The evening world. Newspaper, November 4, 1905, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

World Hom Mogozine, Saturday Evening, November 4, 1905. New York Needs Jerome. HOT TIPS ON FINANCE By Roy L. McCardell. Published by tho Press Publishing Company, No, 63 to @ Park Row, New York, By J. Campbell Cory. ‘ Letters from an Insurance Man Abroad to His Son on Broadway. 3 Butered at the Post-Omoe at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. Pal, oy ome Y DEAR BOY: Recelved your letter stating you VOLUME 46... sonsasnaes om / M were not feeling so chipper, as you Gad been & Why Jerome ?—IIl. a wine party the night before and must have Because of Al Adams, given a ate something that disagreed with you, My son, you start out in life with the dissdvantages term in Sing Sing, and the convic- tion in one year of seventy-two) of @ college education and the ambiftton-killing knowl edge that if you do not pay your bills eome one else policy shatks who preyed on the poor. will, But I am glad ‘to see you recognize ‘the social standing of being out with wine buyers and being one Because of Rothschild,.convicted | bank wrecker, and the band of yourself, In the eyes of Broadway, ay, and Fifth avenue, too business swindlers sent to keep him company in prison, thre Js a sacredness that halos a wine partyy almost Because of ‘Monk” Eastman amounting to a fetish, Folks who come regular to @ Testaurant for a good and the blow his ten years’ sen- fence gave to thugism and gang | Square meal for years are shoved aside from their fa- lawlessness. verite table to make roomyfor the bunch that may only 5 open wine annually, but when they do they want to do ve sdateaateal it near the Broadway window and with all the lights Jon them. The fetish that worships carbonated cider at $4. bottle permeates all | ranks, Never ask a New York woman if she will have wine, She will alwaye say "No, I don't cafe for it,’ but she will never forgive you if you call for ® bektle of unobtrusive claret instead, ‘The proverb-bullder who said “Look not upon the wine when ft {s red” knew Ma business. If you want your social standing and commerelal rating to both ko Up at che same time, ask no questions but order champagne. Then you will be looking at wine when it ¢ d. So will everybody else in the place, In » _ + Because of Canfield, and Kelly, and Ludlum and-all-the fratemity HE BEEIE SE Ne posts ee ti, v— ‘ bad — Is it only a coincidence that Carroll, and Sexton, | Then ch aiee Mae - ‘Devery-and Prank Farrel! have passed fro: whic q As out he will bow low { were the foremost figures when J : t he eee i The cha peat teat open Wine. [ A ae 4 “~ Psa ‘ook office’ { Another thing: {t 18 al! right to tell me you are feeling bad the morning si sand Welnselmers becau | after a night before, but don’t tell any one el } redelights and‘the eradicated cadet i = Whar Lois & yodhg iain and uss Winsting co6'la 0b} exadh che. Seaam { ated cadet system, | that I have never repeated, I got down to the office late after having been }\ __ Becausesof Ammon, the lawyer of fraudulent finance -and iget-rich: | ¥ quick Toguery, and that notable crusade against crookedness and cor- | muption in the: legal profession which his conviction began. This of ‘itself alone was a public service deserving of reward. It ts } because of what he has done to purge the bar of its unworthy members ; that the lawyers are for Jerome. It is ‘hecause of Birnbaum, and Mills, }and Conlon and Alderdice as well as Ammon that they are lending him h | their support. Shall this work of purification be left half done? | ant There remains the still more Important Investigation of suspected [> | fegal crookedness higher up which the indictments in the»Morse-Dodge _ divorce scandal more than hint at, f4 It is in the work on these lines which he has.yetsto:do, and his ‘ further probing of financial criminality, that two of the strongest claims jto Jerome's re-election lie. When the indictments for insurance graft are fpraining my ankle to death In the family or an ulcerated tooth, the offlye mam Ager would shake hts head sagely and advise me to stop drinking, Never admit such a thing any more than you would apologize to your wife when you are in the wrong, The only troub T ever had with your sainted mother followed such occasions as when I knew I was in the wrong and apolo- ised. Never apologize to your wife, Feel ne sorry as you want to, but ff you evor apologize it will be held up to you for years after as the tkne you were @ muoh In the wrong that ‘you even had to admit it yourself.’ Womankind, alas! lke (he steady brute who rejoices in his brutality, In tw lower classes you will find (t carried further. The man ho beats his wife stands better not only in his own wife's estimation but in the estimation of all the wives in the neighborhood than does the poor fellow who !s\palpably hen- pecked. According to your letters, all's quiet along the Hudaon to-night since the Insurance Investigation Committee has adjourned, bur walt till] they meet gain, my boy, They are only getting wanm in this expose, as the children tay. Don't I know? YOUR DAD. +o | Surgery in Olden Times. F OR a long time Alexandria was the only medical centre of the world, and qound the town the night before with some country cousins, When asked why, 4 eo late I did the Truthful James act and told the real reason. That was thy only time in all my business career that I ever was late from such a opuse, or yreturned shall it be a competent, fearless and footloose District-Attorney | ‘who tries them or a man with bound hands? that I admitted tt, at least, but every time I lost a day from any oaug from When the Grand ars Grand Jury takes cognizance of the: betrayals of trust Wome, Ly? SI N NY NS WY | for personal gain in high financial circles shall there-be a representative pape, H the physician Galen (born about 139 A, D.) had to journey from Rome to the African city oven to see a skeleton, He sent hts students to the Ger- man battlefields to dissect the bodies of the national enemies, while he himeelt 2 used apes as most resembling human beings, Human dissection was revived in Bologna in the fourteenth century, where Madonna Manzolina later was professor of anatomy—undoubtedly one of the first women doctors, If not the very first. Leonardo da Vincl, painter of ‘The Last Supper,” was @ great anatomist; but dissection had fallen into disuse when Vesalius finally revived {t about the middie of the aixteenth century Even in comparatively modern times anatomists have been the object of at- tacks by the populaca Ir 1765 Dr. John Shtppen, of Philadelphia, wae mobbed 45 ® grave robber, Doctors’ riots In Now York ocourred twenty-three ‘yeare later, and were due to the bellef that the medical students robbed graves con- tinually, It was the lack of opportunity to obtain subjects regularly that led to the practice of grave robbing, and originated what Dr, Keene calls ‘a set of the lowest possible villains—the resurreotionists.”’ of the people in the District-Attorney’s office, a.man of old-fashioned v honesty, or the representative of a boss to whom to “work for your ‘own pocket all the time” is a cardinal principle? When cases arising from corporation corruption come -into court, ; Shall their outcome be dependent on the business relations of the de- fendants to a favored contractor or shall they be prosecuted -honestly and efficiently by one who wearsyno party tag? When the Tenderloin removes the lid, as ibis-preparing to-dovin:the event of Jerome's defeat, when gambling-house:doors reopen, when Van Wyck conditions return, to whom shall the:city look forsprotection? To , @ district leader or to the District-Attorney? In the three years from 1902 to 1904 inclusive the ‘DistvicteAttor- |, Ney's office disposed of 12,179 indictments. Of the 5,039 cases dealt with last year 49 per cent, resulted in pleas of guilty, 12 per cent. in conviction by verdict and 47 per'cent. in acquittal, What possibiliti ) d p ag i Ibilities pronounced to rhyme with ‘duly,’ and so our forefathers actually did pronounce j of pul and Pigeonholing exist In this t agg .s te of nal It. Spenser, for instance, has the line, ‘Then comes hot July boyling like t fre,’ charges which come before the District-Attomey for-prosecution it needs and even 80 late as Johnton's time the accent was still on the Ju + Mo inside knowledge to perceive, | | “But July te only one of many worts which would startle those ancestors of Shall tt iministrati f thi ib | - = . | ours, spoken as we speak them now. ‘Balcony’ used to rhyme with ‘pony,' aa It | \ + Shall the administration of this responsible office. be intrusted to L { h P | man of proved capacity, whose freedom from party fetters will cab etters rom t C eople cught to do {n accordance with fts Italian origin; and, though Swift once threw wW w nswers to uestions the accent onto the ‘bal,’ ft was not regularly done until about elghty years ago. The change to the modern pronunciation made Samuel Rogers sick, he “It's none of your blamed business T ‘ ard P SASS SS << << SSE Ss" SSS — SSS SSS SS BS ——Ee Scientific Origin of Accents. “Hs ‘wwe came to pronounce July as we do now, with the accent on the eec- ond syllable, 1s one of the unsolved mysteries of speech,” says the London Qhronicle, “Named, of course, after Jultus Caesar, it should really be him to conduct it with an eye single to the public inte: " rn ndue h > Interest, or to.a man (Ewo," “Too,” or “Tot” as followa: 4-298 , oe declared | fawhose obligations to Tammany Hall «will oblige him to ke: ' its it woth sides i gers ‘le agalngt emoking on ‘'L" plat- “what (s the correct way to pronounce Carnegis? A contributor to Notes and ? CP ONS-CYE ON | To the EAltor of The Evening World +)e3 (4-4) x t 5 and in subway stations {s as 4 th" * The name ts derived from ‘ourteenth street? | Here {9 something for erammarian yy! ‘G7 “On ary ipidiheces as if never promulgated, Once, it Weries says that tt ought to rhyme with “pingue i Shall it be a courageous non-partisan administration with the law wire to rack their brains over: hat to obta To make {t HTS blamed business 5 true, a man Was arrested for amok. | % Gaelio word which means ‘The fort at the map. f 5; san adminis UR aoRd, Gs "tees oe tw: | the aavarion t na elect Willian ing on an “L" platform,” but th . tH jenforced honestly and without favor, or one “modified” and “mitigated,” | would be "used in ‘saying, “there eso os, ht ANE MIRGE WING RT es aeeg || HOBIE RSE Ripe Red. PONE ee V'twith justice tempered to those toward whom the boss would be merciful? Fees in the Mnglieh lenquane? Rules That Ate Unentorced, [reste Aterher rales ihat peony | The Tobacco of Royalty. 7 In a word, shall there be moral courage in istrict tg| 7 omer words, how would the be ey the Fattor of The Rv vor! i f won the platforns ffice or Murphvism? a8 the District-Attorey's spelled to signify all three forms of the ‘MATH, hare ore ISLE OF Frlee nak cen aha | traing—is aleo a A silver tobacco pipe with a stam ten inches long is used by the Empress onice Aurphyism words with that sound? KLA HOP. , nd ta J in ride on plat. ¢ ay a . e pat hy: , “Rverybody Works bat’'— * 1 letters in this burg of | f st profanity of Japan, The bowl is small—~in fact, only a quantity of tobacco sufficient to That is the question the voter must decide, and not the city alone, The “Fallacy” Again, | 1 he ‘ Gotha of them: ‘The |t give the emoker two or three whifts can be put into {t. Then the ashes are (but the entire nation is waiting for his verdict. . To'The Baitor of The wvening World: | Everybody works bu a Inance {8 never |*te rules and laws If unenforced? | Ienocked out and the pipe {s carefully cleaned before {t 1s refilled—a process gone | T append an old proof that Qed. ft ts! Where uli ne get it enforced any more. It 19 a dead letter, [them from the books or make, tt * | through many times {n the course of an afternoon A VW IE S IK A 6 Lo THE FURTHER HISTORY OF # # 4 a BY H, RIDER HAGGARD \ ° SHE-W /10-M UST-BE-OBEy) ED. Author of ‘‘She, Allan Qaatermain, ‘King Solomon’s Mines,’’ &c, Pree ate Aenea OY Sette onaee that Orne te BUNCE OF PRECEDING CHAPTE with whom I was famillar—the deep- for an unknown country chested, mighty-Hmbed, jovial, upright traveller, hunter and fighting man who had chanced to love and be loved of a claimed to | apiritual power incarnated tn a mould of to, nave loved | perfect womanhood and ammed with all | Nets Sigal a8 | ohe might of nature's self, These things Nand ‘uetoae the. Tht ountRins | we li presemt, indeed, but the man } Fyeetne hese mountains they come to (D0 | spay nged, and I felt sure that this Atene, the Khania, or Queen, of Kaloon, | change came from Ayesha, since the e with Leo. an thi of r |Ingly like to that which often hovered upon here at rest, that I offer to thy royal state, and Heten to !te music, Perchance thou deemest {t naught. Why, then, I'll give thee others, Thou lovest war, Good! we will go down to the war, and the rebellious cities of the earth shail ‘be the torches of our march,” She paused a moment, her delicate nostrils quivering, and her face alight with the preactence of ungarnered splen- dors; then, like & swooping swallow, | fitted to where, by dead Atene, the gold clrelet fallen from the Khania’s hair lay upon the floor. as though | the oath?’ “Ay, by myself I swear; by myself and by the Strength that bred me, If it be aught that I can grant—then if I refuse it to thee, mi | fall upon me as will satisty even Atene’s watohiing soul.’ Such destruction I heard, and J think that another | beard, also; at least, once more the | Stony smile shone in the eyes of the Shaman. “I ask of thee nothing that thou | canst not give, Alyesha, I ask of thee ‘thy hand—not at some distant time, when I hi terious fire, but mow, now." = been bathed in a my Shoe shrank back from him a@ Uttle, jsmnayed, ‘Surely,’ she sald, Mowly, “I am like She stooped, litted tt, and, coming to | ener foolish philosopher who, walking © Aino Was watching him, with epec- Bayptian p ulati Leo, held it on high above his head. | abroad to read the destinies of nations joved by mor noarmation lative, dreamy eyes, till presently, je destinies art ago uni whoee Tival Avesta hat en bash LER Ccueas hae ae Slowly sho let her hand fall until the in the stars, fell down a pitfall dug by Hully und Leo escape and make thelr way in a ee t gh her, I ew glittering coronet rested for an instant | !#!@ children and broke his bones and to the wntaln, thowe eyes taze up, and the red blood perished there, Never did I guess that hace ae ie |Pour to cheek and brow. Yes, the on his brow, Then she spoke, in her| with all these glories stretched before ; | nary unui Cee atte at Avene. Whee dead, tats tr glorious voice that rolled out rich and) thee, like mountain top on glittering Ko) passed throux 3 p ‘ low, @ very paean of triumph and of | Mountain top, making a stairway for ake him {mmort sy. | 2 Jay atrown the thowand on thy mortal feet to the very dome of Hews that Atene ie marsh: | yonder plain, power. | heaven, thou wouldat still clutch at thy and trembled Uke y io a maiden at h ver's kiss Y » open! Lao rose from the tab | “By this poor, earthly symbol I create native earth and ask of It—but the com- thee King of Earth; yea, tn ftw round |™9n boon of woman's love I would “Oh! Leo, I thought That thy soul Sia eee tease coe eo that I had been with thee in the fray, for thee Is garnered all her rule. Be! was set upon nobler aims, that thou pehtane ti treachery. “captives ‘a ng suns, and sunk tn the infinite | thou Its king, and mine!" eee Pay Jee bey TeRiTae SoSuE i Yona ord way th. waren at 0 " ‘ | vast dominion; tha: 01 Be Rrsinat xa ation ta peneue pe At the drift there wae Mxhting,.” she ! above them one vast Countenance| Again the coronet was held aloft, | Saey were but yonder fallen door. ot | vrae MH4WeReG, “afterward none es ] ad In @ calm so terrific that at its as- | gain It sank, and again she sald, or, | wood and iron, I should break for th t Raatits ihe whale etme co Ate, oateg of fire, carth and air ne my spirit sank to nothingness. | Tather, chanted | the bare of Hades, and He the Burydise iY whe Iw about to make Ure of he i aah Us 4 bd i ‘ay . bi Begpe is about to Ye De Pa mora; I waked them from the | Yes, and T knew that this was Destiny bina this ied bait bee o hie Oy death ok thigne jee midst a ‘nd, at my command, they am ing 4 throned above the spheres, ‘Those lips | ¢ternity, I swear to theo the i of the fires of the furthest sun to watch i cyclone aweenn away the Kha thee a A haat ied nevel'eni oben « ana endless days, Endure thou while the! its subject worlda at play. Qrmy Ayesha” and Molly enter Katoon e t ed and obedient worlds Fuahed upon | " wouldet bid Atene ills herself, Ayesha freee Le | "Man me to take for one man’s ¢ th } elt couse, ‘They moved again and| World endures, and be ite lord, ANG |e Coveet Mint be women oret told, the hnctpeilramere gaid sol y, a8 though aa 1 these rolling charlots of the heavens eh ere cashed bn bitter, naked trath<all mya end Ore ‘ OP TS the thought paine ‘ were turned or stayed, appeared or dis- third thme the coronet touched his | rows, all the wandering fal of my CHAPTER LIII, | “Hed they been millions and not | Holly | | | appeared, I knew also that against this | brow Tet aude earshabea, Wie Reale Bot, The Pleading of Leo. | ay i alm Majesty the being, woman or| "BY this golden round I do endow) ‘5 t'am and whence 1 came, and how HEN I had satiate’ myself, Leo 3 lood of t | spirit, at my side bad dared to hurl her | See with wisdom's perfect gold un-| to thy charmed eyes I seemed to change W a Bi AL fc ans, toe Nhe Or, rather, on have kept the oath, 1s pnasion and her strength, VAfy soul |M0ountabte, that ts che talisman where- | trom foul to fair, ond what Is the pur- # still at his meal, for tows of | 64 pointes deal Ata fs ow on the Ge a 5 DARN \ ‘ ’ | pose of my love for-thee, and what the she pointed to the dead A Yes, | 2 at man who stands yond reeled, 1 was afrald At aN Bature’s secret Goths ahall open | FUE! MD ehee tale OF GA AAlSTY Gene 1, or the effects of the tre- ce Tis re le mae aR ba” eee : J : | 98 here who made this war. At least BUN sed Saeed The dread phantasm passed, and |*© thy feet. Victorious, victorious, tread | jog, wi never waa except In dreams, Mendous nerve conic which Ayesha or-| a os My 4 : ‘ | ; td thank me who have sent so i, and say again wh iat mee tehni thou her wondrous ways with me, till! “T thought—nay, no matter what 1 mere to be administered to tim, hed) rove: @ host to guard her through the |SbaUt to do to thee when I entored : ; [When my mind cieared again Ayeshs | her topmost peak at last ahe wafte | thought, eave that thou wert far other ) made him ravenous. darkness,” here” | ¢ aS | was speaking in new, telumphant tones, ue 10 O4P weimeetal o whereof the | Wise than thou ert, my Lao, and in #0 | T watched his face and became amare! “yor it is terrible,” t4o{ "TO take vengeance on me for the | “Nay, nay, she cried, “Past ts the) ‘tela sped) death.” high a moment that thou wouldet seek Of 4 curious change in !t; no immediate | Aad 140, "40 dorm at tg queen and of her-armiien 4 night of dread: dawns the day of victo- {Columns twain are leath. to pass the mystic gates my glory can bs i ; | think of thee, beloved, red to the hair Mmeees t i sali | . ( . \ry! Look!" and she pointed through the | Then Ayesita cast away the crown, | throw wide and with me tread an alr @hange, indeed, but one, 1 think, that) with slaugh' wewered 20, t Ayesha. w \ and lo! tt fo upon the breast of the|supernal to the hidden heart of thin Shad come upon him gradually, although | “wh, knoweet thou that a powe a window places shattered by the hurrl- Yet thy prayer 1s but the same that ¢ RETIRE? filly appresisted now, ater at reck I?” she answered, with a than + Gah Wi ABE céatn By this poor earthly symbol, | create thee King of Earth!" ‘cane to the flaming town beneath, |Joat Atene and rested toere, whole world whiepens beneath the #'le © Dye ln mace te aaaivian # aplondid pride, “Let their blood su ee | vet? a monent terror s 1 to take | earth that dare defy my will?” | whence rose one continual wail of mis-| “Art content with these gifts of mine, | moon, in the palace and the cotta : a Saget ae - . o ea to wash the stains of thy blood trom c ‘As he spoke a pale shdow fil a, then It was gone as quickly > she spoke, and as her words of |ery, the wall of women mourning their|Mmy lord?" whe cried, amo ila) ind on TDP Beets F srl oloa4 f AH spoken, his} these cruel hands that once did mut-|/on Leo's face, euch a shadow it came. Awiul pride~for they were very awful \countless slain while tha fire roared pinta looked at her sadly and shork fer Sioe. Ont ep ere te ae { “a a pd a facta er th fali trom death's advancing wing, and| "Nay," she sald. “I ordain that ft —rang round that stone-bullt chamber, |through thelr homes like some un-|)"t0hl toes mat thou, then? Ask| now, beneath the moon, - Pastegdibg fun of the) “Who am I that I should blame|in the fixed eyes of the Siaman there jehall not be, and, save one who listoth | a vision caine to me~Holly, chained and rejolcing demon, “Look, | it and I swear it shall be thine,” moon!” on of things ‘ware to come, thee?” Leo went on as though argu-|ehone a stony smile, not, what power reigns in this wide| I saw Illimitable space peopled with Leo, on the smoke of the first sacrifice’ ‘Thou swearest; but wilt thou (To Be Continued) si ili ili a

Other pages from this issue: