,1 MO OF 40 YEARS AGO Steam-Driven Machine Now on Hx hibilion at a Lowell, Macs., Oarage. ECCENTRICITY OF INVENTOR Worked on Ills Contrivance During llvil War and Exhibited Hesult Throughout Country. In the show rooms of one of the lo cal garages at Lowell, says the Bos ton Herald, la on exhibition what is believed to be the first steam-driven automobile ever Invented In this coun try, one which served the Ideas and fulfilled the expectations of Its builder perfectly. The machine, a rather odd looking affair as compared with a mod ern car, was the invention of William W. Austin, who died last year In Win throp. Mr. Austin waa born in DIghton eighty-five years ago, and at the age of 9 was left an orphan. When a young man he became apprenticed to a blacksmith and after remaining at his trade for a few years went to Boston and eventually to Lowell. In 1860, at the very outbreak of the Civil War, be started to work on his first automobile. His second effort was the machine which Is now on ex hibition here. He took his invention to the larger cities of this section of the country and on his return to Low ell some time later he brought with him 114,000. Eccentric in some particulars, Mr. Austin, Instead of placing the money in the bank, burled it and made a map of its detailed location. When he left the city some months later he placed the map in what he considered safe keeping, but on his return It was gone, and, not being able to remember just where he had placed the money, mourned it as lost. A few years later, while away from the city, a mental picture of the spot where it was buried flashed into his mind, and he returned here with all haste and after some efforts located the notes where he had burled them. Decomposition had destroyed the outer edges, but he appealed to the Secre tary of the Treasury and the notes were redeemed. CANADIAN WRITER AND EDUCATOR WHO IS DEAD. Professor Goldwln Smltu, one of tho most distinguished educators and writ ers of modern times, died at "The Grange," his home in Tonrto, recent ly, at the age of 86 years. Since the deatff of his wife lust summer the in firmities of old uge have been creeping rapidly on Dr. Smith, and several months ago he guve up all his literary work. On the morning of Feb. 2, aa he was walking through the hall of his home, he tripped and fell, fracturing his thigh bone. On account of the pa tient's advanced age the bones would not knit, and from tho first there was no hope of his recovery. Ooldwlp Smith wns born at Reading, Ooldwkn Smith. England, on Aug. 13, 182. He was educated at Eton and Oxford, and be came In 1847 a fellow of 1'nlvernlty College. He was Regius professor of hUtory at Oxford from 18G8 to 18t6. In 1868 he was elected to the chair or English and constitutional history lu Cornell University, and In JS71 he set tled in Canada, where he davoted him self largely to Cunudian Journalism and to literature. His pleasant home, the Grange, is situated In the center of Toronto. His various A'orks, lit erary and polltlral, make ,ij u very fine record, but to ninny be is of inter est aa a leading figure lu kiow-forgot-ten controversies In which btth Mr Gladstone and Iid Beacousfleld took part. In addition to his work In bi ography, criticism nnd political essays. Goldwln Smith was a poet. WITH THE SAOE3. matmwwl 'ilimjli'mMW HI I li ii & .v-.A:..- V Whoso es' ji-ea a duty avoid a gain. Parker. Who is fr .' Tbe man who master bis own re !"ViicteM!8. To CUltlV Mod tllO'.l'.lU is lo be loyal to oi -r If. l.ee. Tbe gM ! il.r:::a or thla IJ.'u are frk:: . i -.V tlcn. Kcbert aon. No on im t.'.U world who lightens . i' for auy en Ue. L MILLIONAIRES ON A HUNT MAY SEEK NORTH POLE. Paul .1. Uaincy, millionaire turfman r.nd polo player, who Is said to have spent nearly $1,000,000 on the turf, has decided to give up raring for good Many of his hornes have already been sold. He in Roing to the frozen north for a six months' hunt after bf game. Mr. Kainey plans to penetrate the wilds of Ibrador and perhaps even make a dash for the north pole. He will hunt all over Ellsmereland. Harry Whitney and Mr. Ralney have gone to Sydney, C. P., where Uiey l tv-: Jiff mi ( : . fym will Join the arctic ahlp Beothic, which they have chartered for the trip into the northern latitudes. Capt. Bart lett, who accompanied Peary on the Roosevelt, will command tlwe Beothic and have a crew of twenty-nine. This entire expedition Is to be recorded in photographs, and in this respect It probably will differ from any eimllar undertaking. There will be ten cam eras with duplicates of them all to be used in case of accident. Some of tbe cameras are especially adapted for over-Ice photography. There will be motion pictures of all the hunts and of the fishing, the harpooning of walruses, the fights with polar bears, and the caribou chases. NEGRO CADDIES DOWN SOUTH. Olillirlnar and Cheerful Helpers the Ultima; Uolfer Find Them. Ths winter resort golf player meets a refreshing novelty in the negro cad dy. Sometimes the "boy" is a grizzled old fellow rising 50, who totes the bag of clubs about with the alacrity of youth. The caddies come in all sizes, from six feet or more with the muscular build of a prize fighter down to lads just about able to handle tho bug; but no matter w hat his age or size, the ne gro caddy has infinite ability to bo cheerful. He doesn't adopt the some what cynical manner of the white cad dy, and his manners are better. For another thing, the black lad ordinarily has the eye of a hawk and traces the bnlls with marvelous sure Hess. One caddy said he hadn't lost a ball in the two years that he had been caddylng, which Is a remarkable rec ord. The negro caddy conies Into his work with an Rinlable Idixi that he is the partner, of his employer. The ball la "ours." "Whose ball Is that near the nln?" nsks the golfer. "That's ours sir", the (addy says. When the golfer gets a good long ball from the toe, the caddy does a lo of (inlet rooting. "Illde on, ball, rld on," he calls, much as If ho were roll' Ing the bones und rooting for his num ber to come up. He does his best to coax the ball Into the cup, too, In much the unmo way, but his sense of eti quette Is too strong to permit mm to make any noise whilo the play Is ac tually being made. No mutter how much of a dub he 1ms for a boss at the time, a writer In '.he New York Sun says, he doesn't rneer or say, anything impertinent which is a relief to the player from up North, who knows the unpleasant IvihIM of some of tho white cuddles. The only bad habit the bey has Is to gamble on the result of the match he's accompanying. It can be seen what a ten of cheerfulness It Is for blni when his player Is a dun and misses an tasy id-ot for the hole and so throw away tho bet. 'Hie Hlilmlynt I to U.ie. A can of mieent.ish beneath a t-ou ;b, t"o:ne turnips, beans, and peas for nio anil thiui! Tbe while tbe Meat Trut howls In futl!e woe We're learnlrv to eat vegetables now. Ko.-tU.'.i Traveler. Inih nnd Credit. "Father, witt it meant by bunk if.ptcy?" "'lankrup'.cy I" when you put your nroney In your lilp rocket and let your creditors ta'Kc your ccr.t." rUi 5 ndo J'.acito nirn wttt it mm EN years nno It was found that It was possible to cross tho cow with the native American buffalo. In fact, the cross was made, and the herds have been developed until at present there are moro than 300 head in the United States. "Buffalo Jones" of Arizona has a thriving herd, and another of even greaier numbers Is that on the Ooodale ranch In the panhandle of Texas. Great, shaggy, high-withered steers stalk about the mm fields, overlording their domestic ancestors In no mean manner. This Is a creature that never existed In the world until recently, says the Washington Post. All the suns that shone in the paat failed to see Its like. It Is a new thing In the world. The Important question is whether it Is a useful thing. This question is not yet decided, but It Is well within the range of possibilities thRt It will prove more profitable to raise the hybrid than the cow, and If this Is proved the latter will pass away and in Its place will remain the new creature, the cattelo, for so It Is called through a com bination of the names of its ancestors. There are a number of points in which the rattelo surpasses the do mestic cow. It Is of greater activity and can find a livelihood where the cow would starve. Mountain fastnesses and barren plains lend themselves as pasturage for It where herds of cattle could never graze. Llkewlso tbe frozen north countries lend themselves to the grazing of cattelo where cows could not resist the cold. The cattelo ha a shaggy coat Inherited from its wild ancestor that la without a peer as a reslster of cold. Interior Alaska might be induced to yield up billions were cattelo brought there to pasture. But there Is still another of the brand-new animals that appears more attractive than all the rest. This Is the zebrass, offspring of the royal zebra of Abyssinia and the plebeian ass of the west. It has been developed under the special care and guidnnie of the United States government itself, and the hope Is strong that there will result a bearer of burdens and drawer of loads that will surpass any domestic animal now known. Five years ago King Mencllk of Abyssinia sent to President Roosevelt the finest zebra In all his domain, and the Abyssinian zebras are the largest and handsomest In the world. As his back yard was already filled with things from the wild, the President turned the zebra over to government scientists of the Depart ment of Agriculture, who, being agog with the newly found Idea of the times, that of Inventing new animals, set about using his royalty of the stripes for that purpose. The asses they already had in plenty of the variety of the patient -Mexican burro that bears the packs of the prospectors of the west. The experi ments were carried on at the experiment station at Bethesda, near Washlng-v ton. To-day there are rive young hybrids running about the place and de claring themselves tho very latest things In animals. The oldest zebrass, the first of its kind, was born a little more than a year ngo. It Is a male, and those that followed are all females, this fact offering the possibility of devel oping the herd very rapidly. Animal growers throughout the country are waiting with great Interest the further development of these strange crea tures. And the possibilities loom large to all appearances. The zebrass seems to have combined many of the good qualities of both Its parents, and Is one of the prettiest creatures In the world. It has the heavy coat of hair of its mother on the body and the short coat of Its lather on the head and legs, thus exaggerating Its already apparent tiimness. The stripes of the male parent are present, but greatly dimmed on the body, while vivid on the legs. The greatest hybrid that the world has ever known is the mule. This is a cross between the horse and the ass. The resultant mule was, however, barren, and the possibility of developing tion did not exist. The mule had to be of. At that he has borne the brunt of the nation's cannon Into the ever advancing frontier. He has surpassed In many ways both the horse and the ass that bred him. The zebrass Is evi- TO WOOD PILE Modern Methods Have Killed the Picturesque Sentinel of the Cigar Store. WAS VENERATED BY DEALER City Ordinances Against Obstruction of Streets and Other Causes Hastened Downfall. The wooden Indian has gone to th3 attic, the basement and the wood pile. He no longer Is the recognized sign of the tobacco store, says the Chicago News. Time was when the proprietor of a tobacco store considered the statue of the American aborigine standing at the entrance of his doorway a neces sary adjunct to his business. It was regarded by the proprietor with the same feeling of pride that now swells In a man's boso.ni when he watches his huge electric sign attracting the at tention of the crowds in the street. When a new coat of paint covered the front of his store the Indian was adorn ed with a new suit of attractive colors. At night the statue carefully was re moved within the building, and the first duty of the Janitor the next morn ing was to put the sign on duty In its accustomed place. A few tobacco dealers Btill have tho Indian sign. They consider It now more as a keepsake than an asset to their business, and don't Ive It the caro and attention It demanded former ly. They bought It many years ago wen Its presence was considered nec essary to the Bule of tobacco and their attachment for the relic prevents them from using It for kindling. The retail tobacco business has un dergone a revolution during the la.it fifteen years, and the Indian was ono of the old customs slated for the tobog gan. When modern ways and .modern stores began to encroach upon the din gy, untidy tobacco stands of the pio neers, tho reformers chose to regard the absence of the Indian as a mark of -i their kind. The electric sign or the unassuming "Cigars and Tobaccos" ou tho windows downed the chief. Other things, too, aided custom lu discarding the wooden Indiun. On nar row sidewalks the life-sized statue mounted on a largo base was a serious obstruction and often It was necessary for pedestrians to pass it in single fib This led to ordinances and laws against street obstructions, and the woodeu Indian became ill. At this stage In the history of the retail tobac co business window decorations came into vogue. The big signs prevented a view of a clever window display and discretion led the shopkeeper to aban don the old scheme for the new. Tho use of an Indian statue as i t'.-u of a tobacco store is commonly accredited to the fact that tho red man waa the first to use tobacco. BIRD CHAT. The Chinese eat "rotten"' eggs that la, eggs preserved In lime until they get a consistency like that of hard but ter. A fosll rahphoryueus, a bird of 50, 000.0)0 years old, sold for $9,000 re' ccntly, the highest price ever paid for a bird. Cardinals have been known to alight upon window sills of housus and peck ai the pane, probably attracted by their reflection In the class. re hew fmmjv a more perfect type through selec taken as he was nnd made the most cornfield labor at home and tugged WIFE AND CHILD OF Dot. Oi tferavwu. Hvi. '.V- , . , . . '-" , - v( . . j 1 After waiting a year for the return of her husband, who left hiB home to go to a neighborhood store, Mrs. Sophie Oiserman of Chicago has asked the police to assist her In finding him. Oiserman and his family lived at 589 Sangamon street. According to the wife's stcry they were happy and never quarreled. He left the house, waving a good-by to his little daughter Dora, then 1 year old, and he has not been seen nor heard from since by any member of his family. Month after month thu wife sat waiting for the return of her husband. She would not call the prlce Into the search, believing that soon he would be back. She taught her kittle girl to lisp the name of her father and pray for hla return. BOY IS VICTOR OVER TWO BIO BALD EAGLES. Ten-year-old Ira Cunningham, son of a farmer in a remote section of Pennsylvania, known as Rligdale, had a fight with two huge bain eaglea for his life, and he will carry the marks of their taloaa to the grave. He was returning home from school when two eagles swooped down upon him, knock ing him down and attacking hJm 1th great fury. - They repeatedly tank their talons In hla shoulders and tried to carry him away. The bay fought plucklly and, gettlag hold of a club, resisted the birds so sturdily that they abandoned the attempt and sailed away. llltfh Finance. "Why do you keep asking people for change for a dollar, and then asking other people to give you a dollar for your change?" "Well, somebody may make a mis take In change, sometime. And, be lieve me, it won't be me!" Cleveland Leader. Mere Mention. "Did you uncle mention you in h will?" "Yes; ' In very uncomplimentary terms." Louisville Courier-Journal. N'j;. Jl dently a creature superior in every vith selection and scientific breeding. will tend to retire the latter and possibly the horse from the field of action. But of the new turn taken by scientists is a great law of heredity which vas deduced first by an Austrian monk, Gregor Mendel, who lived half a century ago. This monk In his cloistered garden studied long the laws that govern the things that grow and their relation to the parents that bred them. He established, in the first place, the fact that all things having life, be they plant or animal, are controlled by the same laws. Then he worked on the hypothesis that given trait? of either or both parents would occur in generations that followed In certain together for many years plants and animals having certain dissimilar and readily reecgnized qualities and noted the recurrence of each In the genera tions that followed. Finally he worked out of these figures the greatest law of heredity that science has ever Little was thought of It at the time, past ten years, it has been hit upon, sand times and finally has been established as the one great and correct law. This law the government has MAN LOST A YEAR. Sophie Oi eetw&xi- All the seats were occupied and the straps were coming into demand when the woman boarded the street car. She was beyond the age generally consider ed attractive, her attire was unfash ionable, and she was undeniably fat. There were several men, but no one of them rose as she reached vainly for the strap that eluded her short arm. "Take my seat, .ma'am," piped a voice i small, red-haired boy had risen, The woman stared at her diminutive benefactor. Then she recovered her self, thanked him gratefully and tried to take the proffered seat. ' Of course everybody was looking on by this time. But the lesson that should be conveyed to the seated speci mens of mankind threatened to be lost. The boy was not over 11, and small of his age. The efforts of the portly wom an to Insert herself Into the space left by the boy were fast becoming ludic rouB. Broad grins were appearing, and a girl or two giggled. The boy, who was of the "red-haired temperament," began to blush furiously, and was evidently embar rassed at the turn events had taken. "I'm sorry I ain't bigger, ma'am," he said to the woman, letting his shrill, thin voice go distinctly through the car, "but If I'd 'a' been big enough to leave a good-sized seat, mebby I'd 'a' forgot to pull all of me up out of it when a lady come along!" SPLINTERS. Graie work grinding horse-radish. It is a mistake to aim too high with a short-range gun. A level-headed man is not necessari ly a flat-headed man. It you don't ask for too much you will find more cheerful givers. Bowers She was safe In challenging that fellow 10 guess her age. Powers Who is be? Bowers The weather man. DRIVEN HOME. N ! way to the mule, and, It Is believed. It will take a place in the world that mathematical proportions. He bred known and set it down for posterity and It was neglected until, within tffe has been proved and re-proved a thou taken great pains to prove. COLUMBIA PROFESSOR SUED FOR HEART BALM Suit for $50,000 damages for alleged breach of promise of marriage has been brought In the Supreme Court at New York by Miss Esther Quinn against Prof. Harry Thurston Peck, A. M., Ph. D., L. H. D., LL. D., holder of the chair in Latin at Cokvnbla Unl verslty, president of the Latin Club of America, member of many prominent literary clubs and associations, maga zine writer, critic of the fair sex, and essayist on morals. The first wife of Prof. Peck obtained a divorce In South Dakota in Septem ber, 1908. The grounds were deser tion. On Aug. 20 of the following year he married Miss Elizabeth D. du Bois, a teacher of classics in the Morris high school. Miss Quinn in her com plaint alleges that her friendship with the scholar-critlc-writer began In Juno, 1900, and continued until Feb. 3 last, when she heard for the first time of bis marriage to Miss du Bois. In the same document Miss Quinn asserts, through her lawyer, Daniel O'Reilly, that in September, 190S the month lu which his first wife divorced him Prof. Peek proposed marriage to her rnd the accepted him. The Columbia professor Is 54 years old. Miss Quinn is much his Junior. Through his at torneys, Tappan & Bennett, Peck has entered a general denial of the charges. The woman's lawyer will offer In evi dence on the trial of her cause more than a hundred letters written to her, she afflr.ms, by the famous litterateur. It is a remarkable collection of letters with dates running from 1900 to 1909, crowded with tender phrases, many of them filled with expressions of adora tion, declarations of unswerving devo tion, sobriquets of endearment. Are They Uurnr Mr. Penman It Is computed that 70 persons are born every minute. Mrs. Penman And from observa tion, I should say that a large propor tion of this number consider them selves poets. Yonkers Statescnan. No ttxeaae. "Why do you smoke cigarettes?" "Why not? Robert Louis Stevenson smoked them!" "Yes but be went and lived on the Island of Samoa while he did It." Cleveland leader. f 0nm-. Jir t. , ', I 4 V I r,sw -"Tir I L 1 t 1 1 I THE WEEKLY fi rUTCTIIH l-A 1621 Christening of first child born of French parents In Quebec. 1672 War declared In Boston agulnst the Dutch; the first declaration of war In the colonies. .. .Union be tween the colonies of Massachu setts, Plymouth and Connecticut. 1680 Elizabeth Morse Imprisoned In Boston for witchcraft. 1778 The ltritlsh under Sir Henry Clinton held a council of war and decided to evacuate Philadelphia, 187 First cotton mill In the Unite! States started at Beverly, Mass. l"9;i A Democratic society was form ed In Philadelphia. 1800 Connecticut yielded all claim ta Western territory First munici pal court established In Boston. 1819 Cornerstone laid for the Pe syivanm state capitol at Harris bun,'. 1835 Railroad line between Boston und Lowell opened for trafilc. 1838 Karl of Durham arrived In Can ada to assume his office as governor-general. 1845 Fire in Quebec destroyed more than 1,000 houses Sir John Franklin sailed on bis last expe dition to the Arctic. 1846 A convention met at Albany to revise the constitution of New York. 1848 MaJ.-Gen Winfleld Scott received by the municipal authorities of New York. 1859 First sod of the Georgian Bay canal was turned near Toronto. 1861 Savannah blockaded by Federal squadron Union troops destroy ed the railroad between Alexan dria and Leeshurg, Pa. 1862 Gen. Ranks defeated at Winches ter nnd driven across the Potomac. 1864 Nathaniel Hawthorne burled in. Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord, Mass. .. .Sidney Edgerton appoint ed first governor of Montana ter ritory. 1865 Galveston, Texas, surrendered te the Federal troops. 1869 The Massachusetts State Senate refused to grant the right of suf frage to women. 1878 One hundred houses destroyed1 by tornado at Richmond, Va. I881 Award of J15.00J) made for the attack on American fishermen in Fortune Day. 1886 Haymarket anarchists indicted in Chicago for murder. 1888 Boston Corbett, slayer of J. Wilkes I'.ooth, escaped from an ,1 asylum In Topeka. 1889 Flood at Johnstown, Pa., result ing from the breaking of a dam, destroyed 2.295 lives. 1891 The "modus vlvendi" coercion act passed by both branches of th Newfoundland Legislature. 1892 The "High-Water Mark" monu ment at Gettysburg dedicated. 1893 Body of Jefferson Davis taken. irom tne tomb in New Orleans for removal to Richmond. 1896 Coronation of the Emperor ar, impress of Russia at Moscow. 1898 Gladstone's body lay In state in London. 1899 French Court of Cassation decid ed In favor of the revision of the Dreyfuss verdict More than one hundred buildings In St. John, N B., destroyed by fire. 1900 Welland canal dynamiters sen tenced to life Imprisonment.... Gen. John Ti. Gordon elected commander-in-chief of the United Con federate Veterans. 1905 W. W. B. Mclnnes appointed governor of the Yukon Territory. ....President Roosevelt offered his services as a mediator to end the war between Japan and Russia. 1909 William Lorimer elected United States Senator from Illinois after four months' deadlock. .. .Andrew Carnegie gave $1,000,000 for a hero fund in France. .. .Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition opned In Seat tle.... Great street car strike was begun In Philadelphia. Pnper Makers' Strike Settled. The mills of the International Papr Company at Palmer Falls, N. Y., and at points In New England have resum ed operations during the week past, with the striking employes all taken back after ten weeks of Idleness, men employed as strike breakers being sent away and the company of State militia on guard at Palmer Falls sent home. Chairman Lundrlgan, of the New York Board of Medial ion and Arbitration, said the men returned to work under h. ennLrticL which HimiiHneH n nn.Tk work, mukes an increase of about 5 per cent In wages and fUes eight hours a day aa a maximum In machine rooms except In emergencies. He believed they had settk-d a most complex sit uation to the satisfaction of all con cerned. Peace Conference Hopeful. At the closing session of the Lake Mohonk Conference on International' Arbitration, Secretary Knox, through Solicitor of the State Department James Brown Scott, announced the probable early establishment of an In ternational court of arbitral Justice. The dean of Worcester, England, and Rev. William Thomas, of London, dele gatei'for the British and German em pires, urged the American churches to Join In a world peace league. South American War A rerted. The offer of mediation made by the United Stales, Brazil and Argentina was definitely accepted by the govern ments of Peru and Kcuador, and the diplomats hastened the work of or ganizing a Joint conference. Pending this action, however, the feeling be tween the two rivals continued at high pitch, and there was no let up In tae the troops are to be withdrawn from the frontier. The boundary dispute was still pending before the king of 8 ualn LrV'T""" . . - - " 1 A J. . . ' ' ".. Jij.'k-a- t'l l'. . u a ...... A. It .. 1 i. .-. t -. ' ' . n,. ' "'' 7