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Show 1 - Judugeda ..Ian by His Nose, Chicago Tribune. "Tuat was an interesting and true little item that the Tribune reprinted from smiic hOTScbreeders' paper telling the character and disposition of a horse by his nose," said an old State street merchant, "but let me tell you that I eau pick out a stingy small minded inun, or one that is liberal, big minded, etc, quicker hy a glaneo at noses than most any man cuu the. extremes ju horses. Nine out of every ten men who have a concave nose, and particularly if its small, are stingy or intensely telflsb and narrow minded and mean, and it wouldn't be necessary for yon to have but precious little to-do with 'em, especially in a business busi-ness way, to Unci it out. When you see a large or good sized nose that ) convex In build, and especially if il has more or less of an iutimation of the Koman school about it so architects would say you can depend that his possessor is a liberal, broad minded fellow and, usually too, scholarly. I guess I've cleared close o nto 1 million dollars, during the twenty years I've been running a store in Chicago, and half of that 1 owe to having made a point of reading people by their nose. Anil what I've said applies to women just as much as to men." |