Evening Star Newspaper, October 1, 1898, Page 20

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papers as the richest woman of the world, and he will reply, “Well, that’s all right— ADVERTISED LETTERS. = ages of four and fourteen galloping about their old people and always ready to help him into mincem@at. It was a sickening population. The average yearly income of Fidmire, Richard H CIM Fitzsimons, WA Rrow Hagens, W 8 Prof O'NeR, Prank the Chilean woman who had millions of N EW Y Q R K GO S S | P Gear old Noo Yawk, gnyhow!"" W Auton Urieude, Michele acres of lands, mines of copper, silver and — ‘The following js a fist of advertined letters re- | Halner, Mike Orting, O HF marae i C.) Pe Hau. GW coal, towns ang factories, and an income df The Servant Girl Problem. wining tn tae : aauington @. C.) Post-otfice Sat- ep ae eS of millions a year. These statements were = 43 Yestérday afternoon I met a former | He), crim any’ sre inaks ‘Setince the mughicons | Suneeinen’ eo much exkagerated: paler a T f M W = F Co Washington Won who is now the mis- | sbould call for “Fadvertised Letters.” | Hamilton, w pias an aes eed a aed beeen teg fen CUS Lh Ho Frequent Ooney | tress of a tidy little household, even if it pall nat called for (within two (2) weeks they will | Hamlin. dno We She has, hoéver, been a heavy spender, Island’P a Fi hts, is a flat, over here. Her countenance wore LADIES’ LIST. ue eborough wM and her estate, which through ber death }trige Fights. @ look of mingled weariness and distress. | Aarons, Fra Mre . Rectine Sten | H&tina, Berinte in Paris a few months ago is now being es She was bound for an employment office, | Adams, Sidney Mrs Ellen Misa Hanlioe settled up, will not agsreyate, I am told, S25 which explained the look of mingled wearl- | Adams. Rose Mise Mente bese ex 2 f zi Mrs Millie M theless a remarkable woman ana fond ot | TARY WANT KNOCKOUTS EVERY TIME | 2c*, 2" pain. The servant probiem was | Akers, Charles Billie stew all things modern. Mocul was one of her : bearing heavily upon her spirits, as it| Altiander Susie Miss Incobeith, Minnie atlag) | Has. Joe A Capt sith best farms. It contains about 5,000 acres bears upon the spirits of women who come | Allen, G W Maj Mrs James, Ada Miss Mantes a Ww iipe and cost when Senor Cousino poseny tt ° = See part =o sii leet EE ae —o LE ure they ee 600,000. I venture to say more than that | Pp; Sok ae . . e New York women have become = jerson, le Junnsen, “Ad rpemias Siork isterer. Fred ps Hes beeuepeut ucod' sk and ints Disgusting Spectacles in Guise of | iousea to the situation that they have ceas- aes aes een ae Me onthe tert, Gash w valued at over a million. Upon it.are ome ed to take on additional wrinkles over it. | jShioe (ques Me regen ep A Howes: FL ata ota, taey Admits of the finest of blooded horses, Manly Sport. The gist of what the Washington woman | Ralier. Masia Miss Sabie, Sem Heldam. Warrea hy ne the choicest of sheep and 200 of the best i - said with regard to the servant proposition | Beidwin, Martha Mrs Jones, Lettie Miss Meineietis, Fatt § AF of cattle bred from imported Durham 3 was this: Bangs, Wm Mrs Jones, Mary Mrs : ate james mye a stock. It has a vineyard which contains = ae “If T could get a Washington colored girl, ) arms, (Diary (A Mies ra re Henderson, 31 Karis s of vines and which TS - yq | Stch_as in Washington I used to employ | /ttmm, Felin Rieter Cheriae ies Heechtine, Bae adden, Le J hundreds of flome wt bettie of wine a|VARIOUS ‘TIMELY TOPICS | for $e or $10 a month, to come over to me| Berke Hattie Mrs Keller, Charter Mrs) Heseiti Kapies WM Capt as ‘American plows and other machin- here I would very willingly pay her $20 a | Beall. Zoe Miss Mrs He lues, Readies Franktin SoS aretused mipanmals andste takestalrest ; month, and 1 would undertake to handle | Reveris. Katie Mise Kennedy, Mottic B atige | Houris. Charles Se as ment of pecns to do the work. The es- her with long suede gloves and to treat | Bevington. Lures Mire Howard, Charice gh ooh tate ts kept like a prize farm, and. lines | Spectal Correspondence of The Evening Star. her like a princess of her color besides. 1 Fudge Goo Mts Kent, Sallie Mies Howard Ba Beane. Baa f tall poplars mark out the course of NEW YORK, September 29, 188. | mean precisely what I say. I am not in a Mary A Mrs” Ring. MUA. Mise Howard, ET Seen he each irrigation ditch. The water rents for] After you have taken in one or two of | SUfficiently cheerful frame of mind to in- | Mise Kitching, Fannie LM’se | Howard, Geor, eve My Mocul t about $5,000 a year. The ground Py a $ dulge in persiflage. The servant problem | Linzie Mre Lansdate, Jenni- F Mra Howe, WB iceebee ‘a Mocul cost about $5,000 a year. 1} the Monday night “scientific boxing con-} 4 S SoanGIG Tarot nee I) Bowie, HD Mre Laws. Rachel Mre @) Huckow, Adrian Dr . is very rich and all things grow 1UXUrL | iests at the big barn down on Coney | Oy, |S simply dreadful | Den arent | Brdes. klizabeth B MrwLenck, TON Mew Hudson, © W Dr yr lnegieoe y. st hedges I sa = Ba Sas e208 ‘ Brann, Julia M aftwich, Plizs anter, Samuel Brkherty bashes thirty feet high. They | Island called the Greater New York Ath-} months, and I've positively had twelve ser- | finn Julla Mire Denes eae tr” 4 were wild blackberries and had grown up | etic Club, you are likely to conclude that { Vants since then. ‘That's a servant and a| Hristo, 1 © Leonardo, Marte Stes | Jackson, D se Bor between the poplars. The Park of Mocul| nun-fighting would be a tremendous go | half a month, isn’t it? And I’m sure I'm Bieta: dies aie pe I Mrs sae oa Walter B : ie : Chile. s not 80 very disagreeable nor so very hard | fits. a ark. Mrs ackson J re A PEO! i ene OF te feac. in someerespects there | Over Rete, ‘The! betlened mataaor direct | (> Oo So sein ai Washington 1 hed the ae Julia Mise guacs, We duo BR ea Base Ses Se -lis nee Inthe world. It has long avenues | his cruelty toward the extirpation of a| same colored woman for twelve years, and | Brooks. Mamie Mise nae pay prince | Seuuee ates CTR a z 5 x x i @ branches of | beast; the maddened bulf impales himself | when I was compelied to give up my Wash-| Brown, A E Miss ie kins, OR 4 buildings, with roofs of red tiles and wide | of trees 100 feet high, th : : B Ape eS Alice Miss ins. 0 1 BIG FARMS IN CHILE porches floored with brick, running about {which mect overhead ‘and form arbors |vpon the tip of the rapier, and there is an | ington home to come over here with my | jpn Antic Miss | Mconuies. JD Mew | Sewelawi, MD 1 . patios and gardens, A grove of trees at | reaching almost as far as you can see. At) end of it. Not often does a bull achieve | Husband I'm sure she was very sorry to see | frown! Eom aniseed) Metvonall, Mary Tr ation | Jobtecn alex Gy — leas fs 7 i 4 | places other avenues meet these and you & : me leave. But she would not come along. | Brown) Matel Mics Spire alneatel fom John east 100 feet high leoked down upon it, and | places s the cor.quest of a man in the ring; yec it | Tancane Gut § a MeNell. Augus Mire foeneogl —_—_+> the long leaves of a great palma hundred | stand and look down these long arbors in (yas rary kc Cee Na se Ss he had heard too much about ar Mack, Rr Mise Johnson, 3 W years o}] rustled 4 welcome eas we stepned | four different directions. There are groves z paniards ¥ few oa Well, before I came over here Bumty.: Marie sites Mack, Sallie Miss Johnson, Josey : pate ‘ = There were. judge, cres 0! = s planted so regularly | scrry, and exhibit tLeir sorrow in tears and | I made all sorts of elaborate efforts to in- sf Magaran. Annie Mis dobrson, Measer Schwartz, Wim A Vis Ts Estates Managed by | wpe the porch. There were, I judge, at | of acres of great trees p 1 noes “ ey, Lacy Miss iss, ~ 3 eoeeag isit to Two bsta ‘anag Yjicast ‘one hundred large rooms in the | that every way you look your eye runs | wailings, when a man goes wrong at the fluce dozens of colored girls to come over | Burnett, Tyler Mrs Mallet. Wateabern airs | febtnon, BO Socks. We Wesley Women. house. and all on the exonnal floor. BG plode the straient nes of one of the Tone points of a bull's horns in a canopied am- neem See Be gears wereioe panera Mrs apen seed aa Jones, James W Daniel . ning was with regard to comfort | There are lagoons which win 7 h . They simply wi Butte Be afer ee cating cen ‘oot ee ch you see in all of the Chilean clty | Swans and other water fowl swim upon the |{n Stygian darkness frcm a careful, well- | in horror of New York—and, really, 1 do| (iv? jtlius A Mex” Marten. Leona atiee | acing. SIE De ow. Jasper , | home 1 we at once were made to feel | lagoons and over thelr dark waters orange | aimed blow upon the point of his jaw, | not much blame her. I have since met| (am, J Willme Mey Miller, Agnes Mira Kuwia, te LIFE ON ONE oF THE BIG HACTENDAS that we were in “Liberty Hall,” and were | trees, palms and weeping willows hang. writhes agonizedly upon the padded deck aca puaehington women who did suc-| Carter, ; L Miss Miller. Florn AMies Svioge hs Smith. Nery B ree to go and ceme and do as we pleased. | Here you pass over what seems a natural the C aie ‘, ed, when they came over here to live, in rter, Fannie Mrs Miller, Frank Mra Smith, 2 F There were about thirty children and | pridge, in the center of which there is a secre eee aeons ea es Bae Inducing colored girls from Washington | yirk: Florence Miss Siltier, Ruth. Mies Smith, 31 Sa crandchildren of Madame de Toro visiting | rustic ‘table under a canopy of bark, and : 2 wah @ sweeping vertical’ | to come along with them, but they allitold | Gaius’ games Mee Miler. Zadle Smith, JW . jer, as well as several other guests. V there a waterfall splashes over the rocks | movement of his two urms, counts the | me that their colored girls left them in| Clark) Jennie Mins Mitchell, M in, Stanley op. 1 5 OD Mortality of the Peons and Their] sere duly tntreduce?. and later in the day | and as you look upward you see bronze | fatal ten seconds over the prostrate man's | les than two weeks, on the average, after | Clark, Julie Me Mockatee Kalght. Sut, Chas i trove with Senor Santiago de Toro, who | statues of Neptune and his wife where the | cercass—at such a grewsome moment does | #!Tiving here and fiew straight back to| Clark, Julia Miss ( Morrow. Thad Mra Kadieehers, @ 1 moodige xt ful S th is the chief manager of the e ‘under | stivery drops are spraying before they flow | the New York mat produes hg handker, | Washington—admirable| taste they. dis-| (les. Matving see Dafon, Chas Felix Prof Strnan’ 1. & Co Wonderful Strength. his mother, over tho great farm tn quite | onward to their falls. Here is a winding | chief and temo they eats pandker” | played. was It not? rae eel Hehe ae pees Stetson, Geo I al style. cave and there a lemon grove laden with | which permits two human tintes Oho ‘Well, when I got here I had to get a} Coals, Euua Mrs Morgan) Ella Mise Laveus, A mee be —<—_-—_— Im the Carriage of a King. yellow fruit. There are hedges of roses | ly wel wrough ; phy servant, and, as I say, I've had twelve of jeman, Annie Miss Morrie, Jennte Mrs Lawson, Jno ~a- . - 3 ight, to hammer each other to a ; a e. ss ~ mnie 3 7 Sullivan, Wm J o eB = % and other flowers, great green houses filled | the verge of dissclution Ih) an SUID ES them within eight months. I shall not] ‘leman. C Hazel Miss Newton, Emina L Miss = wsOn, “4 L Sweeney, I CUSTOMS OF THE PEOPLE ur carriage was a three-seated drag | with orchids, and, in short, such a variety | thet 1s euly cx Fes pasos smear harrowing details over the story. | (vleman, Mary Miss Nicholson, Jno Mis Laweon, Wm : é Bo which once belonged to King Louls Phil- | of beautiful things that I might fll a col- | the city hall Of the metreole ey Te ceo | It’s the same old tale of the servant girl | {(illis. Lirzie Mew ee ee Vere Fartor. Lam —_—+ = lppe, and of which the counterpart or mate | umn in mentioning them. It takes thirty | crn world? No. The New York man, talk. | 2% New York, only it has been harder for ok, A” Miss O'Day. DL Miss (2) Leech Fredk Mr& Mrs que iy? © is ni property of Queen Victoria, ana | men to care for the gardens of Mocul alone | irg over the beers with a friend, descants | ™¢,t endure on account of the really ideal | Covk. Annie M Overtcn, Lizzie Miss on, Pheanns, Prank 1898, by Frank G. Carpente: Spas and 18) men are employed in its vineyards. | learnedly upon the relate 2 | Period T enjoyed in dealing with perma-| Cook. Hattie Miss Owings. Etta Miss Tenning, Albert Hl as, WL is kept In th> Windsor stables. Senor de Sein i relative merits of the z ‘mper, Sarah M Lewis, Pronk rresponcence of Tus Evening Sta rE ; 2 | One of these big” farme alvays has 1s | uppereuts, counters and swings une goes | BeMt and occasional colored ‘servants in| Cala Sarah Mew ee ee Fc Telcn, Allen Bowte ROSENDO, Chile, September 1, 1895 | TOT? bought the vehicle in Parts after the | manager or major domo. It has its sub- | home refreshed. iG Washington. I've been shouted and | Corlius’ ate Mins curt ageass Lavingyton, WA hey had RESEND), Chiles See aw | Geresition of Louis Phillippe, and it has | overseers and its army of laboring men or = : screamed at and abused in Gaelic, Scan-| Courtney, Carring Miss Louise Miss Logan, E 2 bolt HE CHILEAN | been so kept that it looks as well today as | rotos. The farm hands of Chile are called Many Men of Standing. dinavian, Scandthoolihan, _Plattdeutsch, | (sins, “Eliza Mrs EW Miss Loundds, c—_- armers are perhary when a king was its owner. We had six | rotos. They are the cross formed by the| And the New York man who thus goes | Plain—very plain—Irish and all modern lan- | aon HOS Mrs nnie Miss (2) | Louse, ot M the richest of their | horses managed by three postillions “In j union of the Indians and Spaniards. They | home refreshed ts not necessarily of the | BUakes up to twelve, by their representa: | Snug: Katherine Mrs Mary 1 pra) ee iB \ kind in the world. Bowery, elther. If this were the case, the | intoreralie’ com of threatening, impudent, | Creamer mre Mise | ples, Semen y dike feuds 2 z a erable servant girls laying down the | Curtis, agg Eg like feud ! matter would not be worth talking or writ- | law to me and demanding aaie Tights” ‘ hee pon theirgreat ing about. In the domain of toughdom the | and I'm about discouraged. I've been de- Ada Mrs nies, Jame " Ss, and numbe pitched punch will probably exist as an in- | "8 all of my own work for the past cou- An a aperes Ee a Mabe tae s : : amie Mre 5 toe “ Wachtng : eas 4 rae = A Rernalds, Fliza Moe MeDoweli, itn ashington, Satnl ate tances athe stitution for the remainder of time. But | Pl of weeks, and now I am looking for 4s, Beatrice Miss Richard. Louise Mile McDonough. 7 Wastin Thos 1 hundred ney have | in New York it has come to ba an inetita= eee girl, for I am on the point of col- Bich eon Tent i Mre ue Fr ok “ aterbury, Wim M Mag of thousand tion in the domain of decency. That {s “pies big no rig es Sane © Weaver, WD ast droves say, the men who flock dc ae to ae Gacy Of With High Hanis. Se ae ee Roane Newey Stes | 3a peggy hl Island barn on Monday nights to take in| At a theater over in Brooklyn they have | , Madame Biers Anan Nae’ Jae won’ Renee these “scientific boxing contests” are, in | solved 5 : - Dennis, Sarah Miss rt Annie Miss prong foe respect to their daily lives and their rela. | S°Ved the high hat problem in the very} De Vaishs Ma Mrs Hegers. Anni Manon, Je ae Te aaa tionship to law and soclety, not toughs at | Mcest, and yet the simplest way concety- | avillites” Adelina x Faadie Mathers, Ett amy at the annual | all—not by a good seventy-five per cent of | able. The scheme 1s worthy of adontion | pencvan Maggie Miss Bowe. Currie Miss Mattingly, Ez: wery (year over them. ‘Ihe toughs go, of course, and their | throughout the country—that is, of course, | Pesie. May Mis ages ee Whited, 3A i . mill f gal- Chuck Conners patois runs through the} to say outside of Washington, for it is Russ. Mrs Mae wec White IG ses and best hum of talk with top-note discordance. fact worthy of repetition th: Russell, W> Mrs White, MA Saas oy sadab die Chi cont But they are decide@ly outnumbered by the } fCt Worthy of repetition that the ladic Sadler,” Mabel Miss oe White, RCo Dy tidaaes senaopin chara eae well-clad gang, business and professional | Of Washington were the very first in the Sale. Bettie I) Mr wry Capt Wickward. Frank B f them have the most mode men of standing ‘wno"yet have a sneaking | country to abandon the flagrant and bar- V Miss ay Ose vel, Will Wiles. dames m nd men who own a dozen leaning toward ithe Icheap thing called | barous outrage upon their fellow men and nche Miss ‘Chas 8 Mre ett, Isaac thrashing machines are not un- “sportiness.” These, for the time being, | Women consisting In the wearing of high | Byans. Ams Miss Ruth £ Miss | Moneshan, Des F willingly convert themselves icto imitation | hats at theatrical representations. At the | fulthurt Milly Mies tears Moore, FA Se : ne-half of the population of Ct hoodlums, and talk Steve Erodiese, and | Brooklyn’ theater the ushers are unifozm ersen, “Rita Mise Mrs | Moore, Wim Hi as. Crank, sb tal eacloatincds ¢ ie aese hoot and howl, did exchang: swigs from | in a neat, if somewhat spectacular, dr Faguill, Valerie Mies More, WoL erase, 988 d to agricul put only the black flasks, and, in ,general portray the | 0f blue cloth, brass buttoas and gilt cord. | Ferry, Johntile Miss Moore, WD Rew spools downers. In the whol natural proclivities of, the tire over here | You have simply to look at them to know Shaw. Margaret Morales, Luts Alfayay(2) feo. wit 5,000,000, inhabi in a very realistic way. Bonker, baker, | that they are ushers—and this in itself, by Shekels, Mabe Morris, JH winter each: Deh own Eiiia Gt e000 candlestickmaker, doctor, lawyer, merchant | the Way, in an age of evening suits for ail porter, Mars ane stake Winfield, WwW Wand exe tient THE HAY WAGON OF CHILB. they're all in the “push” down at | hands, is a f2ct worth noting. Well, these Seay Morecr, WD Wine, RH baie eed “de barn” when these Monday night con- | Ushers all march down their respective eneit. 3 Murph, J A Boles I meet | — tests are pulled cof. >The man of family | #iSles of the theater when the orchestra’ Slaughte Murray, GW Wood, Mende a ano fuitey | Hvery and outriders, and thus drove for | are the laboring class of the country and | sits contcntedly ‘alongside the thief, and | 0Verture has ceased, and stand for a mo Rhepperd Hambleton Mrs ) Nea aS, Woodward. Sam) Hew of lan v after mile through wid> avenues of | correspond to the peons of Peru. They are, | exchanges flask drinks with him in a| ™ent facing the audience, in postures that fo: eat a Nelsout. Harry Woodyard, RM Lombardy poplars, by the two lakes which | however, of a different make from the | spirit of close camaraderie Tae high-sala- | €XCite interest and attention. ‘Then, when agher, May Miss Smoot. Genevieve Miss mustadter, M Wooten, Julian P family with fish, frightening the | Peruvian laborers, although fully as drunk- | ried city or state'officlal sits cheek by jowl | he footlights flare up, cenoting that the | Glnt=ay Smma Mis conven iB aie akles, Thos F Word, ot s en and shiftless as to money-making and | with the tout or knéwn crook, and the | Peformance is about to begin, and the | Gareseme tto, Mary Miss Oenreos, Bives uben M ns of f2ch | on to the rose garden, which contains more | money-saving. They are brave to excess | two speculate learnediy upon the outcome | Wet throughout the auditorium is marked, | Geddes: peer. Rev. Wm Mrs STATION A. and in the | than_@ hundred varteties of roses, past | and will not tolerate abuse nor insult. You! of the next round. the ushers exchange g! Thea, in uni- | George prices. Amelia Mra LADIES’ LIST. ong Ss. | meadows upon which grazed great flocks | can kick a Peruvian peon and he will smile, 3 Heer ay apes bee thelr worls Genet, | Cee te Ser Waa || Keb ame Biles Sapa Rin One : ttl. | Of Sheep and by many irrigated fields being | the Bolivian servant is afrald that his mas- Want @ Knockout. ly together, after considerable pract eae ime re, Erminte Fagacr, Lizz'e Mrs oo Mise CATO for next year’s crops. Bee ter Is angry with him {f he does not thrash | In its reference to the contests that take rhe! ae Sai 4 2 ‘ eS GENTLEX ends of eucalpytus trees planted | him once or twice a month, but the Chilean | pjz thin the ring of the Coney Island dies audience who are wearing | ¢ Mrs (2) tg tgs Barbour, Chas E Klaice, Marry (@) Seen aber, there an orang> grove, | would be likely to resent such treatment pee ye Aa ee Sones ian) large hats will please now remove them.” | ¢ Sophia Mrs AAAS seas ace uecics faa Hen Peene bearing their yellow fruit, | with a stab or a blow. These men all carry | 2&7, “scientific boxing contest” is t.e Then the ushers walk back to the rear of | Gingill, Lille Miss ok ae Mrs STATION B. were on & Vineyard of well-kept | Knives and they do. not hesitate to use | Press agent's amlable way of describing in | the theater, and the hands of women who | Glneon, Minnie Ming | Sioker. Parnelin Atte : uy PADIS LIST. eit Gad oc the [one of the fetds were sur’ them. They care little for life, and, I am | advance what is intended, as a matter of | Reyer really intended to remove their iarge | Gimmes. seth MISS Sturtevant. alfred Airs | BEoOkS. Annie 3 pee rons f the country. | reund wolrmade stone walls, and | told, many of them would kill a man for a| course, to be a violation of the law pro- | Bats at # Fie on omens way 28 the 1 Goins, sary Mice! ee GENTLEMEN'S LIST to one hundred | Very Part of the estate seemed carefully | dollar. On the other hand, they are fond of | nipiting knock-out prize fights, To fully | tate t 18 @ marvelously effective | Goldman, Fannle Mies Sienus. Taw Newcomb, Si dD ; ed miles | aNd economically managed. I noticed in| the men they work for, and {t {s hard to Biber, p ghts. To fully | scheme. an. Minnie Mrs Sera “Avia” Mice Nowcomh, Fisnee a) iago to | one place a Chicago windmill, and Senor | get them away from the estates where they | Understand the meaning of that phrase, = . Wille Miss ing naory STATION D. point. On | de Toro told me he used American plows | were horn. Most of them are in debt to | ‘‘the roars of the populace.” one ‘must hear Worth Five Dollars, el Mary J Mies Talbot, Margaret Mrs LADIES’ LIST. walls of and other American may ene | their masters. They ltve on the estate, get- | the angry howls of the 8,000 or 10,000 spec- The guards or the elevated trains in New sad Moultrie Tathert. Mary. Mrs lerson, Laura Miss eat c is to a large extent a t has | ting a hut and a couple of acres of ground | tat< SOnen ae York have got a nasty way of sla « ieee ‘lor, Maggie Miss é x en Pike cut 2,000 cattle and 300 miich cows. The | for themselves and being paid from 40 too | Mts at a Coney Island prize fight when CE eee ee ee San Re ate Sel = ~ baa “ vmething like | cents a day for thelr week, Thief ie Gai | One oF the other of the chief contestants of | the gates on hurrying passengers, whether | Gras. Pannk Miria Mrs THE KAISER OFF DUTY. $6,000 wo k and $$,0% worth of | Con silver’ so that thelr wares aro rosie {the evening fails to score a knockout! | there is any-occasion for duing so or not. | Grayuon, Kate V Miss gale butter a from 14 to 20 cenis a day. T pecaive ee Coerr yepnie Buruistic erm) | A well-known broker had this experience | remem. Kate Miss ‘Grace Miss Insight Into the Private Life ef the aq bon the estate are 200 horses, although | food in addition to. thelr butathis | cronita va <paboutuNtaaeaae prone as, | Wren he was hustling for a down-town | Grom Hutte Sine atary Bite omperor. pees draught and farm animals of | £,0Mly for themselves, Thetr first meal is | deceased dog, before they are ‘willing to | tfain at the 424 street station of the 6th man, Helen, Miss A Misa *] From Le Society. ra ‘se are chiefly for breeding and | gene tide they Handful of toasted wheat | depart in a spirit of entire happiness and | avenue L the other morning. The broker | Gtiin. Maggie Miss Grace Miss The imperial family have been leading a y | flcur, which they mix with water to form 4 , Emma Mi Tibhles. Sarah Mins s the of the family and gue: It 18! mush or bake in a cake. At noon thes | content: and if they don’t get what they | decided that he could afford to give upg a| Grimes, Edna Miss Toliferro, Fanny E Mrs | delightful quiet, unconstrained life at eve | ne y to hi large number of | have a bowl of hot beans, and for supper, | W22t. they yell “Fake!” and chuck cush- | day's business for the sake of getting Rosie Miss | | Tolson. Allen B Sfrs Wilhelmshohe, rare enough event, and just it | he x fam , for often partis of | or dinner, s y call it here, they poet: | ions and benches into the ring, in quite the | square with the offensive guard. -So he | Grubor, Elison Fraulein qruhman S Mies a ee : : e2 = ~ Bags ents ‘ : =i inner, as they call it here, they get a cl sladiatorial The Ras Ree ere 80 he! Guenther. Frieda Miss es > N Miss | What the kaiser and his wife enjoy. His | fifte wenty go horseback riding at the | gccond bow! of beans, with, cartes, & ancient gladiatorial spirit. When one | crossed over to the other side of the sta oe Tneker, Jennie N Miss In the Intertor. pane rere fate ialtnan: |\eyon {sere ene ao perhaps, some | comes to reflect upon it, it surely does seem RiGniandlewaltsator anetGn aed ral aca Tucker, Julia Mrs majesty has even been wearing civilian’s hax the Mapo, the | ag for the comfort of the family | meats they cat In the Helda, when ante wwe | odd to think of the clerk of a New York | train to return from AViien||| sine, Rrances Ml siiss) aerees See. dress, a thing he hardly ever does. He that it is said to | than for profit, although fn a financial way | tras ‘their wives -bring from home. “They | Court of law. or an established, middle- | the broker caught sigat Haller, Emma Mrs Turney, wom wore aiteuiabely Ria eke a a the Srrigatio: lit is a very profitable farm. sit down on the ground to eat, ana their | {fed Physiclan with a spsnlgnable Murray | the returning train, he + Hamilton, Salis Mise Sen, Mary. Biles knockabout pepper-and-salt jacket suit of 3 ; sy ice po : "at, practice, standing on the top of his ard’s gate. Sane amilton. a Valker. Mamie Miss vin i Se . ar. Other ams, How She Treats Her Friends, cnly eating utensil is an iron spoon or, what | seat, when some feature of the fenteenitel lanaesoeee con ae Boece on] nama. te mas Mrs Wallac Clara Miss rough tweed, with a collar a la Prince of nn ene oa eo ea ee eng rere g | such food they will work frost auctive © | ‘2 Please him, and franctically sawing the | give that guard « careful and deliberate | Hawi Namie Mrs Walley. 7 Miss, | Wales, and a large navy plastron tle. The 1 s cle For instance, she has one man busy al! the | Singet and will carne enero. burdeng | #t™mosphere with 1s arms, and yelling at | and entirely non-alcoholic punching, that | Haris, Amelia A Mrs Want ie Mra (| Kaiser sported a plain straw hat with black canal year round making baskets to be used in| and do the heavicat work Ens | the top of his voce, STake out that stif:” Was Worth great deal more than the siin- ts, Eleanor Mrs Washington, Charlotte | band _geuerally, but occasionally chose a try sending pre 0 s > be 2 huts whic! z 3 or “He's a lobster!”” or “That dub couldn’t | ple $5 bill that the benevolent and some- ary Miss Miss : fsa f ie ee ee eae pera peat nll form theln homes (ace lt | en ioenesmrantimornenie ic eateiortiec | eoeae admiring police magistrate charged | Hart. Julia E Miss Melkite Clipe Die | |e! St 2 Oe eee given to guests with fruit when they leave. | tle better than our pig pens. | They are | Gist!" of etumme me money Eaeeyy ay | Pee semirinE police magistrare charged | Pind", Ses Watkins, Kate Mes every-day ettire he was frequently passed She raises for sale 500,000 oranges a year, | noes Jat, Mish, enough to get into and | surely does. And vet this is absolutely not CotG. Wins merr ome) Gratuity a muel in nrecognized, to his intense but 5,000 are always left on the trees for | are or wattled twigs, sun-dried bricks. oe an exaggerated picture. It’s precisely what —qx~— Heart. Hattle Miss Webh, Virgie Mrs amusement. estates are walle h stone | the use of herself and her guests. All of | in the south of boards. and the sate ace | YOU see If you ever muster up sufficient The Sale of Money Belts. Hetenbold, Michael Mes Wi Annie L Mrs ASmnoik jak oneal oF Hay dhe Kea SOO y occasional you see | the mutton eaten on her estate Is of her! cuanly of thatch The anny vis jare | nerve or latent hoodlumism to witness a Sie Sa a tee tee ed family were up and about. Th on hence There are no own raising and the 800 sheep she keeps | aq"In many totes ee te Get cre oor | “scientific boxing contest” at “de barn. From the New York Tribune. derson, Lille Miss Wells, Ella Miss and his family were up and a - e ing out on the landsc are chiefly for herself and friends. She | A"bow or tao and a nebo ia es ree Now, a scientific boxing contest between | The unpretentious but useful-looking Se Se ee kaiser only allowed himself twenty minutes nes are ates ev Fa CRE aes og entona)eduaaies furniture. There are seldom partitions in pele otal matcnea ars or ae we money belts, which are to be seen displayed Mazele Miss = ite. Turnbull Mrs for his toflet, and waagrtieris Tal 8 of the owner of the | and other vegetables to give away a1 this one om. © peo; neha A 8. re evil in its Seaindowe a aaron we . P Mrs hitney, M. 1] for morning coffee in the dining room, the squalid house sends them to the Santiago hospitals and | lke pigs eoeerarel familie site i Gccuny | effect upon the eve of a man of healthful | 1 {he Windows Of most stores that deal in | Henricnsen. WH Mrs anes kaiserin tink out for her husband and all cribs her friends by the ox cart load. I saw] the same room, es often occupy } spirit than a bout at fencing. leather goods, have had their sale increased } Yenser, Mali Mise Witkir, aA Mre = a - ar kia heer be everywhere piles of such vegetables stacked up for this : in the last few months, chiefly, the dealers | Herbert, Agnes Mrs Vilking. Kate Mies sons like any other hausfrau. er break- rses or mules. Clumsy carts | purpc ack CetHe House: Uneret wis ‘They AU Get Drunk. A Brutal Spectacle. believe, by reason of the war. It is true | Hickman, Daft Mrs Williams, Alice Mrs t the kaiser rode with his sons, or took se be with yokes tied to | enough to have fed d-sized America But this is not the sort of game that is + ‘ s iil, Ida B Willams, Bettie Miss a Jong walk ull luncheon; then his majesty farm wagons, and the | tnest tor a cea Moet pimetiean | The ehfet end of the Chilean rotos’ Ufe 18 | rurniahed ta the New York mene ae | that the summer is always the best season | Hil, BG Mrs Wiltams, Emma Miss | Superintended the swimming or riding les- tncouen ite w by the | great piles of squashes, bags of walnuts |‘ 8*t drunk. He works only for this, and | oy g3 that he pays at the door af the Cages | fF such things, because of the great | HM. 3A Mr Wilting: Lizzie Miss) sons of the younger boys, frequently stand- r. The es nd cartloads of corn all awaiting thelr | Mne-tenths of his kind are in a state of | (uesa ta miei Goney tat te ¢ Coney | amount of vacation travel, but this year | [[itiee MO Mrs Williains, Mamie Mies, | ing tn the center Of the riding school with 1 prssed shipment as gifts. She delights in the old | beastly Intoxication at least once a week. | ways a battle of from twerte cr eyen a | the number made and disposed of has been | 1s Angelina Mrs Wills, Mildred Mise Bie St oe ee now ¢ paya) (of (doing (things, aad (tie) tablents (1e staya drinic and willlnot work as lous | nua ecunas lauration beta Gen Goa cise Ueteer (so ualal .One Pulladeiphig firma|| ten cneeee vet ania aes | ke Raine tee ae Se as his money lasts. For this reason Mon- nds’ duration, between completely | which has agents in this city, bas filled | Hore, Hasdle & Wilson, Corn Miss ST eee ee as tone eae ee 7 ‘ day 1s called the “rotos’ holy di t unmatched men. It ts always a punching | several government orders for money belts, | fuehes. A E Mrs Wilson] HW Mrs ens and pigeons wilh the aseistance of prin- cases a is so drunk on Sunday that ne has Paes match, pure and simple. It is always an | to be used by officers of the army. The Hint, Laity Mies Wilton, Mattte Mre cesschen, inspected the dairies and tasted « iit Monday to taper off. ‘The men, women and | “alr in which the savage love of brutish- | belts were of the same pattern that Is com. | Hist. Mie Mtn Windies Flores aiies | the butter, The young princes looked for i t children of this class all drink together, | ness, inherent In the blood of men, fs pan- | Monly Seen—flat pockets about two feet “keon, “Arthur Mrs Wermles. Lae Mites eggs, helped to gather fruit and enjoyed None of them seem to have any desire to | dered to, and coddled, and nourished. af- | lone ane aa SS GIN Oa Oe ds es kson, Annie Mrs Wright, Belle Miss their Folideys like any farmer's sons home ‘ better thelr condition and all seem to con- | falrs of this character are brought oft with. | Wide: divilcd into several compartment GENTLEMEN'S LIST. from scl wines i tinue in this state till they die. The Nquor | ! an easy enough riding distance of Wash- | £0" the different sizes of money. The flaps | ca walter Dantel, Cortey Dinner was at 6; before and after the : : | they use fs the Vilest Of ate nol eau | ington, ay odd times, during & conain cons | of these compartments button down secure- | Ackrord, ¥ esas caeak tin palner 3UEOD AO abe SRR Per ae The cht c a z eae st of alcohol, made of | & x a SRW Washi ly over them, and when the belt ts fastened | 4) Thos W Davey, Paul rae e aff rahe to K Xu potatoes and rotten vegetables. "It would, | 802. An clement of the Washington popu- Mee NG RIaE: DE CHOS Gt GoSNEtene ken, Thor a hour or two te settle the affairs of the fa * t Calif as one of thelr employers says, kill the or. | lation rides out to an “amphitheater” ad- | 2T0! ay a AB ehe Guab Brkntee that ine Reg ees o Taos We iherland, while the kaiserin drove her pony a dinary man at a thousind yards, ‘They | Joining a road|house-inot very distant from|| there ts no) possibility Of having tts con: | Allies, Geo W . "Phomas carriage, with ber small daughter at her e gulp this down in great quantities and | Washington, to assuage thelr appetites | eet’ oe ee nee ea eaee cPabouc | Anderson Chas & HenryDe Peep, G Heriot side, into Cassel, where she did ehopping. me, save that it drink, not for the pleasure of drinking, b for this especial manner of brutishne: Wn eatne paths HEN arate Anderson, Jno Dervish,” A Every evening wat devoted to music. The ¥ J most of t healthy to get drunk. ©, but | But do Washington men, who profess to be | the same Be ee as eee W Clarence Devs, Charles kaiserin, who is a very fair pianist How One Woman Farms in Chile. The resuit of their excesses, of their poor | Sentlemen, Washington men of character | ySemem in several kinds of leathers Piekwon,” James ot the maxulficent performer the é aged = ae food and the insanitary condition of their | 214 personal dignity, attend upon these af- | 30e¥ [ome ie” Cretinished seal and buck. Tecate: Sans apers say she is—played Wagper and Bach “ tld one of the California women houses 1s that the mortailty among them | 24!Ts? ‘The writer, Who knows Washington | Chamots, cuit, s nished seal and buck- rk her husband, and accompanied her eldest . yo ure mo severe iared Ey Breed : from Great Falls-to Anacostia, ai skin. This last, strong and attractive-look. — + an ene “- v a is very great. They breed like Australian es sla, and from rine taimotteerss| tonesan etna scoRe son, who is l ming an excellent violinist. t f ke care of rabbits and their babies die like flies. The | Silver Spring to the TU street wharf, fan- ] Me. with Its soft gray ‘ emu ¥ ‘At 10 o'clock the eldest boys retired, think w ked to manage a farm children who live are only the strongest. | Cis not. fo te 52 ee Dusdall, Horace ¢ by 11 o'clock all the lights were extinguish- : ; ‘The peon child who has constitution enongh | , A recent “scientific boxing contest” down = ape ed in Schioss Wilhelmshohe. : , i aa eran to grow up in Chile has constitution | &t “de barn” was witnessed by 10,000 men, maasinia weer: Dunlap. Hobert ————— or - r acres? There The Rich Owner of the Estate. enough for anything. O1t iaiperhapsitor this | The fend wos Peuncan de pace se eNineTist, | Brom the Loudon Mati. ainara Dunning, Wim The New Paris Telescope. i of this size reason that the peons as a clas 3 | cat-footed, s Ya finished, a wiry ani- i j . rd, W ISON, y . z 2 self, and | chiefly supplied from the estate, the Ice | strong as any people of the world, f hace | mal, of about 165"pounds in weight, and a | Statistics tie AST ey iy. Samuel Dupes, ‘NG fe From Nature. ’ t ow gousidera- | cream being made by means of snow | rcen them all day carrying bags of nitrate | huge man of Falstaffian girth from Buffalo. | Russia only 847,268 families out of a popu- J Bias. Robert Deo e We gather from an article Be Ke Bates bly « a Keeps | brought from the mountains In bags on the | cach weighing 300 pounds and tossing them | This elephantine Buffalonian weighed when | lation of about 130,000,000 souls have an in- | fiincuistone, H Rar 4 L that M. Gautier, the well-known optician, her * hy Balances of cach page | backs of her peons. It takes them several | about like bags of feathers. Four of them | he entered the ring exactly 22% pounds, | come of over £100 a year, or that practical- | Tosler, Oliver S Dyson, SE js making gcod progress with the construc- of fat the thousands of dollars, | days to make the journey and she could | will lift up a piano and trot off with it, | Which were padded in-huge welts of flesh an § { the whol Bradburn, TA Fastland, W 1 fio: jant tel : c By tes 5 z 4 ‘ :labout his five foot eight frame. ;, |J¥ more than 99 per cent of the whole popu- | Rriides, Henry I eer A 8) tion of the giant telescope intended for the import tee more cheaply by train from San- | and in the mines a peon will carry a bag of | #bout his five foot eigh me. He knew, a q Ehret, CD. : household aud Its | tiago, but she prefers the old way rather | cre welghing 150 pounds up a notched | @PParently, as m@ch Of the art of boxing | lation are constantly in a state of abject | Brawdess, JJ Bilis. CH Mr and Mrs | great exhibition at Paris in 1900. The than the new, and her estate is kept as | Stick that serves as a ladder all day long. |@5 Asuinaldo does of modesty, but he had | poverty and pauperism in their various de- | Hridses. Engel, Geo B aperture will be 1.25 meters (49.2 inches), } y e. Bright, LR P racters of Chile. | much as pos: faye of | Comparatively few @ very great power of endurance, indeed. | gree: ae Fygholm, © A : : : uch Ge ae as fees in the days of K i oe row te them. I am told, So he hobbled argund the ring for t ae A 5 lt h Brittor, GB u Faher, $ 6 and the focal length sixty meters (196 feet her girthood. ach of her many grand- | have gone through the marriage ceremony, | 5° ol or twenty e figures become appalling when one | Brooks, Willis 3 her, 8 x a = nee children has his ow:: ponv, and I gaw a lot | but nearly all have wives, and they are, | Founds, did this Falstaff of the ring, per-| considers the case of the peasantry, which | Brmeker. Gem Fisher, David 10 inches), while the estimated cost ts ‘ate has been | of the Mttle boys and girls between the | a8 a rule, true to them. They are kind to | Mitting his opposing Bardolph to punch | forms the overwhelming majority ‘of the | Breen. James sher. Henry 1,400,000 francs. An equatorial mounting and dome for such a gigantic instrument Pranct the place and holding thetr seats like men | h€ another when in trouble. They have | Spectacle. The ring was a shambles. The | peasant family consisting of six mem- as Flinnery. EJ may well be considered impracticable, and and women. The meals on such an estate| the humor of the Irish and the supersti- | Falstaff looked like a ‘butcher's block, and | pers ranges between £12 and £15 a year, cE Ford. Harry accordingly the telescope itself will be rig- tamliy are of course excellent. You get up when | ton of the Chinese. ‘They are as great fa. | tWard the finish* of the scientise boxing | out of which between £ and £7 has to be nite Fields ily fixed in a horizontal position on sup- the summer months, | you feel like itand have your coffee on ten | talists as the Turks. They are as treach. | Contest he could only hold his arms at his paid to the government in direct taxes. Sey Foster. i ports of masonry, and will recetve the light 1 their home at the | and toast in your room, At 11 or 12 oglock |€rous in their enmity as the Spaniests | Sides and let the other man hammer him, aos Bocas an Trenkia: of the heavenly bodies after reflection from ‘ company with our Amer-| ait of the household ‘meet at beset from whom they are descended, and will | TR crowd went wild with joy. The crewd (Copyright, 1898, Life-Publisbing Compan: Cakes, James Fry, Phil a movable plane mirror two meters in di- ‘ and his wife that 1 visited | This is what we would call a course din. | 8t#b you in the back if they are offered the | WAS, Betting its money's “worth. “Soak | — (Copyright, 1808, asses tee ae Carleton, Ere. Samuel Rectan, Tip plane iene Ss Seeiane Steers = Toro and had one of the most | ner, beginning with soup and ending with | Chance. It was thought that the system | him! Put it on him! Finish him! Lay Carter, i Puller, James Duncan | thick and weighs 3.000 kilogrammes, and Interesting experiences i have | Ley _besining with soup and ending with | ceence, Jt was thought that the system | Ai ti ce as Ree ee as eay Cartwright, 1G Mr and Mrs it is curlous that of twelve disks cast for fed during my stay fe Gnite with perhaps a lunch or tea at 4 o'clock | Chilean government might attract the | 0D egged on the smaller man. And when Gepman & Os, a ed the purpose, the first one turned out to be A Visit to a Great Hacienda. and supper late in the evening. The Chil. | Pe" It has not done so to any extent, | the fat giant was finally knocked into a Cuondtrler, James © Gibbons, EL aor penengS lagineed yonerar ways bea gg we Phe 2 banc teeuians nee - y and today of the 3,000,000 people in Chile | State of slumber all hands exchanged flask Ciaweon, JM 6 ‘Ge rinding for seven months, and is not ing Santiago on the train, we rede | aM families, as a rule, keep very late | 2°4 p ale || ewige alideronea aaa TENG kc on, JM BSthson, Geo grinding : yet : hours, and there are Uoeaily ene ar pute | less than one in four can read and write, gS all around and the crowd went away Cole, A GIN, Leonard finished. e snow walls of the Andes, whe say ap clots : & FRANK G. CARPENTER. in a state of high good nature. Collins, Thos Gillespie, Patrick There will be two objectives, one photo- aden heclanaes teint ise z ong after mid- On Monday night last one of the contes!- Colman, WE, Glenmeser. L graphic and one visual, which will he eas herds of cattle and sheep unt + | Prem Puck. until the finish of the fifth i Goreoa, § and Mrs se “ + “en tc Big mda ak kiko alnd i a I also paid a visit during my stay at San-| Ss e fifth round, his left Cousins, HS Goodwi usefully employed, and that occasionally a came to the station of the “Aguila” estat fig rene eee ean hee ae ‘At one time,” began the great grandee, | 2M hanging as limp as a rag meanwhile. c Gerace ed Hl He power of 10,000 may be used. As the high- met by a spanking tea of. Then the referee awarded the “fight” he early kingdom of Spain ran cleur to Covert Grabam, Ernest 1 est power available in the largest xistin bays and driven for a mile or so ch the | Madame Cousino, known as Mocul. You a5 the other man. The érowd at the ringside eae, quest i aes does 3 eziate before we came to the home. This | have heard of Madame Cousino. She has | Ud the world. Was disgusted, and money-back demands strament he the: succes that every “It did?” replied the pessimistic peasant. Gray, “Who was making it run then?” strument, {f it be the success that every one will wish, should have @ wide field of usefulness. Crank, Cruitt, Geo L Crosley, WE G Daley, Harry Grigith, GS consisted of many long, low one-story | been much written about in the news- "Rocits some of this to the New York man

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