M Ml 'I M f 1 i i I1: If $ ' f: i: It SI- jr. POOR LO ON ICE. TIIK .U.HKAN I SLOWLY HKCOMIMi A THADITIOV Ciklniun, TUIInclla ami Alaota Are Ilrlnu DrHrnilrd lijr ItllUInu In flurnrra und Arp Kinlirtclim Ihp White Mun'a Mm limtvad if Ilia Vlrlurn Thrjr Arp liraUnnlly AlmnitonliiNT Their Ani'lput Com taiiipn nnd 1'iialoiiia Nnil Mnklnic Into Smacrrr llh All Mmtprn litipriM t-iurnta Mark Knltitn W'rlfpa of UN K&iirrtpiippa .uions; tliP IVnpIra of I in' If Snm'a Terri tory In lltp Lirrat !NurthrMt. (Siwclul.) SITKA. Alaska. Oct. 20. Via SKATTL.K, Wash.. Nov. 1. Poor the Indian, will Boon be as much of a tradition In Alaska as he is In the Western States. Mont of the na lives are p.irsIiik through what for them Is certainly the dcKiadlnK process of civilization. The Aleuts particularly arc alianilolnn their nuili-nt costumes ami otistoiiis and iipint; the iln-vs ami niumiiT of the paleface. AmoiiK this peopli- the aliorlKinal fur ciuincnts have I n almost entirely replaced hy the wl'.ite man's More clothes and the aboriginal stomach Is 1c!iir slowly but suifly eoriodi'd by the white man's rum. l'an nihetli'ally, I may remark that the worst whisky on this fireen earth Is sold rlrht here In little old Alaska. I oui ;;!ve a t,rond-slz d n'jjwt for a tcenuine Miinhattan cocktail, and I am iiot what a Kentucky colonel would call a drinking i:uin. tne feels the need of a reully pure stimulant occasionally In these parts. It Is doubtful If any man would remain a teetotaler lonir In this latitude. Good whisky In a blessing here when It Is needed. It's like carry Inn a (,;m In Texas. You may live here all your life and never need It, but when you do need It, you need It "miKhty sudden." What Is ruining the Alaskan natives Is not Rood whisky, but bad rum red-hot tanglefoot, that burns nnd bites like vitriol. Hocan't Like the Native. I have met the Alaskan native In all his phases, from grnve to gay, from lively to severe, and I am free to con fess that I am not yet prepared to hall him as a man and a brother. As a man. he Is at best a rude apology; as a brother, he would be a disgrace to the family. He is about the dullest, slow est, dirtiest, meanest coyote to be found anywhere on the North Ameri can continent, Philadelphia lawyers and Cone Island photographers not excepted, and, so far as the present generation Is concerned, Is,' fn'tny Opin ion, utterly hopeless. Something may be done by the Government teachers and by the missionaries to reclaim the youthful Thllnglts, Eskimos and Aleuts from their racial stupidity, but the Alaskan Indian of to-day Is a pernic ious and persistent barbarian, with all modern improvements in the line of savagery. Since I undertook to prospect this country for news specials, I have fallen upon ways that are dark and tricks that are vain. I have been In Sitka Just four days, after an extended tour of Alaska, and have taken two baths every day. This Is Just double my usual number, but for three months previous every square inch of me, ex cept my face nnd hnnds, has been a slrangtr to water. You can't bathe In the open nlr In Alaska, save In the Summer season, nnd the Russians who preceded the American pioneers neg lected to build Ilusslan baths. You see. It was part of the Czar's policy to truckle to the prejudices of the natives. with Thllnglts and Eskimos and Aleuts In every accessible part of the great Northwest. I have slept In the Igloo of the kolosh, with sledge dogs lying on my chest and greasy Eskimo babies sticking their pudgy feet In my face, half suffocated by the pot-pourri of perfumes emanating from a dozen human and canine forms, and I have huddled under the Inverted kayak or bldarka of the Thlinglt, with the rain leatlng upon every part of me except my head nnd a bitter east wind chlll Ini; me to the marrow. As fate or dained, I have made a meagre meal of uiikan and seaweed cakes, or have gorged myself en seal blubber and moose steaks. I have discussed yukala (a very line trout) with the Azlavlglok hamlut and have shared shellfish with ,the Aleut. fTo my discredit be It said, 1 1 have tried to drink fusel oil and all I the fearful liquor which the Ksklmo ! distills from flour paste, sugar, dried fruit, berries, etc. I am happy to say I that I have been wholly unable to do so. That vile uecoctton wouui over strain the bibulous endurance of a liowery lush. Long before I returned to this, the cnnltal of Alaska. I learned to appre- !,.l,it.k ne.n lh rtnor tient of a ehikshn his mother-in-law. She U the actual head of the family. V'tau'i Rlcfcta la Alaska. Women occupy an equivocal position among the Alaskan natives. Their legal rights are many, but until they become mothers-in-law, their actual privileges are few. A mother la practically the Blave of her eldest son, although he and the rest of her children take their surname and tribal pedigree from her. Instead of from their father. When her daughters marry, however, her sons-in-law become her serfs, and thenceforward she enjoys sweet re venge upon the male sex. The large, ferocious-looking females In the pho tograph of a croup of Alaskan women I sent you a couple of weeks ago may easily be distinguished as mothers-in-i law. i With that photograph I also for ! warded a tintype of a Thlinglt girl, the belle of the village of Kanakanak, and a snapshot of an Alaskan Indian In the act of harpooning a seal. Toor Lo, when I caught him with my camera, was standing on the prow of the bara bara, his harpoon poised for the lunge at the frightened seal, an expression of fiendish glee on his swart features and his whole body bristling with the joy fTCu II AM! : The Alaskan Indians have bathhouses of their own, but, although some of the most fearless desperadoes of the Pacific slope have come hither, no white man has yet been found with sufllclent nerve to enter one of them. By the time I get back to the States I hope to be clean enough to enable my friends to recognize me but It's an eyen chance. ' Tor thres months I have foregathered fire, made of the dry vines of the berry of that name. Now I am luxuriating In the delightful warmth of a real coal blaze. The Varlnua Trlbrn. Of the Alaskan Indians, the Fitkns have been probably less Injured by civ ilizing influences than any other tribe. The Takus are more self-assertive and taller, and have better features than the average,, excepting the Chllkats, who are much like them. The most primitive are the Ynkutats, who have the darkest skins. The largest men are found among the Hutznahu. The Auks nre the least Intelligent nnd have very bad figures. The Thllnglts nre very Imitative, nnd extremely shrewd. These last are guilty of all kinds of offenses ngninst the moral code, and would rather lie than tell the truth any day. I have known Thllnglts to lie when It would have been distinctly to their ad vantage not to do so. They relish a rood lie as does an American a bright joke. Gratitude Is unknown among them, nnd theft Is second nature. All the men are born gamblers nnd both sexes are addicted to the excessive use of tobacco und rum. They are confirmed skeptics and laui'li In their sleeves i:t their chief idol, Yehl, even while they are sacrificing to him. Even their be lief In shamanism and witchcraft Is a dead letter, nnd, us Christianity has not yet taken Its place, they have no faith. Polygamy Is as popular among them as it is with the Mormons. The Cheerful Koloali. One thing may be said in favor of the Ksklmo he Is the most persistent ly good-natured chap In America. With everything under the midnight Bun to make him miserable, be laughs at his frozen fate and finds humor In conges tive chills. Pleura-pneumonia U a huge Joke with him, nnd diphtheria a delicate witticism. As for such petty details ns food, clothing and shelter, they are to him absolutely ridiculous, lie cun get along with less of them than any man on earth, except the 'Frisco Chinaman. I have seen him, when the mercury was shrinking into the lowest part of the bulb, trot around with nothing on above his waist and his feet bare. Nevertheless, when he Is playing In luck, he will Bwaddle him self in furs like a gay Parlsienne. It tukes such a philosopher to eke out existence In the Arctic Zone. The Eskimo's cheerfulness Is the more laudable In view of his relations with his mother-in-law. That estima ble ludy rules him with an Iron hand. She bus by law, what she has by cus tom In clvllzed climes, the right to dic tate to him In every detail of his shiv ery career. The Eskimo Vould not dans to build a new Igloo or kayak or bldar ka, to go on a journey, to Bell a bun dle of furs, to buy anything whatsoever or to cut his hair without consulting of slaughter. His companion In the stern of the boat was paddling swiftly but silently, in irder not to disturb a family party of seals a few rods away, which the hunters also had designs. It was a fierce and exciting chase, and, though 1 felt sorry for the seal, I could not but admire the skill and strength with which the hnrpooner sent his slen der steel plunging through the body of the animal. This is a primitive method of killing seals, but it 1s still popular among the Thllnglts. When I get more used to writing with pen nnd Ink on real paper once more, nnd when the genial warmth of the modest hotel at which I am stop ping shall have thawed the Ice In my veins, I will tell you more about the peculiar and picturesque peoples among which I have lived these many weeks. At present It Is an effort to think, and my fountain pen Is still frozen. MA UK FALLON. KXil. AMI'S CHILD DltflVKARDS. Thirty Thousand Women Visited Ilnrroouis In One Night. (Uy AnBlo-American Prvai.) MANCHESTER, Eng., Nov. 1. Lady Elizabeth Blddulph presided at the opening sittings yesterday of the Women's Total Abstinence. Union in Bristol. Mrs. Vanse (London) made a special plea for children, saying that there were hundreds of little ones In courts nnd slums who went to bed drunk every night. They had parents who, for the sake of drink, were willing to place their chljdren in the care of people really unknown to them, and themselves in toxicated. In London alone, out of 80,000 persons who went Into public houses one Satur day night In the course of three hours, over 110,000 were women. The awful amount of drunkenness among women must cause deplorable wretchedness and suffering. PERSONAL POINTS. Ex-Secretary John G. Carlisle. In prac ticing law in New York, will devote liimstlf to pleading coses in court in nead of confioiug himself to office work. Count Nicholas Esterhozy, who died recently 'at Totis, in Ilungary, was well known on the turf in England, Trance cud Austria. lie gave orders that he should be buried ju a red hunting-coat, with ail tbe honors of thecbase. Cougressmau Walker, of Massachu setts, is the president's almost daily companion, ue in Washington, be tween four and live o'clock in the after noon. The tie between the two men is their mutual fondness for horseback riding. Col. R. G. Shaw, in whose memory Boston has unveiled a statue, was rather a poor student while at Har vard and excelled in athletics more than in study. He was extremely pop ular und believed in having a "good time." Among the new recipients of honorary degrees from the University of Oxford are Wilfrid I.uurier, premier of the Do minion of Canada; Sir William V. Whiteway, premier of Newfoundland, and E. L. Godkin, editor of the New York Evening Post. Kichard E. Gnlliennc seems anxious their mutual fondness for horseback to take the place formerly held in London tsociety by Oscur Wilde. He appeared recently on a bicycle in a black silk costume trimmed with cream-colored lace, according to the London Tigaro, which also asserts that his father is a respectable brewer. JUST ABOUT PEOPLE. Miguel A, Otero, who has been ap pointed by the president governor of New Mexico, is a leading citizen of Las Vegas. He has held many offices and Important positions. President II. II. Vreclnnd, of the Metropolitan Traction company of New York city, was once a brakeman on a Long Islund road, and his rapid rise is often commented on by his old asso ciates, who find In him to-day the same friend of past years. On his eighty-third birthday, which recently occurred, Verdi, the great com poser, wus seen at five o'clock in the weekly market of the town with some sheep he had brought in from bis farm to sell. He also bought a cow and bad a right good time with Lis rural neigh bors. Hezekiah Butterworth is perhaps the best known writer for juveniles; his books for boys nnd girls have reached a circulation of hundreds of thousands. Mr. Butterworth, for nearly a quar ter of a century the editor of the Youth's Companion, now devotes him self to writing books for young people and traveling. Gov. Black, of New York, who is a young man in the forties, was a farm er's son and one of a family of 11 chil dren, yet he prepared himself, unaided, to enter college at 18, and graduated from Durtmouth at 22. He is now angu lar, tull and smooth-shaven and is often called "young Abe Lincoln." His long, narrow head is covered with dark hair and his face is built on square lines. POPULAR SCIENCE. ft I The Woman Wfcfr Uses The average walking pace of a healthy man or woman is said to be 75 steps a minute. It is said that the patterns on the finger tips are not only unchangeable through life, but the chance of the lin ger prints of two persons being alike is less than one chance in sixty-four billions. Among the animals which surpass man iu the ratio of brain weight to body weight are the following: Among the Ilodcntia squirrels and mice, among the Primates many old uud new world monkeys. The bottom of the Pacific between Hawaii and California is said to bo bo level that a railway could be laid for 600 miles without altering the grade anywhere. This fact was discovered by tbe United States surveying vessel engaged in making soundings with the view of laying a cable. Important papers, maps, charts and good engravings can be successfully preserved by brushing a very thin coat ing of India rubber solution over their surface. This Is perfectly transparent, and if nn important document is var nished with it on both sides it will be protected for an indefinite period ogainr.t the elTectsof damp, whilst tbe writing will remain clear uud unladed. J SEVEN THOUGHTS. i z a 1 1 if it aw s -zr ity-v. i . j". i Washing Powder jjLjjjl LJV-tNrfey j ! finishes her work as lp tB Ufl 1 1 fresh and bright as htM f J ; her house is clean.' ' S ftSi I j J Largest package greatest economy. p5 fttffirviiSiEij S tola 1 The N. K. Fairbank Company, V i lsRllllPuTS? 1 B 2 Chicago. St. Lonis. New York. SJfl lfiy3ilili!T rn 9 Boston. Philadelphia. - If ia SowCtW0t8800OK)O000ttnBBetMi lobe ; r ... " " " " day fTZS CANDY STn if IJy CATHARTIC Ji laGgte I: 25c 50c 3Gr? VjSt DRUGGISTS aaaaaaaMaaiaaBaaaaaaaBaaaMBaiaiBaBi RIPANS TABULES are intended for children, ladies and all who prefer a medicine disguised as con fectionery. They may now be had (put up in Tin Boxes, seventy-two in. a box), price, twenty-five cents or five boxes for one dollar. Any druggist will get thera if you insist, and they may always be obtained by remitting the price to The Ripans Chemical company wn in Vsp'ruce st WE DON'T SACRIFICE . . . .Future Comfort for present seeming Economy, but Bi the Sewing Machine with an established reputatf that guarantees von long and satisfactory service : Mam WILL VIC KHKIi T1IIJ IHISIIf I'rtitlou for the Kclcimr f Prisoner l aid ltcfore Her. (By AiiKlo-Ainerlciin Press.) IjUULIX. Nov. 1. Dr. M. D. Kavanagh having, through the Home Secretary. Kent a petition to the Queen for the release of the Irish prlnoners, has received from the right honorable gentleman the following ro ply: "Whitehall, Oct. 9, 1897. "Sir: I am directed by the Secre tary of State to liilorm you that the petition on behalf of the treason -felony convicts which you have submitted has been laid before the Queen, but that he has not been able to advise Her Majesty to give any directions thereof. I am, sir, your obedient servant, "CHARLES S. MURDOCH." More flies are caught with honey than vineg-ar. If you would not be known to tlo n thinf,'. never lo ii. It may be said that yesterday su pests, to-morrow promises, but to-tlay accomplishes. It Is difficult to sn3' who does the most mischief, enemies with the worst in tentions or friends with the best. There is a prat btru'le between vanity und jiatienee when we have to meet a person who admires us but who bores us. Hew arc of prejudices. A man's mind j is like a rat trap; prejudices creep in easily, but it is doubtful If they ever get out aain. A Lrood nnd wise man may at times be nngry with the world, und ulso grieved nt it; but no man cun ever be long din contented with the world if he does his duty in it. X. V. Weekly. A THOUGHT A DAY. Never meet trouble half-way; let it do all the walking. The better one is, the more good ness one sees in other people. Say as little as possible about that of which you know nothing:. In private watch your thoughts. In the family your temper, in company your tongue. People who live only for themselves nre engaged In a very small way of lntsln5. H". Y. Weekly. rts beautiful figured H work, durable const tion, line medium cal adjustment, coupled with the Kim-ft St Attachments, in:ik it if Kcst DtsiraWe lacliiiic is FEANE S. EEfi MlDDIiKl'-l''' SCySuud for our beautiful liiilf-tone catalocue. told me rmed am Morlk: I receive , but t Wf VOHl jflj said iiue only M diseu I me that , tU . lowing tyldecfc e prodnc inaed the U)i the las ' e el 'ease hat ' tlai-mini f w whicl operati ion. an A . method. , 1Dg amoni k tt i rhere the nii, th( " once thi med. .! w reckl( many cau 1 tnra. Pration is No niao ; care c u disease: t r in the '. or r .iiiiUF I1'" only re b,ood rem, 8"' direct 'and r.. o. fSiai. fcre'rca bai V'e' a ComagioU! J"ie onl t,i- Rasa r these drujr. fel'-e'i f,ce of f J-Fire, Life ar)d ACC Ir)surar)ce. Atlrney8.at. SNYDEX'S OLD, AND RELIABLE e Insurance Atrency, SELIHSGBOVE. SNYDER C0UHTT.A c 41... wnisn,., ir fttivilcr. louctveaiii iu uiu luiu tt iinaiu jji ".' Tim Tor.T'Tf.oll.itino rf T?t.linliln Tnmiranm ia rf-nrflSOCteJ ., ng list of Standard Companies, from which to make a NAM 10, I.OOATIOW, J.VU FIKE lloyal, Liverpool, Eng. (including foreign aHHets .f Hartford, of Ilarlf ord, Conn., (oldest American Co.; Phoenix. Hartford, Conn. f Continental, New Yorlr, X VJit3IUJU Aiuvi lnut lion xum Oy?MA i T.TFTi'.Ariitiinl T.ifn Tn. Co. New York. 'iU4'1 ACCIDENT Employei V Liability Assurance Corporation, Fire, Life Rnd Accident risks accepted at the lowost possibleraifl. titled by a strict regard to mutual safety. All just claims P'mri( satisfactorily adjusted. Information in relation io au cmooj" anco promptly furnished. ELMER W. SNYDEB, At. . Office on Market Street, Sehnscroyc "Bu''tnir. IK Pott WW (LlMn. -oiueasent 0sinesa Rouse, 0RT AT r. Minn ""US att-