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No, 63 to 68 Park Row, New York, pI bien! Company, Padiished by the Press Publishing ‘a* Bevond-Class Mali Aintter, Mutered at the Post-Oflluo at New York \ aE | | Why Jerome? | Why should the honest voter ast his ballot for Jerome? Not .erely to continue In office a man of high character and une usual intellectual gifts, a pubile of) al of tried honesty and proved | capacity whose services to_good | overnment deserve that reco; ‘on and reward, In ordinary clr. | umstances these qualifications ina andidate should be all sufficient | pecause of thelr exceptlonal nature. The motives which must impel the conscientlous yoter to support Jerome are more vital than these. To vote for Jerome is to indorse that domination which his candidacy personifies, A vote for Jerome is a vote in rebuke of the conspiracy against him which was the most flagrant exhibition of boss Insolence since Tweed, It is a vote for public honor and agalnst munlelpal degradation, for | popular government and against government by Murphy, for honesty and independence in office and against subserviency, It is, above all, a vote onthe question—Shall the people or the boss control the administration of the criminal law? Shall the Dis Attorney's office be run in the public interest or for the protection of corporation corruptionists and the organized powers of graft and greed? Shall the Police Department be conducted for the benefit of John Doe and the district leader or for the rigorous suppression of crime without discrimination of protected interests? To Jerome more aptly than to any other candidate for public of- fice in New York within a generation the sentiment applies—'We love him for the enemies he has made,” Opposed to him are all the allled forces of evil and baseness in the city, all the strength of that corruption whi.h, through a community of interest in crime, binds the underworld {o the outwardly respectable malefactor. | The cadets are against him because he broke up their Infamous traffic. The hundreds of proprietors of disorderly houses whom he drove + out of business are against him, The keepers of fraudulent employment bureaus, who sell innocent Immigrant girls into slavery, are against him, The policy-shop keepers are against him. The janitors of tenement-houses who connived at the existence of | ice under the eves of young girls are against him. The shyster lawyer is against him. The landlords whose income from houses rented for immoral pur- poses he cut off are against him, Every agency of vice, indeed every detmsing Influence of the! powers that prey from those greedy for graft higher up down to th - emma T | 7. a VOLUME AB vive NOs 10S ich spirit of revolt from boss al have to fear, the single restraining influence w! misrule in check, He is the sole occupant of the District-Attorney's of. fice within recent memory whose conspicuous capability and fearless. | ness have made him a terror to evildoers in all that the name implies If gratitude for services performed fails to influence th Interest and the expectation of duties yet to be discharged must move| him to support Jerome. Mr. Jerome alone can give the city protection | from the criminal ascendency against which on honest and competent ad. ministration of the District-Attorney’s office furnishes the only bulwark, AYESHAs iehted, 1904, in Great Britain and the United Slates by H. Mider Haxtard | themselves with t SINOPHIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. | jittio browned Grease, SOW § Vincey and Horace Holly, two Ens: ve own that grew on start for a unknown country be. |thiv bowgy soll, end afterward drink Ase) a. yond Turkestan in search of ® wondertu) and Oi Are Bloyole Girls Pretty? ‘T) the Editor of The Ev Zz, 1905. “The Most Generous President that Queens Ever Had.” By J. Campbell Cory. ing World. A® you permit discussion among rend era I hope to hear something on the i ime i Ne following: pikers of petty crime is leagued against him, He is the one force they | pretty-faced or @ shapely woman on! hich holds disorder and |* D?** heon, lote of them, country roads and Coney 1 A gays he T say there are, Our Path, or Hudson County To the Batt We Harlem would convince stroll there any Ne voter, self-| cay, How about chat, readers A. BT m were 1 woek neve’ h eto as ace have take a| _ “The Horse Car of the Waters,” vz, the marshes and let thetr thorsee filly Supposedly mortal woman known aa "Bh |0moe water, "Ip for r 1 1 ah ayesha. ry int | All this time Ayesha stood allent, for j ¢ Deen Javed fi | #he also had dismounted, that the mare [ 0 Fae toe : ; sent she rode and her two led horses mi Il iahed: bul in ® Viston Ls to f iil lives "4 te wetting tor him ia | eraze with the others, Indeed, ‘one the het_ mountains. apoke but once, saying ine these mountains they come to the | Fish ah i‘ kest this adventure mad, ne, the Khania, or Queen ” In tove with Yao. and hy the ‘ me Ot atrad imbrt with nee fc fu ‘ad Seeks to win him. But Teo. learning thal | wwereg igey Neds acct a Fulee fs pleh 4 tthe | ewered ‘Still that second army’ — moun ney er Shall t bef Frito Mie Aa vor pet | ,pnall ihe eu me lke mist bes reincarnation of menartis, an fore the gale,” she replied, in a low tan princess who had loved and been neil “Holly, 1 feet “ i nek Foner taeagnatl Fat Ree tm Dia voloe, “Holly, I tell thee ago and whoes rival Ayesha had been. | thou ehalt see phings oh as no m Molly and make | se to th oh igo eacape and make thee WAP! upon the earth hae ever eeen. Remom- i re they meet A: 00 | by y word e ° ght aretha She, and, Lao | epee Words when I loos the powers until the latter have journeyed | 294 thou followest the rent vel) of a Fh certain fire) Ayesha through the smitten squadrons athe 7} Aiene i» marsh- | Of Kaloon, Only—what if Atene should ine’ Ayeann with @ great arr dare to murder hin? Or oul i Ly Ra CA a 0 murder him? Or, if she should ant Hol * forth neainet Ioloon Aare" ame | nae for the the opening | “Be comforted," I replted, wonder-| that lent ing what she might mean by thie loos- ing of the powers, “I think that »: loves him too well’ | "I bless thee for |yet—I kaow he will refuse her, and |then ‘her hate for me and her jealous | rage may overcome her love for him, For Life or Death! | Should this be #0, whae will avail my | vengeance? Eat and drink again, 49 swith tee sot bem m a cheer, | Holly—nay, I touch no food until I alt a ere Herce men, whose in the palace of Kaloon—and Ic 1 ancestors had loved war for gen- A and bridle, tor pte Haul te Moreover, mad as seoned tho | and on a wild errand. Mount thee on Leo's ‘horse, whlch te swift and captures Leo y'to march at © CHAPTER LI, m4 erations. enterprise, they trusted In their oracle, the Hesea, and, lke all hill people, wero : easily fired by the promise of rich it it dies the guards will bring dee plunder. “iri An hour's steady march down the! 1 obeyed her as best T could, and onco re ba y head in @ pool, and Slopes brought the army to tne edge|™ sh lands. These, aa it tled a rag soaked sssable a defense as I feared) th that it woukt be, Btill, because of ite! to befall, made me forget my hurts, ky bottom and steep, opposing banks| Now, Ayesha was Standing staring f$ looked formidable enough, while on| upward, ao that, although I could not thoverosts of those banks, !n equadrona| see her velled face, I gucased that her il companies of horse and foot. were| eyon must be fixed on the sky abo the regiments of Ate the mountain top, I was centi the wings of footmen deployo* and loft, the oavatry halted in b i. unknown object, for her Feaanande Cepeda 4/8 y will upon an | » | land. that she was concentrating her fearfyl| around the words, Holy, | rible wonders that were about % hea | ‘ ohanced, proved no obstacle to our pro- !n tho liniment on the bruise, af.or frress, for tm that season of great Which I felt wound enough, Indeod whol drought they wee quite dry, for | the m ert of those minutes the 21 ‘ Bon che ahiro ver was|of waiting, and some foreshadowing of and cine @ great much sn early. ter calm, thing shudder; not the ord Once oF twice SHE-WIHIO-MUST-BE-OBEY the wind. a very strange m aw I thought th minutes (0 of The Evening World: have @ eudway that takea us to in Afteen jelly), and rapid "L" and tr ecasion- ey care. | To the E Letters from the People y Yet tn the twontleth put A Wayward Advocates Artistio Dres 6 Evening We rest the letter of Iter I read whth up with the crawl unwieldy rry-bont, that horse onr « Why can't we ¢ i snake us two minutes ten? And to Brooklyn tn ere ara all our Snventors? we aro about ave aquatic a» 1 aa terreat api tranalt SUBURBANITE. Son, ning World's Home Magasine, Thursday Evening, Sovember THE WHOLE —— CASSIOY FAMILY ow Answers to Questions He waa in a the. He ts not abl 1 ask for advice. MRS. M, THE FURTHER HISTORY OF entury we still! correspondent who scores the hideous “The Life of the Party,” the Battor has missed ‘The Li # one man w of Tha Evening Word: om the foolkt That {8 the man kno stage by his buffoonery, Girls that sort of “party.” alee | That encourages him. Men swear tn- wandly, That doesn't deter him. He goes everywhere “brightens un’ “every occasion." refer to ME as the ‘Ii *\1 would knock him down This same Ife of the party’ Is found tn every walk of life, and tt !# time a law was passed suppressing him as a public nuleance, I'f like to be the death of COLUMBIA SENIOR | A Flat Dwellor’s Limerick, > let, To the Elitor of The Byening World When our janitors flats have |The steam heat ts on, you can bet w £2, Uling of earhyu1ke, however, shuddering seemed to be of mosphore tt us were quite as. much was as though is very much afraid, lowin, Fo! 8 Ayeshe's earnest gaze, as all Scears for t the | of th nature living creature whivh art. to I Oros bro} and arrows were louds were aky wert lear original remark, but cum’ A she answered, weather will be wilder eart, No longer shall er water fn Kaloon! Mount, Holl @ ni even Ances BURBESt- ht the an my cry for The advance begins!" and trnelded ‘ane The adv y sada of the mare that foe. sal Mi Dk dt iit at Blind ema i Riba slaughter on both sides f us was gathered the main Khanta's army, massed Upon, the further bank, while picked men stood up idles in the w: our In fro! body of regiment hun at t forced nt the already entering the alle to right and left of ug. befell them [ can tell novhin yervalion, although T learned 4 ( flying akout us so thickly that they seemedto darken e midst of the five thou. 0 it after great by to ir, Waiting to homes ae we ‘3 the sky, Wy our |e e and soon were engaged hott; ¢ootmen in midstream, y went on Oros « Simbri pare thy answered, oid he fell back rvoir in which was still some Pa ES eaters ee he eat came words, I know It," fo of the Party.” You al w/ When the flats have been leased im. He tnfeste all soclal aa #8,|We soon find we've been fleeced and says and does slde-spiitting inane| Cold afr with 001d shoulders we got things, and holds the centre of the F. DERKMAN. s Cad Cd w ] uttering thelr wild, iat {1a companies dashed inva river, leaving us upon the ban with the and Aa enem: she id her, A Group of Oddities in Picture and Story. HERE have been “cannon kings’ ever eince the days when the modern “vaudeville” was known as @ ‘variety show N of these performers, however, juggled merely n bulls or were shot out of epring-gun eunnon, It remained for a German Somson named Brinn to manipula real article with anything ap; t dexterity, Brinn has been touring the West tn an act that has roused consid erable invere: He has a genuine can- non and calsson of considerable size and welght which he balances above his head, gripping it with his teeth, and which he fires by nolding {t in this precarious position, The matter ts of ater 'T course largely one of balance, but her. culean etrength is aiso required, Brinn Ko claims have originated this odd vaudov: turn and defies any other Samson to duplicate it, There {8 @ wholly unique military hand attached to @ Surrey regiment of he Uritish Army which other British ree 8 are preparing to copy t may In time cross to the United States, where it Is ceriain to oxcite admimation tn the heart of every small Tho Savoy regiment's band. whieh is compored the m ara mom was formed only recently entirely ¢ the Firs rey Tegt and their funct onglsts of y the regular regimental " the march. The offect playing seems to be a § dex! more stimulating th hat produced by @ drum corps, and new (fen appears likely to be @ tvely imitated the 6 Tritish Army. Thue future heroes may march to battle to the inspir eere of the harmonica instead o@ to clarion 4 On the ytee A rich widow died, Gold Const the com. ing all her enon tume of a reigning nous fortune of belle ts less a money, Jowels and ter of well-fitt real estate to a clothes than of we rooster, She was a spiked hair, ne 1s behever in transmits vinoed by the ac eration of souls and companying pleturo ad become cone from the London ved that the eoul te ¢ aalr f her lute husband, Ivided into Lon Potro Stiva, a half dozen braids was {mprisoned in a these braids that rooster 's body, are etiffoned with So she but the wax and tar until bird a splendid ey areas bard as se ond named kindling wood and m Pedro, stick out straight When the Donna rom t ad ina Silva's relatives som le, Uke the atd of the bird spokes of a woeel. they natu Thus colffured, the " belle fs ready to Chicago Tribune, conquer al! hearts, About three months a azo the woman dies, 6 wil had hia fine house Poor Pedro did not long enjoy his wealth. For ten minutes afte been read the exasperated relatives of the old woman bur and promptly twisted his neck. Thus died the wealthiest rooster In the world If this sombrero were worn In publi the alr would be full of renditions of that sweet lyric, Where Did You Get That Hat?" wearer (s vast y proud fh e igear, Ho is the maa n Sabo Club and wore meeting of the cot of ¢ this hat to a re t Grand Ledge of th rie & sf and weighs aearly el remembers that the average hat weighs less than one pound, the mae- cot's yiyforta will be sean to equal Is distinction, The photograph, by the reproduced Humphries Company from the Buffalo Express, river of genuine ink, joining of two streams, mes from an iron te- second flows ¢rom @ meeting, the meld of is w the fron sojue ton of the other, and ink is the res ee i Mexican botaniats bellove they hn Aigcuvered the oldest thing In the wot fa a cypress of Chopultepes, the trig ” of which js 1S feet in clroumference ~ | ind the age of which fs calculated ag ‘wy 4 BY H, RIDER HAGGARD Author of “She,’’ ‘Allan Quatermatn,’” ' , ‘ “*King Solomon’s Mines,’’ &e, tw , but ag they set foot upon ft the rw and barley meal, ¢ 7 ui n trove them I 18, WhO # y ped to osted fore repulsed | and that 10 eth Ayesha & ith taco, Ud cy aed a leailer: and T will give words, fhe searces tham ore.”’ sh ud, "Come with me ly seemed to hear them, Only whe ore my Holly,” jowed by the main ¢ d tiat all wea horses should be body of the horsemen she rode @ ity) abundoned and fresh ones mounted, tla way inte tre. river, and there! Dorward again for hour walted until the shattered troops nad perfect silence save tor, a lle c ma s, yhispered to) Gur horses’ of: ° yord fallen back upon us, Oros whispered Avesha, nor did her wild scott uptake , a will be | only from time to ime they looke | iit. madness; the Heaea x only from time to tne | iithinkest thou eo! 1 answered. |red mpears at the rede! “More like that we siall be slain,” & | J Jox nor ehell 1 forett He |saying at which he smil ; fing MstAL and shee und gathered so that b Dr all his soft ways OTos Was seo man, Also 1 belleve that. he ; try me, knowing that his mis: | wuld take no DATR a in which |, time vaporous points shot forwards eshi thin, liko swords, or massed like chargs ; was no weapon, and waved It for- 4 nat | Ing horse. a ‘A great cheer answered that | 1M sana) th advances, and in the midst of | Under them a vast stillness reigned, t thie fratl, white-robed woman Bn |1t was as chough the earth lay deed to her horse, so that it plunged Weep | beneath thelr pall. into the water. | Kaloon, It In a lurid Mgt, Ww neem foe flew ho: is, shaking their jewel! king | ter reached us in hollow echoes, Now we saw th vast array, posted rank on rank wit! silken banners drooping La that atirl jair, tanked and eoned by gli regimens of hors i An embassy approached us, and at signal of Ayesha ed, It wae headed coum, whose fave T i rein and spoke boldl: {sten, Hos, to t ot ow the stranger Jord, thy Two minutes later, and spears and i@ plokets of the tying about us ao thickly med to darken the sky, T horses fall te right and nothing. touched me or hes that floated a yard or two ( ‘eo minutes and wa were galn- jing the further bank, and there tho Worst fight began. lt was flerce indeed, yet never an inch did the white robes give back, and where taey went men would fol- low them or fall, We were up. the bank, and the enemy was packed about ug, but through them we passed #lowly Nike 1 boat through an adverse sea that frets but cannot nar it, Yea, furt) and further, till at last the \head grew thin as the living ot horsemen forced Ita path be-| qui them—g@rew thin, broke and van- frountath bars ig hoo boty han ee eave ir Pr to the words of Khania?" \% ite al A had paved through the heart of ort, and leaving the tribesmen who ea cy oilowed (o deal with Ita fying fr Ayesha whispered to Oros, who then ments rede on half a mile or so Ted aloud lroustered, Many were dead and "7 " . Go, It y | were hurt, but the command was for death draws near to you,’ tat ull sore-wounded men should fall) So they Went fast as their switt out and give thelr horses to replace | steeds would carry the but for a lite tle while Ayesha still sat lost In thought. Presently she turned, and throw her thin vell | saw that her face wi white and terrible, and that the eyes {t glowed like those of a liones night. She sald to me—hisgh words between hor clinched tee jolly, prepare thyself to look the mouth of hell, I desired to spa them Jf I could, 1 swear it, but heart bids me be bold, to put off hw pity, and use all my brie might would see Leo living, Holly fe a they bout det hy hat Be Conia) ay ‘ose that had killed those that Dat nee and. presently we moved on, three thousand of ua now, hot mote, heading for Kaloon, ‘The mot grew to a caster, and the canter to a gallop “s wo rushed forward across teat endless plain, UL at midoight, or a little after—for this route was far \shorier than that taken by Leo and myself in our devious flight from Rae- on and his death hounds—we bik \aaw the city of Kaloon a pe its ti f Now 4 was , for was @ rewe! in a the i