Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 8, 1894, Page 17

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. msm ]-I.\"['ABLI.\'HI‘II) 7:!(71\ 19, 187l OMAHA, U\I)AY MORN I\'(-, Al'RII; 8, 1894 'l'-\\'l",iV’l‘Y PAGE INGLE CO'Y FIVE CENTS BOSTON STORE,BOSTON STOREBOSTON STORE Corner 15th and Dodge, Omaha. Cor. 15th and Dodge. 2000 ELEG’ANT NEW SPRING‘ T his carload was bought divect from the Railvoad Company's Fcoh,ht Claim Agent. 1000 PIECES NEW A g All the Carpets and Curtains in this sale N wera in the car at the tims of the wreck. D 1 See that you do not miss this great BOUGHT FROM AN EMBARRASSED BROOKLYN IQAIIJ IIOA D CLOAK DEA;ER AT AN EK?RMQUS CONCESSION AT ORNE-THIRD COST. i BANKRUPT PRICES THAN Corner 15th and Dodge, Omaha, 1,000 pieces English, French, German Fabrics, entire stock of a New York Commission House, sold for duties and cash advances, i I I[HIS SALE BEGINS P ) % ENTIRE WORTH 1 ¢ TOMORROW ' g% LOT UP TO i worth AND CONTINUES ONE WEEK. R 5 | AT ONE PRICE R : %$Y|"5I'IU) i $2.50 g g worth $7.50, Hea” Unlun i | E egant Wool Filled A YARD. 500 Sl e 400 ; @ Union Ingrain Ladies’ All Wool : Ladies’ Elegant Spring Ingrain Carpels e & CARPETS ot cage w2 }Jackets and Gapes . — - Double Ca.pels > in the very latest styles, in Best Qua ll\ Hm ¥ Fine CHOICE With passementerie trimming, \ / \ | A1l Wool Sargoes, Super Wool ) Brussels #0-inch PURE SILK and WOOL DRESS GOODS. | worth ¢2, 50, go at (ch each. N g i CLAY WORSTEDS, bl i\ 40-inch & DAMASSES .. c ‘ A | Xmported Broadeloths. Ingrain Carpets Carpets 40-inch |/\|, JORDS. . e ; ’ - ™ A4-inch TUAL VALL , GO AT & H PP Jart Pl A 44-inch C ll:\\(.l..‘\l! = - s NEhi i SR R | a AT s belier eraden soad Ny Ohthnead WORTH UP 70 $1.3 | sl kS = B INE R : 557 K AU \ in Brassels Carpo's { MOQUETTE [ % fER i 3 E the whole car loa CARPET 2 (Caces CW 3| v 2 Cases New Imported case strictly AJI -WOOL . worth §1), s which would be ALL-WOOI i : ARD G L) FHENDH Alnerlcan Very lmndsome styles in ey ; T s worth $25 RAILROAD WRECK SAI'E OF - { Ladies’ 2-Butt e 200 Ladies’ Extra Swell ] /_ l \ _\ 7 3 “?‘I“IA[”S Challls 2c 5 :;T—A'IWII'A(;‘S { ; 4 Imported Su;unple ( : ‘ j 1\ A [ S Wesigns. A VARD, Worth 35¢ a yard: ~ varp. Bll Woal Cloth Jackels| F° = Jackets and Gapes . S el S in Novelty Mixtures. ELEGANT NEW 1,000 l’.lllN \'t.r\ Finc Lot of 2 Cases 2 Cases 42-inch elegant S No two alike. Soms ot these| Jpish Point gH Very Fine 3 8PR| NG have moire silk sleeves, others are | . BRU SS E LS Also splendid N T \form Spp : L a4 with very heavy Bour- CUrtains Effect Lnce New Srinef§l Stomm Serge Al Wool Broadeloth |(\PES e A “I\““’OS &l I:N“Nl:w_ c GAPES in black, brown, AND :i23‘:‘tg?:s:?;isfxsijaflrf?;:;‘ "'”'ifill‘fil‘.“"” Worth fron are worth tully $25.00. But dur- An Immense Lot ing this sale you take your choicse | A (e hoTal Polka Dot and Drapery Swiss CURTAI N§ Sprine Phidy e e o (INORERS Sfl]d“ l lilld\ worth 75¢. WORTH 25¢. SIO go in this sale at $598. Worth §7.50, Worth up to 40c a yard, goes at 5¢ a Corner (5th and Dodge Sts " N 1 JJ ! his own vessel. And that on the 22d of " within the past six mont en and talked | T had gazed by the flickering light, quite | of customs in vogue exactly identical with | Some im © bowlders on our right, and | spoke to Elkomin, who arose and sayng, A ML IN)s J 1776, Captain Cook anchored under the = with a man whom I firmly believe to be | fascinated, at her withered countenance, I | as many practiced to this day in China. winding twisting ' anlong many more ome Enumklaw, Alta-num awaits you,’ promontory which he named Cape Flat- | more than 180 years old, and that he is | as him how old she was thought to be. nd now to return to the thread of our | that to a casual glance offered Insuperable nducted me again into the open court. y—the name it still bears—and there en- | none other than the ci-divant mate of ! old, old,’ he replied, with a shake | & " continued the Colonel, having first | Obstacles to further progress, finally emérged | Passing around one of its sides I beheld riained aboard ship o mative Indian chiet | Bodega y Quadra. : e - s Head, “butthere 15 anather still older | lighted a fresh cigar, and sunk comfortably upon & narrow shelf-or ledge of rock that | at a short distunce a smull clrcular strue: . who had_previously rendered him a g eur, hear,” was the universal chorus that | tha ack in his seat, ~ ‘‘Juan Martinez was not | beetled over the yawning gu rayersing | ture, exactly similar o one of the ‘estufar’ The Hoary Sage of Mt. Tacoma a Pioneer | \iayess. greeted these words, for Colonel Hope is a ‘And who, I asked, ‘may that be, | slow to perceive the advantage he had gained | M8 for another 100 yards or so we doubled | of the Pueblas, especially those of the Canon from Wayback. SOME ANCIENT HISTORY. gentleman of unsullied honor, and the an- | Elkomin?' by reason of his resemblance to his captors, | & bold peninsula and the grew broader | del Muerto, but with this important differ- At this point Mr. John D. Davis of the | olicement of this conviction naturally cre- | **‘Ahta-num To-ko-mah, the venerable one [ and, later, discovering that he had many | 4nd the declivity much sharper. Descend- | ence, this building possessed a door at ite Post-Intelligencer, who Has been at some | ated the |}|u.1u||ml-';| a lunl,»lm’w;u. After a | of the single mountain,’ he responded. words in common with them, quickly learned u':“:”'_'"”»" for "'W next '[m"' nilelaurpath base, while the ‘estafu’ of the Pueblas has <1 pains to collect and preserve some of the | Moment of deep silence. as if his auditors fount Rainier? 1 inguired. their tongue, and, being really a superior | 454in contracted until at last there were f no entrance or aperture of any kind ex- YHOUGHT TO BE 180 YEARS OF AGE Gariier (raditions of Angeline's tribe, spoko | Were am(lmmh Lullum-l lh-;:u proce: a Yes,! replied Blkomin, Mount Rainier of | man, he soon gained great ascendancy over | SCArcely mer ‘I""_" I'““'n'""‘ ‘“‘Y "‘"K“) ""i “‘P'l its apen top. IMr E. Bickford in N g et protest, gentlemen, that I am speaking | the white man; Ta-ko-mah of the Sno- | them, and was finally made their chief, and | ' he rugged rock walls on the one hand | an interesting article in e Contury for Py YIS ems, gantiemen, that we have | In truth and soberneas, 50 far as con- | qualmies.’ at a far later period (for what reason. F and the gaping abyss on the other. “Another | October, 1840, suys that the Spanish invaders olonel Hope Beards the Patrinreh i 1 | 1o GV oy 0 & Mot of symposium | Corns my own convictions, and it you would | ‘But; continued Elkomin, ‘we of the | min did not say) he retired to a deep canyon | 100 Yards of this perilous trail (for a trail, | under Coronddo found the Zunis and Moguis Rocky Den % About Him--A on Angeliniana, permit me to contribute to :Ik:n:fx h'.:"‘r}.‘w":; "l'l ':‘f fn\:'xm in |er~-l cass mh.- of Fx;ll-]lmln;’h'lv are |I.n||. |nlmlk of | of Mt ier, where, as priest and prophet ““I‘Ir""-‘r ;;f”"‘;’:;“:”’xfy'::,“ Ll f::"":"n"l“y":;’ "“'";" ;:““rl!"l""!"ilx“"“]'lrI!"M“\u lun:ur!m‘nl councils 5 me onda Eronato! 5 ake great pleasure in relating | Ahta-num, for such is his wish, and we are r he has dwelt for many years. So PEOELSD ) d BO) aces similar in coustruction to an oven Wierd, Enchanting Story of the the fund some facts concerning one of the | . ", : Y chasm lying directly across our path, ap- tank, and which c e most interesting of her recollections. We He his children. deeply interested in the story of this strange Bl 3 path, ay or tank, and which could be entered only et e RS Th S H G in | At this there was an cager cry of assent, And it was only by @int'6f many adroit | man had I now become that I was resolved, | PATCAtIY as fathomless as if the very, globe | from the top. Within these fires were kept the scrvice of his Catholic majesty g1 ColoneliHovotc Btimisd e | questions during the noxt two days that bit | it it could be compassed, to sce him for my- Hadjthareie ‘,‘I':::;“‘k‘l‘;“'_“,"""[, el perzetially ““”l”“]' from kwhlchitacCith 111, King ot Spaln, salled rfom San Blas, in was last summer, after two weeks of | by bit I gleaned from Elkomin' something of [ self, and made known this purpose to Elko- e E M AN, aald s Hilkomln Spaniards:named the:‘estutas (stoyes).” The SEATTLE, Wash., April 2.—(Correspond- [ Mexico, in chiet command of the Santiago f‘;‘_’.',"";“"‘ con ”“’l "‘l‘l‘;"f"""‘" and —Sno- | the history of this Ahta-num, who, like Tam- | min. At first Elkomin would not listen to | (¢, M0st perilous point of your jou building before me was, 1 believe, used for ence of The Bee.)—Last Wednesday evening | and Sonora, the latter being ('\vmnmmh-ll.b,\' (%3 ;"I_'“;“‘lrljlvm‘”"l'm;:‘" ‘;:‘l‘;‘x::‘fl’n';r“n‘l':‘ll nd of the ancient Delawares and .\h;yln it, saying that it simply and absolutely | gireet you will presently be again In safety. | the ‘estatu’ by the Zunis and Moquis, that 1 at the Rainier club, where Colonel John &,"‘_x‘.‘;‘*(‘;lhfdr’f“l:‘}l‘d“, l:,:“':,’m('," 4;“lfl,g‘:f,,s "}7 | bia, that toward the end of August 1 resolved T v Lo L S one even amang the Snoaual® | Will you go on or turn back? a_receptacle for the sacred fire, and a place Hope of Snohomish was a guest, the post- | ininutes north, and thence coasted south- | 10 try my luck at “trolling” on the upper | thus obtained left me in no doubt that he | allied to him by blood, could be bronght face or a moment I fain would have turncd | of worship and council, which constitutes prandial talk happened to fall upon the pos- | ward, inshore, seeking the outlet of the | Sound, 1 had |..u.vn;L:-rl Introduction to that | was, in truth, Juan Martinez, the mate of | te face with Ahta-num.. But 1 persisted, and ?,’:‘,",ki :::,‘”',‘;v""_],‘,'f""“" SAMEALOSMYLEeROUSy anguenitagh iniithalions npar ayidangesiint > SO e topic having | Strait of Fuca, as laid do Jellin's chart | &mlable gentleman, Colonel John McGlynn, | Bodega y Quadra, supposed by hiz contem- | as I had already greatly endeare and T simply satd: has convinced me that the Snoqualmies are sl ongoiy ot man, the i vin | st o P a0 Sown i ety cart | st s Solone ok, eShann, | Baloer Quie svpcned T, s comen | g ity iy emart ot | 2 B0t EGun 1 win s oty descend Wi e ruthren ‘of cen suggested by some allusion to An uys v ce and residel 1028 s Bl y many acts of signe “ “Then for the space of a onts,’ o pue common pare; i T s ot Sonttiora ativa "5 | tnorh. Barly in August (on the Gth, accord- | With office and’ residence at Neah bay, and | Martires (Point Grenville, on tho . coast of | finally 8o far yielded as to consent (for El- | w10 o 1l for the space of a fow moments,' | the pucblas from a common parent stock. 9;': 2 TADOONS,: Of attle,”” a native -1 jng (o an old account) Quadra anchored | A1€r & day or two at the agency, including | Washington of modern maps) on the Gth of | komin is a splendid fellow) to conduct me to | Jort. Jast yvou lose your head with Glidinees. FACE TO FACE. dian woman of very great age. near the mainland, 47 degress, 20 minutes | & Visit odihel Indian achool l)h‘lh’“hlfl and | August, 1775, According to Elkowmin and the | the base of the lofty penk, and there leave e e e TN eRea LRI G inoss, Andlitewas haralfinia coll bulltiintolth Colonel Hope was of the opinion that man | north, and sent a boat ashore with six men [ & Peeh into the agency store e s pon- | traditions of the Makalis and Snoqualmi me with Skamokawa until such time as ho | “'\0irY fhut ho retraced our Mieps for some | massive wall of (bl anclent bullding, in a might possibly live to be 200 or even and a mate for water, all of whom, according | o IGel, O CEIAE ECE, counts and | fiX men of the Sonora were killed while re- | might first visit Ahta-num and ascertain his | arey paces, and began slowly elimbing what | mysterious canon beneath the eternal snows years old, saying that he believed the de- | to the same account (Lope da Gama's), were | T W0 RO T (e D aasg "W"I‘”'] turning to their boats with water, but their | own pleasure in the matter. seemed to' me might, at other times, have | of Ta-ko-mah, that I was led into the vener- crepitude o old age was the rosult not so | murdered by the natives. 4 IeEaR{atilankitol makehaoma) trianda brane]|Losdera(Martines) S ANEHIMGIL {an FIn- VISITING THE AGED CHIEF. beentithol cournatttiie ade of melting | able presence of Ahta-num, high priest of much of the actual lapse of years per se This last statement, however, T believe ! a dian, or mestizo, as will appear later in my | .y 3 3 4 1 M sz ) B G . 1 s e st 1) InacuTate i forLahile alx aritna: [Ltue ampleni fisher-folloiThai Inaianaiotatnia: [ £108 S8 MERES A SH LR ERIRAR TR 08 E With this I must fain be contented, and | snows from the heights aboye. Upward we [ the Snoqualmics —face to face with Juan Posited i the human system along with its | crew were In fact brained by the Indians, | (ribe are, as you know, located along the | ouiid"o "\ FiiGra at seelng his rosemblance | (W0 days later we were bivouacked for the | went for some minutes, then downward | Martinez, mato of the good whip Sonora, Posired fn the human system along with dts | FEW BA Hls related by Angeline and | Strait of Fuca, and have for ages been born | po o f B CUPtort A O e wonder at | N&ht on a small arroyo on one of the foot- | again, until at last I was permitted to look [ that safled with Bodega y Quadra from food, Lot kb o o sallors and fishermen, most of their tim 0 LQINAR\VEH, ANG UA VA an hills. On the morrow, with the first glint [ around me. We stood again upon a rocky | Blas, Mex., In the yea d 177 After some desultory talk as to the great | corroborated by some other facts, escaped 4 the strange things Martinez had to tell them f d " 4oy e 5 e to which ' of our native Inai 1= | With his life and subsequently became chiet | Deing spent in their splendid sea-faring | oo “\FSE MEREE ¢ R IEE RO G0 of the sun on the eternal snow, which lay o, this time broad and spacious, while his statement, ontinued Lain, otably those of tho Arizona Ducbias | of the tribe i canoes, and it 1s by no means unusual for | Of @ kiudred tribe far to the south. more than 14,000 feet above us, Elkomin de ofly overhead, at about thirty feet, the | Colonel Hope after a pu indeed, i DO (WUR. ATZ0NE st - i 5 . them to venture far as 100 miles to se e it b 28 parted, and it was not until the evening of | rock shelved out and over us—the point | 8eem incredible from any point of view ld Missions of Californla, the topic re NG 1.“'.{ applying ‘_:" ]“;'\*{"fk) of -\l" n Questhof Keals . somatimen leven. whalo “Now, by way of explanation of this | the third day thereafter that he returned | where we had stood a few moments :m.‘.- within your experiences, and 1 do not ask d to Angeline. 0 s, geline all the cruclal tests known to | 40 ong these brave and hardy fellows the strange fact, and some other points of this [ and said that Abta-num would receive overlooking the chasm you to belleve it, but simply ask that you S S T R AR Ry = : Was none who pleased me half o well as | narrative, permit me to digress a minute | mo on certain conditions. ‘From this new colgn of vantage, the sun | concede that I believe it, for you have not, on, h senor wember of e ‘coterie, > Elkomin, who was really a lower sound In- @nd say something as to the origin of these ‘And what, Elkomin,' I inquired, ‘arc | being high, the depths of the gorge became [ In the first place, seen Ajita-num, nor felt ARt NRRERS ) B9 R aray 5 dian, his father being no less a chief | Indlans (and, indeed, of the origin of the | t nditions for the first time visible, and at 1,000 or | In his hoary presence that inde- AR i AR IR RO SRR CRRRY 4 \ than' old Patkanim, Sagamore of the | Natives of North America) and their subs “‘Only, Enumklaw,'—for such was the | more feet below I now beheld a sparkling | finable conviction of antiquity that QiaRRfaraboiles thirty SYpLEREAR), l-“m‘ o Snoqualmies, and the war chief of th \Ixmllnl lhrw-flun(y\vr \h{h‘-;'n?:ln"m.“ n.“in- Indian name by which Elkomin had of late | lake fringed round with tre and in its i\w’"" f you may b ‘-"‘I! X lle »;;Awlmu ’ A $ = e ribes P cked old Fort Nis y | traditions, like those of thelr cousins, the | heen accustomed to address me—‘only that | cente all cmerald Isle whereon, les: hefore some ancient ruin, whose indisputa- ATy g pi i \ allied tribes who attacked old Fort Nisqually | I P 3 | § ) L sma 1era hereon, less SRiace ox-baak of Abuit txice the aise of A ; on the 1st of May, 1849, near the prosent | Chinooks and Nootkas, tell that their fore- [ you will consent to be led blindfolded for | distinetly, I could perecive some irvogular | ble history transported you 1,000 years fnto A N C R S fa it AT p site of th of na. But the most | fathers, ages ago, came down from the north | the first day of your journey, and while we | buildings the past Nor have you, as 1 have, been TH8 s A8 &N Aniuas of Elkomin’s life since early boyhood had | After having first migrated from a distant | (raverse the same part of It on our re **There,! exclaimed Elkomin, ‘lies the | at puins to sift the evidence of his man, and iich certalnly bore, originally, been spent among his cousins, these Makah | €Ountry (probably Japan), where thef e | tu abode of Ahta-num and the priests of the | Strange life story, after hearing it from the some. lnagkiptian, tor there. were Ingistinotly es, se ¢ as has be was numerous and mighty, and crossed a To this I assented, and we began our | sacred fire of the almies.’ lips of a man whose I experfence and H ble X ts of ANV Ehave: Quillayutes, whose country, as has boen said, acred fire of the Snoqualmies. 0 | RERUAR: BARIO- DAED. - SR NORIY LHREROR: A lies along the Pacific ocean and the Strait of | PATTOW sea (probably Bering sea), and con- | preparations for an early start the next [ “At these words and the scene below 1 | every word, look and gesture bore that in- ac simile of which, as far as they were Fuca, and anclently included the north- | tinued their migration southward along the | morning. was much astonished, for 1 had not thought | trinsle evidence of truth that n of us decipherable, 1 then prepared and still pos- 3 8 Y SALEChODGEE s R A e e e Ry panei | (R AR X a astonished, for T had not thought PR DR R o T AL westernmost promontory of the United States | S10res of the great ocean, ng oft y o first day of our ascent was with- | to find Ahta-num in other abode than some | may deny ARt | TcRRA- KON 0L A IDSIA Hp AR Flatiery—so named by Captain Cook, | /anent wettlements here and there, until | out incident and inexpressibly toilsome and | natural Wl had far less dreamed of | “Suffice it then to say tl feve this e e : anchored here for some days on | they reached, at last, the country around | dreary, for the first half of it was made | his having companions, Our further de- | n (e e AT ne \ % Dy two of his voyages to the south scas. 'IHK;'I und (’l_h""yll!‘u.nlutn stem, n(ll‘l through volcanic ashes, Into which we often | seent to the valley was quickly accom- | 17 among the Pueblo Indlans of the Dau t tle. = g I was not long, therefore, in closing with | 4PHINg !’m- ’.u a yw..-l,\m‘u\ul m.\u:;. nk to our knees, and the last amid bowl- | plished, and at about noon we entered a | Sierra Gordo, in Mexico, in one of the Fran- Yoy ook Elkomin for the rent of his best canoe and | '”“" j‘,"‘ll‘n“;-]:'l“ ';";'N'I:“‘ .;.} LI::“\:”)“!’!&.:“; of lava and lvnu.'u»- ijlhhkl,\ mnw; small canoe moored at the margin of the | ciscan missions of that name, and that here, Vhile ups 3 orse o, iry his own services as guide, together with [ 4bly Callfornia, / A and ew Mexico), | across our course as to render our upward | jake beg pad 0 o the hen about 40 years of . he first knew I‘l\nl-yllll\ URSA he. guarse. ware, Ouahindla those of a younger Quillayute, “f.,« dimeuit | Where they built great houses (the pueblas) | progress extremely slow and tedious. island |]m ui”L,.f\::“\l:'f u\.”'\“y: .:‘Iu ;‘\'.:r" r mlmm e R e l.‘r y name way Skamokawa, Mmsclt te son of a | 400 dwelt there for thousartls of moons | “But with nightfall my eyes were un- | by an aged Indfan, whom Eikomin gravely | felating in' (hose mivsione, himself about noted chief ‘and kinsman to Elkomin, for | Later the .}“.“\f,}.-\."i Ereab sea (the GuIf | bandaged and my spirits greatly revived, | galuted as Wenomah, and after mutual | the same age—having been born, as we the suchems of many of the Puget Sound | {| - "“‘l" MR far |"| In_anciont | and atter & supper with which we h 1 pro- | greetings and some further words between | know from [ather Palou, on the 24th ot BATTLE." tribes are, or were, as multitudinously re- | JINES 16 HAve CRORTCC FRE Inte Whit We | vided ourselves after abandoning camp I | (hem, the venerable wman approached me | November, 1713, on the liland of Mullorca, lated by Intermarriages as the present royal | (oW 40 Ui B0 EHATE SO ARQ:thon re: the morning, T began once more to keenly | and, ‘taking me by the hand, said (as was [ and with whom Ahta-nu r Martinez, ac- princes of Germany. But it was not so joaeay g th Fyps 1se area of coun- | enjoy the situation. It was, however, but [ jnievprated by Bikomin) cording to his own account. was of exactly late in the season that the greater part of § {I¥ depressed far below the present level | a jittle while before, overcome with fatigue, | "o gy L v HE N YT A S A i T the salmon had already made their “run” | °f the Pacific ocean) flowed away from their | I rolled myself in ‘a blanket and quickly 2 2 Serra, fired by the ardor of a fervid zeal cities, and then the parent ¢! p Z AR A REMARKABLE RESEMBLANCE. or ascent Into fresh “water streams for | ¢ PR I s ¥ fell asleep. With the coming agaln of the “y to devote his life to the conversion of the spawning, and so, after two days. of rather | 510K migrated agal stitl to the | sun Elkomin awakened me, and my first act hile we were approaching the build Indians in Alta Californta, projected two expe- ! southwa T here founded & | was o quickly glance around ehind anc ¢ 1 was struck by its close rexemblance been Jegible to him than to us, and that ho [ Witness to the scene of the murder of these | indiTerent sport, Hlkomin suggested that it A A ac R i Hae AT e A | R e Buchlo del Artoyo, in the. Chaco | ditions thither, one’ by’ land and, one by A no diffic oD, A six Spaniards nearly 120 yea D, foF & wished to extend my outing with prospect | ' > ? 1019W U, -0l ARR ARNG. IBY: 8, Y1 HERO had no difficulty in \“x::, FpreLing it as s boan nlu n AI{T)[ |r”«u’.|:”u:":. l'[ B :I\! e e T et T SRR IR RIRRBERS{ and “Pery). mo , Rumorga than llw»l.‘n\~ late expanse of stony sterility and brownish | canyon, New Mexico, with which, indeed, geline, % ) IRy, LEARSGY) Al o) on the trees of Kandlchie. And, by the | gray ashes, only relieved e and there ceneral outline of plan, it was ex Daughter of ttle da Gamaehimself n lieutenant of Quadra's | descend to the lower sound in the wake of | % T ar le. And, by gray ashes, only relleved here and there | in general outline of plan, it Y | tinez, and at the meeting of the two ex- Japta , oard the Sonora—accord s exactly v the vanished shoals and troll about the these traditions are In accord with the | Ly fantastlo shapes of red and black lava, | similar and may well have been its: proto- | U Dd At the Smediipk XD 8Ks Captain James Cook. aboard the Sonora—agoord sa: exaotly with RN ABaub4f supported by many eminent scholars | while in front, barring all further ascent e, Ita_rectangular walls, bullt around | editions at San Diego in 116, he Wit and the Incidents as narrated by this untutored | Mouth of the D'wamish, To this I assented | (O0FY supported by i barring all furthe b s rectangular il Come Flatorge o it seling) | Vo o b 10 N Foom, ff doub it | Eekdy. fo s from s hope o btia | (niaby the mreat”vou Humbld who be | hvcene wile” M Navage orke, Wiond | thr ke 'af ' hnrutlordi wore”ace | RSO, [, CAPCLLE L 11 U8 LAY, 7 deg., 47 min, N she s the literaltruth, allowing only for | Sshiug, 1 was aiready auite enamored Of | iy oontinent had an Aalatio origin, and | vory precipice, my vislon way unable to | the pueble just named, smoothly lald in | NeXt tWo years as a sort of major domo 1776, the uatural impertections of the human | canocing, and still L ““"I’““““‘ with our | Coro endants : of Hiong-nu, known |m>r‘.l Over and beyond this fearful | clay, with the spaces between filled in with | t0. 8 ) " L Now, according to Angeline's statement | memory T Bt enre, and, be It aald, no | ot difterent times as the' Kalkas, Kalmuks | Chasm; up from the unfathomable abyss, | rubble, while opening upon the court werd tablishment o - Gabriel 1 the tradition of the elders of her This declaration created quite a sensation, | less captivated by Elkomin, wh free and A 5 ( 1771) ) 1K returned to AR A R ;,.l!_l",._ Shiere. af :y_l“u"‘ and Cotonel Hiome CTonted quite i sensation | unsophisticated nature fashed and glanced | And Burattes, and as Hups at a fiter period | rose sheer and beetling rocks like clyclo low doorways, hardly more than a | U0 George” chief, In recognition of services | the deepest Interest to the remarks of Mr, | a8 limpld his natlve Stillaguamish. So, | ' roy Humboldt, aceording to Hubert | y battlements uplifted from a moat, and from top to bottom, and little win et S o " Bl l;m‘l rendered to @ score of men sent ashore by | Davis, arose and e med excitedly rigging our single sail, we made a swift run | &‘-]“"‘, Ui itavor d "‘“‘; R ATR Belk At hexand hatee t0Naredis M an 4t Fukged 9, 8 -XORLUALOEE MAE PRARGFLY, Len AiMl | o now returning San Blas TANGaTed, 10 B aeers of AR sent aabare by T o T e S R P T O Y TS T bioh " the ancestors gf 'the Tolteoa wnd | olifls, ittng thele {snoltul contructions o ve inches square, situated near the top: RANC C AUERIE Lo ol e the chlst to explore the coast in wearch o T A bivouacked that night under D'wamish Head, | A¢tecs left the old warld for the new, by | fortresses and castles high upward to the the ! The interior of the roon u d o ar astray. Gentlemen, 1 firmly believe that those o ia s parg g in plain view of the lights of Seattle. way of the Aleutian islands and Alaska, and | primeval glaciers, which & in a flood of | where 1 was now sitting was also identical N in fact, we know that Captain Cook | old patriarchs mentloned in the bible actu- IN THE CAMP OF THE PATRIARCHS thence to California and Mexico; and it is | sunlight, shone and corruscated upon the | with those of the Chaco pueblo, that th about this time was secking (as was likewise | ally lived to the great ages imputed 1o them, 8 a fact that the remalds of Chinese or | brow of grand Ta-ke-mah thick walls, In which were many recess the mm‘l\l-;r“‘.[ml Mear in the Felice) for | and, further, I am convinced that while the “It was here around our camp fire, just | Japanese vessels have Qn\ll found on the *Come, Enumklaw,’ sald Elkomin, lightly g as cupboards and store plac w William (“0'd H y's new comedy A58 mouiho lx ie fabled Rio de San Roque, | art of prolonging life to 200, 800, 400 or even | after supper in the light of our blazing pine | American coast, whick, fro papyri dis- | touching my arm, ‘it is into those depths ) ed smoothly with mud, while X f P o 1 ueason.. (s called 3 Ibaceurately down In the Spanish | 500 years s lost and forgotten as to the bulk | logs that I first beheld that ghost of the | covered with them must have been wrecked | poiuting below the gorge, ‘that we must oor was made of small stragit withes | i) ' ¢ and which it was reserved to our | of the human race, the secret of it is still | past, old Augeline, and when she had de- | there prior to the fourtéenth century, and | scend.’ s log sleepers, and partly covered AN :‘:":IHA\‘”: : .u‘:\l »Mmlx Gray, in the ship | preserved to a few, and, more than that, | parted into the surrounding gloom after a | among the Peruvians, at the time of tk A PERILOUS JOURNEY 1 ts of bark o w Witeh Hazel e cures ulcers, fumbia, o discover later and name after | 1 assert upon howor tuat 1 myself bave | short pow-wow with Elkomin, during which | conguest of the Ineas, there were buudred “Tuen, leading the way, Blkomin skirted esently another Indian entered and vit's Witeh Hazel ares pllosy i Snoqualmie Chief. if your heart be strong and you will do as I | the same purpose by the Snoqualmies as S F..ttrye, then, very plainly the words: 17 deg., 47 .n N, 177 “I was afterwards informed that this = % 3 medal had at another time been shown by | the rules of evidence, including cross exam her to Dr. Marcus Whitman, who, with his | ination at widely separated perfods, 1 be wife and nine others, was massacred by the [ lieve that ‘the Princess of Seattle,’ whom you Cayuse Indlans at the mission at Walilatpu, [ may sec on the streets of this city almost November 26, 1847, and that more of it had | any day, was actually present and an eye sea, from San Bla ailing with 'this lat ter, in the vice of Serra, was Juan M San Diego an 1y his who subsequently furnished a full account the first expeditions to San Diego and Mon, terey

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