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REA ET Sass -- “7 ~ * rie, Cam J. Dy tho Frees Publishiag Company, No, 03 to 0) Park How, New Jork evoud-Glans Mall Mat Puplianes Marered at the Voat-Omive wi New York as O, 16,14 sarcasm ¢. GH Hae 4 JIM TALKS Too M LUME 46 Bad Days for Czar and Boss. | The Czar of Russia trembles for | ‘the Boss of New York for In Russla, the throne of despot-| ism {s shaken; in New York, the, ism tumbles from Its figure of bos pedestal. The Government in Russia has Trepoff and an army with guns; the Boss in New York has himself} and “Jimmy” Oshorne with boom. | rangs and “Pat” McCarren—with Ridgway ! The differences in circumstance are tremendous, but the splrit of fevolt in Russia and that in New York are righteous alike. | About the troubles of the Czar, we may have our prophecles and our} hopes, but it is not for us to fix or foresee thelr end, A week from to-morrow the Issue In New York will be met and set. | tled by ALL the voters who care what becomes of thelr clty, | Let us repeat two significant watehwords of the campaign: “I have served YOU," says Mr, Jerome, “He (Jerome) {sa foo! if he didn't get IT,” says Mr, Osborne, “IT” Is “graft.” The difference between “YOU” and “IT” Js the fssue with which the voter Js to stand face to face at the polls Nov, 7. Where the Shoes Will Cost. | [ ‘Anybody can tell where a shoe pinches. The manufacturers tell | @snow where the shoe is about to cost. The story leads back to the Beef Trust, a corporation not new in the news. Hides go with hoofs until they are safely In the hands of the trust, ‘At the stockyards they become one Issue important among many Issues fn a diversified slaughter-house industry, | Cattle are not scarce at the moment. Naturally, neither are hides Myathful stock reports show these facts. It has occurred to the trust, however, to create by forelgn shipments and otherwise a pretended scarcity of skins, Thus Is afforded an apparent excuse for an advance {n prices. | The Leather Trust, say the shoemakers, fs not slow to back up the | efforts in Inflation of its fellow corporation in the beef-hides-tallow-hoofs- hams business. | When the arrangement finally reaches the people, It is In this way, | the words being those of a large manufacturer of shoes: They will have to pay a little bit more for thelr shoes, or else they wll get from unscrupulous makers a shoe for the same money that {s not quite $0 good, The combinations are to come out “all to the good;” the people, as| xf yitin, Ave ST Gane Sarat Abad Mg Gest they can, | Will re ENGrA 40, RRROA ALTE GUL OMY WOAKIY f + this qui $14 Just to win the ¢ of being @ And why not? The poor old trust of the packers has been put to devas 3 ood fellow. I've @ mother ard slater Joss and embarrassment by courts meddling with its nopoly Jeet of the chy if Fifth avenue s to support. Here, through no fault " dling with its mo ly-purchase be closed to ordinary trafic? f mine, [ find myself branded as plans and private-car lines. Shall it not recoup itself easily and through the millions who must have shoes? Is that fair? atingy Simply |sta:o reason why {t ° BANK CLERK. | oO. F. — Would Change Ferry Signa. | The Eventng World Failed to Say “This In on Me” r ” To Prevent Wrinkles [3% fe Belton of the rening or wir st spits * Tam earning $4 a week marmer of labelling che re Law Ine of those {ll-amelling Dr. Sarah J. McNutt tells New York’s clubwomen to drink sour mitk | "tek friend invite y drink with him, We entere sr “boats?” they would not grow old. and were there joined by ale trends Cabin" and “Women's tw h the exes must be My friend, asked ther of course, A better prescription The Evening World's Momo Madazine, “POOR JIM!” Lo Letters from the People w wi A , Monday Evening, Octob wo pbell Cory. eee UCH nN in the women's cabin and when the|had the satisfaction of seeing four reek of smoke !n the r abin fs 80 auto # collapse there in one day. 1 horribie that a nm sit ah keep It till I render at least there SIMON I, COLLIVER. one bit of road mune from this death st Orange, N. J. | vert! H.R. N., Jr, Onidand, N. J, The Death-Deating Anto, Aske {f Girle Propose | To the Editor of The Evening World To the Editor of The Evening World I read with st the complaint of| IT asked a man once why he hap-/ your correspondent wt ste of the) Pened to marry, when he hed told me plagio of fast-whtz: obties | before he would never marry. He told @long country roads My|me f!neconfidence that his wite hed own Suncay walks and those of 1 bors along the erstwhile peaceful asked—begged—entreated him to marry ner; saying she could not lve without 1, and that he had done so to save fonds are wholly rulned by these from suicide, He was not joking. endanger life and keep| About a month Inter another married *’ nerves at tenston al! the;man told me an almost similar story. He also sald s friend of his had done 8 An outrage, We, the tax-| and for all women—wo Au : the same thing, This opened my eyes . men—would be to avoid sourlarinx with us, The check eting? Why | payers, the lan are driven off|to'a phase of feminine character hither: Next, one of the others ‘bow at ch ker's Cabin” our own ro iam eieotively fo “unmumpected “by me Tf these In. Envy, hatred and all unkindness are fruitful of worry and wri Bee ee tee ne ee edule GaMslate (| ee tae en besprinkled | the | staneeh A" not be many another? rd aul sgl \ 'y an Inkles,| oniy 40 cents with me, 0 T dié uintiand far more distinctive, especially in| mond before n pais tifa! f : whereas the smooth skin goes with the unruffled ¢ s|only ents x h hi t nee like to hear readers’ frank opinions of 3 y = a temper. offer to treat. They shun me ever.ras 3, when men hog the peats |with tacks and n ginss and have! tii COLIMRIA SENIOR THE FURTHER HISTORY OF o ry * o IZ] ¢ future—ah! that I oannot read det- | ter than thou canst, my Holly, and that 1 indeed. Tor me the past and all present ile bathed in light reflected that black wall—tne future,” the fell to brooding, and, look- ing up at longth with en alr of entreaty, sald to Leo: “Wilt thou not hear my prayer and AY ESHA: Wopyriehted, 1904, in Great Britain and the | ¢h, United States by H. Kider tameard OPSIS OF PREC Vincey ani H #0, from (> samt | bide where thou art for some few days, 1 OT Ale or even go a-hunting? Do eo, and t | |W [Pd {Nl stay with thee, and send Holly end sae a the tribes In this “4 , anawered Lao, trembling wiih indignation, for this plan of hers that IT should be sent out to war, while he bided in safety In a temple, moved him, a man drave to rashness, who, al- Lee though he disapproved of f# In theory, ting for Ite own enie, alao, to absolute tage “I pay, Ayesha, ¢ | repeated; “moreoy lal Ayesha escape and make thelr way t I will not,” he { $f thou leay- my way down the mountain alone, and Join the bat ne en. Ayesha plans to tmmortaiize by her magic arts, to m Hot the world “Then come," she answered, “and on that Atene in marsh. | a /thine own head be it Nay, not oo 4 . nese Snande| euine beloved—on mine, on mine.’ ! her tribes to prepare for war. She then| After this, by some strange reaction, Phy ae. bf y. a ere whe became lke ar By f ehie. reduce wn-| more than I had ev miter {Hew of 6 us me ta far e that were sad or tragic was very strange to nd mn to t ’ other mowers, she believes a) jer the whole world for Leo. CHAPTER XLVIII. Atene’s Defiance, N the day following this strange O experience of the iron that was \Tt her while she spoke of people, one or two of them known as names tn bis tory, and been heard vany others who never have that had trod thie earth and with whom she was familiar over turned to gold some great service (tRO thousand years ago, | fwae held in the manctuary, ns we un-| Yet she tld us anecdotes of their | de: “to consecrate the war,” We lover and hates, their sirength or weak~ a Attend it, but that night we ate Tesses, all of them touched | together as usual, Ayesia was moody tinge of humo satire, or ilustrating SEG wad kat la, goo varies from |? BDIty Of huotan aim ana "The excitement of coming | thriliet cur nerves.” @illenners to laugtiter SEPIFATIADS, er, had tr ! Egys t ed Kallikrates “Know you,” s nid to-day 1) 4“ ath he Li and . i f 1 npanted by ris an ot it fools of the? j ‘ 8 WEP ant au Pan is, whom whe Mountain went ¢ ficine men to S#4 ang 1 aie i nd hated In her} @uk of the 1 tle would | for wisdom, she had ¢: re 1 1 of how shee M0, and whit) of tr 1 be slain, sof her day and refused thom r 1. Yes, she even told of a and which » mor. A e by one; of how she had preached in ts f rl r f them had eat willing, together evening before th tora of the Law. Of how, also, she had|to reveal too much, § | | to discover the Place of Life, wandered back to Arable and, being re-| history passed from Egypt to Kor. She! and of an evil Prophecy that this royal | dected by her own people as @ reform-‘ apoke to Leo of hiv arrival there, & Amenartis had made as to the aug of, Jerusalem and been stoned by the Do: Rot toll ther ats 1 Words, 80 that t 0 thoy would, low t ttle will go Bbmow well for 1 shall ciroog 1, but ye ia though sie w oe SHE-WHO-MUST-BE-O { shigtt] i 4 { + sctesit selina aii eat tii nasi aii ikea cate ada id rd BEYED. | even more beautiful than I before I Gipped me in the Essence, foresighted | also, though not @o learned as I had | srown, From the first we hated each | other, and more than ever now, when she guessed how I had learned to look upon thee, her lover, Leo; for her hus- | band thou never wast, who didst flee 4 too fast for riage, Bhe knew, also, J that the struggle between us which had sold, “It wag such a! begun of old and afar, wae for centuries and generations, and that untll the end should declare iteelf nelther of us could © that he was beardiess harm the other, who both had sinned to then and younger, was at my side.’ win thee, that waat appointed by fate to Where thou elitist, Holly, sat the royal be the lodestone of our souly ‘Then Amenartis, @ very fotr woman; Ye®,| Amenartas spoke and.sal@s - thelr Journey. Ay,” Ayesha silent night as this, and such a meal as 40, Not #0 greatiy swers to Questions a er 80, 1905. A Group of Oddities in Picture and Story. | ont on dry land Is the new- | A est oddity devised by Huropear { pleasure-seckers. Though few auch “boats now ertst, there w ably be many others, 4 in du the craze may be expected to cross the Atlantic, The accompanying {llustra- tion from the London Sketch dopicts two views of the frat of these ‘bo. | The structure fs really more like a car | and {s mounted on wheels, It is owned de Sennevoy, who calls it ‘La Tt contains several rooms | fitted up with a rare combination of | luxury and of economised space. It te. in short, @ complete house in miniature and can be propelled trom place to place whenever its occupants ohance to desire & change of acene. The car te painted white and ta equipped Itke a house-boat De Sennevoy was so ploased with {ovention that he founded a “Home. Club,” whieh now has a membership of fifty, \ ‘The strenuous life in literary circles seems to have antedated the Labagr de | Bryant was only nineteen when | was eighteen when he wrote ‘Queen Mab," Voltaire’s lighed when he wns but ttventy-two, Keats gave " the age of twenty-two, while David te sald to have wi the age of eighteen, and history has it that Homer wrot j tender age of twenty-three. ragedy was pub- to the world a® the Mrat Pealm at first odes at ¢he case of war with @ forelen power, the problem ‘This ia @ pleture force of the new | | ] |° the entire naval | Repudtto ot Par wt the ama. In other vimiral's brain, words, the Panama Uncle Sam's coasts Navy eonstete of 0 are thus reasonably i i 7 safe from the hom vec ir a rors of an invasion yacht. The! from the now re Panama army. pubile, While a multitude of bapt! the prerogative et Toyal familles, there is a man tn 1 New York State who rejoices in the @uphonious nomen ¢ of John David Henry Curtis Peter Joseph Robert Blair Krell. He te said been nar for an uncle, ont John David Henry Curtis pert Blair Meade Krell Hoskyn | Peter Joseph R ‘The “morning bath” {n Lapland presents astoundingly few charms. Even the most cleanly New Yorker might well be pardoned for shrinking from it. Kor ‘the bather must often hunt up a spot tn sh nter where the ‘y partially cleared away and must chonss that frigid place for hls matutinal tubbing, ‘There | is said to be a certain exhilaration in the process, but ft ls noted that the Lap lander {s not n notably clean person. Taxing into consideration the discomforts of @ bath this is n reatly to be wondered at. Yet o scone such as 1s portrayed fn the accompanying Illustration fs by no means uncommon along the coests of that Arctic country BY H, RIDER HAGGARD Author of ‘’She,’’ ‘*Allan Quatermatn,’” “King Solomon's Mines,’’ &e, “Lo! to my sight, Kallikrates, ‘he wine in thy cup !s turned to blood, and that knife in thy nd, O daughter of Yarab'—for so she named me—‘dripa red blood. Ay, and this place is a sep , ulebre, and thou, O Kallikrates, sle-p ved her mensage, and enw er Mt, face to face with “ce of Kaloon Ga, uh me no more, 4 departed she turned Ve of mine af long ago wee Amen- est here, nor can she, thy murderess, Wel! Htted to CW hour, for ,08 noes kias back the breath of life Into those | ft Y ies Dead ty cold Upa of thine, Wel, let a Hd “Bo, indeed !t came about as was or- ‘all must, and I h from it who know. that t tramph a dained," added Ayesha, reftectively, ‘tor I plew thee in yonder Placo of Life; yes, in my madness I slew thee because thou wouldst not or couldst not the ts fre to fr 4 6 ile, but she then be eure, be! Lil we with us, elnee t understand the change that had come 5 over me, and shrankest from my loveil- RRC won ness ike @ blind bat from the splendor or uw of flame, hiding thy face in the tresses 1 toll thee, Leo, that out of the of her dusky halr—why, what is it now, fu lives ahd deatha thou Oros’ Can 1 never be rid of thee rn by bing ihe meat ¢ for an hour?” ¢ mugh ack Om "O Mos, a writing from the Khania 30) jh bfinalng rate : ith hii | Whi n r Atene,”’ the priest ald, with his arual Edel recating bow. \} “Break the seal and read," she an- | awered, carelessly, “Perchance she has repented of her folly and makes sub- mission.” fee and Know ane 1 ohaln that aball dra v f rest; steep they. weereby @ allotted palace of our rth I fear no more and e agalnat that which must I say wo are but wingod teedg n down the gules of fale an change to the a pete warden where we shall grow, filling ite blest air with tie immortal fragrance of our bloom, Leave me now, Leo, and sleep & while, for we tide ‘at dawn," It wes midday on the morrow, we moved down the mountain side the army of the tribes, ree and @8Ve age-looking men. The s before us, then came ti ewea of the college on the mountain, known as Ayesha upon oarth, |and {n the household of the Over-world | whence sie has been permitted to wan- der as "Star-that-hath-fallen”— “A pretty sounding name, forsooth,’ broke in Ayesha; “ah! but, Ateno, set s rise again—even from the under M1, Read on, thou Oros."" thelr gavalry mounted, y . Thou who art) woile t mt an Greetings, O Ayesha, Tho Tan” puldiaeh marched ta very old ast qathered much wisdom tn the passing of the centurles, and with other powers that of making thyvel! | seem fair in the eyes of men blinded by ‘thine arts, Yet one thing thou lackest that I have—viston of thore happenings ‘which are not yet. Know, O Ayesha, ench undor the command of im fs owe ehtag, Ayewha, velled now—for she Mi dd ver beawy to these wild the midot of the hore rare of matehione With her wont Lau an » Khan'a black horwe, rode tn a whi'e rape, that I and my uncle, the great seer, have hot unitke i sonrched the heavenly books to learnt ut, a what is written there of the issue of MH ; this war, Be Thie {e written; For mo, death, where | Ay; at 1 rejoice, For thee, a spenr mat by | tor |thine own hand, For the land of Kaloon, |) rere moray. wt of wmf blood and ruin bred of theo! the feere @ for ATENIC, Khania of Kaloon, md haunted FJ 5, tom in elience, but her | frel, caves wore lorad Prange sorta he her Mand paie| the teen of thousands |'Do Ores she maid, proudly: "Bay to the mesenger of Atane that soldiers, menvamae hi uh, ond who were now to ‘hie person, yore moriy, nut of tm, fo Bia ap - To be ‘Contiaved.) i Lier hed wave 4 >» «sey