Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
\ penay. not all, twenty thousand of thelr prea Ee rs nn ——— SSS - ee uh she KLvening © Chic ?S@ ssOMme reagazing, wersaaay wBVEONING, VUCKONMEY ws, AIID THE TEACHER AND THE DUNCE. A Century's Evolution an Naval Gunnery. By J. Campbell Cory. ' pupitenea by the Press Publishing Company, No, 68 to 68 Park Row, New York, Putered at the Post-OMco at New York ax Second-Class Mail Matter, | nes whan ene Oe Not only has the N , v ” i f f wing dimenalo re, 6.41; projectile, round shot pari VOLUME 46 sseseeccccee covers ss seeeeeeNO, 16,188, pean The Over-Developed Cassidy. — WHERE we LEARN Queens Borough has long been an ill-kept and illetreated section of the 0 TO GET Greater City. Perfumed.on one side Y by the Standard Oil Company and y on the other by BARREN ISLAND | it has had a troubled life ever sinet | its political possibilities were discov. | ered by Patrick J, Gleason. It is now the personal property of Joseph Cas‘idy, Its Borough | President. His rise from poverty to affluence since he took office has amazed even the Murphy experts. There is a fusion against him led by Joseph Berme!, who Is at least a different person. This fusion prom- {ses to succeed. It will succeed if the people should take a look at Cassidy's auto- mobile, at his pool-room, his yacht and a few of the other accessories that have followed a holst In the cost of building highways In the borough from $5,000 to $30,000 a mile. Cassidy has “developed” the Dorough, but not half as fast as he has developed Cassidy. 1805—A 32.pounder in action #*.. In this time of clear seeing and plain speaking it is a pity to over- Welghing thirty-two pounds, 5 1 by a ten-pouna 6 charge of powders * Took him. He is magnificent, but he is not necessary. mange, 2,000 yards ia ? The modern 6-ineh quick Re w s en tons: calibre, 9 : to 49) pro, e f W ¥ 4 typ powder charge. F 3 one of the fittyet “Sermons” and the Drama of Dirt. A play by Bernard Shaw, dealing with subjects newer discussed in decent society and only hinted at in time of moral crusades in red-light regions, is to be ed at a New York theatre next week. It is a play which the author himself calls “unpleasant,” but it is more than that. It is as disagreeable a dramatic work as was ever written. I! isa foul play with a loathsome theme, Its production at the present moment js calculated to exert a worse influence because it will enjoy the advertising benefit of a two years’ careful nurture of the Shaw cult in New York. Anthony Comstock having objected to this delectable drama as too filthy for the stage, Mr, Arnold Daly, who is to present it, alleges that it has merits as “a great moral lesson” and “a strong sermon.” The excuse has a familiar ring. It has been heard from “Camille” down to D’An- nunzio, It is the plea which glosses all decadence. But who {s to derive benefit from this particular “strong s¢rmon” in the name of stage indecency? Not “Mrs, Warren's Profession’’ itself Not those whom new plays of a salacious nature attract to the theatre as connoisseurs of the drama of impurity. Certainly not the wives mothers and daughters who compose the bulk of theatre audiences, For them the play can be only a defiling presentation of facts of which they were be The accomy and the modern f-ineh 5 f Nelson's day In action 4 in «9 yw te menage «am Letters from the People we Answers to Questions matic decency ever made in this city. It will be an extraordinary act ot theatric, | audacity, Housewltves, Attention! | Dered to eound his horn re !ng sharp curves In the Was twice almost run do before round- the home-bound sar |fore midnight 1s worth two hours’ sleep ' git: One hundred years ag ‘8 got fully twice us much Automobile Manslaughter. tht ale att te Gehan v tone wo Te bat the poor than | rican whose motor car ran down and killed a girl of twelve at St. Ouen, France, has been sentenced to three months in jail and to ” pay a fine of $120, He is also required to pay $4,000 damages to the child's parents. ct ved and tn poorer general health tha: f | we. How does sclence account for this ye? And how about asleep for How many hourg and at who ts beat? GRA n-dealing tury auto throug! no redress ZACCHARY F. SCHAPPE The Shopping H FAiltor of The Trade School or Tradet ity of the punishment fs in striking contrast to the in- dulgent view with which automobile fatalities are regarded in our own) To the Battor When a ma ay : ‘ 6 Evening World rt “aia ed will be eomewhae courts, In the eyes of the French law, apparently, life taking by aue 1 est 6 goes and dl + i. oe hie readers please a s . tomobile, where the circumstances prove criminal recklessness, is mans 17.4 “y ng and has the whole thing wit Nie hee any. Ide ce eee ilar at Bheedinghs 6 aernpet (Onn GE rived Rees ng pattern was the standard medium-powe Slaughter and punishable us such have alf an hour. A woman, under ne WENy Yor Tamra | Would the echecl be of ture eave wy from 1 104, whon it ed by the 9.24neh The precedent is a salutary one for imitation here, where too little Cee erenarrer «7 Bhd pears Ay do 1DREEH Blenpill to him than to leam his trad it ahah on ore? effort is made to determine the exact measure of criminality in “acci erka to a frassle, return home half toe ! types, in « stlk ease, ond fitted with a primer at tte dents” of this class, bu [nnn ] THE FURTHER HISTORY OF rr we » 9 " 3 AY RSHAs: 7, SHE-WHO-MUST-BE-OBEYED. i Pheer Une ain geet ‘King Solomon’s Mines,’’ Cc, dead with (Copyriahted. 1004, tn Great Sritain and the | Ur s by H Rider Haggard.) J AVENE 1 not ke i d into my eyes. 80 1 stood, le f a ked behind me d the door close and ey BDING CHAPTERS. wit Holly Ena- ness came ike @ HH an to loote Leo from or it so ft can bi loosed me; and 4 } \iince we stoo St h other like owls In the ob o the tears streamed down v p Ingratitude {9 thist / Th my Leo, didst wonders that 1 work, ¢ you are rude and any 1 weeping like a ohid wh r. Here, take this,” and she e salve that stood upon & | uy It on your eyes and the avs away.” ling voice as thou wast ever, the t ts hours afterward, mine . ee wonders?” I “Jf thou meanemt fs born of the mance, thou dost Loo tent metallic Tut her, whieh, ttt rit with nly, lay upon the floor. r the ¢ 4 pe \ jh At Th! eta Mtl Lis 4 | | , uae ot make. them mgs? te iy not, who thought to my* ha night bo well accus: fires, and feared 1 looked, hows CHAPTER XLVI. @hronae the Fire. , five minutes perha ke one awake cop, passed her hand Impl mmiseht +, lone and earnestly "We 1}, what ts It, Hol 4. myself, he dull, red at of either aiid as »® grew royal, and in ame a look that nawered, ‘It ts golds last we ore In this place must be nich,” end and was as § Me arena (aCe & edulousiy, for 1 would not had by mewhat languid, Pint an nore aa thous A left her withou y ved, the tron ore lob.” she said, “and ass ind he looked at her. as ie bik Katy ofl atucre wit a ‘ answered, "for from ji “ dearly—I 8 asuties | She thrust the glowing substance up almost to the mask that hid t gold In such id be Killed, My J0rd, | the empress of the ear . f beloved, that see war? Nay, thou shalt! «pose ember, 140, how Kor 1! | my face, vange to & , which us in our nee y whilst I go forward | founda b ; y f work ¢ , "Ww sta doing? 1 4 and T soa ned, for vi Atend, as I pr mise a. nose Weary axe t of fo tiron with @ tends than for t it was d, an auld make that e thou goest, 1 go," sald Leo, | mother, nature, one, to yt selving ita molten ng my thoughts, she s fa Ning to the roots] yy her choicest secr I, who am a of clay. They stoy 8 Why waste breath upon foolish ques- Is y angry. with sha a jatuddent of all things wifoh are and of bade t itl the tepid, A ; hatures salt!” ako crted, "wert _ “LE pray tice not, T pray thee not,” #he| the forces that cause them to be b ey Fin ine unto onde tae een my. friend. Holly, the foo} Qnawered, yet without venturing to fT | sow follow me, both of you well, ae ‘ cheek iia rte LD eee Praysiny rf Thor Bid hin. “We wilt ¢ It hereafter, | shall look on what mesial eyes have n: | and we pass doingebit’ Chat WIKROUE “maine. thoul tioning & very. bones wii te Ofos, away! Send d the Fire of! yet beheld.” sundry doors and pa el wrouldat not belleve) #0, doabser Wou| mask that 1y "kas why should Res {0 every Three nigms hence |” @he took us down passages that we | chamber cut in the rock. here wae no| shalt ace." Then turned waddle’, for t hen she pointed to and bade us don] pun, put of th two strange girments that hung upon | wall beyond «i my, back toward het ratory, for about it rtoking, whose fires, lke ¢ and various strange: | twisted columns In the sanctuary, |!@mp or flame of fire In it, ang yet the Moreover, there 1 from the voloano beneath our|Place was filled with a gentle Ii ‘int bogh blind @t the moonrise bid the tribes gather 38 shalt as Y se ind, leaving um, she Qassed vi the pastages, oalled something tO the priests who were jaboring in the had not passed before, to a door whi she signed to Leo to open, He ole Dest wii be enough, the rest shall stay} and from the cave within issued a flood | was a furnace in it, one of the best con | f walel seomed 4 Now from the annosing the wall, made of @ material which QO Guard cho mountain and this sanatur of Ught. As we guessed at once, the ceivable, for tt necded cemher tuel nor| When we entered two priests were at wall seemed tobe Balt cloth and Balt wood, | faeitea UM. t de fae T felt a0 | workahopy pap r a x BL A an ok aa oa la ie a r Z : ‘ “ , wai Atta game eR A the pain went from *