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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, November 9; 19083 | eA a ~ Published Dally Except Sunday by the Pr Pur Fifty American “t= <se to 68 By Maurice Ketten. = Soldiers of Fortune By Albert Payson Terhune lishing Company, Park Row w Y 4 Past TM Street ‘ 1 QOREPN PULITZER, tre eoenrs ise Mall Matter STAND STRAIGHT ! DIRECTORY NO Jor . - : JOHN You HAVE A SHAPE ? | PUT THAT ON 1AM | ANAM hs TTS a ule PERFECT DIRECTOIRE GOING To USE YOUR ered Bubseription j World ne 4 5 SHAPE. COM ( SHAPE To MAIKE A One Xt : S 4 Sy DIRECTOIRE Crow “VOLUME 4 eOvecer a iN Ol ts, MORSE AND THE LAW. means One Yeates we $3.80 5 Olle Monthivvsvscesssccccccce esses OD NO. 9—-SAMUEL DE; CHAMPLAIN. YOUNG French cavalry officer, Samuel de Champlain, grew tired of the army when his country's long civil wars came to an end. He was @ sailor's son and in youth had himself been a satlor, But he ued left the sea to follow the fortunes of Henry of Navarre, who was just then fighting for the French crown, Champlain did gallant service in the wars | convicted and fought his way up from the ranks by sheer daring. Then, when peace came, his love of adventure led him to fresh exploits. He sailed for the West Indies in 1699 and joined the hardy soldiers of fortune with whom; Central America was ewarming. He was not lucky enough vo find greas wealth; but he formed the Idea of establishing somewhere in the new land a French colony that should be as prosperous as were the rich Spanish settlements there. He also hit on a plan for uniting the Atlantic and Pacific by cutting a canal through the Isthmus of Panama. Thus, more than 800 years ago, the Panama Canal wes thought of. But Champlain could Interest no one in his canal scheme; 6o he turned to his original design of founding a French colony. violated the Jaw and the law must be vindica If the law means equal justice, Charles W. Mo! of the high financiers of New York to face the world from behind the bars. Neither should he be the only one. . eI se di . Cartier had explored Canada. Part of that mighty province had been grant Nhat llores (cid other yang 1AM NO PIN by Henry of Navarre to one of his nobles, De Chaste, at whose request Champlain bigger men did before him. He followed the bad examples of Ryan, AT CUSHION | in 1603 set out to prepare land for a settlement. *. Q —b Two voyages of exploration were made by Cham Harriman, Hyde, McCurdy and Perkins. Don't move A Soldier Sallor’s plain. In the course of these he explored the Atlane Which was no excuse, because a bad example justifies no one. WS a: Tae Adventures, ais Feeast an] tar southl as} cave: Co) cul dnelzsee j cided to js colon: . Lawre In the published interviews from Wall street bank presidents ‘ \\ > 4 LINE ® @ region. To this decision we perhaps owe the fact F ji s s expres C ) * ‘T HELP IT / that New England {s not known to-day as "New France.’ Champlain, Hke Care anciers eneral sentiment is expressed that the con- | | CAN > ngland {s nown to-day plain, and high financiers whe aa 7 P (T'S YOUR ONLY : > tler, was attracted by a site on a cliff above the St. Lawrance. It seemed a splen- DAY AT Home y did place for his colony's capital; strong, high and eastly defended from enemies. ‘ Here he built houses, planted grain and started a fur-trading post. The natives | ‘) VVE BEEN WAITING = called the spot “The Narro’ In the Algonquin Indian tongue the word "Nam |. ALL WEEN FOR IT |rows” is “Quebec.” Champlain met with opposition from every side while building Quebec. He : barely escaped a plot to assassinate him and was ever threatened with attack ! from the warlike Iroquois, who infested Northern New York, ‘The Iroquois were sworn foes of the Montagnais Indians, who lived along the St. Lawrence. Cham- plain made friends with the Monta; is and led th vna raid into New York against the Iroquols., Southward w invade water, until Champlain, leading the redskin warriors, drove ke lake. He was the firs€ white man to enter this body of water an is own name. Lake Cham- \, plain it remains to this da Barely had he sailed i 7 party drawn up on one of th 1AM GETTING JOMN ULL BEAT erce battle followed. ‘The WEARNETIE STANO STRAIGHT! THEM ALL To A FRAZZLE plnin’s skill asa soldier. He UM BASTING THE AT THE HORSE Stow under Henry of Navarre. Inst 1 THING 1 Ll BE WITH THAT GOWN on coolly proceeded to pick off the foremost I he shot dead. The Iroquois, panic-stricken THROUGH INA 4 fusion, But Champlain's victory &{ COUPLE oF HOURS R intervals there was trouble be se should not be viction of Morse is a de- sirable lesson and that his punishment is a warning to everybody else. It is a warning, but of what? Surely it is not a warning tai high finan- ciers who will be punished, because Hyde is in Paris, unextradited. ~ te the law saw a large Iroquols war ick of the Montagnais. A | t for Cham- he had learned Indian allies, he ec of these chiefs their leaders, fled tn cone the French, With few \ 1 the Troquots Ine © finally lost Canada, mechanics, and set still enjoying li McCurdy lives in the lux- ury of his palatial country home. Perkins desk in J. P. Morgan & Company’s office. Thomas I. Ryan is planning new ettlers wee sits at his dians unt! the Champlain hurried to France, brov to work with a will at building up ¢ attacked him, BEATEN A soon after his return. He beat them I t Was badly wounded by an To A FRAZ2LE A | arrow, In a third fight he received two dangerou is, and was carried from Tie | the fleld more dead than ally ALREADY | Interest tn Canac at tireless energy and persistence, managed to ce | scheme to keep it afloat un ghtee But Champlain, by ugh capitalists in his 1 the settlements be- was one of constant severe for) a inoment scher of plunder. Tf Morse had done | nothing except violate the law, would he have been prosecuted so cami self support i thon mhemBuliding eased up in his ¢ of Canada. length the tide grew, | a rn epeedily and convicted so promptly? Would his banks have | nies have been taken of the We 'T. Barney, driven to suicide? been smashed? Would his steamship eompa away from him? Would he have hy n despoil cess seemed A ritish fi et, % ag literally ara gue ie breve ee, k Mrs. Jarr Observes with Pained Wonder that No: mal Children ciara ae Bee 3 dea vo Rem Have Amazingly Little in Common with Hand Painted Angels. (oreo ses ciancea u trates witeronee ton ae p the fru it ‘ot hi Hards! 8, Then, just as ne time shattered pout to Railroad and his associate, Char vid and Louis Kirk, appeared before Quebec ender. Champlain was wholly unpre- e British away hey returned and in &% garrison, Champlain was car- ere three years, ‘Then, by @ , Canada Was restored ‘to t the province and hasteued at once a Morse and Par- ney were the lead- ers of the banking perous province did not live to al rs They had a char-| Whereupon fhe upon her pride and led him away to be rasped with | ‘ivity and endless work at last le vater, 8: towel tion. , three years after his rele: Sn Enron, es ea By Roy L. alte care el VIE EE | clothes. a t ‘ortable looking ‘broad. —_— | Maste ter for a W Jarr rus! nd dow! ff < , the still street cars.| Missing numbers of this series will be supplied upon application te i winder, Maw? I stand on |(trealation Department, Evening World, upon receipt of one-comt {| nder?"* stamp for each number. d Mrs. chee “He'll how" tall you are and ee ee Cos Cob Nature Notes. {| ous servant of @ great The g flat in the palm| e¢ ? that happiness ing, but melts away with the z ¢ Larchmont, came up from and elsewhere, people me of them (be- Morse saying, that to make the water raise ice if they will get some water, chester road ITH a yell His 7 expected, throu their political sociates, to b ’ narred the journey res fare, and as she felt the new east s the CE ts beginning to 5 iI sun. r since our ne: Baltimore | have come to eve Wesley man a dark Abracadabra! Presto, change!” or something like reeze, As a matter of fact, anybody at it In a pond and leave it out of do In Cos Cob our thyifty icemen releo on thelr ponds in the summer and ice in the winter by letting the water y. Ice will not freeze in the house unless you have w it usually occurs in pipes where nobody can get # subw would the Battery to Connecticut, in cor ew Haven Ruilroa ce and robbers’ on our str r and the > d gets a jag said the bi me Jarr, agi run out and in accor¢ owing the smoke throug! | ot alr furnace, and the of interest to him, "I the plumbers through my nosel’’ he Sprangle, Harry Leon Wil Pp. has arrived at Bert Leston Taye. or'a cottag winter, He wi the poet's society with Ror smoke cigarettes | Lincoln cat, ( n has spille? some more spikes in the roadway under the king them up. We never saw a railway president who could pill so many spikes ay Mellen can Cheered by the brisk weather and the ease of sleeping nights in Cos Cab, resident Truesdale has again broken out into song on behalf of his Inamoreta, Miss Phoebe Snow. It goes this way horrid things?" she cried. ‘Just for that I will Magi Fah oabe er controls through the the Knick ran ocker ht about its failure, and y brov w up to be a big, § voy," aid Mrs, Jagr President M st epiied the boy @ to bef dwarf and b | rack without pi if you are stunted, you can be a jockey ‘¢ a Ightweight Ryan influence jn the ( ing House closed up the Mor in horror stopped the flood of boyish preferences by shaking 1 now see why he praises of s road you ery, My gloves are white As when last night Ihe Million Dollar Kid «~« « « wo» By R. W. Taylor Wa teak ene Band A little hard to sean, but still better than the last one, The Sweet Singer | nmit,N. J., suggests a new Ine of thought on behalf of the lady, @@ ows Informed his little rin confidence that he had ers because tt had two big pockets for revolvers ) Knickerbocker Trust ¢ has proved to he nt arney ven ‘ ste § Aare “vation to. dor [ (TELL YOUR mamma \ Wor's winch ¢ } + | “ \VLL RE BkouNb Toy mE Bor? | | | MR. BRUSH I'LL GIVE You #)000 To FAINT THIS Kio'S PORTRAIT~ TO BE DONE WHILE SURE! { NEED Oh, Phoebe Snow, It's rather slow— ‘The way you go To Buftal ‘The Temporary Selectmen at Horseneck have set a number of farmer-looktag nen with ploughs, some horses and a mule to doing something on our Made stroet, All the soft spots are being turned upside down, with the grass unders seath and the angle worms on top, and all the hard, smooth spots where % vas nice to ride are being covered with soft, alluvial soll, Interspersed wits Little boulders. What looks HMke a sus: ditch 1# being ploughed, so that ae water can off the sidewalks Into what was the road, but must stay on ome: feet. None of our eltigens understands what the T. 8, intend to do, but the tame pression provatly that the street is to be sowed down with winter wheat i SELL HER PA\ rex THE DAY'S GOOD STORIES. Signboards in Japan, _|'# attacked by disease or injury, aptitie F TOM tle Jaland empire come these |e eee ery uaatul: 1am enema ( STUNG ; C Gor my MONEY LAGAIN ANY way | in the the dentist ake examples of “English as she is ne the dentistry and 3 will make fem Japanesed,” says the Detroit | 70" PUPOR® News | ‘Tailor, native country; draper, mil- | His Only Pause, HT and ladies’ outfitter; the ribbons, | HEY were asking the eminent lawe the laces, the vells, the feelings. ‘T yer why he took so large e fee Hand-painted post cards,” from the Trust. Extract of fowl kept.” “T think it was its largeness thet ‘Photographer execute ian it easy to take," he emilingly eme ‘Head hair cutter.” awered, Writing for another done here."’ | Then the State's attorneys conferreds “Specialist for the disease of chil-| “And didn't you etop to consider thes iren."’ |the money was tainted?’ they asked, Best perfuming water, anti-flea, | nim, | dealer of." ‘No, Notiss—Our tooth i @ very import- stopped to count It.” ant organ for business life and counte- ‘This closed \ to nance es you know; therefore, when it dey--Cleveland % ” Doniy 100K LIKE E! \ pont want UTTIN, LiKe BAT! did He and tha gon Ore " we -) @ enter, ’