The evening world. Newspaper, October 18, 1905, Page 12

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The Evening World's Home Magazine, Z The Published by the Press Publishtag Company, No, 63 to 63 Park Row, New Tork, Kntered at the Fost-OMvo ot New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. VOLUME 46 ceessssecees cesses ereree essen cssee ee NO. 16,120, street yesterday morning was one of the boldest operations of all. * It has become the custom to attribute these crimes to the B Now to Cut Off the Black Hand! Elght times in a year and a half, | in New York, the explosion of a) bomb has followed the threats) against different men in business made by a gang or by gangs of outlaws. These outrages by dynamite have punctuated a long serles of “hold- ups,” murders, attempted killings, efforts at kidnapping and sendings out of threatening letters. The blowing up of the Glambalvo Brothers’ grocery store in Stanton Wednesday Evening, Black Hands. Oct ober 18, 1905. ‘A Group of Oddities | in Picture and Story. { 00 which Is puzzling solentists and which ts scon to be made the subject of a forms the caption of a monument, 8 stone ball has been observed to IT the cemetery at Maron a curious natural phenomenon has been observed thorough investigation, A large stone ba! | ng tn the centre of an orainary pase. Be 4 slow turning movement, The turning movement 1s not from left to right, but takes place from top te bot- tom; that (8, the bal} wotates slowly about @ horigontal axis in the direction from north to south. The circular spot shown In the photograph (ceproduced from the Sclentific Amencan), Is un polished and was originally tn Juxtapo + sition with the baso of the monument |The bail was never actually fyed to the baso of the monument, tt being oon- | sidered that the frievion of the rough unpolished spot with the rough top of the base socket would be sufficient to hold the heavy ball, which welghs 4,20 pounds, In position, ‘The weight of the ball would seem to prevent any wilful attempt at deception. | The monument wes erected a number | of years ago, but !t was not known | that dt waa turning until the pring of | WO, Since that time it has been wa Jed and measured repeatedly, and tt is eatablished beyond question that the Hand, an alleged secret society of criminals, The question whether or stone {8 turning continually, presuma- not there is such a body in this country is unsettled, although the bly by the action of the sun's enya It has been suggested that the monument ts partly « 1 by the t trees at dimes, or for a portion of the day, and that there is some connection weight of expert opinion is in the negative, The public loves to organize its mysteries, ‘There 's more of a between this fact and the rotation, chill in the thought of a band of brigands than In that of handfuls of An eminem man of aclence has recently declared that red-halted people are And certainly the terror has travelled fast, A year ago it was even | Aner, and over three dark hairs take up thie space af ne red He Abie in the schools—a wholesale panic affecting teachers, pupils and parents. Sateen uty chests reetieels FA BBlibe bi ad Thus far the icine of outrages and t s have been chiefly 1 common number of hairs on the set bad falr iy ” | Along the Chinese sencoast the coolies whose 4: stor ad fi a ara Italians, The Black Hand itself ts assumed to be an Italian society. But Detective Petrosini gave significant warning the other day that desperadoes grown more daring with continued success in evading the to carry the cargo to the wis or the ne some barrow for the purpose As the w Light Q front bar of t barrow police are not likely always to confine thelr exploits to special quarters of the city, theae & rude sal ls fitted Whether the thugs are banded, or, as seems more probable, are In- quarter, the wor dependent criminals, working under the convenient Black Hand cloak, Lie eee fay ae for carrying camp equipment they have made themselves the police issue of the moment. , | Bigger than any Vice Squad contingency— Bigger than the bureau of the Shoofly Squad— Bigger in the pinch than the operation of the Traffic Squad— | Is the necessity of settling for once and all with the men who have Introduced old-world brigandage into the new world’s chief city, It is not possible that even fiendishly elusive crooks can long es- cape the united, determined cleverness of New York detectives, Since the beginning of the end of the Black Hand terror is already | overdue it should not be longer postponed, ns, it will cost ~. The steel door alone will weigh five tons, The combined salaries o dents of the fourtes in the United States do not equal the amount paid to the head of o: nce company, Anti-Treating as a Drink Cure. e fee Se! Tom | A man Ih Fifth avenue has started an anti-treating soclety to fight, At Gonoata, fn the South seas, there Is a fine exacted from all who do not attend church three Umes @ week. ‘Said “won w the we Side. the dtink evil. | In a world in which few things are new, the anti-treating Idea is! ; ee ee eee ee . RLEM and ¢ yo premature blasts. Children wise. a Rete vii ty merm Letters from the People # Answers to Questions. Hr i; de , The hopeful founder of the fresh soclety s broken, rocks fly into re Abbey and magastne tllustrator to give passed at Albany making it a misdemeanor for one man to invite another Cannot Save His Tips. [fautting in fils oMidthod days and | not over one woman In ton ever took | sald: “It's all right, but the people live |Siteet bombardment & continudls Del”) up an income of 45,00 a year to study in a,public place to “have one on me.” | Ze th ening World! [nothing angers me more than to go into the trouble to say lke cats and dogs.” New Yorkers, you| formance and casualty list for pee | ox Long way off from the days 4 |, Can readers adviso me the best WY @ restaurant and alt down at @ table! 1 would adviso men always to give are beliind the times and don't know it.| forméiable one, Good tlme for the olling players performing in barns Volumes of records of freak legislation, asked or enacted, contain a oeen nas eee eeeneer in| Roere one or more persons are aiding, wr ticle senigit they sce an old iady or Wake up! H.R. HUNTER, |couragement of « red fag movement | and artista in attic nothing less sane than this proposal to say by law that a man’s good Wa day in tips, but as soon ea Tam [OuCh O86 ting to make more noise F : Gera arene Treusea SEs el anlar oar ti New York, New Ilaveh and Raritord - , y y a ips, sou the raion cap my seat until the women of this a a. ne, i 7 ’ i fellowship shall never be indiscreet. Out of the hotel I spend it Can eome| With his mouth shan the party along. Aeue My seat until the women of ttle To the Editor of The Evening World ajloon rose near Paris, Airship club | commuters unite to elect an Assembiy- screet, ide him, It may be that a majority n bia : feat ench) siganized in New York. A good deal| man, New power in politics only needs Wha a) Alesle i er one advise me of some way to overc ‘ a tt ie they get and to be polite even to a| | Wed © surrender my hat would a disciple of the anti-treating idea do with the poor, this? A MESSENGER, (of the New Yorkers do mot know that tired workingman AR | night and morning to aome lady, One ‘in the alt’ nowadays, ing to realize thelr strength to use it to @ eweet ee fms 894 Agtor to de buried in Westminster ANAir GA be +a I 4 One can eat a meal wivhout keeping his A z iiay : he as reported from Waterbury, Conn,, has spent practically! “The Cold and tey Truth” | mouth open continuously, ANTON A. An (0 Philadelphin, Fong thee te Be aa eee all of the last twenty-seven years in jail, a victir i 5 To the Editor of The Evening World: | One His Se Te the Bbitey of Th Work! ceeds tiles Boag. Ss “seeing New York," | English oolony of Rugby on the Cum aunkoctible thirst?” y Jail, m of his own lonesome, oar saicorels ure vay ana 1] WHY One Man Keeps Bis feat. | "why ws it that New York people, a9 4 hank you.” When I ar.| New Zealander, sdahacdad die Reser oe one e? baad saat Editor of The Evening World rule, call Philadelph ‘ office I discovered my|feposits $1,230 with the Ne y guccens delight tn reading them because thoy| ww should a man who has teen passes New. Yorke ih & young lady in bl 4 police for safekeeping, May be Ma- chance for some time, but scored a nit. @re the cold and fey truth. I would 4 i day f Ks ee ere csnse SA eee 1B SUS CORIO Ot may Erpee | ; has touchdown finally, Dr. William H. Allen, general agent of the Associati b : 1d) working hard all day, standing on his gome sa { they have better mun-| Wrher demonstrating to my employer) Caulay’s New Zealander who has passed Wig 5 tine (i a Ne ES f he Association for Im- dat it © porso Mt you could] feet all the time, arise and give a nera nnd better home € than the| how much provtier she looked sitting| London by for w sight of something | wovenment employees forbidden to uA Ving the Condition of the Poor, says the number of New York chile tena of Greater Now York in regan to| woman. & seat? A worn in a great Now Yorker, If thero is anythng move there chan 1. She could not work ax| more intereating pee ee ae a en see dren out of school who ough cate F . tna of Greater New York in regan! to| many cases who has been to the mati-| disgusting than {ll-bred rsc fast as I could, but sh ‘ Gt 8 a te a oa Wes 01 Bi to be mn iS nearer 100,000 than the 2,300! Keeping weir mouths closed while cat-| neo and then has ben hanging around | would like to Kaew what it te Me lthat Twas ane Pcidecl eat apie sited Gf sided a th tations bowers. seek barred iroca i : sk ard of E ucation, Also that there are many other 96 meals tn public restaurans or else. | t res until the Inst home is in the South, and my father, o r called mo into the office and| complaints of the station-akipping habit | ie 8 things the 4 ard does not know, The Board has either something to "ere. DM you ever notice how few of) pecially when special train and brother wero up here to soe me told me my servtces would be no longer |on the subway. Local trains alleged tO) staying of a good policeman in the do, or sc mething important to disprove, our citinens Know how to eat properly’ | for her special accommodation? Out of | two weeks ago, and when I asked my | required, I don’t ive up my seat any| Jump trom Worth atreet to Astor Dace | Hricklayer who fell ix stories, got up [without stopping, “L" has reformed and s1!d "G’wan!" 'T am one who has had a little good] all the thnes I have given up my seat| father what he thought of the town hel more. IDLER. A y F § i GHE FVRGHER. HISGORY OF # 2» # @ & &@ @ Bw 4G BY H. RIDER HAGGARD | e . ° ut rf S h e al W h O- M u st =! B e-O b e y e d ° Author of “She,” “Allan Quatermain,” '‘King (Conyrinnied, 1904, 4 Solomon’s Mines,” eto, i Bee (Syptiah ey Cod fest thera h ers marden bal overcome were ] Of attendant prieate. world, hear me, Now for the first time wre also by all that we had endured and As soon 4s our eyes Decame accus-|I apperr among you ms I Am, you who SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. | },, thot we could scarcely speak, much | tomed to the dazgling glare of the flam-| heretofore have looked but on @ hooded Leo Vineey and ierace Holly, two sna: | 18" ‘seuss these marvellous events — | tng pillars, we saw that some great rite | shape, not knowing Its form or fashion, | 4 coMntry be ren dials swims, said Leo to Oren. | was in progress in the temple, for in| Lear now the reason that I draw my | Ha eased aaa aRAtaNGA. th: ts 4 fromt of the divine etatue of mother-| vel, Ye see this man, whom yo be chamber shore were boda and’on thos hood, white-robed and arranged in ror-| lieved a atranger, that with his com- we. ft Oubmlves down and a a ried ranks, stood the company of the) panion had wandered to our shrine, & dreamleysly, like Mttle children ii | priests to the number of over two hun-| tell you that he Is no stranger; that of When we awoke it: was af.ernoon We | dred, and behind these the company of 14, In lives forgotten, he was my lord untalns they come to the rone and bathed, then saying that the priestesses, Facing this congrega-| who now comes to seek his love agalm Wished to be alone, went together } tion and @ little in advance of the two| Say, ts it not #0, Kailikratest” n, where even at ida, pillars of fire that flared on ebiner alde| “It 4 " arrawered Leo, he ond of August, the air was of the shrine, Ayesha herself was soated “Priests and priestesses of How, as | still mild and pleasant, Behind q rock | in q raised chair @o ehat he could be Y@ know, from the beginning it has by a bed of campanulas and other moun- | cen of all, while to her right stood @ been the right and custom of her who iin flowers and ferns was a bench nea simflar chair, of which I could guess the holds my place to choose one to be her 3 to the banks of @ ilttle stream, on Tiree, ford, Ia tt not 80?” ) iy and Leo escape and make their wa have yo! say, Horace?" | parelled, though eave for the whito be ne Bw J a 7 ash », laying his tad upon my [ture of infinite sweetness turned to Ht ues them thit a ‘ i 4 ve Heath, Ler robes were those Of ® GuceB) 1 6 tant poward him thrice and sf n rather than of a priesters, About hor m i I answered, “That things radiant brow ran @ narrow band of slowly dank Upon her knee, about most marvellourly; | gold, whence rose the head of a hooded ‘Bay thou, Ayesha eald, looking up t We have dreamed aright and la- aap cut out of @ single crimson jewel, |@t him with her wondrous ey d not Jn vain; that you are tae |denoath which in endless profusion the| before these tere gathered, most fortunate of men and should be | glorious, waving hair flowed down and| those witne whom thou canst not : y around, hiding even the folds of ner/** Gost thou again aocept me as thy ut me somewhat strangely purple cloak, bn eaay brider boil ba No empress could have looked more] "AY, Indy,” he answered, in a deap y ‘ourse: she ie lovely, Is she|ént. Or perhaps ft is only faney. But royal, and no woman was ever half so| Dit shaken votce, “now and forever.” 1. but"-and his voice dropped to its| Horace. 1 kt ls afrata of lovely, for to Ayesha’s human beauty) Then, while all watohed, in the midst fowst wihisper—'I wish, Horace, shat |A‘ene. Why, in the old days, the wos ndded @ spiritual glory, her heri-|®f a great silence, Ayesha rome, cast Ayesha were a little more human, even | Khania would have been dead and for- tage alone, down her slstrum sceptre, that rang CHAPTER XXXVIII, |as vuman as she was in the caves of {gotten In an hour Loo, who, notwithstanding tt On we marched between the ranks | Upon the rocky floor, and mretched o s(, | Kor, I don't whink she i quite flesh| “Perhaps ste may have grown more 4 clroumstances connected with (of Merophants, tli Oros and the priests |her arms toward him The Kiss of Fear. nd blood; I felt it when whe kissed me|Sertie, Teo, who, lke ourselves, has | his Mee, retained th: ous principles | ltt We and we stood alone face to face Leo also bent toward her, and would | if you cam call {t a kiss—for ahe hard. | learned bard lessons." | Jin which I had educated tim, very | With Avesha, Now eho lted her scep-| have Kissed her upon the lps, But 1 OGETHER we descended the mut. ly t ir, Indeed. how can! "Yes," he answered, "I hope that is strongly Indeed, rofused to move an te.end the ehant ceased. In the mitst | why watched, saw thie face grow white si titudinous steps and passed the Sie be thus in an hour?| 9% At any rate, she has grown moro Inch until the nature of this service was {Of the following silence, she rose from | as it drow near ty hers, While the ra % azdless, rock-hewn pastagen tii] Flesh and blood are not born of flame, |4!¥ino—only, Horace, what kind of A } Fy nade clear to him, Indeed, he ex. |her seat and gilding down 18 steps, | diance cropt from her brow to his, turn we came to the door of the dwelling of Horace husband shall t be for that bright be- : pressed himself upon the subject with |come to where Lao stood and touched | ing hts bright hair to gold, I enw also She HIgh pricstase and were led through | “AT® You sure that she was 40 born? | IMB If ever I wet eo far? 2 vigor to Oros, At first the priest {him on the forehead with her slairum, | that this strong man trembled like @ it Into a hall beyond, Here Ayesha |1 asked. “Like the visions on the fire,|_W5¥ Should you not get so far." 1 ‘ seomed puzzled what to do, then ex. |C'vine In @ loud, sweet voice: reed and seemed as though he were Tarted from us, saying whe was out- MAY not that hideous shape have been | S86 snarily, for hls words Jarred) “Look here! | don’t want to be mixed up in their heathen idclatries!” | plained that the forthcoming ceremony | “Behold the chosen of whe Hesea!" | about to fall, Yorn, an indeed she scemed to be with | but an Ilusion of our minds? May eho | YP" my tense nerves | was one of betrothal, whereon all that @udienoe echoed in a) T think that Ayesha noted it, too, for Qn utter weariness, not of the body, but | be still the same Ayesha whom we| 1 don't kr bi he answered, “but sprang up, and we accompanied him | d and Into mine a plain wand. This! Op Jearning this Leo ralsed no further | shout of thunder: ero ever thelr lps met she thrust him the « For her delicate form |k#0w in Kor, not reborn, but watted |O” Seneral principtes do you think that | back to our apartment eptre was shaped like a crook, and] oyjeotons, asking only with some nerv-| “Welcome to the chosen of the! from her and again that gray mist of Arcoped like a rain-taden Illy, her eyes | Thither by some mysterious agency?” [isn “Wier gly re lowed to @ man? | Hero priests wore waling, who, some- tho sight of It ave mo some clue tothe] jusneas whether the Kania would. be| !icicat” fenr gathered on her face Grew dim ca those of & perwon in al "Perhaps. Horace, we 0 not know rit What did Atene moan when sne4 what against his will, trinmed this halr| natu f the forthcoming ceremony, present. Ores answered "No," as she| Thea while cho echoes of that glad] fy an Instant It was gone, She bed ee, and her voice came in @ soft, |—I think that we shall never know |e nrg s nnn aa and spirit cannot mate and beard, and would have done the) "The crook of Osiris!” 1 whispered to| jaa already departed to Kaloon, vowing |r) Yt Nang round the rocky walls, sinned from him and with her hand edt Whisper—the volce of one speak- | But I admit that to me the thing gl nate tee Linwt j same for me had I not refused thelr | Leo, war and vengeance. Ayesha mojitoned to me to stand at her| held his hand, as though to support ing in her sleep, terrifying, I am drawn to her by’ an| frome neand oe pane Mer Fos appeared offices, ‘Then they placed gold-embrol-| "Look here,” he answered, “I don't] then we were led through long pas-|eiie, and, taking Leo by the hand.| nim, ‘Thus they atood tll his feet grew *Goot-by." ehe sald to us, “Ores will] Infinite attraction, her eyes set. iy Sabres oh the rock, and, bowlng with dered sandals on our feet and wrapped | want to Impe to any Egyptian god | gages, till finally wo emerged into the|drew him toward her, so that now bel frm and his strength returned, Fuard you both, and lead you to me at| blood on fire the touch of her hand 19 more than his usual humility to Leo, Leo in @ magnificent white robe, also|or to be mixed up in thelr heathen Idol- gallery Immediately in front of the great | faced the whiterobed company, Hold- (To Bo Continued.) the apoointnd time Rest you well.” [as that of @ wand of madness ind | ny Li; {he Hevea desired our pres- | richly worked with gold and purple, a| atries; in fact, I won't." wooden doors of the apse, At our ap-|ing him thus, ghe began to epeak in ooo « Bo she went, and the priest led us tnto|upon my brain, And yet between ua | (last th (ervie sn the sanctuary, Re- | somewhat similar robe, but of lets or-| “Batter go through with It,” X sug-| proach these. swung Open and we en-| clear and aliver tones, SUNDAY WORLD WANTS @ Pesntifu apartment <tat cbeded onto there ls some wal, tavsile, atl pres: Magaln before he had hoped to do a0 Las |e: alse sess sane yen gay | gyvid: “probably Isls only something | ered it, Oroe going fet thon Lao, than| “rasta and prlastenes of Hes, stry- . ; # had hoped to do ao Leo! e silver aceptre was thrust into his’ ermbolloal.” Luyselt, and ¢ollowing us, the proveqslon ante ‘with her of the Mother of the WORK MONDAY WONDERS, ;

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