The evening world. Newspaper, December 2, 1905, Page 8

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1 A at ee , “a The Evening World's Mome Magazine, Saturday Evening, December 2, 1905. “Please Don’t Kick Us Out.” | New York Thro’ Funny Glasses, ' By |. S, Cobb, T wasn bitter night on the moors and along the GW, W. The wind Med ttaelt I to a keen edge on a flatiron building and, whistling around the corner of Forty-second street, smote the poor green-goods men, huddled together there for mutual warmih, stabbing them again and again, so that thoy shivered before !the blarst, For tt had come by way of Boston and acquired the pronunciation | passing through. Hence blarst The snow beat Ntfully, pitilessly down upon the Jus: and the keb-driver alike, The old beggar woman by the Subway entrance poked a skinny claw trom be- neath her ragged shawl, and, plucking the yugrom flakes out of the alr, sprinkled | the crystals in her gray halr, where (hey were worth 19 cents every time a prose perous wiretapper passed and saw them, Of the myriad lights, glittering lke | diamond settings in Broadway's front ceeth, it is not seary to speak. That has been done several times at length by those who were working on spact. A man and a woman came out of a theatre door and made their way afoot to the nearest Welsh rarebit studio. The man had on thtek-soled boots of vare nished calfskin and a long, double-breasted s:o°m coat, with a collar bigger than ’ By J. Campbell Cory. | VU BE Good *\ HONEST | WILE ‘ Pubtianea by the Press Publishing Company, No, 63 to 63 Park Row, Now Tork, ! Entered at the Post-Omico at New Vork as Second-Class Mall Mat! Oe VOLUME 46...... sevens sees Sesser i “Judge” Hamilton's Health, — Much interest will be taken in the mission on which Mr. John C. Mc- | Call, Secretary of the New York | Life Insurance Company, departs to-day per steamer Lucania. Mr, McCall goes to Paris as the | company’s special representative | and plenipotentiary to discover the | whereabouts and diagnose the health | of its legislative agent and disburser of “yellow dog” funds, Andrew Hamilton. Frequenters of the boule- | ards seem well informed as to his whereabouts. But is his health suf- ficiently robust to stand a voyage to New York? The question intimately | concerns the health of various gentlemen in Albany and elsewhere. | A friend of Judge Hamilton agrees that “saving his health is far more important to him than this insurance controversy,” and, in view of the | experience of Alexander, McCurdy and Hyde, point is well taken, y In Judge Hamilton's case, where the health of so many others is de- pendent on his own, its care becomes paramount to all other considera: | tions. | Give US ONE. MORE CHANCE } | the wings of a stage falry, and a muffler around his neck and heavy gloves, His shirt front was a shining white buckler against the cold, He was wrapped up Uke a bone felon, but, ah, me! how he did suffer! His nose got red and tears ran out of his eyes and he shook inside his s:onm coat. Before he had gone half a Dlock iis feet were so numbed that he had @ gait like a pair of butionhole | soissors, woman with him was a little bit of a thing, not more than five feet. Her How slippers, over lace stockings, were thin as paper, with soles to match, Her loose opera cloak, of wadded silk and far, was caught loosely about her, Under ft you could catch a peep at the bare neck and arms. Her head covering was @ tiny mouthful of gauze and fur. Pound for pound, her clothing could not have weighed @ third as much as his welghed, But her nose didn't burn red and her eyes didn't burn red and her eves didn't weep and she didn't walk pig¢con-toed, Her cheeks flushed co A becoming pink; she looked thoroughly comfortable. THE FUNNY PART | We are accustomed to call them the weaker sox, | A policeman stops a runaway horse, drives it to the station and falls Senseless from a fractured skull, A brakeman with both arms broken| walks and runs two miles in a heavy storm to give warning of a train wreck, A motorman sticks to his post as his car rushes down hill uncon- trolled, to his certain injury, possibly death, A boy of fourteen, his leg) broken at football, says of the boy who threw him, “Say, kid, that was | 8 daisy tackle!” Evidences of pure grit are to be found everywhere by @ny one who cares to look for them, “Money in Massillon. a “Everybody has money in Massillon,” says the Times Special. The bettors of that Ohio town were $50,000 “behind the game” on Thanks- | giving morning. That glorious day their football team worsted the ath Metes of Canton, McKinley’s home, and won the State championship, (About $100,000 changed hands, ; Who has denied the “practical value" of college education? Let him | keep silence! On the beaten team played “Blondy” Wallace, the former | Pennsylvania “star,” Heston, of Michigan, and Cure, of Lafayette, Hes-| ___ tton is said to have received for one day's work $500, the whole year’s Pay of many a country clergyman or schoolmaster, Canton must buy more college “stars” next time, Massillon had @ve—Schrontz, of Washington and Jefferson; McNulty, of Chicago; McChesney, of Chia o's baseball students; Lang, of Latrobe; the mighty in conduct Eee MIM OOM Dig tans, ata emo T attars from the People @ Answers to Questions . DE corm mie] BRE Slaughter syndicates organized to do" ¢ach other at $500 per day, More Ald tar Country Woy. ral of trouble f Saturday, Dec. 2. ——— + THUMBNAIL SKETCHES. | CRJECT—Willlam McAdoo, Favorite Sport—Trailing along, Favorite Task—The present one. Favorite Book—"‘Lives of the Czars.’ » Favorite Author-Dooley, Favorite Artist--Schmittberger. Favorite Frvtt—Peeled cocanuts Favorite Plant--The night-stick Favorite Vehicle—The mounted cop. Favorite Musical Instrument—The rot bell Favorite Character in History—Ivan the Terrible 40 ————————EEE | Sentence Sermons. Lays of the Days. IVING is the gauge of Uving. dvery curriculum must bo tested % ; raw a @un on a party | intent to deprive h of his iberty, if, Sor people are never grateful titi ni $100,000 bet on a side—these are the logical outcome of the “gen. To th Bakor of The vening Worl whowe face aon ved rt M4 who mean Rim no mor-|ROE to do him Boaly harm?” HAR. | ynoy get hu sd ikl Mapai ; man’s game” so et , To the young man who wants to cess, due to the ves correction." 80 he Aske Ab : 4 ; yd Sle ite ‘ ‘Auaeeiba Ut The day set for reat; ga highly esteemed by the young barbarians all at play in| xnow ‘whether it" la. necoseary for & t anes De tie Bill uaksionetmacicyvee ay elletan Is SPRRE TARTS LINE Another week's gone from Our institutions of the hivher culture, “| man to take an occastonal drink $9 Dresden, 1s03. f IW notes: that Dithorccatey a | she prayertal heart wil be proven by |p _ bite ; ‘ lorder to succeed in business, 1 would », y x0 TaN eey ROO |) LHS PISYer rl BARES: Wi * ] But that had to happen, : an 5 1 @ |ts attacking the Supreme Court Jus- teal life may " and what ia more tmpor- i the sation So what to tho Use KC) avis , ann i ° @ t » Occup! » and seems to have something 1 r qhurtn makes buta J * “ The excuse of a State legislator who occupied a room fiteiof rérit In| tant, 18 MAE ® manintio Goes take 6) Mayer) RT, (eaves took it” for gra aa at no | ha aleeve againat them. Why is It that gacrenepro avove, fd j OF Paina 4 noise Uke:@ fo? The “House of Mirth” is that it was “such a Iittl Grink will always fall. There are na : " nded money loan sharks’ are per- ‘ ‘The worst infidelity ts to’ live as ft will if I can time-h a uch tle one.” The plea is @ exceptions to this rule, I would coun- (any vuh the law? Will be not though God had forgotten, Get good trom the day, ime-honored one. If the apple had been as large as a watermelon DORs. | HOI tS eels Bt perRoe: ofeen ree) vipers era T At he vil tne hal {rot religion wen they wel one And forget about Monday's new bly Adam would have been afraid to eat it. * Teoh herein, ie eth BAMe RS Te) Wem ven able- yahome Seed from ita many colored garment stetfo! attached to in his country home. He! wr one, with CONSTANT. Lyk wR Tribune. |S, _ A New Yorker’s Strange 4 we. & Quest for a Pirate Hoard 4 The Lion Tamer : b ~— By Albert Payson Terhune : | A Wonder-Story of a Wid & w Duel with the “Unseen” GYNOPSIS OF PREV: she commanded, picking un | Where else should we go? By taking) you as well aa on me. Before you f scribbled sheots of paper and the road over the downs We van reach Started hunting for the treasure that eat , the mands this side of Indian Head ymine you looked like a boy, ‘ eels to him, We can get a general idea of where look twenty years older, hi ' 86 ed at first eagerly, and th easure lies oven bef i ite mark yah? ,meets Avice Gr appointed, p (he rest of the let He wise and turn aside wh Wn former days, Leva a dv that it lies at s point) time. ‘This is a man's w of Gault, was a p idian Head, lo a siraight line buried a ” K nt Judith and Yarmouth! hoar pu in. you yi happen and, Gault. boy. had found a despatch . t n ‘ “< f u in your spying SL. F Hs. P »y across It vou shall never Ii Bos, once ibe goeesion of tact on tie) "Sb FL HLS. PY. PY. HL walked. Stephen told her| wiiat siu've stolen from me. Remmeme 1 caer bey ! HR. | more of Metford’s search for the treas-| her that, I shall watch you, Leave f also on’ B Waat d pint’ he asked Ure and the long, nerve-tacking hunt| this search and for Anjos Gray's sake ing somo The girl laugued at his d afiture. | Paul was having on account of the! you shall live, Pursue it and I will BOArah es 45 HAAN NSE Sa GI TBE townie on eee missing words in his copy of the cipher| oruyh you as my dog was orushed, @opte, is frightened and rune vay on hy town, She said, while I tell | verse, ave} shall watch you, Be warned in ume." 0k & wagon’ Metfor rg tbs by d my morning. | | Poor fellow sympa th ined Anice, "Il "He turned on this heel 4 Gea lea thoment ister towne hrs Gault ot dering, Beating feel s0 sorry for He has had ® toward New Bhoreham belore herseif close perhaps = UAnecemarly | slove—deside nin, she sald “While you and 1 were talking this | ut the full clue fe contained in) morning 1 remembered u queer-looking | idempach hon” ied J a boy Be old slab of slate | saw one day in! PUle hoard heseaap ee tu for | the parlor of old Mme; Michel's nouse eh He levis. tove antes eat On the Wesi road. It Was vovered wit ‘Jecte him. He fancies Gault in tn lotters and lovsed Uke @ aeroglypa of i" o prevent him some kind. ‘fds morning 4 eduud on ionely, lavelegs lit Mind all the gould reply, Stephen could not Kir dogity, though the copes Is avparently einpt thie (reasurenunt Tt doa't 6 fon hie next. tow t ealautes were sleeps at all. His mind has dwelt on 4 ae becom: letford has an incomplete clue to t earn neared by his ancestor. Bteph the subject till att} reall monomania rt him, something for hi Ph! tainly,’ Ssuented | Metford is as muoh Jerael fo scendant as lam, I'll Lig Ag halves whatever we find. If the hoard ls anywhere near as Verueae [4 nico undertake to decipher “iso you sal.” en k he cryptogra FMEA itaanctrcaate eR ge | Dost we taaent, 1 comcy w ‘yori Nero, are shocked by lightning the point fs called er attention to former is with difficulty. resus tated. Fabid and evinces a mad Resta, fe <niepben elves word lating the cigber sai i Mi CHAPTER XII, A Clue to the Treasure. | QATEPHEN rend and reread the briet | summons from Anice Gray “Great news; wonderful news!’ hat nad netruct @ umber Anat on as 1 spoke fi her abour re in Head treasure he off Quebec. That haw by tteelt mould mean a tor: | sos tt horn ot alin We ani tune to us If dt's buried here, Oh, I'm! off the view. "a move on.” that ta one of the t dates back to the The giant swung himself up to the path wher) they stood, repeated. what can she mean i ralds were feared, j ¥ Maat ed to yy? “Certainly, P.-J. comes riext and’ —— What do,¥. or ¥. H. stand fort & fool to let myself dwell on the| A hundred yarts further and they jf. pPy that? Whatever tt ts, 1 must go at s t goods |, roine Judi translated Stephen, | H.?" repeated the girl, | Chances of success! But when I re-| had passed beyond the jutting promon- @nc ‘ if i" Hitaine’ from ‘Indiancttead-dout aie ‘armouth Harbor, of | ember that my only definite hope of|{tory. ‘To the north they could plain+ He excused himse!f to Currier a ‘ ° '. Point dudithe' NOt very clear, but What | c J rmbuth Harbor or farmoutn | making you my wife lies In my chance |ly seo Point Judith fifteen. miles of. he b Currier and set ‘ ‘ ox Cove ag it 1s sometimes called, ‘The| of Mnding this treasure, 1''— "There's Point Judith, There’ & ewinging waik toward New jen. # tee i rhot's as far as T can get.’ con- unused Httle bay or cove that used to) ‘*That's the second time in two days| dian Head and there in the ag horeham Village. ‘The tad w altar , : fessed the B T haven't been able | be thesharhor of tue island before the! that you've spoksn so," interrupted | rection rmouth Harbo! Brought the vote gazed « . t Bast — gure out What the next leshog Acwater eived in oat ry 8° Anice, “and I want you to understand, [epi ms ve gon Hen Ni) line now, < bi lerstand the rai) ds fc It was at that stage that I) ) t | ether | Somewhere along that line the treasure Pe. mf kt ta ‘ Se at nt You, fr 1 was sure Twas on votilatmed | Sout win tite wealth of not 1 ait going must ie. But it may be anywhere Gee! ho muttered, “I wish J was a 0 ifort wake | | the right: track We "take the. ee Meinning |(O marry you. I would be happier with) Within a half mile of us. Bo unl when the. surt we decide to dig up a mile or so of “4 J, no matter how poor you are, than is up ady got too high on the New Shore! Beach, | You the Ish tv uch better iy A of |Let's see—tie next letters are ‘1, O.'—| with the richest_ man In America, And | he 8 and we ares! very much 4 ne would read nutb-line’—no, ‘Mon-tamer ike him ening the ent “A Jot of people wish that er ‘ou know it. 80 don't t or even Maughed Currier. Rat jor t % Me looked up at the dark oll ; ‘ | Det ( (y He jotted down the two letters.) think, of the treasure as a means of ; ed They aren't made. And one 1h JAM og 274 Sonth’ I gilt 3a he done so when Anice,| making me your wife, I am Intereated ni aloe inno Gore Fi t stand for ‘Straight | looking over his shoulder, cried; In finding & only because it will let and i bee ee id then read: |-"Dofyou" know. what you've Just) eturn to your rightful station In tt ay Se ie Aight line from Indian Head South) writen?) 0,,' of courne,’* But whataver your fortune or «poverty | he wald, turning his eyes from the s¢a Py Steve Gault fen't born once a oon } 4But unless 1 miss my guces #0 lose him. That girl b EN ys » worde? itt 8 ent a 44 Judi In other words, the 4 may be, Lam going to-share It wkh you. | jy m N A at P)Vaour house will never stand tor Words? I don't suppore /T got to thinking ani tt seemed « Fo ea een some point-on| “The figure ‘Un,’ "* she contradicteg” | 36 wurg of, that,” Wrrwelef ances strewn beac her busband « circus 1 Ant hen," And'| eee Ale Mea jas Todian Head that, im a abralght line due) "Sot haye, ‘Tent’ What's the next! "gtensen, ‘his heart almost too tull for! “tte pointed to an“ugecenten” wenthors “Why not, I'd like to kn 1 eas eiphe lottera) are a ey t f Point Judith, Just between | letter? oP. 1 ted. “pen | itterance, turned impulsively toward | darkened boulder some. yards ahead, y not, ke to know?" oa ne Bt cre are Gomby ce He Hs nt Judith and some spot that mu ‘Ten paces!” she supplemented. her, when the rattling of stones down| Tho ollff at that point jutted out, leave fenged the boy, sir! Min't a Hon lettere vou w nh be hat tt bhatt jamed somewhere Jater In clpher. | pace be, What have we| the ide of the olift along whose crest ing a very narrow path between Mamer greaier'n almost any other man? It, lif distinces i 1 At a snot where a I o ‘ wold wot now. It must be, nat ha they were walking betokened the cs pice and tide-water’ In the midgle of n ‘| Jed . n > h Lh po! ch ¢ ie A Vales: miybe a pirate.” he added as aurel ey? 10W Polnt ‘it HH git, tt m uther spot a your| “And, setting down the later words, Brone Tnatat Pau attra aaa aes | Falk Sam, causing the. pedestrian be [6 @m afterthought me aa Sut Ra at jhe read; BS lovel if the cliff and| perhaps five feet high, It of Meantime, the object of this. aduta “ ei “Tto'. She Inndlody’s son had burt une) straight Ine from Indian Hea, 7 Hote fie paths) teguiee. formation, the. slides bel MUTiche’ teasing the village; bic veons ep. ais , F snously into the. room South, from Point Judith (or P'int Judy |*he slant swung Mt Wat SOE Au? bate cent eeth te aaa An erat itaniog wa he saw te ; f dno. ‘ r w, don't mind me!” the youth ex; | Pint) to Yarmouth Harbor, Ten paces, | where tney etned i so sntde, to | giving the. whole. boulder. the vain form ye in lie rs ‘ a ns ou town fi : f empts roe ported. them, "1 don't see nothtn’ 4 4 5 * read the girl, Then:| wich bite of dirt still clung, was Hppearence of a very roughly-hewn © Cottage, payee i \ t tbbted a) ion he Nida nds ora ih a eh Mi don't know’ what C,H. stands for rapped ACTOR i TH ts pleasant |. ‘I'he two drew closer to the rock, Go Uhore's news?” he queried gayly r ‘ scleral Indian Head!” erled. Stopiu ww Ma says I cap or with Cap'n! but T believe Y, C, stands for Yarmouth | ite with a bow that was not devoid ® bevy of white-breasted Wi t ! P udy P’nt, Cove. You know ¢ my ‘a e looked | pipers th: roned there, fe he came within earshot.“ Wonde 1 4. PY. H. 1,0. { thoroughly Interested, | 8 MW this" mornin® fo Pint Judy | Yarmouth Harbor and. Yarmouth Cove. | of certain und dignity, ‘Then he looked | pipers inaction aie stone sets noe Tui news," In fact, 1 petlove your ‘ re A | Pram Towign Hendy ont at , fo| And'8. probably atands for South, Oh, | long and searchingly at her eompanion: inane one Jom It “And that dr ! . t 1 can't see that 5 Indtan He nd 3 she asec nite 1 “Oh, here's the hat under the sofa, my. head's all {n whirl! Let's go for| Although aad MAG bath i we ie oe oroeaL Oe ee yd q me away fro i e gs, “Perhaps » eg! tO put some BILD | tg p d - Work, lat's hear | ’ gi oy to thie Ciwdbodte [in Tay. Vanenticl 3 at Nast? . , ne int Judy: * orfed the girl.) 4 ioe shal or" Me Suerleg, Be as| ity and be R ine Pt leompinnce a i bake Mal could not help 1 With many thousand | | "'Ple OP Sa ho “Yn | ephat'a the Tha nders an name i we q ravpeen. of the iliig night were | semblance, not rattling hh Tete the cool ce p eta lb i ‘ Int nelieh language, how can | 8 I guyed you,’ for Point Judith, J, P. in the| they ¢ “jaaai ae rie i tt The man girl gave th excitement in her, manner as ra haat ons ur amber we ‘oll watch ones Mt in this elpher | Tpal Gispones. of the first. five t¢ rman cent 3 ee ampat nea of Bie aty"and f, : d hor into the Yypewge ait- | of ana Cit, want outsiders to under: | "hats the thought that. came to pt a” iy a pace sudea ad» uring site ed 7" she eo bbe roty'vi got qtand, we used to way only the initial me at drat,” returned Anica, "“Buth ‘#outh again, t suppose?’ ba ea " oa i “rea 4 as i ‘ i

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