The evening world. Newspaper, October 31, 1905, Page 12

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World’s Home The { Pubitened by tho Press Publishing Company, N Entered at the Post-on t New York as Seconds ee, , r a VOLUME 4G ccssovccscocccecsesssvensovsoessuss tenes NO, 10)! Some Pre-Election Openin gs. Mayor McClellan has presived he opening ¢ municipal fer service to Stal (Project herited from Mayor Low's administra: | on) The installation of a municipal ¢ rie-light service for Williamsbur Bridge and the te rary schools | neath it. (Pet scheme of Commissioner yodbury, retained from Mayor Low's adr for putting city refuse to use as fuel.) It is not to be understood, however, that there are no openings jus before election which have not had their preliminaries away back. The contrary is the truth, In the Tribune of yesterday appeared these stat ments; The Tenderloin, over which Capt. Dooley keeps an eye, Is wide open. Not Only is there no curfew in the red light district, but the gilded saloons of gan Ming, closed by William Travers Jerome, and kept closed for several months past Opened at midnight Saturday, and all day yesterday were In full blast | newly greased, and every other gambling device was whirling at a brain-burning speed. Scores of youny, well-dressed men were seen going in and coming out of the best-known gambling | ff places in the district. There was an apparent attempt at exclusiveness, but no | altempt to conceal the fact that the clubs were open for business. | These are openings original for the emergency. They invite the gamblers all to take a chance on the man who has} Said that “If Jerome did not get IT, he MUST have been a fool.” | nistration, e- Before 9 o'clock lust night every roulette wheel, That Wasted Feeling. A communication to a magazine published for girls begins this way: The vear is waning; the night wind, robed in darkness, will soon fill the| ih frosty air with its funeral dirge, All about you Nature in every phase is bring- } ing in her store of gifts, the labor of sunlit hours. | Is not your heart heavy with the memory of wasted hours? of unwashed tears smart and sting your aching eves? A girl who feels this way is one of the penalties of an age in which mother no longer does her own washing. One wholesome hour at would make things right, Does the brine} the tub Cleveland is spending $2,000,000 on twenty-six miles of ci boulevards. Baltimore's pending park improvements will cost about $3,000,000. | Philadelphia, larger by 400,000 souls than Cleveland and Baltimore together, finds that it has spent $6,000,000 on “graft.” reling Magazine Octob _Tucsday Evening, ‘Eclipsed. | | By J. Campbell Cory. a ee ee eR ET A TNE ET TTT | And yet we need not despair of a day when cities shall grow in grace along with numbers, Letters from the Pe 1 The Tenement Buildog 7 «over and started | to atop, and the other supporting the| so far, Tam inclined to belleve that the, lurgely of metal greaves, or shin guards, and a huge engraved oopper plate suse ; . . ° T J lead ra ! policeman at woman ie led her gently te ie other oitisens of New York are the most chiv- ‘ In a house in East One Hundred and Third street are George, Victor! ,, Lome He? m, and | side, Now that te what I call true gal- | alrous on earth | id and the bulldog. : Lisi : sal) nal vehicles |lantry, From what I have seen of them OBSERVANT TRAVELLER | Passa siet Vietor is nine ae t F — si ————— Apr@y to Legal Ald Soctety, 239 | jeorge is eight, Victor is nine and the bulldog is a terror. 1 Ant AID ON THE SIDE | Broadway, j hoe When the two boys played in the lower hall the man who owns the ! . my the Riitor of The Evening rent: ; | & ‘ 5) rere jails all day and eveal Lam a} Sr Hallowe'en ceremontes tn {, Slzable lot of te. s there any way in which I can ool- ‘ f dog threatened to tum him loose, Because George thereupon went andj kicker, » 1 ‘ . Trin WHIGh Uh eelook thu wiuety anal Oe OOF wages dus me for general | 3 stood on tiptoe at the sergeant’s desk to tell the police, the story got into |‘! t of a sure r everywhere observable of who will battle for gridiron su. | Dousework? My employer keeps pu 1 : at . " extracting my ear t » rit Opper | premacy. ting me off whenever I ask her for | yesterday's print. ’ rORTURED. |t a lark, w {ves, now tae what is due me, by giving me a tow , “Isn't it funny,” said the little fellow, “that we can't play in our An Inatance of Chivalry, elders as well as small boys Thought thie the numiematic vote dollars, when she owes me #5. Now n hall?” _ “ | 1 f ening Wo 1 also ev revival has been | qyi1 g. Iving because he ts a coin | She tells me It will cost me $0 to get a k own ha : . ; tw ila haw we t ste kable In PUPA collector, Coin disbureer would appeal, /*¥Yer to coWect Ht for me, and tf I do The captain thought it was, So did the sergeant, When we all! was walking « Four 5 MaNriCn ob 10 to Rome voters, ie will not give me a recommenda k think of it, so do all of us. \" n old w t ge and] . a . . tion, and that I can get no employ: Pe eat > J} with « faded shaw , sulders, | 1 ag it is spoken in New York Bald by Golf Ty ment wihout a city recommendation, | Not a little funny, also, is that state of tenement affairs in which the! startet ocean t She walked | t ect of m Columnin Univervity | palters prem te tate ne a eben ca thelr MAND Fy bulldog overshadows the bright boys. One would say offhand that it ‘ un, and Ww le Rus r ka in (okey model, others the negro minstrel and Tt In Pronomnced ‘Beeak.” should be the boys whose social future de a present prefe as y t ft ars and rushes not includec others the tramp, Certain. at any tate, | To the Editor of The Evening World: care 'B t perhaps th mn ‘, Migsiens id Present preference in n't rus A: milled co that this costume t¥ more varied since How should I pronounce the wont| pended about the neck, as shown in the accompanying tilustration from tl! ‘are, But perhaps the man with the dog knows better. | Kk. Then a od frotal registration at nine Atnerican the red golf passed into oblivion, “‘biaque'’? GC. | London Sphere, AA IAA ANAAAR ADA ADRAADPPOAOOY panennnnnnins \ ~~ AYESHA: Wopyriehted, 1904, in Great Hrlinin and the beaming stars. ' Unied states by H, Kiger amkarur | : ‘ | ng.” she sald, with a SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAP t ait EG Re t e WVORED te, eee Leo Vincey and Hovace Holly, (wo i Rv atohe Leer a ¢ ‘gh \ start for an unknown count wels of sombre moun panied ¥ ce urkestan In search of a Wondertul ang ty ‘i ieee ¢ elute: ‘ eupposed|y mortal woman kn pan She y y mutes 1 savag “ ¥ In former years they had met ly n ‘ r ar wot - m glad D0 " r How bea are the WS alr and th slop 4 untalns. broad jains t nd. away \ y mountaina they come to the | those borde 7 1 ry land of Kaloon psdlh latte. Atene, the Khania, or Queen, of Kaloon, | the sun, eternal as w alia in Jove with Leo. and. by the arts Of ie dea ¢ heavy } er eels Simbel je Keen eir of heave y Belleve me, Leo, more than twe aacred 1 centuries ® gone 8 lw h rue to his gue seated on a steed, and yet t I Dayptian . have no rgot re ie Pa TO ROU TOrEOS, ne, bare Fears ago and whose though this beast cannot Aveaha had been, | Holly und 109 escape and make thelr way to the mountain, Th Arabs that [ pode in the wide wha. Bhe and 10/ Arabla, Oh! I remember how . f # side, 1 galloped dow ain aguinst the marauding Bed monthe | how, with my own hand, I sp t nine | chieftain and made him ery for m men alain t letting him! One day £ will tell thee of t ‘ Ko Into Ai edes and saves | them, mine, for T was his da 1 to jmmortaitze to: and | ¢ho . een 10 ) gle rae ts rake Mfin| though we have been tong apart, I hold world. his memory dear, and look forward to news that Atene Is marsh- Ayenha with a great army. Ayesha, | SUF meeting, L MA trance, seeks to verify these tilines ff aaa j nehhe, creeds In Aoing eo and commands Look, yonder 1s the mouth er triber to. pr a | eo ae 1 sie: Oak Aroranlgel f Ber tae br gorge where lived the cat-worshipping thie tra sorcerer, who would haye murdered bot ' } pmited of you because thou, Leo, dids ow i } Bee Oper, | his familiar to the fire, It is strange, { . Aves! but several of the tr of this moun: ' wet forth amainet K . tain, andot ¢ i CHAPTER XLIX, t make divine first Rass must have brougnt vind ats their gods, or mea 1 think than t 1 of Alexande Now \ The March to Rattle. prootice here from Egypt, Of thie | wonder é OT for many a day had 1 seen Leo Mavedonlan Alesander I could tell thee) Was Wet ; ie N look 80 vigorous and happy, of Much, for he was almost a contemporary | Veil, however i t late he had grown somewhat thi {0% Mine, aud when T last was born the | Pile ene! ia and pale, probably trom causen that I ang with the fame of his| Py have suggested, but now his © ks | t Wh 1 ty were red and his eyes hone brigh i eas a aren : ote Uy again. Ayesha also eeoned Joyous, for applanted the . ‘ ? i the moods of this strange woman were icreof the flamin . a te i Ps {88 fickle as those of nature's self, and tie sanctuary rerain as monuments an stod that . i Varied as a lamiecape varies under the | tiat of Hes, or Isis, or rather blended WPM Om appire t en ) i | ens Or the shadow. Now she was) the two in one. Doubtless among the Yo Statements \ f hoon and now dark night; now dawn, | pricsts in his army were some of Pash Say" enh, oe hehe mh Mow evening, and now thoughts came | or Sekk ONY ee Se OF EROS sirarad : belt a vith 4 And wont in the blue depths of her | brought witn them thelr secret wt font | me. down ; aA that ang ui e798 like vapors wafted across the sum-|co-day hae dwindied down to the vulgar | SMW: f0llsh man, that when I #ald! At this Leo Si Mer sky, and in the press of them her | jons of savage sorcerers, Indeed | (Mit the Macedonian Alexander lived sembled a whistle vs Sweet face changed and spimmered ns{I remember dimly tha: it was eo, for 1) ee” I ineant before this sionraheion: Ri : le. o In the ‘existence that Broken water shimmers beneath the! was the frst Hesea of thie tomple, and preceded n it though 1 outlasted him by a ' opl THE FURTHER HISTORY OF SHE-WHO-MUST-BE-OBEYED. ciams and certain recollections of the strange tale of the old abbot, Kow-qyy Idiety robe and diled both @ib wine and e x» ~~ Answers to Questions ad ad Cd ad Rl s ! | | | ty “But Hark! The Scouts Have Touched!" were born in the same which would rise within me, I asked the learning of others, who disputed U knew him for T quickly with Alexander till he grew wroth with whim he consulted most “And dost thou, Ayesha, remember | him and caused him to be banished or vid to my wisdom he well all that befell thee in this former | drowned=I formet which,” ries, Afterward we life "“T wappose that I was not called Di- | left him and pushed, “Nay, not well,” she answered, medi-|ogenss?” I asked, tartly, suspecting, Rasen, From that day tatively, “only the greater facts, and 1w)9 not without cause, that Ayesha f Alexander began to/those I have, for the most part, recov- ered by the study of seoret things which thou callest vision or magic, For In- stance, my Holly, I recall that thou wast living in that life Indeed, I seem to see an ugly philosgpher clad In a amusing herseif by fooling me, "No," she replied, gravely, "I do not think that was thy name, The Diog- ones thou spenkest of was a much more famous man, one of real, tf orabbed, wisiom; moreover, he did not Indulge ja wine, 1 am mindgul of weay Aitle made a sound that re- In a very agony of beating back the criti- | che primitive charm | by tha people of Kaloon. | hideously disguised, Yeo, I was with thou, thou knewest mein thy sleep— rit \ is ae re er 81, 19058 A Group of Oddities , in Picture and Story HE si on Intest sctentit an ot various “malt, vinous and spiritpege Startling dicoveries as to the proportion’ qt mitalned tn Few laymen, for instance, would be inolfsed elileve that port contained more alcoho] than champagne or that rum {seo | TEAL e 8° shows someN | | | | Lager Beer, Cider, Brandy Gin Rum. Whiskey, 4% 6% 1 4 bi bd sd 4 5 od ¥ sg i Por Bherry, Burgundy, Cleret. Champagne, Hock, Madeira, , 2% 2% 12% M4 % 13 84% 18% much more aloohollc than either whiskey Weer containe & per or brandy. According to the diagram, 4 cent, less alcohol than cider, . ' Even the most earnest student of Frenoh might well be "stumped" by the question, ‘What ie an Artiste Stoppeur?’’ And yet London is now embellished with several members of this new Industry for women, for the two mysterious words simply mean “darner and mender,” and, needless to sny, each falr “Stop pour’ bag been taught to mend, darn and remodel in Paris kingdom of dress, Rural Canada has been “opened up" to the publie to an amasing extent by recent automobile trafo, People who never thought of ¢x- ploring the w north of so-called “olvilization'’ are now journeying in large numbers through tracts of Canadian country what still eontain all Athwart the cross ts vung a ladder, @ spear, a hammer and three natis, all of them sacred ome blems of the cruct- fixion, Below theae, on the lower shalt of the cross, is @ lite tle shrine with Mas donna and ohtld. All these symbole may ved in the panying pho+ raps trom “L'Te lustration.” Passer. by halt and kneel reverently in prayer of the aixteenth cen- tury, Hore the feu- dal lords,or "Grands before the holy «ign Beigneurs,” atill live as they have done on, ruling their ten- for centuries, An ants with little less yp-to-date automo- authority than when © pausing before Teula XIV was the shrine wa sight king. Here, too, are at once incongruous strange and = else- and anachronistic, where forgotten It In to be hoped ecenes that that the opening up the moto’ of the primitive triots wil! not mods i ernige the natives ta} the extent of robe bing them and thelw land of the quaint old-world charm now found nowhere else in Amertoa, T Waystde Calvary le but one of mi oddities of tts kin every hand, Perhaps oddest of puch the the spectacles are uent Calvaries” the newly discov. ered roads, These Calvaries constst of a fenced-in sj whose centr & gigantic thet dot cross. This {9 not an aggregation of footbal players, but a “beauty Ine Ovambo belles. The Ovambos are a tribe in German Southwest Afrioa wht are causing the Kaiser a bit of annoyance just now, owing to their unwilll “come in and be counted.” An Ovambo belle’s evening dress conal nese t BY H, RIDER HAGGARD Author of “‘She,’’ ‘Allan Qu atermatn,’’ “'King Solomon’s Mines,’’ “ec, ( of that M!fe, however; not of mors, In- line, It was only to report, however, toll that the skirmisiens of Atene were {9 deed, han are many of the followers ptt te a aed 8. prisoner of the prophet Buddha, whose 40- tiny nought with them, on being ee trines I have studied and of whom thot, tioned by the priests, o wed at once Holly, hast spokes to me so much, May- that the Khania had no mind to meat ipon the holy mountain. She pro- battle on the river's fure | having for a defense te! ra which we muat fond, § alee | show good military judgment S» ft happened that on this day there { was no fighting. All that. afternoon. we deeoemted the { I the mountain, more awiftly by ¢ far than we had climbed them after long flight from the clty of Kaloon, 7] sunset we came to Our pr camping ground, a wide and tain that ended at the crest of ey er ea Bones, bd a we had met our mysterious However, we did not reach through | Recret mountain tunnel a whi lhad led us, the shortest way by miles, boas told us now, Mires it wae sulted to the passage of an army, Rending to ‘the left, we circled i ick onatienpenle Deneas. aq that tunnel pas brow of be we did not meet woile it endured Still, I recollect that the Valley of Bones, where 1 found thee, my Leo, was the place where a great battle was fought between the fire priests, with thar vassals, the tribes of the moun- tain, and the army of Rassen, alded For between these and the mountain, In old days, as now, there was enmity, since in this present war hisjory does but rewrite Hf." “So thou thyself waat our guide,” sald Leo, looking at her sharply. “Ay, Leo, who else? though It ia not wonderful that thou didst not know me beneath those deathly wrappings, 1 was minded to walt and receive thee In the sanckuary, but when I learned that length, arrived Hped te a at length both of you had escaped trim attack by night. Atene and drow near I could restrain| Tere a tent was pitched for myself no more, but came forth thus)! ahs was me only one, Leo rocks ala di dred yards, Wh must | be posed to giv bank the Val it and, you even the river's ba: tered though you saw me not, there from harm, eo, | yearned to look upon thee and ve certain that thy heart had not yor ot tent changed, although until phe allotted ing time th mightext not hear my voice 4180 me pies oo or see my face who wert doomed to un- ought = Gergo that wore trial of thy faith, Of| ina decustomed to and itm the But most of all, ehe waa reelf, who had this detatl, and until Leo et with a Muth of vexation, wugwest that we tent, since she had no Migors of the mountain The end of it was that we gether outside, Or, rather, supped, for, there were around us, Ayesha did not even vell, That evening Ayesha was @i and ill at eaeo, as which #he could not overcome, her, At length she seemed some effort of aa ships. Holly also I desited to learn whether thre, Unt his wisdom could plerce through my dieaulee and how near he stood to truth, lt was for this reason that I suffered him to see me draw the lock from the satchel on thy breast and to hear me wall over tit yonder tn the pest- house, Well, 4d not guess go ill, but Kknoweat me as ! am and not aa | seemed to be; yes,” she added softly, “and didst say certain sweet words, | which I remember well.’ “Then beneath that shroud was thine own face,” asked Leo again, for he was very curious on this potnt-—"'the hem by 0 1 wee to-day tunced that she was mi thou wilt” she an-/and thus refresh her aoul; the onl awored, coldly; “aleo It Is tho spirit | of her, T think, which ever that matters, not the outwant seermtng, Jast Words to us were: though men in thelr blindness think ‘Bleep you also, sleep otherwise, Perchance my face ts but| not astonished, my or ag my will| summon both of you heart fashions ~ lg it to the sight and fanoy of fe benolders., But hark! The scouts fn my slum T may anes and need to speak of t! dawn,’ to have touched. thee ere we break camp at : oats itatan ‘wo parted, but ah! litte ald we PR | reoks, Si pound ot at queag how “and where the ites it us ae ure ny

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