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Show OGDEK DAILY COMMERCIAL: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, Craffcark'. rrytml fcavwa. , A party of 1jc1 eraoeg J. IL Cross nj whcua were the Et-v- . SeT. A A. H .Urn. La just retnnied from an excursion to th top of Gry-Lci- , a noted Eioc.-- a that flax.it north i 1 of Sta Croro vxrj on theAf'.er lio paa. spending the night on tie pek tLe J Arty etarted to return ly a derent route. On tLrir jcxarwy they deep, with tw escrow aboot fort aul on peering ot will, ptrj.dicul4r - the sale, iac w was seen at the bottom. Owing to the hrd of the canyon they tsjriui a (lace where they could lIe dosra, and o&e ly ote the party tock the risk. After alidlzr several hundred feet they cum to a body of ice and enow, which nearly a they followed down. It mil in length, and from the cracks it about the ice aertined SSfoet thick by 60 feet wide. Large bowlders as big a a house were lying on tap cf the ice. There was to appearance of the glacier melting, and the ana doe not reach the bottom of the canyon xaore than as hour each day. That the glacier pue&eesed motion was proved by the fact that immeriM rock were pushed forward oat of their bed by niaase of ice and tnow. The bottom cf the crack waa of a dirty yellowish color and looked very Jd There is a stream of water flowing from the lower end, probably fed by spring under the glacier and maaa of ice, which may have been in that canyon for agea By testing the thermometer in boiling water Urayback waa found to be exactly 11,920 feet above the eea level. "Water waa boiled at 193 degs. Fahren-- D O YOU NEED JOE 191. PRINTING OF ANY KIND? tu vu tii tht If YouOare engaged in any kind of Business, be it Large The camp waa aome 6,000 feet below waa frozen a id covered with snow. California Cur Chicago Tribune. Maa. Unit fur Samai.r. The saah ne er obtained much favor among men w o drees particularly well; there waa som thing about it that waa too "dressy" nd conspicuous to suit ft quiet taste, an I this aummer it is considered alinoa" obsolete. The narrow, plain ruatet oelt ia now declared to be the thing to wear with flannel suits. The flannel sb rt also seems ft thing of the past and ia replaced by cheviots and Oxford. Thwe ahirta are laundered without stare i, with the exception of collars and culTs, which are stiff and are generally worn with gold stud. The delicate colors of pink and blue which seem to be the favorite this season are very becoming, and look particularly well with white flannels. White flannel trousers with a light gray komespun Jacket, russet belt, and chev iot shirt look always decidedly good form, while the, narrow striped flannel suits, with coat and trousers to match still hold their own as general favorites. In the way of shoes russet leather Ox ford are worn as much as ever, but the colors are rather darker than last year. In fact ft well dressed man is almost al ways eminently "quiet" in his colors, although the bright red neckties worn this year with gray and brown suits are such pretty innovations in the way of color that they have become very popn lar. .New York Tribune, Th. Judg Fined BimMlL Perhaps the most disgusted man in Somerset county is ft justice of the peace, who is the owner of a fine gar den, the pride of his heart The other day he was Informed that an unruly cow had wrought desolation in his Eden, and lie at once ordered the animal sent to the round. Then he went up to view the wreck, and after noting the vacant places where the beota and corn had been, the trampled down quashes and cabbage, and the demoralized pea vines and sunflowers, and ascertaining, as he supposed, the owner of the cow, he made out a writ against that individual. containing fourteen different and dis tinct counts, including trespass, forcible entry, malicious mischief, nuisance, riotous and disorderly conduct, and as sault and battery with intent to kill It was then that he learned that the trespasser was his own cow, and his ire cooled as he meekly paid a field driver for getting her out of the pound. Fair- aeia (aie.) Journal, or Small, you will need something in our line. Four Hundred Boy. at Work. A practical joke on a large scale has been perpetrated at Hernals, a suburb of .' Vienna. There is a plot of building land there more than 800 yards long by SO yards broad, surrounded by a board ing t wo and a half yards high. As about COMMERCIAL, RAILROAD, BANK, LEGAL AND COUNTY PRINTING AND BINDING. Whatever you mayJjjped, be it much or little, come and see us. We want to figure with you. Well figure with you right. Well treat you square. The especial attention of attorneys is called to our unequalled facilities for turning out pamphlet work, in the way of briefs and abstracts. TISF-OTIO- N GUARANTEED. 400 boys were playing there recently a passer by told them that the boarding had been set aside for the poor, and any .one might take the timber away. In spite of the threats of the watchman in charge the boys demolished the boarding in half an hour and carried the planks home. When the police appeared nothing was to be seen except a few poles. The police ordered a survey of the ad joining houses, but very few planks were found. London Truth. A Novel Ledger. We are fully equipped with the latest pattern machinery and new material to do you justice on prices as well as a high class of work. go after leav- Clara We think of going to Baah Haahbah. Kate Where the mischief is that? Clara On the coast of Maine. Kate Is it near Bar Harbor? Clara (icily) It is Baah Haahbah. Pitteburg Bulletin. : flie Commercial P Misting o a I S , Sh. Bloom. Parsnnlally. We have lately bad hard times In the west. The rich have been compelled to curtail expenses and the poor have often suffered. Salaries of young men have gone gradually down until the articles of fashion in the east find little sale here. Everybody shows some evidence of the hard times through which the country has passed and out of which it is just now emerging, with the exception of the rummer girt. Through all the days of trial, when the scorching winds wilted the .stately cornstalk to an early grave, she has been with us in all her radiant glory. The irrowth of the puffs on her sleeves and shoulders are apparently not affected by shrinking purses; the size and quality of her headgear have not diminished, and her sweet smile bears no mark of pain. Trouble Blips off her sateen back without leaving the slightest stain. Watch her course and you will discover that nothing but marriage fazes ber; she cares nothing for hard times. Atchison Globe, Summer Diverlons at Bar Harbor. A Bar Harbor man has a scheme for amusing the summer visitors at Mount Desert and making a few dollars for himself. He proposes to entertain the tourists with a view of a genuine shipwreck. His plan is to man a vessel with men who are not afraid of getting their feet wet, and then, when it comes on to blow hard, to run on the rocks at Otter creek or Schooner Head. Spectators will get the tip, as at a prize fight, of the location and will be charged so much a head for seeing the fun. The crew take their own chances of getting ashore, with the assistance of a life saving crew, which will be on hand with all the necessary apparatus for fishing them out Bar Harbor Letter. ment of a law which shall suspend the business of clearing during the summer season in order that tourists may see the beautiful scenery of the souni It seems that the work of burning underbrush, which can only be carried on advantageously in the summer, creates an immense volume of smoke. The general sentiment appears to be against the tourists, as the people argue that if the clearing was stopped they would all have to Bubsist on a diet of canned goods. San Francisco Post. A Tanderbllt Swimming Pool. A stonecutter in Sullivan, Me., has filled an order for stone of very unique dimensions for the Vanderbilt swimming pool at Bar Harbor. It consists of thirteen pieces of granite cut on a circle to form the coping of the wall. They are 6 feet long, 4 feet wide and 14 inches thick, and are beautiful samples of the superior Sullivan granite. Bangor (Me.) Commercial. On. and the Same. Kate Where will you ing here? Am Odd Coapl. Weddsd. The wedding at Berlin of XaiXa.a Siamese gentleman, son oi tne governor or Uhantetron, and Frauhn Schultx, the I daughter of a cigar manufacturer, is the affair which aow most interests the continental press. Kai Ka a father long withheld his consent to the marriage. He thought it impossible for a Protestant lady to enter as a daughter a house consecrated to Buddha. However, he has been brought round and the happy couple are soon to proceed to Bangkrk where Nai Na's family have promised them a hearty welcome. European men often wed Asiatic women, but the reverse seldom happens. I should not wonder, young Asiatics coming in large numbers to study In Eu ropean universities, if numbers of Euro- -' J pean women found husbands among them. These orientals are generally the sons of rich men. and turn out well Victor Hugo was a warm advocate of what he called the churning np of races and the consequent evolution of a great mixed race which would fed at home in every part of the globe and be infinitely complex in its faculties, t The late M, i Kaoul imval s forecast was that years hence a full fourth of thVpormhv tion oi tms continent would be of mixed I Aryan and Asiatic blood. Paris Letter, i ' Senary vena. Canned Goods. Paget sound papers are now debating the advisability of securing the enact- ; One of the bills filed before the county court was a pine stick with twenty-fiv- e notches cut on the side. This was the account of Anthony Lobb, an old negro, who, by the way, is quite well off. He can neither read nor write, and his bill was for taking care of an old colored woman. The court promised to allow him one dollar a week for her keep, an? each week Anthony cut a notch in his stick, and Monday filed it as his account Independence (Mo.) Sentinel. liti a, heit the peak, and one of the party on the top tried hi voice and shoaled in the direction of the camp, and those who remained below cuted that they beard the Toice faintly. The temperature on the top of the peak waa 89 degs. at 4 o'clock in the mornin ;, but a small lakenp there Cum ta America to B Karris. There was a rcartie Bunriage here Tady, Mits JloIIi James, of a&d Mr. Charles ViUoee, cf Sew York, being she peraoa directly icterud. The Wide is a tiac of Q. P. R. Jas the author, aad a very beautiful w of the pure Saxoa type. The bridegroom is a Spaniard, dark and hanlaome. They met at the house of the bride f jcr years ago, when 3Lm Jamee was only eveteea years old. It was a ease of love at first eight. The parents of tba young woman peremptorily forbade their marriage, as Villon is a Catholic. The young Spaniard cam to America. Be established himself ia business ia New York city and has thrived. Six months ago Miat James agreed to aeix the first opportunity to ahp away from home and coma to America. Her paretta divined her purpose and kept a close watch on her, but without avail. She eluded their vigilaaca and bought a ticket to New York. She was pursued and hid oa shipboard. When she arrived ia Sew York she found that her fiance was ia the south. From his business associate she obtained his and they made an appointment to meet in Memphis. Miss James arrived in the morning and waa made Mrs. Yillone that afternoon. A magistrate performed the ceremony, as neither of the lovers would consent to a marriage by a pneet of the other's faith. After th ceremony they took their departure for St Louis. The bride said before leaving. "It was a long journey for a girl to cuke alone, out i am giaa I made It. And her husband looked as though the joy was mutuaL Memphis Cor. Boston Globe. Jink.' Son. Winks Your son is a mighty clever fellow, isn't he? Jinks (proudly) Who told you so? Winks He did. Good News. . . if 'I |