The evening world. Newspaper, October 25, 1907, Page 18

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World Patient a 8! Daily Bxcwi Sunday by the Preas Fublisting Company, Noe ! 3 id Park Row, New York x ANGUS BMAW; Fae eTrear. set re HI Ore dUnent anit Ai. in the Inte ~ Postal Union. DON’T POARD tees NO. 16,866. YOUR MONEY. | HIS is not a business panic, but aj Wall street panic. “There is no rea-j son: why any of the readers of this / per who have heed&d its repeated A warnings against’ Wall. street “garft- ~ bling should be disturbed. The big: Wall street’ gamblers oilars just}: —have—lost —millions—ot -as atthe race tracks-gamblers ont}: : horses ‘lose thousands of dollars, as - ? Wall street gamblers have lost is not their money, but belongs to other people, just as some-of the money lost at race tracks-is_stolen_. ; ly people Wall street gambiers, but of banks which Wall street gamblers control. But it is no reason at all—indeed, it is quite the reverse—why-depositors (Whe only way this Wall street gamblers’ panic can result in any- thing except the good of the-general public is that the thrifty, indus- trious mass of the population of this city shoukd take alarm and begin to hoard their money. os ~~ Hoarded- money ts dead. a Tt pays-no wagés. It buys no groceries. It shelters no family.” For industry to be prosperous, for business to be profitable, for ‘employment to be constant, Money must-be-kept-in circulation. The merchant must receive money for his goods and in turn pay that money} his 0 the factorie ich produce what he sells’ ‘and which in tum pay it out to their > the butcher, 7 workingmen, from whom it goes to the ‘grocer and the storekeeper, keeping in continual cir- | IMT iG i a i}! ‘ Meets fit My i : B (3 { | li “i | nil Money in itself is of no value to anybody except the miser. It ic| Not edible until it is exchanged for food. It does not-keep off the rain until it is paid out in rent. It does_not Protect from cold until it is ex- changed for clothing. ve = _Idle money. is-ene_of. the; most- useless ‘commodities in the world {| What money a man does not need to pay his bills he should 7 positin-a bank, where it willbe put to work. Ina bank’s vaults money a_basis for credit, and credit ds necessary.to-profitable-business-- i ~ The worst place for a man to keep his money is in his Pocket. It holes there. It isa constant temptation to excessive ‘expenditure; “money-which-3-man- does tot need ssary ‘purchases of en oe Brctibes bylaw from: engaging tn Wall street gambling, and pear p Class of -men-who the-taw, differi from the Wall street gamblers, —— Ss ™ se The depositors: who have drawn & cannot be withdrawn without the ~ troubie“of going in personto-the. bank—which J ne _Abave' all, do not hoard itt it is Hable to be “lost or stolen, the surest way to check Prosperity and to throw out of work the very | peaple who do the hoarding, A Letters from the People. & Zoaq, Fhotoxraphers, ‘To the Editor of The Rrening World: . | ‘wo young men stepping into a ring, with woft padded gloves, and showing “Amateur Photoxrapher’ rebols against =the ‘rile of the New ‘York Zoolocical Boclety concerning the taking of vio- tyres in the park. Let mo say in.de-. tense of ihe y tbat they are cn- 4 In making sucn a rule, ¢ the park derives much n the wale of xouyenir ould immediately de- Sould take pictures 4, the great num to take plott Of trouli s want ad 4 might throw the animals to sired position. a day the ant made exceedingly mo- 3, Many have obtained make drawings, pal ot the * Loclety ‘hy not » ylew of Mix question? AD BC. yall and Bexing Again. lai aing Worfd would cause Ach person view of the ¢ stones anu Ket then 40 (a! a the cour of more manly training and manly sport than all the football ganes ever played. weak spot and 1s compelled to rest ten second that bout fs over, whereas if @ football has his head twisted around so that YoU gan'e tell which goal ho ts alming or, there are a dozen others waiting to fll'In so wa to continue the guine SQUARE DEAL. The Fraction Problem, To the Kaltor of EY vo Sasol i@ Kdltor of The Evening World mt In answer to the fraction pri jftratixe the numbers 1 ty. 0 fractions whose sum’ shall the fo¥owing method may ja 1-2 | SPH 1. CONNELLY. tr orl { qut mal 1 J.B, vil to him’ who otland, Polest xguinst Lualtania bev dor the MWilic be Ya} If a boxer receives a blow on somal player has @ leg broken, or! Sto cpasn | terkaeting. Wburg or Brooklyn she. when W.a. Tanita dain Econ omy. By Maurice CHEAP’ po.) RoR eoR or DWE AUST. { ECONOMIZE Tars YEAR — The New Recipe for Beauty OU can't think in eagies and meve tn curves,” cays & new beauty qxpert in Chicage. ‘To be beauti- ful, one must have beautiful fo _ali_that is necessary to make. 4s for her to think vinegar instead of drinking it, while “the thin woman who would add to her weight must have nice custardy—thoughta “starchy reflections and sugary | meditations, ‘The beauty of excess. weight need no-longer- trudge Anat disposition, The atteruated damsel has a more pleasing figure at the same time _=We-will be interesting, te watoh_her_aa she enters_«_ car and proceeds.to glare! ye a we ww w_ By Nixola Greeley-Smith. srelop her characterand— er! ly Magazine, Friday, October 25, 1907. NO. 2.—KING PHILIP'S WAR. OR many years after,the Pequot nation had been demolished there was peace in New Rngland. Massasdit, Chief Sachem of all the Indian tribes between the Charles River and: Narragansett Bay, was the friend of the white man and made the newcomers’ welcome to his domains, |The English settlers had an odd way of repaying this hospitality. By ,& hundred clever tricks they outwttted the savages, took advantage—of-the ted man’s ignorance, and little by little took away more and more of the |. Munting grounda and fisheries. While pretendlag ‘to’ meet the batives | friendjiness half way they were forever pushing the latter further and... ftrther: back and depriving them of their lands ‘and thelr ancient rights, ‘Then ‘cange thé crisis. u i "Massasolt: died in 1661. His son, Pometacom (known: by the colonigts as /Klag PIII"), . wa) very different sort of man. He had long seen “|.through the supposed’ friendship of the English, had marked chow his own people were crowded -back-and-despolied,-and—he-had-forestght-enough to >| | Fealizo that {t was only a matter of time before the aborigines showld be antsy Owe ae GIVE You_ DEAR OLD CHUMP expected: Thoughts af her fat-foriing mental diet will suddenly obtrude them-| eelves and the aiazs cwill melt into © gracious smile whichithe passenger, If ho be of the coquettish temperament that seems to Infest the Subway, will be almost | certain to misinterpret. Siriano EEA ay ‘The fat iady, on the ‘contrary, being of a naturally jolly disposition, will find herself getting vf her thought det by thinking chescful thoughts shout. every. -one-that will put om. twice as many pounds as ehe had previously lost by meditating conscientiously on the sad fact that nobody loved her. ——— Betrayal of [ects | Or TTeyonge, mu) slayers. The jstruck on July 4, King Philip's war began. jarmed, simple folk of the Pequot war, |} people's -wrongs. | It containdy 500 wigwams and ; wuppiies “and -stnughtered or captured for alavery about 1,000 Ti wholly driven from their own country. To check this gradual destruction - Philip hit-on a datjng and: thoroughly Indian tdea— Secretly ‘he made tour: of all’ the:tribes-from-Ma!ne to-Connecticut,” minting out to them deprodations of = the Engt raging them to unite in one general uprising which should rid New England of ‘the invaders. A Almost without exception the tribes consented to join the league Philip Droposed:- Even the Narragansetts, who had always been the friends of the —white_men,"were_so-enraged—over—the-receat murder oF their chief, Miantonomi, by some colonists that they eagerly allied themselves to Philip. The plan for deatray- ing the English at a blow was well-nigh complete when news of {t reached John Sassamon, ia Christianized native, He carrled the tidings to the English authorities and Philip wae ‘arrested. So craftily had the chieftain arranged matters that nothing could he.proved aj t-him: was A“party “of his followers. tn “murdered Sassamon. The English promptly hanged the informers. latter’s friends retaliated by murdering every Englishman they could lay hands,on. Thus, early in 1675, the first actual blow being It was, wo far ns the English were concerned, much such a confilct a@ 4 man might wage with a swarm of homets. The Indlans would not meet the militia in open field. Instead, they attacked-parties—of “churchgoers, - {ambushed smal detachments of soldiers, elew unwary men who-yentured alone into-the=forests; , Swooped down onan ‘unprotected“vittage and Kited and burned until the settlemen: it was ii ashes. Nor were they the arrow: . Thanks to long association with white men they had guna and ammunition and knew how to use: them, Deerfield, Northfield, Brookfield and other towns were the scenes of fa-. describable massacres. Springfield was attacked, but, being warned ja time, beat off the savages. Capt. Lathrop and eighty men were: set- upon= -}and-butenered-at-Bioody Brook, near-Deemeld:— Throughout New Bagland, but chiefly In Western Massachusetts, rifle and tomahawk gleaned a hore rible harvest. Women and little children, as weil as armed men, fell victim to the red wave of destruction. was amply his Once, at Hadley, Mass, as the English townsfolk were huddled, pani: stricken and leadérless, like scared sheep, ‘before an Impending Pequot attack, an old man ‘a sald to hav. hed among them, formed them Inte milltary order and, by his brilliant egic prowess, enabled them to rout their-assailanis. Then the mysterlous s@ranger d{sappeared. He {s\ be- Neved to have been Gen. Goffe, who (forced to flee from England for his ; Part in the execution of Charles I.) had taken refuge fn a hillside cave, {near Hadley. — - Nor were the English {dle under the assault. Companies of troops from -;-Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay were sent-against Philip and drove him from his: headquarters at Mount Hope, opposite Fall River, Mass, But it was Impossible to corner the Indians and fotce them to a decisive battle, Gov. Winslow, when winter set in, marched 1,000 men through the-pathless, ; frozen wilderness and fel! upon the principal encampment of the Narra<. ribe were in winter quarters. Thelr camp. high palisade and surrounded by a marsh, great stores of food. After a two-hour Aight ypast the patinade. burned the wigw: and gansetts, where the bulk of thi Was onw Bix-acre HINT, grt by. ‘Winslow forced -h' women and children. It was a death blow to the Narragnusett-nation. It was also the turning point of the war. For, though Philip centinueg his depredations during the spring of 1676, he was fighting a losing battle, His men fell by the hundreds. His wife and only eon were captured. This little boy (last of Massasolt’s-royal line) was sold a a slave to a Bermuda planter. At last in_midsummer Philip waa hopelessly heaten With: handful of followers he crept back by stealth to Bristol_ and hfd-there {n a swamp. One of his warriors-pointed out the uselesanes@, ; of_further_struggle-and—begged Phillp-to-make= peace with the English. Philip, furlous at so cowardly a suggestion, struck the warrior dead. The slain man’s brother fled to the English and betrayed to them Philip's hidisg.. place. Naat ates Capt. Church and a band of militia surrounded the marsh on Avg. 13.) © Philip, heartbroken atthe loss of his family and the ruin of. his- = tonsave=his remaining followers’ ttvesby—hreaking—through—tho eng lines and escaping, thus drawing off puren mh By eH ease, Wee he thn Tas ONIN fat-forming thoughts, “tor. thereb: the temper of the word will be improved. But Iam not of the opinion that lean -posvish—t ie —bet—-Phe—tatter: ‘and the worry of excess weight bestdes, twill: improve the temper of any woman dolng reducing exercises to atop @ oome male passenger for not moving up as quickly or as far aa might be them. But I doubt tf ehe will find the thought-reducing formula efficacious. IF-You AWE Your LIVES he ran, one of hi 2 h im dead. it rch cu Ais Dad tits body quarterei- and sent the mutiiuted corpse-of the last aud greats, - of New England Indian ym iph. "Fhus-ended-King powerin- New Engisna forever crushed. The white man had at last won the tand for himsel: oie @ cost of hundreds of burned homes, murdered women and children, and. brave settlers slain in-useless-defense-of-those-they—loved.— ” ———————————— ____ “A Random Dictionary. , — By-Helen Vail Wallace.. _ RAVITY—A strategem for concealing defective knowledge. - SILENCE—Something often mistaken for: wisdom. FOLLY—Wiedsm on an outing. —— WISDOM—Folly on guard. g gn ueRs BPITFIRE—A sereon with-evident warmth of nature. FORBRARANCE=Ancevtdence-of ebaracter growth. BLOW iT our! HIS ONLY CHANCE, very fond of ¢ is Wasgem) Boo ts always plead | yout advance’ Africans in tho The Africangiof America. T, Wasningtoon saya that theiten million in the United States are the now ‘orld, eepectally in religion and Industrial educa- OTHER WAY AROUND, | He-Darling. I have won youy I froula iT | graduates Is twenty-eleht years, 3—Something destiny provides to Guvelop mental agility. Thi ‘5 -COIFFGRE—The-result- of-a--woman. spending move than ten-minutes-t- arranging her hair, =o ie 4 i ee “Odd Facts. UNCTUATION marks were firat used in 1490. P , The possibility of one peraon'a. finger tip belng Sdentical with another fa one chance in 64,000,000, 008. i It took forty-four men thirty-five duy@ to count the §267,896,166.26 inithe New York Sub-Treasury. The cowh balanced to a cent. | ‘A \eaiing tailor says that many young. married women come to him to leare ‘ow to pack thelr-husband's clothes, ey : The United States has 260,000 echool buildings, in whlch 40,000 teachers are at work teiohing nearly 18,000,100 childrca’, eae Physicians, chemists ond’ physiologiate (meny of them smokers themee)yes) Agree that smoking before maturity 1s reached always leads to a waste of nerve | — Power and brain force, and thus saumnders life by weakening the very center of j— Rhode Island, which has 460 persons to the square milo, Is the most denéeely | Populated State in the Union. There are only sven other States with more thas | 100 to the wquare mile, Rhode Island Jeads not only in denalty of population, bug | noe ft In Increase in density. D She tries to improve herself intellectually trevery possible way, Bhe dresses as becomingly and taatily as possible, She works with gr and determination to overcome in her own charact faults éhe sees in others, : Bhe studies to become a fascinating talker and a synspathetic Hstener, She knows the value of a kindly, helpful word, and that while civility costs } nothing {t brings may rewards. 28} f { Se What '“ Miners ’”’ Earn. HE EARNINGS of mining school graduates have been shown in statistien that och + _____— The Girl Whos Popular. . OES not allow herself to harbor the stggention that she is unattractive, School; The average earnings of twonty-fvo men for the first year wepe / $878, for the second $1,466, and In the third $1,900, ‘The avérage present age, @¢ a the ee present salary 1s $2,987, havenyour father, | te She—Ob, Alfred, Hoong, he'll

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