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OE DESERT ae inabee. The | Wished by the Press Pubii« 88 to Park Row, Now York, Second-Class Mail Matter Entered at the Post-Onive verses NO, 16,184, VOLUME 46..... Big Chief and Boomerang. This, as the first reader would iy, is the picture of a boomerang. An Australian warrior uses the | boomerang as a weapon, Big Chief Murphy, of Manhattan, has just tied to do the same, The differ. ence is that the Australian knows | how, | The Murphy boomerang, with an Ahearn appendix, was thrown in the direction of Jerome. It was not built right to land —nor thrown | tight, | An Australian boomerang is a third of an inch thick, Murphy's was thin enough to see through. The Australian boomerang kills or “throws a scare,” as its skilful user may desire. Murphy’s neither killed nor scared. It came back to bump the Big Chief’s head—and bumped it hard, Murphy was unwise to enter the lists of the boomerang throwers, There is nothing about the simple life at Good Ground to impart the skill i The Evening World's Me = Home Magazine, 19058, : Monday Evening, An Answer for Mr. Roosevelt. By J. Campbell Cory. GRAFTERS MUST BE REACHED BY PUBLIC OPINVON October 28, A Group of Oddities » in Picture and Story. t ed to soly imitate leaves or shrubs te escape tection by ene t plants in turn are able to resemble stones for 18 @ame end eral varieties in South Africa that so closely the ar nong W they grow that attempts are frequently made }to plek them uy } ‘ pr that they are rocks. ’ | nd. The original | orated electrie-lig tovk of plants in globe, bat an ritain dwindted chid. Its price util only one spect- cater than ten was left, A gross of such globes ember he Ti+ and a year's lig yer Expedition diss @y DD) thrown In.¢ Tt is wered a whole Ja owre specime yuneh of plants. | that ts arou . — The wartare of sexes has taken turn In Knoz+ Tenn, A gam ‘ame tpedium — Fatri m The Cypripedium Fatrtcanum w sent In 1 don, sa phere. From the Hay of Ite first dis ery until recen hot @ plant was vax vecently raided e police, and a imber of well- known young men were arrested, Tho ris of the city aro lemanding that the ake publio the names of the men, threatening to cut the offenders’ acai ‘The men feat the matter as a joke and hove asked t Airdressers of to pub- sh the names of all the girls who wear 5 Edmond Beall has been elected May tes. Mr. Reall owns what are know © “Storkr t jto rent to far sw ildre His ideas in regard to t tier won him c 1 the, married women tn town having workers In his + inherited through generations in Australia. = { Nobody believes that Jerome sought to see Murphy, Gia Bia! Hse Nc ea ae ; The boomerang from the Wigwam has not even dented the issue, min Mranklin rker exonanged which is that of ALL the people—“YOU,” says Mr. Jerome—against a friends ine ae” few of the bosses, {t made this which Js now jn ¢ \t a ety of Delaw AnIncompetent Monopoly. ie tan Sh | ce . ; elt; fresh water lakes ot 22 degrees | Commenting on The Evening World's recent strictures on the perse-| Fahrenheit tution and neglect of second-class mail, the Wall Street Journal observes: The Iteutenaatdovertor of @auit This is tersely put. Newspapers are expected and pald for with the understand. be kis TEIAIRE & P oe Leh f oft tng that they shall be in the hands of the subserther at his breakfast table, Is this | in eee , Accomplished? No—not even now, when every newspaper in New York City pays A London electrician | | rent, employs labor and buys material for a private postal system of tts own, sort- | e “wireless” In his ¢ ing its mail by districts, towns, cities and States, because the New York Post-Office | means of in AEETORSI Eis TH ’ Cries “lack of room,” “insufficient help"—bad system and the grabbing of our - a i ample postal receipts for use in other places. The total number of 1 te! | The Government {s endeavoring to cover 1,000,000 square miles of “farming ree ee ae ye fand” with free delivery at a cost of $24,000,000 yet to be expended” (quoted from : , 4 report), but a newspaper cannot mail a bag of mixed mail in this city at 9 P.M, | t | and get it regularly delivered uptown at 8 o'clock the next morning, Here {s a ] The deepest sounding yet’ made Government monopoly, directed by perhaps able men, but positively deficient in real ; =f a. ‘ "i : postal work and service—run on lines that would call for their immediate discharge : EEtanene if they were delivery clerks for any dry-goods store in New York ’n the nearan wllsh town 4 ie te A - N ‘ t enol onder This is exactly true, Mr. Cortelyou was greatly heralded as a master d Any 5 1 1. By ord of detail and efficiency when he became Postmaster-General, Perhaps his j | duties as Chairman of the Republican National Committee have impaired ; levaa rater aia ba aide ‘ : | ‘Hs good ques, He ought tobe ashamed of tisderarment. Letters from the People w# Answers to Questions . How long would it he before Government control OF done] fe Tak lle oe Wn mecalee Wace, RA a deinen er, SONB ar 1a 1 er BE | intties cooing: F became Government control 3Y corporations? Several times I have boarded Brond-| money op rolatives or frienda, and has| 1 offer the following as by some strane Paes ' | ia 7 way k scideraag ge d he srihlttips jus: got to work for her living? And ts horse sohi at $800, wal “ es seem ' . — | turn the mn the car to “Houston |i: + unkind to see gremt, strong men the horse cost $40) ty, It does 1 } The Germs of Laziness, Street Only,” thus forcing me to take wiuib. thaila Ablbs i WONIE | $00, lose 25 per cent. course | ul “ a crowded car ahead. The sign was hang to straps? Where js their| Hence this horse cost $606.06. Result— fact t this ts wrong | HE buying of white rata and mice be nesded could not carry out his agree. | turned by the motorman at about Bond | manhood? Teelbes ta es paeen tee ie ; and cost of the! Somehow, Also, history shows ua tha | {a not @ joke among the doctors | ment and that he wanted author street usually, Is there mo redress? | oyening World | ria " uld not win ts connected with the Marine Hos-| go into the white rat and mi. MONROE 8 “ | hi mice tn 2 08 | yattle for the women. CHIVALRY | pital Service, Neither ts the hook-/ to buy the animals at a price not ex- Crusade of Politene: | horses at $0 s | | worm, which is the germ of laziness. | ceeding 2% cents each. Mr Reynolds the Baltor of The Evening W Pink for Girl) Blue for Boy. loss in money What {9 | $84.68 2-3 on an Investment of $1,069.08 2 f or .0625, whiten ia 61-4 € consumer is kept poor it plug OSCAR WALTERS, prosperity's gam AR Higher Cost, Stationary Pay. How Far Apart? > the Fuitor of The Brening World tor of The Beening W Bo many are the varteties of this bacil-| granted the desirod authority, tw ide rook \p— |g the Biltor of The Bvening World polls apes til pds Abd acorslden ddd Pel eaceeealaae ants Hospital | ¢ 1 etc 7 ea be fii | of the colons pink and blue, which ih supply of white mice and) Rervice regard the disease caused y up thelr seats to women. I don't be-|!8 Worn by baby boya and which ts| rate to use in ite experiments to dis-|the hook-worm bacillus, the tech aoe nee ee tok at the aaaiter in the| worm by baby gitle? J. 1, FRANK | cover a serum thet will kill the worm. | name of which : ) the technical | lieve 1 look at “he matter in the ls > the Fy Burgeon-Gen. Wyman told Assistant | as to demand a Mespeer stay added re © t hice sora) Slant, ainoe The “Two Horse” Problem, I read with great interest an article I ie Me ab 9 fly this Becrotary Reynolds, of the Treasury | bestow upon it. Rottents are ited ce EMR ET BOL me Nh NOS f hare To the Filter of The Evening World in last Sunday's World, sta »; Car ls golng at the rate of sixty miles twent entury to produce a war lord w shine. Attendants: ealuad UPite Department, that the contractor who | subjeste for inoculation with the Pees their chances with them, and atand In| Roferring to the query of Samuel ¢, | rents b doubled tn New per hou do the ba going at the n’s three dachshunds, whose pictures ine from ths London Bketch, had agreed to eupply the service with | 4nd so long as they are to be had any, te cars shuce t desire to compete | ty wit If a man sell two horses for during the past ten years. In rate of 120 miles per r ww far will} are known through the length and breadth of ¥ 2. They company thelr fs many white rats and mice as might | {"e DO Substitute will be accepted with a A yet, how toolleh to talk | $50 each and he gain 2 per cent, | the price of food has, accord! they be apart in one st perlal master everywhere, and, unkke the rest of Ais subjects, frequently 1 ‘ ‘ Are there not more women | and on % per cent, calculations (based on hard personal ex- er: HERBERT CROSS. | Aisobey the Kaiser without tnourring the remotest talnt of leee majeste AAR nn AA é GHE FUVRGHER. HISGORY OF «w# & et A A BO fF s F AYTESHA: 3% She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed, Oy de GEER AG eee Solomon’s Mines,” ete, Wopyrighted, 1904, In Grent Britain and they Ayesha had achieved the secret of any a y f United Btates by H. Rider Haeeard.) ax oe endunrg thst for — ND cen be certyin® ra — aN es arene ‘ ne Not] 1 swered Yet I im od q SXNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS | * ve purposes it migt plore, woman <« tell me one 1] Leo Vincey and Horace Holly, two t ending, W n certalr Tell t Oni . i Jahmen, start for an unknown countr ® h weiter x to forese el 0 he j Peng Torkestan in search of a wondersul ang 1 as her witer inability to foresee what wa 5 Tan, and nae i sedly Immortal woman known as "She | che future—undoubtedly, also, she was was be , ; PRS m t eare they liad t Hr treba.” th eormee peers het if endued with powers that can only be/ described as super Her rule over the s' thie woman in Africa, where sh ed aC me very solemnly and hai ‘ti tural, | Ange community , nd been ave by Leo. She , ve been 2.000 years olf we o in @ former Incase’ my meinory deceive me, Ho H HEY _percehens Dat among whom she Hved was absolute; H 8 !t written In the first book of Jand across the T indeed, {ts members reganled her as the law of the Hebrews, wi XS i © Passing (hese mountains the @ to t as @ law he Hebrews, which once 1 wad ot Baloon ie goddess, and as such she wie wor-| ised to study, that the sons of Heaven Atene, the Khania, or Queen, of K shipped, After marvellous adventures, came down to the daughters of men, falls in love with Io, and, by the er uncle Stmbri, Bh ( peeks to win him and found th they were It is so written,” I answered. “Then, Holly, might it not have chanced that once a daughter of rr ago the man who was her very life, I might is | almost say her soul, whose belng was 50 mysterlously intertwined with hers, intens- goddees t ri esteee oF tht eneleateos” bo be ATeAnS Ajoom, holieves, thie urlenteas tr md remalas true, toe her, Holly be-| whom. ghe loved, also, with th ed straighuway eet i) were ' Bevee Alene etn feinceas who had igved | est Aumen passion of which woman can hoaven came down to @ man of earth oul were watted sIESIERLAAI @nd been loved by Le in a former me cane | be capable, had sought her out tn thie and loved him well? Might it not enk | Eee 2.000 years ago and whose rival Ave#8 | 5 aden comer of the world chance that for this great sin, she, who | “7% IY saw: why, an. te AAAS Holly and Leo escape and make thelr WAY) fore, thrice he had proved his un- | | had befouled ber immortal state for powerful, she did not come to nee Khana purmues them thither, The] alterable fidelity to her. First, by hie mM, was doomed to suffer ll, mt, itstead OF etn ee though 1 ion yb i rejection of the royal and beautiful, if length, his love, purified by pain andj aivvoar that. some superior force for= F but verselt 0 Ave faithful even to a memory, was por- jade her ty do more than companion us undisciplined, A Ing our every act, reading ¥ ne, Secondly, by cling Mi t ned to b itted to redeem her? 7 mis, | (hg 00 Aveabe hee shy) Beene? i r at y thought, until at length wo venling. the ered face, and shrunk’ | pepulatve to every natural sense Th! | Now at length I saw light and sprang OUF Me ie nines Hy idy Serre OF 8 ay | Atgee Se ts ly, after that homage scene fr | Up eagerly, but in a cold voice she) Aiso, as will appear, there were other ‘ bi utter ded we of which this 1s not the time to uary—though with her wnutterable ad things . ” © perfections before his eyas this did not “Nay, Holly, cease to question me, Hoe rch still more tor- fg stuas fae Vasa Se appear to be go wonderful—by stead- for there are things of which 1 can ‘YN ti Brit ow nothing except that Passes BR thn ugh Ayesha's | fastness in the face of her terrible avow but speak to thee in figures and In my existence has been intertangled with Atene flings at her the final taunt: Man] tee, th he hed ¥ her parables, not to mock and bewilder | one of the great mystertes of the world; EP Spite cannot mate! Ayesha trembica| al, true or false, that she hed won her| | thee, but because 1 t. Interpret | that the glorious being called Ayesha &t. the. words | eifts and him through some dim, unholy hee, but because I mus aterp! ran the gecret. of life from whatever La and Aveena are formatiy batratned tn them as thou wilt, Stil, Atene thought | won thi he temple, Teo fears Ayesha ie not fi with the powers of evi, in the Ina ho mortal, since ale told iy that; power holds It in its Keeping; that she ut @ spirit tac s and consequences of which he man and spirit may not mate; and! alleged—though of this, remember, wo Bubreqian! events strengthen thia theory be involved am the price of her there aro matters in which [ lét_ her | have no actual Bpore--ench life was 2 ete raake her people worship | ill Ni ie judgment. weigh with meas without |be attained by bathing tn a certain 4 He te tke ee Tee Mill nor | Dosmesnion: oubt, now, as in other Ives, she and emanation, vapor or essence; that sho it, but denounces the idea eas idolatry.| yet Ayesha was miserable, Even ! that old Shaman, her uncle, have wis-| Was possessed by a passion not easy to tells him his love has redeemed ber > ‘i Ae st was clear 4 mm ay, and foresight io old my | Hogereteae but terete iB Iie foros ong from an eternity of e 4 ord press me nd more to wed him, for;immortal in Its nature, site urges ner marr those skeletons at the feast it gives me pain to say fim nay--ah! (upon one other belng and one alone, fe portponon th pansies ware: ie thou knowest not how much, That through this passion also some en fete fan che ANALGA WHA a “Moreover, [ with declare. myself tolangry fate smote her again, again, and Shere, which will endow ial companions, HGeRR: WED, We ‘hee, old friend; whatever else I be, at| yet again, making of her countless days youth, . | we ¢ alone she would acknowledg Ris ‘ eee jeayt Tam too womanly to listen to the}a burden, and Jeading the power and —_>—- Mask hints kid! velled aliaworieh oval! a - oe pleadings of my beat bebved and not) the wisdom which know all but eould oT 4 . 4 wn f t myself be moved. foreknow nothing into abysses of an- CHAPTER XLII, sions, Crushed though her ri Now, at Length, | Saw Light and Sprang Up Eagerly ‘ay, may, another pf Journoy-|guish, suspense and disappointment Khania Ate git be, also s ; alataanaueasd Gai BS . airs ' , ing, but a’ litle space, and we reach such as—leaven be thanked!—woe com: The Love of Ayesha, |. \y ,, . ative om rose the barrier | glowed upon her forehead. will not burn thee. Mayhap thou dfdst] the’ bridge my wisdom found. «nd cross! mon men and women are not called Matas : f well-being, especial 4 tility, and that until his! Mor’, she begun slowly to stroke her| but imagine it, av I have noted thou] lt gafely, and beyond forever ride On| upon to plumb Lent tha weeks. that | ‘Serhace * Ha ate ? r ean y magi 1 notyl thou] !t safely, “| upo plumb, URING the werk wed | _Ferhar ® knew that the wall of separa must | 7 1 being had been impregnated) abundan; hair, then her breast and| dost ‘magine many things; for surely|\t &i4¢ through the happy mcadiw4 of) For the rest, should human eyes over Soak fhomenthus: dive ai eens the seemed to warn! , ‘ foe 4056 \ Y) uur love, fall upon it, each reader must form his ease Haein et me ee | won eer c mbed for at lea > years, mysterious virtue of the Vapor | body, Whorover her fingers passed (he) no woman could clothe herself in Mght!” ‘Then @he was allen, nor would shel own upinion of this hisiory, lis true tne Bina a wane rat A telng |wanld cong. bo Alter in, and Wonitey Fhet chee: Inet Appt ft Was not wise towt she eiould| inyaile ght was born, until in that! and live, nor has so much as the smell Upon the matter, Also |terpretation “and. algnificance, Shag Whether « re age wane eon soil ‘ grew ar 1 could {take him ea a husband, darkened room—for the dusk wi th-| of fire passal upon my gar io sg tof it-even now land the exact parts played hy Ateng ae aver ves Wan thd ‘worn Gis'l thant would’ be wh bGPAAG AL res fh rel arian ol on pee mt ne: GOA Wee Baths | Be Bee penenl: Upon air, ea mene T'was not sure that she told mo theland myselt ints development 1 neue ah t Wee Gas ues lav the wiiige weateracar howe h | sked her why, g that though a}ering—she shimmered from head to] ‘Then at length my patience was out-| truth, or, at any rate, all of it, for 1 |to solve shortly, though not here, / Ppirit, whom we knew as She, r we P reseind and marry t Jong Jone, she Was still a woman, | foot Hike the wat'r of a phosphorescent, worn, and I grew angry, Ayesha's mint truch wag many colored! Well, ag T have said, the upshot of tt ‘Ayesha. Whether In fact, also at troubled f a thousand-| But on this point Ayesha was Inmov-| whereon her face aseumed a calm but! sen,.n being glorious yet fearful to be-| , , {as are the rays of Heit isrown fron | all wae that Ayesha. was devoured with Our imagination only, she had on |f wever, were her fears for I , I Py wee Lao, atid I by i ‘ | *T am sure of nothing, Ayesha.” 1 diftcramt faces of A cur Jowal, Welanxiety about Leo, Except in this mate bho adban of. her hideous age Int 1 iii : cj de Ml terrifying smile and she answered ' Thon she waved ler hand, and, | answered, “except that thou wilt make,| never id be certain whicl) ximde of| ter. of marriage, his every wie) was a ay ype apr ped reload ened le tte Alle be understod, to stand In| may add my own curtosity, when wel “Art $9 eure, my Holly? Tell ms do cave fr the gentle radiance on her) yx mad with hil these wricke and’ it, ehe vas pleased {9 presen’, Who, |saiafied, and indeed forestalled O ploot O| erpetual | and is Intimate relationsh to this half ere ulone hs * in asl me P reference or of nec y 7 5 m joom of perpetual e and | his Intimate relationship his h. w 1 questioned ‘her again as| your women wear such jewels us that brow, became as she had been, changes, Say, art thou a spirit then?’ ke it naa 1, apoMa of ‘ vee ee Havatined toa yer J beauty inconceivable, divine and marvellous being, and yet|t ‘These things at least were certain: not to be allowed so much as to touch D @ reasons of thts self-denying ord!- sot upon my brow?” and she pointed to ti ‘Art so sure, my Hollyy' Ayesha re- ‘We are all spirits,” she sald, reflecs | secrets in figures of speech and para; | awakening, . All she would tell me, however, the faint but lambent light which peated “' ane ‘ay, sbtink not; that flame tively, “and I, perhaps, more than some, bles, ‘To Be Continued.) gare