The evening world. Newspaper, September 25, 1905, Page 10

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Home Magazine, Monday Evening, September 25, 1905. 1 | ° i) ® | py d Jeal | The Widow’s Mite. mney ove and Jealousy. n By J. Campbell Cory. | By Nixola Greeley-Smith. @udlioned by the Press Publishing Company, No, 6 to & Park Row, New Yor! = ~ - Dear Miss Greeley-smith Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mul Matter. [~ mall ANY letters Rave been address ng to love affairs of - —- _ No. 16, 1¢ 8 M ath sot ive read then nd have concluded that VOLUME 46.. ieusgenoatvey Wadene ines +NO, 16,108, cases the correspondents have filled to discriminate bes = ’ CY L ve and My true love ds, I fear, not 66 ’ " indulge mo 1 will try to illustrate the {dea THE CHIEF “WHY” OF POLICY. GiIF Lime Paneene geile etrent oan Who wr . Sdarkhurst So- y hippy: when tn company of one another, As time pastes on a hew As the result of a Parkhurst ‘ man uuppears, Eventually the git) finds her affection for her admirer 4s | | waning, while her love for the new 1 hee springs up, She apprises quaint ts and begs his « ¢ friendship, Since it 1s A good man truly loves a good wome riftee, which will add to her happiness is too large for him to wrdingly withdraws from the race with the best of ure happiness of his former sweetheart and his successor, Now, on the other hand, ff when the girl advi i man of Aer transfer of affections he omes angry, he clearly acknowledges that It is not the girl he cares so much about asx ft 1s that no one else shall have her If he cin prevent it. No doubt some of your readers will say that my idea Is only carried out Ina play or book of some romance. verthelens I feel that tf people, youre or old, would sy all feeling of jealousy there would be fewer broken friendships and perhaps broken homes. Do you think my conception wrong? Gow ciety raid a fresh gang of policy her former lover of the There is n no me of swin se ih dling the poor by means of “gigs! and “slips” has been going on along in New York us systemat- cally and prosperously there had heen no arrest, conviction ‘olicy and imprisonment of a “y king.” IF Many men may suggest many reasons for the survival of this par | ular form of sneak thievery, There is one chief reason: The policy swindle persists because It pays. | Only one thing can make it pay. That thing fs not any form of pollce connivance or official overlooking. It is VOLUNTARY PATRON | AGE; the offering of willing sacrifices to the game. Policy has many victims who are fleeced in ignorance through skilful | playing on false hopes. | i But the game would be stopped in a day if all those persons would cease to support it who go in KNOWING THAT THEY ARE TO BE SWINDLED; knowing that they one that all idealists have and keep. Shaker speare summarized it in the sonnet beginning, ‘Let me not to the marriage of true minds admit {m+ pediments. Love is not love which alters when its al+ teration finds or seeks with the remover to remove,” Oh, no, it Is an ever fixed mark that looks on tempests and ig never shaken.” It is the only real love there is, but real love is about as scarce as radium, and we can- not expect the feeble possesaors of counterfeits sold over the bargain counter of emotions as “near-love” or qua conception of love expressed in this letter ts ks = “am-[-love” to poss oN The first 1 Y UW DOW iragon and, bathing in its blood, its qualities, t the true lover is the slanghter of mo! When Siegfried slew tho je himself invulner ble, there was one ack where a leaf had ‘luttered and clung that was not erving bath am |iittle spot on his touched by the pr n win only through such an accident which brought about his death. . f f asst is the purpose of the slip-writers to prevent. | The encounter with jealousy is much the same. For though we slay ¥ | ' The late Capt. Norton Goddard, who fought policy to the last of his it forty times over there Will come some one little moment when we realiza " a za | that the battle has been in vain | active days, once explained that he was not fighting gambling in the large. Most love ts a mere projection of self love, and that love perishes with There were too many forms and degrees of it. j wounded vanity. Hemi hcn moa leat 5 Many people are genuinely of the opinion that there can be no love | But policy isn’t gambling,” said he. “It’s swindling, stealing. It's without jealousy. But as a matter of fact jealousy is love's alloy, the bases I & mean, petty form of robbing the poor.” metal that makes it cheap and brings it within the veach of many who | What the Captain thus dectared for the fact thousands of the poor | could not otherwise afford it. It is largely an artificial passion stimulated | : . 5 . by novel reading and attendance at plays, where the outworn traditions and t know from experience. Yet, having been robbed many times, they are j conventional illusions of love, as it is written about, still prevail, standing up whenever there is a chance to be robbed again by the same | But to those who love truly it makes a vain appeal method. | t . ’ . . | If policy were played “on the square,” a slip purchaser would have | Each City s Special Diet, something like 200 chances to win in 76,076 plays. With lightning cal- NE of the Government's experts on axricultural industries has published : ' e of the experiences of those way to the fancies and prejudice: | culators hired by the men controlling the game to make the figures beat O Ge tha rau terert markets ieaiy ors = - i f r u eeling of the housewife when she g: the chances, the operation becomes the nearest thing possible to a case of a Rerun é Salriioes fai x 1 to kn all take and no give. | ‘ se co appea ar A | Butter's 1 ) Estimates made in 1903 placed at $20,000,000 the sum pouring an- ewife's point Heximain’sonsid is fs Fi . the weight of preference in official ju Nually into the policy shops of the United States. At least $16,000,000 | - Z the different scores in usc ranging for the f es ” Va i 001 u orf of this was “velvet” for the promoters of the game. tt f th P ] A a ance of the 100 points constituting a pe ~ le of package. From the tenements of New York alone Capt. Godard atuntes| Letters from the People .« Answers to Questions. SORES atuke viii leeaee Gaeee } $3,000,000 per year went out for slips. “In the Navy a Good Placet” and children have to walk throwgh the lock, alindoned , abut Ave stalls tol pubither in OF) Aa ORO i The poor man or boy with the policy habit is encouraging that fine To the Baitor or, the en verah mal a els ey ; c no ee ails rich aoe made wo e 1 u) P an oda) adn) ja home industry which consists in turning out millionaires of the “AI” | navy ts a good place for a young man of ™ud tholes, Las; Monday wille trying /a million eas to save tis m. s d? ae E. wR, ; , sre pa 3 Ae Ls o 6: os ‘o hold to drive through ke ship and to chor her fore t Adams stripe. There is nothing in it for him, Can he really love the | ;tgem “PO, cannot seem fo old 8 ie ee aa ue hip’ and ito anchor nerf Dixon, the mi “ SEO Oivtie and Dy) the I DEerTnane St Nee ase At work? reader who has had ex je and wil Health ought to take the master up. 48 points to cara: » points ta deaturelg et be eee nse Wise fintsh. \ = Het ‘ A ay = - 4 sini RIVE, Fruits are bought as much for appearance as fave J The raiding of the swindlers should continue, of course. Wherever eee eavioe BROOKLYN; Wants Stamp Fiirtation fruits, particularly those {ree from pala enaine the policy snake raises one of its many heads there should a head be hit. |r en» a or iH ae ening Z often hear of the stamp filrta Dean alta, fol aiples a ting , accordingly, I Nevertheless, more effective than any possible detective work would}. St ante holas 4 Ridgewood, 45) and i and many others would be gra sellers, dans is Be a minor u raslorintie f te oh ome! ors | be a grand revolt of policy’s victims: a determination by swindled thou- ception fit alakeona wioae cea ne ane ee oe iy, 3 ‘o unitormits ay STOR ere sands not only to be fleeced no more, but to spread abroad warnings to | “he B. ee In. judging peact pears and wherrles a nating value ts also 4 in etl ; aes: ig rhat point Ik, is al oh ‘ | assis 1 ra i$ about 7d points out of the | their still deluded fellows and denunciations of known agencies of the j network feet ee PERD Re ® established as standard of e r game. uibove the grade conte | ee cme PRO Yellow-skinned chickens ure ed in some parts of the country, while on i Lead F . say the B. R. ish the | Pattery ere the contrary in European countr Nghter-colored chickens are desired. There aders who will organize such a revolt will deserve well of their|etrees to be paved at that point be- The Constitutions is no plausible founda fe rence. » fellow-dwellers in the tenements cause they would e to take ‘To the Editor of The Evening World In Boston brown ol two @ dozen more than white eggs, their tracks. Hundreds of men, women] “Old Ironsides" lies dying ‘longside a *# | yet in New York white eggs are sought, ——— - GHE FUR_GHER. HISCORY OF rd a ro] ro rd ea 2 es s VY H. RIDER HAGGARD ATESHA: 37's" She-Who-Must-Be-Opéeyed, BY... RIDER HAGGARD | Solomon’s Mines,” etc. vaxcvoutl and fo see those things have been ~ £ . at] und that ave yet to be. Then I saw Why should it vex me to'learn ths lees un RIGA aI Lae ore Teal there is one honest man in this court) of broken Ico, over the rver of the gulf, Who will have naught to do with mur-/1 do not lie; it Is written here upon thé der? Nay, 1 honor you for those wards. A iy He NLRC TI Know, also, that no such foul hough §/ piace and hurried thither and waited by have come near to me, Yet, Leo Vin-| the water, thinking that perhaps bee cey, that which is written—is written i lay dea Poubtless, Khanta; but what ts wrlt- ere scale I OTEny Betiatn and, tho mysterious and unreachable, and vainly anal: racking our brains for plans to escape STNOPSIS OF PRECEDING cHaprenrs, | ‘Hither, or at least to communicate © Vincey and Hi i -| with dts pri ney, ant Horace Molly, twe Bag: | 8 priestess, of whom we could eatan In gearch of ul and peta BO 'B9 i pmortal woman known as “she” | For two great burdens lay upon our be re a Noa where she hedidued |souls. The burden of desire to continue p en yaa bey vir ee rae our: search and to meet with its reward ‘ne former Incarnation.” she hed seem. | Which we were sure that we should |. lot two tiny ared far above upon the ley no man may climb, and, ished: aul liven arid-ta walttne for him in| PUCK amid the snows of yonder peak, ross the Thi ac) ken Cs ibet_ mountains. if we could but come there; and the mr , Spell-bound wo Ink these mountaina they come to th 4 ‘Tell him, Shaman ow Ey Ce = Seen oe wamin'| Burden of approaching catastrophe at Now simbri pasged beyond the cur-| Sor tovor the ulin cord and rush domi ra h hania, or Queen, of s \ és pepe 4 # og Kinin. or Queen, of Kaloon, /the hands of the Khanin Atene, She tain and returned thence with a roll} ward; yes, and. saw that brave fans d spate Simbel, the Shainon (naxiclan, [had made no love to Leo since that from which he read: “Phe heavens have | Holly, leap headlong after you, | im. lut Leo, learning ve 7 va the hand im M Sr eupposad golden Whow a aueTne that /night in the gateway, and, indeed, evon declared by thetr steng infallible that | (But mine was, the hand that drew. riesteas of the sacred if she had wished to this would have before the next new moon the Khao] you must have drowned: 28 been diMcult, since I took care that he § Rasen will be dead at the hands of the | of the long past and ri country | Of all time. Yes, you a stranger lord who came to thin country | Qf Al! time, Yes, you a |was never left for one hour alone. No duenna could have clung to a Spanish from across the mountains."* your danger and thix hand which de- of princess more closely than I did to Then te heavens have declared & | liver yout trom death, and—and would k : lie,"’ suid Leo contemptuously. you refuse them now—when I, the ” f Kaloon, roffer them to en Atene tn the reincarnation of Ainge: | Yet I could see well that her passion ‘Thut 1s as you will,” answered Atene, panos 9 fa AI Bexation princess who hea toved |wae no wiit abated; hat it grew day ‘but #9 1t must befall, not by my hand | "So shes: and leaned upon thi flan 2.000 youre ago and whowe Hival hermes |Ds day, indeed, as the fire ewells In the or thoxe of my servants, but by yours. | table, look! ip: Mi. been. heart of @ volcano, and that mon P And then?” f dine and ‘The court is dissolut The hi } Y ow. ° G 7 dy," sal Ms ‘OU BAVeN La Been’ condoned” insane by druxe“aaminies (Must break loose and spread its ruin ‘ £0, yeh x . a : \ . Yee 1? an then doubuieds L shutt mien again {thunk you, thou any Atene And Sindy The Khania by |round. The omen of It was to be read Ws “iC /f } the’ punishment of my ‘crime, at the | Would have been potter If you. ad be Journey {0 the sacred’ mountains, in her words, her gestures and her| [i Wy 's r H ’ Z hands of irning widow,” he re- | me drown, * igo tragic eyes, + \ Hh livd, exasperal tion, if ali this ‘tale be true, why did You are pleased to mock me, Leo| You marry another man Vineey, well knowing what a husband|, Now she shrank back as though @ this man js to me. knify had pricked her, ‘Sale Been eeeiee ion forum aa int, Now I felt that the crisis had come, ‘Oh! blame me not," she jnoaned; P ye known it, for us, a fateful place, indeed, - Bid i = Z Leo, for he looked her in the | Was but polley which bound me hee it Into the streets the|{ov here the last act of the mighty * GY. } " at 2 a say all you wish; | urged me to Its wen Zot Bi 2 CHAPTER XVIII One night Simbri asked us to dine with him in his own apartments in the ¥ madman, whom oat me Mens -§ € E k , AG eak on, lady, ‘ people ceased from their business | drama wis destined to be fulfilled, So « 4 é gai $ peruaps 1t will be better for ue bot ‘oad athe fuch as it Was, and followed us| We went, Klad enough of any change. f ° ’ ‘ : ‘ ‘ g ey you, lord. Of the beginning about, wiaring at us ull we tock retuge| Wea we had eaten, Leo grew very Wt UES® Z sas 2 a of this fate f know nothing, out I read J Amain in the palace gardens. thoughtful, then said, suddenly: Ee ae “There remained, the ou | “Prlend Simbri, I wish to ask @ favor = cE EA Le s ; mines "Learn, 10 Vin. fm the country with tho Khanta, Of You-that you will beg she Khania PE EE ZZ f Childhood onward you have haunt 4 On! when firat I saw you yonder by t > hut after three or four of them theee| I*t us go our ways ; EZ y 4 i Pyne to an end owing to the jealousy Rikewoold the Snaman's guezina old - ie E Y ba Sinead P fue Khan, who vowed that 4¢ we w. woe became likea mask of ivory, = Z 2 Z Y A ve other any mere he Tabie toloy “Surely, you hud better ask your Z rman a Au vg i al Heat " acini nent thrthe death hounds, Bo we must ride |MV¥Or of the iady yourself, lord; I do z J @ Mf At all, in tise. centre of a large 2% “luk that any in reason will be if woldiers Gent 10 KEE that we did B attemt 1 wscupe, and accompanied sald Leo, “and fatten by 8 mo of peasants, who | consider (he facts, It has seemed to 1 y -epipeatios Gemanded | me that the Khania Atene Js not happy we the rain which | with ber husband.” a ee “Who was it that spoke of crime?” shi forgotten what most men would re- here they do not trouble much about ined very keen, Lie on talnax’ But tenets ten Fs) it Is that men de. It f¥ the porns ‘ ma : . But how if the matter Jot, and the Khan \ pry id lord, and) st remember certain things, Simbri, tani tina, bon rtabeing L could be managed without woandat? If. | very teayily of lute."’ - shad begun tn jeeps say that they have decelved} iat hive to do with her and you.” | tor instance, the Kania oboe to luke mean that men can be mur ai "You Tengen our "It has seemed, turth wonton ach ct aang arenes. bie boned: | another busband the whole lana: would. dered," said Leo, angrily, “Well, A will retenie 10 |1.00, reddening, “that she bas becn orn | 044, Bimbri, except | race.” Read eh eRe: abtiesrtige jets wth eyoh # orime. end. taten sie ad on me wha ‘ "tam so tin to ¢ "How can she take gn “i i vs iked in a cold voice, eye Pedi a

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