The evening world. Newspaper, November 6, 1908, Page 18

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a a aril Demi ENS satan} Advance Copy. | «Publishing Company, Nos. 62 to 68 | By Maurice Ketten. | cent Sunday by the Pre York | ANGUS STAT, ReeTrona, S01 hae t The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, November 6, 1908; QOHODODDOGHOOODOO. Fifty American -:- - Soldiers of Fortune ® Publiened Datly gosern PULTTZE Second-Class Mat! M Entered at t! FIRST { Bubsoription 1 For 1 the Con World cor iit thin Aunt n ther tate THE LoOokouT By Albert Payson Terhune One Year... +1 $3.50 | One Yea $9.5 | One Mont seeee . D1 One th. 8S ray a | | NO. 8—SIR WALTER RALEIGH. VOLUME 49....666 Qeeeeeeeeeee oe savene niN@ | YOUNG ENGLISHMAN—courtler, dandy, soldier of fortune—recetved® oe eens A from Queen Elizabeth tn 1584 a deotdediy remarkable charter that j WHAT OF THE BANANA SKINS ? | empowered him to salse and colonize “any remote, heathen and i | barbarous land not actually possessed by any Ohristlan prince or people.” Moved by the fact that every wee rings 120,000 to 180,000 | North America was the most ‘remote, heathen and barbarous land” bunches of bananas to New York, a eurious-minded citizen arises to | Within his reach, the holder of the charter—Master Walter Raleigh—turned his attention to colonizing a part unknown of that countr As the esser problems | Raletgh was a strange man, Fearless in fight, he was yet a flattering, time-serving courtier, A lover of riches and splendor, he “could neverthe- Jess endure privations and Ive on a crust. Selfish and ambitious, he still yearned to form colonies in far lands for the future glory of England. Fight+ }ing, flattering, scacming, he managed at length to win Queen Hlizabeth’s notice. It 1s said he first attracted her attention by spread’ag his velvet cloak across A marshy spot In the path before her, and by afterward beg~ ging leave to wear forever the muddy cloak that had been hallowed by the touch of her royal foot. Raleigh was unlike most of the Queen's favorites. He (it not care to stay at yurt te gather what crumbs of pat go he could. Instead, he begged leave to form colonies in America. Up to that time ne} every one who ha@& gone to the New World was a seeker for gold or fame. nt } what bec ask city turns with one nnd to > the may fly to s advance of urban civilization Why has New York’ a matter of $156,000,000 next vear W r become 000,000 of t ena Park? Why | we really get the police t isthe straightest, tion? When will the THEeovorRe Roosevect. enitoR NEW- YORK is the Ashokan Dam? How out quickest solution of the part-time school sit SECOND PAGE f polities and politics out of the police possession of a publie franchise for strect-railway operation carry @) Sees et L we F ee ® ® Raleigh was the fist adventur sought to These are questions for the dull and the hopeless. ‘They promote A New Sort of hanent colonies tn what 1s now the United § Two Be Gay of the eek ienineuing citien) move no Discoverer. Ie alips went early In 1881 to America, crutsing along : i baw the Atlantic coast and bringing enting nation Away with issues that breathe ; ; Ra exponen ed Virginia In hor gland’s “Vggin Qu leigh was na made a Knight as reward for was ‘no-man’s land.” I them in his Government's name. “Raleigh fitted out a new expedition of seven sh ginfa in 16%. A colony was established at Roanoke Is! between Canada and Cuba. But the settlers grew up gold everywhere, and because they m re no the sort of went back to England the next year. A second ny was fitted out and aent to Chesapeake Bay, This setth seemed likely to be permanent. But when Raleigh went buck some time later they had vanished, The Ind yarned their houses and massacred men, women and ive oflice! What becomes of the gland ld find un triviality even banana skins * fruit serves many purposes. It i Down in the banana belt th It is ground into flour. Its peel and pulp yield From fruit and plant comes material for soap, | use in clarifying and refining sugar, for the eaten as 1U grow vinegar. wine ar fora manufacture of paper, But the banana came into its climactic phase of utility only when a New York mind with a vivid, press- be orests, ‘They recies of dye, fe je wilderness, So t oth and other things of daily use. x mon:ent it inspired ina glowi ing query of the hour: What beeom wr ated failures to to see it an E of the skins? ng further in behalf of his pet sct —___—_—_++-—_—_ PRUNES AND THE NAVY. it. but there was a visible supply | In 1904 the peanut crop was lis of 15,000,000,000 prunes. ‘Phe crops have no connection. The facts ruse of the announcement | | t interes of pre ts of Raleix statoes into E are recalled as bein i of a brand-new variet) This item of reform in ships’ rations is almost as important in| its way as a report of progress in targe t-shooting. On a long voyage | prunes are like a message from home. It is not with the sailor afloat | as with the landlubber ashore. who has within easy reach oranges, ap- | ples, grapes and each other fruit in its season. So navy prunes must be good or even better.’ / | Prunes are “any variety of plum which can be successfully cured | Raleign, w His > navy of prunes for tt ndlans yes ever geen in as Lreland’s ear- m Virginia the first & field on his Irish estate tatoes—those were the only visible fruits had cost many lives and $20,090 in money @ with the Western Hemisphere. After J gz party up ¢ potato crop. 8 of disastrous voyages t But Raleigh wes not y in B te w without removing the pit.’ They are not, as jesting paragraphers | and some agents of supply have assumed, “any old plum.” Before | 1886 the United States got nearly all ite prunes from France and the Danubian provinces. There were also some from Turkey and Spain. Now we can turn to California, where by the count there are in Santa | Clara County alone nearly four millions of trees bearing the right| kind of plume and whence the output of fue asa ae oe ae When Women’s Costume Is the ham. ‘aoa Helpless aoeaade ne Clara Valley is celebrated in April the “Prune ‘ : The Wisest Ones Look Pained, but Foot the Bill—Like Mr. J lan gradually lost favor wi 2 Her successor, J. I 1 Raleigh thrown 1 on @ charge of treason. There, Led to Success. shed for twelve years. At the end of that i { succeeded in persuading King James of the e: gold mine somewhere on the Orinoco, Wi? a mine existed or if Raleigh invented it as a ruse to gain nis treedom, cannot be Som, EW uth America to look for the treasure, warning with the Spaniards there For England was On t A Failure That 3 into pris FASHION PAGE mies sent him to void all trouble with Spain. of his it bed, @ party killing many of young eon lost his life. The gold mine cor age was a total failure and Raleigh Every ‘year in the Santa Bloom Festival.” | The development of the domestic prune induetry is, as may be | the first man to take note and make remark when a woman looks The sailors mutinied, the vi . inci i ilding up of slompy.” | : : : There hi seen by the dates, almost exactly coincident with the building DY.’ : | was obliged to go back in disgrace to England. There he was Imprisoned for y 5 | By Roy L. McCardell. “I do not?” sald Mr. Jarr. the attack on the Spanish town, The old treawon charge against bim wae me the greater navy. ‘ G42 V HATS the kina of @ hat I want to get!” said Mra Jarr, clutching her ‘Oh, not when I look shabby, for T will say I never look slompy.'” retorted | yived, aud, in October, 1013, ne Was beheaded ee husband by the arm and pointing to a woman pessing with what |*7® Jarr. “You are the last person to notice how I look. But if Mrs. Kittingly has a new dress or Clara Mudridge @ new hat you see it quick enough, although pers of thin ne 111 be sapplfed upon application to , Evening World, upon receipt of one-cert cu do not say anything because you are afraid I might ask you for somet | But I'd never say a word. I'd never ask you for anything if I never got it “But you do ask me,” sald Mr. Jarr. “You just sald this minute that the hat ike to have.” Fa ” seemed to be @ burden on her mind. THE “SPURT” AS A RACING PERIL. “Gee whisl"” sald Mr. Jarr testily, “don't you women shni nd by means of records, includin, think of anything except clothes?" | By ways that are technical # ait dies ng | "'Yes,"" said Mra Jarr, “we think about hats once in a those of the recent Olympic races, Prof. A. E. Kennelly deduces in while, and I don't see why you should object to that. |that woman ahead of us Is wearing is the kind you would i T inciple i “T might have said {t was the kind I'd like to have, sald Mrs. Jarr, “bt the Popular Science Monthly a law of fatigne. The principle is ap- aa : ae oe plicable not only to toot-racing but to rowing, swimming and GEN 44 qk [OCU ODOOOUUDDOL ‘Thinking jen't expensive.” | ° e ee ae) “Thinking of women's clothes {s not thoughts for a |! “/dn't ask you to get ft for me. I know better.” Sayings of Mrs. Solomon ; 5 penny,” replied Mr. Jarr. ‘If women didn't pay any more | "@ be glad to get It for you !f I could” said Mr. Jarr, ‘and I don’t see why for their hate than men do all would be well, and i¢ they |¥°U shouldn't have one Ike it. it looks greatly like one the stenographer at the (Being the Confessions of the Seven Hundredtn Wife.) didn't bother about clothes any more all would be better.” oe wears” . Translated b; “Oh, you think @o, do your” if “Oh, I'll be bound you'd notice what the stenographer wears!" sald Mrs. | y Helen Rowiand, said Mos, Jarr. ‘Well, = A Mra. Rangle waa telling me that ahe went out election day |Jai7 “But you wouldn't notice what 1 wear. vf course, L don't care, but I would lixe to have a hat Iike that, and there's a sale of two e business suits FOO OCU COO OCOD BOO OOOO OOOO not deceived, my daughter, nor put thy trust in signs to pick a suit for Mr, Rangle. He was with her, of course, a to-morrow. Speaking of your stenographer reminds me of it netther judge & man by the size of his tip to the waiters exercises for speed. | z Studying distances and recortls with reference to the point) and time at which runners are “run out,” the writer finds that “the | 80 as to be fitted"— fit ‘The opera t# going to open next week, I see,” sald i ion ia inversely as the ninth power of the speed time of exhanstion y I P “How kind of her to let him come along,” interrupted ey ey fore a billboard and glad of a chance to change the subject “Mrs. Stryver was showing me her new ¢ cra cloak,” sald sirs. Jarr “She's within the limits of racing speed.” Which ir to say that increase of . ‘ picky 2 i of as : [oe “How sensible of him ti ve Jong," Ned M speed within racing Limits brings down a runner's time of endurance| y. 0 te you would let Be atin os ‘him tebe cela aaa a ay a lucky woman to be able ‘) have everything she wants, except fat, but she A | SaeTs ri pei doesn't want that. But ft certainly {s a beauty in the new Japanese effect 4 yery rapidly. So— | of clothes you do that make you look like « freak’ Hut, aa I was going to Sy, Vive: velvet. Very plain, but then the wor, on it! It's all trimmed with Peralan i tn order to make his best the he must keep t sora MPa, Rangle told me that the men's clothing stores shat were open were SU8t | embroidery.” Tt would neem that™in order to make pest time he must keep to a unffor /pned. She heard a lot of the customers saying that they were gind It was ele ee TO ancing al Esai : pece, at Jeast toa first approximation, It ts evident chat on the last lap he will ston day hecause Jt gave them e chance to pick thelr clothes by daylight. 80, you CON TRIMIBESADORE C8 TRE | ABBR ME SAN, Rb a: pur testes) His zemaining ener! and Spur if he can, because he ahould arrive at | you see, mon are Just as much interested in what they wear as women arel” | ates, Jarr HOW, TAR HOt Timm CUINE BRORE ec CAC ALY Vern pare Sigel ead Phe goal run out if he has done his utmost. If, however, he Js able to spurt to a art eneatte ‘ . m mt a x ; Sarr, nad marked extent on his lart lap he has held too r It goes to prove nothing of the kind!” said Mr. Jarr. “If men were as tn racnit arene wvenleenng consumes unduly rapt: the higher speed. Acco forth, he should have been © goal m . Jarr; pausing be: | And because a man weareth 2 passionate vest ale regular... Fur a twenty with @ blase alr, yet a trust magn but firmly to # street car, Verily, & man regardeth thine acceptance of his roses ie fore marriage as a favor, but he looketh upon thy milliner's. bills afte urrlage as GRAFT. Yea, a sweetheart is an obe Ject of conquest, but a wife ts an object of cha Nevher judge @ man's morals by the temperance outton. uideth thee gentyy, Nacavitratanvateniianine ‘ i a cloak when you can't get the hat,” sald Mr. lng 10 Riel josic Gere rat| See ee ane such things they would take days off to get them and Jarr uneasily. He had thought the opera would be @ rafe topic, vut It wasn't ff the lowe ere set | not wait tll election day. When Adam an. Eve ato of the Tree of Knowledge | 1 wouldnt wear a hat at the opera and especially nut with one of the new i Ea Mir and saw they needed clothes, Adam didn’t take It as seriously as § cloaks. That would look ridiculous," sald Mrs, Jarr - Ty ee SEE i form increase in speed ov sort of old clothes would do him; but if Eve started in with fig lea “Well, we'll try and get you the hat,'’ said Mr. Jar _— eo Weureth wntll fhou has (searched his. pockets to xep Prof, Kennelly sue s)i9 SAMTLLARPANG, ORE SIP BERS AY SERRE around hunting tor palo iep “Qh, try to get me the cloak," sald Mure, darr. ‘I've got the hat. It will be| =” eI Aa TEH EERE PAE PATH REPEAT eRe NA naeancaAlly ailittle Aagiso ea » aig. | °ver™. pe 0 went home to-morrow, Wait till you see | ndifiittel t ‘ Pieces of which racers may Le paced by a little flag so eet as to do the dis ‘Well, we won't discuss it,” sald ars, Jar, “I have noticed that you are’ Mr. varr promised to walt. Bnd: TCeeshin et, TREAT PHAR AREY CAMBR Meh hou. neet found cul whet NOM by pean FAY cord tine. Spectators wou | nec ieee a ; tance at even speed in record thine } tors would see then not) | Tcharge thee, my daughter tremble not when thou art introduced to a college ssor lest he ask thee the equare root of the hypothenuse ther will he ask only the actual runners in competition, but the ‘ea of the best | The Million Dollar Kid ~ ~ ~ ~ By R. W. Taylor Hee AACELOM ipiaah Lugesius haunts: nee as Se Ral ia He el aa man who ever took the event Besides, the would be able to jand a poet will brag of his muscle. For every mun seeketh to appear that whiten wy CERTAINLY! running wire by means And he who remaineth up until mfdnight to talk to thee m to arise at 6 o'clock to work for thee Therefore compliment @ learned man upon his dancing, a preacher upon his school themselves to the be eir energy. be ts not. not be willing MR. MONK ,WOULD “Tou GIVE US SOME MONEY men to whom Phis ide: la inter This idea should int HERE'S $1,000 Ld rc . & hecc e so important as al st to oversha v to y \ the record” has become so imi] overshadow th FOR THE WASHLADIES’ naam! WILL THAT ‘a fat man upon his graco and @ fool upon his understanding. ‘Tell a bank laure). Home ? HELP You ANY ? president that he should have been & detective—eyen as Sheriocis Io! and he will marvel how thou discovered his acuteness, ‘ m the People. Yet tell any man that he shouldst have been an ACTOR he will exalt thy dgment or no man Hveth who thinketh not that he wag cut out fur a matinee {dol, Selah! Letters Fro ah ony en ee see : i The Earliest Punctuation. sno the BAitor . 2 4 les ave @ UNCTUATION by means of stops and points, so as to indicate the meaning A corresp t asks e or WM R P of sentences and assist the reader to a proper enunciation, 1s ascribed gin of the w ' Ane originally to Aristophanes, @ grammarian of Alexandria, Wgypt, who lived some kind read tel y the , J in che third century, B. ©. Whatever his system may have been, it was subser nol fragettes chose yellow as their par a the ing World |quently neglected and forgotten, but was reintroduced by Charlemagne, the neo r anes rareyhte hee a are there $n | various stops and symbols being designed by Warnefried and Alcuin be “lemons” than “pearhe * bei signed by Warnetre - H. DIC ‘ I r ’ = 4 iualdatian iaaeseni Four-Pigure Hroble “OM You DARLING?» ay ie Gee! IF > KNOWN “THE DAY'S GOOD STORIES. To the F The § . ; { RING? KIND SHE WAS GOING To | nee ounce er this YOU ARE SO Ky = SHE’ is “AD pi ; 5 = on Kiss ME SHE'D NEVER | Explained A he whisperad, glancing cautiously rou ke “Apmoiay?" rs ‘ * of the aeons HAVE GOT A CENT! | xplained Away. “It's that other gentleman's fish : a) one | 118 diner dropped his fork with a| Philadelphia Inquirer 5 Greater New York Population 4 'T Ain Hinata ‘To the ; Yo. 280 Broadeas J | Ugh! Ough! Phew!" he cried. | His Revenge. What 1 ff sir? inquired the olly walter ae . Greate / Re ee ac ane fea ang HE lawyer was drawing up Bim ulation 6 | manded the diner paok's with rr rey. havleis } | Steak, air, 1 think,” replied the walt-|o°). 1, hereby pequeath all my The est L < ler, examining it closely, ‘Yeo, it te | Property ny wife,” dictated Hnpeol, New York on Jo \ ory "Got that down? N “= Sy, steak, wir, I'll awear to It now Rea phen : The <s ms i] PP jeefut the smelt!” roared. the diner,| .r0t"" Anawered the attorney, ee duit oot eT | | Smell it! Judge for yourself! It must} “that sie marries wit ad Bnpeom Ko, @ License ts Kea i ray | be weeks But why that condition?” aaked the se toes Phe Wailer shook hie head, and then | MAB of law, ‘ saat ae," answered th \ Wil 8 mininer v1 Jus \ HAAR —- J | nent over confdentiany lowiy testator “Mh want stumepadt is “You're making # litte misteke, oir, sorry that I died’—~TiteBite,

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