ENEVIEVE5 Empire Mail Bag )3Li mms wml 1 KNOW Iso thcirJAMUES) JJ7 HELEN HELP The Genevieve Who Married to Reform Him W U 7 VAV 7Lrt O BUILD an automobile road from tho Missouri river to tho mouth of the Columbia, follow ing tho route of tho old Ore gon Trail, Is the ambitious pro that has received tho indorse t of automobile clubs, good roads ciatlons and men prominent In 3 and national affairs. As yet tho ect is little more than a dream It Is of the kind of dreams that e true. though the old Oregon Trail start tt Independence, Mo., and proper rmlnated at Tho Dalles, Ore., it Is ned to start its successor (to be vn as tho Pioneer Way) at St. s, and to continuo it on to the h of the Columbia, a total dis ci of approximately 2,600 miles, n completed, It will be unsur ed among the world's highways s historic associations, and in tho Jty, beauty and sublimity of tho ral scenery along the way. It traverse or enter seven states, m the roof of tho continent at an ptlon of 7,450 feet, and finally do Id to sea level. It will pass through I wheat and corn fields of Kansas Nebraska, cross the high plains Wyoming, traverse tho newly irrl ml lands of Idaho, and give a pse of the famous "Inland Em ' of eastern Oregon. I om St Louis, the Pioneer Way follow the Missouri to Independ . Thence It will go up tho Little river, reaching the Platte at id Island. For 650 miles it will w the Platte and Sweetwater, to h Pass that hardly perceptible sing of the Rocky mountains, 7, ieet above the sea. For 100 miles route lies over an almost level ;au, 7,000 feet and inoro in height, .his long stretch, with snowy itains in sight for much of the I on both tho north and the south, from centers of population, in a Im absolutely uninhabited and un stable, the old Oregon Trail is the same today as It was 60 years with the exception that tho thou s who then traversed It have dls ared, and that it has relapsed Its primeval solitude. Mile after of tho roadbed is as distinctly Ined as over, worn by tho wheels Ins of thousands of prairie schoon- Iind tho hoofs of millions of draft mis and pack animals to a depth om two to fifteen feet, and to a h of anywhere from twelve to one Ilred feet. ten Green river is crossed, with icks and palisades. Farther on is jford of Bear river, after which stream is followed for forty miles oda Springs, 1,170 miles from In- Indence. Here tho later Callfor- Trail turned off to tho southwest. road to Oregon continued on to iRaft river, where tho old Callfor- I Trail tho one followed by the niners diverged to tho south. It down the Snake river ran tho fcto Oregon. This will be the R picturesque and beautiful long rch of tho Pioneer Way Just as las the most difficult part of the Lbn Trail. Past American falls, W falls, Shoshone falls (called the Kara of tho west), Upper and Low almon falls, down Boise river, up seemingly Impossible face of tho, mountains, through the pleasant lea of great pine forests, across a l-cursed desert, and and at last to broad Columbia. Where the trail strikes it, the Columbia Is a mile but it soon reaches the remark chasm known as tho Dalles, ro it is pent between rock walls Ii 190 to 200 feet wide, and where ilummet has ever sounded Its h. Hero Is literally a "river ed on edge." Pleads for the Old Trail. lesent day interest in tho Oregon 11 is attributed solely to the ef- of Ezra Meeker of Puyallup, lh., who for five years has devotod ielf to a unique campaign to se- the speedy marking and ultimate evardlng of the old highway. Ho t to Oregon in 1852, when ho ba e a prominent figure among tho ecrs, and made and lost several mes. On January 28, 1S06, ho ted on what ho calls his Oregon II Monument Expedition. As an ct lesson to the vast majority, know prairie schooners and "bull lis" only through the medium of l;s and pictures, he drives a team led oxen, hitched to on old-fash ioned prairie schooner. On 'his first expedition, he traversed every mile of tho trail to Independence, then con tinued on to New Yorlc city, and final ly to Washington, reachinc tho na tional capital November 29, 1907. It was his intention to ask congress at that time to appropriate funds to mako of tho Oregon trail a national highway: but from this he was dls- suaded by President Roosevelt, who advised him to content himself with tho comparatively modest request for an appropriation sufficient to nlace monuments and markers along the route. Meeker snent the winter of I909.in campaigning through California, in tho endeavor to arouse tho interest ana secure tho co-operation of the peoplo of that Btate. He has addressed more than 100,000 school children, hundreds of public meetings in town halls, churches, schoolhouses and pub lic squares, and thousands of street corner crowds. Furthermore, he has secured the erection of 22 monuments to mark tho trail, has inscribed 24 boulders and erected many wooden posts. He has ascertained that 700 monuments will be necessary to adequately mark tho entire route, and that the approximate cost will be about ?85,p00. Through his efforts bills were Introduced in both the Six tieth and Sixty-first congresses, pro viding for tho appropriation of $50,000 for tho marking of tho trail: but these bills never came up for action. Tho Oregon and tho Santa Va Trails both started at Independence, wo. or 41 miles they were identical, but where the town of Gardner now stands the Santa Fe Trail boro off to tho southwest, and the newer route turned to tho northwest. At the point of separation a sign board indicated the northern route, with tho simple lo gend, "Road to Oregon." It followed tho direction of the Kansas and Littlo Bluo rivers to the Platte, reaching that stream near Grand Island. It fol lowed the Platte and Sweetwater for a distance of 650 miles, to South Pass that hardly perceptible crossing of tho Rockies, 950 miles from the Mis souri river. Green river was crossed, and then came Fort Bridgor, 1,070 miles from Independence. Sixty miles farther on was the ford of Bear river, which was followed for 40 milM, to Soda Springs, 1.170 miles from the starting point. Here the later Califor nia Trail turned off to the southwest The road to Oregon continued on to Fort Hall, 1,288 miles from Independ ence, at the first crossing of the FJnako river. Forty-five miles farther west, at tho Raft river, the old California Trail diverged to tho south the trail followed by the "Forty Niners," but later abandoned in .favor or the bet ter road that left tho main trail at Soda Springs. Then down the Snako valley, across tho Blue mountains, through the valley of the Umatilln, treked the pioneers. The distance from the Missouri river to Fort Van couver was 2,020 miles, and to tho mouth of the Columbia 2,134 miles. In 1849 occurred tho ereat micro. tlon the historic march of tho "For-ty-NIners" to the gold fields of Cali fornia. Crowds began gathering along the Mlsosurl early in Anril. and by the last of that month It was esti mated that 20,000 peoplo were en camped waiting for tho crass to crow sufficiently to insure pasturage for livo stock. The procession started about tho first of May. and by tho first of June thews was a straerellnor caravan a thousand miles long mov ing westward. Then the cholera epi demic that had broken out on the At lantic seaboard reached Tnd and spread throughout the moving nost. wot less man 5,000 emigrants fell victims to tho plague that year and were burled on tbe plains, be tween tho Missouri river and Fort Laramie; but 25,000 reached Califor nia over tho Oregon and California Trail in spito of plague, famine and all tho hardships and perils inpldent to the passing of so great a, host through a wild, unproductive and hos. tile country. Another outbreak of me piague in 1852 carried oft an equal number of emigrants that year. The Oregon and California Trails constituted tho principal highways bei tween the east and west until tho driving of the splko ot sold at ,Pro montory Point, Utah, In 1809, marked I the completion of the first Pacific railroad. When a woman marries a man to re form him she falls to take into con sideratlon that by tho time Bho has got it done there will be nothing left but reform tho man will bo entirely rotted away. James was a delightful man with only one bad habit. It was the habit which most women .call "bad habits, Ho was a real estate man, was James, and his bad habits were very actlvo right after he had cinched a deal. Ho cinched a deal rather so often per haps Genevieve met James at a club party, according to tho commonplace wont of things, and ho was very nice to her. She was a nice little thing, and he got into the habit of driving out rather often to her father's home on the very edge of tho town. It s not too much to say that Genevieve fell in love with him. James fell in love with her, too. Then ho went driving out to seo Genevieve very often and was allowed to stay to sup per, and ho and Genevieve had a love ly timo on the veranda in the moon light. Then, as cool weather came on, ho was rather busy and fell from grace as usual, when he cinched a deal. And at last, at a party, Genevieve saw him when he had fallen from grace. He was a bit above himself, and, besides sho danced with him and noticed something about his breath. Next morning big brother said, "Jim had a lovely souse on last night, didn't he? But ho certainly had a nervo to dance with you. You should have turned him down." Genevieve gasped a bit. Then she said, "He was nothing of tho kind and I don't thank you." And then sho ran to her, big, pretty, pink and white room and got down upon her knees nnd cried and cried. Then, when she could get her breath, she remembered his; and then she prayed for Jim very sincerely and very girlishly, and felt better. She entirely failed to pray for her self, because she had not yet found out "Nothlngwrong, Hatetastestuff." that sho was tho person who really needed that attention. James came out In a few dnvs sober and In his right mind. He knew how bad ho had been, and he riitv. posed she did, too, so he told her ho was not fit to sneak to her. but he w.ih going to boa man now, and would sne lorgivo mm 7 And Genevieve said he must ha a man for hep snlre nnd sho would forgive him, because sho was sure ho was repentant and would never fall again. When James went hnrlr tn the nlnW the next night he lifted a restraining paim to his friends and said: "Never acaln! I'm on the water w.itrnn for keeps." And his friends laughed, bo- cause mey nan climbed on the water wagon themselves at the biddlntr nf a nice girl. About Christmas Genevieve nnd n shock. James was dnlncr crpnt hunt. ness and. besides. It was the hiessed holiday season. He was to dine with them on Christmas, and when he ar rived, rather late in the afternnnn h had been warding off the cold of tho drive. Genevlevo cried her even nut fnnt night, down on the floor beside her bed; and James 'went back to the club and gathered together a monumental er well, he was a Htle above him self again. Because ho was extremely ashamed. By tho time this worn off. lie trim truly renentant. and hated the very smell of the stuff. So he drove out to seo Genevieve and told her so. Gene vlevo had the theory,) held by every well brought up girl, ibout a man re forming by tho grace-4well, by prayer and such things. She tad prayed sin cerely and James now declared tha,t ho hated tho very smell of tho stuff. These two things stood' to Genevieve In tho relation of cause and effeet. And this was the exact moment chos en py James in which to ask her to marry him. When James and Genevieve came back from their honeymoon, the happy Bridegroom was warmly concratulated by his many friends. When ho wont home to Genevieve tho first evening ho said, "M darling' assure you noth lngwrong hatetastestuff." All the years that James wnn enm, Ing home to Genevieve perfectly sober er mat is, sober at least three evenings out of the week. Genevieve was thinking with some prldo that if ho would only straighten up, he would show those friends of his who had so far outdistanced him in the race because, really, said Genevieve to herself, James was far tho ablest of mem an. it was nothing but his dls astrous habits that stood In his wnv. And at last the day dawned when James came to. He saw what he real ly looked like and decided that the time had como when he must straight en up and leave behind his boyish ways. So he straightened un. Imme. diately? Yes. immediately. Was it nn awful struggle? No, it wa3 not an uwiui struggle. He was sick a week or sn and felt depressed and down for months, but mat was about all. Because the truth is that It is not such an awful strug gle, as a rule. The truth Is that James and John and William and Charles aro not often in earnest when they say they want to stav nn the wn. ter wagon, so they cheerfully fall off again. Their wives think they are? Yes, but their wives only see them when they are depressed and down in tho mouth. Tho mtnuto James and tho rest of them get outdoors, they are different men. You don't believe it? Well, you ask your brother about it, Genevieve, my dear, and watch what ho says. Well, when James' really made up his mind to quit he Just quit. And tho saddest point of tho story Is right nere ne never did astonish tho world. He never set- the rrver on fire, he never did a thine excent tn enntlnno to make rather a shabby living for Genevieve. She had reformed him, but tho re form was about all there was left. As Genevlevo sometimes said to herself; It seems as if he were only a ghost oniy a guost." As he was a perfectly enmmnnnlnpo ghost at that, perhaps Genevieve did not navo mucn or a run for her monoy after all. (Copyright, by Associated Literary Press.) The City Policeman. "Tho man in uniform." snvn mm trate House of Now York. "Is a target ior street loafers." "It's a funny thing," mused Offlcer Flndley some months ago, "but every body is against a con. If ho rets the worst or it in a scrap, everybody is satisfied, and if a enn wns tn wnlt ita beat with a blacked eye every citizen wuum inugn nisself to death in the matter. 'Kill the con!' that's shout. And yet what is he doing? Ho is uoing nis duty. Take a fireman; he does his duty, ton hut he'a p hn Why? His work isn't any more dan-' bciuuo mau u. cop s, remaps you think it's a cinch to arrest character who is waving a gun or a Knue or a razor. Well, it isn't, and a cop never knows when he the morning whether his wife will bo a widow by night. And say! Imagine this town without any cons fnr innt one week! What?" Baby Was Mother's First Thought. A story of a mother's sacrifice fni. lowed by her death Comes frnm f!nir. entry. Mr. Walter Clifford of Coven try took his wife, their child and a friend out for a motor drive, ami when about a mile from Stonebrldge, where there is a narrow stone bridge, the car got into difficulties. It was ev ident that a collision with tho bridgo was imminent. Mrs. Clifford, seeing the danger, took up from her lap tho child, who is two and a half years or age, and in a moment threw It nvor the sldo of tho car on to tho crass. Tho car Immediately afterwards over turned and Its occupants were thrown out. Mrs. Clifford sustained a bad concussion and died a few hours nf terwards. Her husband and friend ns. caped with mere scratches. Tho child was uninjured. Choice Engravings, "America Is not deficient In tintriot. Ism nor in lovo of art," said the cheery citizen. "No," replied Miss Cayenne. "But. Just tho same, tho general eagerness to posess twenty-dollar bills is not duo entirely to the fact that George Wash ington's picture la on them." Appropriate Space, "HOW much snacn Bhnll I clvn thl account of tho pillars of society?" "Oh, give 'em & column." Photo, Copyright, by Underwood A Underwood, N. T. NO up-to-date costume is consider ed complete without the inev itable hand-bag, which must har monize -with, if not match, tho costume. This bag is suspended from the shoulder either side and made of embroidered moire three Persian palm leaves bordered with pearls being tho chief decoration. The fringe ami fringe is the mode at present is made of pearl and wood beads, in brown to match the cloth suit. URGENT NEED FOR A NAME I DRESSES FOR EVENING WEAR if the Bisected Skirt Is to Be Gen erally Worn Let It Have Femi nine Appellation. It is thought by some in Germany that tho name "harem skirt" or more horrible still "trouser skirt" Is the only thing that prevents the spread and general use of this much, talked of artlclo of wearing apparel. So these same people have offered a prize for tho best names and have hit up "Ama ron" and "cavalier" skirt as a result, and hope by keeping these more allur. Ing titles before the feminine public to popularize the garment. Not that it needs so much to be popularized, they say. The leading German shops ad vertise it in bewildering variety, and privately claim that orders are pour ing in to a degree which shows that, like other extreme modes gone be fore, the trousers er, that is, the cavalier skirt Is sure to conquer in the end. But if the more timid fol lower of fashion buys one, and keeps it hanging in her closet tq gaze upon with awe and admiration, yet Is afraid to wear a "trouser" skirt upon the street, by all means let us christen It with something softer and more feminine. CHILD'S SIMPLE FROCK Mw-i This pretty frock is otsHfay bluo cashmere embroidered in tho same shade. Tho waist is finished across the front with a band of maderja embroid ery on linen, of which the shoulder collar is also made. This last is placod over a .collar of black satin, bands of which finish the silk cord matching the gown forms the girdle. Sllght Change In Styles Will Be Noted In the Coming Season's Garments. . An unusually decolleto neck finish, extremely short sleeves and an Irregular-shaped train inclined to shortness are features having a bearing on the new evening gowns for fall and win ter. Laco plays a largo part, both as a foundation material and for trim ming purposes, every variety being used, no matter what the toxturo or pattern. Allover designs or robo gowns aro used as an underbody, in which case tho filmy draperies par also used for draping over soft fln tlally conceal tho pattern. They are ished silks, crepes and satins, and in these Instances usually are cut in one with tho waist. Some of tho newest models show the allover laco exten sion below tho waist line In cutaway coat effect, Cltoyenne frill or peplum. In some instances tho pointed effect is made In the front, with tapering lines cutting off to tho waist In the back. Dry Goods Economist Detachable Flower. It must have been the girl of small allowance who invented tho detach able flower for her hat. Trlmmlncr the winter's chapeaux is so simple mat it is an easy matter to whisk off one flower and put on another to match tho next costume worn. Velvet polnsettias are a favorite flower on winter hats for thnsn whn can stand tho vivid red so close to the face. Another popular flower is huee vel vet roses in rich dull tones. A new idea is to outline the edges of these roses wim tiny beads to correspond to tho color of the costume worn. Instead of sewlnir on the detneh. ablo roses each time, th ev are nrn. vided with tiny safety pins on tho under side, which are quickly adjusted to the trimming. Making a Pillow Cover Fit. Tho cover of a sofa nlllnw mado to fit well by tho following littlo trick: After sowing up three sides but before turning the cover right sldo out, tack the two finished corners of tho case securely to two corners ot the pillow. Turn tho caso over tho pillow. Sow up the fourth side for an inch or two at each end, Tack these two corners to the corresponding cor ners of the cushion. Finish as usual. This keens the nlllow from null inl and sagging away from tho cover. Houskeeper. Large Revers Popular. The use of tho larco collar in t doubt responsible for tho nonulnrltv of tho large revers. Some aro long and narrow, coming down below tho waist line. Others aro sauaro nnd a. few round. In a certain number of cases th coats aro mado with a slnglo rover on one sldo and double rovers rre seen in some instances. Tho long shawl collars aro again, meeting with favor.