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ie e. ——— Bvening TTeaday The New Brooklyn Bridge By J. Campbell Cory, 7 Published by the Prose Publloh Company Now stede VOLUME 46...... dlgheiiatit weave NO, 16,114, Teaching a Lesson to the Banks. Harry Leonand, t messe ; ger | prisoner with a I ch calls it “high’’ finance to lend millions to office bovs, he must not be regarded as a y d says he stale bs 3 of securities to ow easily it could He wamed to teach the The operation in forgery by ally clever. His plea in extenua- us after a fashion which does which the boy g tion is at least shrewd, Leonard is credit 10 the most devious teachings of “high” finance. Wall sireet has an atmosphere which is to natural keenness of a cer- tain sort what the air of a hothouse {s to a young plant. Developing under such a feverish influence boy reached the stage whete he could | see himself fooling his elders by taking advantage of their own methods, He saw safety sacrifice stock-transfer methods, And he rushed a bit for himself. It appears now idly; that ht A more gradual ment might have favored the young man’s rise to prominence in wifaiever group of syndicate artists may succeed to the financiers of the Hyde-Alexander-Perkins coterie, It is possible that he might have come to the invention of an absolutely new game of buy- | yourself-out-and-sell-yourself-in, However, he has succeeded in one thing. that “the Street” will have to heed, A startling variant from such tales of fraud as involve directors who do not direct, it points still the same moral. Eternal vigilance is not only the price of security to an institution of trust: it is necessary to the saving from himself of every possibly weak | 1¢ Leonard precocity has been forced too rap: He has made his story one ing man in a place of trust. It is a form of mutual moral insurance, The bond thief has taught his lesson to the banks, though perhaps at Greater personal cost than he had reckoned upon. | The Foot in the Aisle. | FP Ra Laps EIR ctober HOT TIPS ON FINANCE, | oti By Roy L. McCardell. Wl Letters of an Insurance Man Abroad to His Sor on Broadway, | MONTR OARLO, Sept. 10 thelr money for them. Aad Y DEAR BOY: T Just cave t th 1 Invested It In your vost, M boat ahead! of the pr A wl to do was to 105k polenta, server Tila man Hughes v low Cicuncey Depew »0 Intense for ya \ iH ose of humor wae got mine, and when I rovlized the fo He just had ap y was to be pried out ail , found {t hand @ oles In the life Insurance bushes” jw yw > misinatt 1 packsd the vellow-do fupd into aly , Chauncey wasn't plan ® ¢ small man @ ean orphan, The ways ous man, ‘Teg re conserve me around nd got its frum theea thelra but he never got tise i We carned our money, We nevest' had any fun, I'm going to heave pow, and, as the old game ts done and as T can't wofk you in at thousand @ year to occupy a roll-teg) desk in a private office for an howe jay, you might as well have some fm yourself, You can draw on me for anything within reagon, Rut don't invest in ange | u “The widows and orphans pester you to death.” valise and tipned the steward to sit me ,at the captain's table I'M de abroad til! Rocket: iter gots A hafr out, and if you do not want to run over and join your 04 did, stay tn New York ani enfoy yoursit I've got imine and I won't > with you, As I am out of name may not be brought Int vestigation. On the other hand, th may blame ft all on me. I don't « the game's played out, and after an upright business man of spotless tn togrity for forty years Tam coming out {nto the open and be a eport Let thom say what they ike, but don't forget that I've got mine and “Every body works but father!” back door,” I soe by the New York papers that the | = Fustonists and Republicans have friz Milne, see We ae 1 : Hae spe fled In finding a cttizen of reputae "26 Taos. Ton see } your money goes and won't be bore® tion en gi es a esier ik reading financial flotion tn the way off Tammany lcket % a nivel from me that they can’t find a citizen reputation and standing, because are very few reputations mianding eae da} Ym afraid the gentle art of sinug bunco {ts over, Mme Was that stingy my the In y 6 “Chauncey came around to thag! I have notloed a tendeescy on you? part to {mterest yourself in Sunday school work, Don't do tt, People wilt talk about you. Men venture to make two sides | \ to the question of giving up their ti seats to women in the local transit] |! Except for the $10 Inducements flered by The Evening World, The little picture given herewith | — suggests a nuisance of street car and “L” car travel concerning which there can be but one opinion. On Tharsday, \ BT ne only needed a clean shave, & gold f} | watch and a silk hat, and the widows and orphans would just pester you to All one had to do was to howl for c'vio docency and have soli@ mahagany off furniture and people came and just begged you to do them the favor of “in. Objection to Nobel Prize Gift. | Wormen would be glad to go: work. think It 4 Letters from the People w Answers to Questions. T| Low and (approximately) when will the parture of Fifth avenue's latest skyscraper hotel, which will NTEREST taken in the new | death to take charge of thelr money. | | It is the Foot in the Aisle, To the PAltor of The F Wort { The Evening World ; wrong to take h change cone? What political esonomlat; Rola Somatimes the F hag In what doy of t ls talk of tenderlig the clothes where there are ¢ ¢| can answer me? SARA B. |no bar, Hotel's m interesting si ‘ . imes the Foot is in a Pol- | Thankse { 0 Pre ident Roose: Boa fe Hes * . Four Kinds of Gold. | vation, in the < pinien se ey Lee he ished shoe, Sometimes it is quite Wat n of his services ag rule 6f the Streee- APtONe ny the { The Bvecing struction with © view to Be. ; es ; Doos not the Constitution Wor the benefit of poor peo pat we ds 3 natead of seve decoration.” Fin- | otherwise. Always it is a Foot in the wrong place, Subway Cer Oddity, Lo kotaat RE A. Bieeidant ea ag eg Fae | Amorenes Feauesis weigh ote Helio oF seen aenpltclty” tn place of It sheds its dust or mud impartially on the garments of rich and|™ ¢ 1 of The F Worid nolument from a for , Nae WARNE ie ee ee gold and onyx and carving. To de humble. In th eas a democratic | I boutded a Subvwa: the ro What Is the Limitt has nothing wha wo do with spect | # raed Mt the “rich wimpiielty”” ex- lumbie,. in that respect It is a Gemacratic Foot. |rush hour rece I was an ex | To The Editor of ‘The Evening World flo gravity is the apecifio| Wenter a restaurant churges. But in democracy there is no saving quality for a nuisance, press train, thind oar trom the ffont Plaine of White Wing's Wife, | The higher rents each year and the | #TAVItY and cub { four kinds | tends to roo gph ae If it is your Foot we advise you quite honestly and kindly to take it| This car was jammed. 1 1 torty- | To tor of The Evening World higher price of ofl and coal] of Kold, water being 1,00 sp, gr, and down. ue ‘ i ay so Rg I one people standing I a woman sixty-two years old, are! £2.88 1b. per. cuble foot . Bald that when Miss Alice Roosevelt . butted my # t cata isband is employed | Her . OF we ltn, | reached Beond she pet clei city ate ae s ver {in r i Sir « Department, He ts ¢: b r aamane r ali cleaned and in onfer in experiance The city milk Ww as never better, a ording to Health Commissioner! nit one soul was i 4 Wnllad’to, ave tiworanilla’ a, able ana et Wa Y sesso 10.802 390587 11.86 of her visit. Might be well to invite Darlington, And the city death rate is the lowest since 1798, As for to the ft ret ett weeds eng anpen oF need 59 1125 | Hep to epend a few days in New York the State, there are fewer idle wage-earners, Labor Commissioner Sher-| Yscant seats. \\ ’ 1 ashing is very severe on my health no one will be } ee! BAe eve man tells us, than even in 1902, the most prosperous year o cade, | RPPortionment of passens Forty and T eannot afford to send the clothes priced things : Eng: New police court for the Bronx . There is no lack, it appears, of bright sides f pia tage of a decade standing In one car and standing ai I thiok the efty should tomes, which will ruln the peopl qarat.... 18889 1178.80 10.010] Cltifiemtion of the Westchester or 4 sa uk hee § DO TOOK a, in the next SCARLET ve ‘hem washed. So many poor | are boom! joes, Now, where and| W. B. HALSEY, | ough proceeds. Reports of pool-room Stand out in the Hmelight and spend your money. The John W. Gates type is the popular sort that inspires cand dence these days. 4 Have a good time. I'm motne 0, 1 Affeotionalely, ’ YOUR DAD, | Said w on w the w Side. door-mnaghing and other eptmutes of up-to-lete municipal existence socom expected, ® . e Battle of the “Crater” to be foughd fort | Over again on the old feld at Peter burg, Va Battle with the “crater” = continuous performance in which maz veterans engage. ‘ . ee Prospective visit of the Prince an@ Princess af Wales to India cvases great demand in London for Hindoo embroide eries, sourts, (nse garments, &o, Btyl when reaches New York, will some surviving Oriental “eosy corners? in Harlem flets ready to weloome it see “Racer in crash on Vanderdit eutes motéle course.” Just @ tthe prelim, inary “tuning up" before the regule@ event. GHE FVRGHER. HISGORY OF f «# # #¢ She-Who-M s B | AYTESHA: ust-Be-Obeyed Y H. RIDER HAGGARD Author of ‘‘She,”’ ‘Allan Quatermain,” ‘King | i Copyrighted. 1904, In Great Britain an ited States by HW Rider Hagen 4 thes mummy. W tare yout" shouted Leo; and q SNORE + | yotce echoed drearily among those n Leo Vii Uehmon, start { rocks. sature did not answer.) yond Turkestan | It only continued to beckon. Leo walked up to it to assure hinmelf were not the victima of sowe nation. As he came It gkded to its heap of bones and stood there like @ ghost of one dead arisen from amid wn 89 had met those grinning evidences of death, or q rather a swathed oorpse, for that le j What {t resembied, Leo followed, with HA intent of touching himself of it reality, whereon | ts white-wrapped @rm and struck him Ug on the @ re- cotied, {t polnted with dts nand, first up- ward, as though to the peak or the sky hunt town f \ | And next at the wall of rock whioh faced the f Amen: | ue artie, An Exevotiar 1 and been loved | He returned to me, saying: “What Hon 2,000 years ag 1 we do? ear find beet AW tains if Len phe Pollaw, I guppose, It may be a mes. if tro ¢ 9 Senger nm above; and I nodded ‘a pours fn water ni ‘ o Wed | ¢ 1 the mountain crest | Khan bo helr Y ; From below, more lkely,"” Leo mut: | + tered, ‘for I don’t Ike the look of this miserable fate. she appear top of the bowlder, looking like a sec- jond Witch of Endor, and siretched out ‘her arm, Not a word did sek only stretched out her drape the effect was Instantaneous, si of her down to their faces as though @ ¢ightning stroke had Instant swept them out of exis! Then ahe let her arm fall and beck whereon @ great fellow, who, I sup was the leader of the band, orept towurd with bowe missive as @ beaten dog, To him she made 6) us, pointing to the far | ing and uncrossing at in r ominute they go that in ano vanished a8 qu: though not [for over two nous We went on thus, feill our path brought us from the ra lon to a grassy declivity, across wi {t wound Its way. Here. t {shment, we found @ fire burning, and oh uy Solomon's Mines,” ete, But here I dia her in-) Neither would she ei for when A { Justice, for she had, I sup ome | tried ner @ 1 weth food, she ree |to save us from this very fate wh fused it In lke fashion. without her presence, we must m Meanwhile he had taken the pot off certainly have suffered. the fire, and as soon as tte contents When the savages were within a few coo! enough we fell on them eage | yards, suddenly on the for we were starving, After he eaten and drunk, Leo rextressed my s best he could and We rested & Indeed, I think thet, being veay we began two doze, for wos 1 by a shadow tating us, to seq our corpse-ltios and looked, up Wulde etanding close by and pointing fire to the then at the horse, am though to show us that we had far to tavel. 8o we saddled up and went om Again somewhat refreshed, for at leaa® Wo Were no longer ravenaue, All the rest of that day we journeye@ On up the grassy slopes, seeing no ma) dugh occasionally we hea: 6 mountain savaged, } arms, but 90 far as 1 By sund the character of the coum: cig lige thet iy wae ey ibe, the ty lawl changed, for th ps Wigy re derstood her, hx Ot Me ded taht thee ee bate pes Ht in @ guttural language inted firs. We hed left the lowes Than he uttered his 1 whistle, es and were Deginning to climb the) whereon the band arose and depai min isee chence at full speed, this way and Sin eank and we went on throught, The twilight died and we on through the dark, our pathy the twilight went Now our guide motioned to us to pr ly by the stars and the faint r }ceed, and led t ere itunes aim'y diance of the glowing plilar of pis a) nak, whieh waa rafiecti ‘rom the mighty mantle of snows, Soon wo lost all count of the ro Wa turned this way and turned tase , ml, Apparently It un- above the fire an earthenware passed an open patch and raed to the left and which was on the belle alth acove SE ar yh. ae egan te ay am b ah | wi uld Ree man tending | joon rowe, we enter > plek its way among the stonca eit tara tion, to mo to dismount, | vine, and, following a path that pa ; { nolse, Poitsing. 19 che pot, dn token that we | down it, came to a place whlch Is beat ve wed for se hundred yards, peers oat the food which doubtiess sie | descrived as « large amphitheatre cut ti! reached 4 6 ow cleft in the had ordered the wild men to prapare for | the hund of nature owt of the nook: rook, This clett we bad seen aready te, and very glad wak T to obey her./ of the mountain, Evidently wam rook, ‘Thi 1 j Provigton’hea been, made tor the horse | chosen as a place of defense, for q Say -_ vai ag ft appeared to end at a depth of jhien, for near the fre lay A great bun-| entrance was narrow. and tortu 4 CHAPTER XXV, ebout t feet, we passed on. T dle of green forage. | bullt up at t 9,08 also, $0 that o} q " < . figure entered here and vanished. vhile Leo offsaddled ithe beast and! one person could pass ite gateway et The Ghostly Guide. Hane tae aioe? CLA Lae | apranuie’provender for It, taking wit Umo, Within an open space and at toe “Unless we can finde way out of this) 7 hadow, , me a spare earthen arene), knee lay) Lurther side stood low. “mone houses s 1 house befors I a dy, 1 went to the edge of the torrent! | Unst tho rock, La front of ancursed charnel betors long AIC T RNEWARSA, CRG AENRT Toadynk and steep my wounded arm In| houses, the moonlight shining folk come / nk that we shall add to {ts company “What Waheutea oe 6 Bort sure etd fis ice-cold stream, Thly relleved it] them, were gathored seven! hi I gaid, staring round me. at are you?” shouted Leo, jut the creature not answer. | greatly, thoug' y now Wad Sure.) men and women arranged In a 4 ' 4 P ] ree up the cleft, to ‘om various symptoms, that the brute ojre) in alt te oo Aa y le mn Ape lt seemed : fared abeeel theep and cattle were visible In the and ahlelde iL gnould Jmaeine that they | afaster's fangs vind forvanately only citele Roa 188 ternate ompantea, waa that © o.rner of my eye acne arpl "4 were not unlike ot i ured the smal) bone, P ol 6 a ics teap. ve te lop? te tones the form was eT ee. en tanal a pully, tote) Sct ae they Appeared. 10, the Invade ee eee oe ee ee ethan kid ieuan,| Wie ea a caotath Yn ten ott Bee iscaticd var ices cit ng a. Forward ca Took wf A mullv. C01") Romans, Atus they came uttering thelr] taving finished attending to 4, na well gnd In’ the axact centre of the s looked roun ee It vai 7 aher dy down @ a lowing a rough path that led along the! shrill, star en orem, eviden ye jas | was able, I filled the jar with) oircig, ood @ gigantic, red-be It rose, {t etood up, 2 human fyure, an- |, : eeu aeale edge of a raging torrent, It was | | ‘ Leo, drawing his | Water. back a thought struck | Man, Who Was naked except for Perently that of @ woman—but of this A areca a Aosolate plac {a mile wide or mor W aible, they | On may it | to where our _mysterious| R!Fdle about his loins, He was win T could not be eure—wrappot from hend iinet. \ ; : re more than ten feet | having Hundreds of fantastic lava iw and ws, Good-by, Horace.” | me, and geing to, Wiarte cot nr ehe| ‘itirel! backward and forward, #0 foot in white and wearing a = Ie ‘ in ey en 4 In width. bowlders strewn about its slopes, Before x answered rather ferntly, Fue eon turned into a pillar of [penge, resting Weo3 10g ibe and in white an ing a four fe i gaye H ‘ wars a fe ye rill und ving whe: the Khanla and a0 ; ing that she wo hou ne Uke It advano " ’ side ' i evidently bad saved us 9 det whistle, and suddenly from behind these Sco "tnat we should %e Killed before (ny fest time she showed some sign), When he bent toward the audience, y with ra, f w \\) and standing for the time upon bowlders sprang a number of men, quite eo" ascended the first slope of the, ti T'thought, for it| bent toward him, and every time mere, We Seared as At, UN the #e by tho brid th d, 40> clings ¢ otner | the actual slope of the mountain, which | fifty of them. mountain Toe me that eho bowed ever wo] straightened himself it echoed bie gatohts of the thing, shied vio fit che br ted and regred | Piunged thet stretched voward for a great number of} All we could note at tho time was Meanwhile our ghastly-looking guide little In acknowledgment of the cours Wet eS eh weet tan a, Jently, and nearly threw me, When at) tat It fell hack Ward upon | Atleneth We saw daylioht and novel tll it reached the’ snow lng] that they were brawny, savage-looking had slipped behind a grew bowser, teay. Ler A Mey Gate EMP ene tis el, for Socata igor ) © distance of about ten paces tt paused me, Aw it found Ite feet again, the fe: | was T more gled of Ita advent, although wbove, Here we saw evidences of fellows. for, the moat Dart, red-haired |¢nd sven fen occur ting “played, une turned her back on me to show that hoad, with aretied back and waving Gnd beckoned with tts hand, that waa ure struck It on the head In the same! {t showed us that there Was a gulf on suman Nfe, for the ground was culll- {uly were tutner dark who wor cloaks ao, if it were a woman at all, was it waa declined, So she would by i van babel Sy yt @lso swathed in white, tke the arm of passioniess, iahuman way that it bad our right and that the path we travelled vated la patches, and herds of mountain of white goat skins, ‘and carried: spears withdrawing herself while we met our for sag! bi coum Bot e habe a eee roan oa aS Oe eee Pe Eee