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Show 1 I HI Slade's Hr III Transfer H Phonf 121. 408 25th Street Wa have tflS largeat van 'n rh Wf city. Quick service. Moving, ship. BT ping and handling pianos. Prompt B freight delh'erloa. Furniture mov- B ing it tpeclalty Storage at reason- B able rates. II t HI CHICHESTER S PILLS J I'MK DIAMOND BRAND- A Mi vV" LdiI AL ;ar Druaclal fr A BBk SLatt' 1 R C ( ( t,l rh.Hr Olim.nJ Ilr.dA l ''HI I" Ifl ol -old l c-Jiiicr I Vv yfl t-i.n, fJ -J. vtlh Bl'jfl f . ' . r. . V BBeSaV 'W rJH Take othrr. aj r jour V mmUM I I nr "'"sk''- ' 1 1 1 - iiKn-Tm 1 I U Jjf DlAsOXD I'.RANt) I'll.l.S f'-r S: T? ytiritnowo H Ii.t, Sifot LaeW. Iti V The Story ol America in Pictures The Discoverers "Learn One Thing Every Day" No. 6. HENRY HUDSON Copyright. 1913. by The Associated .sow-spaper School. Inc. One day many, many years ago, some Indians were out In a canoe fish Ing on what Is now the Hudson river. riv-er. Suddenly th-y saw a strangi ip parltion coming toward them up the stream It appeared to be either a big canoe or u wonderful wigwam Qui' kly they paddled for shore, after seeing that there were people inov ing on this strange contrivance, and Informed Hit- rest of their tribe. Everyone Ev-eryone thought tha it must be a nuin ber of Manltous (gods) come to visit them. So they dressed themsche.s in their gayest skins and beads, and went down to the shore to greet the. visitors When a number of their fair-skinned guests had landed, he who seemed to be the Chief Manitou of all poured something from a bottle into a bowl and passed it to the Indian thief This one solemnly smelled It and then passed pass-ed It to his neighbor He also merely smelled this liquor with the pleasant odor. And thus it went around the circle of braves Finally, when the bowl reached the last man, he resolved re-solved to taste the litjuor thought that it would probably kill him but he was not afraid to die for the honor of the tribe He- raised the bowl to his lips and emptied It Soon he began to sway from side to side, and finally fell to the ground, and lay-like lay-like one dead After some hours however, he revived and declared thai he had had a fine time, and wuntd some more of the strange liquor This encouraged the rest of the braves to try it, and soon the entire tribe was intoxicated That is the Indian legend of the di3 covery by Henry Hudson of the gre.-v river that has been named after him It was in September. 1609 that the little lit-tle Half Moon sailed into the mouth of the Hudson river, and its navigator landed on Manhattan Island. But Hudson Hud-son never dreamed that only three hundred years from that time this small wooded bit of land would be part of the second greatest city In the world New York In fact, he was uot there to found a city. He had bul one idea to disroer a northwest passage pas-sage to India Contrary to the belief of many peo pie, Henry Hudson was not a Dutchman, Dutch-man, but an Englishman and a citizen citi-zen of London He was born there in the latter part oi the sixteenth century-Hudson made his first oy;ige in 1C07. and his second in 1608. It was on his third voyage, in 1000. that he explored the Hudson river. The sur rounding oquntr) was seen to be pleasant and fertile and full of game They found few hostile savages and did a great deal of profitable trading with the eaceful Indians. On his fourth and last voyage Hudson Hud-son sailed from England in the Ills covery to seek a northwest passage. He did not accomplish his purpose; but he did discover the great bay that now bears his name The provisions on the ship ran low and his crew mutinied under the leadership of Rob ert Juet. Finally. Hudson was thrust into an open boat, together with his little son John, and seven fk sail ors, and the boat was cut adrift Thus he perished on a midsummer's day of 1611 in that great waste of waters j which is "his tomb and his monument." Every day a different human interest inter-est story will appear in the Standard You can get a beautiful intaglio re-production re-production of the above picture, with five others, equally attractive. 7x9 1-2 inches in size, with thi week's "Men tor,: In "The Mentor" a well known authority covers the subject of the pictures and stories of the week. Readers Read-ers of the Standard and the Mentor will know art. literature, history, sci ence and travel, and own exquisite pictures. 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