w K i V T Br STrXmNXTS G MO s fe t o rftfi H M JTsSia ONG Before the discovery of America there flourished in southern Mexico Guatemala and parts of Honduras a great civilization which has heen call ed the Maya It may be said at the outset without exaggeration that this civilization had reached a height equalled by no other people of the western hemisphere prior to the com ing of the white man In architecture in sculpture and in printing the Mayas excelled Their priests were astronomers of no mean ability hav ing observed and recorded without the aid of in struments of precision such as are known to us the lengths of the Solar and Venus years and probably the lengths of the Mercury and Mara fears In addition to this they had developed i calendar system and perfected a chronology which in some of its characteristics was supe rior to our own The the ancient glory of this people had long ilnce departed when Hernando Cortez first same in contact with them on the coast of Yu tatan In 1519 Their star had set Their great ist cities had been abandoned and lay in ruins nd their country waa prostrated by the quar rels of a score or more of petty Independent jhleftalns each of whom waa waging war on the other Even the memory of the older cit ies of their culture such as Palenque Copan nd Quiniqua for example seems to have pass ed from the mind of men their former existence forgotten Famine pestilence and internecino strife are al said to have been contributory causes to the decay and eclipse which overtook thiB brilliant aboriginal civilization several centuries before the Span ish first set foot in the new world Probably the largest and certainly the most magnifi cent of the ruined cities which the Spanish conquer ors found on their arrival in Yucatan was Chichen Itza around which even in its desolation there still clus ter a thousand traditions of former sanctity and splen dor The name Chichen Itza is Maya and means Chi mouth Chen wells and Itza the name of the Maya tribe who lived in the neighbor hood of the place The Mouth of the Wells of the Itzas therefore iB the meaning of the name nor could a more appropriate quo have been applied to the place by any people The whole peninsula of Fucatan Is a vast limestone formation with Ut ile or no surface water One may travel for miles and miles and never cross river or brook or even chance upon a modest spring Indeed in the northern part where most of the great ruined cities are located water is fully 70 feet below the surface of the ground The modern Inhabitants overcome this difficulty by means of wells and windmills which afford the only source of water Bupply during the dry sea son December to June excepting what little rain water may have been caught during the rainy months and stored In cisterns But of wella and windmills the ancient May as knew nothing and generally speaking had It not been for the great natural reservoirs which nature had scattered here and there aver the country Yucatan never could have been colonized These great natural wells or as the Mayas sail them cenotes are found all over Yucatan They are usually about 150 feet In diameter or sometimes more and about 70 feet in depth to the level of the water Geologists say that these cenotes are places where the limestone crust -which everywhere covers the surface of Yucatan has become weakened by the washing of subterranean waters and has cal lapsed of Its own weight forming great sink holes or natural wells on a large scale And now It is clear why the ancient Inhabitants of Chichen Itza so named their city In the course of their wanderings the general trend of which was northward the Itzas entering Yucatan from the south finally reached the two cenotes around which Chichen Itza later was built but which then was probably noth ing but wilderness Here the striking contrast afforded by such an abundance of water in a country so generally parched could not fail to have attracted their attention The place must have seemed to the thirsty wanderers a God given site for the location of their new home By right of discovery they claimed the place and to the city which grew up around the cen otes they gave the name of Chichen Itza The Mouth of the Wella of the Itzas The two cenotes at Chichen Itza have been known by the Mayas from time Immemorial b the Cenote Grande and the Cenote Sacra or the large Cenote and the Sacren Cenote re spectively The first of these only in former times was used for the water supply of the city the Sacred Cenote being reserved for re ligious use exclusively It is the latter how ever and the religious observances held In connection with it which gave the city Its holy character From far and near all over Yucatan and probably even from points more distant pilgrimages were made to the Sacred Cenote It seems to have been the most holy shrine of the Maya people comparable only In Importance to the Mohammedan Mecca and the Christian Jerusalem In time of drought offerings of all kinds were thrown into it treasures and in cases of extremity even liv ing human sacrifices Chichen Itza today is somewhat changed in appearance from the time when pilgrims came from far and near to appease with human sac rifice the wrath of offended deities Now the city lies burled in a thick jungle which has steadily won Its way Into the very heart of the holy place Colonnades have been over thrown and pyramids covered with trees to their summit courts have been lost In a tangle of thorn and creepers and palaces stripped of their sculptured embellishment Desolation has spread everywhere In the wake of the encroaching vegetation ffO VW Of TSt A0rAS Off StOAASTWY To visit the ancient city now one jolts for 15 long and weary miles In a two wheeled cov ered cart drawn by three mules over the rough est kind of a highway imaginable This pres ent Inconvenience fortunately Is not to be one of long standing A new and straight road is about to be built and an automobile service to the ruins probably established which will shorten the present length of the trip from four hours to about half an hour Now how ever this ride from Cltas the nearest railroad point seems Interminable The road so called by courtesy only winds through the Im penetrable bush which everywhere In the nat ural state covers northern Yucatan Through this the creaking cart finds a dubious way mile after mile until every muscle in ones body groans an agonized protest Finally when it seems that the limit of physical endurance has been reached the cart suddenly lurches around a sharp turn In the road and as If by magic the lofty Castillo flashes Into view towering high above the plain and the rest of the city In Its lonely magnificence Thia imposing structure the higheat in Yu catan rises 78 feet above the plain The pyramid on which the temple stands la 195 feet long on each side at the base and covers about an acre of ground The Castillo would seem to have been the center of the ancient city and probably lt3 chief sanctuary To the north Ilea the Sacred Cenote and the causeway just mentioned leading to it On the east is a vast group of buildings colonpades courts and pyramids The City of a Thousand Columns as some one has picturesquely described it Due west is the group of structures known as the Ball Court To the south for half a mile or more scattered through the jungle are pyramids courts temples and palaces The central lo cation of the Castillo with reference to all of these as well as Its great size and command ing height argue strongly that It waa the chief sanctuary of the Holy City Another interesting group of structures at Chichen Itza perhaps slightly less sacred in character than the Castillo is the so called Ball Court mentioned above as lying just west of the Castillo This group Is composed of two parallel masses of solid masonry aach 272 feet long 27 feet high and 16 feet wide placed 119 feet apart from each other These two great walls for such they really are form a court nearly 300 feet long by 119 feet wide High on the side of each at the middle point from end to end there is attached a stone ring four feet In diameter with a hole through it These rings are fastened to thlr respec tive walls by tenons of stone and are so placed that the surface of each 13 perpendicu lar to the vertical face of the wall The ar rangement Is very similar to the baskets in our modern game of basket ball except that at Chichen Itza the baskets have their open ings perpendicular to the ground while in our game the openings in the baskets are parallel with the ground To make a basket at the Chichen Itza court a somewhat horizontal throw as In baseball was necessary while nowadays it is a toss that wins the goal At the open ends of the court formed by these two walls stand temples which in effect inclose the area definitely marking its boun daries On top of the east wall at its south ern end there Is a beautiful temple which affords a commanding view of the entire court This has been called The House of the Tigers because of a frieze of stalking tigers which Is sculptured in alto relievo around the rfft tXatfjitaKjr 1MJtLaKmffjcmXij mmmimmmmzmm3r 1 1 1 t TiitTTtT n i t i r i r iimiiiiiii ut riT 1 tn iiSlTini TK i rw tBWwm i iB i TffwiTBTMHPOISiw JIF TTiTnrnBtssTit i t IPillsii v BO III l l l MOKHMHiBiHIBgMBMBiHiHBnBHnMMfl Tf CASTJLIO QfiCASTJ 8lLm CA1JLD TSf GLc5A OJ CHLtfCrt Hlliiill 0kilmM 0 vw cr tjwjl cajulo cfofifcfaa a a r3Ciic -- - rrv -vi - i riiffi rO5r T2vrSP - - J3 c termwZrJ rV PAMOfiAMA Of TfJVy5 OFCmcHEN JTZJ outside of the building This temple contains also on the walls of an interior room an elab orate mural painting representing an attack by some enemy upon a city perhaps Chichen Itza itself and its defense by the inhabitants Some of the poses taken by the combatants in the conflict are extremely realistic such as In the throwing of Javelins the swinging of war clubs and the like This bit of mural decora tion in The House of The Tigers at Chichen Itza probably markB the high water mark of aboriginal painting In the Western Hemi sphere at least It is superior to everything else that has survived The Identification of these two great walls and the temples associated with them as a ball court rests on firm historic foundation When the Spanish first came to Mexico they found the natives playing a game of ball which was of sufficient importance to have a spe cial court or ground set apart for its exclu sive use Several of the early Spanish writers have described the game in some detail and all agree as to its having played an Important part in the life of the people One chronicler has it that the object of the game was to strike the ball so that It would pass through the opening in the stone ring above mentioned as an Important feature of the Chichen Itza court He adds that the feat was one of con siderable dexterity since the ball could not be hit with the hands but that the hips or other parts of the body had to be used instead This rule of the game very materially in creased the difficulty in making a Maya bas ket so much so in fact we are told that the lucky player making this winning stroke had forfeit to him as a reward for his skill all the clothing and ornaments of the spectators At such times the chronicler concludes the spectators were wont to scatter in all direc tions without loss of time hoping thus to es cape paying the penalty but that the friends of the lucky player Immediately gave chase and endeavored to exact the full forfeit Although the name Ball Court has been giv en to this group of temples at Chichen Itza it should not be supposed on that account that this great court was built primarily for sport Such an explanation of its fundamental purpose i3 incompatible with any conception which the American aborigine ever seems to have entertained To the Itza people the chief function of their Ball Court was doubtless a religious one Games played there If not actually held in connection witli religious fes tivals were at least sufficiently religious In their meaning as to completely overshadow the element of sport as we understand the term That a game was played in which com petition and skill entered In cannot be doubt ed in the face of contemporaneous evidence and to this extent perhaps tne Mexican Ball Courts were athletic fields but It must not be forgotten for a moment that its true significance- was religious and that the games which were played there probably were held only in connection with religious festivals It Is not improbable however that the Aztecs were breaking away from the religious feature of sport at the time of the Spanish Conquest but that The Holy Men of the Itzas as the peo ple of Chichen Itza are sometimes called In the early manuscripts had taken any such a radical step Is little short of inconceivable so religious In character was the whole Maya civilization To the east of the Castillo lie a great group of courts pyramids and colonnades The City of a Thousand Columns already mentioned i fist Here desolation is wide spread It seems as though an earthquake must luve shaken the Itza capital at some time Row after row of col umns have been over turned and now lie pros trate within a foot of their original positions Perhaps a capital or a drum here and there is broken but for the most part the stones He just where they felL In its entirety thia section of the city must have presented an imposing appearance being literally a forest of columns surrounding and connecting the various courts As to the use of these great colonnades tradition and his tory are equally silent Some think that they were the law courts of the ancient city where justice was administered and punishment meted out Others say that they were the market places where the produce of the sur rounding country was bought and sold This latter explanation has one strong recommenda tion in its favor in that the descendants of the builders of the ancient city of Yucatan the present Maya Indians still hold their mar kets under the portals surrounding the plazas In the towns and villages throughout the coun try today South of the Cenote Grande there are a num ber of well preserved structures most of them presenting beautifully sculptured facades To these fanciful names have been given which probably have little or nothing to do with the original uses of the buildings One large structure for example has been called The Akabtzlb The name Is Maya and means The House of the Dark Writing This build ing was so called because of the fact that over one of its Interior doorways there is a lintel inscribed with hieroglyphs This lintel is so placed that the hieroglyphics can only be seen by artificial light hence the name The Houbo of the Dark Writing Nearby is a round tower with but one exception the only structure of its kind in the Maya area This is called The Caraco Caracol is the Spanish word for snail and since the interior circular corridor and spiral stairway of this structure bear some remote resemblance to the convolutions of a snail shell the name was applied to the building The Manjos Spanish for monastery is perhaps the most beautiful building at Chichen Itza It Is composite showing three different periods of construction The above are only a few of the many struc tures at Chichen Itza But In all directions tot several miles the brush Is strewn with ruins Crumbling walla and Jungle ridden courts are to be encountered on every side disintegration -so far advanced that these once splendid pal aces and temples are now but little more than shapeless mounds of fallen masonry The total area covered by ruins which may be assigned to this center of primitive population has been estimated by some as high as ten square miles That larger Maya cities yet remain to be dis covered now seem highly improbable so thor oughly has the general exploration of the area been done Consequently we may affirm with but little hesitation that The Holy City of the Itzas was the largest and most Important of the Maya civilization and probably of abor Iginal America as well THE SIGH FOR LEISURE Lives there the man who has not sighed for leisure And lives there the man who in his more sober moments has not been honestly glad that he must work Human nature which sweetens under toil sours in leisure And It is by no means sure that the fall from innocence which first brought work Into the world and all our woe was not bringing salvation dis guised as labor Faithfulness will dignify and beautify even drudgery no matter what the work Is provided It la honest if It Is done well it commands our instinctivo respect Besides If we did not all have to work so hard to keei alive the Jails would -have standing room only Thackerays Kindness of Heart Thackeray was the gentlest satin 1st that ever lived As editor of the Cornhill he could hardly bring him self to reject a MSfor fear of hurting his would be contributors The story of his actually paying for contribu tions that he never printed in order to conceal the fact that he had reject ed them may be true or false We d not remember exactly how the evi dence points But even if it be 3 story such stories are not told of men made of the stern stuff of the Thack eray commonly misknown Lead in Salt Industry The six leading states in the salt Industry are Michigan New York Ohio Kansas Louisiana and Cali fornia and in 1909 these six states produced salt valued at 7714557 The salt from these states is obtained from rock salt sea water and natural brine In other words from all the known sources of salt Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children and see that it Eears the Sjf XT sixtm Signature of JofM In Use For Over 30 Years Children Cry for Fletchers Castoria In Eden The Serpent Whats Adam so grouchy about today The Ape Oh he says that the ar rival of woman means that all hi3 plans for universal peace have been knocked 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