The evening world. Newspaper, July 6, 1906, Page 8

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| Pabtaned by the Press Puvtientne Company, No. (3 to @ Park Row, New Tork Pntered at the Post-Omee at New York as Becond-Claas Mail Matter —_—__ VOLUME 47,. im )~|SCUTRY MURDERERS! 4 the Tor % prison the curious the “nvurder squad” exer weekly wW thro sweltering N et tried, and not f Mr. Jerome does not try der cases in summer.” | The State has dealt with them with | f prosecution. It has speedily ; Its, awaiting the summary prc tndicted them re of a di Indicted prisoners, to sate innocent. If they are pre ‘Prom the unneceSary expense e Mshing their crimes again In either event a wrong is done by the Inactivity of the prosecuting | "attorney in pushing these murder cases to trial and clearing the docket. | Why does Mr. Jerome wait? Have his other prosecutions wearied him? | “Does he need another vacation to supplement the one interrupted by the | selThaw murier is anomalous that the administratfon of the criminal} Aw in New York Id be held up by a vacation shediie “Wher Ce pursuit-of recreation has reached-a-pass where It occasions these abuses! tt has become a fetish and should bé abolished for the good name of the city. Try the murderers, beginning with Thaw if necessary, as a first example of prosecuting while the crime Is fresh! RAILROAD SAFETY. The wreck of the Lake Shore road's St. Louis Limited and the @eraitment of the Saratoga Limited at Ballston occur just as we are in| ‘the act of pointing the finger of reproach at England for the Salisbury | disaster. In cach of these accidents it was a fifty-mile-an-hour flyer of ® high-class railroad which left the rails Among accidents In the same} Gategory which are yet fresh in mind was that to the Central's Twentieth Century Limited at Buffalo, the wreck of the Jersey Central’s Atlantic | _ City express and the mphaps to two Pennsylvania fl ; In spite of a providential absence of casualties these accidents on the est railroads must excite graver apprehensions for Americans than the | Salisbury catastrophe In three cases human fallibility was at fault— | THisplaced switches and an open drawbridge. It is the two which are | #5 yet unexplained which will occasion the chief concern, In building | locomotives upward to provide increased steaming power are we making When topheavy? The modern readied approaches perfection. Cars are | of solider con: More-care 4+-exercised in operating trains. Is | the sk) € the main element-of-insecus Is the inch or OY MR IR aT Re YD, { guilty the ends j j failed and the unwarranted delay in-pun-+ lt thed moti and a half flange which holds its ponderous bulk to-the-rail too narrow & gmargin for satety? | o | 4HT ss wll he le Nertus ation of enjoyment. Th ) Uately afterward me tn the face, “for a few i versation with you. 1 ahall pe agh to fined at hone te walt for my anewe looked about Rim with “It tw Indeed a lonely spot,” can tmagine anything happening heat-ot a tragedy oaly -the—os nd dead?’ eee ee fatesiew Primo Henr M eyelets, GUY and Angela bom Petnck, tame a dint marked yerrmnreenrs WR bere.” CHAPTER XII. +0 BBCOUD | be. A. An Accident. | telt me of rssh ioe tee HE Princes accepted my most oomftortah! chulr with an al Lady Angela was Into in the afte ih the room behind. “The Pritice Lady Ab him for # cigarette eensy | marshes merged into the mands of graceful condvsension. | roe little to the ad already apated herself it | nu “The mAn was woon, and Grooton was busy ommark, lar 4 ieht th net rained his hand in poltte expostula- | iq with a lit ton, but he accepted a clgaratte wave te Wl ai veee} wel reo, Mr. Dre lish are so fond tte fot quite « fondly imagt that wv covers! w \ countie ¢ aly c away.” Grooton br t E me Clg Deely clowe! anew “You are perhaps . tn it ea Dueaine.” he remarked _ “Mimensely,"” 1 anwwerad, wart Ue Sard my books’ “Bat you » 4 Lady Angela. Evening World's , BETRAYA hee Edie on a a ee od “Yom are very good,” I anewered, q ~ aia j Lady Angela calmly Interpased. RECRUITING CHAPTERA | luttered toast and drank tea wt rose slmoat “You are coming tp to the hones this evening Mr. Duocaine?” Lady Angela asked. t am due there now.” T answered. “tt you wil F allow mo, 1 will walk back with you” The Prince toichet my arm ae Lady Angela Dassed out before ow ‘L am anxious, Mr. Ducafn looking lo and he hastened to her eife. He seemed in no hurry, however, tc e the place The evening was ¢ unusually dark, A north wind wan tearing throcgl the grove of tH, abet the reat —of the tnaaming tes, vip owteh matted the Prinee little grimace he remarked. “it you have a taste for horrom. Prince.” I re- “you cén Mi the spot from the edge of Price moved engerty torward, claitn all sudh weakness,” i printed downwant to where the creek-riven only halfway up now A Quiet Day in St. Petersburg.” By J. Campbell Cory. tf [i NM fj Uf Mi i ih if / The Prince a th & bland aff: imine for Lady Angela “One here. Did T not trendy —e hte or left of the white poned to have his eye. of he was ittle about him mys h ‘ t 1 huve heard the ¢ tal clally, He is a nar pay. 4 He haw p 1a great r ecamire, altost c the French 1 murmur ked In tinsel.” least the Pri eutened.” 1 wh The Ye not by any 1 ! Hy can't pona the bottom. { will clamber down tation P ft bly have got t jook for him. shuld Oh, you m the exclaimed. “It te not sate, Flow t e It looks down there!’ fay that tt fe part of @ pose. and that he! | raland my volee and shouted. Almost imme Tions political ambitions. He contemplates | diately there came an anewer, ne creat goheme which shall make him! ‘I am here, my only for a day of the French mob. A| bush. I Anre not move. It {s ao dark | cannot be eufictent, for be would strike while |see where to put my foot, Can you lov be careful,” ehe ealled out,. “AhI" jJantern, and 1 will eee If T can climb: up idol. it Daily Magazine, Friday, July 6, 1906. friends, in the middle of « mee i ao ial am the United States Is What Tt Is Co-Day. FOOTSTEPS OF OUR-ANCESTORS IN A SBRIBS OF THUMBNAIL SKETCHES What They Dita Why They Did tt What Came Of It. eee! By Albert Payson Terhune, No, 47.—The Second Year of the War. HP second year of the Civil W the first, showed a tend of tnoompe- ba d genius, It @ fr or oem. H Garteld, ¢ : ynew G14 eplendid work for the Unio the & A still n . David Farragut earty in the year. With a at < Wreans, At Brip-teland he 4 was ed by B t New Englanders. The 0 U » ~ . us was by no means aa strong; but “ at wertal forte Taokwon and @t. Phiip—on » New Orleans. below thenr nd wreckage. ne of the Oc the Farragut { { Attacks the $ a anid getting by \ The Co fe yw hastened down (too tate to aid SS 4 was bea ' ut, with Por ) and oap- ok w Orleans + hed y while Farragut passed p the river 4 Farragut in the Souch had almost ; the Dane” done -ak-arbll there was a far t atory 0 tell ome © Eastern armies were far lanrer and had more farnous leaters than t ia ibs Weed, We RAL, aha lan, were encamped ansas, Between them Ricimonat™ we the Ponins >mplications again snd been fallen Aa delayed made at this it wes, the ~utpeneralied he saat The Fad- the James River to perate with thts orders from Washing- The Federa ains of Virgini McDowell (of Bui F ¢ Attack on Richmond. Why It Failed noaeded to beni Washington, nders, time eno oo Laat when at last \¢ place was no longer *, thought the Cont pactmps clevernens of weg ¢ be waa ever to } on ant MM, Advance : y etaenwed te Tackhon and 1 ne ‘imnawe fh the a the. Pwriwnaie an laMentKbi® campals ronumer! of Peteral SAAMI AIA TALERAREA LAA, PPENHEIM right you Ww be al “1 cried ont were ont ot not halt as # as it looks.” th where caver y ‘that Yo can see ‘ tantern comes she The Jantern arrived af tT tmmertiately, — W Jowered it to him by a fope, and he e¢xamined “You warned the face of the cll niet-to~tarkee ck in whet a posttion 1 think that I can get wp,” ho erted out, “but Towa 1 had no career, | was penniless, How J like to help mynélt with the ror fom bebe Lio’ away such a chance? you It tightly? i—this morting, has tt nr Ttoanswered: We're gett He clambered up with aurprising agility, But he reached the edge of the cliff he groaned heavily in. She was deeply tie Are you hurt?” Lady Angela asked, ! breath coming Daw, Uii—-ta the -teck he aeubtersd Hee ith we were walking at a snail's pace | longed 1 twiated it In fulling ‘be ie 1B her abeolutely, but I dared mot, 1 1 hetped {othe wottae, Aeon » not ask me to tel you what {t waa," I said iy mlong with tently cleochad Upa The k ta ar Paper a? a Se ond De® DUN {5 hulle DORA: Sony -cart to. wet Nays AL the time like poleon in my 3 2 Ans -weratd, te ai . king vary close together. 1 tett hee am wonde over thi, I myself, | scarcely know sipped the brandy which Gr 1 am subject to Sts of giddiness, over mé a8 I stood there jodking ground away and remember no more sorry to give you all this trouble, fear that | cannot walk.” te Fein ay ara abd het so bremlt hee But lf you do not tell me everything—how cam *xyeet my sympathy, perhaps my help?” Ge unaware aa ba may not ask you for efther,” T answered wats toe hed prodneed. iy Me knowledge of somethings aaamt—reman upon you ma) between your-treher ate terse: “Between tather the ry but indeed I my and yourselt!” she te Tam ¥ Tent, Gnd then we Both startet apart, we could hear the sound of footsteps We will send you down « cart.” f declare: nching—#oft, qiiek footsteps, niutted “You will have rather a rough drive aatous Upol he apotay tort We grome,-but thers is no other way “You are 4," he declared. “fam tn des @ spair at my clumsiness.” LA 7 i -gey say box of eigarettes —Laty Afigela | CHAPTER MTT: Net A Brib * she xaid, “that I ought to stay with HS oeeeeminte sched while Mr. Ducaine goes up for the WHEELED round and peered into the dark. pan ady Angola's fingers clutched my arm. 1, Lady Angela, you ate. very kind,” he | d feel that oe was trembling violently, W tt 1 not permit It, f reg Y 1) whose figure loon almoat im. th me pain and weaken before ton a aded and bel Iaue anytt ' D W ' 1 exclaimed qatckly. Pa Reais er ieenrat i , that you had better neturn,” be k with Lady Angela would I joy: But trom the firat mo..." over his shoulder toward the"Drand" me ntage | wig any ‘ ‘eratood. In a moment I wis on my way nk of that tian?” I anked her Wilbert if Thad not dono since my college nt ¥ T mean personilly.” jaye aps and more than I bate he answ coo! . Nihon ar \ rabbit hole how seom always ¢ t offensive th 1 fin ha ; Ai pei 1 very hard Indeed to be civil to him ‘ r edb a Prince ‘Do you happen to know what Gol. Ray thinks papers In Me hand. tothe oth & Bundle of of him?’ 1 asked her 4 the room. ‘ open the door and I have no apecial knowledge of Col, Ray's likes iwift though my mowement had ave ni’ ‘ nd's diMeulty with the eatoh had or dislikes,” she answered re wiven Forgive me," 1 sald. ‘Tt thought that you and when | enters, alee he wore very Intimate, and that you might know ptongyl Hr ning there with I wosder whether he takes the Prince soriousiy o Yow He looked up at) me with wen “Col, Ray is one of my best friends epodrauloety but I am not in his confidence,” A slight reserve had crept into her tone I stole & "lance at her face; paler and more delicate than ever Jt seemed in the gathering darkness. Her lips were firmly set, but her ¢yes were kind A sudddn desire for her synvpathy weakened me. “Lady Angela,” I said, “T must talk to some one. I do not know whom to trust, I flo ‘ndt know who Whe said. “You are soon baek, Mr. Ducaine,” be remarked calmly. “Did you forget something?” “I forgot,” Tanswered, straggling to recover my breath, “to lock up my deak,.” “An admirable precaution,” he admitted, watchs ing as T gathered my papers together, “espactslly ff one has valuables, Tt is an exposed wpe, thie, and very lonely,” (To Bo Comtinned.) je honewt. You are the only person whem I dure}

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