The evening world. Newspaper, November 8, 1905, Page 14

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Fenn nen nna noon i ame HOE TRE EET ETI 0 The Evening World's Home Magazine, Wednesday Evening, November 6, 1905 err aa ’ . ALL OVER! Science Discovers Animals with Odd Musical Knowledge, By Ernest Ingersoll, BR antmal musicians J here mean instrumentalists rather than vocalie—tiray ™ By Ferdinand G, Long. Pablighed by tho Frese Publishing Company, No, 63 to 63 Park Row, Now York, Watered at the Host-Oftice at New York ax Second-Class Mall Matter, ——<$— ‘ VOLUME 46. tasee sresensennne seesee cress seers NO, 16,180, TWwE The Triumph for Jerome. !* Despite his rejection by the bosses, despite the desirable but powerful enemies he has made, despite the Flammer false step and the rotten elec- lon law which cost him thousands of votes, Mr, Jeromesis returned to the | ‘office of District-Attorney in New York. ‘ Upon his canvass turned the Issue of Issues In the campalgn. It was his to represent, locally and In the eyes of the nation, the Cause of the people—of YOU—against defiant bosses, Aside from the contest In which Jerome led, and aside from Mr. Avins’s almost amazing run in the face of betrayal by his own party, yesterday's event in New York was a muddled struggle between the un- “scrupulous boss and the unlimited promise, . _ Mr. Jerome's was aypersonal triumph:and a populardrlumph and an Posplring triumph. It has taught the people, through extraordinary» circumstances, a resh lesson as to their own power. What New York's honest voters have done once-they can do again. *WWhat they can-do for one faithfulmanthey.can door a whole ticket of Phe faithful. : They can-make “Ivhave served*¥OU" ‘thesnecessary: slogan of:any \piicial seeking re-election at their hands. . {s, such as make use of other means than the voce for making a noise, The found {n some cases may serve them as @ means of signalling only, but often it seems to be made for the pleasure of hearing {t and eltciting a response, which Increases our Interest In the matter. Tt {# too early to plan for organising a "band" composed of wild animals, but there would be drummers enough te begin with, ‘The greater number of animal instrumentalists come from the ranks of bints ond {nseots, but a few aro furnished by other classes, as fishes, Perhaps the tatiling of thelr antlers {8 one source of pleasure stags seem to drive from lodke ing horns and pretending to fight. The loud stamping of hares, like the ‘clashing jot teeth of woodchuck, or the water-slapping by the beaver's taf, an 6x. | pression of alarm and anger rather than of a musical mood, and serves as @ Ngnal to all other hares to “watch out.” ‘The storks and some related birds have found that theyscan male a pleasant racket by clapping thelr beaks together, , Another Instrument for agreeable nolsemaking {s furnished by hollow quills, Keep your eyes upon the next peacock that you happen «o see marching about with his tall widespread, his gleaming neck arched, and every movement Intended to display his grandeur, and then presently you may bo) see and hear him give t @ quivering shake, making each quill strike the next with a loud rattle, and causing a thousand rainbow lights to flash across his banner in metallic seine tilations, Birds of paradise do just the same (hing for the same purpose, The Amrican rattlesnake las a act of anets by which he can play a jig that will | set the dullest creature dancing away from the bandesand Of the drummers, the woodpeckers stand easily first, for much wf the ham- ss of digging out rmering these lively birds do is entirely apart fr | nesting holes or capping and teart: wood In searoh But the biggest and strangest example is that of the howling monkey of Hrazil, for it ts pre My a musical instrument in the throat which gives to ut creature the fearful volume of voice wiich no arrangement of vocal chords one could produce, A pecullar hollow drum-shaped shell (an expansion of the tamgu bone) ts joined onto the upper end of he windplpe, for which room 19 made by the widening of the lower jaw, Through this drum: the volce passes \with echoing resonance—it Is, in fact, a nat | —_———_ ++ —_____ Lightning’s Strange Freaks. Ira) megaphone The Chauffeur !n Demand. ae eteniitee 2 We ESC, ee ee ne s In clroumfei ‘| President Dave Hennen Morris, of the Automobile Club of America, en speaking to the young men of the West Side Young Men's Chris- precepts ee , Association about motor cars and their drivers. He knows of a m soteron was hard and eed ® the ; nad been, lied igtauffeur who gets $6,000 a year, Not all who follow the business of this from a battery will vitrlty finely powdered I t feldspar or quarts, The lightning. however, does {t in the manner tn one place, but n many, showing that before strik the ) several branches, ! ggne can hope for such wages. Yet the field for good, reliable chauffeurs rago an each strong enough to pen \JB 4 wide one, affording opportunities to thousands of careful, sober, | eee e: ' men. | on ph vienitaatadealate | | Mr, Morris'sxvords:remindone-again-ofhowrapldtydinvention creates | Micro-Organisms in Butter. hg i occupations, So recently has the word “automobile” fallen into its OMETIMNES butter has a tiehy taste, and this led the Department of Agricule S re in Victoria, Australia. to make an ! - tigation, Ww \ proves a fishy taste in butter isin no way o ted with fish. One or more of fou it common use that it is found only among the addenda to a great} lish dictionary bearing the date 1903; yet the machine of which {t has i the name has already created a demand for an army of men Vy ly and specially skilled, and the increase»in places'which is to.follo simply incalculable, That Mr. Morris accents the word “sober” ‘in speakingrof-a chauf: Feur's essential qualities is important. He might have added that the term should cover many particulars—includingsthat-of-freedom from anintem- i perate passion for speed. be concetned in the developaent of fishiness, ite om which the thin coating of tin Je ¢ made from milk which specified micro-organisms may Rusty cans or any so-call worn away have @ \ e cans have contain slon of the tin coating | a bad effect on milk and on cre n the bu » iron or steel which be although ft inay be polished bright ++ | Odd Origin of “Orange.” , having been car { westward by the + ea to Spaln with Mohammedin'sm, The fruft\ crossed fr aders be thanked for bringing it to I (the Bast name {a Atat mea from two words mea while, probably, the ¢ () ANGES came originally from ern Eumpe ng thelr trop nd of Eastern origin, though the legend that tt ¢ | The Boon of Disease. . er ; ng “e and ‘be {I]," because elephants ate Oranges to make t | ! Jf Sir Frederick Treves is to be believed the motive. of disease is) —_— i Probably in French the ta ts droped off fro . a eatin sans — -- eae n° of the tndefinite art! wtas " worn’ rer d Henevolent and protective, not malignant. Its purpose has been entirely L t — Shee Ming with an “‘o” poltite to false association with “or” (galt)e } misunderstood. etters rom the People wv Ww Ans wers to uestion = — - That cough which racks you {s really for your good; ' S . 1, * 3 That ¢ uf n t sed a ) ) uur good; it is nature's Foothall an Advertinement plainer to the average mind why the Mats in 1900 and 5 SA ID ON Tl H E Sl DE, ’ way of expelling bacteria which ~ pul e cause untold trouble.| 7. ene maitor of The Evening World: plea of fat ere that thelr football al r9 tn Retiro tus Be a A106) | Ay be all Figlit tn iy way : A alte seis seo sen 4 0 Wl to abd 8 NE dl ie os 7 i The per istent sneezing an catarrh which make life a burden WHEN YOU I etegreed, Mith nterost the very AA08| often: disteganied by Petite 1 jetoroa the But human beings are aw ¢ 40! Die ieaal et is tt " : | have a coldare merely her method of dislodging pestilent micrococci | wrote to Columbia's president, begaing COLUMBIA SENIOR. | siiowing’ hom se Fake epee then Brovidenne teincat Lacogmonuted ft ie ot teal remed? Wenrs of he { = ar 5 . that & 4 ad a the 3 te bi children to have ‘ message hI 1 from the nasal passage. Tuberculosis is an expression of the body's un-|ptaaa ‘ce Sie anes to study In- Saye We Want Notse—Not Beauty. | ©" bo la ares nil Grin: | WIE ehibéhona'e fanien oa | Meas ought to vole the ents| benofis of street nolnes. . ‘ h . | or af anything it has hit be : plays, Hel oy myriada of the # wun eee flagging efiort to oppose the progress of invading germs. Just what Of old even twenty years aigo—auich | 7 the Bion of The Evening World x hiking abaya i slae ba Tones ud 4) have then w tn ‘ ee : o ahiows for paelmonik: é i " 7 ei ee oat . uation would have been !mpossit hy does a New Yorker who wants! to wha é ¢ to begin with TO : . os ¢ x {beneficent function cancer performs the distinguished surgeon does not|tiove went ‘to college to study. The 0 celebrare a public event do ao bY| oul ree eg eem ° iets ae hia cora cea tho more thes seem tic a ni le that admi faculty saw that everything was sub- >UYing @ tin born and blowing {t tn hi bia al wore brought up on religious | to envy inan his Independence the ‘ Oo e a $ ng was 6. u Wing it in his > an ' ‘ze pon religious = know, but it is a poor rul that admit of no exceptions. DUGAN COALS, ThE oreldeet. reg | HURSDOEA east, € Te ee ai | #2 And the fiat you can 1 sal eead aah an see ea Sir Frederick’s theory convicts the world of centuries of monstrous [chosen for scholarly attainments, To-| New Years eve this is New York's one| bigger dfvcence tne sw cnet $ Picking November atrawberries in r tw whit cup he Police 1} . : lay the ident of the av t det lo the fun tine. In Bunipel, ence | siz tOTHE seton, Intercet here in tho polit! | Commissioner will real labes Mmcratitude, Now that it has been aroused from its delusion what amends |iewe is supposed to prwsese en Sart pat in the fun line In Europe) chan most perple gucas MOTHER, | etre about to be meked canont “Reet 3a eye! on the Swill it make? business qualities. A money-getter|confett!, and perhaps masks and dom!-| sc, a Sree ne faventnm World | One a Datiuited for balk ewill it ? . . ather than a scholar. A man of ad-|nos. But here, you plodding mon Feo yoats, How ahout It sale durin Sald of young William Waldorf Astor | (ey tae To be tent, should it not throw physic to the dogs, boycott the |ministrative acumen instead of an| getters have no eyes for the beau ors TAXPAY ‘would pu{ hat he “kek to poke about the | lectelt vine: effect yt rug stores and abolish clinics? At least it should subsidize medical in- academician. Colleges thrive to a great| Only a greedy ear for loud so Up-to-Date Children, ree two's | seeing how people live.” If the proper} tof the Long Isle - . : degree by clever advertising. A col-| 7’ tern by some of t Jer na the ring‘ Engilsh 1 ty of mankind fs man, New York : ffer bounties for the discovery of new diseases, while |lese's best advertisement ts not tts! t! outstripned, and your| The pls 4 nd ee ae aala tm hasta rainy und ¢ 08 80 ch ite ¢ t . New ’ ul ' rescribing penalties for sure cures, Uitou oR ibiee Ne hate : eee MeEPALBOREAA | Bay nd no Bible, and w : Wal alveralty far that kind Oo. \tak im t re 6 annot | 8 8 ~ 1) (oe | Detroit man suffering from Insomnia AAAAARAAN ANA THE FURTHER HISTORY OF #@ #@ #& ow wy g . is ; , a TT BY H,RIDER HAGGARD A VY IE S IR\ A\ 3 S HE- Ih f/f (OF M US 7 * Biss O BE ) ED. Adin ¢ shot ae Quatermatn, ’” or beyond it, for. @ a? But at shall know whother I belleve In vain, of Upon the earth, | whether she will appear to be my guide! while that wind les ale as, with her last words, she swore that! sungot or at dawn, at noon or 9 t, It will begin to bbw agat she would do, ‘Then, too, T shall learn n what she was about to reveal to Leo) then woe to thos ho stand across its Phen he dled-the purposes of thelr be-! path Jing and of thelr love Remember the de { | Go T can wait in patience, who must plains Me senloon : Heaenoer (ae br } not wait for long. though my heart 1 parting of tie Shaman Simbri, with his / broken and I am desolate, incssage and the words that she spoke / Ovos and all thie priests wore very then, Remomber the passing of the good to Indved, even had ! been Hesea from the mountain point { their wish, they would have feared to Stranger from the west, surely as tos | be otherwise, who remembered and Wert morrow's sun must Tiee, t6 she ene | Jsure that in some time to come they !eo she will return again, and in my bore { Sgoonyrichted, 1004, in Great Britain and the | let Panave, with Oros as her cownsellor PP United States by H. Hider Mexward) nd husband, and thelr seed, hold my sperma cuaprena, | Pte till | return again be PRECEDING ©! P - opt teste: ni Sole Heer ov ag tlorece Holly, (we Mas Pricats and priestesses of the Col-| 4% Mart for a6 uoknOWn cou ege of Hes, over new territories have I held my hand; take them well and i : i yond Turkestan in wearch of 4. ea ir tonner years gently. Henceforth let the Hesea of] ? is woman in Africa, Where f ry he hed 5 h f t Re Rg ed the Mountain be also the Khania of ) = old and | 2.000 year nd 13 ts and priesteses of our an- fent faith, learn to look through its ites and tokens, outward and visible, b ; to the Informing spirit, If Hes the pani, or Queen, of ea at | goddess never ruled on earth, attll pity ‘(mentor | ing nature rules, If the name of Isle never rang through the courte of heaven, still in heaven, with all love | fulfilled, nursing her human children ) on her breast, dwells the mighty motherhood whereof this statue is the | symbol, that motherhood whieh bore faithful, will re- ve, o in a fo ormer inearnation. ine ney come to the must render an account of this matter rowed garment , ; to their dread queen, By way of return, | "Tahu ene! Ver ‘advent an I helped them as 1 wng best able to sword, and thus we parted draw up a scheme for the savernment | Accompanied by fifty. plek of the conquered country pt Lots boaring provisions and Tob ree hs ae ee Bete Ne |the ladders easily enough, and now that had food : And 60 at length the lon gponths | mountains iene meter crgeaed the wore away till at ne Sper 1 asta escorted me through the ER, 7, ov jmer the snows melt 4 in 1 aa'd |till one night we camped witht eyon: that I must be gone, ey Lys Neat Of the gigantic Buddha th In sight thelr treasures In prectous etones, the monastery, a that sits eefore 1 should need money for my faring. |the sands and meeece eternally across since the gold of which T had suci When 1. ae apes plenty. was. of course, too heavy, {0 be priests were gong, Mext morning, the lthe hushandmen, those that were left ig aralking st owly, came at sunset of them, plouhed the land and scattered grey netait lamaaery, At ite door ay *' se mountains voir way ator us, and, w celve us ‘For of the bread of bitterness we i slways eat, of the water of | | tears we sliall not always drink, Be- yond the r ever the rainbow shines around the r ym our clutch w, the lives 1 immortal, of our h the royal suns roll on | af them, ploughed the tand m t Wrapped In a tatte; Ponte sitting. engaged apparently ". 4ut amid those blackened ruins, over i whith “Atone'n paltee aul frowned W-| our aemnlation of the aktes,. Tt way | harmod, I would not enter, for to me It horn miele Kou-on, Adjusting hie was, and always must remain, & home | at me. clea on his nose, he looked of death. So 1 camned ponds tne eT was awalting vou, prot walle by the river just where Leo anc u, t . brother Thad landed after that poor, mad Khan| q vos ts, called the world,” he antatlt, ig free, or, rather, loosed us to be | conceal’ he waned Very Ineffectually, to ed by his death:hounds, | erewne pfs evident delight. “Have you Next day we took boat and rowed | poor place that you return to this up the river, past the place where wel yy ~ had seen Atene’s covsin murdered, tl) gwar most excellent Kou-en," I ane we came to the gate house. Here once re ungry for rest,” again I slept, or, rather, aid net sleep, Be} yours for all the days of On the following mornin: went Mon. jut say, wl aan, the, teOmavine and found, to my | her brother?” ¥, where is the surprise, that the rapid torrent—shal- |, {{Dead," T answered, low enough now--had been roughly-|*."And therefore | reborn elsewhere, bridged, and that ia preparation for my | Well, doubtiess we shall meet him late? 00) rude but suMectent ladders were | OM Come, eat, and afterward toll me ult Mh the face of the opposing precl- mr story," D! y star hand na Bim. : . g Let him be your It " will that you tend and hin r 7 4, that you fashion a LD the bn) #7 re to ® ¢ “pte 8 of the di Now f: , ith the gulf and bring lawn, Now fare thee well for of me, but beware how thou usest tt, untalns by which he| We ltue hour, When thou art about save at the last to summon me, for it to die, but not be h wil ‘ome ft ! Seemed to Sce Two Glorious Shapes Sweeping Upwa all me, and I has virtues.” and she » me the jew- and speak) élled alstrum that she bore—then sald ice, At the foot of these I bade faro- 1 ate, and that ni well to Oros, who, at our parting, | Al! Kou-en Hatened ah 1 to a intled benignantly as on the day wo ettention, but the tie, strange as It t | MINE Reem t> most poopie. excited no We have seen strango things to-| he Veulag monder In bis mind. Indeed, gether," 1 ald to him, not knowing | ald of some. marvelouy sic lenzth. by what else to @ay, Carnations, that 1 boean to hare Fela "Very strange,” he answered “At Inet” T aald, slennile "4° would + “At ‘east, friend Oros,” T went on, | Seem that we are all Ing merit o shogone? ; awkwardly! enough, "events have ERS, Operlanting plane,” for f thought ‘ h ‘ fd is Bone? 1 know not, asked dt of the sites; I asked it of the| shaped themselves to your advantage, | him. “*vorite catchword would please nthe gale, and/ the woman or tt tt hovered where Ayesha stoo’. Lutned and the. broad aocce Set esp spirit of Leo, which often was so near) for you inherit a royal mantle,” jes, broth Hosea, |to leeward, on » floated the torne|adore and fone ty Pit thou didst| Jt appeared, It vanished, and one by flared out to meet it, 1 roomed th hea | Tet an se) Zeke ‘ “y wrap myself In a mantle of bor-| the world.” Ioicen anmwncat ty Sees § and off clouds and pinractes of fire. By the|and ancriftes taw ® one the long minutes crop: away until |tW9, glorious shapes 'aweeping whit (20, gure answer ever came, nor! rowed royalty,” he anawered, with pre-| vero voles, ‘doubtless Yopl Are al dead Leo knelt Ayesha, gazing at that |ent, "¢ : he first spoar of dawn It upon the point | wort were rroaaae he, faces thd y|Ayesha'a origin and livesctor the vores | claim “of which, doubtless, one day Z/ning merit, bigst MivRuntnes to ay “ang it may | i ip hates Lobe * eoul, r know that now once mor ? 7 apes 6 wore were those of Lao and of Aye: of thei Vor Tea ne gs ith | shall be stripped.” #0. You are ing It very alo =a ‘A ee Ing face, but speaking no ain-|as at the begigning, his soul and ming| {70% | Often and often during the weary | mystery. wee hen deaitor eee cay (id) “¥ou mean that the great Hesea Is pecially, the or the worceroeees A while t-- | gle worl. At length #he rose, and sald: |are one i t mine | Lot tt was empty, utterly empty ana | Months that followed, while 1 wandered | her departings, for I cannot think hee ngt, dead?” (Pr ihe Waist Caevil splrit—whoro names A year, or a] "Darkness draws noar, my Holly, that | ghe thoug® lonesome, Gone was the corpus of Leo, | fOUBh the temple ‘or amid the win-|dend, Surely she still is, if not ‘aq| ,"i_mean that Hea never dies, She! try ang ia tere edit Oe Om wry—I cannot say. If 90, decp darkness whieh f fi She thougit awhile and added And Rone, too, Wam Ayesha the iarperian, | £2t,800%8 upon the mountainside, did T|earth, then in some other sphere? on 4, I, As the wind blows, \i°% 4nd. A} upon earth and ig , leh foreruna the glory’ “Friend, take this sceptre in memory the divine. the tmperial, | seek to solve this question—whither had} Bo t believe: and whan my-own houg| ROW hence, hither, so she comes | *Uilere air Hoteie ia ot en Corey emenns. [ihe gone? I asked it of my heart Tleomes, and it draws neat swiftly, £[ 404 goes, and who can tell at what apot © Hone waar him in safety. Hen CHAPTER LVI. ; sure that to mo The Passing of Ayesha, Re [one 9 g tA matey t's ‘ t of him! Tan no! “So kiss his brow, stand back, and be ‘ t t " < ate W toward the dawn, and | ence shoud i : he we stood the pelle Ak pared ie pass on and slay thee Now, as once before, the darkness! / whor Med. flanked Sy | o¢ f ; i mull) Tink no: that J am “1, for! gathered on whe pit, and pres Ae, the 8 and Py pAverka and Tl now my neme is v i 1 p 4, st tuary, be Said dawn tha body ec? tae bearers | that Avesha’s strength eis done, for of it etood fared tn tromt ge oe urea | @ single page, ‘Think ni 3 ia. its crest!) am to-day that thing not till a longer here to be thy rd imme press | att Think not] though { heard no prayer, though now s spent or hee/no mighty music broke upon the silence, | rough that darkness, beating up. the | T gale, came the two-winged flame and geile inchang os seemed Bearol Ws fulet fa t On her thr t the ve Biving commands to her prie t over

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