The evening world. Newspaper, January 19, 1895, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 19, 1806. Precipitated by the action of the Gov-| 4 DAILY MINT PROM M'DOUGAIL. | AMERICAN NOVELS OF 1804 |The Bventas weeta's” Gallery/et} BOME GIRLS AND OTHERS ernment in ordering a search for arms Living Pieteres. among the known royallet residences Plenty of Good Ones to Be Found and the attempt to enforce the order at the Revieweos Mucw Where to Look for Them. Poetry and Prose from ai Them Which Have Come to “The Evening Werld.” the home of a prominent Royalla Of course, the enemies of Mr. Cleve- IRDAY, JANUARY 19, 1895. ants Administration will seek to hold the President responsible for the out- break, and will attribute it to the alleged sympathy he has manifested with the How tar kiseing goes by favor te tIlustrated in the Iiterary reviews of the year, which unite in saying that no good novel has been produced by an American in the past twelve months The To the Eéiter: T agree with your correspondent wherein {t {9 hard to find respectable statement {9 true, If we consider only the work of well-known American writers, the salect few whon reviewers, like Mr, Andrew Lang, rea but it 1s very far trom true if we take the new work of new men, of whom the reviewers will Bot hear for years to come, if ever; men who in ome casee have had to publinh thelr work at overthrown Government, Rut Mr, Cleve ‘and's course, whether well or ill ad- vised, has probably prevented an earli uprising. ‘The sympathy of the American people wiil, of course, be with the existing Re- publican Government, provided that it OMS TO THE EVENING WORLD were anxious to let all the world eee et one time just how many golden ecirclets | you possess, You who have the beauty, of youth do not need to wear jeweiry— « @ little ring, if you will, @ modest brooch and perhaps a bangle on your Gown In silver-gray taffeta, figured with magenta palms and smartened up with cabbage bows in dark moire silk and cream guipure work; the latter com- poses the cuffs and vest with epau- breatbbrytalt ed amore al ht dd areco! aa dane let well as the bands round the|wrist, but not an arm covered with does not forfeit thetr good opinion by ture of periodical, which te far greater in mass “4 a ide|them. Do not wear a ring om your the Post-Oftes at New York os | arbitrary and oppressive measures and fan’ of even Maher order than that of books, neck and across tho skirt. This wide | the! _ > Materea at " i t believe, because Fat econd-clase matter, unnecessary prosecutions and punish- Publishing i@ @ business, and there 18 no money skirt is mounted with three box plaits | forefinger and do not believe, RARRY SINCLAIR. ments of a political character. in these days of keen competition, financial de- at the back and in front, and is lined eae anyon ates og think | | Se. SRANCE OFFICES: The point on which our own Admints- pression and diffusion of Hterary interests, im ‘The jo Girts. a e eg ltal ently aoa it cw | | WORLD UPTOWN Lt junction of Broad- tration will probably be justifiably cen- Introductng the work of an unknown writer fiona thin far 968 abs | way and Bixth ave. at 32d ot. ot that ‘ t- & pubject not of news of contemporaneous Interest, 1 answer to that woul! a | | WORLD HARLEM OFRICE—I200h et ant nt ene et oe oe me at the ‘ho has to be advertised to secure readera, tc] ‘This te the picture of the gambler and at would-be bookkeeper, 1 wout al | bon ave. BROOKLYW—209 Washincton 1. juirer Office, 1100 Mar Whe to say T think the telepnone girls are not im the least bit dirty, as I answer the telephones every day, and always find them very pleasant. And as for ringing soup bells, he would look Detter doing that than they would. I suppose that would-be bookkeeper gets about three per week, and the boss's old clothes, and he thinks himself somebody. He te only jealous because wan possible for Weyman to fight his way to recognition In England, after yeare of unrecog- alned splendid work, tor there literary interest ts concentrated; It would not have been possible here. And even in his case recognition of his ability came first in th’ country through American howspapers printing his stories and creating «© @eman4 for them in book form. sport whor Gov. Markham, of Califor- nia, appointed as a Police Commissioner nd whom Gov. Mark- outbreak, When trouble was so likely to occur the Americans at Honolulu ought not to have been left without pro- tection, although we should of course have had no more right to interfere in the present outbreak than we had to lend our marines to help in the over- Welsh Rarebit. ‘Welsh rarebit is another thing that ta much in vogue now that chafing dishes ' ure getting to be commonly used among plain people, and to the lovers | of “Brown October ale’ there is noth: ing more toothsome than the toast and nine days later. $$ THE GLEANER'S BUDGET. I Wonder if He Really Thinks He ircdlation FOR DECEMBER, 486,104 Per Week Day. For December, 1893, 414,253 Per Week Day. Gain Over 1893, Per Week Day, throw of the Royalist Government. ferring to the member of Parliament's maxillary process—said some pretty hard things about our institutions while ho was in this country, but he very 3,000 miles of deep and salty water be- tween himself and Broadway. In a speech to his constituents at Bat- tereea yesterday he told them that he squared up to a metropolitan police- man, who war using coarse language and going to use his club, and paid “Drop your hand or I'll break your Jaw!" Whereupon—glory be to*Batter- sea and its beef!—the policeman dropped his hand and bowed down meekly before British brawn, From this slight bit of information, wafted over to us this morning, It in evident that John Burns must have had an encounter with Inspector Willlams immediately after the latter had been Lexowed for three days. We can't im- agine any other man in the New York WIN Ever Wear Itt most violent exerci Climatic circumstances have com- pletely taken the charm out of Brook- master hand, the Lexow report was far from a masterplec Mayor Strong gave Mr. Platt's Lau- terbach the marble heart—and that same day it snowed. It 1s perfectly proper to refer to the jature as the Platt Politicnto Insti- French Soctalists aim at civil war, is @ good mark to mis: A Better New York or @ Platt New York—that is the question, Platt, it appears, is not only an easy boss, but the boss easily. oe It to thowe Inside or outside of It, by personal in- terest or social conalderation. This te an age of & The "nuws" in literary work determines the consideration shown {t, the same as in any other work, and this news Ja dependent mainly interest. As Mr. Gladstone's Iterary god-child her personality became news and her work be- came new’ not to be tgnored, A dozen other ex- amples, even stronger, will instantly rise (nto cognition, That Mark Twain has written a new book—It only @ business directory of Harttord— hows In which more persons have, of think they have, Interest than that somebody utterly un- known has written snothor ‘Vanity Fair.” News ‘and newspapers have destroyed the old-time methods by which literary reputations were made —for which there Is no reason to be sorry Ratural selection at work in evolution to @ condition, It any one doubts, let him read “The Daughter ot the Nez Perces,* by Arthur Paterson; ‘My Lady Rotha,"" by Weyman, and “The Raiders, by Crockett. ‘The three are all of one species, that of romantic {dealinm, as Ike In kind as any 1. @, has no bulldings on it—are permitted to lay only half a sidewalk and to keep even that half unshovelled, ungraded and unirained. There are examples of this @urt of thing all around the upper part of the city. And these csamples contemporary has exerted herself te the extent of @ page to prove that it is uecessary to be snobbish and {mpertifent in order to be @ suc- cessful shoppa in New York. 1 am assured by a number of womun whose friendship and opin- fona I value very highly that this 16 an utterly unjustifiable slander against the shop attendants of the city: that, as a matter of fact It tn snobbishness and impertinence om the part of shoppers which ha bred the larger part of whatever impudencg existe among the clerks, Dr. Parkhurst received a present of @ very handeome India rug with the picture of a tiser im the centre the other day, and he takes great Golight in showing it to the reporters who call on him by the doxen every day. ‘‘I shall take reat delight tn tramping on it," he uoually says, with @ emile eee T am told that shopping has been almost an the telephone girle won't firt with him, bat if he thinks they will, he ts going to get left. Something made of nothing, Tasting very aveet, A most delicious nd With ingredients complete. Rut it on occasion, Something made of nothing, Though ‘tte never twice the sama, And {9 knowa im every country ‘Where love has had @ mame. “Twas cleatly meant tor givt jut “tie sometimes bought And like coffee and potatocs Is not 0 good when ceid. At oft appensee anger, When words have falled to ‘Whether bestowed caressingly Or given just to tease. Yor « ‘will sometimes eave ese From doing something worse, And the lips that taste thie sweetness, ‘Were seldom known to eurse. ‘Tie the oddest, strangest mixture, ‘This something made of naught, with @ bright color and stiffened with a false hem simulating a skirt about three and a half yards wide in horsehair, edged with a double row of feather trimming, and backed with @ bal ‘of two pinked-out flounces in plain gray silk, Cabriolet bonnet in magenta velvet enchanced with a panache of dark feathers secured down with a cabbage bow in rose Bengal matching the drawn Uning. Mock Orab 8: One-half pound pickled shrimps, one- \ cheese with their favorite beverage, coed THE OFFICE BOY. For @ party of four use about a half Among the five best novels written Im English Life. JOHN BURNS AND CLUSBER ALECK. |fngiand John has apparently been hard| quring tise tor We not these, are by Americana Tales of Clty Mts. ane | _‘“The Definition of a Kien the tasse ready vefotp lighting 76a John Burns, M. P.—and these abbre-|at the endeavor to demonstrate that his| utterly unknown to the aristocracy of letters,| 1 am moved to ask by whal heart fea | TO the Battor: the toast ly beforg lighting aes viations may as well be accepted as re-|own jaw is unbreakable, even under the | whone attention ie quit turally guided whether | Property-owners whose lend fs aim prove chafing-dish lamp. In‘ bout a cup ale cut up the cheese in small shavings and add just a pinch of mustard, Keep surring with a tablespoon until thor- , oughly melted, then pour over the wisely refrained from attacking one |lyn's enforced pedestrianism, pou the personality of the writer apart trom the | become striking onge $a stormy weather, Phe Naan ahd tatu ade ee eet me two slices ae an } great American ‘nstitution, the New a merit of the work. Mra Ward by herself was] , ring womae who writes for an occasions | ‘DAS no great significance, must be taken to watch the ‘moment | York policeman, until he had placed) Although It was a work directed by a|noboty, and her commonplace work was without Tt loses halt ite powe the cheese is done or it will be stringy | and unmanageable, For thoge who do not dring ale milk can be substituted equally well, To Sweeten the Breath. A woman who adores onions and says she would eat them anyhow becau: of their salutary effect on her com- plexion, avers that the scent may be entirely removed, no matter how they have been served, if you drink a cup of black coffee immediately after eat- ing them. She say®, also, that @ clove or wintergreen cream will remove the smell of wine from the breath, end that she uses a gargle of camphor and | myrrh it she gets the idea that her breath is the least bit tainted. =e 5 eae ow Which ts not seen or handled, quarter pound ycod old cheese, one ta- === | police force who would yleld #0 quickly] ,, three peas, the first named being an unknown | unknown quantity im Brooklyn this week. The QOLDIERS SHOULD SHOOT BOTH WAYS. | and gracefully to the member of Par- It's real campaigning in Brooklyn, | work ty an nuknown American, and the others | big stores have been empty, bargain counters re- But yet ts often caught. blespoonful salad ofl, one-half teaspoon- jr | Hament’s bluff. HOW, books by recognized masters to which the review-| main piled up with goods and merchants ha ‘Which will not spoil in keeping, ful cayenne pepper, one teaspoonful salt, | To Keep Wom 1s in Shape. Sympathy with the soldiers in their a unpleasant task of curbing the violence of their fellow-citizens, the strikers, Mayor Strong has performed hin first wedding ceremony. The next thing to FATHER KNICKERBHOCKER’S DIARY. ers hae given praise unstintedly; yet the reader of the three will unhesitatingly give the crown to the American, The theme of Mr, Paterson's postponed clearance sales for a week. The trolley tie-up has mate Brooklyn women exceptionally domestic. ‘Whatever be the elime; For this something made of nothing, ‘Will etand the test of time, one teaspoonful white sugar, one te: spconful mixed mustard, four table spoonfuls celery or onion vinegar. Mix One of the chief objections to the tallor-made coats of women, made with Gbould not overshadow in the public| demand his close attention ts one of), c7 'N Wh—t am in & reckiews mond te: | story is the famous reireat to Canada which the a MIGNON (a Pretty Brooklyn Girt). | the shrimps and grate the ckeese. Work te ee Leni an Pave Gay, mind remembrance of the fact that thin | qemand his Rey Ae night. It seems to me that I ahail do something! Nex Perce tribe attempted twenty years Another olf road-house has yielded to the prog- Into the latter, @ little at a time, the | or tailing away with elmcet ev whole troub:e arises from gross and|UVorce, Varty politics must be sepa-| areagtul—that 1 must do {t, and that I do not| when the War Department determined to drive | Fes# of modern building In upper Seventh a How can i A iceatal anieerated apeve ge oway most every move- wilful violation of the law on the| fated from municipal interests or the {care what it ts. It 18 dimeult for me to realise 4e out of ite home In the Wallowan Valley, where | Th small hotel and sheds for « number of years) | Various condiments enumersied eye, [ment and consequently it deprives the, q part. of the trolley-car companies, | battle for a Better New York will have | that t am the same Knickerbocker who was! \t had lived at peace with the whiten for three |Known as “'Cawoot'a" at One Hundred and |T the Editor: i Sada se ' “4 cM tui Wthee Eating the coat of the trim appearance it might j Pre They: competed thelr men. under | 22h fought in vain, Platt has sounded | iately so full of hopes and good resotutions at| centuries, tncaune It refused to give up ite lands | Thirty-tourth street, have fallen Into the hands of | | ' hve two very arent Benda, who are angry at) gether ten min fore adding the | otherwise have. An ingenious device Be penalty of dismiseal, to. run the |‘ challenge. He means to preserve the | the beginning of «new year. My rocklesaness for settlement ty whites and move further south, |*he teareredown, Anew flat-house will be | 11° Cbets, Fea prayer e ag MU ie ot ee ea nate tae ie tne °F |has been made with a view to obvieNag : 4 y ot in of pe hei ® erected. less PEE Ser aR: Uieguisiand CANMeOUN Ce atteiet il takiomssbH a girteg cr: te Manly Chocdts | eee ae ee ae, eens ot eee seas) they: waver hu this state of things. It consists « @ t ever 80 nonsensical, thas to show themselves euch im other cities and by other hook and) votdie é é u It the experience gained by Net Herreshof in| S00 Jssing of the writer te nowhere shown to| BY Soon they'll have the city clean To) Ris atte . 8 crank as you are? MAMIE DUNN, c by other eoldier boys in the field we have @leacing Rricah cutters last Summer ahall enable Pep dieetdeadlsardiels For Waring! She Don't & I wish “RB. K." ‘would kindly explain the euntinns } * crook, might scrape together enough |iiving and active sugkestion of What | Ge builders lo improve upon, the Vigilant, we Betel advantage than in hia character work, Tt o. k reason for getting the Lexow Committes mized! age, N. ¥, | 4 men to make © stowing, | the Hawallan row looked like. may feel asured that the cup will remain oa this |!" Rot until long after the es Batis We Sty 8 SR OE ‘Tethe Matter . up with the New York Board of Pharmacy. It is! Some Queries for Simgle-Tazers, creasing irritation of a =) aacigh Garatsuticaeuleteonia weare, aside that the reason becomes apparent] The people waded through the el . In answer to ‘3. Rie" letter about Kiestag, | \.y evident hy his own admiasion that he 18 lack: !to the Batt fie would render the © | why the great chief should be introduced to ‘They said, ‘Street cleaning’s still @ sham," for my part I don't how any man can | torr { * had one fair damsel whom he thought @ great ; ee ‘Those New York Democrat who voted sgainat " f is week, and {a still looking for a job, he has lost He would have us believe that he bas ‘ F; Soldiers in s strike are crpleasent, but | ETievous mistake In failing to kiss the) 210) 0 to rebuke bomiem will undoubtetly | ‘MMs cup, reading portry, and writing letters; @. 0. LOSHES. | deal of—well, then, and only then, I can under | nai¢ hig iite, and the other halt ten't worth Ilv-! net down for himsclt - — oe a it ve must have these cee eee Pat bride. The woman will not be enthustas- | (21) 1m er to tehthe tle enle praccatey | Dut Aa we seo nim calmly waiting for the death ~~ stand the delightful sensation be describes. ings ‘Shocking of josieraJuotors hare te Wards gitar tase comme ane fer eames rt tic over him for that omiseion, by Mr Toa Platt as he rune up to Albeny to aot (volley from the fring party, amiling ht MUSICAL JOTTINGS. BE THe | Sicrtig whe we aes eisevior be ae le-tax } =? oe ch nid ursed ee Kingston bas bad @ Poor Man's Ball and Pov | do mot lack either material or writer tions’ Tuesday afternoon. The Americas eomposi- ed and Eli a! This Is wet j 4 ee cl ae * tat cede kent ne ere Time does sometimes bring ite revenge. A| str, Andrew Lang ant his confreres are qare-| rarity, Mr. Thomson will sing three songs wan taken to a drug store. A polleoman arrived | would. like to. ask | wey ¥ ‘ plumber'a store at ilighiand was fooded by & teas They seok only among themselves, among | written for him by J. Frank Kelley, called ae ac ain ie ce ie you a few questions te @ went—shorter hours or larger pay?) 4 groom of alxty-five and @ bride of fifteen tocker the monopoly of a few—Mt te the Inheritance | related to the awful Asher maiden of the hand puree Se peeltngealys Pa edi Daeg Boe Ia et State of New Jersey allow i jo tod grid _ - Freel aap cere ene # PAY Hien, rece Conn, | at insane Rewmazere hare made {0 oa The and An Olde Rhym re farteesar be pypenreliytoog tnr II a fan se 7 mysterious whisper art. pe mote, + Dow cold the waather,| 4 Hillendie mea Nap married Bie'stepmether, | s¢.tho reviewere will come Sem cul of the oleate Walter Demraeh sanennene 9 reise a im ee Acari giro alien) be ay that e can hare {ter accommodations larly where groups ee ere br PB be ushel of dead catfish removed from | they will @nd goal wor clever work-—quite | @*planatory recitals aint 32 gee ee ceee Sen Te re ate Genet Win is POE) See at de veer te ane sain areal ade acc ae einen nae SNivelungen Trilogy” en Monday and Wednesday that he would have to pay 18 cents for the une of (Jan, 14), and acted as doortender om the ‘ate | Vella, end tt would « aay Se ee ee care warm. | vorks ahd a vert aisount sore, amons the commen men | Afternoons, beginning with the coming Monday, the same from his own pocket, which, he claimed, unit {reached Jersey Cty; that is, T Bad to get a to bear that the elor . | The tuventor of ‘'Saratoga Chips’ has Just ‘ wear halos of hair. They | TRE frat recital will be “Rheingold” and act 1 ha 4d not me a On tome toa pe Meer up and clove the door at every station at which en enclioe aren 6 . ‘The only died at Baratoga, aged eighty-two years earn what they do Rot now sem to ete TT. and It. count, See Bublé teltotins 1A: 06 Al; Cie traln stopped, of alt and freee, M1 an : : . ee | feasts Lockport yearna for a cliy market know--that Mterary reputation does not depend, | of “Die Walkure;"* the third, acts 1. and IL alee yr Mat Ne Een daiagl There 1s no protection for women and ax er Major Joho GHUDCt, who was the frst mam to. as it once dtd, solely upoa Literary work; that the | ‘'Slextried:"* the fourth, act III. of ‘Blegtriel Se ee a aan “i apie they have to’climb om and fall off the ror tegtpentih os Mono wine | worne Vuet type for the Mormon Bible, Is very 111 In best ifterary work does not necessarily have tt; | the Ath, ect I, of “Die Goetterdaemmerung,”” end ee ee ad en thane ag wt best way they can, I wish you would assies E the aeed ot ¢ gest Compa : Vaimyra. He te over ninety years of age. ct thine. who eccare ic mow are unually only | *M® Aixth, acta TI. and IIL, of that epace-pervading charge me for it, Tay fold me there Wat 0 |e tw og ne ee een | 5 standa ‘ ae te P " m Hawa! ts ee ast: FAFA sof hesctinl IDEs aRAW HIM clk cess ee dl ves a fa J ter train protection. LPH. | eee, Makonal 6 milion aie Banal WOREDLINGS. thing to add to thelr work by which they attract yaritaticn, " Plotnela, Neg; f Mt imtroduces & new ‘ s BLILLy ko take care of its own i ee le fi fevt es siae suate wi) been Ausiatice man, afiernaon': The Future State. i ' Benator veryoudy ue Chicago clergymen have formed @ club to tn ta. attention. ta tt.and the est work of | at Chickering Hall Tuesday. : Sinaia Cat the Serctas inate cn woot Prospective, tlcalonarion, tne foreiga lane 48-298" may be dy aDsocutely wHhnowN MeN, Who | Uy che tenor ‘and Mise Fanny A, Richter, the| The Playora’ Club ts just what ite name im- ee Ab gekiens wied wk gas Five New @ . : walking aud taker Ww sux Fuourh France'e new cilef executive | guages by imeane of the phonograph. # without permonality to astract the curiosity | pianist, There will be selections from the com-| plies, Yet it 1# broad enough to include im tte! ine varia is, What le our future atatetsit we | onthe Pitot 4 ~ ~ ae r Faure, be cannot correctly | Five hundred Christmas packages addremed to % Me pewnreader ponitions of Liest, Schubert, Grieg, Schumann, | membership, men and patrons of the other arte, |1' 0°, "tier ine death of this life, or it we are cy| 22, Nom was hydrogen first Hquetied, ang a A BOW AT Last eferseG le ew & twWorby-two Prem}. | places im Ireland were held back tn the Boston Paderewaki and others, as well as those of the art of stagecraft. It was tence, beginning with the con | Nhat temperature? | Poe Often for lack of sumctent postage The book here clted 1s not by iteelf—an excep- see organized 1n 1887, Incorporated in 1888 and biack- pied requrection Gay’? And: what ta | Ho™ Has the Chinese language shown to be pee | The uprising in Honoluiu ix vy F won Carcinog Jadve recenthy getated divorce tol During tle past year "The World! has] Mina Sybil Sanderson has mad balled ‘Col. Bob Ingersoll in 1888, The ting | NOLIY Screbled ramurrecton day? And what that | ouitrty interestite? , Means & wteriling piece of news " hing the Brooklyn strikers |te « couple, and two weeks thereafter married | Mie attention to Be or six novela by unknown | lobby of the Metropolitan on Wod house which the Club occupies im Gramercy — eae tok el het Gam an padopairy Where are our portage stamps now made? 1 - wonder is that it did not oocur sume int fight Use militiamen, | te divorced wife, who had considerante pr Aworionn aushors dot one of whieh the covianere | nesmet to be S)ied with pevale whe Sqaure was presented by Edwin Booth, and the| Crit and param, the eclentist and Arheiae aa |, What mew derivation of the name “Amertea'® | ago. Jt would probably have done « wut to show avidiers are unneces| A rel have read, and "The Daukhter of Ube Nex | her tp Paria im “Beclarmonde,” and neariy every-| piayere tonk formal possession of the place on | hitlan And Pagan, the eisvilat and Aitelat. In /nay ben advanced? "the natives nd royaliets had not been | oat Kan, with the result that up to date 261 famiites| ersee."’ tasued In December, by Georne , Peck, | body considered that she was seca more advan: | ihe inst aight of December, 1698 One of the] ' ooag, KNOWLEDGE SEEKER | What recon has been advanced why mb National Jed to expect aid from the United Stat have beem found that are 2 and 171 thas | iH merely the latent, the ome that calle attention | tageousty. tn ERAN optre an Me, Uitaneee ree | senderest momorien that the Club will Bold, as thanksgiving day was proclalmed from the time ef jm preventing the overthrow of their vig) AN American man-o'-war could hardly | are not fo the injustice of supposing that the literary ac- | ist of English-speaking sot jew York | tong as ny of its then members remain, is Washington to that of Lincoln? rate of speed, thereby getting more trips for the same wages. This started the dissatisfaction which resulted in the strike, If the managers of the com- panies lad observed the jaw limiting the Speed of trolley cars, the dividends would have been less, but there would have been no strike. ‘The business in hand is to prevent end punish illegal and violent attempts to interfere with the operation of the voads, but when the soldiers are through sbooting strikers who throw bricks at care they ought in all fairness to be fetained on duty to prevent the ruffian companies from hurling trolley cars upon Gefenselese citizens at a greater speed ‘nan the legal ten miles per hour. ROW WE SHALL SEE. ‘The action of the Brooklyn authorities ‘The Board of Aldermen propose to see that street cars are properly lighted and heated, and that through cars are run over estublished routes. If the compa- nies du not dissuade them from thetr Intended course, and they succeed in bringing about the proposed reforms, the public will call chem blessed. ‘The killing of a bystander by a Bergh Soctety agent, who was trying to put an end to a moribund horse, reminds us once again that {f some men must han- dle deadly weapons they should be re- stricted to the use of the Aztec maqua- huitl or the prehistoric stone hammer. At any rate Seely, Carter and Quigley have each set this mu-h of a good ex- fan in cracking among my immediate friends | Jokes about the aituation and about my desperate straita, which I know to be unseemly and out of Keeping with my fatherly dignity. But I know that this ts all the reaction from & state of depression, And I know that follow- | Ing It will come deeper depression till, before a} better and healthier reaction, When thie later| tate cr I ahall again feel impelled to do Something, but not, then something dreadful, 1 am ashamed to write again that tt te that follow Platt who 1s the cause of my troubles 1 wrote yesterday of hie victory In his own party struggle for the County Committee, Also that 1 feared the worst regarding hie possible control of the Lexow Committes, That Committee's report ame out to-day and it wae Plait and Platt and Platt even to the last punctuation mark. It went m0 far even as to betray a thinly velled respect for Platt's late partner in political deals, the de- the story Is Chief Joseph, who led the retreat, and the heroine 1s his daughter, educated in the East and a teacher in an Ohio seminary, who folned her people on the day the troops moved upon them. Attacked by General Gibbon, they jught thelr way through hie lines and escaped; attacked by Sturgia, they beat him off, capturing hia machine gun. When within a few miles of the border line, beyond which they were men and cltlzens—our naturaltzation laws forbid the admission of @ treaty Indian to cittzenship—they were surrounded by Miles, whom they held at bay for days with thelr captured machine qun, untit Gen. Howard came up, and the half-atarved handful of the nation that atarted surrendered with all the honors of war under Howard's pledge that they should return to thelr old homes and be protwcted in their rights—a pledge repudiated the noxt day by the War Department and supple mented by orders to shoot the chief who had or raised hia hand against a white man except his own life, ‘This march from the Valley of the Winding ‘The Elevated Railroad people, an employee tells me, expect to have thelr middie track in use for xpress trains next week all the way from the Fourteenth street to One Hundred and ii teenth street, in Ninth and Eighth avenues. At Present there is an {nterruption from Forty- second street to Fifty-ninth. Much better tt Will, of course, be possible under the order of things, Why, ob, why can't they give better lights also? THE GLEANER. —_— NOW WARING! (With apologies to the shade of H. W. Longfel- tow.) ‘The snow last night was falling fast, As through the olty streets there passed ‘A man who looked from stde to side, And marched along with martial stride— ‘Twas Waring. fad was his eye; cold were his feet; know of, and, in fact, acted Iike alsters to each other, Now, if any of the readers could tell way through ‘The Evening World” to find out the cause of their ‘madness, I would be very glad to obtain the information. Don't suggest notes, as I have written them and have received mo answer, ADA H., West Forty-ninth street. Two Heaux to Her String. To the Editor: T have been keeping company with a young man for the last two years, I fell in love with @ young man 4 short time ago, and I go out occasionally with him, though he has « lady friend of his own. Am I doing right by making my gentleman friet believe I care for him when I do not? And should I give up his company? THE GIRL WITH THE ROGUISH EYES, ‘The Light Yo ‘To the Edito: = Man Says No. dish or in @ crab shell. Good Form In Jewelry. Fashion makes certain wise laws for the wearing of jewelry. People who break these laws and assume too much are at once showing ignorance and lack of that fine taste which is at the heart of everything which fashion dictates, You may have rings innumerable—as many as the famous being who adorned her fingers and toes with them—but that is no reason why you should look like @ heathen goddess or as if you) spring stee) band, which ts attached t the inside of the coat from the side seams, so that it goes round the back of the waist, and, while keeping the! coat in place, is not seen in front. i Pastry Glaze. H To glazy pastry, beat the yolk ef P| |ege to a froth, ind when the pastry is nearly done brush with the yolk and return to the ovea to set the glaze, but be careful nut to let it stay too long, as it will brown it unduly. LETTERS. [The cohsmn t open to everybody whe has @ eompilatnt to make, a grievance te ventilate, informa. ten to give, @ subjax of general interest to discuss nothing, and “‘sumphn* for something. No, = Gecidedly, no, there 1s nothing neonslatent im suck | people as I. Bakes wishing to change the name of anything English. So go ahead and change it. ‘Yet the German, the Frenchman, the Russian, the Jap, the Chinge an@ the Hottentot will tell you ‘A white shroud covered all the street, A certain dark young lady 1s in love with a! or @ te end who can | ‘The Evening World” { im calling out the militia will probably |{™le? Having been caught at bank |throned Oroker oe Waters to the Canada tine, with tts fights, Ite] 1 ™hite shroud covered ait the Mght young man, but the love is not mutual. pebipapssel ates — arg tava Vas Weer eset Wise al eee ee be criticised as premature. The justice | TverY, each has pleaded guilty and not! me only comfort 1 have comes trom the tact | camp incidents, ¢ nelle and adventures of | Vn wnat will Strong say tf T fall?” Do you think her casei ti heosion® Kaed . am 100 words, apres reece mericang of the criticiam is doubtful. In such |*Usht to cheat justice through legal) tnat my new Mayor distinctly and effectively, andthe chiefs, the suffering and herolam of the ow ata Wivibe. ‘A VERPLANK Yours. | =" printed, Retere — a3 pace. matters it is better to be too early than |J°S8!i9s, nor to buy a compromise With|in hie own offce, anuboed the Plattite head of the | women and chiltren, forma only the setting, the es oe eniag en lAln ayville, Ne de too late. portions of their booty. Republican County Committee, to-day, when that background, for the love story Interwoven through “1 414 not th'nk," one heard him say, To Sylvia. tel I F ‘The whole tasue of the right or wrong aa Individual called to exhibit his triumphant bearing | {t, Dut what a setting It makes! “That Dunn would use me Just this When my love walks afeld, tied. Lire eas Meyecoaprpil ete Nonsense in ‘The Evening of the strike rests upon the question| Hetty Green says this country is going |ét the City Hail. More power to the Strong snub ee 8 ee ie Stine 1 te ‘The flowers walt along the Satis Hiealnh asia oll pease Jovuoh au4iat (tl World.” whether or not new men can quickly and|t@ ruin, but she will sink with the ship) snd It may prove contamous,, Mr. Paterson has told Ais tale well. The tn: Quoth Waring. Pappa we cd with two of more keels, or have the bottom | Te the Editor: easily be found to take the place of the| When it goes down, Our old friend Mc- § é 4 aun, y [terest begina tn the frat chapter, rapidly Increases! spewary the slushi"" Bill Andrews sat, nan ae ot, Tightly hollow? T-would have air forced through | T am a “regular reader? of “The Rvening strikers. If they can, then the strike is|Ginty mizht get up @ submarine recep- | Rut my thourhis ace faster than my Panell, 119 intensity to the last, and criminates tn the! sopproughout the elty tt will spread. Litera ddarylive siete the forward part of the vessel's bottom, thus| World, and every night I read through thie cole | ‘mistake. —| tion for hi e only knew just when “| inal worda There 1s no break, no drop, no : giving the vessel a partial bearing on air. Be + Ke Ice of ama! 1 don top han 10 He ool 4 hen |™ust clove my book for the time and let tie ‘ y ‘ ‘Thou art the falrest of ua all. re ir. Be tt Uma, and I consider myselt s good judge of ameall * is thay cennot, ten the com: thoughts go thelr unrecorded way. But Waring quickly made reply: ‘Gia Ulla nonerve aisieeuseteth cones “ panies ought to yield at once. Hetty was due at the bottom of the sea, i de : anti-climax. ‘The descriptive parte—the attackw] egy” Bille you talled; now let me try— Bupdl eal rare man-of-war of ocean steamship, with 3,000 square matters, therefore 1 do not agree with William The calling out of the militia now| = = = BY OTHER EDITORS. on the the visite to netttements, the tralle T'm Waring!" bseacab leading ncahabadgcd feet of wet measurement, my plan would reduce | Pursell, who says there is nothing but nonsense makes a fair test possible. If the com- panies have the new men they can run their cars as uscal and the strike Is Private Secretary Willlams says ex- Gov. Flower is not ashamed of his veto |of the Lexow Committee appropriation. Gould Stock and Water. George Gould will spend $76,000 on a yacht to over the mountaing, the dramatic surprises—are jadmirably done; but Ite vivid character painting Jin the secret of It faacination. Cooper bimeelt “Oh, stay," Throckmorton satd, ‘and walt; It'a bound to rain, sir, acon or late. And show that praise to her belongs, Because of her divinity— ‘When my love walks afield. the wet measurement to 2,000 square fect. Ral! roads will have to see to thelr laurels Let me hear from somebody, and have it tried this im the lettera I think he has been crossed im love, or perhaps he is an old maid tm disguise, and never was kissed, or he may be one of the! ver drew a finer portrait than that of the grim| But Waring thought of Mayor Strong's gout, on 1s can be applied to any veasel now Droken-down sports thet can't follow Croker'e | over. If they have not the men, then | Nobody will doubt Mr. Williams, There | race for the America’s Cup. History evens all set dacoriecs ciiet, who in yout had won his| And anewered with a frown, ‘Get out— Fapa Doesn't Like Bim, pei cee oe can illise: thu tretaat [barsee tm Rarops,. leita serv’ corn pemypoests thelr claim is @ blu and the strikers |doesn't seem to be anything that could |qhings The aon of Jay Gould spends on water | white wite from & half dosen white rivals, afte Teu're wearing ‘To the Baltor: mpust win. Jaaving the acttlement from the Blackfeet. Nor ts], tea }. McG.” |!m any part of "The Evening World,” and, whet j Had the calling out of the militia been 5 2 —Chicago Times. ‘ork all given to him, Each man in the Pi gonad » lea oapicapaauraad father forbids her to recognize om account of his fe more, it will not take any “Sweet Williem.” ( , Gelayed, tbe compan! s, by begging and| «me news about the Honolulu uprising Speaking of Cup Chances. maltty, an individuality, « hu-| 20 dl ee wid te dene | Dusiness only, what shall she do? Knights of Mortar and Pes Is it not wiser for people to ask questions, be they | borrowing = pathetic companice Gefeat by the violence ‘thisers. Benstor Hill seeme to heve taken & new Geparture. Heretofore eimort & Tecluse, he has e: last £40; bemmers snd dress ueckiics «. Plunges eimost recklessly into society e Gastpe:io: e st take auch a trite subject as Indian border wartare pr. Catus, end Sig. Rinaldiat, Bardoiph. “0 aaa song neat Yes, they did so here, And | Patch. ee et cor owl tiinn, Gnhe to acih spparsaiy, aed ome Mee een sherelot on A abe. PaO ere would have us think, why, thea, €0 not our ng fF Muner @: the they hadn't been followed far enough EMPIRE STATE BIT @ a story which the readers cannot reall Eapronenialivem: tyne t'GP7 White House come the party at becre- tary Lemont’s, ené last niget the New form of government. ‘The trvuble does not at present seein \kely to sesume any great proportions @r to threaten the overthrow of the newly @etablished Republic. Only one known {@ reperted killed, Charles L. Carter, was bere in the capacity of an commissioner, but several ere said to have fallen and to i Zhe trouble was make the ex-Governor blush. comes a little late, but with Brooklyn's Mayor Strong performed his first mar- | riage ceremony yesterday, but made a w there ta talk of @ war in Mexico. y¥ don't these hot-blooded fighters wait the Brooklyn trouble is over? One uty at # Ume is enough on this ere, “Tracks will go up,” says @ Chicago) ies he Lexow Committee ad- en the United Btates, What does Porto | | have own men in the ate crisiy in Honolulu. Leen more eflective than Hawall's the money his revered parent made out of water. ing Spectac! a8 Amistant Governor —Washington Post, The Senate's One Succ Gorman eays the Senate was created for the purpose of resisting popular waves The Sen- ate has indeed been a great success im resisting everything popular, has not done halt eo ell, St. Louis Post-Dis- burat pipe. Camphor placed pext to furs will make thelr - | golor lighter, France imports about one-half of its Govern- A powerful anti-Platt {» much more| ment tobacco from the United States, urgently needed than anti-toxine just now, a8 8 check to @ public scourge. John Burns says he threatened to break @ New York policeman's je Bince he got back ‘Tee Ine Age estimates that steel billets eost | manity that 1s aa rare as It 18 welcome, The art the reader in a young ladies’ carving the meat, sipping te seminary placidly from a dainty @aughter's eyeu aa whe stands erect by Howard's |alde, and travel backward over the events of the previous montha—then, know. The same art and cunning 1s shown from the first page to the last, in the amallest and the greatest things; but 89 carefully 1 it concealed that the book has to The British House of Lords |D® studied as a whole before the relation of its parts can be understood. That Mr. Paterson could jm as fiction, so vividly ts It written, shows thi the elect, for good work; but laiviigal the: world lp orudasd to's email aera \of bookmakers, who secure reaters by something | apart tom eny particular Interest 1a what they have to my aaa tenael British Pensriog And some ejaculated \——I'" (That's sweart ‘The date of the first performance in America of Verdi's opera "Falstaf?’ ts fixed for Jan. 28, Mme. Emma Eames will be alistres Ford, Mile. Selle de Lussan, sweet Anna Page; Mile Jane de Vigne, Mistress Page; Mme. Scalch!, Dame Quickly; Vie- tor Maurel, Falstaf; Sig. Russitano, Fenton; Sig. Campanint, Ford; M. Castlemary, Pistol; Sig. James Fitch Thomeca, the baritone, gives aa- other song recttal of ‘mostly American compoal- “Thou Gentle Fisher Malden’ (we hope she ts not te now complete It Includes Sybil Sanderson, Mme. Melba, Mme Nordica, Mile. de Lussan and Mise Lucitie Hill, HAT te make with Bessemer pig tron at $10 per| it i penuriovs in the British Government to | aumber of elgarettes made ta this country ia to bis Own merry’ sa00-0) was 4,817,100,666 | refuse to co-operate wit the American Govern- about im the Atlantic ocean, to the peril of Bavigation.—syrecuse Pandert Accorting te the Internal revenue returaa the| ment Im the destruction of the dereitcts Goating It @ young lady loves young man whom her DIANA FLEMING, enjoy Kissing any girl who will allow him. If “EVENING WORLD’ GUIDE-BOOK. aw 7 ot New ork--IX.--The that of the famous tragedian as he stood that ight and made his earnest, yat kindly speech Presentation, Among the distinguished men present on the ovcasion and now, like Booth Dimeeif, ‘‘gone over to the majority,” were Gen. holmting engines to pump air while under way | |1ng somewhere, for, if he has studied halt his lite | to become a graduate of pharmacy at $18 per Pounded many a prescription, but we hope for the weifare of the community In the immediate vicin- ity In which he was employed that {t was not without the supervision of the proprietor, for if after all these years of careful study and broken rest under the prescription counter he {s still out of work, he must have been a very inferior juntor, PH. G, N. ¥. ‘To the Eéttor: Inet Saturday morning a child was struck by « Rechristening the Langu: To the Editor: Please allow me to give I. Bakes my views of his proposed change of name for the English lan- guage, Yeu I. Bakes, go ahead and change it to American, Indian, Holtentot or anything else, thing, and I wish to tell him there is uo nonsense He who signs himvelt “Equity” undoubéediy | ‘thinks that folks cannot see he is @ single-taxer, men, but cannot let him go without a dig, which they should all get every time they bob their beads to the surface. In asking the following questions I dare say I voice the sentiments of majority of our people: How cam enough revence | be raised from « tas om land if they exempt im- Provements? Do they mean te abolish the cus tom-houses? Do they mean to kill the real-estate business? If the single tax {s all that ite believ. CHARLES CRETTY. regard to the law that «: rns steam railroads, PARKER BRISTOW, Red Bank, N. 4

Other pages from this issue: