The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, May 21, 1897, Page 6, Image 6

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THE BED CLOUD CHIEF, FBIDAY.MAY 211897.
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JOHN.W.THOMAS.
PRESIDENT.
President McKlnlcy placed tho tip of
hla right forefinger on n tiny electric
button In his ofllcc at tho white house
at noon on Saturday. Then ho prosscd
It lightly and a thousand mllCB away
In tho Southland tho massive machin
ery of tho TcnnesBoo Centennial Ex
position was sot In motion. Flags of
all nations leaped from a hundred pin
nacles and "Old Glory" floated out over
tho scene from tho top of tho giant
flagstaff, whllo tho BonB and daughters
of TcnncBsco and of all states, gath
ered In thousands to hear recited tho
slmplo story of why tho exposition Ib,
mingled their shouts with reverbera
tions of saluting guns.
Thcso opening exorcises were Blmplo
and dignified, befitting tho character of
tho men who have made Nnshvlllo's bu
pcrb white city. In brlof addresses tho
governor of tho state and tho chlof
ofilcorH of tho exposition celebrated tho
history of Tennessee Interpreted tho
spirit of tho occasion, narrated briefly
what has been done and then Invited
tho wltolo nation to partlclpato In tho
bcnoflta.
I Triumph of NhhIivIHo.
No word of boastfulncss, no syllable
of Bclf-glorlflcatlon was heard. There
has been erected hcao tho greatest, tho
broadest, tho most beautiful and tho
most complcto exposition over built
without government aid. It Is big
enough to represent tho wholo nation,
from tho Atlantic to tho Pacific, from
Canada to tho gulf moro than 200
acres of park land, with all tho con
comitants of shady walks, groves,
lakes and flowers enough to deck tho
garden of a fairy queen. Its scope, lit
erally and figuratively, Is broader than
any Btate, any section, over-reaching
even national boundaries nnd bringing
togethor tho products of nil civilized
peoples. Tho arts and sciences, edu
cation and commerce, history ami pro
ductive possibility, tho skill of handi
craft which transmutes tho coarso ma
terial of mother earth Into tho dainti
est possessions of carth'fl Inhabitants
nnd tho genius which preserves tho
drenms of tho poet and artist for the
delight of humbler beings 111 aro rep
resented within tho walls of thcso
white palaces. In Its parts and In Its
entirety it has all tht completeness of
tho mastor workman's llnlBlicd prod
uct, ill tho beauty of tho artist's con
ception. From end to end It is tho work of
Nashville of Nashville, tho modest
capital of a modest Btate, n city which
Is outclassed by a score of American
cities in numerical strength and in
'ilustrlal Importance, a city where less
than 100,000 pcoplo live. Nashvlllo men
conceived tho Idea. Nashville men gavo
"the trains which has glvon that Idea
form in Iandscapo nnd architecture.
Nashvlllo dollars havo paid tho bills
to tho laBt cent. Tho last spadeful of
earth has been turned, tho last brick
laid, the last nail driven and paid for
and tho result is offered to tho people
of the wholo country with tho slmplo
Invitation, "Como and seo." Tho mon
of Nashvlllo who havo done nil this
look for their reward only In tho per
sonal consciousness of work well done
nnd In tho admiration of their follows
for tno fabric thoy havo reared. Ab
one looks at this exposition with tho
mlnd'B eye, taking In tho associations
which cluster around tho landmarks,
old and now, aboriginal and transplant
ed from other lands and other ages,
ono wonders ftt tho 'audacity of tho or
iginal conception nnd ''marvels that so
much of this gray old world's llfo story
can bo told on bo small a pago.
In tho beginning, this exposition was
planned to celebrate tho ono hundredth
birthday of tho "volunteer state." Pi
oneers of the samo blood as thoso who
laid tho foundations of this nation and
cemented tho stones with their blood,
carved a Btato out of the .wilderness
embracing tho rivers of "tho big bond."
June 1, 1790, tho star of Tennessee
waa admitted to constellation of states,
and these ploncors took upon them
selves all tho responsibilities of tho
new distinction, For n hundred years
thoso responsibilities havo been borno
how well tho history of tho wholo
country tells. Tho namo "volunteer"
state wrs given nnd confirmed In re
peated baptisms of lire.
Tennessee riflemen, led by Jackson
of Tennessee, rolled back tho tldo of
British red coats at New Orleans. In
tho Florida everglades Tennessee mm
quenched the bloodthirsty Seminole's
appctlto with draughta from his own
(EfJTENNIv
XPoJo
NASHVILLE.
MAYlNOV.1.
1897.
veins nnd Bcttlcd tho tranquillity of tho
then southern frontier. Tho warllko
Chcrokco was taught by them to lova
peace.
Sons of tho pamo mon wcro with Tny
lor on tho plains of Palo Alto nnd be
fore tho wnllH of Monterey, followed
Scott from Vera Cruz through tho pass
es of tho Cordlnnclns nnd wroto their
nnmos In bullets nt Ccrro Gordo, Cho
robusco nnd Chnpultopcc. Threo pres
idents this Etato has given to tho nn
tlon JnckBon, Polk nnd Taylor nnd
It hns fostered Bitch men as Denton,
Houston and Davy Crockett. In tho
lato war, although split In half, It was
still tho "volunteer state." It gavo
00,000 men to tho northern army, moro
than many n stnto of tho north which
has boasted moro loudly since, and had
In tho confederate ranks moro men
than there wcro voters within Its boun
daries. When It wan proposed to build
an exposition to eclcbrato thcso memo
ries Tcnnessco wbb still tho "voluntcor
Btnto," and this white city wna built
by volunteers.
Nccllonitllain Wlpoil Out.
Tho exposition represents further
tho wiping out of
tho last rcmnnnt
of sectionalism in
tho state nnd na
tion. No common
wealth In tho un
ion was moro com
pletely d 1 v 1 d o d
than Tennessee in
1SG1. Hero It was
iA
V Vmv V
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Uaii O. E HeflFAB
.vsO- amv.iMtm ,35T i hi safes:
V . -t -TE-"l
SrS
Vav.N
ilBiMllf'ilil
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Air DUILDINa TENNESSEE EXrOSmON-CFEOAN
PAITTKCNCN. ATHENS. RErSODUCED TO AN INCH
littcrnlly true that old ties of friend
ship wcro severed nnd brother fought
ngnlnst brother. Hut tho bitterness en
gendered by thoso dayB has waned. On
tho exposition board, working side by
side with a common purposo, there
havo been soldiers of tho north and of
tho south. It used to bo east, middle
and west Tennessee, nnd tho divisions
woro recognized by the stato constitu
tion, Tho exposition represents nil of
TonnesEco and Imaginary lined havo
been obliterated.
Tho whtto city is built on ground
once soaked with blood of federal and
confederate alike In tho battle- of Nash
ville. Union cavalry charged acrosj
the level ground and from tho hills be
hind cannon pounded tho Hardin plko
whllo ThomaB and Hood BtroVe for tho
mastery. Now tho stars and stripes
float over a now seono, Illustrative of
the arts of pence This summer tho
veterans of tho G. A. R. and tho rem
nants of gray-clad brigades will camp
again on this historic ground in all
amity.
All State KcprrncntMt.
In tho exposition, as built, no sec
tional lines aro recognized In grounds
or buildings or exhibits within. It
stands first for Tennesseo, second for
tho south and third for tho wholo na
tion, For Tennesso and tho wholo
south It offers an object less In re
sources, progress and development. Tho
north, the east and tho west nro not
forgotten, though, In these minor de
tails of productB of loom and forgo,
workshop and factory; but those sec
tions aro romomboral in moro compre
hensive fashion by the Invitation Tcn
nesseo has extended to them to como
and boo nnd participate. They have
responded, too, not only In word of
formal politeness, but In deed. Com
missions from every Btnto nro enrolled
among tho workers who have helped
to build nnd equip thla whlto city nnd
special buildings havo been erected to
show thnt tho peoplo of Now York and
Illinois nro as much at homo hero as
the people of Kentucky and TonnesBeo,
Then, as ono looks nt tho exposition
again, tho mind reachos outward, over
leaping the boundaries of states and
nations and bridging tho gaps of time.
Thoro was tho great pyramid of
Cheeps, built In the dawn of this
world's history by a people now for-
feOJClOCLCS
I Nam K iflMMBIsR
cassr
JOHN SEVIER..
TATHER" AND FIRST GOVERNOR
OF TCNNESS6E.
gotten save for the fragmentary rec
ords committed to Imperlshnblo stone,
a pcoplo which tottered on tho vergo
of oblivion when Julius Caesar ruled,
and which was sunk In slavery when
tho Christian era was born. It Is hero
photographed In timber nnd stone.
Here Is tho Parthenon, last rcmnnnt
of ancient Grecian civilization nt Its
highest and of the best art tho wprld
hns over known. It haH been dragged
from beneath tho dobrU of near three
thousand years and set up again in tho
midst of hitrroundlngs tho most mod
ern. Here In tho
n ogr o building,
with Its story of
n people but ono
generation re
moved from bond
age and almost
Bavngery, c o m -mnndlng
atten
tion for Its giant
strides upward
toward tho pinna
clo whero the sun
of progress al
ways shines.
iUKw--
L R1 Mil. SMrraiTmfelfcn
-0 n$8Vt auditob " !Str
V- iSF -jjgfffrl H ASSEMBLES WILL EE HELD. W
J WOMAN'S BUILDING, TtNNESCEE CENTENNIAL EXPOSmCN.
All around are
tho evidences of
what men nre doing
today in all the
varied avocations
which claim tho
oxerclno of hand
nnd brain. Away
off nnd outside tho
exposition boun
darkG lies tho ov
crydny llfo of tho
modern world, city
nnd town, vlUnRO
nnd farm land, rail
roads, sky-touching business blcc3
nnd olcctrlc HghtH. The RIalto of
Venice, symbol of tho medieval
age, rises near tho pyramid
of tho Choons. snannlnK a rib
bon of water so narrow It lpoka as
If n boy might leap It, with ono foot
on tho side of tho nineteenth century
and tho other nt tho door of tho Par
thenon. Thrco thousand years arc here
linked by a few wooden beams. Tho
pyramidal symbol of uncounted C3n
turles looks on. Tho (lag of the Amer
ican nation floats high overhead.
Something of all theso varied aspects
of Na8hvillo's whlto city entered the
hearts of tho thousands who stood in
tho exposition auditorium last Satur
day morning nt 11 o'clock. Right Rev
orond Thomas F. Gallor, coadjutor bis
hop of Tennesseo, Invoked divine
blessings. President J. W. Thomas
offered tho completed work to tho
people. Gov. Taylor spoko for Ten
nessee. Director General Lewis told
what had been dono and delivered the
keys to President Thomas. Tho band
plnyed and tho audience sang "The
Star-Spangled Ranner," "Hnll, Colum
bia," "Dixie" and "America."
Tho following special days have been
asked for and will bo nsslgned later:
Hrooklyn day, corporation day,
Scotch-Irish day, Marblo day, Ireland's
day, German-American day, Swiss day,
Iron dny, Chamber of Commorco day,
police dny, miners' day, railway men"n
day and printers' dny.
Conventions I'laiineii.
As if special dayB were not enough
to Insure tho attendance of g.od
crowds at the exposition, Nashville ha3
Bet out to gather all of tho 3,000 con
ventions of ono kind nnd another
which meet In this country during tho
summer nnd fall. Commissioner Gen
eral WHIb has betn after them. Among
those which have agreed to meet hero
or to como hero In a body on adjourn
ment elsewhere, with tho dates of
mooting, are tho following: May 1-3,
Supremo seuato, K. A. Essenlc Order:
7-8, Freight Claim Association; 12,
National Association of Stove Manu
facturers, will meet In Detroit and
como to Nnshvlllo after adjournment;
11, Wolverine Stato Prc33 Association,
meet In Utlca, Mich., and como to
Nashvlllo In a body, reaching here May
14, and remain three days: 17, Nation
al Good Citizens' convention; 17-18,
women's musical congress; 18, Unit
ed Order Golden Cross, suprome com
mandery; 19, Hocking nnd Ohio Val
ley Press Association; 19-20, Tennes
see State Hankers' Association; 28,
Stato Press Association of South Caro
lina, meet In Nowberry, 8. C, May 25
and 26, and como to Nashville in a
body, May 28; in May, but no fixed
date, national road parliament and
farmers' congress; southern Irrigation
congress. Juno 1-5, Natlonnl T. P.
A. of America; 1-5, Grand Lodge
KnlghtB and Ladles' of Honor; 2,
stato convention Republican Lcnguo of
Tennessee; 2, Grand Army of tho Re
public, Tennetsco department; 2, Ala
bama and Tcnnesseo divisions of Sons
of Veterans and Women's Relief Corps
of Tennessee; 8, Stato of Tcnnesseo
Master Plumbers' Association; 9,
Knights and Ladles of Dixie; 10, Al
abama Press Association nrrlvo in
Nashvlllo; 15, Tcnnesseo Press As
sociation; 20, National Association
of Labor Commissioners of tho Unit
ed States; 21-22, surviving Terry Tex
as rangers; 22-23-24, United Confed
erate Veterans; 24-25, Mississippi
Press Association. July 20, Interna
tional Association of Distributors; 20
23, Senate Natlonnl Union; 21, Tennes
seo Druggists' Association. August
3-5, Stenographers' Centennial Associ
ation; 17, Crockett Clan; 17, Daugh
ters of America Auxiliary to the Jun
ior Order United American Mechanics;
30, general lnsuranco ngents' conven
tion; unplaced, Lumber Manufactur
ers' Association. September 7-8-9,
United States Veterinary Medical As
sociation; 9-10. American Fruit Grow
ers' Union; 21-23, National Associa
tion Mexican War Veterans; 23-20, Na-
tlonal Spiritualists' grand mass con
vention; 27, Journeymen plumber.',
gas fitters, steam fitters nnd steam fit
ters' helpers of the United States nnd
Canada. October 1-15, American So
ciety of Religious Education; 4-8, Na
tional Pythian Press Association ; 5
10, American Society of Municipal Im
provement; 7-10, Sons and Daughters
of tho American Revolution; 7-9,
commercial men's congress; 8-9, Amer
ican Association Stato Weather Ser
vlco; 12, TrI-Btato Medical Society of
Alabama, Georgia and Tennespco; 12
15, American Association of Traveling
Passenger Agents; 13-15, American
Humano Association; 13-15, Sigma Nu
fraternity; 15-1G, American Medical
Asscclution of Colored Physicians; 18
21, Internal Revenue Employes' Na
tional Association; 19-20-21, Sonthcrn
Homeopathic Medical Association; 19
24, C3iigrebs of religions; 26, National
Council of Women. The following or
ganizations nre coming, but date3 havo
not been announced: Natlonnl con
ference of state boards of health, Afro
Araerlcan Press Association, National
PROMINENT OFFICERS
1 Adjutant Otneral Charles Hykea,
llson. Chlif of AKrtcuitural Department;
Dt-partmont: 4 A. i:. Uaird, CMlf of
j'lunnct, viiici ot I'epartinent or m'Kieiio;
Depattment; J. ii. itruce. Chlf of
li
Chairman Building nnd Interior Decorations; l Mrs. C. N. Orosvenor of Muinphni!
vice i-rennieiii ur em lennmseu; la airn. amry iioyce "leiiinie, vico I'realuent
for l?nst Teniietet: u MIb M. 8. I.elieck, Chairman Muslo Committee; 12 Mr
J. Hunter Orr. Chairman Decorative nnd Applied Arts: 13 Mr. Matthew Iiar
iw Pipf- f'biriniHi of Bnico Commutes; M Mr. Juntos Mnrohall, Head
Chairman Historical Colonial Relics.
Congress of Afro-American Women,
United Typothetao of North America,
National Young Men's Christian As
sociation (colored), American Federa
tion of Labor, Conference of charltlos
and corrections for tho southern states,
American Forestry Association.
Men Who Have Done the Wrk.
Tho following Hat comprises the offi
cers, standing committees and depart
ment chiefs of tho exposition, upon
whom tho task has devolved of making
It a success:
Officers President, John W. Thom
as; first vico president, Van Leer Kirk
man; second vico president, W. A. Hen
derson, Knoxville; third vico president,
John Overton, Jr., Memphis; secretary,
Charles E. Currey; treasurer. W. P.
Tanner; director general, E. C. Lowls;
commissioner general, A. W. Wills;
director of affairs, William L. Dudley;
auditor, Frank Goodman; general
counsel, S. A. Champion.
Executive Committee J. W. Thom
as, E. E. Bartholl, G. II. Uaskette, II.
E. Palmer, J. C. Necly, A. II. Robinson,
Tully Brown, J. II. Fall, J. W. Thomas,
Jr.,-J. II. McDowell, J. W. Daker, Thos.
D. Fife, W. L. Dudley, L. E. Wright,
John I. McCann, II. W. Buttorff, S. M.
Murphy, M. J. Dalton, J. Vandervcnter,
m. ii. Lurton, E. W. Cole, W. H. Jack
son, B. F. Wilson, V. L. Klrkman, W.
P. Tanner, S. A. Champion, W. A. Hen
derson, S. J. Keith, E. C. Lewis, J. Ov
erton, Jr.
Standing Committees: Finance
Samuel J. Keith, chairman; John N.
Sperry, W. S. Settle, Edgar Jones and
Joseph II, Thompson. Instnllatlon
William L. Dudley, chairman; J. H.
Bruce, J. II. Eakln, A. II. Robinson nnd
M. S. Lchccli. Privileges nnd conces
sions E. E. Uarthcll, chalrmnn; W. O.
Collier, John J. McCann, O. J. Timothy,
James L. Do Movllle, Charles Moloney,
secretary. Music and amusements
William L. Dudley, chairman; Hcrmnn
Justl, Alfred E. Howell, E. J3. Baithell
A. H. Stewart, D. G. Charles, manngei
Classification-E. C. Lewis, chairman;
Theodore Coolcy. T. F. P. Allison. A
H. Robinson, J. M. Safford, J. D. Plun
kett, Charles Sykes, Richard Hill, Wil
liam L. Dudley, J. H. Bruce, George
Reycr, J. W. Braid. A. E. Balrd, V. L.
Klrkmun and W. T. Davis. Legislation
(national) J. W. Baker, chairman; E.
B. Rtahlman, II. Clay Evans, D. A. Car
penter nnd H. C. Anderson. Legisla
tion (state) J. M. Head, chairman; W,
J. McMurray, A. A. Taylor, J. W.
Gnlnes, S. B. Williamson, W. II. Mceks,
Zack Taylor, W. B. Swaney nnd Lee
Brock. Grounds and buildings E. C.
Lewis, chairman; J. Matt Williams, M.
M. Gardiner, J. B. Richardson nnd W.
C. Kllvlngton. Committee on awards
WIlllamL. Dudley, chairman; A. H.
uomnson anu u. ii. UasKtae.
Department and Bureau Chiefs Pro
motion and publicity, Herman Justl;
fine arts, Theodoro Cooley; commerce
and manufactures, J. H. Bruce.
Artificial liable.
In a recent lecture Prof. A. P. Brown
of Philadelphia described tho methods
now practised for making artificial
gems. Although minute diamonds can
bo made, with tho aid of the electric
furnace, none large enough to be em
ployed In Jewelry havo yet been pro
duced. But rubles of large size, and as
fine in color nnd appearance as the best
natural gerat, huve been made. Tho
ruby Is composed of oxldo of aluminum.
A certain method of detecting, artifi
cial rubles Is by examination with a
microscope. Tho natural gem Is al
ways filled with minute crncks.lnvislblu
to tho naked eyo, but perfectly discern
ible with a high magnifying power. The
utlilclal ruby has no cracks, but, on
the other hand, is filled with minute
bubbles, or gas-holes. This tost, ac
cording to Prof. Brown, Is tho only one
by which tho best artificial rubles can
be distinguished from the samo gems
as nature makes them.
OF THE
EXPOSITION.
Chlof Military Department: 2
J Dr. Jamex M. Surtoril, Cli
the Forestry Dtpuitmtnt:-
:-T.
P. I At.
Of ot Mineral
1 K IJr. .?. r
o uconro Meyer.
Chief of Machinery
Commorco Department
COCAINE INEBRIETY,
ptclalUU
T.nrcely Illumed
for th
Spread of the Corse.
Tho medical press comments on the
gravity of the Incrcaso In many parts
of tho world of cocaine inebriety. Much
of the onus Is placed on druggists,
dentists, rhlnologlsts and Laryngolo
gists, on tho part of whom, It is main
tained, tho frcp prescription of the drug
should bo checked, says tho Pittsburg
Dispatch. Remembering that overy
Individual may live some special
Idiosyncrasy against some particular
drug tho first application of cocaine
should bo made very carefully, as, in
deed, should every subsequent one.
There can bo no doubt that many Bpc
clallsts nre responsible for establishing
tho cocaine habit with n great many
of their patients In having treated cory
zas, hay fevers nnd othor local discom
forts of tho nasal passages with solu
tions of cocaine. Tho constitutional ef
fect is pronounced nnd alluring. A
medical may says ho has now In mind
almost a score of such victims, who
would hnvo dono far better to havo
worried along with their liny fevers
and other nasal annoyances than to bo
afflicted with tho cocaine habit, which
is a hundred times worse than tho dis
ease for which It Is used. Tho great
est number of victims is to bo found
nmong Bocicty women and among wom
en who havo adopted Iltcraturo as a
profession; nnd there Is no doubt that
a considerable proportion of chronic
cocalnists have fallen under tho do
Inlon of the drug from a desire to stim
ulate their powers of Imagination. Oth
ers have acquired tho habit quite Inno
cently from taking coca wines fortified
with salts of tbo alkaloid in solution.
Both coca Wines mado from cocaine
nnd cocaine lozenges and tablets should
be supplied with the utmost caution
and prescriptions containing cocalno
should not bo dispensed a second tlmo
without being relnltlalod by tho pre
scribes The symptoms experienced by
tho victims of the cocalno habit aro
Illusions of sight and hearing, neuro
muscular Irritability and localizing an
aesthesia. After a tlmo Insomnia su
pervenes and tho patient displays a
curious hesitancy and nn Inability to
arrive at a decision on even tho most
trivial mnttor. One drug habit speed
ily engenders another nnd tho victim
of chronic cocnlnlBm Is usually addict
ed to overindulgence In alcohol, be
sides being a confirmed cigarette
smoker.
Warning.
When your dear girl gazes at you,
With a glanco to melt you through,
Don't Imagine, Ilko a stupid,
That her thoughts aro all of you.
'l'en to one her dainty musing
Is constricted on this wise:
"When we're married, won't I break
him
Of his horrid taste in ties."
Detroit Journal.
FOOTWEAR.
Tho Portuguese shoe has a wooden
boIc and heel, and a vamp mado of pat
ent leather, fancifully showing tho flesh
sldo of tho skin.
The Persian footgear Is a raised shoe
and is often a foot high. It Is made
of light wood, richly inlaid, with a
strap extending over tho Instep,
Tho Algerian shoe In appearance Is
not unllko tho English wooden clogs.
Tho shoo Is mnde entirely of leather
In tho simplest form, and usually with
out any ornamentation.
Tho Armenian shoo has a leather solo
and heel, without counter and back
quarter. Tho vamp Is mado of felt,
und is beautifully ornamented with
needlework, dono in colored silk
thread.
Tho Muscovite shoo Is hand woven
on a wooden frame, but little attention
being paid to tho shapo of tho foot
Leather Is sometimes used, but tbo
sandal is generally mado ot colored
silk cordago and woolon cloth.
Tho Russian boot is composed ot
many pieces of morocco In several col
ors put together In tho shapo to please
the taste ot tho wearer or maker. Tho
foot of tho boot Is beautifully em
bossed with thread in bright colors.
Siameso shoes have the form of an
cient canoes, with a gondola bow and
open top. Tho solo Is made of wood,
and the upper of inlaid wood and cloth
and tho exterior Is elaborately orna
mented in colors, and with gold and
silver.
Tho Mussulman's shoe Is ot heavy
leather. It is adjusted to tbo foot by
a wldo leather strap which runs from
tho heel and buckles over tho Instep.
The only ornamentation Is tho fasten
ing of two feather plumes on tho right
ildo of the toe.
Tho sandal worn by tho Egyptians
Ib composed of a solo mado by sticking
together threo thicknesses ot leather.
This Is held on tho foot by a band pass
ing across tho Instep. Tho sandal Ij
beautifully stitched wl.th threads of
different colors.
The Hungarian shoo or moccasin is
mado of raw hide, prepared by a sun
curing process. It Is bound togethet
with mnny thongs ot raw' hide. Loop)
or thongs extend upward round tho an
kle, and through tho loops Is passed
a strapwhlch Is buckled at tho sides.
The Grecian shoe Is made almost en
tirely of leather, und has a thickly
padded solo with a sharp turn-up toe,
which Isi surmounted by a lnrgo ball
of colored wool or hair. Tho shoo Is
fleece-lined, nnd Is gorgeously decor
ated with beads and ornamental stitch
Ing. Tho ttJog worn by tho Japaneeo u
ot wool and as viewed from t!ie sldo
is tht shapo of n boy's Bk-Igo. It Is
fastened to tho foot by u sti Ing, which
passes between tho great nnd second
toe, nnd ncross the fornw. A strap,
nn Inch In width, mid Until w,4h Uuon,
Is carried ncross tho Instep.
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