July 8, 1000. Natives of the Cape (Copyright, 1000, by F. S. Dellonbaugh.) Never, probably, has tho Irony of fnto beou moro distinctly exemplified thnn in tho now fnnioitB Capo Nomo mining district and tho contiguous regions from which for cen turies tho natives have with great dlillculty extracted a precarious living. Indeed, tho traveler accustomed to lands abounding In food plnnlH, and game, and timber, bowB to theso pooplo with a kind of rovorenca a his NATIVES AT POUT CLAItENCE Copyright, through his courtesy. eye runges across the vast desolation, and his souses reallzo tho dllllcultlca which they havo bo bravely surmounted. At llrat glance It appears to bo an Impossibility to sustain llfo thero even In summer, and the thought of tho long, dark winter with Its frozen sens and drifting snows and lack of fuel Is appalling. Yet theso natives llvo and are merry. Their hard-won pelts they havo traded to tho casual whaler for coveted steel articles mode afar away In sutilands of which they havo no conception, and for cartridges with which to continue their arduous seal and walrus hunting; and, alas! nlso for bad whisky to add further terrors to the many of tho cruel winter nnd nil the time these poor peoplo havo been living, or Btarvlng and dying, upon tho sea beaches whoso gravels embrnco a fabulous wealth of gold a wealth so easily acquired that had they but known they might all have easily be como millionaires and purchased comfort and luxury. Hut that fato was not theirs. Tho gold beneath their feet means rather destruction than benefit to them. Should they bo clover enough to grasp the situation they could lay by numerous nuggets against hard times and old ngc, but It Is not likely that they will. For, whllo tho Eskimo, or Innutts, who mako up tho native population of Cape Nome, aro a clover peoplo In adapting them selves to circumstances, they nre slaves, like somo whites, to whisky nnd nro always on tho alort to purchaso It, so that with tho advent of a grent mining population, when whisky will bo readily obtained, in spite of laws to tho contrary, wo may expect to see tho Eskimo fado away till in a tew years a llttlo of their language only will remain to recall tho story of their long battle with their fearful environment. Hcforc (Solil Wn Found. Neither Indian nor white cared for the treeless land and tho Eskimo pitched his tuplk, or summer tent, wherever it pleased his fancy 'and his earth and driftwood win tor home wns locoted with equal freedom. At Capo Nomo now nil is changed and sim ilarly at other points even further north. Tho Eskimo sees tho lands ho considered his own claimed and occupied by others, who In a fow days oxtrnct moro wealth from tho earth than tho wholo Eskimo trlbo lias :ossesBcd In nil Its centuries of exist ence. And tho Eskimo gathers driftwood to Boll to tho new comers, tho women with tholr customary laxity selling themselves to tho desires of tho miners. On such terms ns theso hnvo they becomo n part of tho pop ulation of Noma City. Whllo their original life wns terribly hard amidst their awful surroundings, despon dency had llttlo placo In tholr composition nnd for them tho long night of winter, when only tho Btars benm on tho Icy nlr, hold no terrors, provided they wore nblo to sccuro an abundance of seal nnd walrus. Songs anil dances and other original amusements pnBsed tho tlmo happily nwny. At times of famlno thoy sulTorod greatly and moth ers would lenvo their llttlo ones Bometlmos out In tho biiow to die. Hungor Is a cruol tlilnir and In tho barren snowlnnd Is moro to bo drended and feared than anywhero else. Tho Eskimos hnvo alwoys boon tho most northerly peoplo of tho continent nnd In forcing the frozen land to grnnt them subsistence nnd shelter thoy havo shown an Ingenuity that la extraordinary. From skln3 and bones nnd chnnco bits of wood thoy have made excellent bonts, sledges, utensils and numerous useful articles, whllo tho vory cold Itself has brought Into bolng houses that for Ingenuity of construction stand unrlvnled In all tho world. Whllo tho Eskimo, who aro scattered along tho shoreB from I'rlnco William Sound, Alaska, clear across tho continent to Green land and Labrador, nro a wonderfully homo- 4 Nome Country gencous people and speak practically tho same langungu everywhere, thero tiro varia tions In their customs due to local condi tions. Tho Cape Nomo native, for example, has a greater abundance of driftwood, nnd has therefore never been bo dependent on oil for fuel. For the smno reason his house Is considerably different from that of thu Eskimo In tho central continental regions. Thero tho fumllnr dome-shaped snow house 1809, by 13. II. Harrlman and published is common us well as In Greenland, and this house Is n triumph of Eskimo skill. Blocks of snow of oblong shape are cut out of a convenient bank with a steel saw, or au Ivory snow-kulfe, tho excavation thus be gun forming tho beginning of the room. Tho blocks are laid around in a circle, tho first ono being beveled down toward tho starting point, so that when the circle of snow blocks arrives at this place they rlso upon tho incline of the llrst block without a break and thus Bplrally approach the cen ter overhead, where a keyblock Is finally 'In serted to hold all firm, and completing the dome tho only dome or arch used on this continent before the coming of the whites. When thero is light thete houses do not need windows, ns the snow Itself Is translu cent, but windows of clear freshwater Ice are usually added; while at night and through tho long winter darkness both light nnd heat are obtained from another clever Invention of theso extraordinary people, a lamp, and they nre the only people on this continent who used nn nid of this kind. lliiK" In (irent Di'iiiiiihI. Near all the permanent houses n frame structuro Is usually erected for tho storage of nil but tho heaviest articles out of reach of tho dogs. Last winter dogs were In such demand at Dawson for tho purpose of reach ing Capo Nomo at nn early date that In somo enscs they sold for as much ns $100 apiece. Kino dogs of tho collie breed havo been sent up to Alaska from tho United States and havo been found to be admir ably adapted to tho work. One colllo In a team of Eskimo dogs Is of great value, ns ho Is ablo to keep them In order. Tho Capo Nomo anil other Alaska Eskimo do not as a rule rldo on the sledges, but in the central regions of tho continent tho driver usually sits on tho load and urges his team forward from that position. Variations of this kind aro due, like tho changes nnd the stylo of the houses, to local conditions. An nbuudauce of wood and a milder climate, for example, would probably booh completely do away with tho lamp. In form this utensil is some what llko tho half of a largo shallow saucer and Is made generally of soap3tone, though It la sometimes of burned elny. Tho wick Is simply a bunch of dry moss, nnd tho oil Is that obtained from the blub ber of tho seal and walrus. In winter the freezing brenkB tho vessicles of oil, bo that tho fluid is easily extracted, but In summer tho blubber la chewed, and tho chowo, opttB tho oil from time to tlmo Info n receptaclo provided. In was this practice, misunder stood by early travelers, which gavo rlso to tho reports of enormous consumption of oil by these northern peoplo. KnUIiiio .ViivIkiiIIiiii, Tho Eskimo travel consldornblo dis tances in tho umlnk, which is fitted with a sail and somo from tho Siberian sldo of tho strait como over to Port Clnronco nnd tho shores down to Capo Nomo for tho pur pose of trading. Tho Siberian Eskimo orig inally sailed across to Alaska, so that It Is ovldont thnt tho waters of tho strait have boon no obstnelo to tho Joumoys of tho Alnskn natives. Their customs nro full of Interest to tho ethnologist nnd havo been described by noas and Tumor nnd Murdoch nnd other trnvelors In the fnr north. Tho mnrrlngo relation Is vory loose Polygamy is common nnd In somo districts tho reverse Is practiced, two mon marrying ono woman. Thoy seldom steal from each other, but thoy will tnko odvantago of n stranger If nn opportunity Is offered. Llko many Indian tribes, tho authority of tho chiefs Is merely nominal, Tho ofllco of tho chief Is soma times horeditnry. Thoro Is nothing warlike about tho E3klmo and thoy appear to ba tractable, bo that tho missionaries who havo gone to tho Alaskan Hold may yot bo ablo to save thom from extinction, Tho govornmont has established a reindeer stntlon north of Capo Nomo about sixty miles at Port Clarenco nnd It Is the Inten tion to Instruct the unlives In the care of and breeding of theso animals, which find nbundnnco of food on tho tundra In the shnpo of tho abundant reindeer moss. The rolndcer, under tho name of caribou, Is found wild In Alaska and It Is believed thnt tho tamo variety will thrive, thus giving tho Eskimo another source of f.od. It would seem that one or two mining claims' might Justly be reserved for theso poor peoplo to work, under proper govern ment superintendence, thnt they might dig out a little comfort from the bnrren soli on which they have struggled so long to main tain their existence. With some money, no whisky nnd ono or two de-voted white teachers tho unlives of Cope Nomo nnd their brethren north nnd south might yet be como useful citizens of our Arctic province. Forget Business During Night "Every business man of common sense knows, whether he chooses to acknowledge It or not, thnt tho farther away he gets in the evening from his commerclnl associa tions during tho day, so that his business associates or thoughts of It or them cannot get at him, tho healthier he Is, the wiser life he leads; In short, the better off ho Is In every respect, nnd tho abler for tho duties of tho morrow," Bays n writer In tho Ladles' Home Journal. "Now, what does he get In tho city In tho evening, even If he lives n carofully regulated life? Thero Is no mode of life ho enn pcsslbly follow which Is In any way recupcratlvo to his mental or physical being. Ho hns never been out of hearing of tho noises of the city or out of the range of Its lights. Every night he has slept In tho polluted air of the city, and In tho morning has looked out on the gray sldownlks which ho sees all day long. What does such a man know of the exhilarating, refreshing and blood-qulckenlng experience of opening the shutters of his chamber wind w upon a landscape of space nnd sun shine? And what Is fnr worse, what do his wife and children know of such n blessing? Yet ho deludes himself Into the belief that he must llvo In the city so as to he 'in touch with things.' If you nsk him what those 'things' nro ycu Invnrlably discover that they aro of a business nature, cither strictly 4usincss or somo social convention which ho feels has a bearing on his business. Hut It is nlwnys business, business! Now, a man living under this pressure rarely does his best wcrk, although he fully believes that he Is doing It. Hut he cannot he giving out tho best because he does not allow the best to get within him." Few Know How To Drink Water Prof. Sllkham says thero are fow people who thoroughly reallzu the value of water as a beverage or who know how to obtain greatest ndvantnge from It. The effects pro iluced by tho drinking of water vnry with tho CAPE NOME VISITORS ON SHIPHOAUD publlshcd through his courtesy. manner In which It Is drunk. If, for In stance, a pint of cold water ho swallowed as a largo draught or If It bo taken In two largo portions, with a short Interval between, certain definite results follow effects which differ from those which would havo followed If tho snmo quantity were taken by Blpplng. Sipping Is n powerful stimulant to the circu lation, a thing which ordinary drinking Is not. During tho action of sipping the action of tho nerve which Blows tho beat of tho heart la abolished and, as n coiiBequonco, that or gan contracts much more rapidly and th9 pulse bents moro quickly and tho circulation In vnrlous pnrta of tho body is Increasod. In addition to this, wo And that tho pressuro under which tho hllo Is socroted Is rnlsod by tho sipping of fluid. And horo Is a point which might well ho noted by our rendors. A glass of gold water slowly slppod will produce a greater acceleration of tho pulse for a tlmo than will a glass of wine or spirits toteji at a draught. Tn this connec tion It may' not bo out of placo to mention that sipping cold wator will often allay tho craving of alcohol In those who havo boon In tho habit of taking too much of It and may bo endeavoring to roform, the effect bolng probably due to tho stimulant action of the sipping,. Dumb Pets of A volume might bo written of famous peo ple nnd their pets, nnd It would bo Interest ing rending, says tho San Francisco Call. Mnny hooks of hlogrnphy havo scattered along their pnges tender romlnlsconcc of nn nttuchment to somo dumb nulmnl, from Hoi well's "Johnson" nnd Cowpcr's "Letters" down to one of tho latest works of the kind, "The Life nnd Correspondence of Charles Klngsley." Johnson's cat, Hodge for which ' . w . . ' ' .,.. CAPE NOME NATIVES IN CAMP-Copyrlght, 18'JK, by E. II. Hnrrlmau and pub llshcd through his courtesy. . ho used to go out to buy oysters "lest tho servants, having that treublo, should lake a dislike to tho poor creature," -and Cowpor's hares, which used to amuse him In his dull, weary liouih at Oluey, nro ns well known as tho two men themselves. Charles Klngsley seems to hnvo loved every living creature around him, nnd ho taught his children to respect even the most loathsome Insects. Mrs. Klngsley tells how n family of runaway toads made tholr home In n hole of the green bank nt Eversley, anil the scythe was never allowed to approach their retreat. He hnd two llttlo friends In u pair of sand wasps which lived In n crack of tho window In IiIh drawing room, ono of which ho hnd saved from drowning In a basin of water and every spring ho would look out eagerly for them or their young, which came out of, or returned to, thu snmo crack. He potted tho white stable cat nnd tho black huuso cat, and sat up with a sick dog during tho last two nights of Its suffer ing life. Wherever ho went ho was followed about the pariah by his faithful llttlo Dandy Dlnmout, whose Intelligent face was always to be seen at tho lectures and school les- Copyright, 1899, by E, II. Harrlman and sons, nnd was known to every cottager In tho place, being almost ns much esteemed by thom as by tho Klngsloy children, wheso nttnehed friond ho was for ton years. Dogs, perhaps, have been pets with a greater number of fnmcus persons than nny other animal. Everyono will remember Sir Walter Scott's canine pets, of which he hnd moro than a score. Tho most prized was tho old Scotch hound Maldo, his companion for many years, whose grave Is near tho gato at Abbotsford, with tho monument nnd In scription that ho designed fcr hor. Then thero wero tho two put greyhounds, Douglas und Percy, which attended him everywhere, Thoy had a privileged place In his library, ono of tho windows being loft open In all weathers so that they might pass In nnd out whon thoy pleased. Lord Hyron had a famous dog, Boatswain, whoso plcturo Is still to bo seen nt Now stead abbey; and Hood's dog, Dash, will bo romombored as tho ono that Harry Corn wall said should have been named Ilovor. Ho accompanied Charles Lamb In many of his walks, nearly worrying tho life out of tho gontlo essayist, who could hardly man ago to keep In sight of his restless four footed companion and was In constant terror lost he should loso him, Walter Savago Landor was another lovor irP""fWTrMiiiii ' Famous Men and Women of dogs. Ho hnd a number of them Pnrlgl, which followed him In all his tramps; (Initio, given to him by the sculptor Story, whose place was to Ho at his feet; and, most cele brated of all, Potnero. the llttlo while Pom eranian dug that wns sent to him from Fle boIo to Hnth, where ho wan then living. For twelve years l.uidur nnd his dog were al ways together, noticeable figures wherever they went, nnd Pomero was written about and talked about nearly as much as his master. Mary IIusboII Mltford was surrounded by dogs from her childhood. To relate her his tory would bo to tell theirs likewise, for they wore inseparable. Their qualities, troubles and general doings have an Im portant plncu In her letters and they have tender mention that might lead one to sup posu them to be human members of thu household. " All our pets nro well," Is hor UBiinl messago In closing and many of them como In for special mention, like "Mnrmlon and Modoo and Miss Trooper, tho hounds," "Mnrls, with her black and glossy puppies;" "Mlrnndu, from Stratford-on-Avon;" Mayflower and Mid and Lulla, from tho north couutrlc," und Dash, who "sends his respects to Mrs. Hrownlug's doves" and wiib so well boloved by his mis tress that when alio was In London home sick she wrote to her parents, "I am dying for ujy DnBh and my lluwera." Wordworth's companion on his morning rambles was a dog, tor whoso death he sin cerely mourned and to whoso memory lie paid an exqulslto trlbuto In vorso. Thoro have been other famous lovers of dogB. Sir Edwin Lnndseor was especially fond of them and many of his puts ho Iiiih iimdo to llvo again on tho Immortal ennvas. Mrs. Drowning was greatly nttnehed to iv silken-haired, hazel-eyed spaniel that Miss Mltford gavo to her. Flushlo lives In literature na the subject of onu of his mis tress's tondorcat poems. Gootho hated dogs. Ills pet waB a llvo snnke, which ho kept In a chlmuoy corner a repulsive companion one would think. Tho pet of Tiberius, tho Itomnn omporor, wns also a Btiake, yet tho two mon wero wholly unllko In every particular. Jean Paul Itlchter's pets wero a mouse, u squirrel and a whlto spider. Hogarth, tho painter, was fond of cats and at his homo at Chlswlck ho had a gnrdon whuro ho buried his fnvorltes, placing llttlo tnblets to mark tho spot and distinguish their In dividual scpulchers. Tho cat bus been a favorltu with n num ber of well known pooplo. Popo mndo com panions of several and ho Bhowod tho best Bldo of his character to them. Dryden had also a Btatoly favorite cat, with a tompor us bitter as his own pun. Orny, author of thu beautiful "Elegy In a Country Churchyard," wroto an "Odo on tho Death of a Favorlto Cat, Drowned In u Tub of Gold Fishes." In this llttlo poom ho bownlls tho fnto of tho demure and al most historic Sellna. Danto mado a pot of a largo black cat. Thoophllo Oautlor had a whlto cat of groat beauty named Don Plor rot do Nnvarro, of which ho was extrava gantly fond. This nnlmnl dlod of consump tion. Ho hnd a regular physician nnd was fed on asses milk, hut ho finally succumbed and tho poet describes his death In moving terms. Put Him in a Box IndlnnnpollB Sun: "Did you ask papa?" sho questioned, eagerly. "Yes, and It's nil off," he respondod, ns one In a dream. "Why, did ho refuso?" "No, but ho said when I asked to tako you away from him I wns nsklng to take nwny tho light of his life; that tho house without you would bo n prison coll." "Well, all papas my that, you big, tender hearted fellow." "I know," ho responded, huskily, "but It Is not that." "What Is It, then?" "Can't you seo?" Ho expect mo to take you away from homo and I wouldn't havo tho nervo, after ho talked llko that, to stay and cr well, don't you soo?" "I see," sho nnswered, coldly.