The evening world. Newspaper, July 3, 1906, Page 6

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The Eveni are GlSoanin by the Press Pubhering Company, No © w @ Fark tow, New Tork Batored at the Post-OMee a: New York as Second-Class Mall Mater. | LUME 47 “ iat “NO FAVORS sae secvee cesses nevees NO. 16,587 FOR THAW.” District-Attorney Jerome an hounces that “Thaw will be treated like any P No f he will wait his tufn untit the nine-| teen other the t have been disposed of This is only what was expected. ther murderer.” | rs will be shown him and homicide cases on doc In spite of an unfounded belief to the contrary, a prisoner’s wealth) ' does not influence the execution j p othe ¢riminal law in New York. So far from profiting by favoritism, | Whew in common with his fellow murderers will und ergo the injustice of | confi ent in the Tombs pending the pleasure of the Prosec jad-the-end-of-the court vacation season. The District-Attorney thinks that his case may come wu: for trial in] 4 ber. Thaw will be hicky if he faces a jury before December. Nan z : Herson, a:raigned carly in June for the death of Caesar Young, was not until Nov. 15. Although the time actually consumed in trying this ES defendant was less than ¢ight weeks, she‘spent thirteen months in jail. ) — This delay of the law tends directly to frustrate the humane adminis- © Gation of justice. It denies the prisoner that right of speedy trial which the Constitution guarantees ali persons charged with crime. Jt is in sug- apestive contrast—with the swifimethads which_in Philadelphia secured indictment, trial and conviction of the kidnapper Kean within twenty- = hours of itis arrest, By right. Thaw should now, nine days after the Fi "Mnurder, be before a jury. That he is not and that the sensational c onl Grag its length along In public discussion for months before prosecu- Bon is begun is in the highest degree discreditable to local court processes. * | THE SAME MEDICINE. © The dispute between the city and the Interborough over the Third ne elevated express track is a very pretty quarrel as it stands, By all its prettiest feature is the effort of the Corporation Counsel to use tha + yal-remedies for the benefit of the city that the company is wont te ely on to thwart it. In beginning Injunction procesdings to prevent Operation of the track and in instituting other Proceedings to force its i the'city attacks the transgresfor with its own weapons, _ _ This is eleventh-hour activity, but it is none the less gratifying be it is a belated attempt to uphold the public rights in the case. It the exercise for the defense of the city of some of the energy so | Freely expended in aggressive movements against it. Taken in connection =— With the Bridge Commissioner's measures to end the Manhattan Bridge dup, the fight against the Gas Trust and the Proposed war on the Fifth Stoop-line offenders, it evidences an enc suraging encroachments, Possibly we may someday see the i employed to protect the city ting Attor-| ) CH} fils spirit of resistance Injunction as liber- wis Ales Doan Aexiteted. A boprd wae Cheretore form Ke t ly of all existing Inetitutio: oY miltary rd tnfly Ray and myself are Cheleford, ( tio the eafery ng World's Daily Magazine, Tuesday YAL by tL od hava. men ur ed upon orate different oda of attack tts-the countey for bor oh the south -a coast Is suppowed to be known to us, every 4 of railway’ feeding the seaports from Lon i wrtificatic ons ar ce xouth of Londo { being held by ¢. The wi at r pe tc = anyone hes been gone thoroughly and » every p bin movement and combination of the ficot. Thege are only a few of things which havé become our enre, but they are sufficient for Hirpose of iMustratian, The importance of 4s hoard mus absol, you salso the i the ¢ watneas of the kly as p trtesereedton @s tho semgiog oat Chsisionl, whore @Rough to me trom the pag. — perere Poet spp mete taki fae tole te : felt all the while the mercilevss investigation of ance that atsembly, We found elvés in « terrible m- ae regards ita doluga sub- 18 tnichs we" on J x weeks ago, The Comntander-in-Chiet bert no aiternattve but temporarily 40 dissolve the and Bie rearvhing eyes. The uke, on the other band, | disastrous position ore Ronald Matheson had eeemed. to have throv de x0m0 part of his cus- been adting #s ac for us. We met always Somary reserve. He spoke at greater length and) y ked doors 1 the names of the :twei lye tn With more freedom Thad heard him. members of the be are the most honored “You see, M he began. “1 am not a, England. Y four hours after-our meet- —@an whe makes here to offer Ings a verbatim report of them, with ful! particu Fou emp? necent & post lara of ail our schemes, was in the hands of the ot nome You. of « “Hf Lam Qnewered, “I eho ben Bat y j x ectly whet ‘4 in my 9 i moat a ve frat wit post Hence Your Grace I me y too w > my by the re rward tn head Why do you come to ine . . The Duko smiled 1 tea “In the first ‘ he said, “we ar m t + @err frou Porsibiy ax Clove tecord of 2 ee pulveraity, jokrow tb frieids, your tor De watch me spo the persona nt v fi f at may b Francs ween t ten have eve: © betors her's en ‘Walt until » com lL by half, th a by the Whr shocking rero}ut 4o light fring the+rocont wa MA the Prime Miniver, as | dare ai the Duke's house et the thinking men fn the country, that {f ourj as poasible secretly fo-take the offensive wae sowbvious "posable thet pur Gefenaive preciutions hal with cor exceptions, having breve decided that fr at tha War Office they ~ oe Maa t would be. 0 od, wtartled for the mo- ve his i ke to-day wo sat Then aa ‘regards the pore [had some possihiv doutttul relative or atwoclat taryship. No shadow of suspicion reats upon Lord) or custom fn lite Ronald any more than uyon his predookwsors, but] treachery somewhere in the very highest quar] 1 apoke cally and deotalvaly. July 3, 1906. NEW YORK THRO’ FUNNY GLASSES J. Campbell Cory. f By Irvin 8. Cobb. - | TPPOPOTAMOUEHY apoaking, which ts to any speaking in a Jarge, | ‘Droad sense, there are two ways of celebrating the Fourth of July— the other way and the New York way, Bither way ts caloulated to make the late T. Jefferson turn over in bis grave until he gets in the pin- wheel class himself. Tn the country ‘te a grand time for the Spirit of Liberty and the nearest doctor, The dawn of the day which commemorates the time when our grandsires fought In order that wo, their descendants and the othéere who have moved in since, might be owned by John D. Rockefeller Inatead of by the British, is ushered fn by 4 discharge from a cannon Joaded with gunpowder and the fore-fingers of the fring party. Shortly afterward the young gentleman most prominent in the preparation of tne salute is led home wigh his face fali of mew blue freckles and carrying part of himself wrapped up in a newapoper. As goon an the odor of arnica begins to spread properly, everybody who fe still Intact goes out to Perkins's Park, because |t is a nice, sunny place, abounding freely in insect life. A number of appropriate patriotin aire— we quote from the Jocal prese—are executed by Prof, Walter Wilkina’s Siiver Cornet Band. Following the execution, the chairman of the day mounts a platform and reads al! of the Declaration of Independence, except Just W ait! wach members of the band as are light sleepers. ‘Then there {fs a picnic dinner, The picnic dinner was the Invention of es true friend to thé red ant Th addition tw the ret ant the ballet iugte Prevent In force. For the benefit of the city-bred we would way that the Dallet bag is & bug having two rows of logs and fifty lege to a row. This dug craves excitement and js seen crawling down the necks of nervous ladies when not engaged in expiring in the lemonade. ‘The younger people repair to the basky dell back of the pest-house and engage tn Innocent amusements, such as eating the wild turntp and crown- Ing some among their number with wreaths of poison ivy. In the evening there is a programme of fireworks and casualties;’ and. oh, say, you can gee by the rocket’s red glare that only one of Abe Watts’s thumbs fs still there! Memories of the celebration Iiager evon after the docters’ bills are paid. Here in New York the Fourth and So Forth begins about June 15 and extends over to the 10th Inst, It looks as if we had holidays enough to go round in this town without sweiching Die one out so thin —The Chi- nese New Year lasts until Mock Duck runs ont of cartridges The Irish enjoy at least two ammiyersaries of their own—March 17 and the county electton. The Italians have feasis for more saints than there ere on the north aide of Barclay strect. ‘The onst side takes an onting every time the Big Timmers give a chowder. The date when new cabbage comes on the market is secred.to our German citizens. Yet young Gluseppe Sare- fie Jobann Guetay Hiram—that Hiram part is to catoh the Amerioag, vote—feels that he should bave a period of Glorious Fourthing covering the pertod of one calendar month. As a result, by this time, he probabiy hasn't an eyelash to his back. We do not find anybody publicly reading the Declaration of Inde pendénce fn this immediate vicinity. If anybody did he would undoubtedly be arrested for using viotest and incendiary ianguage calculated to injure vested interests, We may add that they are called vested interests because they have got the common guy stfipped to his undershirt There are no picnics In the sylvan groves, although this ws the geason when the jayn bite freely and the woods are full of fish, Nor is the Spirit of Liberty able to do any business on the same smal! island with Messra Ryan, Belmont et al (P. S--f they haven't et al, they've e't nearly ail, anyhow.) * Onehelt of the populace stay at home and ewolter and winh they were oat of town, and the other half go out of town and swelter and wish they were at home, Nil A THE FUNNY PART ‘The Fifth of July te the day we really ought to give thanks for, { i. ps @PPENHEIM *W “{ abeept, Lord Cheleford,” 1 eai4, “I whall| He was stifl lingering there when I glosed the Leount my Ite ® ameall ttng tudeed speinet- my | door, fidelity.” He drummed idly with his forefinger upon the iy table. His eyes were wandertng around the room , abeontly, His face was crim and exprossioniog. | “Very well, then,” he seid, “my business bere is wettied. I shall leave it with the Duke to av Quaint you with the practical details of your work and out arrangement.” He rome Wh his Teer watch Fy iDirrr Cee rey, CHAPTER IX, “i Treachery. HE sunlight was streaming through the win+ dow when at last my pen ceased to move, I rubbed my eyes and looked out in mo mentary amazemeni, Morning hed alteady tro kn eevee the wee My green-shaded lauip ead burning with a sickly light. The moon had turned "You have only just time for the train,” he re- pale and coPoriew: while I sat at my dewk marked. ‘The car ehall teke you there. 1 prefer | stretched myself and, Hghting « cigarette, to walk back, and I have something further to say commenced to ect my papers. Immediately # }to Mr. Ducatne.” dark figure rose couch in the further cor- | Lard Caaadord took leave of me briefly, and the! ner of the room « . | Duke, after accompanying him outside, returned) ~Can | get you anything, str? | to his former seat. 1 ventured upon @n incohtrent| J turned in my chair, The man servant whom atiwmpt lo @xpress my gratitude, which be at) the Duke had put in charge of the “Brand,” my lonce waved aside, He isened over the teble and! present habitation, and-who remained with me ihe fixed his eyes meadfeatly upon me. siwaye in the room while | worked, stood at my | "fam able now,” he a@id, "lo ask you w quewtion | elbow r. \ postponed from the other day, It (ls concerning | ~~“ would ike come coffee, Grooton.* 1 anid "1 | the man wio wan found dead in the creek.” m going to walk up to the house with these | His merciless eyes noted my start. | papers, and [ stall want » bath apd some break- “ab!” be oontinued, “| can see that you know | fat directly 1 get back.” {something. I bave wy suspicions about this inan.| “Very good, sir. it shalt be ready.” You cac now understand my interest whea Tlieir) T folded up the wherts and maps, and placing of strangers in the neighborhood, | do not be-| them In ah ollskin cas Ued them round my body Meve that he was a derelict from the sme. Do) under my waistcoat. Then I withdrew all the you cartridges suve one from the revolver which had “No,” 1 anewered. Jain all night within easy reach of my right hand He nodded. end Blipped tt into my pocket. “arn T Mbt,” he said, ‘tm presuming that you) “Coffee ready, Grooton?” know he wae not?” “In one moment, sir.” “| now that he was not,” I admitted. I watched him bending over the etove, pale, His fingers ceased thetr beating upon che table.| dark-visnged, with the subdued manners and vole His tace became white end maak-like, which mark the arle ccracy of servitude. My “Go on,” he said, employer's confidence in him mum be immense, "I Know that he came through Hraater, and he }for while he watched over mo I wan practically asked for me. Hé@ looked in through the window} in his power. | of my cottage when Col. Ray wha with me leew) “Have you been long with the Duke, Grootont* him po more after thag antil I found bim ded.”| 1 asked bim. The Duke sivuced et bie “Ray left you after you ha een this man's> “Twenty-one years, sir, I lett His Grace to face at the window?" -|to Lord Cheleford, who found me some work “Yen, London.” | “The wounds shout the man’s head and body “Seorot service work, waen't It, Grooton?”* | It he wae not thrown up by the aa, can you ex-| “Yes, sir.” plain them?” “Interesting t” “No,” J answered with a shudder. “Some parte of it very interesting, sir.” “At the Inquest It was not mentioned, I think,| I nodded and dronk my coffee. was that he had been seen tn the villaget”’ | watching me with’an air of respectini intensst, “It waa not,” | admitted, “Mom of the people!) “You will air, but 2 1 looked from one to the olher, § you may have r in the ne 6 youbg men were sure to”be brought 7 i : rdon’my remarking it, pws ap et os i" ° t | * iV ate € we i waple ont pa Bei dryer | were at Cal, Ray's lecture. He spoke to one girl,| hope you will toy and get some during. the eal connections and whose. ¢ \s possible, Who would dave. no| She dia Bot xive erkience.” T looked glass and Was atarcled et ney ows FV 9 Ae ioe pet reeillanes of de. “1 thought,” T said in @ low tote, ‘that abe bad| reflection. Th was only my thing dey, aad the ad a wapin, add oat 4 BN nsncyoin “A 2 Sed ; ry cenininaen “Did you hear anything after Ray left?’ he! My cheeks were wunken and there were Tings f y wo have o| “In a. seune “W/ Chelsford contindnd, | Mked suddenly {around my eyes. in via inti ( “ourve, will be ble, but| | Could have eried out, but my tongue seemed) “I will Iie down when I come back, Groton,’ ey A 1 felt : wi) live all the time at high pressure. The Deke| “There Was & sound,” 1 muttered; “1 fancied) sudden sweet tonie to my jaded nerves I ‘ u , \ Will place @ srind) house et your diwposal, and it, Uoat it waa cry But t could got wl). The wind) for @ moment to face bareheaded the 3 2 2 ances mut referenee to him, nor must you wor tel.” 7 o i" “ A gmntied 4 oo Gaye F “jy On ant (i ayo A ac Niuake You appear,” he sald drily, “to beve discre-|steps, Some one was coming toward the A ity man.” I You Ww tully be a prisoner, and {f ton. Qultivate it! Tt iq a reat gift, -T abel look| trom the park. <p ese Np pengiif ante Of te » correct you may| 9 you at 11 o’elock In the morning. 3 am hay~ 1 did sh, Ieinediataly turn nay hand, bok angel the 1 1 rine ie Datu I n find the post 1 physical danger, ‘8 8 large howse party this week, and Among) nerve in my body reamed to atiffen into quivering ee ectain Grdthiln ausetras: «eon + | On tharorhene ave & thoutand «| them will be our friends,” eurtonity, The pathway wan » private one lading ix more Umited than ye cht think, At t your salary, and a sum of £6,000 in two years} Ho me without any further farewell and/ {rom the house only to the “Brand” and down, fitty namos were prope of them of young) time if all ta well,” ‘ | warned slowly homewanl. When he reached the) cliff to Braster. It wee barely 7 o'dfock, and and so far; men of the highest cha. Kach one, however, Exettement seemed to have steadied my. norven,! bend in'the road be paused, remained there| footsteps were no laboring man's. 1 think on. 1 forgot.all the miner tragediqs whiet fad been| for several Lead very well who wen that came go It Ia evident that Chore inj real enough things to tacn only o few houra down tho

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