Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 16, 1891, Page 9

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== 'THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. [rwws| - TWENTY-FIRST YEAR. OMAHA. SUNDAY .\I()RNI;\'(‘-. AUGUST 16, 1891—SIXTEEN PAGES NUMBER 59, hold their lands in | N I N they are not bound by law to work out their | lagoes of their NN l PETER | monks and masters with w complete know- | cial queen's tdilotte du bal, the point being | mORINAN TEOTINNG '“”3 Ph.\SA\.\TRY Ok MIZMU). debts they do so and incur others, so that 1 common, cultivate them together and divide (U\[ l;I)LRK\] UN “4’”‘1. ledge of how will proceed to act, and | not to wear the jewels not as o Il.'um its, m.: ' (,R\‘I‘, “\\\(I\I 0“'5”0\51 | they keep themselves aud their families in | the proceeds, These villages nave their own with blankets strapped avout their body and | as component and essontinl partsgof the | b et i S bl bodnwe for yeurs to come. They have no | customs, and while under the general govern- | = a flask of brandy avout the neck, they are off | gown about going agmin in debt when | mont they have certain reguiations which to their work of rescue It _your completion Is a dolicate one and climbing dan- 1 over crevas . | and Americans who a hero on_our methods tell me it is | the Pe trying to | govern their own people. All ov Mexico | Oslebration of the Six Hundreth Anniver- Often weary and foot sore ns, Aztecs or Indiuna—however they gerous snow peaks and leapir | you freckle aud burn easily A Look at tte Life and Characteristios of | bo sure and pro- | They Are Quiotly Disous:d by Scoretary I e Vide yourself with ared veil. This gives the the Picturesque Peon. almost impossible to keep their men without | may bo called—nave traditions, queer cus- sary of £witz rland's Fr.edom, ses, they push onward and upward, for hour | bast protection to the face. . Wene 1t i the Foster aad Senator Shernan, S R they are their debtors, Tney neyer getany- | toms and superstitions, many of which hav after hour and varely return to their clois- | qun and on the water, ‘The nut-brown maid thing ahead, and when thoy want to get mir- | come dawn from the duys of the Montezumins S tered homes without fulfilline theie mission. | jsa popular fad during the summer, but e i S ) 5 | ried they usually borrow enough to pay the | and it 1s a_ wonder the ethuologist does . ; P SION, | Could men do more than thist 1oss08 and cream nre preforrod at the' cotils 2 DID THE AZTECS ORIGINATE IN JAPAN? | [ ty'Gd thio' feas and ot tho weddin not make them study, Thero are, 1t A FEOFLE 0 ROGRESSION: Somcthing About Swi s Cities, tfon 1n the winte. - Unfortanately, the snaa. | QUTE A DIFFERENCE OF ~ OPINION, i | outtit, and this makes them debtors for | is said a hundred different dialects in 'use g e B WTER aRe TAYRES TN fACL Pard,: And: | VB sleln, RTter: bolig . axposed to- aun-.and . § | years! "Their employers pay them so muchin | among them today, and thouch the most of : the sitk, cotton und woolen goods made 1n | Wind, does not always rosume its fair, ety R e UL LU LU o B ISRy e GO L DA UL T R L rn Modes of Alpine ClimbIng— | 7,0l compare fuvorable with tnose of oth- | hewithy appearauce. Therefore be advised | The P and a Halt e —Debt Slavery and How it Exists amount out of each month's wages to ko | language us well, They are a people of mor Tho Mignificent VIow from the SeConntHEs and use the ounce of prevention, - Butter: Cu Wia Nat S i T towards the debt, and us their wuges ranwe | than ordinary eulture, great lovers of music - i 0 e 1 Geneva, independent of its immense trade | milk romoves a siight coat of tan and keeps avoreld by ~The Futu : '; the Mexi- in aifleront. localitlos Trom about 13 10 50 | eisily governed wud Very palito ey ox: igi—The St : .uln lrml ang b o el | CH6-EirTW suTE At et thie Linttor=Somnthiig can Indi cents a day, it will be seen L ug love towards each, o ¢ ‘Their Misson of Life Saving onul side, and university and schodls, = ; ; Bope for thelr supportiug their families and | theie families and the question as to_ thei Ly WL GRS TG G ki L Ll ety TS Must e Do e paving their debts. Iu some parts of Mexico | future is one of the questions of the Mexic _— = HaJH I the sventbhiest olty. hSwitseriAnd e bovs get 6 cents o day, and in others the aver- | of today. They have produced many good 5 b i fien EhuL: ; ool SR Kb 700 S (Copyrighted by Frank G. Carpenter.) age farm wages is 19 conts per aiem. Onthe | men. Presiden Juurez, ope of the groatest | LUcErNe, Switzoriand, July 20, —(Specia | It cbicf woulth ligs in its manufocturing in ll." LRl e Maxseieny, O, Aug. 15 ~Whila politios Mgxico Ciry, Aug. 10, Special Corres | Mexican platowa the wages range from 18 to | mon of Mexico's pasty was u pure Tndian, | Corrospondence of Tur Br.] ~Commeneing | 1RSI TSR0 IS, BRASL WL GO0 ] Whe Mthodist gonral. eonforence of Mon- | yviro warm yestorday and Major Mei€ inloy pondence of Tur: Bee: The bulk of the Iu- } 23 cents, and alonz :; ||w‘: ufl»r‘ull'nul I;ywu\x;lwm Diuz has Indun blood in his veins, | on the last day of July, thera will open in | wordueting to all directions. 5 talog L6s: Sl Omon &8 85| and'a woman by tho namo of: D! from i1 ponulation of:Nortt: Amasica I8 1h-Mex- | Wharo tr layers nud construction com- | the Mexican congress coutaing n number of | gy, oo o hich isto in- cerne an iteclaken are but summer ¥ p i i ;":‘ ot ‘”KY‘”“','\;\(”“‘ \:”t”l“"':,"“ 1: e | patie id more they have become | pare Inaians, and th st Mexico of the "‘"!-‘»"- 3 ifederation \f which i \’ o laeerne and Tntoelaken aro bt sum i Pather Mollinger, whose miracilous cures | Kansas, who vopresents the farmers’ alliance co. uited States numbers only about | | o ¢ | cludean historic play, given in honor of the | plac ere the toarist comes with ki o Heliin o i y S considera bigher. On the farms these | future is bound to be greatly 1 1 by 1de an b ic p Dbt S Lol ! " | atTroy Hill shrine have made him famous, | Were debating economic questions in a grove a quarter of a million Indians. Mexico has | us work right along for theso | its Aztee blood. G20t anniversary of the taiing of tho oath | paee 4ud wiebstocc prepared for 100 | s ncenmulatod a fortue of 000,000, somo twelve miles distant from this place, 8bout 4,000,000 whose blood has the bluest of | v 1ay offonly forSundaysund foast FANK G, CAnvesten. . | of alloglanc 4 e I GBLniNG T'he annual conferenco of the African | speechos upon grave subjocts wero bowg aboriginal tints und her metizos, or people | days, and they appedr to be industrious, - Senwyz is one of the three confederate can i Methodist Bpiscopal churen 18 in session in [ mido by two distineaishod mon i i1 quiet, subservient and good laborers, Even > P s ; 3 ‘ Sacramento, presided over by Bishop Grant MG G LM A e 4 who havo como from the inter-mixture of | quict subservient and good luborers, | Even CONNUBTALITIES, tony mentioned 1 Williawe ‘Tell, the otber HONEY FOR TILE LADIES. # well knowncolored thootogtan, P STt | ho nudience cousisted of only two and thoy the whites and the Indiuns, are 5000000 | 1y by savine that they wish to loave | Whon a woman applios for n divorce nowa. | W0 belug Url and Unterwaldon—famous €8 [ guiin offects appoar vory promiuently In | /Tho iree Methodist churen of Allontown, | Were nlso the speakers, Tho conforance was more. There are about 11,000,000 people 101 4nd by gotting o new master to assume their | days, the firso question people asic is,*Whom | e oath of Ructli, the new riobous. Pa, allows 1o one who belongs to a secret | A tmportant one, if it may b o desiznated Mexico, and 2,000,000 of these are pure white. | devt and take them. In such acase o new | does'she want to marry now ! A Confederition Fete, A pr and a gold dollar pass cur- | society, uses tobneeo ov wears jowelry to be- | but in reality it was & friondly eommunion Theso and the motizos govern the country. | contract 1s entered inte and tho Iudian staye | No railroad stoci ever depreciated in value | Briefly outlined, the firstskoteh represents cver come @'member of tho congregation. botween twa important mon who were facing For them the great mountains vomit forth th his now master il ho eots dissatisfied | so rapidiy as a set of ardent love letters dur | yiborty” showiag to tho thres Helvetian fam- A new drossy glove hns o polnt on the | Rev. Me. Rowan of Strudsburs, Penn., | oxch other npon national inaneial ufaies ooy their silver and gold, and this rich soil yields | o B0k anoiher istento par s Gobis ARG | io the tivst year after marringe facger (huntemen), Fiscter (fishermen), | Wrist, plain or embroidered. tas duclinied a, $1,400 call, although he gets | g (O S ILIBH GE 0 MBNB P ATEOE ; 3U8F il i o There are some women foolish enongh to b iltelings = X Hif {BIvB eluste ors | ODly €1,000, The call didn’t come fr ¥ @ present condition of the money mariet. its wondorful harvests. Under them govern- | other branctes of industry us well s farm- | (hore aro. some wamon fuctish S0Reh 19§y Hirten (shoptiords), avout 200 B. C., the | A LU AR ST S A S Bver sinee Mr. Fostar becamo secrotacy of ments rise and fall, revolutions come and go, | ing. Factories have their Peons and mines | belicve that IOVELE L S | AT B e e RIS Ta £ Lo TonRE A tons Fas. | Arg notivatiinithie HalvibrocatEs & s 4 J BRI OV LhAve i A 1 to thom the México of today practically | have iheir debt slaves. The company ‘store | Promises they make whilc they are cngaged. | stores of the | [ e It is huvd for a givl to believe that a man Out of the British [sles the Salvation army | tho treasury there has byon more or less dif- and to them the M. i S i e el R e Marriage bas ite redecming qualities,” | their future home. ist't siucere when hie is paying ber & comph- | DAVE now 1,705 corps and 1,040 societies, al ficulty about adding to the circulation, and belongs, ‘The Indian who originally owned | FHER BEE3 B8 10 EO0E I ARE el States, and | sald Porper as he paid off the morteage on | Scene 2a—Return of the couquerors | ment gether 2,751 separato salvation socleties. | when hie proposed the seheme of continuing the land is only tho silont partacr Whose | tha Peons get deeper aud decper in debtas | Mis house with some of bis uew wife's money. | from Morzarten on nber 15, 1815 | Yos, Dross Reform, You are probably cor- | These ard ied forward by 5,500 oficors, the 41 per cont bonds at 2 por cent (ntorest, name is not on the business sign and who re- | they live on. “Hetlo! where 15 your engagement rine! | Puero 1s joyous greoting by 1ho people at | rect. The “Common Senso Corsou hus o | Rev. soseph Bausuian, pastor of & Prosby- | it was expoctod that the offor would be takea rOCee T i v o Vi s your engagerme arold off ' ©OY T 0 01 o Prid 4 A ochester, S C, " § ceives none of the proceeds, Tho Indians of How the Peons Live. Is your engagement with Harold ot o Sear | Brunnen. 'Then follows a escription of the | doubt come to stay SOHAerad Blo ronlen ooty thie slato, a¥ | with avidity, “After making due’-arranges Mexico are unkuown to the world. The The Mexican, however, spends but little | 1O. Indeec e sl AL G LU RSl T wal of the oath of allegi Mrs, Frank Stuart Parkor suys corsots | (G R B8 Con B OB, BE DO T ac ments for its accoptanco, rotar, s i croam lust might, and we had to leave the s Tille SRV 4 iy ) the views held by Professor Brigis. v , ary Foster term Mexican as it is generally used de- | upon himself or his house. The houses of [ cfenm List muehte and we il HAvGIH | dbba bave filled more graves thun whisky. They i 1 . i SAHa s g b el Y e bouis | tho poor tro bt or hovels, diffeving accord- | tine s security”for the eream. Hurold | nuce _ ; Y ; ot inilke thaliy viotine vary Hilit According to the returns published in the 1o to his home at Fosteria for a short scribes only the ruling class, and the books | Fie Fook A B OF AOKR G (D GRTR e, [ didit have a cent, Scene Bd—Murten in 1436, showing |00 R awas in a box they | British house of commons the annual lncome | visit and then went to Middie Bass island, that have been written about, the - countey | ik iiora is ltile wood, tho Tndidus Tive | A notable marsinge at the Windsor hotel, | camp life, with flieht of the Rurgundiuns, | snould b wrappea in paratino. tssue paper. | 0f the Chureh of nEland s about 300000, | in Lako Erie, tora rest. ~ Mr. Foster was nave left out the most interesting part of | iy low, squave one-story huts of sun .Im.- A'\n;w \‘x;m. {\'li)}‘u“hi‘i\”\'":lfi:\';‘ \u;:tm{ andlvictory. o thia con fedoratos: Never lay gloves together clean or soiled. ‘x;w‘l\nlmu‘u.(l- e u""rfi»‘%fili.‘l' |K:|‘»'|‘“é:»' ]l:H(le\‘\; resting comrortably and enjoying hi t the population. ck, often constructed witbout windows, | John Fowler ck, the vounger son of Sceno 4th—Tie day at Stans, Decem- ANl underarments ave more'noarly Atted et PR ! d Y| with important men that he know, wh HRaiMesican Indinn, T'hose hovels ure like great mud boxoes. They | Colonel 8. A, Buck, tho editor and propricior | | BEEHE ST 0, H08 0 PEr Bl BEETE L oy et SRy Hitvo over beon, Kyen | Pice 170, evory year go to Middlo Buss for eomfory o S Sr N et aeTaa it all like | have fiat roofs, no chimneys or fire places, | of the Spirit of the Times, to Miss Bella | ber Quurrels occur between to hiehtrowts are bolted, though 100sely. of are | . Here Is the prayerof the ministcr of the | and repose, whon he was summoned Uy the The Indians of Mexico are not at all like | /%y 3 00r of each hut 18 of roughly made | Louise Couke, one of Clevelind’s prettiest | folk and the peasantry, tri-colors vs flue. B rolosid oy ¥ Cumbrays, two' miserable islands in 1o | announcoment that whito the. bunks fonce our savazes, Itis a question whether they | hogrds and 5o low that the men and women | and loveliest women. Scene Hth—Pe. L Stans, Septem- s 8 k) A gz mouth of the Clyde: O Lord, bless and be | ally were willing to accept his proposition "N Come of the same racs and they look more [ of the family huve to stoop in entering it. Kunsas City Journal: A Lincoln, Neb., 1708 adoption of the orphuns after th® | 1, & Prétty dress for tho house ‘;n";“‘l"‘:“;; gracious to tho greater and tho lessor Cuin- tho people who hold the 41, per couts were like the offspring of the Eigyptians or the | Most of theso huts have but one room. Tho | hoy of ninetcen hos just marvied » woman of | fobi 5G it Lo corsazo tuckered so 0% S0, fomn & | bravs, and in “Thy mercy do not forget the | not, und, after six weeks of trial, only a lttie Jupanese than of the Mongolians, who are in [ family slecp on the floor on mats und there | fifiy-two. and the dispatehes sy navely e O LA I RAT L (ReaYatiitie oot 2 oentan: |\ Eiiuranre S DS A‘Alx-mvntnlmuhnf Great Britain and Ire- [ over €18,000,000 out of $51,000,000 were con itk D the ndians. of | are neither tablos or chairs, The cooking is | that the courtship hus extended over w poriod st se ireat \c cors Euip land. tinued under the secrotary’s scliemo. Ho was ice and form so much hixo tho INCINS 011 qone over a fire built out of doors or in a cor- | of five years, A woman of forty-seven court- | at Schwyz, Augast 1, 1501 sembly of all The viding hubit is of ‘The Congregationalists are doing well. Ac- | not particularly content with this Showing, the United States, Mexico is move like the | pepof the hut and the cooking utensils are | ing a boy of fourteen! She mist have ec thoe vierious groupes in above scenes, and of ‘\':«HW'_M}_-" white coutil checked with bluc. | cording to their vear book the denomination | and started at onco for Washington, bub oricnt than the occident, Tts comtnon peopic | of burat clay aud not of iron or copper. It | menced by combine his haiv and spaiking | o Swiss people of modera tumes avognd | H166 1S for counte wenr o white salor bat | yumpess over. 500,00) members, with more | eame here first to see Sonator Sherain live in huts like those you see today on the [ costs but a few dollurs to build such a bovel | him of to bed. T e isudded with cnecked ribbosis. than 600,000 children in the Sunday schools. | Lust evening, while Mujor McKinlov was banks of the Nile, and they arc of the same | and the average Indian can build his own [ * A romantic wedding took piace in Cedar | 2 o - A eraceful walking dres: is in chestnut | The amount of money raisad and” expeaded | addressing tho' husbanduien ) v BT e halo E URo Shahas thosa. willldve ul 3 1 v I uien at Blackman's type as those used by their forefathers | house. Near the towns these buts are in a | county, Nebraska, on July 2, <ysa Yan Setween each of the scenes the foulurd. The corsage forms a scarf over a t year for benevolence and home expenses | Grove, where they were holding o picniv, i the duys of the Montezumas. | collection of o duzen ov so, making suburus | ton paper. The coutracting pirties were | tablaux vivauts, representing pictures of | frontof old lace. A narrow border of lnco | agerosated almost £,000,000, Mr. Ioster reached Mansfield for consultne —@-Their dress is not unlke that Uages of mud, aod on the hacieadas | soeond cousins and residents of Dukota, the | Siviss bistory ; runs down the sides: the bottoms of the | Phe total property valuation of the Catho- | ton. He haa wired Scnator Sherman of his of the people of India and Egypt, and their arcarton inside the “wall surrounding | fuw of which docs not sanction marriage be- | iat part of Switzerland bejug about the | sleeves are all adorned with luce. lic chureh in the United States in 1850 was | Cowing and the statesman was at the depot customs and habits are in many respects the | the adove buildings where their masters 1ive | fyoen parties sonearly related. Not to bt ol I enENI S, 800U0 5 Pearls bid fuir to take the place of dia- | 38,263,558, 1n 1860 it was 26,774,119, in 1870 it | to receive him. They drove at once to Sher- Bt L 4 £ C lake of the four cantons—commotly I ) | 2 ssme. They cultivate the soil in the same [ or they are built cicse to the wall f oyidone the wedding party went on ap kuown to Euglish speaking tourists as the [ monds in popularity. At many very swell af- | was 260,255,565, That is to say the aggregate | man's residence and “then began one of tho way using the same forked stick with oune | on the outside. Along the railr you | five miles out of Yaniton into Cedar county | fauiio of Luce WIS reie s aid ke |Lf that the ladies wore beau- | wealth “of “the Catholic church increased | most imvortant talks upon finuncial matters hundle for a plough and driving their oxen | ofton sce them made of discarded ruilvoad | yng had the ceremony performed. shores of the lake will be iluminated with | tiful pearls in place of the brilliant diamonds | about 1S per eant from 1550 to 1560 and ubout | that hus taken place in the country for a long witn Clong o whilo they | ties, the ties boiog sot, on end and formins |y, ko supreme court at Bath, Me, last | chinese iiterns, whilo the summit of the | which had previously been used ws favorite | 125 per eent from 156) to 1570, time. It continued for five hours, auring merely seratch the ground with \e ‘walls of the hut, while a thatch of cac financial guestion was re- week was witnessed the spectacie of w fif- | Rigi aud Palaius mountains will each have [ jewels. It Ry, | Avbich (tho jontire id that the tract wr s: stick. Their women carry water from the | or other leaves makes the roof. If you will [ VPR WES) WITHERSCE FAE BPEEH LAl i o aberise 3 suggosts n combi % e ALy viewad and the question of coutinuing. th 3 c ) ; ST S allvoat yei o pleading for a divorco | its bon Llights. The chemise most used suggests a combi- | Dr. Newman Hall, the English Congrega- | V1 question of ‘coutinuing the wells in red jars upon their heads ag they do | rbmember the average length of the railvoad | g0y or hushiung, aged twenty-two, They OFi\ el biar stita Bllthe Swiss uation of the corser cover and short under | tionalist, ontitled “Come to Jesue,” has had | 45 per cent bonds was naturally the central i all tho Mohummedan countries, and the [ tio you will know the height of the Mexican [ yeoifh W W SeCE FRRIAEANG: IR 1 Charaet ics off ¢t HALIEORE TG M v UaLite chiemise witiIow | e praatt benl s than nas ot ha sl ol oht b | (HEbrelotitbaTdiaatssions draping of tho rebosn around the mouth so [ railvoad hut. In the rainy regions of Mexico, e s The Swiss are a slow, plodding, industriou s 3 S 1 | Potitics, or the prosent situation in Ohio, husbund had atready that you can sco but littie elso than the eves, | where the ‘water comes down in showers | IO B SRR 80T R BRI // may fiavo come from the castern custom of | every afternoon for several months of the [ it e, SRUREL B Cour SR ©EEEER Veiling the faces of the women, 1 see hero | year, the tuts are built with rigie roofs, and [ [2ehend AnE o e © E¢ | feol disposed to grant themselves. overy day features that make mo think of | ia tho valley of Moxico and amid the pietur- | Wos SPPATeRdy & fulture | I is cortain that they carn the right of a | A fad of tho Japancse, and the skill shown by the | esque mountains tlong tho line of tho Mex: aneiew Konk erila ols s natrtaio. Hroko, it will nlosiitiokpetriviiono) attee s ontl e Mexican indians in pottery and art work W National railroad you see roofs mado ot | Hial story iu heac ke Van tlorae’s | hoown quict manner. ain’or stitched wi X e R O S T : piug Neang ORI . (D16 banrd. Toofs’ aratl Romance Euds in Blmiwa Prison —Thussday ; e piyround of Bavope, vich 1 | be worn as close fitung as kid gloves, as | tate to undertake that pious duty, Of the | 4gree wil R Rt IO % indiutos that thoy aro of mixed Japanese | bonrd und tile. ‘o bourd roofs wro ted on | e By B 5N ik riuga — Sunday, \u}l‘. NEanon :’,\.."fl“'j‘_:‘,r”,lt"i,}“; '{‘u','.u- they are not clastic, Thoy sofl, castly, 'but | 66,000 pilgrims who hive sailed froin various | B¢ 446 per vents. Socrotary Foster took no origin. Some of the pottery of Guada and held down by weaus of stones placed | Eloper - Friday, - (N ; i they tic. They soil, casily [ Do o rorstary Kol bt ookino fs beautifully decorated ‘and artistically | upon them, and the_tiles are fastened witn | Sepavation —Thuvsiay ol Avrest— | eqidest works, the Siiss toil from day- | the yellow und white especially was well oriental ports for this sacred spot during tho | § LLOHACT rou and without slecves, is shaped | the bible excepted. Several million copios in the back oy three box pluits that extead | bave been printed, and it has been translated | 4id not cut a prominent figure in the confer almost to the waist. into more than thirty languages, The author | €nce. Seeretary Foster put somo very inter- o o [ Ly ke esting hypothelical ana practical qiestions ; n s the use o o g ; to Senator Sherman, which vory soon demons and lavender cLamois The risks of a pilgrimage to Mecoa may | afitad the fact that the ex-secrorms o hed with blace. Th weil make the most eartost Musselman hes v : e didinoy people working hard at theie lavor, and mai ing the most ot any diversion which the e e . el 1tal pe s deavoring to continuo the 81,000,000 of 4 shapod, and the ‘most. famous of Alexican | mortar, Th fow of theso Tndian bhuts ave | I7riday Sentence -suturday, lmuisonmout | real til sunser, be itin s pastures on the | A pretty boanet cousists of a shape of gold | 1ast six vears somo 22000 have never re- | piti i, % (RGN (18 et sculptors havo Jupanose features, This Hidls wsed, and topos and withes. tako their | Husbinl Arubeim a Thief=tio Murried the | mountain slopes or upon tho rudo bench in | cloth cmbrofdered with pearls of various | Wened. A fow ibis thought, may vossibly | B SOt artions for the el of thude 1y name is Panduro and helives at Guadal Dlices. o choapest huts of all ars thoso of | (il Thinking She Wi Rieh, aid She \Soluted chalei in the yalley, where ho | colors and surrounded by u frinze of tulle, | find their way back by othor foutes il osn el dtel Ll which by the way, 15 a city of 100,000 people, | the hot country or low lands along the | Floped with Him Believiug His Father wa sits carviug his bit of wooll, sometimes no | which ri ses behind after the ‘manuer of | Mr. Spurgeon, the great English preacher, | could be relieved if this project could be. eate stone, waich comes out | Normandy bonnets. There s arose satin | is as foud of being a gentloman farmer a8 | ried into effoct; but it only $18.000.000 o \ K cl of filizree work, and | bow in front aud the stringsare of black | Beecher was. Hohus a fino country estate | &0,000.000 out of tho $51.000.000 could be jco. Itis the Athens of the republic, and the | tiod to cross poles with strings. The poles | grooms, in which Mr. Garland and Miss | of such beauty as to mock us with the pa- | velvet. atBrulah Hill, Norwood, where he has gath- | tirned to account, there was somo other finest. art works of all kil:ds of Mexican make | are of the sume lcny:n‘gum to. lll‘t-‘i!r.lims x;\r'n- \1:‘3;}.3\.:r{\"x‘f"“-‘x‘“nfi.‘.'.‘“-u]\.}‘“\lr l’li‘..,:’(-;,(-r tience displayed thercem Weite serge is the material of the boating ~':‘v_tl‘nn unsury l~»~_ml_vul\lmilh.m a[yvlmn.s and ary to be consideved instead of are turned out there, P ufulup‘) isa v\lmulul ers (.‘lu}‘gl m‘\vl. on these a t \5 ched roof n'\r “l“:\m_ m_m“i; LR PR ek, Beuetits of Invention. dress, checked v torguoise blue. There is | :{r; b3 !ll om I.n]ll’ «l') er the wor 1'dv The ¢rounds | the one he hud proposed. Ho cun tako a pieco of black clay, and in ono | fustened in the sune \vav, Sometimes the | gieeidy pramivent, wav, be sddod those of | uitzertand, tike other countrics, is rapidly | & band of plain biu about the siiet and blue | aro bndsomely laid out and all the appoint- | Seuator Sheriman did not share the sccro: 08GO Lo Dy e R Vea i i i io) seu. ror (O tobeot natiien || showld ithioipractialivosu{ta¥btiancdora in- | braid koutlincdTietio fcontiirayeral (¥AT bluoifmentsiofthoinlacolarelaniajmagnlficant acalol s views upon tho subject. He thought a bust of vourself which is alpeyectpiioness gliors lnrl'nf?a!;m\'l bony ,mly inch, 54‘ s thlalh plonialICAn VoL R Tt RIS piGH] [ vansie caud up mountains, through | corded vibbon fastens the white cambr The Baptist Missionary union sends out [ that secretary Foster should pay the 4! per endiwhionwilliot bamioen s haihren fori | fandivoulcan scojallithateligeliz fanfiakihe))wectileminiin Ginlonaly faronandiaoBlE Ly & Wilero n fow bears nigo | blouse, and the sailor hat has a bluo ant | this year tho largest mumber of missionarios | conts, aud he undertook to show how casy. it four inohos high, It you o dusirett. 1 have | but through its wlls, I suw wholo villazes | for the full 1s that of Senor Dow Autonio | {ocl (g dous entirely. by dilligonco or ¢ white ribbon. : cver’sent in a single yoar. Forty-four of the | was for him to do so without makinyg trouble heon in his studio. It is a hut of sunburned | of such huts in the state of Vera Cruz, and | L a, e ) Wreaths of bramble flowers and ripening | sixty are newly appointod, Thelargestband | in the finaucial world. The question of i i AT & v legatic AR T we, uow boast of their narrow aud broad bricks and e squatts cross-legged on the | the Indians who swarmed in and out of them | ican lesation, sud Miss Ay Darnes of co vl wis, il soon 1o snow Alp will | blackberries are liid ubout rustic straw huts | - cizhtecn—go to Burmah, that fiold whero the mo situated in the western purt of the country, | coast. The are made of canc or tthy. - longer than & che: and is the center of art and culture in diex poles, which are ariven into the ground and the Washington list of fall brides and | of his hands a i f ! o . i ra thero was | Géorgetow al o 'y Was to come from was £ 9 3 4 i e SRlIng system. s of chy vimmed with bunches of car- | Ir 0 beginning. L'en g 2100008 sition was i ¢ ulready in the Works away'ts he' talks, turaing’ out Wis | kot ullve wiilo tho food was on 1t by menns | I3 taking. on. its wost romuutic phase, aboat | e Alpine gutie, will eveuttinliy bave tolive | any now on display. Bluck lats ure golug | seatterad in China. Jupan and africa, e dind e au i RugOeuphpithaibnn: Wonderfal pnotography in clay. | Ho mide n | of a fan made of rushes, which the. women | Soptomber 15, AS_ already. announead, her | upen tho memory of his muny ascents—his | out of favor. ,Tho Rev, I W, Belstolior) Beaver, Bulle; | tine, wotld ba sumiclent to pay off sha boods remarkabie statuotte of Eiwma Juch, the | moved vigorously to and fro during the | marriage to Mr. doseph Picrco will take | Socation, like that of the Danish prince, | Corsot covers for slender fizures are “baby | Pa, dvaws the line. When onoof his lambs, | when due. It was evident from the discus- el At tten L b bt i P 48¢ ] will be gone. waists” of nainsook shirred to i belt of linen | Solowon H. Myers, wrotcof him that he was | 8101 that Senator Sherman never hud been “sharp as a tack,” ho prayed that the | in sympathy with tho sehemo of continuing sinmer’s hard heart mght be softened, | the'd's per cent bonds iustead of payin i as u fox,” he | them off when they matured, Ho expluine ‘The funiculare railways swell in number | set on as a facing, the ends extendin and even that bride of all the Alps, | the hips, The low, round neck is edzed w the <now-covered Jungfran, will soon beas | 1 w lace or embroidery, and the fullness | When he added “‘canu foxican Lifo fairly speak and act. He will,L | hot country 1 saw many buts which had [ countey place, and will be @ quiet but stately m told, go to the Chicago exposition, eral rooms, and the homes of the better | ceremony, since Cardinal Gibbous is to \*I:rm-\ when she was here, apd his types of | operation. Both on the plateau and in the | place av “*Danlen,” Mrs. M. V. Dableren's and if he does 1 predict for him that hi classes of the poor had now aud then a table | officiate_and Rt. Rev. Bishop Keane isto | A0 S A FLHEY e s Ay g LIk, 3 ! s R AR A her o now. secre o fhino will be Intornationnl, 1 speuk of nim | and o chuir. 1o the citios I fnd the majority | ussist. Miss Droxel, tho voutest ard now | conded, Dol s 0t yore by WA of Dlokaxe, i 1s hold IS bending sirongh whick bibyg | dlimed the :Y.E'\\'[‘-'|'.‘..l(1|.‘}\:lx:.'-‘m"-p‘;"“,l""'\. G :In'n“n\fif‘.'.‘,-“y‘fi'.\“ Hell . Juas i, L here, however,as a typeof a class ot flexicau [ of the poor living in tenement bouses, aud | the only single sistcr’ of Mrs. dotn Dablaren | FoPes unid alpoustock, but by the favorite nur- | ribbon is drawa. A 1o01c \yike a8 a1y 8Tk PRt 1 RO SRII S babora || July; bhe worat in the yeur thadibeon: passed Indians. He hus the features of a Jupuncse | here in Mexico City there are streets where [ and Mrs, Kric Dablgeren, will o the vride WL What mony may.conaiiasihis modesn | roma o Fase costlme for the country s 1o the d ' forgiving tenr: But “deceitfal as | in sutety, and that aow goid would return to and the photograph whieh 1 took of him | the peoplo fairly swarm and whore whole | maid, aud some others of the youn peopio | o WA whitt many may consider this modern | foru of u loose blouse, with a decp collar cut forgiving tonr: But “dcoittul as | In dafoty, sad that now gold would rotirn i would ot 0o out of place in uny collection of | families und several familios avo erowded at | who have figurad in the marriuges of the two | decration mueli of the voanc of Apine | in squires and cmbroidered i soft foues of 00 08¢ B0 Droukht | 1o onts of tho splendid ¢rops und tho puymoent pictures from Japan. uieht in ono damp, al-smelling room with | ludies just named will attend these two il st iadpgotbe A sille. Around the hips aroshort busques, ulsg | SU L for $AN domages. ; T T i e s LT Mexican-Japancse Art. nothing but this foulest of sewerage-laden | young ‘uspirants for matvimcnial dignitics A Very Progeessive People embroidored. A ho Cova @b stiead) P aTinoRa0oone "“""l“."“"",,‘I"'\‘l","‘_”' Sinn | saving that tho bouds eould bo pud or retired o+~ The similurity of the Moxean ana Japa- | Eround to sleep upon, On_toe quiskirts of | upon this momentous occas ion Mbo Swiss, like thorast ot {ghiojworld, aro: | Arobidthe watslmlay tua blouss, aud salis [ [eroios Wit aeliios I, tho Matronelliant i ithoht diculylor dsngor. - A8'aboub/8isis Sy RETa TR et tup” [ the city you may sce the homes of squatters | — Owen Clarke of Clevelund, a merchaut | progressing, tud with their well-known love | de e frout of the Mothodis al church, Washington, | 6 o0y N A oG i i donnd :f:ll;;'l‘,l\!.::‘:'J“&,:},}“‘,'ll(; mage of ull kinds of rofuse materials from | sixiy-five vears old, summoned Attorney M. | 0f #ain see i such chanzes many thousunds | Eccentiicities of shape herald the autumu | D G Oclober 7 and vomain in session two Sl ;,j:",'[,iv,,“,'\’,'l‘f,"f,{', ::‘,.“i:‘m"f",“'}f’_,‘."‘ iy 'l"lf; wostern parts of the country muke lacquered | Ul cuns to store boxes and sun-dried bricks, | W. " Beacon, Tuesday moruing, the 4th inst., | 0f francs pouriug into the aew company’s ex- | riot of color. A seasids dress of white bea- [ {Veeks: ‘Gho Best conference was hold tn | oy (o ordtary considercd that 1t whs cusy to and some of the huts are so low that the | yud dictated what ho w people bave to get down on all fours to get | Tater in the day ho visited iuo thow. Such places ure occupied by the | yydertakers, and had prepaved a bill of e od ' bis willl | chequer el “season, Por, the number of i 5 finished this week. The front Srothers, | of those who are adventurous enough to | trimmed with a flounce put on in points and ) T pstic hat 6ffec 6 puorest of the poor of this great city. Their | ponses for a vespectable funeral, which been- | tending the ascent, is very small in propor- [ beauty who ordered it expected to bo more | dttended by 500 delegates. Threo hundred | B L AOGETLSS Dot doposit for ciroulation inhabitants live by bogging, odd jobs and T i Chh i tion to those who would willingly reach the | than cqually impressive from the buck view, | Willrepresent Americu, cniled the western | (0 5 P s ¥ ging, ) dorsed as corvect. The next moraing b b £l qually imp etion. and the othors the. balanee of the | Would have on the banking systemn was nat- often by stealing, and they “constitate what [ Nrs. Murphy, a widow, drove to the ¢ summitin & more cowfortuble and less haz- 1 down collurs are a relief for which | Sfoot; Ad the OLIeXs tho balance 0f the | iaily one of the foatures of the discussion aro fond of Howers and theso Indians havea | MiKht b called “the residences of the five | of the Immaculate Conception on Lyman | &rdous manicr, no matter what the cost teful after the ich, torturing stocks | /90 ""‘;,"“l‘l‘ 03 smo eastern seetion. | Senator Sherman did not think it would have Shnilar tasto for them. . Tho Japanese basket | Poluts element of the capital. street,where 4 marriage coremony wis bezu Lho Rigl wis tho first of who wmountains to | iu which nocks have beeu imprisosed solong. | Next to Buillins Brooks, w '“"“; Figantie | any excopt to evoatually somewhat change work is noted and bere you find the finest of | How They Dress and What they Eat | by Rev. Father Sydaney. Before tue last | claim the uttention of civil engine W They are made of pleated or gathered luce, | S1%¢ 1 “_~_‘ KDWY, "*:““ of tho Kpisco- | ji5 character. His opinion s that while it e e e B L S R e The Mexican Indians are not the blanket | words which would pronounce them man and | Wis, at that moment, more or less of an e white or cream. Swmall capots made eutively )‘«”l' fureh, g "‘]’x"““‘«“".‘ ; 191 grenLash ‘“”)”‘ will not change the system after these bonds, colors and most ingeniously put | savages of our western territorics. They do [ wife could be spoken, Glarke foll forward ir | periment, “bas proved sulliciently suecessful | of llowers are worn by women who object to [ 40d stature, is Bishop Walier of Novth Da- | ijich are held s a guarantee for circnlation together. In their love for chil- | not cut the seats out of their puntaloons be- | an apopletic spasm, from which he never 0 sugzest mauy others to follow, untl teday | the big hats or gauze toques covered with | Kota. Heis three luches ul “""1 X fect in | 4p0 petived, the government would issue the dron the two people are alike, and | fore they wear them as our Indns do, | covered. [ expivedin a few moments in | 1ot only mfi\v_n\/“ rland, but in Italy ard Ge jewels, . he w\nvl.l:ml\:'t”:x:‘ ]l;:l(;.nnn;;li: lllllll.llll'-‘llli\:.lll.i notes dircetly from the treasury department I sco babies carried about hero o the ‘backs | They are m fact as cleanly and particular | the arms of his bride 1t was leazned later | many, every well-known mountaiu where an Bluck hosiery s quite as safe a choice as in | 1%y HASSIE fHAR 1S e IR | upon the deposit of bullion in the treasury to of tueir mothers and sistors just as you will | about their clothes as any people in similar | that Clarke nad wade a solemn rromise to bis | uninterrupied view may be obtained has its | v rorm ison, notwithstauding the ro- | fhf o e ISR B 80 QNIRRT E shanOlatkolnslnlie ealoni gy o A O s Tilier i & man who chines us' biiebitly 1 | €OYCF tho amount issuod, M. Sherman tool o them i B8 them also oherlead nsi | olka A co! orld” ov The poore: vst wife on her death bed that he would | furniculare traius running to the summit, T Ry s retirome ey ind a g 0 shines ) e T oct the sce them in Jupan, see them ulso carried as | eircumstances the w orld” ove I'he poorest borHdal peated warnings of its retivement. It is worn ciety as in the pulpit. A few days aro ho the ground that it would not affect the banks tablos and bowls which are both beautiful and artistic. They paint these with rosc and other flowers and thoir lacquer will stand water, and, though not like the won- derful_work’ of the Jananese, it may have como from the same origin. ‘The Japanese ference, which will reprosent the 45,000,000 [ make provision for them. 3 e6 them in Indla, and I note that | man hus Lis white shirt, wide-legged panta. | never marry rany circumstances The View From Rigi e el LN dolsE A W anonagatt i bann L el a0 8 : o g few days ago Do | g that they would very soon adjust them- the numbers ys for ehildren are as many | loons and tho Indiun girl wears u white | In his will, Clarke left ‘his entire estate, | iy wide and enchanting; ove scems to be look- | tier than matebing hose would be. Bluck [ IYOh Some nptovioty ,"~‘_”‘,‘,""““'K'l‘“_'l is- | solves to the new conditions U T fn Mexico as they are i pan. These Me: chemise and a shirt. She has it is true, not | $10,000, o Mrs. Murphy. ing down upon an illuminated map. hose with a light embroidery, in some color _‘“‘f," fn‘l'“[ l‘: 9, ‘_‘_I:‘,“‘;‘.: 9 it “‘l' “ AUEC Ii ernment would furnish the currency to them an Indians do Wonders in frescoeiug, All | the corset, the bip pads ov tho bustle of our s As far as the eye can see are villages, | brought out more strongly in other portions | fiitoush the northavestern statos o "0 ] divect the louses of the better clusscs are frescoed | advanced civilization and the covering of her EDUCATION L, green fields, bluc-gieen lakes, with @ back. | of the costume, are effective. irough the ng 1 states. Ho\ for SaoratarviRoator: aabaatoillan will fnstend of being papered, and o Mexican | long black hair is only wl as costly ns | i P e Bround of sbow Alps: poneeral.villages, with 1 the way of shoes russet leather oxfords | | MI: Gladstone recently said:—The older [ accept Senator Sherman's views upon this plusterer, ut 50 cents i aay, will turn out ef- | Eor meager purse can buy, still sho looks | Ftom or_ the colloction of schools which | b\ yoorea” houses und ehurches with tall, | arc worn us mueh us evers out the colors are | L oW the more confirmed [ am in my faith | gubject remains to bo soon. Being i bankor focts that would do credit to Ltaly, They | neat and tidy in her simple raiment and when | FOUSHELIES WHIG 15 POPULAELY Kiiowin 85 N, 1 yjonger spires; mountuin slopes dotted with | rather durker than last year, In fact s well. | 4140 religion. Tulk about the question of tho | himsclf and haviag dealt in practical finans have all of the care and honesty in their work sho has u straightness and roundness | Bis 1,000 scholars burnt brown chalets, and winding roads so | dressed man is almost always eminently | Go¥! Thore s but oue question, and that is | cial affuirs all hiy lifo, his ideas in pronosing of the true Japunese artist and will labor for and which many of our | A public school law recently passed in | \hito us to sugecst u slender thread, “quiet in his colors, although the bright red tho gospel. That can and will prowet every- | 1o contizue the 47 por cent bonds at 2 per weeks on o wax figure to produce a certain wight envy. The feot | New Mexico has caused a wreat demand for The sunset 1s supevh. The foll srning | necktios worn this Wil groy and brown :;l‘mu.[ ].\"lw('n~vn-|~rn!' 1 .mv.1I Hpr:)hm(llll}ly cent wus to avoid any friction or uew experi- effect, and they wake the wonderful | of — both = sexes ‘wre bare and | school teachers. Tho applicants so far have | Ay the sound of tho Alpine horn we fuastento | suits ure such protty innovations in the way | {hankful that none of my children or kiu- ts at the time when peoplo ure begging pictures out of feathe that ~suc- | are half clad in sandals made [ not been above oue-third the unumber re- | ihe pointof outiook with the cold snow air | of color that they have become very popular dred have veen blasted with it Tam glad to | for more money. prised the Spaniards under Cortes, | of two pieces of sole leather about the size of | quired. brushing our faces, and witiess that gr sny thabiabont ull the inan abthe top in Groat ary IFoster took the 11:4) train for Miss Willura ssys that the Chautuugua | Britain are Chvistians. I have been in public | w, 2 ' 58y Svitain are stians. I ha ) Washington to decide his e dress roformers, of whom she is & moviug | [ife fifty-cight vears, aud forty-seven in the | g spirit, have not reaceed the point of opposing [ cabinet of the British government, and or recommending tho divided skirt. ‘Their | ing those fort and you can buy these same pic- | the bottom of your foot and one bound ou the | - With the id tures or have them wmde to order here in | tob and the otber on the sole of the foot when | guag Mexico City toduy. Thoy work ke the | worn. These sanduls cost about 25 cents a | Jupanese, each in his own little dwetliug, and | pair, and you could dress an Indian woman | F of preserving the Gaclic lan- | of Swiss sights, an unclouded sunrise, the duke of Athol's daushter is pre. The sun, looking like a great ball of 1 for the instrac of the Gacls of [ slowly rises from behind a mountamn and Perthshire in reading, writing and speaking is'its glow upon the suow veaks of the w0 after his rival at the treasury dopartment, and what ur- | may bo the outcomo of this important and seven yours 1 have beon asso- | pather unusual meoting will dountiess bo dis- Whien they have enough mado to start out for | so that she would look respectable here for | their native tongue, s Obertands onw ‘uitor “unotber o | RN GATAME 5 MOG Etih Bitbeeted | eluted with sixty of ulo master ‘minds of the | covered witnin “tio nbxt twenty-four hours, selling trip, many of tho urtists tuke thele | $2.50. It would cost considerably more to fit [ Dr. Frederick M. Fling of Biddeford, Me,, | different snows caich the crimsou coloriniz, | 1o vodieo i o st ot tromooe e | country, wndallout five of tho sixty were | Scoretary Foster exkabited 1o nervousuoss us packs on their bucks and peddlo out their | out the man, and the ciothes of the Mexican | pas been elected professor of European his- [ until in a moment, tho entive. range is vivid | women, she says, 15 i mattor for {atore die. | Cheistans to the kEaYe .omorgenoy; he mbat vory 49eg wares over the country. I met a basket | Peon ave one of the big items of the family. | tory in the university of Nebraska, in plac b tne Alpe elube. AR i e AUBRLOR R HENER Bl MEN OF MARK meet, and certainly Senator Sherman’s man- seller out fn the ficlds near Mexico City | His blanket or serape, which ho wraps pic- | of rof. Howard, who as gonc to tie Leland que Costames of the Women Soft vellow sheepskin is recommended for : - 3 ner toduy and advice of lust night oxblblted todny. He had about fifty baskets on his | turesquely about bis shoulders and which he | Stanford, Jr., universit Th R At s e vo | truvolors! shoes.: SHppors. are porfumed. by Herr Alvary, the tenor singer, bears an as- | nothing but perfect confidence thut every- buck, and these, the result of a month's work, | wears whien uot workiug both day and nieht, | ™ Gonord) John Faton, at one time United | oxtromely oty uml vabin m e e | i s, cliosen seent powace betweoy | Stmed name. fe is really the son of Andreas | thing would o along smoothly and Seore- Bo Was bringing fnto the city to sell. His | costs ull the way from §2as high as Le can | grates commissioner of cducation, and lat- | fag 16 th chnton to which ey balene o " | th lining and. outer leathor, Amerioans | Athenbach, marin3 and land. | tary Foster would fud no dificulty whate leather puntuloons were profusely patched, | afford to go. ‘I nave seen some that were | o B EERITRSAONE PR AT A I DLOUIA SRR 10N IO CINEY Delong,y . RS it Sy S il 1 scape painter of Duesseldort, ever in mecting every obligation, but his whito snckc-like shirt was s clean ad | worth &0, but theso were hand made aud | pell B ILITL S Lout tn order 10 devotohis. | amt i A iomon oo B 10 Gl | B e Eatoey sattae. ot uen % [ ™ Whan tho monument to the tuneful Burns e likeubss of the Aztecs to the Jupanese. | & like wmount. If, however, he is tue ordi- [ COOKery reports that 5,601 pupils entered for | clbow, black velvet bodieo jaced beforo and | and leatbers, R 9 taaaxetaomal e WAS 80 hi was managing oditor, Sono was an aggress baan Daaniallake FraanAnL bAINE Bod ¢ Tndian he will confine himself to n cheap | trainiue iu” 1500, seventy-seven teachers ob- | buck with sitver cheins and fastenings; sil- White shoes will be more worn this season | braius und feelin A AL > Sat Poon wenrs oloan white cottons g ' ioe: | aroand under his big straw hat with all the | 5¢hool tho total' numver of pupils has slightly | endivg in - hand Gilagree oanaments, | many varietic lo white patent leather tie | for the city of ko, and son of tho | 4o 4y compatency. Some years aftor that, quently see both sexes bathing tozether here | airs of the brigand of the stage. Neither no | excecded 40,000 Around thio acols of Lhe oghtelfols o Vo8 Is bandromo, | While undressed kid slippers | fumous demourat of that uame, naver visits | Oy 0 "SRR (RaTe TR (L domns as they do modestly and with 1o thought of | nor bis wife wiil wear underclotbiug, and | A recont applicant for o teacher's certifi- | collar of pale rose or blue surah, ¢ bavo gold heels and soles, and white satin | Sprigfield, 1L, without goiug to the tomb | WS BONG Wos fl the #etith of his success shame in Japan. S0 far I see nothing ab they will sloep at nignt in the same outfit | eate in Lake county, California, wrote i an. | plaited, which is worn $0 8s 10 leaye tho 1 Foyars avo on graen. kid tos. = With white | of his fathor'a old political” apponent " and | (o1 Btong vofused to. give. hium. work. ron these udians 10 connect them with our that thoy wore duriug the day. The cost of | Swer to i question that the vegetable kiug- | exposed, o wide dog collar of garnet beads | cloth aud wool gowns are worn shoes of black | friend, Abratam Lincoln ob, Rigne: paciged o gitee i work) kos akes of Lo western reservations. ‘Thoy are | thete food will not bo proportionately greater | dem of Austratiu was divided into two grand | Wit tlugree silver clasps, aud handsowo | pateat leather having whito cloti tops, Sev | Archbishop Ireland, who is lkely to e | UG G B0 Qe oVl Hison bim a differcut prople and they coula never tiave | thuu th costof theirclothing. Threo-fourths | divisions known as the auimal aud minoraly | lree silver bucklos or pins i the hair com- | eral inds aud colors of leather aften aro | come n cardinui, is s iativo of Irolund und | (Stone) from the Inter Ocean, Fhis was bad the same origin, of Mexico lives nimost entirely on black | and in answer to the question s to how G plete the costutae combinodin ano shipper, the va p being of | fify-throo years of age. He has resided In | rather’ humilinting to. Halford, but. waon As b cluss these Mexiean India ro per- | beans aud cakes wade of tndian corn and the | laws were “enacted, answered that the Canght the Spirit of Pro tress ono sort, thi6 quarter of anothor, th lustapof [ St 'Paul for many years and during the war | Stono's Nows wis worth four of the late hops the poorest peoplo on this continent. | frijoles und toriillas suucea with ved pep- | were “enacted by the grand jiry." Tho shepherds no longer wear their origi- | 2f P4 Witle heels and soles may mutch one | wis chaplain of the Fifth Minnesota in- | Qeoun Stono's argument was forcible and i Phveo bundred years ago they wern tho richs | pers moke up the diovof Mexicau Iu- | The Argonaut: A Yale student recantly | nl costume; they, too, seem to huve caugnt | “hALo fhree = o e oven. | foutry. Ho was ordained to tho priesthood | couclusive: est and Montezuma gave Cortes plates of gold | ¢1ans, The tortillas form the ch upa- | handed in'a paper to his professor, and wiis | the spirit ot progress dud now dress ke tHeiE | [ vwour are tho fine silns coomons. olkmon | in 1581 and raised to the avchepiscopal e sud silver us big as their horses, Since then | tion of the Mexican house-wife. Every | surprised the next day to have it returned | brotuers in the villase. ' One reason I have | £ Woal are tho fine silky crepons, silk mus- | gignity in 1558, ¥ \ator Spooner has shorn tho long and lins, Chinu crepes, organdies, nets and tulles with citber velvet spois, tloral embroideries or & powdering of tiny gold, silyer or crystal they have been the slaves of their con- | wWoman it her own miller and cook. A rough, | with a note scrawled “ou tho margin, Ho | heard assigned for this is that the pictur- querors, ‘They have been opvressed ana | flatstono afoot wide nad eighteen incheslong | studied it diligeutly, but was unable to de- | osq is expensive aud so long as beaten and worked for generations and it is mill, and she soaks tho graius of cc eipier th to undersell Gug Charles Francis Adams has turned from ! wavy locks that used to fall thickly over his the churms of vunning a railroud to those of | Byronic collar and give his the” name in clectricity. He is expected soon to assume | Washington of the “Laurcate of tha Senate, costume note, und 50 ho brought his puper | Kiem & Co., tr struction of evening gowus for 1 n Spain, These noblo crea- | the porsessors of muny nets of i with their almost human lutelligonce | gowu to mateh each set ¥ ) N succeed Prof. J. 1. Sbaw. Mr, Bechtel is a | and keen instinet, deserve more than mere | naments are justly cel provalis, ‘hese Indiuus many of them are | rcsweoter uad votler than the buked boans | graduato and past-graduate of johus Hopkivs | mention, for thelr Work i roscuing 1ost trav- | ablo world wore & ouorable and all of them great lovers of | of Boston, and the better classes of Indiuns | wny has mudo @ special study of Letn and | elors and snow wrecked gulies coiitie. i bome and the locality in which they live. | bave wauy dishes which are both cheap and | kindred languages fncluding S { utrons, and cenheim & | . RN 8 of | PTG Iy P e e S © water till they ure soft and then rubs [ back to the professor. I caw't quite ( 16 peusiiut wiil dress ufter the wodorn | Cf il ol Marle Aptolnetto brocudus of | the presidiney of the Westiughouse system. | He 15 now as woll nad as any man in the chance 10 bo ubything else. As they ure | them ou this stone with unother round | out what this is, if vou please,” said the | style Tho areateat Mboety bs fllonai MG Patterub | = oneral K. Burd Grubb, the wminister to | congress. M. Snoonor is leading u quiet life today bundreds of thousauds of them uve | stone like tho iwhetstono you use | studout., “Ihat, sirl’ sald the professor: | i St Bernarde, | drosstnd rosults in strliing vontosts ofotns | Spain, will ssil for Naw York August 20 to | in Wisconsiu, but ho oceasionally runs down bopelessly in debt wud are as much | in sharpentug - o seythe until - she | “why, that says Icanuot vead vourhund: | Ono scessome splenaid specimens of that | ple orsundie With tollate i iaists OFSHI: | Ve prosent ab the reunion of the Phil Kearney | 10 Chicago to make a political proguosticas £ dedt slaves as aro the debtors of Siam. | gOS them into a paste, Sho pats this out | writhig. You write illegibly, sir o breed of dojes, Lhe 5t Heruard, 1o moune | Wi cluborately omamented AW Jewellod 14 bl of Waich ho is prsidont, wud also o | HoD Millions of them live from hand to moutn, | lke w griddie cake and cooks It before her | Ay recent meoting bourd of trus. | tain places, for Switzedlaud 15 the home of | - Precious sones eator largely iato the o ftor his chinnces for the goveruorship o und only the fewest have what the Americay | 0pen fike. 1L is by no means bad eating, and | toes of Yankton 8. 1 ge.. A, Bechtel | this partiCular race, wlthouch the original | onl Of 6YOWINg ROWOA [OF mALFons, AN Jorsey Loxt year TR R Ta SRR Cind b it ety Curdinal Howard formerly held i conimssion vels buye o ieral Palmer, the new commauder-in- | in the Lifo guards, and the g lady whose or- | chiet af the Grand Army of the Repablic, bas | bishop of Perth was 1o youth thc ted in the fashiou- | tarved his attention of late years to fresco | Austrian hussars, 1 itly a white gown bro- | paiuting and decorating, and most of the in - n | eaded with gold, draped with folds of yellow | terior painting of the state capitol at Albany The negro of the south would cousider a compe- | With a Sauce of red pepper it lows down tho | of John Honkins univorsity, Bultin tency. Peon debt sluvery was abol- | kreat Mexican throat by the millions per Ashod in Mexico in 1578, but i practice 1t still | diem. As to the fr s, OF black beaus, the ¢, Md., | breed came fr was clected to the professorship of Latin, to | tures | archs \ rtest of atue of Pope [ 0 which was presented b iskrit, and 1s | 1o more thap passing notice. Powerful to uslin clasped ou the shoulders and at the | is his wor Ho is affavlo and bas many | to the Catholic t wo wad 1 ality in which they live, | have o uslin clasped on the shoulde id at tie | is his work. Ho is affablo and bas many | to the Catholic university of Wushington & ~ Sha buls which shey CURY 68 the aran af | & J e a speciulist 1u pbilology and ancient history, | look upon, gentle eved aud inteiligent, capa- | waist with topaz clasps. . Diomond epaulets, | warm friends. He is an excellont prosiding | Joseph Ev De Loubutof Now pome fiod by - Uole waster eraditors. huve oed o hoties an Villages. He now holds a fellowship in the famous | ble of understandine the work ecxpected of | girdles and vuckles, opal clasps, and real | ofieer, buta slow aud uot particularly elo- | rived ana has been pliced for tho tine bein ’ elr fuwllies for geueratious, acd though Many of the ludians of Mexico live 1 vil | Baltimore university, them, they take their instructions from the | pearl fringes add to the glory u) wany aso- | quent speaker, du the prayer roow of the university % L

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