The evening world. Newspaper, October 2, 1905, Page 10

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rhe vr by the Press Publishing Company, No, 68 to 68 Park Row, New York Siass Mall Mo Published tered at the Post-Offico at c Er .NO, 16,118, Seeing New York Seve nty-Two Years After. Mr, and Mrs, Warren Dubois, of Montrose, dropped into town the other day, after an interval ot Seventy-two years, Most of us have wished at one! time or another that we might ‘see New York a hundred years from} now.” Mr. and Mrs, Dubois have furnished-throughstheir visit the nearest instance of record to the fulfilment of such a condition. There is no reason to doubt that the New York of 1833 was worth| seeing, In some respects {t was like the New York of 1905, For in. ’ stance, it was growing like a weed:and there was much kicking over the local transit system, In 1833 Manhattan had got well past the 200,000 mark in popula- tion, What is now the consolidated city was more than quarter of a ‘ million-strong. | The -Erie Canal rhad "been openreight+years and a million dollars had been subscribed toward ‘building the Erie Railroad. ___ AsSonthern visitor+to New’ York in:1823 had: written of the people | Wheytay no cleims-tortastesor refinement;rtheir attentionsto business, which ter \ f pours tnnpon » like-a flood, feaves them nortime to cultivatethe graces, They have, howev: rt of untaught nobility in their countenance and alf their move- | ments, They are mild, .courteouseand -benevolent; and-above all people they have ‘therleast pride, Courtesy and the “untaught nobility” seem to have endured at least for the next decade, There is the testimony of another old-time oly server that the like of the “‘street-car hog” of now was-unknown.to the | stage coaches: of then. There arespoints at which-evolution ceasestoespell progress. | No Evening World of 1833 felt the necessity of offering to men $10 " Inducements to give up their seats to women. | That same 1833 was Brooklyn’s last year as a village. It was the last year of an appointed Mayor for New York, In 1834 this city began to choose its official head by direct vote of the people; and | here is where the good new times score over the good old times, The} very first of these popular elections brought forth riots and a call for the | State militia, However, thls is apart from the subject, and anyway it was-not a Fusion split which made the trouble. New York was recovering in 1833 from the Asiatic cholera visita- tion, which had cost nearly 3,000-lives in thesprevious-year. In 1905 we te Sa ee aa Peet VRAIN GT WOTTa TS: Mons Mato be hanemeuns ees. ery ~ ” The “Whole Thing”’ in Insurance. By J. Campbell Cory. 6 PER ne INTENDENT OF \NSURANCE? — WHOS HE? —— ee [NOT ACCOUNTABLE TO ANYBODY BUT MYSELF BY ORDER OF THE _ BOARD NOBODY'S * INESS BNE | THE POLICY-HOLDER SHOULD BE GLAD WE LET HIM BREATHE iW Theniiny mein q | ndas Mvobingy Ocetober™ty" 1905; MRS. NAGG AND MR.—— nw oer ee By RToy L. McCardell. ; She Discourses on Life Insurance. a these insurance men seem to have had? There Jan's Anything else in the papers these days, and every body is talking about it, only as I told Mra, Gradiey wien she came {n snooping around to-day to find out how L was going to have my new green chiffon velvet dress made, just as 1 told her-—and toe way that woman took up my time just sitting there gabbing by the hour, Ike an if T dat nothing else to do but listen to her—but, as L was saying, and 1 wish you wouldn't interrupt’me by looking out the window—I haven't any time to look out of the window—and I told the girl to wash toem to-day because they are #0 dirty one can hardly see through them, But she didn’t do it, and that's the way It ts with girls these days, all they want to do is to come and sit down In the parlor with you, an» yet if you'say a word to them they | pack up and get out. and It's no use going to the intelligence offices, and I can't | see for the life of me why they are called Intelligence offices, for I never met an Intelligent person in them yet, except a fat woman that had @ wart on her nose, What was I saying about Iife insurance, you ask? Isn't that what I am coming to {f you will only give me a chance to get a word in edgoways, But that {8 just like a man. I have to sit here like a dummy, while you monopolize the conversation and talk of things that no sensible person has any Interest In. ‘Well, as I was enying, the papers don't seem to print anything else these ‘days, because I see whole pages of it when I am looking for bargain advertises menth, ‘That's right! 0" Mr, Nagg, !sn't 1t something terrible all the money Sneer at me! But it's a good thing there !s some one in this house that tries to economize! Look how you sneered when [ bought Mitty. pounds of prunes at wholesale and saved @ dofiar on it! But much you cared, for you and Brother Willle never would eat prunes, and they don't agree wit me, and so they all got mouldy and I threw them out, but I saved a dollar el them and much thanks I got! ~~ Anyway, I don't see why you try to change the conversation to prunes when Tam talking about life insurance, It served you right to go and get insured in: those companies without finding out that all those people were taking your money. ' I coal have told you that that man Depew wae deceitful. You can depend on ft when you see a man grinning and always pleasant that he {s deceitful, and that’s why you can’t fool me by pretending you are always good-natured! Ww didn't you snatch those violets right off the Iapel of that James Hasem | Hyde? Your money bought those violets, and now {t will do you no good taydie, and I won't get a cent, and goodness knows what's to become of me! I fust hate funerals, although {f you don't go to funerals everybody thinks old-hearted, and when young Smithers shot himself because he couldn't sorrow a hundred dollars to pay back when he'd Jost that much of his employ: Jers at the races. |t wag some comfort that there was a whole carriage full o ‘ost five hundred dollars, and all bis people were rH ' ‘ flowers that must have ¢ | forted at that And they couldn't get his Ife Insurance because he had committed sutetde, atthough 1 don't see what that hnd to do with tt, and {f you should dle I wouldn't watt ty touch @ cent of your insurance money, although I don’t suppose I'd get any Ane yet I know a young man, who wante to insure Brother Wille, that calls here almost every day, who has the lovelfest mannera and tho whitest teeth! If they would put a young man like that in charge of all the insurance oom- pantes one would feel easy. And now, come to think it over, why don't you use your influence to get Brother Willie a nice place at a large salary, with nothiag to do, like young Mr, McCall has? Oh, T know why you wo! have a Inrge tenry! Because he's my brother and {# ambitious to Said “won e the 2 Side. ENSATION of the automobile races) Might be advantageous to have a few S at the Poughkeepsie fair a''fake" of those hands clasping the bare of fall motor-car accident for moving pic- cells, tures representation Camera snapped s Celebration on Staten Teland of the aie wil . ; ‘ tt sauffour smashed into @ mark plagues of all kinds as all but Impossible. teal tence erected for the purpose paselng of the ‘'vamp'’ and the inaugu- The corner-stone of the University of New York was laid in Wash- Will excite surprise that an imitation | Pitln Of @ paid fire department. ‘Tired aes , Vilevgeat a i of this nature had be ar- of waiting for a chance to celebrate the Wl, ington Square in 1833; 1905 sees the University flourishing-inits:splendid “1 want to say here, Mr. Hughes,” said Banker Jacob H. S t under the prevailing system of directorships in New York the real article {@ 80 | coming of the new ferryboate, f group of buildings in the Bronx. adlirector is at the { they please” ne coe ie i The cellar of the original Astor House was -undugsin 1833;.{n 1905 e : ea LI —T 4 sna tet fy did id ; r + sintamobtles, reaow | Rovanc ne for surface car vig seven great Astor hotels rise where woods and the.open coyntryslay when | * Jeb of Moto aromomie | 258 committee to prepare achedul a ls ! ied Be automobile ‘ aaa vm aeduiee the house at Barclay street was built, Letters from Answers to Qu estions. or N mee ues . alt + UE, \ n rst ‘ associat Maid outwits a burglar by tur: In 1833 Park place, Murray, Warren, Chambers, Franklin:and “White The Homortat’s Victim, , sk, where my policy ts, “Be Brief, a9 any candidate who owns an auto the lghts when he Pointe Pied 7 , streets were, with Broadway, the abodes of fasttion, | To The Riitor of The Brening World readers, Also, whi 6 is M ; are as { a) her, New duties of house ; yy tae, Belton of ae ! d n bone e ¢ duties household 4 St, John’s Park, where now the “Death Avenue’ freight trains ladlenee 7 on 1 r A wo ! « sin tr m a Super) prestdent back in Was tnaton bat Serntiet of her make her wag nate their downtown runs, was famous for its forest-specimens, jafo daily #s MES anal hited ieas sBlesoue. suns | tbe is ut in t j Li A The city was deficient in public parks even.in 1833, and had notfiscene. to Sn eDesRHA th ONIEE, 101 PT LCRIY Ate Hay 0 Laie: ) 8 1 apt 1 ot; an) kus [HORRY SH ReLReND SE atEPeL: #82 7 Pre UR aos baipaiga <r i“ eek the ‘ \ 2 appre 9) ft 4 eH oe ’ be eral Ciees F taken sufficient thought for its water supply. On theslatter-point the | qrme Joke out of Mem He 88 A Me ir I attend Raie system of multipart Tita Ey Jushers rleing to the top. ‘Things In « ‘ : dive t what on ly ‘ \ , r d yuivale in the | bo’ , nme no vs h greatifire of 1835 was to'teach it a hard lesson. want a joke a tong ne | muelra & 1 fo op] Shoven ptico-stalned slinol f Hints of teas muste at the theatres, |e tie etna ot eee tof F a s AY" perta 7 is z 18 realm, dof sht be ny r 16 “slow ‘ bes ws @ fon F In point:of its failure-ever to look far enough-ahead, not seventy-two| tumor ra eather wor M48 UN oe truss 4 DSW Sierstlond fi , snus ro tyme NRE ay hence ont at | eneration eo ee Es _,yearsmor twoshundred and fifty years:have changediNew York, Theres taker tinn sit next Wen ee iF eats I y these directions to Ss FA A hla vay > Af H umords at (an 1 Blow Bo dake how ee lo to the tanks of Borton, \fore shave we school-houses always too few, water-fronts still to be im- [Moony NNN I " ate W om wreak “Woman's wit locates the ‘Black | window ten turtles, on the back a \sproved, trans{t facilities constantly below the demand and:a water-supply | . te e Petit Liao uRIobD, ‘ Mandi Graw* te pronounced Handa." "Black Hands’ demand $1.00 |of which 1s patnted one letter of Oe i tion-ahich is threatening and may grow worse, *| Tall or Short Woment s ws: § WENT davies Soe a oth ae if M Gran." from steamship company.” Nothing In| name. A prize of $10 18 offered PA & ee wa ts ; ? . ; dd Roles fora ce Desk, R PA wan may serve Prog. {', of course, but 4 little too much of It one who sees the th Nevertheless, vite Mr. and’ Mrs, Dubols: to come again—and 1 Bie ot The Benine Word : Vvried Bates for as maufy 1h the news of the day tn conneotion | that ‘the letters are. In the mraee "0 \ypoonen, is I ¢ os * ferme 4 © elected | with stories of blackmail and terrorism. | which they Appear in his nam YESHA: peated ty wand, “2 heart: the man say eomethine abont therdoga not daring to enter t ORERNG | CHAPTERS | territory of Yhe mountain, a remirh ‘upknown country be- ron Of & Wwondertu), ang which came bank to my mind ae at inden attor Leo tma toldvene iis dream ‘Ten b forme! ce had met inet | remembered show we were placed GHE FVRGHER HISTORY OF % ~—— re) ut She-Who-M s od ust-Be-Obeyed eye ae sia oniteherierthinioobtuinlondbnowdboderel BY H. RIDER HAGGARD Author of “She,” “Allan Quatermain,” “K Solomon's Mines,” eto, a erod: P these we pushed our way thank you for your warning," |COUN, for we fenred teat the hare | ane thy “Horace, watch them while! Hed gine to fetch her escort, which “ peyitapub ee : ough! whe might have lett | horse, lest they do Us ®| rie, and would return wine peerne ne a to hunt us down, 1 W presenti So 1 took the spear in my uninjured! At that time we did n hand and stood ready ot know, 3 !med te “Wake! T whispered to Leo, "Wa ¥ erwi ; yea She had cing | Wad whlapared x9 Leo, "Wake | hand | But they made gw jlearned afterward. that with leben 4 und fo. Have oun | We are Durem ho attempt to hurt us, only fell back @| Waw absolutely oases Of the mountat ‘ ae ina Ninian Wf Told) THe sprang to hie fest, rubbing his Uttle and began to taik 1 | Invdolaple se etsee. nd. in prastions wattiog for him In|... + a oF an to talk In hurried w mviolable. True, it had” hon Stee, Paste) ne toe “motintasne jeves and snatohing at a spear. Noy pers. It was evident to me that they! PY, th® People of Kaloon in sevensh eed ita estttiite Tar aot to the l ehbas upon the bank ney’ hut on gach occasion theie gee vars ‘of n. apou the Qank sw 4 were Mich perturbed. In a few min-/deatroyed or mat with (en any. was ie Hhiotn, or, queen, sweet volco epoke through the mist utos the horge was saddied and Leo ag-| Little wonder, then, tha Peken a Panter, Sth tae ; navise {sisted me ty mount tt, Thon he ald: |'0,qvelMve tha: the house ar aeons “ rel 7 Mle my get Pant to ia omplish our fate, what- | Quersble Soin ection of some uncon. imountalr f not come to harm you.” r it may be, but before we par eaving the marsh wo re q Besjoon. alleves, nie triveteee icemorowned | Ji Was the volce of the Kiarla Atene Khanta, 1 thank you for the kindnes a Sanit elgg the heat slope Reamer the sai Sune 4 jand the tan with her was the el You have shown us, and pray you to be|@WAY. Here we expartey oF, fut miles Atone’s husband, hates the tw Shaman &imbr) | Wise and forget that we have ever been, | ‘° bi Attacked gen” moment fore. He keene s wack of firroe ant Aleatt’s Mt ohall we Go “now, Worased! Throwgh no will of mine your nusband’s| creatite “eatd 80 mush, ut’ ho Work Meee ent down mnletartors a {asked Leo, with something Hke a groan blood Is on my hands, that alone, devert streaked. wits ihe plaoy waa j fens Leo with this orm 0 *|for ti the whoto world there wero | must separate us forever, We are di+|ORC® had been molten Invi CK that Mieves Atene 18, ai. ¢wo peopte whom he whed te vided + jremember much eis T do not Baio a peegpeien ezineeas arin had loved {two people whom he lesa wished to ae nd by the doors of ‘death and des-| the pain In my ape eg lout Iti indeed i and ee faved, BY Ta ne fore yen, “Nothing.” answered: “it te for then tiny, Go hack to your people, and par-)1 h4d no eves tor physical carne tae 4 f . Hen thet 140 ahell| 12 }don me if, mom: unwillingly, 1 havel pAty!nath dhe rise endeq (aeuee | vias teat Lao. tail ee Tea. cyte ied Pave brond donwa, quite hestitns {4 % bare, t shyred SMC you doub: and trouble, Fare-| don, of which the bet ee Of Vemetie 140 twelve! ncross watt, “"T ennme that & weil,” Java and a debris of rocks weg tried In 49 WON Sie listoned with bowed head, then re-| slopes'apoen, 96 Metting snowy: fect pea acta | plied, very andly: On the further tae game Was bordered ; "1 th : fifty fe ° PY @ cliff perk ' ; thank you for your gentle words, cot in t. in wh’ “ihn if 7 #9! stall stop 1 we are ready , but, Leo-Vincey, we do not part thus] "'g,)}? Onening Hen we cout i easily, You have summoned te to thel decy'q® ‘escended the place, tin ae mountain, and even to th Main 1] Qa"e and rugwed: pervaded, menor? i - Atene apeke to Simbrl, What ahel will. follot en to the mountain I) by an extraordinary mloom, ayo”. ' follow you Ay, and there I willl wont we parce mm. and as sald we ¢ t ihe she whis meet Its spirit, as I have always Known! was sprinted ever gent it Java floor ———— fit “ if y ch) of these, and yO gkhe Arse , g " gly dis 8 decree je A CHAPTER XXIV. baiirse ich hs ny aay ~e tue! be that crown for Which "we. have recitabhe Teh cf, Sane bone hou ss > tae : : warred for ages.” tle gravevard ft 1 x The Khania Pursues. ‘ water and mde to us ‘" Thon suddenly Atene sprang. to her| some a my hated a8 * n. : asa ; de. Be ; ‘Then death is the answer that we seek,” saddle, and, turning her ees AY Fe areet ariny had potletred here, e HEN, awakened 3 shart rode I Bick, through the water to thel Was the case, fled, Mfterward that’ thie iM W pangs in my arm, f opened m nted, and wo anil elotie you with that dead mad-/Ateno went on, hurrlediy; “nothing| shoresfollowad by old Blmbrl, who lifted] sons In the far weno eget om once . e be ane ween sods real eo Y bolls b's crown and mantle wells there, It ts the home of fire and| Up tA crooked hands a though in woul of Kaloon had attacked try (ae, 2°o0!® Jug A thin + - er 4 w | You | have your answer on yon a vole." ant ee muttering as he went In tribes, they were 1 ‘and ental jd ¢)e fatend, and through st 1-eoua | Shania w K and t hor tr ” said Leo, pointing & Want voice?’ and HOW ATSNG: thie Guy Of GeeInON Ta] cored, Mogi Bully, Toaving: their boxes pnd te island, ax gh i | [ ntalr “0, poln 0 t vot and now, A q deo ming gee Th sleeping hoavtly atiny | overs not sh and fatheue ier e powls above us, “where 1 seek | "Pie voloe of the Oracly that spraks | upon te all on us and er--that pre-| these sad Bheloiony $a Wane Anioing i : me ; a) any trace u insertable fa ; rom the fire, The vote! of a spirit |Uestined ¢ Din and of wer, conpolately. seeking a NA diss the soape e black horse, w rn n What do they mean?” asked Leo of| posing olf, iS A path up the o, Ssen and woe @rasing, close at hana. | ¢ Woe *He who broke tho silence, eny " Bhe paled a Uttle and replied: ‘1p |vhom no man haw ever seen, or shill] me, eg i Se ues fing, hone, until al Pele mill tat «ani neers | tng MM {nnd that it ie death is 1 have told | see." “don't Row." I answered: but 1} whieh Way to ene en, free ee Pi Asati S , a lon fast and far sin you, the place ts guarded by savage folk ‘ race," do | Have AO doubt we shall find out soon | we met with our first stray ma shat alt that wo had undergone and wonders vin he pina ee Come, Horace,” sald Tao, and he) ugh. and that tt will be something] Oh the mountal TANKS experience last we me, my «& nd late t ont Mn, * {nw that T should tive to wake, ¢it! pree.| ay 8 t left an ¢ who know no pity moved toward the hors, snpkibeante Now tor this rivers” Phe eitit and tis moulderine reli ently, ab he murmuring of the was| t the path you took, = Y So be t Then death is the answe Men broke In the old Shaman,| Before we had struggled through tt] pressed us, so that for a while went Tey aes cart te he rocks es that we seok, Come, Horace, let us go) “would vou rush upon your doomt|1 thought more than once that the day Bo is, Pd tell Mis truth. somewhnt C i ”: he " " ‘ 6 : ui te 0 ’ 4 bere’. througt 1s Maes. | bo wound m | "Taw to you," #he broke In, . for it was I who, according to poe Swept us away. But Leo, who | head and shiver » hung ius Beperts throus ts, on i y th swerad Leo, stretching| that there dwells not the Woman of} oustom, brought thither the body of| waded, leading the Khan's horse by the | ,uinse Py us lay f pile of bones, the ro.» : m they out his hands, \your dreams. Iam that woman, yes,| the Khan, Atone’s father, for bugial, | bridie, felt his path and supported bim- | wiorcied 1 y, of a number + | moist, I saw rea mounted upon} "T knew 4 , “ : ch the apear shaft, so that in the; Proched creatutes that, dead or tinins Misie, Grose st as dipraits knew It, me Answered ‘and 1 wer for his and I only can, “That ar 1 should haveleven f, as you are the man of mine.” |and J warn you to set no foot within ee) we lached the ochetcnenk ately had been hurled down from the ai ‘ ra, : Amen. | blame you not, for fate decreed that fh Ania ae wel sone, Ri “Then, ta rove it yonder upon| tt plea," hy | Bove, and on the Cop of tho pit They were pointl t ev A k ' protect you from them. 8 gone, Ri Th Pr F Mpon | its temples, Beyond it lay. a breadth of marshy | 4 tittly h - Piles wi De Shahin’ they: ckamined erat Hpound | desth for Mia, and now t is fulfilled.) sor betray me to them,” sald Leo, |memt Fa sbURle HAE. cloig | Ele rinews ALA LAS Eh Atha Whivn your miatress alld Chat, we] posse thet ‘doubtless Were overflowed | mine, uuadied henp, which we toututog { * Be. Shep’ ocean spom 12 the” Btlll, there are thone to whom you must! michania, what do you seek?" [can save your Mo~ay, and will do dy] ‘ies dwells there no woman,” ! should never reach,” I commented, but when'the torrent was in flood. Through (o Be Continued) ux ‘ wg é f A ‘ a ; fi, 4

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