The evening world. Newspaper, October 26, 1905, Page 18

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Now Yor! Published by the Press Publishing Company, No, 6 to 6 Park Row, New Butered at the Post-OMoe at New York aa Geoond-Clans Mat] Matter. OLUME 46 sssseee seseeeNO, 18,187, The Jimmy-Sammy Ticket. Nearly a million and a half peo- -Af the world’s greatest cities, though | ranking merely as a borough of “| New York. ‘| Politically, New York's best citi- zens are to be found in Brooklyn. It is a town of homes. With infinite | audacity Patrick Henry McCarren, a race-track Senator, owned by the Sugar Trust, the Standard Oil 7 Company, or whoever else will buy, has assumed charge of the poli- al tics of the place. He calls himself, for convenience, a Democrat. Pretending to “stand for’ the autonomy of Brooklyn he really stands for the monopoly of graft. Many well-meaning persons followed him in his “fight” against Murphy, The ‘Tiger’ must not come to Brooklyn! McCarren has now developed a “Tiger” ofvhis own, It Is visible under his county ticket. “Jimmy” Ridgway and “Sammy” Whitehouse represent the worst that could be found to work the will of McCarren and his owners, Signs multiply to show that Brooklyn will not have them, She will | President's office to become a kennel of knaves, Not Forgotten. Some one who fears that New Yorkers will forget there is a God has hired billboard advertising space near the bridge entrance to keep His name before their eyes, But is the reminder necessary? Has there ever been a time when the city was more assiduous in the worship of its god? Has that god ever before had so many temples and fanes and high priests? The spectacle has recently been seen of the presidents of great “eleemosy- nary” institutions diligent in his adoration along with United States Senators, the heads of trust companies, the stewards who have the funds of the widow and the orphan in their keeping, and in general through- out the highest circles of fiduciary finance faith In their god was never 60 fervid as now, In some cases whole families are consecrated to his service after the manner of the hieratic class, like the McCurdys, This god, to be sure, is not the God of thelr fathers, But that fact has no bearing on the assumption that New York fs forgetting there is a god. It was never before so mindful of the existence of one or so un- remitting and untiring in his service. Industrial Insurance. The investigation of the largest of the so-called industrial insurance companies by the Armstrong Committee will attract attention in the ex-| traordinary growth of the Metropolitan and the Prudential through the cultivation of a line of business rejected by the older companies as too} AYTESHA: (onyrtented, 1904, in Great Britain and the ythat can bend the mountains or turn t * United States by H. Rider Hageard.) ocean from its bed, and we begin to be. OP: 518 OF PRECEDING CHAPTER | Ot how I sicken for that hour when soe Holly, tw first, lke twin etars new to the firma- h unknown country bee fa wonderful ang i) | ment of Heaven, we break in our {m- |mortal splendot upon the astonished alm It will please me, I tel thee, Leo, it will please me, to see pows ers, prin fes and dominions, mar Ww " love of mer had claimed 10 4 to have loved She had, seem, a vision te tol Ming tor Kim'la | ehalled by their kings and Kove Tbet_ mountains, viens ale Thre: Bt ains they come to the| bow themselves bet r thrones and ot Kaloon, | RUMDIY crave the liverty to do our will ae, oF Guest: Qe arts of | At least.” she added, “it will please ine 1 Shamon (maxtoian), ttle. th Ti) Wa acal IAKS YAmOn Ting tne; (fOr @ little time, until we seek higher f the) things i So sho spoke, while the radiance gleaming above and her «il, to my ing mirrors lumbro. thought Bhe ant which I Ayesha saw 0 attor shall’ haved throne] and suppliant pecples pass 4 the ert 4 ¥ sked Io, with some 4 ie w, asked Leo, Ww thing Jke a groan—for this viston * universal rule rom afar did not ewed seam to c nw, Ayesha, wilt thou bring these things about? a nM to immortaitze T449; and) “How, my Leo? Why, easily enough heen by Nee” maeie arn to make fim) now monar the 9 For many nights I have ed to the | w ur Holly here, at CH. {PTER R XI, V. least he t we who still has #) much to learn, and pored over his Tidings of War, oronked maps, comparing them with | : tually planned to make | those that are written in my memory | of te have had e for f the whole world of such little matter ed and pondered your Also T have ae races of this world; th c follies, thelr futfle struggling for wealt 1 1 the peoples T must | and small supremactes, and I have ples, for how ean T take a | termined that it would be wise and k i’ ales fy Ang | to Weld them to one whole, setting . + rh the |Atlves at the head of them to dire 4 easton Tharaiort stinjes, and cause wars, sickness it is plain that thon wilt he the master [and poverty cease, 89 that these of this earth: And perchance of | creatures of a little day Arie Silas 4 pear, for of @reiae”’ was the word she used—“may these 1k uing, and, r{lve happy from adie to the Ahink, can reac 1 will, though | fhitherto 1 have had no mind that way.| were It not because of thy My Lite hot vet. bes Iig | Strange shrinking from bloodshed how Uttle space within thie world been | ever politte and need my Le RMA ith thouwht and care for thea: |e yet thou AN Ho thie philosopher fm Waiting wHtil thou wast born again, | this were quickly done, since I can com @nd during those Jast years of separa-| mend © weapon which would crush Gon, unt!) thou didat return, thelr armories and whelm thelr navies “But now a few more months, and|'n the deep: yes, I, whom even the light. yee days Of preparation past, endowed| nings and nature's elemental powers energy cternal, with all the wis- must obey. But thou shrinkest from ple live in Brooklyn, It is one of | keep the bench honorable and clean and will not permit the Borough | The Evening World’s Home Magazine, Thursday Evening, Octood Not Big Enough for the Job. What Is the Reoordt To the Béitor of The Evening World: WUl bicyclists tell me what !s the| record, and also the distance, for the) & aoe By J. Campbell Cory. Letters from the People # Answers to Questions. |Misg King’s recent crusade, which I| individual consumer gets it In the Jug- The reason {s that you rave a city, but indorse. ADR ular, But at a big hotel it is differe on; merely animate ‘mortal coils,’ Thanksgiving Falls on Nov. 30. |The main offices ough: to ‘Jack a Which should have been shuffled off siving # tiw of thee bre ; DR ago, PERLEY E, BOOMER To the Editor of The Evening World re FVRGHER HISGORY OF She-Who-Must- Be- -Obeyed. aS ont ny | following ride; Brom Ridgewood 00) 6, wiat date does Thanksgiving fall | Messenger service is Dover, N. J. insignificant to be profitable, Coney Island, from Coney Ipiand to quis year? = BK. | Way decent TRANSIENT A Double-Barrelt a 5 " ” yi Ne ch, fron ht: =a ouble-Barrelled Problem, Insurance of the poor on a system of weekly instalment-plan pre- at de, gag! Bad Messenger Service, Country Life va, Chiy. TD the Editor of The Evening World: miums of a few cents has proved immensely lucrative. Of the Pruden-| pay to Bergen Beach, trom Bergen To the Editor of The Evening World | ‘ i SL an oaks ates jal’ ics y) ee y this c CG to Oa tT Ma ° an uptown ‘hotel Is Las 1 "eel of insurance. Their weekly premiums average about nine cents, From! through Forest Park to Ridgewood, re hould have ‘bean del! you and Your readers an f the as bacennsa leis REX Gaia ; his ni houghts arouse the mind of a ¢ Wpact ’ these pittances the company has accumulated assets of $72,000,000, eangicas pti Hop lara pide ext See ue eck honghte aroused fn the mind of a coun e direction, ¢he bullete From similarly small payments the Metropolitan has acquired assets of tim expla Hitaes “WC. K. | again, Same result. Ten minutes later | na A arias : rl og fae each $105,000,000 and erected a magnificent office building which is probably | one Efect of Car Hom Crnaade, |"? "M8 It a thin time, After a drear a flea, from the moving car, res the world’s most extraordinary monument to the purchasing power Of ‘To the Raitor of The venting W onauing wait I went and delivered th : melt Wine backs wore tne pennies, th @ faeatty 's total of insurance in force is Si, 342,381,457, T notlee rth oh, the: Lathe gees | Ot Oe ita + vee ponulous t the rae of ninety miles an atadt ¢ ' + nue subway teains that women upon | boy hasn ived y . 1s are | han whai time would thee : dimes grow ti dollars that a thrift president lends himself COMPANY promptly than before, ‘This lesson in| not bave been surprised. For ee aa these pontive i m thee then? Help out, readers! funds at 114 per ‘cent Pennies saved in interest become pounds in time, , politeness was no doubt taught by your| branches of New York industry thejour In most of the outlying country. | L. H, MARCHER ad * er 26, 1905. [Perils of Dictation for Business Man and Writer, nd it possible, mpress all that he bad dictated within twoethinds w compored laboriously by. his own n admitted of It s to be the individ ta \ fact of almost univers] appltoas Time Is money to the business man, and t advances of commerce In recent years 6 © almost as much t saving devices as to labors saving machines. To make his correspondence as su t lo the man of business has |{nvented a number of abbreviations generally stood, by which he seeks to compress thought. Yet with this has gone tho use of the stenographer and types | writer for puspoiee at dictation, says Wa n the Chicago Journal. The result {s surprising mp !s not merely made bad English by the introd Ang othing of the ore thographlo and grammatical vag nstricted shorthand writer | but tt Is almost impossiiile to ne that ts not loaded full of needless words and phrases Every such word le a the time of the man dictating, of the person ton, and of the correspondent who has to ren every unnecessary word obscures the sense ¢ There is no time in modern business fo: trained stenographer can herself effect. dictated words flow out upon the world But the evil once realized, can be met and over ed @ strict adherence to logic and knowledge of good English, especially through | the widening of his vocabulary. ‘Thy more words he knows the meaning of with | accuracy, the more toc has to do his work with, the more accurately he can | do It. | Mud as Daily Food. toss of time of the most serious o taking nineter, It wastes nd transcribing such dictas doubly 80, in this last case, for n more than {t incumbers the page, Tevision, except such as a thoroughly @ ts the fatal facility with which me {n the person dictating ——~+ +> —____. “O* of the most extraordinary olties in the world ts Yezd, in Centrag Persia,’ writes a traveller, ‘It tg situated {n the midst of a vast eale | desert which stretches for reds of miles dn all directions, The nearest Inhabited piace of any size ts Tepahan, and that Js £0 miles away, The inhabitants of ¥ ve} way from Yerd during thelr lives number, | perhaps, two or t sore 1 bulk of these have not extended their travels further than to one direct t to Ispahan in the other, Tet between £0,(% 8 the pla rhome. For ninety-nine Suit of every 100 of then r jo world has not merely no interest—It has absolutely n Yead j# a city the houses butit { this matorial, but the very ¢ for grain, the ohitdpat's tora pread recepta id, molded Into most! Aro displayed on tlere of mu@ e bakers’ ovens are of mud, down to seven eat mud and develop an unwholeeome the « Side. Tats “dnsareat reported. Good pla ace to find and mty to fitiy lette . 3 fit number of page led on American railmads ending on Jur ast 1 with the previous year, remember, not total number, Jare superseding the older diplomatists eee Change sald io be for tho bebier, wit h who mys he was “tutored to noueh Looms exceptions to prove “teal” Irarned how in a which bas ¢ largest staff of instructors and poate oo 8 ate proferson: wn | f hit ° \ steel-doored pool-room Dey 1 Attacked In lonely wood pnts | -ereet in ag workmanlike a er as nWayman to flight with a het-pin, {f they had been professionals #4 eee go Prospects that Discovery of Island New 9 oun be on thelr uppers. Maud Muller Up- to-Date, AUD MULLER, on a summer's And he lived to pose and to draw hie Jay, pay 'M Soribbed the ateps in the same | W. faud sormbbed on in the same old W ld way, The Judge came by on his morning | And, ‘mid her tolling, now and then, ride She # thought of woat might have Ho was writing Insurance on the side~| t And he sald: "Come, let n But one fine morn, when the paper For a thousand detlars, or ma ame He jllbly talked until she answered | She rend It and erted: “They've spotled Yes, 8 game!’ I'm willing to take a chance, I guess.” | For she saw him placed with the robber he paid her the sy crew he Judge spoke gallant Ke as|And painted @ deep, dark, villainous At any rate, ag the time went by | "Oh, gee! erie’ Maud; “oh, geet oh, f Maud rose pretty high eee! 1 dhys came and her eyes grew | I'm even at Ins—here's revenge top rout of him WOR ihiy madeck Ol CHARLES Ro BARNES. BY H. RIDER HAGGARD Author of “She,” ‘Allan Quatermain,” “King Solomon’s Mines," ete, an she hersel fh vedoner love 'y small degree, her passion for this » Jn its endurance FEY Se unnacoeneyn| Mt ‘ould, I felt sure even, ony d that In practice i i ¢ ture as int 1e pas, rove a form Of Aye : ier heel of Acie” When my mind was 40 oc yi nM ‘aters of pled with njectures, some of th this human quaint aud absurd enough, as te at the first necting be- and the Brnpres a lady of wie Aéter and ambitions {had : th Thibstethat 1 forgot this 8 T wae willl tadulgin myealt development of our fiiti ese reflections and hoping Ayesha would not take the atble to to read them in my mind, I became aware W - that Oreos was bowing to the earth bee He aes min Fay hah “ry business, priest?” he asked, And attack thee first sharply; for when ehe with ‘aad “Ah! she sald, with a flash of her |Avesha eyes, "ST have thought of It, and fo Hes, my part hope that it wi vance, since oe then thou canst not blatne ine if T put What need have oue my that has shall awa battlefield has of, thou shalt see ards sweep on tov! strength. 0 t so long, f thy aples ‘Hee, thou dl “Well, thete report it most graye. The people 4. Of Kaloon are dewperate because of the drought whieh has caused thelr om it command me.” thou shalt the nation« fall and to fadl, so that starvation elares perish, until at length I build thee a In the eyes, and this ay lay to be throne upon the hecatombs of thelr gharge of the strangers who came countless dead and or of a world regenerate fire.’ Leo, whom this now gospel of regen- eration seemed to appal, who wus, In fact, a hater of agsolute nyc 8 and somewhat rep And sympathies, continued the argu ‘ment, but 1 took no further heed. The their land and fled to thee, The Khania Atene also is mad with rage ‘hee and our holy college. — Laboring night and day, she has gathered two great armies, one of forty and on» Oj thousand men, and the letter che sends agatnst the our ar the command of her uni Simbrt the Shaman, In nga ft should wl she purposes to remain with n thee emperor in blood and thing Was grotesque in its tremendous and fan i Av eane | ‘8 am- bittons 9 madinan could concelve. ‘ond and greater army on the about Kalooon."’ Inga Indeed,” sald Ayesha, with F e displeased be- | e an t of Heaven, Well, s will Is mine, and, th 1a gentler path," | how wilt thou persuade the kings |of the earth to place thelr crowns upon \t id T asked, astonished laa By causing | w elr peoples to offer ) ene answered, suavely. Sh! Holly, Holly, now aattow la 4hy mind, how strained the quality of thine imagination! Set {ts poor gates ajar, I pray, and bethink thee, When we ap- pea among men, scattering gold to fhe exes, and with o strength the sight of death, and thoy bellevest satisty thelr want, clad tm terrifying * Her lovely face grew rigid, like-that of a person In a trance, power, in ing beauty and tn tm: \ mortallty of days, will they not ery, Be yo our monarchs and rule over us!’ W answered, dublously ’ nou appear?” She took a map of the eastern hem!- re which T had drawn, and, placing her finger upon Pekin, sald; "There {s the place that shall be vur home for some few centuries, say three, or five, or seven, should it take ao long people to my Nking and Me rellsssagiog's laugh. “Has her hato made this wom in mad that she dares th to match herself against me? My Hols ly, tcroseed thy mind but now that it was T who am mad, boasting of what I have no power to perform, Well within six daya thou shalt learn—o) yorlly thou shalt learn, and, thoagh insve he vo very small, In such a fi vt thou wilt doubt no more forever, Twill look. though the eftart of for those sples may be thelr own fears, oF to sof Atene.”’ nly, as was common with » thue Ayesha threw her slqnt toh olther from {ndolon-e or pecoure, as ehe sald. It exhausted her, Yot—here came the rut f® scorn sligutest doubt that able to put ry 0 on, hers will ould c follow her, Her ple would enadle her ty 4 ye with which th t hie! ly tra ie opry could not aahily conpet I deed, It might be as she aald, a that at ald at her ¢ the elemental forces of nature, # would give all Hving Oeings to he a pr f Ayesha was stil! woman enough to rave worldly ambitions, and the nrost | she did but rarely, her lovely face dread clrournstance about her superhu-| risid, like that of @ Lote gl ina i 10 man posers oo that ‘hey appeared to, the light faded from bes, De be unrestrained by any responsible to| great ouplis of her ea one Ap toy ane Sho was i) thecapelvet ae fallen angel to be, proved,

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