THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDAY , MARCH 'I , ISM-TWENTY PAGES , 19 OFFENSIVE NEAR NEIGHBORS Smiling Invaders Who Knock , but Noise lessly Enter , Not "Waiting n Bidding. THE NEIGHBOR A DANGEROUS CONFIDANTE I'rnprlntr of Milking Matrimonial ' . ini-ntfl I'liMIr Women .Moro I'onil of An- . . / notinrliiff Tlirni Tlmn tlio OppoMto jMe Sex A Ollmpio lit thu Of course you have a near neighbor or liavo hnd , or will have , nnil wo alt know what n blowing Is the cheery , obliging , mlnd-tliGlr-own-lmslness sort of a neighbor. That Is the kind wo jiln our faith to nnd whoso generous , unobtrusive help In case of sickness or trouble we always remember with gratitude. In n city vvhfcro people are largely renters our neighbors are constantly changing nnd ( luring the course of a faw years wo sample a great variety , good , bad and Indifferent. Hut. of all creatures to bo dreaded Is the ofllclous Inquiring neighbor , who Is ap parently devoured by nn Insnttablo curiosity , respecting the dimensions of your grocery bill or the condition of the family morals. When you hear n ring nt the front door bell you nro mentally prepared for u caller , n visitor or a hook agent. Dut eli ! these meddling , light-stepping near neighbors , who , at any moment from /tarly Monday morning till late Saturday night , are liable to knock at the back door nnd , not waiting for n bidding , nolslcssly turn the knob and silently enter your private domain , apd with a cat-llko trend are upon you , catching jou In the act of cleaning jour false teeth or turning your soiled white apron wrong sldo out to present a bettor front. Or perchance nn early call may flnd the family seated at breakfast and silent notes are taken on the quality ot the tnblo linen and the supply of mutton chops , and what a virtuous shock of surprise Is exhibited U the mistress of the house still happens to have her locks adorned with curl papers It man. be a few hours later you are hurriedly dressing for a business trip down town , when In glides your ofllclous neighbor , and talks and chatters half an hour , whllo you fume and fret In well bred though use less silence , und you miss thu Important engagement und thereby are seriously em barrassed , i Some day jou have a headache and know thaUuuict rest Is all you need , husband Is gone and the children nro at school With a sigh of relief you scttlo that aching head upon the pillow of the sitting room couch But ah ! > ou forgot to lock the back door that you might pretend you were not at homo , and thcro she comes , that ever-to-bo- dreaded near neighbor , tripping lightly In with a gny llttlo smllo to tell jou that nil of her work Is done She never reads anil never sews , but docs knit lace , nnil then olio chews gum Incessantly , whllo the yards nnd jnrds of filmy lace her nlniblo lingers manufacture seems as Intennnablo as her everlasting tongue. That wags and v\ags , as she masticates that gum , till , patience , that noble trait , Is worn to shreds nnd It becomes with jou a case of Inward conquest or outward rebellion ; jou must needs summon to your aid all of the angelic qualities in order to "lovo thy neighbor as thyself. " Of course , she Is only thoughtless , nut what nn awful lot of mischief a thoughtless person can do , especially If thcro Is an un known quantity of Old Nick In their inental mnkoup. Whenever I see two neighboring women exchanging mlnco pies or testing the baking powers of tholr respective biead ovens , I presage a falling out some dark day , nnd what a toirlblc revelation of ono another's bosom secrets and family skeletons will then bo disclosed. . . Your neighbor will "scatter to the four winds of heaven" all of your cherished , harmless llttlo deceits , which they had promised so faithfully never , never to ruvoal. So do not bo too Intimate with your near neighbors , and respect the old saw , "Fa miliarity breeds contempt. " Another variety of next door neighbors who become nn unbearable nuisance are these who Imagine that though sick unto death jou can surely eat their cookery , which they evidently regard as the nemo of the culinary nrt nnd qulto superior to anything produced In your kitchen. A short tlmo since a lady friend found herself confined to the bed with la grippe She begged the family to keep her Illness a dead secret. Hut murder will out , and In rushes a kind neighbor , carrying n bowl of soup. "Now , you must eat this. I know It will do j'ou good , for I made It myself. " \ The Invalid smiles n sickly ghost of n . smile , feebly expressing thanks for the unexpected attention , devoutly praying mean time that the lady would retire , for soup Is a dish my friend fairly detests. Hut alas ! for the vain hope , the benefactor stands guard over the painful task. The martyr tastes a llttlo sip. nnd driven by sere straits to hldo behind n llttlo In nocent nnd much needed docolt , declares that she appreciates the soup Meantime the gnstrononilc regions telephone up to the brain a vigorous protest imalnst break ing the fast on turnips and hot water , loudly demanding French coffco and rolls Will some vvlsoacro explain why the tlmo of n hoimoHlfo Is considered of so little Im portance Unit she Is expected to drop her v\ork the moment a visitor enters' Will the day ever dav\n \ when the house keeper will place upon tlmo Its true value ? When that much to bo desired period does arrive , Mrs Smith will not bu hanging over Mrs llrown's back gnto halt the morn ing hours , attending strictly to ovfiybody's business but her own , whllo household duties remain neglected and Xho children run wild upon the street. May choicest blessings rest upon the good neighbor , say I , who calnilj Ignores the ex istence of those whoso Inquisitive noses nro continually ferreting out the private affairs of others. * Nothing has been moro shameful In our -past than the light nnd frivolous way In which matrimonial engagements have been regarded oven by Intelligent people. No wonder It has hccn said of thorn that llko plecruijt they were madn to bo broken. Such i thing ns publicly announcing n betrothal except among our Jewish residents , wns seldom dreamed of until English customs caino In vogue Not many years ago It was qulto eustoin- try for both parties absolutely to deny that an engagement existed until the wedding gown was nearly completed and n home In readlne.ss for tlm newly wedded pair , writes Huth Travelnn In the Brooklyn Times , If you go Into country districts todiy , where there has been llttlo Influx of forulgn popu lation , jou will * ad these primitive Ideas itlll prevail. A fou jears ago I met n girl from Maine , itndjIiiR art In Now York , uliom I heard nas engaged to a young man from the same locality , also an art student. They went svorywhere tcgethur nnd fcocmod quite do- rotod. When I became better acquainted islth the girl a wonderfully Intellectual roung woman she told mo that tlm two ! uul grown up together from childhood , that theirs was a purely platonlu friendship , that ! he y hail not the faintest Idea of over becom ing husband nnd wife , She could not go irotind with a joimg gentleman us she Mithl In the country without being talked ibout , so they decided to bo "engaged , " The airaugoment was merely a business and loclnl ono. 'Unit this brilliant girl was taken to a lunatic asylum soon after her "filond" was aiurrlcd to another suggests to ma a inelan- iholy tnlo Of course , the fact ot an engagement usually leaks out In uomo way or other , greatly to the surprise and Indignation of the parties concerned. It Is as Impossible to stop tosslp ovcr n matter of buch vital Interest to two family circles , schoolmates , companions and frlohdn , as It would l > o to item the torrents of Niagara. The boat and moat honorable way Is not lo try. Any } oung man to whom a loving woman has promised to Intrust her future ought to bo proud to ncknowlnj o It , In such n state ot boclety It Is possible for i young man to be engaged to a plurality of girls nt the anu > time , for u ypung lady to aoveral strings to her bow , fho most popular stories of thirty y&nrs ngo ctrilcd either hero or heroine som > tlm s both- through a succession of matrimonial en gagements. I remember In "JJred ! A Tale ot the Dismal Swamp , " by Harriet Hccrher Stovve , the Interest of the tale centers In the bewitching Nina , who la secretly betrothed to three gantlcmen at once , Ono of the most characteristic of Glbscn's society sketches represents two young ladles ot that charming , high-bred Ijpo ho draws so admirably. Ono says : "Aro you going to bo married , Mnud" " "No , " replies the other , "I nin only en- Rflged. " The Idea that an engagetnint does not mean marriage some time In the tutitrc , no matter how far distant , Is a most pernicious ono. It Is the root of many ovlls. Yet I have come to the c inclusion that women ore much readier to tell of their newly found happiness than the mure folf- consclous opposlto sex , who Into dialling and are morbidly sensitive to public opinion. The fashion , fad or whatever you choose to call It , of announcing matrimonial en gagements Is a safeguard at the outer portals tals of marriage. Few or divorces will ta the result. Young couples are not apt to ru h thoupht- lessly Into an engagement , Wiien they realize that It Is not solely n prl ' .He matter , that others must bo taken Into their con fidence. Men with no means or no posslb'Ilty ' of means ot supporting a wife hctllata bcfcro they ask a girl to their lot , when they know the world will bo cognizant of their pre sumption. Girls without stability of character , frivol ous , j-c't bchcmlng , have no longer occasion to accept some mnn they do not care for as a stopping stone toward securing the ono for whom they jonrn. By announcing nn engagement , I do not mean proclaiming It from the house tops. AH that Is necessary Is for the young man to toll ono particular friend with permission to re- pcit the fact , and the news will spread moro rapidly than a pralrlo firo. I take It for granted that the families of both parties have been Informed nt once Greetings be tween thorn should bo ns cordial as possible A slight coldness nt such a tlmo has re mained for jenrs untorglven. It Is most annoying when , after an engage ment has ben made public , it Is found that for financial reasons the marriage cannot take place for an Indefinite period. Ono shrewd young lawjcr has solved the problem what to do under such conditions. Ho and his fiancee have announced that the engagement Is dissolved the girl's mother called on friends and acquaintances and told them so yet ho takes the young lady out as much as over and every ono Is expecting to receive wedding cards when circumstances permit. To hide an engagement ns If ono was ashamed of It Is complimentary to neither party. Let us congratulate ourselves that fashion now sanctions what the best people have always done announce betrothals oven when this was considered by the ma jority ns Implying a lack of delicacy. Its observation Is now required by society as much ns a cessation of brilliant functions In Lent Is required. After finishing her toason In Berlin re cently , Eleonora Duso filled nn engagement In I'rankfort. In passing the largest nrt store In the city one afternoon she noticed in the window a picture by Dr. Adolf Menzel , the greatest of Germany's historical painters. She wont tnsldo and bought It , saw other pictures by Menzel and bought them , carrylng _ them alt away with her In her cairlage' A few minutes after her departure Menzel himself stopped at the store. Ho Is almost 80 jears old , and for the last generation has been receiving all the honor nnd admiration that could touch the nrtlst'o heart. Never theless lie showed much satisfaction when told of Duse's fancy for his works , nnd mumbled some words to the effect that the Italian actress was really n genius In her way a great concession to her sex from him , for Menzel Is a knotty old fellow with all the woman-hating sentiments of a confirmed bachelor. Ho bought a picture of Duse , placed It carefully in Ills coat-tail pocket , and departed. The proprietor of th6 art store told ono ot Menzcl's friends' what had happened , nnd the friend at once , Invited Duso and Mcnzel to his house to meet each other nt dinner Each came , overflowing with admiration for the other. Menzel knows no Italian nnd Duso knows no German. So the conversar tlon was limited to shrugs of the shoulders , wnvlngs of the hand nnd mutually unin telligible exclamations Whoa the tlmo for parting cnmo Duso throw oft the reserve , of which A.acrlcans hoard so much during her American tour , seized the old man's hand nnd tried to ralso It to her lips. Men/el struggled to escape the honor nnd finally , bowing his head , kissed Duso's hand. Then ho fled. German newspapers say that the kiss was nn event in tha history of art , that It was the only Ides Monzol has over been known to bestow. His now gallantry has been n greater revelation to his friends than was Duso's hero worship to her neglected ad- mlrer . The Incident has caused several editors to recall tno sccno between Mclssonler nnd Mendel In 18C7. Menzcl's reputation hnd nlread spread through the world , as his pic tures of Frederick the Great and his court and of Wellington and Hiuchcr at Waterloo had been placed high In the list ot the great est historical paintings. Melssnler re garded him as the foremost of Gorman painters , and Menzel considered Molssonler , the most admirable of modern artists When they mot In Paris just after the Austro-Prus- slan war each struggled vainly In his own language to toll the other ot this admiration , but the failure wns complete. After having exhausted nil the possibilities of signs and grimaces without reaching nn understand ing , they fell In each other's arms and expressed - pressed tholr opinions by means of several hearty hugs. There Is nothing In this weary world moro unsatisfactory and discouraging than to give a .present that cost $3 that looks ns If It didn't cost moro than $2 , w rites the sago of the Atchlson Globo. Its a bad hlgn when a young husband be gins to go to see his folks without his bride. You are getting too old to flirt and dance If j'ou can take n nap sitting In n chair. When a mnn discovers that his wlfo be lieves everj thing that ho tells her , ho tells her things that are not truo. It depends entirely upon how much she has whether or not It embarrasses a woman to hive her back hair come down. It doesn't take moro than three months to take away the triumphant air n young married woman Wears In the presence of unmarried ones. A married woman's description of nn Ideal man Is the picture ot the kind she didn't get Wo are willing to bet that the devil Is a married man. The trouble with people being religious Is that they are too concjilted to Imagine they have anything to repent of. "No. " admitted a man this morning , "my wlfo never tolls mo that she Is fond of mo , but she alwajs makes tjio kind ot pie I like best " Some people got married because they are tired of being In love So much less Is ex pected of married pconlo than of lovers. How very seldom It Is you hear of a woman giving a family dinner to which her husband's relatives are Invited. Have jou noticed how baseless are the grievances of jour friends ? Your grlov- nnces have nn equally ridiculous foundation to your friends. Wo nil make too much ot our troubles. The most affectionate family vvo ever Know wns composed of nine different mem- beis. nnd they lived In nine different towns When a girl wants to marry a man hoi father opposes , she finds a champion In hei mother. A mother will always oppose her judgment to her husband's In a case of thla kind. kind.When n man Is a llttlo queer as a lover , ho ls awfully queer as a married man. An humble lover makes a very domlnoer- Ini : husband. FASHION POINTERS. Durable twilled silks ot various kinds are revived The old-fashloued corn color Is ono of the now shades. New twilled cloth tor spring costumed roeomblvs the weave of French vicuna. New veils have very large black velvet dots and borders ot ribbon velvet an Inch wide Moss roses and bud'- , clusters of wild rose buds with aecoiupanjlag foliage , La Franco and American Beauty roaua are I shown In the Importations of mllllncn'i an ! point to a rose season. Taffeta silks will bo largely Imported for trimmings , and for spring and summer gowns entire. Cutaway jackets worn over vests of tan , reseda and flunkey's red are again populni for tallor-mndo gowns. Silks and stately looking brocades nro to bo more used during the spring nnd sutnmei than they have been for jears before. Handsome surah silks ot violet , gray , sti ver blue , petunia , golden brown , and laurel green have , petit pols dots of the same color , Velvet capes , coats , costumes nnd com binations will bo worn for months to como , nnd In some guises through the entire sum mer. mer.Moire crepes In all the * new shades are shown. Two shades of flame , called vandyke - dyke , Will be much used during the coming season. A novelty In millinery ornamontn Is called the Sandow , and Is nothing moro or loss than a pair of miniature dumbbells In Etruscan gold. The perennially popular skirt waist Is once moro to the foro. Flannelette , per cale , saline and taffeta silk , In changing colors , are cmploj-cd for these waists. Jet certainly has first place among the now trimmings , and will be used In great pro fusion on hats as well as dresses. Feathers nro sprinkled with It , and cream-colored lacoj ore elaborately jetted. Spanish guipure , point dc gene , point Russo nnd rose point are the laces now In greatest use , but for decorating summer toilets these will bo added to by hosts of exqulslta "fancy" patterns of airy mesh. Shoulder capes of Ruslan silk point In military shape arc now and promise to bo exclusive novelties. They have picturesque otanding collars and metamorphose a black frock In the most desirable fashion. The wide rovers and the cravat of the Dlrectolro period have appeared again , and fashion books promise that "the styles which will dominate our best spring clothes are to bo picturesque. " Lenten lea gowns of v'olet-strlped black molro are trimmed with a very deep Marie Antoinette bertha of jetted lace , with long ends of jetted net that fall halt the length of the skirt front after they are tied. A new shade of brown called mordoro Is very fashionable. It Is pretty In silk and light wool material , nnd Us beauty consists In the light bullion tints shaded over It. IJIack and white striped sateen tea Jackets , trimmed with black and white lace and In sertion , have fronts ot white accordion- pleated chiffon , completed by a Jetted glrdlo. FEMININE NOTES. Although the parents of Mme. Enmes- Story nro Americans , the prlma donna was born In China. The Idea of placing saleswomen Instead of men In the boys' clothing department has been adopted by n firm with large stores In several cities. Annie Bosant wears a bloodstone ring given her by Mme Blavatsky , which pos sesses wonderful magnetic power , so Its pres ent owner states. The Russian government has just Issued a decree that henceforth the services of women ns clerks , telegraph operators and ticket sellers on the railroads nro to bo dis pensed with and the vacancies filled by men. According to tint arch-fiend , the statis tician , who manipulates figures with most astounding results , only 65 per cent of blondes marry , against 7D per cent of their dark-haired bisters , who secure husbands. Mrs Charles Avery Doremus , the author of "The Full Hand , " which was recently piodticcd In Now York , Is a descendant ot President Jefferson Mrs. Dorcmua was educated In Paris and has written several works of fiction. The first literary venture of Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward was a story written when she was only 13 jenrs old. It found ready sale at the office of The Youth's Com panion , and soon after saw the light In that publication. The mother of Bishop General Leonldas Polk was ono of the earliest promoters of railroad enterprises In this country. She projected the first line of railway In North Carolina , a cheap tramway , which was called the Experimental railway. Mrs. Sophia Braeunllch , business manager of the Engineering nnd Mining Journal of Now York , was recently made ono of the twenty llfo fellows of the British Imperial Institute She Is the only woman member of that organization In the United States. Drury college , Springfield , Mo. , has Just re ceived from Judge Melvln M. Gray of St. Louis $25,000 as a fund to endow a chair of geology The gift Is made by Judge Gray In memory of his wife. The Institution Is open to men and women students on the same The musical editor of the Boston Homo Journal has had a letter from Pattl , and he says It Is as well put together as Is her won derful vocallsm. It Is written on heavy white linen glossed paper , the sheets being about six Inches wide nnd nlno Inches long. The handwriting Is exquisitely fine and dainty. The Innovation of no gloves for brides received fresh emphasis at the recent wed ding of Hon. Nelllo Basb In England. She were rings enough to almost cover her fin gers , but no gloves. This Is n very trying edict , for the whitest of hands are apt to look red against the snowlness of a bridal gown. German housewives , and perhaps others , make nn excellent Icing for cake without eggs. To n half-pound of powdered sugar add the grated rind of an orange , a tablespoonful - spoonful of boiling water and u llttlo orange Juice enough to moisten It thoroughly. This should bo .used nt once , and when "set" will bo found soft and very nice Miss Mary , the youngest daughter of ex- Secretary Hugh McCulloch , la a recent addi tion to the list of short story writers. Miss McCulloch Is the author of a very clever llt tlo story "In the Diplomatic Set , " which ap peared In Harper's Bazar. She has spent much tlmo In England nnd Italy , and knows Washington society thoroughly. She Is a tall , fair , handsome girl. K-dclmiiH Cheer the rintf. Undo Sam's subjects from the Arctic zone taught a Chicago audience a pretty lesson In patriotism at the Chicago opera house , sajs the Times. It was when Herrmann weaves from nothingness the ( lags of all nations and from them In turn evolves an American flag emblazoned with an equestrian figure of Washington. The eleven Eskimos from arc tic Alaska , who occupied boxes , rose In their scats , cheered the Hag , and remained standIng - Ing until It had disappeared. The audience caught the eloquent slgnlflcanco and burst Into delighted cheers. The orchestra crashed out tlio "Star Spangled Banner , " Herrmann bowed low , and the ensemble- was a very genuine demonstration of patriotism. The Eskimos , who were the , magician's guests , are onrouto to Washington , where they will appear before the president , senate nnd house They uro In charge of Miner \V. DrucRiJwlio was sent by the government two years iigo to study methods for the develop ment of nictlc Alaska. Among other plans which ho will submit to congro x as tending to this end Is thu Importation Jnto Alaska of the Siberian domestic reindeer to bo used as food for the Eskimo. None of his charges speak English , but are u keen , Intelligent race , tar superior In mentality to the Es kimos of Labrador. The party In the charge ot Mr. Bruce are the first genuine Eskimos ever sent so far south There are four men , three women , nnd four llttln girls. All wear furs and have UiBlr hair done in the quaint native fashion' They will return homo by wav San Fran cis : o In Juno. To them Herrmann's per formance was of especial significance , ns his mcthoJa are not unlike those ot the magic- lull ! ) and medicine men of their native land. They watched his tricks with Intense Inter est , and , far from being startled , showed rather a decorous spirit of Investigation that Indicated keen Intelligence. Ulna , a child ot G years , sat gravely through the performance , behaving In a manner that could have been hold up as an object le&son to some little girls. The four children clapped their hands joy ously at the sight of the flag , mingling their shrill cheers with those of tholr elders. Their bright , pretty faces shared the Interest of the audience , which was highly Mattered at the patriotism of people living within twenty-three mlles of the Arctic circle. One of the women were by far the most costly gown In all the well dressed audience. It was a dress ot arctic squirrel skins and was valued at fSOO. The Lutheran church Increased Its mem bership In Missouri the past year by 15,000. It now has a couituunlc&ut list In that state ot 330,000. KING OF AMERICAN PEAKS Its Spotless Oono Towers Three Miles Atovo tKo Boa. THE MONARCH OF THE 'PACIFIC Dciltrntlng n National I'nrk with Mount Tncoiun In the Center The Womlrri of tlio I.ono Hviitluol or llio Northwest Outlined. Tlio wisdom of tlio national government In reserving anil dedicating as public parks the soenlo wonders of the nubile domain Is uni versally commended. ( Tie | Yellowstone and the Yosemlte national narks have been sup plemented with minor ! reserves and larger and equally majestic areas of natural grand eur are In contcmplatroji. Among these Is Mount Tacoma , the sconc splendors of which are the theme of a descriptive paper by Mr. Carl Snyder In the Hcvlew of Ilovlcvvs. Mr. Snyder writes : The proposed new national park lies In the state of Washington , In tlio very heart of that vast and somber forest which , stretch ing northward from thq Columbia rl\ur far Into the solitudes of the , British possessions , inunlcs In a. dark pall of verdure the whole long western slope of the Cascades. Here the heavy rain-laden clouds blow In from the Pacific , finding their custcrnwaru flight barred by the mountain barricade , pour down upon the region an annual rainfall of fitly Inches. It nurtures the giant growth of fir and cedar and spruce , the heavy festooning moss and the deep tangled undergrowth that makes of much of western Washington a dense and sometimes Impassable Jungle It Is for this reason that the wonders of the new park have so long escaped alike the lncurslon of tourist or descriptive artist , while the glories of more accessible regions have been heralded throughout Christendom. And It might still remain unknown and un noticed were It not that from out this almost Cimmerian land rises the most superb and majestic mountain peak to bo found on this continent , If not upon the round earth. For , while there are other peaks whose brows are cooled by yet higher altitudes there are none which present such n rare and wondrous union of symmetry and sub limity , of mystic color , perfection of grace ful outline and gigantic and awe-inspiring shape as this soaring dome of snow , the Mount Ualnlcr of the maps , the Mount Ta- coina of popular usage and aboriginal tra dition. There are few who may look upon Us lone and simple majesty with soul un moved , for It Is ono of natuiu's master pieces. And there are few who , having looked upon It , do not experience a desire to penetrate the dreamy veil In which it hangs and make acquaintance of Its nearer beauties. It has a spell and a fascination so subtle and resistless as to stir the com monest clod-while It spurs the poetic fancy to fantastic nights. I remember , as I first watched It grow , luminous , opalescent and regal from out .the mantle of mist which held It as In a shroud , I could have sum moned back the whole antique world of mythology and domiciled it upon this greater and grander Olympus. DISCOVERED UY A POEJT. It was Theodore Wlnthrop , of gentle memory and pathetic fame , who first spread abroad the glories of the slwasU's Taconia. Yeais ago , a matter of some four decades , to bo exact , Wlnthrop , young , ardent , and a poet to boot , journejed west. When he crossed the Isthmus of Panama and struck northward ho found about the Golden Gate a patch of population a population that , In paradoxical parlance , had been summoned by a fever for gold. But for the rest , from beyond the Missouri to the rolling tides of the Pacific , ho found a land which the maps still traced with uncertain outline and peopled pled only with savages , save where In ono blooming oasis by the shores of the great Salt Lake the children of a now mcsslah had plunged Into the wilderness seeking a home and a haven from the bigoted perse cutions of a nation that still traded in slaves Penetrating as far as the region which congress was about to erect into the territory of Washington , ho brought back report of this lonely peak rising sheer from the Inmost waters of Puget sound , whoso name he caught from the varying dialects of the Indian tribes and fused Into softened " . " His first dazzling cadence of "Tah-co-n1a. zling vision of the mountain , caught as ho paddled up that matchless Inland sea which bears the name of Vancouver's lieutenant , Peter Puget , Wlnthrop cast in these vivid and colorful lines : WINTimOP'S APOCALYPSE. "Wo had rounded a point and opened Puy- nllup bay , a breadth of sheltered calmness , when I , lifting sleepy byellds for a dreamy stare about , was suddenly aware of a vast whllo shadow in the water. What cloud , piled massive on the horizon , could cast an imago so sharp in outline , to full of vigor ous detail of surface ? No cloud , ns my stare , no longer dreamy , presently discovered no cloud , but a cloud compoller. It was .1 giant mountain dome of snow , swelling and seem ing to fill the aerial spheres as Its Imaga displaced the blue deeps of tranquil water The smoky haze of an Oregon August hid all the length of Its lesser ridges , and loft this mighty summit based upon uplifting dimness. Only Us splendid snows were visi ble , high In the unearthly regions of clear blue , noonday sky. The shore line drew a cincture of pines acioss the * broad base , where It faded , unreal , Into the mist. The same dark girdle separated the peak from Us reflection , over which my canoe was now pressing and sending wavering swells to nlinttor ( tin lin.nllMftll Vision before It. "Kingly and nlono itood this majesty , with out any visible comrade or consort , though far to the north and the south Us brethren and sisters dominated their realms , each In Isolated sovereignty , rising above the plno-darkonod sierra of the Cascade moun tains above the stern chasm where the Columbia. Achilles of rivers , sweeps short lived and Jubilant to the sea above the lovely vales of the Willamette and the Ump- qua. Of all the peaks from California to the Frnzor river , tills ono before mo was the royalest. Mount llegnlor , Christians have dubbed It , In stupid nomenclature , per petuating the name of somebody or nobody. Moro melodiously , the nlwashos cnll It Tu- coma , a generic term al-so applied to all snow peaks. Whatever SUcon crests and crags there may bo In Its rocky anatomy of basalt , snow covers softly with Us bonds and BWcoping curves. Tacoma , under Its ormlno , Is a crushed volcanic dome , or an ancient volcano fallen In. Hut If the glunt tires had over burned under that cold sum mit , they have long slnco gene out. The dome that swelled up so passionately had crusted over and then fallen In upon Itself AVhcro It broke In ruin was no doubt a deso late waste , stern , craggy and riven , but such drear results of Titanic convulsions the gentle snow hid from vlow. "No foot of man had tram pled these pure snowa. It was a virginal mountain , distant from the possibility of human approach and human Inqulsltlvcncss as u marble goddess is from human loves. " I'UGET SOUND THEN AND NOW. This was forty years ago. The railway now penetrate , ! where Wlnthrop trod a wilderness , and the ships of commerce from the distant ports of tlio Orient ply that beanllful sound down which , In the midst of a vast solitude , the young traveler pad dled In a rude dug-out. Two modern and prosperous cities , ono named from the great mountain In whose shadow U lies , the other from the great chief who so long ruled the tribes that dwell at the mountain's feet. Tucoma and Seattle , have been built \\heru Wlnthrow found only Indian huts And attracted by Its grandeur and UB mjs- tory , the mountain wlilqh deemed to him so distant from human approach has been ex plored , Us fastnesses puiiotratod and mapped , and a number of Buccwsful usconts to Its far summit have been tnaile. Anil uueh a wonderful region has It. been discovered to bo that fitting recognition can bo made uf It In but ono way ; Tot not It akIJe as our third great national pari ; . THE WASUINGTOrrNATIONAL PANIC The first step toward''this end wan made tv htm on February 20 I'retuUunt Hum son Issued a proclamation Betting aside a tract of uqmo 1 600 sqijaro miles about the mountain as the 'Tauitl * Forestry Reserve " And now before congress Is the bill Intro duced by Senator Watson C. Squire , which our legislators are urged to put a speedy passage , "dcdlcntlng this area , to b known \\mliltmton Notional Park , for the benefit and enjoyment of the people of the United States , forovor. " The reserva tion lies In the northwestern portion of the stnto of Washington , about forty miles di rectly southeast of the city of Tacoma , and Includes portions of Plerco , Klttltas , Lewis and Yaklma counties. Some forty miles cast and west and about thirty-eight north nnd south , It contains In all about 1,000,000 acres , or n rather larger area than the state of Hhodo Island. THE GREATEST GLACIAL SYSTEM. Chief of all among the wonders of the re gion are Its glaciers. Spun round the moun tain as an axis , llko the radial spokes of soma gigantic wheel , nro some fourteen huge Ice fields , varying from n mlle to twelve miles In length. Though no ono of them taken alone equals In sire the great Mulr glacier of Alaska , together they constitute the greatest glacial system In the world By way of comparison , rather than disparage ment , It may bo said that all the glaciers of the Alps might bo snugly stoned away In n minor segment of this immense circle Perhaps the largest of the Ice fields Is the Tahoma , lying on the southwestern slope of the mountain. Its proportions may be roughly stated as about one mtlo In width , seven miles In length and an average depth of COO feet. Im agine If you will a solid block of Ice whoso average thickness Is twice the height of Trinity spire , and In places between 1,000 and 2,000 ftct , and of sulllclcnt length and width to cover one-half of Manhattan Island The Nesqually , the Cowlltz , the Carbon and White river glaciers are of but llttlo less Immensity , the last named being fully twelve miles In length. When now yon consider that a glacier a mlle In length nnd a half a mlle wide , In Europe , Is an eminently respectable affair , you may grasp something of the size and bulk of this field of Ice. Trom these massive storage reservoirs flow some six streams varying from seventy to 100 miles In length , the Cowlltr , Natchos , the White , Puyallup , Dos Chutes and Nes qually , which variously empty Into the Columbia , Puget sound nnd the sea Fre quently Is to bo witnessed the singular spectacle of a stream bursting from the glaziers In full head Thus ns the great Nesqually glazier issues from the narrow canyon which holds it llko a visa It presents a towering wall of Ice 500 fcot high , of abrupt face , from which the river pours In noisy tor rent beneath. Again , on the surface of the glaciers themselves , small streams are seen tumbling down Into some deep-riven crevasse , while here and there a lakelet of deep blue water GOO or COO feet In diame ter is to bo observed nestling on the solid Ice. A CAMP IN PARADISE. In almost startling contrast to all this drearj desert of snow is the unique beauty nnd sublimity of Paradise valley Lying on the southern slope of the mountain , shut In on cither side by the huge glaciers of the Nosquully nnd Cowlltz. ami surrounded l > \ towering walls of basalt , the effect as you como upon It Is bizarre In tlio extreme , It is as though ono had stopped from the regions of the polo Into a semi-tropical garden Hero nature revels In her most gorgeous scenic and chromatic effects. The valley Is a deep , broad , natural park , some ten miles In length nnd perhaps two wide , and curved In the form of an uncompleted horseshoe. It lies just below the line of perpetual snow , Its basaltic palisades protect It fiom the glacier's chilling breath , and as the warm southern 'ami beats upon Its rich volcanic soil It summons to life an almost tropical vegetation , which spreads over the floor of the valley llko a carpet of brilliant color. It Is almost a hothouse effect. At the ex treme head of the park lies Paradise glacier , pouring forth the turbulent mllk-whlto stream which goes swirling down the valley llko a stria of pearl In the richer emerald or amber and foliage Higher Ftlll gleam the cold , white flanks of the Cowlltz glacier , whllo over the jutting clltl tops the riotous streams poured down from the ice fields take flying leaps from the dlzyy crests , and shim mer gently into the far depths. Chief of the&o is the beautiful Slulskln or Paradise falls , nt the head of the valley. A llttlo lake nestles nt the foot of the ridge , whllo away to the southward , 100 mlles to the Columbia , the rough and broken country stretches away llko nn angry , tumultuous sea. St. Helens , a sharp volcanic cone wreathed In snow , lifts It graceful head In the distance , nnd beyond nro Mt. Hood and Mt. Jefferson. Looking down the valley the basaltic walls seem of an artificial regularity ; the effect of the vivid coloring of the foliage Is weird nnd fantastic , as If the sunlight were filteicd through some vast prism ; and ns the ojo sweeps the scene with Its stranso com mingling of crag nnd waterfall , glacier and garden-like vegetation , the blending of Jan uary nnd Juno , ono might fancy the spot some ancient playground of the young gods. A camp In Paradlso park Is an unmixed delight. Game abounds and the scenery Is Intoxicating. And It Is hero , at an eleva tion of about C.OOO feet , that you begin to appreciate something of what awaits the climber who pushes on to the summit. Camp of the Clouds , which lies on n high ridge above the valley , about 7,000 foot up , In at a higher elevation than Is Pike's Peak summit ubovo the city of Denver. There Is still n matter of 8,000 feet , a mlle and a half , of sheer ascent before the top Is at tained. HIGHEST PEAK IN THIS COUNTRY. Dut the mountain Itself Is nnd over will bo the central point of Interest ns It Is the dominant figure of the landscape. It IB the middle of the three dazzling snow peaks which space the crest line of the Cascades at Intervals of about 100 mllos. Mount Hood at , Urn south and Mount Halter at the north attain a height of 10,000 and 11.000 feet , whllo Tacoma rises nearly 4,000 feet higher , or to an attitude of 14,411 feet * This , It should bo berne In mind , Is tlin visual as well ns the actual hclcht. for. Tacoma rests Its bnso piuctleully at the edge of the sea Thus , although Pike's Peak , for example , or the Muttorliorn of the Alps , uro each of about nn equal altitude , rising us they do from n high plate m five to seven thousand feet above the level of the sea , the } afford the eye hardly half the aspect of sublimity as this Colossus of the Pacific. Tour or five Mount Wnshlngtons might bo piled ono nbovo the other , llko the superimposed temples of Ilolus , nnd still hardly attain the cold nnd distant heights to which Tacoma rises. Slmllaily It would icqulro n pllo of thirty pyramids the sl/o of Cheeps to reach the level of Its summit. It overlooks Pugel sound from Oljmpla to Victoria , n distance < jt ICO miles. It Is visible from the city of Portland , 120 miles to the south , nnd from Walla Walla , on the eastern edge of Wash ington , 1DO miles away. Within the field of vision from Its summit nro Included nearly the entlro state of Washington nnd portions of llrltlsh Columbia , Idaho nnd Oregon. Fancy such a peak as this rising from the midst of the Allcghanlos' ' Not a tourist or a geologist In twenty states but who would have visited nnd explored It , nnd attempted Its summit , whllo bealdo It Niagara would be a point of moderato Interest. HULK ENOUGH TO DAM THE ATLANTIC. Then. too. Its enormous bulk. Tacoma Is not attached to the range , but stands silent and apart , HKo the royal chief that It Is. This Blnglo mountain Is nearly ninety miles In clrcumfoionco at Its base , nt the line of perpetual snow , about G.BOO feet altitude , It Is twelve mllca In diameter , whllo its broad summit Is more than two miles across And It Is , as I have said , nearly three miles high. A pen and pencil will readily compute Its volume , nearly 200 cublo miles That Is to t > ay , If the average depth of the Atlantic doea not exceed ono mile , the material con tained In this mountain would construct a solid embankment of an average thickness of 300 foot from Capo Cod to the English coast. Prom the summit of luconm the tow or of Ilabel would have been hardly more visible than ono of the church spires of u Puget sound city. A FLOATING CASTLE OP THE SKY , Seen from almost any point of the compass the aspect of the mountain Is Imposing be yond words Perhaps the best attainable view , If one does not care to ponetruto the Interior , Is flam the top of the noble bin IT a on which the city of Tacoma lieu Hero Uiu eye , looking up the low Intervening valley of the Puyallup , may command the tintlro bulk of the mountain from base to summit piu picture Is strangely varied and changeful fan one day the mountain seeing cold , distant and lifeless , and , again , warm , glowing , opalescent , like tinted alabaster For days It will remain hidden behind the densu mlitu which gather about It , and than as ( h cloudn part loom out of the murk In all ltn Imperial majesty Still again , Its base will bo burhd In cloud , while above will rise brow and shoulders , musKfc- fhelr spotless ermine , resting only upon thuMlmy fleece of mist and suggesting n floating castle of the sky. CLIMniNG OUR GREATER MT. TrUANC. The ascent of Tocomn Itself Is , on tlttf whole , perhaps moro arduous than perilous , and thus far no fatalities hnvo been re corded , Hut an ascent Is not won nt any light cost and the climber who essays that bleak and barren summit must bo wpll sup plied with resolution , uiulnrairo nnd daring. And oven with these ho may fall , as many hnvo. The first white man , perlnps the first of human kind , to make the ascent was Gen eral , then nontenant , A. V Kant/ , who In 18G7 was otatloned nt Tort Stellacoom , n llttlo frontier stockndo on Puget Sound Of nn adventuresome turn , he Induced two com panions to mnko the attempt with him. They reached the saddle back below Peak Success , perhaps 1.000 feet below the actual summit , Crater peak , when hunger nnd ex- hnusllun forced them to nn Immediate de scent. A moro successful attempt to explore the top of the mountain was mndo In 1870 by General Hazard Stevens and P. U. Van Trump , accompanied by the old Indian guide Slulskln. They chose what Is now the accepted route , through Paradise Park and up by the side of the Cowlitz glacier nnd Gibraltar Rock , reached Crater Peak and Peak Success , nnd spent n night In the crater caverns. Slulskln awaited them about half way up , In reality never expecting their return. No amount of urging would Induce him to make the ascent. T.ih-lio-nn ho regarded as the dread abode of nn evil spirit who would hirl avalanches on the Impious mortal who dared penetrate his sacred precincts , The Indian superstition of the mountain Is general , nnd In the picturesque legends of those red men there runs the story of ono who climbed to the top nnd found there n fiery lake , but was hurled down by the spirit who abides there , Indicating that the mountain has been In eruption within legendary times MANY ATTEMPT , 1'EW SUCCEED. Slncci then several successful ascents have boon made , and In 1890 Miss May Puller , n > oung lady of Tncoma , braved the rigors of the climb , and won the honor of being the first woman to reach the summit Many attempts are made each summer , but the number of those vvho&o names nro recorded In the caverns of the crater nro not large. Thus of all the numerous parties w"ho es sayed the feat during the recent season only the photographic expedition led by Arthur rronch of Tacoma was successful Many entertaining accounts have been written of these nscents. Hut they can , after nil , convey little idea of the strange sensation of otandlng fur above the clouds , the landscape below blotted out of sight , only the towering cones of distant vol canoes lifting their heads above the vast nnd gloomy e\pniibe of mist , of peering over tlio brink of some eyrlo erag down Into far depths , whoso outlines are lost In obscurltj , of feeling the earth tremble beneath jour feet nt the onset of bomo roai Ing , plunging a-alanche. to be alone on the summit of nn other piercing peak , nmld trackless deserts of snow , miles nbovo the precincts of animal or vegetable llfo , In a still darkness that appals , with only the sky and the stars for a neighbor. Llttlo wonder that the law giver ot Israel went upon the mountain top , for It Is upon the lonely heights that scet- bhlp tomes , nnd the mind escaping from the nuriovv fetters of common llfo stands face to face with the Immanent forces of the world. Recent nnd more nccitrnte measurements sliow that the true height of tlio mountain Is nbovc 15.UOO feet , so that Tatoma la the highest peak within the boidus of the United States. The | Pall Mall Budget's Inquiry for the most pathetic lln ever written seems to hnvo moused much Interest Among the last pafjeful published me these. So sail , so strange , the dnjs tlmt tire no moro Tennyson Wo have done with hope nnd honor , wo are lost to love and truth , Wo are cliopplnu down the ladder , rung by lung Uuilynid Kipling , My long-lost beauty , hast thoit folded quite Thy wings of morning llfchtf ' Ollver endell Holmes. The light of n whole life dies When love Is done. Uourdlllon. Out , out , brief candle ! Life's but a walking shadow ; Uiu poor plnjer That btruts and frets his hour upon the singe. And then Is heard no more. Macbeth. And here , with hope no longer here , While the tears diop , my dnvs go on. n. It. Hrowntng. Hut oh , for the touch of a vanished hnnd , And the sound of a voice that H still. Tcnnjson. Of many thousand kisses the poor last. Anthony and Cleopatra. Now with his love , now In the coldo Rinve ! . Chaucer. Or they lived their life through and than went whlthci , And wcie one to the end , but vvlmt end who knows ? Swinburne. And some are taken from me ; all are de- paited ; All , nil ate gone , the old familiar faces Charles : Lamb. Ao fond kiss nnd then wo ROVCI ; Ao farewell , alas ! forevei ; Deep In heart-wrung' toai.s I'll pledge thce , Warring sighs nnd groans I'll vvago thec. Had wo never lo'ed sac kindly. Had we never lo'ed HIO blindly , Never met or never parted , Wo hnd no'cr been biukcn hearted. _ Burns. Till ! IbAHKl.l.A CO/A" . KIRKSVILLE , Mo. , Peb 10 To the Editor of The Heo : The enclosed circular letter I would bo pleased to have printed In The Hoe. It scorns desirable that the history of the Isabella coins and the fact that they are still for sale should bo spread In every part of the country , ns they uro souvenirs that will constantly Increase In Interest and value. Members of the board of lady managers are earnestly requested by Mrs. President Palmer to assist In the undertaking of dis posing of the remaining coins. I am willing to promote this Important Interest of the board In our own stnto , and upon my loturn homo hope to Induce ono or moro of the local banks to place these tolns on sale at $1 apiece. MRS. JOHN S. HRIUGS. A RARE TOKEN. As the Columbian Exposition passes Into history the question of Us fittest , most on- durlng nnd most beautiful memento for In dividual possession assumus Importance Of all the tokotm that have been devised to celebrate great episodes , coins or medals coins not for currency have been found most appropriate and have survived every other vestlso of human creation In connec tion with the subject they were Intended to mnko Immaitnl. The Isabella coin blonds nil the qualities of beauty , penmimincy and fitness ( It. because It Is Identified with the exposition by author. Ity of congress , nnd relates oxclusUoly to If , bccauso the whole Issue It ) tompiratlvely small and the bulk of It Is bound In tlmo to bo lost ; because the portrait Is n fuc-slmllo of the only ono unquestioned ns truthfu , and because the execution Is of unusual pre cision and suavity. In addition to those traits , Its valno Is enhanced by the unprece dented distinction of being the only medal or coin over struck In honor of a quoou ntter her death , for coinage of uovorolgnH1 heads ceatiOH with the reign It IK unique In bolus the only coin struck In homage to a woman oxerclslng no sway In the world but that of ( dual worth , and In rememboranoe , not of battles , or prowess , or In the name of her own race , or for any material mid , butte to revive and perpetuate the glory of a woman who , actuated by unselfish motives nnd out of faith In God nnd a man , uavo her gems and her patronnga to a projuct deemed futile by consort and court and nearly all her advisers , theieby oponlng to mankind a world of whoo real scope even Us discoverer was not nt the time uwaro. Much of the history of the world Is written on coins The Isabella coin will bo India , sulubly associated with the World's Colum bian exposition In the future , ami will also acquirepreilmisncsH from the IOIIK Interval. ! that have paused between coinage of special tokens by the L'ntted States , The now luvaluubl" Liberia * Amf-rlcann" was struck In honor of the Decliratlon of Independence. The work was 'lone la Franco , nnd the dates fire October 17 , 1777 , nnd October 19,1791 , the first I ho surrender ot Hurgojrno , the second the capitulation of Cornwnllls. The motlo Is from Horace- "Not So Strong Without Divine Aid. " * /Tlioro Is a cent struck after tlm peace , boTlring-tlio head , laurelxl , of Washington , with thoMejwni ! "United States of America " Among nil mlnTagW. , American or tojvtitn of modern days , noitp 1mc' ' - . ' . * crlpU\o Of the event It commemorates , none morn expressive uf the advance of science and art applied to medallion ! ) than the Isabella , Although bearing the visage ot a queen , It has paid xelgnlorago to only n tree people , nnd , ns It further commemorates the first ofllclal participation by women In n national undertaking will go doun In the annals ot numismatics absolutely without n peer. COA.M III l/.ir/K.S. Yager I made one ringing speech In my life , nnjway. Chorus ( derisively ) Where , when ? Yngcr The night I proposed to Mis. Yager. "Then jou don't hate mo , Laura , dear ! " "No , ( Jeorgo. 1 like jou well enough , but It would lie ildlctllous for me lo marry Jim. You are the first man that has ) ropjaod to mel" Father Don't jou think wo ought lo walk faster , darling'Vo nro not keepIng - Ing up with the organ Daughter No. pa I have watted a long while for this oppor tunity , nnd mean to maku It last ns long as possible. First Young Ladj Do you nlways buy two kinds of paper ? Second Young I.ndj- Alwajs You see , when I write to Charllo I use red piper , that means lovo. When I answer Jim's UHtcr.s I 1190 blue paper , which means "faithful unto death. " There nro over 1C 000 hicholors In Mani toba , and thcj send wonl through I heir government that If that number of Ung- Innd's "supeifluous" women will emigrate to Manitoba the proceeding may bo mutually advantageous to them and thu aforesaid bachelors. Isabella A. Dajtou of Cambridge , Miiss. , n giddy joung thing ot C5 , has just re ceived $5,000 In n suit for breach of promise The defend nit agreed to pay her $10,000 last jvnr , owing to the opposition ot his family to the proposed mnrrlngc , hut Klio declined It at thu time. Insisting on a ful fillment of the engagement. Mrs Wnldo Hohlnson , n cousin of Presi dent Cleveland , who died In Des Molnes last October , mndo tin arrangement by which her husbind was to marry a Miss I'ninin Drown of Indianapolis , nn Intlmato friend ot hers , who hnd promised her to take earoof Mi Koblnson nnd their children Thu iViarlago of Miss Drown and Mr. Iloblnson has just taken place nt Indianapolis The most Interesting bit of gossip In con nection with the new associate justice ot thu supreme court Is that ho Is boon to bo married to one ot the most attractive ladles In Washington society , the widow of Linden Kent , n popular lawjor , who was executor of General Sheridan's estate , and died three jears ago Justice White Is u , bachelor , 4 ! ) jcarw old , rich and handsome , without a wrinkle upon his ruihlj face , and red hair which the moth ot tlmo ban spared to a reasonable degree. Whllo the town board meeting of West Indianapolis wns In f-esslon recently Justice of the 1'eaco Allen , who was present , was summoned to perform a mairligo ccromonj. The contracting patties vvoie John Perrj and Mlhs Mary MeOre-ovy The ceremony wns pcrfoimcd nt the residence of the bride , on llrldgo Btrejt When Mr Allen entered the houbo he was Informed that It was do- blred by both parlies that the ceremony bo a short ono. Mr. Allen piomptlj tied the knot. Mr. Wjnno , who had taken his watch from his pocket to note the tlmo con- buiupd In the ceioniony , staitlcd them all by announcing that the worlds record had just be cn broken. "You have taken only two and ono-half seconds In the ceremonj " Another gentlemen present alllrmcd Mr. W > line's statement. Not the Iliinil tli.it Wax IXalt Him. Mr lftnrWiiltorson Ins lit-i-u In New York , wlicrc In nnimei lo a quer ) af to Ilia opinion of tin- Wilson lilll , ho H ild ' Tim vVllfon bill irnilnilH mo of an nceliknt til it once happ-nod In l.oulsnllc A w > ll known local iiainblci thought ho liad < i gord thlni ; In a MniiiKei who tpiic ircil upon the menu loaded with monej liewns Induced In play a triune-I think they cill U ilriw poKer nnd whin thu op portune inoniuit arrived the' Jjoulsvllle man deilt theHtruiBi1' ' tout i icks and hlmsilf four HUICIIH 'ilie hctthiK hnpan , nnd whin all thctr nioni'j wai up and it eanu * to n Hhim-Uown tlm MtranBei dl pliiod full ! MnK * Take tlio money. BtianBcr , ' Ki pid tlio aBtonlsliul nutivu IIH ho fell In a lit fuko the money ! lint that wasn't tin hind I dealt > oul' THE COMPLEXION AND BEAUTY , MME. M. YALE'S Excolalor Complexion Romotllos Awnrdod the ITighest Modnls nnd 1)1 lilomus from the World'a Fnlr Uo- lumbinn Exposition. Mine Yiln , tlio VV'oilU Kunud romploxlotl 'jIKfl illHt , ID tlio niofll buiiillfiil woniii Hun.- Her IMI uity li i boon cnltlv itcM and hup umiii pio- tervcd liy llio IIHD of tlnmj ivmoUtUH At U ho dOLH not look moro than IB PRICE LIST Anil Mine Yalo'n Advice FOR M3TII PATCHES , SAUOWHESS , Thick , ilo.ul Bkln or any other discoloration I roo- otnninnil niv ( 'imiiili xlon llli ifli an I is a ir ml ju It will iiMiuiMMill Hit in hli intHlii and gh > > a p irr ti-i n ituril eoni'l"fi" | iiii l In IIIIHIJ nid Iwiutvto nthllilH I'rli-i' , * J Oil inn Inittli I fop f ! HlH ndvlHililolo Hid thn < Diittloilf UIMC 111) in of lin ; HI uiilliualtliuni ; ! ) on" butllu l'i mitllLlunl In in my tlU1H WRINKLES AMD SKIN FOOD. KveelBlor Skin I'ood will ruimwn any ei-o ol wrluUltH and ou r > irun uf atrr It li IH uteri ( Hteil hy thu irriMt < t i hi nlc il uxptrlt ail IIIM iionnciid iimruilniit It m ik m lUnoy fl'tli linn and Ujiiolil wllhm > iBklnfr nil nl isllt ) in I V null fill HiniUi in IIIM ItH i omul and | iliun ! > Tnortliji , piieo , * 1 50 and 4 100 p-rjar FRECKLES AND LA FRECUA. It inittorH not If fn < ptliS ! h ivu bunii fri uontli to old i , ' < i Ln I'leeltll will rnnuno thuni In every n IHII In i Ulilixm montliH ovir u nuiH i uf i million men , wonum ind children h no b uiuivd otfcii'.ilc'H and tin ii Hkln in t lu bnuiilful II H liimkHM ind uonlurfol 1'rlcj , ij.1 00 pi r boltU THE HAIR AND EXQEIBIO I HAH TQ1U , Oriy Imlr iHHOwtnrmit link in it orielu ilmlo \\ltlicmKHo for lln > llrtil llmu In Din hluloi ) ufUid world MmoY ilu hiiwlsioi llalrTnidi IHCUII Hlitunil the muni nilraminl ulumiili ln < h-nilHiry It louUiri'HlIni n ituril color to ifi u li Ur luutiliM 110(1)0 nndHtuiiH h ill filllntf In fro n 'I h HI-i to uiiKWitlc C in lie nilliil on toi roito in intu i ih nt ; tfrawlh I'm U i' ' < > h" > < ) ) It IH in u'folom 1'rluo , 1 | ui liotllu , I ) for fj GUIDE TO DEA'JTY. Minn Yilo will wend In-i Onulo lo'llMiitv a vain iliKi liook , fn-c lo li Him H nnlliu II ei nti HI DOHlaifO HluipH to | iiv fui mallliu imn dlvti iixIradH tiuiii Mm" v.alu fain nn Inetur 1 on tii Hilly mid KIIIII r il aivli' | on Uitiiiily e'litlu Mm muni uduuinil tirine-li of njuoaliiiu-whli li um * i > u'runm in an ixin ildi ineo lo Lmcoino Ufuiuful and n in tin > uiiii.1 ulw a > H. bond all mull < ml < r tu Mum Yal nl Inir hold quartern Ti niplo of Duality , 1 III State HI Chi- OIMAIL OHDKUS-1/iillen. you wiv onlwr your irumU by in.ill m m-l tin in from your driUKim It hiiilnoMiiotkitDU tlKtin ( Mint Minu Valu his n lino. 11 mum b bcliinil thu tlmu * Mme. M. YALEX /Jpiiiify ninl Complox/oii N/M > < . > /ii//nf , 501 Knrbach Block. 15th and Douglas Streats , Omaha , M , JIulli Olllef , UU blu'M bU , UUllMZu , III.