The evening world. Newspaper, December 8, 1905, Page 22

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Evening Entered at the Post-Office at New York ae Second-C! Mall Matter, VOLUME 46......5 vesees NO, 18,170 A Case for Jerome! Could an) green-goods s elations yanked concerning the Mu Fund Association ? gk It appears from President of this concern rebated the salaries of employees into his own pockets, and that policy-hold- ers were not only victimized by “converted” policies, but their heirs were actually clubbed into compro- mising their just claims. The trail of Platt and Lauterbach is visible in the slime. They were Kept busy, it would appear, protecting Frederick A. Burnham from the operations of the law. It woukl now seem that their protection had become ineffective through the publicity given to insurance affairs and that the Law would have a chance to come to its own! Mr. Jerome has a splendid opportunity here to step in and imprison the common swindler who has been engineering this game. Will he do ft? We note that he is about to go South to take another rest. What fas tired him? Can it be that he is weary of the importunities that he keep some of his promises? Judging by the premonitory symptom Mr, Coler will continue to be @ Bird after Jan. 1, and the Borough of Brooklyn will keep on being Dunne! Passes and Railroad Virtue. Incidental to the popular uprising against graft is the virtuous resolu. Won of the railroads to restrict the issue of passes, After Jan, 1 the Pennsylvania will provide no free transportation except for employees, and it is expected that the Reading and the Cen- tral of New Jersey, the Baltimore and Ohio and the Vanderbilt lines will do likewise, The New York Central has already discontinued its “dead- head” list, » The abolition of these perquisites and special favors will put all pas- Sengers on a desirable footing of equality and considerably swell the vol- ume of earnings. According to a Pennsylvania official it would require a daily train of ten coaches to accommodate the passengers holding free | transportation on the road east of Pittsburg. But having stopped this leak is the reform to end there? What of the larger loss in freight rebates to favored shippers? Gov. La Follette’s investigation of the Wisconsin raitroads showed that in that State alone the freight rebates granted between the years 1897 and 1903 amounted to the enormous total of $6,118,689, while the sum | of the passenger rebates was $972,661, One road, the Chicago and North- western, paid back $3,123,810 in freight rebates. A single grain com- pany received $151,447 in this illegal discrimination against other ship- pers. That sum involved a greater loss to the road than annual passes for an entire legislature. Is the saving to be at the spigot only? Is the reform to extend to rebates? That is the real question of public interest. And swearing they would not resign, resigned, One by one the fatthless | trustees run to cover, Depew following McCurdy, Perkins soon to follow Depew, | preasion to my views on this subject. and McCall, now in the stoutly protesting stage, slated for early removal. Pub- licity, that “true source of public safety,” as Mr. Choate calls it, has driven them out. The Passing of Morris Park. Morris Park gives way before the real estate syndicate as Jerome Park gave way before the Aqueduct Commissioner. The partition of the Westchester course into building lots will excite regrets. The dwelling houses which are to rise where the old paddock lay will occupy a site whistoric in the annals of American horse racing. The rapid growth of the older city to the north and east across the \Harlem makes the establishment of another race course within this area” ost improbable, The choice of Sheepshead Bay asa site by the Coney sland Jockey Club in 1880 was a wise recognition of this movement the population, as more recently was the location of the Belmont i in Queens County, Tt ts sald to be Mayor McClellan's idea to get elther a soldier or a policeman (or hts new Poltce Commissioner, Why not give a policeman a trial? 5 w a pescincollpen le edie | e7e Weed from €ane to tune, and wo had to do what he said. He was surely ® arent ohdet, that Lord Baistannon. The two men who had fallen a prey to the Apaches were two teamaters and r "Guatkeye Haas is on fh wey to abe wounded by the @ Mexican, all komwn to these Bar Y Cella riders, and they wore sure sorry. But more than that they enjoyed this short- CHAPTRE II, horn, this tenderfot trom the East Lord Balshannon, who could stand fit of hostile Indians wi They saw ITH all the signe and the sinel |). was youn he dug graves for W smokes potiting for war, I reok-| his goad, mate for the hving, | oned I could Glspanse with that | and though b of eve fm excep nd stay round to wee the play. | pap. After coffee e f, there was this British lord, ,.. (watch t ‘ 1 in Aesert, wounded some, hep funeral sonore L " we joss as a baby, game as a grisly bear, | noone in the Br wal ite ged round with dead horwes and deed | goog j\ce an ollicer t de reailing os, and dis troubles appealed to was t 1 from a book, His ’ er, his face a plensiful, I @couted around unt!l I 1 live trail, then streaked away to 1 ple, 1 was doubtful if I had done right In case that lord got ne being absert, #0 T rode hard. { 0 noon saw the smoke of a camp the Tres Hermance Mount ' to be a cow camp with am nothing of Apaches ® but ame giad, on sand por and his v ¢ tie war tral coud t wig i the Bolf vo hot t ebere gota ent y ¢ to the bo Ralshanno: urned od “you'll fin © er—coffee ready behid ’ from { the fre, and afterward, if you pleas he ; MM bury iny dead Ae we saw Gis faco po wet! leyya Ioancd over in thelr saddies, | at him, but the lord's coot for er—for coming. It seena, indeed. rollin, oneinAtee ates closer to dling than the rev- it by Mr, Hughes al Resewe Life uncontradicted testimony that the yoke, “I'm much obliged to you all's, siome Magazine, | Hatching! woria’s Friagay HXvening, vecember 8, 1905. 'A GROUP OF ODDITIES _IN PICTURE AND STORY. \ By J. Campbell Cory. and ot , |tlonal fads for “popul fre outdone by the plan devis by the Mayor of Westminster, {n I land. The Mayor siag presented to the | Weatmninster employees one of vie {equipped miniature rifle ranges In Lon |éon, The range Is in the vaults St, Martin's Chures, and affords + curlous variant of the idea of a church |militant, Yet it furnishes wholes |recreation for many young men durtr the evenings, and as the where the rifle range Is # suffctently deep to sout In sound, there has been no complaint against the dar- jing innovation. The accompan }lustration of the range !9 reproduced fram the London Sphere, newes vauite A curlosity In the matter of bell ring ing ts to bo met with at Pulburne, near |Oambridge, England, ‘The ehurea bells there not only ring the t ot the ‘ day, but at Intervals also the date of | the month, Thus, at 12 o'clock noon | on the dist, there would be 4 strokes The canton of Zurich, in Switzerland, hae taken eteps to eetabliah poll tax of 8 cents to be called the Zurich mefical tax and from t , thus produced, some tred phys ) } vices are to be at the disp t me f the co t remuneration, wher mse t for thet Eminent Babylonian explorers say that the muliipiication table which the | Babylonian child had to commit to memory extended te ot 1 that he { was easily conversant with two linguages besides his ow Tals welrd figure form of an immen || ts not a masquera- g nor @ hobgoilt t It ts a firema kodak-shotted just ‘His M J after making a res { Teue. His face ts \ Il, covered with a queer mask, recently {1 vented by a West 1 Ae em man, This mask white cock ty made of @ non \dnflammable — ma bert has auto ‘s tod modtie gogeles, and t aon is 0 constructed rout 4,000 that tt wards off F s regularly both amoke and fl ce by } flame from the that the wearers face. The nove tor l spectacle of a com- | pany of flre-ladidles thus masked, how J ever, gtvas a dis- tinet shock to the uninitiated who sees | them for the first | thine, Streets of London | and many of them ee were possessed of | A monument has considerable sums been erected = in of money and even Grossstrelitz, Upper of bank books Sileela, by Count showing handsome Techirechky in the deposits. Jeres de la Frontera has @ population of @,000 and ts the centre of the erry making trade, There are many rich people there, worth from $200,000 to $5,000,000, Letters from the People ~ Answers to Questions) ®Ziyedi cystitis oii ae rink, just for the fear of being walled jdefending New York men, 1 wish to To the Bittor of The Evening World. ® name chat rightly belongs to the jere wice to an opposite thought, Be- A correspondent says: “I don't see |cowarde who called him such. Don't ing @ Southern girl, accustomed to that why a man woo Gas put in @ dard! take the first glass, and whenever you|fine chivalry whioh men invariably be- day's work should give up his seat to & are tempted to do so think of your stow upon women in t! » Tre “doors” stare into one's face until thelr Presence is positively unbearable, They endeavor to force themselves upon you in every conceivable way, and by their actions convey to my mind that they Courtesy vs, Selfishness, A substance called peirolign! {s being adopted as @ material for the decks of ships. It ts prepared from Mixed with certain minerals and ¢ «med into elabs, under high hy ssure, Its valuable properties are that it ts non-inflammabile, and {s not slippery when wet ehh s ; 4 Nuctantly and sorrow: that men wao of 4 rerun ‘i young lady.’ I would like to give ex- is ones be lage Lrg! ay and ins atin ine ab 4 plaids fone Lf meneeRE on pg This couple might walk Broadway and the shopping dtstrict for months withe Peg Pathe ag m who ° ae Ae |finds tim on the promenade, street gentlemen i all pi and upon all | a ae more attention than To my wey of inking, his iat . * lears, in the theatre and other public occasions, SOUTHERN GIRL. Bes 9 1 Jorsey question of “should @ man give his seq Scores the New York Men. — | places, {s utterly lacking of that def commuter ¢ ey are t King and Q recent vistt to mor they to an old person or to one of the fair sex?” It's a questton of selfetiness vs, | unselfishness. No matter bow tired the ungeMiah man may ba he will always! ece. During To the Biitor of The Evening World) Jence to which I have been accustomed High Rent: Low Wages, and walle on @ Observing the comment of Miss @, B, |!n my Southern home. These New York | Te the Edkor of The Evening World: [ am a@ poor woman with a large niente My husband only makes $10 1 vt § toa kodak fiend: w qive up his seat, BARNEY Sentence Sermons, Ja week and I think it a same the way the w tng result, The King 19 People’s Chorus, Cooper Union, ‘ landlords raise the rents Our land. hot even clad in the frock coat and | to the Editor of The Evening World the duty of happiness, samy 5 ate of worry over the stock lord tus raised our rent $1 @ month high hat so dear to Londoners; but | Whera can I find good Instruction In ve DYER SHO: LEADEIAORD GE | Fine glen ' , [since Ociover, I think it shame youre & business au 1 overcoat |ainging? I have a good voice and) Buy ‘i than di sitics Greets woe ee '@ UP | that reople make rents high and poe His Queen i dressed with |woulg ike to cultivate it. A SINGHR, | No heart !s more hungry than the one /t Ni ot , S MMABNOE uot raise the poor man’s wages oor Fatt io Amarin hither Gt shen Weltie : hat follows for the loaves alone eee. _ ; | reap ig, Many havelto we (6 bed either cf them holding Countey Boys Adviser, te ensily mistaken for| You can take most of @ man's boaste | ic. iy PG ono a auattan down a To the Editor of The Evening Worlds y the man who has tt om qualities as AGvertnemet FOP | Oe help beads A. HOB — gene him. | ones. | Will the young n he depth of a man's : H be GNASE hearted Wilts Sideste . Pie marriage rate is Meher In Eng oun le advice | wisdom by the intensity of hia stience, Sone TAR DE tERURE: RORTOS WING ponte Tae Jee?! elsewhere, being I 4 warnin 1? Does 8 tong on cowandice he | OUt Deine purty headed ‘ , an ss N°} Whoever has a mir to work will : PA cad m 7 to he mean to sy that by refusing to to pass {t off as con night I saw ave a work to min colored boys cracking Ice Grink with nis friends he Is called a Meekness 4 not bu avery. atlin the wash-basiie o ‘i ; \ Jatistles milkeop? I think he le a very brave Some men think they have peace of| 1.6 cost ot meniineg ey Mt in ia wash-basine of the lavatory tof ie jane noble young man to have strength heart because they have cobwebs In the Peale Alsi ga resent ¥ sd yee tee put In the tish Be { Trade, is tn ‘nough to refuse and to set them an brain. (tat IC GAA ORip. O46 Ghd Shite OP tha lhe tee aecliciie Secure ee eee » 01,000, ‘That country also exam: Remember the dear father 7 + . ? n tae auc m. Moral: If a colored r ghost death rate, 22.7 ” and pee at home, and how they wate ok psd rege tarieatiyti ey enum wmane ain hoy In @ theatre offers you a glass of ; ‘. ' stm Sen ie ts in ee, would feel it they knew that their son the walls, Jaronitecture of heaven will take care} Water with ive In It, don’t drink tt, where It is 9 a 1,000 When a man really believes God he /or itself—Chicago Tribune. aPpT, | WONDERFULLY SPIRITED AND INTERESTING. A LIVING ROMANCE OF WILD NATIVES AND WIDE DISTANCES ose: A Tale of the Arizona Desert —<~» 4 By Roger Pocock | because he felt lonesome in the wagon. |to leave a sick man and a III’ boy thar Balshannon lay by the fire, hiv mind alone.” straying away off beyond our range.) ‘(I'll stay with them," salé 1. Often he mu put I could not!, “That's good takk. If you-all need catch the words, and som sald | help by day make a big smoke on the was throwing Gis manhood away on | p oof, or |f it's night just mak fla: something aloud wiich sounded ke |f9% oF of + Soe noneense, It must have been midnight, |p. Ace, TM keep my outfit near enough to see, | when all of a sudden he «at bolt Up | ‘right, calling out loud enough to waken | half the camp. | ‘ou reckon there'll be Indians?" one. That was u stray band, an what's left of It ain't feeling food t | "Ryan!" he shouted, “Don't disturb | eno i y Y ough to want scalps, But when | him, Ryan! He's upstairs dying to Holy Cross this morning T seen this you fire the shock will Don't par er, and some tracks of the man who | shoot! Ryan!" oft It nalled on the door. T said noth+ | Then with a groan he fell back, I/|!mm to my boys, and the Briusher had | moistened his lips with cold tea, “All| Worries enough already to keep him in right,” he whispered; "thanks, Helen,” | terested, but you ought to know wha For a long time he lay muttering while | Saryn’ 8 case of trouble, Hore's T held his hands, "You see, Helen,” he | PAPer! whispered, “neither you nor the child could be safe in Ireland, Ryan killed my father,” He seemed to fall asleep after that, and, counting by the stars, went by. me. "You see, dear? thelr farmi venge, #0" Toward “Grave City, Arizo "St February, 18 “My Lord—This ts to te. 1 wolte of everything you could do ‘to aoa toe, I'm, safe tn thie free country, and doing Then he looke ‘n riving the ion he looked straight at | committed tn drivi and our fathers hi Year, hens t Iturned thom out of and Ryan wants his re- Morning I put some aticks | me when, Art ire whieh crackled a lot “Geo P crust to ea) +p | Ot, Your wi turned lo ' 1 heard him say; “don’t| tho denert,"you ‘wi plead for even oo inde | nh rtridges. Poor lice ehap:’ i ‘AL lanl, the cook was eatit, | ten Teall oot tie ott en pt 4 and the men rode in from herd, €]end of your accursed house lll Cropped off to sleep. 8A.) GRORGE RYAN, It was noon before the heat awaken-| “These Brittshers.”” said Bryant, ‘ip ed mc, and I sat up to find the ir f two breede—the lords and the still curning, but Lord Laletaoman | fy and you Kin judge them by gone. | saw his wagons trating of | the ways they act. This Mr. Bate neross the desert, Dick Beyant was at [N18 8 lord, and this here Ryan's pipe with a coal | {aky. Tf a real man frets that you've been | enemy Is pome superfluous ont sloep throwgh yo" y marth; he dont male lamentations and Ha) ¥ st lem > sor, No. he Goin’ to ynake: ki his ensmy to & meeting; he many ie Teolaration of war. and when the *thar t food and rea e with thelr gu an iyere snake nnd the tg 4 wenty mile, I've been down OF ere Ue Paper, dqor'-othe | And he grosped [a's dian fetnt, | stars, the Bar Y people ia pics lying enone thie morning. reckon the people Mie hie wunneas, lad, wa seemed| So long stay allve I shall rem wrapped in thetr bla s around th@|there had smelt Apaches and run, It ' | not our y, ing to 8 yo if Bow amp's moved?” ire, I've sent the Britisier's wag ons gown to Holy Cros, He bougut the place from a Mexican Jas¢ monta,’ "ta it fart” The voys leaned over In thoir saddies, wondering at him, ix g bora find my camp in ly meas, but nt whiskey bn | naw an dleme })—“when Wwe ge: to my new ranch| ber that night, the smell of the Wagons, the relia of ridera go1N6 oUt | waa et es why: Pam. making | Unt Ae Lind) —*wt t F ; t , f ‘oe guard.” at Holy Cross 1—1 hope you'll——friends | horses, the nee, the smoke of our|on guard, the cold toward dawn, The ‘alee Jou A are you Jim had curled uo beside dav. ana T don't i Dic ta Theo cn a? : in sue) some fairly doc th fire going un atraleht to @ white aky of | Mitle how me man i

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