{ title: 'Lansingburgh state gazette. (Lansingburgh, N.Y.) 1880-1883, April 28, 1883, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070138/1883-04-28/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070138/1883-04-28/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070138/1883-04-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070138/1883-04-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Troy Public Library
hus the interval of 'wa tmg to plaee salt l.l tween ht:rs •Jf and her mmt, that no one may be able to mtmde a rfmark to th~ fact upon her tbrougft that moffensi ve Tacoma \ill Le medmm. She has ~1.ten a few· spJon- San of the North•rn ful3ofsoup, when, t 1 her horror,'Arry, cJa,t, tlm great expo1t ngt!epot as she ha> dubb~d !urn, comes m, With R.nd manufa~turing center of th3 'lht some ht le noi;e a:~.d bustle, lllll takes r~gton north of Cahfornia. ller cum the chair next her. She qut~ tty etlge3 and uu\nufa~tures will lind tbe r away frurn !urn, and gradually turns to mark~t by the sea, but tho citJ iler~elf so that her sl•ouluer only is pre- be closely identified \1 itll the nul- sauted t~ h1m. developmentm Oregon an(l Waih· \11ay I troul>ls yon for the salt?\ inglon, ani! the gre ot !arming region he says, in a loud, che~rful voice. stretclle(l away t 1 the north, wluch 1s llere 1s a contmgency on wlliqh as :yet almost uninhab1te I. 1s simply perfect. .A& her maid says, P,tmela ha!l no.t reckoned.. Her unequlllcd po3ition ,md rela'ions, \Theugh she looks ratlter ·anghtv, she S_he hands tt to htm m a rn~nner an 1 the two lines of r,11lroad, from tho 1s a most affable young lady.'' · 1 vo; Inch mtght freeze the ml!-rrow In th.e s<:~uth and the east, wtll make Tacoma Mrs. Smclair betake; herself to doll' b tnes of a maue-::H\owed With suscept1- the Iota\ metropolis of an area of tern· her walking aUtre, aud Pamela pulls bility. t~ry larger tlta11 i:\at which mrlules from he; pocket a letter received that \Thank•.\ he says, quite unl\b:~h.ed. Chicago, Buffalo, Ntw York, Philad!\l- ~ ~~;~;;;~=~r~r:;;•·+ morrung; and :read~ over i\v..tce t11~ !91- \ I'll:tmt 1t ~twe_,.n us ~;'':;~:::i~~H!:\~~;.a:ull~~~~~~~-=:::;::~~1!~~~ Baltimore, Louisvt!ie and Htl lowing passage: shall not h<we to you ,_b\\\'\\and baelt ~ ClllG.'lgO. :Nnti<llllllJ.y \Melton thinks of gomg< down to Pa:ne!a. edges still furtlwr away from be the e~trepot and outport for --in~ day or t\\0. I have talketl him, and IS abottt to take refuge m the trade with Japan and Chma. to WM. O'CONNOR, IIE.ILE!t lN .ALL l<Do'DS 0. IEATS, PODLTIJ -AND- to him so much about you t!lat he is con\er,ation \\lth her :lllnt, out, to her whirh Tacoma IS 600 m1les nearer than dying i.o make your acquaintance, and di,gnst, perceh e3 thatl:uly to be ta.1Ung San Francisco is. is, I b~1e1e, quite prepar(d to frul head affably, and rn en in an intere,te 1 The climate and sitna'ion of the over ears m love with von. Remom- mann~ •h her next neighuor. town are all that coulrl be de•lre·I. In ber, m:y dear, twelve tliousand a year 'f.rry eats Ius •uup \H\h apparent 1882 the lowest tPmperature was and a. charmtng place m --shire!\ 1 re 1sh, an<l hanng ntp •l ht·unouth and twenty-one degree~ FR.hren4ett in Feb- After reading th1~, l'amett·s spints pulled hu mu>'!l.\h •, gw ,s a g.>od, ru:-&ry, and the highest wa~ •eventy· revive. ~he ts an arnlJ1liou; young 1 exhaustn e look a~ l'amcla, of whtch mght degrees in June. Snow fell eleV< n lady, and perf~clly aware of the fa.ct 1 she 1s perfectly .md tn<ltgntntl)' con- times inJanuary,FehruaryandMareh that, at twenty-three years of age, it 18 scions. but generally disappeared on the same high time for a woman to have setll •tl \Hot~! se •ms pret' y full,\ he eb- day. Frosts occurred five times 10 herself in llfe and taken up her sen·es t, ltor s\)ou!tler April and t\ice in May. The ram fall defimte po\>Ition in the world. She namela effe ts not t~ hear. The a.mounted to 44.54; inches durin;!' the has been the vwtim of a. VI(}lent p1s- Impertm~nt little snob J~ans a triile year. The city 1s s1tuated on what was Bion, wltich ruined the three !Jest) etrs 1 neu, r to her an 1 rc1 terate; hts rema.rk. called Commencement bay, Puget's of her ltfe, ~er ~eart _hn~ b. en broken I S;:nne<hing must hP d me to stop tlt~;- sound, and is bnilt on grounds ascend· and nearly r paued; It IS !tile a~ !l . hll>s Clifford repl c 1 glacially, \I run mg, by succe3slve steps or plateau~, gant Sevr~s vase \h ch has het'n sh:tt-j n t aware,\ and bestow. at the st·ne three b.undred feet• above the water, tered anl 1leftly put t1.1getltPr :t6m 1 it 1 tun • a glan~e up n Ju n whi~h bel Eton a.ffordlng a most excellent opportunity leoks as \el 1 , but ll no~ expected to cousin ts wont to ueo>erti.Je as \a regu- for draina.,:;eo. From lh3 matn street hold aeytbmg, Lme IS a wor 1 at. Jar Ver3 de Verer.\ the view of the sound, a. be~utifnl whose mEntion llr t a thnll of Joy, and 1 For a. m Jment '..Arry a.ppears to be sheet of wnter, is a. grand onP late~ a spasm _of agony, has been wont 1 cru,hed, but afttr a short llaq,sei'tl.mela Puget s?nn lis a ravishmgly beoan'l· to Vibrate througJ. her fr,\lne; no\\ Jt t hert.rs hun mqnire If she hlq\b!J..ell here fnl archipelago. There is not so love- onl_Y insp_ires contemptuo,!IS tlt..behd ur : Io tg 'l'l,e·e 1 s only t·ne tbmg to he ly a hotly of \a'er on the eoarth. smLlrn~ uony as an old tradttion urI donP, ani she does it Deliberat •ly Tourists by tPns of thO!LSands Will go superatition, on the truth ot whmh I she mterrupts Jpr a 1 mt. 10 th~ f~tll yearly to Tacoma, to sail on this pur- some uneducated pers1.1n\ i11s1st Pam swmg of convers~tion and (}Omuel-3 ple sea, through islands evPr grePn ela's unfortunate love had for ye,lrl that lady to enter mto a'u 1 alo\u~ol the With fir trees, the pur piA sea but- prevented her from recuivmg tbe ad ba'dest an!l mo t ftettt 10 u~ ~liaracter tressed on th\il \Vest by tile snow peaks vances of even the most eligible aspu- w1th herself. This time 'Arry takfJs of the Olympian rangP, and sentr.ed A!lts, now Bhe looks back wtth tho tha hmt and <.IevoteJ himself to e>ne of on the east by the slumbering vo11tm:nn deepest regret to lost opportnnitle.l, the girls of the p~riod on his right, Tacoma. 14 5!)0 feet high, a and is fi~mly resolved to make up for who, nottung Io h. gtV(S hill1 every of eternal1ce and snow. There her .crmunal waste of tune .Ant! life, Pneouragement; nnd the p::ur are soon in all Ameri~a such a s11pP.rb specta'le as it is, ts by no means agreeable to I laughing all,d taking \tth abandon as this snow monnta n. And alone ot hfr. M~s. Sinclair, her aunt, is a kind which, though pe1 ffiiSSlble in the circles ..American mountains 1t holds in It~ and amiable l!lliy, but a handsorr1e m which :M Si Clifford moves, is unre- heart a glacier, as grand and Impress- young woman of t 1 1reJ 'and twenty de~me!l vulgarity h rP. She 1 s filled as that of :uount Blank. The wants a different Jdnd of a con1pan- wttb a s~n e of •hdt•m:tt on a~amst population ha.s grown since U!G9, ionship and quite anotht>r sort or m her ,;1.unt f •r brmgmg he· mto e~ntact when the City wa.s settled, to more touragefrom that ~1 middle-aged aunt w1tnl'luch p'ople Thankful io.dealtH than four thousand, and its street.q cav. grve.. Just now Pamela, feelmg she whQn the p•nanoe is over. \h 'U of that thrift whi h is the noleat react1on of extreme dull they ret1re to th 'lr slttmg-room Mrs. in the West, but which is ness after-tb.e fast a·ul furmns g~yetteH I Slllchtir mdulgPs m a nap, a:td l'.une'a tn the older towns of of the season (wludt, by the Wd.';. she f sits on the\ a'co:ty anrlloo';:s out atthe The people h,\ve handsome bad declared bored hel' to tlellttf, an.11 1 sea, an l listens to the slrains or the wateMvorks, gas-works, and she longei to get away from), is town band \h h ,, performina m the convenience's of older places. prepar~d to view Lord Melton, his j fl'ont of the hotel At this mo~ent .tweh e thousand a yen.r, nnd hi!'! pl1c0 !he two \girl~ ot the pet o 1\ passed in --shire \\tth the grente~t fO!\Ible 1 1 thl' WifidQI\, '.\rry 1s wa'lnng Get ween favor. In a day or two I them, an 1 they are all laughmg and Well, she must get through them j talkmg hmsteron<lv Rc:~lly the man- tervemllg time -1hc horrible tabl~ ners of thtS C'lt•s ·or p·rsons arc t6o d'hote inc\uded-a.9 she m:1y. Pame'11 1 revoltmg' taltrs her }len an<! indites 1\ grn~eht1 f NPxt tnornfng, al'tt>r hrenlrra.«t as lit~le,l):Ote In answer t<> her fri~nd Tn 1 iS' a l10t snmhiny mornmg, :llr •. ~!;,c!a'r a jndiciQ\ls lJlace, neithPr to'o nt'fir tQp prrp )Res tlmt thf'y Rhall t~ke their b~gi!.m_itig nor flt,e t.'nrl, sl1e ~ riteH books and sit in the hotel gltr<lE'n. \We sl!Oll be charmed t,. ma.l1~ thA Pamelfl ~r.mpliE'l nod for a little wh1le acquaintance qf rour J'i'iellll, Lord tl~v are forttmnte in having 1t lo them- ..... ~~-m - A. Now York Society J()!ie. The fulluwing I'> nlal.e<! m X ew York s >\lety drC\'e'O l\Ir W K. Van l£>rbtlt an•l h·s w·tfe ~pJ·o:ned Lord ant! Lady :-.Lntl •v i lie 1 .st fall, on thPtr arnval herP tr> •rwrl the winter \'1th mnch ror liattL'<' The mo•t t'lahorate a•Hl rnnside;.1te pr<'paratJoni were ma•le for th('II\ receptinn, and evPry arrnngement ronf\Umm.lted which f'oul<l m.tke tlre1r s ay as the Ynn lerbilts' gurst~ a~ pleasant a.<~ pos- stlJJn. Tieceptioqq, parties. dinners and balls m thetr honor 11ere g1ven \\\Jth· out number. 'l'b~ MnndeVIIIPs, of cour,e, noted all this, n:td appreciated it to the full. Nothing, howev~r. touched Lady Mandeville more than the fact that all Ute glass an :I china m thetrapartments-the p~ctures, ba~ins, wnter-bottle•, tooth g:lltsses and other toilet etcetera-we;e stamped w1th the crest of tQ.e D~l1e of Manchester, to whose nJlJie f,tmily Lod Mandeville belo;n {\· L·tdy .Mandeville pointed out the fact to her lmsba~d.., a.nd thal1,ked Mrs. Vanderlnlt for so tl.-lic!l.te .1 com· pliment. Lady UaDdeville hilS re cently learned that .a rcpresentati vc of the Vamlerl,1!ts boug-ltt the Duke of Mancheste1's crest 111 London for per- sonal use, but a; tlte d(sim did not please .Mrl'. W. K. Vanrlerb~lt, :mly oae room was so ilistingulshed with it, and a new cre,t v.as ortlt:reJin New York. Something Better Thnu 'Railroads, DuriBg a Western trtp <>f one of New York's ratlroad kmgs, macle last year, 1t I.Jeutme known through the passEnger coa~hes tli.tt. Ius private car was attfl<\hed to tho train, and as the contluctur entered one of the coaches a man frum N orlhern IndiuD!I heckoned to him and askrd: \ ls Mr. Gouln car wtth thill tramt' IIUJIOR OF TH~ l)A.T, It's b~lter to hnvoloveJ some gitl, ltmattelan>t bows:t~all. Than t > hlVe lo•t love's gtddy wh1rl, Ancl.mtssed both short nnd tnl'. A Polish nm elist has writtf,lll 5!l0 stories. !in one e\·er ·thought so many stones could be put on one pole.- Pia:zyunc . .\ n~w l~nghsh book is ralled \People I Have Met.\ A new Amerira.n hook migltt IJe f',lllerl • .Men I II a\,; ll•eu Out to See.\ ·Tho wIse m,,IJ has his foWJs, nu Jp•s than the foolJ but 1t..ll1!13 bQ~n saltl that hPreoiu luJ.q the tlifferenc~- tiP folhes of tllf' fool are known to tho worlu, l>ut {lr!. lw.dden from him· selr, the follies of tho ''I so man are kno\\n to hlmsclf;<Wt nte ludd,n fr lll the world