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The Evening World’s Pudlioned by the Press Publishing Company, No, 63 to @ Park Row, New York, Entered at the Post-Office at New York a* Second-Class Mati Matter, 1 VOLUME 46, t \ NO, 16,162, A Romanoff Nero. The Czar watching from Peter- hof the glare of the flames in Cron- stadt presents a curious historic parallel to Nero looking out from his palace windows on burning Rome, There is, of course, no fiddling in the Romanoff palace while the flames rise, Nicholas has not ap- plied the torch with hls own hand, with malice aforethought. Yet in a larger sense he has personally kin- of} dled the conflagration which has set @mempire on fire where his incendiary predecessor burned only a city, w Its the Czar who in the end is responsible for the flames at Cron- stadt. On him rests the blame for the fires and riots and street massa- ‘Gres in Kishineff and Odessa, in Kieff and Kazan, St. Petersburg and War- aw. Back of the bumed homes and looted shops, back of the bloody ‘Babres of the Cossacks, Is the shadow of the weak Romanoff whose un- “stable will has provoked the ruin it Is now powerless to avert. u» Will the flames eventually reach Peterhof itself? Can the delayed concessions to popular government, wrung from the sovereign at last sAnily through fear, avail 10 allay the rising tide of discontent? It is to be| Wondered whether Nicholas from his palace window saw pictured in the!| Aight of the Cronstadt fire the funeral pyre of the Romanoff dynasty. A Supposition. ‘T Suppose the chief evangel of Mr. Hearst’s campalgn were known to have bets booked for $38,000 at odds which would have netted him| $240,000 had his employer won, would it have the effect of increasing the pitch of his cry for a recount of the Mayoralty ballot? The Visiting Warships. The British and American warships in the North River make as} beautiful and impressive a spectacle as New York, which Is surfelted with| sights, is ever privileged to see, They form a five-mile panorama of un- usual interest as an object lesson in the development of naval construction and armament, And incidentally there is the added attraction of the | free burning of powder by friendly nations. | This Is the second near view the clty has had of the crack fighting’ ships of Admiral Evans's fleet, and it is to be expected that the landsman | will embrace the opportunity to get better acquainted. His greatest in-| terest, next to the flagship, is likely to be in the four armored cruisers of Admiral Brownson’s division, These fine craft represent what Is so far the highest development of fleetness and formidability in warships, Their batteries of eight-inch | and six-inch guns give them fighting effectiveness, while thelr 23,000 horse-power engines give them a speed of twenty-two knots an hour, to! which the Pennsylvania, the greyhound of the navy, | voyage added a knot. It was the flagship of this Squadron, the West | boas oF not. M po man's man, ‘ — Home Magazine, Friday Evening, No MAN Can Rule Him. By Ferdinand G, Long. co | TAM No MANS ) MAN! RISE IN YOUR MIGHT, MEN CRUSH THESE ARROGANT Bosses! No MAN SHALL RULE ME! , AND ( FOR | [FRECDOM: WELL, Bors, We Gort To Go Now, MINE MAY, it WANT ME November & (Mrs, Ivins came to the Hotel Breslin and sald: —News Item.) bold Ivins sald, “And It & & & Boss I'd moet I'd pass and never turn my head, While strolling down the street. There ds no collar on my neck, As you oan plainly see, On a memorable|!'m no man's man, I am, by heck! Bill Ivins said, sald he Virginia, which conveyed the President home from : New Orleans, Their| cost of just under $4,000,000 each is the record price for American ware! TRIAL OF GOLD, Every year in London a number of ships, though it will be exceeded i 5 ‘i elected , the product ¢ ‘ P of rm he C " d in the six massive battle-ships now build. | Bneitse aes OF othe v ay ante B: Of which the Connecticut, at the Brooklyn Navy-Yard, is a type, and | Sprigus pinatltution ia called the tril s : ” of the Pyx, One of every 2.00 of {n the three big armored cruisers contracted for, , | Gee Seine atruck is (apart tor t, and from each sixty pou ‘of silver cotns. ‘The Canyon of Gold . OF PRECEDING CHAPTER. & young New Yorke, Md “in Arizona, tl they could reach their friends, During his oaptivity, Pedro Cabega had often heard of gold yons, like that discover: but he had never seen uh and was y|Ot Interested enough wp investigate, even if he had been pet.nitted. 1 Gold te valuable only as a medium of exchange, and amoung themselves the Yequie never use i for that pur- | Powe. | By noon of the next day they had jellmbed up from the blistering platr to} the hills, where stunted pines and mes. Quito bushes took the piace of cactus. Under Alabam's guidance they entered & rocky rift, 60 narrow and with sides 0 steep as to resemble a car Through this rift ran a of clear, cool water, very the men and animals, Wty were burned by the alkall water had been forced to drink during of their Journey There was not a sign to indicate that wore the first men who had SYNOPSIS Frank pros. meta Tom caves or can. by Alabam, CHAPTER II, The Forbidden Land. ARLY Catholic missionaries have recorded that the Yaguis, then a much more powerful tribe than now, met the first Spanish explorers and oonquerors in 4 friendly spirit But these unscrupulous adventurers were out to find the sources of Montezuma's vast old supplies, not to make friends the generous and too confiding nat Tt was the famous Coronado who. find. ing that the Y, tried by force to learn and falling {n this attem; the red mountaineers History records the result expedition wasn als r h gold thelr mines, ed to enslave Coronado's y destroyed, as ! ae Vie expeditions sent to avenge mi nadie n to an abundant water sup Meanwhile the Yaquis retreated to| Ment, the rave mple room for the fastnesses of thelr mountains. They ty" {°4" Banded 16 Joarned to use and even to copy the! cu variety of that plant white man’s destructive weanons: and) tha e best fodder stationing their guards, guards that Alt with e : i ave been 4 ned for nearly four) point enturies, the white man at) nights defiance he quent In thetr many forays the Yaquis) “ye plan was for one-half the part have captured hundr t young women | to yemain back to care for the animals and children of both sexes, These were Tee Pant Es ant eaten te 4 into the tribe, and from the! yt su p F they could earry anguage to enable them to communica (7 " id a With the outer world during thelr briet |" t aod Infrequent truces, Fr h A That the Yac have he ; a sheep and th ary do f f has bong been n, as well as el them } fact that their valleys abound in the} men of ney PcOuM grains and fruits needod for a vigorous) Vide. wes thd i and prolific people. | The next n suppe ed with k and with the! and some Had they known t been gone ten min Pike had started Despite the harrowing stories of their treachery and cruelttes, {t ts well known that the Yaquis never leave the moun. |¥ tains In force except to make reprisals for wrongs inflicted, and It is equal well known that Instead of attacking mall bands of white men who sought Invade thelr territory they have 1 Whfmed them back with a warning, af ‘ Supplying them with food to las| n to tnd f in the o Wee Guile as strong as} doubts of the other | Alabam came,of a race of frontiers en, and so fils experience and in. loyalty of Pedty, they would not ha heen Aisappolni®l or annoyed, for the i mi i herited tendenges fitted him in every | make no sound . bel Mr. Ivins and His Boss, By Walter A, Sinclair, "T belleve you “I'm no man No Bossa y I'm no } He just stuck to one sex can vex. was his ntl the campaign died away, and Ivins learned his loss. Then he admitted, proud and gay, ‘The fact he HAD ea Boss, In fact, the Boss gave Bill away, And—hush! he wasn't But meekly started to « When ordered by t the sort tha ay am Ivins cal and aba ow Flot n she wished for ) | stars and the @harp a eras, the Thelr mocons | made mo noise, and were #0 arranged as to as they strode forward. vis dese » were resolved meh should not be { vigilance and precau they we y we hin che Yaqui country’ mess © a towerlng anie rocks that towered vem like the ruins a ant's cal when they were brought to a sudden stop by @ long, low how! to the right, fy r vol rons, his Boss. n, said Bill egatn, refrain you'd expect 1 have fn mind ed and becked | | Woilve Vash V brat, I'm sartin. But w His Boss said A ‘here @ man named ivins who says he has no boss, "You 2 And said no Boss could say that he Gave orders you obeyed. You sald that you were no MAN'S man Throughout this campalgn Come home! Obey rife, Ivins ran; He HAD a Boss—his wife, | A good good town city for sailors, a sea captain, Salem; a d city for a laundry, Washington; a Sing Sings f d city for musicians, good city for the wealth 1 for Indian, for the wicked. Cinn. =n) aay has 3! yo he sar then, hat does | ie are sure, Alabam ?" Heard mean?’ ot, ‘em before many “Tt may be an alarm, or only just @ aleanal; t LOWS \ he ox tot iking hen again Pony rate we'd better for day ts at ha eastern A faint copper glow Iv and silently aa the lifting night n dirted forwa the (Wo or chamb t may And wind be’ danger, sittin) Alabam ich were vere soon swallowed up in t war, nar spaces that divide wngular, lowerag rocks and com 1 them to clamber in single file length Akibam came to a halt in 1 ber that afforded an llent place of concealment while it enabled them to look over the country m All sides, ‘Here Mabam, vad to short, we camp for the day,” sald and he get an example ‘for his compaaion by unsiinging the pack that grown so heavy and exhausting during the long night mareh. th !me the howling had changed | arp shouts that seemed to| dwellings from which rose pillars that suggested peac come from every point of tae compass. ‘The bravest man’s courage largely on his power to resist, ing Trank Rand now ‘this, felt jepends Know- a fear | that he was eager to hide from his | “ow come home With me, Through this campaign you've played APPROPRIATE CITIES. I'll show him whether he has a Portland; a a ond, a al panion, for they were only safe so long AS hey were lndtscovered. ered resistance In that cramped spa: If disco Wes Impossible, while to come into the co afore ing Mrank. e8 at th the get us ne br vious night for the saw the lig amet hystin Meant immediate destruction at ve dismounted is of men who could shoot from cenness, that, would have dio ve “Tve heard ‘em howl and yell tke that ‘said Alabnam by way of onver= “Ls powerful tryin’ on the first hangin’, ter it made a welc adventurers. who, ht turnin, e arch, but, lke te Irisinan tain’t nothin’ when So let us have st. for I'm hungry as @ pack of| me 1 bread, dried meat and cold cof- zit from the camp of the pre- ome breakfast as they ate, | the mountain to gold and the cloudless sky to tops an As soon as the meal was over Frank crawled out of the niche, an his eld glass took a survey of the hilis and network of valleys stretching through to the south. The upper elevations wer, purple and In cont valleys tains spre brown, and ad iar thou voretation; but lower down covered with sheep coul {i} bi in the long, winding valleys t him, ign 0) 10, Man Is Not Descendant, # we but Cousin of the Ape. By Dr, Alex Sokolowaky. Ti investigations of eclence have proved conalusively that man approaches the ape closely in his structure, and yet he i@ different from the ape, even though the highest type of ape be compared with the lowest type of man. Btarting from common parentage, as they must have In the long past prehistoria Kes, the ape has developed in one direction, while man has gone in another l- rectlon along the evolutionary path. Man ts not a highly developed apo, they are not links in the same chain, but form, as tt were, two Unes starting from the same ancestor, Haeckel has sald that there ts less difference between the skull of the lowat Malay and the highest chimpanzee than there {s between that of the low Mali and the highest type of European chinker, and there is no greater distipotion capacity and power generally, The Melanestans, living in the Pacifico Island possess such apelike characteristics as the prehensile character of the large toa which can be used for seizing almost as the apo's can, With thelr black ourly hair and black skins they are not far removed from chimpanzees, If we now look at the African continent we find a great multitude of low taces, different in many ways, yet all creeping along the lower rungs of ‘the lad- der of progress, saya Dr, Alex Sokolowaky in the Chicago Tribune, Here are the dwarfs whom Stanley found, and then there are the larger natives of the interior, Lock ut the Arabs of the Soudan, and you see how race tells even un dor the same conditions as those with which (he negro has to contond, Savage to @ certain extent, these Arabs still control the country by thelr intelligence until the European forces his way in Tt remained for tie newer race, the Europeans, the Anglo-Saxon among Europeans, to move *o the topmost rungs of the ladder of progress, where he now stands As the eye aweeps over all the human ra aboriginal in his primitive home, the Fire Isla in his, the pygmies and lowest savages of Africa, conclude that race has little to do with progress. All of these are of the lowest, are nearest to ap yet they spring from different stoc What, then, i» the magic by which som: 9 have climbed the ladder of progress so that they can claim superiority over all others? Herber: Spencer coined the phrase, “the survival of the fittest,” to express one way in which men progress, and here les one of the secrets, Ry It and the constant development of chat mental fitness the superior races developed and oe, glancing at the Australian ler, lowest of Occidental races, the obeerver is compelled to reached their climax tn the Anglo-Saxon of to-doy Is Sour Milk the Elixir of Life? OUR milk ts the nearest appr the much t “elixir of Life.’ accords S ing to a statement made recently by Prof koft of the Pasteur Insitute. Any one desiring to ¢ ain a rip {fs advised to emulate the | Bulgarians, who consume large quantities of this nad eastly obtalned bers The professor says, a rding % |¢rawe, and who are noted for thelr longevity. | the Chicago Journal “Sour milk contains a large baciilius remarkable for the grear lactic acid It ts capable of produ his microbe does not exist the human body, but can be Introduced wi great benefit to the preys on the hundreda of thousands of microbes which infest the large intestine. It has been hoted tha: there 9 a great similurity between old ago and disease The study of certain diseases has proved what there ts difference between the yphy ¢a by the microbe on the mechanism of senile airophy and that of a! person. In fact, on the approach of old age, a ver ta innermost parts of the bedy.” Research is being prosecuted to discover some vital elements of the body on the one hand and to weaken the aggressive tent ency of the harmful microbes on the other, When ohis hos been attained, Prot. Metohnikoff hopes to be able to prolong life considerably beyond the present average. LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE tween the Bridge an! Soventy-second sireet if they went as fast as locals, | Why don't they? Also, the past few mornings my express has taken nearly which ¢ this season's walking ©°8- Ave minutes more { eohedule ume tume for women i at once mo pretty |i go aawntown, Doves the company and #0 comfortable that I wonder Wom: | need w tat of jacking-up, I wonder? en ever had sense enough to adopt It. | AG wh No dragging skirt to cate a nice lu battle Is waged in the means of strengthening the Pratse for New Costame, To the Editor of The Bvening World The new long coat and short skirt dust }iong coat for warmth and comfort. It| In Not a ‘Masher,’ Jeerma too good to be true. But 1| 70 the Editor of The Evening World suppose women will, as usual, load) Though I wrote of my diMeulty tn ihe eee ea open bose ettee ine oF | meeting a girl in this city, I ain not & cold days. Kl. D, |"masher” nor “a would-be masher,” Lesel Faster Than Brsresa, |neither do I wish to be either. I con- Pee ri == | sider a masher is a desploable creaturo, 10 the Editor of ¢ Evening World | whe tries to force his at jons on way express trains and a “local” |) jay, Pipe (- tt 4 ave been in this country for six comes alongside the local ts nearly al- ay reek : waye travelling at a faster rate than|YCar® without meoting a girl yet, and 4 to be alone in a great cl! is as bad a the express, They lose time by stop: ping at stations, but when boi) trains being on) the ‘cenan el A ie are going at top spect (as between 90" for this is that I have tried to be Grand Central and ‘Times square or | What the Almighty ia mast between Forty-second and Thirty-third|And this seems to have put the ban on streets) the local draws ahead. Now| ™y life, for | do not look with favor~ If this Is because the expresses are not | be eves Upon the bar-room, the il permitted to go as fast as they can, 1| !ard or ball room, or a few other places say it is wrong, For we could knock | WHere men (7) do congregate off two or three minutes easily be. ! HONBS?T AND TRUE we wet Thrilling ADUENTURES in the Unknown Land of the Yaquis, with FIERCE FIGHTING -»—«<~ ~~ <- Against INDIANS, and LOVE as the HERO'S Splendid inspiration.—By Arthur Rochefort, eeaicae) Rand wholly forget the danger of his you?” sald Fr fica situation, but he Was brought back Ww his unbounded for hus its realimition by Alabam, who nd crept to his side 1 allow “What's that moving down there A ae asked Alabam, pointing to «listening, | labam, Moving Objects about a mile away Frank lowered his glass to the pl indicated, and then, keeping down shout at his lips, he replied hoarsely |. “My God! A band of men, mounted and armed!" right place are “Can you e@ which way they his eye et ; c LT Ral ae wrack's| Uf Roe TL take the frat eaten w) they—they"— you sleep. Remember, we've | Volce choked. Vell, what te it other long march before us to-ni old fellow | “Why. ‘Alabami’” was. the re Frank agreed to this, but though he see red paint on their faces, and Was very tired It was long bet he @ coming this way!” could go to sleap, and even then he | There were at two-score wi moved tly n sleeping on rlors in the approaching band. All were | the batile- joldiers cons well mounted, and In addition to their “inue the contest In thetr dreams, steel-tipped, short spears they carried) 1: was an hour noon when rifles slu:g at their backs. Frank awoke of his volitton to Straight for the rock mass in which| find Alabam seate! near him and Frank Rand and Alabam were hiding watching the country in front. they came, and goon the rattle of thelr! o¢ course,” sald Alabam, a’ he ad- |bridle chaine and thelr high-keyed | justea lis pack for a pillow, prepar | voices could be heard, tory to lying down, “you ain't h |. Still closer, and the feathers In thelr the sleep you need, and you won't long black hair, the red paint on thelr | till we're back In a eafer place than cheeks and the Ngee of white teeth and | thts, But I allus find that it braces me the flash of black eyes could be diatinct- | i at sich times to think of the ease iy oon. Ti take when the fortune’s made, and They were slight, slender men and |! have a home of my own, they rode with an ease and grace which With @ woman, who'll be no longer |the bow trained white trooper could noi] &, Widow, to take’ care of it" laughed equal. The light, wiry horses were just | *TANK. + . } lene animals for such riders, and they vit allow that's #0," @ald Ala- |fooked to be as free and feartess as the it ht wasn't for the* women we men they carried, ® and who love us, I reckon we | Wouldn't be here, though we might be |{n A sight worse place—even ff It wag safer.” ' Aad ‘ few fainutes, Alaern was a5 indifferent to the worl jrock on which he Inv a a yet okt sponsive that a wi roused him to action, Frank crept out of the recess lying flat on his face, watehed oer jPolnt of the compass through his glass. In ranks he saw the sheep grazing the distant mesas, and now and then he Was Siire he saw the ithe brown figure of the whepherd. In that dry aimos. Phere objects that would have been ine Within about a hundred yards of the rock mags the red horsemen suddenly reined in and, shading thelr eyes from the sun, looked to the north and east, from which directions two horsemen could be seen galoping toward them. To Frank, whose rt eyes were de- youring these absorbing movements, the approaching horsemen looked to be low-f Ang, red eagles sweeping over the slopes. ine newcomers reined in with a sud- and yet #0 re- have less cortain riders; and then with many graceful gestures In the direction from which our frierds had come, and where Pike and Pedro were In hiding, the | visible near the ocean loomed Yaqui scouts spoke In high, shrill land large, #0 that tvon without ing voices, but the anxious white men un- | glags he could make out the gray adobe derstood not one word. ‘One, Whose energetic bearjng and superior mount, as well as tne three eagle feathers rising from his head- | dress, bespoke him a chief, questioned the seouts, Then. after a long delibera- houses in the far-off valleys and @ the Sinan ine that indlented “where @ Chill colnados, or red pe} v' drying on the wall, i He watched the mountain shadows deepening and the trople vultures tlon, the party divided tnto four equal hands: and as quickly as they had come {@weerng In slow circles, like aerial they rode to the four points of the| Ships far overhead, ‘Truly this was a It was not till the fall i mselt and the cries ofthe. Yaqui Of hoofs and | friend was such as no white man sinoe had dled ou! that Frank Rand could com: nime |welf suMotently to speak, Turning to | Alabam, he gasped: nut God they are gone—for the ‘ent “Yes” drawiel Alabam, “White mighty onsartin'; but Yaqui Thu i heap sight onsartiner. When you think they're here, they're one, and when you think you're alone they're most apt to swarm all about you.’ “Then this ban ee world's dawn had ever ocoupled ba. As Frank Rand amused himself wit thoughts of the wo.derful canyon o1 gold, the sun resting on the western slopes of the purple cordilleras food the rifts of the eastern mountains an turned each hill and crevice into great masses of that metal for a little of which go much Is risked and #0 inuca that is far better ts lost, (To Be Continued.) 4 did not surprise ro0s.