Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ow, New Tork, Stantial for c: Obviou all about at sumer 4 of Bs hese conferences, are mount 1 back of t an empty bin, millstones For} g 50 cents more Ss $1 additional. York and Broc 00,000 mi ‘Already he is white ash coal aston, for red a ‘As the mor averages 800,000 t whose benefit is ary tax Clearly not for the union fu part goes to the d what part ultimately to the operator is not so material a Sumer, the helpless victim of the | At to-day’ gether. On eac’ Prompt concession fering public. BOMB- peewee IN NEW YORK. It is i it of certai 1 t throw bombs, sometimes inc often as part of a sordid inference let tt party to tt and encourage a § c disp) It is time Ne dastardly crimes. Sampiere’s shop ir from repeating t than sever erity d ¢ remedy condit The Evening World's Home Magazine, | At Odell’s Training Quarters. | By J. Campbell Cory, NS Thursday Evening, Ap of 10,000 on which ac MmmMunily => LETTERS from the PEOPLE 2G. ANSWERS to QUESTIONS EEE <7 lth Thpa. shortens Pils oocaocacceccenrnl savevanaeacaes waeaseressrseasesesessseessasees By VAAAAAAANSA The CRIVTE § of the LAST HOUSE Bu Arthur VWorrisor CHAPTER TI. 3 The Murder. » room | to be i | y ; : ‘ 7: then 3} Walker peared f 1 attempted to take her Sitenancete t and the the stand—a room, « @ Sart. that thing was servant and « Ming ¥ ‘alker, ‘a achool come jammed between the stand house were the|oaken one, Tho ribs, Nowever, had be- : and cofuo?" th the occupant of the room, 'geachen They, Inew nothing; but Migs the wall; So Alias Walker, owtth 9n@ upon her, “It's awful! 1 can’t stop there!" tall, Queer View of a New vorker ‘ drag SAVANE Reeeenceenrecersererryy) prececececcececcecererenrereenceccecnctrectct! BS aaa acta tected at at nat t toad the r than she lool me upon the landing. he see hore room, muoh al S not the sort of Md expect to find grea inything, She was th with the rigidity and women « < o have a nv sked a fey o had been wateh Beckle's face very cl , with pointed emphasis, e you known Mr, Pul returnod & quick sho said, town hint, off and’ ons for'a long faltered and by, marriage, of kaze was still rensibn ment aright, canaka Ais next w ring and anything “No. or € house wi Sarah elothes mark taken’ to lately. ane ia wile? with toh, 2 a worl or two with the serv and then 1 Tafts was the he seme | muntoative "You sald Hin't want to, e night be too the famt}> SMOPOL! ning World ifederate so) A aute «of ev suppre dn your i away suddenly fired enough ¢ Can you wonder Ora tr remember the story of t! he “and: one ‘pative’ fandeet hain boy—were the only surviv- they were the only tw » only one that caine Wack AS Yes. He was just now back voyiige after that, I take ron “Yes, In the Tolanthe bri ship chan he has been wsed* aah be onetnK: to iterent owners," : Re Much money this tina?” Ho had pought hi toh and chun abroud, and fo neers @ few pounds ‘in money, an, they've nil been atolen now," the Inspector eald. “Have you mista yourself?" the other toa you know? O'S lodwera, 90 far os o, aither of them. well, Mrs. Reckle, We'll nave ‘ant now, M get you to con HAL ne over the say, am she rope ane © howe Rut that was ai, Th Is Fosters rocin ned to betray anid the part of its tenant, and was ervwhero in Movenly confusion, ‘The * were ftung anyhow on the feoaantite chair “was overt urned, Hewitt looked around the room, and re- that there seemed to be no anging about, as might have peotd Mra, Beckle replied; ‘he ha Keeping them ail in’ his boxes “How many boxes has het’ asked the "Only these wor’ , er Be Continuet) | and to res ril 5, 1906, Why the United States Is What Tt Is Co- Day. FOOT BPS 0° Oun ANCESTORS IN A SIRES OF OF THUMBNAIL SKETCHES, Wahoet They Did; Why Thoy Did It; ‘ What Came Of It, By Albert Payson Terhune. 7.—THE PURITANS: A Sect That Sought What It Would Not Give. 66@ TRE.” explained the Duke of Buckingham, “they are a sour sect, who S frown on Your Majesty's gay court as a nest of Bellal, and who they want all the world to be as pure of If sted Charles L, smiling at-the of court slang; and not dreaming taken up, a8 an “A sect of ‘Puritans,’ eh?” oddly colned word, which was then a that the derisive phmse was Iater to be accepted, to bi honored title for a body of men who had already mac nfluence felt in Charles's kingdom; had settled {n his New oniee, and were destined, in a few years, to dethrone and behead their dissolute sovereign. They were a strange class, these crop-haired, {l!-clad men, who had deen evolved {n sharp reaction from the pleasure-loving, luxurious nobles of the Stuart court. The pendulum which was to swing from godless luxury to harsh, uncompromising piety and simplicity, had its first expres- sion in the Puritans, nd col people of the Oa They deemed themselves the chos Colony Founded Almighty; a little flock set aside for salvation from for Religious among the throng of the ungodly, Reasons. Unable to practise religion according to their own ® standards, in their own country—for would embrace neither Roman Catholicism nor the tenets of the Pptacopal Church of England—they sought out the new Western land bo- yond the Atlantic, where, !n the wilderness, they planned to f that should worship God in {ts own way and be free fr | restrictions which, {n the Motherls nd, henimed in every Had the Puritans been content msolves such a home | for religious toleration and to eatend simfli: fugees, there would be fewer stains on New En ad's ea th newly freed victims of religious persecution at once established an a-bitary | church government, based on no command of the New Testament, put to death, any fellow-colonists 1. Innocent women were peaceful Quakers and un of death; persons eliaf in t eternal punished for their to est, and remorselessly persecuted, and even | who did not wholly contorn | put to torture and even burned by then {| Catholfe priests were driven from among | wiyo dfd not subseribe to such gentle notions poerneteg of unbaptized infants were seve heterodoxy A cold, stern race colonizing | days, Hawthorne says, were as | ing. To kiss one’s wife on Suni | Sunday was to go far toward marking ope’s | hope of Heay Harsh, -, not only dicated to the service of God, to both A nd sE} | In both countries the body politic | corruption and misrule. | cine that effected a painful but most jin time swung back, the once-uniy ar ‘ A | day all-powerful for right, for manliness, for sterling virtues. The “medicine” itself de with the it cured. But America whole world will always remain the better and the stronger for it. man can properly be st power of the New Eng- onists. It Was a eral religious movement rather than the al that ed the Massachusetts tract. In the early winter of 1620 a shiplond of Pil- niddie class, pious folk of stanch stern land; a people whose festival days of general um To be born on tan, without other pec ad as deemed ryed a gran fruits h-needed sick: strong, depleted from dissipation, ver itanism is to this for re} land ¢ | genius of an indi eT! Massachusetts’ | grims— Two Great working stock—landed from the Mayflower at | Colonies. Plymouth Rock. Rigors of winter and peril from sav- ad no power to turn aside these men of fron, al ng and a permanent home. won the favor of Massasolt, who did much to forward the set- eee ee rT From the bleak wilderness they wrung Their venture prospered, and th us and other local Ip the success of the Plymouth ploneers, a large con- Massachusetts Hay colony, salled They bore a self- it At once to establish a strict Calvinism and hare » shir rnment charter from Charles 1, an rmanent community whose ke) ynotes we work. y South America and the West Indies w ginja by “younger sons” and down at the heel gallants, whose Pa settled by gold seck im won fortune, New England, greatest and most endurin tht y settlements, was established ay rough ail hardships it endured and waxed prospe . Sat its: first harsh methods, but never depariin Rony ; Anybody Who Reads This Column Will in a Short Time Know All That's {* Worth Knowing About the History of This Country. » ——_— + ¢-—_ THE Two BOXES. was ten years old For round ¢ Of bats and shi And on the stand « The by, and Johnnl To be a youth of dashing air; And in his mother's patient head Appeared somo strands of grayish hatr, For on the dresser fn this room (And this ts why his mother frets) Another little box Js seen, is It's marked “Se ae IMPORTED CIGARETTES CRE CLEVER THINGS | NEVER SAID By Lowe R. Case, ¥ dear old) ‘yes. 1 were Idealist Hasolbly Chex tried, g.| fibre of golden t Plerpont — aloriran, : was babbling to me] John D, Rookefe s trring to of the Joys of| instil same of tie val knowledge Spring (not he sort| Of Joba D. Rookeretler 1. tn:o the Davy. of apring that] ord John D. Rockefeller IT, I eat Mocks are watered) DY "ih n euperior smile, walting, neve from, but the Kind ‘ston! Py SOAS BOS that gives us book fool te ing), i “How indlesolubly the Rabbit and ce f ee the Egg are woven into the fubrio of man erould mi epee On: golden Waater tradition!” he exclaim $,(0,000 at's par onrieas €@ tend a0, rotting bis eyes in poeto-rapture, y snignnomy UU Never.se0