Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 83, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 April 1910 — INDIANS TO KIIL WOLVES. [ARTICLE]

INDIANS TO KIIL WOLVES.

Hoes are so high that It -4s almost • compliment to call a man one. = Th» telephone 1b thirty-four years •M, Wbt the girl operators are all What a happy world this would be ts all of our pleasant dreams would asms true. The Boston woman who complains that kissing. Is overdone probably preista hers rare. * Coats that button up the back have hooa suggested for mss. Doubtless It Is some woman's idea. Toning a Congressman where to get and off should be regarded as one H*e duties of good citizenship. *Uo women worry more than men 7" aahs a London paper. They do, but the men are always to blame for it, of -Oblige," of all the words In the English language, is said to be die one frequently mis-spelled. And ■Jgihaasdt tee. - ■ —__= Chicago decided on a safe-and-aane Fourth. "'Tf it is accomplished, it will stand out the one white spot in the S6S days. -Chickens may be kept nine months," says Dr. Wiley. Much depends on the character of the neighhorhood one lives in.

John D. Rockefeller drew six millien dollars In old dividends in one toeek recently, considerably more than •was necessary to settle with the grocer •ad the butcher. ~Many years have elapsed since bid Mother Hubbard went to the cupboard to get her poor dog a bone. But, •wing to the high price of meat, history is liktely to repeat itself. A. Chicago man says. the love germ to located at the center of the nervous system. Recently somebody declared the liver to be the seat of affection. There is no end of opinions.

There la In Flushing, N. Y„ a man wfeo baa thirty-two children, and his neighbors report that hjp never makes •ny complaint about ti# cost of living. He to probably kept too busy to have Hme for complaining about anything.

Investigation has shown that the high cost of living is due to the fact that there are not enough farmers in this country. This 4s the penalty the public is compelled to pay for permitting the boys from the farms to enter the cities and become leaders there.

Professor Wheeler, of Yale, fears the United States is sailing straight toward paternalism. Notwithstanding Ihe fears of Professor Wheeler and •there who have for years been warning the people against paternalism this to untry will probably stick to Uncle •am ism for some time to come.

Mr. Wolgast, the new pugilistic champion, is being “flooded” with •ffers from theatrical managers. It is reported that some of the offers carry nlarr provisions ranging from SI,OOO to 12,500 a week. It will be wholly —Hess for anybody to-attempt to concloce us, after this, that there** Is in thio country no widespread appreciation of our home "brand of art. The eqormous demand for India rubber created by the bicycle, and greatly toereaaed by the automobile, has led to % rapidly advanced price. This, In ami. has not *only stimulated the March for new sources of supply, but aas encouraged investigations looking » possible substitutes. At the recent Meeting of the American Association - tor the Advancement of Science a special “rubber division” was organized Mnong the chemists, for the purpose of ffudylng the chemical composition of mbber, and of producing it artificially. It is sometimes mistakenly supposed that primitive races have natarally better eyesight than civilized M»es. That is not exactly true. Natste works morAlowly than that, and to the records of power or acuteness * eyesight some French artillerymen proved to be as well furnished as the ®°*t keen sighted Arabs. Native races aften appear to have keen eyesight toply because they know what to look tor and where to look for it. But as ■•on as reading is introduced to a race toirt sightedness begins to appear with progressive frequency, and some strik--tog imrfancM of this relation to cause h, sf *PP e * r * d “long the tohoal children of Egypt, =- Uptm how small an inpome a ■ma afford to soightbe debated indefinitely, hut the ■or. Wright Gibson, pastor of the Mottoes Bocks. Pennsylvania, Presbyterigto church, has established an empirimol Minimum The present cost of SMmmodltlee. he says, is so high th»t ho does not feel justified in marrying •My moro couple* in his parish Unless the bridegroom can prove that his in* - «ome is at least two thousand dollars • Year. "Poverty leads to divorces," •erlsrss Mr. Gibson, ‘told T doTnot fforpoae to aosist the dirorce.cause.” With the principle involved in this Stagsable income there can be no gaorraL Bat Is not two thousand dollars too high a limit T Perhaps the

Presbyterians of McKees Rocks are above the average iff* their possession of this world's goods, but there must be some people' fn that town who will never have an income of two thousand dollars or even one thousand dollars a ye|r; and shall they be debarred from mm-ylng?

If there is one gift that comes more directly from heaven than any other womanly attribute, it is the instinct for making a home; first in th* inner, finer qualities, the sense of peace and fulness and order that should prevail in every household; next in the framing of these virtues, their harmonious expression in outward and visible signs. For a house may be beautiful, spacious, stately, yet remain but a carven chalice, unfilled by the wine of life. It does not follow that the small house is necessarily invested with this divine quality; here inconvenience may quarrel at every corner with ugliness, redeemed by none of the warming fires of sincerity and good cheer. But of the two problems, it is the easier to solve, because, for some * strange and unaccountable reason, it is given to the elected only to blend with large beauty the charm of comfort, of reminiscent homeliness. A house, a home, should have a rested, lived-in look, the sense of toys played wku and put by, 'the lingering sound of little children’s voices, the glimpse of happy, human, peaceful joys. What wonderful quality is there about a glowing lamp or the cheerful flap of a red tablecloth on a backyard clothesline that can belittle mere beauty into a thing offhr less worth"? The much-abused midVictorian peridd, with all its oversenslbllity and decorum, had, nevertheless, a surer grasp of the fitness of things. Nowadays most rooms have the air of being planned by people who never expected to live in them, and one has seen their pictured furnishings standing in rectangular aloofness, all so completely alike in spirit, that at last the fastidious observer is tempted to parody Kipling’s verses, and demand, “It's art, but is it a home?” •

*l°** Colorado Cattle Men Expect to Put an End to the Past. Tough times for timber wolves are. looming up in the future. The latest scheme for ridding the White River cattle country of these four-legged marauders Is to let the Indian do it. And this appears to be the best notion yet. When it comes to trapping or shooting wolves and locating their dens an Indian knows what a white .man would never find out, the Denver Republican •ays, so how the,plan Is to invite the Utes up from the reservation In the southern part of the State and their cousins from over in Utali and turn them loose to st&rt the wolf massacre in Rio Blanco and Garfield Counties. The Idea originated with Charles T. Limburg of Leadville, a prominent cattleman and banker. He has taken up the matter with the office of the State game and fish commissioners, where the possibilities of his suggestions were recognized at -once. Various schemes have been devised for getting rid of the big gray wolves which slaughter so many yearling steers in the White River country every summer and so many deer in the winter. The wolves of the White River timber country are exceptionally large and fierce. A head of one of them shows them to have heavy, capacious jaws and long, keen teeth which look as if they could snap a dog’s backbone in-wlth. a.Eingle crunch Jl looks as If It were up to the Indies, and It is believed that they will enjoy the outing with great pleasure, particularly since It means getting all the food they want tyhile they are’ away from home, with the chance of bounty money thrown In.