The evening world. Newspaper, December 2, 1902, Page 11

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> Love in the Woods. THE PRANKS LITTLE CUPID PLAYED WITH AN ADIRUNDACK GUIDE, “ALECK” THORNTON'S DELUSION. Miss Vining Was in Love with Nature Only and Had No Heart for the Guide. BY H. S. CANFIELD. (Copyright by Dally Story Pub. Co) the deer come down io feed or found is3 V1 went to Coour d) 3a the summer homes of nesting wild fowl. M Lake because she wanteil to he ng at dusk, she paid him and MA r tee tees Ginner. then to her book, then Jingle of the telophone, the raucous! to ner bed as routine, She did not think roles oF days, the thowsand little! oe the town often and had lost her annovances of ite in a ble city, BIC! weusiness of Iimb and spirit. She caw was titty beautiful and &| 54 change in the man, He was to her, socin| leader, and she found that soct-ty |e cyer, patient, attentive, uttcouth, welghed hi upon her. Disgust fol- | 4 th 604 sentences falling now and then lowed upon ratlety and wearinera upon! from His grizzled Ips. If she had been dlagiist. an older or younger woman she might Sie found that Coeur de Sang ThK*| have sounded tha shoals and deeps of Wagefar enough away from her o'd life | his mind, but he did not interest her ‘The little jumber hote) stood at its north { gufficlentiy for that. end upon a nt of land, Th few; It was a mellow day In late Septem- guests were arden: fishermen and fisher-/ ber and the air over the far edges of the women, | lake had a blue bint of Indian summer, Miss Vining was a botanist and culled | It was ca in the afternoon, but she the wild flowers, an entony ; had sold him her desire to return to the studied the insests of glad hotel and he was paddling slowly home- @ naturailst and Inspected the wild [w She noted for the hundredth But, most of ol! she loved to float upon‘ time the awkward droop of bis shoul- A FREE SERVICE. “HERE, HE SAID, “[8 BVERKY DOLLAR YOU'VE PAID ME.” the ake of travel slowly through its| dere, swaying back and forth in the shac‘es or plunge among its beds of lites | coarse brown shirt, and the gnarled look or watch, far down, the darting bass. of his hands on the oars. She never used the rod and Iine,! “tt has been a pleasant summer, Mostly she had a book tn her Jap, upon | Aleck,"’ she said. which she glanced occasionally from} He sald yes, that it had been a pleas- under her wide hat. Brown came to} ant summer; it would be, though, an her cheek and a stronger light to her! early fall, He had nbdted a tall bit of She was a picture of health, very golden rod on the west bank. easlhil and gracious and unconscious | “tn the winter the lake freezes three of ; .feet deep and the tre ‘A dozen guides were attached to the |oid, Gt'm a bitter kentry out here” | hotel. It was their duty to row the| “fam going back early, because 1 boats and fishermen to the most |teave for home this afternoon. You fruitful waters, She had looked them | have been a good gulde, Aleck.” over upon her arrival and selected | ie paused with the oars in the air one of them who seemed an older man | ang jooked at her suddenly, startled. than his companions and quieter. She face went an ashy gray In color, had beard him called “Aleck” and 0) tome? ne repeated, dully, ‘Going addressed him. His other name was} ) 299 Thornton, but she never learned it. Bhe paid him his wage at the end of eee son falon” voters, going | Ore power Into the strokes, ‘Ahead of “Thai ' Q them the hotel showed on its high | point of land. He ran the boat to the landing and made it fast without leay. . HI iM-kept and f t. Ghe expected him to step Mie beara geinulog, tis eoceoh the dmtest| out and lend hor hin hand, as had been of the uniettered. She had chosen him his custom, but he did not stir. Instead because of uw cortain quiet hopelessness} "° 4% looking at her with a strang in his face which seemed to promise| "tensity, His gaze caught and held that he would be dccupled with tis own|°7O* thoughts and would ot interfere with) "7 don't want you to o."" hé bean her& Bome guides are garrulous, and slowly and speaking with manifest ef- there are few things more grindingly| {0% “without knowing what you've wearying than a long day on a lonely | one. I'm just a woods guide, poor and lake with a talking guide. A commoner |‘#n0rant, but I'm a man and I've got looking man wes not to be found in|*h? Maht to tell you. There ain't a ‘all of the North woods, yet he had the|@Wer that will look as pretty to me oul of a poet. Under the rough tusk|®fter you're there won't be no of fils homeliness and commonness there | USC in the water and in the wind. longing and dreams, but they did| THs, whole earth looks gray to me lps, now.’ knew his business, He learnea| The Color surged to her face, then quickly that it was Nature not fish that | Peceded. she wanted, and he showed 6t to her in “Yes; I could not stay always." He bent to the oars again, putting “IZ am very sorry for this,” ahe wai, gently. She waw nothing ludicrous WORLD'S —= HOME — MAGA/ZINI | signals across the Susquehanna River jtul has he wropght fn that time that it] stations. i through the ether between Cornwall, | between four wooden towers as shown| use of the greater number of wires, | 185,000 miles a récond. At present the | flows through the ether surrounding the| which are being made at present, RLD? TUESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 2, 1902 cere ee = ae HOW MARCONI WILL SEND WIRELESS MESSAGES 2,500 MILES. - pe Brator arcg mtatio Poldhu, Corhwalh strument to the other.) The waves then feeble and could not instrument, so that a “coherer” amd “Re lay," as shown in the diagram of thee recelving station, have to be used. Shenth! coherer consists of metal filings. whishls remain separate from one another and qeum offer reaistance to a current until Hertgian waves strike the aerial the filings press together and the ohe struction is bridged, The relay nt n then act, and a strong oui stantly flows vhrough the ciroult” operates the machine which prints code on paper tape. The ether are like the strength of the engine which {9 sufficient to pull over the which sets the steam (here a relay tery) at work. a wireless message clear around the world? He has demonstrated the possibility of signalling nearly %,000+miles without wires, Now he Is on the eve of siecess- fully establishing transailantle wireless telegraphy. What he has done has been accomplished In a very few years. The Arst wireless experiments were made in is? by Prof. Morse, who sent electric W's Marcon! ever be able to send ald that two stitions might be pliced back to baok aad the Waves made to pass comp roan) the world. Such a feat would require waves of very great lengih in order to bend round the great curvature of Uno earth, the curvature of the Atlantic being «mal! in comparison. The upper layer without using Intermediate wires; but of our atmosphere may, however, form a kind of in 1 reflecting surface whl Marconi's experiments are only five Will curve round the Waves to a certain extent and prevent the loss of energy years old, and so much that Is wonder- coming from too great 9 diffusion js not unreasonable to expect a world-| Instead of a single wire the new sta- ed It. The old single wire gave out) whieh when dropped in a pond causes | Waves travel not by means of the atm xirdling achievement from him. tlons are fitted with 160 wires, which]!ts energy in one or two violent spasms, ripples to flow outward in every direc-| phere but through the far more intan- At any moment the news may come/are not fixed in a perfectly perpendicu-| which could be caught by any receiving tion, The electri¢al ripples almilarly | ible aubstance ether, which 1s held to that messages and not merely sig-|lar position, but are arranged in the) station within reach. The necessfty for stream out from the wire in every di-| fill up space and penetrate all matter. Is or single words have flashed} form of an inverted pyramid suapended| secrecy has, it 1a understood, led to the rection at the speed of Hgot, which !s| Even.in ordinary telegraphy the current es England, and Cape Breton, N. @., 2,500)in the illustrations. witich give out a more regular flow of number of waves Which stream from | atoms of copper rather than through the| may carry a portable wireless | miles apart. These towers give the stations a mora! waves that can only be read by an in- & Marcont pole ts from 500,000 to 2,000,-) wire itself. In wireless telegraphy the| graphic instrument tuned to iteh Powerful stations have been estab-| Imposing appearance, but their duty ia strument ‘tuned’ to receive them. 00) per second. current does not flow through wires, but | of one carried by a distant tole pe lished at Glace Bay in Nova Scotia and| merely to hold up the wires which do! (nat happens when a wireless mea-| ‘These waves ure not to be confounded | from wires using the ether which pene-| on" frat, Ayeton has put $2 06 pee at Poldhu in Cornwall, which can throw | the work of transmi'ting and catching sage is sent across a great space? An | With the alr waves which cause sound, | (ates the atmosphere as a medium) not where, he will call in a rt out electrical oscillations that will reach | the electro-magnetic waves in the ether. | electric spark is made to snap | though for the purposes of explanation | through which to flow. magnetic voice, re by him "wo 4 far and wide, The Cornwall station has| This fan arrangement of wires is evi-| tween two brass balla by the mechan-|they may be compared to them, When! ‘The waves which fly from the trans. | Wie, Clectto-magnetic ear, silent already kept in touch with the Ttalian[dently designed to give the low but|ism shown here in the diagram of the )a poker Is struck the vibrations of the! mitting station almost instantly reach| “Where are you?” he will say. crulser Carlo Alberto the whole way| cumulative Impulao to the ether waves! sending station, The sparks may be | steel rod transfer thempelves to the aur-| the distant recelving wire. (The same small reply wilt come: across the Atlantic, and single words| required for tuned or “ayntonic wireless! sald to make a spalwh en vse ether, the |rounding alr in the form of waves in the| wire ts used to transmit and recelve, | rogaine the A ‘nian have passed between the sea divided telegraphy,” as Mr. Marcon! has desig-| high wire taking the place of the stone atmosphere, Now wireless telegraphy | the cable end being shifted from one in-| the Atlantic. = eee eaten “ | ° = H pee kn a A ROMANCE OF THE DAY'S NEWS. THE OLD RELIABLE Cc | TENNYSoN's ENOCH ARDEN A BACK HUMBER, | © KOCH eo 9 | Th Ee ap TST AS MG epee a a a SEE Ree IR Wednesday and Thursday. A and a sharp breese stirred the The preparations for leaving London So terminated the long-anticipated re- | Z leaves of the old oak trees fn @] could not be completed quickly enough | turn of wealthy Peter Spies to his home; L BER Y ATIN RIBB N, Pa i quiet little street of Mount Vernon. gn] to satisfy the exuberant spirits of the} at No. 61 Oak street, Mount Vernon, the shadow of a vine-covered potsh | happy inventor. which he left as a poor man. stood a trusting family group, a picture} “Not a word of this shall they learn! ————— 2 of reluctant separation. from any lips but my own,” he erled “Y b dear,” said the} out delightedly. “I will return unex- Setroking the hair back from the] pectedly and surprise them, No more| | MAY MANTON man? stroking the hair back from the paseelyss leet i ne face of his sad-faced wife. ‘I will re- | boarding-house my wife and the turn as speedily as| children; from now on they shail live DAILY DRESS HINT. I can, and when 1] {n comfort." a do you and the chil-| Out into the densely crowded London dren will have all] streets went the childishly happy man, the comforts I so] buying tokens for the wife and ‘children Jong to give you.'! | he longed so much to see. The woman then| Never did steamer creep so slowly, brushed the tears] thought Peter Spies as he regarded the from her eyes and| great expanse of waker which was *truggled bravely to gradually diminish- meet the man’s ten- ing between “him der faze with a look and the little home Hfot confidence and in Mount Vernon, cheerfulness, | At last he arrived will be brave, |} ao at his destination, Peter,” she said, “Can It realty be?” “but, ohe It le so he murmured, look- wns. peren spies. hard to let you go. Ing up at the half- DOUBLE FACE SATIN LIBE RIBBON, 4 inches wide, pure silk, a superior quality, ev rable evening shade; Flow also white, cream and black, reg. 38c. per yd.; for two days. RUFFLE RIBBONS, with shirring cords, vari colors, also holly combinations, 4 inches wi 35c. per yd., for two days . POWDER | 125th Street West, Brvenienon Absolutely Pure a ae ee aT aD 4 THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE aTASCO TREE =| see i DMI BEL Asco W AARON NED. 5 AGRE Amusements VISIT PROCTOR'S TO-DAY. 3, Boe THE DARLING ,%%, GODS LANC) TES 1s You will return just @s soon ae your |]h curtained windows, | Reserved Rvery Att SBATS NOW ON SALE. Invention 4s sold?” she queried. from which the {| {| ye Near 6th Ave, “Purope fs such a long, long way from evening lights |, (Taylor Richard C here, but I will do my part. I can glowed. “Fifteen make 4 living for the ohildren and my- months and nothing self by taking In boarders-yes—I will A} changed." vacrifice anything for the éake of seeing MEE) ike a schoolboy your ambition in your in- he bounded up the PETER SPIES. steps. Already he could feel the preasure of his wife's arms around his neck, already he could in his fond anticipation, feel her kisses upon his ips. FAREWELL PERFOR MANOS, yD COTT | cp UinEnigk (AUNT JACK. William Dramweli, | DAVISON & MECUSKER. POST @ CLINTON, | MR: ‘Dlh hie Minnie Seligman. “An Favorite] THE BROWNINGS, Fiske a MDoNOvON.| OLCOTT (Stock, with Vaudeville Features. Br 3 RE THEATRE. “Oloott reat OF OMINATOWN." sont.| Rv'en N30" Mate, Wedneetsf a Setortage Pie | eee ee Ones OI VOID Sh zea ecsrce | FAVERSHAM it IMPRUDENGE, | Poestar Matinee To: Morrow, 6-80 (THE LAST APPEAL, Adelaide! Ga pp We BEST STOCK COMPANIES NBW. YORK. E. Ss. WILLARD, CARDINAL. 4 "How nappy Tam." he aid, an he HERALD Savane riper 8 way & aotn ge, | THUPMAY Matines, Deo (DAVID GARRICK, paused to cing the bell, ‘to return wi eleptione. 703. 33th Se THEA., Bway & 8988. NA + MK. = .NIK Y sctial wraith to tay atthe font oF my | MARE ARrRNoON coRN. Latin MAN'S FALE L D|icneortis tts, Exe me | Mamtvattnny Ptr hes ea brave little wife.” Gowns made in shirt walst style are th RNG Miss MAXINE MRS. FISKE | ARY ARK mad Co Ma ring the door|Ideal for atternoon wear'and are inthe! JULIUS CAESAR, |GOODWIN — ELLIOTT ; PASTOR'S» 152 Setiaben | 40 St Theat, Be oes | phat is a brave girl,’ sald the man tenderly, “Tt 4s for you and the children that I am taking this venture into the world, Our future depends on It, and 1 fam sure of success, Only be patient, dear, and wait for me with confidence nd choer in your heart” ar will wait for you forever, Peter, ail the manifold glories of that vast in the ugly figure and strained, ugly day she leaned trom the boat's! {ace. @.and plucked @ golden lily which} “You hain't no cail to be,” he an- flared upon the surface. At that mo-|#wered. ''Tatn't your fault. You mont ten yerds away a swirl showed| couldn't help being the most beautiful where @ muscatonge had risen, rolied |@nd the best woman in the wortd. I'm to blame. I knowed how it would be the said,| the fust day I went out with you, but ng to the lly, “that them flowers}! was willing to stend the after pain, be gold bowls made by the fairies to] You'll remember me for a little while, Arigk out of, and in the morning when | Mebbe, as the man Who pulled the boat fe yoman, her arms around 518! In response It oe D : Leis toe ie hard to eay g000-DY, DUE }opened and on the threshold stood the|Aelght of style. ‘This smart example 1s PRINCESS, "x2" 2% we iveg ame |_'@ THE ALTAR OP FRIBNDSH SEATS FOUR WEEKS IN ADVANGE. JU . - 1 for the best. Httle son he had left in tears fifteen|made of myrtlo green henrietta with by. ure. ‘ving 7 = ee re aes ° road - J ° cite Epics kimed hie wite and chil-|montha before. pipings of black and white, ‘Tho watst) Weedoo Grovimith & Con Tas Night ot the’Parey, | CRITERION THEATRE. prea aoa | Wober & Plelds’ 031° | prams so ‘ f rf a ith Hed plait authe Last 6 By'gs at $. Last Matinee Saturday at 2 |rine MUSICAL Wie A moment's attaton, den were #88] cing "made invay atthe trone| GAS "tS" A GHIESE HOKETOON] VIRGINIA HARNED in IRIS. | issue, TWIRLY-WHIRES, a @ad cry. x f v rr > beneath the central plait. The skirt is DEC. J! A MARLOWE tn THE CAVALIER, | ——— — ae Ae : Ratner! Ob, father, you have really! out in nine gores, two of which are in | gyrgy iiiiTHe ; ing | MATINEE TO-DAY, ve Into the dren good-by and started out woud to maké a fortune for those he loved. 1 man, but with the confidence nich wuceess In his invention, GARRICK THEATRE, 35th at., o'r Biway, Kv'gs, $25. Mate, Wednesday & Saturday, 2.15. DEWEY, come back again.” full length and form the train, while prices Bon Ton Burlesque! which betoke t In Joy his children crowded around ne ee Lae aA bee he viaited the capitals of Europe, WheN| nim, put the face he amost longed tol iN frit And Abt mores are lenginene MANNERING. | TOP GERALDING. > | B40 0, | “A Daty Seep. “ortental Fortune seemed to turn her smile see was! Gbuent Material required for the medium st | By Clyde F: ; URS, OSBORI'S PLAY Hommes EEAGE PAE oon “FAD AND POM ee: Ev'gs, 8.20, Mute, Wednesday & Saturday. new hope would fill his heart. bit the dear wife and childron who are waiting for me across the sea I will “Where ie your mother, children?’ Be) roy walst, 42-8 yards 2 inches wide, asked, his exuberance of feeling blind-15 1.5 yaran #7 inches wide or 2 yarda 44 Ing him to fhe strange look In the] et int 938 yarde 2 NEW SAVOY THEATRE. 34th ot. & Bway. there’s dew in ‘em it seems like the tor you; that's only natural, But 11 boon trouble in the night and the fairies} never forget you, never; and I'll think hate cried into ‘em.” of you every day as a woman that come “But, after all, it is only dew,’ said] Gown from the stare and let me look ‘at her a little while and went away.” pped to the: landing and 4. As she sprung to him he drew from use Vining. “Yes, I know; but I like to think it's the fairies, We folks out here, miss, things, and we'ye got to think of 'em ifferent from what other folks would think of em." To him the waters, the winds, the woods, the wild creatures, the blooms ‘were matters of everyday. ‘The hours went on through the lan- guore of June, the heats of July and atill she stald.. The every dollar paid ne’ meant to keep 1 couldn't take money for belng wh ‘ou. Pve got the yellow Itly you 4 Met) A oy left Wp nthe Purse into t ai turned “into tne path leaging to the When drove away that aft phe ma his ting in the boat, pedir PITHY POINTS, {f ignorance is bilss most of the world ere Of right, She met him inji# Geliriously happy, as o ntuer of epee Or! “Naturally the seamy side of life is @ boat. Then Aischesed in the sewing cirole.— it purse, evidently ut 5 gucceed,"" he sald. In Berlin, in Paris, in Vienna the in- ventor tried to find a hearing, and be- ere = | BannTnone |,4 COUNTRY ROUSE, KEITH'S 2x Pati: Soe . ative” AUDREY, | itt. | MUSES ngheMatOSbagte, | retain ate thought. we were| inches wide, $34 yards 37 Inches wide ats 41-2 yards 4 Inches wide. I ave | never golng to see you again,” said the oWalat pattern, No. 3,999, in sizes for fore his mental gaze one picture 6! f,| eldest; “but we're 0 happy—so very || 49° 9 38 and 40 Inch bust, mailed him the courage which knows mo M1 | napny, now. Mother—why mother's gone | fio conta (aint oy oleae ate eee ‘so | £0, the theatre with Paul Miller.” Skirt pattern, No, 3,976, ts cut In sizes « surrounded by the children A sudden chill fell upon the man as ‘ A gag JAS. 3 In go . 2 Writ for Mint | sesenibeeetae + Well, standing on thet familar vine-|,¢ Mind’t tO its children’s facee and th 28 and 39 Inch wala 4 HACKETT rive CRISIS a Re (METROPOLIS. "sy RTZON i c wee -| aca y OF MUSIC. 14th St. @ Irving Hi | ad poreh. read a story he dreaded to prove Send money to “Cashier, The World. | ATLANTIC Q4RDES. towers. “sotora | 30 MONTH—A MELODRAMATIC SENSATION, | 1422 St. 4 22 Av near Cena Ste « {am a poor man," sald Peter 816%. | Wyen the wife and her escort returned | aoe ine, New York Clty” weet THE NINETY AND NINE [HARLEM y Eves S15. Maun Wed. @ Gad Lie «| BEERS" FEMME THEATRE CD wt Hoa, ‘and I have never been able to #ive} 1.4: evening, the long-absent husband my children and my wife the comforts) ¢oii4 his cherished Jreama shattered Pricee—5,50,70,100, Mate, Wed.d Sata. By.,b.1u, | HOUSE: jal tow 2 fect of the wife he had fancied waiting HAIR ON THE Snes VIOLA ALLEN BROADWAY T2iC8T HY m8, an¢ It waa in London that success came} pariently for him was gone. removed by WEDNBSDAY MATINEE 60s. TO an 80. tira to we ther alge ot the erent | yrurped, at nike Bngeh he" di not infu i f2"%c08"| B1JOU) Mabelle Gilman |THE SILVER SLIPPER, to the other atte of the great ped, but unlike Enoch he did not turning usu nu i Bat. Mat fn THE MOCKING BIRD. Atlantic, where all that he held dear] creep allently aw: ean: : : 1 = = DALY'S; aie Hi In Ufe was centred. Peter Splea discovered Miller wear- LE 3 i. they deserve, but they ehall have them The Joy of proving his wealth at the ORIA, 424 st. D'way,7th ay ak way, Sat. ‘The municipality of the city of Lon-|ing Mis clothes and Jewelry, which had don bought -big patent on aré Mghts| peen removed from the trunks he Had and $100,000 was paid into the hands of/ sent ahead. The angered husband or- the happy husband and father. | dered Miller from the house and thi “Qne hundred thousand dollers,” he! quarrel which followed led to Milles’ LESLIE GAR Amusements. AGE 5 2DIC, 1D av — SS RON a We = | AMERICAN 22 88 A80 srt av LUMBIA}T ar, Om Brs-845) West Bnd Theatre +", a TO MOnN “Tomar, SRC |4 ga bi OF feat: Ee pee yr 2 Popular Priets, | MARGARET MAY in ‘WEN STE R)* | Usxo't Men.).260. Lie ‘ a

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