When the Eqvines Own New York j a. *V*HE country's y1 112 J[ great equine ' event, the na- Sw|R!y tional horse show, A, 1 which will be held ¥9 / jg>\l in Madison Square y Garden, New York, during the week ol *i {MB# 112 Nov. 8-13 will be an exhibition national \ kin scope as well as V /j\ in name. For the first time in the his "l'D HATE TO BE tory of this afTair A MUI.E THESE JJ LE farmers will be DAYS!' as much interested as the men who own thoroughbreds of a more ornamental and less useful type than the draft animals, special prizes amounting to over SIO,OOO having been offered for the work horses. This will bring to the show a million dollar dis play of Belgians, Clydesdales, I'erche rons and other famous drafters, and the great animals in the ring with dainty saddle and slim harness beau ties will make a novel exhibit. In the past this exhibit of equities has mostly been New York's show, but hereafter other cities art; to take an important part in it, and animals of all breeds from all over the country will be entered. The judges this year will be the best known and most efficient to be obtained in the United States and Canada. Harness, saddle and jumping horses of the highest types are to have quite as important a place on the program as ever, but the draft horses are to be featured as the pi k of the country's breeding farms. Edward Morris of Chicago, whose massive six horse team was a big fea ture of the London international show, has entered these champions and also ten of the best Clydesdales ever brought from Great Britain, among them the champion of the annual highland show in Scotland of draft horses. The McLaughlins of Kansas City have entered their recent impor tations of Percherons, the pick of the Nogent, in the heart of the Perch country in France, and the Crouches of Lafayette, lud., have brought over y .* JUDGING MATED RAIHS. the champion Percherons of the last Paris show. Champion Belgians are to be the exhibit of Alexander Gal braith of Jatiesville, Wis., and the Truemaus will show the prize Shires from the Royal Agricultural society's show in Eugland. Many other well known horsemen will exhibit. Probably no other event held in this country brings together so many people of great fortunes and promi nence as the national horse show, wealth and fashion having set their stamp of approval on the affair from the very first. The development of the show to its present proportions and significance means that it has far outgrown the ideas and even the an ticipations of its founders. The ex- hibit not only interests and excites the social and sporting world, but is of tbe greatest moment to the hotels, restau rants. florists, liverymen and even boarding houses and transportation companies arid to the railroads center ing in tbe metropolis. It takes to New York an array of wealthy visitors and out from their homes many thousands of New York ers as wealthy, whose aggregate ex penditures. inspired incidentally by the show, in the matter of gowns and clothes, flowers, carriages aud hotel and restaurant outlays mount into the millions. This is no exaggerated state ment. and it is safe to say that Were the horse show fo be abandoned or even to wane in popularity there would be wailing and lamentation in the business as well as in the social and sporting worlds. Women in the past have not only en tered many equine prize winners, but also personally exhibited them In the ring. And last year, for the first time in the history of the show, a woman took part in the jumping contests and captured a ribbon The ridi-r was Mrs. Allen I'otts. a noted southern horsewom /) an. She- howedwon- *) derful roolnoss and / S ' Jaines T. Hyde is YJ called "the father * of thenational horse A , show," having con- -N 112 1 reived the idea of X / holding such an ex- 1 bibition in ISS2. its development from NOT ox TnE PR °- Sts almost crude be- GRAM. Sinning in 1883 has been surprising and unceasing, aud now that all the most famous breeds are to have a part in the exhibition it will attract people from every state In the Union. The Sensitive Press Humorist. "It makes a press humorist mad when he sees one of his Jokes attrib uted to some one else." "1 judge so." "And it doesn't seem to please him any better to see one of his rival's jokes attributed to him."—Kansas City Journal His Awful Mistake. Mr. Newrirh l understand the or chestra is in play one <it I (oorknob's compositions tonight. Mrs. Oidstock - Doorknob? Doorknob? Ah. I suppost you mean Handel! Chicago .News. ' RASMUSSEN LIVED WITH ESKIMOS Danish Defender of Dr, Cook Authority on Frozen Morth. IS AUTHOR OF A POUR BOOK. Ha Went to Greenland With Danish Expedition In 1902 to Study Racial History of the Greenlanders, Etc. Returned There In 1906, to Be Gon» Six Years. Knud Kasmussen, the Danish ex plorer, now at Julianehaab, Greenland, who defends Dr. Frederick A. Cook's claim as to the discovery of the north pole, was a member of the Danish lit erary expedition which left Copenha gen early in 1902 and spent two years among the Eskimos iu Greenland. Rasmussen's assertions of his belief iu Cook's story after talks with Eski mos familiar with Cook's exploits have materially strengthened the Brooklyn doctor's position in various circles which have shown an inclination to doubt parts of his narrative. Rasmussen spent the two years he was in Greenland on the stated occa sion i:i studying the racial history of the Eskimos. The other principals of the expedi tion were L. Mylius Erlchsen and Count Ilarald Moltke. Organized orig inally as a private enterprise, the ob jects were deemed of such importance from a geographical and ethnological point of view that the total expenses of the expedition were assumed by the Danish kingdom. Went to Cape York. The expedition arrived in Greenland in June, 1002. it left Upernavik for Cape York iu March. 1903, spending nearly ten months among the polar Es kimos, ami left for the south again in June, 1904, breaking its journey by a stop in west Greenland and returning to Copenhagen in September, 1904. In August, 19013, Rasmussen left Co penhagen for Greenland, intending to be gone six years to complete his re searches into the ethnological and so cial habits of the Eskimos, the tour, as originally planned, to cover the entire north coast of North America as far as Alaska. For lliis work Rasmussen is peculiar ly fitted, as lie is part Eskimo himself. 11 is mother is a south Greenland Eski mo. His father is Christian Rasmus sen, a Danish clergyman, who spent over twenty years as a missionary among the natives of southwest Green land. At the age of fourteen Knud Rasmussen went to Denmark with his parents and entered the University of Copenhagen, from which lie was grad uated with honors. Three Branches of Race. The results of his early association with his kinsfolk, supplemented by his more mature studies of KJU'_' aud 11)03, were published in Danish under the titles of"The New People" aud "The Lash of the North Wind." They were translated into English in 1908 and published under the title of "People of the Polar North." The book deals with three distinct Eskimo branches which i umprise the population of Greenland -first. the west Greenlanders, being I lie civilized and Christianized inhab itants of west and southwest tireen !;ind: second, she east lireenlanders, l.elng the former iuhabilants of the • ■utbe&st coast, now practically de i-rted except in one area on the east ■ •oast known as Angmagssllk, and. third, the polar Eskimos. 111 this record of the lives of the most northerly dwelling people of the world, comprising the nomadic groups be tween the degrees of 7t> and 78 uorth latitude, are embraced their legends, religious beliefs and fables—everything, in fact, counected with their folklore and their present views of life, in the preface to his book Rasmussen says: "When I was a child I used often to hear an old CJreenlandic woman tell how. far away north, at the end of the world, there lived a people who dressed in bearskins aud ate raw tlesli. Their country was always shut in by ice. and the daylight never reached over the tops of their high fjelds (mountains). Whoever wished togo there must travel with the south wind, right up to the lord of the wild north gales. Kven before 1 knew what traveling meant I determined (hat oue day I would go and find these people." "The Eskimos," he says, "are much like animals. The hive their wives, but when I lie fancy takes them they maltreat tlieni in a manner that we civilized men would consider bru tal 'But.' say the Eskimos, 'lf atfei ti''U Is to tie kept alive the women m'wt feel occasionally that the man is trong.'" Even Ihe presence of a civilized man v'"> had Eskimo blood In his veins fir >used the suspicions of the south east <.reenlamlers. All sorts of m i"ors. he says, were circulated about Ills coming, "chiefly hawked about by old Christian women whose tongues re quired a little exercise." To win their confidence Rasmussen adopted the policy of asking no questions for a numher of days. "Thus." he says."l succeeded at length In the confidence of the people, and during my life with theoi they gave me descriptions of the events flint hnd been mainly responsible for their determination to migrate to ttie west oonst and their resultant conver sion to Christianity." Life's a reckoning we cannot make twice over. You cannot mend a wrong subtraction by doing your addition right.—George Eliot. The Aeroplane Dance. Born of the craze for aviation, the "aeronette" dance, which. It is said, will be popular this season, is the lat est thing in dames. During the dance those taking part in it Imitate the roll ing of the aeroplane, the rising of the aeroplane from the ground. Us flight and its landing. It is said that the dancing masters have glveu it their approval and that It will be popular during thi' coining season. THE NEW STYLES. Some Po'nts For Both Sexes on What Is Being Worn. Maybe that awful racket you heard the other day aml failed to locate was one of the new fall suits for men. At any rate, they tare loud enough al inost to awaken a tramp asleep on a park bench. They come in plaid, which the tailors say is going to be real fashionable J. this winter. Gray Is the right shade, but If you want to AN EXTRA LOUD make a noise like a ONE - sawmill there are some red and green plaids that will help you togo as far as you like. New material for waistcoats are gorgeous iu the extreme, some of the designs even showing flowers. It will be sad news to Algy ana Chol ly to learn that padded shoulders are out of style this year, but such is the case. The collar and shoulders of the new coats, how ever, will be fash toned so that the | wearer dues not /\J/\ i look as if he'd es- 112 I r I \ j caprd from a clr- (• J/ I cus menagerie. The 112 ! sleeve is to be nar- /yJ | rower at the hot ton). The coat will I , , . lIOW AL.OY L.OOKS I be long waisted, NOW ; with a swing at ; the hips. It will measure about thirty ; inches for a man of average height— j say live feet eight. The coat collar will be broad and the ' lapels long. Of course, therefore, they \ will be narrow. From the bottom of i the collar to the bottom of the lapel I must be exactly four inches. As for the fair sex, nothing very | radical has been adopted yet iu new styles. There are neither hoop skirts nor panels, although there were mys terious whispers about the latter ear lier in the season. Itut it was only a scare. The sheath skirt has disappear ed along with the tliin, clinging ma terials. Rough, thick goods for the ! street and short, rather full skirts are | the thing. In using the term full skirts j we must qualify. They are full only about the bottom. But they are pulled ... in as tight as pos IL sible about the hips. This is ac \ complished in vari -0 ,j ing on the dress- If 'Jr maker and also on V V j the dress itself. |/j Sleeves are still ill \<J- ' ons: ' ""d they are • ~ ==== lJ = J ; -_jl_ "I'" light fitting, but not so plain ONE OF THE NEW AML , 10L A!I IOQUES. hist season. As to \ hats, an attempt is being made to bring I in tlie small affairs, but the milliners I also have plenty of large shapes in stock, waiting to see which Dame 1 Fashion will choose. You're in style j just now whether you wear a toque | no larger than a hickory nut or one I of those big Gainsboroughs. the Organ Blower. "The organ blower is passing. He will soon be. like the armorer, extinct." j said a musician. "It's a pity. He was a quaint type. I "Most of my blowers were simple ' minded old chaps who tirmly believed they must suit their blowing to the ; music. In soft, light passages they j blew soft and light. When the crescen dos thundered forth they worked fran- I tically. blowing with all their might I and main. ! "Often a facetious reporter on the J local paper would refer to 'the excel lent blowing of the organist's assist ant, Mr. Bellows.' Then the blower in j his vanity would develop all the affoe ! tations of a Paderewski or a Sousa. Now he'd blow delicately, a dream ' smile on his lips, his eyes half closed The music would change to a march ; and he'd stamp his foot in time, while up. down, up. down, the old bellows, in j time also, would be jerked. At a cli max his face would redden, he'd bend to his task and h'ow so fast and furi ous that the or n would nearly burst." —Philadelphia Bulletin. —v Say Now, Will Try These Foods Shot from Guns'' Order one package, either Puffed And their folks have heen glad. Wheat o[ 1 uifed Rice. 1 hen you p or no ot h er cerea l foods can com \vi now tiew io e story. pare with them. None are even half Hear what your folks say when they go rQoc j taste the gigantic grains. See if they ask for more. The result is this: Those folks last Do this tomorrow —order the pack- month served seventeen million dishes age now. Do it to learn just how of these delightful foods, much you are missing. £ an y OU doubt that you are going r j , / : , , , to like them as well as the rest of the Hosts of housewives have already , ? done this, and been glad that we told wor c them to do it. One package will tell. Puffed Wheat—loc Puffed Rice—lsc These are the foods invented by Prof. An- Then the guns are unsealed, and the steam derson, and this is his curious process: explodes. Instantly every starch granule is The whole wheat or rice kernels arc put into blasted into a myriad particles. sealed guns. Then the guns are revolved for The kcrncls of K rain arc «panded eight , . , , times. Yet the coats are unbroken, the shapes sixty minutes in a heat of 550 degrees. , ... , ... r , arc unaltered. We have simply the magnified That fierce heat turns the moisture in the grain, grain to steam, and the pressure becomes tre- One package will tell you why people de mendous. light in them. Order it now. Made only by The Quaker Oats Company 19 , NEW SOURCE OF RADIUM. English Engineer Says There Is One In Portugal. • ; That tlit* recent discovery of rich ore ! deposits iti Portugal will make possible ( for the lirsi time the manufacture of j radium iu quantities sufficiently large for commercial use is the assertion of Hurry March, a young English civil engineer, who has eouie to this coun- I try in the hope of interesting Anieri- ; can scientists and American capital in the Portuguese mines, lie has brought with hiin a boxful of ore. specimens of which have been examined by miner alogists here and abroad, who declare that the mineral contains large quanti ties of crystalline uranite. or what is technically known as the sub stance from wV'*h rauium is ex tracted. Professor James F. Kemp, head of the department of geology at Colum bia. and other r tubers of the stafT have seen some of uie specimens. According to one analyst, Allen F. Wnldeti of the chemical department of Oxford university, who subjected the mineral to the usual scientific tests for | radium, it is estimated that the ore J contains nearly "20 milligrams of ra- I dium to the ton. a new record. The ore itself he found to be made up <>l quartz thickly crusted with yellow crystals. These crystals when exniii j lued proved to contain uranium, cai ; cium and phosphoric acid, and there was no trace of other metallic or acid Impurities. Up to the time of the discovery of the Portuguese deposits the chief ore from which radium was extracted was pitchblende, considerable quantities of which are found iu Bohemia anil in Cornwall, England. The amount of ra dium producing material in this sub stance. according to Mr. March. Is about (> per cent, whereas the ore ob tained from Portugal has been tested and found to contain 33 per cent of oxide of uranium. E. B. Barboni. a French chemist, after subjecting the new mineral to careful tests, declared that by reason of the ease with which it could be treated it was in his opin ion "at iea=t three times superior as raw material to pitchblende." COUNTRY BANKS THE BEST. Young Men Find There Greatest Op portunities, Says Chicagoan. "Young man.go to the country if you want a thorough groundwork for a financial career. Shun the big city bank, where you are liable to get into a departmental groove and go no high er." Joseph T. Talbert. president of the Chicago Clearing House association and first vice president of the Com mercial National bank of Chicago, was talking of the reasons as he saw tbem for his being called to New York as a vice president of the National City bank when he gave this advice to J young men, Mr. Talbert attributes his success to - the fact that he was trained in a coun try institution and says that lie "rub bed elbows with the farmer." "In the bauking business, as well as in any line of trade, the man who knows his customers, their habits and peculiarities, is going to got the best results. I have never regretted that my start was in the country bank. It was a good school, and no young man who is in enrnest will have cause for regret if he takes a course in it." Selling by Candle Time. "It did me good." observed a young girl who had just returned from Eng land. "to see in real life one of the old customs my grandfather used to tell me about—the burning of the time candle at an auction. In Berkshire the old custom still prevails, and when an auction is in progress and an article Is put up for bidding a short length of candle Is lighted as the bidding begins. The shouting continues until the can dle burns out. and the last bid before it flickers Its last is the one that takes the cake. I don't know but what it has an advantage over the 'Coing, go ing, gone:' variety, but It is fearfully slow and un-American."—Exchange. Necessary. "Pear me." exclaimed the lady, "that's twice you have dropped that cnt glass pitcher within five minutes!" "I know It. ma'am." replied the maid, "but it didn't break the first time." RECALL OF CRANE. Controversy Between Secretary Knox ! and the Now Minister to China. The recall of Charles It. Crane just as he was about (to take the steamer for China, where he was to act as United States ambassador, and his re moval from that office by Secretary Knox have caused a diplomatic sensa tion in Washington such as has not been seen %ince the Sackviile-West af fair in Cleveland's administration. One of Mr. Knox's principal reasons for de manding Crane's resignation was that the latter had been indiscreet in ob taining information from the state de partment, which he surmised was to be used as a basis of a protest against ! Japan's domination of Manchuria, and gave it to a Chicago newspaper. It is also said there were many other rea sons for Mr. Knox's action. Much incensed by this statement of Mr. Knox and refusing to accept the CBAItLKB B. CitA.NK. action of the department in silence, Mr. Crane made a direct appeal to President Taft. And, not to be out done iu that direction, the secretary of state wired a full statement of the eu | tire case to the president, who agreed | with Knox that Crane should resign. Mr. Crane, although a Democrat, vot ed for President Taft. He has travel ed extensively and spent some time in ; China, speaking tlie language of that ; country fluently. He is fifty-one years ' old and a native of Chicago and in order to accept the post of ambassad r : to China was compelled to resign tne directorship of the Crane company of Chicago, which employs li.OOO people. Malay Race Not Dying Out. There i> a very common idea that till* Malay is a race that is dying out killed in its own euuntry by the enter prise of Chinese. Tamils, Javanese (who, however, are kinsmen of the Ma lays! and Europeans. To those who come out east expecting to thai a few miserable remains of a once powerful race, whose probable fate is that of the Australian aborigines, it comes as a revelation to timl a sturdy, independ ent and courteous race, whose lan guage runs from Suez to Australia and who. so far from dying out, are year ly becoming wore numerous,—Java Times. A bad ?Jart. "Ever try This keep a siniling prop ositionV" "Tried' it once, but with poor suc cess. Unfortunately 1 started the ex periment on a day that the boss felt grouchy."—Louisville Courier-Journal. On the Spot. "Yes." said the Hillville story teller, "the cyclone carried his house into the next county and set It down there as comfortable as you please, and as he stepped out of the door to survey the country the man who owned the land notified him of suit for trespass and the tax collector handed him a bill for taxes."—Atlanta Constitution. Life of the Red Dser. According to an old tlaelie legend, a red deer might live for -10 years, an eagle for 030 and an oak tree for near ly nineteen centuries. Nowadays, however, hundred year-old deer would be difficult to find. From twenty-Ore to thirty-five years apparently may he about the range of their existence. YALE'S FARSEEING Preparations For Her Teams Laid Down Years Ahead. SAVAGE'S CASE AN INSTANCE. Princeton Graduate's Views on Need For Basketball Players on Big Elev ens—Changes Made In the Forward Pass Play. Many who have seen the really ex cellent work of Savage as substitute end this year on the Vale varsity foot ball team have been surprised by the j news that he has now been shifted to fullback on the scrub. Those fa miliar with the Yale system, that habit of discounting the future which has j boon the source of so much of the Blue's football strength, see in this change but another manifestation of Yale forethought. Ted Coy graduates nest June, and at present there is tio man In the squad capable of taking his place as a kicker. Savage has shown no little ability in this direction, and. moreover, he has the build, weight and agility of the man qualified for tile basic position in a New Haven back field. lie will therefore have all j the training, drill and hard work this season which a coaching system less | furseeing or prophetic or whatever you t will than Yale's would have passed by. "Favorite Year After Year." | It is this sort of thing that makes Yale the favorite year after year—this i reliability of football instinct aud fore -1 sight. On the train which brought i many Princeton admirers back to New ! York after the Lafayette game was j one group in particular composed of j old players of several different insti tutions. Almost without exception they i had played against Blue elevens. One : of them practically summed up the an -1 nual situation nt New Haven with the 1 remark, "You show me n list of all j the players in this year's Yale squad, regulars, substitutes and scrubs, and then toil me which men graduate this I June, and I'll pick Yale's next year's i team for you." And x there was wise 1 ' § 1V '' A .- ' ■ J TEIi COY nodding of heads and many who said, "You're right." As one veteran of the gridiron remarked. "How can you ex pect regularly to beat such a system unless against it has been laid the backfire of similar preparation?" Value of Basketball Players. It was In this same group that a Princeton graduate, a man who earn ed his -P" every year of his under graduate life, said: "What we need are some good basketball players on our team. The more I see of the new game so much the more am I con vinced that it takes a man who has been trained by basketball to stand against oncoming body checkers to catch the ousiile kick and the forward pass in a badly broken held. Von fel lows who've played the old game, just ge4 out and see if it wouldn't worry you considers lily to poise yourself to receive a low thrown ball with a half dozen taeklers coming down the Held hard on you. It is the basketball man who lias learned not to duck or drop to the ground with the ball in such an emergency who makes the best user of the forward pass aud the onside kick, both to get them off and to re ceive them." The forward pass is after its four seasons' use become very much a ilif ferent play tlmn it was nt tirst. For merly high heaves were the rule, and the man who caught them brought his arms around the ball just as he did for punts. That has been changed. The forward pass and the onside kick of 1900—yes. and of 1008 to a con siderable extent oti Franklin field, where Pennsylvania played the most open game of the year—shows a ball moving straight, low and hard, revolv ing on its long axis if it turns in the nir at all. and caught in the receiver's hands like a baseball. The arms are not brought over it until the man who catches it is turning his body for bis ruu. Then, of course, he stows it away in the pocket of his crooked elbow. Women's Bureau at Washington. A federal bureau inside the depart ment of commerce and labor at Wash ington. presided over by a woman, to collect data pertaining to women in industrial pursuits was advocated bv resolutions adopted at the convention in Chicago of the National Women's Trades Union league the other day. Man's chief wisdom consists in know ing his follies.—Rochefoucauld. In the Regular Establishment. "Yes." said the fresh youug lieuten ant, "the aruiy has fallen on evil days." The sophisticated captain merely gasped. "Why," the F. Y. L. went on, "look at the names on this roll—Private En trance. Corporal Punishment. Major Dotno. General Housework. What kind of a"— But just then the S. C. shied a—a— well, a ginger ale bottle at the fleeing offender.—Lippiucott's. THE FUTtJf.r. JANITOR. Life For Flat Dwcllsra Some Day Will De One Grand, Sweet Song. Will tin- jr. nit of of the future read funny stories to lis when we feel blue and lend us money wlieu we are broke? Will he come up and give the children their regular Satur (lay night bath when we are too '•J' lazy to attend to the matter? Will he give us tips on Christmas and New Btei v tvi 'f A Year's and keep a ' record of our birt ti er <la . v s? It may not * be quite as good as HE wit.i. nfc l octt- that, but just the TEOUS ON ALL oc- same the janitor of CAHJONS. F U TU RE J S TO BE a tine sort of chap if the new school that is to train him can briug it about. The course of instruction—the first in this branch which has ever been given in America—will be part of the cur riculum of the new Italian evening in dustrial school of the Children's Aid society. New York city. Appreciating the fact that the janitor jokes of the comic papers are founded upon facts which are by no means matter for laughter among fiat dwellers, the educating a ne \\ type of janitor and I believe that in so np* v -- doing they will 1,,. i oeneiitiug society. xjj u \.) \ The course wiii rvT/J' include instruction in plumbing.so that the pupil who re ceives the sheep- ASJ> v , . , Tll[l skin of a "keeper cnii.unj:\ I I:I:J. of the door" may AT IIOMK. be able to plug a leak, pack a faucet or thaw a pipe; in painting and glaz ing, in the care of furnaces, engines and boilers, in running elevators and keeping them in repair aud in all that relates to the sanitation of fiats and apartment houses, including the proper disposition of garbage and other house hold refuse. One of the most im portant features of the curriculum will be the drill in courteous treatment of tenants. For example, an impassioned request for more heat on a zero tuorn lag or for hot wa- BSu , ter at midnight will wy jV JSm niet by the soft ■ Wvdkjßjafl answer which turn l-tll away wrath ' -ven if the re r sources of the j "° t ) '' or " u.-/it|j ll schoo'i authorities I illr il! behalf Of their Ml pupils «ill not U (j cease with their AXB I;E TI 1 O\ ALL graduation. An etu- THT: THADES AXX> ployment bureau risoKESbio.Ns. help graduattys to secure paying positions, and the co operation of business men in the plac ing of boys and girls with good records Is assured. THOSE ESKIMO MURDERERS. Explorer Rasmussen Defends the No torious Egst Greenlanders. Knud Uasmussen. the Danish sci entist. who supports Dr. Cook's claim as to the discovery of the north pole, has written a book on life among the j Eskimos which has established his reputation as an authority. Basmussen tells some weird stories j about the horrible murders practiced ] by these Eskimos in their earlier days, | but in summing up their general char- J acteristics he adds: "I have never in the course of my ! travels lived with more cheerful, more amiable and good humored people than these east Greenlanders. who. had they ! lived in a civilized state, would have paid the penalty of the law for most I horrible murders." 1 And again, speaking of the Eskimos | as a whole, he says: | "There is no people with a history I which, as regards the bitterness of its struggle for existence and the eerinesa ' of its memories, can be compared with | the bost of the Eskimos. Yes, they are | good natured and filled with a desiro I for peace In spite of all. But do not j forget that they are, first and fore i most, men, and men formed by the na j ture surrounding them. The mind of the Eskimo can be quiet and serene, but it pan be savage 4nd remorseless | as the ocean Itself." i I They are never alone that are aecoip i panied by noble thoughts.- Sir Philip 1 Sidney. In Stock. I Joker—Do you keep smokeless tobac j ro? Clerk—Sure, we do. Joker—What | kind is it? Clerk—Chewing tobacco, of course.—Cornell Widow. Down on Rival Plants. Wife—John, the hens have scratched up that eggplant seed you sowed. HuL ! —Darn 'em! Jealousy, 1 suppose.— j Boston Transcript ins HEW! A Rella tol® TO SHOP I »1 • l - Tor all kind of Tin Roofing Spoutlne nnd Csnsrul Job Work. • I * '« Stoves, Heaters. Ranees. Furnaces, eto. PRICES TBB LOWEST! fllllLlTl TDK BEST. 1 JOHN HlXSOtf SO- 11# £, FRONT ST.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers