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_- por yenary RIDING ON THE EAST SIDE ‘ 1.” By T. EB, Powers. HEN HE ‘ : Woe IN THE BRONX ; i ‘BUMPS ALL ; | OVER by tho Preas Publishing Company, No, 63 to @ Park Row, New Tork at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. NO, 16,088, By Nixola Greeley-Smith. ue HE Latin races have always accused the Saxons 6f THE BURGLARS’ SUMMER CARNIVAL. The number of New Yorkvrs due home from vacation outings ths tweek or already returned is estimated at half a million. How many will seturn to find their homes looted by burglars, as has been the experience} of the Aymar, Marshall, Willard and Leslie families, to mention only con- spicuous instances of this midsummer vandalism? | It is said by apologists for the police that “never in the history of; | New York have burglars and petty thieves been fewer relatively than they k mre to-day.” If the August record of robberies and burglar jes, to take no f gcoount of the extraordinary outbreak of general lawlessness, represents f nly the normal crime conditions of the city, police “protection” has be- { \ being ungallant. And could anything bear owt the unpleasant charge better than the phrase ws use to describe that most sudden, tender and delight. phenomenon, |. e., “falling In love?” Bi Why do we say “fall?” Should we not rather regard, that. stato of blissful emotion as the topmost of those stepping stones of our dead selves that we have worn thin since Longfellow wrote about them? “Rising” in) love would be far more accurate and incidentally more, complimentary. , Of course, there are as many different {deas of what it is to be In love as there are different people. And perhaps falling im | love is descriptive enough of a state which many people experience so often, | as to merit the appellation of emotional tumblers. " | But for that rare intoxication of soul and sense that most of us know only once and some of us not at all, there could not be a more inaccurate | phrase = | Love ts the sparkle in the wine of Life. And, therefore, unless we drink ltt early, it is apt to seem flat and unprofitable as champagne that we have, left in the glass too long while listening to the man who took us in to din= [ner discourse on novels or poetry or whiskeys or stove polish or whatever HIRE 7; TENT AND WAIT FoR, Your TRAIN ome a mockery of the name. Among the home-comers is Commissioner McAdoo, who reached fils desk to-day. On his return from his vacation last year the Commis- 3 sioner, when taxed with the great prevalence of crime, said, jauntil) i “There has been vice in New York since Hendrik Hudson made his ‘trip up the river on the original Hudson line, and there will be vice a you and I are gone.’ Then, dropping into golf metaphor, he I wed fae ft 1 3 he ball, s iis I isi alto; ether and ‘We witt Glee: Hib partieuisr) une miiy De. added: “Sometimes | top the ball, sometime: 8 HAVE : Our first love comes to us unsought, the others we make to order. And sometimes I hit it a good one. But I will keep my eye on the ball all BALOONS Agxr- the difference is like that between the sparkling mineral water that bubs ithe time.” ‘Monpay" | sles up from the earth's heart, that we get sometimes when we order tt j Is the Commissioner prepared to say in the interview which may and the choice Croton charged with gas that we get oftener in {ts place. f {"be expected from him, that his force been keeping its “eye on the Aume Bir I remember reading a alle soma here chek, tarnlaied i. t ' 7 i . ‘ HS . WEEE I i 7 y ng one of a box of pellets in’ | ” qi ¢ carnival, and particularly with = PUALIC recipe for making mineral water by dropp’ | pall? In the light of the August sot ae Paneer HE PUBLIC ordinary filtered Croton and thinking the process of “falling in love” any respect to the great number of burglaries, there appears to have been a a but the first time was just about so artificial. \ itwoful amount of “foozling.” WALK /E Yeu T Promiseo We are all born with a desire for the Moon—the Man in the Moon, or | With the coming of September the housebreakers’ opportunities for WHY nips Tew WANT To S Er To MEET AMAN To SELL HIM | the Woman, according to our sex and points of view. Wanting the Moon, footing vacant dwellings diminish, But if summer burglary is not to, | BOBTAIL SAR? OP tale PAST ANO-HE-AINT | evo ory for it and through our tears we become aware of the magic ratn- | continue to be the scandal of police inefficiency it has become, the lesson Sa FAST ? UM ihe a 2 bow of Love, wherein our spectral moonbeam fancies have been trans- | Bi crreticn years denrediti Pew Pye y cis Pues ~ Nuc LES BRONX Di. {used with rosy color. It is such @ beautiful and mysterious and alluring | Pettus) cas (CED coAUots ius ae ap ted\ sor, the! future protection THOSE Ex PRESS | archway that we straightway want to know what is at the end of it, and | | sof householders. Boarded windows have too long served as a mute in- TRAINS fav often spend the rest of our lives in failing to find out. I ‘itation to butglars to plunder without fear of interruption. yy ‘Itimately we come to believe what the cynics ‘told us in the begin fs Ultimately Much of the August lawlessness has been attributed to crooks from | \ing—that there is notbing at the end of it—but we don’t give up. yout of town. Why have they been permitted to remain in the city?) That SNONDER | But surely this uplifting rainbow chase ought not to be called falling was not the Byrnes way. To account for their presence on the theory HE PROMISED WHAT THEY | in love. of a general relaxation of police vigilance is to bring a most serious in- ae se Sy E WILL TAKE dictment against the Department. TWAT 2" AVE : FoR THAT JUNK |\Said exe One the we Side As a first step to getting the eve of the force on the ball, the Com- | express — } | missioner might take up the two cases of house looting which have been a) | \ perpetrated on the eve of his return, as if by way of challenge. | OUNG woman, starving, falls t© volcanfc mountain in Samoa and lights The robbery of the Maloney house in Wes: Forty-sixth street and of | Y the pavement overcome by the)a@nd odors on the New England const Seoeceyngeusar weed o eae | ‘dre of cooking coming from a| Suggesting proximity to the infernal re- the Leslie house in West Forty-third street while their occupants were out , ‘broadway hotel. Discharged soldier gions, something is apparently doing in of town came as a flagrant climax to the long series of similar crimes this dropa fainting trom lack of food on the Hieveartbisdntetion, steps of a Fifth avenue hotel. Sorrow- (Tee | ful sights for the best-fed city in the) Something in the remark of Dr. Rod- The vandalism resorted to in the Leslie residence had parallel features HOME TO A world, in which tons of half-consumed crime Ww alsce that ‘one of the most with the looting of the Aymar home. Pictures were cut from thelr COLD SUPPER: lle LZ tect go tO ee Perr eee seasidaciodging “neese a: shay ipo: frames, carpets ripped from the floor and valuable books and china de- Z | New shaw play at one Manhattan | [ut ,0f living in i It drives you out stroyed. There were evidences of the same leisurely methods used in the | Seniesa aL anothes ola oro 6 ea i ate 8 aN if = 5 with a Shaw repertoire. ‘Aymar robbery. They furnish instructive illustrations of contempt for The facilities for getting home uptown were never so poor as they are now. Gomiestic dramatic talent? Eas RS TGRT Meee ER par cay Ae | . ee Root at ‘the Pouce penterences bref ? Some excuse for the Kalsers mistake | Hub’s’ bluecoats are brothers to those What is the Commissioner prepared to do about it? Will he dis- The World’s Best Thought on Labor. in thinking Maine “the State from whiah | on the New Fork force } miss the accusations of inefficiency which these crimes bring against the OD has laid us under many severe trials {n this world; but He has created raiment; he gives us flax and sheep, If wo would have coats on our backs we! eee ee a tine that saat ae force with another string of glittering generalities? labor for us, and all is compensated. Thanks to labor the bitterest tears | must take them off our flocks, and spin them and weave them. If we would have oe 6 Speaking of hubs, the invention of a are dried, a serious consoler, {t always promises less than it bestows; @ | anything of benefit we must earn it, and earning it, must become shrewd, inven- hat the new 40 pneumatic hub for automobiles is the _________ | pleasure unparalleled. {t !s still the salt of other pleasures. Everything aban- | tive, ingenious, active, enterprising.—Beecher. Complaint of critios t! the Not Le. | test attempt to solve the tire probl dons you—gayety, wit, love—labor alone is always present, and the profound eee gold certificates oe ee ee in England. Claimed that such a hi & Letters from the Peo | | esJoyment it produces.—E. Legouve, It ts only by labor that thought can be made healthy, and only by thought! Meved, never ace yectee crgoe, | Permits the use of hard tires wif ' p e. & Ss: ¢) te that labor can be made happy, and the two cannot be separated with !mpunity.—| Tefused admissi: equal resiliency and with leas dang 7 about sixty cents. Take a tablespoo The gods sell everything good for labor.—Epicharmus. Ruskin, ernment engravings, = | in elde-slipping and better wear: ful att : ss adidas an OQ 0 eee With Vesuvius active again, a new! qualitt ul after each meal. JERSEY GIRL, Labor {5 one of the great elements of soclety—the great substantial interest God bless the noble workingmen A Good Word for the Police. on which we all stand.—Daniel Webster. Who rear the cities of the plain, To the Editor of The Evening World: e 3 Who dig the mines and build the ships, ink there are entirely too many| It 18 not work that kills men, {t 1s worry. Work fs healthy, you oan hardly ‘And drive the commerce of the main. | The Origin of Architecture. cks about the police of New York, [| Put more upon e man than he can bear. Worry ts rust upon the blade.—Beecher, God bless them, for their swarthy hands | UR architecture came in the first | ences, amg the human apectes on there is a finer body of fenlie, 48) Have wrought the glory of our lands. O ce from Greece; Baypt. As-|planet. A well-conducted ex} the world. There Work for some good, be it ever so slowly; a syria, Persin, India and the Far, performmd at one spot on the earth eg ONe, thet aa. tn Cherish some flower, be it ever so lowly; “To be employed,” said the poet Gray, “Is to be happy." “It fs better to Wear) pas: have had but elight influence upon | !n one hour of thne can be of use to the @ign parent few York Pattee Labor! all labor !s noble and holy; (out than rust out,” said Bishop Cumberland. “Have we not all eternity to rest mpared with that wielded by the | whole world and through all the ages. A. J. BYRNE. Let thy great deeds be thy prayer to thy God in?’ exolaimed Arnauld.—Samuel Smiles. |, arid, mountainous country. where | The Greeks of the sixth and fifth A Cure tor Deafness. A Perplexed Hostonian, ee Li re nearly %00Q years ego men made in the |turies B. C. made euch an experement Seaeiis — To the Edltor of ‘The Evening World: Wiaat 1s there that t» iIustrious that {s not attended by labor?—Cicero. ‘Without labor there were no ease, no rest, go much as concelvable, Blessed !s gomains of art and thought Investiga-| this when they thought of « Too large Ge f A ous young man past twenty. . e 8 he who has found his work, All true work ts sacred; in all true work, were it but! tions and experiments which are of im-| form of temple with columms, and eke une alt Ty are |eh®, Who has lost five and a halt eld Labor, wide as the earth, has {ts summit in heaven.—Carlyle, true hand labor, there ts something of divineness,—Carlyle. mediate and Girect value to us oven to- down Seria rules for tee freatrtions BAGG in one Hae of busine ttl eee eo « 8 y, y: chitectural Reoord. One | And we of the twontieth century tum the cause o' $ fend cos of hess, making “littl day, says the Arc ae es ae as and having :o support ‘mother | Ht 8 no man’s business whether he has genie or not: work he must, what-| Observe that without labor nothing prospers.—Sophocles. sey at reflect upon thie without a feel-| the eubtie-minded Groaks of 2.400 yoags fp the morning and one of culd do fo batten AeygHe™, What he ever bo Js, but qutetly and steadily; and the natural and unforced resulta of auch encshee fae of natonishment. It shows us the|ago when we have to deal with @ protiy feibe annealing and gh se sisal pects of @ future in the above sen: | WOK will be always the thing God meant him to do, and will be his best,—Ruskin. | Labor 19 the ornament of the attizen; the reward of toll Is when you confer! closeness of our ‘connection with the| lem in architecture and want to know pa abe a loan’ of neat ollve el. cart Sar ooe pe on o 8 8 | blessings on others; his high dignity confers honor on the king; be ours the Blory | people of distant ages, the community |how to solve it with elegance and pre DISGUSTED BOSTONIAN Clay and rock are given us; not brick and squared stone, God gives us no| of our hands.—Schiller. Ithat exists, in spite of seeming differ-° cision. CHE FVRGHER HISGORY OF » #9 9 9 # # 2 8 8 IDER HAGGARD e ° ° ‘ Pad A Y E S H A # ad She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed. Author of “Sho” "Alias Quatermaia,” “King jolomon's Mines, /. Moprrinntet, 1004, tn Ores: Britain and bea led them in their ‘ ited States by H. Rider Haggard. to make nothing of | to no such thing. We had been sent to in fight, SrNOPSIs OF PRECEI ag fll eu oar | be thetr guests, he sald, and thelr quests |He told us that there was a fine 90 Leo Vinoey, a you n Were ag ragged as his | hh er ny li aH ote we should remain for so long as might | Pieeiea with droughts and earthquake eral Queen of iC Wil we i) | fl th . be conventent, Would we lay upon) which latter, indeed, Wwe often fe a mun i i ir (Ni i | | them the burden of the ain of Inhospi- part e penple of | ed eectey Mt tH Writ telitv? folldwed agriculturt AW yl Wit “But though the time passed in com-! "I'he stranyer-man, told st HN i) A i] | | fort, and, indeed, compared to many | 18 Deple, morenipped ® prigntass o ral y ae \Kt it § f our riences, in luxury, oh! our from generation ' to ‘generation. @ } : °! expe! # iat “my ( . hearty were hungry, for In them burned lives Jn a great mountain, apart, and le 1 Mt A the consuming fire of our quest. But {0n 01 y all,’but {snot I “yi ‘ eo Ol que if thi try, in the nH 1h, Pi the connuming fre of our quest. DN auean of ie cougtey nthe government Wi i howev fh frered, hi then points v Yih AN else to be done. wever, sacrifices are offered, and i Lev tel WG, who re her ve nee dies, #0 t Honey a MS eA Ono alleviation we found, and onl¥ Oven ‘the monarchs, of that land are hey start ¥ Stl thelr subjects often one. In a ruined room of the Latent afraid of her. was a library of many volumes, placed fight, for they hate each other there, doubtless, by the monks who | We answered that he lled when . The aid that this woman was immortal were maasacrod in times bygone MG thee Tia momen wad Laos had been more or less cared for and re- nmeant—since nothing ts immortal; also | we laughed at his tale of her pow: ‘anged by thelr successors, who gave | Ne laughed at his tw Pal CHAPTER I11, In Strange Quarters, 1 A Uberty to examine them as often a8) ne qeclared that our 7 v We pleased, 90 this prieste: ¥ heart, also iy « hy ow i jee What proved most Interesting to us| she wou ow It by belig aveng WAS AN, ‘ vk was a diery in many tomes that for | "2? er this we gave him food and te Y PTET pe le 1g gonorations had been kept by the Khu- | turned him out of {lie lamasery, and he ubttully a Uttle coll af blue sul bilgtvang or abbots of the old lamasery, | Went, saying that when he returned wo sprang from a chine Paynes . Ta aiveh every event of importance was | 3nowld learn who spoke the truth, wa Bains, did I seo a more sischt. | 4 ae a Hourens recorded in great detail, Turning over | ho * ' 4 in the centre of the edisi la ive TOOM: 05: FaLbOR | the pages of one of the last volumes of | his country, wi y bullding, evidently the 1 Baan s inouaatery. tor it] thie diery, written apparently about two | ¢Ftnd the Far Mountains io ust pew a wnalle f ; rede ee bundred and fifty years earlier, and | to frighten us, above wi he smoke ‘ are Ltd | shortly before the destruction of the i this door J went, and knocked, the: Bre: ‘whiol monastery, we came upon an entry of | Such is. preps of thie strange entey, aloud ond engaR which the following—for I can oly Bailes us with hope’ and exeitem ‘Open! of holy La quote from memory—4s the substance: | Nothing more appeared about the man aeck your ‘ semen in RS “In a ruined room of the monastery w: “In the summer of thie yoar, after | oF Bis sountry earatnln 4, alttle oy there wa and of shuffling feet, and, ‘hey wer two of them went to prepare @ room, | where the meal was now served, It con-/ winter, Bo we finished at length, feeling | the winter get in in earnest with bitter | very froat sandstorm, beokneratiee abbot came tos sudden end wi the door croaked 1 {ts hinges, re-| could 1 x and others drew off our rough hide sisted of e kind of porridge, to which as some book of maxling wiilch I ean | cold and snowstorm eavy and fre-|name was given, but I forget Htfound | any Indloation that unusual events vealing on old, old man, clad in tat-| five. To niro. | boote @ Kk outer garments, and |was added new milk brought in by the, remember in my youth sald that all|quent that all the desert was covered |in the desert a man of the people who |oggnirel mt mire supitted, | fered yellow earmen duced us of the monastery | FO¥BHt us slippers for our feet, Then | "Master of the Herds," dried fish trom| polite veople should do—ihat we could| deep, Very soon it became obvious to|dwell beyond the Far Mounteins. of heyond eRe mountains was 48 good “who is it? Who te iit’ he ex | cued the folk poow Mage, | they led us to the wuest chamber, which |a lake and buttered tea, the Inet two|eat more, and much impressed our hosts | us that here we must gtay until the/ whom rumora have reached this 18+) iii word and brought down’ ¢ elated, blinking at me through a pein | 8F¥+" fF Uein could noe, taey informed Us was @ “propitious |tuxuries produced in our special honor.|by chanting a long Buddhot grace spring, since to attempt to move in any |imasery from time to time, He was 'ly-| vengeance of the priestess called of horn #pectacles, Who Hee to | mi 4p iis aund to part from thia| Plaee,'’ for is had once slept In by | Never had food tasted more delicious to} After thig we asked leave to retire to | direction would be to perish, With some |ing, but beside him were the bodics of Aisturh our solitude, the solitude of the | little Joke & noted saint. Here a fire had been lit, |us, and, I may add, never did we eat| our chamber in order to rest, and th misgivings we explained this to the Ab- two of bis companions who had been holy Lum af the mountains?! They stared at ue, bb. and, wonder of wonders, clean gat-, more, Indeed, at last I was obliged to, Upon Very good imitations bans. We bot Kou-en, offering to remove to one |overwhelmed by sand and thirat. ‘be, “Pruvelors, Sacred Oner who have! thin hande, cher Lowe en eed thr mente, Including linen, all of them en-|request Leo to stop, for I saw the monk| slept euildly for four and wwenll AULT | of the empty rooms in the rulned part |was very fe “day, following thie pemer yt Sherer m hands, shey vowed and wished Us Clene and faded, but of ood quality, |Staring at him, and heard the old abbot| rising at last perfectly refreshed O64 of the pullding, supporting ourselves | say how he came into the diver we prayed the Abbot Iou-en to shawered, | well, an y were delighted at chuckling to himself: well, |with fish that we could catch by cut-/us only that he had followed the road|P the paueaxe, asked Whe ane bate with whieh I was well our arrival. s WAS not strange, how- #oguainted, vayelers who @re stary-| ever, seeing that ours were the first | fng, and who seek your charity, which,” | new faces they had seen for four long | years. 3 added. “by the rule you cannot r fens. Nor did they stop at words, for whi! Mie viared at us typough bis bora they. made waier pot Lor, us to.wash. were brought for us to put on. So we washed—yes, acvually washed all over—and having arrayed ow {n the robes, which were somewhat email for Leo, snuck the bel that hung in the 1@ room and were conducted by @ monk, my io -anaweasd sit ‘pacle-t0 "Oh, ho! ‘The monastery called the world, where folk row hungry;'" to which anotuer monk, who was called the “Master of the Provision, we May of our.orrivel at Buch was our introduction to the for it had destined | the monastery, and if we were able to find any, with game, which we might Monastery of the Mountail no other name—where we wer to wpend the next #lx months of our WiMmmediately atter, indecd, on the ve | ng @ hole in the ice of the lake above | trap or shoot In the ecrublike forest of stunted pines and But be, ne ae world ceased. We gathered, however, committed some crime for which known to the ancients before communt- cation between his people and the outer that bis brethren with whom he fled had thing of the om wise sway about is_men|