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event, fault or misfortune he was driven to fice from the land of his birth and) ta reach the le to lay aside the name of his ancestors. | y He sought the States; and instead of the raw flesh, and a fire was being bullt Mngering in effeminate citles, p once into the Far West with an ex-| The girl still lay reclined against the rock; she lay tuo far sunk in the first to have observed ploring party They had pu: the still unknown re; For some time the of Mormon animals. On the fortieth day th already run so short of food th was judged advisable to call a halt Ghe Destroying Ande ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. A Story of Mormon Mysteries and “Blood Atonement.” ‘The Lord God commands you not to pity the persons you Kill, but to exeoute the law of God upon persons worthy of death. “Putling to death tho tranegressor would exhibit the law of Ged, no matter by wiiom it was done. “There are sins that can be atoned for by an offering upon an altar, as in ancient day. “They must he atoned for by the blood of the man T could refer you to plenty of instances where men have been BRIGHAM YOUNG. rightecusly slain to atone for their sins. CHAPTER I yen 3 that were Y father was a native of son of a cadet of a great ancient! gown, those but untitled family; and by some upon the q e already sa frontier: as I have sald, into| staze of deati gions of the West, | bustle round her followed the track | fath in that vast and melancholy by the skeletons of men and | she opened he d/ were eyes more hoed The Strange Sect. | moment the camp the report; and in ¢ England, | pling, falling and throwing each other starving and before my fath climbing down by of the strean fying their hu hed at| by the more dainty. had raised her head, put the fask door alded her to the restorative, | yes and smiled Never was there a ane, gulding them-!to her Ips and for, vallow some drops ¢ languid had| upon him faintly. t it smile of more touching sweetness, never THE MORMONS STARVING PEOPLE RUSHED UPON THE scatter upon all aldes to hunt. y father rode for many hours with | with knowledge, p range of cliffs upon the one |same eyes that smiled upon me in the who was to be 1 Jealously watched and followed by the man with the gray beard, who had and from the claw-marks blanket, carried his attentions to all the women of the party, and gave drainings of his flask to those an the men who seemed In the most ne “Is there none left? afd the man with she fe drop,’ “and If you find yourself. in Want let me jcounsel you to put your hfnd into the pocket of your coat." replied the You will h you will ther duty was not to this caravan of paupers but to mankind at large.’* ‘3 comrades, he found when Toturned to the signal fire, | © good day's hunting. jthe more easily persuaded to | assistance to the Mormon cars the next day beheld both parties on ‘the ntiers of Utah. distance to be traversed was not great, of the country and the the other great animal, 1 the hair among the brush, judged at he was on the track of a cinnamon r of most unusual following the quarry, came at last to 7 the al Here, then, he picketed his horse, and. relying on his trusty rifle, advanced alone into that wilderness. Presently, reigned, he was aware of the sound running water to his right, and leaning | that my in that direction was rewarded b scene of natural wonder pathos strangely intermixed. The stream ran at the bottom of a narrow and winding passage, whose wall-like sides of rock were sometimes for miles to- gether unscalable by man, The water, when the stream was swelled with rains, must have filled it from side to side the sun's rays only plumbed™it in the hour of noon; the wind, In that narrow} of Oe and damp funnel, blew tempestuously. culty of procuring food extended the ‘And yet, in the bottom of this den, Immediately below my father's eyes as he leaned over the margin of the cliff, a party of some half a hundred men,|*¥ccored. I will call my mother Lucy, women and children lay scattered un- easily among the rocks. They 1s upon thelr backs, some prone, and hot one stirring; their upturned faces seemed all of an extraordinary paleness and emaciation, and from time to Ume, above the washing sof the stream, a/ ‘ts only offspy to. faint sound of moaning mounted to my) faitneay ly In hts father’s ears. ‘While he thus looked an old man got ‘staggering to his fect, unwound his|jight and grew to girhione blanket, and laid it, with great gentle-| indeed, and in spite of all our wealth ided as heretics and $ he lay down for awhile below his spolls, and, ag my father imagined, felgned to be ‘but presently he raised him-|jngs how some again ne elbow, looked with} healthy and in the Batre et some one, perhaps, while bi of approaching death secretly restored his powers. these mysteries? ‘My father was 20 Incensed at what he saw that he raised his rife, and but} {ouse in a green a for an accident, he has often declared, be woulda haye shot the fellow dead upon the spot. -How different would] neighbor was Dr. then have been my history! But it was] was but a mile not to be; even as he raised the!barrel hie eye lghtcd on the bear, as it crawled black and horrible; and upon cradle. n unweatered vale dotted with Wife, my father, ers llke the slte of some subverted At length he found a slot of a ize, He quick- the pace of his steed, and stl! Yot Jon of two watersheds Grierson again, and op that in the arent si nd human} yy ay mareh for the but the natur: time to nearly Her f. ome | mentl ered exceeding! to. my h on a young girl who sat hard} pone more ae by propped against a rock. The girl ul dia not seem to be consclous of the act: ‘and the old man, after having looked} midable tyrant, was known’ to look as: upon her with the most engaging pity, returned to his former bed and lay down| Under the Morgue again uncovered on the turf. But the| fect Innocence and tan ene had not passed without observa- tion even fn that starving camp. From prise me more the very outskirts of the party a man with a white beard, and seemingly of ete neeaanicnt erable rose upon his knees 1, Pro . his w Mea came crawling stealthily among | #h4red among the elders of the church, the sleepers toward the girl; and judge| tiated breath and dreadful jof my father's indignation when he be- | Ings held this cowardly miscreant strip from her both the coverings and return with} Such tople would to his original position Here|eicers hy che e them draw. the Berutiny at his companions, and swiftly carried his hand Into his] four been spirl mand universal la named in a wi very differently looking the roa ‘@ ledge some way below him; and | Tange of over to the hunters’ instinct, it was] eet ee te bens brute, not at the man, that he|- ely ‘bear leaped. honestly eloquest of the soul! ‘rom her & three weeks; father had thus amyle leisure to ic and appreciate the girl whom he had ly name I am not at liberty to ny IL 4s one you would know wi rying her my father was fore to adopt the Mormon faith and g¢ Salt Lake with the strange caravan. The marriage took place and 1 ‘and. thous! y wonder to hear ue i th lieve re few happier country than that in whic Ise and plous of the Brigham Young, kance upon my father’ this I had no’ guess. I friends had many 8; but such was the custom; and z From time to time one Of our c quaintances would disa ne » and houses Fecalled with When I had been very util an presence perhaps was. forgotten, some look behind them and 1 might gather from. their wht prime of his ay who had ta ‘on his kneos a week betore, had ti A from home: thence to his mouth. By|tly, and vanished ke an Image from a the movement of his jaws he must be/ mirror, leaving not a print bh ating; in that camp of famine he had “feserved a store of nourishment; and] tal, should wax | companions lay in the stupor] silences and nods, yas terrible, Inde but 80 was death, full of ominow and I should hear Angels, how was a child to understand We dwelt orginally in the oi an early date We moved to a musica! wi splashing Water and surroundo fh Most every side by twenty. mil ‘ sonous and rocky One enh i ie stood oat ft steep slope and planted close againet niging blufts, I remarked at some day it would +No woman can have a beaut who has not learned to carry herseif correctly. All the Physical © ture lovsons In the universe are a | wi failure if they do not teach the subsect! how to correctly carry herself in every! stomach pretruded, bircumsgance. Innumerabdie women affect a sta posture tractive not assiduously cultivate jt, in fact {s positively yicious jn upon the figure. I call to mind one girl who was sup FOURTH ARTICLE OF SERIES. ful Agure| posed by neven. sa which they must fancy se and graceful, or they would ae ay an THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 23, 1902. \< How to Have a Beautiful Ficure. By HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. z in a beauty-destroying pose as she should ait Small wonder the never found never thought about them at all girl who sits with a young girl who frequently lungs fatrly ied” from the Paris stairs, | Panacea GANS > begging for beauty king If nothing can be remove the dark o and give her rellef from backache, My dear girls, you will never recover nd you cannot hay so long as you do Jwithout fatigue and rhe did not he correctly and walk up- les under her cyes om the backache good complext e than walking on breathe properly so long as you sit in it » an Imitation ng her lungs with the a girl supply ¢ abdominal mus- cles and causing them destroy the natural and beautiful curves THE WRONG AND THE the hips we ard and up as in sta place the feet {1 Relax the arms, e position shown in the filustration. Walking upstairs correctly will make real difference in your splrits. wrong method right way of xolng upstairs y hundred walk tairs with shoulders and kne high and throw the chin and shoulders your health, strains the muscier of the back by nterested in. the » well and to 1 1 her young friends to be d J that she thi § with all he med until It was prov ture jec-| formed a habit of stand! ight on one le, to be suffering «hundred pound welght on th result ts almost wo great fatigue sto your manner rise or atretehing rauscles rom hip diseare, her shoulders were and every one felt so sorry until ehe Joined a physical culture when it w Hy had a lovely fgur nee insufforable ding. 1o walk upstairs without fatigue you ou stand. properly firm and light step oi balancing the body Upon citer Our iicad and practise wabitg and down stairs and yo n you can go Swi nd that if you walk up and | tairs as you should the exercise | ed from it would fall almost and that ber at of the abdomen, |{odging te book you are y fiy and without pain or fatigue. dear friends—each ‘MAY MANTON’S HELPS For Women Who Make Their Own Dresses. | ” ‘THREE eu INGE STORIES. | OF OTHER LANDS. ||: THE OLD RELIABLE With erles of i for the shore, could reach [Fashionable Indoor Gown | No combination ts more effe: pale blue with bits of black. This atyl- ish gown shov’s wool vellln paste! sh. vest, revers, collar and cuffs of cre guipure overlaid with stitched ba At the foo: of the skirt are bias folds or shingles the waist fs worn a be't of black low ribbon, matrix, "The foundation for the w ng smoothly fitted by means of shoulder, under-2 single bust, vest with its pointed stock. MFO} at and stylishly yo slightly elongated, faced and turned to form tanering revers, 1 Are tucked from the Shoulders obtained through The Evening World by to within a short distance of the wrists, | rollowing Milas Mantan‘s directions. they are left free to for back sle when puffs. The skirt is cut In three pleces, row front and wi ness a the graduated tucks over put is Iald In an inverted piait at the back, which provides graceful folds and e flare The quantity of mater! medium size is: In the yards inches wide or 2 yards 44 inches wide, with 18-8 yards of all-o} revers, stock and cuffs; out folds), 71-2 yards 21 inches wide, ve than in a soft Ing of black, and With etite ade of the material, At tune held by a clasp of turquoise tet fs a It ams and m and centre back On it ts ara fs tucked In groups a » but is gather ant where it blouses slight r the belt. The je side gore. the/upper_ portion 1p, at the lower port ure. r walst, 41-41 cents, 31-2. yards 21 Inches wide, r lace for vest, for skirt (with- the erles of alarm, hastened to the and were in fortunate victim come again to the The sea around him was st. Ving 9 portt ae a ct ”) miles from Jerusa He spent @ risky and anxious thirteoa in spite of the kind- the Governor, ly a prisoner days at Jowf and, ness of Johar, fons, was pract toward his would-be but before they could reach hiny ark was scen agonized face . and on these falling he was ex- 1, Johar himself sa The incident hus caused grea: no previous case of a man is known on Many sharks find their into the Mediterrean through the usually perish in all Christians, nearly cost Mr. | was a storm of wind and rata, nnd one adobe Lowers of the ¢ fell Inward into the room in which Johar was seated reading the Koran, crushed him severely ked as the ble |ing form of the revered Governor was An unfortunate inc! Forder his life, Absolutely Pure THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE burial of lving persons may fortunately they former times, are more rare than fn Ewen the doctor's orders leman's Magazine} the case of Richard ¢ Herefordshire, who was supposed to have died, that Carson still | been out and looked at the tower and | affected It so that it fell; beginning of This ts a sketch of the fashionable com tume which May Manton describes in these volumns to-day. exploded in Amusements. y P8| doctor declared Let us kill the | sized by the Patterns may be adway & Win 2 MUMMY ASD brandishing of clubs, dag-| + but when the tray- wemed inevitable he relatives paid no heed EMPIRE THEA TRE. tine | 3-4 yards 27 inches wide, 6 1-2 y yards 44 Inches wid inches wid | CRITERION, THEATRE, uryades VIRGINIA HARNED in IRIS. “| GARRICK THE ATRE \ THERE E'S MADISON SQ. THE GREAT LA 1, THE NEW CLOWN clerk to open the grave, sizes for a 32, It will be railed for 10 cents ming in the man was bes ind soon dled BAUMANN’S and 9 inch waist 4 for 10 vents. nted send 20 sizes for a 22, 24, 2 made aj ery STIANY A SLIP. required for] qf both If In a hurry for your patterns seria for each pat- uid they will be promptly mailed an extra twe MRS. quate CAMPBELL In Her New Flay, AUNT JEANNIE, one paper thelr room from the magazines, If they c! airing his woes In He complains that some of the ters. editors have told him that his matt lofty these tis stuff which fs not original, {s of the! sort which thelr cut-and- ‘ariod system most favors, saya the Washing-| ton Times. ‘As the grievance of the rejected co: tributor 1s not altogether uncommon, {s worth some con 1 temple once whi Its aides the advice to be bold, and onj Wve, Manner the fourth side the w too bold. ‘Tho sanctum too original; and he profe ni disvellef in the statement, often, chill cox the legend DON’T BE TOO ORIGINAL, ————— NNN EL) | HINTS R WRITERS. th certain of those ,¢ t ; rejection siips Keeper newspaper el azine and book p ubllgh | a A ers good, cle good writers, He much-abused gentler: | EQUINE REVENGE. it deration, There 1 bore upon three | mark ning not to be} iy SMR eet eae a eamoueairay Dyce Furniture and Carpets. 3-Room Apartment, furnished complete, at. rl ver THEATE ROBERT EDESON | SPs Nits | A MOTHER'S HEART, as CORRECT CAI AND [MOTI JOU CANNOT HAVE A Good FIGURE IF YOO STAND IN THIS FASHION AS MANO GR Dy CORRECT WAY JO STAND ~ HEAD OP, CHEST OUT, LEGS STRAIGHT, Amusements tient VisiT PROCTOR’ +5 is Es STH AV: Msi eas age see Leth st. dataice Kelm, Nel Howard Pewee dt Avorite Siock in ‘The Thorout APTERNOON AND_EVESING: LEAH THE FORSAKEN Elita Proctor Otts ax Leah, PASTOR'S»: & Scatlea & 30 CENTS. RENO & RICHARDS, FLORENCE BINDLEY, PANTZER TRIO, 3 BARRETTS and other! ATL ANTIC 22). coun De Witts, Besni theatee, LULU GLASER iq Yer Si as Bh |DOLLY VARDEN EVE, Bt Flat. '¢ METROPOLIS idk NEW YORK | sided Kil wicHeAtL. ooklya Amisoments will to that of the THE ROGERS OTHERS IN en MADISON $0. GARDEN, Thurs, Nioht, Japanes Wedding € BROADWAY H rs who can) sitlon is anntog: pose, has) (ele dine dd while they a new or fo want to be sure of finding roast and « al fant which made 9 Wadding ta vant its bill of fare of WRITE FOR LIST OF GOODS FOR THESE ROOMS, 4-Room Apaity wat, furnished complete, at, 3H OR CREDIT, Crby 2 COUNTR Cor. 8th Ave. and 46th St. OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL 10 P.M. MATINEF TO- Nine GRAND Gt) Wh HE Doings ot Mrs, Dooley. ati To-D. DE t i Ciy Sport ae ee ng without being e: en Amusements amusements, Tath St. Theatre, ar tin Brandon Tynan, Robert Emme Biggest production and best cas? tn New ¥. re AChiness Hora ACALE = ostoNAs INR Bil HOOD | Mats, Wed. @$t, 2. Eve, 3 A horse bel miele to W, ,jof Asbury ¢jhuman trait of CITI ST. @ COLUMDUS AVE GCOD-BY DUSS. {Sth week—Last 6 nig cently evidenc venge In quite a ne New. Musteal P COUNTRY had previously Madison Square 2h | a5 an authority all over the globe, - « NWRLY- wily, |The information contained pel ne |Aveen its covers & of importers ma | ev:ry one.” ed while horse that had broken loose In the sta- of the average editor tie, A few days ago the horse that wis might well have a dado inscribed with!icked slipped Its hater, walked past two ‘Be original, ke original and/other horses to the stall of the one that be original, but be not too kicked it and pald the animal back in the punishment Inflicted ‘The average magazine editor, and for|in the second Instance being worse than that matter the average publiaher of ain the frst, book, {8 a good deal safer In sticking'necessary to close up.a cut made by thi the line of work which he knows tho avenger's shoe ish its victim's hind- GERALG. 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