The evening world. Newspaper, July 31, 1905, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Letters From tie People —_— Rand Koswers to Questions [| Published by the Preas Publishing Company, No, 63 to @ Park Row, New York, ; Mntered at the Post-Omce at New York as Second-Cinss Mail Matter. NO, 16,050. HH PUBLIC CONSCIENCE. | Men and women are collectively law abiding and in favor of high) Principles, though individually many of them may be guilty of the same } practices which collectively they deprecate. It is through this tendency of "human nature that public movements are almost always in the right “direction to favor the good and to diminish the power of evil. a When people go along engrossed in their own affairs there is little }foundation for any public uprising. Better conduct, higher standards, ie Banners of Hatr at To the Editor of The B | I'l bet 40 conts he Windows. ning World One Mundred am- cultural b b Yorl: | City. Any eunny day of the week a dozen wo:nen can bo seen drying ther glorious but for the nonce damp hair y out of th front. windows of their orals and ethics in general are left for the discussion of clergymen, | reiitt aparimenta, "Ant it im gregt rs and professors. Where a commumity acts as a number of hair, to! What other city olock cin boust a Ike spectal distinction? SEPTIMUS JOHNSON. Complains of Water Supply. To the EXiitor of The Evening World: Can no one help us about the water trouble? They say there is pletky of water, but we oan got very little and at times none at all. There may be a good deal of sickness !f we cannot get any. MRS. M. ROBERTS. 128 Herkimer street, Brooklyn. B. G.—Roosevelt ran for Mayor of New York Clty tn 1886 against Hewitt and George. Hewitt was clected. The Actors Along Broadway. To the Ecltor of The Evening World: Why not sts wllce at Forty-sec- ond street und Droadway and Thirty: seventh street and Broadway to warn women who are using the great thor- oughfare that a great swarm of return- ing actors of all grades and with not much respect for woman {s th posses- ns and not as one civic body there fs no common standard and there is ho proper hokling to duty of public officials and of those ‘semi-public offi- M@als who direct the insurance companies, the banks, the railroads and other great corporations. ‘An arousing of the public conscience is not so much the quickening '6f'a number of individual consciences cs the awakening of the community sto a better realization of common ills and the necessity of united action to medy them. The life insurance situation {s in this respect typical of all public hovements caused by an awakened public conscience. The dual capacity Mr. Schiff, Mr. Ryan, Mr. Harriman and other high financiers who pend one side of their life in philanthropy and the greater part of their and efforts in taking from others by none too squeamish processes )the-many millions a fraction of which goes in charity, is repeated in the P Average citizen of less importance who individually makes his money as ‘best he can and collectively resents the doing of the same thing by men expert at it. sion of Broadway between those two f It is a natural tendency to see every one’s faults except one’s own andj po'nts. I: would save women 1 of annoyance. HAMLET. | | Yo-seek to remedy the vices of every one else and to reprobate every- body's else misdeeds. When this feeling is concentrated, as it is in the fe insurance case, it is a power which none can resist. The Foye Cane. To the Editor of The Bvening Wo! T have read of the young ruffian by tho name of Faye who kad his mother arrested. Readers, what fo you think! 3 TO LABEL PLUTOCRATS, Jof that? After his inother (raising 4 Thi 5 ; " him from infancy and cheving his 4 rough the prosecution of the society canvassers and Publishers | childish whims), seks him fur a few! There may be worked out some suitable scheme for a recognized classifica- TRA een) SRee ie onli! | tion of the plutocrats of the United States. Hereditary titles of nobility | surance, the young repromate turns ~ | his nose and coldiy disowns her. The ) wre prohibited by the Constitution. Titles of colonel, major, judge and the ‘Tike are too readily assumed, and they do not imply the possession of Superabundant wealth. The mercantile agencies have in some ways » nitherto supplied this omission, but their reports carry no official sanction, ) and they include only men who are in business. If there is to be a plutocracy it is well to have it labelled. Such label- ae ing might be done officially. Chiropodists, tonsorial artists osteopaths | right punishment for one of hts ctamp | could not be severe enough. NORBERT L. a Continuous Oven. The Subway To the Editor of The Evening World: Vhe iron of the Subway should ted or treated im some way interact the great heat which it gives Phis iron, which attracts and ry be to y and other classes in the community have officials created by law to pass at nl GHEE Sy Ge = upon their qualifications and to gi ificates of thei i an ive one . q Ir and to give legal certi icates of their Standing. |. y._netteek is a thin, highly-slazea | | There should be no discrimination against millionaires, A millionaire is porcelain, originally made in Belleck, | entitled to as much recognition as a chiropodist. A plutocrat should not | Ireland. ) be at undue disadvantage with an osteopath. No Brownsville Post-Oflice, ‘0 the Editor of Tho Evening World: i Before the last election a political h N peaker promised that Brownsville | FLYING MACHINES, should have a post-office within two »' ‘Another flying machine has failed to fly. The inventor brought to New York and tried to give an exhibition on Riverside Drive, which ) resulied unsuccessfully. F This particular machine was designed on the plan of a series of kites, ™dsummer and we don't hear a word | the theory being that the direction of flight could be changed with a steer- | HEA rey sare aeeae, aries ing apparatus and by shifting ballast. Even if this kite design should be | The “1” Becoming @ Back Number, ; found to work on a test it has obvious disadvantages which would pre- TREE aren ene een vent its common use for air navigation. months. Brgwnsvilie !s still waiting for | the post-office. This was In November. ,We should have had our post-office at |the latest in February, and now It ts Such cen- the "L" road is since the Subway came atch ey ff 4 . ry Into existence. It looks to belong to th Any airship which will float through its own specific gravity muSt poried of ihstaia Seer eat rien | be of such enormous size as to be helpless against strong wind, Any stage $s twentieth D kite airchin j Aes . ~ | tury progress, kite airship is also dependent on the breeze to keep it afloat. 103) STREET STATION. 3 To navigate the air successfully there must be a smaller and more To Encournge Invention, compact design which will not afford so much surface to hostile winds Te the Editor of Tha Evening World: ie 4 oH Py satymar ee SSS I belleve {1 wowd be a good scheme, : and which will derive its own buoyancy from the principle of a bird’s ana would giva a good start to many| flight, rather than following the lines of balloons and kites, tt eome valantanonata poor people, would butld manufacturing plante fitted | all machinery and! into and perfect ¢ them on the mar- mireds of poor men ons but no capital to up wh kinds of ' ( Armour's charges for refrigerating fruit cars are based on the east pooia' side five-cent chunk of ice. : e are h Rood Inve! Why should a rich young man, successful in business |Beauty’ The une | can s:cile and smile Into the jaws of death + | “refolce: The Evening World's Home Magazine, Monday Evening, Juiy S11, i905. Na suit for breach of promise now! sute perfection our crown of glory may have carried I being tried 1 is alleged by th» some royal privileges with it. But now who would place injured lady that the prospe:t've any more faith in the genuineness of a woman's hair bridegroom declined to marry her on than in the slngleness of a man’s devotion? the novel plea that his hair was fall- The possibility of the universal counterfeit has taken ing out and that he was taking cer- all value from the real, since the counterfeit is one im-| tain scalp treatments that the matri- possible of detection. monfal festivities would necessarily, Wihat poet would care to pour forth his soul in golden interrupt. verse celebrating Amaryllis’s golden hair with the possi- Now, if the woman had set up his billty ever before him that {t was culled from the head impending baldness as an excuse for Of some necessitous peasant girl in Sweden or Switzer- | non-fulfilment of the contract, we land? What youth, however enamored, would waste his might find some justification for her. But surely, if she Senius tn a connet to Cynthia's eyebrow, product of a could stand for it, he could. beauty parlor's pencil, or lavish his adjectives on an eye- It seems to me that the value of hair as an adjunct to !ash helped out with charcoal and a burnt match? They beauty has always been overestimated, and that woman's May love them certainly, for men, like moths, were ever crown of glory {s after all but a tinsel crown, Of course, Caught by glare. But the possibilities of poetry are beautiful, abundant hair {s for the Individual woman a Over very desirable thing to have, but, judged by the effect And if the power of beautiful hair {n woman has de- she produces, wherein is she superior to the possessor parted, surely man need not worry about his tonsortal of a $4 switch? So long as the modern beauty has deficiencies. Woman can’t afford to be fastidious on enough hair to tle a switch to she is the equal of the that score, for beauty has but a single hair left. Sha finest hair-tonic heroine who displays her abundant locks ought to be thankful instead that his vanity does not on billboards and advertising pamphlets, lead him to the hairdresser'e as hers does, for two mag- Possibly in the times when wigs, pompadours and nificent crops of hair of the sort now prevalent in tho switches had not reduced us all to the same level of hir-| same family would bankrupt a millignaire, The Futile Funny Man, By Robert Hichens, AE effort to be funny 1s sometimes an ex- | smile, but one can scarcely commend the good feeling of such haustive effort and often a useless one, |a pleasantry. It is ustinctly at the expense of the poor old but it 1s an effort that multitudes of |grandfather, who {s probably upstairs in bed cursing end persons are cont{nually making. “We | swearing in the normal manner of elderly males who are suf- must try to brighten things up,” they |fering under the chastisement of Providence, says Robert think to themselves. ‘We mustn't let |Hichens tn the Chiongo Tribune. ourselves be dull.” Oh, the pathos of | pew * 5 5 people, I suppose, who have “been about’ have failed that last mental exclamstion! Oh, the |ty meet the man who tries to holet up a laugh by 5 longing tnsidfously enshrined in it! If ‘ taal ns ly ens M some well-known saying and putt'ng It into the mouth of the only they felt at liberty to be dull. ©. | inet parean whe could, or would ever have anid tee dow to be themselves—how comfortable they would be, how com-| wan: te ght, but, ly Jingo, If wo do'—~ am Ierbert Spencer Pletely gt easc, like a woman unlaced, Ike a man with his | ax-inimed when he foreanw that some day we should have to clippers on and his old pipe in his mouth, But {t “doesn’t do’ a ; as H have a go at the Boers.’ Or, ‘What's the odds as long as to be dull, and fo perish the longing. This tsa trying world. | Vere nappy” as Matt Arnold was ao fond of aacing hen and, 1f we'are social altrulsts, we must endeavor ¢o brighten | OO" AIT, teatrain his exuberant love uf covenant things up fn {t Insti ty ai PRTG at \Eihies hunny, eaneaceiaisitoren) PENNE Amene ‘ances of this typs of humor. It seldom entertains the fant tio re, deed ve iT Ty It as the number. Even in the twentieth century the pun siill has | iat we Ges fe/known theni tavlonk upon! ttn ee arene: “alstinety. offensive.” ang I am‘ not gure that they were Others have a reotpe for brightaning things up which con- mists {n telling comic Ites. For instance, a hard-worked man, when you inquire of him how often he takes a day off, will|funny. The American relies upoa prodigious exaggeration to eply to yap: “Oh, I stay in town 365 days out of the 365, , |excite mirth. A man possesses a pedometer and {s staying for T can't get away. I'm r- bus uu know. I'm always at |the night at an Inn, where he occupies a room four fect . tWentyeye hours out of he twenty-four.” square by six feet. He ts waked up by the scratching of a Acommon plan for setting the table in a roar fs to put|Mouse—he sleeps, of course, with his pedometer—gets up, mubstantives that have little or no connection with each other | f'ls to find a match and endeavors to locate his persecutor together ina string, as If It were pecullarly natural for them |!" the dark. In the effort he craw: the room till Jay- to be in juxtaposition. “My poor old grandfather fell down |!!eht. when he finds that his pedometer has registered 2u7 stairs yesterday, When we picked him up we found that he | Miles 13 yards 1 foot and 1-2 inch. was full of bruises, resignation, swallowed falre teeth and| I think {t may be sald that the definite effort to be funny the desire to go to a better id," 1g an instance of this, |is rarely completely successful. Fin should be spontaneous, ectedness of the following nouns will often induce a | Wke kindness, to bs really delightful. | Woe are all acquainted with the American effort to be w To Read the Smile Lan HE smile means “I am happy to see you, to speak with you a moment, direct you on your way, to lend yo guage ~ Prof. George Dumas cago Tribune. | To the smiles of joy are bound by taanifest parentage the! smiles of love, of the tender sen‘iinenty and agreeable em - a took.” It is not ony the voluntary] tions; but the amiles of pleasure and the smiles of polite-| expression of ali the agreeable sen-| ness ure not the o that are derived from them, | tments like love and affection, but} There are smiles of mockery, there are smiles of disdain, | also a great many social acts, No people has exterded the meaning of the smile to so vast a degree and 80 generalized its expressioy as the Japanese. A Japaness | in any other clreymstance of hie life. We can trace the way humanity! has come from the primitive reflect acifon of the muscles in joy to this smile of high civilization. It still signifies find on my «.untonance only signs of pleasur And does not this signification connect it with its distant | origin? | Thus man has extended the em which nature has spontaneously produced as an indication of delight, into a sssion of politeness, meaningless when it ex- eM nothing more, but of the utmuat delicacy when it there are smiles of deflance, there are smiles of bitterness, of resignation and of sadness. Tho oitter smile corresponds physiologically to the as- soolation of the ordinary movements of the smile with the expression af the mouth and of the Ups which provoke cer- tain disagreeable tastes, particularly bitter tastes. Ths mile of resignation {8 a fugitive expression which passes in intervals over the sad countenance in order to| break or modify the dejected position of the features of the visage. We thus have two distinct varieties of the smile, arising, | the one from the simple expression of pleasure and the other from the laigh. The smily of pleasure can only ex- | press pleasure or a ifeneral state of Joy and cannot be as- sociated either naturally or artificially with any sentiments save those of sincere or simulated joy. On the contrary, the smile of the laugh Js rich in mult But the two sorts of smile are not so unlike, but that they may be redyced to unity at Jeast along thelr physto- logical conditions and their profound mechanism. Under whatever form the smile n appear it Is first and alway: {ple meanings. The Joys which bring to our lips| 8 ure exceedingly rare and the will rarely absent from the polite smiles which we distribute | during a day; all our sinites have been conscious at a given | Aoment of our existence, but habit early gains dominion|a phenomenon of nervous excitation; {t translates an | aver them. A man smiles In social fe as he ratzes his| auereentation of the excitation elther in periphery of the | nat; ty by fur the grentert majority of instances he 4s un-| sensitive nerves or Jn thelr centres and renders this aware that he siulled, saya Prof, Geonse Dumas, in the Chi-] augmentation under a motive form. | terined autor be sportanerus snul! OUR DIPLOMATS’ PAY. THE EMPEROR'S TEA. A FREAK WEDDING. | Our Ambassadors of the first rank | ‘Tbe tea used in the immediate house-| ‘Phree brothers were wedded to three are those at London. Paris Berlin and| hold of the Emperor of China {s treatal | Sisters and a sister of the brothers to a| brother of the three sisters at Durren, | near Thoune, recently, Bride and bride- groom in each case were of the same age, Wall Street Romance. St, Petersburg. They get $17,690 a year, The Ambassadors of the second rank are those at Vienna and Italy, who get | 312,000, with the utmost care. It 4s raised in a garden surrounded by a wall, so that neither man nor beast can get any- ‘where near the plants. ‘ ae t and in good push A pitallst would profit, y sh and uf for ge royalty on sales. E health, kill himself? Let ot stay long enough to be = ————— able t a place of his owa, then Is horse-racing straighter or more cr is season? fone: room iter some 'Onetelee i ig ore crooked this season? | INVENTOR. | ‘The Detached Brain A e ° ° i CHAPTER I. lave will lose {ts richest man"'— i A Strange Case. ir hi : ae ay, ij “ RTHUR NOSTRAND, you must ¢ Philippines, and I had hy pes tha Usten to me." before my enlist was over “That's what I am here for."| Hever mind, Vay, Phil. I won't Ma ou irsstdo ant ace?! Interrupt vou a "Well; that's another matter. But let ‘He's heen dy for years and p }) me hear you, Phil." | Up mor ine Philip Dolan, a well-built man of five Yourself, nor a child to ‘and thirty, with fine gray eyes and a leave It to; have my own rea- mustache that was distinctly red and $0n8 for belleving—for I witnessed his crisp hair that had a strong tendency st wi BO, and just before he fj to the same color, rose quickly, locked lost the his hands—that out of the door of the little bedroom in the the whole pile of millions you are to © Third avenue hotel, hired for the pur- | Ret just one dollar.” Dolan slapped his [) pose of this interview, and then came hands on his knecs to emphasize his I) quickly and quietly back and took a statement, ehair facing his companton, Arthur Nos-| “It must have stavbed his heart to ) trand, remember me even to that ex and q Arthur Nostrand was dressed in khak! Arthur Nostrand smiled bitterly. P uniform. He was about ten years 3ut you can beat his game; we can | younger than Dolan, and with his brong- beat It even before he dies." Doan B pd face, brown eyes and halr and spoke with the agis of assurance, | white forehead he would have made @ "I can't see how,’ aisched Arthur. pleasant impression on any man or ‘This is how." Dolan jerked his woman with an appreciation of physical 1 nearer and bent forwai4, its b deauty. biue-gr 9 fastened intently on the DAs he sat easy and erect tn his chair handsome, bronzed face of hls compan. V Arthur Nostrand looked the soldier and ton. suggested the trooper who had seen ser- The doctors say the old man's case P vice outside the barracks and parade is the mos! remarkable in all medical Ground, history. He nus been turnie @ bung ’ “Arty, you'd better smoke while I'm for years,’ giving it to you straight,’ | Turning into sto leughed Arthur, As he spoke Phil Dolan drew a cigar “and the disease began with his heart from his vest pocket, from which Rut I forgo, he was born without one," F other olgars, ike (the tops of little purni: bone,” continued Pht organ pipes stuck out, and handed olan, “Ogsifievtion the doctors call it Mt with a match to his ifriend, { Already his le y “I can't smoke and talk in the way hard and bi up te ndless as tint the body H ar ars @ 2 want to talk to you, so I'll postpone to the shoulders are stiff and powerless, f the pleasure till I'm through, Now, are jand the disease is moving up to als you ready ead: but so far that 4s as clear ap ever “All ready, Phil; fire away." gald Ar-| it was clourer, indeed, for a xeems th ' ve. The doe thur Nowtmnd, and he settled back in| with the loss of the other powers its 1 ne failure of one of his Killed him I could almoat wish it may seem eruel, Phil, but I cannot deals Th! f Bis chair, piaced his crossed feet on the |prain becomes clearer. Tegleter and looked up at the Ny-flecked his messenuer Why, and I am tn a position as to F gelling toward which he was ding know, sume of Samuel Russell's bigsest forget that he robbed my widowed Smgke rine lke bits of an airy chain, jdele-deals (hat have set the street mother, his own sister, and as for my- "To vein with, your Uncle Bamuel | wild Kunssing—have herr made sie self, he tried to keep me in his service and when he dies Wall L he had to take to Lis bed It iy his [at & bessarly wage, UN my manhood — te dyin fi ‘Mant volted against his brutal tyranny, » nother belng dead, I enlisted aud,“ felt free for the first time in my lf But let it go. I want never to see the Do You Propose to Kill Sam Russell?” “Bee him again!” echoed Phil Dolan.| “Hear me out before you decide,” Vhy, man; you must see hin aguin:’| said Phil, “But why?" Again he went to the door, Istened, “To use his hy and satisfied that there were no steps monster again." And Arthur Nostrand| “I use his head? Heaven forbid!” in the hall outelde, he came soffly back, took his feet down from the register,| ‘Hear me out and you'll change your| and speaking in even lower tones tha: Knocked the ashes from his cigar and| mind.” before, he outlined a plan so audacious, | contemplated the glowing end “4 doubt it, Phil,'* #0 original, and seemingly so feasible s Single Hair. « By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Evolution of the Horse & from the Tiny Five-Tocd Beast of Antiquity. ITE dom: le horse retain Inherited adiptations mar ¢ the Avy and fee ant tare: tocd 1 of antiay An 4 1x leo: {tres on “The volute We i Prof, Henry Palrtiold Oshorn, presonts Interost mate ‘Taus the hablesof eaneylag the } hich Is n tes Minder of the tine whea the wild stallion a head of the herd had to, bo als Ways on the water for fe i len shy an Mnstiae tl enory of the (By courtesy of the Scientific American.) Skeleton of 2 man and of a horse mounted for comparison. Man has retained more of the primitive features common to all mammals, the horse deing far more specialized in the structure of its limba and of its grind- ing teeth Skeletons of the modern horse (above) and of the small four-toed horse (below), showing the superiority In length of limb of modern horse. days wren a quick jump to one side might save a horse from the sudden spring: of a beast of prey. while buck!ng fs a device for shaking an enemy off the back. Again, the usefulness of the hor for cavalry exercises dvpends upor his having inherited an Instinct for acting in concert with his fellows. One of our photographs represents a beautifully mounted group consisting of the skeleton of u horse rear d of a man, r ntly placed on exhibition in the American Museurs sh thit the bones of ian and horse are strictly compara san has retained more of the primitive or generalized, } features common to all mammals, the horse being nore spe zed in the struc ture of Its limbs and of + g teeth, The rate of os: fon of the upp arm and thigh bones w ko a pendulum lias reased by the t come drawn shortening of these bones, and they ha Hor purposes of locomotion the movem hor fore and aft, the muscles for drawir mbs across the body # the arms havirg been lost during Irse of using spe ‘The fairous protorohippus, tho virtual founder of the horse dynesty, was & fascinating ttle creature, whiten was accuiliy smaller than the head of one of s modern representatives. It had already lost by reduction the first and fifth toes of the hind foot and niost of the first toe of the fore foot The reason for this change 1s quite apparent. The he has made epecd the keynote of Its evolutin; it ras elected, as tt wer a Lis length of limb: One facto aide, to seek for food over a wil) ar of Spe of Um) wherefore the “horse” rose up on its toes, und ihe tocs began to elongate, Tho first effect of this was to lft the shorter toes, Nos, 1 and 5, clear of the ground, dwindled and vane » the weight and continued, a middle too, remainedy eful in supporting weight, t nidile digit had to beac mo: hence it graw larger, The provess of getting ap 2 and 4 followed Nos. 1 and 5, until finally only No.3, th with vestiges of 1 and 5. By Arthur Rochefort. but not for loyed and, being no Jonger u ished. Meanwhile th» m Hoffmeister. soldier let In T ‘om his lips) setentiqie 1 that the astonished young ested extinguished cigar fall and rat in ope! use he Briefly this was an's scheme Among his long list of varied ace quaintances was an old German doctor c and pro! or, who had been banished his own pretty sige from Germany because of his Soci hur had been ene Democracy ; thie enlistment, Dr. Hoffmeister, with his bent form pL aah bai a and long gray hair and beard, lecke HES ARETE ETH VET HS more than hs. vixtynf is scared ‘of death, though he is that, most skilful surgeon and nost he wu to see his pile ow learned man in tho New World, or In ae ennte ine ond ith ieee the Old for that matter, Dr, Hoff neister |. I'm about the only man he does was at first courted by the scientists of | trust, Now. ty. I've thought about New York, but he chose to live alone | letung Dr. Hoffmeister have his own with his books and apparatus, never leaving his humble quarters on the cust side except to help some afflicted fam- ily near by or to join in @ consultation but I debated it over ull your re. turn decided me, It has come to this— your uncle's body must die and be buried, but we'll keep the head in worke way, at the urging of some of the leading | ine order, and''— surgeons, Phil Dojan's explanation was cut He had been called in in this way to! short by Arthur's ery: see Samuel Russell, and he at unce de- “My God, Do yéu propose, ty cared the case to be tho most unusual | Kil! sium Mussel?” ; is 1 nim? No; we're going to kee In the whole history of the profession, | nin ~aiivel scoop’ itm alive w. benked But as he could not manage it alono and in his own way he refused to con- tinue his vielts. To Dolan, whe trom the first became strongly attacned to the old philoso- Sight longer than if he didn't take Dry Hoffmester's treatment, ‘Dnat is, we'll keep the head ailve, und while It's alive we'll use it to work the rhea aud Incidentally to make enougl to leave You quite Indifferent to the old man's | will, Do you understand, Art Die: Deana, a heeMnety et HbOWA) Only ie’ a bale Gilad inan sees laboratory; Shrough, & tiles fox,” replied Arthur, “ ‘ hen rubbing his eyes and Jumping. ui I don't care for the man's filthy) je added, “lve had enough. for one money, but as a scientist 1 am pro-| sitting. I'll go down and call on May, foundly interested in his case—in his) When, and where shall 1 see you head, These doctors—and they are do- “At your uncle's house at 9.20 o'clock ing their best—can keep the old miser bright, A am ng 10.0 a on Dr. Hoff. «| melater,"’ rep! Ph! olan, alive for a few weeks at the furthest; | With a “Wary hand cluap the two now, if I were to perform an operation, young men parted before the hotel, Are long graceful 1 am sure by detaching all the body! ates mating hie’ way | ay flit below the neck I could keep the head | that commanded a view of the green alive for many months, But how many | square ut the junction of Second aver _ . ;/nue and teénth street that is the thing that interests me; [peeks itr While Arthur's that Ja the contribution I wan to mak to welence. Ach Goit! what an interést- ing case this fe! But Iam not in con-| Pad Mp trol, I am as helpless as the ossified) he could not bring ee" that man,” and the Professor sighed and beheading a man was right, even if threw up hig hands, Fh Dolan became profoundly tater: Krave, ri h Veree OF te Asp Continued.) , team is he were the worst of men, and on the |

Other pages from this issue: