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THE SUN t4NMY MARCH 30 19JD2
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HE MEXICOS PASSION PLAY
TIlE PEXiTEXTES AND HEIR
fetor f the Craetnxlon Still ReprodaeedA on 3oo l Frlrtay by Indians In a Remote
1ll f Psnanee That eoee CausedDeath Ttiey Are Revere
Vt M Maroh 27Araong7 tlm Amerioans who flock onoe in ten years
to see tho Passion play at Oberammerd gnu thoro ore few who know of the more7 realUtin performance given yearly by
tho Penltontee of New Mexico This performanoe was flnt adequately described
5 by Adolphe Bandolier In a report issuedby the Smithsonian Institution about tenyears ago
The full title of the Ponit ntes Is LosHermoaos Penlt nts meaning The Pen
K tent rbthen Tb order was establisheds in New Mexico at the time of the SpanishS conquest under Coronado about 1MO
panled the Spaniards was to form a societyfor zeal among the natives Theytaught the natives that sin might be explated by flagellation and other personal
5 sufferingAs passed the and half
breed eaalota sought to prove their eny thUlIum by fiercer selfimposed ordealsM of suffering The Ides of enacting the
tntvaU of the Master on Calvary wasvohred Henoa the Passion play of thePealUnte on each Good Friday
Mr Bandelier learned from the Spanisharchlros that as early as UM a crucifixion In
twentyseven men were actuallyoed to crosses for a took place
n Good Friday after several weeks ofpdov mortification of with knives anoaotua thorns The Penitent nwnberedsome 0000 at the time of the AmericanMaxfaan War in 1B48 The Catholic Churchbaa long labored to abolish their practicesBo have the civil authorities
Jlfty years ago there were branches ofKM Penltsntos in seventeen localities theterritory and oruolflxiona took place ineach of the branches The organizationhas 4noe gradually died away
Nowadays the sole remnant of the orderIs In the valley of Ban Mateo seventyfive-mflet northeast from Santa
There II no railroad nearer than sixtymUss Some 900 Mexicans still cling tothe doctrine that ones misdeeds are to besquared by physical pain during fortydays of each year finally closing with acrucifixion
Most of the Penitentea live at Too avery old adobe pueblo They are sheepand cattle herders Not one In a dozenof them can read and write In Spanishand they have as little knowledge of Englishas if they lived In the heart of Mexico
Tho Penitent keep their membershipa secret nowadays They meet In theirprimitive adobe council chambers moraden at night and they conduct their flagel-lations and crucifixions as secretly u pos-sible Charles F Luramls of Los AngelesOil was nearly shot to death by an assassinfor photographing a Penltente crucifixiona few years ago
T The Penitentea have several night meetduring the year but it is only In Lefit
that they are active They have a headthe Hermano Mayor whose mandates arestrictly followed on pain of death Aiolphe-Bandeller has written that upto a halfcentury ago there were instances of dis-obedient and treacherous brother Pententes having been buried alive
In Lent the Penltentes have nightmeetings several times a week at themornda One day they will whip oneanother on another day they go to ElCalrario Ue Calvary a little hill awayfrom the town where they coat their bodieswith asjiM and all the time call in lamenta-tion for a witness to their sense of ulnfulness i For snverat days at a time they gowithout food and they spend whole nightsIn tearful prayer
When Holy Week comes the Intensityof the fanaticitm increases They havebeen seen to thrust cactus spines Into oneanother1 naknd backs until the flesh swelledowing to the tortur caused by thousandsof nettles under the akin They have beenknown ta crawl on all like lizards overbill and vale fnr miles at a time to provetheir humility Belflahlng with shortwhips similar to oato ninetails U cornmoo and young men have died from ex-haustion and lou of blood during too zealousflagellation
On Good Friday the Hermano Mayornames ones who have ohonen toU the JCM CAr the P ter the PontiutPUsh Jfory the JortAa and so oo for theplay Notwithstanding torture In-
volved In the Impernonatlon many Penltnt arc annually inont desirous of beingtb Ckrift Tl play I given on FJ raInrIo
While P MTO blow a sharp air on athm man who U acting the rt of UM-
Kavingr OIIIUM forth HUnnly gannxnt Ujuaiiiii nf iiion WUng or muslin
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In the Ran Rita UounUlna severaldeaths among tho Penitent because ofpoisoning by the cactus thorns and thelashing the men had endured The Pentente believe that no death la so desirableas that caused by participation In the actingof the travail of the Lord
After the first half hour of noise andflagellation about the cross at El Calvariothe excitement dIM away Tho crucifiedman whoso arms and legs are now blackunder the bonds must bo suffering inde-scribable pain but ho only exclaims ocaslonally in Spanish Peace peace peanewhile the Penitent who haw had no partin the punishment prostrate themselvessilently about the cross
As the sun slowly descends behind themountain peaks tho pipcro rises to hisfeet and blowing a long harsh air uponhis flute leads M procession of the peopleback to the Somo of the leadingPonltentea remain behind and lower theman from the cross
Then following the narrative of the sceneson Calvary lila body is wrapped about with-a mass of white fabric and is carried to adugout cave in the hillside near at handIn the cave the bleeding and tortured body-of the chief actor la nursed to strengthIf the man is of great endurance and ruggedphysical strength ho will probably be ready-to go home to his family in the eveningconscious of having made ample atonement-for long years of sin and having earned areputation that many men in Taos havecoveted
Until a score of years ago women joined-In the balancing of the Penltontes accountswith Heaven by selfImposed bodily suffer-ing No longer ago than when Wallace was Governor of the Territory hun-dred of women scourged themselves untUtheir backs and shoulders were raw
MUSKOX FOR VKIP IOJIKWilliam c Whitney Presents a Rare Animal
to the Zoological ParkThe only living muskox ever exhibited-
on the American Continent is now at theNew York Zoological Park to remainas long as It will consent to live Afterlong negotiations beginning in San Frandeco across the continentit was finally purchased by William CWhitney and by him presented to theZoological Park The price paid was11600
Thus far only three live specimens ofthe mu kox have ever reached civiltxatlon The other two were taken on theeastern coast of Greenland In 1499 by aSwedish exploring expedition
Both were sold to Carl Hagenbfclc ofHamburg and by him one was sold to theBerlin Zoological Gardens and the otherto the Duko of Bedford At last accountsboth were still living
The specimen in the Zoological Park1s a female and was captured in MarchIDOl directly north of Great Bear Lakeand about twentyfive miles Inland fromthe Arctic Ocean She wu captured-by a party of American whalers andEsquimaux sent out by U H captain-of the steam whaler Boluga which vesselwas wintering near that point-
A herd of twentyfour muskox wasencountered and four yearling calveswere captured alive Of these two werekilled by the Esquimaux dogs before reach-ing the ship and another was killed bythem on board
The Beluga reached Bnn Franoisoo onNov with the mu kox in excellenthealth Bhn was exhibited in thatfor a month then taken to Chicago andexhibited at thewhich she was to New York forexhibition at another Sportsmens l8howAt the latter she won notbefore the public and few visit-ors realized rare zoological prize onview
For three months the ownenof the animalhad It a valuation so high
of the owners Julius Friemer ofopened negotiations with the directors of
and named aprice which was considered reasonableThrough the friendly cooperation of Thomas-J desire to
this Rpecimon was placed beforeWilliam C Wwtn who gavehi nhck for the purchase price
Excepting the bears and thepresented by
W M HarViman this rariwtthat ha thus been secured the
Park In honor of the daughter-of Buffalo Jones the littlelrf eii named OUv
The mUAkoz arrived at the park lastThursday and ban the
enclosures on Mountain SheepHill formerly occupied by theand iwar ixwr and raoooontree Signs have tiM it on adjacentwalks to POint out her
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THE MURDERS AT BEAUMONT
A SERIES OF CIUMES SAID TO HEWITHOUT A PARALLEL
At L it a forest Btrangrn Ixirrd to aDmand Murdered Month TheirHouSe River Hun-dred nobhtd A Woman Conreuri
NEW OnLziNH March 28 A1 the In-
dications ate that the mystery of the bodiesfound floating in the Neohes River nearBeaumont the town beensolved and when all of it Isbrought out will be one of the grewsome tales of murder ever evenexcepting tho Burke murders In Edin-burgh or the human slaughter houso ofthe flanders in Kansas The six murderedmen wore found in the riverat in the last two months wereonly half the victims of the gong and probably 400 other men were robbed by thogang and escaped murder only becausethey did not wake up at the wrong moment
Such wholesale robbery and murder hasnever before been known The policehave nine persons under arrest as impli-cated In these crimes six white men onenegro man and two negro women Otherarrests are expected
For the exposure of the crime the policedeserve little credit The story came outsimply because one of the women Involvedcould no longer stand the strain of theguilt and became frightened for her ownlife Previous to her confession there wasnot even a suspicion as to the manner ofthe crime
the body was found In the29 the belief was
that it wee a case of suicidebodies floated down the river
to the Gulf before this discovery no one canknow A second and then a third bodywere found and It was evident that murdersof an unusual character were being com-mitted Each body had the skull crackedand each was attired merely In under-clothing
Having decided that the bodies mutthave been dumped into the Neohes at acertain the police watched that
night In the ofthe criminals In
watch more corpses appeared in the riverAnother fact not altogether remarkable
considering the condition of affairs InBeaumont and yet of a disturbing char-acter was that the murdered men wereall unknown in Beaumont Clad as theywere in their underclothing there were nopapers or other means to identify themand no one of the hundreds who lookedat the bodies could remember havingseen the victims Finally no one reportedany missing relatives
There has rush of strangersto ever ethos the oil discoveries
among these strangers thatthe murderers had operated They ap-parently operated with great Judgment-and discretion taking visitors of the middleclass and not disturbing the welltodooverwhose disappearance there would havebeen some or tho tramps whocould yield nothing in the way of plunder
There was some reason to follow theFrench detectives advice etitrtht lafemme but the detectives could scarcely-be expected to find that the murders werecommitted a mile away from the river inwhich the bodies were in the veryheart of the city fromthe Court House railroad station andprincipal hotels-
It was the confession mulatto womanMattle Bennett that exposed the gang ofmurderers The woman confesses to havebeen the stool pigeon In the murders but
part In the actual crimes whichto have regarded as altogether
unnecessary It is probable that onemotive loading to the confession was thefear that the gang would kill her to preventher from exposing them
The Investigation of the police left noreason to doubt the womans story Onlyone other of tho nine persons arrestedhas shown any disposition to talk and hea negro does not seem to have beers one ofthe active criminals but merely a tool
gang Mary Jane the otherwill not speakBennett cannot tell all the story
or estimate the number of murdersand robbflrien committed in her housebut shn thinks that about twelve menwere killed there and sno and oorobbed And this I how It WB done
Mattin Ilnnnett a mulatlreM and MaryJane a young negriwa occupied a house onHabinn street almost in nf Beau-mont The plane was of III repute hut hnr
no special reason why the police shouldInterfere with It Among theof It sire Jack Welsh suits known around
1iioch Prim Joe Herd and othersThen men began bringing stranger
to boilM They walled aroundthe for rmw nuivrs liinrfUtIhemnelve with tiM t od adrink or and finally pn p l goingUi the IWjiimll house whet they iviuM
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were carried In cab or cart to where theywere thrown Into the river but It Is scarcelyoonoolvable fhat life murderers should haTetaken the risk of halting a passing cab onthe street the purpose The policebelieve that a special hackman or teamsterwas the removal of the corpsesIn the torn way as a special saloon waspatronized for the knockout drops andthat the owner of hearsecarriage willlx found sooner or lanr
Even as It Is It peom strange that thesecret was kept nolong an It was Themurderers became hardened byand unpd the club or brew knucklefrequently than at first It was simpleand apparently safer but It setBennett to thinking She had the livesof a down men In her hands and shethat they might silence her So she
What Is itlll lacking Is a history of themurderers and their victims The menwho were engaged In these crimes arescarcely novices Their records will al-
most ctrtalnly prove Interesting If notbloody Npr has anything been done yetto learn exactly how many persons weromurdered In the Bennett house and to getsome tact them This may not bepossible murderers seem to havedestroyed all the and other recordsof their victims
If however the facts can be learnedthey may explain some of themysterious disappearances reported fromdifferent parts of thehas been one of thehave wandered from all parts pf the worldand some of these wanderers were lost tosight there
ALL is WELL I FROZEN NOME
Reindeer Replacing DOR as GovernmentMall Carriers
Non Alaska Jan people ofthis far Northern mining town have heardno news from the outside since the closeof navigation In Bohring Sea last Octoberbut they are happier than might be sup
The outaldo In the language ofIn subArctic regions in winter
moans the whole world Occasionally adog team comes over from Council City-or Candle or Unalaklik but thoseare as much Isolated fromNome
The mail by which this letter will be car-ried Is to leave tomorrow morn-Ing and with it will go many hundredsof letters from Nome residents to theirfriends and relatives on the outside Butthe writers have the uncomfortable feelingthat it may be the end of February or middleof March before their letters reach the per-sons to whom they are addressed ThereIs a great deal of snow which is favorablerather than otherwise to the quick trans-portation of mall C
The mails are being carried this winterboth by dot teams and reindeer teemsJ T Llndseth superintendent of thereindeer station near Unalakllkthat reindeer are superior to dogs lAndseth is the man who proposed to the PostOffice Department In Washington lastwinter to carry the between Toilerand points on Sound both ofwhich places are farther north even thanNome HQ has a contract with the Govern-ment and his first experience in carrying-the malls was encouraging
Three men and twelve reindeer left Nomewith mall for Teller on Dec 20 Undsethhad established two relay stations on theway and his contract calls for five monthlytrips Reports regarding the first partof the Journey to the north brought In byprospectors Indicate that the experimentwith deer transportation will be successful
Last ye r Llndsolh told the Post OfficeDepartment that he could carry mall withrendoer from Nome to Unalakllk in twodays The distance la 250 miles He hasnot yet had the opportunity to demonstrate-the truth of his assertion It now takesten or fifteen said the other dayThats with teams DORM are all
right but I want to show people thatreindeer Is the most useful animal In AlaskaThe dog drivers stop at night With deerI can twel night and day
Llndn th says that Is the way they doIn hU native country Lapland Llndonthby the way propone to make a trip un theYukon Itlver later in the winter decoy withhU reindeer some are not hlngmore or IMS than wild reindeer and aftercapturing them domesticate them for UM
Heretofore the lovenimentofficers Interested in the reindeer projectfor Alaska have nnnnidernd that It warneasier In the domwitlo n r In Siberiaami bring them over thus it to do
the carilKw of this regionThn thing most dreaded
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MEW FOR THE COUNTRY HOUSE
FVRtflSHtftaa THAT GIVE THEDEIRltn QUAINT EFFECT
Wall Coverings With Riots of ColorFlowrrert Uesiami for Bedroom NetWindow Draperies The flamiy Mis-
sion Furniture In Great Favor Now
Were it not for tho constantIn thefashion of saidmany of us would have to go out of busi-
ness Much of our prosperity Is due to thecountry house To extent countryhouse furnishings class by themselves
It is now pretty generally understoodthat quaintness nnd plc uresqucncss ratherthan splendor to distinguishoountry house For this reasonwith country houses are always prowlingaround hoping to secure fabrics or furniture which will contribute to this result
Tho brilliant wall coverings which nowflaunt themselves conspicuously In themarket were among the first of the newthings designed for the country houseto attract attention Plain effects for thetime being are cast into the shade by averitable riot of color
For the living room oven In the smartestcircles the drawing room is calleda living are landscape papersof many varieties of color which to someextent give the effect of tapestry minusthe figures Hills and valleys trees and
together with growing plants furnisha pastoral environment which snakes itnecessary to banish framed pictures fromthe
patterns even bolder and moregorgeous In color which come fromFrench designers showmythological designs toview and In every case need a large roomfor their proper display Furnishing ahappy medium between these luxuriousexamples and the plaindesigns are some which are faithfulrepresentation of tho twotoned satinbrocades which lately have played suchan Important part in the decorations of tho
of city housesin these the designs are large
mainly wreAths and baskets of flowersbut the colors are inconspicuous yellowon a white ground palo againstfoliage green ecru and andwood brown and delft blue and white
Fashion just now gives prominence toleathor and loather effects in draping thewalls of the dining room and the mainVery beautiful illustrations of thisbe seen in some of tho houses recently builtin a fashionable part of Long Island ineach of which tho leather used 1 of theImported variety representing rich blend
of color and conspicuously beautiful
dwellings the same idea isout in of
even In Imitation leather whichis a sort of papier machrt Tho more elabor-ate the pattern of the leather the more
and whereleather of a uniform color is used an elabor-ately frieze surmounts It
of unpolished wood sometimesalternate leather In thomain hall which as a rule In the moderncountry house Is enough to be
a a sittingroom-The newer wall for the
most represent a luxuriant flowergarden and the designs the more
are A or n stripedbackground strewn with bouquets
with one hugesingle blossom or with flowering vines
with these flowersand vines clambering clear to the ceilingwithout a
A beautiful exception to flowerenvironment 1 a green
work of vinesroses A room after fashiongives the charming effect of living in an
or a canopy of ronesThe always question of
door urn draper not tobn difficult to solve yoar There are anynumber of new and veryfor the piirponn and are comparatively
For example among cottlkllttImlMering are Cairo lattice endSingapore materials
yet nuftiriont weight to l n effnolive
Thn shown In artistic artsoft rennda and mignonetteold row vim tedolive brown and deep erwam rretnnle acoarse grenaillnn weave whereas in the
the I more andthe fabric Include gay mixtures of coloras well a thom f plain lint
For the Mime oldgixxlnlioth striped and plain
art colors arrn a not unlike burlap that the colorsrn morn
that It U evenly wovenand llullilliall ta trl of both linen andmilon In every lint plain Initlirn e wi l fr thn stitch dotIndimillVM of Dm itilldlil wrajve andin old divUiiK of lrl and flown
One of the flret of the new windowdr nrleii to allrnot eye of llm wrcker
fli r U uliiitU twain ii lli ln-
iV H yellow In lor The rewm I
rnliutia n i U mine dninlileI-M iniieti heavier tlm nf-
wmdiiw net iionin MVM lIe niii ii rlerl-ludi hInt ine i IM IIK i4iiii Hi
H x NII very linn HHMnikllteii llel AliliiU fl HH whwh If-
n lIHIIK la lilHlUf IttUWUV-
MK4M4 Mlltull-
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chang
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count
wail
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will
gen
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delloed C
con
planor pink wall which Is ar In of a
blooming with
I
for forpurrn 11
colorIk
ur Ih
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iR
all
10 ll
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ought
a
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this
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suitable and
first
are
moss
tiemIre lulu
tie11e
nl a-
I beS lieu sits jrlt y
slit enrate
ahit slot
1 I iati S 1451 l i mi 5544 1 PI IM1Imist ai end I IMMtIed 5 iou terIoeIew-itseiw 14Mk 411 U JMIIi Ieetfj4 tibiastill tI4lsO ujC luiis Itemi Siw
has iii 1 IIe sail lieil I lee ii S lela
I 5kM su4 e tq raee wm-I iIek4vi if lush 11 h4 I th
sf4 011 sit s-C sui Nell ls S-
MIM4 Iwseiau mIj ha amw-1kl I sc t 4 I 41 it t-
Le4es Item Immluaar Sm a ye A I es 4 g ti-
S 4ddl II ii 4I-
suflStaW 5 111 V uses ad H
ii JuM 4-
toi se Ii es 4w 4-
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s s4 oesetm a se0M I e 1 seam
4l-
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45 W40511
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wniTis XI B PIECESWhite to play and mate In three movu
rnoBLiu NO 1101 BT UTIIOB MOT KNOWN
BLACK EVKf MICKK on 0 n 4 0 on K n R on K Kt 8 Q n Si
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WOTTKKIOHT PIECESWhite to and mate In two moves
KimoiUS TCDT BT AVTBO POT SHOWN A TITBLACK nvB ritm
K J K 4 P on Q Kt 8 K Kt J nd K H
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KlKBS 12 Q thIrSt K
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10 B KHtS-
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KlKIKB83 KtxP4 KtKBS-ai O4
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KlRS10II Kt OB3IIKKI314 UxK-tI5OI1518 KtKtl1 IxllI-B flItS20 RxRcS-2IQ 7
5tchevemartp
PKS-KtKBSRK2-PB3qKtq2C-iutleaIllKtq4-gKtR3
PETROlPllUbury
IMfPK4KtKB-SIgsPgiIIK2Ciutl-eKtKUJPBISlitKIB3-BK3BK2ItiBPKR3B-xKKKtlBxKt
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11 PK4 KtiKt I
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