The evening world. Newspaper, October 11, 1905, Page 12

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The Evening World’s Home Magazine, Wednesday Evening, October 11, 1905. —$—$$»__ a H ( The Good Fellowship of res l e : M Ire d Modern Crown-Wearers. The Puplished ') the Press Publis Bntered at By J. Campbell Cory clable and demoeratte in thelr ways as ordinary folk. Stories of the ge menus, One of these relites how, Upon a country walk, he Once stopped at @ le inn, and, calling for a tankard of ale, joined the crowd at the bar an@ ted freely with them while he drank. At another time the royal Kdward, walking along the stress with « upon a windy night, stopped at the ‘can’ of @ street yender of het potatoes | bought some, When last year the young King of Spain went on a vite to Balamanca, the Mayor of that city, together with the rector of the famous college there, went out to meet him, and, on thelr knees, sought to kiss the monaroh's hand Alfonso, however, refused ‘thelr homage, remarking gentfally that he wae omy ' a king and not ad And not content with this display of contempt for opre + | mony, he shook hands with the astonished pair and took them for a ride in his carriage. The aged Emepror of Austrin has greatly endeared timedlt to ble subjects by his simple and cordial manner. On oné occasion a Hungarian deputy, who had grown gray tn tthe service of try, applied for a post tn the ¢tvil service, but was Informed that being he Was ineltgtble unless he gould secure the special sanction of the Dressed in the national Hungarian sume, the deputy gained admics oval presence, but so nervous was he that he found Aimeelf unable to - Hable, says the Philadelphia North American. word from the I , however, maasured him, "Your Majesty,” 1d like to be forty years of age.’ "Why, so would 1," replied the monaroh; then, glancing @t the deputy's pet , he understond the pore ark, an] aMxed Dis signature, after which he sat down and chatted . ith bis grateful visitor for nearly an hour. It ts said that Pope Plus X. ts never ashamed of his humble start in life. Once, ft {8 related, in (he presence of a cardinal, he drew from hia pocknt a cheap-look« hg watch, the guard of which consisted merely of am oli) shoe-string. The cardinal at onoe produced his own magnificent gold timepiece and begged TJs Holiness to accept @, and give him the inferior one In e nge. But whe Popo refused, explaining that the poor old watch was a present from his mother, who had to stint herself to pay for tt. As to the shoestring, wh he watch hag been pald for there was no money left for the chain, so one of his sisters gave hitn the string. Mo HS and other great personages frequently unbend and are as 8o= Cheap Telephones and Penny Postage Since some time in the 1880's Me ee telephone monopoly has been fight- ing off competition in New York. Competition is now talking busi- ness as If it meant to be fought off no longer. This is a matter whic should not end in talk. Five million telephones, almost, are in the hands of operating com- panies in the United States, A million farmers on wire-fence cir- cuits find the former isolation ot country life relieved at nominal cost, Independent plants in Kansas and Missouri supply good local service at $1 a month, In the country at large, the uses of the telephone have become so varled as to suggest comparisons with Sweden, in which happy land you call up your washerwoman, {f she does not appear on time, and ask her what is the matter, In New York City, although Manhattan alone uses more than a hundred thousand instruments, the telephone is still much of a luxury. So long as the monopoly exists here It will keep telephone rates above reasonable figures. The good business principle of proportioning separate profits to increase of general business does not appea! to it. In its understanding, the thing to do Is take all It can get on the spol. Related to the telephone Issue, because it too is concerned with the easier intercommunication of men, fs the question of a universal penny postage, renewed in England by the Hon. John Henniker Heaton, M. P. Mr. Heaton Is the enemy of the postal surplus. He feels that the rate of postage which leads to such a surplus {s ‘a tax-gatherer's clutch on the windplpe of commerce.” On the other hand, he is a friend of letter-writing, which he be- Tieves would so increase under the universal penny rate that all the Governments consenting to the reduction would soon find themselves getting satlsfactory returns, r American experience justifies the Heaton bellef. Every time our domestic postal rates have been reduced business has responded with | vuver for! | How Science Aids the Law, tod In London, the “Angers HFN a erime-@ murdor, for inst print” method ts at once broug ever p A plece of giass tearing the marks of two fingers ts ff ut once to land Yard, It has been de that the crit 1 is a cas borer, and K-house within a rae o~ts 1ere {8 @ detective quiotly watching lus of miles. Meanwht stored with namos of each of the desp y to commit suah a erime, bas se movements will, unknown (9 th That bustnessiike-looking Kes around the booke stall or nent the booking office Is n from the Yard, ‘I'ne methe 1s vary according to dreuinatances, | t there a inseen meshes of the polly net. Up 6 f the ae rd, wit 1 memory tbe likes ta searca for € of these men, whose f i back is whon wa been left on the pape tored away until wanted for re ‘ yr with acejdental marke made by escaping of gle Perhaps the finger marks on the glass coincide with th nas not been seen or heard of for many months, An t once made for him and possibly some of ius ol acqu re enlisted In the juest, He may have been a frequender of a s. Be sure that ia ee every one of those dens there is an official entative of Scotland of the position of the thousands who will write the letters, WEIS AS] COE oe ED. . e. Be: —_— Neither cheaper telephones nor still cheaper postage will make for SSS SOI SOF. rs bat = y A cheap people. Both will promote comfort, good feeling, good cheer,| -—— — ee — ae Said #2 On 2 the a Side. good understanding and good business, Lat, then fave be Letters from the People # Answers to Questions. a leap, This fs in accord with the nule of trade which, as is said above, the telephone monopoly refuses to recognize, Mr. Heaton's scheme has been indorsed by the London Times and many leading Englishmen, In America ft Is favored by ex-Postmaster- General Wrnamaker, Ambassador Reid and others, There is no doubt he ARGO curled by @ schooner from) unusually good luck, Might have —— One Moterdy's Dental. £ women, whom he introduced to )to be allent? I am in dire perplexity.) men give me thelr senta on cam I Boston to the raise ea bagged’ ¢ man. 1 Wo Balibe cf Tee Dreetng Worst: , man a@ hie wife ‘The other I am no gossip, and only want to do| stand tn front of some man whose Afites, comains oir aera one i I read reporta that the clan of the| ta dressed him by me different my duty, But what te my dutv? The| boots look new and tight. When the| Canned goods, sewing machines, al Pretty near time to call in the opens Ridgway. McCurdye are living on the Mutual | from the one he bears at home Now, |More T ponder the question tie iess| our aways I pretend to lowe my bal-| ture, dc., 175 barrels and 16 hogshes 1g | NOrk shirt waist or to provide close@ , : (fe Insurance Company, 1 wisn to] what is my duty, readers? When I go certs am. ALO G ance, I jurch forward and bring one|of New England rum and "ae an air protect ite wearer from the risle McCarren is hearing fom the people. They do not approve of hisjoorrect this, I and my eister and my | !mek to Buffalo ts it my duty to tell A Ruse to Get a Seat, of my Cuban heela down with, all my| 18 horhende of tobaono, | Clviliaatlos of pneumonia whe persists {n runsing, | , ‘ an Uncle Frank, of us family what I saw and heard, or| te the Editor of The Evening World | Wetght on the men's instep or toe,|of the heathen still onducted on thy Ds | Selection of James W, Ridgway for Borough President of Brooklyn. |stam., are of the clan, would {¢ be kinder to them and to him! I have a good satieme for making Imes out of ten ft has ite effect, old Inew 8 | yy Most valuable book in the world eatg ‘ ; ‘ i rt Moc aaa emaainidie astaanin as a - tenth time @ second atanp may | votes for! to be the Cod drint This office has always been held by a decent man, McCarren has )father waa Robert Mocurdy, proiter | [Se necahonry, Bin tacally. top an| REET LRiner et CHAU Poteet ee ee OL ca earn eh | put up Ridgway because he thinks he can win and tap'the graft with a| Brooklyn concern, | A Few Pointed Paragraphs, tives In agony and I ap fogo tle 903) in that Hall of Fame. j{n Greek manuscript, and dates trom . THOMAS ROBERT N’CURDY Sine aula : * mayo . . i y, |S tone up a car ant ar} | the fifth century. Held at $1,500,000, ang free hand, | a ae git ba oan a hie. oi a (orhiehe Hin water ene Twentyeeven ourtain calls for 8M) aately lodged in the British Museum, ; ; . | . 5 At Cooper Unton, hy cad ye ae 0 to convince him over again | # worth: MRS. H. Vy, [Actress who scored a failure on her out of the clutches of American mille Perhaps he is mistaken, Brooklyn is apt to be pretiy independent. | po we pattor of The venting Wor Ws ite ‘ fot # rumor) yout! hays > ince 2 f awe iapiiee first appearance, “You never can tell!” tonatres, ‘ : Vhereabo aii’ | that 118 to. etONe Bp Ere ' | dl what keeping at It will do. es The support McCarren received because he “stood for’ autonomy against | over yous Gvee Prank Damfoota vy stead of trying to kt two bird with Frestneas Sn all) Ts tae Dieee of he: Broaiag Worltt i re A PAINLESS BULLET, ; : e sitll Aa | one stone use a shotgun, anagy to kick Here are the anawers to Mr, Elbert] police station for @ chivalric streec . the wicked Murphy will weaken now that he has “stood in” with the A Buffalo Girl's Dilen | No mag need hope to reach heaven by ©. Smith's problems; “A and B divide! gar passenger who interfered to pro-| An earthenware bullet has Just deem | latter To the Editor of The w | walking over hie nelghbors y 84 between them, A le to get two-| tect a woman from che unwelcome At- Melon ite a ewe hig bee ; a | i tiaian' | It's usele the of on fifthe more than B, How 4008 | renttons Veual | The peculiarity of this bufet ts that | nema es in But. It's useless to oall the cat when you e re than much doos of a fellow-pssenger. Some 18,000 Democrats voted against him at the primaries, If Piles Hyns/a Nt pes) facil bac| 9 mide of human kindness tach gett Answer: A. gete $8182-8! rate of the butterdn, however good hie doe not hurt. Two men can measure half of these vo' i dows ; ’ é tr fons may do for paving iving And B gete S318 And again: If 2 off a number of paces and "pepper half of these vote against Ridgway and for Major Ebstein, his worthy passes as 0 nan, Ne ina trees Ba hat gal e to death If you ett Wel Cnerhalf of 8 what would be one-|intentions, , , , Jaway" at each other without any fean, pponent, the community will be saved from the possibility of shame| teste 10” LA ee at aly rit to come around |barder ones Me oeeg 2 V8 48) scinviie, N. J opoetaman who went | ‘The bullet almply makes a mark on the which confronts it. |not wee me, He was with a refined man because he is rich go News, ALOPEKION, | gunning for birds and killed a bear had clothing and drops to the ground GHE FVRGHER HISGORY OF «# #@ # & A F&F A Bo OB BY H. RIDER HAGGARD ' A Yy Fr S H A ! r) wt She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed. Author of “She,” “Allan Quatermain,” “King Solomon’s Mines," etc, ter, for the gale was roaring over us.) {in this consecrated place, where the Twenty more paces and we came to @ ashes of a]! who went before him have | recess out, I suppose, by man in ihe ne fuel for the boly fires, Oros, my (Conyriehted, 1904, in Great Writain and the United States by H Rider Haweard,) the mountain's bout tw elimb syNoPsis OF PR pie tae oe min which sate face of the loop, In auch fashion that a priest, summon thou the wccuser anu mo. Vinger, 458 sore lava roof was left projecting hait| him who makes defense, and let the So we sat down In the vaultlike place euroes ite width, hooks Be opened that I may pass my ‘\and let the sherp draught of adr rush- . Judgment on ‘the dead, and call “his soul ‘Thia recess, or rook chamber, which |‘o live Dy or pry Ghat from it the wes large enough to shelter a great broath of life may be withheld number of people, we reached safely, to 1a reat, I aay the court of death ig | discover that it was already tenanted,|" ‘Oros bowed and left the place, wheres * Seated In a chair hewn from the rock | on the Hosea signed to us to stand upon ing to and from the passages play upon were heated with Journe: ose galleries. As we sat thus & roaring sound and asked Oros what {: might be, He answered that wed was tho Hevea, wearing a broidered fe tT Seabentiy Gok Garer nae the er of t purple mantle above her gauzy wrap-| hooded priests and priestomes stole inte heard throu pings that enveloped ber from head to, the chamber, and to the number of Atty foot, There, 4oo, standing near to her | Sule nen cine ten” pen Mss | iw were the Khanie Atene and her uncle, | in black and maske ore ‘bore ‘ol the old Shaman, who looked but iM at | tment books tn thelr and laced rock was the rush- ng fires, Then the| themee|ves on either side of the ough very ease, and, leatly, stretched upon his | wintie Oros stood at pede vate funeral oouoh, the flery light bag A — if lebih The climb of upen his stark form and face, Iny Pay i Pied 9 wintrum that i bedlence me of that dead Khan, Rassen, Bros Gly, 7 wrectense so the tiewal ‘We advanced to the throne anti bowed} ‘Let the books be opened,” EEL FUR Es Thereon the maakey to her who mt thereon, ‘The Hesca ii Sele g oi furlongs; that of was like the ascent of a cat of several aplres to right broke the seal lifted her hooded head, which seemed {wan to read i449 pa Sad gh Ea bee to have been sunk upon her breast a |the sins of this “boas =e ‘ though she were overcome by thought |fully as though o or care, and addressed Oro, the prieat, | 0x! conscience given life Yoho. ps a Oo a BL pela CLI A wd of his wea ‘oO time, we drageed Wa e “sup tp Givpe, sash oF walls, by comparison, there waa silence, | youth, riper There th om quite a foot in helght, till the and folk could ‘hear each other faaeegt together the resord inde i Khan’ r was climbed and only the loop apenk, | inaseed atc teal ts i Up it we went also, Orvs g us, and glad was I that the still ran within the substance id feel the nesdie’s the rush of the “Bo thou haat brought them eafaly, |’ 64 smesed, | my servant,” she said, ‘and I am glad, spr had’ Dg & oa tay. vod ry hed for to those that know it not this road | der man Fé. H] ‘5 foartul, My queste, what say you |tieo with & shudder Ae was not too great to be endured. eat Cae es Se eee a yah 4 companion wk, for I ox eye quiver the -_ Appalled by that ternifo spectacle, | ",, ” ; Si s winds which swept about Ite eldes, which seemed more appropriate to the sot Sith tala ws of & tat, nglttiva er Sas a eet CHAPTER XXXII. At length we saw light before us and torrors of the Pit than to this earth of Lae, ‘Soe 5 id inte fo, i jer # emerged up) We stood ours, and fearful lest the blast ahould | */4™M looks like Ite mouth.” A ie gor, owe The Judgment of the Dead wend tn #70 | Joop 6 4 ‘ Nan" he enevered, “there te no | clown Lastly Tt tat rt she Juagmen ‘ in front | Joop, a flat space of 1 F Whirl me like & dead leat into the g1OW-| nett, save that whlch from lite to lite| that noble upon the st tie iaving: ae Gn Tita “a yl saw/yarde in length by some t ne PEA ae tke Decor to we fashion for ourselves within the ofr- Cem rer by + : 7 haa by |breadth, with the star K ; hand an K cle of this little star, Leo Vinoey, I tell ’ er nets py oes ; to him to ask labove us, To the soutis, t tow The Sight Before Me Seemed to Pa ralyze My Brain. to do Ukewise, and looked about me.| thes thet hell w here, ay, hore,” aad ahe| enh. "thes the eenue a toe la aa WBE jaand feet or more below, stretched the 1p surface of this Jake rose) serermed through the eye of the plllar| Now T observed Unes ot priest wrapped | seruck her hand upon her breast, while ag cast Ut G8 te ert ere! as scaival back, "“excopt dim plain of Kaloon, and to tho east t took fire as 4 oRainat fiw rueRed surface 4m great capes, kneeling upon the £40@| once more her head drooped forward ast up'as thou hast beon siven wi om tmooncelvad by the mee PN A de ed x epee a : ; Pi of the rock and engaged apparently in| though bowed down beneath some load| Without spe Ing, the Hanes’ pants M 3 : abhk and the Gided browns ‘slbnas (lormed n roller is bent over by prayer, but of Hes the Mother, or ot] of secret misery. with her setrum to the Setenier, ok zee soos ; gal i PN CAT os from it fraemenis of fire, that] Atene, oF of the corpse of the ded} ‘Thus sho stayed @ whtte, then titted | thereon broke the seal of hs mee ate iss Te: he BON high Tia cA the } wa the blow: n, I could see nothing. it and spoke again, saying; began te ee All the good that } this w h Now t Wis cleat of tha Gunnel, and t sight, and one more awesome. There, |" , lee t While I wondered where thoy might] “Midnight f# past, and much must be|/dead man had done, of every mane. Mwave 8 a aes elleve that had It ‘ct been for Pe Pa eg Ded hed eon FY | Tod it not been for this strong and] be, Oros, upon whose nerves thls dread | done and suffered before the dawn. Ay, Word that jie, had (PAG. Ho SVCEy than o wir t ot At le peen 6 Qt! pillar temt Inward, Iny the vi rater © moun- | ateady wind, indeed, no creature could | scene appeared to have no offect, and| ihe darkness must be turned to light, or See eeuans ot ila vassals, oe leat We came to the fa great stair Hux to the ano, and in the centre of tt on the have lived upon vhe pillar, for the Vapors | some of our attendant priests surround-| perchance the light to eternal dark-|to ti] that he had resisted, of the true “Rest aw re, m on | fl ore me we © of fire thot © Into! would have poisoned him, but its un- |e us and led us onward by a path that | ness,” eye t he bs borne ? ae t 218, Downing to. Laer mit the revere |to ps yy brain. Nor was this to 1 flowens of yudden fam wind blew from south to north, j ceasing blast drove these all away | ran perilously near to the rounded edge} “Royal woman,” she went on, address. | Wh? Pecame his wile, o! tT @nve that he had shown hin from the be wondered at, for I doubt whether| or spouted, writhed and twisted 1 t ked tp Coward the crater of the toward «he north, Por the same reagon,' of the rock, A few downward steps/ing Atene, “as fe his eight, thou hast he a a f Boal, “or this stair 4g steep and long. |the world can stow euoh gnother, — Langry sea, \wolvauo, and its flerce brewuh, tht (a the thin alr of that doy place the heat aud we found that we were under ahal- tay dead lord Dither sor : ae at

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