DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. uri.'MLMULLnjautiUUPjiiKiiiwgp'm'U'i' mJMFiwwai. 53R -jfA,. sr& f'f "n, "B rv W C.'i fK m IV vm. MY $88h s & f 3 mj$ ass ' J v ;' it'" II y$KW( i,e"4i mjx a s lUtii .;3V f:" ' - -j J.(Jlf . J -4i a '": .zi 'r--r K v$ At J mp',jtA j.m 2 3 r Ji&GADJ&jm'XrJZlfiiADlJZ' E3T NCLI3 SAM'S 1020 "Illustrated Cata logue" of Mount llalnlor Nntloniil Park Ih ort tlio press. It Ih an Inter esting booklet of fit pages of text, mnps and Illustrations. It contains everything the tourist needs to know. It could not very well he dull, for Mount llalnler Ih ono of. the most interesting of Iho 10 peaks In our national park system. Incidentally, Uncle Sam should re name the national park. Its nanio means nothing to the 50,000 Ameri cans who visit It In vacation time. It should luivo a good American name. A change In name, of 'course, means clinnKliiK the name of Mount Hal tolcr sinco the mountain Is one-third of the wholo Brk. I'etcr the Great, on his deathbed In 1725, do creed that Vitus Bchrlng, a Dane In his employ, ahould cross Siberia to tho unknown western sea, fcuild two ships and eenreh for the fabled passnfio o tho Atlantic. Thus camo about the Husslan pos awaslon of Alaska- and of the north Pacific coast. Perez, In 177U, and Ilacela, In 177-1, both Span iards, explored the Pacific coast, discovered Noot fca sound and suspected tho Columbia river from ho breakers on Its bar. In 1777 Capt. .Tames Cook discovered Cook's lnlot, but missed both Juan do Turn's straits and tho Columbia. Capt. Robert Means of tho Kast India company discovered tho Btrnlts In 1788 but dared not cross tho Colum bia's bar. International Jealousies broiiKht about tho Noot Itn Convention of 1700, which gavo the British tho tlgax. to llsh and trade, provided they did no colo nizing. Then In 1702 came an American, Capt. ltobert Amy of Boston, In the Columbia, the llrst Amer ican ship to sail around tho world (1700). It took thin dauntless American sailor nine dnys to get through the breakers on tho Columbia's bar. ITo willed )0 miles up this noble river and named It after his gallant ship. That same year Capt. Georgo Vancouver of tho British nnvy was sent to enforco the Nootka con vention. He oxplored Paget sound, but balked at trying to cross tho Columjila's bar. ITo mot Cap tain Cray, who told him of his ascent of tho river. But tho British commander balked nt tho break cm, took possession of tho country In the namo f his sovereign and loft Lieutenant Broughton In tho Chatham to explore tho river If ho could. Broughton go"t Into tho river and ascended 100 lles by launch. IIo saw Mount Kalnler, about J0O miles away and was struck with awe. Llko a truo British navnl olllcor ho nnmed this mugnlfl cent mountain, rlNlng 14,408 feet almost from sea level, after Itenr Admiral Peter llalnler. Mount Kalnler Is 42 miles from Tacomn and VI miles from Seattle. It Is tho sight of splits ttoin either city. As Is well known, theso two cities have a feud over tho name. Tacoma calls It Tacoma and Seattle calls It Mount llalnler. This fa not to say that the controversy shuuld bo de cided In favor of cither city. Hut "Tho mountain that was God" of tho Indians, one or tho most fenpresslvo of earth, should have a better namo than llalnler. Hero are some random oxtractH from tho Intro ductory pages of Uncle Sam's booklet : "Of all tho lire-mountains which, like beacons, nco blazed along (he Paclllc coast, Mount llalnler 5 tho noblest," wrote ,lohn Mulr. "The Mountain that Was Cod," wrote John D. Williams, giving title to his book. "Kaslly king of all Is Mount llalnler." wrole V. K. Matthes of the United States geological sur rey, reviewing that series of huge extinct volca noes towering high above tho sky line of the Cas cade range. "Almost 250 feet higher than Mount Bhastn, Its nearest rival In grandeur and In mass, St Is overwhelmingly Impresslvo both by the vast Bess of Its glacial mantle and by the striking sculpture of Its cliffs. Tho total area of Its gla ciers amounts to no less than IS square miles, an cxpanso of Ice far exceeding that of any other s&iglo peak In tho United States. Many of Its Individual Ico streams are between four and six Miles long and vlo In magnitude and In splendor with the most boasted gkiclcrs of tho Alps. Cas cading from the summit In all directions, they radiate like the arms of a great starfish." Seen from Tacoma or Seattle tho vast mountain Hppears to ilso directly from sea level, so Inslg aftflcaut seem tho ridges about Its base. Yet theso rMges thcinselvcH aro of no mean height. Thoy ' rtw 11,000 to 4,000 feet above tho valleys that cut tirough them, and their crests average 0,000 feet Is altitude. But bo colossal aro tho proportions of tho great vrtrnno that thoy dwarf even mountains of this eke and glvo'.them tho uppcnrutico of mero foot Mils, In height, It Is second In tho United States only (o Mount Whitney. .' Mount Hulriler stunds, Jn round numbers, 11,000 fret above Ifs Immediate base, Is nearly threa nSles high, memured from sen lovel, and covers M0 square miles of territory, or one-third of tho ?' v t.iM m- .- ' &s&ii ' "'f?Zj ,A M "T I i j t voro fv CfrVT77J trWUJX &s f WARNING! Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 20 years and proved safe by millions. C5J S fmf mm rJ SAFETY FIRST! Accept onry an ' unbroken package" of genoine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains proper direc tions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheuma tism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and for pain generally. Strictly American! Handy tin bo.cs of 12 tablets cost bub n. few cents Lnrgcr packages. Arplrln la th trarto mark ot Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcocldeitcr of Sallcyllcadd JLayzv&s&er&r jzfv&ks Gjaszbzr area of Mount llalnler National Park. In shape It Is not a simple cone tapering to a slender, point ed summit like KuJI (FuJIyamu), the great vol cano of Japan. It Is rather n broadly truncated mnsB resembling nn enormous tree stump with spreadliiB baso and IrreBtihirly broken top. Its Ilfo history has been a Varied one. I-Iko nil volcanoes, llalnler has built up Its cono with tho materials ejected by its own erupUons with cin ders and 'stcam-shredded particles' and lumps of lava and with occasional Hows of liquid lava that havo solidified Into layers of ban, basnltlc rock. At one tlmo It attained an altitude of not less than 10,000 foot, If ono may Judso by tho steep Inclination of the lava and cinder layers visible In Its Hanks. Then a Brent explosion followed that destroyed the top part of the mountain and reduced Its height by some 2,000 feet. Indian legends tell of n great eruption There havo been slight eruptions within memory one In 18 III, ono In 1851, and one In lSrS, and tho last In 1870. lOven now It Is only dormant. Jets of steam melt fantastic holes In the snow and Ico at Its summit, and there are hot wprlngs at Its foot. Hut It Is entirely safe to visit Mount llal nler, as further eruptions are unlikely. Later on this great cavity, which mensural nearly three miles across from south to north, was 111 led by two small cinder cones. Successive feeble eruptions added to their height until at last they formed together a low rounded dome the emi nence that now constitutes tho mountain's summit. Tho higher portions of the old crater rim rise to elevations within a few hundred feet of tho sum mit and, especially when viewed from below, stand out boldly as separate peaks that mnsk and seem to overshadow tho central dome. Especially prom inent aro Point Success (14,100 feet) on tho south west side ami Liberty Cap (14,112 feet) on tho northwest side. The altitude of the main summit has for mnnv years been In doubt. Several tigures havo been announced from time to time, no two of them In agreement ; but all of theso, it Is to bo observed, were obtained by more or less approximate meth ods. In 101U the United States, geological survey, In connection with ltn topographic surveys of tho Mount llalnler National Park, made n new series of measurements by trlangulatlon methods at close range. These give the peak an elevation of 14,408 feet, thus placing It near tho top of the list of high summits of tho Unltvd States. This last fig ure, It should bo added, Is not likely to be In error by moro tlmn a foot or two, aiufmny with some jCOiillUeuco bo regarded as Dual. Creator exact mess of determination Is scarcely practicable In Hint enso of Mount llalnler, as Its highest bununlt consists actually of a mound of bno'wTTiie height of which naturally varies. This crowning snow mound, which was ouce hup- 2 tWZtil S'.l rfWCi swrv jar etAVAS rfiirn. posed to be the highest point In the United Stntes, still bears the proud name of Columbia Crest. It Is essentially a huge snow drift, or snow dune heaped up by the furious westerly winds. One of the largest glacier sys tems in the world radiating from any single peak Is situated on this mountain. A study of tho map will show n snow-covered summit with great arms of Ico extending from It down tho mountain sides, to end In rivers far below. Six grent glaciers appear to originate nt the very summit. Thoy nre the Nls qually, the Ingrahnm, the Tin- mons, the Wlnthrop, the xa honia and the Knutz glaciers. Hut many of great size and linnresslveness are born of the snows in rock pockets or cirques, Ice-sculptured bowls of great dimensions and ever-Increasing depth, from which they merge Into the glistening armor of the huge volcano. The most notable of these are the Cowlitz, the Paradise, the Frylngpnn, the Carbon, the Itussell, the North and South Mowlch, tho Puyallup, and the Pyramid glaciers. Twenty-eight glnciers, great and small, clothe Rainier rivers of ice, with many of the charac teristics of rivers of water, roaring at times over precipices like waterfalls, rippling and tumbling down rocky slopes vcrltnblo noisy enscades, ris ing smoothly up on hidden rocks to foam, brook like, over Its lower edges. livery winter the moisture-laden winds from the Pacific, suddenly cooled against Its summit, deposit upon Its top nnd sides enormous snows. Tlwse, settling In the crater which was left after the grent explosion In some prehistoric age carried away pei-haps 2,000 feet of the volcano's former I helgbt, press with overwhelming weight down tlie mountain's sloping sides. Thus are born the glaciers, for the snow under Its own pressure quickly hardens Into Ice. Through 34 valleys self-carved In the solid rock (low the rivers of Ice, now turning, ns rivers of water turn, to avoid the hnrder rock strata, now roaring over precipices like congealed waterfalls, now rippling. like water currents, over rough bottoms, pushing. pouring relentlessly on until they reach those parts of their courses where warmer nlr turns them Into rivers of water. In glowing contrast to this mnrvelous spectnele of Ice are the gardens of wild flowers surrounding the glaciers. These flowery spots are called parks. One will And on the accompanying mnp Spray Park, St. Andrews Park, Indian Henry's Hunting Ground, Paradise, Summer Land; and there are many others. "Above the forests," writes John Mulr, "there Is a zone of the loveliest flowers, fifty miles In cir cuit nnd nearly two miles wide, so closely planted nnd luxurious thnt It seems ns If nnture, glad to make an open space between woods so dense and Ice so deep, wero economizing the precious ground and trying to see how many of her darlings she can get together In ono mountain wreath daisies, nnemoni's, columbine, crytlironlums, larkspurs, etc., among which wo wade kneo deep and wnlst deep, tho bright corollas In myriads touching petal to petal. Altogether this Is Iho richest subnlplne garden 1 have found, a perfect flower elyslum." The lower altitudes of tho park are densely tim bered with flr, cedar, hemlock, maple, alder, Cot tonwood and spruce. The forested areas, extend ing to mi altitude of about 0,500 feet, gradunlly decrease In density of growth after an altitude of 4,000 feet Is readied, and tho high, broad plateaus between tho glacial canyons present Incomparable scenes f d'"rslHed beauties. A larco part of the area above the 4,r00-foot contour onslstS ot open, grassy parks, rocky and barren Miuinilts, snow fields, and glaciers. Tracts of dense oiibalplne forest occur In sheltered loca tions, but they are nowhere very extensive, and their ci utlnulty Is broken by open swamp glades and meadows and small bodies of standing (ra ter. The steep upper slopes of the spurs di vulging from tho main ridges are frequently uv ered with a stunted, scraggy growth of low tr?es llrmly rooted In the crevices between tho roka. The most beautiful of the alpine trees are about the mountain parks. Growing In scattered groves and standing In groups or singly In tho open grassland and on the margins of the lakes, they produce a peculiarly pleasing landscape effect which agreeably relieves the traveler from the extended outlook to the snow Ileitis of the moun tain and broken ridges about It. At the lower levels of the subnlplne foiest the average height of the largest trees Is from 50 to 00 feet. The size diminishes rapidly ns tho elevation Increase-. Tlfe trees are dwarfed by the cold, ami their trunks aro bent and twisted by tho wind; Small patches of low, weather-beaten, iukI bttinted moun tain hemlock, alpine tlr. and whlte-bar'pfne occur up to 7.000 feet. The trunks are quite' prostrate and the crowns nre flattened mats 'of brnnelies lying .'lose to the ground. The extreme llu.lt n' tree growth on Mount llalnler Ik about 0u w There la r.u distinct timber Hue. Among the Reds. "Vote for my candidate. lie's In Jail." "Vote for mine. lie's out on Wll." Louisville Courier-Journal. Sure Relief wT?firJi5 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief BE LL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Permanent Relief CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fad. Purely vege table act surely but Kently on the CARTER'S ITTLE IXEFR PILLS liver. dinner dis- tress cor rect indiges tion: improve the complexion brighten the eyes. Small Pill Small Dose Small Price HAD USE FOR HIS MILLION Zeb Would at Least Employ It to Good Advantage, as Far as It Would Go. A party of bnymen gathered round the stove In a little oyster shnck on the Great South bay stnrted the old, old question as to whnt they would do If they suddenly camo Into possession of $1,000,000. 'Some bought great ocean-going yachts; others endowed schools, nnd one even offered to con tribute his to help out tho govern ment. The question finnily came round to old Zeb Banks, noted ns the ne'er-do-well of tho fishing neighborhood. "And now, Zeb, you've been keeping pretty quiet," one of them said. "Just whnt'd you do if you hnd a million dol-lars?" "Well, I don't know 'znctly," re sponded Zeb reflectively ns ho spat at tho stove. "I reckon I'd pny It on my debts, 's far as It wont." Saturday I2venlng Post. Expensive Melody. "Ah! Life with you would be ono grand, sweet song!" "Hut I'm a practical girl. To m there's music In tho purr of an expen sive motor, In the soothing tones of n French maid, the sunve replies a wtll trnlned butler makes, the honnyed words of tradesmen eager for my pat ronage, the " "Say no more, Angellne. You aro tnlklng about the kind of mu'ilc I can't provide." Birmingham Age-Herald. A Feeling of Security You naturally feel secure ivhen you know that the medicine you arc abfut to take is absolutely pure and contai. ij no harmful or habit producing drugs. Such a medicine is Dr. Kilmer's SUmp Itoot, kidney, liver and bladder remedy. The same standard of purity, strength and excellence is maintained in every, bottle of Swamp-Root. It is scientifically compounded fy ta vegetablo herbs. It is not a stimulant and is taken Va teaspoonful doses. It is not recommended for everything. It is nature's great helper in relieving and overcoming kidney, liver and blad der troubles. A sworn statement of purity is with every bottle of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root. If you need a medicine, you should havo the best. On sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to try this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer fc Co., Binchamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Adv. TO MEET THE EMERGENCY The Latest Style. "William Dean Ilowells," said an editor, "often Joked about the latest styles. " 'Tho minister made a witty refer ence to the latest stylo In his sermon, didn't he?' Mr. Ilowells said one Sun dav morning to a young lady of New York, " 'Did he? How?' nsked the young lady. " 'Why, didn't you notice?' said Mr. Ilowells. 'No choso his text from Hevelatlons.' " Youngster Had Little Difficulty Mak- ing Up His Mind as to What He Would Do. As the old lady strolled on the cliffs near a seaside town she came across n lad dressed In the well-known scouts' rig. "What do they teach you In the Scouts?" she nsked him, with a beam ing smile. "To bo manly citizens, and true to king and country," replied the lad promptly. "And whnt are you going to be wher you grow up, my little man?" went ou his self-appointed examiner. "A soldier, to fight for the king," was the patriotic reply. "Very brave," applauded the old dame. "Now, suppose you saw tho king's conch dashing along, with run away horses, straight toward tho edge of this cliff, what would you do?" Tho youngster eyed her In disgust. Evidently she was one of those people who never Imagine n boy has nny sense. lie determined to settle her once nnd for all, so lie replied: "I'd shut my eyes, nnd sing, 'God Save the King.' "London Answers. Bygones. "We must let bygones be bygones." "I endeavor to do so. I no longer give a thought to the tlifle I wnsted making up my mind how I would voto In tho prlmnrles." Washington Stnr. Celebration. Knicker "Did lie havo a birthday cake with candles?" Bocker "Yes ho hnd a cake of yeast and got lit up." (There's no waste fo Grape nnrL il s;ai)0s: xiirrrr-B -- z contains Us own sweetening JNo cooking is necessary and tne likable flavor of this, wheat and malted barley-food iseQualed only-by. itsconomy. Grocers everywhere sell ra.-raesM4-c H ' r ""iiiir I "Wb.1.J TfTti t$Z -Js iw . " ""--1 Hi, S?3Sc Ss? JL v -V ww