Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 07, 1907, HALF-TONE SECTION, Page 5, Image 19

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FINES
EACH CUnt SI'CO
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Lekie e Louses 5 -oof
or mam eivts lirv
- ' ' W jr. &
GLADDER RAIMENT- FOR MAN
Must Reform Kit Dreii to Compete
with Woman.
MERE SUMPTUARY LAWS WON'T DO
One flu Clothes Were Garer Tkaa
Hers, but Now, In Spite of Haber
dtikfr'n Dlaplar, iobrlety
... la Role.
Now doe tha young man's fancy turn to
the fashionable haberdasher's windows.
Ther he sees displayed wonderful shirts
and shirting, silks for neckties, dressing
gowns and pajamas which seem made for
soma fairy princeling, so beautiful and un
real are they, so unfitted for .wear In a
rude and practical world.
Ther are fabrics fine enough to be passed
through a ring In true fairy tale style and,
aa for colors, you sea pinks, greens, yel
lows, violets, tha hues of Ice cream and
bon bona. ' Just common folks are often
heard to wonder If these confections are
artful dodges of the shopkeepers to hold
the public before their window.' It seems
doubtful that they find purchases, because
. V ffonutne, pqn your word man has ever
ff n seen wearing them.
' Persona with a shrewd sympathy with
the natural weaknesses of mankind can
conceive of the ravishing bath robes and
pajamas being worn In the strict seclusion
of th bedchamber. Why not? Tha beauty
loving soul who la obliged to apend his
dreary days In the ehamefacedness and so
briety of the regulation mat attire must
have some outlet, and a man Is no hero to
his valet anyway.
Oh, Man! Alice In Wonderland thought.
Oh, Mouse! the proper form of address,
therefore, oh, man! should be appropriate
here have a little courage, wear a gay
ahlrt or a gaudy scarf occasionally, and
bo not auch a Slav to tyrant fashion!
Think of Kins; Kdward of England, who
not only wore a rose colored ahlrt to the
races, but carried a tall walking stick and
Is thought to be making a determined effort
to introduce soma life and oolor Into the
sad colored commocplaoeneas of men's
dress. .
This ,1 a wise king, able In dlplomatlo
arrangements of publlo and private diffi
oultlea, and It may be that he recognises
and Is trying to cop with a critical situa
tion. It Is time ther was a call to arms,
Bhall man allow himself to sink quietly
Into drab oblivion while woman competes
with him In every occupation not quite
beyond her physical strength and yet does
not sacrifice on Item of the pretty lm
pedlng frivolities of the toilet?
Men have been pleased to regard this
phenomenon with amused contempt as a
display of feminine unreason. This Is a
mistake. It Is no sign of Inferiority, but
rather of sagacity or amasing cunning.
Woman realises tha distinct advantage
of a charming appearance 1n the struggle
for life and proposes to retain It even while
gathering up everything else In sight.
Th French revolution, that leveler of
social distinctions, aeema to have been
largoly responsible for th blotting out of
all beauty and plctureaqueness from men's
dress. An authority says that though th
v; .twit
..."''(iwwiii mn. in li i.yy,nni'ii
1
Bt-MPTt'ARY
FTJTIL.B.
LAWS WERS EVER
change began in France, It was partly to
mark contempt for old court usages and
partly In imitation of certain classes of
persons In England whoee costume the
French mistook for that ot the nation
generally.
This new dress was Introduced by the
sans culottes and consisted of a round hat.
short coat, light waistcoat and trousers, a
loos neckerchief Showing th shirt collar
above, hair cut short a la Titus and shoes
tied with vStrlngs. This simple costume In
turn soon became much admired In Ebg'
land and was adopted by young men.
Trousers which fitted close to the leg
remained fashionable until 1814, and both
they and the boots which bear the name
were Introduced by th Hessians. In 1814
loose trousers beeama the mode, though
they had already been worn for som ttme
In th army and by llttl boys.
The Cossacks were responsible for
trousers with which Wellington boots wr
worn. Th loo frock" coat or surtout
was added to th list Of garments by som
of George IVs dandles, and since that time
there have been fw differences, only varia
tions. In men s dress up t f,h present
da.
Th Ideal was at first "An honest man
close buttoned to the chin. Broadcloth
without, and a warm heart within." But
thers was some latitude as to the color of
th broadcloth In the first fifty years. Dress
coats war of Prussian blus with gilt but
tons and for half dress th ooat might be
of dark purple and brown, cherry color
or olive green, with waistcoats of salmon
color, scarlet and emerald.
Nowadays all such mild Indulgences are
sternly repressed and the Ideal of a well
dressed man Is neither mors nor less It
could scarcely be less than that "his
clothes never seem too new, but are never
too old, while his perfectly kept linen al
ways gives him an air of freshness."
When women first began to fore the
entering wedge into business and profos
slonal life ther came into being a threat
ening cult of the masculine appearing
woman; but It la sufficient that this crea-
ture Is now almost extinct, though th van-
guard ot the business woman has become
a mighty host. Tha pastor's wife who
"JUrr HAD MT HAIR SHAMPOOED."
occupied her husband's pulpit officiated In
a plotura bat with hug whit feathers, and
ven th merry suffragettes, though w
things thsm dismayed, refused to 'storm
th Hous of Commons In trousers, whll
th ordinary woman leading, a thoroughly
business life In close association with man
M'a in .! '".""f '
' MLs; '
' 'A AsS- $
wVV'a AN a
I Indulr tn euch tileaiuit fripperies
! lingerie bloutea, bracelet and curl.
Men ahould wake up and atrlve ere It
la too late to adjuat matters to a more eren
balance. Women should be taught that
ther cannot eat their ceka and have It too.
Men being aa yet In tha majority a em
ployers should lay down strict rules for
the women employed by them.
Foolish furbelows should be rigidly fined
and plain serviceable dress as Ilka a man's
s possible should be enforced. Then peo
ple might sea something Ilka equality of
the sex as.
But, alack-a-dar! sumptuary laws war
ever futile and women notoriously allppery
In evading them. Men have for ages been
striving to keep women In order In this
respeot. They have tried ridicule, shame,
sorrow and Qeroe denunciation to no pur
pose. But In olden days If women "dressed
too fine" man bad one redress which Is
now denied Mm. He could go and do
llkewlsa and could usually go her one
better.
The great privilege was his of making
himself tha most noticeable and magnifi
cent object In creation. But pride goeth
before a fall. He became so besotted with
Ms ago that ha felt himself able deliber
ately to cast aald all Illusion producing
adornments, all tha romance at flowing
THE BKATTTT-IiOVINO BOULi
MUST
liAVfi BOMB OUIUST.
curls and th mysterious grsce of stately
flowing garments and now looks
t th
foolish creature. On la almost temptea
to think that h deserves to be tottering
as unsteadily on his pedestal as w now
find him.
But there is a gleam of hope. Because
he has clothed himself for 100 years
In sad sobriety Is no reason why he should
always do so. Let him try tha potent
medicine ot long ago and see If this ag
gressive tide ot feminity cannot be
stemmed. .
Of course he will feel very foolish and
theatrical at first, but when he has once
observed the thrilling effect produced by a
swasaering velvet cloak and a feathered
hat upon th feminine halt of th popula
tion, ha will think th game Is worth the
candle. iBlrs, outdress them; it Is th only
1 way to keep them In their places.
Woaiaa la Flu Clothes.
Th woman on the stage must, above all
things, please the ey, says a writer In the
Broadway Magazine. An attractive appear
ance will mak up for th lack of ability,
as any sophisticated actress knows from
experience. Tha wis ones, accordingly,
never neglect to dress th part of fashion
and prosperity to the highest degree their
usually limited stock of finery allows.
They hav to "put up a front" before tha
managers and, agents. Dorothy Tenant,
when she dropped In last season to apply
for the role of th College Widow In George
Ada's play, wore an ordinary summer shirt
waist and plain aktrt. Colonel Henry Sav-
age spok to bar briefly, and evidently In
tended giving, her some small part In tha
cast. But th stag- manager stopped her
as aha was going out, visibly disheartened,
from her interview.
"Go horn and dress," suggested that
worthy. "Dress At to kill!"
Accordingly, back horn went th meek
Dorothy and sorted out th most stunning
of her pravtous season's dresses. Tha next
day sh sidled Into th colonel's office In
th stagiest of stagey "creations," with a
long pink "rasmataa," as sh called It,
around her neck, and a big "rasmataa" hat.
"I want you." Tha colonel had looked up,
observed th vision, and, without recognising-
in th gorgeously gowned woman th
simply dressed girl of th day before, signed
her on th spot for th leading role. Ha
did not know h was getting Dorothy Ten
nant until he asked th young woman her
nam; all he knew was that lis had an ac
tress who "looked th part." That is th
secret ot th gam.
sums m i' 1 9mormmmmmemswMmig
sr ..r 11
jit1
1
Pioneers Celebrate Their Golden Wedding
HB golden wedding of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Brown waa celebrated
at tha family home, 1424 North
Twenty-sixth street, Friday after
noon and evening. For twenty
years Mr. and Mra Brown bavs been resi
dents of Omaha and they have been in Ne
braska for mora thaa fifty. In May, 165,
ARGENTINE NATIONAL PARRS
n Ont Are Found the Famous FJli
of the Ijpiazu.
BOME WONDERFUL FEATURES
Cataract Wblek Is Antony lb IMgsreat
anal Moat rietersq la World
Beaalle of Lake Naaael
llaal.
Argentina has now two national parks,
which ar strikingly different from each
other, but both of which are among th
finest things In their way that th world
affords. One of them Is the celebrated falls
In the Inguasu river, on th border between
Argentina and Bratll. and the other Is a
part of tha. beautlfut and extensive Lake
Nahuel Huapt, whose aaveral arms extend
up tha valleys of th Andes In the northern
part of Patagonia.
Th Igruam falls have been practically
InaccessIM to tourists, but this year tha
government has begun tha work of lm
provement which will make them' easy to
reach and provide all tha comforts of
civilisation for those who may wish to visit
this natural wonderland.
Th falls ar among the greet scenlo
spectacles of the world. Their height Is
about 200 feet and the fall Is broken about
midway In the descent by a wide Jedge of
rooks, so that th water drop la in two
Curious and Romantic Capers
Old Sweethearts Wed.
1S3 MART EMERSON of Lexing
ton, Ky., and Judge William Cole
man of Oakland, Ind., ' were
M
v . l quieuy marneu at ine resiuanuv
of Joseph Dinelll, brothcr-ln-law
of tha bride, in Lexington. Both brida and
groom ar about 70 years old, and their
marriage was the culmination of a romance
which began befor the Civil war. They
had been engaged to marry when young
Mr. Coleman entered the army and when
th war was over the young people had
drifted apart and Mr. Coleman married a
woman in another stat and the former
sweethearts soon lost track of each other
Several years ago Miss Emerson movea to
Lexington, where she made her home with
her sister. Mrs. Dinelll, and being a skillful
needlewoman, procured employment In the
embroidery department of Kaufman. Straus
& Co. Several weeks ago Mr. Coleman
came to Lexington on business and find
ing his former sweetheart still unmarried
and he having several years ago became a
widower, the courtship of years ago was re
newed and resulted In the marriage.
Tha bridegroom is the circuit Judge tn
th district in which he lives and Is a man
ot considerable wealth. The couple left for
their home In Indiana and confidently ex
peot that their remaining years will be th
happiest of their lives.
:
Woa br Welkin.
Won by walking" might be the tl 1. of
th romantic story of th courtship of
Miss Cora Kramer by John Francis Bell,
both of Chicago.
Miss Kramer, who lives not far from
her lover's home. Is a physical culture
advocate and believes In fresh air and
long walki. A Jaunt of ten miles la a
mer nothing to hy, while Bell always
naa a lonunes. iur .... -..v. ,
considering ex.rcis an unnecassary con
contrast that led the girl to ask One day.
' J f.rb.7. th.
posed for perhaps th
after Bell had pro
hundredth time:
"What would you do to marry me?"
"Anything In the world," said Bell.
"Except walking." she laughed.
"No, I won't even except that," Bell
said.
"I'll dar you to walk forty miles with
me."
"Will you marry me, the'n?"
"Yes," replied the girl. And they agreed
to walk from Hammond to Michigan City,
Ind., forty miles, over th Michigan Cen
tral railroad tracks.
Hour after hour they walked, passing
sand dunes and clumps of woods, the
young man Impatiently counting th mile
posts and his companion laughing at his
longing looks at the lunch box. At noon
they had covered thirteen miles and a
halt was made. Ten minutes later tha
food supply had disappeared, and after
resting a snort time tney proceeaea .on
their Journey. Once In
while they spoke
to a chance wayfarer going In the opplv
sit direction and were laughed at wheu
they told of their destination.
Th mile grew' longer and Bell mor
Impatient But h stuck to the trail and
murmured his opinion of Indiana railroads,
The way became worse as they went along,
From cinders the roadbed had changed to
gravel, then to heavy crushed stone, and
finally they reached a long stretch where
no filling In had been don between th
ties, whll on either' side was a steep
grade.
The afternoon passed, and with each mo-
ment the way seemed to grow rougher for
the weary pilgrims, for Miss Kramer now
also waa tired and footsore. The sun
sank In th west, and. according to their
reckoning, Michigan City was but a short
distance farther. Before them the track
now rose on a grade of perhaps two miles
In length, "When we reach the summit,"
aald Bell, we'll see Michigan City."
When they arrived at th top ot th hill
Miss Malvlna Hamlin came to Nebraska
City wi'.h her parents. At that time that
city consisted of less than seventy-live in-
habitants and the Hamlin family went to
housekeeping In the only available house,
a one-roomed lov cabin. At a church social
Miss Hamlin became acquainted with
Henry Brown, who had com from Lebanon
in her native state, and two years later on
July t they wer married. Their house, in
which all of their children wer born,
atood at the corner wher the Nebraska
City federal building now stands. For their
wedding trip they took a steamboat rid
to Council Bluffs,' a Journey which at that
time took two days and a night to ao
complikli. '
Two of their children died at an early
age. Those living at th present ar Miss
Eslell Brown of Omaha. Frank Brown of
Seattle, J. 8. Brown of Chicago and Martin
M. Brown of eturgls, 8. D. Ther ar
three grandchildren. Mr. Frank Brown has
on chllii and Mr. J. & Brown of Chicago
has on son and a daughter. The second
daughter, Mrs. Frank Hlela, died Seven
teen years sgo.
Th First Methodist church of Omaha
took an active part In the reception Friday
because Mra Brown is the oldest living
member of that church in the state and
the only survivor of the nine Christians
who organized th first church of that de
nomination in Nebraska
Mr. and Mra. Brown were the third couple
married In Nebraska, and ot the people who
' ,' a. ? . . . v v . -i 1 1 1- 1... -a ,.mi -r -"-" inV""" . ... J
H?.a i r sfif i 17. ,-sr5rr:,8aT; -1
FALLS OF
cascades.
In breadth th falls doubtless exceed any
others in the world, being about 13,000 feet,
or roughly two and a half miles In width.
This, however, Is not an uninterrupted
waterfall, for Islands intervene just as Ooat
Island separates the American from th
Canadian falls at Niagara.
The falls are thus much higher and wider
than Niagara, but they do not carry so
large an amount of water. No other falls
giv a mor Impressive conception of power
and grandeur than the 'best scenlo parts of
the Iguasu cataracts.
The Improvements are being made ac
cording to tha plans of Charles Thaya, the
director of parks and of the Bontanlcal
ganden In Buenos Ay res. Driveways will
wind round through the forest and the
other magnificent subtropical vegetation.
Paths will lead to every point of vantage
wheT the most picturesque Views 'may be
they looked eagerly toward their destina
tion, and saw not a thriving city, but an
other hill, steeper than th first. They
plodded on, slowly now, for they were be-
coming exhausted. Eventually they
mounted the second grade, only to find a
thlrd ascent befor them, while th longed
for city still was invisible.
Darkness cam on, but fortunately a pale
moon appeared In th sky and afforded
sufficient light to guide the way of th
travelers. Finally a Ught appeared In th
east, and they sighed thankfully. Then
they saw another light and quickened their
pace. After a walk that seemed hours In
lenirth. thev reached th outskirts of Mich-
,Kan Clty and sank exnaUgted on a door-
,tpp unable t0 go another yard, but Bell,
one thought uppermost, gasped:
"Do I win?"
Yes," was the feeble but happy reply,
and they Immediately forgot tholr wearl-
ness.
Imagine the rest.
$ .
Wed at Brldeftroom' Bedside.
Miss Ethel Spencer and Lawrence Beyland
of Philadelphia were married at the bed-
aid of the bridegroom In his apartments at
the Gladstone hotel. Only nurses, pliysl-
clans and members of both families wer
present.
A church wedding In St. Mark s church
had been planned, with a large reception
mother A lnvltatlona had to hurrledIy
recalled on account of th bridegrooms
sudden illness.
Miss Spencer was anxious not to postpon
tn- ceremony but lt, was on1y decded at
th . , momont after a udden relansa
upon tha part of Mr. Beyland. to hav th
nlari.,aBe performed at one.
I( gtoDii h- Vrtitn
on ayracu
division of th Delaware, Lackawanna and
Western raload went out of operation
TtcmUy tofirty P. cllnton a w,althy
young manufacturer of Blrnilncham. N. Y.,
and Miss Kllsaheth Tvler Newenmb. a
lovely girl, lived at Whitney Point, twenty- Through this marriage the brlda becomes driven forth. If th calf runs to Its mother
one miles north of Blnghamton. Whll mother-ln-lew of th earl of Orford, on th rl"ht of th8 ted pair, the cere
courting her Mr. Clinton rode north each whose wife is Mr. Corbln's daughter. Close rnony can begin. If, on the contrary, It
evening on a convenient local train, which friends say It was a love match. passes them on th left th proceeding
stopped at Whitney Point about 7:1)0 p. m. Tne daughter of a small farmar In rural suspended. A ring passed over
But to return Mr. Whitney had to take a Sweden, as a little girl Mrs. Corbln dreamed th bride's finger, som grains of rloa.
train about 9 p. m., which cut short his a bright future and before she attained thrown over the young people, and they,
courting, or a train that arrives about 1 majority came, to America to lmprov ar married. Thess tribes hav an Inoes-
a, m. There was another train which
passed Whitney Point, on ordinary sched
ule st 11 -an tv m. not itnnnlnv thera Mr
fnin, tft w Sl.nrd. .unerin.
tendent ot the division:
"I am plunged In lov and business. Let
ma attend to both Bt0J the U:30 at te
Point."
Superintendent Shepard answered sym
pathetically. Thereafter certain lights were
displayed at Whitney Point station. The
11:30 ,tc.nncd their bileflv and went on
wltn Mr Clinton on board. When the wed
ding took plac th courting schedule waa
abolished.
Tbrawlna old Shoe.
struck by an old sho. hurled by one of
the guests at a wedding; In New York City,
the horses attached to th carriage which
was to hav been used to convey th bride
and bridegroom to th depot ran away and
drsgged the bride, Mrs. Frank Dawson,
until her leg had been broken In two plaoes.
Mrs. Dawson, who until a few minutes
before the accident had been Miss Jose-
phine Helm, walked from the altar to tha
carriage and was about to enter the vehicle,
when the horses started to run. The skirt
of her traveling gown was caught In tha
rear wheel of the carriage, and, a tha
driver had dismounted from th box to
assist her and her husband Into the car-
rlage, the horses ran unchecked.
The frantlo bridegroom rushed after th
running team, and as his wife dropped to
th roadway unconscious he picked her up
James Miller. Mrs. C. C. Hall, Mrs. N. 8.
Harding, Mrs. J. J. Hostetter, Mra Cornutt
and Mrs. James Reed, all of Nebraska City,
"" among thes and were present Friday
when Mr. and Mrs. Brown stood under
a wadding bell of whit and yellow daisies
at their horn and held their fiftieth an-
niversary celebration,
: t ,
: s . A'
. -
TUB IdUAZU IN ARGENTINA'S NEW
enjoyed; bridges will span the gulohes and
hotels to suit different pockets; casinos,
baths, an administration building and other
structures will be erected. This la to be a
playground for.tlie world, and th govern
ment will protect every natural feature,
Including the splendid forest. Th pur
pose Is to preserve the wild and primitive;
aspects Of the whole park as nearly as
possible.
One of the most celebrsted men of the
Argentina republic Is Dr. Francisco Moreno,
who has Just retired from th directorship
of th La Plata museum, and who figured
In Santiago de Chile and London as the
Argentine arbiter In the long boundary
dispute between Chile and Argentina. His
tftovernment several years ago, as a national
recognition of his public services, presented
to him twentyflv square leagues of land
In ratagonla, on the shores of Lake Nahuel
Huapt.
and carried her to her father's house,
a time it was feared she would die.
For
$
Woo Tbirleea Years and Woa,
Thirteen years ago John a. O'Donaghue,
just beginning th practice of law In Ot-
tawa, mat Mis Bortha O'Reilly, a mm-
ber of an old Ottawa family and Inheriting
much musical ability. It was a can ot
lov at first sight with th young man.
Miss O'Reilly admired him, but sh wa
ambitious to become a teacher ot muslo.
Then sh cam to New York as an lnstruc
tor In the public schools, where sh made
good progress.
Mr. O'Donailiiw remained In Canada
end built up a lucratlv piactlc. Year
by year he came to New York and began
new suits for the hand and heart of the
young lady. She was not so ready to set
the day, though she came to love him m
time.
Early In Jun Mr. O'Donaghue had to
ore Da re for a business triD to En eland. It
ajso was time for him to prosecute his suit
In New Torfc n, ient tee,rain t0
Ma O'Reilly:
"win you go to Europe with me aa Mrs.
O'Donaghue on June 14?"
lt WM not tw(J flaya tne oajp
iat tnat a r8py waa received, end then It
waa ..yea The marriage took place tn
tha of lhe Ascension In New York
Clty an(, Mr an(J Mr, O'Donaghue sailed
on th SL
Millionaire Weds Ills Housekeeper.
... ... .1 . , .
AH the elements of one of Hans Chris-
tlan Andersen's fairy tales ar contained
In th romance ot Anna Larson Peterson,
horn of hmhi. .r... ( '
marrlag to her former employer, D C
Corbln. a pioneer millionaire railroad
builder and sneer nl.nter of Hnok.n. w
plM at Mount Vernon, N. Y.. on May 23.
Th. wedding was not made publlo until
recently, a few days after Mr. and Mrs.
Corbln returned to Bpokan from New
York.
Mrs. Corbln Is Jo years of age, whll
her husband Is 70. He was a widower.
her station in lire. After working in vari-
ous households In New England, eastern
a mother should bo a source) of joy to all, but the suffering and
danger incident to the ordeal makes its Anticipation one. of misery.
Mother's Friend is the only remedy which relieves women of the great
pain and danger of maternity ; this hour which is dreaded as woman's
severest trial is not only made painless, but all the danger is avoided
by its use. Those who use this remedy are no longer despondent or
gloomy; nervousness, nausea and other distressing conditions aro
overcome, the system is made ready for the coming event, and th
serious accidents so common to the critical
hour are obviated by the use of
Friend. "It is worth its weight
says many who have used it.
bottle at drug stores. Book containing
valuable information of interest to all women, will
oe sent to any address free upon application to
PtADnaO REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta. Oa.
n .tin
Milk
Pure,Clear,Sparkliiig
AitesianWdter
. . :t sa.
Ai.MvS'fi
..v.v.l: . ,
This water has in itself health-giving
properties that peculiarly adapt it to
the brewing of a delicious, palatable
beer. During the past fifteen years
STORZ BEER has become famous
because of the use of this water. No
other one ingredient entering into the
manufacture of beer has so much to
do with its general excellence as pure
water. Discriminating people who
want nothing but the best when eat
ing or drinking will appreciate this
point and insist on having STORZ
BEER.
m
"Phone
BREWING
viV-'?.VV'
:V'-.:'.;,--iV:.'i
NATIONAL PARK.
Vpon his request h was permitted to
return to the government three square'
leagues ot th grant to be turned Into an
Argentina national park. He said that In
all his travels he had never seen a region
that surpassed this mountain lake and Its
surroundings In natural grandeur and
beauty.
Th physical phenomena of the region 1
were beginning to attract th attention of
travelers of other nations, who were find
ing there rich opportunities for fruitful
study, and the marvelous beauty of th
lake, th torrents and waterfalls, th glgan
tlo forests and tha lofty peaks of the Andes,!
with their eternal snows, all helped to
make a geoa-raphlcal situation of trans
cendent attractiveness.
To make the region accessible the rail
road must be extended from Neuquem to
the lake, a distance of about 1 miles.
This Improvement Is not fsr away.
1
of Cupid
and the middle western stales, she cam to I
Spokane twelve years ago and entered th ;
horn of D. C. Corbln as a housekeeper .
and companion to Mrs. Corbln. Sh gained
th friendship of Mrs. Corbln, who assisted'
In her education.
Shortly befor Mrs. Corbln died, six years
ago, Anna married Antone Peterson, but .
they lived together only a few weeks and '
the young woman obtained a divorce at
Tacoma. Befor her marrlag she Invested '
her savings In realty, which she sold profit- 1
ably, and with the proceeds went to New
Tork 'nd placed herself under Instructor.
afterward going abroad with a teacher and
three other pupils on an educational tour. I
Sh traveled extensively and In the mean
time entered Into correspondence with hee
former employer, who asked ,hr hand la
marriage two years ago.
Bhe gave her consent several weeks ago,
when Mr. Corbln started eastward on a
business trip, where they were married at
the horns of a friend. Mrs. Corbln Is a
'rl"lant conversationalist and speaks Eng-
Uh and German with fluency.
Corbln is president of the Spokane In-,
ternatlonal Railway company, which lin
bulIt ftPr '"In" the Spokane Falls
and Northern railway to the Great North
rn- H ,a a brother of Austin Corbln ol
N" York and occupies a picturesque man,
lon on H!ntn avenu. wher th bride
h" v'-ytlilng to gratify her wishes.
,.. f . . Mt 1
L .... ..
Th wild hill tribes In India, known aa
,, . .
' -umD'' "nnur ano.unayara.
ar a people Imbued with quaint old worlif,
superstitions. . They are haunted by tha,
te" 0f thS ,vU ePeolally for thcls
ohlldren- Cunning and light of foot a
these chlldr.n are ready to dlsap.
pear with a sudden bound into the forest,'
thicket. Th Dhangur hav curious mar
rlag customs. When they want to ascer-
tln thB favorable moment for th. par.
form.nce ot th rites, the young- coupla
are made to sit before th door of a hut.
from which a cow and then Its calf sra
sant struggle against poverty and th
ments. ,
Every mother feela
great dread of the paia
and danger attendant upon
the most critical period
of her life. Becoming
Mother's
in gold,"
fi.oo per
Homer's
Mmi
id
9 I
Js used in JhretKrtg
BIueRibbon
Bottled Beer
Webster 1260"
OMAHA. NEB.
knew them they cam to Nebraska City
as ,oua, aeopi on,, ,.w M Uft
THlt IS WAT TO MANAGE ''EH
HENKT BROWJf.