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TH]‘ ()\IAIIA DAH\ BEE: SUNDAY, MAY 3 -SIXTEEN PAGES, Having determined not to move any of our goods trom our present location to our new quarters, we have decided to slaughter every dollar's worth of goods in our lele)hshmcnt without regard to former price or cost. . O LS BARLCY II\‘ XY OU WISH BARGAINS Woven Wire Spring $1.25; PR GATSI ; worth § Alarm Clocks ........ 75¢c, worth $1.75 lccllsoxestiy, Wash Stands, .. worth Silver-plated Knives Gasoline Stoves . Riccle: worth $2.50 and Forks............ $1.90, worth 4,00 Extension Tables Silver-plated Castors 1.0, worth 5,00 Iolding Bed Wire Cots .............. 1.50, worth 3.00 : Fine Bedsteads ....... 4.50, worth 9.00 Bedsteads |, worth $3.00 8-Day Clocks, ... .$2.75; worth $7.50 Parlor Suits, | 25.00; wort Decorated Lamps 2.50; worth 7.50 : = Springs 90¢; wortl Caca S i Dinner Sets............. 9.50, worth 20.00 (‘I 1\S Oak Rocker . 2.00; worth 6.50 Tea Sets................ 4.25, worth 8.50 ‘m)_. 'mu”" g i Y Bicturesii .. 3.00; worth 8.50 Lunch Baskets ........ 12c, worth 3oc Cihlflontici ol won L QU Pictures .. .. 1.00; worth 2.50 Lounges................. 4.75 worth 8.50 Side Boards .. ..............14.00; worth 28.00 Ingrain Carpets, . L. 12eiiworth#35¢ Cradles .................. 1.25, worth 3.00 Breakfast Tables .. 1.90; worth 3.50 Matting .. " 1hci worth#35¢ Book Cases............. 3.00, worth 6.00 Children’s Trundle Beds, . 3.75; worth 7,50 Brussels Carpets | ... 55¢; worth $1.10 Antique Stands ........ goc, worth 2.50 Lawn Settecs 2.90;aworth S FOH00RNT Folding Tables, . 70c¢; worth 1.50 Bureaus .................. 8.c0, worth 15.00 Toilet Sets. . 3.50; worth 7.00 Baby Carriages, ..$6.00; worth 12.00 Commodes.............. 2.75, worth 5,50 Center Tables .. . 1.50; worth 4,00 Wash Boards_ .. 12¢c; worthts 25¢ Plush Rockers.. 2.50, worth 6.50 Wooden Pails_ 12¢; worth EVERYTHING MUST GO. Mammoth Installment Compan Al 613-615-617-619-621 North Sixteenth Street, Between California and Webster. SOVIN \D THE MEXICANS, | Scnor Diar, has somo ndian viooa in his | o skics are closer to the carth horo than at | gallop up on horses s gorgegusly apparaliod, | THE ANDREWS RAILROAD RALD | dui the it the work expected of cach cugine ve (8 ey, ot MEXICO AND THE MEXICANY., | cins. mha congress of Moxico is inrgoly | howmo, the wmaon. shines at. misht with & | ond - hoross . tho country” Wo. . saw Al S R £ i T R bl B R on the bridg wado up of the descendants of the Azt greater brilliancy, and the diamond-like stars [ now and then troops of worgeous ets to difforent points north were purchased. | in the hope that the pursuing engine mignd and it s believed by many that the futurd | remind me of the luminous heavens which | cavalry dashing over the fields. Tho arly Friduy morning tho party boarded the | be wrecked. Futile hope! On sped pursied possibilities of Mexico are to come from this | hang low at night over the Gulf of Siam, 1 | costures of the common people were fully train bound for Chuttancoga. It bad the | and pursuces, Iosecn was passed. . Tho ;. spublic and TIts | race. The pure Spaniards of Mexico are | Luve been in Singapore, almost on the | as picturesque, and both men and women illine Cl : _ | usual number of coaches and three closed | fucl of tho formor wis exhaustod Aud the A Look at Our Sister Republic and few, and they and the people of mixed In equator, whero the thavibmeter. stands at | presented raro.bits of color and reminded ns | & Thbrilling Chapter of War History Re- | hiox'cars next to: tho engine. This clrcum- | box cars wors torn to picces to supply the Curious People, and Spanish 'blood make up, it d, about eighty the year round and where the | of the dance of the nations in a spectacular vived and Retold, stance was favorablo to the raiders. | nceds of the en ory attempt to'firo a than one-fourth of the wholo population. | air1s always saturated with moisture. Hero | extravaganza. The lower clisses of the men They formed groun in ome car:| bridee was balked. Recont rains had sonked Stll, it is from them that the whole country | I judge the therwometer averages about | of Mexico dress in cotton, but tuey wear and resolutely awaited the moment for deci- | the timbers aud tho five failed. 1o take. hoid has 'been judged in the past, and it remains | seventy, and the air is as_dry and exhilerat- | blankets of all the colors of the rainbo' about 4 ; sive action, which was _rapidly approacting, | beforo the pursucrs areivod o quench it, AZTECS OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. | {0%c soon what tho influence of railroads and | ing as that of the cquatorial Malacea is moist | their shoulders, und thoy drape these around | HONORED WITH A MONUMENT. ) At Big Shanty, the first stution north of { Thus the raiders, defeated in their mui pac sequent development will huvo on the | and cnervating. themselves in @ way that udds dignity and Marietta, the (tain stopped for breukfust, b, struggled’ to escapo the toils rapidly Pare amnllOrat oo grace to them. Many of these blankets are The events immediately following 1s best told foning about them. The situation was A Land of Perpetual Sunshine With ng and Agricultueal Resowrces. | hinkof n comtry whoro the crops grow | OF tod flanol and it you will tako n blanist | An Outline of a Daring Undertaking, | by ittenger, bistorian of tho raid: * less, and tho raiders, when with Roses and Strawberrics the s best, part of Moxico has not boen pros. | tn Txuriant groounass als the sear_ Whore | of this sort and throw it around your shoul- | o) "o oo coushe, the Capturo of Now was'our_opportunity! * % * An uty miles of Chattanooka, decidedea f PEOta ey b Lo ainaras A luing ook | bao meas o enotn no Hoonr: , WWihoro!) ‘dors and over, your’ back somo “morning as ) drews quictly arose, and without turning bis | ubandon tho engine, | scatfer and o Year RRound and Var- o g e L hele e otk [ Fsoeirasc Broiatiniotroos and fowors Ibloor ) | voulapiousiotibed fnfyousnow.wiitte the Train, the Chase and the bead toward us stepped to the door with the | deavor to reach the union lines. Ono aftor ied Resources. statds of (he country, tells mo that the great | crops in ono end of a field, while othor men | ™% ““\',t‘)‘““‘,‘“‘]’;“_ ;f’"’:‘\,‘;{,“‘fl‘,‘“‘?l“j"‘fih ‘I"‘BI‘““{: Lading of the Expedition. SrONISUIRG as poncinglionts mm‘““ 1ok ljanothorithe R ...‘vl.::m”:r ooy mines of the future” lie in the south rather | were planting tho same crops at the other. s v HOWOYOKy ASDABE B el st IS PO G AW Q.a0vel 8.0 o day, thau in the north, Still the north has been | Upon parts of this plateau strawberrics aro | 48 the wing of the raven, you must stain your tiraipbloningtholiidonhorostitholeain ihitlling lasiithovihan fuoonivorglehe bog! WA S I S Workod for ages. and gold and . siiver are | Fibg. duting ovory: Wweok of the yvear, anq | face with walnut juioe, dud putonyourhioad T 1ay | opPOSite the opot.” Thoy walked” o nitie 0f @ serics of privation’ and_ hardships [Copyriaht 1891 I Frank G. Carpenter.| turnediout the by the millions of dollars' | everything scems to grow at any iime. it is | Ohe of these gorgeous sombreros in a more or t was eminently fitting that Memorial day | at an ordinary pace” uutil ab whicnh the seattered raiders were doomed to iAo, Mexico, May 20.—(Spocial Corre | SIGE R U Pl Corl thie northorn mining | planted. Tho rule about. Silao s two_ crops | 1058 dilapidated ‘condition. You must get a | should have been chosen for the unveiling | the locomotive, which ~they saw at | undergo. They were hunted as wild animals, spondenco of Tue: Ono hundrod thou- | FECLL AL Somparatively Htks known, mhd. | bf wieat rom the suimd rouhd & $oue, and 1 | Pieco of diety sole leatior'so lurgo that $0ut | and Chattanooka for the site, of n monument, | & glnee” {0 "bo © vaewnt,' That was | Blodhounds wero enplovod %o track then, sand Americans will spend at least, ouo hun- | Colonel Bivins, " well " kaown American | see that in harvestng the wheat is ‘pulled [ [0t (&% stand fn it et feuve s Baté el 68 | commemorative of ono of tho most thrilling | YOy e @uitens Wt fow stops IR | o king now hovrors to the chie. | Pittengos sight-seeing. Tbey will rush from one part | $itie 0% (ARG ILECE: (RR I8 R AR S O | e Maxionn pintoon 1s Hire s sarden: “ihoe | blacking the soles of your fc look { of the rebellion, was clea far as the curve littlo way up | Robinson a few miles from the vity, By o of tho continent to the othor carrying a little | ¢Sy & SORCCEm A0 on o vich. bub unknown | 15 some: Tt oat o ma, blices the | More rough and tough than the leathe Ul [ The story of the Androws railvoad raia | the road which closed the view. Thes then | Monduy evening all tho raidors excopt Wood America along with them and will have their | 5ol Yooty on the. western. const of the | oo o o ut an Ay, Pices e | Aftor you have dono this you will present & | 110 GGoorgia in 1552 forms & uniqus ehapter | irned and walked back until just in wdvance | and Wilson wore captured. - Tha lattor wmade two hundred thousand eyes worn out with | country. The ngricultural resources of Mex- | yesterday through lands which were as rich | (30t """";““!"_’,f" Mot ‘,,’“n“ ‘\‘[“.',.""‘{; oy olinoliiestibarangoearjand chehlndisnag| helsivmytoitheunlomingy sl o two hundred thousand legs will limp from tho | tested us its mincs, and theeo is onough un; | makos nfl::: e e avosi | you ! il 500 i Iy c- | ness of the participants and the gizautic re- | for me.” Knight drew out the pin and laid | transferred to the jufamous “Swim's” hole effccts of their tramp ‘Their one hundred | Seates if it were cutivated. Just now coffeo | richer than these uplands, and the boautiful | Cupations as are possessed by his bro her in | guits sought to be accomplished by a hand- | it cavefully on the drawbar. Audrews came Chattanooga, In accordanco with the thousand stomachs will bo turaed inside out | planting Is being largely undertaken and new | valley in which Mexico city is located is ono | ¢ 1and of gyut, o carries the hesy B | r) "ot “men 1o tho enomy’s bagleto;thdidooriofioupican Andiandihigior: montimudalba(ozelduactingithio o atleast twice by the billowy Atlantic, and | sugar and coffee fields are being planted in o | of the garden spots of the world, | dons of the country upon, his buck, - Ho Jugs | o 55 B0 T Gl Southorn Con. | GIRATY tone, o RS wh el e P TaoH nors Rl e Y number of the states, O e s ool pihe Vsl | about Mexican beer in pig-skins as the Hen- | try b - | to go mow.” Our hearts gave a great | from recognizing oach other and refused their §100,000,000 will be largely spent in dis- o A i f o the sen, My ride :of “terday | Balee water-carrier carries the water ho has | federacy declured at the time, *‘the [ bound at the word, but we rose quictly and | give any information concerning themselves. comfort and«discontent. Kuropo they will ~ The -_\I"" “!f:'l"‘ l“";'(‘: '“I- oo/ot | 1A 8t ‘an. altitude St more than Yathny | for sule, and you see him in a hundrod differ- | gecpest laid scheme, and ou tho grandest | followed b Andrews glided forward | They résolutely maintained that they w find to b3 mo longer n forcign country, Tho | | Americuns know but litlo of tho Mexico of | Yt 1, S WA | Jord (o S0 U | ont fordhs on evory strcot and i overy 0a0 80 | SCulC™4hut over omanated from tho prain of | SWHLY, and Kuight, scolug b coming, hur- iers sont under commund to necomplisi & _ tourist s tation its. ploturesquonoss out of | e present. Loy would considor it an ovi- | S fetuabeve the level of the sea. [ho | 15y uow pictu vied on'before und jumped on the engine, | definite purpose aud insisted oi being treated —e s taken its pletures dence of ignoranca it a Mexican had never ey thro ch wo puss a Lies et Beauty of the Women, any number of Yaakees combined.” By some > ho at once cut tho bell rope, and, seiz lonorable prisoners of war, The t, and the custows of its peopie are almost | heard of tho name of any one of the United | 00 both sides with mountains, which, 1 the | qy, womin ko as straugo 43 the men, | it s likened to the Morgan raid into Ohio a lie throttle bar, stood leaning forward | conf aid not take kindly to the samo us ours, The most foreign country | States, but muoty-nino Americans out of one | Bazy distance, looked as though they Med | though thelr plumago is less gy, 'Those of . but except in tho fatal termina- | with tense muscles and eye fixed ou the faco | this amiable view of tho raiders’ istel can now be reached g hundred canuot numoe without looking at the | been dusted with the frosty silver which is asses are dressed in black, 5 - Y of the leader, Brown and Wilson, tho other | work il the instructions of high in Christendom can now be reached in u Pu ¢ A 3 S 1 | tion of both there o comparison, Tho atend O e by | geography five of the twenty-soven statos | 50 abundant witkin them, and as wo rode on | oo WIS, THEE 57 0T rals ook | toR © ) tharo ils’ no/ compariacn, (Thal | ok e londer, (rowg anc Ailkan to, GiNK| WOk itlane; o high mow slgoper, o o Only water it meeds | which muke up this great republic, and the | through the green, I boiuted to thewm and | o %ough o plague had struck tue town and Kuight on the engine. The rest of us seram- | spics, to bo Orders wora to bo crossed Is tho ragged little viver kiew | majority of thom look upon the whole country | dsked ouo of my Soxican fellow travelers | o)) “tho women were in_mourning. In theso | mounted and carcfully arvanged plan to di- | pled into the rear box car, All this time a | issued by K. K i AR 8s tho Lo Grande. Moxicois o land of dif- | as about us lurge s one of our medium sizeil | What 1oy boyond. Hho xeplied that ob tho | jutorior cities of Moxico the better-cluss | vort the forces monacing Generoi Bragg in | sentry was standiue not . d feet from | April die g that *tho spies bo tried at ferent clvilization from ours. Its peoplo are | states. ‘Tho fact is Mexico is one-fifth as | othor sido of the mountains there wero othor » Moeanwhilo the prospeet of an ex- @ people in themselves, and I find it one of | large as the United States including Alaska [ little valloys s rich as that through which | oyper bare or covered with a black shawl, the most ordinary proceeding,and a numberof | change of prisoners nerved the raiders, The s earla b e | andiit N liman big a5 Great Britain, | WO werg pssing, and, tho greater part of | ¢ of which their olive-complexioned faces ! other soldiers “wero idling but a short | advanco of Mitehell on Chattanooga not only ISEATIRERL, QINREEIN .9 h:a09 HOXS 3 1t is more than three times as targe s Ger- | central Mexico wus mado up of such country. | gpin and their dark lustrous oyes look at you | equipment and tho enthusizsm of ofticers aud | gistance away. Asthe last man boarded the | dispelicd these illusive hoves and aolayed less known iu guide book literature than any | muny, aud you could lose three countries as Cattle and Cotton Grounds. with a strange wonder, There is no greate the gallanttroopers rode into a trap wnd | train, Andrews ‘gave the signal, quick as | the court-martial, but forced the romoval of couutry in Europe and it is a land of wonders ) big us l'rn_n'lv mwl--o(ln. .\mmr thy \u[]n-! The Mexican plateau is not, however, by | beautifier than black, and I believe these \,”‘,..V annihilated. Scarcely thr flash the valve was thrown open and the | the prisoners to Madison. and then to Kuox- and a continuously changing kuliedoscope of [ it, where. like o great horn, it is fastened to | any means all green, ‘There are vast doserts ud Spanish women get u great part 4 of tho 2000 composing tho or. | Steam giant unchained—but foran wnstant | ville, Tenn. Hero Androws was convicted e 2ttt o ot wran it n b e thio United Statos, it is us long as Indinnupolis | like those of Arizona and Novada eputation for beauty from tho elothe o o ubostug tho or- | Wikich Seomed torribly loni the locomotive | and ' sentericed to' bo haneed. | Pouding Littlo K £Moxie is distant from New York City, and aline ) coming here through the ereat s wear, At first sight they appear hand- | JEinal command reached the confederate | ..ineq tostand still, = Knight had thrown | the execution of the sent Shuislalnown ofdoxiog. drawn from the root of the horu at Califoriia [ Chibuabua on the Mexican Contral s but a close examinatior resuits in the | lines. The Anarews raid was designed | the full power on too suddenly, Tnado Tl eacapoc’ bub was reoant We know very littlo of Mexico. Prescott lwull'm'\’ull ACToss 'Ih Izm at \{ iatemala, | T traveled for two days through a blitding | discovery that the most of them are rather | to destroy the bridges on the Waestern & At- | wheels slipped ou the track, whirling wit and promptly executed near Atlanta, G | gave us a picturo of the country in the time | would bo as long as the distanco from New | bluze of dusty sand, in which the only green | homely than otherwise and that man de- | lautic raitroad betweon Atlanta and Chatta- | swift revolutions and tho biss of escaving | June 7. Early in May another court-martial of the Montosumas, Passing teavelors have | Y to Denver, This horn is about one | thing was the cactus, which grows there cidedly ugly. [I'he lundian women are much | nooga, thus checking the concentration of | steam, bofore the inertia of the ponderous | was held at Knoxville and twelyve of the ¢ written the impressions that cam to them | bundred and iifty miles wide at the vottom | ail its beauty and in all ‘its ugliness. These | proticr than theirwealthier sisters. They | confederate troops at tho latter point and | machiie could be overcome. But iliis wasan | tives tried, Soveu woro convictod aud 7 4 " <2 NI or tip, and about eight hundred miles wide at | deserts are some places fit for gri have a striking beauty when under age, but | enuble the union troops under General O. M. | instant v none of the soldiers had time t tence death. On Juno 15, 1562 Wilson, while looking out of express trains going at | jts roots where it joius on to us. In its curve | Mexic that on them are to be the | after thirty they grow old rapidly and hard | Mitehell to reach and fortify that important | v their” muskets, eivean alarm, or in- | Campbell, 1toss, Shadreack, Sk Robins the rato of forty wiles an hour, and we have | it embraces the Gulf of Mexico and tho | great cattlo-grazing grounds of the future. | work aud ‘poor”food makes them wrinkled | position. Tho twenty-two men comvosing | deed recover from their stupor beforo the [ son and 'Seowt 'were exceuted Atlanta. @ hazy idea of tho republic as a sort of tail to | Pacific oceun washes its other side. 1tis | Vast tracts of them will be redeemed by | and old at thir & ‘They are nore pictur- | the band depended entively on their wits for | wheels hit the rails and the tran shot away | Crucland ignominious was th fato, Lut the United States. The truth 1s that the | BOt & smooth hora by any mcans. 'Great | frrigation, and thousands of acres bavi esque than the higher classes, and their dress | success. With arms concealed, each oblized [ as if fired trom a eannon.” their sufferings were briof. Mayhap the country Is an empire In itself, and just what | Mountatns lic all along its top, una tnis top is | ready been reclaimed. The 1 takes you again buokito the east, They often | to masquerade as a southerner, and without I'he rarders had now entered actively on | minutes that passed whilo standing’ on tha A i ] i Wt Yavast volling table land, the most | gated makes splendid cotton ground, wear dark blue cottons and about their heads | any prospect of succor in event'of premuture | their perilous undertaking. A few iniles | dock listening to tho nt dofenso of sort of an empire and how much it is worth, [of “whicn is a mile' above the | tract produced 57,000 bales last vear. they drape a cottons shawl or reboso so that | discovery. a handful of brave wen plunged | from the camp the engine camoe to o stands | their conduct by Georizo D, Wilson was ¢ even its own citizens do not know. Itissup- [ sea. I~ had imagined this great [ pumber of new companics are now being | only the upper halfiof the face shows. Some | into the heart of the confederacy and entored | still. The dampers of the engine box were [ them a mental tragedy, vet it was incompar posed that there are about eleven willions of | M 1 platedu which runs from the uorth | formed, and Americans are largely nterested | of ‘them wear bright red skirts and white | upon what proved to all a series of startling | closed at the station, forcine down the steam. | ably less eruel than the indignitios and cruol- pooplo iu tho republic, but thoy have nover | 10 lhe south throughout the entire country, | ju them. ‘The lowlands which’slono from | waists and many of them go barefooted and | adventures. to some unparalicled pri- | The defoet was soou remedied. Meanwhile | ties inflicted on the spaved. - Thoir's was il e T ¢ | to botlat. Itis rollig and is made up of | tho plateau down to the coust do not uced | stop not to re-nirange their clothes it more of | vations and hardships, and to oth- | the raiders busicd themselves placing ob- | continuious living death whilo on confoderate cen aecurately couuted, aud most of | Jesort wastes, vich valleys and of mountaius | jyrigation. They have an immenso ruinfull | the aukle shows than our ideas of etiquetto | ers e and undeserved death. [ structions on the track wnd cutting telo- [ soil. ‘Thov woro not treatod as prisonors of hem aro of a character and raco about which | which have for the past 200 years | guring the rainy season, and vegetation | all The childremof the Aztecs are more | The me s of tho_expedition were: . J. | graph wires. Ackworth and Allatoona w wir, thouigh that condition was not much hote the world kuows nothing. Ihe men known | been furnishing a groat part of the gold and | grows as rank as that of the jungles of Iudia. | or less naked -gemeeally more in the buck | Andrews, a Kentuckian, commander, Will- | passed without arousing suspicion. AtKings- | ter. The strictost surveiluneo was main. @s Moxicans are the ruling cliss and these | silver of tho world How the ¥ Dress. districts--though ewen the poorest of those | iwm Campbel! vorge Wilson, Marion Itoss, | ton the first serious dificalty was encoun- | tu and they wero in constant dread of are numbered by thousanas wstead of wil Land of Perpetual Sunshine, The wholo of this country partakies of the | I have yot seen havos short skirt to hide the | Johu W. Sce son W. Brown, Willinm | tered. The raiders were compelled to wait | having the se o of death passed by the lions. ‘b peaple of Mexico are the Aztecs, Mexico is a land of good sized cities, Its Y e moment vou Taross the: iy | upper parts of their bodies. The clothes | Kuight, d. R ter, Martin J. Hawkins, [ for a pa e teain. The cool audacity | court-mart into effect. Of the re. millions upon miliions of whom have nota | o W o) BOW Rt 01088, | 4 e - m by 84 o | OFP0il fire ns o mile cleanlior than those of | Jacob Barrot, Robert Buffuin, William Lsens. | of Ande or, W Al to tho [ maining fourte cht oscaped from Jall drop of Spanish blood in_them, aud many.of [ SEDMAL which 18 aiway at the soutl his maoro ide you aro {n the lands of the romantio | &) O the s i f po o Rt ~ rs’ Wi U with | Octovor 1 \ o RO, A v Dy, Rite T hundred thousand inbabitants. | east rathier than in the practical west. The | Other people's in the sume condition of pov- | jugor, Perry J, Shadrack, Samuel Slavens, | emergenc ) cav oudad 4 Jvor and six were oxchan whom posuss no eloment of pature in com- | Guadalahara bas 100,020, and there aro a | air, the siy R oSt B | erty, and tho self-veapect which they vos- | Mark Wood, Samuel IRobinson, J. S, Wilson, | powdor % hurriel to the front ving March mon with Spaniards, the half bieeds or with per of towns the names of which ave i (T L e ety sessed, when undew Montezuma they were | John Wallam, D. A. Dor William Red- | in res, J n Gieneral Boaure ttenger’s history of the raid, tten ln suolr. clvilisation. sfost of these ludiuns ically unkuown to us, which have 2 wminds you now of Moorish Spuli the most clyilized people on this continent, | dick, ©% H. Mason and Willlam Pitter | & wll was wisted o ¥ ves tho names, oceupation, and ad apeak Bpaalah bul, thoy Bove their owh nd upwards, It is o lund of mauy | of the niud huts of Egypt. Tho b clings to them still, and many students of | All éxcopt Andrews were from Ohio tro. t y that proved fatal o tho | dre survivors of the expedition thon ongues s well and it iy saia tnero aro at ¥ (i 5 th Mexican questions believe thoey are o peoplo | oue from each company responding to a call | success xp o news of the ot one hundred differant dfalects usod by | chmates. - Along the coast you have tho | among the most picturesqueon the globe. Xl { i | - 4 o ¢ Wi ?. “.‘“ uln"pfv ey "““ LA ‘\“_‘ ) \‘“‘ ¥ | tropics with all of their rich vegetatic eir | Every man is a fit subject for & painting, and | With @ futur - i for volunteers for | capture i i W ht, stationary en Iy 20m I diffgrept paria of Moxic \ SOWO | fugits, aud also 1 lewrn their tigers and | the American arust, Mr. Chureh, who has = WANK G, CARIENTF On the night i rapidly an sures 3 v larts of this country you will find notding | yuvairtulus, i tho bIghr mountaln rogI0N, | soant ioces wintor i sy ot thotth i s l E : S AT o overtike the raiders. 'Th Wi ducob Parrott, farmor, Kenton, O, tut theso Iudians, i 1\ Senator ‘lh‘u'vlv.llt s cold, but on the Mexican plateau you | he finds Moxico a much more. fortia’ ficld .lr‘n»}\.w Hil.n'v.l“ I\?’y‘..\w‘fl:.fl.': “u‘ PE o | camps wnd 1 1 by ‘different rout v vided with 0ls 10 tear up | r Licutonant D. A, Dorsuy, dealer in real podc ox a0 oo, twavellod over somo of the { the ideal ciimate of the world bis | than the well worked countries of Euyope, | PN f0F d¥SPEPSIt 8970 g b | Voint near Shelbyvillo, the u structions they made. we tite, Kearnoy, Neb. ack districts of Moxico where he was tho DT T A T Y aocl’ couR LY % % Heayous pitch tul ed by the pursuer Afte iing \Villiam Hensingor, furmer, Mos e e i constitutes the greater par x- | As soon s I crossed the Rio Grande Isaw at [ FHugh Cleek, a younz man now a re i e BT ; s d h D OUIoAtEs oam , aud this may bo called the climato of | every stution lusty brigand-like won with | of Albuny, Ore,, seems to be ve foll | 4 HOSRY g % Port hey rogarded hiu aa ol S | Hero, the cliuuto ls the perfection | handsome, durk faves shining out. {rou groat | doubt whi fie 18 mavrled or not. Somo | BINE plorced U A 8 [pores W i v Borter, lighted H“"' ‘r\" w s The aiv is us pure as that which sweeps over | nojut o foot above their heads, and the brims f his marm e s ) | surrou 3 eshad 3 . 1dick, farmer, Louisa The Aatecs of Mexico gypt. from the desert in wiater time, and | of which seemed 10 be & foot Wide all aroun T was copied b X8 ik Rl RIS ARIAON 0D MORlom! - ¥ o ) i L | of which seemed to be a foot wido ll arouna, | of ty, which v 1 by the A X 0 o : _ SRS TS \o word Indian, gives no proper idea of | south Italy and Greeco can furnist no more | These hats were gorgeous fn their silver and | Herald, Then young Cleck went into the party 6 Halkion O, these Aztoos of the nineteenth century, ‘Mo, | beautiful skies than these. 1 aza now more | gold trimmings, Some of thew hud ropes of | Horald ofice and inaiguantly denied that ho | & i quinds o, th ; ) t irown, farwer, Do are rothing like our Indians in appearance or | thau a mile above the sea and this is the | Siiver around them st as thick as your | w N : : civilization, They ave as advanced as the | level, not of & point on a mountain side, but | wrist, they formed ouly a part of the | a correction was publis The nex Aboryille, Q. lowest classes of many pavts of Europe and | a plateuu upon which the biggest nation of | glittering costumes of these Mexican dudes. | tho voung man wus led > the ofiice by t X , ko ““{_;j{‘ r": it bave muuvers and & _ oivilization | tho contiuent, with the exooption of Russia, | The clothes below them shone with silver | ear figuratively spesking, by an irato sister ! ; I Caiboun i sl conforonce, Hads S.»\ aliarly thelr own, They have | could bo lost. There is perpetual sun: | buttons and braid. ‘The pant » of some Who proclaimed that the murriage did y in war history. It stands aone in the dar- coun- Morgan raid was o thoroughly equipped, wormen wear no hats, and their heaas are | mpennessce and transfer hostilities to north- | the engine quietly wutehing, as if this was | once ern soil. Duspite the thoroughness of the dry goods mem as marvied, Supposing he ought 10 k hown themselves possible of great | shine hero, aud the blue _skies are | of the men were 1 with silver buckles R5d the young man sdmitted 3 G, @ . 1 ; Topeka, Kan, ovelopment, aud some of the most stetking | bluer thuu those of the United States. The | while to the waist of ), fastoned by o act Hders tho rl { -— : men in_ Mexican history have come from | mirisso that the eye can see many wiles | Joathe led with cartridges, bung a big - 3 (i riles wor Doy qn Feaghls pink and piokish bellotrope, or thew. Juares was an Indian: Hidaigo was | further than with us,and it affects the nerves | silver revolver. At many of the | Uso Haller's Sarsaparilla and Burdock, th 1 lng the Oastensnea brig 1 perly mauye, are predicted for favum s Iudian; and the presiaent of Mexico today, | as though one was breathing champague. J stations wen dressed in this maoner would | great blood puriticr v 10th, ) however, were galuing rapidily. T " rs noxt soasod,