Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 27, 1890, Page 9

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TWENTIETH YEAR. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY, 27, 1800-SIXTEEN PAGES, i NUMBER 3 MORSRHE'S. MORSRK'S. MORSK'S MORSE'S Ladies BLACK SILK JERSEY MITTS! French Satines, 15¢. | Ladies” Waists, $2.98. UNLAUND Monday morning we place on sale the balance of our fine Ladies' fine gauze Outing Flannel Waists, with belts, neat g 8 E ;G French Satines at 15¢ a yard, These satines have been sold | patterns in light shades, tucked yoke and sleeves, very stylish, /I]R atfrom 3sc to soc a yard, The lot is limited so come early. sold during the season at $4.50 each. Choice for this week §2.98 Have just opened another large invoice of Black Silk Mitts, and 54 ik 7 A e - - - e ¢ offer them Monday at 85c a pair, [N C " IMPORTED ¥ 4 . French Chialis 550 Ladies’ Silk Waists, $8. |.czrsummsoomeny e latest modern improvements in ' , . 0y TMnao Wy [ . . shape and finish, Limit, one-half dozen to each customer. 0 b a[ IOS 15 0 0\ 0‘8’ Tomowmow, the remainder of our stock of best quality French L:uliu' fine IH:\w:k Silk \\':\i,\ts, very latest .\t)’lrs, sizes Challis will be reduced to s0c a yard. ) MERRIMAC <y out all odd lots in every department. In Gloves we have numerous e B odd pairs, in nearly every size, we have been selling from 25c to 85¢, 111 Llll(T 1 111 S C Every pair warranted to be Monday we place them on sale at 10c a pair. & ) kS . il = & - ?flnl;\n;e kid, es x»;»liml\y adapted - oy 7 . | P for both street and driving gloves. 5,000 yards of these fast colors shirting prints, reduced to 5¢ N + . Sale price 87c. ¥ ) o 9 a yard. On sale at our Domestic counter. l I 9 9 R < Riae Leather Lined adleS ISlC GlOVCS‘ _5(:. T TR R 5 . % = - —— Monday, all of our ladies’ White Suits, formerly $7.50, $10, % BEST AMERICAN $12.50 and $15 each, will be offered at one price, $3.75. LFHT[I]KR BRGS This has been our BOc quality all season, but everything must go v g e g AN regardiess of cost previous to moving into our new building. We Indigo Blue Calico, 6c. LADIES $1.75 ] Any one contemplating a jour= g S B ney should visit our Gents’ Fur- For Monday only we offer 3,500 yard of Standard Indigo ¢ nishing Department, and get our Blue Calico. There is nothing better to be found. Regular 7ic 1 { rl )CS prices on Traveling Hand Bags. > @S y e & Examine our $1. 5 quality, quality; marked down for this sale to 6c. Silk bound, embroidered neck and arms, marked down specially [ i i : 2 Ladies’ Black Silk Netted Capes, with deep silk fringe, very for this sale to 25c. ——| AT LEDS THAN COBT. == \psrGams SPEB HL I '\) A . Pears’ Soap, 12ic a cake; $1.48 ( Previous to taking our semi-annual inventory, August 1st, l' ) \\T l S 5 s adozen. re shall close out at less than cost, all of short ends of Ta- /\/ tS O Osakley’s Camelia Soap, 19¢c a Wi 1 l ; (. (& |t Il‘ (. th ]. ( (). t 1 ; Kll ()l‘l‘r ']‘()l. end ? ‘0 l- ‘a( 1CS OO Lll ’ \J o) oaval ble Linen; oddlots of one or two dozen Napkins and Towel Oakley’s Sweet VioletSoap, 12ia mnz % ‘ silks, e acake. remnants of Dress Goods, silks, 5 p y R AR e 3 Ctara Sl At 4 B i : We have a few light colore ool Suits for ladies, ranging | castile Soap, 80c a bar, Machine Oil in price from gro to §20, To close the lot Monday's price will > Oil, Bc a bottle, Monday niorning we shall inaugurate a sweep ingsale of Ladics Hand Brushes, Bc each. and Buys* Hoge See our east show window. Choice ofthe lot15ca be only $5 Writing Paper, 28¢ a box. pair. i - Canvas Belts, 10c each, THE MORSE DRY GOODS CO. THE MORSE DRY GOQDS CO. THE MORSE DRY GOODS CO. |NORSE DRY G0ODS CO R T % Z i 5 3 T IS = —_ AT, 0 NAT[IRE | teok turms working ut the windlass aswe did | path was so moist from the spray that Blon- | are two more small falls, the flow from the | mpn AR L SPUTODING | 1oy 1 mack per day for hoard, This gosainto | sng T e ] THE UR\]ORW 0[‘ h‘TLRh. also in speculatin hat would b | din himse e itated in its more northerly of which passes the entrance 1”L ARI 0[‘ “0 SI;I\I‘JLI IN(,, 11 Alstrict TonaL s DR aslbnts o S I'al'a,«"»f..y'..r\'&;,-k P clid o iolKipge our fate if the ferry’s cables should dingly, our guide took us by 4 | toa Gothic cave, the threshoid of which no two installments, one after tho frst two | Aert e ol S cirhe DU First class, plan of theoretical fnstru break! Once, while i iid-iver, the current | stouous path to @ Hight several hundred feet | man ‘has - transcended. *Somewhal to the s, pla ! mon ths, the sccond at the end of cach te Prom & oAl MoR 0% < strack us with unusual foree and all the male | above the fulls, There, however, while north and west of the ve rocls, g 5. There are two i From 3 lock, Mondays, progress- it d . i i g | jvoinstructions 50, Tuesdays, hands ; ; e .ot | hands were required at the rope, while the | #ood view could be had of the scene, it lacked | an imperfect o is what i known o - itis Mad tinot Branol winter. The summer o vo uats : sl , Bung with Ceaseless and Thrilling Bffect | {07 MIC AT other in o v S e AR A place was | the Bridal Veil, the fall of which is esti In Germany itis Made “‘D‘s'”’“t‘ Branch of | e worle; 7 to8, care of sile stolc; by the Falls of Shoshone. main ‘_‘l""t *nless until the bank was reached, | sought.8 P ot This name is inappro- Education, the girls wtum tolelp i tructions for further improvement There is little pleasure in traveling in th On our way thither the guide di- | priate, becaus the width 18 not proportioned G farm at lome, Tho winterm Dl e bbb LA e L dark and there is little to reassure the tr gressed, leading us down the precipice to the | 1o the height and because the lace-like trans- ember and continues tll Kaster, or the ) idays, improvement it eler when he encounters dangers the m surface of the river, Whis descent is | DA pecular to the bric al' 'y il is , | abouts, with atwo w tion at Christ- $3 3150 t turdays, instructio THE MARVEL OF OUR CATARACTS. | tde of which must be determined by coj- e sost Derions thatean b imained, | scavcdy if ever visble in the fall, | This | HO A mas and New Yo ach termhas o length o Apucdays, Ipslauoaons thy tare. For this reason, when the ascent of | ) b hait b alne Eemendicn| fully “howovwy s Imposing, and, of ity of about five months, $ES e vatupvial fouls, SO By B the opposite bank was undertaken, there was | L Svery jutting piece of rock and foot of | itself, would be gidered a curidsity. < The plan of studies is prepared by the | Anything moro the ere idea of the g Sights and Incidents in the Vicinity | nota member of the party who dil not fo il was bthed n dow. A Shigle false step | DUt "t s dwarfed into nolbingiess | AnInteresting Report on the Subject pcial mittoo of the district and the | dcasae 15 ey bt AR of the Great Miracle of Snake that ke o she had uccomplishe o | would bave hurled the unfortunate tode- | bY tho catara A bl Gag ofEh from the United States Consul cacher ns to be as near practical as | in the power of a pon to givo: they ave apirt ] ; deed which would bear recounting after the | struction, Ho would have rolled from roc foreruumners. - 4 cet south possible. Anything like theso-calle of that splendid system of education which is Riverand a Visit to Them return home, rock and finally found lodgment in the viging ther wall of water, aud still to the south at Mannheim — The ot fino corking s soldom, if at all, indulged | ut the bottom of Gorminy's Wenderral prog. by a 1sce Man, we climbed the hill, again in the densest | witers which dashed + the base of the 1s anirregalar pillae fifty fect high, sur- Course of Study. in. The mani o is thut | ress—more than wonderful when one thinks darkness, eve nultancously solid walls below. The desc andered | rounded by s waters, on the suminit based upon = all klnds | of her very limited resources, the niggzard i marked that it had begun to rain, A “heavy | possible only by the use of a half inch : | of whic crutions, it s yresumed, has of foods, animil and vegetable, and the best | ness of hor soil, inclemenoy of het slimate, TAIFG Riruk A andeniti wenba necesnry | cabia which led - down Ha stooc Plicve today proud birc % 3 botter trained and drilled | manner of producing them to see sasant | and s of swamps and land good for Siosione, Iduho, July 20.—[Staft Corres- | Pyis, the driver explained, wis the s hich wi stened at inte the roc! of th i i the pinions of Theve are no better tr ang s taste and healtt ot 4 _ L and g , Tdaho, July s, the ined, was the spray | which was fastened atir 0 the « : PHAES T Lot e s 1l cand health littlo or nothing. 1 have myself seen so pondence of Tur: Brr1--Our party left this | from’ tho falls, which the'wind was scatter- | along t In'acoapleiot ustaonay| Uk Sse10la to 31ab to UBKRYL Do ihe midak | bolsskoapers War Gormin women, Ihe UA0 | Bach school has system or plan of regula | many practival examples of their good thag little town ab 6:80 in the cvening, with the | Ing around with lavish gonerosity. In this | slippory lndders were employed where tho | §0 1 CHig8, SIZEEL 10 WA 1O SLOMOSY | German boys give to Greok, Latin, matho- | yiong which the girls have ve, I not only approve ‘of, but most intention of arriving at the celebrated Shosh- | Mist. we reached the hotel, which not a | cable could not have been o for a d- | teart, so that heroarter, as tho symbols of | ;4108 and “the military” the girls give to 1 The sehc must moral, industrions, | heartily comimend them to the conside mo falls at about 10730 orelock the samo | It burned, and in which every occupant | rail. By means of these agencies tho party, | thelr country, may be fearless amid the [ Jr 1o "tides and to learning how to bo | otc., and no girl is_ allowed o leave the | of our school boards, T have seon youn G0 AALAL o S8 | must have fallen jnto the sleep of the just | saturatéd with rain, perspiring from tuguing '"‘l';‘ ‘-“ *;‘;'L avound these pillars, | good, careful, saving, industrious wives and | school d: or evening without permission | from cighteen to twenty-five take hold of and night, There were two traveling wmen, one | which even the erash of the falling water be- | at the cable and, 1o greater or loss dvree, By thes! 8, Avound these pillars, | good ! e Lay | fromithe principalor teacher. direct, and ran large houscholds, superintend- named Maguire from New York and the | neath was unable to disturb. covered with mud, reached tho river, Thero | Pist these eaves, U i Taysyelhng|imatiem, yribe 1, 0. Monsuan (oopRil b Vi AR e ind aro ro- | inithe buying, avra ooklng and e other Moore of St. Louls and two young | The hostelry stands on ahelght almost over | Men and, women passed overa uumber of b e oo o | Monuhelm, in s ropott 10 Bho. @oyernnont, d on Sundaysand hol ing of meals and a hundred household duties, y . ; o south end of the falls and was e rough rocks strongly suggestive o utic > g thasgbys nst confess I nover saw anything like 20s” or destruction of proporty | These schools, howe sive training o ¢ women, the elder a Chicago schoolma'am and | 1B south end of the falls and was et Iohel vonls airongly anugeative f ) et ok i 3 fant bufors the Tatat | L mist confoss Enover sw anything liko I | 3 All damagwes or do f'\'i“ n of property Those sehiools, lowevir, give training (o all 1 e the youngerher sister in the gawky age of | ind cloud of spray which, oy ereid et AN b e o © > $ " from the | Every town, eity and district has its hou esulling from carolessnoss, williulnuss lasses, and fit 'girls t most any station 3 s o gawky L T o T Mab T bhe o s b anig ers roamed undirected voen made, vaters, fired fron ; ey e achool), | Shall be made ood at tho expense of th | in life, whother a wifo or housekeeper, cook feminine development. et A G were hundreds of varicties of > Is of the | hallungs-schule (housekecp chool). | ot 4 ; AT B by Aosaeson tanld ain to the fic o o landlord was 1 - - Fol & MooV | party or person doing tho samc or general servant. They deserve a trial in The road o the falls has boen cut throngh | aroused and the party stowed away for the o which the action of the waters had "";:' s j}l 'I‘“‘l ina while they exhibit, tho exer 4 As the scholurs get enough of good, | the states. TN T U AL S S s (ST worn frem angular into well-vounded propor- | Mune. Wher hesitaney b displived in | s ical and theowvtical, tho | wholesome, well-prepared fiod in the sehool, | —— T i six mles there is nothing to relieve the | My apartment was the nearest to the falls | 1o RIS = o | borne along by theresistless tide from behind, | latier usually covoring such themes as gea- | they will not bo aliowed to buy food or drink | | sVastauantities ot fortlilzers are finported : : sanite the tiestn Our path led to “Dimna’s Bath,” and with | brnes 2 ide 2 xtiot Jkeeping: instruction | outside, or to haveit sent to them 3 ¢ and, despite the mist without, T Left the win Then it shoots far over the brink with a fo eral knowledge of housckeeping; i B 0 monotony of white sand, brash and lava, but b . bt S hen it shoots fav i brink with a f ey — ¢ y h dow open to listen to the deep base voice of | Knightly propricty it was suggested that the | oiinec capable of penetrating the e in the ions of various foods, their qual b All ¢ oS and arranzements between i the driver’s stovies and the jokes ov conver- [ iV Ren 10 Iten ROD: D80 JOM ladics should enter the place first. This they | S56MingLy capable of panetrating the cc in (he nutritions of yarloas Zoods, A | seholars ave allowed only with the consent of | Dr- Bivney cures catavrh, Bee bldg. ; A\ e ™ | the falls which had not sounded unmusical snould ¢ ho] Tl of tho 6arth, and ndeed of furnishing motive | sties and. ratios fo s cortaln standard, thelr he A o ) sational powers of one's companions. We | from the first moment it reached my | 4id and upon informing us that we i power tothe machinery of the world AW R ot iy 2 principal or teachers. i very little bocause of the lack of | ear. Tho piteh ©wha — even unl i | enterthe sacred precincts, the gentlemen effects as biood, flesh and fat producers, ete Uncrowned Heroines, t Al water s B0 fanb BIgh. fart ot 6 The scholars will get up in the morning | . Lk Ak versatility of the party and became anxious | volume W maintained with but the | followed higher than that of 'D § care of the sick, knowledge of and nursing | on work-days at 5:30 on Snadayandholidays The last story I told you also leads me to & e e road obscured under | slighte ation, save when the sound | The tu huntress had evidently finished | bseent doseribod by 1t and caring for children; household arith fatt o'clock. As soon as the' seholurs are | point on which altogether toolittle is said or 5 AR e R he | 'Vives were wafted to the opposite side of the herablutions, because the place was tenant- | o point, When the sun shines fig t | metic, mental and on slates, The practical | dressed the, All assemile for mo written, and that is—the modern tendency to the starless clouds which had overcast the | canon, ‘Tt then roseand fell with masterly | less. The bath iy one of the many caves | within ~ these miraculous prayer, after which they will go each to her deride those women who go scene when the sun disappe sympathy and expression in a s0loof nature's- | formed in the bisaltby the action of the | o seen . coral I f exor daily task or study, as appointedin the plan 0 lite, 3 A 107 For nearly two hours we proceeded in the | oratorio to nature’s God. water, and is about thirty fect deep by two | Aptipuros o oven . | sewing by hand and with a machine, ironing, | of studies. At 7 . m, breakfastis served, at [ L umn.ulu‘d.‘ _or asthe w orld darkuess, some fearing that we had lost our I had heard that those whose sense of hear | Bundred foct high. —In the middle of the en- | fhan " its fable 08 uud o | mending (patehing), knitting (they ave born | 9 lunch,at 12 lunch, at 4 < meal (a | culls them, “old maids,” There aro by far , in which éyent there would be no ulter- | fug was wost. acute or whose ears had 1 ire is a pool formed by a crystal am S5 rre o hundred Mo i o) but a ris| amp through the acsert | attuned to the closest harmonies, could dis- | Welling from the roclk beneath. It was in this | ied ing, cte, and the muking an? keeping of | beforedimmerandsupper, ind thanks to the | women, says a writerin the Ladies' Homo Ay tinguish @ variety of sounds amid the rush of | that the goddess had bathed her shapely / th DRI 06 N Creator of all when rising from the table at | Journal. Iu the minds of mauy it seens 8 The driver, however, continued to pick his | waters over the falls, I lay, for a time, and | form. This, too, seeved as hevmirror. Hee b progpect from below saves untonched A O et canly, | these twomeals. vening prayer and ‘g tied fact, that because & woman re way and finally announced that we had at | made tempt to cateh the var jewel casket hung up the rock, where o per- | fha yarvelous P > ost, Ther It is astonishing how carefully, inly, | ing to bed,” #:30 p. m, Dif s of relig- | the age of forty, fifty or sixty the rocks.” Iu this manuer | with but indiffcrent success. Some pe petual string of pearlstrickled from a crevice | tho water by hidden agdncies is transmated | tirdessly, happily they work, singing g | dous belief will be carefully regarded, that ot some time In her carly life st the lava beds which extend | say they have been able to distinguish cig and another passing over a bank of ferns was | jnto snowfakes, cat into diamonds, wov time some lullaby sor Sehi or 7 Sundays and holidays the scholur the victim of cither disappointed love or une. e P T R e e ey e S P e e ek transformed iuto the brightest of emerald. | jnto and finest Iace, carved Intointer- | national poet, Orderis a G ) each tho church in" which sh as | reciprocated affection. This is tho dark, it is impossible'to drive with safety [ one of those so musically constitute The young women armed with the | Jueings of martle, and we tinto mosuies | first law. They develop a skill that boen reared, Protestants the faster thun a walk thought, however, that 1 could faintly note | $Potand d A to linger, but_ the 1O | of erystal aud emerald finer than ever graced | astonishing. The scho! )to the schiools, | “hurch, Catholies — the * Cathol * | history and in our every-day life cin prove, Oy ety hour was spent picking ourway | four or' five distinct intonations, some of a feeling at home in Ky Indy’s chamber, with- | o Moorish temple or inspived an arlist’s | not as to a task, but as t ound, with Wilks and outdoor exercises, efc., are | There are hundreds women to-day who through these adanua ubyrinths when | comparatively high treble, and th fscon- | drew, followed by the fair ones, aflc ral | dream, only to behurled to destruction the | zest and interest. At the exhibitions one | allowed only in company with the teache have never mavried beeause of some Special the driyer sententionsly rmally re- | tinued the investigation. I let the imagina- | €003 bad been left for the goddess of the | pext moment hencath, sees all kinds of products, which, like valug- | 9 Opposition to or contempt for rules and | mission in life, either in their own familic marked : “Here's w h.»..-,uu,. t out tion have full playand there was no move- | PIace: 2 Thereis 10 ¢ fon to the iconiclasm, | blo works of art which reveal thieir beauties | regulations, willful destruction or damaging | or to theworld at large, which they feit the Wo disembarked without —qestioning and | ment in musie, mechanics or human agency, With nuch dificulty we re-ascendedto the | ylthough, momentarily que hopes the power | ouly on close mspection, awake most interest | of property, unbearable temper, untruthful- 1 better accomplish if untrammeled by the dviver tied one of the hind wheels to o | to which that of the fulls did not keep accom- | summit of the precipice. The sunwas shin- | i is precipitating both the viot and the | under a tareful and minute examinatio: ness and lishonesty will be warned, punished, | domestic cares. By theirself sacrifice theso side brace on tho Wwagon paniment. I heard, again, the first school bell | ing warmly, the mist was ri perpendicn i from | Thie best way to give our woploan ideaof | and fnally vesult, when carried 10 far, of | women are hovoines; and the vory lvst per his is a steep hillan’ I never hauled a | which sounded in’ my 1 the chime of the | larly becaise the winds had gone to rest A Wbt the | these schools and thele work is to present a | When nosignof reform ora desire to reform | son on God's footstonl of whom jost should be Aiving being down it in my life. 'l go shead | little church in the wood in which rare and | Shoshone falls w to be scen in all their | oeralc s si amid o halo of | wi v appear, in expulsion from the school le. Two of the sweetest women who with the team and you follow. radiant maiden arly and sweetly at iy, But who can puint that glory! Six | he sun never shines on Shoshone Lhe has for its object the teach 10 Prtracted absence from tho school sver honored me with their friendship, ‘*Are we near the falls p atly asked | tuned to carol the praises of their maker; the | ) ago, when this wonder came into th without impuarting to it the characteristics | ing of housckeeping must be by perinission from the distriet com- th whom to come in contach the younger lady passen s if she were | booming of the guns which proclaimed, | ¢ ion of Dewey & Stone, John A. | \chich have often been pietured in . th Cooking, buking, washing, milking, | mittee aid upon request of parents or guar- like @ bemediction of goo wbout disgusted with the journey throughout the land, the surrender of Lee eighton, of Omala, and B. Clark of | Jopusalem, The effects of licht and color ave | uses of g, taking of butter and cheeses, | dians i x ness and grace Ao addressed ‘*Yes, Miss, though they're down at thebot- | @nd the close of the rebeliion and, with the | Butte, Mout, T read a description of it for | suen that it may well be doubted if they may 1 care of a kitchen orvegetable gavden The special nmittee will arrange the | by the title of “miss.’’ From their life-hise tom of tho hill,” he good naturedly veplied, as | imagination veveling in several of Patti’s | the fivst time. Since then | have read w be elsewhere exeelle rise’ from (b) Troning, sewing, mending, patching, | school plin and vacations tories have I deawn many a lesson; and to he started off with his team. chocest arias, I fell asleep with the ceaseless [ has been written of the falls by Judge Good- | halfa dozen points, the arches springing | kutting, dothes (dre making, ete. ¢ 1 o virtues especially recommended | the frageance of theirlives is due many followed. It was asdark as a dunge ume of sound in my ears and sensible to | Win of Salt Lake, Licutenant King, formerly | sometimos from the banks on elther tido. an olaes bring their own working tools & ! s to excite rivaley and emula- | a geacious act of chavity, and many a_harsh We conld not 1 I 1 Isations of thé fall which ked the [ Of the army, and our own FHon. B. H. Bar- | 4t others resting on no move stable founda- | stuff to work with and on. ‘These on ar iness mind, body and in | word has been left unsaid. Should such s00u discovered thaut 0 1S most like a cradle. rows. It is necdless to stato that the descrip- | tion than the shiftingsarface of the river eandu d ave exhibited on th h il - | women be ridiciled! Ah,no!let us rather ba abrupt, so wuch so, i at it required When [ arose in the morning, the mist was | tive efforts of th itlem e in them- | Thyough these ares of color, the weird, v of =chool afterwards given to th et ity g i hos )l 1gs, | thoe scholars of their teachings, adapting the theunited efforts of the 'purty to keepus | sweeping in great clouds over the hotel and | selves gems, But the grandeur and glory | frowning, fire-burned wills of the canon, | scholar who mude th 18 t ) lossons_thoy can often give Us 0 our own from breaking into @ yun, leaving theroad | fulling in rain from the porch, It promised | and impressiveness of Shoshone fulls, never- | pasiod and distorted intocolumns, piunacles, ¢) General ir ion in ping s, —1"Fom W o o | lives. You'and I may believe that itis for and going we knew not where 1o be a bud day for sight seeing because it | theless, will be experienced by no man who | mounds, parapets, and other for innumer- | and in vegard to presecving health when pos- | got . ih1 the greatest happiness of all women that they When we reached the bottom of the hill we | was almost impossible to stand upon the | fuils to see the great mirvacle itself. The | aphle wre softened with @ frosco | and obtaluing when lost; also, house © ral | should mayey; but that it is no reason why were out of breath and the driver told us we | brink of the precipice or within_several hun- [ Union Pacific sends two truins daily each | jng by the hand of OQmnipotenc ld bookkeeping, wor! > kitehon ; 0 to 10:15 | we should not respect those who by thele had traveled a thousand feet. We agaiu took | dred feet of the fulls without being drenched. | Way within twenty-five wiles of the place, | for the time being shutting out the repulsive At the head of each s g ) C i general work in’ the | live v that they have decided otherwise, the wagonaud atthat moment for the first | The fulls also, w enveloped in the mist | and the trib will repay any one who can ap- | ness which at other times 1san clement of | mittee of five, chosen from the dis om- | kitchon? el @8 to 12, diny to 1 timo the hoarse voice of the falls @rected our | only the erest being in any manner visible. preciate what is both beautiful and sublime. | their Wednesdays, 'cooking lessons; part at the exhibitions consist of excreises in kultters, seem to do it instinetively), erochet- | lunch) , and at 7 p. m. suype : s sald | too many careless jests made of this cliss of 4 common mistake, 08 thousands of instances, both in Tyt , work | § the noblest women of the past,whose grandeur. Betgyeen these walls of | it [ pecial go e 7 the kit 1140 to i3, 4 inds of hand- | nmes o greatest trivmphs in caxs. Almost at the same instaut there was [ About 10 o'clock, however, the wind veered | Two hundred feet above the falls theSna Jasper, & thousand fect bigh, | the i ! Navs: | working; 3 to 3 :0, lunc 30 10 4:30, in 1 X never married, and it a rift in the sable covering above usund a | 10 the south und the sun came out in all his | flows between basulic bauks S00 feet high oves slowly, and we leaye 1t on it of the 100 otc., struction; 410 to and kitehen | needs no streteh of the imagination 1o believe white patch of cloud becawe visible. Whenee | glory, and the work of sight seelng was un- | 1ts surfaceis scarcely more ruffied than that oth, gliding way 0 the sea the boar A and 'has also an ¢ work that as good and greal women are lving it received its light we kuew not. Therewas | dertaken, of amill pond. Suddenly, however, it en The falls hada number of visitors this | part to play in seclug that the s > Second ¢ From5 to ek, get- | right among us today as have ever figured in not a str visible. Profiled against this er- | The hotel stands about fifty feet from the | counters vocky upheavals ‘aguinst which it | year and many of them have been from | properly and carefully instructed. They | ting up, dressing, and bed mak 5245 1o | history. There are countless familics today rant cloud were immense masses of rock, | brink of the chusm. The latter is lined with | has been flowing for centuries. ‘The traus- | Omaha. At thehead of one purty was Mr. | carefully inspect all work performed, for this | 7.0, breakfust, toom cleaning, lamp trime | w Il loso their brightest and most coni- bliack as the night itself and towering above | durk vine trees while the bank is covered | parent waters are divided, Some flow to the | Guy Barton, whose daring recalled one's ad- | purpose visiting the school from time to time | ming; 750 to 9, womanly © orking, i ars when the breath of her who scemingly to a distance of thousands of feet. | with a rich matting of grass. This is about | right, some to the left, and others are im- | venturous boyhood when an eagle's 1d | during hoursof instruction ting, mending, ote,; 910 0115, luneheon never uttered the marriage vow, returns to In this samouncertain light wesaw orfanciea | the only departure from the reign of sage | peded und lashed into foam, but the stream, | be scaled in the absence of the parent bivds [ 8. Children ave expected 1o visit the school | to 11:80, hand-work of all kinds; 11:0 to 12, ) Angels of fort are these old we saw tho windings of the Snuke, but it was | biush ind is effected by the fruitful libation | with its wonderful power, s, forming | for predatory purposes of their own district, though exceptions are | dinner;'| to 3, hand-work;? to 4:15 luncheon; | maids” of Awerican homes, every day of only funcy, bacause we could scarcely see the | of the mist from the abyss within a short distance thrée small fulls, two | Mr. J. C." Cowles,a_ pupil of the great | sometimes made and childeen out of one §:530 to 430, instruction 06, hand work steeam whon the driy vounced “that we | From these pines, a rough walk leads | of which face bad reached the forry. We boarded the lat- | almost from opposite the door of the hotel | than their lives teaching us anew some noble trald the west and the other, lavger | Bierstadt, is here sketching the falls, aud ex. | trict admitted into the school of another, The women 3 0 1o §:30, arran of rooms ; | of sel fsacriticing aud ever glorious vomas both, describes an ellipse toward the | pects to have his work done to be reviewed | girls must be sixteen years old and of good | 6 to 6:30, for both clusses, supper | hood e which is about two hundred feet above | down a hundred feot to a ledge from which a | south. A 'short distance in advance of the | and finished under the direction of his master | character. Evenings—Finst cluss ' 1to 8 o'elock, work — Ahe falls, horse, wagon, women and all, “.l fuil view of the falls mav be bad. But this | two falls ficst mentioned and on & lower plane 1 in the winter, 2, A, O'Buiex, 1 4. Boarding scholars (and most are such) | in kitchen: Sto ¥, light hand-work und Hnish- Drink Excelsior Spriugs Missol lors

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