Evening Star Newspaper, October 22, 1898, Page 20

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THE EVENING STAR, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22. , 1898-26 PAGES, | cascades, some as big as your wrist, others |that it just covered) ‘thk ears and | gift often overbalances the saving on his ADVERTISED LETTERS. eth, CR | no larger around than your little finger. |fell down in a thick black fringe or bang | debt. Bribery seems to be with the Ara- iat of = bras These are to be seen all along these inland | over their eyes. The ski: re of a brown | blan inherent and natural. Under these | | The following ts a list of dvertisedl letters re Wh —— channels. They come from the glaciers |coffee color, and all had, very white teeth. | circumstances it may be mentioned as re- | Musing in the Washington, D. C., Post Office Sat- | Comiter im, Miler. Sylvanus and the mountain snows. Which they showed aggin iand again as | markable that French officers have very | “Ts cotaik ang’ of there letters the applicant should | Cox. Jas I Moore : they laughed. Their voices were not un- | rarely avatied themselves of this eisy means | call for Advortioed Tattes Crenshaw, Jno Lewis Moore. A Rainbow Set in Silver. Pleasant, ind they mimigked [us as we call- | of dishonesty. : It not called for within two (2) weeks they will | Creseley. iy W Me One of the strangest atmospheric effects |ed out to them. The man fn the vest had iaveadasy be sent to the Dead Letter Office. Crowe, Rev 8 > I have ever seen happened on our third |tWo or three otter skinsi! whieh one of the | _,, ee LADIES’ LIST. Cuffy, Jas” Se day in the channel. ‘The mourtainwallea | ficers of the ship tried, to He would Setif, the distriet of which Captain Es-| adams, A 8 Mrs Lines, Mary Mrs Gummi, RP Motganthy lay hannel. es not come on board, and the Officer crawled | terhazy had charge, is the most important | Adaine, Sidney Mes Lim. Lotte Mrs rest Ae peute. Bee river had widened and we were again com- | down the side of the ship: ®bove tae boat | in the province of Const: th Pe Alexander, FM Mrs Lindsay, Mary Miss pee ge Morly, WOR ing to narrows, when over our pathway in jana held on there by a rope while he tried Gnethewadl onstantine. It borders a Lind Ke te Miss Seas = fn Mou! Hora front of us a great rainbow sprang from |t© make the trade. He hada ble butcher ce caper Ne eng py een at Davis, 3 Moran wir the snowy summit of a low mountain in |bife in one hand, whileche held on to the | tribe cf the Hodnas, who raise the finest | ApeMy, Ledaie Long. Annie E Mrs Davis Murphy, Richard $ the south to that of another mountain ol- |'¢P& by the other. He wanted the savage | horses in Africa, and who are renowned Arboga:t, May V Mre Lonis, Dove Miss Paves, Myers. Jno W most opposite on the north of the channel, | ‘£2 Sive him two skins for the knife, but the | for their wealth! Esterhazy was always | Arthur. Pauline C E Miss Lawe: Elizabeth Mise Dell. ae making a great rainbow span over the |S#¥a8e thought one was enoagh. ‘The na- | much more friendly with them than he was | Afen. Chas @ Mrs oe ee Dewitt an eae ked man would ve e Bally, Maggie dark water. It was a splendid many-col- | Keg the ate inne the skin until he | with his brother officers. ored arch of the gods founded on pedestals Nichens.” Car Nixon, Manvill O'Counrr, Richard it a) Martha. he knif , and in the trade | “Our pay was uniformly 300 francs per | Riyts Maithe, Miss he displayed a wonderful shrewdness and | month ($60), not a munificent sum. You | Barbour, © Mrs Ressie Miss Lizzie Mrs (2) Seo trusted fatlvel os see 5 ss Nister, C Mrs Otis, R of frosted silver. AS wi proached the ability to bargain. Of course, neither party | can imagine that aot much of it was left | Barnes, "L Miss arty, JH Mrs 4 rainbow faded, the sky was blue overhead, | could understand the other, and neither | at the end of each thirty days. Esterhazy | Bamke. May Mrs in) W Mrs rher, 3m but a great wall of fleecy white clouds had | would trust the cth v 2 savage, | w: Jacl ewan cee 2 |B W A Mrs reery. L 1. Mrs . dropped down upon or rather risen up from i © the bane naked savage. | was as lacking in meang as the rest of us, | Hartus, Annie Miss McDonald, Ena. Miss treo the water, Wien Davee baw i 1 thought one anes th: ae pes eeeot ee, ae but his manner of living was very dif-| heckwith, B Louise Miss Metieaze, Stella Mise Senedd w ty ss ay ere s a ra . ” Virginia oT jow and = Ee waed Aaa Seiten, Teens n be used in trading | ferent. He occupied a house by himself. | Beard, Lalla Miss Virzinia Mt itowant with these people are bright cloth, beads, | It was richly carpeted from top to bot. | Beard; Anna I It Mrs Della Mra peat a ow and it extended upward to what ‘tobacco and knives. 7 = a ) Beasent, Kate Miss ‘Ann Mrs seemed a height of several hundred feet, | use of money, hey jo not know the | tom, the walls were covered with splendid 1, Carrie Mrs Mars. E Mise . money. and would rather have «| portieres, and the rooms were furnished surctcnlng sActoss) the) chann elstram jnoun- | jack-lmitel dria) iatchetithan lal genuine gollll| withiricm divans osrertmittone ce Pointe 3 ——in ss Paan Bee eee nee herons tes Cmae ne | bricks Dhey) were evidently; afraid/tolcome \In’ addition, 40 all this tthe teone mere | Ries ic, Marapall stern ‘ —— SEY Meas cleo andi the/only other clotds (0) (on Board #andei ambtolagthey care py ecto rieniyadecorated mtn aor ties eeeome eiok | pee Masber. Eulen Bros Pinskett be seen were those hovering over the | means friendly to stra vill kill ‘ ¢ Blair, Lizzie Mi Elliott. Hector 1 rege Head = = a it angers, and will kill | and another. There was a considerable eat Ets, ©: Porter, DJ THE EXD o1 HE ANDES. mountain peaks. We sailed out of the |them if they can attack them with safecy. | retinue of worvantar mee on ee erable | Bites: CT Mies ln, dope UK ponent, wate 3 2 ane ae —— | lght right into this cloud wall, out of the {They use bows and arrows to defend them- | (native cavalrsmony In short, Captain Es-| ponitt: Myrtle eee 5 hin Pamptrey, Gee : } Gry air inte | & mist solthich thet wercoid || selves a althoughuithey vdoi miotiiuntu:The |l|terhasy imalntalned’ an establishment cof lle ie Beetl.' BS Quarta, tiandait own into r 2 i, eov= | {most wash our hands in it. | A half hour | food for the family ig usually gotten by the | oriental luxury, and to helghten the effect | Borer’ tite airs Mitchell, Tilda Miss sanuing, it J —pengt Bs ee ith eae ee ear anened trom | liter we were again under a clear sky. At |women, of whom each man has one oF | the place wae presides Cee ete ettect | Rete ae ue Mills, Annie E Mrs Rees, Rev Preaek ered With moss, risiney straight upward from | times the masts of the steamer were in the | more, as he can get them. The food com woman of great beauty. While the rest of | Bove. MM Mrs Miller, M Miss Manta i | the water for 1,000 feet; ee roar | clouds and the deck clear and dry. Again | sists of fish, mussels and of now and then | us might noake what chit eed ‘ape | Beulles, lea Mes Minner, Paes cr ac = | procipitously Into the sea: nevbere. germea, | {he clouds would form a roof over the ja fox seal or otter. The women fish with | pease our thirst, wileh in ther coocrre woe | preke: Gora Miss Moor, Witte Nita me. free 3 ‘ | preelpitousty into the sea; narrow gorgcs. | channel and again the lower walls of the | lines, but without hooks. A little chunk of | bur greatest misery, there was not a day | Brown, I, 8 Mitchell, A Miss eee Story of a Sail Through the Strait of | in rien the steamer qmust tack this way | hills would be hidden and we could iook | meat fs tled to the end of the line, and | but the Arablane carted to Esterhazy ice | Brooks, Mamte M ell, “Alberta Mise prerera Tg and that as jit winds through Islands | over the clouds at the green and snow {When the tish has swallowed this it 1s Jerk- | and leod anor: frome at raga a aeeey ce | Brown: Anna Mtoe hell, ME Miss Robison, Jas E Macell: of n and isiands of rock. Here | 2hove. ed into the canoe. The Alacalufes are aiso | bor, which mista 1 a Brown, Resse Mrs onroe, Corinne. Miss Rogers, AL agellan. > lds of flosting ice, ‘through | “P°VE- " . reat fond of whale meat, and a dead whale, I | ten’ miles from Betif. | “|S a't MM OF | Brown, Emma Mre = Monroe, Jennie Mrs Gar Ralline. Rent apse ates ich the boat crashes; narrow fiords, in muones ers Lecter ay and) Glaciers: 4 | ami told stefcut lniolecesiandiburieastorwe |f “1rmece eae things in them-| frown, Mary Mise Montecue 8 wire Gatewood, Jonah G Roseveil, ‘Nathan Cte the black water is 200 fect deep. | It seems strange to think of green moss, [eaten In its various’ stages of decomposition | geives "that Bache wae cupepaiae vai Mary O'Mtios > Manone lars Moe Giles, Jos Tonghtorn, Robt N ON Oe fn short. Such a variety of scenic won: | green trees and a snass of dense green veg- | #8 long as it lasts. ‘They understand what | though ‘they mar acive Cen ina eoe lar. Moore, John Mrs Te Scan aan a SCENERY THAT PASSES DESCRIPTI ders of clouds, mountain and sea thet 1| cation in aaidwinier, amia the snows and tobacco ts, and those we met were as anx- | character; it was rather the manner of the Buckner, Martha Stas Moore, Martha Mies Ulmer & «ttmore Rodale, 6 ee | the word. “If sou cosid take. the most | Rlaciers, ‘That is what we have here. The |i Yfow foreign seeras, et [They had but | man that gave offense. He seemed to real: | Bilis aM sq Morrie, Sarah J Mise dwn, TAs | pictucesque par ah Andes, the Hime | elaclers| slid downiinioithe ercen,and ithe |. Wren Wehment iathaatcrmuby ewilcht cy lleva ty sere ete Oe eee Maroy. tee siiee Schncider. 1 avas and the Alps, Id sink them up to | snowy falls and melts upon it all winter [designate all fcreigners, and the two 4 = ot Byrd, Evelyn Miss weer dd cena <t Schoenle, Dr ROW : cloud masses down with them into the sea! in othors it is snow dusted, and in others |SWeet cakes, and “‘tabac,” the German for ing, ‘studying, suspecting everybody with | Gampbell. 1) Mrs |) Nelson. Funnie Mise Rent, WR Tierra del Fuego. and wrap their rugged sides far up from | jeaqcd with snow masses. Qn the highest | tcbacco. FRANK G. CARPENTER. | whom he came in contact. In short, even | caubniis yur sqiest’® Nre. Bibel & Mise Seagur, J | ore waters fae¢. with a wonderful mantle | peaks only it is all snow and ice. Even in ss at that early time, he was a man certain | Carey, Sallie Mrs fois oe eae ee eee fi gtecn, which is now brilliant in the sun | tee jungles of India I have not seen so] THO ROU GHLY DISLIKED] to be unpopular, because one felt instinc- eee Sane Ses Parker We Mrs { ies hea ‘cane he an © Saye dense a growth omtrees and ibs cee ez tively that he could not be trusted.” Poqtees cue ences tase Slee es, Ino J “< OoTHTE ALACALUFES ce that it lies erraces up ‘he west ¢ of Patagonia. ad a cas Darter. C 2 ella. Matilda Mins sd € ENON tora ae Of natures wonders in the Magelians "| Chance to €9 on, shore every renee THE CHINESE PEDDLER Cary, Lacy Aine Rerklos, Lettie | = of nature's wonders in the Magellan shen we anchor 2 SntmeTs of 5 5 ‘ eae eg § ne Ma when we anchored for the night. Pushing | a, ; Le ie aeeleoatios — e Mies | On a South Pacific Steamer. cur way into the country was, however, | Major Esterhazy Was Never Popular With as ie et Philips. Laura Mise : oid Rcd aise | as era ' ssible. The trees are evergreens, gen- BPee Ones Seca te pene oe Sime) ema Walken es Serene pane ee Hencbert a% impeon,. Th Utada be weiss GSC pateey ide Ge eer all, Lut so dense that you ‘cola His Fellow Officers. for Their Toys. Cee eS ter, Marietta Miss | Heuke Wo wer. Rtecan be Sank. oeen te | ne enouete this axabipelase-— Ke lasted | walic) onl tele topslorigsnow (atioes!\aAu bed From the Philadelphia Inquirer. Gece see primis Mre Harding, Mr nett, TF W fM IO es | three days, and it was such a series of | of moss as deep as your waist covers the Few, indeed, would be their playthings | Chipley, Irene E Miss et ee Rade we it %” South, September 2, 1898. | wonders that only a blograph of the zods| ground about them, and great ferns, with | ovseniai im His Appearance and|if the Chine childven hee te mete Chew. teria. Miss “ay pane. a sag Ty THE TAIL END| worked by thelr own hands could paint | leaves as long : arm, extend ont in Sept A 5 or] Gaarke: Francia Miss Pugh, ‘Nellie Mias Harrison, Woe Slinghter, Jno B i 9 : every bare and rocky spot.. The ground is Character—Eived in Li toy stores for them. As it is, the peddler | Glark, Jennie Miss Pursell, James L Mrs Hartman Smith, Jas ¢ r re. ihe non the retina ef your imagination, Al jesturated with moisture. The mold and SEE is a familiar sight in every Chinese city, Puree. FB Mre Maskell, Smith! Ino fr Att m-|T shall attempt is to take you with me | rotting wood of covers it, and a Small Salar and when the children hear the gong of a] © x. Lena Mixe Hariwante well } ane lass Be say : 1 s ye Cole, Be ond. hia Mis: as , nental point of through some fow places by a transcript| vou sink in and stumble about more than toy seller It is a signal for a rush to the | Cole: Hester 1 Miss @) tend. MR Mion Hewtey, sand miles n the | the Itauri of the Line, bound for | ye F a oniy there that the | Special Correspondence of The Evening Star. At a call these men slip the pole from | Conner. Tattle E Mrs feed, Fiannab Mra gy le south pole t the | Hamburg via th lies in the har-; clima ul e glaciers and NEW YORK, October 21, 180 their shoulders and set their baskets on Cee canes Reed, Mx Mrs 5 foot of bor. S1e is a Ge pofG,20to per res we ; f 8 os the ground, and there ts always a group of | Davenport, Sallie A. Mrs Rebies & As un, Hanae It is seldom that a man whose name is ORE oot "8 Reynolds, Sarah Mrs man, Robt b . rs eee = + | Children ready to gather around them, Davis, Mis Regnolds, Thos Mrs Hill, Jox encer. Wen so familiar to newsp: eaders a h: ha - ¥2 - ie m4 fe aan Epaber ca as oa ee play of toys carried by one of these aise Sen at A Mrs] HUL Chas r, Alex M sa of Major Esterhazy is actually so little = fos ees z 3 me iddieh. Mrs Hodge, FM ¥. Payne @ known, There are probably not more than | to" Amerivang hoe eany things familiar oe aa! Seed Hodkins, Chas te 4 to Americans, though the shape half a dozen men fn this country who are | and seem odd | Diggs, Rose Mrs Ritchie, J W Mrs (2) Hin al wchsen,Hon and Mrs ° antastic. Clay fruits, dolls. of all ee Mra Roberts, Hattie Mrs ra Personally acquainted with the disgraced | Kinds, pewter Jewelry, earrings and, hatr ie Ss eae” Seen ee = ornaments, firecrackers strange shapes re ppineah, Charlotte ellis, Thi (4) Cenue Unench (oflcer: | (Ons (of) those! whol new || want willl wardiyreves EGO ieee ne ron rata Robinson, Harry” Mow Holines, dis Mrs ‘obinson, Ida Mrs Drurrett, Winnie Mra jfoninsen, Ida M Monk camels and elephants all | Dennison. Rettle Miss Rude him well is Baron de St. Mars, a French captain, retired, who now liv een myseif the United tle bowls and chopsticks, smali carved idol: s in this city. | little horses, dog: Andrew D on, Susan Miss Hopkins, Jn Prof RC a 3 : Hopkins. ican I “Among those who are not surprised at covered with rab t fur, and ywagons with | fails, Nan atts Roots, ir Hore, WOW pay peri ler sic boxe. ler the seats tha iy. 3 orer, el Mrs jouston, jr CP Sudley 4a the Steait of the final downfall of Major erhaz: are ene a Brees aa erind one Edmonds. Joo Miss Russell, Estelle Miss “ping aay A ws J site me the black, rocky Z ly said the ex-captain the other day, “may be} Other things seem stranger still, for the | Edwontn: Time Mpios [usnell. W Aten aged ige ae Coca rr Cape Froward, > southern Y, , jy safely counted those officers who served | kite mene in the shape of birds, fish, ser- | mewards. Helen Miss ay EnAETT Sun Taslor, W Clark nt of Sou fetes oats with him in Africa back’ in the seventies. | Peuts. dragons and even inanimate objects | Visworth. Ethel Miss ake ae Taylor, Wm point of South Amertea, ris nost str: : BNE ene psa Vettes. jl tie cuelta reand Gicteesterilleaweeere harps | Evans, Louise Mrs oathce Mes Sat aoe Templeton. David L upward to a height of 1 feet, and be- He held the rank of captain at that time, | fastened on their backs to make thent sing Olive Miss {Lille Mes eH 1, dno Ht hind them, listening in the moonlight, are ard I remember his appearance well. He | while in the air, and will have eyes set Tahanock eat Maggie Mrs Ic etek, Sa8 the nows of Mount Victoria. was a man of medium height and weight, | loose in their heads, so that when the wind] Fane Aisne Mia & Co eee pa Synheie tee ae With a long, thin face, tanned to an olive: | blows the eyes will turn around and look | Farr, Mi Mrs 4 tag RC 2 Spee he brown hue. The most noticcable of his | a8 if they were winking at you. There are | Farreil, Mary Miss . Phelp Mrs Atheee Walter great Andean chain. hose hills are t featur | long glass trumpets, to be blown like bu-]} Fields, Lucie Miss er. HL Mrs Erne Was a pair of black eyes, deep- ; . Ernest A ntinually in motion, aad surmounted | gles. t set, ¢ » Martha Miss Waverl end of the mighty ridge which tes the sf give out a beautiful, clear note. | [ye Shanklin. CH Mrs Maser Pvauk ar = ee 7 e sae = Ida Miss . Ella Miss is. KW centine! r. Loaded with copper, by heavy brows. The nose and the mouth, | Little shuttlecocks made out of a couple | Prone yqgls Ai ane 5 | dobuson, Juo i h awl from here on with thin lips, drawn at each corner, gave | Of cash bound together with red leather | loner. TMi Mice 7onannab OY ohnson, 3 Wo ard the north him an castern cast of countenance, At |#nd with a bunch of feathers fastened in] Flosd. BC Mes Simms, Laura Miss a ard th rth first meeting him the idea naturally sug- | the holes in the cash, which the children *t. Thelma Miss Slums, S Chaymnan Mrs paciay drop gested itseif that his orfgin was neither | Keep in the air by bumping with their E Miss Annie B Mrs = Tibbs, 7 ma and end Latin nor Saxon, Rather he looked like | heads and striking with their feet. Molds | Friese, F W Mrs (2) a Miss = Townsend: Sommers F 1 a i x Ba for making clay money, whistling tops that | Fuller. Fanny Miss laughter, JS Miss Kk aoe! beyond the gold one of the figures depicted by Ingres, in | Eoy mann string held between two sticks; | Frankiln, Mildred Miss Sloat, LJ Mrs = |e Pa eee 4 Klondi’ The his celebrated paintings: of oriental war- small whistles to fasten on the tails of pet | E‘¥. Lucy Mies mith. A LL Miss (2) eran: Tae A Tatten, Jo bait » a part of Tierra rior: i : SHORE ee Cee ee onge, ali dd lien: SmithJehn Dabney Miss | Kemp, David 4 ov eae Satheine aie Kernan, Jas Van Deventer, M@ Horn, snd that eae am, NF Vinson, Ree duo exo, above Ca pigeons to whistle as they fly. Gant, Nellle Miss Smit aan Uo an assignment to ‘duty in Afcica |" You will also notice a lot of clay molds | Gate pNci, es, Smith white frozen p: al cone which Was looked upon) as\ nothing- less than of different kinds of animals or fruits or | Garrett, le Miss Keres, Jas a i ong them is Mount Sarmiento,which LIVE IN THEIR CANOES. exile. Naturally, it was'Jontly’ work, with | other familiar objects, and for one cash | Gartreli. Mand Mes soe ie, ie gules AAR GEIS? 10 cia a ee no neighbors. except the Wandering tribes | you can take your choice. The toy seller Gaten. Mary Mra es Walters, Chas the altitude of M shing- | — Se z Cesoueces, and the GntoNn upon our OFM | then opens up the bottom tray in his rear | G85. Lacy Krieg Ward. Thos din front of my ship. here | Behrmann. her commander, 1s German, and | saw in the channel came from these gla- | Tesources, and the young oMficers all tried | hasket and shows a bow! of yellow candy Gihoon, DAMS. a © S Miss Lambertson, Dr Q F Waring. Col Geo fr T the Shadows of the | so are all the passengers, officers and crew. | cers. ‘They are among the great glaciers | to relieve the general ‘monotany of lonell- | ect over a pan of burning charcoal to keep | Gitpen- EA Mra Sternberg, Frank Mrs Lament, E Se. lark 25 me 0 silver t full) We sy nat the table, and are, in | of the world, many of them surpassing, it | Nexs. Therefore, we kept to one another's | jt soft. He rubs a little Hour in the molds Giles, V H Miss Stetson, AR Mrs Larim weeemmunk ~~ Se ¥s th rait of of Germany in one of | is said. the largest glaciers of the Alps. In | Society as much as possible, and naturally | to keep the candy from sticking, picks up | Ciliem. Martiee Miss Tsun, Mise | Teuh Wenn, ae eteeedia ehic! = of the coast of Chile. | Tierra del Fuego they line the channels in j the men got to be well acquainted. But | little of the soft sweet, which he works into | Gordon. Bllgabeth Mex ie ant Wesley s great oceans, t It is No. and is places with walls of ice a thousand feet | nobody knew Hsterhazy well. He had no | a cup shape in his fingers and then draws | Greenlaw, Sallie E Mrs Steward. Alice m Miss | T°. West, Ar sh together ar th of an Atlantic liner. | high. and ships must sail carefully not to | friends, no intimates. He always seemed | out, closing up the hole. One end is drawn tilhwell. WoW Mrs Lester Wet. 1B commerce rman. Themeatsare fresh. | be struck by the icebergs which in chinks | to have a furtive alr which he concealed | out longer than the other and then broken trattan, 3 Lowts Whiting, nner T hear thesquawkof | Of a thousand tons and upward break off | under a showing of arrogance and hauteur. | off, He places his lips to the broken place Streak, Mary © Mis Lieali, $M a inner T hear thesquawk of a dU i DI P P 5 y x Willianis, « Wie Starke of Maeck meats are carried alive | of them, with a noise like thunder, and fa!l | In short, he was far from being a good | and begins to blow and the lump of candy Street, Coplin L Mrs ee Wiliams, David payne aad, wana ater on we shall listen | into the Icebergs often fill’ Smyt fellow in a place where that was the only | slowly swclis. Then he claps the molds 1 le F Miss ee ee ae cake 0 Williams, PJ The Strait of Magellan makes | baa-ing of sheep, the grunting of | Channel, that it is impossible to get | crime that counted seriously against a | which you have chosen around it and gives Miss Se. Onrny Mies ; Withans, Pevaik age between ceans shorte Lethe cackitis ae geese mixed with | through: ‘Thlalwasithe caselasbyear!wheni| aan & hard blow, breaks off the stem through | Gus. Cassie Mise Enieline Miss Wittians, low Cape Horn ts than a nehing of the ice fields as the | one of the steamers was forced to go back Feathered Hix Nest. which he has been blowing, opens the | farmer, 4) Miss er, Eliza Williams, WF Soest fred intles agusteoeie. tat ts r makes iis way through them. Be-| ind where the ship upon which I now am | «#:sterhazy's position made this attitude | Molds, dips a ttle bamboo stick Into the | Tall Renton Mrs Tate. James Mrs Wilson, Jno M jr - = pay the $7) which is my fare to | had its bows crushed in by the icebergs. sea } soft sugar and touches it to the side of the | Handley. NJ Mrs ‘ate, Cora E Miss d y Wood. TT waters Iways tossed about by terrible | pinta Arenas on the Strait of Magellan 1, This glacial ice 1s not like that in our |f Isolation possible, though not at all | Candy figure in the mold, lifts it out of the Hames, Sarmeaner Miss 7po ior, Minnie 1 Miss | Mclonough, ‘Martin Ww storms. Tonight the Magellans are almost : if the ship will go via Smyths chan- | Tivers and lakes. It is as hard rock | hecessar At that time he was detached | mold and hands it to you on the stick; all | Harris. Nina M& BS ge tear Maisto se we ~ sige nd, end the Htauri is s_ The Kosmos is the | and of a crystalline ren. “During out | from his regiment, and had charge of the |in much less tme than It takes to tell | Harn: Magee Mas nan, Louisa Ailes McKee, Mr and Mre Jas } ste fy through them s this route, the other ; Second day in the archipelago we Stopped | collecting department of the Arabian pu- | bout tt. as is Hathawas. Flora Mra Thombeans M. Mra SS -SSs ¥ wa We are now AP whlch wetcer unalone | IU up to the ship. It was a little bere, mot | ret at Seti. It ts diffcult to explain Spain‘s Great Bullding. Hotzrsond. Batata Miss 280ruls.. Virinda $cLaughiin most mic n the Atlantic and the | from Cape Horn to the | bigger than a Washington city lot, but it | larly the exact duties of this bureau ay 5 Herndon, © W Mrs Fibs, Emma Mr ier, 3s n Foe reer CO Ee eee erat Wes tifa Oba Sere eeeoda ced |RWHLER nedicchaveetotl the enticelwamimsicse | Erem:tnelNew Tore Wertd: Herndn, Stone Stes THGS, Steunia Mie & eae tier MEETS unter oD io fatroetealaliversalt haauerac angles | ton of that half-wild country previous to | Spain possesses one of the largest build-} ighfold, Mollie Mise TughBMn, Grace Mee | coast. We shall have to travel very slowly | and projections, and it was with crowbars | the establishment of civil $urisdiction. Its | ings in the world. It is at once a palace, a | Hicsine es Samuel D Mrs ©| and must anchor at night, but before we | that the steward and a bout load of sailors | Officers were judges, sometimes lawmakers, | Nuscum, a lbrary, @ picture gallery, a] Woucday tb Me Sam Mrs FOREIGN LIST. peated 5 Neate trips Whe | attacked It and broke off enough ice to jast | t@X Collectors, and, in fact, the one con- o> geen anal Guburials plaee. Fe Nnea Romie alle rir, Lectin kee othe hSatahh Sbabeae: ik ae 3,000 tons of saltpeter {for the rest of the One of the | necting link between the native tribes and | Monastery, Place. | Holton, Mary F Sune Warriemiee Carracriste, CPZ Schelmnes, Mendel for a distance of | ee ~ of Chilean | great log ¢ ing heavy | the home government. They were usually | This wonderful edifice 1s called the Es- | jforner, Rettie Miss Van Dyck. Edwin sre | Colerino, Gluseppe Sehm Auton air is clear t } for different parts of Europe, hun- | Cargo was first coupled about the corner | 000 friends of the sheiks, who, for the | corial, although the name is very generally Howard, Ea Mire iam Yunzera, Nettle Mrs Duvinage, 1 Seconide, Cle GS miles. Beginn | of rolls of Chilean sole leather for | of one of these ice masses. Then a lever | maintenance of their own prestige, found | corrupted both in England and America igheintess Wade, Mary Miss eee art poreny is pene S southeast to Cape Fro- | and wheat and wine for Punta | in the engine room was pulled and a sec- | It advisable to keep on the right side of | (15 \tpsourial.” wea BSS Walte, Maria Mra ae Bettman & Warneewn vw northeast, w Arenas and Montevide We re ow taking | n of an iceberg was raised by steam by he officers. Sy Howell, G Rushton Mrs. 4 3 = anetti, Lucia Wot, br Neeamee = her s tons of coal. Hrawny Chilean ¢ ing | means of a derrick to the deck of the vee. | “Eisterhazy, as I have said, had charge | The Escorial was commenced in 1568 by Hudson, May Miss wale Morgan, Jno ' t F pe tee Boi ie te ee sel. Some of these blocks weighed many | of the collecting department’ of the Ara-| order of Philip Il of Spain and was intend- | Hunter, Clara Mrs “ete ease putting it into the ship. 5 ig! many M Miss ia Mrs, STATION B. i H Ges nnel is 3 stand in lighters or flat boats and use ; tons, and altogether we must have taken | bian bureau. The chief reason for his se-| ea partly as a royal burying place for the Hava Shad Washington, Margaret M>s. LADIES’ LIST, K. an w ies from {Wo t0 | shovels to throw the coal up to the plat- | a hundred tons of ice. Coton to All this post was his excellent | yings of Spain and partly as a commemora- | Hutton, Lula Miss shington, Rene Miss? | Brooks, Aunie M Mrs twenty-four iniles. At times our vessel has | forms under the doors of the hold’ fers Sac arey eh ie area knowledge of Arabic, a qualification witen | Hos Ph anain and partly a8 @ commomora. raeaty Oise chington. Rosa Mi _ been with stone's throw of the shore, | other peasants shovel it in. They swear as . Ld i Was rare among us, but which he had pick- | s+ Quentin in 1557. It is built entirely of monies tlock, Oulda Miss Irvin, HO ye masts ip, whet the chan’ | thes work, and we hear them still swearing | During our voyage through these strange | ed up somewhere in the course of his mys- | St, Quentin in 1507. He is bulls entirely of Keon, Julia Ay Mr Db Snccee Mee STATION D. = ters seemed to aimo t/ and heaving as we go to bed. islands we saw but few animals and birds. | terious past. His position was one of abeo- | 589 feet in breadth. At each corner is a sae SE Aa rbsier, Marth Miss GENTS’ LIST. tour This is so only tn the | nl Paid Lock onsens: Now and then we passed a small school of | Me Authority) he Had no subortinat's and | tower 200 feet in height. ‘Tho bullding ts | Jacoe. MF Mien Wace ae Martin George Welsh, Thos L*~ : oe ont = BER Ee ath sae: ; e spe Pir heads out of the | oe eee entre ee eeeagen’t@! | supposed to represent an enormous grid- | Jessup, Laura H Miss Welch. Mabel M = —= = = ds of Patagonia | We awake far out in the Pacif fies pace Ung ech bee da tien ies ut he in command of the entire subdivision, to AL Mrs . Martha Mra of vy th Is © sont a a c racitic. hes piece a sea Sih mie ts ‘i BrOns iron lying upside down, and this shape is | Johnsow. A 1. 3 Wells, Annie Mrs Raising a Submerged + Pieces der Fuees care In the west | steamer is rolling, the white caps are dane. | Water and took a peep at the steamer as it | whom alcne he had to report, pellerol' to dave Peters EAGL Tawiicen | samen, Cane Stes “Sous Auate Mis, = little else than mounteins, which | iy Gver the waves and away off to the | Went by. We saw half a dozen whales in| ‘There was one other peculiarity about whio/waslanantyredion\ aigridiron: Ss we Cornelia Mrs | From the Chautauquan. wes mated aud tap ming Gees | eastward we carl make oul tha tatne ice |(the different daysiotltie trip ana newrandl| Wsterhazy'a\ino SION. Mat gas Almost the | “Twenty-one years were spent in bullding | Jonson, Harriet Mrs Reonsentica: If the sunken ship lies more than fifteen eles rait of outhne of south Chile. A day later in | hem an albatross and gull. We had, how- | O08 (ne in Africa which gave a man che | it, and it cost $12,000,000. Tt has been twice | Johnson, Hattie srs Winyres jam ats meters under the surface of the water the a Vas hipelago Ss wae srry ever, 9 number of visits from the wild | ¢hDOPMBIY tO reap oer gna ivantaze | partly destroyed by lightning and was Jieeon Lime Miss White Katie S Miss. possibility of rescue appears very doubtful, stp ‘ storm and rain we steam past the long vages of the Magellans, the naked In- | 479m, his connection with Mectignetnment. | sacked by the French soldiers in 1808, Johnsen, Mt Miss White, Maggie Miss the pressure of water flowing over the er of h are moun- | helio - savages of the Magellans, the nuked In- | white 2 » colle arts [eee * | Johnson. 3 ruite’ Paina as S of wa ving over the bove the waves and the | N#frow island of Chiloe, which the gov- | Gians of Patagonian channels, who ure per | Vile the heads of the collecting depart- | There are 14,000 doors and 11,000 windows: Johueou, Mary Miss @) White, Mary FM maken : he sides are z A | Tents Ee eT TOM ea Ioneees & is ment in the various districts did not fix EE CE TONES anson, MJ Miss. Whitlar, Mary Miss wreck is so powerful that t ' ad of Tierra del Fuego. The [ernment fs trying to colonize, and on the | haps the least known of the wild men of | the amount to be paid in by each tribe, they Jonneon, Roberta Mrs Whittle, Retito Miss | Hresesd in, in which case the wreck is thin many rican | evening of the third day we enter the wile | the world. As far as I can learn, no eth- apa : ? ne | Mamma—“I wish I knew what baby is | Johnson, Wickes, Fannie Mrs ? | & y we 1 : had sole charge of the ccliection and the hnson, Rostabell Miss Wickes, Neibibes Oat itis arvensis Sis Bees EE De yuna andvetleyswes° | Gulf of Penos and come to anchor at the | Bologist has ever lived with them or made | power to grant full discharge upon their | trying to say when he ts cooing.” Jones, Alice Mrs (3) Wiley, Georgia Miss worthless. 2 eee eee xtensive ple | entrance to the channel. ‘The water 1s like | Study of them. They are different trom | F2' tures, Fapa “Well, I ean tell you what he te | Jones, Fannte Mise Williams, Alice M Mrs | teen meters under the surface of the water nsformed tr a THE pond: | (Ha Stee an the Oaas and Yaghans of Tierra del Fue EN eis ristic of the Arabian | UYing to say scmetimes when he is crying.” i 2 then the divers first calk th: 1 the strait lies the endof sou \ in the ocean, We ure eulling among the | and several of whom were carried years | a portion of any debt laid upon him, no | , Papa — “Blankety - blank - blank, blank, | Jovell, Rachel Mrs, Wiltees Frasts Me |. on thicueh which wtube la conbuct- on the « an ine eee acpntinua- | couds through the water-filled ravines of | 80 to England. These Indians are known | matter how small tts amount. If he sue. | lank! — —!!"—Puck. Joie Jennie May Miss Williams, Henrietta Mrs | Cer CAEN die eakinkes Mon'of the arehipelaxo of Terra del Fuego: | come of the gredtest of the world's moun | as the Alacalufes. ‘Thera (are, alll 'told)|| cena hele prea: Cetin tee ete + o-____ Kaiser, Lizzle Mra ctreeendy ot Awe Porctlgge Mtoe gr cage tong dg ed Te ras well as the strait and al-) cline On our right are grass-clad islands | Only about 500 of them. They have no | cversencned ‘a christian, and wilt breee oe Wants Quickly Filled. Kenderson, K Nits Wileon, Bewle Alles Soya snidie oped Ae nek pebaedl Sar ed hn urea of land here, which | OM our left are rugged, ragged peaks rising | Chiefs or tribal relations. Each family | jt to all the other tribesmen. ‘To attain | At this season, when #0 many are seek- eke 5s tes Wolfman, Katie Miss ton dktoukn “eeebonn tebncan meee ae (She has an area of land here, whic | in all shapes out of the sea. There is one | takes care of itself, living in its own canoe. | this object he 1s willing to give the most | ing situations, and. on the other hand, so | Kei Ada Mre Wood, Maria Miss ccna cae SEAS ae 3s eDnenese See She seemucety Geers aha er | clothed in green which reminds you or tne | TP are strictly canoe Indians, who live | Javish presents—guns inlaid with silver or | many seeking employes, it 1s of interest Kenny, Annie Miss Wood, Mary Miss is driven in d fe it to the surface of the State of New York andalmoat tae tae | Pyramid of Ghizeh, and there is another | almost entirely upon the sea, and who are | gold, thick carpets of priceless. value, | to kuow thar advertisements under the | Keyser, Mary B Mii oe be eee ee ee f Ohio. "Some of the Chilean navai | Which ts a fair likeness of the smashed nose | found only in these straits and off the | fabrics woven by his women, if necessary | classifications Wanted tran’ are cranes | eee ‘Allen Mes | Woodson, ‘Merriuder vay hiner SO hs ok poseiae hp maki is eed Eh concer | suliinixs infront the green nll are clan coasts of southern Patagonia. They sleep | even one of his fine-blooded horses. it | Situations aro inserted in The Star at a a8 eR Miss Woodwanl, Eliza Miss bmerged wreck air tight, or in case it v a nd Machine tat the arccin | ile Gver ole another Uke 4 troup of sian pomcrlnen on pancnin bitte piegane thrve | matters not to him that the value of his | charge of 15 cents for fifteen words. Height. Lizsle D Miss Woolfolk pr ese een agree nage eee p ncegrey channels and harbors, b Feat : Me da ‘y | feet high made by bending over the branch- wai ell, Mary B Miss Wortce, : ~ P ‘almost as unknown az |Dlaying leap frog, and farther on they | fe¢ i i ees ne Tandeli, a woke Gon very quiet coast, then wire ropes or chains ee Meewelia Spa | tise upward in fort-like walls of grecn a | €S of trees and tying them together. ‘They Lanier, Maggie Miss 2 Sha tok xaksicar by ake 8 ri vefen Che atrale: Gebon | thouswnn trestanign Migeine unoasciseer tn make a fire in front and craw! into them for A SPANISH VIEW OF THE PARIS PEACE CONFERENCE. Hawrence, B Mies woe a uns aero ci bag Fak ening . eee, cats | that mist rele | - ‘above | the night. Their canoes are well constructed. Lawrence. Eva foane Ales Sik the i - are, and it is only lately | Now we are in lakes surrounded by sn ebouts tires op sout tee uiwide and Dernane Lee, CC Mrs Young, Mande Miss on th: other side, so that both ends of the Even now the sav-| sail by a break in the mountain wails, | tosether with sinew. They are cross-rib- 1S*vincents, Jessie Miss Younge, Dora Miss which connect with the engine on the prams less known than the | deep fiord with moss green walls. snow peoriaie rn medeuthat rey mean abe caally. Lettie Julia Mes Zuntes, Emma Miss In this way the connection between both and only the coasts | dusted a thousand feet high and filled with | Paddied. Neate : et GENTLEMEN'S LIST. the lifting prams is made and the interior haua Beew exvie black water a thousand feet dcep. As we | Hite, bullt on aan cereale aaa Abbott, CL Brice, Jno of ths wreck pumped out, so while the the gold digger and the | look the sun breaks its way Into the gorge | SUC asIOGK ine: Hao olarthestaxe ries ‘Abendsheim, Fred Bromaugh, Wm ropes or chains are being wound on the vessels are, however, making | and turns the water tu siiver. It paints | Boat: Sue Se oa In oak tater Aaiieon & Johnston Brooks, Chas Sriilans SS TSVRIECK is aunheOd Searte “hay” Siac; and within a few years this great | diamonds in the snow of its moss-green | Wear no clothes whatever, in a state of Allen, AW Se Tee An GONERBERER: ike iatchn he cieabe es be a terra incognita no | sides. Over there is a glacier, a great | Pature, and Tot Ree yen bt a ‘Allen, Geo " Broughton, Wim S nearly twent-four centimeters in diameter green mass shining out upon the ragged | Smid the snows of winter. with only a con deterecn: Rev gaw Brown, Harry and that in raising a wreck from four to * Satine sides of a snowy mountain. See the ee Cs GE wee ee Andrews, W Brown, Jt eight must bs employed, then It is easily - ae z . has struck it and it is now a bed of emer- | they have seen white men, hoy Hah ‘Andrews, Rey and Mrs Brown, Peter estimated how great ts the weight brought e generally accepted belief regarding | f1Gs In a setting of frosted sliver are glad to get such clothing as th — Brown, IM cp Red nibs MhAk GkbcuED OF teaat abe tor shern Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego| The weather and the sky changes every | bes. and they come about the ships and Arthur, Isaah Sree bor the rescue requires, t they are something like the coastsof | moment, and before us fs an ever-varying | f0r cast-off garments, food and tobace Baldwin, G R Brown, Wm E ——~ee % a mn f sky a - -. | Some whom we saw were as naked as Baldwin, Hen: Rrezan, Victor R Rs se 1 or those of the arctic seas, The | Panorama of sky and sea and land. We | 80M ; ere paneer oe Ranrea, Wm F . Women Nameless in Corea r sail out of the sunlight into snow storms | Adm and Eve before the fall. Others wore Barbour, Edwin Boda. Sem! a mt them as wastes of | ong steam right out of the shoo ine: tc. | bits of old clothes. >| ee Bare, IS Frem the National Zeitung. ate, forbidding and ter-| sun. Now the sky {fs almost blue overhead, | One man. I remember, who was apparent Rarnesby, Walker B pe The Corean woman has not even a name; ler. For the past four] with fleecy white clouds scattered here and | ly the head of the almost naked family in Barre, Frank H calvin, $ in her childhood she receives a nickname winding In and out of the | there through It. Cloud masses here nestle | Rls canoe, had on only a short vest, open Tas Ferdinand Bemanell: 3005 by which she is krown in the famlly and Patag Dee all Was Deen theooe ye |e whe (celwaty taparof the! hills, there thieya| foe) sev cadet Gea toen atau canh Beaman, Dr € J Gare Wat by Fer nearest friends, but which, when Patagonia. } sail has been through a pemsely 0 snowy pe: ey, 3 We HL . + i 5 . | a ecenig. patioaman' that cane bel to eccin mete er ches [his walst. His favorite wife, clad Ina SS — > she arrives at maturity, ts employed only { assed in the world. We entered the| stoop down and press warm kisses | StTing of beads, sat in the boat near the Berry, Cartwrite, L by her parents. To all other persons she ago by what 's Known as the| upon thelr icy. lips. pon the snow- | fire, with a naked boy of two sucking his Ber, Js) Caul, Jno is “the sister” or “the daughter” of such Smyths channel route, about 400 miles | dusted hills and dark water are dashes of | "gers as he leaned against her naked legs, ae Sane, en ol beck kk as ee es ee) above here, and coasted slowly along | sliver where the sun has poked its way | And his other wife, Ru eitae Heeorn Bird, ” Ge name is buried-—she 1s absolutely nameless; through one chai after another wu: through the clouds. The varying lght | {een held @ naked baby to her, broaut Biscoe, Geo D her own parents refer to her by mentioning we makes the channel on one side of the ship } Tih the other “i was oninering ih my SS the district into which she has married, + black, on the other side it is of a beautiful | Sverooat as} looked ay these beephe tak Boswell Paces sar Should her marriage be blessed with chil-/ Sarmiento yellowish gree d beh i t overcoat as I looked at these people, 1 . i her” Of so ana if ¥e green, an ind where the sun they did not seem cold nor miserable. Block, J 6 Clark, B.C dren,she is “the mothe of so and so. ras. Tt 4 Strikes it the ship has left a path of molten | Buch “inen ‘and Wore rere aS. Bliven, WE Clark, Chas it happens that the woman has to appear ern Patagonta present combinations | silver. ‘The hills change even as tha water under than over-sized. They had faces Blount, § 4 Clarkson, Jus W in a law court the judges give her # special h make you think of a hundred Lake | under the sun. Now they are dark. The . baal ei Goady, Jno P (2) name for use while the case lasts in order Lake Gen - 1 pe somewhat like these of our Indians. Boudinot, F J (3) Cobb, Andrew W i . cet fe ae Cet i ren | Sunt washes! thems withslta cays an® thé [pie men ay faces were alice eviientiy Bowker Robt B Soph. deacon to save time to simplify metters. together in one ever-widening, ever-| ferns and moss and trees brigh Th : ting, = a ri Here are th % ner ane moss and trees brighten: ie} from paint, and the naked brave in Bowling, Frank jr Gol Ree ed islende reyes, Peautles of | ragged volcanic background of the rocks | the vest had a thin black mustache, “They Waiter McKinley—“Fried eggs! Fried eggs! Fried eggs!” es Cheap Pabiictty. wed to bee ae eed etic Eye; | sFow out and through the green Gnd black | had lack hair; that | of the ‘women Sagasta—“But, my dear sir, when there is nothing but fried eggs on the menu, what | Boyse, Re ad G For fifteen cents you can let every one fq : ‘apped m ains Kissel | falling hundreds and sometimes thousands |Icng, but put’ up in some way. | choice have 1?” 1 by che sun, and mighty glaciers stit: Washington know by a Star wart ad. that’ you want a situation or want a cook, : 1 Bi . M A of fect almost straight down are silvery land’ that of the men cut off so| Waiter—“Well, sir, you have the choice of eating fried eggs or refusing them,’* Buster, BD

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