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World's Magazine, Wedn 1905 . Restitution. THE MAN HIGHER UP. By Charles Raymond Macauley. Yorw Pvdiiened by the Press Publishing Company, No, 61 to @ Park Row, New A Botered at the Post-Office at New York ‘an Becond-Class Mail Matter, VOLUME 46 vssssscvcose sossoe sovsee corsee seers soreee NOe 16,187, Mr. Hyde as a Salary Sought Him. Cheerfully as he might have courted Folly at a French ball, com- placently as he might have presided at a Cambon dinner, gracefully as he might have adorned a beauty’s box at the Horse Show, Mr, “Jim- my” Hyde faced yesterday the sometimes inqulsitors of the Insur- ance inquiry, It was a red-letter day In the In- vestigation, A record crowd at- tended, Mz, Hughes was cuttlngly facetious, The sergeant-atearms Frequently when Mr. Hyde smiled the crowd laughed, Then Mr. Hyde laughed as well. The 564,000 Equitable policy-holders might have laughed had they been in on the joke, It has passed into a proverb that Bquitable policy-holders ara In on as little as the “Big Three” insurance code allows, Mr. Hyde's late salary of $100,000 per year seems to have been the first matter to arouse his mirth, “J don’t think,” said he, “I could have gotten that much anywhere else.” A lot of people are convinced, despite the laughter, that this Is no merry jest, Mr, Hyde's opinion on the salary question recalls the words of Judge | Gary, chairman of the United States Steel Corporation, given In last Sun- | day's World: | It {s not that the salartes pald to the heads of grent business corporations f to-day are too large; the real question fs whether the right men are drawing the salaries, : By his own testlmony, Mr. Hyde spent a tong travel period et home and abroad in training himself for the insurance business, and afterward, for further training, served the Equitable two years without pay. He did not ask for the raises which brought his salary up rapidly | from $30,000 to $100,000, He shad an Idea that the increases came be- cause other companics were paying large salarles to officials and the Equitable could not afford to be behind in this respect, And yet—"I don’t think I could have gotten that much anywhere else.” ‘ | | If $100,000 was a reasonable salary, why was Mr. Hyde, after all By Martin Green, SEE," eald The Cigar Store Man, “that the Netgh-Neigh Show opened with great eclat at Madison Square Gar+ den,” ’ “The Cock-a-Doodle-Doo Show at Grand Central Palace aleo opened with great eclat,” answered The Man Higher Up. “After a while tha Bow-Wow Show will open with great eclat; Mkewise the Meouw-Meouws Ptzz Show and all the other shows. But we don't hear anything about a gas meter show, “There would be a hit for your necktle—a Gas Meter Show, fully {lluse trating how meters are made and how they work for the gas company. Everybody would go to a gas meter show—but you'll never see one, “What's the matter with a Mlat-House Steam Radiator Show? [n such an exhibition might be illustrated the method by which a janitor shovels coal into a furnace in the basement and produces Ice water in the apart ments on the first floor. A Life Insurance Show would be something lo make the populace mob the box office. “There we might see the kind, benevolent presidents sitting on bales of thousand-dollar bills, surrounded by members of their devoted families with molasses on thelr hands. We might be shown the high-browed | tunry throwire Aeures Into a bin with a shovel, tramning the mass into | a paste with his bare feet and drawing off the result through a spigot. A great foature would be the etationing of four presidents at the four cornere of the hall and having them cry at regular {ntervals, ‘I need the money? whereupon trusty messengers would run from one president to anothen | carrying quantities of mazuma, “People wouldmt go to shows of that kind to make a front with thetp clothes. It !s to be feared thet many of them would have axes, knives, bombs, revolvers and similar playthings eoncealed about their raiment foe effective use. Displays of domestic animals and fowls attract the rich an@ | those who wish to be thought rich. A poor man don't care much for them, | but he would hock his overalls to attend a High Financier Show, in whicls | some of our eminent bankers and men of business would {llustrate how | easy it fe to get It {f you have got it to get it with.” | “What's the matter with a Practical Politician Show?" asked The Cigar | Store Man } “In view of what happened at the last election,” replied The ce a y Higher Up, “even a practical politician wouldn't have the nerve to enter.” “Hh | ++ —— Aa apo Hy right man” to draw it only for the Equitable? ° 1 | ' Why should -rere be doubt that other companies requiring the same kind \i4|! SAI D \ N T a E ‘ Of training would cordially welcome him to high places? | € Att | 2 ; It surely cannot be that the pay was called reasonable In Equitable opera? The question as answered | gas pressure out several politieal lives Arcles because it kept quict and contented on a mere eleventh of the | At: the Castho) When | Buaday | canner reeentiy, | ° | syndicate profits a young man wi i ; —-- a nicht comes, ‘Then the secular play of| P young man who, on the strength of his inheritance, | nts undergoes a sudden sea| tory from Pennsytvanta of Republe Wis fs a ocomte opera not & Ccomts) low gas pressure, Thought thet teh i $ ni i i ’ | week n pea be bose less nice and polite, might have hogged more than halt | Letters from the Peo le W wW An we to t ONS. sateen mest tle oi of Sinatra by wate fe Y S rs ues | ns the difference that no scenery must be “‘ilverybody Works but Father.” Man J Mr. Hyde's appearance on the stand does not make him 9 Jees ine . | anitted, the curtain must not be low-| who eald he aid not care who made the + teresting incident to the general insurance scandal oo Are New Yorkers “Sheept™ =| I'm half ashamed of being 8 Now |shave against tho grain, but with It, | Jump fs 14 feet, with ordinary shoes on.! ered and the players must wear the qation's laws if he could make its songs f scandal, Te Ysa Baltes at tue Aenlag Aten | Yorker, ONE OF THE SHEE. os shaving against the grain cases | 1 cons} emarkable, as he is In. same costumes through the acts, Great) knew whereof he spoke. | In parts of the West a fine telepho: A Slot Machine Complaint. peta re the seoond and third | no sort of training, nor ts m is the law, and the theatrical manager © ¢.s ervice coats but $4 n rural/T the Editor’of The Evening W | Pkaces, the Jaw and chin a aved the) in appearance, I woud like can interpret it like @ Philadelphial Wh I distr! raha Hee f ; bis | On the downtown tide. of a subway | me as the face, only on shaving them | #MAteurs f they do or not con: iawyer | norense of 30 entries at the Horse d (i) ew fstricts of this part of the country you A i # fy | they are tilted, but th is held | fcregoing feate worthy of oomment, T 3 eee Show Indiontes @ disposition on the rare ad it ‘ | can get good telepnone service for lesa | *tation there stand three chewing gum | © yet tne ress think auch competitions (after office | ya tiny mosquito emerges from! Of lovers of horsefiesh to disprove #o- Mayor McClellan has gone away for a week's vacati than half what {t In New Yorit |#10U# In one 1 put acent and recetved | the same. Always hold the razor han-| hours) provote good. fellowship and en & q sere y Clellan ha away for a week's vacation, Hee nee sew es ave nothing for K, acd tried it again, wits [dle on @ level with the face when | health among employees ‘te Inte in @ case of glassware and con-| Clety’s claim that tt le the whole show | By the dictionaries, “vacation”’ means “a stated inlay If City. la ye oe dad sore the same reeuit, Not unt! I had put | shaving. SAFETY FLOOR-WALKER. | veys the cantagion of yellow fever from) * ee ! and recreation.” , MeO Test on ante een va sw York, (in four cante Ald the station man tell An Oftioe Athlete. Wire or Goldt New Orleans to Havana man's appro-| Club of young women formed in In« ening World: | etntion tor the Importance of little) diana to ring the curfew for spooning at your clever read- | things of life Increases. 20 P.M. will be rerarded as only ag ee anti-matrimontal orwantzation tm die. hi to! To the me that the machine was out of order. |, 14.4 gator of THe Evening World: Manin k ectian : ers bo held up by every monopoly? Just BA E . The em to discuss: Which le worth the more | te of being re-created;” that fs, made new, | decnuse we are a lot of snerp who Recreation” is “the sta !s a man who works in our The Mayor will come back. if his vacation rec t fairly bleat for the priviloge of being Shaving the Corner office who can stand behind @ chair! ; ‘ f ¢ Mayor will come back, if his vacation results as it should, a artven to slaughter, We bemoan high |. the Piltor of The Fventne Wo Jand junp clean over the back of It pajesd one ie # a9 oF Gal meee tle jasieet ontne senenas Ls eee new man. ; prices of living, &o., In New York, but In reply to Tonsorlous on how to| and land In the seat of the chalr, This! DArspring wire lion bellowed to be content with the) Three Mayors elected tn Oho whe wee all reduce the price of nearly use a ty razor, and having used |{s a standing J: . 805, There could p. The chair back 18] Dresden, Germany, Nov, 2% 1805, | ceackers and rockets already have only three leas between them, Not etter exercise for his fresh str 1 ; Bs she MUS TPOST ength than jn everythine by from % t) 60 per cent, If one myself @ year and a half, I will try| forty Inches high, He can also turn @/ nm, ing maitor of The Mrenine World 3 known what thelr quallf throwing off Muy man which is corrupt.” we had the coutage and brains of the to give him some advice on the subject. | back somersault off @ table and land on| Where and when wie our Mayor, G,|[¢t Om !m Me honor, ofice are but obviously prerpryedtlg fn people we sneer at as jays and Rubes. In the first piace, by all means do not| nis feet, His record for a standing long| B. McClellan, born? oO. R. § Poports of danger to lite caused by tog.” J : © Thrilling ADUENTURES in the Unknown Land of the Yaquis, with FIERCE FIGHTING -»— . 1 he Cany on Of Gold " -»< Against INDIANS, and LOVE as the HERO’S Splendid inspiration—By Arthur Rochefort. i { The parute in wbieh, Prank, Band pntog. engineer,” was confined occup: ol at ie, you sa ‘Gombotienea ts Meareh for gone” »opuluus and evidently @ prospero find gold that you came oo 5 OTE | 9, the Spanish-anenk! ‘ isohand a pau 2 fea, ne man said] town, On the edge of this town the | Was @ plaza with ralsed seats about where the Yaquis held thelr oounc come wit 8 tON Asked FP; Yr M n hi ‘id celebrated thelr half-yearly sui found | Hy fest Lise oor’ } ; To-night a great fire burned in the) Whore?” . } » t ‘i entre of the plaza, and around it {0 | "1 will now tet. jctureque war costume were gather Eyide: 1 avy the men of the Tamara clan, to deoide thi aed ‘ee vy the fate of the young man who had . fallen, Into thelr hands, aa never pris: | | : oner had fallen before, “ " } 1 , ‘On. the murrounding seats there were | 7 4V8 YOU a witer ' ‘ | hundreds of women and children, talke) 4) }Av® not. ing In whispers and eating eweetened Tank said this he th \ pintone. begets {of ope came to '. re i. A | The movement and color would have ke hy ! | appealed to a painter an eye ir married?” : for rr ong. fteets, nr, sh ald 1. After leaving the estuta, Zalone made t f i her wey (to the counel] fra where she © asked : aly Tas Pte esta"tatay Ae tht | Seat tate | * 5 . i ® ne le her er, in om ' i 4 slender, quiet man whose every fea-| Was near jts on ts ay | {if ture beapoke the warrior and leader, ‘a will | Sy Zalone had harily sat down, when | Your death,” n old man, who # red to be the pre.) The marn Maing officer of the peek called on Frank, Whe ete Hy, See) 4 ted her to rhe and to tell to the assembly. | that his fate might be a it fom 5 the story of the resoue, as she had| that of all other white m: 0 had { told it thrice before, fallen into the hands of” the ferce | Without a trace of salf-conselousness | mountaineers, the girl walked Into the olrcle of Ight,| "Because that you have saved the lif where whe could he seen of all, and/ of Zalonoe, the ter of Toltan, you then In & musical voice, low in pitch, | may live till the first day of the nest but carrying in a wonterfil way to the|D@w moon: then you die on the altar furthest Ustener, she again told her) Of the sun md." sald the man. story. lean” haan't told all!” broke in Zan After this Zatone wae subjected to! ho vou bring me h many questions, all of which were an-| Pour lite will he woeea eaked, Brant swored with a quiet dignity and prompt: | ever give up your “avec If you fore nas that should have carried convio:| join onre, and ifeifyaow” People and ton, “It what?’ asked Frank, #eeing th When the Iaat question was asked the| the girl was cont y’ RONG: SKE jeantiful girl bowed to the assembly, r then walked over and sat down with the women and chilaren, CHAPTER VI, ‘ 1eirl ond t ire ‘ | In Peril of Death. rifles ready to left tor Frank Rand bu hin a few the river the | as if on the fle and soon the hor p on his side and riding dire fim, As the riders neared the Yacut ei \ " gald In good Span “You saved my T will not let} ‘ them kill you here!” And you will pase.” ave raya" Frank waa dreaming that he and| The words of the beautiful Alabam. and Pedro were back in Tuo-| startied Frank Rand ao that henson? | son, and ‘that they were showering thelr| "ot have uttered a word at the moment, piles of gold and telling of thelr ad-| not even If his life 4 on It. t ventures In Yaaut land when he was| The air! notleed “|t is | whom you saved. fam the daughter of the Tamura Chlef.” | of oiler. | placed them on the benoh and motioned | Though a bit vague, there was a tem- | il men who dare t Wy 3 had grown ae droueed by the sound of low voices and| aed with a woman's | ( Porary hope In the girl's w Jonter tne land of the Yaquis,” rept ti tomed of the kmht, he rec the glare of torches, and, springing wp, | seemed to understand its cay } Before Frank could utter hie thanks, | t ‘deta i omrilte ¢ ha found that a throng of people had| The cholco has depended on me,” : the Yaquis whirled about him, and all| oor, as| «nuit f his a 1 gir! whom heh ¥ pes a fy entered the room, foremost among| she sald, with sweet simplicity, “for I ‘ sno} sence. y { who wae th Nnoceit uu of bb whom were Zatone and the man who| could not do leas under our laws for dismounted like troopers on parade, Ww waa no} Yaqits, and 5 egent trivniations. i H1. one who ha done » the sy s ut ttt 6 Spanish so we jo much for me, But Now that the man, who had spoken Heras; then "he | Pew! ah a \el ‘yng red blossoms In the eir!'s loone “Tris man, whom from the firet Frank | Jo not answer now. You have tii the | to film from across the river, was facing | 7eW i on tive bench ahd tried to] Moure—Lacy. wi black hair, and the graceful white robe, Ald not. like, advanced til! within three coming of the nest new moan tp make w ai is thoug od fyeescd \ fastened to the slonder wale by @ belt paces, then sald: ae ts Sew, Frank could woe thatihe was near ak Rand was too much of « pnite | wie? fy ur of gold, remalled to Pranks pictures. of “The Council ot the Tamara has de-| sacrifice preparing for the sun god, all | ly wivte, and he reesoned thi @ WAS! osopher to lament the lnevitable, one of those Mexichns who had been| Ho understood 5 di aiion, but, while d captured in childhood by the Indians fespalr. We had ed for a beats cog | athongent may, | vestal virging he had scan In the illus- from eweep nistory he had 4 your fate,” honor will be patd you, and all your re- iy ware ro Mfondy’ to hear tt," replied the|dueste-but that for freedom—wlA ‘be risoner, with an assumption of tndif.| stanted, which he did not fee). With these words Zalone Ry eka vie dayul, but the one Great Fatie: made ail lands aud all people are his | p! prirts “My people do net go to the bein 5 the ‘waite men, and the w Spanish, the |know it; why then should they como Sanger of his po | maelstroma of t Ting 1) he did not] In thd face of he ine the weakest, a apt 7 4 | uJ h.Oud Oe tree to wande, | ference 4 gad after years had become one of Caereeore By eect nok up prada himaeif; | to Peers, a fata) . . {sh Ay |, black eves /to the homes ‘of the Yaquis, whepe they nthe rs gurden, if they wrong at tell you answer me some extended hee shapely Uttle brown hai 5 y 1 ne of th t ni 0 are forbidden, and e on 16t. ol : fons, t By this time the girl was fully reoov. {Drospects lay Detore him! "i What) The Paces, Of ohe Ditt wren l eAy name ts atone. It is I whom |been the fate of ail who have preceded) “MOving away, aa if she were loath rang. reversndly Meta we Iie eae ahd tek Gradually the light that had aittiea| own on the bench | au dele [you saved, Iam the daughter of the | them?" to dopart, Zalone said: nm la 6 bec fi: , ng @ position tn front off chrough the cracks in the door diet cut | Ine into the forgetfulnass of siney, then | Tamara chief, Toltan, Lat and then] ‘There was a ead note In the giri’s| Tam but a woman, and eo have no i: trees 3 “erould tele tans MM ‘ong white man, as if to protect him, bed ie ot F ated Wes black as a fa. door by) opened and a@ flood o? | sleep.” jaiisada iis fueet yoice, “tn wae speaking PCS volce, In cafie I veil return fre tel! enin th save vou.” ' o m 1 it ured In. 1 4 ne e ch In er knowledge and nm rol La i} you e@ council wi a1" 4 Hiaine th dary ot be woman | geht Hurst etm uy he] A “eingags bavi tn Mrs ames ni a De, Le tea S| Ogle SRR as sat ba ae Sta J . ay @ wet clot! an jor 0 Women earrei way, when the you! man ie or inion went oul 4 and the WAT Sead id ole to ‘on her aide, } ite door Sette them, and the im the darkness the bench 4 unable to th e bench and una i cowed ye ad ‘his experiences— he was agon was nothing tn tmpassive famine of hunger added dasketg advanced towant r h ‘ Of the listening Thdloce to Indicate| ge OF the prinoner ss (one SUT) eho naa ‘gow ripen to tie foe, Prmoneh Mise name ts Frank Rand, I am an|° the man whe hes no, home felon ann tenon | ber Pat ths he ew. way hedge el etek TAN ABU a! Wa stad gma Naat Fane anal Mp. aa ue - to forget our ewa troubtes la to become | watun and another 2 pol @ Yaquis, Why eho treater reminded of his hunger and 5: FRaiene by tho food and. Orin the; wh loam of pity cat ito te | fe f they agen when, igam of ity came tn Me [set etre my “bg at as’ only { 3 el etsy