1
NO DL uy AT DROUGHT NEW phenome- non appar i i ently been and i that is that the L belching of cannons can force the earth to exude water where arid re- gions one reigned supreme- It remained for Magdalena Bay near the southern end of lower California to prove this to the world according to a correspondent- at that point and the demonstra tion was made when Admiral Evans big fleet of sixteen battle ships visited that point for target practice- It has long been known that wa ter could be drained from the air by the generous use of explosives that rain almost invariably follow has dis- covered ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ tho Magdalena bay region took It leave Wells that have hwretofot never given forth more than a fe scanty drops of water are fitted with a plenteous supply and tbe recease of the barren canyons from where water came are the trickling stream that tell of the future glories of land In plentiful harvests Ever since the story of the bay was known to man the region about it bat been a waste of sand and rock clothe in a scanty growth of cactus chap ral and rnesqutte it was shunned b moan anc beast as a plague spot of the earth JSs Jtf Even Missionaries Retreat Even the sons of Loyola those missionaries were compelled to retreat before this dearth of water and they went tack Into the interior miles to erect the mission which stands today and bears the name San Luis Gonzaga When they beheld the beautiful sheet of water and gazed upon the encircling hills that shielded It from every storm they looked Into their breviaries and noted that the canon of the day was in honor of St Mary Magdalene With accord they chanted Santa Maria Magdalene and set about to lay the foundation of one of the links in the wonderful chain of missions which J i from fort JlYe the In- trepid d a big battle was learned at of the civil war and in the ar West rain making by exploding ynamite in the air is a recognized rofession But where land has been arid for nturies the surprise is that the coming of 12inch cannons a ozen miles out at sea can force Wrings to crop out of the ground- nd the wells long since an empty role in the ground to be filled with water It seems incredible but such are the facts vouched for by the correspondent MAGDALENA BAY May 4 1K magic te there te of great guns to the transformation of a barren waste into a load of promise and cause the fountains of the earth to flow forth in abundance where only drought was known before That is the question a few dosea of settlers on the snores of Magdalena bay Lower California are la tlioir wonderment of science sad sash other The concussion of other heavy ar- tillery salvos have shaken the hills about the bay and caused earth o tremble For everal years British cruisers on tbe Pacific station have entered for target practice sad Ire then the battle craft that flfcttot the Stars Stripes have broken the silence of this solitude with the roar of their cannon But It not until the great fleet tinder Admiral vans belched forth Its shot n4 heft at the improvised targets tiutt the tell spell of drought that for cen turies has cast its curse upon Page Four the- me WHAT the the end was i i ail hg the ¬ ¬ > ° they wore perfecting from La Paz at the very point of lower California to that of San Rafael on the northern shores of the bay of San Francisco- In vain they searched for water Then turning from the shores they wended their way back into the in terior and the site upon which a temple to the honor and glory ef the Magdalene was t be erected was abandoned The Spanish admiral Francisco de mien was the drat white man te en- ter the bay He had been forth by the redoubtable Cortes to discov- er and conquer the fabled isle of Clgvatan where Amazons ruled and reigned and guarded a mountain of priceless pearls It was on Christmas day 15 that the first of the worlds admiral entered the harbor and at a glance be exclaimed with glee Clguatan But instead of Amazons he encountered the warlike and blood- thirsty progenitors of the present race of Yaqais The pearls that he expect ed to find garnered into mountainous plies but lay at the bot- tom of the sea Added to these disap- pointments was the lack of water Back in the interior a captive native explained was the much desired sup ply But it meant traveling over a desert waste of fifty miles confront- ed at every turn by hostile and ferocious Indians The Spanish ad- miral angrily weighed anchor and bore away from such an hospitable shore Others That Sailed Away famous Cabrillo came only to find that his discover was f a Vlscalno was tlx taInt Mid tact of tbe great navigators to furl hi sails te the bay and he team- ed to his that wa not water to be had to replenish the oaks of his ships Then came the piratical era when were nt TIM desert there f sent 1 next shore r Bret 1 1 ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ the Jolly buccaneers and their crews repaired here to evade the Spanish frigates and dart forth upon the polls laden galleons that came with their treasures from Peru to west roast ports of Mexico They excavated for water and found a limited supply on Santa Margarita Island that zcrsrs the southwest boundary of the harbor Here were found the graves of tMrty skeletons of English sad Dutch buc- caneers that almost a century before had engaged in mortal combat It division of the loot of some captured prize or the consequence of a drunken orgy following the celebration of their more successful raids for plunder It was the custom of freebooters who frequented the Pacific wafers in those days to bear down upon their prey and after cutting the throats of crew and passengers to re move the plunder to their own and scuttle the captured caravei The Dutch and the English were particularly prominent in this indus- try and the commercial caravels of Spain then In the zenith of its glory the chief quarry After an adventure- of thte sort the Freebooters cachet their golden loot in th harbors aloag the west coast of Lower California the most frequented of these beme- Magtdateaa bay Aol many are the stories of hidden v tilth buried be- neath the sands that Mho the shore The discovery of the grave which leek the skeletons of the pirates of those days bad caused no Jttle ex- ploitation of the region thereabout iiigotten treasure But none of it hat ewer been found Thin skeletons whteh paw evidence of a hasty burial at the hands of their comrade were var iMia metallic trinkets which hud sur vivad the decay of the centuries that had Intervened and were of the kind worn by those engaged in the pirate trade era came the traders and As may be presumed the was the result of a quarrel over the C- one the r halls whalers ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > they were down Enters and were given to the came of swap In which the unsophisticated natives came out far to the rear These invaders with that luck that always seems to follow Ajaerlcjn pioneering multiplied the producing in the of the bay and leading their tryout kettles and other paraphernalia to transform whale blubber into merchantable oil they soon gave a busy aspect to condi- tions about Magdalena bay In tact it became sort of a Pacific New Bad ford and the odors of srizzHng blub ber considerably changed the balmy atmosphere There were not a few tragedies re- sulting from the too free use of the whalers rum and the mescal of the natives Quite a number of mounds marked the spot where tile victims of this unholy combination were laM away to await the trump of Gabriel horn The wholesale raids of the harpoon raiders on the mammoth denizens of the deep in this locality depleted the prey and compelled the whalers to move further north whore they located on Guadelupe is lan o and at gan Diego Then Magda len relapsed into Its forgotten state Hale and His Orclilllas Walker the GreyEyed Man of Destiny in the furtherance of his dreams of empire sailed into bay The famous flllbustorer concluded that it was the place for the site of his capital city That at least was his first Idea and from this secure harbor he and his advnturous followers intended to make their sor ties upon La Paz and San Jose del Cabo the two cities to the south But on second sight the filibuster chief- tain soon discovered the Spectre Drought Ho sailed away to meet his tragic fate in Nicaragua Magdalena- bay was again forgotten by the great world and only an occasional vessel yJclnl y soot j wells Magda- lena ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ in strew of weather or hunting for seals put in an appearance This stet of things remained vnttt the cominc of Joseph P Hale a Englishman who afterward made ate home in San Francisco and died there test or twelve years age Hate ap- preciated t rains of Ute orofcWa which grew abundantly there for dyeing purpose It te of Ute lichen family and at this time overran every bush tree and shrub of the territory adjacent to the bay It had eves fast- ened Itself the cactus which grows here like trees and what drought had not effected m the way of redudag everything to too statue- of rock and sand the was destined to do eventually Then lisle came in and to the rescue of the grow- ing mesquite and chaparral He at- tracted quite a population to the vicin- ity of the bay who engaged In gather- ing and delivering the orchill to Bales agents at so much per pound lisle had the support of an American com- pany in the exploitation of the orchiUa and bad secured a concession from the Mexican government amounting to 4 HMO acres The oreMUa traffic made Hale a very wealthy man sad his Income was seer mot 5 and continued for many1 years itmtH the aniline dyes into market and orchids quoted up la the hundreds of dollars a ton was not to be thought of for practical purposes Hale saw the handwriting on the watt v and he sought to develoa tine region about Magdalena He bad Mad enough to build an empire for original concession bad been increased- by grants of several millions of aerea in addition to the first one and for a time tie San Franciscan reigned the absolute monarch over an area nearly as enteastve as the State ef OhIo It ere tDa came the B ala upon y ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ In every country where scientiftc ob- servations have been made the fajr com- plexion proves to be lying out says a writer in the Contemporary Review It will vanish altogether unless the decline be checked Everywhere the conclusion same dark type supersedes the fair This writer claims that the dark type offers greater resistance to disease and nas more tenacity to life and says that the constitution Indicated by light hair and eyes is not adapted to town life Yet towns grow without ceasing at the expense of the country 77 per cent of us have already deserted old for street He believes the blonde must go and saysIf this complexion be declining new and vanishing thosn who fancy that the Aryan is played out may find there a striking confirmation of their views The fact Is assured at any and the cause of it ascertained the constitution indicated by light and oyes is not adapted to tho conditions of town life and towns grow without ceasing at th expense of the country the last census demonstrated an in- crease of 15 per cent in the ten years Isthe a rate hair ¬ ¬ ¬ lacked water and was somewhat shy oa the kind of population that msfci- mirteslaa Well Water Water had Mea found Ai t the Bale Company and It gave a bounttftrt supply Tbe Jesuit tethers demouetrated that the soil sad ettnmto at their mlsslnit of 9aa Lute nets or the semttropte and trsptc soles Halos eacperteBoe snowed that tobacco and sugar cane would tbstve two the coast The be ons abo t the bay teemed with nooeter reel tar toed proem from pearl ftaberia MJn ico was adverse to slavery the peons only in exceptional and these were not very frequent so poim laden front tIN thrifty lauttbjraata from Europe was what na combination with the water to traao form Ms aaJeaa into a second Ttorida To get this class of people the Hate y offered to give fifty sores at form to settle at Ma da free transportation a cow a mule seeds and agricultural toote That to dtacover that there was plenty ef- sanshinp ass illimua that no ore could live Ion on either or both of them Them the settlers ciaimad they were marooned and a loud wall eminent to Investigate the of all the note proceedtaa front th btgr Then came the appeal of Bate ma or domo which gmahtealty told of the things Ja deified at forth had favored slsost all prd tIM and the bed tile ocean or native lababtcfatr would sot work tot neM C to the head of of a score to the trust It did not take the sew loss Mat up that lnclted the cue g this era f I well was great sraasa by Goaaaga the of prom was wasted lead each fare botddes broust few settlers wpt Mext an go > < preceding Seventyseven per cent of ue already have deserted the wholesome field for tbe poisoned streets The same fatal process Is working Europe even in Russia and prtocipeltttes aHrays aeooafi pealed by a anilttpUcation of the type and a diminution ot the bond Perhaps it is on a ealoaftatjoa of the rate kt which towns are that Prof pcopustes the absolute extraction of the fair Before anyone perhaps had con- cerned himself these questions Dr Beddoes wrote In my experience a a physician it has appeared that oa whole dark ooraptexloMed cbOdcen how more teatdtr of life than fair sues under some of the waCavorabto condi- tion of town That obsctvatteu hi echoed from alt parts o the world now the conditions are more fa- vorable such a boroughs ji which are large model dwetttaav with plenty of open space around the blondes seen nearly to hold their own and hi the su- burban areas do so with snore conehMton is that the iWr allover Den Mason ith the here The type must die deprived of fresh aIr white I L the bru- nette in- creasing w life out if ¬ ¬ jog an industrial empire and the sad finishing touches to OIlY km They have onto ap aD COM and if yam a ono the mote the people will same BwoaW M Tfca far caped aray tothe the toiraitsis for jtphhn aaOai hue theMr at the ar aBt Ja- sephiae bad beea tfaaatchetf scene of discontent by Hale Invitation was generally uwrtpr nHirl to a hail sway tsm the frij la After the heatta of the etaairs pie sad aolltnde aamta rvhjaea at bay Tbeo th Arttlah Pacalrw- iVOOWrOO its VvNWVtal900v for parpesa and akhooati the the cruisers bearina aloft tIM Mars sad Strips thaDdered away at the targets erected to the hay the ecooth- tm abided by place Water was sly to be bad at Bees artesiam i ai sad at the water holes on UB Mac Then OB a bright iain ianj day the stow baiMoa of sea aaar coaarnand of Admiral Robtey DL- palBoft their naes mto few days later the great gees trembled sad hffi shook with the Water began to hose forth the parched which were espy oa wet years which are aa of rove occasion a snow storm hi Ban Fraa deco Sprhajpi of IIS years the of the guns ftaat- orctoed the Specter Thumb aa they have many other and kinds of specters that have afflicted kind hi common with fruitful XM Oho aa ahnnaanc of water with which te icing forth uoumKat har- veata and time refers the ef the old navieators who aedaret- Maad of Ctroataa a dent ac Gt the laaers or the ell It put the fW not lot Punt the they ja J to It lIlY tile tM mod tortmsa die eaees tile It the pace sad the Amrrieaa aIItIaed the port tot the et pdta the the the harbor sad slipped dMiIr A to thaader at urges tile tkadoL hrehs from the canyon many dining tile voice tIM decks of AJDerIeaa dl ere t And will the re and Son J t test vf blmg tile I tig hopes fomd s d f gehsi road In is titi4 sac ssd tbsi sit hag aaod IlE t ty mules 6 falling Ir1Mr diue rages schooner psyche ogleal The i tin art am tot salt filet aeard i 1eY anaafhomhsb see4lr awns one sensor dome sad natives who norms act dye ad If y s- d kids steak sad in eAMa- tiss spMnsa and made reodavoss ma- g t as a supply statism- Reaotty naval des pnompted snore gals the 1sis Leame g saeltoeaa bags and the earth essco os and into wells tided trickling water art edea sad sin ss o oecaslsrhs pat battlesb s a sea Magsle a by new have gleog about Lm Pag Yana i deaka hnelpad its ab leo was enrsed < > < BLOND TYPE PEOPLE SLOWLY DYING OUT 1 THE WASHINGTON TIMES MAGAZINE t J 8 i < the dirk snfcrs cmnuratl eiy IMfla It te a example of natural se- lection and the aanrtval of th Ittaot winder aa aanauaral state of thhrar- HProf Riptey asserts that m th dose iinalitjuiltd Londoa the aveca e stature of people M evaa than tm tile metropolis an4 they are aarkerl- aoaOy Thin he attributes a oaa stant micratloa of the taller taTMamte who seek to better tuemauUe hi town they are the sore geaermtty the fair o tbe dark liars w- cTtaad for adventure remain t gate their lies in the mothar eaawtvy- S OECi GOLF TASK Preen 8e ttend comes a sob yam Aa pocket The visitor TQta responded a richt stir rll- gie it ye the reoad Te see Ive gotten haut a croon oa y aa- Oaav on ID irks ear o ya a richt Chicago News May 10 1908 Milling J- ot Bat the tall a 11ft tile IMr big this rule sgUsh YIIIItor to a when hta to see hW cigarette and wIleD k banded to him It WIll I to till wtL lower the as alas moreover ettt rpris sad spplieg to eeaigetrtn pa apar Carnoasti was ba t- ning comtct ea s asked case wag eoofy put h et peaulai Ire r dimes mess Ile smoke i h > ¬

Washington Evening Times. (Washington, DC) 1908-05-10 [p

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    3

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Washington Evening Times. (Washington, DC) 1908-05-10 [p

NO DLuy

AT DROUGHT

NEW phenome-non appar

i i ently been

andi that is that the

L belching ofcannons canforce the earthto exude waterwhere arid re-

gions one reigned supreme-It remained for Magdalena Bay

near the southern end of lowerCalifornia to prove this to theworld according to a correspondent-at that point and the demonstration was made when AdmiralEvans big fleet of sixteen battleships visited that point for targetpractice-

It has long been known that water could be drained from the airby the generous use of explosivesthat rain almost invariably follow

hasdis-

covered

¬

¬

¬

¬

tho Magdalena bay region took Itleave Wells that have hwretofotnever given forth more than a fescanty drops of water are fitted with aplenteous supply and tbe receaseof the barren canyons from wherewater came are the trickling streamthat tell of the future glories ofland In plentiful harvests

Ever since the story of the bay wasknown to man the region about it batbeen a waste of sand and rock clothein a scanty growth of cactus chapral and rnesqutte it was shunned bmoan anc beast as a plague spot ofthe earth

JSs Jtf

Even Missionaries RetreatEven the sons of Loyola those

missionaries were compelled toretreat before this dearth of waterand they went tack Into the interior

miles to erect the missionwhich stands today and bears thename San Luis Gonzaga When theybeheld the beautiful sheet of waterand gazed upon the encircling hillsthat shielded It from every stormthey looked Into their breviaries andnoted that the canon of the day wasin honor of St Mary Magdalene Withaccord they chanted Santa MariaMagdalene and set about to lay thefoundation of one of the links in thewonderful chain of missions which

J

i

from

fort JlYe

the

In-trepid

d a big battle was learned atof the civil war and in the

ar West rain making by explodingynamite in the air is a recognized

rofessionBut where land has been arid for

nturies the surprise is that thecoming of 12inch cannons aozen miles out at sea can forceWrings to crop out of the ground-nd the wells long since an empty

role in the ground to be filled withwater It seems incredible but suchare the facts vouched for by thecorrespondent

MAGDALENA BAY May 4 1Kmagic te there te

of great guns tothe transformation of

a barren waste into a loadof promise and cause the fountains ofthe earth to flow forth in abundancewhere only drought was known before

That is the question a few dosea ofsettlers on the snores of Magdalenabay Lower California are latlioir wonderment of science sad sashother

The concussion of other heavy ar-tillery salvos have shaken the hillsabout the bay and caused eartho tremble For everal years

British cruisers on tbe Pacific stationhave entered for target practice sadIre then the battle craft that flfcttot

the Stars Stripes have broken thesilence of this solitude with the roarof their cannon But It not untilthe great fleet tinder Admiral vansbelched forth Its shot n4 heft atthe improvised targets tiutt the tellspell of drought that for centuries has cast its curse upon

Page Four

the-

me

WHATthe

the

end

was

i

i

ail hg

the

¬

¬

>

°

they wore perfecting from La Paz atthe very point of lower California tothat of San Rafael on the northernshores of the bay of San Francisco-

In vain they searched for waterThen turning from the shores theywended their way back into the interior and the site upon which atemple to the honor and glory efthe Magdalene was t be erected wasabandoned

The Spanish admiral Francisco demien was the drat white man te en-ter the bay He had been forthby the redoubtable Cortes to discov-er and conquer the fabled isle ofClgvatan where Amazons ruled andreigned and guarded a mountain ofpriceless pearls It was on Christmasday 15 that the first of the worldsadmiral entered the harbor and ata glance be exclaimed with glee

Clguatan But instead of Amazonshe encountered the warlike and blood-thirsty progenitors of the present raceof Yaqais The pearls that he expected to find garnered intomountainous plies but lay at the bot-tom of the sea Added to these disap-pointments was the lack of waterBack in the interior a captive nativeexplained was the much desired supply But it meant traveling over adesert waste of fifty miles confront-ed at every turn by hostile andferocious Indians The Spanish ad-miral angrily weighed anchor and boreaway from such an hospitable shore

Others That Sailed Awayfamous Cabrillo came only

to find that his discover was f aVlscalno was tlx taInt

Mid tact of tbe great navigators tofurl hi sails te the bay and he team-ed to his that wa notwater to be had to replenish the oaksof his ships

Then came the piratical era when

were nt

TIM

desert

there

f

sent

1

next

shore

r Bret

11

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

the Jolly buccaneers and their crewsrepaired here to evade the Spanishfrigates and dart forth upon the pollsladen galleons that came with theirtreasures from Peru to west roastports of Mexico They excavated forwater and found a limited supply onSanta Margarita Island that zcrsrs thesouthwest boundary of the harborHere were found the graves of tMrtyskeletons of English sad Dutch buc-caneers that almost a century beforehad engaged in mortal combat It

division of the loot of some capturedprize or the consequence of a drunkenorgy following the celebration

of their more successful raids forplunder It was the custom offreebooters who frequented the Pacificwafers in those days to bear downupon their prey and after cutting thethroats of crew and passengers to remove the plunder to their ownand scuttle the captured caravei

The Dutch and the English wereparticularly prominent in this indus-try and the commercial caravels ofSpain then In the zenith of its glorythe chief quarry After an adventure-of thte sort the Freebooters cachettheir golden loot in th harbors aloagthe west coast of Lower Californiathe most frequented of these beme-Magtdateaa bay Aol many are thestories of hidden v tilth buried be-

neath the sands that Mho the shoreThe discovery of the grave which

leek the skeletons of the pirates ofthose days bad caused no Jttle ex-

ploitation of the region thereaboutiiigotten treasure But none of it hatewer been found Thin skeletons whtehpaw evidence of a hasty burial atthe hands of their comrade were variMia metallic trinkets which hud survivad the decay of the centuries thathad Intervened and were of the kindworn by those engaged in the piratetrade

era came the tradersand As may be presumed

the

was the result of a quarrel over the

C-

onethe

r

halls

whalers

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

>

they were down Enters and weregiven to the came of swap In whichthe unsophisticated natives came outfar to the rear These invaders withthat luck that always seems to followAjaerlcjn pioneering multiplied theproducing in the of thebay and leading their tryout kettlesand other paraphernalia to transformwhale blubber into merchantable oilthey soon gave a busy aspect to condi-tions about Magdalena bay In tactit became sort of a Pacific New Badford and the odors of srizzHng blubber considerably changed the balmyatmosphere

There were not a few tragedies re-sulting from the too free use of thewhalers rum and the mescal of thenatives Quite a number of moundsmarked the spot where tile victims ofthis unholy combination were laMaway to await the trump of Gabrielhorn The wholesale raids of theharpoon raiders on the mammothdenizens of the deep in this locality

depleted the prey and compelledthe whalers to move further northwhore they located on Guadelupe islan o and at gan Diego Then Magdalen relapsed into Its forgotten state

Hale and His OrclilllasWalker the GreyEyed Man of

Destiny in the furtherance of hisdreams of empire sailed into

bay The famous flllbustorerconcluded that it was the place forthe site of his capital city That atleast was his first Idea and from thissecure harbor he and his advnturousfollowers intended to make their sorties upon La Paz and San Jose delCabo the two cities to the south Buton second sight the filibuster chief-tain soon discovered the SpectreDrought Ho sailed away to meet histragic fate in Nicaragua Magdalena-bay was again forgotten by the greatworld and only an occasional vessel

yJclnl y

soot

j

wells

Magda-lena

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

in strew of weather or hunting forseals put in an appearance

This stet of things remained vntttthe cominc of Joseph P Hale aEnglishman who afterward made atehome in San Francisco and died theretest or twelve years age Hate ap-preciated t rains of Ute orofcWawhich grew abundantly there fordyeing purpose It te of Ute lichenfamily and at this time overran everybush tree and shrub of the territoryadjacent to the bay It had eves fast-ened Itself the cactus whichgrows here like trees and whatdrought had not effected m the wayof redudag everything to too statue-of rock and sand the wasdestined to do eventually Then lislecame in and to the rescue of the grow-ing mesquite and chaparral He at-tracted quite a population to the vicin-ity of the bay who engaged In gather-ing and delivering the orchill to Balesagents at so much per pound lislehad the support of an American com-pany in the exploitation of the orchiUaand bad secured a concession from theMexican government amounting to 4

HMO acresThe oreMUa traffic made Hale a very

wealthy man sad his Income was seermot 5 and continued for many1 yearsitmtH the aniline dyes intomarket and orchids quoted up la thehundreds of dollars a ton was not to bethought of for practical purposes Halesaw the handwriting on the wattv and he sought to develoa tine regionabout Magdalena He bad Madenough to build an empire fororiginal concession bad been increased-by grants of several millions of aereain addition to the first one and for atime tie San Franciscan reigned theabsolute monarch over an area nearlyas enteastve as the State ef OhIo It

ere tDa

came the

Bala

upon

y

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

In every country where scientiftc ob-servations have been made the fajr com-plexion proves to be lying out says awriter in the Contemporary Review Itwill vanish altogether unless the declinebe checked

Everywhere the conclusion samedark type supersedes the fair

This writer claims that the dark typeoffers greater resistance to disease andnas more tenacity to life and says thatthe constitution Indicated by light hairand eyes is not adapted to town lifeYet towns grow without ceasing at theexpense of the country 77 per cent ofus have already deserted old for street

He believes the blonde must go andsaysIf this complexion be declining newand vanishing thosn who fancy thatthe Aryan is played out may find

there a striking confirmation of theirviews The fact Is assured at anyand the cause of it ascertained theconstitution indicated by light andoyes is not adapted to tho conditions oftown life and towns grow withoutceasing at th expense of the countrythe last census demonstrated an in-crease of 15 per cent in the ten years

Isthea

rate

hair

¬¬

¬

lacked water and was somewhat shyoa the kind of population that msfci-

mirteslaa Well WaterWater had Mea found Ai t

the Bale Company and It gave abounttftrt supply Tbe Jesuit tethers

demouetrated that the soil sadettnmto at their mlsslnit of 9aa Lute

nets or the semttropte and trsptcsoles Halos eacperteBoe snowed thattobacco and sugar cane would tbstvetwo the coast The be ons abo t thebay teemed with nooeter reel tar

toed proem from pearl ftaberia MJnico was adverse to slavery the peons

only in exceptional andthese were not very frequent so poimladen front tIN thrifty lauttbjraatafrom Europe was what nacombination with the water to traaoform Ms aaJeaa into a second TtoridaTo get this class of people the Hate

y offered to give fifty sores at

form to settle at Ma dafree transportation a cow a muleseeds and agricultural toote That

to dtacover that there was plenty ef-sanshinp ass illimua that no orecould live Ion on either or both ofthem Them the settlers ciaimad theywere marooned and a loud wall

eminent to Investigate the ofall the note proceedtaa front th btgrThen came the appeal of Bate ma ordomo which gmahtealty told of the

things Ja

deified atforth

had

favored slsost all prd

tIM and the bed tile ocean

or native lababtcfatr would sot worktot neM

Cto the head of of

a score to the trustIt did not take the sew loss

Mat

up that lnclted thecue

g this eraf I

well was great sraasa by

Goaaaga the

of prom

was wasted

lead each farebotddes

broust fewsettlers

wpt Mext an go

>

<

preceding Seventyseven per cent ofue already have deserted the wholesomefield for tbe poisoned streets

The same fatal process Is workingEurope even in Russia and

prtocipeltttes aHrays aeooafipealed by a anilttpUcation of the

type and a diminution ot thebond Perhaps it is on a ealoaftatjoaof the rate kt which towns are

that Prof pcopustesthe absolute extraction of the fair

Before anyone perhaps had con-cerned himself these questions DrBeddoes wrote In my experience a aphysician it has appeared that oawhole dark ooraptexloMed cbOdcen howmore teatdtr of life than fair suesunder some of the waCavorabto condi-tion of town That obsctvatteu hiechoed from alt parts o the worldnow

the conditions are more fa-vorable such a boroughs ji which arelarge model dwetttaav with plenty ofopen space around the blondes seennearly to hold their own and hi the su-burban areas do so with snoreconehMton is that the iWr

alloverDen

Mason

ith

the

here

Thetype must

die deprived of fresh aIr white

I

L

the

bru-nette

in-creasing

w

life

out if

¬

¬

jog an industrial empire andthe sad finishing touches toOIlY

kmThey have onto ap aD COM

and if yam aono the motethe people will same

BwoaW M Tfcafar

caped aray tothethe toiraitsis forjtphhn aaOai hue theMrat the ar aBt Ja-sephiae bad beea tfaaatchetfscene of discontent by HaleInvitation was generally

uwrtpr nHirl

to a hail sway tsm thefrij la

After the heatta of the etaairspie sad aolltnde aamta rvhjaea atbay Tbeo th Arttlah Pacalrw-

iVOOWrOO its VvNWVtal900v

for

parpesa and akhooati thethe cruisers bearina aloft tIM Marssad Strips thaDdered away at thetargets erected to the hay the ecooth-tm abided by place Water wassly to be bad at Bees artesiam i ai

sad at the water holes on UB Mac

Then OB a bright iain ianj day thestow baiMoa of sea aaarcoaarnand of Admiral Robtey DL-

palBoft their naes mto

few days later the great gees

trembled sad hffi shook with the

Water began to hose forth theparched which were espyoa wet years which are aa of roveoccasion a snow storm hi Ban Fraadeco Sprhajpi of

IIS years the of the guns ftaat-

orctoed the Specter Thumb aa theyhave many other and kindsof specters that have afflictedkind

hi common with fruitfulXM

Oho aa ahnnaanc of water withwhich te icing forth uoumKat har-veata and time refers theef the old navieators who aedaret-

Maad of Ctroataa a dent ac

Gt the laaers or

the ellIt put

thefW

not lot

Punt the theyja

J

toIt lIlY

tiletM

mod tortmsa dieeaees

tile

It thepace sadthe Amrrieaa aIItIaed

the port tot theet

pdtathe the

theharbor sad slipped dMiIr A

to thaader at urgestile

tkadoL

hrehsfrom the canyon

many dining tilevoice

tIM decks of AJDerIeaa

dl ere tAnd will

the reand Son J

t

test vf blmg tile

I

tig hopes fomds d f

gehsi road In is titi4

sac ssd tbsi sithag aaod

IlE

t ty mules 6falling Ir1Mr

diue ragesschooner

psyche ogleal Thei tinart amtot salt

filet aeard i1eY anaafhomhsb see4lrawns one sensor

dome sad natives who norms actdye ad

Ify s-d kids steak sad in eAMa-tiss

spMnsaand made reodavoss ma-g t as a supply statism-Reaotty navaldes pnompted snore

gals

the

1sis

Leameg

saeltoeaabags

and the earth

essco os andinto

wells tided

trickling waterart edea sad sin

ss o oecaslsrhs patbattlesb s a

seaMagsle a by new

havegleog about Lm Pag Yana

i deaka

hnelpad its ab leowas

enrsed

<

>

<

BLOND TYPE PEOPLE SLOWLY DYING OUT 1

THE WASHINGTON TIMES MAGAZINE

t

J 8

i

<

the dirk snfcrs cmnuratl eiy IMflaIt te a example of natural se-

lection and the aanrtval of th Ittaotwinder aa aanauaral state of thhrar-

HProf Riptey asserts that m th doseiinalitjuiltd Londoa the aveca estature of people M evaa thantm tile metropolis an4 they are aarkerl-aoaOy Thin he attributes a oaastant micratloa of the taller taTMamtewho seek to better tuemauUe hi town

they are the soregeaermtty the fair o tbe dark liars w-

cTtaad for adventure remain tgate their lies in the mothar eaawtvy-

S OECi GOLF TASKPreen 8e ttend comes a sob yam Aa

pocket The visitor TQtaresponded a richt stir rll-

gie it ye the reoad Tesee Ive gotten haut a croon oa y aa-

Oaav on ID irks ear o ya a richtChicago News

May 10 1908

Milling

J-

ot

Bat the tall a 11ft tile IMr

big this rule

sgUsh YIIIItor toa when hta

to see hW cigarette and wIleD kbanded to him It WIll

I to till wtL

lower

the

as alasmoreover ettt rpris

sad spplieg to eeaigetrtn

pa apar

Carnoasti was ba t-

ning comtct ea s askedcase

wag eoofy put het peaulaiIrer

dimes mess Ile smoke

i

h

>

¬