, THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND,1' SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY' 2fl 1808. UNIQUE t Amencait & V-'K. r'V-V,v'4:'T.-1",v.; rt- 'M "f., 'J.'-S.vJ-.r.;'.:.- V, . ' V-',;,' - V. ' f ' -'t.''Wlt Btatee. which may be property V v V'V ;VM '; Vy:: .-.Mh.'iJ'iibf.ifc.. "i f' .-i ' . V - - frmnod,the saloon -of foreign ambiW. :!...;' : ,,-,,,.. . -A .. , 'S5V ' "."I othar '""etion. diplomatic enJ so N International ' Eclificis - Be HcaJquartcra of - Bureau . ( " By Alfrad T. Beara, C. E. , v IITAVB , pleaaura In , praaentlnf tha ; raadefa o Tha Journal wltlj Ulna- , tratlona and daacrlptloa of tha mar- nlflctnt lcternatlonaJ ' salaea about. to ba aractad at tha local canter of American liberty. In tha nam and toil uta uea or tnat rraat laagua of r paMica which coyer tha western hemla- phere. " ror thla pleasure, I ' debtad to tha Hoa John Harrett. di rector of tha bureau of .Amertoan re j , pucbltca, whose devotion to an Ideal Am- v erlcan unity In public policy and com- ';. merclal Interests dealsnated blm to the v .'. president aa the proper chief of th4 In- '. atltutlon. Tha new edifice will be unique In Its u claaa, net only In Washington, but In ? tha world. It will be the International eenter of the II republics of the conti nent. The new temple of peace In The Hague la the only other edifice In the ' world that more resembles the architect .' ture of Latin America. .It will cost f about 11,000,000, of which, tha DhlUn- ' throplo Andrew Carnegie haa donated ! $7(0,000, while the American republics .' have' made ud the remaining 1260.000, . . The en ara vines represent two faoadea ' aacected by BisoretarT Root and Ulreo- tnr Barrett, from drawings submitted by ' lio or tne most prominent aronitect or the United 8tatea..and were made by " the firm of Albert Kaiser and Paul P. Cret of Philadelphia. . , , ' Centrally Located. ,' ' ; " ,. ' Thla , Imposing palace will . ba built , on one of the 'moat plcturesaua central altea la the capital city, Van Ness park. ' einbraolnf an extent of five acres, frontt Inf on the aveovie oppoaie the Whit , Mvaaarv as a s vwi nt vk wuiautvilliu, and B atree.ts, two squares below the fa moua Corobran gallery of fine arte, not far from the houae of .the Bona of the American Revolution, and' near the - Washlnaton monument The dimensions of the oaiaoa will' - be 110 fet aquare, the principal body two aioneatnian.. tne UDuer-aiorr will have a flat roof surrounded by a balus trade, and the posterior portion will be somewhat higher than the general body . . of the structure, to accommodate, the 1 grand saloon of audiences. The con- structlon will be what Is knows as re inforced concrete, and will ba stuccoed in the 8Danlah atvla. with decorative features of white marble. The roof wUl ibe of Spanish style adorned wlthln by terra cotta In polychrome. Thus the general atyle of lta architecture will be 'seen to resemble that of 20 of the Amer ican republics of Latin origin. Not withstanding thla general characteristic the edifice will contain lines and fea tures, which will be in harmony with and beautify what will eventually be the Jmost beautiful city In the world. Apart iruin ina numerous apartments ror tna working office of the bureau of republics.- a feature of the bulldlnar will be a Icourt yard or ''patio" as It la known Is tne south, bo reet square, covered with a glasa roof, which may be opened In summer and closed in winter, for the proper prtectlon and cultivation of the tronlcal Dlant. which will ba nn ihl- jbltlon there. There will be a reading room 100x60 feet In area, containing all (the important publications such as re Views, magaslnes and newspapers of LVorth and South America and where (the Columbus Memorial library will be Established: a library that contains the most complete collection In the United states of matter relating to the Latin repuDiioa. unere will alao be a stately au, tne only one of its kind In the ..." I : . , mm " ' i . jf r- , . saw r. sr- rn m I V It It nifv-: aavnin ' ar-. , Hi mi T 'Win - .... mm ml WiSiM i IJaTriouC vievv d InternAlwnAl aSvrevu' w nil OLAND'S MOST Versatile genius dies J (Br a Staff Oarrespendent.) m m WARSAW, Jan. 8. Death haa Just 111 laid lta band upon a remark- Y y . Able man whom competent I f critics have declared to be the moat versatile genlua Poland las produced In a century. He died at he age of 38, beforo bla work waa half lone. Poet, painter, dramatist and soulptor, Btanlalas Wysplanski painted' i masterpiece at 25, wrote another at ;i, and gave more literature to th world In the last decade of his life than he author of "Quo Vadla" In a life line. His Ufa atory Is as atrange aa his alents were great and varied. Born In the old-world town of Cracow, where eland's history ia written on every Uone and Italian architects have laid heir mark on every houae, he grew up imoAgst traditions and things beauti ful. The aon of a sculptor, he began to work with hla chisel. But he worked kith hla brain aa well aa hla hands, and the thought of the foreign yoke under WflWh, bla people groaned weighed heav ily noon him. Thla melancholv la 1 non to Polish and Russian youth. They lrown It, or try to drown It. in dissi pation. Wysplanski did likewise, and ;oiled like the proverbial negro aa well Hla health began to fail him. Then n Craoow began a movement amongst he Bohemians to get away from the Hysterical women of their clasa 4 1 1 r : :viaasw. .. ' .'V . i y " 1 " v 4 , it :::. t .. , Wftaf ! 1 Jmm & Ml .. 4t HOW T HIS STUDT by Dr.' Hrdllcka of the United States National Mu seum of all the remains of sup posedly early man In North Am erica v.hlch have received any sci entific sanction, haa led to the conclu sion that as yet no human bones have been unearthed on thla continent that ANCIENT IS Bones U THE .1 1 neartnea INDIAN? Study on the Continent rf H uman ularly grew to such heat that the disas trous results to "Our Society Upon the Stanislaus" were graphically recorded in verse by Bret Harte. rVrtlsts. poets and sculptora married TZll. J?.- .-I ..ri Early Discoveries. thy, nerveless, Ig- 7 i; . .. , Iiorant, The new race' which sprang typea such as those found in Europe. In irom these unions, they believe are Pt of frequent reports, only 14 lOBiinea to llDerate fOland. Wyspl Unas nT at au lurvimu """ nskl was sufficiently attracted by the Investigation. Dr. Hrdllcka haa ex- MnnMt n hi. hla imlnml lhm all. and after a careiul ler coarse Ideas and shrewish tongue study of each of the 14, Including the rrated against hts delicate nature, but Nebraska "loess man" found by R. F. efora he waa SS aha hnr him . n fJilder and others last year, he has tther children followed, and finally ha reached the above conclusion. Thla narrled her. article contains a very brief summary A fatal disease, his enemies say the of the "finds," with the circumstances esult of dissipation, now made its ap- surrounding; them and the conclusions 1 jearanoe. The doctors said he could drawn. were - alao attacked. He said he had In spite of frequent reports of the much to do hfnM ha AiA k.... rilro-lnr nn nn this continent Of SKUllS h,ZA'J iSS- a iss ?' twZXi whichTt i.wwm cSd oe hTve T rr "O"1,8-?- was 'e " ; v r T, been tken P1od known to be long Ivery poor, and painted pictures, glass present day no human bones nave oeen heord an H :d . windows, madonnas, pastela, altarsTand unearthed In North America that undis- Doi n v e t U. ihVv!y " 'wpeoapnie fJf!"lttiS -imtlfAi bone i,,?'! ?l " Pt' Iypes',.ruchJ?,? JiMTh?a i-the Ponclu- ' th xtln mastodon and other anl- cance. But in 1S01 his three-act drama, deposits of Europe. This is the conciu- msi wa- unearthed In a ravine at the (Tha Wedding." niacin him mk i ion reached bv Dr. Ales Hrdllcka of yi1."' 57n mJn i.rAvlnf. iin5 foublio esteem and caused him to Be ac- the United States National Museum as Ztn.-y soil mav have writer of the result of an hautiv. .tudy con- Sal c-uwiu viui.ua u uul century, tseauty auoiea mr uui c.u m ji... - mixed with earlv anlma.1 ramalna of language, Danleian .strength, im-' nology of all the supposedly rhi Laae nro FTorld"" ones, con- mens dramatlo effect, a portrayal of tons or parte of skeletons found on this .latin of "laws with nnrfaAt tanth and ha avanta nt avrv.V.v iV. ZZzImZI MnHn.n7 nrf nnw nraaarved In collec- "'? WA3ltL Pe"?pt teetn ana "iJu ..MkiM""'.' rr"""rr .Jlr.-r h..a '" F . were aiscoverea oy "itu ail vaii.uii.iui, u VIJO auparnatUrai, UUIl ur ill lliuncumn. Each of these "finds" has been ex amined by Dr. Hrdllcka. The first, the New Orleans skeleton, waa struck In digging two gas tanks In what was then the back part of the city of NeW Or leans. It lay 1 feet below the surface beneath the roots of a tree. Fifty seven thousand years was the extrava gant claim for lta age, but apparently the bonea were not old enough to have become fossil iseu. The Quebec skeleton, It was said, waa "dug out of the solid schist rock on which the citadel stands," but no trace of It can now be found. The rock from the presence of early man in North America. . Information Is also lacking as to the Soda Creek. Colorado, skeleton, un earthed by gold miners 22 feet down In the gravel and boulders of Soda bar. It was not fossilised and was apparently a modern burial. Likewise, tha Charleston, South Caro lina, hones, dag up together with masto don remains by Professor F. S. Holmes, investigating for the Philadelphia Acad- The man of Penyon was quarried up in 1884 in the valley of Mexico. The skeleton waa imbedded in limestone, but not far away were found fragments of Asteo pottery and roota of modern plants. It can hardly be very ancient. The Trenton Bonea. other farm products in one of the bluffs flanking the Missouri river. It was 70 feet from the face of the bluff and 20 feet below the surface, In a deposit claimed to be geologically ancient. In structure, however. It Is practically Identical with the typical skeleton of. a large majority of tha present Indians of the middle and eastern states, and for thla reason any age attributed to It would not.be significant. . What is known as the fossil tnan of western Florida, Includes a number of "finds" dating back as far as 1871, most of which are now In the National mu seum. In the makeup, careful examina tion ahows they bear a marked likeness Tha number of skulls and bonea un earthed near Trenton, some of which are emy of Sciences, have lost their weight now ,n museum at Harvard, are be- . rcent Indian bones, with not a single aa evidence or early man. liuie is known about them now, and no record of a chemical or physical examination Important Divisions. Among other', Important divisions of ' thla magnificent structure may be men- tloned a handsome hall for the reunions of the board of directors of the "bursa a, four balls of commleslona, for diplo matic conferences, a fireproof hall shelves for books, with a capacity" of 20,000 volumes. Spacious offices for the director, secretary of the office anil hla assistants, including the editor or the bulletins snd other publication of .the bureau; statisticians, translators, librarian, clerks, mechanographlsts and etenographera. The greater part .of tha interior will be finished in the precious woods of Latin America proportioned among the states according to their quota in contributing to th construe-, tlon cost, while the walla of the vari ous most Important halls will bo orna mented with paintings and statuary Illustrating pan-American history and development. At the grand entrance will be two monumental statues of the Americas, North and South respectively. Blaine Suggested Bureau. , The Bureau of American Republics waa cstabllahad on the suggestion of that great-minded statesman, James O. Blaine, In the winter of 1882 to 1820, and he presided over Its Inaugurating onference. Its object was the Im provement of understanding among the American republics and their mutual ridvantage by friendly Intercourse, .But , tills Institution never counted so tronrly on the general cooperation of' nil the republics, as since Secretary Root nande the grand round of th re publics In the fmternal vlalt of 1I0(. The third International Pan-American rongres occurred In Rio d Janeiro la that yeRr and Secretary Root was pres ent, with tho result that a new Interest In a general American unity ; was awakened and resolution adopted fa- . vorlng a reorganization of the bureau with a pledge of devotion on the part Of the members of the congress, to a frsternlty of policy that should draw more and more closely toward each other the different states of the west ern continent The office Is strictly International and Independent; Is not subject to th rules of any department of the United State government, and is supported by contributions from all the American atates, north and south, in proportion to population. i Ihe affairs are directed by an official called director, and a board ' composed of all the diplomatic representative of the American republic, presided over In ' conferences by the secretary of state of the United States. The present director Is Hon. John Barrett who has served this government as minister In the republic of Colombia, Ecuador, Argentina and also abroad In Slam. Th secretary of the office la Dr. Francisco J. Tanes, an eminent and erudite Latin American. Since thla new administra tion has taken the office in charge the correspondence of th board haa quad- rupisu. nnu ma uemiiuu lur its puDiica tlons haa tripled. It ia an Interesting fact that In th last alx months, slnoe Mr. Barrett began an aggressive cam paign for the increase of lnter-Amerl-can commerce, there haa been an in-1 crease in their traffic of $15,000,000, meaning a better acquaintance and growth, not only In trade, but In friendship among all the republics of tho western hemisphere. t DO YOU LACK FRIENDS? Be a Friend and I ou W ill nave lYlany By Irene Gardner., FTEN you come across ceonla who complain that they have but few friends. They will point to other people who have many. and wonder why such a distinc tion Is made. The matter is easy enough to explain; for, aa some one haa well said., "The only way to have a friend Is to be one." For friendship cannot possibly be a one-sided matter. Just as It takes two to make a bargain or a quarrel, so does it take the same number to make . a friendship. - i , No one can stand aloof from others, waiting to be sought without experi encing keen disappointment This be came friendships are . not made . that way. People do not . look you over - as you stand off by yourself and say: "Now, there'a some one I'd like to know. I'll make a point to draw, hint or her out, and take all the pains pos slble td establish a friendship." ' - That's not the way It happens In real llfn althmio-h anme 'atlll ImnrtiM that it is. What really does happen is thla: Two people meet and gradually they -find polnta of congeniality, gradually each does little favors for th -other,' gradually a feeling of affection -takee root in each heart Netlther one Is thinking of what can be gained from the acquaintance; rather, each Is think ing and planning to give Instead of take. In other words, both are-trying to be a friend unselfishly, . And. lo, . It Is the very thins; which makes their friendship. Bear in mind, my reader. If von happen to be among those who lament 0 -iro wunura miu a piay wnicn Only a master hand could save from melo irama, and, in saving It. produce an ef fect that keeps its sudience spellbound ind breathless. Many other rleon. ni. 'towed this "Wedding," including "De .iverenee." "Rnlenlaa tha Rnlrt -. I cnir the Great" ''Lelewel.'l "The Rock,' and several clays and noema built afta tne ureeit moaei. Investigations has just been published ask bulletin of the bureau of American ethnology. In summing up Dr. Hrdllcka says: "But one conclusion is. justified, whloh Is that thus far on this continent, no human bones of undisputed geolog ical antiquity are known. This must not be regarded as equivalent to a dec laration that there was no early man In Count F. de Pourtalea in a bluff on th shores of Lake Monro. Although ex amined oy Froresaor Agassis, lnforma- of them Is left. The Calaveras SkulL The famous Calaveras skull, on the other xhand, now In the Peabody mu seum at 'Harvard, is one of the most' examined and discussed skulls un earthed. It was discovered by a mine operator In 1866 In a shaft he had dug ISO feet below the surface. It Is in a fossilised condition. After an exhaus tive study, Dr. Hrdllcka la of the opin ion that It bears very close resemblance to skulls In the United States National museum taken from caves in the same county, to which no great age can be attached. The skull from Rock Bluff, Illinois, now In tha United States National mu seum, claims for the antiquity of which were based mainly on the long sloping forehead and general undeveloped snap, tneir scarcity or menus, t, i, Many false accusations are laid at llevod by some to furnish evidence that feature Indicative of a loologlcally the door of our modern life, and among man waa hare before tha glaciers came, lower or otherwise substantially differ- them I believe la that er our lndiffr. iuau was nere oeioro me glacier cam. . i i , ..n.rt tmm eno In arolna- out and hfcntln nn ha Although most of the bones may be pos- tn- United States Geological survey. In that we may know them. I fancy that itlvelv Identified aa Indian remains, two e-olna- over tha around, found many men and women have been the samo .ion. ... . Airri f,m iv, nieces of'modern shells and other evi- in that .respect over since the World that they have puszled many. They are of a type foreign to any known Indian heads, and only after several years' search was Dr. Hrdllcka able to asso ciate them with anything yet discovered. Descriptions of skulls of peoples of the northwestern coast of Germany and Hol land and .on the Islands of the Zuyder Zee finally tallied so well with these, that he concludes they are probably re mains of European Immigrants. The so-called Trenton femur, or part . . , . . . . oi a. mign Done, was aiscoverea Dy an . .. - .i, n(i nthara investigator for Professor Putnam of tne University of Nebraska, and others. Harvard, in a deposit of sand under neath glacial gravel, which would tend to snow its deposition before the ffla cial epoch. A detailed account of th no sine dencea that the soil is not very ancient became Inhabited. Emblaaoned on tlio Investigation of a number of Indian Ptei or nistory is , the Indissoluble mounds In the locality brought to light friendship of Damon and Pythias, but other fossilised Indian skulls of simi.ar it was not formed by a on-slded effort. structure,' The Nebraska "Loess Man." The most recent of all these finds, the Nebraska "loess man," unearthed with other skeletons from mounds by R. F. Gilder, Professor E. H. Barbour of and that Ml ned Ions; before tho rush find. aowever, has not yet been tlon about them is meagre, and as their is likewise very similar to more or lesa fossilized state means little In Florida, modern Indian skulls In the same col lection. they cannot jbe accepted as proofs of llshed and present evidence Is not con elusive of fts age. The Lansing akeleton was brought to light by tha sons of a farmer near Lansing, Kansas, while they were dig ging a tunnel for storing apples and , . i httna nr rrnaiesi urnaisiifc ZZl'ZT' K KT. .Sin rfiScussed In print . . Uoy tnemseivesv ,; mi! ;!.. - - - r rrienna ara inev xrnn lnva ni tint , bv soma of tha leaning men oi .(T.i k;..u..i.. ' in the country. The most sigrnncant rtC'farh. iTSfi: VtmsV. kAwtaa law H aan slnwn in LliO II1UUI1U low others above them. An exhaustive examination of them, however, haa led to the following conclusions. "If the present knowledge concerning l"" " "-.fi I- ImnartinllV OOnald- Can UU H KMHI IIMH1ID in ' ' arart it ia aDDarent that the theory of a Ifanv tlmea- he was at tha nnlnt e - thla nnnntrv: It means only that If early leath, and many times his strona- anleit man did exist in North America, con- Hwhlch said he must work, trluranhed vlnelng proof of the fact from the )ver the pain-racked, diseased body. Hla standpoint of physical anthropology MARRIAGES IN MEXICO Mexican Women Over 30 Have Not Much Chance of Being Married these specimens more than recent geological origin of any of them meets with aerlous objec tions, while on the other hand, no Insur mountable obstacle appears In connec tion with the assumption that all are comparatively rec-m. continually hearing called bltterlyelf If we count our friends by those who accept our invitations to dlnnor. or to the treatre, or to pour afternoon tea for us, then, indeed, do we number them . recklessly. For thesa ara ulna tlmea out of ten but acquaintances who enjoy us as long as we are able to Pur for ex- nt heart and charity which radiates from va '" ,.-;, .,.-, rou cannot receive such hospitality as that unless you also give it nor u kito it wiinoui receiving ii return, your lack of friends. oy oeing one, give It without receiving U jr Think . of thla If you hemns - -nn make, on great grief, some months before his atlll remains to he produced.' leatn. was that he lost tha tianr r - Ithe fingers of his right hand and could Fourteen Recognized "Finds." ino longer paint. But he made the doc- - .. .. . tor in a pencil to nis oanaagea and he uub cunitucni, nun mn iu wrota The proofs of the last drama, study th subject, there have been un "Judges." .were corrected In this way n .ui.V.n. n.r. n for publication In book form a couple of earthed onlT 14 skeletons or parts of weeks before his death. There is little skeletons the early age of whlca has re doubt that had he lived, his work, which celved any Mlentlflo sanction. They Improved steadily every year, would w xt .i v. a,. Correctlns Her Answer. . From the Kansas City Star. t.. t . ms i mtrnt well have . -i , XU1IU1IUA " , " , , , 1 V1UUM1 V1MI Wl -MCXlUQlnX carried bonos through their tunnels to of artthmetfe. . - uninjr M deeper level; there are marks of jnaw- Now j hmv on. pencil in my right M Ing on some of the deep bone ,s they are nand Md n In my left " she sal I l,.t ilka hones at higher levels as far .t mnv nancila hin Yi ti-i-"S.: From 14 to 10 years. B; from II to as discoloration, consistency, and mark- may anaworA ,v monies unlUna children. Tha marrlara Ina- this neriod. Aa ia aaan from th... 1m "J inga go; some or u,e Two." piped a small yolca From the Mexican Herald. SO years, 102; from 81 to 45 years, 24; Not the least of the romantic features from 46 to 60 years, S. of the marriages of Mexico are theoer- No woman over 60 was married dur- marrled at different ages waa as lows: ihave' won for him world-wide recogni tion. He was a ferverit Roman Catholic, and, though suffering agonies and con scious to the last moment died with that calmness that. only great souls Can show, when crossing the gulf. , . .HI 1 I i . HI ' - Rheumatism jfind Meat Eating. . ' From? Green's Fruit-Grower, i A arreat , many medicaJ authnrltlaa tag th around that rheumatism I sullarly th disease of the fish es peter, in 1844; the Quebec skeleton of about the same time; the Matches pelvlo bone unearthed in 1848; the Lake Monroe (Florida) bones, 1868 or 1868; the Soda Creek (Colorado) akeleton, 1860; the Charleston (South Carolina) remains of a little later; the Calaveras (California) skull, ,1866; the Rock Bluff (Illinois) skull, the same year; the Penyon (Mex ico) siteieton, ibb:. tne Trenton skuhs, of girls over 18 years of age and boys over 14 Is permitted and most marriages In Mexico come In early life. There are about 170 to 180 marriages a month In this capital, a ridiculous proportion In ylew of th fact that th population by the census of 1800 was 560,000, and Is now probably nearer figures, the number of women who mar ried at from 21 to 80 years Is greater It is seen that the proportion of men and .similar- scratches aro n '.'Then one and on make two, do they than any other. The age at which most S?"'i1 Pf.10iV2 J?" Li" lr?n?i lZ ."".haadad pronounced ridges like otf "Sur. " i -t ' r .- - - women marry in Mexico Is from 18 to ' " i v.. mC:1 if thi occur occasional y among -i.tfii rTaaiai U4r" ii it la t ha nhaarvaii that in tha he women married under that age. The one or tnese, occur irr;f"',h . spectrin answer, hlahei elfsV the alrfrmarrV aenSrall? Proportion of women married uSder 80 modern Indians; In t here Ii s Uttle .'That's hardly What you should have nigner classes tne gins marry generally ... tA ,0 " . tn aimnnrt a classification or tne nones aald"aha aaM. "win i ana aom. or tnam naanv " wv i- --fr. .u. anil anart rmm . -7 . . ' :". - . : . . , " hA tann j. OS . , I Tl I MM Hill ITI ' . W when over 20, 80 and over 30, while in the middle o iJI?!!. .IdreWotTanru'ch80 Thli has fed SFJ found in the ancient " claaa tell Helen what her anwrnoui4 . many others found near the surtace. have been r w, before they are 20 years old. Among tne lower ciasa, on tne oon 800,000. This small proportion of legal trary, the number of girl's who marry SiM" the ar not great beyond marriaaraa 1a ilna larralv tn tha avnanaa hefnra SO la conalderahin. and many of years. attenaing a religious ceremony, ' sldered as not having much chance Thla has led Dr. H1,cn"nf ''ti? Thsro was a moment . of being married, and in the mlddUe question any, claims of antiquity for tha Thfta on brown ; fist sbf 12 Nabraska remains. Comparative Studies. i Into the air. "Ah. James, yon may tc "she should have said." ., ... .,0 i ... i. ... i , 3 urn, juntos auvuiou i In connection wim tone of triumph, tlons. Dr. Hrdllcka has recently com- m . niati artenslvo studies of a largo num. I A Joint board of V tnr tha tham mrtrrv at lh. 14 and avan peon la educated to believe that the years. The most recent oases or girls xne c-auoung ror a united States legal marriage is not sacred without married at 16 and 18 are observed senator to succaea fcenator Wetmore the ehuroh servloo. Henoe, when he among the middle class and lower class will begin In the Rhode Island general a..nn kaua Ik kmh k ilul n&nnl rtr. rtt Mil,, la lnl, fr- IMMmhlT tlfiTt ttk. A t th. last aa. 1878-87: the western Florida akull and- not bother to have th official service, mona, who married at 18 years; another sembly the necessary two thirds vote bar of skulls in th collection of tho' labor bodies of Great 1 men is not expensive, performed. . is a spanisn girl, ttosano uonsaies, wno coma nm oouunea oy eitner or tne united states jaon -" " wmpon u. uikuuimut The general aae for women to marry married at 18. and another Is that of throe candidates, and as a coBseauenc othar things these studies have estab- Is recommended that in Mexico is about 20. The statistics Kduarda Gutierr, who married at 14. Rhode Jaland now has but.one repre--liahed tha fact that no gTeat reilanea. rgd-to. abolish - for the last two, months show . the fol As to the men, the age at which they sentatlve In the senate. The withdrawal can be placed upon a low sloping fore-', where this is not wr lowing figures, on the marrying of generally marry Is also from 21 to SO of Colonel Colt has left Senator Wet-- head and prominent ridges In determlrv. restricted to th ' women: . " years. The statistics for the last two more unopposed in hie own party and Ing th degree of development or ths that when workod, i mm U to 10 year a, M; tropa 24 to sooathj aUw that tba sumbar ox Q2a big siocUoa to Mnaueatlx aasured. -aalj(luuy-oi steU. -'.-,,',. XuAitat itcu 'asltatlrtn, nfiduriti en wht ml, in a nd th theory Is strengthened by tho bones, 1871-88; the Trenton femur, 1899; which is not expansive, performed. Is a Spanish girl, Bosarto Gonial es, who could not be obtained by either of tho United States National museum. Among report on unempio bct mat tne rurtner.you go south the tne .inmg hmumd sKeieton. iu., less rheumatism you find, until when and the Nebraska "loess man" of last you get into the tropics, where a veget- 'r and several years before. Of tha 3ble food Is the rule and people est verv a number attracted great attenUon at little flesh of any description; there Is the time of their discovery, and the die hardly any rheumatism, . . ., ; - ausslon ovar . tha Calaveras aauli paxtlo i i t . '-iV