Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 2, 1891, Page 9

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HE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. [rees N T etk i w TWENTY-FIRS GUS NUMBER 45. PATRIOTISM OF THE FRENCH | crover o trom the monument prectcly ac | o thopenutre tountans on sae e ot 36 | MEXIC) AND HER BAILROADS, | pove e st aplose, Bt wup, [ thero upon thom. There are_tew windows | MAY GRT THEIR MONEY BACK tho Mexican, ‘I will have to charge you | people as a rule are dressed in cotton, ative murmur ran around the awe-stricken | square, that representing Strassburg had more, and I couldn’t lot you have them for )W you go up the mountain ez throng which soon afterwards dispersed | been coverca with wreaths and flowers as l: e Jess than 75 conta apleco.” And 1f I want | Tno roud winds about In horso shoo curves site gradually and quietly, it were a monument to the dead. Portions of | Two Hundred ifty Million Dollars Tn- | 100,001 T went on. ‘Well; said the suc- | and loops, aud an hour lator you are looking or's Steali ow Vo Irdeperderce Day Dates From the Fall of | K5t e tinee performances at | this funcreal decoration had been sent by v and Fifty Hant g e e 05,408 ol e w rodt Asal | dow oclismatls BT test Ao, e villuga yoit ||~ 2 x4 BueaLge fotiuis Now York Pros - the Pastile, the subsidized thenters proved the greatest | rious sociotics in Alsace and Lorraine. The vested by American Oapital, ot trouble, and 1 couldu't think of undotak. | huvo jusu passed througt, You stap at. ol duce Exchange May be Recovered, Lkl ; AL 5 ng suc that for than 1,50 | e of the cleanest, prottic o citie et attraction, Kverything was arranged upon | view up the river was magnificent. Upon "l"ff“m:,, 8 job as th b Uil I:\':\'t:-‘:in‘-:\[..‘”‘:; |‘Illn‘::lL:n‘\;n.htlh:‘t:ln“l\ f:nrln-v‘.‘(:.'.-‘. i the extremo democratic principle, no tickets | the Eiffel tower a great electric are llght N ARER Railway Construction 1 Mexico, | ming country till you como to Celaya A A GLIMFSE CF PRESIDENT CARNOT. | Gy isvor were issued. Long before daylight | changed its color successively to blue, white WHEREBRAIN AND BR .W AL PUA (6 s At A peculiaritios of | - Tho rond from here to San Louis Potost is HIS FATHER LEFT HIM A FORTUNE, : groups of from 100 to 00 had gathered about | and red, while the base was encircled at sev- — R e o Mexivo.Tho ronds | 1ess Interesting, but at this city you find @ it have to be built by peous and it costs apout | Kreat future trading center of the republic v » 10ing of the | BaY e 1 He D b oins ther, notwithstandink | 804 gou 20 ot northivatd to Monterey, which | Now Itis Proposed to Attach tho I the entrauces of the principal thesters and | eral stages by lines of light. At its side rose | gopathing About the E n Central=Ties of Steel th 1| 1% 8 Mexican town in the mountains, now quest to Cover the Defaleation there they waited with good-aati patience | the pal of the Trocadero, like a Paris as Scen Through an American’s yes o e Day--Strect Fae . Mexic ches or, as it doe America, Byes uia Feto DiyEptrecy T until the doors were opened for the perform- A Crown of Gleaming Jewels Hb bl tho chenp lubor, as 1t doos in America T Wi boomed by Americans, ana. @ day later : Kkire and dh. ¢ ance which commenced at 1 o'clock. surrounded by a double coronet. All this and Ebony 2 i ifond bainess s they t1 mo that tho | You fnd youesclf fu Toxas and on your way [l mbez- 3 Wiles, Reviewing the Milit . but served as a setting for the public display . Class U P Mexican will not do one-fourth the amount | 10 New York. zlement, The great event of the day was the grand | of fireworks—the whole spoctacle upon & hat the American workuan does, and only odel nt. the muscle work is done by the Mexicans. ilway T hay in Mox- military review by President Carvot at the | magnificent and almost oxtravagant scale. Pants, July 16.—[Special Correspondence | hippodrowe of Long Champs. Kvery caband | Such a display would scarcely be possible of Tnr Bre.]—The people of Frauce cele- | cappiage, omuibus, tram car and ralroad | except in Paris, where the government tukes brate tho birth of the republic on the anni- | coucli was ealled into requisition by the mul- | upon itself the task of amusiog the populace. versary of the fall of the Bastille, For more | titudes flowing out of the ecity. Although | The expense must be enormous, for there are than 100 yesrs the July 14 has been to the | armed with o ticket of adinission toone of | hundreds of public buildings in Paris. In Frenchman a day of general jubilation. it | the reserved stands, 1 thought that Iwould | the Champ Elysces Place de'ia Concorde alone which all the features of our Fourth of July, | dispiay a bit of American enterprise by ar- | thero were no less thun 25,000 gas lights. Decoration da ing are com- | riving on the field at least one hour before | Numerous strect balls had been in opera- ew Yorg, August 1,—Alexander E. Orr, the president of the produce exchanie, posted (Coy yrighted by Frank G, Carpenter.] Indians who woek on thé road get from 50 | jco 1 found well built well manuged Y 1901 Gnectal | cents to 15 conts a day, and this is move than | The cars run slower than ours do, but tho Mrxico. Crry, July 01 —(Special | S Verage wages paid them othorwheres, i well ballasted aud i SR AR g At The United | the avers ges paid them otherwheres. | ronds are well ballasted aud L ] et dda a4 oA | Correspondenco of Tue Bt | —the United | myq ailronds have in fact increased tho | and pussongor conches are good. All tho | Septorber 28, 138, & forinal notico tothe States hns about £250,000,000 worth of capital | prices of labor along the lines of the rail- | ronds have socoud aud third class carriagos | 0oard which smd fn effect that William R. in Mexican railroad We practically | roads, but they do not work much better for | and the lastare patronized by the Mexicans | Foster, jr, the counsel for the gratuity fund control the railway systems of the country nl::::“\“x‘vnnf ,“E:r"\;} S BRI (baih: dbable ouly. it e of the exchange, was a defaulter to the ex- whose investments amount to little more | woil for the first two weoks, and then thoy | chusioned benehes runmiog through them | Derof the firm of Foster & Wentworth, at- than one-fourth as much as ours. These | layed off until they drank up their surpins. | just under the windows and another bench | torneys-at-law. He wus not only a shrewd bined. the time when the troops were to move. It | tion all evening, but it was only toward mid- | L L 8 1 ok T pud o bk Uon AT o word 1|15 g ilon) v i rurhibel. §a-T- wlonet i || HBHYRHAKChioy st bAT Dhelk i sasiovitss | LAY S KRNI FGE Ay TR R R e e e oo E abe fromd. 6o, M0 | Foue day el oA Fe AL h e to express what the Anglo-Suxon designates | Champs ftself, With the excoption of the | proportions. Anyone who laid claim to the | Promiscs to be ono o "Nr most profitablo | B 14 " Minning the Moxican trains aro | to Heotban or of LAG CRECEOM ong: SHC || A few days bofora: Prasidont Ort postod the as home, but patrie, patriotism and 1iberty | ground necessary for the review every foot of | title musician, easily found employment for railway countries of tho future. A Rreat | Apericans, with a few Buglishmen on the | Allof the men wear big hats and ali of the notice that Foster was an embezzler, Manag. {waken among uil classes an intense senti- | syuce around the racecourse was black with | the night at some public square or cate, and railroad development i8 going on in the | 51d Jine from Vera Cruz to Mexico. women and girls have shawls of cotton or | D& Clerk Bedell of tho law fivm of Shipman, ment to which tho July demonstration | peoplo standing ten and twenty deep whilo | when the supply of so-called musicians ran | cOuntry, and about two thousand miles of The Wages of American sillc about thorr heads. Thoy are by all odds | Barlow, Larougue & Choate was arrestod on gives full vent. As the metropolis and capi- | the brunchies of the surrcunding trees were | out, every hand organ that could play a | ReW roads are now under construction. on the Mexican ronds are fairly good. Passen- | the most picturesque travelers you see in | a charge of embezzlemont by his employers. The country has now over five thousand | gers conductors on the Mexican Central get | Mexico and tho only travelers who ropresent | jfo succeeded fn gotting sway with near tal of France, Puris is naturally the center | ofton bending under the weight of over- | waltzor polka was called into requisition. e, o S : e S oy ot o vacation of | the Mexicau peopie. i Gl iy . 4 of all festivities although the celebration of | zealous spectators. Mauy Frenchman make [ The principal dance was held on the pave- wiles of road in active ulpcr:nllllf n‘. and uunnl;: f;‘.::u’.'.'fi;'}-I\'-'L‘»‘;‘\fl\-l(-:.\;.k"kb:‘ulxg\'uut:rs ey RANK Q. Canpexter, | $200,000 by forging transfers of mortgages the day extends to every city, village and | a picnic out of the day; they go to the Bois | ment of the Place do IOpera, where the pro- | (oY sty hiere 1 have traecfed over FUH | the kilometer or the dlotance travelod, and HOvkD R R D s T hamlet in the whole republic. de Boulogne carly in the day with their fam- | prietors of o sensational newspuper had sup- “":“" )'"“0 been {’x";‘-';‘ oul )‘ & U: w f "h they iy \I‘rnm £200 to §250 a month. On 2 o L. i oster l“(fll(lml\ unusual interest in this ease. e 3 . i 5 io ve penetrated country into which [ the” Inter-Oceanic narrow guage engineers ; T 0 never failed on any occasion to express » Fourth for pe Days. ily and friends and repair to the hippodrome | plicd the music. and I' have penetra ic A The riding ke e y The Fourth for Three Day ¥ 1ds and repair to tho hipp B L 3 the iron horse scemed to plough its way | get salaries of $150 a month, and the salaries The riding habits this scason Are sym- | gvynathy will Bedell, und whilo talking with, g i in time to seo the military exhit Evel A Paris Street Dane phonies of symmetrical grace und beaut 3 With us, independence day begins and ends | In time to sco the military exhibition. il i Ll e i Al hrough the wilderness of passenger conductors are $100, aud those | Phonies of symmetrical grace and beauty. one or twoof the members of the gratuit iad | is by no means a select affair. It is true that | H1FOUE 4 s of engineers £200 on the Vera Cruzroad. Some of the newest veils being worn at . W/ within twenty-four hours; but a single day | In the reserved stands, French enterprise doos not afford the Frenchman suficient | succeeded m appropriating all of the chairs | muny working people take part, but yet and left a precarious standing room for those | the chief participants belong to who areived an hour ahead of timo. Accord- | the dregs of society. No oue In going over the luter-Oceanic railroad, Among the Americans engaged on the rail- | this moment are the clear Russian nets with fund the day after the arvest, said: *I hope which is a narrow guage running from here ays I did not find one who was dissatistied. | the skeleton plush spets. Bedell will get off. He was to blame to a to Vern Cruz, 1 passed through o rich | Thoy all appeaced to like the climate, the | A “capoto turoan™ isof black tulle with | certain extent, but we all know that it is an agricultural region and found vast areas of people and their work, and not a few of them | large dots, surmounted by a wreath of tea | easy matter to got rid of #100,000 or 200,000 scope for letting himself loose and winding himself op. Oficially the fete extends over 1hrco duys and threo nights; and the extent | 118 to o rough cstimato, thero must havo | insists upon the forms of etiquetto nor is @ | B4 S0 SR Gl fiog “and, Theso lands | ind married Mexican girls, or better, had | roses and threo largo blick foathors, SRR I06E M b G UnaIn G EAS e e e A tioual amd. Tocal, | been not much loss than 20,000 spectators on_ | proper introduction required. The quadrilie | *ieh Batas vee WUHC Fras | IS CC | brought American wives to Mexico. The fashion of wearing handsomo coat [ You can drop a fow thousaud d i ey i ' s, As the members of the French | scems s the favorite, though it sometimes b kol . ‘The Mexican Central Railroad. bodices of mu | distinet from that of the | far i % i o o participate, affords an exampio which Amor- | the grounds. As the members of the French | sccms to be the favorite, though it some " B i an s i he ! al It ocices of muterial distinet from that of the | faro table in very short time, and when yoa H ¢ cabinet. drovo to thoit place, shouts of ap- | becomes degraded so s to approximato o | climate as that of tho best coffee growing | my o piesast railway system fn Mexico is | accompunying dress skirt is gaining ground. | drop a $00 noto into the hauds of a prétiy jcans might protitably emulate. The order districts of Mexico and the road will develop | that of the Mexican Central. It 1s ow ceasionally it all amounts up very can-can. The round dances are the ones cd | Oneof the many smart toilots worn by a | woinan e rang in the air, but became more gen- [ mild plau f public exercises Is arranged by the offi- ¢ coffe P rinci v e ists, ' i 0 ) N 5 )] i 2 i romi many new coffeestates. principally by Boston capitalists, and it runs | laay artist at a fashionable summer resort is | vapidly 0 o ic v s eral when President Carno de his ap- | that afford opportunity for promiscuous em- AR v o gl U ) ciols and made public by large posters and u'“x' ;I“\' .'L‘ l‘ 3} C ':I" i “"I il "FI_ SHES "r::.! "u“:]:u{v <:r ’W o who tool | AU this writing it is ouly completed for a | from Ll Paso along the backbone of Mexico | made of Spanish vellow broche crepe, Alexander Muun, ono of the trustees, through the press many days in advance and XI" B e ' I\u‘| sl j"l'l : ]l‘ ‘l"Lil Sreiee I ”l i, | little over two bundred miles running from for 1,230 miles to the City qi_.\u»:\:m. it has | (rimmed with black lace flounces und draper- | sear d by this symputhetic excuse for the people regulate themsclyes accordingly. | Plause; the peoplo did not scem wild with de- | part in these dunces was something as two ' branches, one of which reaches out to | jes, Bedell's wrong-doing, after consulting with ”"X“"’“’“‘"V“°,‘“‘_‘?“:"°r! """P" and thence | mympico on the gulf, and tho other of which For dust clonks rough hairy materlals have | his brother oficers, decided o make wn in- on to the mountain city of Jalapa, but within | will extend to the Pacific. como o the Tore seneraily shot and very | Vestigation of the securitis, in the wuy of month it will be opened for trafic clear | It isa broad guage, it is well ballasted, ana | coieh 10, 19 JOK, PR Bt eollir | mortkages, that IMoster as’ counsel for the v complete from Mexicc City wi o g 2 drawn in at the waist. 1 Lo exnine the books was given. Foste have a line complete from Mexico City west | njoios 1y is connected with the Atchison, Ry nn:rn toilot consists of a vost, | Promised to meot the: trustees at his ofic on This vear the Lith foll on Tuesday, Al | liEbt, 2ad the enthusiasm must have been | ing, and they seomed never to tire of the ready on the Fridny and Saturday preceding | S0mewhat disappoiuting to everyono who hius | sport. All night long the strains of music netive preparations were bogun and by the | S¢en the hearty recoption accorded the prosi- | continued, A repelition on o smaller scale following Monday the wholo city was gaily | deut of the United States upon all public | ontho night of tho 15th was required before decorated with many-colorod flags, banners | occusions the excited enthusiasm of the pleasure-living and devices, The tri-color. 1n itself forms a ‘h of the Troops. Parisians could be dampened sufliciently to :‘;n“"‘”(“ ‘l“‘""":":!“‘)"";“ml“; l:::’::““‘“ Gall B '1'u|mlkln .k\'r;_nln |.‘ .;;I,n“-m;,l ol isonoot the | o Pt o Ree Eathered at the front of \\\'.~.1u‘l~mm-. le‘l.-m.-mml-r but o nover 3 5 RS o R P e o g = its ince is y lurge. great trunk lines of the world. & Jeditn L urned up and bas not been scen in New Yor! gbindsome material for such ornamentation, There was but little delay by the troops in | cause them to desist. : - < . > i ¢ million | the waist and opening over a plastron of blue | T rhloii s R ! Tt conncots with tho Mexican narrow | It taps a population of about four miltion | tho wiist andopening over d PIGHERREIEIRE | siuce. A friend of his recognized him on a taking up their positions and shortly after VieTon ROSEWATER, 3 oclock the commander of the day Long Island railroad train that morning, Ho was evidently bound for Bay iort, L. L, where he lived like a priuce in a house that dress | cost him 0,000. His compunion was his ning, | “nicce,’ a pretty youug woman of twerty lrsdatin] e areaol peopls aud there aro twents cities along its | [ The insertion ¢ guage systom which goes frofn Laredo, Texas | FUE® 40 ihitants of which would aggre- [ CUffs are of guipure and the sleeves and skirt and b staff saluted the presi- o e G !"l‘e'" y. ot “{5‘"""3“'1 “,lf;"‘""""k cars | puto 'a million. Cutting across e great OY”W‘N“l;"'\'- = £ : dent, who returncd the salute by | Prof Wilfred H. Munro has been chosen | Fight through to Vera ©ruf ere is 10 | desert of Chibuahua, it strikes into the gar- : lovely rose tints used in eveni G Sbins BEREEL o bovTes o) | superintondent. of university extonsion by | 4obt but that it will pay. Itis managed by | den of Mexico ut Aguas Calientes, and from wson wppear more than ever chui but the French do not confine themselves to their own flag. All the leading nations were represented end mingled theiv colors with those of France upon this festive occasion. A marked exception was, however, made as X : o Brown university in Rhode Island. xicans but it is largely owned by Inglish | thence on the ride for hundreds of miles to | especially in_fubrics of soft clinging silk, | years. regards Germany. Among tho thousands | band in thelead took upits position and the | “5p, 0 o oo St Tearalby of Mol A G ] the City of Mexico is through perpetual | sheer veilings over surrah and under grena Ou September 2 the books were gone over wfantry began to march. As might be ex- rof. Jeremiah Jenks of tha university of | capital. green. dines, lace, net, andjother beautiful diaphsn- | pnd the mortgazes were examined by the upon thousands of bannners to be sce i s accepted the chair of soci - 5 5 i 5 jusce) me 2 y Sp i L L iy The Moxican Southern raflroad which Grades on the Mexican Central. ous textiles, trustees. They discovered that fourtecn out 5 pected the cadets from the Polytenchnique | fitical and mumcipal institutions iu Cornetl % . o 2 pal institutions iu Cornell | ¢ s % e ehtine tollat consil v > for old by Foster 2on O NofiousiaermaniEcanadrd and from St. Cyr received the greatest recog- | university, irant proposed has been taken upand i8 | on0 of the grades of the route are very | A yachting toilet consists of & white flan. | of tho forty hold By Rosten hdndlh e ¢opuld be found. On the other hand, of all | 3 hea. 5 o s ¢ SR 1ts | being fast pushed down intothe stato of | staop. but it has nov the picturesquencss of | nel €kirt trimmed at the bottom with a band | called by payment by tho mortensers, aud rition from the audience, but applause was Michigan has amended its state laws so % 3 i i A 1 £ blue linen striped with white, A white | the amount nggrogating §163,000 had bed orefgn flags that of the United States most | g)50 pivel Ife vieompan ¢ roserves. | that children suffering from consumption or | Oaxaca to Tehuamtepee, and this will give | the Vera Cruz line which is one of the most | Of blug linen Stripec with WHte, o o g e amount aggregating 163,000 had beea 50 given to the few companies of reserves, | that childven » K isun e railways of the world, This Vorn | flatuel encmiso with a blue collar opening to [ stolen. Ou tho folowing Monday u further frequently comes In view. It s partieularly | Ax Ca« wile. the. movies ootamme | Chronic catareh must be excluded from pub- | Mexico another conuection with the Pacific, | ploturesque raflways o 1iae Word TS CPE | show a sailor's jorsey, and a whito flauuel | defuleation of 20,000 was foun, upon the hotels and restaurants, cafes | in tho variogated uniforms interspersed hero | HCsCHCOls. s The Mexico Central has its surveyors at | (B0 RS E SO Boliine has been con- | cap complete e toilet. On Junuary 5 counsel for the exchange ob- e ettt o hattho ataks ana | Itho variogated uniforus tnterspersed bOro | prounciation “bees” have taken the place | work laying a route fro the great ity of | Wriojed to mount them, and this engine nus [ Many of tho bost tailors and dressmalcors RO T = ek, M, i January his futhel illinm o aiey ¥ i of the once exciting aad profitable spelling | ¢ e xpéol - : y ] oontor Wi 6 o reven ric ZoW Cr stripes are displayed. Tt 1s diffi- | gricolored banuers presented an impressive | pee, In the r"ri'm:mmme!r S ohools plru“"w Guadalajura to the Pacific, and [ expect to | two heads and two boilers in the center with | arccutting even rich silk gowns on the cros cult to say whether s 000 to the trustees cn his gives a certain novel look to the dress | R. Foster, paid &2 take a trip within a few days from Aguas | two sets of driving machinery to make it go. | Th mpathetic fecl- | gpectacle. Individually the men do not scem | ciation bees huve become episodes of great rintolimbs;0 yards > e graceful effect | Son’s account, bringing the inacbhtedness ing for the leading sister republic of the vzrv formidable: \fur on the average they | interestand uota little hilarity. : Callentea right across thefesstern: part of x‘.Y'f\?ffi"'H.'[l"'nfiff"fl:’ei4:‘;.3”}2‘(;':3‘{3?,'7 x':‘l'::n ‘l‘{ml{-‘\fil :?:-Ix‘;n‘ull:[l“?u:\murlt:;:“:‘\rxuxl«l::“;\fli down mm:«,o«'m.‘ lnkmt--'mm: |lnu‘4m:::|‘1:l * world or a desire to attrnct the patronnge of | yoem o littie bolow the medwm height and | The state of New York supports seven | Mexico to Tampico. This rond hus just g0t | yy gyg miles, and you go from the tropics to | only is used in this manuer. the trustees reserved their ri-ht to proceed schiools for deaf mutes, in which there avo | into running order and it promises to be 010 | tho temperate zoné in tho ascent. Dre against young Foster at any futurc time. the numerous American travelers has | weight. The infantey havea swaying gait ng sacques and night-gowns seem to SielghBANAaWiIl (HekWEalgs {0 {avoriofiths ||6an exanmoratedibly niwlda swiok oPithollaT | ayouvone tousutil il rea hiindred ipuplisat] lofithy/groavrailionde st fhe mmm.d lr‘hcn Scenery Beyond Description. scll better than any other articles; tnen e ooy o) LiRUER e 5 3 otditoltic b K 'y s 5 s e 4 ) - orics - comes tticonts, V-shuped necks and S : ) starry banner. Of course it is to be expected | arm which thougn, perhaps, uscful to the | auds, and most of them aro doing well. Amcrican capital is bulldivg a road from |y, praches of the Mexican Cotral | COMOS short pel it quite frun on nighte | _ Whilo theso nogotiations wero going on young Foster was enjoying himsclf in the that the public buildings would be decorated | golgier provents that machine-like motion el 3 _| Monterey to Fampico, . and Mormon | promise to bo very profitable. The scenery . dier pro mac Lieutenant N. G. McAlexander, Twenty- gowns. _Skirts and drawers soll botter with | FEWE I s GIRIRE TEae B R on & gratder scale than thoso of private in- | which b the spectator forme the A1t at. | firth United Statos Infantry, now at Fors | capial’ i bullalg ‘anptiges soad. down |.of tho new. Tawpico brauch surnasses In. | sokes;/whlubibinye become geuera: j dividuals, but/atlll, the ordinary cltizens take "mlmm“":mlm e fter the n- | Missouln, Mont., has been detailed as profes- | through Chihuahua from New Mexico, and wildness and picturesqueness that of the | ¥OXe% « Lpain, e s at present in Medrid. On Des e q tars sdtonc . o+ | Denver & Rio Grande, and it is said there is The white serge drosses for mountamn and | copber 20, 1800, Mr. Foster, wi pride, each, in displaying upon nis house or | fantry had passed, tho artillory trotted by | 307 of military scienco und ‘trctics 4t o | this will also tap the Puide and the great Denver & Itio Grande, and, 1615 sald shere It | gach usos ara " no-longor docorated With | e ono g the fogndors of. tho. protuce ox: SO0 ae ARy tAXIATOlly Arvanion bantiers 05| aud thon iane.tte cataliyiutia fulllgulop, |iKova Wesloyan universiy 4t Mouns Bloas- | imining/ireglonsiof the webh Comparo with it. Tt will bo tho samo with | metal cord ant, la. i ussementeries and ornaments. | change, dica, leaving an estate valued at S During the past two years twenty conces- | the road running from Irapuato to the Pa- | ‘The most fashionavle of these gowns are | g ()0,000. He bequeathed 200,000 worth of his circumstavces permit. This custom | Among the latter tho cuirassiers with their 5 i / . Among assic ork on the Northwest university build- | . 1 Hiks zorges of whioh:ave i vith wi si et braids i riat 7 it is not nt all confined to Pavis. I have | heavy steel breast plates are still rotainod i“:,‘ D e i bt a mwmffl sions for new roads or for the extention of | cific, some of the gorges of which are saia to | Lrmed it ‘f',‘wnf."fv hti*ll:t: l:;"lm;n"'_l prover seapograce son, Vesterday 3 75 L P AR AL g | EOLn enng s o tod, d Mexico | e 3,000 feet deep, and the walls of these | straight rows orin fancy p and a the trustees of the produce exchange decided passed through several of the sub- | Tho cavalry regiments then dvew up in @ | Wash., will be begun at once. ‘The building. | old rouds have been granted, and Mexico | g iogyro perpendicular, A shortstrip of | besques. to bring suit againt the exccutors for tha urbs and in cach the decorations did | Jong line and concluded the rev with a | Will be four stories high and will cost §0,000 | was nover moro awake to the advantagos of | Fiio Pampico road cost £10,000,000 for con- | Shees have superseded boots for dro £143,000 still die and owing by the heir, Mr, creait to the residents. And each arrondise- | prilliant charge, The president then with- t};"_l“"‘.“ "“l"l'\%i“"“‘f’ utter the Lincoln, Neb., stann ”0"'!’1'1‘.“')“”')!\‘“{“»6“ LAy é’::‘:;:.';f:fi”:i‘:"- struction, and the Pacific branch promises to | occasions, the tocs very pointed, the heels | Woster, jr. There was ereat excitement ment or local district had its owh programmo | drew, but few of the 0,000 troops remained | . eo it . ! e ety a willldbstons: of goods:| o0 eaually expensive: very high, coming well up on the instep, and | among the memoers of th shange when of celebrations in addition to the gencral 2 ks ety ot A The spiritualists in_camp at Chesterfield, | railroads and SR -4 aeocs Mexican Coal Roads. invariably brosucd. whether made in black | the news of this determination leaked out ; general | upon the field over whish the svectators now | Ind,, have bad a_*manifestation”” command- | weve carried in the frefpht cars. So far Mexico has been greatly retarded | patent lcather, brown Russia leather or col. | yesterduy. Tho concensus of opinion was order of festivities, swarmed in their endeavor to basten their | ing them to build o college. Mr. Carroll An Iron Band About Mexico. o Tl s "'_mflmu‘y-mm d to | ored calf, showing stockiogs open-worked | that every dollar of the amount would bo re- ¥ A Glimpse of the President. return to the city. Bronnenberg gave a_number of acres of land | his railroad development of Mexico really | {1 lort il the conl used in munufacturing, [ #0d emproidered cred in time. Tho greater part of the S~ According to the oficial proclamation the | Tho main thoroughfares of the ity were [ 10 perve as tho colioge krounds, and headed 8 | began about the time of the pame of 1975 | and coal has ranged in price from 31 to $26 | Designs in underwear for tall and short, | property left to the son is in New York city WO by eV ot was (o Dolialopintag | o cittts e = > cription for the erection of the coliege | when the old English line which runs from rroat de ¢ Tigedld stout, and thin forms are shown with lace | and all of it is 1 tho stato. Two weeks ago WL notewortby event was to be the opening [ by this time one continuous mass of moving | proper with §1,500 in cash. R noa it o iAok Mexioi Gty | con. i, EEeat idosl of SBavROW U ed comes | SOt 0 A amings or simplo. feather- | a Pinkerton aetcctive was dispatched to ofthe new Avenuo de la Republique on | pumanity. [n the throng could be found i 4 f City | from Indian_Territory, but the Inter-Na- | an £ s < adi i o s e e bt sy y. o throng cou Among the prominent mon who have re- | was completed. It has been building off and | {jonal road which runs from Eagle Pass on | stitched edges, Lovely shades of lavender, | Madid to nevotiate with young Fostor. - % onday afternoon with exercises presided | peopie of all the various classes; ceutly joined the American society for tho ex- | on for fifteen years and the government et tranth Torreon; whie cons | pinic and yellow charm the eyes, but common | ter's friends here believe that e will make Sebby P ) ¥ v the A 3 o8 T G 5 the Texan frontier to Torreon, where it cou- | 3 3 U over by President Carnot. Rags and Silks Intermin :led tonsion of universityteacuing are Dr. Phillips | helped 1t along with $12,000,000in subsidies: | heets with tho Mexican Contral, opens up | Sense tells us that natural and white models | the amount good out of bis futher's estate, Tnasmuch as the presidens platform was | with livesies aud military uniforms, Be. | Brooks, bishop of Mussuchusetts; ex-Presi- | It was one of the most oxpensive rouds ever | qyito an extensivo coal field, and Lam told | will wear and wash better. uotwithstanding the fact that hie is safe from Jochtelinleuoh apositice $HaY comparautvaly: |l sides the Buropesn paopls ebe os mopelitanc || dchtItutberford 1Bt Hoyessiirastus W [may, f{bulitandilt coat aboub 8 MR 10 sanstelor, |t lapge ponlylalaa havo beoildisuovered: | Few, muterlals ap protilor for dutusy aftor. criminal prosecution, as thero is no extradi- fow people would be likely to find accommo- | ysm of Paris bring P T Oscar Strauss, Franklin McVeagh, W, C. P | the threo hundred miles which constituto the | poae the Tampico land. The Mexican South | noon wear than the uew. priuted crepons, tion treaty between Spain and the United i o 8 Ric R0 o) v 1sm of Paris brings to occasional view thene- | Breckenridge and Sir Daniel Wilson, main line aud two short brynches. ern Southorn will open up both coal and iron | they full so softly, and the erinkled grounds | States thut covers this offense. If the Pink- dations for viewing the ceremony, I mado use | gro, Chinaman, Turk, Moor and Japauese. | - The motte of the American socioty for the | . The peons and the Indians objected to it | mincs, and there are bright prospects that | give such a subdued effect to tho flowers | orton conrloris unsuccossiul whe el suit of a pleasant Sunday afterncon to inspect the | More interesting, however, are those who | extension of university teaching is to help | and all its material had to be_brought from | Mexico will soon be ablo to do a great part | with which the goods are patterncd, A silk | dgainst the exceutors of Foster's estate will streetin advance of the morrow’s crowd. | look upou the fete as an opportusity to reap | those who help themselyes. Its efforts will England, and in order to pacify the peonle, | of per own manufacturing. foundation skirt greatly improves theappear- | D pushed to the bitter end. But what was my surprise, as I walked up | g golden harvest; for this purposs the free. | D¢ ditected toward stimulating each locality | the bullding was boeun at' both ends and | Tho immense area of new country ance of the dress, but this is by no means 0 and down tha entiro length of the now thor- | dom of tho clty was aiven to all. . It seomed | 2oLouLY, 1o bear tho support of what may bo | BIor L tho mountains and. on o Moxico | Somoa Spenediagiby ttceq roausicans Eaeniial shfare, find e ), 3 &/ : seemed | called purely local work, but also to assist | car D 5 i L appreciated. The Mexican Southern will tap A handsome picture hat fora garden party One marriage out of every four in Japan oughfare, to find at least 10,000 people of | 1o me that the vast horde of fukirs and be the national society by contributing toward | City. It cost$5arail to bring them from | someof the richest minng regions of the | js'mado of satin braia Punama with a N onds in & divorce, and yeb tho Jupaneso soam various grades and classes engaged in the | gars that attend every circus, county fair | its general expenses. Vera Cruz to the capital, and this was for | country and it will pass turough agricultural | politan by " ihe brim 15 wide und | to bostill trylug to acquire & more modern very samo occupation. The avenue leads in | aud holiday in the wholo Uuited States had | _ George A, Pillsbury of Minneapolis has en | the benofit of the tewnstefe W 0o 1 lunds which ave now worth buta fow conts | very plinut. LB N 10 oB | p i o a straight line from the Place do la Republi- | Jaunchea themselves upon Paris at one fell | dowed the I rl”shllu'y academy of Minneapolis huih‘lli’:n:'“:( U exican (‘mn.r;l r‘lil‘rmull nulumi\-l, but which will soon be extremcly | pops, shaded oats and a bunch of hazel nuts Moro than RRvelnatite! quo to the cemetery ot Pero La Chaiso. Tho | swoop. Thoy are the ro o | With 8,000 for five free scholarships at the s T Shah Row Erunat froint] s ; intermixed. The hazel nuts are of the pale | Eugineer Colwell, of Counceticut, that the: JRe o aemo Y ReIOTa SRR 0 o |lawoo BTOY 8ot 8ame) haxe asicles-dl newiunlversity. of Ohioagojitolb dwarded 1o that great trunk we whiclinow runs from | ‘ho samo 1s true of this Mormon rond: | groen unipo color. Tho hat is bunded with | wre willing to g0 up in balloon Withbim % pres platfor nd was a | wh only moro numerous and | five students of the academy who have at- | Bl P’aso over O s south to | \which, though not under the Mormon | yoiden green velvet, A i B, most gorgzeous affair draped in dark red vel- [ more importunate. It scemed that | taiued the highest grade in scholarship, .\l«xh-uu:u_' ) g ing o v!h_:_uxlm ve | churel, is operated and being built by capis A preity, goneral costume to wear during | "Now that Mus. Jamoes Brown Potter, Kitt, vet with gilt trimmings and fostoons of | evervone ~who had anyway sus- | Churles L. Colby has endowed the Beaver [ DeAuT at batcnde Anl anamaworl ,"l*“l talists who are Mormons _and at the head of | yaeation time where one's means aro limited | oo, (hat Mis: Jumos Brown oo e _y . bunting. For some litle distanco tri-colored | tained bodily injury. who possossed starved | D Academy with five similur sebolar- | Gl Crue e e Trelne. Aty ooy | whom is Mr. Young, the son of the sronbe { and & great variety of gowus is thoroforo - | thosioro ol romunco in tho world is 'way o % ¢ AR OrOatA i L& i ships. £ farg? 3 O Brigham Young. his road wi hrou ! ossible, is a skirt of white serge, a white 2 2 bauners floated from lofty poles erected on | Jooking children or had only his own woe- | 'yt xican road to the capitol, It | o Eiarra Mudse mountains. ang will tap | Boeoioley 8 0 o o M ouca, "o Svhito toty | down below normal, each side of the avenue, while the buildings | yegone faco uy i s B The Princeton exploving party will do Mou- dits rails and its lron from England 5 et n N Yaonrtoiee bl i e (deeply in love, but proud oifor) — or ss of | pimself upon the street corner to waylay | first object of the expedition is to determine | Siyes ; prosld s ch valloys and will proba. | Wit & white silk band aud whito pompons. | ¢ 0 Wb o™ did, you know, and T wantod fluttering flags. At the head of the avenue | passing pedestrians with imploring hands | to some extent the resources of the tin mines | “mppoa1d Mox vond 18 ‘entirely. Bngll It will open up rich vallevs and will proba- | White castor gloves and a plain untrimmed [ €0 A L ) agtodito i he cemetery ol Per Thai L g Ve 0 0ld Mexican road1s entirely Englist | ply be populated by the more ontorprising ST T e tell you that I am already éngaged. rises the cemetery of Pere La Chaise, tha | and outstretched hat. Though many may | 84d to make the usual collections of fossils | yhough the chief divector aud president, Mr. N e, parasol make o charming addition, yout 3 Y most celebrated bu Y | and specimens. T'he fourtee: L (TR praaliunh AL || pooplo/oilitah, Slviaiaaid thiub Lo “Tho beautiful wash silks are sold at sach | He—Yes, darling, and it shall bo the pur- senior students | o 4 ' i v ou those | e by "Profs. W, It Scott, and W. B, | Afomus Broubif wa or feigned | Magie and will return early al ground in Paris. It | yaye deserved charity, in the confus is situuted upon n seri r Colonies Now in Mexico | surprisingly low prices that they havein a [ pose of my life tosurround you with every o taken the place of zephyr gin, Morms cotch-Trish parents. The roud is a broad s of high hills and | wio dis comfort and to_aut ayed the prettiest fac can afford to carry their products in the | great degr vipate and gratify your £ u October. S TS i : surrounded by an exceediugly heavy stone | tho most ubject wisery scemed to touch the [ Wyen the beautiful new granito art build- guage dnd,e .i\t.111::.1:})1‘3“‘1'.u;,1}15‘1m and well | pe of butter and_potatoes, for 200 miles in | hams, batistes, and faney lawns, for morn- | every wish, Sl How good of you, Hirryt wall, thus forming a natural forti- | hyplic purse to the greatest extent. g of Bowdoin collego is completed it will | grades on rocord and in goiug from tho opest | wagons and sell thew in competition with } ing wear, as they cost but very little more | Andall on 312 a week, too! fication—a fact taken advantago of ome Familiar Fakes, have the distinction of being almost the only, | to Mexico City, it rises 8,000, fect. U the butter and potatoes shipped from the | by the yard thau genuine I'rench ginghains, Pne G bachelor 18 being hunted from by the communists 1 1571 Who | ye fakirs. foo. scemed like old acquaint. | if nOt the ouly, building devotea exclusively | "It had for a time a mouopoly, and it charged | United States by rail. Whon this roud gives | ete. I dfeakon ofiiuere pile OE8 simple made, | i laie by some logistator —a narried man, NPT A TS e 9 LRI 2 2 A% 10 ot Th Ay’ American. colloge, Tho are | ust what . priods 1t ploasod., 'Tia first-ciuws | tom botter facilitics: they may bo suppiving | with belted waist and sligntly gored skict, | nodoubt=who thinks ho s too inuch com- L 5 auces. ‘There was tho man with the toy bal- | tyeasures of Bowdoin include about one hun- | froizht rates wore at the start §76, and when | the greater part of Mexico with their pro- with full back, or with a sheath skirt und | ot 1y bis siugle state, This man has in- until they were shot down, men, women and | loon, the cane seller, the vireus lemonade | dred and fifty drawings by the old masters, | the freight was curried by passenger trai ducts. As itis now, there is a big margin | pointed bodice, ¥ ; troduced a bill In the state legislature to tax children to tha number of some 20,000, With- | vendor, On almost overy public square the | covering uud including the period from | the rates were 807 a ton. Foralong time it | for the sale ot all kiinds of agricultural pro- The ladies of Berlin who have been in the |y, arried men to support the branen colleges duets 1 Mexico, and this 15 especiully s0 of | habit of riding in the riding school in sitk | of the state. Qiry products, American butter brings 75 | tights petitioned for authority to appear in cents and #1 o pound here, and checse is pro- | the Theirzarten, or park, in' that costume, ted, while | Titian o the vear 1800, The collection was | charged over 10 cents a mile for pass personally made by Jumes Bowdoin, fares, and it now charges more thau 5 -—— + | capitalized at $40,000,000 and I unde meter izens of I in this o many cf aro interred tho bodies of | merry-go-round had been ere ance, famous in the vari- | catch-penny side-shows, portable=shops, and A young couple, aged twenty and fourtoen yeurs respectively, have the profonud syme ous tields of art, learning, politics and war. | even lotteries, displayed alluring advertis THE OLDEST INHABITANT. that it pays dividends on this capitaliz portionately high and to ride arter the fashion of mon, with onc yof all truo lovers, Thoy have been Jon: besuty the placeican: not. bs comparod: i menta. (housands of medals, artificial Row Mrs. Frost of Marietta, O., is 107, T2 b educed its ratos sinco the organizy. | Our Narrow Guuage Through Line. | leg on cithcrsidcof tho Rarse, Tiie BeHHOR sted on their way from Virginia to North yith Greenwood or Oak Hill ard fow of the | ers and many-colored birds, banners and tri- To the verson of Tunis Brewer, now nearly | ton of tho Mexican Centigl and now that | The Moxican National road is tho ‘name of | Wit denied by THEDR % the appearance of | Chrolina, whither tiey were bound in search graves can bo traced historically for more | coloved cockades wer disposed of at various | yimet hree veurs g St Louis pocseascy | he Inter-Oceaui is completed, it will huvo | tho marrow guage line which runs from tho police, on tho round that, the appearanes of | o\ ystor who would ey them. "oy than 100 years; the lund has been simply laid | prices. And I must not forget Mr. ab old citizen, He was born Novembor g, | 10 Wake still further reductions. City of Mexico to Loredo, Tex. This is also | yeiG, 00 SN0 N0tON and tead to @ dis- | P already travelled 200 miles on foot, “Tue lutest announcerent from Washington is that the mareiago of Miss Lulu Bustis aud Mr. Thomas Hiteheock, jr., of New York, will occur at Manchester-by-the-Sea in Augzust, and that the wedding will bo a quiet oue. Miss Iustis, who, like her brothers, is 1 Ebony. owied by the United States, and it is the anz, shortest line from New York to Mexico. You can get into the ears in the City of Mexico on Monday, and Saturday morning will find yourselt in New York. Tho Yoad is now on & puying basis and it is bo- Dies of s teel o This Mexican railvoad has steel ties, aud there 1s a book agent | Mexico has perhaps the most costiy ties'in its ‘oars old and who was | railroads that vou will find anywtiere in the ho Mexican Souttiern which is be- turbunce of the peace. A lady correspondent writes to defend pipe smoking by men who will burn tobaceo in some form. She states the fact that pipe tobacco of the very best quality costs less to out with winding avenues and these thickly | baby-for-ove-cigar, who is found in 1748, in New Yorls, twelve miles west of Al- lined with row after row of family vaults. | as well as in America. Add to all this the | bany. Thesigrificance of the cometery at this timo | street singers and fiddlers, the stranded actor | At St Helen, Cal. 0 | o aoUTrORCe 5 ) who is ninety-two lies in tho fact that the recurronce of the | gainering bis own littlo audience, the Punch | never shot at, thrown through a window or | world great feto gives occasion forr olaborate floral | aud Judy shows, the man who decks himself | worried by a dog in all his long experionco, | 1K built towards Tehuantepec uses no_othor o | {he smoker than tho comwouest kinds of hiiss b et tolo flvon ooomslon for elaborat foral { utl Judy shiows, the man who decks blumselt | aormled by 8 eations noblorn raace: | KA than atselend thio TwipIeo: division of | comIug moro sod mnrs profluble. It assos | ciyurs, aud leaves o savine that will ndmi | KFSY COTOUELIG SoRch G G SNRPRETS S Fam us Parisians, he looks Just like the great Napoleon, the | Unquestionably tho oldest triplets in tho | the Mexican Contral has ties of cbony and | 3% ide’on it from the City of Mexico 1o | Of Bumorous Dousehold luxuries, Including & | yeur, aud her futuro hbisbaud s a lossor 0 St v evening v a fow e 8w/ 5 Xtonaite country are Abraham, Isasc and Jucob K NORORY, - ¢ Yol o golng through o part of Switz- | YOry pretty bonnet now und then tar- | o ¥ ord to polo and let On this sauo Sunday ovening [saw a fow | fncily dressed woman with her fortane-tell. | COUBLES ure Abratam, Isaao aud, Jucob Kilo § M EGiice ojection to the cbony ties is that | Celava is lke Kolng threugh o part of SWite: | gy ents aro” strong aud will admit of no | LG ub can afford W play polo and lead Pu. Their age is cighty years ana they are among the nine survivors of a family of twelve chilaren, two erland married to the most picturesque re- wrions of the Himalays mountains. The road winds in and out through the germans. The handsomest American bride now in Paris is said by & correspondent to be the of the famous Parisian street balls already | jog birds, and we have a picture grotesque as in operation though as yet, their patronage | it 1s euriou answer when they come from a wifo who it is 50 hard to drive the spikes into them, will tolerate a pipe smoking husbana and it is alwost impossible 1o get them out Iy fe AR I Bl i G S ATENG i S R BURVIROIN AU MR P TR EASABESH: when they want to change the rails, Tho | , i dfouy theough. o Sonte wondorful embroideries are used for 1 pondent, to- bo th omiclal opening of the Avenuo de la Repub- \\"xll dusk began tho illuminations, and | Youngest of the nine beiug sovonty-toun 1 | steol tiea are not so expemsiva as it would | bemstty! velex of Sexieq, RSN B | who corselet bouios. and the interior of igh e I S e ith ¢ LS - v - seem, They cost from Y0 ¢ents 1o §1, Moxican, | bty Maodici collars, but the most fashionable peo- | & Meg L 3 L oy, She is un extremely tall and ‘rather robust womin, possessing wlmost umazo portions, and when she walks fine figure towers above the petil nes. Sne is said to bo o duzzling s aud dasbing out of the lakes and into the utains at a fow miles distant, nountains come upon you abruptly and you plough your way vight into theu You skirt wide guages, wind along rocky de- lique pussed off smoothly, The barometer | these were not confined entirely to public “Granny” Savah Davis, a well known col- of Parisian enthusiasm continued to buildings. 1 took o walk up the boule cred womau, died at Indinnupotis on the 20th rough the evening dunce: : % ult., at the advanced age of 105 yeurs, S el i through the evening dunces and iluminations, | uud Champs Elysces and back to the Pluce do | Siaihmed that whon Mo miascer. rotupned from R Knhjml'l'tm:uhdwh bout for ougth of an ordinary tie wnd about foa but only to reach it highest pointupon | 1aConcorde. It was hike a scerein fairyland. | the revolutionary war she was o crawling | jyches wide. When turned upside down when laid down here and this is from 70 to 50 conts Americun, ‘They afe nollow plates of ple abjure the collars cut on the cross, with a seam down the centor of the back, that are unsightly and burlesque of aspect when seen from the reur; tho smartest high collars stand out broad ut the side, with an edging n pro- proad her Purisien <ht iu the vards Tuesday, the long-locked-for July 14, Tho cafes nud rostaursnts were all. gaily | child, and this would make her 11 AR A AT Ry O Y ! AR i A o cafe d res s gaily | child, and this would make her 110 years of [ tnoy look like @ trough, AOWH | files witn rushing streaws cutting the earth D A ecoming backeround | K10y of her troussean, and tho peoplo ovince The morning opened clear and wa Al | in one or two incandescant electric lights | U9 Yeurs: f ke a very firm tie and bold the rails per- A Southland Picture, the Venetian dames iu the midale ages, dohyi J, Cox aod Mury Aun Cox, & brothos the governmental dopartmonts and most of | supmianted sas. On il tho public baildigs | L% Toledo. O, the other day, thero dieda | fectly. Oak ties cost from 85 contsto §1 10 | You shoot out of the rough hills into - BRdinitanRacilb HiRcuase o Ltk LRde D, ¥ venerable colored woman, who was certified | Mexic urches luminous rows of gaslights | to be 115 yeurs old, and the undertaker who | Cedur ties cost about $1 1 the position of the cornices upon the | luid ber out, ana found ber somewhat tough | kind of a tie is worth ! hills covered with groen and asec- [ Mrs. Rorer, sged ninoty-nine, mother of 4 ©s you pictures that make you Jerift Clinton Korer of Moutgomery county, | busband and brido of Helen v. You xo by rose-colored | Ponns, died pecently on Wynnewo and William L. Borgman, whe think of Italy, You go by a rose-colored | Pennsylvauiu, died recently on Wynuewood [ e WIS B iieiate, S CE i sma 3, und almost any | ond valley ¥ cents. The Inter the shops aud ofices hud closed for the day | aud « and the streets were very carly filled with | yae a0 ulso sister rosidents merry crowds of people. And they seemed- | packground of durkuess so that the whole | 8nd Stif joiited, was ot the opiuion that she | Oceanie uses steel disks with a ero vi or ¢ 0 e darkuess s » who . 18 : - eanie uses steel dis 88 piece of | church which was built hundreds of years | avenue, Germuntown, Her husband fought ATLYS. " NS tocujoy themselves hugely despite the ab- | bulldiug stood out in fiery outlive, The il. | Wi 8tlcost 10 years of uge. e old wo- | iron, but those do not scom to worlc us well | ago upon a hill, and down in w valiey below | iu the war of 1812, SEAIRlNA, Huoka county, aod Lo hoe 02 senco of the deadly firecracker aud tho aread | Jumination of the ministerint department ws | Lo onn conld romember—the - as loug s | as the all together steel tes. The Mexican | it you sce a village that makes you thiuk of -~ Py M R TN e torpedo. The firstnumber on the oMclal | still further embellished by large shields any oue could remember—the “long” refer- | Centrul, which has a fine roudbed, uses | the Austrian Tyrol A World correspondent, writing from Nar- | W9 "‘;'* M ",‘H.v T L P s argo shields | ring to a period, and not to a pipastem, as a | wooden' ties, ana the same is the case with You whizz through the villag Bare- | raxansett Pler, says “Miss Barnes of | '\“ I\‘\&v‘l u““-“«“ -\»)“.’ I’“nr-‘“v‘\d 41“\.’“-14:18 Programme was the unveiling of a statuc of | formed of lighted gus jets emblematig of the | carcless reader might imagine the Mexican' Natla ¢ al or American narrow | headed women with frowsy-headed on | Chicago holds court here, and royally she Danton on Boulevard St. Germain. Although | different brauches of the government, The Denver is s curious place and is often vis. | guage through line. . A their backs, stare at you. Little girls clud | looks, this gem of the west, with lashes long while | ited by remarkable people aud phenomena of Mexican 1deas of Contract., only in blankets wavetheir hands,and a peon | and curling, kissing for a moment the be Sihat two brothers camo here to get licence to marry two sisters. ‘This last Horgman a local worning paper bad announced | Are de PEtoile shone as a fiery ma it e 20 some that o collision with {ho red ropublicans | tho broad avenue leading up to it waa bor. | il descriptious, but provious records w Spouking of the Mexican Central tios re. | porter who s carrylug o great bindle on lis | teous cheek, theu slowly lifting themselves | CEF (408 ssrangemeny s somawhalr was oxpocted and had warned all excops | dered on each side by strings of lighted | XBocked complotely out when Jonas Carpeu- | yiide me of what oue of the engineers of | back, scowls at the train as we dash through. | to reveal large, bluck eves, with great fires FRLos e Orerate thoso with Irish prochvities to keep at g TRy f lighted | tor of West Virgici, took a stroll around the | {he road told me as to Mexicun contracts, | You notice that this part of the country iy bigden in their slumbrous depths; tiny Kato Field: Tue mother of a governor, the s . eepat o | lamps hung between the thickly planted | cfy. Jouus was born in Lowdon ccunty, | Suia' he: *“Phe average haciendado, or | well cultivated. The valleys are patch: | diamond studded cars that look llike tose pet fo of @ governor, the sister of a governor, At distance from St. Germain an over- | lamp posts. Each light encased in its globe | Virwia, in tho year 1742, beiug uow 140 | furmer of Mexico, hus curious ideas of profit | Works of crops, and tne littie old fastioned | als ipped in dew; & mouth the fuirics them- » niece of a governor and the aunt of & gov- «” powering curiosity to seo whatever migbt | of frosted giass looked iike a | Yearsold. Ho isuow enrouteto Culifornia | and work. Along’ the lMne of the Mexican | \owns scem to bo filled with workers. solves could use for o retreat and christen | eruor! That's Mrs. Richard Mauning of take place, impelled me to ta%e the risk, | luminous amber bead. The Place | 008 Visit to his*son-in-law, who is over | Central there was a man who owned a strip What queer towns they are and how curi- | heaven: the whole crowned by mass of | South Caroliug, and she's the only woman in Foru Rl N St ¥ Faic % 4 o eighty years old uad is stoppibg over us tho | of forest which was filled with good ti. | ous the houses! They are more like huts | red-gold braids wound like a coronetabout | the world with such w record, “his s gove b dfl?‘p“w R ':“‘l)-_,f‘"“‘{'}'fl":"' do la Coucordo was wl ablazo with | guestof W.T. Sawyer, a native of his own | timuer. 1 asked biw if be could G ool te- | than homes, and their low, ridge roofs of | the shapely bhead. Juuo, in all the voluptuous- | eruing with veugeance; but women alway 3 ra-radicals had | the same bead-like strings of lights hung in | state. By way of a clincher, it is stated tuat | 5 (00 ties, and what they would cost me, ke | boards are tied on with ropes and kept | ness of love and couquest, never had form | did love to rule, 50 men say; men dou't rup been forewarned by the police and as the | every direction and reflectiug a mallow glow | Carpenter nover tasted whisky or tobaceo. | yeplied tuathe could aud ho would let we | steady with great rocks placed here and wore tall, sleuder aad diviue. ob, nol

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