The evening world. Newspaper, October 13, 1905, Page 18

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ing Company 3 to 63 Park Row, Now sork — | —— ® at New York a# Second-Class Mail te 2 en aT A Se a nk se nal a is ~ A ONSIDERING the powers hody of the average ma _————$ = ~ 16.124 ? ~ labor i v ' f i a) foot _YOLUME 46, RO, 1h,lee) 3)" ane U < i unusually: interes Based upon the completa o- ~ = ~ « “ls in yatom the fol 8 full of sartilng comparisons 9 f ——————————— Raises tons Raises tons The “Black Hand’ What Is It? , VANDI@eLT ashe ont"F HE one pon oh aa The name of Black Hand seed aid : : Be | ts Bihan bisg comes up again in relation to ~ : = au () R Indicating the difference In press ibe mwuals for the man who labors with his murder of Gaetano Costa, a ¥ : : > * ONO SOMOBIL | hands and the man wh6 works with hy brain at sedentary pursults, two tables to-do Brooklyn butcher , | —— = = — ~ = = nay DID eto) | ar 1 nt * ‘Nt renal worker ’ Costa was shot to death in his : = = : : —S : GUP RAG L Foot tons Foot tons shop by four ma ked men on SSS : “ hts - a Ounces. of energy Oun es. of & Wednesday night, The assassina-| No SPEED LIMIT Oyster tion followed what are alleged to Wee tal, 300 have been threats of extortion, A [Ideal racion for professional or literary mani bundle of blackmailing letters reas Ounces of enor Ounces ST eheinye found in the butcher's safe lends weight to this theory, Or it may appear that Costa was a victim ot private vengeance resulting from an intrigue, ! But whatever the outcome of the case the ominous name reappears fone more in connection with a sensational crime. | What is the “Black Hand,” which occupies so much space in the thronicles of crime? Not quite ten years ago the public began to hear of It in connection with murderous assaults following attempted extortion. It was assumed that a handful of Italian bravos had adopted the name to terrify credulous countrymen in whom Mafia fears are still strong. The supposition that the “Black Hand” might in reality be a secret order of desperadoes banded together to prey on the community by blackmail and bomb-throwing was Beoffed at. ; Yet the list of crimes attributed to fts agency 1s an extraordinarily Jong one. It is charged with mumberless attempts at extortion, with kidnap- Ping, street Its, mysterious disappearances, secret murder and open Assassination. . Bankers, doctors, barbers, saloon-keepers, school teachers, milkmen, hestaurant-keepers have been objects of its blackmailing demands. Men fave left their shops and never returned. Families have gone back to Italy to escape its persecutions, It is not exaggeration to say that the name has been used to cause terrorism in some parts of the city, Is the society a myth? Are individual criminals and various irre- sponsible persons merely trading on the name to terrify? “Black Hand”) threats have been traced to schoolgirls, The possibility of the existence| in New York of an association of professional banditti seems preposterous, But is it not time something was done to prove that the society is a myth and to divest the name of its terrors? The effect of the measures resolved on as a result of last year’s scare from this cause appears to have Been to leave the conditions as they were, if indeed they have not grown| ‘worse, , “Defective Mechanism.” There was the making of a hero in the plucky gripman of the runaway eatle car which plunged down the Montague street hill and crashed into the ferry-house. With the certainty of serious injury before him, Wall stuck to his post in a last endeavor to stop the car after the brakes and the emer- gency brake had failed to work, This accident was due to an old, familiar cause—defective mechanism, Tt was defective mechanism that was responsible for the rear-end collisions on Brooklyn Bridge, It is because of defective mechanism that the blind- ing and dangerous motor-box explosions and fuse How-outs occur. Fourteen such explosions, with resultant injury or nervous shock to im- prisoned passengers, is the Brooklyn record within a brief period. No death resulted from this “accident.” But the fact that more than half of the twelve passengers were injured makes it clearly evident that fatalities would have been inevitable had it occurred in the rush hour, with ' the car crowded. ‘made of the motor apparatus of cars to discover defects? How recently had the brakes been examined? How often are tests Something more than perfunctory and occasional inspection should be required at a danger point like the Montague street hill, To take chances there mounts to criminal negligence, ATESHA: Copyrighted, 1904, tn Great Britat ‘United States by Hf. Rider Has: Then ifke {ce on fire fell the cold voice of the Hesea “Be silent, woman, and see how thou didst lose him in the past.” Lo! the ecane changes, and on a couch ind the ) BYNOPEIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS Incey and Horace Holly, two Ene: pubeien, start for an unknown country be- yond Turkestan in search of a wonderful and ni Supposediy Imm no y woman ki a gt a lovely shape Iles sleeping, She dreams; of “Ayesha.” In fo v had met] otra ver he: thie Msruae ta Aira, wh Ma aed | 8 afratd; and over her bends and Dot loved by Leo, “She had claimed to] whispors in her ear a shadowy form 00 years old and to have loved ; She tad seem-! clad with the emblems of the goddess if . vision is fold | tn the shrine, but now wearlng upon across the r ni her head the vulture cap woman aabing these mountains they come to the| wakes from her dream and looks round, @nd oh, the face is the face of Ayesha as it was seen of us when first she loosed fer yell tn the Caves of Kor. A went up from us; we could not spenk who thus fearfully once more beheld her loveliness Agaln she sleeps, again the awful form bends over her and whispers, It the distance opens, Lo! on a y #04 @ boat, and in the boat two Kaloon, » Khania, or Queen, of Kaloon, b wt Tao escape and Evening 4 > Macnwtnea, Feidne Mntohes 28, 19004, : j py ? Foods That Muscle and Brain | | ew _ Respectively Require. Home ‘Please Slow U f By J. Campbell Cory. nf Worla’a Meaning, Addi o coffee . Total foot tons... | ‘hhene two tnites serve to Point out rome of the differences between the diets of the active and the sedentary classes, With the brain worker meat should be eaten but once a day unless the posal: ble tasher of bacon at breakfast be excepted, saya the Chicago Tribune, Mili, ewes, fish, fruit in abundance, with ight, dry porous bread should be staples, Men working as stokers, furnace men fn rolling mills, foundrymen and the | lke ato subject to tremendous hoat, Thirst {s aroused and too often beer {9 used to quench {t tnstoad of water, or, preferably, oatmeal water. Any form of slochol used under these circumstances means the shortening of the ify of the | drinker. In many cases where a person eating meats and vegetables at the same meal suffers from the combination, he may find relief from stomach disorders by making his meal of meat one day and the next meal of vegetables wholly, —_——_+-¢2—____. | | Strange Origin of Fashions e HE custom of powdering the hair dates back ay far as the alxteenth cen T tury, and was first introduced by the nuns in French convents, ‘Thot who had occasion to leave the clotsters for any reason were wont: to pows der their halr, 60 as to make dt appear gray and give them a venerable look, The fashionable dames were so struck with the novel effect of white powder on dark hair that they soon appropriated the device as one of the arte of the worldly tollet, Out of this grew the use of tints in the halr, The Roman women often used blue powder, and later, in 186), Bmpross Eugenie set the fashion of using gold powder, Rome under the empire and Greece during the time of Pertoles were selmed with a mania for golden halr, The belles and fops of the day devised several methods whereby black locke might be changed to golden yellow, but bleaching did not always succeed, Consequently, quite a trade was established with the fair-halred tribes beyond the Alps, who sold their looks to Latin merchants, te be worn on the heads of Roman dandies, Many @ dame dampened her raven tresses in the strongest of muriatio acid and sat in the sun to bleach her hair to the coveted yellow, tagw the Clnomnatl Commerclal Tritt ‘There were some cunning devices {n vous among the belles of the old world for giving oxpression to the eye, The most reokless of them were wont to place a single drop of that deadly poison, pruesio acid, in the bottom of a wineglars and hold it against the eye for two or three seconds. Or, more raghly still, they would take @ siiall quasliya plo larger then © grain of rice-of an oint- ment containing that mortal drug, atropfa, and rub {t on the brow, Each of these was supposed to give clearness and brilllancy, expand the pup!l and impart fe es \* fascinating fulness and mellowness to the eye Letters from the People w Answers to Questions. Said « on « the # Side. Pm |. AGON covered by @ tarpaulin) Another case of a murderers victim W holts up Lackawanna trains for | dismembered and packed in a sult case an hour fn the rain, Commut Blue for Boy, Plate for Girl. ; there are two classes of men. Qne)is the person who at Lier thne or} sele woman (collectively) ts consti- To the FAltor of The Evening World lass is dirty and hunety looking 4 8 not Geairous ving “stile ally stronger than man; her pow- and hamper. Must there be a third to ‘A claims blue is the color for a boy, the other is clean and well fed, A man ‘ nie ro take ‘08 ers of endurance aro great might not have minded the delay | complete the ghastly series? pink for a girl, E claims just the op- | that has a home is pi sure to look + mother the trouble A buxom, broad-sho: 1, able+ y could have had the wee of the ” ee posite, Wich ts right? A&B. | clean, and with @ dog it ts the same wi is cortainly @ fine trait in hls bodied woman, be she a stenographer, |tarpaulin, Some doubt as to how| Women — ateonlejack in nd Geen bik thing. Therefore a dog that is led by | character C. E.R. bookkeeper of saleswoman, is more!pmosbe sr hoa her train ‘under pone 5 Spilges ee 8 & man, Gaving a home, js sure to be) Strength of Women and Mem. — able to endure the strain of sirap-hang- | present open alr conditions at Hoboken | "AN £9 which she doos not aspire ' ‘To the Baltor of The Evening World clean and sleek looking. He asks of | To the Balt Brening World: ing than t chested jn her characteristic “spotless atyle Books to the number of 81,000 edited I read with interest your editorial de- | what uge ts @ pet dog? Well, a dog| Ist ket m weak: | office boys, jumpers see to the ctty Ubraries last year, Almost manding cheaper tolephone ser a “putt in’ for one thing, but is| er physically as we nro led to believe? | \ If the accommodations for women in| 4 many os an edition of a popular penny postage, Keep it company at the same time, and who! According to medical men and men of" of the new era, | the New York University Hall of Fame | 2°Vel ere must be some wa A Chinese Rite, _— — = = = an his are Imited why ehould not a woman's college start one for the exclusive use A man’s pol giv up né monopoly in t the celeph i | feat to a woman resolves It Agitate! Agitate! TBM How the English Leneunes | Is Chaneite, Questton “of ae on of the aex? a HO haa seen a Chinanan's queue q woman Who expects A | . ="'pigtail,”” you probably call it? | Defends the Pet Dow 5 apnel "ja," which te quite an elemental sound, (her equal) £0 give her hk | The prisoner who escaped from a W leat aise DWE Gun wee ot To the Baitor of The Evening World coming. 80! in "Yep," on other hand, t# clear a 4 meving trun just after it leX the know that when a little Chinese ; Lip hobcad ahs i ae ’ : : the: wanted oF Do Flathosh Women Chew Gamt Grand Central may merely have want. I note a er hea T fan Be n ap has long a protes: against the wa: of time boy starts to grow his queue it ts just as wled ‘ ne Dog.” In the first place the | . ‘yus ips of the! In neue palate and teeth To the Edi ¢ The Fvening World: 1 to get awny, from the atmosphere. [erent an event in his Hf@ as it is when that a pet cog le a “bunch Siie MURR re Gy rRSeRE TH ; to hiss, Phonetic laziness| Why (a lt that 80 many of the women a at Atmentonn ‘ow done bis Bub vase of aiid holea, Ghd A RANK of head Ginone: (he eauanten 60 adopt the lite Prof. Mux Muller would I mest who reside in that section of | Bene <ige marian sown wo jo eon A PiMladeighia Nowa . ow me ay that if si to aHoah Gariania pon Ole world, (58 Brooklyn known aa Flatigsh ehew) breaks tn and the bite ‘ 3 Allow cs [b Ske Mk HEN Uned tol tay AmaHeah eo upon the worl And rhn the fat wee, the pean Gum-shewing. 4h paste. ta the) ave. Decauee they age not twoelved an American, Very proud of bia queue ts / seeing such animals he must go among says the London Chronic} America nd hi y the p ng of ali habits. Chewing, guests the lot of the hotel clerk js che young Chinaman, and he pute it to A very low class and the best thing he! }as found that an open ol or a hewing gum! 1 even notice hardly a happy, ong, |many queer uses, Surely one of the > can do Ww to change his qurroundings {s easier to pronounce than a in uniform doing It too But entoago women who are vivisecting | qveerest Is when he employe it to ewike , a bit, As to the “bunoh of fur and it, And It has two substitutes ~ eats and dogs doubtless renson that it's |an are of draw a clrcie tn his geo ; bone” why, let him iva the anion | om ein et them is "yep" and no worse than monte suret Dinas schoolboy fe lucky? If Young Ametee 4 a good meal nth I be} the other t Other members of sex will probably lioses his compass and has ry | some fat betweon the fur and bones.| Obviously the “yah comes through, » Mater. tlhiten Fido’s chain and seo that Sweet-| handy there Ma no ie for him to t \aere are two classes of dogs, Just as| the influence of the simple Germar SOUTHERNER, ‘heart does not stfay out of slaht but "Munk" tn his geometry. = ag FURGHER HISGORY OF « BY H. RIDER HAGGARD & Author of “She,” “Allan Quatermain,” ‘‘King Solomon's Mines,” eto, | @nd the sorrow of much knowledge, had) sought refuge in the service of the wil- | /) versal mother, thinking there to win the She-Who-Must-Be- -Obeyed. ng eyed BunK tn utter ah Deautital became undying prov to “ie Kallikratos, I tell (bee that | true wisdom which ever fled from her, Did not Ay That Ayesha, as thou sawest also, the| ! er in the Ca goddess visited In a dream, bidding her| fy “fy Hour Pais tavitort waved to follow those faithless ones, and work | her soul, Viney, who | Heaven's vengeance on tem, and prom. [aft Kallicrates, did not Ser epitit thee in thy sleop and sta do with upon this very pinnacle watch and beauty such as had) %e t beacon light to gi lieing her In reward victory over death Vupon the earts hot been known In woman Une wake yee Hs f yany 8, not fe lowed far; she awaited them |whe companioned thy vary. ete) a Twhere (hey wandered, Guided by a strove to guard tho fi uvary dangor, 7) #age named Novi, one who from the LE bask tho simltiol hae begining had been appointed to her and joked toward Leo, service and that of auother-—thou, ©} #8, thoueh awaltig his reply ot Holly, wast that man—she found the fie first part of the tale, sxcapt peek weet 4 1h | trom the writing on che eherd't noe essence ch to bathe ts to out- | nothin "he sald; “of the rest live generations, faiths and empires, we, know that It is true ae | would ask’ a question, and I pray | : ia thee of thy harhy let thy answer ¢ Will slay tiese guilty ones, 1) gwitt and enote’ in Thou sayoxt that In four I cam then Is Ay will slay (hem presently, as I am oom- manded, wrapped her’ ; pre ” thou ha? Ta cog ation ents l Yet Ayesha slew not, for now thetr | (nou, Ayer na And in j#in was her sin, since she who had | in stature? On! hem like a Vengeance, raw-necked and |never loved came to desire thls man, | ever god thou Tagged-pinioned, hovers a following vul- She led them to the Place of Lif ture, mich a vulture as the goddess purposing there to clothe him and hers ore i stanert oh Wore for a hiad.rons, velf with Ammortality, and let the wo: | thou dtdst Pledge “hjset eternally, ides trom {ts burning ) 7 SS }mea die. But tt was nat so fated, for) ‘She lies, she lies,” broke in Atere, frame ast sheet of fire qf {twelt we gazed upon, jthen the goddess smote, The iife was pusbandeador sudh Wik hor mn | emp lay sky. Then an-| \ | Wild scones, multitudes of people, |Avesha’s us had been promised, but n | thar yonder woman who anya that gio CHAPTER t amooth- / rhiy | great caves, and In them faces, among ‘ite frat hour, blinded with jealous rage ed tron thee ng and beautiful, to . | with 4, a cave Y/Y thera our own, starting up distorted |because he shrank from ber unveiled tae twonty y ago, A Vision of Love and) re l Thon ty ine OG And enormous, to grow tiny in an in glory to the mortal woman at his Senter ar ees Geen re ed a Hate. 1, tiow shayen, but] / VA ! stant and depart; stark Imaginations of |side, this Ayesha brought bin to his hallg of Hes, Lot her deny ft if she alred fl the © priest | forms towering and divine; of Ladd a i. ath, and alas! alas! loft herself un- | ca “pon ree ntbe, Mull. thou e ' wy ; and he cl tae ay Mt in rolled Jo blood, and hovering over them | ys by the favor of the goddess, vowed to ur upon her fathlagn minintery, giv: |Y ane ast > hae Sls My, hls una “ fow , \ eee aera ct wits abe tea) |*h8, aplrite of the slatn, ,| ‘Jaisten then," said Hosea, in her| her oternally and to her alone, by the tome event of prety Gay, saad, mecirine e 1 ank. | naked except for her flowing hat afin hee chalr, @ MER OES: WHE Re. These plotures died as the others had] weary vote » the interpretation of} dreadful oath that might nt be broken jery, and to the royal Amunartas jeal-|{oally, in a fashion | thi ‘warried no con- 8 on pr | tiful, beautiful | ‘ vu, [Of ner owa magle, . cd, and the fire was blank again, the writing. Many an ago ago, but! without punishment as eternal, the tate at unend in ge ene | Vint on ie ry! apie tha trues i t ritmyn; ehe points | The other, ‘wrepy & dark Kk Fev diy to ant tro {icra tha vast mie-|» Then the Hevea spoke tn a volee very | phorily after 1 began (0 ive thie inst) “There lived also @ daughter of Pha: a that ove. whlch te trey eth of "of, "winter in tho t " nm and to the river, | the air with her hand ng | ror f dha Hama, aust be rae |£aint at first, that by slow degress @reW | jong Ute of mine, Isis, the great goddess! raoh's house, one Amenartas, who cast haa dared ta Blake bereft bs Nas % me Ki ng an my | eyes aa house to call Bef idee iy laa lt ve re | stronger | of Kaypt, had her holy house at Boh-| eyes of love upon thls Kalllkrates, and, |t Stet a tie toui pases nad at tha [beleiioon iy he Week isos ay eh of long ag | 1 upon her rival 1 ‘}with the mem of over two thou. “Ts thy question answered, oh, At-| bit, near the Nile. It tea ruin now and} wrapping him in her spolle—for then 9 etme olnted, that undying Ayesha itive ‘id of inatth wear et hee { pi | our side, for she | those women were at whone sand years which It was too exhausted | ene?” Isis has departed from Egypt, thouga | now sho practised witcherles~caused him | Who, ‘W his. rebiyth, from eee We Went ‘o o, Wet he I and eres aloud) ing car the shadow ha pered, and separate and defi These visions! “I have seen serange sights, mother, | still under the power that fashtoned it} to break his oaths and fly with ‘her. joo hs fi iy ‘from. ‘th 6. sets heh nlf a ' Kayptlan who had kiss . id multiptiod and melted mighty Umnings worthy of thy mag.c,|and her; she rules the world, for she {8 Thou, Atene, wast that Amenartas, Pr ire $n tht * ay my heart and + beneath the pylon p ne ft the othe { despite their, bat how kaow I that they are more| nature's sf, Of that shrine a certain’ ‘Lastly there lived a certain Ar jan, | 9 yd 0, ja the hour 1 won him in the omiy all the figures f it was tudistinetiwes all were so vividly real, than vapors of thine own brain cast} man, a Greek, Kalilkrates, by name, | named Ayesha, a wise and lovely wom- i ab e ww Det.” t Pp though the fire ate them up, fovefira ‘ (hat dt seomed as though it was life! ypon yonder fire to deceive and mwck was chief priest, chosen for her service ‘an, who, in the emptiness of her. free * ’

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