The evening world. Newspaper, April 3, 1906, Page 12

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' ‘ E TERT 5 Home Magazine, ‘Tuesday Evening, Apr !1 3, 1906. 4 Boastime: ERitth, Ca yale Campbell Cory: ge ee with YOU HAVE irectness in | tion of the law which the city for lany years has heen accustomed to} look for in its Recorders, sa result of this brushing away cobwebs, long before ecial Grand fore real work of inve: Stituted to perfc will -have the evi consideration. Ir methods there wi Reco g of Mr, Jerome, which were fast THE LAND OF DISCONTENT. Rosie Collender tried to kill herself because she is poor and afford preity d fers generally think th trate did right i ite the law to punish s tical questions the Grand Jury} sion of crime before it for ten eater e jen, schoolboy philoso expresses 2 This young we all see man; by people of our some Peasant selves becaus common in ti people with er to try to take her own lifé, for to have, but ¢ E BRIDGE JAD him tn his brutal be to say the i wish New York Dental 8. D. Six Months for Straw Hat. netene alton ecieee ve. Wife=Girl va, Woman, ¢ redo y a WY fF Mont tag become corre y} + deness and tmpertinence and that hla COLUMBIA JUNIOR. SEALS ENGLR ENGEL AS SLES HONE NAGEL EDNGESELANST TA GUAESTRAAESETATEANG SEL TGESGRUAEDES SENS ONS ESTERASE EEG TASCA L CAAA EOS A CASA LASEOAMAOLEAA ALAS, CHAPTER The Cipher. find, Bankside, Once T left him, and then Col Nt PLAY 7 t n oho viens ns yet ¢ ‘ police, bate wy Tt me of the I i j What had a | bany rate a wide or a key? eooni with: the where was. the me—an old wom-| Window ne with a po ny by two unn men id, “You're here ry wou secon any mor» ¥ ? 1 4 300 vlisorabably he'll be here be. mn ¥ addre: Jhough,"* ee nan, a bout this here ar] Mat they alrcady know, if they ‘The party turned Into Colt Row, and kea W c ISO SR AG URAL Hare: Neen telling the truth about the houne | 12! f paises | ; g Jined up with the Wedlake | een {cl tang, You ean ‘omer to | ihe Inenootor,, walking up to the HOF and Ww Whe for t smiled, “As to the name and| uuem, Masts have told you of the | in aoe, nocked sharply. A led. mes: a 0} ve you where ( t3 thd ‘ouse, and there's no cua ein you Just think Mt over a Ittlal Sha hawea ts” ama qroved to yon fee {To Be Continved.) > i 4 itil i SR NS ri niteiacnccn |6.—HENDRIK HUDSON, ‘Why the United States Ts What Tt Ts Co-Day. ga FOOTSTEPS OF OUR ANCESTORS IN A SERIES OF THUMBNAIL SKETCHB3, What They Did: Why They Mid Te What Case Of It By Albert Payson Terhune, the North Pole Secker Who Found New York. jon of the early seventeenth the failure of a certain Eng- Hodgeson. This doug’ plete efficacy of a a trad! HE Muscovy Compa’ century, was ish mariner in its employ mariner had persuaded the compar reach China and Japan from Eng’ the North Pole. It was apparent), {ts success was that, a: which the expiorer passed S)itzt ord of his day), Ho through the northern ice-pack T two sucec break y was disgusted, and the, ut of employment; to which overy of Manhattan Island Muscovy Com found himselt First Attempt i marin to Discover the$ misforty due North Pole. { and the Hudson River, For tho Dutch Past Ind!an Company took the man {fto {ts employ and started him out in a little SO-ton ship, the Half Moon, with a mixed crew of sixteen mon to seck a similar passage to the Far East. From now on his English name is known by {ts Dutch adapta- sfon—Hendrik H letely are Hudson's discoveries as= sociated with Ho vy referred to a8 a Dutch explorer, Hudson temporart s North Pole scheme. From his brill- fant, If somewhat unre . John Smith, ie had heard that along the Atlantic coast of ..merica “there {s a sea leading Into the West- ern Ocean by the north of the English colony in Vinginia.” This sea he ight, finding only Delaware Bay. Thinking the “sea” must be further north ho safled on along the New Jersey coast to : Hook. Entering / the lower bay, he started to explore the harbor and the river that ran into} {t, In search of the fabulous passage to Chin fyet n Sept. 3, 1609, Hudson cast anchor tn. hostlie Indians resulted in the killing of one of his men—John Colman by name. The victim was buried on Sandy Hook, his burial spot taking the name of Colman’s Fetnt. ( Hudson first landed at what 1s now known as Coney Island; then pushed northward to Manhattan Island. In his report t ibes the latter place as; “A very good land to fall in with and a p} d to sec." Indians flocked about and-welcomed the new rs, Hudson treated them with and, Incidentally, 1s cre. bestowing on his ¥ savage guests the first intoxicating Mquors ever drunk In New York, The to one historian, was a native Among the various ed forthe name * is one which traces & “place of de the Hook. A skirmish with}, fled up the river that now bears e convinced that the urned back. To his ess of the Leaving Manhat his name to a pc river did not afford ate d the route to sibilities s is due the initial impulse of sturned to Holland, ch But he spread the ne ich po: ina and Japan, n. He pene- ich he doubt- nad sought. In- his error he waa the rigor of on Bay he s the quixotig d the tack of = son John and re in- 4 further from ds of hostile Discovers Hud- son Bay and Is Put to Death. . as did nd thu, of the af ~~ led 1 power thu North Pole seeker, reaped But he had, uncon- *, pointed out the path that ate. if This Colu W Q ! Short Time Know All That's About the Hi Calor Who Ite : Worth Inowits of This Country, q NEW YORK THRO’ FUNNY GLASSE } By Irvin S. Cobb. \\ who can't seo anything In a doughtnut bs to conesde that the manly art of weartng J di 8 made one or two for strides in the last few centurtes. Al longer fares forth to the wars soldered up like a can of mustard Repaostre ad several sla:s of a burglars. proof riveted down a res to protect them. Nowadayg he incases his person in a pat khikt trousers suMlciently roomy to accom modaie quantities of heathen loot, and carrles a portable machine-gun by the use of which the bl y bo conveyed to Moro ladies and e grandaire, who was beset foal moment and em- foy pin he kept {t out of sight. We moderns, weaw yoniy this summer in an effort ro going to wear Instead of a up and gagging ur. i} up policemen tn ars ago, In sf dren at comparative ith false mo ree of the shirt on best kn out of sty le for 9,000 men in this scuttlos, ontys t make the feet.) 1s off his white gloves * town who not so com. to burn like the ( nd snug, cozy, high co: : Marigys. If ono of tho alr-proof, extra-uphols+ he's lost since golng on posi Gen. im, | s golng along a melod sidewalk, . and meets an Muminated oltizen trying and clubs the cornices off of the ltl , man 18 a heartless brute. y | to wring the water out of his fingers, or to sew how much fi tered uniform co: | Dingum will th So then, wi reminding him to‘ reconcile flat feet to a round ear zen's mansard, ev In the winter skirts on Jt like a rb him just the needs it. Ho unde: up a new 1 {s strapped Into a navy blue relic of the Middle Agen, with havit, and a broad leather surcingle hitched al nt him from drawing his revolver when felonious person, and while ho {ts tanglin; himself up in his mediaeval polonaises, the friends of the fugttive fall upo! lm and, having thelr guns where théy can got them without undressing, they) qnake lm look like the far end of @ shooting ; Ulery in a rallruad town pay-car night And everybody says deceased wus & clumsy {diot, who could: take care of himself anyhow. y ( THE FUNNY PaRT/ | a Nobody thinks to blame {t on the clothes, 5 s to purst

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