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Evening World's Tome Magazine, Monday Evening, December 4, 1905. ‘ —4 —= | | The Open Season. Royal Travel, 1789-1905; | A Study in Democracy, By J. Camphell Cory. @udlivhed by tho Press Publirhing Company, No, 63 to 6 Park Row, New York, Bntered at the Post-Office at New York an Second-Class Mail Matter, _—— a ‘ as VOLUME 46 seeeee sores: eee eeeneenerenseeee NO, 16,178, Football-Field Fragments. ! Gathering up the fragments of thelr offspring after the fray, Brook- | lyn parents of high-school football | players find broken bones, sprains, internal injuries, watery knees and some few hopeful remnants of un-| injured boy, One team had eleven players injured, 100 per cent. of Its force What are those parents going to SRM do about it? What are teachers go- “4 ing to do-about it? Some things have been done, The-St. John’s Academy, of Manlius, N, Y., has stopped the game. That iscimple, Is ht the only way? Two Kinds of football were shown Saturday, The army and navy game was the best possible example of the familar brutal type. ‘There was not on either team a slugger or a hired plug-ugly or a “spectal stu» dent” who does not study but Is carried on the, rolls by a bulldozed faculty. Yet injuries were so many that the game was prolonged into the darkness and several substitutes were necessary. The Columbia and Cornell teams played a game of association or “socker” football. The score was a tle, The players were lighter, nim- bler, swifter than the beefy line-buckers, There was swifter, prettier play, more running, even kicking. Goal was kicked for Cornell by a Mimble little Filipino. There were no substitutions, J Is there not a hint In these contests for teachers, faculties.and parents “perhaps even for experts who have “reformed” football by letting ft alone until it has become almost a national scandal? Newsboy Clubs and a Leader.. The first Newsboys’ Athletic Clith to be instituted and nm on the plan devised by Mr. “Jack” Sullivan will be opened on Tuesday of next week, Mr. Sullivan expects to see within a few years a chain of clubs! calling in all the‘newsboys—all the good newsboys, that is, “The bad element don’t belong in our club,” says he, On one floor of the new club-house Is a gymnasium to delight the as made onservative old England during the past century. The first George T* accompanying Mlustrations show the incredibly rapid strides democracy A reproduction of @ contemporaneous print and dep: jeen on thelr way to a Thanksgiving service at St, Pa in 78a Four white horses draw the gilded coach, while a score of uniformed outriders enctrole the vehicle, Thelr Majegdes are gorgeous tn multi-colored siike an@ gating, while the narrow, !l-paved strest !s jammed with a gaping crowd. The second {Ihistration ts reproduced from a snapshot recehtly taken t= London. King Edward ts shown, in frock sult and high hat, leaving his pladn, soul of every budding athlete. But not for this alone may any boy one-horse brougham. A single footman, Who has opened the catrtage door, Join the organization. “We don’t want those,” says Mr, Sullivan, “who |atands uncovered as the King crosses the eldewalk. In no other respect does the. tre not willing to take the night classes They've got to get educated if ieee differ at all from the afternoon drive of any fairly prosprous Now they belong to this club” ; —— +++ —______ For dealing with his newsboy clients Mr, Sullivan has obvious advan- — Sentence Sermons, ! tages. To begin with, he Is one of themselves and has been for twenty | ‘The noble life asic Lays of the Days. By R. E. Minder, years. In the second place, he can fight If he has to, although among Letters from the People WwW wW A nswers to Questions jtateed ot more eervanta, mone] eee leer the boys who know his good Intentions he does not have to, out of the ruins of another's r more service The personality and the exam of “Jack” Sull Pire-Crackers for Christmas. wane as any place Cut out the eneess, | Objeet Lessons tn Drink, t New York to open « lange business. | You cannot get into green pastures O-MORROW |s Tuesday, to all tg bh : : ihe se Be the Editor of The Brening World: pace cer: TORRVILLIAN. |» tne mattor of The Evening Worldt He started taking @ glass with bual-| while you herd with the goats, I mustn't forget 0 all those who ponder eamestly the problem of a New York casler to| te, Baier of The Brenig Woeld: A Would-Be Athlete, | Country Boy'' writes that nis tem: Pest men. To-day after nine years he | Sinsient dealings are the best evl- To write about all of these rule and better ruled. District leaders artse such force tom of New York children in dressing | To the Déttor of The Evening World: perance prin: and in the way of Hes tn @ Grunkard’s grave leaving @ | dences of boing in the narrow way. bills; f by and methods up in masquerade for Thankegiving and| How could I develop my muselea?, 1 his business 8 what to do, broken-down wife and his two girls,| It will take more than odtcken plety|| Tl! pay the clwar man, as these of the newsboy leader. They affect the welfare of the ctty one|oui it outiandish. Yet ough the | 2m seventeen years old tnd am nearly 1 would beg of him, plead with him, who had to work when they ought t0\to sve this world from sin || And tads made for luhoh— six feet tall and weigh 148 pounds, reason with him, by all that he values have been tn achool, to survive the par-| The man who {s always in the way To think of the rest givag me cord) South Christmas Day ts an excuse for Way or another according as they fall under or escape the lure of the ce frecrackers and other | Would you suggest Gumbbellst ret Jo Ife do not take the first drink, ent who once was @ Sunday-echool children to fire frecracke: nks he is in the only way. hills. grafter in politics, Every embryo leader who cam be won to such loy-|pytetecbnies that custom has reserved ' AMBITIOUS, no matter what you now may seem t) teacher beloved tnd reapected. My own | 4 of evil only to tho] | The landlord and butenay, i ‘i A Ag gacred to the Fourth of July, Also| Join one of the ¥. MC. A, gymna- dose by abstinence, It will in the fu. husband started drinking to improve |man who has failed to ralse any, : ? Aalty to the city as he must later show to his followers means multiplied} in mngiand, people, grown ap as well |sums, The instructor will prescribe ture be your greatest gain. A friend his business standing, To-day 1 am| ‘Nu epiritality is the anility to see bac? Gre ee fat aka : gain to the good-government cause, as children, masquerade and beg on | the dist and exeroise beat aulted to your of mine, a young man with his own strugsiing alone to support . five |the altar in the wanitub and the cook doctor wi 0 ou A New Yorker's Seance 2 , ; % | A Wonder-St , w& & Quest for a Pirate Hoard . The Lion Tamer t By Albert Payson Terhune % ge ale Sle GINMOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTERS. ) of ouett, over a0 Gaul, & youck New Yorse, sol ore id by the edge ef the) ; vas ? | se hia fortune, joiua a otrous troupe, |“, where we've fsolated him, He/| a f d @hrough an abaormal influence ovat | anked ® lot of questions about why : a. ions Guy Faewkes's Day. } Metford grudgingly turned and ase Impatient at the |cended to the summit with them from 8 they reached crest of the olf } Qniroals, eventuaily be . tamer, While the olrous te kept him there I told Mm how th jneete Anice Gray. Wh ° bad gor former dpye larael Mf fong mad and how the brute's of Gault, pirate, one object in lite & reasure gmewbere of you, and how Gault, aa & bor, lied fous seatbpa ence the possession af i & dogmere) Verse wae scraiched. eifond, ancther ‘esowtidant @ Biook Island, wh some mymerious ques h the ssent one brought them within a few rods of th where Nero, the mad Numid Isolated. The seemed bis hatred ears @{ the bars me YOU pass the ooge, That seem to Interest Friend Metford a lot. He would have kept on {asking questions about it yet if T| hadn't come away and left hin stand: | dog enters {he copee | ing ataring at the cage, ' p Bet a BR dar} pede oage, Poor Nero! He There are along the A nes that stand Upon @ nai | Pow base and whose weight Is At tributed that a comparatively slight, push will Jar them, This boulder a ny . | Fooxing 1 felt it quiver soon a8) loo nee Hah froma th Te copes fe apparently empty y day, Hes cpamy all I first leased m: PA : . : y wel, ROOF Nero's crazy ‘ KUNGA ‘by ‘Rin cocpmtot Sioplee | Gt eee oe te OVOP Bot Bt you he'd Hie: | ' | must have "taken the ‘sirenath of three | friend Nad Kone bask on'me’ * Puma tthe hai mite Ya eeatainee fa | Phas Quiaker'n & Gatling battery 5| AG | y All i / i } ; ‘or‘four men to roll tt into place, right} fond of him, you see, By the A Verse be read as a boy on COW4 I'm afraid I'll beve | bY : / j { y, i 5 | alde up, on this Uttle platenu between) What's become of Mettord? I © oblong 1 y 3 i wi he was right at 7 ; '§ Geepatch box, The lux tor! form hb f f yi j » ( | cllff and sea; but one sirong man wih} Maht at ae poe pw. mapped Metford’ Bieph: 4 eng We .eve the island” i ) y All 0 < @ crowbar souls send ft rong over ns the alin. than is jove with Anica, she re| Stephen been surting for the / I) . Whe, y ‘ ‘ into the s¢ io you see the Idea now? . . him. fancies rea | ‘ an) } f / , h : | Ieraol Metford knew better than to eftpeies 9 cdge cottage when Currie: stopped \ f ; Sine: leave his treasure where natives of the | @@uen Gault carved out hie plan ¢ BES sales seviertian te dee bin, Now, as he continued his progress my ) q / ‘ 3 < [island might pass along and notice al Yaneur® 7ie,(0M and lantern to thbe| rDogran. yh Eartake (te decioher| trom the enoampiuent, he looked across i q y : f Z | . ; freshly dug spot ot earth and be tempt: | celved, and mane msM teal, unpore’| ee § 1 evi hia tm |00 Were (on the summit of the olift, ” i z CM / 2 ‘ z je investigate, So Woen he Nad) rocking-stone, € ,them behind the ite lion, oked by lighining. jes the f . ‘aS igtiulk i \ , er | burfed the hoard he and his men llevening, he walked Nn 6 former te with culty resusalteded path bepan to descend to we! \ ou . i, “ til, ny 7 this rocking-stone over it to keep it) eroanmpment ‘toward ony, from | hebrea io] fees, reid Cd a mag |seawuore lane he had travened with | re e ' = Niige Ls ie , a |@afe and to mark th You rela Sar nae Totters Dodme cottage, From Anite that ahe her nade ee oY | Anioe) @ tg onge was placed. in front | Ye aMeh Craik j We: ti jy GEO EE: | | sate digtann’ x Jas oheatnet lous sccees ToMocieee and tatent, | f 7 . Vie : ‘That probably fs why no ove E n the orypeogracy tay por {Fee Metford wes standing, Nero had, of Mmm ever came back for tle) 8 1 conditions weang OF the, Atepren ana | Bt | Aview, been mov trom} treasure,” Yet this dlerrerere. the possible whe: a of the| We encampment where in oA andi! ‘And you really think # is under this|cocur to Pal Mettort sone”, atone? Gault and Antes \ Mevagure on & low, narrow ledge between | fren air Nature sight in time ourel! “I'm sure of tt, This fe the spot namied | 49, brow of th elite and sea. his addled ‘brain, —-— “What oan Metfond find to interest P— é y ES iy, M j tn me clpher, It is an ideal place for Keding down to CHAPTER XITI, wondered Gault ‘a he teened tonne ye OP HT CU iit Mi ae 07 tle if VD a ou vate the oie’ above. outs of the |onmant, by p \ ‘ . (gti ja ‘ . = view from the land, This trail fe on a 4 Metford’s Plot. 7 " uh pel vy 3 es) te bake (iy U6 oul } i ‘ 4 little natural ledge of earth and rook, | forond tae | whe ‘ ‘ 3 ' fh yf LW te ot ; , parcly Sfteen feet wide, with a straight | q 4a “ - i ! i ¢ drop of four feet to the sea. Not a like- | y, landing place for intruding fishermon. | Galt» spend ee it, the treasure lies under “The muttered thet ne! daok and get a orowbar and | [70 a Paul Metfo: dig for it at once!” orled| 1 tMokly and IVing audible yotos A Mech r're going down to that same “Not now," he urged. “People are | fo, Walked through this morning atk e he's} r 1 the & " likely to pass along the trail at any on on, the othen- 1 4 moment; and besides, Metford ta prowl. ther end f to come back the same S* Ste omarked Currier} One morming. # Gaye later, “T Just that fallow K ford on my way tp trom eee! Wrst time J'4 wren that measly trick Your room and tress, But ¢ wel to bend you @ note ina, Michel's again. And ae pad ! spade and Cipher now. 1 reall MEE . Anice, her dark eyes alight with anttol- eve we whol think 1 have, 4 may Yeugh at me; sail,” standing dn front of the cross-, \N » disagreed. “That was all) ble at once, Ani that one poi Was at ing about, dogging my steps moi oN me to moe go suddenly, | rock 1 ire of it, The letter C. | the oval boulder, ten paves to the south the time, I hope my shout didn't reach £0 No other way back, Th Gas tet dee OF & wean boast ated Sault rest of the | from the cross-rock, + bum, Wo must wait until to-night. FI) tae Mn for melee yaault—he "cout intuitions do t r Yar ; br ” ay a ie | track hi Now eyond Ya « this tral, This should bo the plac own here after nigh ni And I'll. be. the Py A: VY une ten paces The o t t object, and| Stephen, in perplexity, do, ® pick and @ crowbar and one ‘ar | very ‘qualineation at the clrous's brightest lanterns some when ane beri aie before ie | t Gault was too wise not to place some the tt oredit In feminine !ntuition—that etramee or yt fore, is that t no wherewith the merent gi.) aking at the other yheer rock of y what | ¢, | But’ Vwhere near the tock, ‘Then, later tn the | Oi MFB, a refres the keen logle of the) tie Jet's tousure again, We! "Do you suppose that boulder could pyening, you und I can go for a wulk tee iit el bave te love T wave |may have misoaloulated,” | have been dislodged from the cliff over- |ang just happen alone in this direction. ne fe, No one'll ever know I opened | \gain the measurement was made;; head and fallen on spot since 7) fake care that Metford doesn't see the cage door, The oatch is easy t thirty fee. from the éross-rock, Again | Capt. Israel Metford burled the trea- |... jring the tools here, And Jf he sees | Work from the outside, told tym pret of hin, He} huh w queer hardly had the heart with hi lie « ve © " * , 1 ! t \pher read we've come. The Trail he } it h east phed | # asked Anice, ther later he'll fmagine | Nero forced It. Now to was 7 er i 8 | ne th n ure touched i fe! vr , uate ine from Indian Head from ¥ » narrow between the cliff and the fe boulder th had eons es No," he repiléd. “I thought of that. | ea ee taning an evening stroh my Winehester and get ’ 6 seamed dith to Yarm Harbor, Ten %| bigh-water mark that there's only one Lied on, Then they measured-—or tried | But tho cllff # #0 high and go near the Wirhey retraced thelr a wp the nar-| {0 let the brute out before th walke ti rom the Under the” oF ‘beyond | #mall apace Jt can be in ) meagure—thirty feot.in every direc- wuter that euch a bi he thet, | ow steap path leading from the leave the lane, Se aod. inhtes: « (or ‘by’) "Yarmouin| She drew @ tape measure trom her |don from the -nookk, rolled from the top, woul have 2 row, teen Pion. Halt way up they|, Still muttering in the mame y Siehat, Alo Yarmouth Traji, | pocket, th hands thet shook {n #pite Hut on the seaw ed clear into the sea, We've alto Paul Metford. Incoherent fashion, but with no vag rong «a of themselves she Stephen (ult distance of barely eighteen |Munder, eotmewbere, inet Pav a you cheering!” annomnced | 20M oF Kick of intenalty dn his insan trying to pump ne sured a straight distance of thirty | tween ,the ross and the iowest tile-| As ‘spoke fe lpenest egeingt dhe |. 1 newre t preamble. "E was on my | 2urpos®, Metford ran through the dark asking whi from the cross along the trail. water mark, On the landward side, |ovad stone and gli in rire Paul, withou' ft heard What | peas toward his stant lode- when we walked th o thelr utter disappointment an y ten feat intervened the crows-nock, nan | way home but » YU Wheat lings in wearch of his rifle, murmuring 1 it you ove: Y Island Cemetery and ‘naw those, elgi-| chagrin & moss-grown Boulder stood or.| the crus and the. precipltau 9 had sprung 20 8 standing | were you Cee or te, nee | PAMIBATY 80 ho rani >> that. But nih century tombstones with “H. jy the exact #pot where rtleth foot! the cliff, To the direction towand ¥: ure, ot “That's affatr, ” 'm erasy took MT st ce hem? Mme. Miche) saya It stands | ended : mouth Harbor th Riane fle full woigtit, backed by all he serine Gault. bret os ‘thiat A phy oy Og hen Mme, 49 if m1 (Here Rasta.’ In Pb case, of the |, They look 4 at ach other, and Gault) lucky; for any straight I i, oleh fast Pe, See by To |" qve mine! You would never bave| iil him and to get the onedst of sare r @ Walohing i! Oke : er i . si d ts q , wou have run of ie Ww added a , pel | “Thanks,” 4 4 another inspiration, ott, 2% | Come!” Interrupted Stephen, more ex. "Our treasure-hunt haw etrick bed- (all inte the sunt, Moreover, | which must have nearly ehouted | in beige ee Mg 2 it Cu | Ing Anice! Gauk's cursed interference | : : mg ou the way from Mone. Aponte | clied than he carey to show,’ “let's go| rock,” he observed, point even twenty feet in that direc- | rocked and ewnyed and fo =| hadn't made every, OF. Rom will be stopped forever and the treasures, fe walked with we to Pen ure i right. lohel's, | over the ground again. Come aro. “Never mind tion, Point Judith was Invisible, gr mpadt. or struck good luck, t | will be mine. All ming @dge bf the eacas - a ahated rook by the other path leading to Yarmouth | her white little Repeated ¢xperiments showed Ante nt" sowie, Gat, waving ing him narrowly. you The last remnant of sanity had fled, er. “Th 2 bi: h Trail? 1 Trail, Metford's up there near the clit.’ tan't the end. and Gault that at only one point ine thi a y. "We win! We jatruck a clue to my treasure, and Paul Melford was ea mad as eves | i tld he oa pas POO" | That'g the C. referred. to in ine cows 1 en fyent im’ to see us if T can commen Sat, Paele arpones trail were Point Judith, win be can't you Lt pe continues, “Bs ehh At y the crased lon. " fe eWay Off Lov dhe reat ays a right t in, dian He ‘a larbor nice Gray tooked re | Bt 0 + , ¥ (Came cater tt ae Five minutes Inter they were in the wrong ‘hinking ©. atood tor Gross biraight ling, ‘or, indeed, all three Ing wonder, “Can't you p60 the Whale lea e ‘ (fe Be Continued) . i Pies & | M6 PSE ( * * “ae a Ae oe oy 4 Le iy meee ,