THE SCILLNTON 'TEIBTmE SATURDAY MOENING APML 4, 189ft. GREATEST OF ALL WONDERS fkt 'Literally Indescribable Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone. f HB IMAGINATION GROWS DUMB Before Thla Overpowerls sad Maltl ' fkrlosa Bpaetaole of Nalara Laiar istlnt la I'aexpeetsd aad I'.pre " " eedsated Seaala Effects. IWrlttea for The Trlbuna The end of our flfth day'a Journey finds ua at the Lake Hotel. We arrive at the Lake Hotel at four o'clock on the afternoon of the fifth day, three hours ahead of the scheduled carriage ride, and In time for a two hours' fish In Yellowstone Lake. Both lake and river aboUnd in trout and those who love to wield the rod will spend the early even ing after arrival in the best trout fish ing lake in the world. Immediately after our arrival wedellver our speckled beauty trophy to receive the finishing touches for the evening meal where upon Captain Waters courteously places at our disposal Ms fsfvorlte skirt "for a good fish." of which all tourists are eager to avail themselves Immedi ately. We also had a chance to photo graph on the fly a big black bear who had the previous night entered the pen and killed one of Captain Waters' valu able pigs. We, of course, courageously chose the latter adventure, leaving the fishing experience till later, as we were ure-of the fish any time, but not of bruin. With two guides, one of whom was Bill Germune. of cowboy fame, we started for the woods just back of the hotel. Bruin evidently anticipated our visit for he came forth out of the woods to meet us and wht-n within a hundred yards stopped. Here was Kodak chance No. 1. It Is only fair to say that a feeling of retreat came over us, but bruin saved us that trouble by re treating himself. A "whoop" from Bill, who was uresslns- the bear closely, ar rests the latter'a attention, when bruin nimln stons. Bivlns- us' snap No. 2, quickly followed by a third snap, when a. Ilvelv seatfiDeiinff follows, both iruldes. bruin, and the writer going In the same direction, namely, towards the hotel. With the aid of Captain Waters' doga a running attack Is made across the lawn fronting tne notei amia fx cited merriment of the guests who wit ness the escapade ' from their windows and veranda. To the oy of everyone, bruin was eventually treed, and from an adjacent stump, some thirty feet away, amid the howling of the dogs and excited guests, came kodak No. 4, with bruin peering between two limbs defiantly at his raptors. A courageous feat for the writer, unexpectedly and unaccountablv made, thus securing memento highly prised, subject to the InsDeetlon of the reader. This is a bear story, but a true one, A CATCH OF FISH. Meantime. President C. J. Ives and family, availing themselves of similar courtesies extended Dy captain w aiers, rowed out to the mouth of the Yellow stone river and. with the new rod that waa to work a "new miracle of Fishes before the sun went down," returned In about two hours with a catch of eighty three salmon, rainbow and silver trout. none of which was said to weigh less than two nounds. This wonderrui catch we photographed upon their landing, as Illustrated by the accom panying cut. The fishermen here use Ions lines, containing two artificial nies, uhinh often hrinir in two beauties at a time. The lake trout differ from the brook trout, although they are beauti fullv snHL-kled. The flesh looks like the flesh of a salmon, yellow. The lake Is .ntireiv destitute of all Ash save trout, There are millions of them In the lake and ara the onlv thing, except mos qultoes, that you dare to catch and kill in th nark. They, are very large and voracious In the extreme, especially for grasshoppers and "two men can eaten them faster than six men can get them ready to cook." . There are several localities around the lake where the angler can land his fish and drop them Into boiling pools without unhooking his victim, but whether it Is safe to eat them to any great extent Is somewhat questionable, "for most of them," says one authority, "are Infested with long, slender, white worms, which not only breed In the Intestines, but burrow In the flesh." Not all of the trout are thus affected, for perfectly healthy specimens are of ten caught, which show on their scarred bodies the places where their tormentors have bored them. This Is a fascinating sport, where the amateur holds his own with the most expert fisherman. Not only does the lake teem with Its millions of trout, but you find on It all manner of wild birds, geese, cranes, ducks, gulls, pelicans, hawks, ravens and king fishers. The hawk here, like the eagle, Is the robber of the smaller Ash-eating birds as they arise from the water with their prey. The woods around the hotel abound in game, but as before stated, they live here free from the fear of man. YELLOWSTONE LAKE HOTEL. This hotel is located near the outlet, where the river leaves the lake, at what they call the "Wrist." It stands on a bluff which Blopes down to the lake and the View Is a commanding one facing this silver sheet of water as far as the ye can reach. Such a grand and glori ous mirror Nature has seldom given to man In which to behold the reflection of the dense forest and noble mountains which surround it. From Its broad veranda almost all of the noble moun tains referred to In a former letter, are visible. This view would please an en ' thuslast. This spacious and well ap pointed hotel, so far from civilization, tends greatly to make the lake the re sort par excellence of the Park. Here FORENOON CATCH AT YELLOWSTONE LAKE. (Photographed by the Author,) guests can remain as long as they de sire, making short and easy trips of sight-seeing and explorations to all points In the Park. Any lover of nature m Its primitive form cap enjoy himself to the highest degree for the entire sea son here. . 1 The further we go Into the park the better the hotels seem toy us. Here we found steam-heat and elefctrlc lights In nearly a hundred rooms, to,tn not and cold bath facilities. This Hotel Is new, .cheerful and with Its delightful sur roundings Is the moat restful spot we i have yet reached. Every manager throughout the park Is a thoroughly ' trained hotel man, and a gentleman; and considering- the many disadvant ages the meals and service are superb. The meats are excellent and hare we dls- .severed that the hotel company oper- tea refrigerator wagons to distribute Its meats to the hotels ana -luncn rooms" of the Park. Each Hotel employs fisherman, who supplies the tables with trout; fresh brook trout Is a staple article on all tables during the entire park tour. Every hotel has Its own Jer sey cows. THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. The Park Is a splendid place to study human nature. We meet all sorts of humanity here. The tourists are strong ly reminded that they are far from the haunts of civilisation Dy tne presence In the surrounding woods of the animal kingdom. Animal nature can. there fore, also be studied.. This is no hunt- lne? around "Here man and beast re nounce hostilities and come into friend ly relations with each other." Tne .do mains of the park are a haven of ref uge to ail animal kind, except from poachers. The animals seem to know this and resort here in great numbers. Bear, deer, elk, antelope, buffalo, moun tain sheep, and all other varieties of wild animals are here and sometimes seen as the stages roll along, and al ways at the hotels. They grow very tume and molest no one. Indeed, the bears are scavengers for the hotels and aftord much amusement to the guests, who flock out at early evening to see bruin feast at the garbage box just back of the hotel and when well-fined, go waddling away to the woods from whence he came. They are perrectiy Indifferent to the men, women and chil dren who rush out to see them, unless KEPLER'S ((holographed pressed . too hard, " and will hurriedly ' walk away. If the garbage supply is not sufficient to satisfy their hunger, they don't hesitate to steal the milk from the milkman, if they can do so, slyly by not making an attack. They browse and feed In the woods and porks, scarcely concerned at the presence of man or vehicle. They es pecially enjoy human companionship, and are often playful and apparently harmless. A little Incident occurred at Upper Oeyser Basin, which I will relate. Man ager Howe has a huge black bear that weighs six hundred pounds. The ant mal sleeps under the house and Is so tame that he meanders Into the office and recetlon roomps and the guests often feed him. We secured photo graphs of Manager Howe In the act of feeding htm from a plate, and in a re clining position. Strange as It may seem, old woodsmen and hunters say. "they act as though they were under a kind of protection." Truly Yellow stone Park Is intended to be and Is a Paradise for these dumb animals. The government scouts estimate that there are 25,000 elk In the park. Deer are fast becoming numerous. The buffalo are more seclustve than the elk or deer and are mainly found In the region of Yellowstone Lake and Hayden Valley, where in the winter they roam In bands; once in a while a straggling member Is found. during the tourist season. There are from two to three hundred In all, and these are carefully watched and kept within the protecting limits of the reservation. If they can be protected from the poachers, they will thrive anil Increase. This remnant represents about all there Is left of the vast herd of millions of the most typical of Amer ican wild animals, that once roamed over these western plains. The tourist on referring to the flfth rule of the park made by the Secretary of the Interior, "with the Hon. Hoke Smith as Czar." will read: "Hunting, capturing, Injuring, or killing any bird or animal within the park is prohibited. The outfits of persons found hunting, or in possession of game killed In the park will be subject to seizure and con fiscation." For several years this law was supposed to be adequate, but poach ing was carried on so vigorously, that now there Is a law providing a fine of 12,000 and two years In the penitentiary, for killing game. Our attention Is called by Captain George S. Anderson, to one poacher captured last winter, who killed fourteen buffoloes, and Is now serving a sentence In prison. As we take our last look at Yellow stone lake we are reminded of Mr, O. D. Wheeler's words, that "the traveler hangs few such pictures upon the walls of memory as that- of this beautiful mountain sea.".. But this, day, what a .wonderful day a red-leter day; how T unlike and distinct from all the days of our trip. It Is an Ideal day for park travel, for during the night dame na ture has smiled upon us and the sudden change from the depressed dry weath er of the last few days, freedom from dust, lime, alkali, etc. Is thoroughly enjoyed by us all. From the lake to the canyon Is eight een mile and the scenlo features grad ually unfolded, grow stronger and stronger with each successive mile of the journey, finally culminating In the magnificent panorama of the Grand Canyon Itself, "the greatest master piece of painting and sculpture of the world." It seema as if this portion of the park intended to make up for lack of geysers by a general landscape far finer and more beautiful than any yet witnessed. We hug the Yellowstone river nearly all the way except where we cross the beautiful Hayden valley. Three miles from the hotel near the outlet of the lake Is a "natural bridge" of rock which spans "Bridge creek" at a height of forty feet and affords car riage room. Along the river anywhere are seen scores of rainbow and speckled trout, weighing two and three pounds, and while resting our horses at this high ajtitude, the writer ran down to the river and the instant the line was thrown caught one only to throw It back and draw in another, to be repeated ad Infinitum. ;'.. ." mud Volcano. : Mud geysers are found, about five miles from the lake along the wagon CASCADES. by the Author.) roads. They consist of several craters filled with blue pasty mud all emitting disagreeable odors. After about eight miles we reach "Mud Volcano," unlike anything yet seen In the park. It Is called a volcano, for It has none of the real characteristics of a geyser. We alight from our Carriage and visit this strange phenomenon, only a few rods off the road. Here Is a deep hole with a funnel-shaped crater at the base of the cliff, thirty feet deep. When first discovered by General Washburn's party In 1870, "they found limbs of trees 125 feet high encased in clay and its scattered contents 200 feet from It." Now Its violence Is greatly lessened and the discharges from it are every two seconds. Like the dull reports of a mortar gun, thud! thud!' thud! is heard and from this or I lice comes a stream In puffs like the pulsa tion of a great waste pipe of an engine, which can be heard for a half mile. Creeping up to the edge, which Is dangerous to stand near to, we see this sickening lead-colored mass of mud of the consistency of soft mortar, con stantly belching out only to roll back and choke up its foul throat and be vomited forth again and again, with terrible force Into the steaming pit. From the latter comes the most sicken ing sulphurous odors. How long this ugly griffin has been lying there under this hill no one knows, but It Is unques tionably the ugliest. freak of Wonder land. Fire and brimstone are terrible enough to associate with purgatory, but the thundering, the groaning, the gulp ing of this boiling black mudbelchlng out of this great black .Aivernous mouth, is truly "Hell tin Earth." HAYDEN VALLEY. From this morbidly fascinating scene we turn with a sense of relief to the river and a new feature of the land scape Hayden valley. This of Itself Is a beautiful park, the largest in the reservation, extending along the Yel lowstone river to Alum creek and west ward to Mary's mountain, seven miles from the Grand Canyon. It Is six miles long and ten miles wide, a broad, grassy expanse with not a tree upon It. It was once a vast arm of the lake and comprises some fifty square miles. It Is well watered by Trout and Alum creeks and Is frequented by the wild animals of the country as a "winter re sort," especially for buffalo, elk and deer, which are found here In large numbers. Our guide says a hundred buffaloes and thousands of elk wintered here in 1894. The views in this valley bounded with snow-capped Mount Washburne rising 10,385 feet high are grand in the extreme. At twelve miles on our Journey we reached "Sulphur Mountain or Crater HIIIb." We leave the main road and cross the .valley for a half mile drive to reach It. It consists of a group of Iso lated hills or "buttes," each about 150 feet high. The whole surface of this locality, including large detached rocks. Is covered with pure sulphur In color and material. Here pure sulphur can be shoveled up by the wagon load. The chief attraction. however, is a large boil ing spring at the base of the highest hill. The spring Is 15 by 20 feet in size and its waters boll un constantly from t,hree ta Beven feet In height. The fumes are intensely sulphurous and disagree able and great clouds of vapor escape from It. - The whole surrounding sur face Is covered with myriad little stenm vents, all highly Impregnated with sul phur, while the overflow streamlets have a highly colored yellow border. This Is dangerous ground to tread upon. On the west side of the road are numer ous mud caludronsand springs constant ly ejecting their muddy paste along the roadside. - . NEARING THE CANYON.,- , We are now four miles from thrvGraml Canyon Hotel and the road skirts along the hanks of the Yellowstone river hun dreds of feet above It over a rolling country until we reach "Upper Falls," when It deflects from the river and winds like a letter 8 through a-tlmben belt across "Cascade Creek," 130 feet high and climbs the steep hillside to th ' t- ( cl. hotel This ride was Intensely Interest- ! ing. 'As the road brings us hear the These wonderful colored and sculptured Canyon the scenery becomes wilder, forms, pinnacle after pinnacle stand The stretch of river for a mile above the ! Ing before- us In-this mlchtly cham. t'pper Falls" is full of rapids, like Nl- : agara. and the river and road are forced by the narrowing valley dose together to within fifty feet, -so that a bridge from the overhanging rocks could be easily thrown across. The river here tumbles over a succession of cascades and swirling around masses of rocks In mid stream suddenly rushes over ' a precipice, at Upper Falls, of 140 icet, a perpendicular drop, striking the rock for mation at the bottom of the abyss, and shooting out rocket-like column plainly seen from the ledge.. . This Is but an In troduction, for In a quarter mile the wild, 'raging river takes another leap of 36(1 feet exactly perpendicular. This Is called "Lower Falls of the Yellow stone," of which we will speak later. We arrive at Grand Canyon Hotel In time for lunch. This is the last hotel and one of the largest in the park, with a capacity for 250 guests and here we re main two days. From its porch the crest of the Upper Falls can be seen and the roar of both cataracts can be heard dis tinctly. Good, better, best, is the al most Involuntary exclamation that breaks forth from our lips, as It does from the Hps of every tourist who wit nesses these wonderful scenes. After lunch we spend the arternoon at the Canyon and Falls. ... We are taken by an extra carriage ac companied by a guide for a ride that covers not less than three hours, for an extra charge of one dollar each. These observation coaches hold ten to twelve persons comfortably. We have'- the choice of two courses to see the Can yon; one to descend the hill along the trail above the great falls, amid the cool foliage that covers, the slope and out upon the platform that overhangs both canyon and falls; or, to follow the road or trail that leads parallel to the canyon and some miles away comes out to the edge of It. We chose the latter route for . today's experience, as . we could stop at pleasure and peer into Its mighty depths, leaving the nearer for the morrow. As the traveller starts out on the ob servation tour, he has very little con ception of what Is In. store for him, or what is hidden just beyond that curtain of trees on yonder descending slope! We have heard much, read much, and formed an Idea of what we will Bee, only to find that the hundreth part has not been told. We went down to the Can-, yon with one set of Impressions from what we .had read and been told of its wonders, and returned with other and higher, those that will tarry with us as long as mind lasts. , ... THE GRAND CANYON. . i You' ask me to picture It? Words can not convey a proper realization of Its grandeur and magnificence. . The mind cannot grasp Grand Canyon,. It glows with a life of its own. , Words cannot paint it! .No artist can reproduce the rain' found here, or depict in language the beauties of the sunrise, or the sun set, or the radiance of mid-day, as we beheld them ail. .-, It is. not' strange that the canyon, has been a theme for writer, painter, and photographer from its. discovery to the present time. While the canyon is not by any means as deep, as long nor as wide as some In our country, there is none that holds the ' spectator spell bound as does this." We have seen and travelled through the Black Canyon, Royal Gorge, and tho Grand Canyons' of the Colorado, and travelled In other lands of canvons on this continent and been fascinated with their stupendous scenery. All are grand and glorious and deserve all that has been said of them, but they ore in no true sense rivals. mis great gorge is a greater study, a greater revelation, a greater, wonder and deserving of stronger, adjectives than I am able to provide, or even to coin, nut I must describe it. Mechani cally I will; eloquently I cannot. I will quote later on from some of the distin guished travellers, men of national rep utation, proround, . brilliant, -exact writers, to show thai, what I have ninted and what has been Written con cerning this wonder of wonders Is true. And now. where shall I begin? And how shall I, in any wise, describe this tremendous sight Its overpowering grandeur, and at the same time its In expressible beauty? - I will only at tempt an outline. The' Grand Canyon oi me leuowstone itseir Is vast. . It Is about twenty-four miles long, ranging in neignt ironi huu to l.zou feet.: It has been excavated out of a series of vol canic rocks by the flow of the river It self. At the bottom . of the gorge the width is bnrely sufficient to afford the river room, as It tears alnriR In Its mad course. The sides are at most places flaring, so that at the summit of the walls the width Is- many hundreds of feet.- A cross section in the largest part measures, 2,000 feet at the-top, 200 feet at the bottom, and Is 1,200 feet deep, giving an area of over three acres. Like many canyons, It .has no vegetation whatever. It has been com pared to a V-shaped Kauri cut out of a mountain of sulphur. The walls are colored yellow, bronze, white, red, and their combinations; but the fttrdhg pre vailing color Is yellow, next bronze. and tho next white. Oxidation of iron causes the red. It is preeminently a canyon of many colors. A WILDERNESS OF COLOR. Thirty-seven different colors adorn Its walls as our specimens will prove. These various colored sands are collect ed and artistically arranged. In. bottles of fancy shapes and sizes, even to de signing and spelling- the names of the various animals, birds, fish, etc., found In the, park, by Prof. A. Wald, a Nor wegian, said to be the only artist of the kind In America. These mementoes are sod to the tourist at prices- within the reach of all. The hue has no exist ence which cannot be found here. This gorgeous coloring does not ex tend through the entire length of twen ty miles, . for In portions, forests cover the sides of the , canyon. In places the walls almost shut out the light of day from the extreme bottom. Liuetenant Doane, who made the dan gerous descent severaj miles below the falls, records, "that It was about three o'clock p. m., and stars could be dis tinctly seen, so much of the sunlight was cut oft from entering the chasm." SHOSHONE LAKE. Along the bottom of the canyon steam vents can be seen, one of which exhibits geyseiic action. No man can begin to describe the variety of effect exper ienced Jn seelns colors, form, depth, etc., from nnv one cf the many points of view- offered him; Jle can Bit for hours at any of these nlHces, climb up and down the walls, study, and kodak What he sees, and aim not be able to grasp and drink it nil In, Grutvd Can yon iH the nliioe.iT all places' In the nark where one fvelri-ns thoughhe were Standing on.the vei'jja.of (the, Infinite.. . THE GRAND FALLS. The best' view of the Great or Lower Falls Is from Lookout Point about half a mile from them and about 1,000 feet nhovn the water. The outlook from here Is certainly one of strlklng-beauty and near enough to bring out In sufll- dent detail the erandeur of the falls. seem to ko down to a beautiful winding river of r i-terr. railing far below. While they ranr not one-twentieth of the wa ter of Niagara, they are far more beau tiful and must be placed in the front ranlt.- The telght IS said to be 360 feet, and the descent very regular, slightly broken by a rock and owing to the vast cloud of sptay one-third of the fall Is bidden from view. The mighty tur moil, the lotid thunder, among the deep recesses. Jars the air for miles around. The river two hundred feet above the falls Is 250 feet wide, but at the point where the leap is made it is only one hundred feet wide. But. from the dtssy heights of Inspir ation Point ire get the most lnsplrng scenes. The far distant falls seem scarcely' larger than a hand, "a white sliver sheen set in the center of tree clad cliffs and mountains," too far away to hear their roaring but the sight alone Is real. Only the Lower falls can be seen from this point, as Upper Falls Is hidden by a- turn In the canyon. From this promonotory we get a tremendous sweep of vision both up and down the canyon and several fine photographic views. This huge pinnacle of rock over hangs the canyon and is approached by a narrow Tldge with fear and trembling by most every one. Standing here, the sensation is similar to that experienced when tiding down a swift elevator, one of dizziness, although there Is no dan ger. If you have a steady head. What adds to the weird grandeur of the scene are. the precipitous cliff points, the grot toes, spires and pinnacles which look like frost, ice and snow, standing amid walls scraped and chiseled out, like old castellated, ruins. Perched on these sharp tips are numerous eagles' nests, around which some parent bird Is seen feeding the young, or, like lightning's flash, swooping to the river and catching up some unlucky fish. No one can view this picture and not be stirred by it. It is a whole sermon, an Inspiration In Its effect on mind and soul It lifts one to relations with the Infinite. I can echo the words of Rev. Dr. Wayland Hoyt, "that to have seen the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone Is an epoch in my life." He adds: "The Crater of Geswolns Is the only place in which 1 remember to nave seen such a variety and wealth of natural color. Says Dr. Talmage: "It Is here that tt seems- to me (and I speak It with rev erence) Jehovah seems to have sur passed himself. It seems a great gulf let down into the eternities." A recent visitor describes It "as being hung with rainbows like glorious banners." An other likens It "to a great cathedral with painted windows and full of treas ures of Illuminated manuscript." Rev. Dr. J. M. Buckley, after his vlstt to the Tosemlte, to Alaska,and the park, says: "Beauty, grandeur, sublimity, and dreadfulness; Inspiring delight, wonder, awe, or terror, according to the be holder's mood and point of view, meet In the Grand Canyon of the Yellow stone." The great traveler, Rev. Dr. H. M. Field, .says: "The Canyon of the Yellowstone Is the greatest thing on earth. How puny and Insignificant are the gardens of Versailles, besides the wonders of the Yellowstone park.' I had seen the glory of the Lord upon the mountains. I had been in the very presence of God when I stood on the top of Mount Sinai. Next to the over powering sense of the . greatness of the Creator is the impression of the little ness of man. Such is the lesson of In spiration point." Keen regret is felt as we leave behind this, the climax of wonders, on our re turn trip to Norris Geyser basin, 11am- umoth Hot Springs and Livingston, on tne main line or Northern pacino rail road and as we resume our journey to the far-off land of Alaska, the feeling Is strengthened that. God and nature have been good to us. -Every -American citizen should visit this museum of unparalleled marvels (which our own government has made free to all for all time) before visiting foreign lands; and no traveler from an other country should leave America un til this wonder of nature has been added to his store of personal experiences. It is admitted by those who come from across the sea to visit the park have a much keener sense of appreciation of its wonderful character, than we Ameri cans have. Taken as a whole, a trip to Yellowstone park Is one of the most surprising, interesting, Instructive, en tertaining and satisfying itineraries we have thus far enjoyed on the -continent, and yields- the largest in subsequent food for reflection. John E. Richmond. VERBAL HISTORY. Villa formerly meant a farm and not a house. Girl formerly slgnfled any joug person of elthyer sex. , Gallon was originally a pitcher or jar no matter of what size. Voyage was formerly any Journey, whether by sea or land it did not -matter. ' Polite at first meant polished and was applied to any smooth, shining surface. - .Good-toy Is an abbreviation of an old English form of parting: "God be with you until we meet." . A vagabond was originally only a trav eler or a person who went from place to place with or without a definite object. Shrewd once signified evil or wicked. Thomas Fuller uses the expression, "a shrewd fellow," meaning wicked man. -Moonstruck l borrowed from astrology. It formerly described one who was driven mad by sleeving in the rays of the moon. Peck at first meant a basket or recep tacle for grain or other substances. The expression at first had no reference to size, Starve was 'once to die any manner of death. WycllfTe's. . sermons tell how "Christ starved on the cross for the re demption of men." The word miscreant formerly signified only an unbeliever, an infidel. Joan of Arc, In the literature of her time, was called a miscreant. Acre once meant any field. It Is still used with this eifinlllcance by the Gor man a, who speak of God's acre, alluding to the cemetery. Meat meant once any kind of food. In one old EngllBh edition of the Lord's prayer the well-known petition is ren dered : "Give us this day our dally meat." Town originally signified a farm or farmhouse. It is used in Wycliffe in this sense: "And they went their ways, one to his town,- another to his merchandise." Tariff was the name of the Moorish chief- taln, Abou el Tarlfa, who had a fortress near the Straits of Gibraltar und levied toll on ships and merchandise pusslng throuith. . ' 1 Mbcl once meant any little book but fts many small tracts 111 the curly days of printing were pvr.onnl und offensive in character the word acquired its present slKiilfleiinee. Yard was once nny stick, rod Or polo. The expression Is till used with thU nvnn Irg when-applied to vsiious purls of a ehlu's ctiitlpment, as yardurins, sallyurds and tho llko. " Imp once meant a child. -Shakespeare, speaking of the -I'hllilrsn of the tower, eslli them Imps. Jeremy Taylor, .In one or his sermon, speaks of the "beautiful Imps thut Sang hosunus to the Saviour In the temple.. ' Oils Sklhner' will' play tha loading part In the new. London melodrama, "One of the Best.",, , - ". ""CT-,a, !ST- 3 rft is DEUGBTFDL CITY OF KICE Its Name Exactly Fits' Its Outward Circnmstnnces. . WHERE EUROPE PASSES WINTER Althoaga ta the Sasse Latitat! i Canada, Mies la MMwiater Is as Wars as the City ef Wash tnttoa la April. Special Coneapondenoa to The Tribuna Nice. March 12. Perhaps the Inherent American tendency to call Nice nice comes from the faat that that word seems best to describe the town: Its nice ness is what : first Impresses the visitor. The streets are even, straight, and clean, the houses all rise In even rows, each with Its garden of orange trees around It, and the shops (they are much too small to deserve our Ameri can name stores) are all very fine and nice. It la only natural that a city In which a good proportion of the world's aristocracy spends one-third of the year should be filled with shops for the sale of all the world's luxuries, but still the sight of so many of these establish ments, finer even than those of Paris, is uaeiy to surprise one. The epicure or delloattesem shops and the queer little shops for the sale of all kinds of prepared meat, are es pecially lnUiosUng to an American, be cause they are so different from any thins; ha has la hie own country. The meats and pastry are prepared In all sorts of tempting; forms and shapes, and they make one's mouth water to look at menu PRESERVED FRUIT. But tempting as they are they can hardly compare with the windows In which the glased or candled fruit are exhibited. Nice seema to be the centre for the manufacture of this kind of sweets, and It Is really wonderful to ate how all kinds of fruHcanbe preserved, and presumably made into candy. There seems to be nothing in the fruit or vegetable line too large for this process, and In some of these windows they have everything- from watermelons ana nuge cantelounes down to our rants. Oranges, bananas, pomegranates, pears, peacnea and ancles, are only at few of tho many fruits treated in this manner. They are usually ar ranged in pretty baskets and panniers or van-colored straw, and the prices piacea on inem indicate as wen as any thing can, that the people who come to Nice for the winter usually have plenty of money to spend. These price cards also Indicate the oosmopolltsuiness of the visitors, for In addition to the price at Nice, the price Is given for delivery in aii tne enter cities of Eurorw. Ths two chief streets In Nice are the Avenue da la Gare. and the Qual Mas sena, which Intersect each other at the Place Masaena, on which fronts the su perb municipal Casino, and on these streets are most of the principal shops, a great many of which bear announce ments on their windows that, by special appointments, they-have the honor to serve some royal highness or excellency. A rather amusing example of this rage lor tne special appointments is found on one of the side streets, where the window of an otherwise unassuming milk depot bears a sign saying that they are -oy special appointment" milkmen to Her Imperial Majesty, the Queen of ureat untam and Ireland and the Em press of India When Queen Victoria was here two years ago this dairyman probably supplied her household with milk,, and now he -Intends to make the moat of the fact. A MAGNIFICENT WALK. But the shops are by no means the most Interesting things in Nice. It is difficult to say Just what Is the most Interesting thing, but perhaps the Promenade des Anglais would deserve tnat honor. This promenade Is a man niflcent walk along the curving shore of the bay of Nice, two miles long, and paved for a good part of the way with a fine granolithic pavement. On one side, is the Mediterranean, and on the other the principal drive of the city. nearly always nuea with fine turnouts. and bordered with magnificent hotels ana vinos. The hotels along the Rl viera are a very different thing from those on American seaside resorts, for they are built of stone and brick In stead of wood, and nearly always lay claim to some architectural auallty, The people In- the carriages and on the promenade are usually a very swell looking crowd, and towards three o clock, the fashionable hour, it pre sents a very gay sight.- The view of the mountains which surround Nice is very fine, either facing up or down the promenade, and take it all In all, it well bears out its reputation of being one of the most beautiful walks In Europe. The public gardens, which connect the Place Massena and the Casino with the beginning of- the promenade, are planted with palm and other tropical trees, and In the afternoon, when the band plays there, ana the people wan der around, clad In light clothing and some of them wearing straw hats, one can hardly persuade himself that It Is the middle of winter, and that, more over, he is in the same latitude as Canada. . DELIGHTFUL CLIMATE. The nearness of the snow-covered Alps seems to make It all the more wonderful, but' In that very nearness of the mountains lies the explanation of the exceptionally mild climate of the Riviera. They act as a barrier against the north winds, and their rocky slope seems to gather the heat of the sun and Btore It up to nourish the tropical vegetation. As ah example of the pro tection they afford. It is said that quite often, when ten miles out on the Medi terranean a storm Is raging, the Bay of Nice Is as calm and still as a lake. Very many travellers say that this liay of Nice Is the most Deautirui in me worm gaining the preference even to the far fmnnl Rnv of'Nanles.- The view ob tained of it as one drives around the headland which separates It from the Road of Vlllafranche is certainly one that once seen, is never iorgoiien. in the foreground Is the old town, with Its harbor and shipping, and then, separ ating it from the magnilicent sweep of the bay on which the new town Is built, Is the rocky eminence crowned with the fort. Back of the town the orange clad hills rise till they become mountains, oni lmi.tf nt these still larger moun tains, the Alps themselves, covered with snow. Tt ran nnfelv be said that the main In t . . -i l .. . . 1 I , ..-n i-,a nt Its ninety thousand Inhabitants depend. In nnA .,nv '.. .nMhnf rm thA ntra.ni?ers UIIC 1. J ,vw,... - - whn flnnlc here durlnir the Winter. Ho tels and pensions rise on every hand and while they are all good, still not hll ure exceed nsrlv expensive, ana Is this fact which makes Nice the llvety tilaee It Is. for sometimes the European nobleman Is not overblessed with this . world's' goods, and must needs count '('.the costs. Perhaps half the visitors are Kmrllsh and Americans, and be tween them they support three of four churcheB, THE CASINO. The municipal officers of .the town recognizing the fact that the prosperity of the city depends on Its attractive ness, have erected a very line casino and theater, to which Is attached winter irardcn.Tho best of Parisian ar tists ore secured for the theater, and the band of tho casino Is one of tho best In Europe, In addition to this municipal casino tlu'vn Is another one. owned by a uii vtiti company; which Is built on a pier running nut Into the nea Just in mm of the public gardens. If anything, th In thp more popular of the two. und the theatrical entertainments, Riven Iwioe n day, are very well attended, whor the best opera In France outside Paris Is given. Of These three places of -entertainment with the Promenade des Anglais and the beautiful mountain walks, are the tnala permanent features of Nice. ana when to them are added the races, the rr gattas. ami the carnival in the spring. u is lime wonoer mat it easily main. . tains its position as the premier pleas ure place of the world. Wlnford J Nort hup. No matter how violent or excruelaMna the pain, tha Rheumatic, Bedridden, In firm, Crippled, Nervous. Neuralgic, e prostrated with diseases may suffer. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Will Afford Instant Eaae. 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Villlnc SMU..1 Htrmntb In old or vannt man rtm bequlck lyand permanently rui by itMtolaf4ll lT.TiKorouaiU.te. ButTercra from.... VARICOCELE, NIGHT LOSSES, AND Alt, WA8TINO mSEASKSahmild writ to uie for advice. I have berni a cloao ttulnt fo man, yean at the aubject of weak nous In men, the fact la. I waaasuflerer myself. ..Toobvbrultoteell III old of older men or rnnu table puyalrlana I iDYee liKMct' tbe inbjeet doeply and dticnvared a alraple but moet remarkably uarnmful remedy that com plotely cared me and fully tnl.rd me from a shrunken.stunted condition to natural atrenirth and lite. I want every Tounc nrold man to know about It. I take a personal Imnrc.n In aunh crwb and no one need hesitate to writs mo at all communication, are held strictly ronfldeiiUal. I .end tho recipe ot thin remedy absolutely froo ot cost. l)u not put II ofl;it write me fully at once, you will always bless the day you did so. Addreas,.' : THOMAS SLATER, Box aoa8, Shipper of Famous Kalaumioo Cclerj. 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