The evening world. Newspaper, November 27, 1907, Page 8

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ae PRR TS ? (Published Daily Except Sunday br f Park Row. tion Rates to th World fpr the ted States, New ¥ Tiffen FHL Week HEE Stree ‘Mai! Matrer, Measured from Sraxt—to- "New York has suffered do much to lower the opinion which *to that tragedy still living being. both a Pan n: | ‘is a sooty place, where the inhabitan These wexthy Sens citizens { But as soon as a.Pittsburg-man build a house, hillboard advertisements. Phipps cami So far asthe law is concerned, Reginald Spaulding is a high-sour object. 4 i No doubt Spaulding and the “Couniess’* could, have introduced Pittsburg women te many people in London. By distributing judi- cious loans, by setting up.the drinks and in other ways being easy marks Pittsburg women would‘have little neore trouble in getting into a cer- tain kind of London society than othar American women have had, The most likely explanation of: the action of the Pitisburg police ‘8 their desire at the present time to keep their money at home, and th tringe his'project which the advertiSement of duce them: to the social and ethical standpoint Spa warrant a much Jonger t in both morals and table manners from the “of aristocrats. To spread the same bad example in London would) LUCE Frick came and sat in the Wall street game. as agent tor the “Countess of Suffield,” who, he explained, was in debt i and desired to earn the money to pay her debts—certainly a’ praiseworthy - is Over Spaulding will be released, with the additional value to N enterprising young man by the! }, name of Reginald Spaulding: has} fe been arrested in Pittsburg for| sending out leprs to the Pitts | offeging. to intro- lish ‘society if} they paid for jit, Spaulding had! burg aristocrac: scores of callers, and would have done a. profitable ‘business had not the Pittsburg police _ fered. . | “He is now locked up in jail under a five days’ sentence. of _imprisoi Englishmen have of Americans and to injuré the prestige and standing of the-tnited-States. For instance, there is Corey, whose midnight second marriage after “bribing his first wife to secure-a-divorce is still recalled as a Pittsburg | festivity. There is the Thaw trial again {o be inflicted upon. this com-/ imumity and whose causes also proceeded from Pittsburg, the two parties Pittsburg products. QZ i | Press Publishing Company. Nos $3 to 8 | { { inter-!- e Evening World Daily Magazine, Can't Feaze. Him! - By Maurice Ketten. iad AVR ote a WAR, to felt was a race NO, 16,- LHP next enemy. the United States was of African pirates, and here again the pluck and warlike prowess of i the young nation became a byword to ihe whole world 8 Along the north coast of Afriva lay Tripoll, Morocco, 7 and Algiers. * ; They were known aa the Barbary States. Piracy was noc only legalized among them, but was one of the chief soi Barbary | Yessels would scour the seas, capture and plunder the merchant ships of other countries, and either hold their passenrers and crews for bigh ransom. (Or else sell them as slaves. That such a state of affairs waa allowed to drag along even in a semi{-clvilized age seems prepos Yet Europe sub- mitted tamely. Many nations even paid annual tribute to the. pirates for . exemption from attack, It would seem to have been a almple matter for an? fallled fleet to have (Grever clearéd out~Ons ‘nest of robliers: But no such move was mad) i : | Scarcely had the United States won {is freedom d bégun fo take part In the world’s commerce than-the Barbary pirates commenced to interfere with our trafic in the MaditerrancanA)gerina sloops_of war captured the merchant ship Betsey in 1784, the Maria and the Dauphin in 1780. Their TMassengers, officers and crews were held for someth{ng over $60,000 ransom, withthe threat that every man, woman and child aboard the three would be, * sold into the most degrading slavery unless this sum was paid. The money was: ralsed; ‘but in other in- stances {t could -nbt be. Therefore thousands of, freeborn Americans were left to die In filthy. Bar THE FIRST HAKEARY ! upon es of national wealth. if ‘ONS. Americans ! je of the | Sold as Slaves, e e 7 bexsad_Conaress_in_vealn—te—le allowed to. Mediterranean and to tnfifct righteous vengeance on the pirates niso, were regularly made in Ameftican churches and collections taken uw: | for.the ralief of these unhappy captives. Sa bary prisons or were mado slaves. Patil Jones, ‘There is no general prejudice against Pittsburg as such, although it! ts if they attempted to wear clean | ‘collars would have to use a dozen a day. The mass of Pittsburg peoole. | however, wear no linen collars except on Sunday, and work faithfully | for long hours at dangerous toil in the steel mills and furnaces. | he outside world does not see. has succeéded in participating in a/ steel trust or oil combination or a coke-oven consolidation he leaves Pitts- | burg.and seeks to dazzle some other community with his wealth. Schwab came here and took a whole block on Riverside Drive to} Camegie came here and sprinkled his libraries arouna jike| ‘How Often Have We ¢ and camped out on Fifth avenue. if the wives and daughters of the! Pittsburg aristocracy are willing to’pay to be admitted into English so-! Giety why should the Pittsburg police interfere? | nding.name. He purported to act iar Sas D box.” rat as soon as the present financial iyen him. his arrest has tters ff Ale 3 a To the Fdivc: 2 Eval Wortd: About story for a sketch which I thought was} Kood, I.a!d not know what to do with] xo I showed it to a leading man Inj; « Harlem theater and he kept {t. say- Ing he would kee what he could do for me. acript, saying nothing {0 me about 1t.} What can 1 do?-t-have written another, | bat can not eet tt convrighted. ALBURT 8, PACHMANN. a2 Park avenue, N.Y. ‘One of the. theatrical weeklinn will] tye yon the man's whereabouts if you | Know the company he !s with. ‘Then ferite iim to sand back your manu- ecript. - #Try the Different Maunzines. ‘Te the Editor of The Evening World Is there any possiviityoor a person who is very young but with consider- | able poetic: talent, to securé anything | fa=_the poetry composed, and, {f #0, Where would the poems have to be nent? CR This Citixen Han Hin Troubles, | ‘To the Editor of The Evening World: Kindly inform me, a constant reader, | what benefits bas citizen besides MMe! vote In this country? Mie ay, siters from if Wecial Letters Should Not Be Type- | to: written, To the Liitot of The Eventox World Jett an insult of tgnorance £ Stake fn a friendly | jem in tyméto a friend?l..., 0, 0. M Phe Bil) Senson tn Nayonne. ) Bator of Tie Bvening World A young man, whotworks at} ” fon Souutler, who can four cups of coffer, a eturt- Pmilk a 2s cabeut- tye six months ao I wrote a,prove lis good he Peoples O lasses of trotes:—T-eat. any one will P. 3K, era and rolls, ar statement if doubt words Bayonne, N. J An Ananias Shaving Club. To the Edltor of Tha Evening World: Reading the shaving records for the s Ananias Shay- Ananias, Why don’t t ing Club Ket together thing that will be mo: esting and. beneficial to community? (abel aE: No, 174 Ba Wants Home. of Her Own. To the Editor of The Eyentng World: Will some kind reader tell me what to dot I live with my husband's par- ents. Hesnever gaye me a home of my own. J7do not itke it there I nave begséd my “husband time and again to give me a Ilttle home tat I could call mine. OH mine, and not have a mother- In-lnw butting in em everything I do Stie has him so, under he ill not ilsten to me. [ Ken. T tove him and to me otherwise. Oniy he Not take me away from. this te House. WI some vice ruthful, inter- reading INSOHN, te avenue. or say. thumb that h am: heart-b help ine UNHAPPY ¥ Vitad Statineh {The Evening World of Vital ent building Sixth avenue. U.S. Itty-AIth street al Ktom Ho: To the daltor of The Zvaning Wor! Kindly jnform me where 1 can apply for & position on the Panama Canal, ueyeroty | i} He left the city with my mani-| past two. weeny makes’ me think of | discuss some- } } Health De- | nal Service Commin- i [tr the frizzen. | | “In that what’ you keep In the medicine closet?” asked Mr, ,Jarr. | polish, old dolla, button boxes?" | xpect me to keep medicines there where the children can cet Tat them, do you?" asked Mra, Jurr, “Why, suppose they should swallow quinine You know how children are. thing Uke that In thé closet in my room." “And yet you kicked and kicked till you did get a medicine clovet,” said “You don't . Sarr, Ens and then “You put an all messed up with that shoe polish. a “You wouldn't kick at all if { rras he picked yp Mrs. By Roy L. McCardell. OW, dear,” said’ Mrs, Jarr, with one of her smiles, “you wouldn't mind putting some of that 7 "T think {t's atuc! | pila or drink laudamum? tor you “Gee! sald Mr, “Oh, Th the medicine iawerer gnane qouen n0B oon BIB) mils 5, ) QoavaaToo SHI, All Played Lady’s Maid to Our Wives---Like Mr. Jair--- And Been Cruelly Jumped On fcr Not Being Dressed and Ready_as Soon as She.) 4 nickel. You men have it easy. that way. T never could get up on one ef; I think tt makes one look 20 jersey City I let the| Derne, and then pressed on toward the capital itself, Stet to sing ‘It's | frightened the Pasha that before the troops arrived h theyg meant, but it{ with the United States, polish on my shoes, would you, dear? r ¥ | many things to do before I can dress, if you want me <9, Ko out with you this evening. to dreas, anyway, with all the fixings she has to endure; -but you men haven't hardly any bother."’ ! : Jarr, ruefully, “I shirt and cuffs; I'll get them all over shoe polish! yh, never mind, if tt ts golng to be so much trouble sald Mrs. Jarr, somewhat testlly. I'll do it-I"l do itt” closet in “Never mind about that now," san) Mrs. Jarr holding the hair tongs m wiping the soot off them on a iper down on something #0 1 you rind your o asked you to shine my shoes, Jarr’s boots, He Achines: thataline Games at the White House. It takes a woman ao long sald Mr. Jarr, quickly. won't take me a minute to take off my shirt and put It on in. “Where'll I find the show poliah?'\ the k behind an old doll of little Emma'syand the button —henHiteatine treaty —wes—irewn pin 1795 hetwaen thi «the pirates, whereby we were to pay to Algiers for immunity $23,00 yen, | We also presented the Dey (Gorernor) of Algiers ihat year with a $190,¢ | Sarship as a sort of peace offering and paid out $800,000 ransom for su American prisoners as were alr y in his power. to punish the Dey for alleged violation of this treaty and to check, Diragy. Commodore Preble was in charge of this expedition. He | salled to Morocco, where be quickly brought the Sultan to terms, and bore down on Tripoli. Meantime one of Preble'a ships, the frigate Philadelphia, comme by Capt Balnbridgs, bad ron upon a sunken rock just outside of Ty | harbor. A horde of Tripolitan boats surrounded and. attacked her. bridge had most of the frigate’s guna thrown overboard to lighten. Then, finding he was still fixed on the rock, he acuttled the ship and tendered. He’and his officers were held as prisoners, but the crew ; fold for slaves. The pirates patched up the Philadelphia and towed harhy der ahelter of their forts This was a heavy blow those bootbinck chars like a lot of women do. bold and conspicuous. One time crossing on the ferry to bootblack shine my tan aboes, and some men near @ Shame to Take the Money I'm gure I don't know @mmt war something rudé I know, because they all laughed.” beat I've got said Mr. Jarr. : new corset and T want you to pull on the haces for me." Mr, Jarr polished the boots and in due corset laces. “What afe you Ircing yourself so theht fort? he growled. “Lacing? Tight?” exclaimed. Mrs. Jarr. “Why the ye just got on my “It ean get my band under it Mme. Flanagan mads my new dress quite Ught for mo." “How does this skirt hang?” aeked Mrs, Adjusted “Does the petticoat show?" “T can't see Ht," id Mr, Jarr, “LE know ft sho aid Mrs. Jarr petuiantis, ‘ow, look carefully, Ul she finally did believe Mr. Jarr that he couldn't see the petticoat. “Now, hook my waist!" said Mrs, Jarr, Tt was a new walst; It was a tighe' nt expert by this time, fumbled milserably, bathroom,” said Mra, “Shoe No, sir; T have to keep hooked, a Mrs. Jarr while Mr celng this. are you. doing hot dressed ven hi BX Sloth «Gedpre baking her not to -get everything 2 business!" would you arr watched the process in awe. ing there? Here you' Talk about women de! ven't your dres# shirt on!" ese ATE to sthant at En Ty Guessing o fH > LoEB-Waory 5 i, ee amor Wi C OS ORTALKS, = HALL | wih W AIC, Lh) HER’ QUENTIN, YOU AND TEO PULL FOR | THE WHITE MEAT 15 (7 UNDER? NATURE FAKIR~ROUGH * RIDER-OR- £ ANEW SYSTEM “Oh, they only meant the bootblack should be proud of the privilege,” “Well, so should you.” said Mrs, Jarr. ‘Now hurry up, because I have a/| ime| was called upon to pull on the | ist idea! This ts corset and I have to have {t Mt rnug to break It in right from the first. anywhere, Besides, it has to be a little snug, for | See, 1 “You wouldn't care, of course. and Mrs, Jarr walked up and down with skirt and hat Mr. Jarr, who @hould have been an Finally by Mra, Jarr doing some re- Verse deep breathing and Mr. Jarr toning. all his finger-nails, the new walst was en powdered tie Inside of some long white cloves and Kot them Mrs. Jarr turned and sald: ““Woll, I'm dressed And ready, What been home for twolhuurs and you're ying In dressing t6 gp eut. Why, you —Jarr was going to remark that he'd been too busy playing lady's maid,j = m Rectal an | the pirates until at _midni ~Then_¢he_alarm—was’ ral But it was too late Decatur and his) me swarmed over the frigate’s sides, drove her crew into the sea and set fre te 1 i the luckless vessel. Meantime the forts had begun to hurl Yolleys of shot {and shell at the daring Americans, and the latter's work of Gestroying the | Philadelphia and escaping from the harbor was carried on amid:a veritable | cyclone of artillery fire. Yet the feat was accomplished without the loes of [ne No te Dees tar's jeeg,a naval genius than Lord Nelson ke Cd | exploit as “one of the most daring in the istorroe warfare.” | The Americaus, however, failed to storm the city or make themesives: ‘masters of the harbor. So Tripoll was attacked the next summer_from a | i new point. Gen. Eaton, with a band of & so marched across Northern t, : if The March } Into Tripojitan. territory. Sahin many na- Across Evyet} tive troops, under Hamet, brother of the Pasha of one ~~~, Tripoll. Hamet bad been {1l-treated by his brether, . and songht revenge by joining the invaders. Eaton attacked and captured the {mportant oity of But the advance eo je made peace terms The war partly checked tha Barbary Statos’ encroach: aght | e ments, and ; Europe again what our country could do in defense of her rights, But the | Diracy was not wholly at an end unt!) ten years afterward Decatur made another expedition into the Mediterranean. This. second and more impor: tant Barbary war will be deacribed in a future article, Lede Pittsburg Meets the King On April 27, 1805, S .. When ~ 1, Then ne ouw muses vs BY Nixola Greeley-Smith. NW Reginald Spauld\ng has been arrested in Pitt O burg [or offering to Introduce for a consideration wealthy Pittburgera to King Edward. His friend, the “Countess of BheMeld,”” who owed him money, wan, Mr. Spaulding Wectnred, to be the medhins of the Ine troduction of Tttwburg to royalty, and the. Pittsburg police are still daxéa by the number of prominent citizens -who swallowed Mr. Spnulding's bait and his hook and line an wall, ‘ It neema @ pity that so noblo an enterprine should com to an-end ab inanepicious. Spaulding when arrested sak he did not nee why the‘law should lave Interfered. witi . ils Uttie Boheme, and if ke-really poswessed the mean of bringing the Pittsburgers «nd the potentate together do not see why he should have been prevented. The onl. jdlmcutty would be that the nam.ber. of emrants for presentation would be uld have to _grem_thet _K! mrore citizens of —Pitrabors—mwauld... ied—togreet him _sad-fnalyo ety .4..popular.price presentetion syery Saturday night = bioh—moderatety— Pittaburgers—ift there be any such—migh eteend for a smaller honorartuc; the able agent. i z Bet cunder.thapescondit, monid not the soverelan-bMimvelfbe- eptitt a rake-off? It seerm to me a percentage of the site receipts, or pert; should say @ royalty, might properly accrue to him. In these | whereby free amd independent American oltisens are permitted to crook pf % | knees to kingw, Jt neeme to be that the middlemen and the jobbere gf's & the profit. Why should not Pittsbure, which bas ever an eye to gettingp:— pt anybody else for Jess than anybody else, deal directly with the | tacturer? ee | Pittadurg, it ts quite evident trom the Spaulding, case, ‘wants to meet [Jt ty not at ail unlikely that royalty ta blandiy willing to meet Pit | King Edward wan something of a sport in his day, and he might coni investigate the tin-horn variety to the extent at least of allowing It presented or even Inviting it to « garden party. a function which In the Yigh social code covers a multitud "detrimentals” ‘The Pittaburger, as he i generally known to have a full.purse, but a frugal nnd. It aurprisea me therefore that the enterprising Spaulding was able to do 4 | well for Ife 1ttle enterprise, King Edward ts, of course. numbered among \the most exclusive and therofore deairable roynities to meet. Tit there are® | noveratena—rea) bona-fide kings or ex-kings—that are much easier and cheaper lot approach, One could nieet ex-King Milan of Servia, for Inatunce.” by mie, even | qt?! in New York, ts estee yhim a drink, Seah | In the difference In potentaten worth the difference in “price Pittsburg? Aghiog 5 + | | Sewer Gas in Homes. / aes American Analyst wives the following (ert for the detection In an apart ment of sewer waa: Baturate unglazed paper with a olution of trey. ounce of pure acetate of tend tn ela Mitd ounces of rainwater: let i | \partinily dry; ‘then expose In the.room Auapected of containing newer is. “The Hpreaence of wa In any, considerable quantity saan blacketis the test paper. » _ oe boa A Woman's 875,000. Hat. OMI; Hats are both common’ and Corily, as a rule, but a woman - } “forthe hi price pald for an article of imillin She bought a hat. | with a tottery ticket which the merchant accepted In placa of the money. A fow weeks later the ticket drew the great prix of £16,000, and though the woman's husband trédite Induce the merchant to sliire the resulix, he bnly recelved aie >

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