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This Story Begins To-Day (By Permission of George Munro's Sons.) @eing an extract from the singular journal of in M’Alister Ray, student of medicine, serving as Ship's doctor aboard the whaler Pole-Star.) CHAPTER I. In Frozen Seas, EPT, 11.—Latitude 81 degrees 40 minutes north, longi- 3 tude 2 degrees east. Still lying to amid enormous {ce fields. The one which stretches away to the north ® us and to which our ice anchor ts attached cannot de sinaller than an English county. Tc the right and left unbroken sheets extend to the Berizon. This morning the mate reported that there were fgnx of pack Ice to the southward. Should this form of sufficient thickness to bar our re- fturn we shall be in a position of danger, as the food, I ‘ Beor, 1s already running somewhat short. 4 It 1s late in the season and the nights are beginning to Beappear, This morning I saw a star twinkling just over fhe foreyard, the first since the beginning of May. There {s considerable discontent among the crew, many ef whom are anxious to get back home to be in time for fhe herring season, when labor always commands a high Brice upon the Scotch coast. ; Aw yet their displeasure is only signified by sullen coun- | benances and black looks, but I heard trom the second pate this afternoon that they contemplated sending a Weputation to the captain to explain their grievance. 1 much Coubt how he will receive it, as he is a man of Perce temper and very sensitive about anything approach- fag to an infringement of his rights. I sball venture after dinner to say a few words to him Won the subject. I have always found that he will tol- @rete from me what he would resent from any other mem- of the crew, «./ Amsterdam Island, at the northwest corner of Spits- en, is visible upon our starboard quarter—n rugged line volcanic rocks intersected by white seams which repro- feent glaciers. It 1s curious to think that et the presen: jmoment there fs probably no human being nearer to us Phen the Danish settlements in the south of Greenland—a ® good 900 miles as the crow files. \ A captain takes a gteat responsibility upon himself when he risks his vessel under such circumstances. No whaler Sas ever remained in these latitudes till so advanced a period of the year. ‘ 9 P. M—I have spoken to Capt. Craigie, and though the H has been hardly satisfactory, I am Wound to eay that Ustened to what I had to say very quietly and even defer~ When I had finished he put on that air of determination hs I have frequently observed upon his face, and paced ace backward and forward across the narrow cabin for fome minutes, At first I feared that I had seriously offended fhim, but he dispelled the idea by sitting down again anc putting his hand upon my arm with a gesture whfch almost mounted to a caress. There was a depth of tenderness, too, tm his wild dark eyes which ourprised me considerably, “Look here, doctor,” he sald, “I'm sorry I ever took you I am indeed—and I would give fifty pounds this minute to Bee you standing safe upon the Dundee quay. It’s hit or miss ‘with me this time, There are fish to the north of us. How | Gare you shake your head eir, when I tell you I saw them Blowing trom the masthead?—this in a sudden burst of fury, though I was not conscious of having shown any signs of doubt. “Two-and-twenty fish in as many minutes, as I am @ Rving man, and not one under ten feet. (A whale is meas- wred among whalers not by the length of its bodg but by tle length of its whalebone.) Now, doctor, do you think I ean ave the country when there js only one infernal atrip of © between me and my fortune? “If it came on to blow from the north to-morrow we eould | Bil the ship and be away before the frost could catch us. If é Bt came on to hlow from the south—well, I suppose the men re pald for risking their lives, and as for myself it matters jut little to me, for I have more to bind me to the other world than to this one. I confess that I am sorry for you, though. I wish I had old Angus Tait, who was with me last voyage, for he was a man that would never be missed, tnd you—you said once that you were engaged, did you nat?" “Yes,” I answered, snapping the spring of the locket y which hung from my watch-chain, and holding up the Uttle ; wignette of Flora. . “Curse you!" he yelled, springing out of his seat, with his wery beard bristling with passion. ‘‘What is your happiness to me? What have I to do with her that you must dangle her photograph before my eyes?’ I almost thought that he was about to strike me in the frenzy of his rage, but with another tmprecation he dashed open the door of the cabin nd rushed out upon deck, leaving me considerably aston | dshed at his extraordinary yiolence. At ts the first time that he has ever shown me anything Dui courtesy and kindness, I can hear him pacing excitedly up and down cverhead as I write these lines. T should lho to give @ sketch of the ~haractir of this man, but {t seems presumptuous to attempt such a thing upon paper, when the idea in my own mind 1s at best a wague and uncertain one, Weveral timcn I have thought that I graeped the clue mich might explain it, but only to be disappointed by his Preventing himself in some new light which would upset all may congluaions. It may be that no human eye tut my own shall ever rest upon these lines, yet as @ psychological study I shall at- tempt to leave eome record of Capt. Nicholas Craigie, A man's outer case generally gives some indication of ‘the sou) within, The captain is tal! and well formed; with dark, handsome face and @ curious way of twitchigg hiv lumbs, spr may arise from | E and Will End on Saturday. (a i resolute, but the eyes are the distinctive feature of his face. They are of the very darkest hi: bright and eager, with a singular mixture of recklessness in their expression and of something else which I have sometimes thought was more allied with horror than any other emotion. Generally the former predominated, but on occasioan, end more particularly when he was thoughtfully inclined, the look of fear would spread and deepen until it imparted a new claracter to his whole countenance. It ts at these times that he is most subject to tempes- tuour fits of anger, and he seems to be aware of it, for I have known him lock himself up so that no one might approach him until his dark hour was passed. He sleeps badly, and I have heard him shouting during the night, but his cabin is eome little distance from mine, and I could never distinguish the words which he said. ‘This is one phase of his character, and the mgst dis- agreeable one. It is only through my close association with him, thrown together as we are day after day, that I have otserved it. Otherwise he is an agreeable companion, well read and entertaining and as gallant a seaman as ever trod a deck. I shall not easily forget the way in which he handled the ship when we were caught by a gale among the loose ice at the beginning of April. I have never seen him so cheerful, and even hilarious, as he was that night as he paced backward and forward upon the bridge amid the flashing of the lightning and the howling of the wind. He has told me several times that the thought of death was @ pleasant one to him, which is a sad thing for a young man to say; he cannot be much more than thirty, though his hair and mustache are already slightly grizzled. Some great sorrow must have overtaken him and blighted his whole life. Perhaps I should be the same if I lost my Flora—God knows! I think if it were not for her that I should care very little whether the wind blew from the north or the aouth to-morrow. There, I hear him come down the companion, and the has iccked himself up in his room, which shows that he is still in an unamiable mood. And so to bed, as old Pepys would say, for the candle is burning down (we have to use them now einoe the nighto are closing in), and the steward has turned in, #0 there are no hopes of another one. Gept. 12—Calm, clear day, and still lying in the same porition. What wind there is comes from the southeast, but it (x very slight. Captain is in a better humcr, and apologized to me at breakfast for his rudeness, He still looks somewhat dis trait, however, and retains that wild look in his eyes whict’ in a Highlander would mean that he was “fey"—at least 90 our chief enginoer remarked to me, and he has some repu- tation among the Celtic portion of our crew as a seer and expounder of omens. It is strange that superstition should have obtained suct mastery over this hard-headed and practical race. I could not have believed to whht an extent it is carried had I not observei i: for myself. . We have had a perfect epidemic of it this voyage, unt!! I have felt tnclined to serve out rations of sedatives and nerve tontcs with the Gaturday allowance of grog. The “ret symptom of it was thet shortly afte: leavirg Shetland the men at the wheel used to complain that they heard plaintive cries and screams in the wake of the ship. as if something were following # and were unable to over- take it. This fiction has been kept up during the wholo voyagct and on dark nights at the beginning of the seal-fishing it was only with great difficulty that men could be induced to do their spell. No doubt what they heard was either the creaking 2f the rudder chains or the cry of some passing sea bird. I have been fetched out of bed several times to listen to it, but I need hardly gay that I was never able to distlaguish anything unnatural, The men, however, are go absurdly positive upon the sub- Ject that {t fe hopeless to argue with them. I mentioned the matter to the captain once, but to my surprise he took it very gravely, and indeed appeared to be consiferatlst disturbed by what I tolt him. I ehould have thought that he at least would have heen above such vulgar delusions, All this Gsquisition upon superstition leads me up to the fact that Mr, Manson, our second mate, saw a ghost last night—or, at lenst, eays that he did, which of cours: is thé same thing. Lt {9 quite refreshing to have some new topic of conversation after the eternal routine of bears and whales which has served us for ¢o many months. Manson ewears the ship is haunted, and that he would not stay in her a day ff he had any other place to go to. Indesd, the fellow 1s honestly frightened, and I hai ‘o give him some chloral and bromide of potassium this morning tc steady him down. He seemed quite indignant when I suggested that he had been having an extra glass the night before, and I wan obliged to pacify him by keeping as grave a countenance as possible during his story, which he oerta'nly narrated ta @ very straightforward and matter-of-fact way. “Iwas on the bridge, Mansion sald, “about four bells, the middle watch, just when the night was at darkest. There was a bit of moon, but the clouds were blowing across it so.that you couldn't see far from the ship. John MoLeod, the harpooner, came aft from the foc’sle head and reported a’ strange noise on the starboard bow. I went forrard and we both heard ft, sometimes like a bairn crying and sometimes ike a wench in pain. I've been seven- teen years to the country and I never heard seal, old or young, make @ sound like that. As we were standing there on the foc'sle head the moon came out from behind a cloud, and we both saw a sort of white figure moving across tha ice field in the same direction that we had heard the cries. “We lost sight of {t for a while, but {t came back on the port bow, and we could just make it out like a shadow on the ice. I sent aft for tho rifles, and McLeod and I went down onto the pack, thinking that maybe It might be a bear. ‘When we got on the {co I lost #’ght of McLeod, but I pushed on in the direction of where I could stil! hear the cries, T fotlowed them for a mile or maybe more, and then running round a hummock I came right on to the top of It standing and waiting for me séemingly. I don't know what ‘t was, Tt wasn't a bear, anyway. It was tall and white Straight, and {f !t wasn't a man nor a woman I'll stake my davy it ‘was something worse, I made for the ahip as hard as I could Tun, and. precious glad I was to find myself aboard. I signed article to. do my duty by the ship, and on the ship T'll stay, ‘but you don't catch me on the {co again after sundown,” | (ip! Be Continued) | WRITTEN EXCLUSIVELY FOR THE EVEN Jand the founding of New Amster- BRIEF CHAPTERS IN THE HISTORY OF NEW YORK. VG WORLD HOME MAGAZINE. BY ANDREW H. GREEN, “The Father of Greater New York,” |.—THE RULE OF THE DUTCH. “ry TS a good land to fall in with and a pleasant land to see,” sald ape Hudson as, on Sept. 11, 1609, he sailed through the Nar- rows and for the first time saw the Island of Manhattan. sailors from Europe, historians assert, had looked upon this island before Hudson's search for a westward passage to India led him hither; Hudson advertised the land be found, and it was his report that, arousing the interest of the Dutch, induced the colonization of New Netherland dam. He came as the agent of the wealthy Dutch East India Company, which, under its charter, could not reap the profit of his discovery; the Dutch West India Company was formed to exploit the new lands and ruled it fifty years. Four other figures are prominent in the first period of the history of this city: Peter Minuit, the first Gov- ernor-General, who bought the island of Manhattan from the Indians for 60 guilders’ (equivalent to $24) worth of beads and established on it the seat of his government; avaricious Walter after Kieft—more arbitrarily, yet more successfully. Stuyvesant was a soldier past middle age, accustomed to command and having no love of counsel. Unlike his predecessors he had no training in nor love of trade, His people occupied lands as far to the south as the Delaware River, as far to the north as Albany and were most numerous on Manhattan and adjacent islands. It was the people of Manhattan who caused him trouble, who took least kindly to the paternal rule he promised and sought to give. They were Dutch and loved self-government, and gave welcome to the persecuted of all sects who cared to come and live or trade with them. They were not warlike people, but bitterly resented restric- tions on trade, taxes and arbitrary rule. They would not repair the fort, nor keep the cows and pigs off the earth walls the Governor threw up, until, during his absence in a futile expedition against the Swedes who were eettling on the Delaware, the Indians came upon them and killed many. Personally, Stuyvesant was not tolerant of others’ religious ideas, but his bigotry in regard to the Jews and other sects was fortunately restrained: large degree by the orders of the home government in the old Nether- ae, vitis “concessions in regard to local self-government were also made under compulsion, THrough many quarrels with the people Stuyvesant softened, and on Feb. 2, 1653, was compelled to grant the members of the board to nominate their successors. The battle was won when Peter Tonneman, “late schout of Breucklen,” went to Ameterdam with the indorsement of the Magistrates and secured appointment as schout of New Amsterdam from Stuyvesant's masters. But under this martial Governor's rute the fort at the lower end of the | y, island on the site of Battery Park was strengthened, a palisade was built across the island along Wall street, streets were surveyed among the haphazard locations of houses, Heeren straate (the Broadway of to-day) laid out and many minor improvements made. He governed a real city of 1,200 inhabitants when, in 1664, fifty-five years after Hudson's visit, an English fleet sailed into the bay and de- Resistance was useless, the burghers believed, and although Stuyvesant mved he had to yield. His rule ended. New Amsterdam became New York, and he retired to bis farm, between Third avenue, East River, Sixth and Sixteenth streets, where he died eight years after the surrender. He had become the hero of manded the surrender of New Amsterdam. the Dutch and the friend of the English. eo 4 iy ra, forewell at the ci ago they would have donned boiler-plate raglans and hacked at enc falchions or hatfdomes or hontsolts or some other meaiveval weap the rulers of tw onlatic nations. At presen and the torrid echer small talk for theirs when they meet boy. Royal Pa «inches his tru fayn the London Sphere, the King sald the’ President replicd Ollendorfl Hy "Bon ' oyagel” GREEN - Van Twiller, the little, rotund Governor who added Governor's, Blackwell's and other islands to his large estates and little to the company’s credit; William Kieft, a passionate, arbitrary Governor, who, after a stormy term, set sail with ‘his chief enemy, Domin{e Bogardus, to answer charges before the Chamber of Amsterdam, was wrecked on the coast of Wales and died, with the rude, old man of God begging and giving pardon; Peter Stuyvesant, who lost a leg while Governor of Curacoa and came to rule New Netherland became much firat munic{pal charter in the history of the city. He was ordered by the Chamber of Am- sterdam, the governing body for the New Netherland of the West India Company, to establish a municipal body to be composed of a schout or sheriff, two burgomasters or mayors, and five schepens or aldermen, who were to sit as a board of magistrates having judicial and legislative powers. Stuyvesant would not grant the schout, but appointed the other officers, in- vesting his own fiscal with the schout's duties as executive officer of the board. For ten years the burghers of the city of New Amsterdam contended with the Governor for the appointment of a schout and the right of the “HANDS ACROSS THE SEA.” Charles Frohman... YIRST TEMB IN NE KLAW & ERLANGER patie Gr rage Yee" “JOAN AUNRY” | To-NIGHT, ROMEO AND JULIET! p ERASE RUN ‘HURTIG. & SEAMON'S <3 of the latter's visit to Paris, Mad they mot a few centuries ATW ETHWE SESW ART BIJOU) MABELLE GILMAN ¢ TO-NI ywever, It Is the glad hand Loubet ts shown In the photo as raising his hat politely, showing he was (aught nice manners as a ty sword with his free hand and his hat stays Where his third assistant deputy valet put !t, As the two great men parted, “T again thank you cordially,’ while TT +HILG THEA. Lex. Avo. & 42d 8. ACADLAY ok Weexerdis Swat’ | SOUMR A WIFE'S SECRET. | PARR. “K1gS; OR, | WEST |THE ROYAL Li! TIANS.-Next * END { Week Sie aston the Pow ‘Orpbane | mare said. Soh. eae Rate ‘ : (oD Mat. To-day, .# THE . EVENING » WORLD'S # HOME w MAGAZINE w WHAT IS THE STANDARD OF VALUE FOR A SINGLE KISS? This 15 Wheama Juries Have Appraised It at Sums Varying from Six Cents to $25,000. awarded $3,000 for 1,236 kisses, a new market rate for the single osculation has been put on record, Miss Pettit thought her kisses, which were bestowed on James P, Tittemore, should bring her in %,000 for 1,236, but a jury in the Supreme Court allowed her only $2.42 a kiss. In the history of the human kiss no set price has been fixed for the rapturous lablal pastime, though court records show an interesting diversity of opinions in regard to its real value. Among the higest-priced kisses on record, according to the kissee’s valuation, is that which Mrs. Antonia Filskow, of Now York, demanded for kisses she said she received from Si Miss Frances Pettit, of Ballston Spa, N. Y., was Dr. Anthony Hoffman. Both partis were of New York, where the kiss seems to come high. Mrs. Filzkow's bill was: To one kiss on cheek, $25,000. To one kiss on mouth, $25,000. Total cost of two kisses, $50,000. Out in the Windy City kisses among the “Coeds” at the Untiveraity of Chicago are valued) at a high rate, Miss Dorothy Mills, who brought sult against Z. B. Brousseau recently, asked for $25,000 for one hug and ten kisses. The hug, it is presumed, was worth $5,000 and the kisses $20,000 per. The cheapest kiss on record bears the Newark, N. J., brand. A jury in the First District Court of Newark de- clded in 1902 that Policeman Thomas J. Dockery, of Mont- clair, must pay Miss Theresa Heervey six cents for kissing her. Miss Hervey valued the kiss at $300, but owing to the fact that she bad forgiven the policeman, she received six cents, which places a distinctive price on the special brand known as the "forgiven" kiss. Over in Newark they have a primitive system of os- culatory fines, for in the same year Judge Sohalk fined a young woman and young man $10 for kissing in the park, which places a difference of 39.94 between a kisa stolen in ® doorway, as in the policeman's case, and one taken in the park. Jersey City places the $10 Umit on a kiss stolen on the street, for in 1900 Thomas Angelo was fined that amount for filching an osculation from Miss Minnie Baxter, It cost George McCatthy, a crayon portrait canvasser, HOW TO TELL A SOLDIER’S RANK, uniform markings to represent rank or grade or branch of the United Btates Army gervice, recently promulgated by Adjutant-General Corbin in gen- 1 orders, are confusing to persons accustomed to the old insignia. The order bothered army vriform makers, officers and men considerably, as the changes from the old devices are very marked. OMcers who wer. anxtous to appear before President Roosevelt, Gen. Miles, Adjutant-General Corbin and the great array of department chiefs at the recent ¢edication exercises at St. Louis in uniforms every deta!l of which complied with the new regulations were put to their wits’ end to secure proper outfits, Ths militany un‘ferm manufacturers of the United States whom army offlc:rs favored makers have been hard at work for months. Some of the new devices have puzzled military men themselves a little and the uninitiated lave been entirely at sea in determining the rank and branch | T| favor are few in number. The: of tervice of the men they met. some of the 20n commirsioned officers. Special Notices, Father John’s Medicine Cured Me of a long standing bronchial and ca- tarrh trouble. Many of my employees use it with wonderful results.—T. F. Kelly, 19 Parkhurst St., Newark, N.J. ne Amusements. HERALD SQ, Frat s NN’ NEW YORK "To. DAN DALY yahica Bib, "Jo ery’ Books RICK THEATRE, HENKY E.DIXEY In PAVING THE ti SIC) = KNICKERBOCKER THPATRE, Bway & One week only, Sat. Matia Presented by Liebler & Co. All Star Cast: *, jor Robson, Kben Plympto in E. Kellard, Edwin Ard “The Toreador.’ Savage presenta the New M aa Ri CASINO To-Night IL HE MOCKING BIRD.” \CHE BATES be expected. MOLES, WARTS, FRECKLES, MOTH, TAN, LIVER SPOTS, Removed Now Stay Removed The ekin being moist and pliable, Greatly alds the treatment, and in- sures perfect and with a clear, healthy, roseate com- Plexton free from spot or blemish. My eclentific trea'ments never fail. Thirty years’ pract perience. Hours 9 to 6. Call or write pereonally t me. ‘Woodbury D. I., 22 Wost 234 St., New York, John H, Amusements MADISON SQUARE GARDEN. SWAN TY ew hee eS USS" muneroitatsree| PASTOR'S scirigidie™ “VENTGE IN WEW YORK” chess: MAY 3L a ordica Ni fe8"* De Reszke | ss mera “Astrwctie "Thats Pratl Hove, IRCLE it Y, $1. $2 Gen, nn 14th Street Theatre, 7" asd a. & Gat. NEARING THe §ND OF THEIR RUN. THE 4 COHANS Ztetvxe OLVEP Dior g0'N in 1BSTH STK D LENOX Manhattan san essay THE EARL OF PAWTUCKET, | tee ose mom MONDAY EVENING, MAY 25, 1903. Vow Gold going to break his Me Wt prepored te Settle for ‘kisses veceived, be ryan eal. %0 to kiss Mrs. Andrew J, Stinemeyer in Vineland, N. # The sylvan Justice placed a higher price on the osculation stolen from the red Ips of the village beauties than the) Newark authorities. o : A Grand Jury at New Brunswick fined Robert McKipbia $5.15 for kissing Mrs. Dela Mauser, which was a pretty high price for that nelghborhood. at A Blue Grass kiss is recorded as costing the kisser $10% . Robert Crawford bestowed an unsolicited salutation upéay the rosy ips of Miss Annie Stewart, and was promptly fined that amount by a Frankfort Justice. Up in Wisconsin kisses have been valued at an: * but a uniform price. In Richland Centre Mrs. Robert Stay- ton brought sult against D. G. James for $15,000, the same being the price for five kisses filched from her, and which she valued at $6,600 aplece. In Oshkosh osculations come a little cheaper, but in the Ht case cited they are put down as the servant girl variety. Miner H.Ballou pald the penalty for kissing his wife's maid three times. The jury fixed the price of servant girl kisses at $168.66. Te At Sheboygan, Wis., a Circuit Court Judge values iktenea’ very cheaply. In a suit brought by Mrs. Bouska for $00 — for kisses given Peter Hugent, she was awarded $600. Mrs,” Bouska sald Hugent had promised her $1 for every kiag, and that she had given him 3,000 worth. ‘ Middletown, N. Y., has established a record. Justice Martin J. Keogh fixed the price of kisses at $200 per. Isaac Harris had to pay that price to Mrs. Estella Hook, woman, in 1902, but the osculation she valued as highly would a blushing young girl. : In 1900 Recorder Walcott, of Little Falls, N. ¥., fixed the. value of a stolen kiss at $10, which seems to be the most popular price yet settled upon. Oharles Persons stole a kis from Mrs. Maud Hurst, and her indignation could only Be. appeased by the judicial decree of a $20 fine. ex The price of kisses runs all the way from six cents to $25,000, and as there are continually recurring cases of grieved” females bringing suits for stoler. or bestowed kisaes, It ‘that the statistics of the kisses’ financial value should be formylated into a system whereby rash offenders might know exactly the penalty they must pay for violating the laws of formal etiquette. A national price for osculating would be the best solution for the difficulty, so that Wis) consin damsels and Blue Grass belles may not be constantly, — aggrieved at a lesser or greater value being placed on sete. lations from their respective States. i House Cleaning Made Bagy, For All Cleaning A Perfect Subs stitute for Benzine an@ Naphtha, Non-Inflammabie. Non-Explosive.,. Sold by Grocers, Drag uid. by Ams Pyranzing Gos Amusements RY PROGICR’S a rved By Aft. and Eve. The accompanying engraving will help you hereafter to properly designate WSLS Bain Tabs, ee WALLACE BRSKIND & All 5 Favortte, Big Veuée, Costinucen,. 68th St. THE SMART SET. Mats. Mon, Wed., Thome, Sh } {Bbth St. Eee ~§ HUBER’S MUSEUM. HMES. MAADY, 1rea, Skull Hooter, MASCOT, Ine Talking Ronee. lasting results, SULTAN 2? SULU: Gard: & Vinesot, Mr. and Mra. 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