Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 4, 1894, Page 20

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| meem————————— . o O Ty v 1 N ety 1 D”‘E\S“E \L\R \El”lBURS popular storles of thirty years ago carried | Shown in the importations ot millinery, anl I l\( OF \\lFRl(\\ pl' “ g | speedy passage, “dedicating this area, to | shoulders, mueke helr apotless ermine, | Franco, and the dates are Octobor 17, AN A} NI ) | either hero or heroine—somstimes buth— | Point to a rose season (A1 AMEIRIVALD LAY | be known s Washineton National Park, for | resting only upon théflimy fleece of mist [ and October 19, 1791, the first the surrender of through In -n[u-v-unlun' n!l v-m'mu;-nl;u r:»x; l'mmm silks will be largely imported for the benefit and enjoyment of the people of | and suggesting a floating castie of the sky Burgoyne, the second the capitulation of agements, remember in “‘Dred; Tal t d { 1 d ¢ United S ps, > or.' The rese: g\ v ) ‘ol L . The motto s m )| ¢ of ‘tho Dismal Swamp. by Hareiot Teecher | gowns entire. | 8 N pummer ; tion Yies n tho morthwestern porsion of the | CLIMBING OUR GREATER MT.DUANC. | TRGMSSE & Without Divin Aut Bmiling Invaders Who Knock, but Noise- f""’:‘;‘-}“"" "\“,“""‘" ot "I"‘ tale i in the Cutaway jackets worn over vests of tan, | 18 Spotless Cone Towers Threo Miles Atove | state of Washington, about forty miles di- he ascent of Tacoma itsolf is, on .!m? JThere is a cent struck after the poace ry N bewitching Nina, who is secrotly Letrothed | reseda.and flunkey's red are again populat rectly southeast of the city of Tacoma, and | whole, perhaps moro arduous than perilous, | bewrfig, the head, laureled, of Washington. lesslv Enter, Not Waiting a Bidding, to three gentlemen at on 1of tatiormade guwns the Bea, includen portions of Pleros, Kittitas, Lowls | and thus far no fatalitios have been re- | witl \INGgaat "United States of Amer e One of the most characteristic of Gibscn's Silks and stately looking brocades are t6 —_— nd Yakima counties. Some forty miles | corded. But an ascent Is not won at any | Among all mintdges, American or fofgn socioty ches represents two young ludies | 1o more used during the spring And summer east and west and about thirty-eight north | light cost and the climber who essays that | of : THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, MARCH 4, 1894—~TWENTY PAGES By 19 of modern days, none Yegoer feriptive THE NEIGHBOR A DANGEROUS CONFIDANTE :l‘ x.:-‘” E |1;m"75. high-bred type lio draws | yhan they have been for years before THE MONARCH OF THE ‘PACIFIC | and south, it contains in all about 1,000,000 \“L .;, and barren sumn L miust be m:l AP | of the event It commiemorates, fRone more 0 admirab e says acres, or a rather larger area tha o stato | plied with resolution, endura 2 aring. | expressive of the advance of selence an ““Aro. you golng to be married, Maud Handsome surah silks of violet, gray, sil. OF Riode Taiand, 1o o tnan the wiate | el aven with thess he ey Ay | sppied. oo medaniy B e Vo, replies the other, “I am only en- | YOT blue, petunia, golden brown, ‘and laurel L 3 i ¥ applied to medall \n wbolla Propriety of Making Matrimonial Engage- ‘ groen have, petit pois dots of the same color. | Dedieating National Park with Mount THE GREATEST GLACIAL SYSTEM. The first whito man, perhaps the first of .)".’(;'f'}.‘M’"f',l',“ Y el ments Pnblic—Women More Fond of Ane The idea that an engagem:nt does not * elvet r:ul-i»sl_ coats, '.u.mmn‘al m‘wl com- Tacoma In the Center—The Wonders {t'm-r of all among the wonders of the re- | human kind, to make the as a8 Gen et AR R B oksiing Thi _ g mean marriage some time in the future, no | binations will be worn for months to come, of the Lone Sentinel of the glon are its glaciers. Spun round the moun- | eral, then licutenant, A. V. Kautz, who In al participation by women in a natlo n’:"-h: 'rl'l' Th’l": ”l ‘l"l. i Ihatier. how [ae distant, 16 & ciout pernicions | S1C 10 Some guikes (uougl thy WROFEASES Northwest Outlined. tain as an axis, like the radial spokes of | 1857 was statfoned at Fort Steflacoom, a | unde i pkinge. Will o dowa I the g ":HHH‘AI ox—=A GIimpee & ¢ Fashlons, one. It is the root of many ils, mer. o some 3 ic wheel, some fourteen hug little frontier stockade on Puget Sound. Of £ nu . - Ty ; . ” . le kade ¢ § of numismatics absolutely without a peer. — Moire crepes In all the* new shades are il fee , varying from a mile to twelve | an adventuresome turn, he fnduced two com- s LA Yet I have come to the conclusion that | shown. Two shades of flame, called van- miles In length. Though no one of them | panfons to mako the attempt with him CONNURTALITIES, Of course you have a near neighbor or | Women are much readier to tell of their | dyke, will be much used during the coming | The wisdom of the natlonal government in | taken alone equals in size tho great Muir [ Thoy reached the saddle back below Peak have had, or will have, and wo all know | "eV1Y found happiness than the morc seif- | season. reserving and dedicatinit as public parks the | Elacier of Alaska, together they constitute | Success, perhaps 1,000 feet below the actual Yager—I made one ringing speech in my b A consclous opposite sex, who lito chafing | A novelty in millinery ornaments s called | scenic wonders of the public domain is uni- the g ’m-e'r”f\\;;»u.:yu stem in the x\]“vrim‘”‘lh' summit, Crater peik, when hunger and e | jice, “uiyway. - Chorus - (lerisively) -Where b Gl et hl Ggke e morbidly sensitive 10 public | the Sandow, and I8 nothing more or s | vereally commended. The Yellowstone and of compariso hr than disparage: | haustion forced them (o an immediate de- | e, " yir Sirin SEEEEE I FREEL mind-thelr-own-business sort of a neighbor. | opinion, than a pair of miniature dumbbells in | o "o i TE6 BRLIGHAT NG tidve bas and | ment, it may be sald that all the glaciers of | scent. Yagor ‘ . That 18 the kind we pin our faith to and | The fashion, fad or whatever you choose | Etruscan gold. D LML ICTRO S vy kiUl the 1ps might be snugly stowed away in a | A moro succosstal attempt to explore the SRRl T e v o o P ounctng Yy on= = : slemente th minor! reserves and larger | minor segment of this immense circle. top of the mountain was ma 1 1870 by hen you don't hate me u dear? Wwhose generous obtrusive he o | 1o call it of announcing matrimonial en The perennially popular skirt wafst {s [ Plemented w e o "t ! i SELE 0, George, o you woll enough, b L 18, unobtrusive help in casn | gagoments in a safeguard at the outer por- [ gree e to the Tora Flannelotte, per- | and equally majestic arcas of natural grand- | Perhaps the largest of the ice flelds 18 | General Hazard Stevens and I, B. Van ) 1 1k i well enough, bug of sickness or trouble we always remember | tals of marriage. Fewer divorces will be i & the Tahoma, lying on the southwestern | Trump, accompanied by the ‘old Indi it would be ridiculous for me to marry you, with gratitude ‘, skl LA 3 S e! cale, satine and taffeta silk, in changing | eur are In contemplation, Among these 18 | yjoh0 of the mountain. Its proportions may | guide Stuiskin. . They chose what & You are the first man that has ; roposed to 10 & aity where'Bhopls are Targely rentss “‘\.”'m’l‘g‘,mlmm are not apt t rusi thoupht. | CO10F% are employed for these waists. Mount Tacoma, the sconjc splendors of which | bo' roughly stated as about one mile in | the nccoptod Foute, through. Paradise T our nelghbors Rl ) lessly into an engagement, wiea they Jet certainly has first place among the new | are the theme of a descriptive paper by Mr. | width, seven miles in gth and | and up by the side of the Cowlitz glacier ather—Don't you think we ought to P l""fl‘ 'I"vm" ntly changing "“l'l vanlite LHAC St 1§ not.plaly-a PrICILE matler, t{rh:nnlm:«.’ u'm! unll:n- u«|u1 in grl-;m”pru' Carl Snyder in the Review of Reviews. Mr. | an average depth of 600 nl:-t. i Im- | and Gibraltar Rock, reached Crater Peak | walk faster, darling? We are not keep- © course of a fow years we sample | {hat others must be taken into their con. | fusion on hats as well as dresses. Feathers agine It you will a solld block of fce | and Peak Success, and spent a night fn the | Ing up with the organ. Daughter—No, pa a great variety, good, bad and indifferent fidence. i wrm‘(l‘-l W 'Ill lj'-“mlul cream-colored whose average thickness is twice the height | crater caverns. Sluiskin awaited thom about [ I have waited a long while for this oppor But of all creatures to be dreaded is the Men with no means or no possibility of | 1aces are elaborately jetted 7 of Trinity spire, and in places between 1,000 | half way up, In reality never expecting | tunity, and mean to make it last as long officious g y means of supporting & wife hecitato befcre | Spanish gulpure, point de gene, polnt Russe | State of Washington, in the very heart of | apd 2,000 feet, and of suficient length and | thelr return. No amount of urging would | as possible. ous inquiring neighbor, who Is ap- _ i that vast and somber forest which, stretch- 2 s t o e i 4 * | they ask a girl to their lot, when they know | And rose point are the laces now in greatest SO DU L] ctehe | width'to cover one-half of Manhattan Island. | induce him to make the ascent. Tah-ho-ma [ First Youns L Do you always buy Y devoured by an Insatlable curiosity, | ¢no” world will be cognizant of thelr pre- | Use, but for decorating summer toflets these [ Ing northward from the Columbia river far | The Nesqually, the Cowlitz, the Carbon | ho regarded as the dread abode of an evil | two kinds of Second Young Lady Tespocting the dimensions of your grocery | umption. : > will be added to by hosts of exquisite | Into the solitudes of the Dritish possessions, | and White river glaciers ard of but lttle [ spirit_who would hyrl avalanches on the | Always. You sce, when I write to Charlie bill or the condition of the family morals, waicliad “fancy’ patterns of alcy mesh. T et Creads “lore | less immensity, the last named being fully [ implous mortal who darod ponetrate his | T uso red paper; that means love. When When you hear n ring at the front door [ Girls without stability of character, frivol- [ Shoulder capes of Rusian sitic pomnt tn | (o, JOV S, Rion Glouds blow in from the | Lelve miles fin length, When now you | sacred preeincts, “The Indian supoerstition | [ answor Jim's ‘lottors 1 use blue paper, Yelltydu ‘ara. mentally prepared for s cailer, ot scheming, have no longer occasion | Military shape are new and promise to be | pycifc, finding thelr easternward fight [ goi®'aof that o glacier a mie in length ) of ey mountaln 8 gerint: 1 jnd i the | which means “faititul unto death.” a visitor or a book agent to accent some man they do not care for as | exclusive novelties, ~They have pleturesque | hapred by the mountain barricade, pour down | A & balf a mile wide, in Europe, s an | picturosque legends of these red men thef® | miere are over 16,000 bacholors in Mani- 2 L BLODBING BLOHY LoWera Shadb s hoeator BN, | atanUing jcollhFx ard mel AMOFEHORB A BINELE Lo AL L ir dOWN | eminently respectablo affair, you may grasp | runs the story of ono who climbed to the | ( Hers r€ byer 16,000 bachelors in Mot HHt okl thos " pping & the one for upon the region an annual rainfall of fifty sthihg ¥ \ 5 i 3 g ir ut _oh: those meddling, light-stepping | whom they yearn frock in the most desirable fashion. T es, Tt mirturcs the glant growth of fi | Something of the size and bulk of this fleld | top and found there a flery lake, but was goci oo SWE e SEtS, O TEIER ot near neighbors, who, at any moment from | By announcing an engagement, I do not | The wide revers and the cravat of the [ and cedar and spruce, the heavy festooning | ®0e o o G red down, by the spirit who abldes thert: | land’s “superfluous” women will emigrato to S Iy e ‘\“muvulngb till late Saturday | mean proclaiming it from the house tops. All | Directoire period have appe gan, and | moss and tho decp tangled undergrowth that [ o uFER HiCse BWEEEVC. SOrRER FOREVE | o otion within logendhry tmes, Manitoba the procesding may be mutually e dlable to knock at the back door | that is necessary is for the young man to tell | fashion books promise that “the styl makes of much of western Washington a [ go% 8OmE SLE sireams varylng ffom soventy ogenda L advantageous to them and the aforesaid ey oo waiting for a bidding, nolslessly | ono particular friend with permission to re- [ which will dominate our best spring clothes | dense and sometimes Impassable jungle vl AU LIRS MANY ATTEMPT, FEW SUCCEED. bachelors, urn the knob and _silently “enter your | peat the fact, and the nows will spread moro | are to be picturesque.” It Is for this reason that the ‘wonders of | oo, WG IWAREE, 0 IS G N | Sinco then several successtul ascents have | Isabella A. Dayton of Cambridge, Mus Prorae Jdomaln, agd with a cat-like tread | rapidly than a prairfe firo.” I take It for | Lenten tea gowns of violet-striped black | the new park have so long escaped alike | dih/s WHIR VAFIously Gmpty o tbe 1, onhqeand tn 1800 Miss May Full a giddy young thing of 65, has just r ('I.-un:::;lv" y{“.;: r‘v.‘;“ |l‘||g.“V\n:|>n'| the act of | granted that the families of both parties | moire are trimmed with a very deep Marle | the incursiongof tourlst or descriptive artist, i “"‘ e the | Young lady of Tacoma, braved the rig colved $5,000 in a suit for breach of promise, soiled white "Im‘m WEGHE ‘Wl'f ':rrlvm» youle have been informed at once. Greetings be- | Antojnette bertha of jetted lace, with long | While the glories of more acc sible regions | o spectacle stream | ©f the climb, and won the honor of being | The defendant agreed to pay her $10,000 (LRI, & side out to present | tween thom should be as cordial as possible. | ands of jetted not that fall half the length | have been heralded throughout Christendom, | pyrebing from tho s in full | the first woman to reach the summit. Many | last vear, owing to the opposition of his Or perchance an early call may find the Attty ’l‘r‘jt“";‘ such a time has re- | of tno skirt front after they are tied. And it might still remain unknown nnv!l T el o T s at Nesqually | attempts made each summer, but the | family to the proposed marriage, but she family seated at breakfast and silent notes | It is most annoying when, after an engage- A new shade of brown called mordore is i'-'f.‘l{,'.:('f.fi'.'."m‘.i. 1'"’rlx!-'l‘"nf.f“',‘.’ufl\"f“."n-r‘n"ffl:i gluzier ssuies from the narow canyon which | Mumber of thos f\\linw names are r (-Iu.-.hv. iii}""”'il e tia drio AN bEEORA ful- are taken on the quality of the table linen [ ment has ben made public, found that | Yery fashionable. 1t is pretty in silk and | FUE7EATS RalnETERR to = BeRite holds it like a vise it presents a towering | o L1 SAVETAS OF the erbter 6fe mot. fark Fe R a virtuous shock of surprise is exhibited | take placo for an indefinite period. in the light bullion tints shaded over it. this continent, it not up L - | from which the river pours in noisy tor- | Sayed the feat during the recent season | dent Clevelund, who died in Des Moine it the mistress of the house still happens | One shrewd young lawser has solved the | Dlack and white striped sateen tea jackots, | For, while there are other peaks Whose | yont poneath, Again, on the s ot [ only the photographic expedition led by | last October, made an arrangement by which to huve her locks adorned with curl papers, | problom what to do under such conditions, | trimmed With black and white lace and in’ | brows are cooled by vet higher altitulos | (e glaciors themselves, small streams are | ARhur French of Tacoma was successful her husband was to marry a Miss Emma It mag be a few hours later N » | He and his flancee have c o0 that the | Sertion, have fronts of white accordion- [ there are none which present such & rare f goon “tumbling down into some deep-riven Many enfertaining accounts have been | Brown of Indianapolis, an intimate friend of later you are 8 2 6 have announc aat the ol o ' B and wondrous union of symmetry and sub- written of these ascents. But they can, | hers, wh * i ke hurriedly dressing for a business trip down | engagemcnt is dissolved—the girl's mother | Pleated chiffon, completed by a jetted : . | hers, who had promised her to take care of i it T et ST SRIIR0 EE G e A Ta At to1 4l |iEIFUTa, limity, of mystic color, perfection of grace- after all, convey little idea of the strange | Mr. Robinson and their children The and talk lb- attors Halt an hour, while | them so—yet he takes the youns lady ¢ boh —— ful outline and gigantic and awe-inspiring sensation of standing far above the clouds, | mariage of Miss Hrown and Mr. Robinson nd talks and chatters half an hour, while | them so—yet he takes the young lady out as e shape as this soaring dome of snow, the the landscape below blotted out of sight. | has just taken plage at Ind polis. you fume and fret in well bred tiough use h as cver and every one is expecting to FEMININE NOTES. Mount Ranier of the maps, the Mount Ta- ATy B oV OMIN R CoTEh B 6t BN L oIl R e ek A RS N OB less silence, and you miss the important | receive wedding cards when circumstances | _Although the parents of Mme. Bames- | coma of popular usage and aboriginal tra- A CAMP IN PARADISE. oes lifting thelr heads above the vast h__,":’m“ with the new associnte justico of Sammemont and: thereby are; seglously. om- | PORIG | amont as It ono was | 0T, AF Anierieans, the primadontia ‘was | dition. Thoro are few who may lock upon ,In almost startling contrast to all this | and gloomy expanse of mist, of peering over | (i ibrema court s that he Js soon o bo T e Aot - itk CLII ol W) d i its lone and ‘simple majesty with soul un- | dreary desert of snow is the ypique beauty brink of some eyrie crag down into far | b fubFEHS COUEL 1 Lhat B rnotive. ladio “,::S,",',fi}','y,.,?li"‘I e iondache Siilknow b s mpmentary o melther | The idea of placing saleswomen fustead of | moved, for it is one of nature's master- [and sublimity of Paradise vafley. Lying hs, whose outlines 4 e b B b M e 1 mCeis ANl you geed; husband is | & . o SONETAL U L men in the boys' clothing department has | pie And there are f who, having | on the southern slope of the mountain, shut ing the earth beneath your Jecaitd » ¥ e gone and the children are at school. With | fashion now sanctions what the best people i Kent, a populur lawyer, who was executor D e n aroral s y;‘;m heat | have always done—announce betrothalse, | Deen adopted by a firm with large stores in | looked upon it, do not experience a desire | in on either side by the huge glaciers of the at the onset of some roaring, plunging | or General Sheridan's estato, and died thres R s e e A B an e i R aoTdBre the ma- | several cities to penetrate the dreamy veil in which 1t | Nesqually and Cowlitz, and surrounded by | avalanche, to be alone on the summit of an A NIEGA ico White 18 49 upon the plilow of tho sitting room couch. | even when this was considered by the ma- SAGI Lt 4 i bl e LI, 4 IS bO L ALITe o of an | yoars ago. Justice White is a bachelor, 49 T al e e T oot | Sority ‘ns Implying o iaek of deficacy, "1tz | Annie Besant wears a bloodstone ring | hangs and make acqualntance of its nearcr | towering walls of basalt, the effect as you [ ether-piercing neak, amid trackless deserts | Ol ‘00 " ana nandsome, without a T Yo O o o e ek door | crvation 1s ow ‘refuired by sobiaty na | Bven her by Mme. Dlavatsky, which pos. | beauties. It has a spell and a fascination | come upon it s bizarre in tiw extreme; i s | of snow, miles ahove the precinets of animal | Y53 Whon his ruddy. face, and red hair Hotiieland therasshe comes. that eversto-hex |much;as sation of brilliant functions in ses wonderful magnetic power, 5o its pre: s0 subtle and resistless as to stir the com- [ as though one had stepped from the regions | or vegetable life, in a still darkness that | (pien (e moth of time has spared to a i erois e comoesathatyaveratoshest |§ARRIMR L o Al R o weraitatun: monest clod, while it spurs the poetic fancy | of the pole Into a semi-tropical garden. | appals, with only the sky and the stars for et teat nsighbor, frippimE ligily Hit g The Russian government has just fssied | to fant flights. T remember,as 1 first | Here nature revels in her most gorgeous | a neighbor. Little wonder that the law- With a gay little smile to tell you that all N RUAcTBRE iRt 5 enceforth the services of | Watched it grow, luminous, ent and nic and chromatic effects. The valley is [ giver of Israel went upon the mountain top, of her work Is done. She never reads und | Aftor finishing her scason In Berlin ro- | & Cecre vk, telograph operators and | real from out ihe mantle of mist which | a deep, broad, natural park, some ten miles | for it is upon the lonely heights that seer N ; I L ATl e i doca il Jhoe and thed ntly, Bleonora Duse fllled an engagement | FOmeR 8 oo, o e 1o be dis- | held it as in a‘shroud, I could have sum- | in length and perhaps two wide, and curved | ship comes, and the mind escaping from the [ 0f the Peaco Allen, who wis preschi, wis she chows gum incossantly, while fthe | In Frankfort. In passing the largest art ) LCKCR STREES OF (1o FAVEGRTR Si0 Ho e tn: | moned back the ‘whole antique world of [in the form of an uncomploted horseshoe. | narrow fetters of common life stands face Aunmonod to perform a marriage coremony, YA, AndeyarieSctinimyanos shangnimblog isloreidn tharelty onaialloenoon Jetojnotichdy | PERsei e i BEC 18 VSRR ed by men. | logy and domiciled it upon this greater | It lies just below the line of perpetual snow, | to face with the lmmanent forces of the | The contracting parties were John Perry and fingers manufacture seems as intermnable as | in the window a picture by Dr. Adolf Menzel, According to that arch-fiend, the statis- | FWRGORY, FC SETNS its basaltic palisades protect it from the [ world. Miss Mary McGreevy Lo ceremony was her everlasting tongue. That wags and | the greatest of Germany's historical | ticfan, who manipulates figures with mo: e ety , Lot glacter’s chilling breath, and as the warm = performed at the residence of the bride, on wags, as she masticates that gum, till, [ painters. She went inside and bought it, saw | astounding results, only 85 per cent of DISCOVERED BY A POET. southern sun beats upon Its rich. volcanic | *Recent and more accurate measuréments | Bridge strest. When Mr. patience, that noble trait, is worn to shreds | other pictures by Menzel and bought them, | blondes marry, against 79 per cent of their It was Theodore Winthrop, of gentle | soil it summon to life an almost tropical show that e height of the mountain | the hou he was informed that var s r is ove 1 €0 that icoma s the | sired by both parties that the ce and it becomes with you a case of inward | carrying them all away with her in her | dark-haired sisters, who re hushands, memory and pathetic fame, who first spread | vegetation, which spreads over the floor of | 5 AROYe 1o Y R CLC L U R Ly L sremanysbo) conquest ‘or outward rebellion; you must | carriage. Mrs. Charles Avery Doremus, the author | abroad the glories of the siwash’s Tacoma. [ the valley like a carpet of brilliant color. | United States, x kit S LUl S needs summon to your aid all of the angelic A few minutes after her departure Menzel | of “The Full Hand,” which was recent Years ago, a matter of some four decades, | It is almost a hothouse effect. At the ex- g i \"l-l e v eatote nothbt et bl aratns aualities in order to “love thy neighbor himsell stopped at the store. He is almost | produced in New York, Is a descendant of | to be exact, Winthrop, young, ardent, and a | treme head of the park lies Paradise glacier, THE MOST PATHETIC LIN witteh from his pocket to n 1o time thyselt.” .| 80 ¥ old, and for the last generation has | President Jefferson. Mrs. Doremus was | poot to boot, journcyed west. When he | pouring forth the turbulent milk-white pumediintihe Coremony s led '_";"l“ ]'“J I‘:{ Of course, she fs only thoughtless. But'| been receiving all the honor and admiration | cducated in Paris and has written several | crossed the Isthmus of Panama and struck | stream’ which goes swirling down tho valley | The ¢Pall Mall Budget's inquiry for the | Rhiouncing that the worlds peeord B 088 what an awful lot of mischief a thoughtless | that could touch the ar ieart. Never- | works of fiction. northward he found about the Golden Gate | like a stria of pearl in the richer emerald or pathetic line ever written seems to | D¢ ‘1” ) “‘3"'” gt (0L M.:. ”“_‘ ':-.»;p‘\ f““, person can do, especlally If there is an uu- | theless he showed much satistaction when | mpo first literary venture of Elizabeth | a patch of population—a population that, in r and foliage. Higher still gleam aroused ‘much_intercat, ‘Among. the [ 4nd cono-halt secouds in Gho ceremeny known quantity of Old Nick in their mental | told of Duse's fancy for his works, and | giuart Phetps Ward was a story written | paradoxical parlance, had' been summoned cold, white flanks of the Cowlitz glacier, [ 145t pageful | e th WyihsaiataiEmant 5 makeup. % mumbled some words to the effect that the | \phen she was only 13 years old. It found { by a fever for gold. But for the rest, from So sad, so strange, the days that r SR 2 Whenever T see two nelghboring women | Italian actress was really a_genius in her | Jooas 2000 5t tna ofice of The Youth's Com- e e s L tot thatrollingitiden rotd] poured down from the ice fields take more e e i, exchanging mince ples or testing the baking | way: a great concession to her sex from him, | panjon, and soon after saw the light in that | the Pacific, he found a Tand which the map D from the dizzy crests, and shim- | o 40 vo aone with hope and honor, we are Henry Watterson has been in New York, DOV Eazetnactive sroacl ovens, T1{ifor Mondell ta a=knotty ol tollow iwith all |ipunitcation, still traced With uncertain outline and peo- [ mer gontly into the far depths. “Chief of lost to love and trutl d in Mnawer 10, query us (o his opinion of presage a falling out some dark day, and | the woman-hating sentiments of a confirmed e 2 G a5 | plea omly with savages, save where in one | these is the beautiful' Sluiskin or Paradise | ywo are Greoving dowrs ihe ladder, rung by N e phat a torrible: rovelation of one anoiner's | bachelor. ~ Ho bought a picture of Duse. | i OGS 0f JR0R, Genertl, Bondes | Biooing dusis by tho shores of the great | falls, at o head of the valloy. A litle lake | ™y 70 “Huayard Kipiing. | 00 Wion b oo bosom secrets and family skeletons will | placed it carefully in his coat-tall pocket, [ jot WS BUE OF Fhe MarbEet BERRIEIS ) oot ke the children of a new messiah | nesties at the foot of the ridge, while away L Al 2 locul gambler thought he b thaikesb§ slitnlotsdy. Youre nelghbor. Lwill | and departed. tojested the first line of railway in North | had plunged into the wilderness seeking a [ to the southward, 100 miles to the Columbia, | My long-lost beauty, hast thou folded quite (it KIMEHE SEHENA"y “scafter to tho four winds of heaven” all [ The proprietor of the art store told one of | fESREE WE PR DGR FOAY GO CRD | ot e"and a haven from the bigoted perse- | the rough and broken country streiches away [ THY Wings of morning lght? money. e wa inde of your cherished, harmless little decelts, | Menzel's friends what had happened, and tho | {repnts & FERER TPEEEIAY: cutions of @ ‘matlon that stilb - traded in | like an angry, tumultuous sea. St. Helens, ~Oliver, Wepdell Holmes. | think they call it draw | o8 it which they had promised so faithfully never, | friend at once Invited Duse and Menzel to % A Al 1ave Ponetrating as far as the region | @ sharp volcanic cone wreathed in snow, The light of oiite 2t portune mmoment urrive RO . 5 Mrs. Sophia Bracunlich, business manager | laves. —Penetrating £ d 3 he light of a whole life di tealt the stranger © +and himselt four Apvey to revpal. his louse to mect ecach other at dinner. 3 hic Was about to erect into the | lifts it graceful head in the distance, and When love is done. ~Bourdillon. | quccns. The hetting began, and when all theie of the Engineering and Mining Jo 1 of | Which congress wa So do not be too intimate with your near | Bach came, overflowing with admiration for | 9f the Husinoering and Minihe Journal of |-l B0 \washington, he brought back | beyond are Mt. Hood and Mt. Jefferson. Joney was p and 1 came 0 & show-down the neighbors, and respect the ‘old saw, * the other. Menzel knows no Italian and | New York, was recently made one of the report. of this lonely petk rising sheer from | Looking down th valley the busaitic walls Out, out, brief candle! yed four kings, “Take the money, milarity breeds contempt.” Duse knows no German. So the conversa- twenty life fellows of the Rritish Imperial A i o B v: the effect Life's but a walking shadow; the poor | Sirins aped the astonished nati Another variety of next door nelghbors | tlon was limited to shrugs of the shoulders, | institute. She is the' only woman member [ the inmost waters of Puget sound, whose | seem of an artfficlal regularity; the effect of & i the DOOT | iy fir,’ “Fake the money! But that w who become an unbearable nuisance are | wavings of the hand and mutually unin- i o v c z of the foliage is weird player enlt you!' of that organization in the United States name he caught from tlie varying dialects | the vivid coloring ¢r)m Iv}]lg (q‘ \\'url ..xtd R and frets his hour upon the | MaRd_I denit yo el of the Indian tribes and fused into softened | fantastic, as if the sunlight were filtered atage, those who imagine that though sick unto | telligiblo exclamations. When the time for | Drury collde, Springfleld, Mo, has just re- | 0f the Indan JrOcs SE0 JUSEC (MG FERG CREGH R} nomAEVARE BIIATT LAnd LRmthe (6Y0l [ oA e e R S death you can surely eat their cookery, | parting came Duse threw off the reserve, of | ceived from Judge Melvin M. Gray of St. 7‘“"“ vision of the meurtain, caught as he | Sweeps the scene with its strange com- 8 which they evidently regard as the acmc [ which A.iericans heard so much during her | Louis $25,000 as a fund to endow a chair of | 4% WS PR G0e "natehless infand sea which | mingling of crag and waterfall, glacier and And here, with hope no longer here, of the cullnary art and quite superior to | American tour, selzed the old man’s hand | geology. The gift is made by Judge Gray in bears the name of Vancouver's lieutenant, | garden-like vegetation, the blending of Jan- While the tears drop, my days go on. anything produced in your kitchen. and (ried to Faise It to her lips. Menzol | memory of his wife. The mstitution is open | Bears the namo of Wancouver's [eterte | B el sine, ono might fancy the spot “I."B. Browning. A short time since a lady friend found | struggled to escape the honor and finally, | to men and women students on the same | Je€F FHES T some anclent playground of the young g0ds. | pu¢ on, for the touch of a vanished hand, herself confined to the bed With la grippe. | bowing his head, kissed Duse's hand. Then | terms. 1 5 s A camp: [n ‘Paradlve park s an unmized | pag T ok ihe touch of a vanished hand, She begged the family to keep ler iliness | he fled. The musical editor of the Boston Home WINTHROP'S APOCALYPSF o]l R G TabouTd s Andlitis o narv s CHETsHI a dead secret. But murder will out, and German newspapers say that the kiss was | Journal has had a letter from Patti, and he “We had rounded a point and opened Puy- | intoxicating. And It s here, at an elev in rushes a kind neighbor, carrying a bowl [ an cvent in the history of art, that it was [ says it is as well put together as is her won- | pyunhae® o breadth of sheltered calmness, | tion of about 6,000 feet, that you begin to | Of many thousand kisses the poor lnst of soup. “Now, you must eat the only kiss Menzel has ever been known to | derful vocalism. It is writfen on heavy white | Gy G 8 B0 8 oia Sot (M qrcamy | appreciate something of what awaits the —Anthony and Cleopatra. know it will do you good, for I bestow. His new gallantry has been a | linen glossed paper, the shoets being about | Srd b oue \fug suddenly aware of a vast | climber who pushes on to the summit. | oo e o e, myselt.” groater revelation to his friends than was | six inches wide and nine Inches long. The | e A0 e VAT 6 GO, FVEE, U Saoud, | Camp of the Clouds, which lies on a high | N 1 his love, now in the colde grave! The invalll smiles a sickly ghost of a | Dus hero worship to her neglected ad- | handwriting is exquisitely fine and dainty. piled m ve on the harizon, could cast ridge above the valley, about 7,000 feet up, L 8 smile, fecbly expressing thanks for the | mirers. The innovation of no gloves for brides | jmage so sharp in outline, o full of vigor- | i4 at a higher elevation than is Pike’s Peak | Or they lived their life through and then unéxpected attention, devoutly praying mean The incident has caused several editors to | recelved fresh emphasis at the recent wed- | oug detall of surface? No cloud, as my stare, | summit above the city of Denver. There is went whith time that the lady would retire, for soup | recall tae scene between Meissonier and | ding of Hon. Dass In England. Sho | no’ lonser dreamy, brosently discovered—no | still a matter of 8,000 fect, a milo and a | And were one to the end, but what end who 48 a dish my friend fairly detests. But 1 in 1867. Menzel's reputation had | wore rings enough to almost cover her fin- [ aloud. but a cloud compeller. It was a giant | half, of sheer ascent before the top is at- Knows? “Swinburne. MIBA] torithe vaLaT 0o, thai bonstugtor atands 6l spread through the world, as his ple- | gers, but no gloves. This Is a very trying | mountain dome of snow, swelilng and seem- | tained. And some are taken from me; all are de- guard over the painful task. tures of Frederiok the Great and his court | cdict, for the whitest of hands are apt to | "o i’ the acrial spheres as its image | yiGHEST PEAK IN THIS COUNTRY. fortig The martyr tastes a little sip, and driven | and of Wellington and Blucher at Waterloo | ook red against the snowiness of a bridal | gisplaced the blue deeps of tranquil water. S 2 5 g s} % All, all are gone, the old familiar faces. by sore straits to hide behind a little in- | had been placed high in the list of the great- | gown. The smoky haze of an Oregon August hid But the mountain itself is and ever will Charles Lamb, nocent and much needed deceit, declares | est historical paintings. Meissnier re German housawives, and perhaps others, all the length of its lesser ridges, and left | be the central point of interest as it is the that she appreciates the soup. Meantime | garded him as the foremost of German | pake an excellent fcing for cake without | this mighty summit based upon uplifting | dominant figure of the landscape. It Ae fond kj’\;q and then we sever; the gastronomic reglons telephone up painters, and Menzel considered Meissonier | oos To a half-pound of powdered sugar | dimness. Only its splendid snows were visi- | the middle of the three dazzling snow pea a2 ;;"1'““'} it hlasliforeyer N e the brain a vigorous protost against break- |,the most admirable of modern artists. ‘When | 4dq ‘the grated rind of an orange, a table- | ble, high in the unearthly regions of clear | Which space the crest line of the Ca 0 ey D SRS theer ing the fast on turnips and hot water, | they met in Paris just after the Austro-Prus- | ghooneul of bolling water and a little orange | blye, noonday sky. The shors Iine drew a | at intervals of about 100 miles. Mount 5 X loudly demanding French coffee and rolls, sian war cach struggled vainly in his own | jyjce—enough to moisten it thoroughly. This | cincture of pines accoss the® broad base, | Hood at the south and Mount Baker at the | Had we never lo'ed sae kindly, Will some wiseacre explain why the time [ language to tell the other of this admiration, | \hoyld be ysed at once, and when “set” will | where it faded, unreal, into the mist. The | north attain a height of 10,000 and 11,000 | Had we never sae blindly, MME M YALE'S of a housewlife is considered of so little im- | but the failure was complete. After having | o found soft and very nice. same dark girdle separated the peak from | feet, while Tacoma rises n ly 4,000 feet '\‘\:‘}';fi ‘l"‘“_ "I""‘ parted, 5 A portance t she Is expected to drop her | oxhausted all the possibilities of“signs and Miss Mary, the youngest daughter of e its reflection, over which my canoe was now | higher, or to an attitude = of 14,414 e had ne'er been broken h"-"""l’, g work the moment a visitor enters? maces without reaching an understand- cretary Hugh McCulloch, is a recent addi- | pregsing and sending wavering swells to | feet.* ~This, it should be borne in mind, is L e TS Excelsior Ccmplexion Ramedies Will the day ever dawn when thie house- | ing, they fell in each other's arms and e: tion to the list of short story writers. Miss | ghatter the beautiful vision before it the visual as well as the actual height, for, THE ISABELLA COLN. 8 keeper will place upon time its true value? | pressed their opinions by means of several [ yfoCulloch is the author of a very clever lit~ | ~ “Kingly and alone stood this majesty, with- | Tacoma rests its base practically at the A Awnrded the Highest Medals and Di When that much to be desired riod | hearty hugs. tle story “In the Diplomatic Set,” which ap- | out any visible comrade or consort, though edge of the sea Thus, although Pike's KIRKSVILLE, Mo., Feb. 10—To the Editor plomas fromn I]uv.\\m*lvl s Fair Co- does arrive, Mrs. Smith will not be hanging peared in Harpor's Bazar. Sho has spent | fur to the north and the south its brethren | Peak, for example, or the Matterhorn of the [ 0 /A lumbian Exposition. over Mrs. Brown's back gate half the morn There Is nothing in this weary world more | yyeh time in England and Italy, and knows | and sistors dominated their realms, each | Alps, are each of about an equal altitude, | °f The Bee: ‘The enclosed circular letter 1| _ i 2 ing hours, attending strictly to everybod unsatisfactorv and discouraging than to give | Washington society thoroughly. She 18 & | i isolated sovercignty, rising above the | rising as they do from a high platean five | Would be pleased to have printed in The Bee. | (Mume, Vale, the WorldFamod | Complexion business but lor ' own, while Hhouschold | @ present that cost §5 that looks as if it | ¢all, fair, handsome girl. pine-darkened sierra of the Cascade moun- | to seven thousand feet above the level of | ‘Tt scems desirable that the history of the | Tor bemut s b SOUt pro- duties remain negleeted and ihe children | didn’t cost more than §2, writes the sage of e talns—above the stern chasm where the | the sea, they afford the eye hardly half the | Isabella colns and the fact that thoy are stil | by Av i1 sho run wild upon the street. the Atchison Globe, Eskimos Cheer the Fla Columbia, Achilles of rivers, sweeps short- | aspect of sublimity as this Colossus of the | g "o o po 1 el dous not ook more than 18 May choicost blessings rest upon the good | It A bad sign when a young husband be- | 17000 gam’s subjects from the Arctic zone | lived and jubilant to the sea—above the | Pacifie. Four or five Mount Washingtons fale 0100, Do, ARread :jn, .avory..part; of, ighbor, say I, who calmly ignores the ex- | 8IS to go to see his folks without his brids taught a Chicago audience a pretty less, lovely vales of the Willamette and the Ump- | might be piled one above the other, like the the country, as they are souvenirs that will istence of those whose inquisitive noses are [ You are getting too old to flirt and dance It | pyiriotism at the Chicago opera house, says | qua. Of all the peaks from California to | superimposed temples of Belus, and | constantly Increase in interest and value, PRICE LIST continually ferreting out the private affairs | YOU can take a nap AltingJn & {x:’ e . the Times. It was when Herrmann weaves | the Frazer river, this one before me was the | still hardly - attain the cold and | Members of the ¥ R R L of others. . ABD- & AN GIRgavel A s wite be- | ¢\ nothingness the flags of all nations | royalest. Mount Regnier, Christians have | distant heights to which Tacoma rises. | earnestly requested by x e (s d !“:[;‘"‘h“I'\‘K‘;"»‘"h'f"l’“f"“""“‘”";'n:“.'”" her, he tells | 404 trom them in turn evolyes an American | dubbed it, in stupid nomenclature, pers | Stmilarly it would require a pile of thirty I“l‘”’“.‘rb requested by Mrs, DPr FOR MITH PATCHES, SALLOWHESS, Nothing has been more shameful in our | e ol e | flag emblazoned with an equestrian figure of | petuating the name of somebody or nobody. | pyramids the size of Cheops to reach the " e an A e inn Flnu)rn|-<l\\(4:)‘ Pt AORRAAN AL LERIX RO how smuch she | Washington., The cleven Eskimos from arc Moro melodiously. the siwashes call It Ta: | lavel of its summit. It ovorlooks Puget | POSINg of the remaining coins. I am willing | ommoid wy Complexion il wa l i pranisoly which matrimonial engagements have been [ Lo WheHher OF not fL SIbATIASSSS & WOMAR | (¢ Alaska, who occupied boxes, rose iu their | coma, a generic ' term also applied to all | sound from Olympia to Victoria, a distance of | to promote this fmportant interest of the |y Wity 10 regarded even by intelligent people. No | (1440 her DACK B cone dow, o months | Seats, checred the flag, and remained stand- | snow' peaks. Wha Mceen crests and | 160 miles. It is visible from tho city of | board in our own state, and upon my return | i eh ¥ s wonder It has been said of th that Tike | (o' ‘tako away the triumphant air a young | \P8 until it had disappeared. The audience | crags there may be in its rocky anatomy of | Portland, 120 miles to the south, and from home hope to induce one or more of the local bl kg & Rl OLoant a Ay plecrust they were made to be broken. Such | ;artied ‘woman wears In the Dresenco. of | CAUEDt the eloquent slznificance and burst | basalt, snow ~cov softly with its bends | Walla Walla, on the eastern edge of Wash- | banks to place theso coins on sale at §1 b & thing as publicly announcing a betrothal | giint B v ool ! into delighted cheers. The orches hed | and sweeping curves. Tacoma, under its | ington, 150 miles away. Within the fleld ot [ apicce. MRS, JOHN S. BRIGGS. WRINKLES AND SKIN FOOD, excopt among our Jowish residents, was | Tyerriod 0% o w description of an ideal | 00t the “Star Spangled Banner, ermine, is a crushed volcanic dome, or an | vision from its summit are included nearly A RARE TOKEN teldom dreamed of until Bnglish customs | man s the pieture of the kind sho didn't Snyder writes: The proposed new naffonal park lies In the crevasse, while here and there a lakelet of deep blue water 500 or 600 feet in diame- ter is to be observed nestling on the solid ice. most interesting bit of gossip in con reasonable degree While the town board ting of West Indianapolis was in session recently Justice to assist In the undertaking of dis- | mufeik, dend siin or auy other discoloration T reos bowed low, and the ensemble was a v | ancient voleano fallen in. But if the giant | tho entire state of Washington and portion : kin Faod o 50 genuine demonstration of patriotism. fires had ever burned under that cold sum- | of BDritish Columbla, Idaho and Oregon : As \'Iu“)‘ olumbian b position passes into -y 10 pro ot many yoars ago it was quite custom- | “\i e 2 RN The Eskimos, who were tho, magician's | mit, they have long since gono out. The | Fancy such a peak as this rising from the | history the question of its fittest, most ens | no . i dlei ary for hoth parties absolutely (o deny At | o ove, A0, N to bet that the dovil I8 a | gyosts, are enfouto to Washington, where | dome that swelled up so passionately had | midst of the Alleghanios! Not a tourist or a during and most. beautitul memento for in o An engagement existed until the ied g1 [ AAEE 8 R oy fije they will appear before the president, senate usted over and then fallen in upon itself. | geologist in twenty states but who would | 4ividual possession assumes Importance. 4 d R0Wh Wis i6arly: dompisted Il ihe wedding | Tha trouble with people being religlous is | ong"youge, They are in chargo of Miner W- | Where it nroke in ruln was no doubt o deso: | fave visited and explored it, and attompted | . OF all the ns that have been devised A Fondinoss for tha nowly wedded pair, writes | (1AL they are too conceited to imagine they | Bruceghwho was sent by the government two | lata waste, stern, craggy and riven, but | its ‘summit, whilo beside it Niagara would be | 10 celbrate great episodes, colns or medals FREGKLES AND LA FRED (LA Ruth Travelyan In tho Brooklyn Times, It | "V x e nY anmes o el Ot " years'ago to study methods for the develop- | such drear results of Titanic convuisions | a point of moderate Interest. P AR R R S8 No," admitted a man this morning, “my | yang of arctic Alaska, Among other plans | the gentle snow hid from view. = A Jou ko Into countey diatricts’ Loduy, Whero | wito riover tells mo that sho Ia fond of me, f Which Sio Will submit to congress as tonding (foatlo snow S from VIOWs " tram. | BULK BNOUGH TO DAM THE ATLANTIC, lation, you will @nd theso primitive ideas |t Shg AWavs makes the kind of plo I| o this end is the importation juto Alaska | pled these pure snows. 10| Then, too, its enormous bulk oma Is | tion with the subject they were intended to | still prevail Cpest ol get marrled because thoy are | OF the Siberian domestic reindeer to be used | was a virginal mountain, distant from the | not attached to tho range, but stands silent | make immortal. A fow years ago 1 met a girl from Matne, | tiont ot Lotne Kot married because they are | as food for the Eskimo. None of his charges | possibility of human approach and human | and apart, like the royal chief that it is The Isabella coin blends all the qualit atudying art in New York, whom T heard 3 ‘»fl“«“'”" \"’,‘ XD, S0, HuGD T e ©X [ speak English, but are a keen, Intelligent | inquisitiveness as a marble goddess s from | This single mountain is nearly ninety miles | beauty, permunency and fitness-— (i, bec PR TR o R ]“ix“:\v o h\vvul ;x '\“4 u\“n Hx -;x \AIJ h”\"-":( a | TAce, far superior in mentality to the Es- [ human loves.” in circumference at its base; at the line of | It is identified with the exposition hy auth : a 3 b ow very seldo ou hear of kimos of Labrador, B BL LM ~ Jerpetual snow, about 5,500 feet altitude, | ity of congress, and relates exelu v to it locality, also an art suident, They Went | woman giving a famfly dinner to which her A b L R SRR PUGET SOUND THEN AND NOW. T L T L B S et et e AR it A A R ey R Kimos ever sent so far | This was forty years ago. The raflway | broad summit is more than two miles across. | small and the bulk of it is bound in time to with! tho girl—a: wonderfully intellectual | grisvances of your triends? . Yeur crine | south. T four men, three women, | now penetrates where Winthrop trod a | And it is, as I have said, nearly three miles | be lost; because the portrait 1s a fac-simile joung woman—she told me that the two ] ances have an squully ridienlons foundaties | Ad four little girls, All wear furs and have | wilderness, and the ships of commorce from | high. A pen and pencil will readily compute [ 0f the only one unguestioned as truthfu had grown up together from childhood, that | to yeur frlends. We all make too ey o | their hair done in the quaint native fashion: | the distant ports of the Orient ply that | jts volume, nearly 200 cubic miles. That is | and because the execution Is of unusual pre thetrs was a purely platonio friendship, that | our troubles. ake too much of | They will return home by wav San Fran- | beantiful sound down which, In the midst | to say, if the average depth of the Atlantie | cision and suavity. In addition to these | they had not the faintest idea of ever becom The most aftectionate family we ever | C'3:0 In June. To them Herrmann's per- | of a vast solitude, the young traveler pad- | does not exceed one mile, the material con- | traits, its value is | g husband and -wife, She could not go | know was composed of nine differont mepr | formance was of especial significance, as his | dled in a rude dug-out. Two modern and | tafued In this mountain would construct a | dented distinction of | wround with & youns gentloman s sho | bers, and they ived in nine diitorent towns, | (10018 are not unlike thoso of the' ma sie- | prosperous oities, one named from the great | solid embankment of an average thickness of | or coln ever struck fn | ...w]\ in tho country wilhout belng_talked When o girl wants to marry a man her | They ‘watched his tricks with intonse inter: | pronn tain i Wh AbAGw L daps:Liig oLiae LR R L L e B hana il e xe out, 80 they declded to be *enga O] hor opposes, she finds a champlon in her 2 .- ks wi ! Ite om the great chief ‘who so long rule rom the summit ¢ acoma swer of | cease ho relg [y iy SR AL mm:l, X R er o mu:Tv‘Lr "\\Knll j:l\\f:‘:”um‘m::" :::'r 4, andiifar. trom. belog startled, showed | tho " tribes “that dwell. at the mountain’s | Babel would huve beon hardl re visible [ the only coin st in b ools ity g v e b bedPe rather a decorous spirit of Investigation | feet, Tacoma and Seattle, have been built | than one of the church spires of a Puget | exercising no sway in L ,“l‘A'" T T e e S t‘:‘lt‘i“"”" her husband's In a case of this that I\l(‘“t.” d keen intelligence. Rina, a | where Winthrow ound only Indian huts. | sound .“\J of jdeal worth, and in remembera v g R ? " 1 was taken & child o years, sat vely through the f sted by Its grande 1t of battles, or prowess, or in tb Y b v, Ch lunatic asylum soon after her “friend"” was When a man is a little queer as a lover, | orgor, ke 4 And attracted by its grandeur and its my A FLOATING CASTLE OF THE SKY Chls married to another suggests to me a melan- | he is awfully queer as a married man. performance, behaving In a manner that | tery, the mountain whish seemed to him so ¢ ¢ her own race, or for any mat i ; Earried (o y A o could have been held up as an object lesson | distant from human approach has been ex Seen from almost any point of the compass | to revive and perpetuate the glor g \ . \or your sholy tale An humblo lover makes a very domineers | 1 some little girls A ey \ " spect of the mountain Is lmposing be- | woman who, actuated by un I A ) penins 1 Of course, the fact of an engagement | ing husband. plored, its fastnesses pepetrated and mapped asp v ; ¥ alts 11 by LR A SRR FagE 0L a0, Spasomen RX The four children « apped thelr hands foy- | and a numbor of wucessstul wsconts to 1ts | y words, Perhaps the best attainable | and out of faith in God and 0 the surprise St PAS] DINTRRE ously at the sight of the flag, mingling their | far sgummit have been. made. And such a | view, It one does not care to penetrate the | her gems and her patronag greatly o the surprise and fudignation of FASHION POINTERS. shrill chvers with those of their elders. Thelr | wonderful region has. it been discovered to | tnterior, is from the top of the noble blufts | deemed futile by consort and tho. parties copoern Lor i pmpossible | Durable twilled silks of various kinds are | bright, protty faces shared the interest of | ho that fitting recogniion can be made of | on which the city of Tacoma lics. Here the | nearly all her adviser 0 stop gossip over a matter of such vital | poyiye the audience, which was highly flattered at | {¢ in but one way: Berset it aside as our | eye, looking up the low intervéning valley of | mankind a world of Interest to two family circles, schoolmates, [ " o patriot of people 3 \ companions and friends, as 1t would be to | The ol ed corn color Is one of the | the patrlotism of people living within | thira great national pask the Puyallup, may command the entire bulk | its discoverer w “ . B new shades. twenty-three miles of the Arctic circle. One = 8 P o = of the mountain from base immit, The Much of the histe vorld | writt The best and most honorable way s not cloth for spring costumes | go 0 W 880/ rescmbles the weave of French vicuna gown in all the well dressed audience. The first step toward this end was made one day the mountain s cold, distan solubly assoclate ith the World's ( to try. Any young man to whom a loving was a dress of arctic squirrel skins and was t n th re, u Hoauty and Comploxlon Spociallst woman has promised to intrust her future New veils have very large black velvet | valued at §300. gieu on Pebrasry 34, President Harri- | and lifeley I, axain, Y an_ ox; ) o on Issue proclamation setting aside a | opa ! tinted alaba A acquire pre ought to be proud to acknowledge ft. dots and borders of ribbon velvet el ) P R L o tar | Wid A BRIA [ e (S b s o, | ract of some 1500 sayare miles about the | It will remain hidden behind the dense mists | that have g 501 Karbach Block, < 2 t0-be enE ) a pl 088 rose: 1 FHO. fathe ohuroh " increaas 8 mem- | mountain as the “Paciic Forestry Resery which gather about it, and then as the clouds | tokens by the United States, = - ¥ A young man to be engaged o u plurality of | Moss roses and bude, clusters of wild | bership in Missouri the past year by 15,000. | Aud now before congress is tho bill Intro- | part loom out of the murk In all 1ts inperial | The now invaiuable “Libertas Americana” | 15th and Douglas Stesets, Omaha, Neb. & A ] eric eauly roses are | of $30,000. our legislalors are urged 0 put @ | in cloud, while above will rise brow and | Independence, The work was done Im Main OMoe, 146 biate Bk, Uhioago, LU, colns not for currency—have been found | 1¢maut most appropriate and have suryived every other vestige of human creation in conne Dot If froklos hitva baoa from youth cleln will romove them i every i g v § s t i 1 ron i (vad ) f vl Do It 14 ) W ) 100 per bottle THE HAIR AND EXDELBIO ! HAIR TONIJ,

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