Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ABLES > : ue naee, "em : Sie Gee # pubtianes by the Press Poblixhing Compan :§ Entered at the Post-OMleg at New York as S VOLUME 47 The Evening World’s Daily Magazine, Concerning Mr. Hearst’s Sincerity Apples are the great American fruits, pears, peaches p=) butter, or in cus ~~ ‘siyle way of evaporating appies- In whatever_form,. they_are_goo Bante salaries are notonihe-inerease— ‘sons, but apples are the only fruit To-morrow the political season closesw Jemon will be restored to its proper place as an ingredient of pies and aid to acidulated beverages. The a season shouldthen bexin. Just as an apple poultice is soothing to bruises and external inj , so the cating of apples will bring bani after a: period of port Tirritation: : Everybody should eat-more apples pple in the great , especially amo the population ‘of foregn apples only as an expensive luxury. This year the apple crop 1s good. by the American Agricuiturist ‘than last year’s crop, but not so large as the craps of 1902-03-04. * The apple crop in New York State is particularly good. . It will produce Proportion to their population Missouri, Arkansas and Kentucky are the _great apple-producing States, but in the number of barrels New York exceeds any_of them. i = The wholesale prices are also moderate. Such standard varieties as — Greening, Baldwin-and Spy, which will keep through the winter, are 52 $2-to-$2-50-a-barrels Every housekeeper should ty rrel of these apples, and every member of the family setting fo » least one ba “visit the barrel at Teast once a day. a Apples are a wholesome food. They contain vegetable juices, iron, phosphate, salts, vegetable fibre and naturat-sugar. They are a much better staple food than potatoes or cabbage. They digest eas! i raw or cooked. Their liberal use diminishes the necessity for cati meat. They save doctors’ bills. At present wholesale prices apples cost only 174 cents a pound: t They aré-thus-one-of the cheayest-of foods, and so faras they are sub stituted for other food their use is necessarily economica But in buying apples do not’go by appearances. One of the best ._ looking of all apples is the big, red Ben Davis, which comes from Arkan- gas and the Ozarks, This apple is. good fo look upon, but its-taste is) oody-and-lacking-in the delicate flavor of the Pippins, or the Baléwi wheth RPUBEO I” GRAIN TRUST. G Thusy: |i MR MEARST CLAIMS TO Oppose BOD5 RULE | | | x vot PENCE SE» Pheir use a5 food is far too limited! TRORPENOEN SE, } SHALL FOR mint~ AD PER AGRCEMEHT! who in their, former homes knew of) “The crop estimate carefully prepared; 36,120,000 bushels, half again larger} 4,900,000 barrels, or more than half a barrel for every inhabitant. In} CORPORATIONS MR.MEARST PROFESSES To FAVOR OWE AN INDEPENDENT TUVDICIARY- | time yearned to-absortsher eastern tt A NOGRED. HR HAD ‘one Peanars eveny-// <I THING THAT COULD PROFESSES To USE OF MONEY MR HEARST CENOUNCES THE VERY (OLA (OF CHINESE LABOR OM THE PANAMA Ch” Become Back Number. {verpool must supersede Lond against the latter and {ts supremacy has only It England had been discov: would {nevitably London May ints out a Man- ed at the samo have become it is alowly but surety Cure November 5, 1906, ‘The FIFTY GREATEST EVENTS in HIS TORY Py Albert Payson serhune— No. 49—The Balkan Puzzle and the Russ¢-Turkish War, you will look. over_a_map of srope-you will see three great ponine i Jutting into tho seas that wash the south shores of tie Continent. f southernmost and Turthest east of the three ds known ag the | ‘eninsia. It comprises Turkey. tn ‘ope, Greece, Servia, Bul- aria, Montenegro, Eastern Roum Roumania and other lesser divisions. den aily that same Peninsula has fora thousand y s been the hotbed ie voit, intrigue, violence, sedition ‘and nearly ev re Neth pe ce. The shadow of the Sultan’s scimitar ever darkened Tene SOREL ig 4a te be born who une fis in all its ramifications | hese 4 social and political snarl in which the whole area {9 en- .. ie pee eS Metrict of the samp. stxo.contuing so-maiy-races.nor £0 -Di0ny _ cetarathen: {ae fo whlely: ditterent in religion, -polities, customs and bars Wendie x n & Jumble Of Nationalities dwell side by Side, yot never” Dirk, Greek, Bulgar, Albanian ond-a half sesre of other peoplos Yetm-ench—sh sided troin-a—the—Sth ers of the Pen The other races spent centuries but have merged thelr various staat Turkey. , The Turks, stroigest of +4 thasters of the Peninsujath the th teenth century, being at that ume the foremost military pe a of the aril ‘ Most of the Balkan States aré Christian... For: this reason, as well as bocatsa of the frequent plots and revolts against the Sultan’s Government, Ture key has from ume to. time punished. her rebellious pune by ufietel slaughter: ata outrage, The Cate rmen{an ond Macedonian massacres have at one Pi te Pee sroused. the horror of all cly{ized countries. started! onetoe ya ate and Herzegovina (then Turkish provinces) aletrict of Berges Periodical Insure: The peasants of the Batak force Under Achaea ee prenaring to rise when suddenly a large Turkish commanded: the j Agha appeared, ounded the town of Batak and nenhariien erat pases to yleld, pre hat not one of thom should hae eestea ites credulity nus a havin cence sith tha * ten the ma: cre began, ne RiseGuers men, women and children allke—were ered like sheep, Samo: tookretuge tin heads, — Achmet Agha received a decoration from ae ran At news of tho outrage the sj protest to the S: ‘He had, Rarded his pied, he gave :the tion w ae wad the chance—torwi scatter‘ Pyrenty years vatiter— urkey: (backed by England anlinia) had beaten Russta in the Crimea — Fhe weit? Russia mor for_a_long tor-to-annex-a x tat= ai torritory: as pouslble 2Tho other nuionv however had no iioawed allowing the “balance ot power’ to be thus slilfted, and Russia had been able to find no occasion to promote her schemes, Now, und ext of avenging tho {njurles inflicted on Balkan Christians, the Czar declared war C377) agains: : A Russlar army crossed the Danube June 27. On July 12 Gen. Gourko made the difficult passage of the Balkan Mountains and adyanced on Adrianopie;-but-was range, vanquishing a Turkish army of 32 Csman Pasha, the Sultan’s best general, m against the invaders und had ut len y of Plevna. Here he ondured for twenty weeks om Inst superior pam= bers, but was {n the end forced to surrender’ With the fait of Plevna tho. Turkish cause weakened, Phillppopolis and Adrianopollg were taken, and the triumphant Russian. armles marched unchecked on to Constantinople. - Here, however, with the frufts of victory within SeTeETIPERTES? thelr very grasp, the conquerors were halted by the The Slege of Powers. The old_menace of “destroying the balance { Plevna, of power” seemed about to be fulfilled. and the Rus- 4h (Jan, 0, 3878). held his own they taste.” The apples brought from far-off States have been raised more for their keeping qualities than their taste, Near-by apples are better. There are 300 varieties of them. Along Greenwich, Washington, Warren, Barclay, Murray and the gther streets of the wholesale produce district the sidewalks are now fined with barrels of apples. Everybody who needs a solace for the ‘election should go Wednesday and buy a barrel. Everybody who desires to celebrate the election should go and buy a barrel, too. Satisfactory results will surely follow, : ta} “ -' That is a defect with the California apples. They took better than | THE JARR FAMILY & yy By Roy L. McCardell "Yes." continued Mrs. Jarr, ‘and both the Duchess and the Countess had chil- ave no idea what an expense they are, or _myasalf. and then, remembering the children 5, 1 buy tings for them and go without myself, JARR was on the volnt of bursting with sup- pressed Information when Mr. “What do— yor People with no childre downtown te buy Jurr came home. aho- Said ex: oy BANS WEE TORMICaEN TO -oHT Torkisti-caprear, + By the peace treaty of San Stefano, however Roumantan Bessarabia and part of ‘Armenia were ceded to Russa, Bul- garia was made a princtpality with home rule; Romania, Servia and Montenegro were declared free countries, and Bosnia and Herzegovina came under Austro-Hungarian sway: So-ended tho Rosso-Turkish war of 1877-1878, Turkey, far from profiting by her lesson, continued to oppress her Christian provinces. In 1895 massacres of Christians {n Armenia, and even In Constantinople, horrified clyilization. Christians in Crete rovolted by way of showing their disapproval, and asked Greece to annex theln island. A Greek military force was sent to Crete. Turkey at once de- clared war, thrashed Greece {n ono brief campalgn and wrung from the beaten country a heavy war indemnity. ss you forget tha bands were as po and their titled hi anid Mr. Jarr, Apples are good to eat raw or baked, or as apple sauce or apple [expect when Uiey sold themselve porokendown-noblement+— 4 tor titles and toadied and c Tart, Tt waa” atl very ro= anderolits and the Goulds” ecame the brides of duct! coronets! © everybody was, and how Mre,-Hopwood went ot of Waataw that belonged to her ethical culture chub, and yo clothes nearly torn off their backs, but Mrs, Hop- he Duchesa’s bridal yell, and a lady with her got halt e of children's o girls sho Kors coming for a ma} as a souventr!* said Mr. Jarr, coldly don't think vo, Because you hayes no delicacy or refnement about ped off mn plece of the Duke's conttat! ighs or bargain sales? | o been lovely,” emont to mob @ titled cad that marries an American mn abuses her because sho can't give him all the a" gal Mr, Jarre m Count Castethine, rl for her money Td or duinpings of apps pie — | ney nag pe Rept per per manently in the farm of snitz, which is the homely term for the old Wheir_juice, whether as soft cider, hard cider, or even distilled into apple- jack, isa joyful beverage. 3 i ics is changeable. Apples are a stand-t the year round. o-wants-to wast atop —F-eould ave t TOM Te Tarr MUsIngty rat _Amartcens—ma ke: y marry ve, like wo did, and that ls why they get without a word, like wo ito, \syou're right there, old lady said Mr. Jarr. +--—__—___—_- Pointed Paragraphs. ple Hke to tel thelr imaginary troubles. mt Ket even with a physician by returning his calls. s——Tr-youmain't— keep yorr—face-ciosed: in adversity nobody knows him. Count acted Ita no | Jats, exsaying this M thelr husbands comet a street car than by an auto- y_other threte > wax of any man, but T e that they Gross to pleased tnemaety es, and—attit SHiste-oTtey Sgcepite their ¢adyfriends— If that is not 80, then why !s tt wo. en -have-auch-« feartul 4 Lng. Other woman dressat even al {wee jika=themerivee?—Otier—expen: a erve nw Offen an Tleated, Fo the Haltor of The Hvening Wi 5 Po the EAltor of ‘The beentne ROM as A eat and a fit to |'in dregaes {a on the increase, Ist hus- Gwblch ta one good reawon Ww i CURR CHARAN Sa eb AIT OBSERVER: | wii take a hundred ¢ What) Trade? 7 dred mts and will re To the Wdltor of The Evening We Here ts a point-b-would Ike expert- ‘enced readers to advise me on. I a young man, twenty-one years ed ‘and mechanically. inclined. 1 lpeatiaetiuicsela tes siitacy Vike to know what kind of a trade to | eee tearn where there is a good future, it where I could follow jny natural H. E. 8, Cruelty to Antmals, To the Editor of The Ey y euburoan tow cats. OF r }rat day. y 1 know two you here who hin riage last Satu dance and drove fast that he has out of the ata’ 8 P, CHA ag such towns to punish young nye our horses, Boonte S.ISULE WIS F Girla Dotng Men Fo the Bdltor of The $--read-of a eis locomotive or-£o as fire Avonder that men complain of are pushing themselves | be yory in mén’s Jobst Would these @irla dike! only lant momp «irl to take their fathers or! had similar experience. , nd al plains that passen Waste In court! as witr man himeclf wax p tlon, by asking ¢ TACHIAEL, Work. World e's rights. If as witness £ sive thing a man can haye—with the possitle ex- It's_a pleasnire to make wishew-and that fe about ail the satisfaction tha | most-of us gat ot of ghitago News. or, Howto ge <@ By Jean Mohr. 56-10 CENT STORE WILL FURNISH THE | NECESSARY BOILER ENGINE ETC. (2B BOILER ETC. TO WHEELS ASK “ANY SECTION BOSS TO GIVE YOU AN OLD REA! ROLLER (AND IF HE WILL) AFTER. ETA CHING THE PAI ‘SEE F1613). SEW IT FIRMLY OTHE-REMAINS OF “THE AUTO-~USING NO-'70 {EVERY BRIGHT YOUNG MAD HANDY WITH TOOLS CAN MAKE A STEAM ROLLER OUT. OF AN ORDINARY. FIRST. SIFT AND SORT YOUR AUTO. A PEANUT HUNT ON STEAM ROLLERS, ISALSO LOTS OU CAN GET UP JOLLY STEAM ROLLER PARTIES “TOO AND FORM CLUBS, RAGE-THE MACHINE IS USEFUL FOR SMOOTHING OUT HARD Wood FLOORS AND REMOVES THE ‘CREASES FROM - DOILY NICELY, FOR A SPIN ON ‘THE STBAM ROLLERS FROM A PHOTO BY GUM), The Balkan Peninsula emt teems with plot; counterptot, int: Fale-and-Aladontent-—The Palka problem, perhupe wilt never toca ee -Love’s Beatitudes. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. e 6, Blessed are the pure in heart, for love stays with them longest of all. j HIS 13 the sixth beatituds of tore which tn vartous phases comes to every one, but tarries with very few. For-onlythe pure -tnheart live happily over after with Fivelyn, and compols Angelina, ~ if Harold cannot see her merits, to devote herself to spend- ing Reginald's Income with tappy u = Only the pure in heart-are constant, Ther alone live up to the best definition of love ever written. ‘These tes from f. Shakewpearian sonnet: >: “Lovg ts not love hich alters whan {t alteration onde Or bends with the remover to remove. Oh,-no! It fs an éver fixed mark ‘That looks on tempests and je never shaken; It {s the star to every wandering bi Sa is z “Whoan worth's unknown, although his height ve taken. To Me -evernge person of today. |e le eort isa 2 tata and pang by poets, but-to belived only dy fools, ‘They have learned by novel {ie phtlowophy of -seifabness, avhone frst prin: da that to love too much ts te be uncomfortable, and, therefore, to be avold TAwhenover THnd that e woman to beginning to care for me.{00 much, or that Lam in danger of caring too much for her, I fap my wings and fy away,” said ‘«-tatuous_epostie of this cult tj mo tse other day. = see ey trom Une patnt of vlew of comfort and safety his method has everything to recommend {t, Nevertheless, the person capable of following it {s absolutely ‘Hoaupable of love: For-tove te absolutely without oalculation. and tn tte exalted pis- of tore. ene Ure pure-tn-heart-understand-tt;—In-love-as-in-every= pnd Inatiig meaning only Vibing else we nd what ws took for, ‘he pure heart ts -without-suspicto: for it The Truwtrol womin Tani dttven—tack:—in--Decenrber-he-tecrossed-the-Batan = hing to be written of therefore, 15 seldom furnished « reas to Iikely to be distiiualoned ‘in love aa the more sopliisticated and suspiclous ho meets trouble more than half way. bolng of the masculine perauasion. stays only where he {a made com= ‘And hia favorite ablding place Js the trusting heart. Therefore are the imoat blessed, for love stays with them longest of all. ne ee i ~ The Counts. By Walter A. Sinclair 15S, the Count of Monte Cristo was a great count—tn a book, VY ut ho really wasn't in it with the count that Berger took, ‘And the Count of Castle Annte kept accountants In the alr, \tule he counted Annte'a money, doling her a little whare, ‘And our friend Count Abruxs! thought at poling he was some, ‘Pil accounts of ‘Yankee Peary put the Count right on the glum. woman Ww! cupid fortadle pure ‘in heart Count Gyullo de Featetica seems to eddy and to ebb In the clinging, snaring meshes of publiolty's wide web. | Xnd our othér friend, Count Bismarck, had to get right off the Job When they published Father's sayings that with William ratsed much hob, \ \outle by crossing the Atlantlo to the Gotham'side we find ‘wnat the merry, tippling Re-Count wttl {a fresh in public mind, | \wetve had dounts which beat re-counters, also counts who bent thelr wives, We've had cqunts who 'midat tho fco-flelds Fisked thelr comfort and their live, We've had coynts behind the counters, selling ribbons for the cash, iWe've had counts who sold bananas, polished shoes and handled hash, LAI these counts will,haye to sldo-atep, for the only count of note \aphat now figures In the papers. What? Tho count of Tuesday's Vote. i err _.Where Cows Wear Earrings. ;qsN Belxium all cows over three months old are to be seen wearing oarrings, I Breedera gro obliged to keep @ record of all cattle raised by them, and each aninial bas a registered trade number, which la engraved on the ring fastened to ita ear, x iy