Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
area tae posern C@uirzen. Preqstme Every Dav mm THe Yean uP Now 53-89 Panx Row. SUNGAY, MAY 19, 7584. S=— Se a the Post- Office at New York as Second- Peee Nail Matter. eva 79) UNITED STATES (OUTAIDE or New ‘York Crty Liars), CANADA AND Murxr00, Daily and Sunday, Daily and Sunday, Daily and Sunday, Daily and Sunday, nity Only, One ¥ Daity Oniy, Siz Month, . Daily Only, One Month. Bunday, One Year. Bvening, One Year..... Brening, One Month , Rea Matty, Gre Year., £00 Weekly, One Year. ig 1106 Liberal Commission allowed to Club Agent Bample Copies Sent Free. em ENataxn AND THE CONTINENT AWD ALL COmNTRIES IN TILE UNIV RRAAL Powrar Our iow. Baily and Sunday, (me Yaar... osngepmn G8. 20 495 215 7 6.00 9.00 60 0 SOBTAGE RATES ON THE WORLD. ASpages, 10 S2pages, 20, AB pages, Be, Foreign Rates Double, AAAS ‘Address all communications, whether concerning * eddvortisements or subscriptions, to THE WORLD, PULITZER BUILDING, Park Row, New York Oty. nn Brancu Oxvicms1 { WORLD UPTOWN OFFICE—Junction of Broad- ‘way and Sixth Ave. at std St WORLD HARLEM OFFICE, 188th B, ona Maat ton Ave. BROOKLYN, 800 Washington St, PHILADELPHIA, Inquirer Office, 089 Chestrest Bt. WASHINGTON, 708 4th 8t., N. THE WORLD 1a also for sale in Europe at Brew tano' a, 17 Avenue det Opera, Poris, (Paom Tam Woaip or Mancm 4, 1804 } ‘The World's Average Circulation per day for First Two Months of 1894, & W. BLOOMINGDAER HENRY CLEWS, CARL WwW, DAYrem AVERAGE CIRCULATION which malistons persons reck to roisuse the sewspaper’s legitimate concern for public interevte pa a means of wreaking their py*vate vengeavte wale corer, No ons evtside the « wapaver offices can kno the lubor ap@ paige to which editory ore eubjncted Ia dlecrtecinating betten the true and the false, the hon- et A the maligarrt, among the ote wa acornittes te them, The new Jaw comes to their aid by roaking it misdemeanor thus ta deceive @ news- paper with false inforwgtion of a kind which, being false, is Mharove Aula misdemeanor in this Moe is eupish- #88 blo by imprisonment me @ wear and a gitts aren fine of $500. It is a food saw. HAVE WE TOO MANY PRUPLe? | Many intelligent people are accus- tomed to explain panics, strikes, tramps and other more or less disagreeable fea- go tures of American progress asa result of | unrestricted immigration, and a reader of Tne Wentr ay Asetin, Tex., asks for its opinion in the premises, Besolwed into ite simplest form the whole question la whether his coun- try now nus vo muc sation, In Tire Wortp's opinion it is so far from being overpopulated that the single State of Texas could support the present population of the whol country not only without bad results but with great advantage. ‘The evils which afilict us at present are incidents of growth. ‘They are the results of under-population and over - expectation. All values in America are based chietly on the expectation of continu- ous growth. It has been estimated that at least 50 per cent. of the value of all corporation stocks in years of prosperity represents expectation of growth, in view of increasing demand to be caused by a continuously progres - sive increase in population. ‘The estimate may be exaggerated, but we dly think itis, Weare in- clined to believe on the evidence that if it were now known positively that here - after the growth of the United States would depend solely on excess of births over deaths, the average value of real estate and of all corporation and busi - ness securities would greatly depreciate. Two-thirds of the railroads depending for business on the settlement of the Weat and South would be permanently bankrupted, and in the resultant read - justment of all values the price of labor would fall and there would follow hard times from the effects of which no class in the community would be exempt, trustees. A more sacred and responsi - ble trust has never been committed to a| people, and if we forget that we are| trustees for humanity ; if we say that in| our laws and policies we will consider nothing but what appears at a given time to be our own selfish advantage ; if trusting wholly to the short and never to the long run we make our- selves Ishmaelites, with our hands we cannot fail to suffer the greatest fall of tras lite popus) testify to the honor in which Tennyson was held in the Republie, It is & small sum that remains to be valsed—culy Ueaw, Tue Comittes! ngsure us thir Hh onn be eauily raised Im w day in EngienG, bt ey do not OH I¢b@ cnemoriai w ve uational or local. Aa Atnericaa tay been appointed a) member of the committee in order thet |the appeal may to his conntry- | men with more force, Small contribu - {tions in this caso will be even better than large ones, for Tennyson entered Jane humbler homes of America, and is | to be found on the tables of those whose wessarily few and small, but | therefore richer than the gifts of those ! who do not feel the sacrivce, Conteibusivas should be sent toi “Rey, Joskit Mernatay, D. D., Chairman of the ‘Tennyson Memorial Committee, Freshwater, Isle of Wight, England.'' It is to be hoped that | they will be as liberal ay the love of hi awiory awl the appreciation of his| works are deep and sincere in the} ry where, almost alone, the love | ar characteristic. | } of letters is a pc THE MONTEREY'S OINDITION. The Monterey is u coast-defense ves- sel built at great expense to protect our ports against invasion, ‘Ti Wortp’s exposure of the armor - plate frauds has led to an examination of this Important fighting ship. At the very beginning of the investigation plates are found upon her sides which ‘© would crumble if struck by a round shot,’' and the experts gay: ‘' From present appearances the vessel would not stand ordinary fire." That is to say, the makers of armor- plate, upon which they get a profit of 400 per cent., have feloniously and treasonably swindled the Government in a way which renders a trusted de- fense vessel no better than 9 rotten hulk, and risks not only the lives of our sailors but the country’s eafety. Capt. Sasusoy’s board may do what it will, but this is a matter that Con- gress should eee to at once, It should order an open investigation, conducted to find out the facts and send the guilty men to prison, whoever they may be, It is not a case for covering up truth but for laying it bare, NO BEX IN DUPES, the accepted modern standards, What is nece ity or responsibility. Men of peculiar gifts have been doing this for ag Sometimes they have succeeded in using the money so as to increase it, and have paid it back, saving the ine crease for themselves. Sometimes they away, ruining all who trusted them. A few years ago there was a Mrs, Howe in Boston who essayed the role. | ness he must #o act as to deserve it. saving service of large utility. have lost it or stolen it or gambled it| Satisfied with them, of the court that the persons charged . THE WORLD: SUNDAY, MAY 13, 1894. his district, and upon society every~ where, will be « continuance in his mistaken dnmand for & renominntion f=} = ro-clection Del Muscrmman cought te with- draw at oice, Moe owee that mich to the people of the Ashhurd district, He or it to the good women whose de- testation of his conduc: has forced them into an unwonted and hurtful potitios activity. He owes it to the cause of morality, to the sense of decency, to Gop und to his fellow-men to take him- self out of the way as a stumbling- block and a cause of offense. lis nomination under the cireum- stances would be an affront to every sentimont of soralit, His elect'on ould be @ repudiation by the Ashland distriat of the moral Jaw itself as a rule of conduct binding upon men. If Col. Breckinninae wishes forgive - If he truly repents of his sin he should make willing sacrifice of his ambition by way of repairing the harm he has done, If he expects to regain the respect of nonurable men he must begin by himself respecting his present obligations, and his one eupreme obligation now is to withdraw from a candidacy which is fraught with evil and which threatens even murder as an incident of its prosecution. If he will not withdraw, then the people of ‘his district owe it to them- selves and to public decency to ad- minister the rebuke of a defeat as over- whelming as truth and justice can make it. ‘To-morrow the corps of doctors em ployed by Tu Wortp’s Sick Babies’ Fund begin their summer's work. Of course everybody trusts that their labor may be light, but under the most favor- able conditions there will be thousands upon thousands of calls for their ser- vice For several summers the annual number of visits to sick children in the tenement-house districts by Tue Wortp's doctors has been over one hundred thousand. They give food, clothing and medicine free, according to the necessities of the case, and they instruct the mothers in ways of preventing sickness as well as in caring | for the sick, Undoubtedly this is a life- Those who have contributed annually to this Mra, Caries Brapvoro, of Brook- | good work will hardly need solicitation | death lyn, has demonstrated that women may | to do it again, be Napoleons of finance according to/| all mothers, and always the children who are fortunate enough to be well ry in order to win|cared for by kind parents have mani- this high title is to succeed in borrow- | fested great interest in this fund for the We who now hold America hold it as | ing money in large sums without gecur- | sick babies of the poor. It appeals peculiarly to The drawing of jurors for the May term of the court to convene at Troy was watched by members of the Com- mittee of Public Kafety. Good jurors were obtained and the committee are It is at this term with crimes against the election law will be tried. Mvnrpuy will do all in his ogainst every man and every nation, | She sot up what she called a Woman’ | Power to protect his henchmen and to Bank, receiving deposits of money from |#ave the life of ‘* Bar Snxa, who PERSONAL AND PERTINENT, Woman suffrage may have to make room fer ite “ant, And still the Park Board has “an ele | Dd wms opr 12> Bands,’ j AnUNaad/ sdaouatoch a ane’ considered | tha avéiess” aiiy par excousar | Perhapn Mr, Olney will now tell Mr. Groker how to work a tennis racket. Gov Weite, of Colorado, still retains sufficient self-resiratot to keep off the brass, | Leander Richardson threatens to ele- | vate the stage by making a few finished actors, | A close watch will be kept on Messrs. Platt, Croker and Sheehan in their re-| tirement. | | And stil tt must be said that it is| | lard % tell when @ central power ts not # central power, If one Andrew Carnegie will return home at once he will learn something to his disadvantage, Troy, N. Y., is laughing at Coxey be cause he was collared and cuffed in) Washington. Troy wasn't. Kate Bradford, of Brooklyn, has that woman's sphere may em- nic financlert An enthuslastic admirer of Cot. Breet | toridge cally him “a Daniel.” He cer-! tatrly has never been @ Zeeeph. ‘That ex-President Harrison “means business” 1s fully established by the fact that He spent a whole day in Brooklyn last week. Robert Buchanan has publicly de. nounced Clement Scott, the London dra- matic critic. Is the former prepared to meet Mr, Corbett? James J. Corbett has been Invited to act before King Leopold of Belgium. Corbett 8 certainly taking the royal road to histriontc greatness, Richard Croker saw ‘Tip, the elephant, skinned, He said It was the best thing that could happen to Tip, no matter what the poor creature thought about it. Henry Irving, It {s said, ts to be knighted. It may be mentioned in this connection that a good many actors in this country are just now being deco- rated, Prof. Richardson, the archaeologist, has found In the ancient city of Eretria the ruins of a theatre. It was probably destroyed during an argument between actors and critics, —— = SMILES BETWEEN SERMONS, Squildig—Do you have any diMeculty meeting your bills? McSwil!igen—No, indeed! My great diMculty ts In avoiding them.—Detrolt Free Press, When a man makes a prediction and {t comes true, It tickles him almost to -Atchison Globe, She—Riches have wings, they say. He Yes, but it ts not until a man loses p them that he s said to "go up.”"—xonkers Statesman, A short-poem epitaph for the occasto: PLB, RT. P. —Phitadelphia Ledger. Doctor—Have you followed my advice in regard to eating plain food and keep- ing quiet at home? Patient—That's all I've been able to do since you sent in| your bill.—Yale Record. Mr, Croesus—You want to marry my niece, do you? Why she is the only rela- tive I have. Charley Hardup—I have thought that all out, si.—Raymond’s There {s no place like the home of one’s sweetheurt.—Gulvesion News, Mr. Softplate—Do monkeys entertain you, Miss Flypp? Miss Flypp—Well, that | | held as treasures by the Austrian mon- impefsonated Charles VI. and yellow that ors, and the Hapsburgian eagle. military plays a Joseph pi enjoyment that was very evident. gorgeous event succeeded another. HAPPENINGS IN VIENNA.” The Carrousel at Vienna the Most Gor- goous Tournament Ever Witnossed in Europo~Fathor “neipp Takos the Pope by the Yar—Ib» Clmex feetulariae the | Post of Vionna.-Amerioan Art at the Kenstlorhaus. (Spectal Correspondence of The World.) VIENNA, April 21,.—The Military Car- rousel which care off to-day at the Im- perial Palace, 1s pronounced the raoat magnificent tournament ever witnessed in Europe, Seats sold for 100 guilders ($40), and that price, outside the United States, |i# held to be @ princely sum to pay for | seeing anything or anybody. As respects weather, we had the first dull skies, chilly wind and finally rain since many weeks, but the festivities Were In no wise affected tnereby, as tne carrousel took place In the Winter Rid- ing School of the palace-the spanish Riding School it ts cailed, and to-day certainly the name seemed most appro- | priate. It Is sald to be the largest arena of Its kind In the world, and 1s capable of holding 4,000 people, Both galleries were hung with costly tapestries. Bilken laurels are these, won tn ancient tri- umphs in Spain and the Netherlands and archy. Many cf these tapestries pos- seas & veiue fost ie vimost meéusureless. ) Tdin gaeppoue mine-en-senne was ip all | will come when he wil be knighted— Ways wortny 6f tne event fllusivated | by the tournament, which was the re- | turn from Spain In 1713 of the Empress | Elizabeth Christina, wife of Charles Vi. and mother of the grand Austrian run over hill and flelduntil the body {s dried by its own warth. Then follows breakfast of Knepp pffee and Knelpp bread. and after the Feceding gambols glad enough he 1s, 1 ah told, to partake of these viands, t «|. Mvery city in wiathevar ooaiay Ht | Ibound to have itwow| parteumr pest. | |Vinona has a pan adi a eectwws ony. | It 18 unique and allherown—a pest mat | does not figure in te gtegory of Egyp- an plagues. Who hae rea ahedelehts tatters of Jane Carlyle withut beng moveu w pity for this charting woman as she | records the details ¢ her annual spring- time war waged agaist this prolific en- |emy? It would seenthat being the wife of her husband migh have sufliced for the | discipline that mortis, especially wom- en, are supposed toveamire, Aa it ris egotism and nerves and tobacag grt | sreen ten and adjeovieg of her teu hold were not enous) without the ered | addition of the Cimelestamartus’ Now, if only Jane Grlyle had chanocé to live in Vienna itntead of Chelsea! |For in Vienna a wa, out of it has at lust been found. It 1 another instance of the hour and the mn. The pest became inbearable, the man appeared. ‘The method of procedure {s this: You write @ polite note to ir. X.—at present watn Mr. X. bat be assure? the day Then at teas, he will be ribbed -¢ buttoned and, unlike many thu decorated, he will deserve his honors, Mr. X. receives your sote. He replies on handsome note-papr, duly mono- Empress, Marla Theresa, ‘The splendor of the entree was tm-| posing. Count Francia Collorero, in| scarlet and gold, carrying a banner of great historic Interest and value, for it had seen service In the war of the Suc- cession, headed the procession. Forty | trumpeters in green followed, with | Count Schoenborn at their head. He | His horse was led by two heralds, the canopy under which he rode being held at the four corners by heralds. This canopy was a marvel of richness in color and em- broldery—always the intermingled black make the Austrian col- All of these rode superb horses from the Em- peror's stables. | As on all other occasions In which the part that Hungarian touch uniform provoked the in the greatest admiration, Imagine a stalwart, in form, a Hungarian cap with the eagle's gor, feathers at one side and the leopard skin thrown over the unto the grace with which the Spanish woman Aisports her fan 1s that with whic Hungarian officer dons his leopard skin. No Worth, no Doucet could better com- with a feeling that he has had you and | prehend the lines of grace than do he respecting this national adornment. on his mind ever since you and he| It {s atriumph—an d the fine, ancient parted yesterday. yellow boots, green and silver uni- left shoulder. Like mantilia and the wears her lace parbarie warrior touch in it! At every high function tn Austria in which the without breathing, back to the outside military figures (and in what does {t for a breath, then to another window, not?) {t 18 the Hungarian officer who 18 thus opening every door and window in the most marked. Of course the costumes of the chief impersonators were of the period in floor and from the coverings of the fur- which the event commemorated took niture, which I had forgotten to speak place. The Countess Clary-Kinsky tm- of, the unconscious remains of myriads personated the Empress Elizabeth C tina, satin she wore a gorgeous one of pink brocade covered with eries in gold and diamonds—a crown of gold and diamonds on her head and her a calmne: whole person glittering with precious stones, ‘hris: Over an under robe of pale blue richest embrol1- At this pageant Emperor Francis | sided gracefully and with an| One "The gramed, that he will have the honor to | be of service to you pofessionally at such an hour of such aday. The hour arrives, Mr. X., in fine attire—top hat, kid gloves—appears. He arrives in @ carriage. Save for a smal) leather hand- satchel, he would be taker for a formal visitor, The small bag contain of it.” Mr. X. politely requests you to remove the “way out from the apartment all articles of brass | or copper and to betake yourself another habitation for the space of twenty-four hours, He speaks in low tones, but with a certain professional firmness. You follow his suggestions and depart. ‘This ts what then takes place: Having plugged e crevice of each window and door, assistants come with small furnaces. One is placed in every room. These are lighted, and a certain substance, best known to the “Profes- 1s set burning on each, enough of {t to last the twenty-four hours. ‘Then he departs, locking the door and plug- ging the outer door from the outside. At the end of twenty-four hours you return, Herr Professor appears on the moment. You are somehow Impressed to yours, down to the very least of them, He unlocks the door, enters, rushes to the nearest window the apartment, Then he proceeds to brush from the HOHOES FROM THE PROPLE, “ Hannele” and the Like, RAltor of The World: one ridiculous fuse recentiy made ever the sroduction of the allegorical “dresge wipe exiled “iiaunele” affords anoting nye fostinve Of people who wif strata at a gnat and swallow a camel, pew vad tinwn, theatrical repress tations of religious subjects, or thowy introducing sacred characters, are not deemed {mplous and blasphemous in Aeemany, The drama of ise notable example ot this, I do net refer to Gounod’s opera or Berlloz's oratorio, but to the original work as Goethe wrote it, which has often been produce@ at the German theatres In this city by such ac as Friedrich Haase, Bernat nd, Ludwig Harnay. The prow gue represents the Al« miles ig #ting in the clouds ag saAganded and ty his angels, hoidlae & vonversatio. with the devil (Mephietormpales), very much after the manjer of, od and Satan in the Rest chapter ty she Book Job. TI ivy of Hor jl pm has been several thm Fiapersonnted gre by an actor nam Gerold, ank f notice w taken ' of the’ matter, thc Irving—who, 4 the way, 1s n Mephistopheiey in. London — 1s. sal have remarked during one of his visit to Ameri: + Would be a hundr years befor a scene could be eme ed in an st theatres arah Ter impersonated tt Virgin, Mar and the play “The Mise years by Wilson Barrett, introduced Death the Devil as two of the, principal char= acters, Franchett!'s curious opera e1 titled "As: yhich was performed a tho Metropolitan (Qpera-House during the last season of German opera, had » scene in hell exhibiting the devil and. tho tortures uf the damned, followed by one in, he depicting the joys of thy blessed. After all this "Hannel pears quite commonplace. ork, May 3. n 29 American Consuls in Russia, ‘To the Editor of The World: My attention has been called to article in ‘The World bearing on th above subject. I can add my person] testimony as to the inefficiency of ty American consular service, I am |Americun doing business in Mosco The American Consul for that city sides in Frankfort and ts never in Mowe He delegates his duties to a Vice 1, who is not_an American citizen, dutics In 4 most per= causing great Incons Many of been, seriously incon 4 result of these conditions, Siates Government ought to, ‘ons The United be able to pay for a competent JAMES © New York, May 11, “ Avorage” Savings Bank Deposits. To the Editor of The World | Your editorial of May 9 on “Savings: Bank Deposits" is apt to be misleading unless further elucidated. In this State such deposits are exempt from taxation and usually pay from 3 to 4 per cent. interest. Owners of large amounts of cash can and probably do take advan- tage of this favorable situation and di posit In many banks up to the full Imig allowed. The fact that more than hat@ of the aggregate amount of dgposits are in New York and Massachusetts, where there is likewise the greatest concentra. tion of capital, Indicates that capitalists, own a very large share of the total de= posits. “Therefore the average amount credited to the great majority of de= positors must be fur less than the $369.68 which you cite. During the Con) of Cimex lectularll into dustpans! By all means remain yourself outside until this ts done, as the sight would fur- nish materlal for many a nightmare! As for Mr. X., he does hls work with and Intelligence that are admirable. And the upshot of it all is that never will you see one solitary Persistent Cimex lectularius from that day. ‘The cure ts guaranteed in the handwriting of the “Professor” himself, and the charge made for all this—in- sional campaigns the apparently Aree average deposits In savings was clal ug a triumphant vindication of the ¢} of Protectionists. And yet hardl: the pressure of hard times generall than this “average” vanished and (mat numbers of willing workers beca: b= | jects of charity, thus demonstrating th utter fallacy of such deductions, Will not The World use its unrivalled’ factl. Itles to still further Investigate exe plain this glaring contradiction of avers ages by indisputable facts? ALFRED J. WOLF, Brooklyn, May 9 Tho World's Service. To the Faltor of The World: Whatever rea 18 i ns Boss Croker m women only, which mone: murdered Ross, The Governor has al-| last story you told I thought was quite|quadrille of the heralds was a notable PER DAY FOR SECOND TWO MONTHS OF 1894, 459197 Tas Worn has discovered another fraud now being perpetrated, a fraud upon the city and a fraud upon men who would have bid for a city con- tract but for the misleading terms and the scandalously loose construction of a contract. The fraud is in the crib-work of the mew Speedway. Its beneficiary ja Janes D, Laany, the contractor who in eo many other cases has been per- ‘mitted unognal and unjust advantages in the matter of municipal contracts. The story is fully told in our news columns, with facta, figures and meas - uroments collected by skilled persons, The profit of the fraud to Leany— unless he has to divide it with some- body—is estimated at from $17,000 to $34, 000. The Speedway is to be built, as the law prescribes, with two full-width sidewalks throughout its length. The Park Commissioners dnnounce that they have decided to obey the Jaw, and thus 3s ended in the only right way an effort, long and obstinately continued, to ex- @lude the people, who pay for this great public work, from the privilege of enjoying it. Corporation Counsel McDonaiv, of Brooklyn, in an official opinion re- ‘quested by Mayor Scuseren, holds that it is not legally the duty of the local authorities to prevent pool-selling, bookmaking, &c., upon the roge- courses of incorporated racing assveler tions within that city. The recedi de cision of the General Term of the Ca: of Common Pleas in this county declaring ‘the Ives law to be contrary to the Con- stitution and void was rendered in a civil case, and does not affect the ex- emptions from criminal penalty in pnecific cireumstances made ir ty law. Fi bretng On the track at the Area! (vem ever Brooglyn course next Tues - “dar ‘i! not be interfered with by offi- ieee wens oie “Bate with betting as practised since .: bat law was enacted in 1387, Deotetar Chere will be no interferenso anywhere iv tha ad » ~The enactment of the Prescott Libel ~ caelww .will go far to dry up one of the “© “worst and most fruitful sources of libel - 4 tous publication. No one who has not control of newspaper enterprises f the extent to and the most abject degradation that incompetency and breach of trust have ever brought upon a people. Holding such views, we may atill recognize the desirability of excluding criminals and of protecting our own people from the attempts of other na- tions to unload unproductive consumers upon us. Weare not afraid of paupera who are merely poor enough to be will - ing to work. Such paupers have made America what it is; have given it its iystem of free government; have cre- ated its wealth ; have forced its progress, It is only the criminal and the unpro- ductive, the incompetent pauper, against whose presence in America we have any reason to protest. Population and demand, population and production, population and prog- ress, population and higher civilization are all indissolubly connected, Only as men increase and press upon each other is the higher intellect, the inventive genius of civilization developed. ‘This ig @ truth that cannot change for any act of Congre: Tt governs and it always will govern the destinies of nations, We need more population in America, And we need more moderation, A MEMORIAL TO TENNYSON, It was in the United States that Texwyson’s fame first began to spread among the people. Like many other British writers America held him in higher esteem than the mass of his own countrymen, and even now more copies of bia works are to be found in the bute. ot 164 country chan in the homes oF aw ee «She Crown of England mafia biyn iarreste and a baron, but the people of Awerica paid tim the higher aibute of reading and appreciating him’) i A menorind jis to be erected to th” | ereas port on a spot he loved well, Iti. wa Use Oatest point of the down on which he often walked and which sep- arates the woods of Furringford from the sea. The memorial is to take the place of the ‘' Nodes Beacon,’’ which is known to all mariner. It i¥ ta he Qremt yranive cross, bo Wii pe vietbly fete @ tong UISUACO X 9ER OF C.1 BOIS, and will be in full view of every ship that enters the Needies. It will be aitica the ‘! Tennyson Beacon, ’’ ag seaeva whe loved the poet and Iwho wead and eniay his works are asked to contribute to this memorial, It is not because their subscriptions are because it is hoped that the memorial may be the expression of the English- speaking peoples on both sides of the ocean, aud that the inscription may | Mrs, needed that this request is made, but | she pre- tended to invest in ways enabling her to pay enormous rates of interest. She paid interest out of deposits. When her Bystem was exposed she went to jail, and hundreds who had trusted her with their all lost it. But she deluded only women, and in all discussions of her case it was as- sumed that #he could not have made such fools of men, Braprory has made such an assumption ridiculous. By claims and promises qnite ay preposterous she has induced hard-headed men to put} | their money in her hands to the aggre = gato amount of hundreds of thousands | of dollars. It is ali gone and they are revealed to themselves as dupes of an impostor, and a woman impostor at that, | Mra. Braprorn's distinction is that she has demonstrated that credulity in financial matters is not a matter of Kex. | Even when money is involved men are | just as gullible as women. BRECKINRIDGE'S DUTY. We are willing to concede that Col, Breckisnivar may be sincere in the abhorrence he expresses for his vicious and criminal course in the past, It is not unnatural that he should} desire to escape the worst: consequences | of his misconduct mat shouid seek a re- jlestiea oe Congress us a sort of pardon | or condonation from bis constituenta, | Butin this matter, as in his choice of |defense in court, he is clearly the vie~ tim of bad advice. In thrusting him- | self upon his district a8 a candidate for ress he must himself see that he is |foreing an issue which earch fail to! | work grievous harm to the morais of tne | Jcommunity. He is forcing upon the excited attention of wamen ae anclean | matter, from the consideration af which y pure women should be spared, He is conducting a campaign which, if pres- ent indications are not deceptive, can - not be carried on to its result without bloodshed, and as it is his insistent can- didvay alene witich areates this copti- tuon by will ne Aimnealf reepgnsible tn } morals for ali che bivodshed as well as for the demoralization and degradation already wrought in the popular mind, Mr. Bkeckinaipox can pat an end to all thisat once. He has only to with- idraw from a coniese apoa whieh he ought never to have entered, — If his ) repentance is sincere, if it is anything more than regret at being found out, it inust carry with it # desire to make atonement, or at the least to avoid do- ready done his best for the criminals by refusing to interfere with the District- Attorney's oflice, which is a part of the Murphy machine. But much can be accomplished by vigilance, especially if the jury be incorruptible, ‘The citizens | of Troy are to be congratulated that | there is the prospect of securing a fair trial for these ruffians. When Mr. Croker warns against “the disastr us consequences of a divided responsibility in the city gov- ernment!’ he is no doubt inspired by the results of the double-headed dis - trict-leadership policy instituted a little while ago. Tammany has been grow- ing weaker ever since, Col. Brrceinrinar is now engaged in rebuking all Christians who are not ready to extend Christian forgivencss to him when he confesses his sins from thestump. But there is nothing in the Christian religion making a confession of sina title in fee simple to a $5,000 ottice, Mr, Axprew Carygats will trouble himself with the details of busi - ness now that he has ‘taken a beauti - ful seat at’ Buckhurst, near Whitting- ham, Sussex, '’ He will leave his able and disinterested employees to plug blow -hoies on their own responsibility. When the mountain of geform labors, with Gonaay as the midwife, ase prod - uct seems to some nothing more tua a mouse, way with mosquito. it it would have been a How many able and affable gentle- |menare there in ‘Tamimany Hall who feel competent to extract a iniilion and ‘a racing stable from the profits of a few years as dictators of New York politics? It's acomfort to believe that all the | Democratic Senators who are serving [the trusts may be left at home at the |nes’ epyertunity without having the \air * Bad rith plaints of poverty, As has been remarked before, the Senate Tariff bill is reform with whiskey and sugar gout in both feet. It is worse than anything but delay in dis- posing of it, Vote! Mr. Gonay continues 40 demonstraie his willingness to keep Mr. Sreruey B, Exis and family on the ground floor. Perhaps Hon, Tuomas Brackerr ing further wrong. Yet the worst wrong he can inflict upon the people of Reep is also waiting to become the un- willing victim of a great emergency, amusing, reully.—Chicago Inter-Ocean, The Income Tax in Europe. event In the programme, as each herald was a famous, skilled rider, Then came the court equestrian quadrille, led by Archduke William and Countess Arco; not | But if Brice had had his (From the San Francisco Examiner.) The New York capltulists who are so disturbed at the prospect of a 2 per cent, | tax on that portion of their incomes in excess of $4,000 a year should look about | them on thetr trips abroad. In England the Income tax fs about 4 per cent. In Tualy the tax on Incomes derived from {nyested property {8 20 per cent, But tt is Iti Germany that the rampant Popu- Hast financiers, whom Wall street abhors, have achieved their deadiiest work. In the Diet of the Grand Duch the President of the Ministry of Finance | has Introduced a bill providing for a pro- | cent, and increasing to 40 p incomes of $50,000 a year and upward. | | At that rate thirty-six of the leading | millionaires of New York City, whose | combined incomes amount to $75,000,000 a year, would pay $30,000,000 In taxes, In other words, those thirty-six ladies and gentlemen would pay as much as the Wilson bill proposes to levy on the en- Ure wealth of the Union, Irresistible Enterprit (From the McKeesport (Pa ‘The New York World of Sunday cele- brated the eleventh anniversary of its passing {nto the possession of its present reviewing lis achieveme years. 1t was also rich in Mterary articles. One of th from “Nell! esentative of her ecure the leading place ragion to the Capito affair, The World ts again to be| ratulated on ite ir istible enter- prise, and on the well-deserved prosperity that atiends tt, —_—< =—____ Mothors of Great Men, (¥rom the Baltimore American.) “AM that I am I owe to my mother, as Ch brave and loyal declaration of corge Washington, Yesterday the words were quoted both by President Cleveland and by Senator Daniel, They! are words to be remembered. Years |later that other great President, Abra- | hum Lince:n, sud almost the thing. Good mothers make great And’ the monument to Washingt mother is a monument to Anierican motherhood, ts during those ese last was Bly,” wh per managed in the Coxey proc to report the | wh a Right in His Line, (¥rom the Indlanapolts Journal.) "Ob." paid the ler laetrer, °S Beve ; bau cucn a delightfu’ conversation with! | thy werUoman you evr Pow to me os 5 10) Ge train, Fhe oebi me thet the! emancipation of woman had been his | Mfe-work for ever so many years, | “Yes,"" sald the woman who had come | to meet her, “that iy so, He has been a | divorce lawyer ever since 1 could re- | member." | Surrender, Not Compromise, ! (erran the Baltitore Sun.) QUIET ue oe ve word that erly describes what the Democratie ma- Jority in the Senate 1s now invited to do with the Tariff bill, Surrender is the only word that fits the situation. And no such abject surrender of a great party, | backed by a popular majority of 1,300,006 in the nation, has ever been proposed or even contemplated in any previous Amer- ican Congress, war of the Succes then manoecuyres and riages of which were used in this same ion. It was a scene of unrivalled splendor. All through these early spring months the grip has been haying its way in spite of the thousands of doctors the c their patients to convales from the chilly winds which come | gressive Income tax, beginning with 6 per | Stralght from snow mountains not far | hav r cent, on| distant, and which make the carly spring We mention In vain the Whistler, the, weather trying to delicate lungs and| Alexander Harrison and other pictures | throats. In this general exodus some | have gone to Italy. One reaches Italian | skies and sunshine through @ journey of | twelve hours from Vienna, Many have! gone to Dalmatia; many, very many, to Abazzia; others to Trieste, and the ad-| vanced thinkers—called fanatics by some —have gone to Father Kneipp's cure. This is the same Father Kneipp who a few weeks ago took His Hollness by the} ear—if the tale may be credited, and It} comes from high authority, It {9 related thus: Leo XIII. was {Il, partly owing to a lame knee, partly be- during an attack of Illness a little time uth in news and | before, having heard of wonderful cures! C4" @cqualntances in the monk-doctor from the Bavarian pine) forests, caused him to be brought to) Rome, and finding himself at the mo- ment benefited by his treatment, he besought the Holy Father to. summon) him to his ald also, ‘This was done. The first Interview does not lack ple. yy in {ts detalls, ‘The cure astounded “a Ye by taking him suddenly by one “But what are you about quoth the head of the Church. “Holy Father, tt 1s necessary for ms} tneroe to find out whether or not you are able | to follow my treatment.” Pope Leo XII, turned upon dery, Knelpp a look tit was a condensed mingling of astonishment and interro- gation, “In order to do that I must see first of all 1f the blood circulates in the ear.” And this {s how Father Kneipp took the Pope by the ear, ‘shut (he clrcusation was found to be in proper force 1s supposed from the feet that the Gevarian mee set about czring the laze knee with frictions and cold water, and the other malady with the black-bread regime. The good creature innocently observes to the public that the Pope's calves are the thinnest he ever treated! Whether the cold water and black bread succeeded has not yet appeared. The means of securing perfect health SOM g to the doetrines of tals much- talked-of doctor are ajm~. tmeits cr cold water turned for greater or leas length of time on the patient, who ts beforehand stood up In a corner whence no escape 18 possible; no towel rubbing thereafter, but into @ hempen garment sess in his trial. | clusive of the style and make-up of the man—ts $2! We speak of what our eyes seen, The pleasure of living In Vienna dates have | then followed sixteen teams, with golden | trom this time, charlots rich in velvet and gold; then four-in-hands, artillery driving of four cannon, the car-| At the moment when the cheeks of certain American high officials at Wash- ington fileted by St. Gaudens, and Glasgow Was reddening over certain pictures only then discovered to have been all this while immoral, we Americans In Vienna haus. It is useless to state that we Breat artists in our country, and in the Luxembourg in Paris. Nothing will avail. There the American pictures hang, and these are supposed to repre- sent the stage at which we as a nation have arrived In art. And here the mat- ter must rest until stronger artists make their work apparent and vindicate our reputation at the Austrian capital, Meanwhile France ts finely represented by Carolus Duran, Henner, Bonnat, Courtols, Lefebvre, Fleury, Detallle and other Illustrious painters, and Bonnat and Carolus Duran were here at the opening, having been charged with the owner by a handsome sixty-four page| cause of some more serious internal) ®'Fangement of that section of the ex- edition, including several illustrated pages | malady. Cardinal Monaco La Valletta! Position. If Austrians chance to meet Ameri American sec- | wrought by this remarkable Dominican| ton, they politely speak of the weather of the Tournament, of anything and everything rather than of a picture! Germany 1s fatrly represented, but. Promises to do even better In the au- tumn exhibitions, (From the Boston Globe.) Kinridge was his own worst wit- rs Tt looks now as 4i ‘Sere Golne to be his own worst anes. Kon the stump. itis own goescnes E Rurt him more th | 9t Ab voponents, BBE tHe, RG damenes Miranthropic Buren, +m the Washington Star.) It 1s at this time of the yoor that many people begin to hope the nex! of summer gin will be, a Hite, less masculine in costume, and the summer young man @ little more po. ——_—oo-— FISHING Bree! 19 Sportaman kz Ys. (But_Hope's & He thowwe Me ta: Ant oF wines 5 ia 4 Fahor chile ad: Cl ay Me, ee forth with 500d aptrta ‘ik heavy loads ‘But not with Ost iS 48 “cannes City Journal, re the waters wht Molly Used smile for balt ‘And caught me with « curl, ‘ovely, golden line tt was, never Dahed In vain; a terelod up in ity bos caunot Gah again: Atlanta Constitution, ployment quite pleas han’ the ‘hkloe are to blue and the tute” iat rays ‘Bet {nto the soul, Au must he get, and bare of feet must he wi Of the sunshine in syriugti Is the fish-ling conaecting @ hook aud « pole. Were suffused with blushes be- | cause of the shock to their delicacy in- | assign for resigning, the truth is that the attacks, principally, almost entirely] by The World, were too much for to withstand certainly are not member of \dized press. Ever honest citizen owes you a debt of grati tule for your attacks and exposures o} all that 18 venal, carnal and corrupt the debasing business of politics, &. » New York, May ll. A Disapoointed Workingman, To the Editor of ‘The World: | Does It not look like a farce to say tht Lor He pe | {8 a government of Dreveanig, is rememb | ple, by the pope, when It y y Were blushing over the poor showing of | ‘4! @ majority of the people voted fo} of Haden |I8 sald to harbor, Physicians are sending | American artists at the International | fee ugar, coffee, conl, rie and wo! ? eat a distance | Exposition of Fine Arts at the Kunstler- | It Is @ shame to see our United States Senators dickering with the Sugar Trust | and other corporations on the tariff quese tion and acting ae if they wanted to wart the will of the people. Democracy ape posed to mean laws for the greatest of the greatest number, Seven-eigh! of the men of the whole of the United Btatos are workingmen, f these articles were free of duty each could buy so much mo! with his money. Wages are down abot as low as they can be and @ man be abl | to live any way decent, | All the Democratic news! apers in 11 elty and country told us before last Press {dentlal election what a good platform the Democratic platform was, and they were very loud In their praises of it. Why a they not all raise a howl that will reack Washington anu cause the United Statey Senators to give the majority of the peot ple what they voted for? You are alt very bold and outspoken for what Uhthe Is good and right. A WORKINGMAN, New York, May 10, To Prevent Burial Alive, To the Faitor of The World: I noticed In the issue of your vatua_ Paper of April 11 a sad account of ) burial alive of a young girl in Ia., who had had a tooth pulled und) the influence of an anaesthetic, fro which she did not recover consciousne but passed into a state of apparent deat] Two or three dayr H grave was ononed Qal ft wwe guna She had revived tn tem vats and stru sled horribly but fhetreywua iv, From ane, frequenuy oy hyention adtul pavuaduces in Tha t | the water, tt would seem. that ‘tare builily were not uncommor 1h Renee, waere hwy for tue Uiepo c ve been in force fe Yours pust. Yet, in face of the oxiseee these IOWA, LAvr eVinencty w oto of uneasiness tn the mind. of the publie | on this subject, for T have learned of the formation of associations In. @ private. ay for protection against the horrible fate of being buried alive. T ertee herewith 4 copy of a statement of the pbjects of one such association that hag sign formed among English-speaking | People tn Dresden and other cities in, "Vienna many people prot shnartein, reaver at their 2 thing betore waa SHOU row, hy r to make all sure t ae through any mistake, reviv ‘his operation is done fe shall be pa Reart in olen to'my shall not, ctor of th al upon lead ‘ara burted, at he does not mistake an for real de ath two police sap ore an present at the oncratine voy kets a feo of ix Horn walt wi learn that there Association Aca ai.” The ex vid ec on are either are carried ‘oy uneasine safety of and to make oF 4 Paris also Precipitate By al laws ag aply that the I in some ut in a manner hides 4 among the ‘peo burlals under ‘thelr direct Vienna, Austria, ape, 7 BU