f THB GOUKIUK. She urged each ono present who thought of any thing thut could bo bet tered in tho way of council work o epouk. So the apoakois were mode to feel that while they had no vota in I ho council procoediugs they had a largo place in the recognition of tho president. From an international standpoint this may bo considered as ono of tho moat Bigniticant meetings of tho Council, for tho tactfulncBB of tho hostess ro doub did much to overcomo much of tho un pleasantness which occurred in tLo general sessions of tho Council. A special telegram from London by Henry Norman to tho New York Timos sums up tho value of tho woman's con gross in a few words, which I think should he ta':on with a fow graitiB of allowance. HoBa)s: "Anything more futile or purposeless has seldom boon Bion in this city than tho woman's internat'onal congress. At Woatminstor Town Hall, where it was held, tho noise of tho underground trains and the cries of echo d childron outside mado most of tho speakers in audiblo. The audience arrived indf ferontly, and tno incessant coming and going of weirdly-clad delegates wus over un interruption. Except in tho case of actresses, tho voices, diction and do livery of most of the speakers were bad. No one was allowed to speak for more than ton minutes. The bell wiB rung inexorably to close each paper. Ap parently no delegate bad rehearsed her paper beforehand with a stop watch, therefore most of them wcro arrested whilo they had still pageB to read. Tho effect of a speaker sitting down in the middle of a paragraph, with the wboln of her piint left out, may be imagined. In many cases there was no discussion after the papers, which were simply rat tled off, one after another, like eo many shots from a cannon. Mrs. Charlotte Perkins Stetson, who said simo tren chant tbirga, appalled her English hoarers by advocating highly trained, well-paid women aa substitutes fjr mothers. English women of advanced views who attended aro askirg was it wor'ih whilo gathering women together from the ends of the earth to gabblo platitudes of precisely ten minutes' duration. The effects of tho congrtflj upon the public opinion hero is nil." The portraits of five American women in bass relief are to be placed on the western Btaircase of the cipitol at Al banyHarriot Beecber Stowp, Captain Molly Pi' cher, Susan B. Anthony Fran ces A. Willard and Clara Batton. We uro cony to chronic e that none of them are to be pictured young. Mrs. Stowo is represented ub an old lady, with whitened hair, and )et, Mrs. Stowe wrote the story which made her famous when she was but a little over forty, and did nothing to equal it in her after writings. Francep Willard was not an old lady when bhe died only about Bixty, and the labors which brought her world wide reputation wore all begun vhile she was yet a youLg woman. It seems u pity 6&ys Harper's Baair, that tho mobt important memorials of men and women who have attained to eminence should be presented te us in portraits destined for posterity bb old persons, with their life work done and the rec ordsof its struggles not the glow of their youthful promise written on their faces. We know Gladstone best after bis battles wero all won and the queen us she Bits almost helpless with no trace in her face of the girl who promised no more than she fulfilled and who became at once tho inspiration of her subjects. Our bjst known portraite of Lincoln wero taken when his power was proved. Suppose wo had never known Mrs. Ballingtun Booth in tho dujB of her wonderful beauty, but waited to boo her pictured as an old person with glares! All that tho latter years hnve prove I in ovory ono of thoao !BseB was in them when young, undo volopod to be sure, but then). It is apt to have a discouraging (-Hoot upon tho young, this disregard of tho jouthful promiBo wilh the prescription only of its attainments in old ugo mid tho culti vation of this d.Bregurd creates almost unconeciouply k certain scepticism among us, Mo-t of ub huvo bean taught to bssoclato wisdom with years and sincerity f purpose ot.ly wilh its fulfilment. My Dear Mis. Riuki ttt-: In view of complying with jour re quest in Tho Unurior of July 1st, I am making an i Hurt to form un opinion on tho reorgan'. ition queeti ii us applied to the General Federation. 1 lind I havo no copy pf tho present constitu tion and not suffhiont Knowledge of iho presont conditions and the working dif ficulties to form an intelligent opinion. Realizing that "I never will bo missed." I forboar diBJUPsing that concerning which I am ignorant, butsend you these linoB that you may know I did not over look tho matter. Is not tbo diH'rict idea suggested in lust Satutday's Courier u goad one? However, tbo more remVo tho relationship between tbo G. F. W. 0. and its individual membership, the less influence will tho former huvo and tho more will it become a posing place for profeBeionuli-m us opposod to altruism. Ab a model for effect' vo organization I ahvajB turn to the Roman Calhilic. church. Jf one h le mastered tho princi ples thht i;uide her, she has the key to the organiz itiou question. Whether it is possible to u ply tho principles with out the dogma" ic authority to enforce discipline is a question. I doubt the per manent effect. ventEB of any organiza tion wheieindiv.dualiem is eo fostered as it is in our club lifo and I doubt tho wisdom of substituting party discipline for individual free thinking. Doubt los3 the able w.imon in oharge will settle the question wisely and Bee thoir way cleur through whut seems to mo il dilemma. I'm glad indeed that I don't huvo to do it. Grace M. Wheoler. To the Fortnightly Club of Ottumwa, Iowa, b longs tho distinction of being the first club in thut city to iesue a ss. tomatic program of its work and mhke use of a year book; this although three or four-clubs were in existence tbore at the time of the Fortnightly's organiza tion, December, 1804 While small in numbers, the membership being limited to thirty, the club haB carried on impres sive work on literary Yuhb, aud bus also done a valuable purt in the altruistio work of tho community. At its moot ing are presented varied and interesting programs mado up of quotations, ad dresses, papers, reading, and music. A Pronunciation Box is an occasional fea ture of the programs thut is found of value. At the 'eluse of its first club yoar tho Fortnightly held an interesting symposium, in which mon took part in tho discussions. During its third year in addition to its regular work tho club instituted a sorieB of loctares upon the important questions of tho day, tho ad drosses being delivered by prominent men of tho city. Kb altruistic work has been varied. It is interested in the library of tho Y. W. C. A., contributing volumes constantly, and undertaking the repairing und renovation of the rooms a? needed. A ' Fortnightly" room in the city hospital is furnished and kept up by the club. Its interest in the City Improvement Association has been ac tive from the beginning of tha society, which Ib now in its third seaeonof work. That tLo purely literary work of tbo club is of a high character is shown from tho fact that no lees than twnlvo papers havo Ik on called out from tho club by tho Statu Reciprocity Buronu. This showing in a club membership of thirty is ono in which tbo society tako just prido. Mrs. Catherine. Tu) lor is tho president of tho club, un oflice which bIw has ucceptubly filled for several years. Tho Bazar. NEBRASKA'S ASIIPILE. I'KOM A OAK WINDOW. The geologists aro all wrong. Whon Nature, set herself at V work of link ing Nebraska sho did not begin and Hiuojth tilings down fruit Iho wo t to tho old Missouri. .It it her. 1 think eho ewopt our Holds and valleys prettily all tho way from east to wost and thr-n left her old rubbish h-up very untidily away off ic tbo northwest corner; Perhaps sho thought that cleau white people would never roam this way, that sho hud given them all they i e u'd deBiro in the land towuids the suuriso. ButBhodidn't knov about railroads und sho didn't under.-und the hunkering of, mankind for seeing what is in his neighbor's yard even if he must needs clamber over his ovn ush-pilo to do it. Wyoming and the grout north-west is too tempting. Sund bills, bid-lands, puncuko plains and all tho variations of our back-yard regions cannot keep ub away. Tno train on which I left. Lincoln, owing to u lute start, wash -outs, and a twenty mile Btretch through a terrific Fourth-of July celebration in tbo skies, cruwled into Alliance two hours behind linio. Anyone who has travelled on tho Billiugs line will know what that means. It means that when jou look out in tbo first uncanny gray of the morning you find yourself somewhere in the Band hills I judge it mutters little just where, or whether it is ono daik red station or another thut you pase first in the grow ing ligh. You uro impressed by the grout gruy hulks which loom up on both sides of tho truck. They seem like the remains of some giants' early play ground where- they sported, before their hands were strong enough to sling rocks. The groat, sm o'bed off shapes are just green enough now lo ren.ind you of the lumpy, camel-like scenery in "oil paint ings ' m de by John's cousin's brother's wife, sacredly framed in gilt and hung in the best room. That everlasting sinootbed- ffness Ib unbearably ugly un covered ub it ie by any trees. You ride on and on among these bills,-careless of geology and the making of worldp, won' dering how the unbeuutiful things got. there and what they are good for. It you are wise jou will not get u ranch nun started on this u' joct especially if you have vegetarian predilections. The eaod hills would bo much im proved it i hey weie pHrtly covered with trees. I im told that there are trees in thut region, but all I saw was the ugly hills, uln ost as bare as Naturo leftthem The old tri e claim Lw came as the voice of civilization and suggested the wear ing of clotbep, so there are trees inspolB My hostess tells a etoiy of a Sunday school lud who grappled wilh the prob lom of Moses and the Luring bush in real sand-bill fashion. "Well," he Fuid Moses must huvo lived on a tioeclaim 'cause thera ain't any buBbes anywhere' elso.'' Perhup', utter all, we ahull find that our fellow-plainsman, J. Sterling Morton, got his Arbor Day idea from the Bible. I think this country will be different some day. That trees will grow where water Hows and water will come where trees grow is a common notion. In parte' of this country, at Iea6t, all you have to do to get water is tu go out after supper, put down a sand-point or dig a hole, and set up your windmill. Further, my own observation is that about all youjnecd to set your windmill on ia four clothes pins. While it must be con fessed that the country does not look as if it would bo necessary to build dykos to keep tho dampnesa off, tho low windmills suggoat Holland. You easily guoss thut thoro must bo plenty of wind hero. If It should overfall it seems that tho windmill might bo reached and turnod by hand. Tho Band hills nro only Iojv, bluish humps on an otherwise poifectly straight boriz in, when (you roach Al linjico und thn puncuka pluin. Hero tho wind blown all tho time, though it blows through no troop, und 'you can buo day after tomorrow coming up hciohb tho plain' ue a western writer has Bald. This would bo a grout placo for font ball. You could mirk out your giidin n unywhoro. Tho hard, level floor stro'ch cb on and on in l llnitoly. Indeed, tho intorea.iug thing about it is th indefin ite no.ifl. A lirol traveler making bin first trip hero wilt try to keep awake just to eoo how long tho tSing koepi up anyway. Aftor that first trip howevor you hope that the train will run on its judiciously scheduled time. Fiom tho car window Crawford seems to bo tho pivotal point of tho ush pile. Thoro aro bud laudBin front of it unit inoro and woreo bad landsbehind i The pancake, trnnlois plain breaki up reluctantly, but it is a Hiiro indicHt'o i that the mountains huvo gaino I tho victory when j oucoinot) tho first craggy hillside adorned with a few acattrul pines eo scattered und an straight that they loik, for all the worl I, iike N nh'a Ark forestry hauled e u and at sifTly, aro-jnd o a rod blocks. Soon you rutuh a country whore th pines are raa-sed with Bom" dignity in tin can-ins and on tho mountain-like peaks. Tho ra Ir.iud windB tortuojBly through this p'uee a?d you get a little foretaste of moun'ain engineering. Thid, I tak-) it, mus' be tha most interesting part of the aph pile to be seen from the car window. One would liko to stay the train at Crf r I and get out and poke aiotii.d uwLilo. There aro curious old: relics hidden there, we havo long been-told. Beyond Crawford mcr bad landp, e.ot mountainous, but suggtvtive of grnat eaten out si res in tLo' earth. 1 hen the sagebrush country and a corner of Da kotayou Bo the yellow tumble-weed all along under the wiro fences the cactus now in blossom, thn lind of irri gating ditches and real hill-. You aro in your neighbor yi rd at lust. The aph pile iB nt beautiful, but it is curious in prope rtion to ita ugliness, and the rincb men say it is the greatest cattle country you can find except Woming. Florae Bullock, M bar-K Ranch, aUamr Canon, Tfeffcastle, Wyo. NATIONAL EDUCATION VL AS'J CI ATI ON. Chicago, Rock Island & Paciflj Railway. In the lovely city of Lot Angeles, Cal ifornia, the abote ,jfemed organization will hold its founeaotb annual meeting, July 11th to Htb, 1890. The Great Rock Island Rout-i baa is sued a handsome booic containing views and necessary information as to trains, rat and routes' and this will be sent to you by addreuing with postal card or letter. E. W. Thomiww, a. G. P, a., Topeka. Kan, John Skuastjan, G. P. A ., Chicago. "Have you ever been engaged before?' he asked of the summer girl. "Not this season, I only got here tbia morning. ON BOARD THE MAYFLOWER. Captain The ship ia Hating to port What's the cause? , Mate Tbo ancestors have shifted, Sir! Hair Dressing, Shampooing Scalp Treatment, Manicuring, and 8wltcl, iM" E0,1??" and ABDeB flings 143 South 12th street.