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The by tho Press Publis P WOLUME 46 j Police Commiss | | 7 Hf But are these the enemies Mr, | { vekeepers any worse grudge agal dge? Or the eighteen murderers hould hate the Commissioner? No! he critics in pr Mforcement of the laws. These are the “enemies” whose antagonism {s to the Commissioner 8 a badge and a decoration! Well, if the Standard Ol! does gobble the Mutual Life, the Mutual Life will be Amirably managed—for the Standard Oll. New York Is Evangelist Torrey, just arrived . New York is meek under such | Clerical logic decides that the c Neclining. world capitals, It is ly, not An “art atmosphere” takes ondon, if less than Paris hey work elsev Munich fs ce isorde rude Atherton, of San Francisco and Munich, tells us we are too Inesslike to have an “art atmosphere.” Yet New York is incomparabl) ime. ing = SA . NO, 16,184, ioner’s “Enemies.” “If « man is known by his ene- mies,” says Commissioner McAdoo, “{ should be proud of mine.” Who are the enemies of whom a faithful police official should be) proud? Murderers, thugs, black mailers, hold-up men, burglars, fire- bugs, forgers, bunco men, gamblers, grafters, policy sharks, panhandlers, all the vicious hordes of the under- world—all who prey on thelr fellow men and whose traffic it Is the duty of the police to stop. His enemies should be the enemies of society. McAdoo means? Is there any clear reason why the gang leaders should hold him in detestation? Have the inst him than they had against Part- who are at large, unmanacled? Or he “rich, vulgar, crime-hesotted lords of the Tenderloin?” Or the cond-story men? Is there any ground why the colonies of crooks | The enemies Mr, McAdoo had in mind are the newspapers and | ate life of his shortcomings who desire only an orderly Not Hopeless. j, says New York needs a revival hazings. But are they just? ity is wicked because churchgoing {s he most moral of the great indecent. | We have more of it now than! and writers meet in London to talk; lebrated for drinking more beer per Rabitant than any other city rather than for devotion to art. Myer despair. i Hereafter there should beac des unbirched New York schoolboys w $ not to be spared ‘Is That All? n Midshipman Meriweth not so rigor Ament i ed ¢ The puni np cadet is me di of a fellow During his MA be able to “take part in the usual recreations.’ Ad the incense of hero-worship burned in Ns honor should mollify its! trea and weary of verity. oe ‘ ‘ sie ‘ get. A man can more readily go with- Is this to be the sole outcome of the agitation aroused by the ex+| out a sent tia @ woman can rdinary imstances of young Branch’s death? Is there to be no mre febuke for the commanding officers who tolerated the barbaric code un- TRS PRAY, eae el ee i Teen | To the Fiitor of The Rvening Worl Béer-Which it became possible? 1s there no c re for officials? Is this “t read of an scoident in the Subwa He ey? continue in the ethan rr Mae. that mt ave proved fatal, An & sind of chival y" to continue in the school repares “officers and, ‘nat mien Mite vee track, Th ntlemen” for the service? World savs it is an accident that might Meriwether is, like Branch, a victim of the syster s this sy reour at anv time, What sort of game te : ; ystem, Is this system , are we New ers up against any jo survive wav? We stood for torn-un streets; we York is bau and good in spots, p of unspoiled little brown ch Let us celebrate the good and on Filipino schoolboys. Logically, then, en on whose superior vir- \ k with envy, W kc her for causing $ as to call for sympath These distractions nee : NZ) fo} as Ni fo} 4s Poprrisght, 1905, by Tuttle, Brown & 00.9) er minew on earth and @ city y nee t 1 warmer | bl aL € amen hat * wie’ | 6 eres more died a ele eee [iiss CHAPTER VI. ) f — ‘ haetrey | Range Whelps Whim- ' ye { the pering. \ i ln ¢ 1m ere ’ ‘e | ’ intel fer words ro ‘ I Wee 4, " I A in ahd 1o* At the 1 « ® aelamme tony ‘ bs es 20 Ve down asd quit; § cds re fine to keep Fa ; it at, for Pm mene Ce ' aor qo troubles w , ; ly and me s along 1k At mare 8 we'll \ : Aya WP gar if} i dispose ‘ Ruppore 1 het t x| me : ; Bar Give City, and how it gt tols ita aiNCRRA as Bay tick (0 18s when tw apace |. ere Kine on ie eS A a, a mail ey're debts of honor!" says ha, wine : 4 } “Debts of dishonor, and you'r 1 ete helr coffins | 8 or wiped out | YOUF pony be anding & f thirst, “Thea feed or a drink, You yours will fiad 4 your | horseman? Afterwards we smoothed our fur and (ey called thelr discovery [lind our supper together. Jim promiced City; bus Hwee cue of tne, gletyr hing Company, No. 63 to 63 Park Row, New Fork, | Entered a: the Fost-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter, | Why Men Shonld Give Up Seats bY much more tired a working woman must »| Holy Yet I was proud of th the Biltor of Th ai i The question ts ¢ year's confinement within the limits of the Naval Academy he! should a tired man give up his seat to ‘ &@ woman on 4 car?’ constitutions than w Evening World in asked, Wh Men have stronger en, If @ man fa} ork, think how stand wr for of the meet horrible eort Good Work! J. Corey. By Campbell Letters from the People »* ~ Answers to Questions bad Subway and for] be a swwophant. Yet the result le that Insufflcient ticket window! my follow clerk has had three raises in fust we stand for a chance] ® yer and mow makes $0 to my $18. ft accident as! I'd like ot to tell me if this well? Outsiders say New Yorkers are shoep, But are we golng to let ‘he Mabway be sur shaenbies! ‘There purr. Complains of Trat ly must be some way discovered fH averting mich nocidents tn future. To the Editor of The Brening World F COMMUTER, way we are | tated « | A | they can run the trains thr: $18 a week,| Northern terminal on a Sunday why t the next desk started Inj cannot they do it In the week? Also ater than I, and at $12. I attend to my| WhY are the “ZL” trains not better work and do !t well. 0 does warmed {n the early morning? I have though no better than I, But he la to eo very early to work and there ts nt all the boss's fokea and fla scarcely any eteam on. But they seem boss and tells him ie to be able to do as they Itke. Very ha ts. I have no thne nor ! ften T lose five minutes waiting for to do that, Iam here to work, not to! the fourth train to take ine heme or Cross, fierce, stubborn a9 a whit aay | ne. Jot w reck Mex id at boy with |atr and temper of 4 thoroughbred kee he Ja Inugh which spoiled mo for preact He wes smart, too, in a new hite #k, @ handkerch! ind striped crea and rose an trouser# of yellow le: Jed down the seams with purs and on his belt a | daa ‘Vien he told me guod ! and «et off on his hundred-mile trail for Holy Cross. I rode home thoughtful, and lay long awake in my little dabe enbin at Las | Salinas, thinking about « slouches. | called g when he in the] siddies on vie Wall, Something was tmuching my face, something cold, so I grabbed ft quick-ra little smali hand. Then | heard Curly's tow, queer laugh “You, Chalkeye!” he whispered. at boy, whose nother war sick 4s father riding | Ho was sitting on the stool beside my ) sure destruction. @ gambler, a drunk- | bunk, dead weary, covered with dust ard, hopele: lost—the lest friend I] from the trail, Somehow, the boy over had in the world Vhen I woke| seomed to have got amalier instead of the faint light of dawn to be good, go home, do bis bempe| mounted 44 Ovib revolver, Ave Kos oy! uke cabla window aod brightened phe! and dollcate tor sueh 4 life ae ie Jed, one through | growing up, and he eure looked weak er 18, 1905. ‘A GROUP OF ODDITIES | IN PICTURE AND STORY. | ANDS like these, if they onoe be- H gome fashionable in New Yonk, may indicate the militonadre. The accompanying pleture is repro- duced from @ genuine photogniph of & Obinese mandnrin'y fingers. Shouta one of the claw-like natls be broken it would be riveted in pac hae silver clamas. m place again with Mombers of the ruling class in C} |show thelr superiority over the work! [People by letting all thelr finger nal |Saeert those of the index fingers«row #0 long that they intemowine and ou lin Irregular spirals. ‘The lar nals the more exalted and work- the wearer, ‘The Sultan of Sulu almos ruined dom recently. He gave have all the pen: Pitt sada; “America, Can nent of North Amertca.” This amtatte. | Moking Mdy is 9 | delle tn her own | walk of fe She | is not the vietim of torture, but ts | very proud of har eibae! } facta adornments moewe | She ts @ beauty of i F) 4 | the Botoouto tribe y; — jin Africa, tt ta = |i & faghton among the Ay 2s | #vege — Botooudas » to Plate the lower | IP and the lobe ut 4// the ear by a round & bece of Hehe wood, § In order to do this The British Among the trees that are most » plum, the walnut, the black poplar, rletles of pine. Other pines. espe firs, are very resistant to wind | itt > the pearl fishertes about his American King» the pearl Aahers sieves and told them that they eouh® ris whieh fell through the mesh, but " , but he would keep the blg ones, And he took care ‘o have sma! meshes, ie si 3 A corremponient of the London Times rails attention to the fact that William ada aod Loulstana are the three countries cn the contde Ups and ears ome be plerwed in infancy and a round pteoe of wood inserted, Thea as the child grows, larger and yee larger pleoee are intodarced. In the village of Meavy, Dartmoow, England, ja an of oak wheh wae flourishing m™ the ren of King Joba, ond is still standing hough supported by strong props. ship Willfam Mitchell took recently 3% days to make the trip from San Franciaco to Tacoma, which 1s she made five miles The captain declares that some San Brancisoo ecagulle swam ahead of or beside the ship all t the record for slowness, In five days way. sitive to the wind are the cherry, the the service tree, the agh and certain va~ ally the mountain vartet) nd also certain The owner an4 chauffeur of this Automabile might mde for fifty years without being aerested for speeding. In fact the vehicle would probably arouse viNl dertdon fram other motorists. Yet t 19 the gmndfathe: of the prosent day motor cars, It {g a model of the firet motor car invented In Englind. It was Matlt atenet 1788, a vas a small afar, aving @ steel cylinder only three-quare tere of an inoh In diameter, Though it ~uld run fram one to two miles, it vald onty oancy a rifting load, When it wpearad on the quiet Enafsh road there wae an epldemte of runawaye ag horses sighted the strange vee The Indtan rhinoceros ts slowly becoming eatingt, There are only foup, ‘epedmens in the roos of the Continent, and the rhinoceros {In the jungle if | becoming #0 rare that one t# but seldom seen, even by the most ardent hunter. to work. Burely we ought to be oon ered a ¥ttle. It's oor money which makes the company rich. ANOTHER HARLEMITR. Sanity, ning Worttt To the Battor of The i Now that Christmas {s stili more than a week off ts it q useless to afvise |poople to exercise ordinary sanity in leheostng Christmas gifts? There thing to be sald against extravagance in beying expensive gifts for iitose one loves, But why waste money on rioh ents for outsiders who neither care for you nor are care! for by vou? Also, | why be “held up to pay tribute to ele- water men, janitors, office help, walters, an odd test which some certain disorders, They clatm that ments at the accompanying diagram. Q have need of an Almighty Father out in the derect | "Chalkeya’ says my wolf, “are you | | | "No boys over thar (n yo’ ram pas- | ture?" “My riders {9 wolfing in Grave City, jut they'll etray back ‘fore noon,” “Hide me up in yo' barn fo the day, | then,”* “An’ yo! herse, Curly?’ "Say you won him Iast night at jeyards, We'll hide the sadile” “Have coffee first?” “[ surely will,” and, kneeling ett weary, by the hearth, he begam to make up @ fre, “There's a notice up for you, Ourly, They're offering $2,000, dead or alive.” “For robbing that Union Pacifie train?’ "Tl reakkon.”* “Chalkeye, did you ever know ter” “None, Curly,” “Then you'll belfeve me I wasn't there when our wolves got that train, I've never done no robberies, ever yet.” “T hope you never mony.” “Sometimes I hope #9, too.” He was holding up his hands before the fire, “How's the patrone?” he asked, as he put on the coffee-pot to boll, “Going downhill rapid, He's mort- gaged Holy Cross to the Inst dollar.” “What's his play?” “Faro and monte—you'll see him bucking the game all night down at the Sepulchre. He drinks hard now.” “pore old—er chap, don’t you know! And the lady?” “pying out down at The padre sits with her.” “And the young chiet? “Do you still hate himt* “Why should I eare?” “Tell me on the dead-thieving, Curly, you do care some what happens to Holy Cross? Don't you remember old Ryan Inviting yo’ wolves to eat up the ha- clenda?” epiey had stewed Ryan for breakfast afterward, and ‘he sure squealed!” Yesterday I seen a barkeep’ who be- longs to Ryan go up against young Jim and rob him of @ thousand @ollars over 4 sure-thing.terge mon Any day ne to the hactenda Dwenty years old? He didn't seem fif- teen, and yet he @poke otd-fashtoned, heaps wise and experienced, har you fro says I, yawning. “Speak low, and no questions,” sald Curly in a@ hard voice, for on the range we never ask a guest his nam) where he comes from, or which way he goes, When he comes we don't need to tel him any welcome; when he goes we say, 'Adion|’ for be'l) suye | may be determined by the sensation of the patient’ ooulists are using in order to judge the presence or absence cf astigmatism eyes after staring for a few becomes weary and ons Tt the e et? The “up money’ thar ta nett Uae brea ot gait old fused after mich a test It {sa sign of probable aatigmatiam, As nine people cut celved would buy many dinners for the | Of ten are sald to have asigmatiam, there fs no grave cause for alarm on the poor COMMON SENSE. | part of the patent. WONDERFULLY SPIRITED AND INTERESTING. A LIVING ROMANCE OF WILD NATIVES AND WIDE DISTANCES oe A Tale of the Arizona Desert eS» % By Roger Pocock will see Rya the crooked hired robbers running ‘aro and monte games where Dalshanaon {s losing what's left of Holy Cross, Ryan hired the range wolves, and they went straight for h! own throat, but now the town wolves are eating yo! beat friends.” “Phe only friends I have excep’ my | gang,” sald Curly, “Why don't you shoot up them town soouts and thas Ryan?" “My gun against @ hundred, Ourly? No, I tried to get these crooks run ous of the olty, but Ryan's too strong me, If I shoot him up I'd only ‘gab | lynched by hie friends." i “Show me yo’ cyards, old Chalkeye~ { me yo’ play.” “T atm to turn the range wolves loose tm Grave City,” “The range wolves ts aome fasti Chalkeye, gnd wants clean meat thetr it.”’ "You don't friends.” "The boas wolf leads, not me, and ware good meat, I must pont g00d meat, or he atn't hungry none.” “Ri has lots of wealth.’ “We ate some once and hes got monotonous.” "How about his son, aire?’ “My wolves would shorely enjoy » millionaire, Qut—#hucks! We'll newer wet #0 much ie & smell at him.” “Cayn't you suggest some plan for checking Ryan?’ "Ll think that over, I cal’ spend some weeks in Grave City “Two thousand dollars dead or alivet Why, lad, you're crazy.” “When I'm disguised know it's me" Disguis Aw how?" “An a woman, perhaps, or maybe ag a man. 1 dunno yet,” I went to snift the morning, and the door found Curly's horse, | with an antelope kished acrhes Ade, j “[ ghot you some meat fy yo’ na ‘ said Curly, throwing coffee ino | boiling pot. y let's have bread. | fame vcnt out and caught some nw | then we ho’ breakfast. \ (To Be Continued.) A Sunday World Wants Work Monday Wonders, want to save your the milliom you'll, never “Now a\