***OTV C/ZYOF^y^COO *r L/ffOJrfiJVOOO - HEATER NEW YORK, having an nexed pretty much everything in sight that does not belong to New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Connecticut and thereby accumulated a population of about 6,000,000 is going to celebrate its tercentenary. In tact,' there will be at lenst two celebrations and probably more. The 4 reason is seen in the fallowing out standing dates in New York's early history: 1623 ? The Dutch West India company founded a permanent settlement on Manhattan island. 1626 ? I'eter Minuit, director general of New Netherlands, purchased Manhattan island from the Indians. 1AB4 ? Kinir Charles of England granted to his / 659 brother the duke of York (afterward large tracts in America, including the Dutch possessions of New Nether lands. Richard Nicolls in command of an English fleet, took New Nether lands without lighting. New Amster dam became New York. 1673? A Dutch fleet retook New Netherlands and temporarily restored Dutch supremacy. 1674 ? A peace treaty between Eng land and The Netherlands turned over New Netherlands to England* and New Amsterdam became New York for all time. So the founding of New York will' be unofficially celebrated this year. Peter Minult's historic purchase will be officially celebrated fn 1926 by the city and the acquirement of the name of New York will probably be cele brated either in 1964 or 1974. The unofficial celebration of 1923 is largely religious and will run over into 1924. It will begin with a Huguenot pilgrimage to Europe, including the Huguenot centers in France, Holland, the Rhine country, Switzerland and the Waldenslan valleys of Italy. It will continue with local celebrations in all districts and cities associated with the Manhattan island settlement of the Huguenots into April of 1924. Practically all the colonial societies in America, Including the Huguenot so ciety, Founders and Patriots o Amer ica, the Holland society, the Society of Colonial Wars, the St. Nicholas so ciety, the Descendants of Colonial Governors, the Sons of the Revolu tion and the Daughters of the Ameri can Revolution will take part. Protestant churches under the lead ership of the Federal Council of Churches have established the Hugu? not-Walloon New Netherland commis sion, composed of men and women all over the country who are interested in the celebration from a, religious point of view and have fixed upon Sun day, April 27, 1924, for special serv ices. President Harding is the hon orary chairman. The reason for this religious celebration is set forth in what follows. New Yoflk's history really begins, of course, on that September day of 1609 when Henry Hudson, an Englishman In the employ of the Dutch East India company (chartered in 1602), sailed into the mouth of the Hudson river, looking for a passage to the Indies. He sailed his Half-Moon (90 tons) up the Hudson as far as tidewater went and then turned back. ^ Three years later the Dutch com pany established a trading post on Manhattan island (Man-na-hat-ta) at about where No. 39 Broadway is now. It consisted of a redoubt, storehouse and four log huts. The next year Adrlen Block's Tigress, loaded with the first cargo of furs for The Neth erlands, was burned. Block built the Onrust (Restless) of 16 tons, got an other cargo of furs and (1614) took James II), theiii home. At this time there were only two permanent settlements on the Atlantic coast, St. Augustine (Spanfsh, 1505) and Jamestown (Eng lish, 1607). In 1621 the states general of the United Netherlands granted a charter to the Dutch West India company cov ering the whole unoccupied coast of America from Newfoundland to Cape Horn. The charter guaranteed to col- ! onists social, political and religious freedom. "Do you wish to build, to piant, to become a citizen?" was the main question asked of colonists. In 1623, three years after the land ing of the Pilgrims at Plymouth, the first colony was landed on Manhattan island tfrora the ship New Netherlands (260 tons). Captain May. There were 30 families, 110 strong. They were Walloons, Protestant refugees from Belgium (until 1830 a part of The Neth erlands), with their cows and chick ens, farm Implements and household furnishings. A landing was made at Castle Garden. They were welcomed by traders and Indians. The "Chris tian teacher" who accompanied them pra.vfed and gave thanks before their first meal. Captain May read to them his commission as governor. The "official figure" was a beaver with a coronet for its ?*rest. The first-born on the island was Sarah ltapalje. And this was the beginning of Man hattan, afterward (1653) New Anjster dam, and finally (1674) New York. Since 1612 the country between the trading posts on Manhattan island and at Fort Orange (Albany) had been called New Netherlands by the Dutch. In 1626 arrived the first director general of New Netherlands, Peter Minuit of? imperishable fame. He bought of the Indians the 22,000 acres of Manhattan island for $24 worth (at Dutch prices) of trinkets and weapons. Then he built the first Fort Amsterdam near the Battery. Then Manhattan settled down ,to a regular program of life. There, were 270 in habitants. Each settler owned his house, tilled the land and traded with the Indians. The popular conception of early New York is a "city of rotund Dutch burgers, idling In the shade with their I schnapps and long-stemmed pipes. Maybe. But here's a truer picture of the days just before the English cap tured New Amsterdam In 1 f railroads; Improved local transit facilities. Population in 1800 was 1,174,779. 1865-1898 ? Realty booms ; introduc tion of passenger elevator; commer cial use of electricity; use of steel skeleton In building construction, which enabled the city to grow verti cally/ Population in 1900 was 3,437,202. 1898-1923 ? Rapid transit In all di rections, enabling the city to grow horizontally. Population in 1920 was 5,620,048. The future of New York and Its Im mediate environs invites speculation. Certainly New York intends so far as It can to Ignore artificial political boundaries. It has begun the construc tive development of the metropolitan area within a radius of fifty mll^s from. Battery park. A Committee on the Plan of New York and Its Envi rons has divided this area into six sec tors with an expert studying each. These sectors Include areas In Con necticut and New Jersey. The ex perts will report on the possible uses of land and the densities of population in the different . sectors." The general question of regional zpnlng and the distribution of industries, business and residences will be considered, with indications of probable future tend encies and dangers. As relief from congestion of population is one of the things most sought, questions relating to decentralization with observations regarding the location of new indus trial areas and business and social centers will receive considerable at tention In the surveys. Contrast New York's present sky line with that of 1659! Yet New York Isn't satisfied. It has a new zon ing system and a new "set-back" style of architecture and expects within five years to have buildings 1,000 feet high and even higher. "New .York Is bound to become the most beautiful and dis tinctive city in the world," . say it* architects. '?./> ? ^ ?? osssssssss^sssssssssss^^ Second-Hand :| Heart Throbs , [ * - It | By JANE OSBORN | <$). 1923. by McClure New?paper Syndicate.) "Mother, dear mother, :you couldn't really expect me to go to that hospital fair this afternoon,"^ protested Molly;. Yates* between bites of totfkt and sipfe 'of coffee ?fnd glances at "Beginners'" Latin" opened on the table before her. "I don't get through at high school until two and, believe me, it's no cinch leaching Latin when you haven't studied it for three Or four years and never knew very much then. I told 'em at the board that I'd rather take math or even histoiy than Latin, but it's the only vacancy they had at the high, and of course I didn't want to teach grade school if I could help. So you see I just can't go? it'll take me two hours to get tomorrow's les sons prepared and dear knows when I'll have time U> correct ajiy papers. "Of Course I in interested in the hospital. You know I sent them $5 and I'd have loved to have dressed a doll or something if I'd had time; and just you take those books upstairs in my room for the second-hand book stall. I think that's a tine idea. Who wants to keep trashy books after read ing them once? Just you look through my bookcase ? take anything that is cheap or trashy that you don't think wtj'd want. I think everything on the two bottom rows%wou!d be all right and when Mrs. Daw kins conies with her car let her take them over." And after this monologue. Molly Yates, feeling rather important over her recent appointment to teach at, the Mapleton higb school, kissed her mother and departed. Three blocks away this same hos pital fair was under discussion at the Stockton breakfast table, while Sirs. Stockton and her son, the mayor of Mapleton, broke their breakfast rolls together in the stately dining room of the old Stockton mansion. "Now," Bob, dear," Mrs. Stockton had suggested, "I know a man hates a fair, but in your position ? " "That's so," said Mayor. Bob, look ing really Interested. s "The hospital fair begins today, and I do suppose I ought to show my face." "Bob. I'm so glad you didn't mind my suggesting ft. The ladies will be so gratified ? and since the ladies vote ? " x "You arch-schemer, you," laughed Bob. "You'll have me governor yet, mother mine. But honest. I'd made up my mind to blow in and leave maybe $50 at the fair. They'd rather have it that way than sent in a check. But HI have to go this afternoon? I've a committee this evening." Bob Stockton wasn't quite so keen about going to tlie fhir as his speech might have indicated. He rather dreaded the ordeal of drawing up .to any of the booths to face the charge of smiling saleswomen who would be so gratified to see the mayor and so eager to be able to boast that tlfey had sold him a potted plant, a box of fudge, a tea cozy or a baby doll. Bob Stockton glanced about the room from the vantage point of the entrance hall of the big assembly room. He wanted to see the lay of the land. Doll tables and fancy tables were especial ly embarrassing. He'd have to make the rounds eventually, of course, he reasoned, but he'd begin somewhere else. He saw at one end of the room a table that looked like the outside exhibit of a second-hand book dealer ? tables crowded witjv books in neat array. It would be a simple matter to glance over these volumes and make a selection of a dozen or so ? not that there'd be any book in the collection that he'd ever want to read. Still it would be easier than trying to make selection at a doll table. The two young women in charge of the second-hand book stall were too flustered at having their table the first visited by the handsome young mayor of Mapleton to start in any of the rapid-fire sales talk' that might have^ greeted1 Bob at any of the tables manned by the older, more experienced hands. So Bob had a chance to let , his eyes run over the titles of the books? just as if it really made any difference which book he bought; The books seemingly had been ar ranged according to colors and then graded according to sizes in colors, with the result that Bob's eyes ran from a book on caring for pet dogs to a volume on meditations ; one on the labor situation fifteen years ago, to a book of housekeeping? a book of In structions for playing bridge, ten years out of date to? Bot's eyes caught the title of the book next? a twelve-mo. red volume with yellow letters that said "Heart Thrfcbs." From some where [ n the past of Bob's experience drifted up shadows of a memory that brought the polor mounting to his cheeks and made his heart beat a little fast. He felt enormous embarrass^ ment and then chagrin. At least, he concluded hastily, he. could not ex amine the volume before the simper ing gaze of the two young women be hind the counter. So he lifted a dozen volumes from the table before him. *TU take this bunch," he said. "I like red books. No, never mind wrap ping them. HI just put them in the car." * There was a card bearing the In scription "Fifty cents" en the table, but Bob handed out a ten-dollar bill and refused to take change. He had the book? that Is all he realized. Inci dentally he had established the politi cal allegiance of two young voters for life. "Ten dollars for that taftidful of volumes that weren't w apiece ? three cheers jj, ^ Somehow, with his r , tlnually slipping uijd?-r young mayor made 0,,H 'J other tables and ni:iri:.-,.,i - of fifty or sixty dollars, i to make each group ?.i that he had bestow.-, j ^ attention, a little umrp lav.,*! ment oil their table. j,n<| j ' * ried off a huge bal.\ ^ toy booth, refusing t?. i,IlVl. it ^ causing the % enormous alT: the ladies? all h\ ti,;s , ^ and true political su|.;,.,i!(.rs Bob Stockton. ? Bob hurried out to ,.;ir the baby tlcll, a pound ..t f.'r^ cushions, sachets and ?!? : else unceremonious! v it ,, , home. At home he < > ?- , trouble then to reniov. '"int his purchase ? save tin books ? and wiih tliov,. | ,. j went to the privacy of [/*? ^ It had all come vi\i . \, by that time. Eight . .;irN must have been twenty r ,.n_J selected this book fron, | ,. a city book seller as {!,?? propriate to carry 1 1..- : ,.,x . dared not express ot ? ( r. eighfeen-3*ear-oId idol i.r j,js ,, Molly Yates. He looked a? ?there was still the In;, f ?all be had dared ? "I . \[, , v' Bob." That was when Bob w:;s j,^ off to college. There ters. Yes, Molly had ev?-:i ?junior ball with him. I : i j ? Molly had made it Heai :,, t [; a rival. Then somehow r u?air spun Itself out. A f?-v. |,;wv< Jewelry had been rotui:.-, that volume of "Ileart ' casionally Bob saw M?.|-! \ tliere was never anything !. ? v formal greeting, a gre?-:ir-.' ways left Bob with a rage or regret. And now }.?? more rage ? to think that M<>!lrT should cast off this book withi.^ taking the trouble to cran* tti scription in the front. While Bob was thinkii;;: t! ?> J agitated person had appeaM :;-fl second-hand hook booth. It wa*MoB mother. She had sent a mistake. Her daughter had 'vl ered the mistake. She -must vfl back before It was sold. It wa*vB To whom? Mayor Stoefcti.n? J relief! Certainly he didn't war? thing, he just bought It to money and he lived so near! A::H [harried Mrs. Yates, so jiiad th&'fl book had fallen Into Mr. St?rfcfl hands. She had forgotten, if she^ knew, that Bob Stockton had Ih*?M of her daughter's admirers. T ^ A been numerous in those days. sir!? ried to the Stockton house with I porting to her daughter. A maid summoned B<>h who by that time was rf'an their shoes?" the veteran propriety of a busy shoe store was a ^ cording to the New York Sun "When a man with one fP** his purchase to his personal t. ^ "What becomes of the other "That depends on the stylo !? choice means the breaking of :t of normal type we have no in duplicating the shoe he has M'US by ordering , another shoe from ^ factory. In a case as simple si* ^ we charge only a trifle more tluin b* the price of a full pair ? Just < to care for the additional ex pons* placing an order for a single sii??e. the style Is not standard, and we ei P^ct to have difficulty In repl^c,tl the shoe, we charge considerably than half price." Cost of Education Soars. Education in Scotland costs times as much as before the war. / ' ' ? i