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THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. C. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 15, 1892—SIXTEEN PAGES. ; ll — — —— ~ ——— — bin} antes hat th \t, bi ee F a Ns" ig cane} eee - machinery. ey know just what they want - cave. Stumbling, sometimes falling, but get- that was to be obtained from it, Ow of A NEW NEGKO Prorr. and they have excellent judgment as to what is THE W AT E R W ITCH ting up and going on, over the rocks, through VICE BREEDING RI IN yaoe horses were mostiy southern gentlemen. | ae good. There are a number of good-sized cities, | Yi 4 4 + | the water that four hours previous bad been 4 4 ANU «| But the time oi when people ic the north | A Rising (and Descending) Laureate Die and I piayed eleven months in three cities such jolly fun to wade, on to the open air and saw that there was money in the pastime. A covered tn an Ohio Blevater. alone. I traveled all over Australia, went ates the open sky that we ‘nover expected to see reat sentation was made when Falsetto, owned | Prom the Indianavolis Journal ; to the gold regions and had success . : ., again. by Hunt Keynolds, came from t! an everywhere. I can. got an engagement any | A Mysterious Cave, Inhabited by the |*Tncia my catdle low to s00 the path, but the | $1,500,000 Spent Every Day on} sot at saratogn the foctest horse tn the norta, | _ 7B Poetic taste and ability of « young oat time I want it there and I consider the country " smoke and foul air extinguished Teeter that ae ‘ Spendthrift, the sire of Kingston and Lamp- | Ted man of Dayton, Ohio, attracted the atten- one of the bost paying amusement countries of King of the Water. bad air reaches our heads we are gone,” Ernest Horse Racing in This Country. | lixiter. Spemduhrift was owned by JT Keone, | tion of members of the Western Association of ‘the world. I went from it to Ceylon and played eee aid. Faleetto and afterward the same | Writers at its last meeting there, 4 Dr. James at Colombo for several weeks and then went We had reached the second chamber, and San Raalidmbearmnae horse capturel the Kenner «take, w Newton Matthews of Mason, Ill. writes to the on to Hindoostan.”” Sa . | only the narrow path between it and the first | p> the largest that had ever been 1 2 “ aa aoe LEGEND OF PANAPASHE. | iy momromaiber Siren and we tet| PROFITS OF THE TRACKS. Journal concerning him tn the following ap- ime, ainoonting to $3, om a the pool, In i thereupon bought Falest “ . er our waists, 60 dered the won uaq.Vory much, indeed,” replied Mrs. Potter. | 4 rege Cave Which Possesses Not Only | few moments’ search we fontd de’ pat cad Poo! Rooms Where Gamblers Wateh for Prey | on Ne ae mngeadnae Tattended a meeting of the western authors, Pr sa a ie woes to — Lovely Decorations and a Mysterious River, seen rie ag et Here the smoke was so | Like Spiders—Clerke and Shop Boys Who} The only racing owners in the eect te those | About half way down the informal program the eed pene ap og poe gg one popula: Dut te Peopled by = Veritable Demon and | 11) tN. Manat vot — Je aor pe ky Play the Races—Racing by Electric Light— | days were rich men, who found It amusing to | PTesding officer announced the reading of « tion. The Island of Hong Kong belongs to| His Bride—Some Exciting Experiences | room wo wont. + king our uncovered hands| ¥#bulous Profits of the Race Track. possess fast horses. Pierre Lorillard owned 1 Dunbar, Just the name fore England, though all the laborers and many of ands and Fire. against the jutting rocks, having naught but Parole and Iroquois, which latter was the only vught I. Great was the eurprise of the the merchants there are Chinamen. From Hong the drip, drip of the water that laved our American racer that has ever won the derby in | audience to seo stepping lightly down the aisle, Kongd went to the big Chinese city of Canton. smoke-begrimed faces, and thinking that it | Spectal Corvspondence of The Evening Star. > | England, capturing that event ir ISS. George | between the rows of fettering, fae and the ax, ‘This piace has about a million or 40 inhabitunts, UR HORSES WERE | Was to be the last sound we would ever hear, New Yorx, October 14, 1892, | Lorillard owned the Duke of Magenta and Tom |sembied beauty and wit of Dayton @ clone but there are few English in it. The next whon hark! 9 faint crackle of our smolderi i prietor of the | der negro lad, as black as the cove of Saco stepped in the pool. In a moment we were “How did you like China and Japan?” Preciative vetu. A month or twoago, while in Dayton, Obie, Ochilt Wi tor pm big city I played in was Shanghai, saddled, lunch 04 bonfire! We located the sound, and by it found ORR MONEY 3 nck csaeterare Ferncliffe stud, at the head of whi: was Pride | pyramid, He necended the rostrum with which the foreigners call the Paris of the cast. S553 wraps ready, but where | tho mouth of the cave and slowly crept out to pent on horee racing | of the Yj August Belmont had a stud | coolness and dignity wed entertainer, Tt has good thea o geapetetr Gethardinye was our guide? The lous lighten or grace a try. pomrly | ene ,villag®, Auarant Belmont ten us Jness and dignity of @ cultared en neluded Baden Baden and Susquehanna, | and delivered a poem ine tone “as musical than is expended in any | the dam of Potomac, Leonard Jerome and | is Ap lute.” "Tie wen applauded to the kind of legitimate busi- | David Dunham Withers were also owners of | echo between the «tanzes, and heartily eneored ness, It is reckoned | fie horses. It was perceived by certain busi-| at the conclosion, He thon disappeared from that a million and a} ness men that racing was getting a hold on the | the bh, denivins be had entered ft, and | people of the no nd the Dwyere, who were | many were the whispered conjectures as to the half of dollars are in-| then butchers at the Washington Market, en-| personality of the man and the originality of vested every day dur-| tered the Sold, purchasing an interest in a horse | his verses, none believing it possible that one ing the season in this| tamed Virgil! Subsequently bought | of his age and color could produce e thing of form of gambling. New | B@@amanthus from Belmont and also the | such evident merit aly a wy | pcting: plater” Charlie Gorham. Thus ther | After repeated inquiries I enoceeded tn lo ‘ork is surroun ¥ | formed the nucleus of what was destined to be- | cating the rising lnureate of the colored rece, and called upon him. He was an elevator bow to Kob ilies Sie to d then on to| sented to lead race tracks and the city | come a great stable. ~~ | to Kobe, another big town, and then ot sented to th tot derful “P: : pense tag be does of Hiodstslen, und tush sha sees thinking | Sekcbatio cod Sabin, At okie "S paces e way to the wonderful ““Pana- | back the curtains and lovers sit on a moonlight contains 100 pool rooms, ON a BUSINRAS BasTs. in one of the down-town business blocks. I IN STR ANG E L AN DS seriously of returning to Indiaduring thacom= | before the mikado at his palace and he | Pashe” cave, tweaty-fve miles from the agency | lawn and build air castles, but the kind in | eleven of which belong to one firm. They are| At that time the only rmcing ground in the | found him seated ina chair on the lower land- \ aN VANUE dha jing year. She showed me photographs of her-| gave me a Japanese . > eet English and Ameffeans and French. It has) §Uys6 9M Meme revious evening Scar many rich people living in it and you need as ; ae te Al Iedian, Ree Cee good clothes to appear in the Anglo-Shanghai | eis trail, along rest we went in search of Scar- society as you do in London society. I acted . — * | face. Gone! and gone was the Piute pony that here for some time and then went to Japan. 1) . every cave, hill, creck | he bad ridden in the morning—gone was our sailed across the inland sea and landed first at or canon far better than | food, and alas a pretty Navajo blanket that did Nagasaki. ‘The trip from Shangha! iso delight- | \ he knew the grassy | not belong to Scartacs, ful one and Nagasaki is one of the prettiest cities as plaza where he| We hurriedly dried our clothes, ate the little fn the world. It has about 150,000 people ' tod the Japanese houses in which these live are pov" actors pande seni Seager emai eer Duilt around the sides of great hills which slope | (AGS on sunny afternoons, - r AT THE TAS MAHAL. down into beaatifal bay. From here I went had reluctantly con- ribet re eget = ng dog, which I have | Stes. Our entreaties and offers of good lunch Heelies nom do {heir worst. | called “commission offices,” because there is a! north was Jerome Park. Lucky Baldwin of a glancing at the July Cr zling rain that chilled and neatly blinded us, | 1#¥ forbidding betting on races between May | Culifornia, Hagin, the copper king; Congress | Xt h tiene $0 caneunse with tee Guan be We missed the ford, but concluded to go on, | 15 and October 15, except at the tracks. Legal me into the clevator, and during s trusting to find another, iny spirited little bay | ingenuity drove a coach and four through this burg: Corrigan and othors undertook to estab- | excursions “rom floor to Moog 1 gathered from ,,and n notes on « handy pencil tablet. self ‘taken in front of the famous Tuj Mabal at | named efter him, “*Mutsuhito.’ ‘When I played and cigarettes had met witha shake of the Agra. This ‘is the finest temple of the world, | in Tokio we had to keep the play going all day, | head and “Coch (no), me heap scared Pana- It ts of the purest of white marble and is of vast | and we began to act at7 o'clock in the mora- | pashe,” but when Ernest offered money his fear Mrs. James Brown Potter Among | extent, put it is put togethor as deli ing and it was not until dark that we stopped. | Pas oat offere y ae ished. It was three hours after sunup, the | following closely the white ridden by Ernest. triction by adopting the simple pretext that | lish the sport ona business basis. 4 him the following facts: Hi ote were both jew its doors w lacework of the | In both China and Japan they keep the theaters | ¥°™ Py restriction by adopting the simple pre : ’ the Native Pri f the Orient. Wrst “delicnte “qnarble carvings "Ove ‘of | open all day, avd fo ToLis thetamilices who | time appointed for starting, before Scarface | Suddenly I saw the rrhite rearing and strug: | the pool rooms were acting as commission PUilt at Brighton Beach. Afu ; slaves, his father having escaped into Canada le Native Princes of the Urien the finest gardens in’ the world sur- | came brought their lunches with them, and the | Made bis appearance. He stopped at the plaza | ging and Ernestcalled,';Don'tcome, aswamp.” | ggonte, merely accepting, money Teproceating |e POpUlAT, the Jerome Park Racing Asso- aus metioe ts Gets te Sup- ooo sounts 0 sed taco fo 0 long mar- | seats were nearly all on the floor, the Japs squat- | gate and we mounted and rode down to him. roee4 Setting out we decided to cross the creck | bets sent to the — ciation tried fo buy it . and he is supporting her and bimesif oa ble aqueduct in which fountains play running | ting down and sitting either ‘on their hoels | His always ugly, seamed, bear-scratched faco | there. | Whips and spurs finally compelled our eosumag Vise sudan ioteon: pn Sot fe res pitiful sum of @4 per week. He t# nineteen HER HOME IN LONDON. | through this upto it. Itis at ‘a foot of this | or cross-legged. ‘The stage was on a pivot and | Was even more hideous now in its assumed ox- | horses to leap down a bank fully five feet_high en the Jerome Park Association sclec In reply —— ° ad | pression of dolor. into the deep water below. The white reached | Now, these 100 pool rooms are scattered all | suitable pagent Hote emery aga y cn ee “Me heap scared—my squaw heap scared— | the opposite bank and stopped. A dense wood | over the town, but always in crowded business | it the most attractive race course in the world. ccncry, which hac been tande up at the back, | Maybe so die. Panapasche catchie me—maybe | Of Young cotten wood and box clder was | neighborhood, where the persons who keep| UP to that period purses had not often ex- bs seogriiy ies traps eere {is Lath | bo vom gives 6 —Patanaie no aot oe ahead. “Ab! Ont in the mountains again. | gwen eit lin 2 Md theit webs for | °C°0e4 #500. At prosent the event known ax sted him to send me some of his verses ip ‘mon tins brome oreued te the Dron. There |" Siby one white parson hod evar toon tho cave | How fash thohoress went, We often mleect the ee Jed with | the “futority,” which is contested annually at | manuscript. Yesterday I recetved from him « wore” & wumber of” fhe best Mate Ot | Cale aatincompht iaok stein ocean te frail and much time was lost searching for it. | en and bere at all — ed imconpastsiieed beopshead iiay. jn ucver worth lew than | letter ancloring ‘the promised sample of his kio a b pen ti play MY | woud hanciy tint the diame a oath fow those horses did neigh. Surely they must 01 . = $50,000 to the winner. Itis run by twosyear- | verse, His spirit seems to be broken. In his ere very ansious to so ta, ah to = pier lh st te Gistense,/ eee de | have seen the Panapashe. After four hours’ | ee eee sees Be ae — j olds, and all « ithe cairn are made befor letter he anys: “My hopes are no brighter than lave between thos a ad |Tible Pahapashe could not prove from | hard riding we saw the agency lights, and so | c ‘ janimalsentered are born. There are s when you saw me. Tam getting on long del —— and the _— = wie Wiese Lone Gaceak Deval ‘For the | Many of them that the plaza looked like ante | eamneaienton — = a a eee several hundred entrice, each paying $250. of | and, what would be impsestbie, no a way of coming behind the seenes without aak- | FICE, | Thies ours wo rode stendily- For the | Tense play ground for’ gigantic, frefion, The pee eye eoonod arp » | which a part may be withdrawn up to within a discouraged than I bave ienes eseuead ves tabniea bare ladies ance struck off ona ‘rail narrow and rough. Over | wind aud rain prevented the agency people 'ccraiaas certain time of the race. When the latter bar! He deserves « ; ° their earnings w = their actors and the parts of women are always | the hills, throzigh creeks. now on tho sun-| from hearing us till we were at the plaza gate, | horses” “Thousands of clerks sacrifice oF fer more than a few co he terminus of the old as Before leaving I Bhe Talks of the Kajahs of India—And| Gives Her Views of High Caste Hindoo Ladies Indian Girls Who Quote Shakes- Peare and Kajahs Who Hire Theaters for Thetselves. St. Pereasnvnc SP rt burned fmountjin side, then between. great | ahd then screams of “Here they are" “"They've | 2°! testants, simply for the reason that the great | railway, should be proud of him, ani wi lightful evening with bunches of wht, odorous sage brash ‘that | Come,” told us we were the cause of all the com- psipscraend ly Jpnches in order tovave! majority of tho horses have meanwhile made it | all his tataral. brilianey and eapectty for bet her not long ago at her THE AYRICAN TOWN CUT SHORT BY FIRT. towered above chur heads, but always something | ™otion. Horses stood saddled and bridled, y ek, evident that they would have no.chance, so that | ter things, ho is chained like « galley slave te : aig = ae a ee Did you go from Japan to Africa?" I asked. | beautify 5 here were the smaller | Dig covered buckboard containing a bed was DISASTROUS EFFECTS. their owners withdraw them, together with the | the ropes of = dingy elevator at starvation cdaleniahakeath he P ds in the pict “aN, i " “ mountains cred with pines of all | ready for use and the agency physician was put-| It is said that this form of gambling does | drawbacks in money allowed them. Wages, Show mea white boy of ninetees whe had along chat withher | aqueduct that Mrs. Potter stands in the picture | “No,” replied Mrs. Potter. “I went first | Cio Gr from tho very light tint| ting up some brandy and other restoratives. The ary than all the faro banks and other ois aie can excel or even equal lines like these: i with the Taj asa background. Another photo- tesdalead baa 4 led to er is! 5 ry PURSES. about her experiences Ja < - b. 1d q | back to London and from there we sailed of the younger brush to the darker shade of ite | rst explanation wa: carface said the Pana- | institutions for gaming put together. When a| Tho next bi > he “Reali. ” A DKOWSY DAY. | graph represents her tent life in Bombay and ® | #4. Cape of Good Hope. We arrived there on pashe set the cave on fire. He saw a mountain _ e next biggest purse is the “Itealization, since she left America | third ghows her as she sits in Delbi among the | the Cape of Good Hope, We ar coulancestor, and the trees red where lightning | P pata 2 man has once een smitien with the fever for | for which horses must be entered when they Typ ck te dark. tho chy tome, some years ago. Mrs. | turbaned jewelers and barguins, as you do in| the 2ist of January and two days later we | had stopped thejr growth or blackened by the Lecce Mud we soacen someiiiag BAN iin’ cn caoad bee fact ba ure fox anyihing ; S 7 Pe ote Potter's London home | India for everything you buy. Said Mrs. Pot- | opened the theater in Cape Town with the | mountain fires.’ On the level land were flowers | happened. else any more. It destroys his morale. The | “T° 7®rling colts, Itis a contest of three-yoar- . locke shagiiy ia Genpiesmn= . | te T can’t tell how much I liked India biggest house ever seen in that city. We played | of every color, Hut moat vividly beautiful were THE OLD LEGEND. vice is fairly undermining the youth of this | ds, and the prize is worth $45,000. The “Om- the rait falls cold and slow, to ene af tho yootliont | wd how quect were my experiences there. We | Rcawo and Jalict us received with a | the cacti, with their bunches of yellow, red, | We went next day to see Scarfuee to ask | country. No wonder that detectives are com. | Mus" run at Monmouth is worth $25.000, the peoaieat 6p little cottages you can | pve no idea of the life.cus‘ons,intelligencegnd | perfect ovation. played there a month | purple oor blossoms. For miles the trail | about his abrupt departure and also to find the | monly engaged by large employers to go around | ireat Metropolitan Handicap Park imagine. It is situated | pospitalicy of. thore pe ‘The English colo- | and had good houses every night, and we | was by the uitiful Winncesto creck, with ite | v0 vas blanket. among the pool roomsand find out if their | {om 15.000 to €20.000, the “Suburban’ ii John’s Wood. | nies there are large and you will find no better | thought w going to makea lot of money. | innumerable little falls and its clear deep | N*vsjo blanket. clerks frequent them, The most trusted em- | Sheepshead Bay $12,000 to $20,000, the “Junior t hour's ride | society in the world than you will in Caleutta We ha egun the fifth week, when one | pools, in whose depths lurked the speckled | | In response to our inquiry concerning the | Dove, once attacked by the frenzy, is no longer | Champion Monmouth from @ ‘then to sleep dup» eff again, * "oss, and her lit.| and Bombay. The most of the officers of the | S jon a fire broke out in the | troutand the shining sunfish. W latter he raid: “Me no wabe—maybe #0 bad | to be counted upon. fils interest in his work | £40.00, the “Champion,” at Monm . becgaeeeaslersnssoesarteans Charing Cross, and her lit- rnment come of the bette: arned to” the ground. Our | and more to admire the ride seemed short. Indian steal ‘im. relaxes, and there is no telling when ho will be- | **™e day, $10,000 to $15,000. The “Twin Citr Steak Sere omeetiaiete: mse is surrounded by beautiful villas} ‘and “it may surprise all consumed in the} | Whon within a mile of our destination Sear-| Our little adventure eansed a great deal of | gin to steal in order to provide himxelf with | Handicap” and the Lrooklyn Handicap,” both Where buidied stand the siliysheeps it is curiously furnished with the} you to that you find as fire and nearly all of our se prop- | face halted. Here the creck made an abrupt | excitement among the Indians snd the revival | money for the gratification of the passion. For | f0F horses of all ages, and the ““ireat Eastern, iy awk Booed 1 2 as well-dreaed people in India | ¢ thoneands of dollars’ worth of | turn and our trail led far away from it. Scar-| Of the old 'ndian legend of the Panapashe, | tron eneat cent _ | for two-year-olds, have cach # guarantee ut itt = ed ler which Mra Potter bas gathered | educated and as well-dré ple in India aie meat | the “benefit” of clerks and others who are fy the vorge of sleepy Ch id where | as anywhere in the world. They lead al p to throw | face looked longingly at the unc phich I will tell you as I heard it, simply trans- | gaged during the day there has recently been | $10,000. Sui ua) . Varn and Sewn from the four wtere of the world where v coffee pot, then put his hand on bis round stom- | lating the Indian dialect into languague mean: | arranged in St. Louis a scheme for racing from | ON THE GREEX SWARD INSTEAD OF THE GREEN ‘What apirite rise bate ach and, rolling his eyes skyward, emitted a | ing nearly the samo. | - ; That an ne haters mt ore, hollow groan, did not fecl that way, 8o| Imagine yourself where I was when Theard | °P-™- to 12p.m. The races in the daytime cuorn. Ques manatee Pastamta started on—he jabbering, “No more water, no | it—Iving underneath a tree. “The green be- | ures tPumenca ny maces at night under the | This will give a fairly clear notion of the vast ‘The treame of south that could wot Naa makee coffee. neath and tho blue above,” near me an old yel- | festsare watched and gambled om in cities ail | “mount of money spent on racing nowad That swept across nig any ates. ppm | eT low wickiup, around me sitting the squaws and | (us the Calon, It is all diverted from legitimate business into re filled with soure olde: jidren o v listening Tia be me. gannt-t fe filled wit souvent After balf an Wour's stouly climbing Scarface | 226% chiliren of the family Listening fo the two | Se ins te the pockets of the great gambling fratoruity. In-] hie wine Sweep anf'soae, called a halt ang pointed to a largo rock at the | saine pipe and talked. and the two half-naked | Before longit may be expected that other | Mau o" Paving for moves on a st merase’ pty head of the rfvino, taying solemnly, “Pana-| pspoove, one old enough to toddle near the | tracks will adopt a similar plan. in former | Peopleot th : patha’s wickiupg” or water devil's home, j seaming kettle of venison, the other on its | times people were obliged togo somerbat out | Through thederelopment of tne tere and pa Wn ecdia ase ening, but hurried our | board of cedar, interested more in the warm ' i ss a [cog ‘armies torent ene ger ther unpublished scraps sent me octal aban idee Aine nied brown breast of its mother than the old legend | of their way in order to obtain an opportunity institution Americans seem likely soon to | 1 slowing neat verses in western ie aren : to play their money, but the races bring | become a nation of gamesiers, and the south of | #274 {hf wees . told by ite father or the Juicy meat simmering | ¢2Jiqlury of gambling sithineasy reach of alf | the fature will fied ‘its most admire plar | °% stmost worthy the pon of Bilay ox Bisld: : ; - : and even the women have adopted the vice to | Of successful industry in the typical eporting usa ng, and picket- cee Sar er yen Oak oe | an alarming extent. Many business men, who | horse owner, wlio, as seon at ti tracks, in e¢ aud Tiooked after the lunch, Everything was | NSM some mountain, under whose overbanging | He't cmulnys, ore tekecloce eee eal | lone OF his ayenrenee” mcllng fa still there. butin such a condition’ that ren- | Focks his could hide, lived « Panapasho eae teevo ort ata ine code i Bee Tom! che | sted os bok teen, ban provid dered mastication alo nevessary. ‘The devil. Always old, always ugly, alwayy alone ¢ in. their | wad of b: with £100 « ie ie oe tained Yrom the | he lived. Not alone from choice, for he i oa a © — jew md aged h he oe tonne of hi cave. Soon it was boiling, aud we set our offered ite ,many chieftains in turn the gifts of | thing Pe pratense pipe © teed Pewtigeerece erage tetas ethepe~caich table, which Sak wack iis wonderful water home, the fishes for food, mturing $10, ; perma ag Soenaas babnnans ota henis As'sooa es our appetites were satisfied (I the gold and silver pebbles that were hidden | COMEared, with this form of mumbling the | sine vo bwek lis favurubio judganent of «hor ‘incinde Scufact on na Tada s aimge | fom human oes, UU the mont hearlom, | Lohans lottery mace barely fication, 1 . texe Bact atk poe Copdsiag epee 1 avaricious father could not give his happy, | ; . eee prepared to explore the os Mas | Ia uughter to this old horrible monster, | from the highest to the lowest, and the time ALL ABOUT CODOANUTS. | d to go anywhere near, so we told him y akin, fect like fins and arms like | MAF Net arrive when national as well as state Fused $5) go any niece noks; 90 we told hi legislation will of necessity be resorted to. for ake Oca gab na” ‘Once one father, tempted by the golden | t2¢ Suppression of the evil. rich black teuk w. ton. Ch ebony in How the Planters of Jamaica Raise Them and What Kesults Afterward. . For twenty fe upper wall is so low that | bait, took his daughter to the water, but she | THE PROFITS MADE DY THE RACE TRACKS The bureau of the American republics has init | Z ad to creep in, We fore from our infwntile | escaped from him and ran affrighted back to | are well-nigh fabulous. Say that one finds 100| ).7 sekad oor — Man? Somat of weapons, | N SINGAPORE. sth elves inn room dark as | the wickiup. Fora punishment to this father | bookmakers on a courseon.arace day. Each of | T°" 8” interesting and minuto description i weds | b ; P m ay. of the method of cultivating the cocoanut a Light from the mouth of | the Great Spirit took away the mind of the : ut {rom the mouth of upon the Island of Jamaica, The several vari- ch | Sit] and forever after she was an idiot. thom page 0100 0 day for hin privilege. In ad- y family has a score | up our engagements, as we hed no costumes laxuriow dition to this the racing association which owns x aciliol, aod aticc @ ic ts’ | ‘Years went on, Girls were born and grew eties of eocoanuts are distinguished by sha: The ope ‘nd ala pogo hing like | with w 0 pr 1. The people th vere soesling : OD lap ad wore waned t * "To | the track gets 5 per cent commission on every : - An’ the girie rt ee | Sore ae ebro Spe ieoiie coer wees Tac citation or.” ecm Mis hanno, wan, eed. aes threat for ai | Hicket sold. It alse gete tho profit on the mic | atdsize and the thickness of the busk milfuy Sfcetnone tta isa 500 for us, but I refy to accept this and | Wa ve eek ; Agere Acc Resid feared him, yet, perhaps, hearing his name so | Of Programs at 10 cents each, which isa big | flesh part of moat. The curacoa isa very large atta of the gov- back t Daring my stay in a and to th fect above us. The sides of the | often tho girls grew less careful and were not | tem when 15,000 or 20,000 people are present. | nut, with thick husk and meat. The rsiden nd mines and ear ‘ oct evan chamber were grayish black, soft and dripping | their men the bravest ever known? Surely | The bar and eating privileges are wold at high | variety is very smalland grows When the peor regi oF nee sige ee cy ae i! i oe ee . 7 ey | figures, aud from $25,000 10 850,000 a season'is a abaes Sse ie! rajabs of | ‘ 0 fire farcell up to | with wale, | Under our feot was'o thin layer of | Che) would rescue « girl from ‘the Fauapaabe | Sitss'by tho telegraph oomaneny Sot Sie sate eaten gringreg Ng Tow 1 tong agin to hear tt, for theater | en; . oo ge ekg ae assy lege. Hactag isto the telegraph company a|Cently exhibited a bunch With, the tree high sor ape hs are often | wa cola Gl clone water’ PANAPASHE GETS A DRIDE. great source of income. This can readily be | fhirssens Ey Pe ntchty eat think nothing of | MRS, POTTER'S sroRY. Aret thought el get lost," vo TEuert | y,/ 9% day Miama, the most fearloss as well as | comprehended when it is, considered what an | curacon produces the largest amount of ol, ‘Ag the Sener ad opening the | 4 ghia point the conversation drifted to | urhappily suggested n fise, thinking the suit | the fairest girl in all the tribe, was out on the | €NOrmous quantity of telegraphic matter is | Geauie ase twelve quurts to one hundred Ale’ the singin’ othe ol” tunes eively for their gueets> ‘Ther ba | seer matters, and Men, Potter told me the | would pass out tho mouth 'of the “cave he | lake in her canoe, A storm was coming, but | %eit out from the tincks to the pool rooms and | nute, about three gallons ‘more than any other Tu the oP fashioned way. INGTON SENSATION. 2 y mach a might, a: . ? oat thought wus put into execution and soon, with | she cared not. Her hands were more aceus- | flowing over the wites In w Coating ene | Sarivty. In sprouting the cocoanut the fattest ttle screechin’ by woman, snd = 15,000 to pees a night for s the true inwardness of the | cs picks ton coe ek Ws blasting tire: | tonied So heeding tienoan ee ecu” | fowing over the wires in a continuous stream, | Of its three silos should be lui? on the ground nitereeeaae een edd Was x 5,000, wlaich was not at all bad. | qhout it.” said she as she leaned her chin on her | {nside. | anil seuMd ahs nol eeten’ ne-vall: ex eager ee | the clectrle Corte Santee tna jouly & part of | milk will ow toward the eyes, “The uppermost an ‘hi yo should even enue tler Joe” at one | PRESENTS FROM RAJAN, hand and look:d dreamily out of the windows, | | There wero ten bodies of water at lenst two | braves in the tribe? Besides the camp was near | “"® “&cttic correspondence that is transmitted. | ride should be chipped to allow the moisture iat poo went to hear the of” Canes } * said Mra. Potter as she picked up a | ny Tulse stories have Deen repe | feet deep ithe first chamber, but with our | the lake and she was sure the black éyes of her THE EXPENSES OF A BOOKMAKER So penta, canting Ge ayes t gue * Lalstiioned way. fair that the truth #1 a) poor bor rsh we thought it “jolly fun” | lover, Wapsock, were watching every motion. | in active practice are great. To begin with, as|™0TC quickly. A plantation “usually will a know, in Louis towade them, | “The storm Durst suddenly—and she hur-| has becn said, he must 100 f day to the | commence to bear in seven years and be A soune Wrtet peesent free t ins and my life there | At the farther side of the fizst room the walls | riedly headed her eanoe toward the land, but it sacs track for his pitegse = i a heed in full bearing in ten years. Generally the nuts besven quasar? Of the most famo: uctin’s rulers. freest and happiest character, | came nearly together leaving a narrow path, on | was too late. Her paddle was snapped in twain | . Ybliged to | are permitted to full 10 the ground, and are iit te Leap y aoe, ntertained s palace and T had an ex- t! ak ink tas txt Y 7 one side of which wei P,tlippery rocks,on and the waves were carrying her hither and | ™Ploy two expert accountants at $10 day, | gathered every day or two and taken to the 1 Lie angel chara, we were comparati . the other a poo! too deep for wading. This led | thither at their will and éver nearer the ledge | One Of them, a “sheet writer,” whose business | store house. The greater part of the nuts io aeweme ¥ sha i e it is regi: h bet made in duplicate, while | shi from J: to Ai id Can- with the spirit o! sa & I larger chamber with man v of rocks where lurked the old Panapashe. Her | it is register eac made in duplicate, while | shipped from Jamaica go to America and Can- ah ee Te cet ecaek annie plant pertures in the sides, We climbed the | lover threw off his blanket and dashed in the | the other writes the tickets. This kind of work | ada, although a considerable quantity go to IRF <saaireron ce id con- tol seo the world, and I thought hill that led to one smaller cavern, and water. All was confusion. Women tore their | Tedtires great skill, inasmuch as prices are | England and the coutinent, In whipping to th io Jury of Uls Peom SaM.’ India | tha: unything that T could do would be worth | disregarding the fc nd other marks of | hairand screamed. Miama was nearing the | hanging every minute, and the horse that is | first named countries all the nuts are husked, | Prom the Detroit Pree Press d Thad a! doing to get to see ad read much and I | the evident ve started in, but a pair of | ledge, but Wapsock was near her, Could he | the favorite one moment may presently drop to | while they are sent to Europe in the busks./ ‘They were about to lynchahorse thief ine 1 recited here and | was ine It was in New ve a growlish voice which seemed to | save her? It was so dark. Was sho gone? nothing. Dasides these men the bookmaker | The average realized by the producer és | western town when a lawyer from the east, who > the*high caste Indian | na the ievesse Mc Poles | fi ict out” caused a precipitate retreat. | “+A flash of lightning revealed the capsized | ™ust have a cashier at $15 a day, who har |2 cents per nut. Such growers, instead of ; ° : and 1 ean tell you that | Suaug and I thought vy saarrsing him that thie | “What do you think it was?” asked. "A | eanoe with Miaten clinging to toc mite sot eet | charge of the money box. Ordinarily be chalks | chipping ‘the nuts, prefer to extract the il, | Bappencd'to be present, stepped to the frout create t did and I you, think 2 ‘ | a] ets bose a nd asked if be could not say afew words be- ednented as we | desir’ of mi etfs mountain lion,” Ernest replied. They never | sock 80 nea~, and what else? A huge form that | the prices up himself, but he may prefer to en- | which is done by a very simple proo After | and Attack a person unless angered or very hungry, | rose from. tte wutery depths tos uecertniy | Be somebody for that job. ‘The cashicrs and | being hueked the nuts are broken up and the | fore knocking the barrel from under the pris- bund that of them could quote Shakes- | ey avecia bat ye concluded not to try thelr patlonce Over | height, two eet like arms that enciroled the fair | ecuvtuiets ore oll spurting mem themsselves, | plosea eid pears See until She mest will come | casr. Rarml we Bink ge meagre wuld never have not been | urged tL a“ n t Mrs. Seer: lceie saree p> Bombay, while 1 | 2°" me ke Ao ‘ and they ‘receive such good wages for only | a tary Whitee - EG | opr dvag io Piagnastth attiorery. bleed Be 1 found. thet 1 | See femete tes wee, | horrible laugh from the Paerpesten that as | three or four hours’ toll. four days fn the week. | the thin black skin that lios between it and the | "Gentlemen," he eaid, “yon ehould mot take tertai h was mothered, you know, the ‘coming to the theater of|/T sent with bim to New York and we lived Repntais actar ous aiviaga by a beauti- | beard across the lake and above the storm, they | It thould be further mentioned that the book- | shell not being removed. After being washed | the law into your own hands im this manner. |< Ag * fed wah og umber of these high caste ladies. We | with the family. I conld do nothing to please disappeared forever from human sight.” maker needs two or three messengers, who|the meat is grated, placed in a vat, boiling | You are not fair to yourselves. Why do you y hones a attr Wank |e Seen ee aig | fully rounded stalactite-covered arch, My narrator paused. All was quiet. The baby | have Varied duties, one of which is to maintain | water poured over it and the whole strai not let this man be tried by ajury of his he tuto these out of their covered | ant T coutl de methine coke. SullT wacacnc. | On we went through lesser rooms, exomining | at its mother's breast was calmly sleeping ie | &Fumning commnnication with the paddock for | When the water cools the oil louts on the top Peers? @ | carriages with veila over thetr faces. | When | cess in New York. ne people seemed to take to | by the flickering light of our tapers their many | other had toddled after a gold-winged Batter. | tbe — of obtaining information, notice of | and is skimmed off and cooled and is ready for | | “Hold on ther, stranger,” interrupted the wy got into the boxes they were shut out | me,and Iwas more noticed in social circles | nooks and crannies, till we were suddenly | fly. Even the grasshopper had ceased to chirp. | ie! He is obliged to spend great deal | shipment. The oil sells for 12 cents per pint | Jeader. “You've ‘said enough. He can't be ia the view of the men in the audience, and | than the other members of my husband's | brought toaetandstill. At our fect was an What else?” I asked. . “Did Wapsock re- of ag opting yes in the way of stationery, | bottle. It is now ae aopald introduce into | tried by a jary of his peers, for he's the only ¥ peeped at the stage through the holes in| family. ‘This angered Mrs. Potter, and she | underground river. Dark, deep, wide—rushing | turn?” fe, which are ‘all manufactured and sold at | Jamaica the manufacture of cocoanut butter. | hoss thief left in the county and he wou't be late . While I was in Bombay I | ysed to toll me that che did not want me known | against its boundaries with a force that sent the ‘“Waprock’s body came back. His heart stay high prices by one man, who has obtained from ae Pang here long,” and he kicked the basrel and Tudian Sozosis Cinb, which has been | ag Mrs. Potter, and that I must tell people that | White spray high against the rocks was this | with Miama. We hunt for Miama and try to | the racing clubs what is effectively a monopoly. | John F. Steadman of St. John, N. B., has | settled the business on the spot. sized by Mrs. De. Ryder, an American | Twas ‘not the Potter, but Mra Jimmy | wonderful body of water; wonderful because | Kill the Panapasho, 6o he get heap scared and HIGH ROLLERS ALL THE Sixx. been arrested in Boston He is the manager nad which is made ap of high caste native | Potter. The truth of it was that I was so per-| no one bas discovered from whence it comes, | tke Miama away to the cave. He make her a) Notwithstanding those big expenses it is ob-| of the Intercolonial railway cattle yard at st. | Robert Reynolds, a Deleware, Lackawanna y sdies and which is much like our Sorosis in | secuted at home that my life was a constant | how deep it is or how long it has been there. | trail down in the water all the same white John and is charged with the embezzlement of ve sew York. 1 made many friends among these | het] cave when I was in society, and my hus- | The water is pure and cold and contains fishes, | man’ssteps. He gave her gold and silver bead ladies and I correspond with some of them | band did nothing to help me. if I talked to| which, wo Judged by the two skeletons we | dresses, shining like the fishes’ scales, They ; | nite about my troubles I found that my words | found, wore like the brook suckers. Ernest, | eat fish, Yon tee "em bones? Maybe so they te select, wl: 2 my mouth, bi an 4 better than I luce of the poe I know I ree! AE wse! pa, come to go out to India, Mrs. | were repeated to his mother, and she would | holding my hand, stepped in, and I followed. | happy, for they have many children. Maybe | Sccasions by handsome and beautifully dressed de an rine ter?” 1 asked. throw them back at me. I had no money and | For a few steps tho ground’ was firm. ‘Then | soitall right to take Miama, for now he no rollers,” and pe saree coe Be Twas calied there from Australia,” was the | because I could not dress well I was accused of | my leader began sinking. “Quicksand!” Our | try to get any more girls,” thee cee Mr. Bellow and myself were offered a| having bad taste. You can’t dress in good | combined strength was necessary to get him | Th teller very good engagement in Australia when we | style without money, but they gave young| back to terra firma. Going back a way we were in London, and we went there and suc-| Jimmy Potter only $1,500 a year on which to| broke off rocks. Then stepping into the ed beyond our hopes. Now, India, Chiza | jive. You might ekimp along on that in Lon-|edge of the water we threw them, i aud Japan get the most of their Euglish actors | don, but you can't do it in New York, and | gradually increasing the distance, from big fool—me sabio—you say you make meri- from Australia, and a success in Australia is to|so it wont on. I felt all the time that I| ten to twenty feet. For twenty feet we could All right. Who make it go out and could make a living for myself, and I did not hear them touch bottom, each time the sound smoke? Yes, maybe so; Panapashe put water see how I could with self-respect continue to | coming back dead and more dead, then twenty- | on it. He no see, ‘cause Wapsock put out his’ pan carrying live an I did, and I decided to leave. I gave the | tnree feet out no sound eame back except the | eves, but he hear everything and get heap mad. ings of the shop boy, tonother with the fumily one Chance, however, and gave them «| dull splash, Still farther no sound. At last a| You go there any more and he put ig | squanderings of the spendthrift on the high year to think of it. I told them if they would | #tone was thrown out fully thirty-five or thirty- | arms and pull you down to his road to dishonor.. give me $7,000 a year to live upon and take|¢ight feet and we heard it touch o rook. ” Young Potter into the business I would remain | Another and anothor, the sound seeming to us| I remembered the smoke, the with them: otherwise T would cut off my con~|liko that mage by an’ immense marble, rolling | gricksand, and with the nection with the family and strike out for my- | down steps. “What could it mean?” As if to singing in my self. They langhed at me and at the end of| answer we heard a bubbling, saw the water | that tne pashe 8 this time I left.” For the past five years I have | move and sound came to our listening cars| when we were in the cave, and not received one -cent piece from them. 1 | like as if an infuriated water monster had been | draw us down to his home under the waves. have ae myself and I have made a name | disturbed from his slumbers. y to this, though I buve do +0." wild Von ust chaeen Our candles were burned nearly down, 50 is Seented sos Suegeecticliy lighting fresh ones we pre to start toa New York weed, and ins deunaiet more carthly region. St by the water ing, during poser dr holding our tallow dips our heads centration af public T helped Mr. Lorillard we saw a weird and lovely sight. 0; of the enormous on ite feet. I did it out covered with glistening creamy resources of the people tites, each one ornamented with a drop try. It would hardly unprofitable kind of ting on the races, so are concerned, but it is an new fool is born every that bunco steerer’s bit of —— of the financial who play the races = ones,” who make i AMONG THE DELHI MERCHANTS. 7 @a> woman who has ever acted suecessfully in | these countries like ‘@ success in London would the far east, and there is hardly a woman in | be to the provinces,” the world who has appeared before such « AUSTRALIAN THEATERS. Strange variety of audiences as she bas. Aswe{ “Tell me something about Australian the- | %