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¥ id * ev ee te of moe ry) 2 ww ed we he ia eae ew oe v +e Od Ae ok 4 Siw RVwutn World’s Home Magazine, Monday Evening, November 6, 1905, Fs » « « The Oil King’s Nightmare, « « «Every Man Should Live | Che Rete. By Ferdinand G, Long. To Be 100 Years Old. | Pudlisned by tho Frees Publishing Company, No, 63 to 6 Park Row, New York | ' Entered at the Post-Offico at New York a* Second-Class Mall Matter. a DREAM By Si | ——-- ry = > = TOCUNE Te NO. 16,148. HE | ma y Sir James Crichton-Browne, SR d dalled ; E y ag a rsttae I think, entitled to his century, and every woman to a centurp i And a little more, for women live longer than men, Every child should b@ 4 ; EAT TWo CRACKERS | ecen? "Ua UD Impressed with the obligation of living to 11, and should be | | YY p i How to avold the irregularities that tend to frustrate that laudable ame S) {Snort} SUKG |AGAIN FOR SUP- bition ( Why Jerome?—lV. An X mark in the SMALL SQUARE at the left of Jercm 's name , ote sor Jerome rsonages, such as Aaron, Moses and Joshua, says our ine 7 "teal 1 Metechntkoff, who accep probable the assig ¢ ‘ PER BE FORE [4s pear berauodlnen oe pts as probable the assignment of such ages as 100 te TO BED m« conviottons Assure is that the prevent duration of life is too short, an@ GOING cxpresses his opinion that a sclence of the prolongatéen of life can be built up, To lengthen as well as to strengthen the lives of the people is the object a@ preventive medicine, Certain great measures that Me beyond its scope are first | of all necessary if we would prolong the days of the masses of our people, Regular employment must be secured and poverty diminished by our statesmen fnd economists, 80 that we may no longer have among us 13,000,000 on the verge f hunger and dying in multitudes before their time. But within the sphers of medicine, althongh much bas been done, much, {pfinitely much, remains te be done, If old age {8 to be attained, a good start in life must be given, and hence the {mportance of the questions as to infant feed> lag and milk supply. If {t 1s to be reached by a proper proportion of waytarers | 10 sound condition, we must reduce the prevalence of those infectious diseases Which carry off 80 many of the young, and often cripple where they do not kit, d we must see our children have a suMfciency of food and a suMotency of th with which to eat {t, says Sir James Crichton-Browne in the Chicago Tribune, ' If It te to be wisely pursued, we must foster the self-respect and arrest the degeneration of our people by giving them decent houses and promote their phy+ sical development by affording them facilities for exercise, Pecullarly desirable ¢ is It that we should warn the public against those causes of premature senility which operate with disastrous effect when childhood Is over, Whatever tends to diminish disease {s conducive to longevity, but in our * endeavor to promote it we must have regard to mental as well as to bodily A hygiene, A great deal of premature decline in force and energy ts due to overs use of the brain and nervous system. | If we are to lower our death rate and promote old age, we must return t | simplicity and tranquillity of life, And as regards the masses of our people, we | must, as far as may be, alleviate the anxieties that press on them, and surely | one step In that direction would be the establishment of old age pensions, Life Insurance has, by the com eof mind it has secured. done something to prolong Hfe, and national insurance against old age by removing those appres | hensions that must sometimes harass even the bucolic mind, would, I believe, contribute to a hale old age. and an X mark in the circle under any party emblem is a ard for the candidates, other ban for District Attorney, on that party's tehet, DON'T mark in the circle at the head of Jerome's column. ‘DON'T SCRATCH OUT any name. To vote a “split” ticket made up of candidates from several party columns, place an X mark in the small square BEFORE the name ot each man you wish to vote for and NO MARK AT-ALL in the circle above any column. Mark carefully a sample ballot as you wish to vote and take it into the booth with you for a guide. If you have any reason to fear you have spoiled a ballot, get another Instead of casting the doubtful one. AT NIGHT! The honest voter should cast his ballot for Jerome— Because Jerome stands for YOU," meaning ALL the public and ALL the public interests, as against “IT,” meaning graft. Re- member that it is Mr. Murphy’s Mr. Osborne who has said that “If Jerome did not get IT he MUST have been a fool.” Because a vote to re-elect a faith. ful District-Attorney is a vote in re- buke of the boss rule which rejected him purely on account of his faithfulness, Because, not being himself afraid, Mr. Jerome has spread fear among foes of the city’s peace and good name, Because those foes, from red-light cadets, keepers of disorderly houses and gamblers to “honest graft’ politicians, are the forces against which honest men will vote in voting for Jerome, Because as District-Attorney Mr. Jerome has ‘made good,” and Because the completion of great works of punishment and purifica- tion waits upon his continuance in office. Because in voting for Jerome honest citizens will force for them- selves “‘a square deal” in place of a one-sided shuffle by the bosses, 4e The Woman Lord Nelson Loved. NOTABLE Instance of the sure A vival of romance in the popular mind Ss In the Intorest layed {n Lady Hamilton tn nection with the celebration of the Nelson cen torary, Nelaon MHterature ts the order of the day in England now, and the naval hero's relations with the famous Lady Hamilton have been so glossed that she shares in his apotheosis to oxclusion of Lady Nelson, wno has been relegated to the Ilmbo of the forgot ten commonplace. This celebrated woman, who was the ablding love of Nelson's life, was > Amy Lyon de Hart, in very humt circumstances, {n 1763, Her girlhood was passed at Hawarden, here she OV- cupied several menial positions, In 1782 she met Sir William Hamilton, British Ambassador at Naples, to whom she was ultimately married, and with whom she lived till she me: e'son in Nelson loved her devotedly and w of her “my own dear wife in my eyes The reasons given above summarize briefly the chief arguments among those which The Evening World has presented in earlier days of the campaign for the cause of popular self-government as represented by Jerome. and the face of Hea The same pleas have heen set forth by distinguished leaders, includ- Lady Hamilton survived Nelson be ing Secretary Root, ex-Ambassador Choate, Dr, Felix Adler, Dr, Edward win! am Weleley at night over an old say) Aisount and imagining that | am a little Shbre I PHY SEO SOUN ER ew PIN D Rockefeiler, Nai Bae a d ts peers Sig } erty tm 1816, fimoug 7 oy — = last arrested for debt, but escaped t . | Romney’ painted t ' m the Feople *” nswers to Questions «esti mess and never tired of celebrating her be ston! and ip at a furious pace, but in a8/to let a man know you | manly a manner as possible, A} seok his comradeship thre woman carrying a biuby got OP | proposed to my husband, ises as In| at Twevty-third street, and despite the | lived happliy together for nine the law did fact that the next car was waiting for) 2eirs. Many a man loves a girl. rs. Warren's crossing room he showed the mother! fears she does not cate fer him. T Jiately after its first t the only remaining seat and made ly @ol I can see to such a com: where she dled tn pe { w the im Everett Hale, Dr. Lyman Abbott and Horace White. rina Press and pulpit are practically unanimous for the same cause L tt ( ir But apart from any urging by words of pen or lip, the people should C Cl S 0 fee! themselves called to the support of Jerome by the arguments of their own self-respect and freedom to act. The mills The bosses, grown imperious on long-continued dominance, forced 1104, ** leisurely thers. I no! the Issue of Issues out of their overweening self-confidence, not di Marp r ve him and; Sunday ts a day for every sort of out: To the Editor of n lite? world gen do not | You day t oi THE SIDE, torte aad) A tp eandition of affairs in an Decwuse of the hot a 1 blow" In te 4 fossil, but 1 town, Newoastle-Under-Lyme,which to ¢ Now Yorkers who e 0 iit ge for weeks to in-] Sunday, Nov. § tno anniversary of has been try f the Sabb. Blindly, they sought to impose their WILL on a public which was to presentation Mr. Murphy's Profession sure she wus aafely meated ere he gave | Pllcation is for her to propose. Mrs. Z ita SAMAKE haa become shame: | guce some one to accept the Mav~| Guy Fankes's pyaeheh abd be herded like sheep, hasbeen enjoying a long and prosperous |a quick signa) to start. Does h no | The Continental Sunday. OLD FooY, orally but hae a sine hance fc reeds rales ! v n thers? budding 4 n a ” » 2 ith no loss ¢ Inwitting’ ey have made ei *5 run and we are threatened with a pos- deserve the thanks of all fathers? la. in, pattor of The Evening World: se wan tt, Cooper Unt ja badd thes Unwittingly they have made gift to that public of a superb OPPOR. sitie continuation of the same show for ‘ HOR Hi Moe |e eau ban sobre ek tee Ts the Biter of The Brenton Word aot . ee - TUNITY to exhibit a will of its own; to settle a living issue in its own! nother four years at the sume house ae neghes ens York who had any pretensions to ri [enastare ones Ries Haasareses Feenlet Wet Ham, England, has fust gained| Fitness of the Hippodrome tor a poe chi rane conscience, oe Usual high prices of course to prevail ‘9 the Editor o! ¢ Evening World: | tability t to church at least once . i a AB netion, ‘Too! 1 ib teat mathe Bas sea Kaito way, asking consent of conscience alone. an LF. RCN, | On a Thursday In AUgUst, 185, was! Ceiaily twice: euch Sanday vencws| Son Te Already a Citisen, |* wove ditintion. ‘ook part In a iPtaal meeting recognised rather late i ‘ feat * * 4 Oth hor ith? |. bide ig Ga ae awimm! conte: nd Wo e campalgn. To-day the bosses shake, foreseeing disaster invited by their own) Pralte for Car Conductor, | the date the 10th or the hith or 18th? | yg weekly prayer meeting of lecture| To the FAltor of The Evening World: ra hatlitis (asueH WELW FoAth OL axe , 4 stupidity 4 To the E ‘itor of The Evening World Kenilworth, N Jas well. It was considered wrong and| If 4 man was born in @ foreign land ne paver can ‘tall ene le Me a » should come defe: ' , Anent the discussion of the courtesy . 3 dell jin bad taste to shirk one’s religious; and and had a son] “Black Hand plot purziing police.” ning Utah was “one of the bows’? | To-morrow should come defeat, not alone instructive for them, but | ora r conductors, 4 The Woman Who Proposes, | durios of to go abrcad openly for ree. > Is now twenty-| Hardly surprising 1n view of the fact aeth) a tetiee highly useful in teaching the people the lesson of their own power. wish avenue sur ar! qe te Btitor of The Evening World |reation on Sunday, That was forty | 4, must the son have the “Black Hand" mystery in More & football star, cor . aida proves to have been caused by @ litle white feminin fe rved compliment.| 4, reader asks if gitls propose, They| years ago. To-day the average young|isens’ papers in order to ' r Fis BTS hopping hour to-| do. And why shouldn't they? Is there 1 seems ashamed to cont did not take any k Vete! Vote early! Vote RIGHT! hopping do. And why shou man I meet seems ashamed to contess| father di take any—or ts his son Li J { day he was rushiog hls passengers out a law against it? Is it an awful thing| he aver goes to chureh a ». | already a citizen? na » i Jday he was rushiog his passeng a law agi goes nat all already a eltisen ANXIOUS, | Called a “whirlwind finish” no doubt te eaaeananmanaanmananaannanenaiaaaianesaree TTT ~ avo all In the prize ‘ THE FURTHER HISTORY OF o Fr] F Ry & r ; \j iz — BY H, RIDER HAGGA A\ IB S IA A 8 3 HE. WHO-M US 1-BE.- OBE Y ED, Author of ‘*She,"’ ‘Allan eae ‘ “King Solomon’s Mines,’’ &e, ne hand n saying that “no gent ali,” Jettries probat <a nan righted, 1904, In Great Britain and they Tp onto me.” ne . Woprrianted. 1004. tn, Great Priiainang™y “Thou dentest me.” he went on with gathering s ' th BYNorsis oF PReceDING CHAPTERS |TOU canst not do, hou mayest | Leo Nincey and Horace iioily, two £na-|not do, for, Ayesha, thou hast sworn men. wart Tor Bn unknown couNuty t vier eee: Fond Turkestan in search of a wondertulang and I dc fulfilment of tht Suvpoted'y spieriel woman known as 'Sh0! | oath T anduie thiadally ie In former years they had met ome w he had loved | torment, nt of thy presence | ——— | tell thee, Lea were I mot srre that locks. abe kissed, him on the lips thy little stream of life fs draining dry .*/'48 they ‘ and Into the great ocean of my life, drawn thither as the sea draws its rivers, or a# | the sun draws mists, een now 1 would 4) not yield. But I know, for my wisdom | Ne fires With @ him, sayings Bhe had claimed (| and thy sweet wonla: try Won : tells it me, ere ever we could reach the) “! thus for the pees eu at eel NONE asarts | thy laste sie He ak wats | shores of Libya the tll work would be gnc pine My hy a ry 4 i : tye ‘ done, and thou dead of thine own long- |, I swore fo hext year. So keep thine oath or let . wt Caves of Kor waiting. pea beste ing, thou dead and I wHowed who and he: C Wiles. Rice | eves Wad Aoeils: thou this, come What may; never, never . mountains they come to the on ienety : . more shall we be separa’e who are of» Therefore, vee! like lost Atene, T gained one, Whilst thou Itvest'T live take the dice and cast them, not knOW- at thy side, and when thou ¢ if die ing how they shall fall, Not knowing !thou must, I'll follow. thee through hd [how they shall fall, for good or Ml f Worlds of flrmamen's, nor shalt all th st," and 8! leon d otion as | foore OF heaven ell avail against cast," and she made a wild motion a8 inv love, “Where thon qos et fale or Queen, of Kajoon, and. by pped f rin his arms 4 roke from hte ped and Then Leo | , 1 | sha stood silent, only nae | | W, for, though of some desperate gaméster throwing | will vo, When thon slorseet, w | | v on sloenaet, with thea or inca enough, and his last throw hdl 1 aliep, and it is my ‘voleo. that Years ano r Ayesha } but at a little | . Aye " “ b js (Hou shalt hoar murmuring through the f Melis ind ted escape and wake paar taney aggre Ho," Ayesha went on, “the thing 18! dsosme of life and death; my voles dime ras » Holly," ah done, and the number summed for 4Y,'shall summon thes to awaken In the . ! a sigs, “to bid thee though It be hidden from my sight. {last hour of everlaming dawn, when alt “ ) AEN S |W jest I should cateh thy man jhave made an end of doubts and fears, HY night of misery hath furled her Iminott . ©? Mus, I say to thee, tt begins to and come death, come Hfe, I'll meet it} WI) e* for ave is arts ae in ane heat ed MOULA it iat , | “Listen, now, while I sing to thee, and Le rin my t i bravely. |hear that song aright, fr in ite mel A aad her ar etineanied oy rio ie, Wainie aoe "Say, how shall we be wed? Thavelody ai length tou ‘shalt loam "the A hey bivouac for. the night at theonening | WH he laughing It Holly here must Join our hands; |!) which, vowed. 1 might not tell Ob a mores, that. trad ‘ ; ‘ y ag | (0, thee ‘Thou shalt learn who and Rid Buin the neces ne ia we W | who else? Hoe that ever was our guide| what Jam, and who and. what thou AAS As treachery . ee way jahall give me unto thee, and thee to me. ie ane, Mi me nigh Purposes of our exh orders her a Rech at once ' na ; he dead (10ve. and this dead woman's: hate inst Kaloon in an effort to rescue he This burning clty Is our altar, the dead) PM nat | ave Wa tron thee te EE oe rts, | and and living are our witnesses on earth | y wildecIng wordy and vialons, Menrahgiate the whole army. of Alene. t ai. day and heaven. In place of rites and cer-| mn, tren, my love and lord, to Be she Ie ahout to inane Use cf é “| the ‘hurden of the Sone of Pate.” Holly h weet . euiid emonials for this first time ‘I lay my! she ceased speaking and gaged heave Of magic to conquer her f ' | + Teo, lips on thine, and when ‘tls done, for|enward with a rapt look, as thourh I'll sing thee a nuptial chant of |“! Wulted fer some inspiration to fall upon her, and never, never—not even love such as mortal poet has not writ-| ji the free of the ‘Korchad Ayesha aweeps and mar n) | know nor care, ¥ ‘ ni thou art true ‘ armies Mines ta api fede HSER OR eI ten nor have mortal lovers heurd, reemed so divine ax she did now, i Wilt take the risk? soba, while o'er her upturned fa “Come, Holly, do now thy part and! WY ist vetore her pale and ath wih rornise thee nothing, Thou mlurhtest | {2 Der alluring eyes there spread iteelt ye co arg hla vseved nor | eatnesdentnlike figure of the Shaman, ‘TAP ny bd : that look which is born of love alone. Like one In a dream I obeyed her| sttit as the Khania's ley shape whic CHAPTER LIV. eR OF TW ROBE, THOU aiant atid more TASIANE MIA Ae beam and took Ayesha’s outstretched hand | etared upmarastrom CM a A mightest dle y ace 7 s , if The Vielding of Ayesha : ‘ to grow, sweeter and more aweot, no hast done these many weeks,"* and Leo's, Aw I held them thus—1 teli| WAe RARE ne eu Ineovelble ¢ Veen 1K *, what, then? Shall we) ionger the velled hermit of the caves, | “LT thank thee for the comfort of | the truthit was as though some fre) wigs in all her might and awl beauty } my res anata be senarat t ole 4 re a hed through my veins from her to] thts proud belng worhipped him, i YESHA paused, then continued e oracle of the sanctuary thy words, Yet way tt woman whose | TUS Mkt she began’ to sing inf voles Ys A "Leo, .T thought bettor, higher ay, Leo. th not possible the Valkyrie of ihe. battle breath wrougat destruction upon yoa-| Nim, shaking and shattering me with) Hark’ MN) cet inat tte honoved at thee.” |v er ; 1, of this T am mly the Jovellest and most der plain? Was tc to woman that| swift waves of burning and unearthly | jy siey seamed to cloy my blood and stop | \ |wure; it is sworn to me, But then Blast and Lightning bowed and sald: | bilss. With the firg, to», came glorious) my breath, Wat ever winddened''a: hur Suddenly Ayesha stopped, and 1 felt ‘We are here=command us, we obey?’ | visions and sounde of mighty musio,| Budlenly Sve ohn her face: Did that doad thing’=and she pointed] and a sense as though my brain, Mled| "Pkt Leo swayed to and fro, ag to the shatiered door—"break inward at| with overflowing Ife, must burst asun-| though the stones*benerth him were but “But, Ayesha, Tam no god; Tam al an and as a man 1 seek the wonan| hon I love. Oh! Alvest thyself ot} through r 1 er spheres, mayhap, our fu force a pain mand's eyes She spoke, and It was of Ittle things, Phe: ; i ful path to thelr last goal of union.” All these wrapplizs of thy power—that f union tor thus she proclaimed the conquea: of 4 ’ : t, ‘To and fro he swayed, Power which strona thy path with deag| “Why, then, I take the hazard, ayes! horse ques: of 4 woman's will? Or could a woman] ger beneath Ite weight. 8 roski ne Betas bling arms 40 clang ‘and keeps m rt from thee. If only|#ha, Shall the life that 1 can to charm this man to stone? 1 Joined thelr hands, I. know not how;|her-then suddenly foil backward them, I know rot in what] lay #t!l Fi she eald, showing her white “OW! Leo, would that T were woman! yn | Slay a leopard or a iton in th h n y P a lion tn nt what a shriek was that she ga’ BE) or ove little hour forget the amt i Bport Of) nop ay, forget thy greatness and alan Idle day, be too great a price to|'0” : torn Hes speara and stained by I toll thee that I'd lay oll my grandeur Then reeled back agaist the | oy ye Dive wakened the very | Smay,, forget thy greatness and be q| offer for the splendors of th oust? | “le dust and dew of war: “fle, my lord; ywn, a wedding offering at thy teet,| y 0. ton tae plain. Surely It muse pay. rs a * of thy bresst?| whet marriage garments iets thee Ie Ayesha Cast Her Armp About Her Lover's Neck, down, wall and watehed. corpees por p ly cout 1 be sure that for one short sour] "Eoin ta what Law, | tite mehoed In the stars, One a ~~ With ap wbardonimen - I snoyld be naught hut woman and 80 fh jondid and intends that ti seomes oT pprank to him, ond there, wi f anaes murmured |i” AVesha'a Kies, slain by the fire ol rate’|Ner love, La Ins, dead=jay. dead. upop t ne shia, 4 ‘Beco ued.) * Reaipan and my wile Thine oath! Ayesha, I claim thine j@ Made no answer, only looked at} oath.” nd shook her head, causing her then throbbing silence, which at last I come to thee, who would have been adorned in regal gems and sald Leo, his burning eyes fixed upon) the prophecy of this dead Atene lies Look! Ayesha grew human; I could ‘ her face, heavy on my soul, Atene who suid that mae than, human, 4 ined * ripple like water be-| see her heart beat beneath ae pti i sper oimaioraeea es obo cn! “Thou pares thal 5 did jorment the ERs “Hosband otle breeze " “Thou eeekest the woman, Ah! there} Mortal and immortal may not mate.” about her lo thine? have known torment, | #tma, abou Teli me, Leo, am I woman or| “Thou must be woman, or thou] but It is 1 who inv who desired yo yleld and dared yf Ay. ula has "aiingleg and hear her breath bl) come in por sweet “1 ecek the woman, not her #drmant" nies? Gaw that Tom woman tar mam! wauidet not have tormented me as thoy