7 I - " I I A - - v PA..v ai . . i 1 1 J W- v TNj j-tote NV'Wv tAl 'MA :rbsr li. ! i V .V. v- . ;:f (Mew Fad Started by i4 V mAA:r .cmri-V-: ' CKtcago Oirf , i w rf" , j. ; -... i 1' T 'V- r - ti,'1 :i I ':VT -"i; YJ -r? V-tf The Flume, Frianconia nctch.WWte nvnifitam? - where a heart was broken Ast?. A ' ' tern.- fe i4fe ''- tv4v 4 $A-'''' 'AA m -f s ? ? ix .W 1' fr ' J y ' & ;v v i txmmmm. r i 9 till Ilili A S 11 W W 7 ,1- 50 M fctSS ESTREbLA REIULY. one of the young- rr ut-'litrB ui ivniwuuu mnieiy, in iiic nivrmur of one of the newest fads for girls, and one which Is likely to become popular among young women whose lives are tinged with the romance of love. Mlrs Rcllly, now In her fourth season In Chicago society, has se cured photographs of every place she ever has received a proposal of marriage, and she keeps the photographs of these hallowed spots mounted In a hand some souvenir album, and written under the photographs are brief stories of the proposal, the name of the man, and the date and at the end of each sketch a single word: " No." The " No " records the fate of thirteen unfortunate wooers, and Miss Rellly declares that, fiom present pros pects the book, which contains eighteen pages, will be filled oefore a " Yes " Is recorded. The photographs, some of them secured at much trou ble and expense, tell the Btory of happy outings and pleas ant Journeys as well -is half reveal, half hide the romances of her life. She will not permit the name of the man In any one of the cases to be used, but, undoubtedly, the men themselves and the friends will recognize the spots where thirteen hopes ere blighted by those "noes." The photographs, too, reveal the fact that romantic surround ings may have their Irfluence on wooers, and also that the girl can say " no " even In the mklat of beautiful scenery. In lands of romance, and In the wonderlands of nature. May Have Its Terrors for Men. Those of Miss Rellly"a friends who have seen the " Pro posal Book " have seised the Idea of having one of their own and some of them already are striving to secure photographs of the exact spots on which men told them the old, old story. Some one has hinted that the men of the south side are In more peril than ever and that they may be led Into proposals for the mere sake of a photograph, and several men are reported to be suffering the pangs of ter ror for fear the Kenwood girls may compare " proposal books 7 and discover strange things that may lessen their belief In the constancy of men. Miss Rellly began to keep her proposal book In litu. when she received the first proposal. It was In the recep tion room of her father's home and the young man was a Vnlverslty of Chicago senior. Just preparing to depart for Ma distant home. It was he who really started the Idea, for he photographed the Interior of the reception room, and he gave one of the photographs to Miss Rellly. After she had said " no " Juxt as kindly as she could undeY the circumstances and he had departed crestfallen, she admits that she felt sorrowful and romantic, so she took the photograph and marked a tiny cross on the spot where he sat when he poured out his story of love and ad miration to her. But on that same photograph there are now four tiny crosses, marked there In legs than five' years, and the notes under It tell the story of three other proposals and three other " noes" spoken In that aam room. One was a young doctor, one a Junior partner In his wealthy father's business, and one a hotel man. The strange coincidence In those four propoals Is that each one of the four declared his love Just at the close of an evening call, which may Indicate that men delay proposing to the last possible minute, trying to screw up their courage, or else that they propose when within reach of tlielr hats, so that they can escape hastily afterwards. Two from the Fox River. That summer of 11 Miss Rellly spent with a party In the Fox lake district, and there were two photographs added to the collection. The notes under these photo graphs are brief and to the point. The first says: " Scene on Fox river, at Geneva. Went to gather pond lilies with Mr. on July P. We had a boat load of lilies and had started to row back to the cottage late In the evening. Bun wis getting low. I'nder the railway bridge Mr. stopped rowing and told me he loved me. The ride back to the lending was faster. Neither spoke. NO. " August T. Dance at hotel. Hot. Mr. asked me to walk with him. Walked down towards the shore. I saw what was coming and asked him to take me buck to the veranda. He stopped, stood directly In front of me to stop me. and then proposed, as If he was trying to bid for a new horae. Afterwards he turned and walked straight away from me. leaving me alone. No." The Rellly family spent that winter In Florida and, strange as it may seem, the young girl added but one pho tograph to her collection, and. without any confession from her, the evlden.e leads to the conclusion that she came near adding " Yea" after that one, at least aa near as at any time. St JM Romance Might Have Been Different. The spot was miles back of Palatka. They had walked alone, she and a young American naval officer who was on furlough, miles from the hotel at which she was staying with her mother and aunt, and they came to a bridge over a sluggish stream In a cypres swamp and stood looking down upon the water, as they leaned upon the bridge. Miss Rellly was tired from her walk and she clambered WM where naval lieutenant came near winning n E -1 n "'" . - M a; l ' i. 9. v'r o 1 ; . F f'j 1 v;- Af "11 'Ay fa .A SI "Al'&vs x ft 3 n Jus -VsVX, v. ft. fox River near Geneva U m re one e vtas hied hop blu Orchesl ra Half where Ho.lZ made his . mistake . -ft.. r4 1. a i- 1- . v' " "-i n2f- " 1 ? v- - - "ry which d made kii f XwvW ' yecend proposal . , mm T ' , vJ3C ,t- - K I V v, t "i I I . feccptfon roam of Mf'41 Reilfy Vf home where fvur men were r-eieeivtl Other evidence that the lieutenant came near winning lies In the fact that Miss Rellly did not photograph the snot then, but afterward almost n year ufterward sent an order to a photographer to make a picture of that bridge, and when It ,'nmo stic found a fisherman leaning at the spot whereon thp romance t shattered. The girl took her camera one d.iy In the following August and started fur Lincoln park to take a photograph and when she had developed the plater and selected the best one she sadly marked a cross upon H and wrote: "This Is the first surprise. I went for a car ride with Ed yesterday and we got off at Lincoln park and took a W'alk. Finally we sat down on the grasf. In the shade of some bushes and Ed proposed. I never thought of him except as my kid brother's chum, and It hurt me to refuse him, and he. poor boy, nearly cried. I wish he hadn't asked me. He Is too young." i "Ed " evidently refused tr take " no " for an answer, for the next photograph Is one of the Royal gorge In Col orado. Miss Rellly, her mother, her "kid" brother, and his chum " Ed " were on their way to California when Ed ppiposed again. It was months before Miss Rellly could get a photograph of the spot, which Is just at the end of the famous hanging bridge, hut she finally found one and added it to her collection. That second .refusal evidently finished Ed, for there Is a foot note In the " pro posal book " which reveals the fact that " Ed " became engaged to ' Milly " the next summer. The next photograph in the hook Is i. scene In ti e heart of the White mountains In New Hampshire, where the Rellly family spent" the summer of l'.xa. The photograph shows the famous flume In Franconla Notch and Miss Rellly's story tells the rest. " Mr. of Philadelphia Is here with his sisters, who knew Jennie at school. He Is awfully handsome and wealthy, but I don't like his sisters. They seem to think because I'm from the west I don't know anything. Mr. has been very attentive. "August 27. Mr. wanted me to walk with him. His sisters, with Boh, were behind and wc got so far ahead that we lost them by the time we reached the flume. He helped me walk across a log over the water and we sat down on a broad bowlder to wait for the others. " Then he proposed. Ho did It so nicely and so ear nestly I was sorry. I really liked him pre tty well, but I told him It was useless, because I couldn't stand his sisters. Then, when the others caught up with us, Rob told us that he and Katherlne were engaged, so we'll have one of those sisters In the family after all." Refected on Lake Shore Drive. The next spring there was a photograph of the Lake Shore drive, with Just a cross on the pavement. There Is no note under the picture to explain It, nor will Miss Rellly explain It at all. The only hint as to what happened there Is a "No" written 'n rather rougher style than usual. The keeper of the "proposal book" flushes angrily when asked If that " No " may not be changed to " Yes " some time, and refuses even to talk of It. "We went to the old churchyard," say? the next entry. " Mamma was tired and preferred to stay at the hotel Instead of sightseeing and she said It really was foolish hut Mi. wanted so much to show me where Pocahontas Is said to be burled that I let her. It Is a beautiful old spot and an old sexton showed us through the church and to the grave where the beautiful Indian mali.-n Is said to rest. We sat down on an old tomb and then Mr. asked me to be his wife. I felt really flattered because he Is wealthy and awfully nice for an Englishman but I had to tell him that I could n 1 -js,- -.-.. . - . H . - i LakeShore Drive hfrysiuiroposaX was received Lincoln whet Cd was refused upon the rail and sat there. The man, standing by her ui arm around her and, before she could move or clamber from the rail to tLe bridge again, he clasped her tight and told her What he told her or how ardently she does not write In her " proposal book," and she grows Indignant If any one hints that the atranae looking blur by the " No " is a tear stum not marry a man I did not love." Finally, there Is a photograph of the Interior of Orches tra hall In Chicago and a cross mark on a et that is II 5 I'nder It Is a note. "April. 1:ki.Y a man should know Utter than to pro pose in the middle of a Wagnerian over ure O didn't. NO."