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About The Basin Times (Basin, Mont.) 1894-1896 | View This Issue
The Basin Times (Basin, Mont.), 08 Dec. 1894, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn84036043/1894-12-08/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• c t AMMI The Basin Time BARN TIMMS COMPANY. BASIN, MONTANA. COLONEL HOHENLCSIE -13HILL.NGS- FuEsT starts right out by showing that there may be • great deal in a atme, after all. To RE-EMPLOY a well-worn saying— the boundary dispute between Mexico and Guatemala is to be settled by 1 means even if both s auntries ye to fight to that end. • LONDON has \reformed\ its music halls by making stringent regulations Ile to the character of both performers and frequenters. .In a selfish sense American moralists have kttle reason to rejoice over this mucWheeded re- form. Unless proper arrangements for,temigatien be made at New York this country will be devastated by noisome \Gaiety\ and \Folly\ theatri- cal companies as never before. ' • THE Chinese Six companies, in or- 4:0ring the Celestials not to give evi- dence in suite brought under the Geary law, set themselves above the courts and the statutes of the United States and invite investigation by the federal authorities. Much as that law has been criticised it is now the law, and certainly we are not going to per- mit a foreign combination to nullify one clause in an aot of congress. THAT the students at the North- western university should have to or- ganize to suppress cribbing among themselves at examinations would seem to suggest that President Rogers and his cabinet have failed— to u their disciplinary powers sufficiently. The examination cribber is a con- temptible sneak -thief and should be punished accordingly. He has no rightful place among decent students. THERE is not the slightest doubt that the spread of diphtheria and other deadly contagious diseases is largely due to the Ignorance, thought- lesenese or selfishness of parents. The only way to protect the public is to rigidly quarantine the s .tiouses when Oases are known to ekisb. If the law requires a small red flag to be placed on a house where there is small -pox it ought to require abigger and a red- der flats on the house where there is s diphtheria. Tule statistics presented by the Brit- ish medical association show that it is possible for a steady drinker of spirit- uous liquors to live as long as the old- est of total abstainers. These eases, however, do not prove that abstinence from tobacco and liquor is not con- ducive to longevity. There are per- sons who ROOM never to be injuriously 1 affected by whisky and tobacco, but the rule still holds that for most per- sons abstinence or moderation is a good thing. PITTSBURG olaims7‘ possess the Smartest bill posters in the country. If a hat box is left outside the house the owner is quite likely to find a cigarette beauty, a ballet girl or some new kind of headache cure upon it. But the chap who is regarded as the brightest hustler is the one who covered the carcass of a dead horse, be- fore it was quite cold, with bills an- nouncing a political mass meeting. The sight caught the croxdsana made fun for the spectators. ---- -- THOSE people who have denied . themselves the pleasure of eating grapes during the past season for fear that some grape seed would wander along down the intestinal way until it reached that little cul de sac, called the vermiform appendage an then drop In, are as apprehensive SW was the chronically -well old lady who would never wear any stockings but spiempan new ones, explaining that she might some day have a fit on the street and then how she would look with a hole in her stocking. ' A BRITISH officer, who apparently knows, says that it \would be as rea- sonable to pit bravo Men armed with pitchforks against brave men armed with rifles as to pit, man for man, the Chinese in their present condition against the Japanese. Of all native and colonial teisope.'• said he, t.1 would. next to Ghoorkas, prefer a regiment of Japanese. They are brave, temperate, patient and ener- getic, and at this moment the Chinese, whatever might be done with them. are 200 years behind the times.\ Ws are accustomed to regard the Japanese as little better than half civ- ilised, even thosgh recent 'treaties with the great powers have placed her on equal footing with them. But theme are many ways in which her people are eminently superior to the average American, who might profita- bly copy the example of the Japanese workman, who bethes his whole body once a day,and sometimes twiee. Pub- lic baths are provided on evitry street. which are . fed by a constant cultrent of cold and hot water. The bather plunges in, remains immersed some ten minutes, then comes out and re- oeiven a warm douche of fresh water JOHN 1-117A4MAN of La Croinet, Wits, had a busy day a short time ago. In the morping his horse rari away and smashed up a costly carriage. In the afternoon another runaway bruised him, and in the evening he was shot accidentally. I'ARMPR Swayne of Huntington. Pa., who has unearthed the skeleton of a mastodon on his farm, is watching the a mouths of the scientists water as they angle for his prizs. It is the best crop Farmer Swayne has raised in sev- eral 'mare. A LTFE OF ROMANCE. HAS MISS MARGARET MATHER. THE ACTRESS. FROM THE STREETS TO THE STAGE . 811E ASCENDED. W Brava Strut:tie of a Plucky Little Obi Triumphs sad Sad Thianciat tuisterivaes—seaktne • M- ysore...from a Reereant Husband. Miss Margaret Slather, the actress has at last applied for a divorce from her husband, Emile Haberkorn. The proceedings were enema(' at Chicago the other day. Mrs. Haberkorn ac- cuses her \ of deserting her The story of their married life is a sad one. All of Miss Mather's life has been sad. Although she has been • leading actress for ten- years, she has not accumulated anything to speak of. Her debut in Chicago in 1883, under the management of J. M. Hill, was a signal triumph. She played Juliet to young Alexander Sal- vini's Romeo. The papers raved over her. The theaters was crowded for weeks. It was one of the greatest en- gagements that McVickers theater ever had. A triumphal tour of the country followed. Margaret Slather's Juliet was the popular craze among theater goers from Maine toCalifornia. Soon the gossips asked who was this wonderful Juliet who had made such a sudden hit. The answer inva- riably came that she was a protege of 3. M. Hill. That was all. Her early life was to be kept a secret. So it re- mained until Miss Mather played an engagement at Detroit two years after her debut. There she was recognized by a man in the audience as the girl who had once sold papers In the streets of that city. He gave the story to the local papers and Miss Mather's identity was laid bare. Her real name was Finlayson. She was born in Canada and until she was fourteen years old lived east of Wind- sor. Her mother's name had been blather before she married John Fin- layson. Finlayson had been a wid- ower. He was fond of C.e flowing bcwl. Had it not been for this fact he might have been a man of promi- nence. Possessed of education and tal- ents one would wonder why he followed the humble occupation of a carpenter. That is the trade he worked at—when he worked. The family removed to Detroit when -Margaret was - 14. She still wore short dresses. She was as smart as a whip, and fond of home comforts. Her father's convivial hat its resulted in her resorting to paper selling, that the larder might be kept well supplied. A year or so as a news girl satisfied her that her talents could no longer be directed in that direction. A philanthropist offered to send her school. His offer was accepted and shortly afterwards she was admitted to a school in New York city. Her fancy turned toward the stage, and soon her reading attracted the attention of J. M. Hill, who placed her in a school for act- ing at his own expense. Two years later she made her debut in Chicago. Haberkorn was J. M. Hill's orchestra, leader. It was while acting in that ca- pacity that Miss Mather first met him. For some years they smiled at each other over the glare of the too - Hetes That was in Buffalo, Jan. 3,1890. They went to live together in a home pur- chased by Miss Mather's savings. The latter's mother soon put in an appear- ance and smiled down as s ergrmanent fixture in the new home. The motto \God Bless Our Borne' was duly placed in position, but it seems to have availed naught. The first sight that Haberkorn caught of Mrs. Find . layson he seemed to feel that all was op. Mrs. Findlayson formed about the same conclusisn when she first gazed on her son in-law. She was nobody's fool and don't you forget it. It didn't take her long io perceive that liaberkorn was not producing his lawful quota of the *herewith that went to support the house. To use a vulgar expression she, In due time unceremoniously \called Dim aown.\ He packed up his traps and left the house. Husband and wife have not met since. In her appli- cation Mrs. Haberknorn makes a curious request It is to the effect that a de- cree shall not prohibit her from re- marrying the defendant. The latter Is not , leader of • Pittsburg orchestra. The wine product of California last year was equal to more than a quart for every man, woman and child In the United States. The great Yuma desert was former- ly a milt sea. Sea shells and oysters fourteen inches in diameter have fre- quently been found at from ten inches to two feet in the sand in various parts of that desert. A correspondent who has been vis- iting the St. Bernard hospice, says that the femme; breed of St. Bernard dogs hats.become 'Utmost useless for purposes for which they were former- ly used, their sense of smell having become greatly weakened from dote,. loration through too much interbfried- lug. Nearte that Ne•er Brew Weary. Oliver H. Steil and Mary B. Long were married at Valparaiso, Ind., the other day. The groom and bride are aged respectively eel and 51 years„ while the officiating Justin!' is upward of 70 years. The oontracting parties were levera over thirty years ago, hat I her drifted apart, both married, and a quarter of a century having elapsed, they pledged fidelity to one anntball for life Roth had traveled in doable harneee, and each had mourned at tki pier of the dead, but the old love ai last suffieed to consummate a lore in sectond marriage SAME OLD STORY. The Names tia•.• truly Been elisinged I. I.I.sus's sake. Lima, Ohio, was treated to a seuss - I street scene the other day. It seems that Fred Schaibenzuber's tongue got him into trouble. Fred is a young fellow and came to Lima from Dayton several months ago He ii. a pharinaceutieal student. and since his advent to Lima has been employed at Gilbert's drug store, lie boards on East Wayne Street, and when he was coming from supper was given a very unpleasant surprise. reddie was suddenly confronted by three young ladies and a young man. Two of the young ladies were Misses Anna and Julia MeGrievy: The former young lady acted as spokeswoman, and called Frederick down in the moat Ap- proved style for certain stories which she claimed were fa s and had been circulated about herself and sister Julia. As Miss McGrievy read him her mind she became more and more agitated, and, drawing a whip from the folds of her dress, she plied it vigorously upon Freddy, and he took back everything he had said. After convincing herself that Freddy had been taught a lesson that would last him a lifetime he was allowed to proceed on his way unmo- lested, and the party withdrew. POISONED HER HUSBAND. She Played for High Game and .Will Probably Got a Gallows. West Winsted, Conn., has been con- siderably excited lately over a poison- ing ease which promises& hanging bee for that place in the near future. It seems that on Feb. 19 last Edward Mannering died suddenly and was buried in the usual manner. Nothing was thought of the matter until some days later when it/ became known that for a year or more previous Mrs. Man- - nering had been in the habit of meet- ing a mysterious lover at a local ho- tel. The lover proved to be Will- iam Whitm a n. a m\. MINNZIRING * wealthy young man of illyamford. Good detective work resulted in their ar- rest on the charge et' aiurder. Strychine bought by his a ife was traced to a drugstore. Two pigs owned by Mannering died the same day, having eaten swill iato which the dregs of the fatal cup of coffee had been poured. —An analysis of the stomach by State Chemist Smith of New Haven, found the poison the same in all. Mrs. Mannering. who has been &rented. is siek and will remain in her keeper's charge until well enough ts be tried for murder. Whitman is under arrest for complicity only. It is believed that he knows very little about the ease, but the feet that he held clandestine meetings with Mrs.- NI:Armoring ma, go hard with him. Jane Mannering is 23 years old and a local beauty of con- siderable notoriety. The evidence against her is so straight that at is be- ' ved she will not escape Mannering had his life heavily insured. LOVE DID IT. A Girl Shouldn't Trifle With This Order of Benign. J. C. Davis, a grocer, was in love with Miss Mary. the 17 -year -old daughter of M. A. Miller, a prominent real estate dealer of Salem. Mo. The young lady did not favorably regard the suit be- cause her parents objected on account of her youth. A few month, ago Davis went to Troy. Mo., and while avay he corresponded with Miss Miller. Ile made her a proposal of marriage. wh\ch she rejected. A week ago he returned and again sent his proposal to the young lady without success. One day last week he called at the Miller resi- dence to see Miss Mary and teas told by her mother that she was out visit- ing. Ile then went away. About 9 o'clock in the even- ing' he met Miss Jc. DAVIS. Milleron the street. Ile again proposed marriage and was again refused. Davis then drew a re- volver and fired two shots at the young lady. each taking effect in the left breast and causing instant 'death. After his vi,aini fell Davis turned the weapon on him/wit and blew his brains out Claim on the Dead. A raise in which a young lady profited ai a peculiar manner by the death of her seducer developed at Columbus. Ohio, last a eek. Last October Benja- min MMUS a railway brakeman, was run over and killed in the yards near the Union Depot. that city. his re- mains lay unclaimed at the morgue for A week, and then were buried at the expense of the county. Burns left a policy for 11.000 insurance on his life. A few days after the burial his father, residing at Ironton, Ohio, turned up and claimed the insurance. A day later Miss Minnie Mounett, a young lady residing in Clinton Town- ship, appeared in court with a judg- ment rendered in her favor some years previous in • paternity proceeding ageinst the deceased. She demanded payment out of the insurance on Burns' life and presented evidence to h s that he bad failed to settle the judg- ment. Iler claim. with interest, amounted to $700. The court allowed her claim in full OFF ON AN Mita A THRILLING ACCOUNT OF AN ESCAPE FROM SING SING. THE FAMOUS IliMMANI OW Ills MR - The Darla; Plot et a Gang ef Deaner ate Illea—Laegbing at Their Pure.- ere—The Tettage et a Gen•let from Citarieetee. HE MOST SEN- national escape from prison ever attempted in this county occurred at Sing Sing in 1876. The con- victs who were \in it\ envolved a scheme of no less magnitude than the stealing of locomotive on the New York Cen- tral railroad. The story is a thrilling one. A large gang of convicts were at work in the north quarry just across the entrance of the more northerly of the two short tunnels 1,pposite the pri- son. \Flie keepers were unsuspicious of any trouble. A freight train came dewn the road and stopped to shift cars in the cut just before entering the tunnel. The locomotive was at the entrance to the tunnel when four of the north quarry gang Oeliteveo WITH A HAIL OF LEAD. broke away. They were all long-term men and desperate characters. They ran for the top of the tunnel, and be- fore the keepers could comprehend their designs they leaped upon the tender of the engine. It took but a moment to knock over the engineer ,and fireman with sticks of wood from the tender, and then, these men, mad- dened by the prospect of gaining their liberty, pulled the pin out that coupled the t engine to the train, opened the throttle and sped into the tnnneL This break for liberty aid not consume any more time than has been con- sumed in the telling of it The alarm had been given, however, by the firing of a pistol. and a dozen armed men I stood ready for the engine when it emerged from the first tunnel. Such was its speed, however, that not a shot was fired before It plunged into the second tunnel. As it emerged from this it was greeted with a hail of lead, but the convicts had huddled behind the ten- der, and after a volley they stood up in plain view, waved their handl; sportive- ly, and laughed at the keepers they had foiled A moment later the en- gine, which was groaning under a full head of steam, had carried its desperate drivers out, of sight, leaving nothing behind them but a cloud of dust and smoke. It is needless to say that the Sing Sing authorities stood aghast. They soon recovered themselves suf- ficiently to send a dispatch to Super- intendent Tousey of the New York Central roadand be immediately wired to Tarrytown to have the river switch opened on the down track. This would have thrown the engine and the con- victs into the Iludcon. but luck for the time being at least was with the escayfing men. The cylinder head blew out just before reaching Tarry- town and the engine came to a dead stand, and the convicts took to the w arida and escaped, but before six months had gone by all of these men were in Sing Sing again_ It doesn't seem possible that con- victs can successfully stork what is known is the dumaiy game, but it has been done a number of times One of the latest occurred at the State prison at Charleston, Mass On the night of Jan. Sus 11491, Henry Garfield made up The., ladies of Dresden have been holding a riding tournament, the honor\' of the joust being won a young English girl. Mille Theresa Brook's. whom- spirited riding won show- ers of flowers and laurel leaves. Her final exploit was the driving of a pair of horses tandem while riding her - own horse at full speed. A quadrille was danced very gracefully and the time marked by ringing of hells to the music In the Wisconsin ifessole . of Represen- tative; on a recent occamiori the morn- ing prayer was made ho - 'ter Mrs. Bartlett. a minister of the Uni- versalist faith. It is said that the prayer was the most thoughtful and appropriate of any delivered fibr- Ing the session and was listened to with reverence rather than impatience, even to the amen. TUNNELED minium, INTO TAW STORE BOOM. a dummy in his cell by means of a blenket and some straw taken from his mattress, the straw being •rry cleverly used to imitate a man's hair, and the endive work brine ino neatly done that a veteran watchman, acene tossed to the tricks of cocoa -us did tittli notice the deception when he flashed his lantana Into the enl an Ids regular round. The arrangement of the dummy, ho' ver, was only a small part of the work of rec./6pr which this man ha , 0 perform. Locks and bolt i and Oh walls, and many of them, were still between him and liberty. Gar- field is said to have been an expert in the use of tools, and having some, he cut his way out of the cell by makins a hole in the wall above his cell door, which admitted him into what was known ae the attic. Ile concealed all evidence of his work as it proceeded by whitening a piece of pasteboard and placing it over the aperture which he had made and concealing the bricks under his bed. When Garfield had crawled through the narrow opening over the door of the cell, and thence up into the attic, he went through a ventilator and lowered him./ self to the store room with a rope made of a blanket. In this room he found a suit of clothes intended for a convict whose term would aeon ex- pire, anti he quickly exchanged his prison garb for these and then climbed up to a ,ransom and let him- self down -with a rope found in the store room, and with this last per- formance he reached the prison yard. Up to this time, strange to say, no one had observed his movements, but now was the critical period of the adven- ture. In the darkness Garfield saw the oire of a man ahead of him. It was e of the guards. This guard had een recently appointed, and he made the mistake of supposing that Garfield was a fellow guard approach- ing and did not discover his error the escaping convict had dropped outside the walls, disappeared in the darkness, making good his escape. TO LESSEN PROFANITY. The United States Uosornment Is Propie Entine Boneless shad. D. E. Crawford of the United States Fish commission recently said: \We have little doubt now that before two more years we shall have evolve what the seaboard public has been clamor- ing for so many years—the boneless shad. Of course I don't mean a shad that is actually boneless, but one that will be to all intents and purposes as boneless as the flounders of this coun- try or the sole of England. \This will have been accomplished by the cross breeding of theahad, the flounder and a peculiar edible jelly fish which is a staple food among the sea coast natives of Japan. The com- mission had much difficulty in securing a supply of these jellyfishes in a healthy, living conditiou, but at last man ed to bring about 1,100 of them to San Fraillaisco and thence to Chesa- peake bay hatchery in tank cars. They have thrived amazingly, and our ex- periments, while at first rather dis- couraging, now leave but little doubt of turning out successful. \At first the crossing resulted in the production of a lot of jelly fishes with an elaborate outfit of bones, which was just what we didn't want, but time and study showed us our mistakes, and now we have a few hundred half- grown shad with less than 18 per cent as many bones as the ordinary sort. Yes, as you say, science is a remarkable thing.\ A SEATTLE TRAGEDY. A Desperate Lower Commits murder and then Suicide. Seattle, Wash., was startled with a terrible tragedy last week, when Charles Rogers Moulton shot and killed Mrs. M. S. Story at 416 Marion street and then shot himself dead. Mrs. Story was the daughter of a clergyman in Windsor, Ontario, and was a vocal music teacher in Seattle. She had re- turned from the theater only a few moments before being killed. Moulton was 28 years old, a real estate dealer, and from San Fran- cisco two s tets. Ile had constant- ly offered Mrs. Story attentions. which she alight- ed. and when he MR& STORY. asked her toPtnarry him she positively refused. A few dayg before the tragedy he threatened to shoot her if she did not marry him She returned from the theater alone at II o'clock. Moulton was concealed in her room fwaiting her return. lie then shot hr in the left temple and fired the pistol into his own month. Both died instantly. Saw the Steen Go Round “There is a little boy at my place,\ said the thin young man, shaking the pepper over his eggs; \a 5 -year -old that we (*ailed Johnny. Johnny had been told that the moon goes round the earth, and the other night he was out making astronomical ob- servation's Pretty noon the little fel- low came running In and said: \Oh. Mamma, I saw the moon going 'round the world.' \'Did you, dear?' \ 'Yes. I Raw it run up peat two clouds. ;it ' d which way was Arcane' 'It WKS going down Thirteenth street.'\ Incomes le Tenotia. Out of a population of 30,000,000 in Prussia only 2. 4:14,Raft persons possess an income of over 900 ruarka a year, which is equal to about $223. This fact is shown by the first year:a-emelt of the new income tax In Prussia. Two million one hundred and eighteen thoseand nine hundred and sixty-nine pay income tax on the lowest scale— that itt, on incomes of between it io and 11,000 marks Only 10,695 persons have Incomes of ove. 30,000 marks, or about FLOM a year. The highest income de- clared is lt.760,000 marks, and from the locality where it was registehed the person is supposed to be Krupp. the 'rainmaker of Essen Ho Had Hip Disease w ag treated at the Children's Hoepttql in Boston, and when lie came home hal John Bogle SEVEN RUNNING SORES on hie leg. Could not step. We have bees giving him Hood's Sarsaparilla a year, and he can walk, run and play as lively as any boy. He has no sores and is the PICTURE OF HEALTH. JOHN C. BOYLE, Ware, Maas. Remember. liood'ssrtiv& Cures Flood's Pills do not purge, pain or gripe. The Solo.. The man with a husky voice is never sanguine. He is a pessimist, and gazes with unexpected eyes at the progress of events. Quick, sharply defined tones denote the energetic man, the originator of projects. They characterize the \man of the world,\ the man of action, not of thought. The slow and hesitating speaker is rarely quick in action. His mental processes are tardy, though the pro- ducts may be of permanent value. Indecision is his oilier defect, anti he is never guilty of energetic) resolve. The man of great intellect and good heart has usually a rich and pleasing voice. In ordinacy conversation it is low toned, serene and distinct. la the heat of friendly debate it rolls forth in loud but harmonious vibra- tions. An Arch of Gold ('oins. A novelty in the way of triumphal arches was seen when the governor general of India visited Rangoon not long back. One structure, very hand- somely decorated to begin with, was still further enriched by being covered with gold moliure and real sovereigns —valuable coins in India—worth over $50,000, each mohur being equal to fifteen rupees. The coins were stuck to the red cloth with a glue that had been specially 'prepared for the pur- pose, and was no doubt sufficiently strong to keep the gold pieces quite safe from any attempt to steal them. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put to- gether, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treattnent, pronounced it incurable. Sci- ence has proven catarrh to be a constitu- tional disease, and therefore require. con- stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken Internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and MUCOUS sur- faces of the system. They offer one hun- dred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Ad- dress F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. itzta tiold by Druggists, 75o. 's Family Pills, 25e, There Is now in course of erection at the Altoona, Va., shops n new passenger loco- motive which hi • :petted to cover 100 miles an hour without any V an ible. The m wheels are larger in diameter the or- dinary engine, and will be equipl ed with ball bearings like a bicycle. It will also haves steam pressure of but ninety pounds, against 180 pounds pressure in the locomo- tive now in use. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal en)oyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet- ter than others aid enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of' physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquierT, laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative; effectually cleansing the' system, dispelling colds, .headaches and fevers and permanently — curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowels without weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable anbefahre. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug- gists in 50c and al bottles, but it is man- ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, slats the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept tiny anbstitute if offered. WE WILL MAIL roitirreio • fine rsnri eritttlaS \MEDITATION Ipesehang• tor IS large LIM Ilards. rut from 1.5on Cowes wriippors, and • 1 ecnt stamp to pay p\.tagn Writ. tor OA cul CKIT 01 h PT fine INT.111111111, I MIMS I'M hc,res. It butt.. Mit- WOotrion iliort CO. 1.10 Homo fit_ Totem, 00. Utah L V. No. 348-46 ffir - Whon •r•••••rIng selv•rtl•anNints hie* mention this paper. girl '.1 T1 •