The evening world. Newspaper, November 25, 1905, Page 8

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Seep seeamemen ontereenmnnnenneennamartee-ommmapaeeneaegemennenete ae Tt gl Sette - . THe EVenran woflw's Mome Madazine, Saturdor Evoning, November 25, 1905, | T ” | ~ | Wal 1 | No Recount. A Group of Oddities | By J. Campbel Py. i { ) Published by tho Press Publishing Company, No, 68 to 63 Park Row, New Vor¥ > 4 NE ell Cor ¥ in Picture and Story, b Entered at the Post-Oftivo at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. — | sas cenlianeaal ww VOLUME 46, Sbed LabASs SULOSS yeanedecsen aesssi NOs 16, 186) : 1e Who has partaken too fredy tiation. on o—— — ar? it fe the hi work of the Crar of 7 ad Jape ab were making his Where Is the Hugger-Mugger? vibe ae The appearance of Mr. J. P. Mor- | gan as a witness before the Insur-, ; ance Investigating Committee will be an event of supreme interest. It will be Hamlet coming on the | boards after Laertes and Horatio and Polonius have spoken their pieces and made thelr exits, iil il What is it that is wanted of Mr. this toy for the delipi of his baby son, the little Czarewitet, It 1s a wooden eerpent, eo jointed as to wr, nevery directton, It is cotered black with red Morgan? Where is the hugger #nd white spots, he paint Aaa belng of a non-polsonoug nature, in case the mugger? What underhand transac- Caarewitch should try to cut his tectli on the toy. tion is he expected to clear up? It The Swiss village of Zofingen, in the canton of Aargua, was decorated has been regarded as Mr, Morgan's | whh flags recently in honor of a hen which has laid her thousandth egg, o | h leputattona, ompanied by bands, wht - Copyright by Pach Bros. 10°2 redeeming trait that he always | eee sent depiutations, mpanied by pie sek { 7 fights in the open. When he goes Into the fray as a bold tuccaneer, oushen, | ot morale rope » "left by Preside Kruger when he ied were Inventor- led: One bottle of | according to Mr. Lawson, there is no doubt about the character of the | craft; the black flag is always plainly visible at the peak. What is he supposed now to have concealed between decks which ft Is desired to reveal? What was the “arrangement with Mr, Perkins” under which Morgan & Co, paid to Andrew Hamilton $59,310 of profits | in Steel alleged to have belonged to the New York Life? In what) ways could Hamilton have made himself useful to the Morgan firm? | | MPhy was it advisable to keep this syndicate transaction under cover? 4 Were there reasons beyond those enumerated by Mr. Perkins In his At fira glance the accompanying picture seoms to} show a new-fangled motoring headgear Tt ts nothing of the | sort, but a lately invented fishing he! met, to be used in tropical Janda as « guard against files | mosquitoes and other winged peas. 1 uff, one tall silk hot, one black ear- tube, various psalm books, a large Bible, six smaller Bibles, elght button decora- jong, @ purse con- talning one Trans- vanl sovereign, one ‘Tranevaal half-sov- tutobiography why his services were peculiarly valuable to two masters? combines hat, wrslen, oka Tea , Mr, Morgan's testimony will be expected to Illuminate numerous | Bt 2 oyeaies vaal shilling and one | wy is it an straw hat, guard, but serves t shade the face, nec} jand ey from the tograph letters pub- | glare of the sun. i iened by a London , — Jealer has surprised 4 good many people by showing the fact that Charles Dickens's (ull name was Charles John Huffam Dickens B) obscure points~-provided his memory suffers no lapses, % Forly Years Old. < In reaching the age of forty Mayor McClellan has come to the most | ) Important milestone, generally. speakingy in a man’s life, To all men it! © isa more momentous birthday than the twenty-first, : At forty a man has tried himself and found what stuff is{n him, His mind has attained its full maturity. His emotions and impulses are under © control, He knows his capacity and his limitations, “Once you have © come to forty year” there are no uelustons, there is no self-deception, § ~©=- Forty is an eminence from which to look backward to things done and, is forward to tasks yet to be undertaken, Forty has heen a favorite time of life for the spirit of Independence to come into full flower. Cromwell was forty when with Pym and| Hampden he was developing the Parliamentary opposition to King | Charles, Brutus was forty-one when he killed Caesar. Washington at forty-three was Commander-in-Chief of the American forces. Kossuth} . at forty-one was inspiring the Hungarian revolution, | It is an age very conducive to revolt from servitude. —— A catalogue of aus A remarkable dinnor was served recently by a farmer near Ault, Vol, The table was set for twelve, and the menu consisted of one five and a halt-pound | Potato, one ffteen-pound cabbage, one ton-pound ontelten, one “pound turnip, « ‘one «wWo-pound onion and three ples made from a one and @ half-pound apple, Runaway horses are unknown In Russia, No one drives there without having | @ thin cond with a running nepee around the neck of the animal. When an animal staris (ie cord ulled and thé horse stops as soon as It feels the press sure on the windplpe. | Perils of the Hunt. Letters from the People _ wo Answers to Questions The cropper which has cost a rider in the Meadow Brook Hunt, Mr.! 4 uy In Hotel” for Women, € oe. } seek!y & Odvice. I would like to tell her | ; | Robert Porter, a broken collarbone and three damaged ribs, will attract | go the pattor of The Rvenine World connected with t )| that It would be @ great deal bett a t “1 1 u od the writer . amen ithe r * 1 7 bg "attention anew to the perils of the anise bag chase, The Meadow Brook's} ..7)Sriis aiotel were. to i. Resate 25p/ LW Rooke “hve. oF 82 Teave h, teneo, thon, ist oun at which she would do I am a boy who had no aptl- oe Nelp! Brooklynites to the Rescue! tude for study, but now I am getting roblem. | Mesias = along ntoely fn’ business, R tT Editor of The Evening World ls accident list is specially long and honorable. At one club meet in April} needy women (actrosses, working girls. ‘1 ‘ H ‘i i » | &e.), 1 {t the “Mrs, Mills Hotel,” ere » assingle fence caused twenty croppers. Individual riders like Mr, Beverly | #*, nd cal it ite Mn ee oan TAM Robinson, Mr. Phipps and Mrs. Kernochan are credited with severe falls.|woutd be, without doub:, one of the = A “World Wanita” ND WILL, ken, N, J. Is the dangerous risk of life and limb involved in this strenuous Hy wekarasal Che Hew BAK To the rok She Mesalia Weeds W exj i Teader let me CMU New York Men Queer, — | sport to be permitted to continue? Are the hazards of following the it aimoult to obtain lodging at higher- y pleas see aie ; Be Bk as baile ngel Pedgineedl de P A "The \ady ts, literally, ‘playing horse.” She {9 not doing it for fun, bur as @ hounds to be allowed to impair the physical symmetry of society leaders | Priced hotels, unless \cco.npanied by a tle a | aoa itn tho frat|GoWa toe stalk? Tt now looks ike u| Une:clability of New Yorkers, 1 agree| tTAcUCa Sum Of equesitien edueelions teeny eee ee nate coy tn : - 7 ° ; tiad anal ted F | male escort, i will? s that if plain stick ine flower pot, Please let| With lm, I have been living ib New| taken to driving four-in-hands, s cult for a ner to handle the reine with contusions and compound fractures? A maimed and mangled Four HELEN LE SDRANGE. million “want advertisements 5 ms know how to keep it alive, readers, | York fot three years, My home is tn|0! 8usd an equipage without great awkwardness, Hence regular instructors i i y wi f ts the Long Word, fn the Mornin 1, | Virginia, and since the day I set my| teach this art to would-be drivers. A set of reins of the same sort uted on Hundred is not to be tolerated. If college presidents are too busy with Ms Eady he Brae wera! put one « ft Advines Lazy Colle foot in New York I have met no gentie- | four-in-hand coaches are rigged up on an apparacus attached to a table, and To the Editor of The Evening World: meh. of ust say T am simply Gakusted | the fair driver, evated In a chatr at the correct distance, Jearns how each ribbon » VIRGINIA, should be manipulated, j oT. O. GC, who cites the would bor! ine! I eaw a letter from a “College Girl’) ways! the dangers of foothall to raiss a warning voice, will not some lay re- [tn veoiy wor "pronatantitransubstanclationisti. twice, "'F former undertake the good work? " ‘ A Yorker’s St i Wonder-St Wi 4 Hew Xoners Stage « 4) F The Lion lamer ¢ By Albert Payson Terhune * 4 ek et Pig ae. | a & Quest for a Pirate Hoard SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTERS. | lished, and two persons at least— eye as he recovered his! in the three words, ‘I love you!’ But, it, a young New Yorker, who! Hannibal and Paul Metford—nad whol: | oe But when he Gn to re | Sweetheart, you Gon’ Koow Gow 2 ats une, join us troupe, | Ly or pantly deciphered a hidden mean { fl peat Metford’s theory that gome out- spise myself for telling you this, I! ance vet | ing. therelt ol \ x side agency had intervened she broke Meant to ask you to be my wife as soon ;| Stephen had often heard of the eimple | {n_ nervously: 141k have | lar Sue then Sates ae are ae phere the rate p! Oh, Stephen! What ond it bave soriunes and 1 had uo Tight to ask you i“ wild ani tamer, While th i ho meets Anice Gray, whom he has loved seventeenth teenth centuries ped, “ Fr eoenisy Gaya lerael Mettord, en encestor | Red'itdely’ gevised tr oraer. bo be —_ — : ¥ BESS hee aoe at enna Bak weave te Rover vour to mat teach | : fw fe, rumored to have hich t t a , ars to . of Gai was & rumored my? | mind the exact locations in wich Gault's face had turned as fay heat, Bur tine only eetved 07 ‘ her own as aha inade this surcestion, | make me love you all the more, I ale mnewhere on Block lal! Moatheq" hut he Interrupted hastily t elr various tbat i 4a despatch ionder, and incidentally in order toy buried a treasure apd, Gault, as a boy, had ways planned to rise above my prese your Box, once the pons e, On te ' t 4 avert . 1 ; x ; ‘ed. Pant] Prevent’ thelr c 3 from disec ‘Oh, no! Of course not. It was 46 1) yn * Stun and to mane myout cover @ dogetrel ¥ poreichied. Pal ering and. mak po Bp ea Spe ald: He fainted trom over-excitement.”’| Social ‘equal again, 90 that T.gould duo also on DB @ condy These hoards their owners She looked at him doubtfully; all me to ask you to matry me. ‘Then, when nore #0, as she saw a4 faint tinge Of!tois wild dream of buried treasure | ing some q He is in | , a8 a rule, unearth at a later 4 STN nice, An Inanie’s horse, oabiing @| apd safer time, end would live th Wid é es b her doubts reflecte! in his troubled eyes. | came to me to-day, my one Jonging was ( copse, is frightened and runs away, amash-| dissipation while the proceeds insted | . But tefore ahe could continue the sub-| that 1 might win it and it at ject he went on; feet. But | vowed2you enould never Know ing & wagon, Motford’s dog enters the | Occasionally, however, it had happened | “However, all that only leads up to/1 loved you until L faq he eat to it, did you, | and {8 a moment later found crushed to} that death In more or less violent form the real point of the story, I haven't) speak, You never ai gg PP ne ens rently empty. | would Intervene before this could be ao- f dear?” etford Aes an tnoorn He to fe) complished, In such case, the treasure ain) af ’ 2% told you the secret yet. any ; acre une oy ea r. btephen | oust, of. course, ile forgotten of at Hl || SS E Briefly he repeated hie conversatios 1 didn't suspect {t," she answered the doggerel verse be real Toast’ undiscovered (like that of Capt, y 7 : i Y with Metford; tolling how he had won| softly, her hoad against his breast; "L Taraslier deapetee bok, | Kidd), unless somo fellow-buccaneer | | , from the history of the treasure, |kKnew it, Heart of my Heart, 1 knew & the pirate hoard has ea nanced to find and translate the cipher } 1| ‘i Anos x = and 4 poy! tly on the possibilities | years ap, A woman always knows, 1 lect. He ts tn | | describing the whereabouts of the i i - of the bh ’@ actual presence on the | think knew what it was that kept fects him. He fanei prise, 5 i , ‘ island. 1 hgh and es Fed I longed to ‘ e and “Was th try to deceive me,| {ell you that such slience was wrong, nd Was this Frey ete ey te eee et the) wae unteir to mel Por 1 loved. you of the tr he case with Israel e; and, if 0, did ead of the recital, ‘You pretend you've|aiways and I had the right to share z tions later, : ‘ “ ‘ , seven generations la! 7 M no faith in Mr. Metis 's theory that| your sorrows, as W your joys. Steve? a es hold tie key "to the secret? y ; ell 7 inate’ ver to y > the treasure is bui ere on Block In future 1 shall share them all, And Chapter VI. Nea fy AE Peles , ‘ . Island, yet ean Hee your mind Js full] now Jets be sonaibie for a whole min~ i ft of the bel an uu * | ute, ‘ell me the cipher verse again, The Pirate Cipher. Be, Nes, for sited over It tis you. cap hardly lt Ur better ati, write K down and give it ZPHEN went straight to the clr- ‘ . still, » 1 elleve it,/to me, Where your brain sis encampment entered the Jong, | iehe wae helt Lr 3 ; A, tte like Bteven” fad a key to the aipher, my love partitioned dormitory-tent end, “What earthly sense does that make?” Yh 3 ae abd OZ ; af a thing happening 42 real Hfenand to | nie! fo And Ht AL any rate f 5 M y 1 mused, Then he tried saying each "4 Y hh se ; iS bite a take the verse home with me to-nig! sought bis own cupboard-like room, | ine backward then transposing the k GAN eo! : Seating himself on his trunk be gazed dully before him, his mind too full of 1s and twisting them into every elvable form, but all to no avall The more ways I say it the more throumh Gault. In that monvsyilable!| the b lope; he hed tacitly admitted that his inter. | (2¢,0acw Of &n envelope; and y and etudy over I it Her unconscious use and emphasis of id ‘t hit on the solution, the plural pronoun sent @ thrill of toy {rom Vary on handed it confit ou to take note of bie] ry free TED ta inaate” bone surroundings, ‘The tent might have | {4 bar Hanh Bhat ta Oni CDOT She did not even notice.) “phe treasure is already found, be readily blown down without awakening it, If Hannibal Metford Matoaile: told her, dearest xo in 7 sarge verle. 80 wbsorbed F eater i 4 - ver sally : God's Treasure House. And It ts mine, \ Gault from his reverie, 80 wb and his great-grandson could hammer 5 Z ‘J id! We'll find the treasure | ne paltry treasure my disreputable old was he in the events of the past bour| out a meaning from the doggere there's ane ; is J then you can leave the Vale i [ | sagon why 1 "t."" i f Y y clrous and take the place In life that| eestor may or may not have buried is that he did not note the sient motion|"dFeagon why Loan’ | Se pI | ¥ j ey: J birth ‘aod education have fitted | insignificant compared with the wealta of the tent-flap which served him as wretched vhyme. the further he seemed | i Ys 0 dR gy | 1a . i by OO il aU aakandad batt eng i a door, The flap was sifted @ few) from any satisfactory conclusion. | i , ‘he -tanned keepor 't you have both won happiness, dar- 6 inches, a face showed for the briefest] ‘This thing has given me a head t y Ht Li / \ ‘8 Up, led the two up the count~ jope, rather than belfeve!” he she repliedas they started down moment at the aperture, and then the| he exclaimed at last, r to help | replied, and there was a new solemnity) the staircase, “And that happiness will i i he aperture, # Mb thO oe at tls watch, 1| tojin his volce, “I never realized until is & stimulant to us boba in the flap was replaced, Paneer hurrocor ii bi just Pe ew. ouoy the finding of it search for the a pe A i “Bo that's wh dies!” mute he isi encampment @ Hew j " ve you your i jon Or ‘Bo t where Wl es mn ub i Neasnpmen a new " ; ah / r ‘one, rather than his words, made! Sut, fonetaner, tebe if you never find | fered & volce, and noiseless footsteps truck ee . | (og description of th Hahes i) her into his face,| Jt and if you are forced to crept away from the dormitory. le my Hands on ) ° perace fon, thi { led auantlty they could never | your present work forever, 1 will n ocr; | Gault, usually so alert in oll pie! to tell her t or ea A AD MPLS {ust how {: happened | you just aa «ladly and share yor Hee | fonsex, Continued to sit there, absorbed, |{t would be dishono "Where yeur krain has feil.d .9 find a key to the clpher, my love may avall to find It!” or to any of the thousand or »| canes She preast and tos tear wae eles a La vain a tony one | A ‘ : ere! W | Goat, dumb and blind to the cuuide| while 1 em penniles ’ ‘tails which the worthy man du sbont ie neck Thelr Ips met in thelr | sentimental, but you kuow 1 mean it," see world, for a ful he ind over Of ite, Even if there ie only a mia the ; = Las cre: sadeie ai - dlnteto rea in his brain bo was turning ioe styenge | 4nd dollars’ worth of booty Al cap tha ; ee fan Brongeie apt ae oane th ae fae dae eidiiieicden yee? Cale Ate tle Pa 4 tong Klas; Stephen Gault left Anice at her o “ae ne Mnement t é Mielines to Sao, Oink ‘make mye if worthiar of living room," and the cottager's bank) 1 ne wild quiumn hoauty of ge and ering | oat’ aallenowate youth ome pita Aidt abtdta a! fs rae dusk waa falling, and hurried | oOhe moment he felt sucline sal 07 . er of , . ‘Sie ‘to- 4 rete: ‘ § Fidicule ‘ihe tale as the fgriens of a het, ‘The treasure may all be a hoax nt! AYOSUERL IR OURORE AV STY: IA: Pee cane whe wala Maple alt Gant we awuy awnile and look at ity | | LAltle by ttle, sanity yeturned ¢o/on toward the clrous sioampment, ie | Mohomaniacs fai ne ext, he And my Search may Only leat meginto , up the dill, qudging the Islanders by thelr rougi| Way toward the le-shaped HTS Sid uals, chorea | Oo: igh Gently released the dear} walked as though on alr yor | Fealived! that the ould he nip] He Saive Oo Semper eee ero the Spriag | dress, wipainted homes and narrow | Mhthouse, Stephen was full of hia new win qiik une, oll man mm from hie embrace, quent he forgot the hope of tesaqures: | mere invention, 2 Was 1 Ill, 1 mean to hunt for the go! ith »w) tortuous | views of life, is nrone to the sudden| Secret, and Anice was eager to lea nked laboriously and posers ave h, what a selfish brute I am!" he|trove; forgot the peril from Met corroborative detail er cr pot Anice as my pcssible reward, the most Yurther und turprise. of learning. tht (he fhaher- What it might be, But the man was of COW" the steep staire, leaving Gault/oried in quick self-contempt, ‘Here, | forgot the nameless Terror Capt. Israel Metiord had teaiy buried dreary labor will be woll worth my| ore iiin ¢ 4. On eltier| man whose lot he pites is often far Mnind te tale’ of the treasure’ there| and tho at for years, I've schooled myself not io| of late #0 # oly manifested | ANY Weisire on Bock Jelond and while. I don't wonder Metford’s get-| yao at far intervals were low story: | more neously blessed with this| 0% the public highway, where any Of | | "And. now tell you f loved you, and now in one|on Block Island; forgot all save that whether or not (hat purative treasure ung to be a monomaniac over tt." and-a-balf cottages. weather beaten ahd world's goods than 1s the nan who has {)@ dozen turns f the’ twisting white | the secret! moment of madness 1 spoll all my good |Joved and was loved. 4 valuable "Why. Stephen Gault!” cried @ volee| of mean appearance, Yet a glimpse, been pitving hime ad might conceal a iatener, 80 they 8°, patient?” réolutions and — He reached the tects and went direct+ ne end a at his elbow, “Is this the way you treat! jite the hute’ tateriore would prompt-| mye. 4 Hh Mae talked on different tonlus as ¢ “It certainly "he “And laboring under the delusion|!y to his own little cubby-hole roo: lite he could your friends? You walked right past ve the lie Ne | The teht Uttle Island, banked on! trudged on. now tience shall have its reward, ” if h hed n ly haye given the le to thelr suabby | a) avery “aide. % I int} ne "i pe told me you love me,” re- 0 pus he tent ed fervently the gate and never even looked at me. | gytward jook.. For the Block islanders | {moat every side by steep cliffs. girt’ <7 see the Mmhthouse!” erted Anice at| lieten: " force back| the faint outer twilight ente i auch a tr Caittence ‘To see you striding along, muttering to| QUMert look. i thunderine surf and dotted by ‘They seated themselves on the nar- mr fy Pepdd lumined the interior the island, and that old Hann ourself Hike that, one would think poor|“\yithin caay reach of one of the ri than three hundred ponds and "Wo'll be there in another five min- You haven’ at soe nadeonre oye. back with an exclam OF4 had staked nd jet his life on Paul Metford’e mantle of eoeentrleity | ext fishing grounde on sie woth emake harnaee, tne MOR unas apHe utes.” replied Stephen... WTI tp. the b Reh evened: Gaede zement; for was certain, | ialien on your shoulders,” aneiahe nurthe soariy ele ta ie coast, 8 Inhablts comer to let is gu ty int (he ght? ‘ " Mingcit had) Tt hae: (thioke” Peale Grautt, oom: | CPTChet well further hy a voasly Infité|hoagt™ that for eeventy-iive veara no Wall” be atone ‘and’ undiaturned uo | Wan, Matford, on the ell quickly and rudely shate Wh lonparcii| ing phir, Hie raréeW with ar laugh, o| ere te eet eee saving and) crime jas be minitted within itt there, and T ean tell you my atery! cine eas B; alt, hts whote | & the golden dreams 1 yaaa BP mcs eae “ona A. Vans, rl i Meno Tapa aper I eles het Be whe hae tN Tea at todo iii Woe Patton ke ay att om q n p 1 0: ‘hole place, and aren't any visitors ax late in tho vent Deeg estab: least I'm affected wth the possessing cottages of tho “natives” that it is almoot the oniy' populated aakthia In summer parties of tourists ind the odd sight that ‘had met at ay ef a) I : * WOR Ted, Aue. ‘ ; i Pt, ree

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