 1d the | tons of it, into the markets of the world during | “6% how the Egyptians prepared shoots Fashionable color. Whs? Because it doesn't | fullest extent, and the records of the War De-| upon carefal and. intelligent answers to the | desolate mountain ridges thai we dnd there now | the last 250 years, and even today ‘the quest in | 25 and 1839 1.562 thugs were aay ns ake Ss show rice powder. partment will show that in the brief skirmish | questions of the child. instend of rose bushes and palm trees spread | Siberin and’ Alaskn is unabated. Hemains of | vom S82 were — be ag coon said he, ina man's offhand way of dis Traveling dresses are made up in soft wooi- | ‘Mat did ensue the department clerks were fuily | | By allowing herself to be unable to answer | out over fertile plains and fruitful hills. jelephas pinnigenins shave been found also in | Ported. A part o pine. gedlbve ng volunteers who were | these requirements of the wide-awake minds in # 5 n, her care the mother not only foolishly pongs mak Aool eh Bhat ~ ' The idea of an elephant, such as we know | them to be, living amid suow and ice was sim-| been dredged up by the fishermen in the channel A . ith | ficient as the regu ens, the skirts being fully gored, lined with | ** ©! satinet and finished with a ruching ‘on tho im- | "ith them on that occas side. The corsages are pointed in front, have WHEN THE REAL SERVICE CAME. tae Fd cot brresteek sorts Gf mother- : . a é ood, but she teaches her ren the ead low 8 f ee ae eee ee ae a erm ss the drill that we had had for | son cf gotting on without her, of keoping thetr | ply preposterous, and it was thonght thas there | of Happiburgh ‘during the space’ of ealy adda finish to the leg-o'-matton sleeves. The | tre gon, ene Previous was manifest when | own interests and their own affairs to them-| must have been a climatic cataclvam at some thirteen Years. Not only are these vestiges of the wepocenbbiongy water vest is separate or may be buttoned to the | ¢ time for reel service arrived, and the wis- | selves. She may lament in later years that her | not remote period of the carth's history, When, mammoth found ail over England on the dry | S#6© 0 unwary traveler in con poring of a question, “they ground it up into ® great nuinbers in the British Inands, Wood- | B¢VeF to practice unnecessary erueliy. nor in | Pot a thee anake meer nowadays, ons ward, in his geology of Norfolk, calculates that | "3 / molded it into sheets.” “I had often heard : in the ith the tnvenlca cf our aay, bast Soomete countenanced, though certain gangs adi wt Saventians of our Gay, a the practice. "Most commonly a thug would en- SS ee a when ereation, e bu | domof the offcialé who ordered the military or-| sonand her daughter never confide in her, ‘ : tal land, but they have been and are being dredged | the fuperior etrangler would throw his own Tin blesses eeryng ot th sums | he Hack A MOAN En otters wn fly demonstra, | Neve ek het, adv Dot why shoal dhe ex | Mavens he a ioc et eau te, Tented ithe" Gano aa fhe Hoc gale aroun he Stortanaics wok rt scheme of garniture. ————+-e2-—___. ‘The brief struggle occurred on what then | Peet them to do so if she has never made her- | nnder wool, and was so organized ag to gain its British channel. A large Russian industry of CDcKe ‘ tie iy The Btoe ine devdiaped into ano of es howe fon eaten | felt necessary to them, never taught them to| living from the branches or the weeds fiber dredging for foesil ivory in the Okotsk sea is | *6¥inst his spine. the rages of dp menet Unt er el aoe PROGRESSIVE HAMMOCKING. the farm of Mr. Tay and now forms a portion | feel that sho is interested and helpful im all | of trees, then the ides was” qnite right of such Still in active prosecution, but on the Alaskan POISONERS AXD ROBBERS, Secs beret trons seh ema of the Rock Creek Park, and the few graves that | their plans and undertakings. en clophant living in grest good. side no concerted single attempt has been made | “Besides the thugs, there were in India the Bion bas emall close sleeves and aneuld invarie. | A Western Girl Invents » Game on Which ~~ Gt eee ee as cody ong A GENTLE FRIEND. the pole as wascompatible with the hardy thus far by any corporation to develop the | ‘poisoners’ and the ‘robbers.’ The former all Diy be worn with s sleeveless vest, for if you There Would Seem to Be No Flies. strife. ‘The next afternoon word came that the | _ Besides the confidant, a mother should be tho | of trees or shrubs. But how or why it whould Dusinesss belonged to one caste of dealers in toddy. b Make ite loaves lange enough to go over an | From the St. Louis Globe-Democrat fifth corps had arrived, and shortly afterward a | wise, yet gentle friend, that shall correct the | have been exterminated long before civilized |, Aor ptetnl aig” Eatnn tad of Acres | They went singly or in gauge, haunting Aer eee — = Flt lt -dowa | ‘The young people in one of St. Louis’ pret- | long line of troops marched up 7th street, their | errors of her children without alienating their |™" © sage, however, of this are the remains of another giant pachyderm, | stopping places of travelers, where they would | the object of inquiry, often, no doubt, to F Collar and Inpela. Nor should it ever be made | tiest suburbs are ina state of feverish excite- | ‘end being frm and confident, their facet fixed | hearts, She should be the impersonation of | Sriwat hoon restricted, seitee in whe cacaf | the mastodon, but it never. ranged "in the chi | tekt advantage of any opportunity to drop a | amusceent, I tdllogot the y fashion and tol | and steadfast, their guns glistening in the sun, per nalhd ‘ chlands: bi tiful glad .- | Small quantity of pounded ‘datura’ seeds into directed | ment over a new gumo that has been devised by | their oficers ‘apparently eager for a brush with | Listes {he soul of honor, the always ready ad-| nearly all other extinct animals, to its bones fucky and iliseourl seems to Lavebeet lischosen | the waytarer's fool. Then they would rob him | Fight ufice and ikely wy some of their number. It is called “ hi é " viser and helper, and their best friend always. | and teeth, it would have been deemed a hazard- | ky seem to b os : right office and likel; um number. — ed “Progress” | the enemy, aud as they reached the line that we | This is hard to live up to?—granted: but it a| sna speculation to have conceived a priori herding places on this continent ages and ages | and leave him to take his chance of recovering | portant type-written commu! in my ive hammocking” and isso full of golden op- | hnd formed after the skirmish we knew that all | mother’s work is the most difficult, is the | ancient elephant, whose remaing "8°- In the Big Bone Lick of Kentucky the re- | from the dangerous effects of thenareotic. The | gearch for knowledge, but I was not made to Portunities in a sentimental way that it is des- | denger was passed and that Washington was | most important work in the world, it is also the |" rpecageeadirid apn Mista mains of not less then 100 mastodons and | ‘robbers’ likewise went about in gangs, stealing | fecl so. The geutleman in charge had tined to become very popular with the youth of | PW thoroughly safe. The boys came up with | sweetest, and brings the richest reward. and Alaska, had been clad like most | tWenty mammoths-have been found. | wherever and whatever they could, and heard of that bulletin outside acheer that told of their joy at-being able |” "In those days of woman’ s rremsensy sami Sor etetanan ing such chances for incendiarism as fell in this the vests should | both sexes. i in these days of woman's awakening, a com-| existing quadrapeds adapted for such a cli- 4 A bright rt, to whi ith al | With an coon henctieg hand we Fasponded | mon feeling among young mothers possessed of | mate, with a donble garinent of close fur and SS eee oe ee oe eel right Toung sitl, to whom, with several | with an oven heartier cheer of thankful- | taste and ahilities orying for development, and | Mate, with ® double garment of lose fur aud a Rajpoots, who, on being conquered by the Mo- others, is due the credit of having given this | nes# at the approach of such a noble y ing spe of ambition to achieve something, is, that chil- a i | They Feed on Flowers Like Humming | hammedans, vowed to revenge themselves upon new divernion to the world, thus describes it: | body of veterans, The fifth corps had | dren are a hindrance, that thels proper care | uence whee yaks ith scntteeat Birds—Damage That They Do. mankind, “You see, each girl is provided with a ham- | T¢PUtation for good fighting qualities, and it | demands the sacrifice of the moilier s best years eoarse hairs of ons kind onl; 66()5, PAPA, SEE THE PRETTY HUM- INCREASE OF THE PEOPLE. } " 2 was because Grant thorough#¥ relied upon their ex esa 3 Sega ne . = s i mock, in which sho reclines, gracefully or un- | commander thnt he selected. this portion of his |" the f* sive ting tla A WONDERFUL DICOVERY. ming bird! From the facts which I have mentioned you |, On my way out the memenger, inquired if I gracefully, according to the extent of her expe- | force to come to the rescue of the endangered possi coreag tes sa" But in 1799 the wonderful and unlooked-for| The object at which the child pointed was | ®4n Well conceive that human life in India was whet wanted. | f enid, i on i That is a 6 take, although Ps . added, rience in hammocking, during the game. The | Cpital. Soldicrs never received a more hearty s A serious mictake, although a natural | aieovery of the body of an entire mammoth | poised above a big white flower on rapidly | 20t valued very highly up to the time of British took place in this way. During the summer of | agitated wings, robbing the blossom of nectar | domination. In fact, the history of the coun- mocks are hung far enough apart so that ees oe ai these troope = thoy disem- one, for the eae at twenty it appears that at no one can see or hear her neighbors, and above | barked at the 7th street wharf and marched up | thirty-five she Mhall be past enjoyment or culti- & 4 je i ith wholesale tragedies each is suspended a Chinese lantern witha | 7h street to the front. People lined. the ration, The contrary trues she wilt wets | that your a ‘Tungusian, memed Soomaycher, | with its cindray- Se ae Si leg Beli sicnpaen od epee eng by poms mr number on it: but these, of course, will be | Walks and cheered them as they passed. Faces | her prime, with (if blessed with fair health) S| “That is not a humming bird, pet," sid the | Sorbo princes were so fond of killing that they | gain some information for my blown out early in the proceedings. A chaperon | that had been before anxious and weary now | thirty or forty years of vigorous mental and ap : | gentieman who sat on the poreh in the gather-| yould go hunting for their own subjects in | upon him to explain. is required—preferably two—a lady and a gen- | looked glad and content, and a feeling of per- | physical life before her. Her judgment will be ar menmuete Scary bse hant the faselltecs ing dusk of evening.. “It is a hornblower | intervais of leisure, destroying them by whole-| “Look up,” said ho. tleman. To start the game the boys draw num- | fect satisfaction immediately 6; matured, her powers under better control and ie = cor py beige Beli wel mend age at moth, Once upona time it wasa big green | sale simply for amusement. In one respect the | rily in and out a small hole bers from a hat, and then each hunts up the | entire city. Early realized as well as any one | the enthusiasm and zest of accomplishment no lied DUneoaL, Taae far Broth this Aves eck, eee. * illar.” doing away with these causes of death has | above the door I saw a bi hammock which ‘corresponds to the number | else th entertained any idea of eni- | jess strong than in her youth. © {ites Whe locality ofhbe Tanmooie mateested | ane ig worked unfortunately, inasmuch as it has re- he begins to tell the | tering and destroying the city of Washington | ‘Do not grudge the years you devote to your it different times brought the largest and finest | 4 c#te=Pillar, papa’ sulted in an increase of the people beyond the girl in nite love story. By the rules the stories ~ pete od Socag’ Romie now ania pearly | babies,” eaid a wise sidesiy woman in my hear- Ps ong} A pollen oy Se ube mais “Yes, dearie. That insect which looks so! power of the country to sustain them. The must be impersonal. and he acreetly elipped away into Vir- | ing to a young one who felt that the’ be = ~ es i] ii it y ii } i Bengal tual) i “But of coure they won't be. That,” she | ginia, taking with hit all the atock and pro- | of her lie wes poing tate the aarere A | frozen clits, or, in other words, in Siberia and | like a humming bird, os you say, is an enemy | population of ose quo Ji mmol ‘ “ riage t it FY. 4 id | Of my own, because it destroys tobacco. Per-| the last century. Inasmuch as very early mar- aaded with a laugh. “is a matter that lies with | Visfows that he could gather in his line of | will never regret Te will pay better than any- las barca eit nts cekccee aie haps Lwould not have bad to pay so miich for | riage is a religious obligation binding oa every the story teller andhis conscience. Well, at the | ™re thing elxe all the rest of your hfe. Enjoy | Mite 'the sca ani the river waters, Some at | this cigar Iam smoking if there were no such | Hindoo, quite irrespective of means for #up- end of fifteen minutes the chaperon beats a AGAIN AT TREIR DESKS. every minute of it; art and music will keep, these cliffs are fifty and sixty fect high, extend | Moths in existence.” porting’a family, the misfortune goes on pro- | tom-tom and the boys move up one hammock,| ‘The department militia returned to their | You can have them later. for miles along tha coust and run back inland | “But the moth does not eat tobacco, papa.” | gressively, It is reckoned that, taking the | Let the natural history writer “look this up, anti each tellsanother story to « new listener. | duties at their desks and were thanked for the | ., B® thoughtfal young mother took the ad- | £0F miles along the cox o, my dear. but it lays eggs that hatch out | whole of British India, 40,000,060 people go | and I will forget the headache which followed | Rng stories, mind yoo, mast all be different | Secs ut they bad pectorsaed, The weitere | cee Nene ane whl ecping up a warm ‘This man Soomaycher, after cruising for eov-| into.eaterpillars, and the caterpillars feed on | through life continually bungrs, not being able | the bamboo sont in the plewure of , One Cannot + same story to two ‘ ‘ per . 'Y | terest in the world of art, hearing and readin; sae bacco Ther ‘i meals daily. reading the explanation. ¥ gizls.”” | organization wos still kept up, however, but | everrthing she could on the subject, and. thus | $l days under those peculiar frozen bluffs of | the tol coat efert gh anh deren iy 9 premeee tue a ant. hs Lake Ooncool, eaw among the blocks of ice a | Over in Marsland and Virginia and the planters PUTTING A STOP TO CANNABALISM. yma y = pdendony al ee al leas mass, but did not possess the time or have to fight them constantly. The moth de- rat Brit b Drawing a Letter Kound the World. tho wash of tha: tusturay) 7 reais aad phical power to got at ft. ‘The thought, how: | POwita its eggs on the leaves and the new-born | _ “Among the practices which the British gay an cgay one y. y worms eat holes through them, w! tried hard to do away with is that of canni-| "4 lotter cannot be so addressed that it will go “And they must all be love stories?”” asked | onty once after that were they called upon to | #! the | the reporter. | do duty. This was at the time of Lincoln's in- | her t “Certainly. ¢ Oh, it's more fun. The boys | wuguration in March, 1565. ‘ i iy int } : , which render out there are scouring the town for short love | It was understood that an attempt would be | as three or four bright, promising children, | ¢¥@t» haunted him, and in 1800, or the follow-| Ton neeloss for making cigars,’ When they are . ier n g around the world. It will be sent to the point stories. De Maupassant is im great demand. | made either to capiure him ou bis way to the | aud more and more leisure for siudy and work, | 8 *" full grown they are about threo inches long. indicated quickest route. But some of them draw on their own experi- | Capiiol to take the oath of office or to take his | a8 their time 4s taken up in echool and play, fare pas tpg 7 pi ene —. They are bright green with small red heads aid living like monkeys in huts built in the tops of rennet dlng wey 2 oy Larne LACE-TRINMED TAFFETA. oe = ae. Well, when the rounds | life before he should return to the White House. Ouive Tuornz Minter. | Yi". solidly imbedded in the glacial: ice, ap- | *¢ Very fat and unvleasant.” : anes foresta 1 along from Calcutta, was|son addressed has shifted ' his so Nines ge The above ustration prevents another very | {ois aunorona, tales te Sie Candee atin | And so on the night before the inanguration the Re eae nope | parently frozen in about ten or twelve feet abore | “{pyt becomes of them after they get big?” | Til recontly notorious for anthropophagy. Bat | shopping lace in such « manner as to keep con- prettily designed Agured foulard with « deep | « secrot ballot is taken. the gitls voting for the | aud were held in readiness all tnt night and the | From the Rural Collaterstor H the bevoh level, with six or seven feet of frozen f ave and tlanta, | ¢ Most horrible human sacrifices were of-| tintally’ ahead of a letter sent to him, and Hace flounce and lace banque, rivton corselet | bor slry taller and the boys ior ee Boer fae | andere held in readiness allthat night andthe | From the Ture) Oollaborator, ||| Sesh eapping’ it The ‘Tungoose, like al of oon fered by the Khonds of Orissa to their earth | thus the lettor, by having the address changed Eira eevee, also banded with ritbon. | tener. ‘That's where the real funny marsctmums | Woaine iba. fins. ener abtednnel oo wintaes:| Shas iad betes thet Basbands amteved oe Dales a by vane pert prergm hie Vought aap tee = x o gown may be made up very stylishly in. for, of course, each girl will vote for the man | those who were engaged in it had discovered | with te ho had pai ‘ t, i Then t i ca ‘place she likes best, and vice vervahenco the chaperon | that extruordinary preparations 4o prevent any | tention ia the days of his ndbiescenee te eovent | poet oy winch "ne what Giant beast, the ware} = Eo '¥ pre a on dolescence, to it it} teeth of which he was in search of, but ‘the: see some very will become the sacred repository of one-luif | accident to the President had been made I do | the gravest hae we _ ; pre rl and there will, 20 Gosen true love talea.”” | not know, but Ido kuow that there was no 00- | tomblativg theme, eur a ee ee ——- = them at the “What about the prizes?" + | easion for our services. Hiedoe ae seem tmunates_ in mournful | alive and moving in ite ee ite! | but they Ii —_ ' out the ; ‘ sb wide, | emion {oF our ser wured to her companion: ‘Ah, | because those natives long have had the belief | D&t they live on cos of the dine i po ‘There will be six first prizes on each side,| Wheu this military organization of the clerks | jughee, he mura i be larly on those of the ‘honeysuci porlerehnd Be se Sere he ee ea | reed ee te tee ny aa same eee ce srt | Set eaten feng enw a r y forts to devise | ordered there - a Belte now so modish. | something new and startling in the way of sum- | noyance felt by some uf the older employes at Pedic dna phy mang apa EA yay tongue pardon yd nd deep epenie mer amusement. being compelled to do military duty... ‘The oie Se are not pene Soins ie dloase bu pancetta D7 EO 4 younger men, of couree, didn't object to it, and 4 watch spring brenda 4 ‘The morning a EEN a those who zd Leen in the army weleomed the ‘ lay their Ehenie- gumencr places h hours of exercise ax a relief from desk work, is ae em. te ect, From the Detroit Tribane. but the old fellows who had no taste for mili: “But what maiden. She A head adorned with a shaggy and unman-| tary evclutions and some of whom bad eonside “a nua — face ageable whiskers was thrust out of the window | €T! iculty jn trying to repress their nat Jand is to- cen ae in | and a voice that fitted the beard inquired: ural sympathies for the eouth were decidedly dis- ‘time | bacco little black hors slouchiness “What is it?” — py wg ore ‘he biae uaifor cat | along, of the blos- suds and. wear ‘Take her in her “Oh, is this Mr. Higgins?" came a still small | of a federal soldier. When the order was first support be | come and fields also et pee voice from the shade uf the doorway below. Saade Chere was no eperuption avd every pect ‘and the gnormous mass fell by | 2d, kill off their with e boutonniere, «Elan Coun right up to Ko. 414 eeeet | We colgnd termcal te asl Eee etneers ite rn reight down ‘he sandy beach below. | Bead ing Tet, OMe, Derigetty boseming eater, jast as guick as you can and bring your instra- | 8&4 uon-commisnioned officers of the compa- fact that it waa dead; cul. the enormons tusks eye of ith = d00p ments. dies had am opportunity at tiese dlls to pay out and loaded his ‘with the flesh £ nr eae eee I ain't no doctor. I'm a car- | off good many scores upon those who were for the use of his dogs. He took theivery over to ee ae woe oes Higgins lives two doors below," | Suthocity aver them in the ofice, nd some of the Lenn and. old “the handsome 834 for 89 its sexs ing, Brojecting came down with « slam that | them didnot hesitate to domo.” Tgubles to.a trader and then told the natives of ‘doally oe our pense T know one sorgeant who had something of a region, ike iia tg ig eg nao mey dashing gil a he | 206, or Platere who know 20 too. ‘among ‘This pietuire shows a traders story, and at ei, te amo tine sat roar pl food upon : : ae a taking ‘traversed at sa at large bow with long late able to say when. skirt is ect cf with pleated flounces. ‘sived 5 Ope Snes der Weuan we, sandsome . Rs ; :

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