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Entered at the Port-Ome ———_- — VOLUME4 to 4)" Mills Whittlesey shot Building at Trenton be r a wife, Mr. Whittlese 4 tapi fs ago he went into the life-ins was successful and earned a ¢ { igation his b f j This news s Which a few high 7 Relves. The opposite is the fact. In -they seek to renew their opportunitie methods to re-elect themselves which w 4 Quigg primary. For no political boss takes the trust funds of 4 &nd orphans to furnish his corruption money — There are 70,000 life-insurance agents in them most heavily falls the discredit of the McCu Hydes and their kind. “Most of these the salesmen of, other commodities The Mutual Life has for m: Bgents of the Mutual Life who pe “Rogers ticket and who do not , of the McCurdy trustees. In ot Henry H. Rogers and Gee the owners of the fu.al of w The Armstrong laws provide panies. Such an election i iblic official faithful eno Standard Oi) gang like te e Mot A PIKE'S PEAK by the gold-seekers of ‘49 tha « Having inspired this terse expressior opening of the further West the m fis cenienniat. Pike's Peak fs not the highest ¢ . being surpassed by Mount Harva ia Mount Lincoln's 14,297 and the ton, Mount Yale however, has fumis a nati at American ide: the gr there is no ol Me how it is that the eel} use Dp 14 nished or de- |x a creased 0 ed bypbout one inch 7 on the length and oy about one-third By Ofan inch on the width? Is Uncle Sam | getting greedy, stingy or crazy? Really i. there is something wrong score This postal 1 am writing And mirerable, while t barely passabip! What d t a S\ of the matte P. ZEPH The Liberty Light. i od the Statue of y beer = since built If not Period of time There have be . . Neht on the § tt due t d tar Poard. The periods var fe | What Careert Tam « bright. ambit ie ma ! of a ‘ 4 } long f - | y a ed LEXED. Conductor Kefused Money . To Dre of The K “Ww , ‘ ere, oy w Bt oF * mY ¥ , 7 2 ‘ « orid's Daily Magazine, Monday, Composite Photo of aratoga Convention Campbell @ Park Row, New Tore Pwdiienied by the Preae Pour iening Company, No. © t yd-Claae Mall Matter. at New York as Se SS (DELIGHTED ROGERS'S AFTERMATSAL. , they almost wrecked the e public, tt ecame public, th lunk into hiding ead of penite years had Henry H. Rogers as ct committee is not will not pledge th man of its Agency Committee. Thi: ure voles and proxies for s, these agents are fof their livelihood if they do not bee re F. Baker, Many of these agents like Mr. Whittlese Swf their own. Almost every 2gent is b ich Her n of tion. Intimidation and bribery at { to treat Henry is engaged in destroying the sanctit ENTENNIAL. It is the centennial of Pike's Peak. may help in the celebration, which | hrough the week. There are to be camp dians of various tribes, a Colorado Da fof "49 and fireworks from the summit ‘ Although Pike's Peak was discovered in Pike, ils fame dates from the middle of the “» THE MEN IN THE NEWS By Way ot Prologue to tall Caine’s Thriller, Which Revoly s Around a Cow Instead of a Stork, le pre handed down tp an enduring place amo were a roader for a publishing house. Straight Talks to Them—By Nixola Greeley-Smith. ned from the White Mouse and o 1 soon supplant the American eagle of Ms, We could not be expected t most alermingly all through “The ta realism, does not contain a real baby @ they belong But 1 the mawkish m that aterwauling Corelll genius ave spared the public for some tin: pe it will bs repeated over here t must be without the mawkish sentimentality you bave unfor- Hall Caine }em vt Ike them on a Iterary shriek The Diary of a Bad Boy. 1 CAT, AND Go GACCERS FoR mE Salaries anil Credit Ge! Im soRRy TY LAUGHED AT THAT [Oo Geezer! | GANAWA'S 15 A | ROY TEN PRUIT ANY WAY, AN YOU An! ME Won't EAT No ( HA! HAI) dawritten = ae Stop Laughing! First Lady—How happy the bride groom looke! Really. tt ts plessan see @ young man look wo Joyful. Second Lady—Hueh! That's not the pom. That's a man the bride| with It bride) died ix months ago.—Tit-Bite. “6 « Fils te @ life that trritates, His trouble ends A-shakin’ hands with folks he hates An’ turnin’ down his frien: He meant to make reform his plan, But couldn't find jes’ how, He used to be a happy man, You ought to see him now. —Washington Star * le: a “This here," morning, “is @ blamed queer world—er, ruther, it hes er lot o'' queer people Into it, who no egoner git what they want Chan they 60 'o grumbiln’ at ut cause ‘taint Just what they thort it wus, b’ jinks!""—Detrott News « ies, angry miss imed; “I lke your cheek! “That's good,’ sald he; "IE mbave, you see, Each morning in the week.” —Cleveland Leader. "John, you look after the eangplank.” John—Ays, aye, sr! “And Tom, you look after the centre- board. Tom—Aye. aye, sir! “VN get busy pnd look after the side. wart, o. {818 He—I 4idn't lke your friend, Miss Knox. She told an acquaintance of mine that I was @ perfect idiot. Bne—Oh, I'm sure Sho knows as well no human being ta Hiuetrated Bits “My titled marriage.” sighed the fret American heiress, “brought on me a countless horde "And mine,” snapped the @cond, “was @ baron waste. —Bailttmore American, 2 eaid’ Uncle Jowh this @ Gidn't miean it! y one else that utely perfect.— The FIFTY GREATEST ~ EVENTS in HISTORY By Albert Payson serhune No, 834—RICHELI 1, the Man Who Was Greater than the King, blood, wold and Cardinal, great jesrman and greater oppressor, gen- erous patron of literature and personally a literary failure, These, in brief, are the chief characteriatios of Armand Jean du Plessis, Cardinal and Duke de Richelieu, the man who held all France in the hollow of his hand for @ quarter ntury, and who did more than hiv abare toward changing the destiny and tise Henry IV. had quieted the quarrele between Catholics and Huguenots, had bullt up the na that had been ao severely battered by long ctvll war, and had reas, But in the helgnt of hia career he had been # XIIL, mucceedet him, and, during the Inde her, Marte de Medict, and the jatter’s Italian friends j YRANT and patriot, conspirator and foe to conspiracies, priest and man af ! I paved the way { murdered. His finority the Queer were in praction t As a teaptt, the great nobles waxed unduly powerful, arrogantoand rebe s of re mand, abuses Of many sorte crept into the state, the glorious realm t by Henry 1V, threatened to weaken and far rev to fordign inf on When Louis X11. grew to manhood there seemed scant chanoe for better. ment. He was weak, dissolute, Inay, stupid, with title thougSt or care for his country’s beet interests, It waa at this critical momen: that Richelieu appeared no had beer : Dut on his elder brothers death, in 1006, had become His But the Church ns. held no Benn y. tn Peoria, The Boy Bishop's became bis } Ambitions. for the Bs te , int r He wo n mogoar Rttuira, Barely had be he was disgraced and ence was made Secretary of State political nb when, owing to court ed from Paris At in 180 be returned From thence on he was the foremost pow ft rete Pg He damol shed their mig t “4 bobs? thus hed from them w ? the cliy of R tham, be wing political power and agalr to the power of or weaken It, Kio puppet, Louls ‘XIIL Rt Cing M King Louls was King dered not { erentness Aeprived a famous v * tnese wae eae gents a Riot the ho was greater than tre King SS PERCY, THE FLIRT. HE TELLS ABOUT IT. By Ruth Earle. Sg] DON'T think We any run proposing tow ais unten I @ to give ‘her a ring If she uccepts you= nd I baVe ¢ lation, so T usually can Millicent Jones how sma for three months, She » ation m. 1 remember prog rome gar lt was really Ke gradu se to her sort of @ Well, she kept my Just to jolly some co-ed. chap tat wast thought it rather atisgy of der, for he fellqw ean always use a ring like that 4 me. & ast Mon- Gay she sent it back with # note about tt all having been re engagement, she meant Shee 1 was calling. on a new felt sort of heavy In my pocket would take a six—that's what the 4 jook at the es in an apa wht, and the ring and decided It we go up on the re The brunet to speak of love But these foots is for proposing. So when we werg sitting in the shadow of the big water tank J begged her not to be shocked and surprised If I told her something I had py t in val on sec ‘She promised not to ahow her emotion, no matter how great the blow. So Leramping In which 1 spoke e Tt fe denecration to tell of It,’ I sald, “but I love you with my whol and until you return my love I muse live in wret Oh: tall eae’ hope! Tell me you ere beginning to care Ghé told_me that not only had she be byt had gotten well aleng in the stages of caring for me. We were tapturously happy “| took the mpeasiire of ter—fingerin_the dark the next brought her the carat and @ half. It Mtted perfectly, She was q ning I to delighted his niorning It came back with @ note to the w effect about hav- ther in my absence. And @o-you know, when f came snot it at all. The setting was quite the same. but Vm sure ‘And inside je engraved: ‘To My Reloved.” And I'm perfectly sure mine | ania: “To My Betrothed ‘tt looke to mg as If nhe Were beating meat my own «ame sBut that doesn't worry mo. I'm Just wondering whom I shall give it to next.” ——_—+ +o —_—— The Seven-in-Six Puzzles, Second Series—Charles Dickens, Hidden Picture No, 1—Find Oliver Twist Grown Up. print one every day, Bach picture te complete to Steelf, but if you will cut out and save the six pictures of each series and put them together properly at the end of the week you will be @urprised to find that they make one big seventh picture that not only belongs to the group, but without which the series would be incomplete, Save the Charles Dick+ ens series aud fing the seventh hidden pleture T= EVENING WORLD here prints a hidden-picture pussie. It will