The evening world. Newspaper, January 19, 1900, Page 9

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)

a a eS an eT é ee sent Ps J WHAT WOULD YOU DO WITH A MILLION A Mr. looked Rramatis nary braeca but to Me. igh vette down the oom & short- rade, the U been | whole proceeding looked ® Otte a bets malice ie copes BY ROY L. M’CARDELL. SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTER fifteen yeore as an inmate ny Breeton, |Gon of the wanderer's Speeding and. ijt: j Still he certal ea with air Wenard Brenton! Gren 80M satisfaction Int the ie 3 f Fa i : Helen‘s fi Pine, het camenes * to write. them “@ gentle reminder id he thi ght it advisable tak the and he thot t je the x end the ts turned bri atria town 6 vireet, a « he vlained tq the police Wore out of gach of the myrmidons of the law or that bi. might bave was which he had thrown at Bove in| over the ‘JOHN SWINTON ON Spe very tnt,” be epebe efeet the jek Rearing penne err ce THE “HUMBLER CLASSES.” _ OH This Is Not the Country for Them—We Don’t Want to See Them or Hear of Them. ouppose that there are Englishmen fm Brgtand whe still speak of the “humbler classes,” but here is an un- newspaper printed in this city which hums and haws about the work- ing people as the “humbler classes." In & super-terrestrial region we can Yook for the “upper classes,” all themselves and gilded; while b- terranean locality, set apart Deters, we can see the Classes" destitute of decoration. Would you believe it that they are humbie! hold of @ coal mine, the: I that classes” are to be patrontond t way, Rot too much. aa ir tm more wages, if the; Printing-House @quare that a a ao ae ‘It tp enough te make the wool Sheep's beck stand on end. It is te make a billy-gomt butt the first pile it comes to. It is enough t 1.689 and much Jowelry. Bot believe it. The man’s at 16 West One Hundred street. GRAY WAN IN WCURE’S, Tt esome that the “humbler clases” or lower orders are the people who earn | their own living, work for their daily | Provender, draw such wages as they | can get and look for a bose tf! they! find one, It is on this account that }4 If they had inherited millions or a/ few acres of city lots or a ratiroad hun- | reds of miles long, or if they had got | oll wail of a rt need. to be| THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING: JANUARY 10, 1900. | MRS. FISH “1 have qrittet my guardian's rot and rks, rerounced him and all his have noticed in my interview you ma: With the son, for that man I struck en, i re about tt if y Pursuant 1 ithe dormitory, where sitting around fire ina bie fron stove was the motl FOF Any to quit his tl 1 his new acquaint. spiny alleyway, at] “I li oiice "he. did Lag! | eee] = and most {U-favered crew he ever be- (eral unkempt ‘longshoremen, all looking held. for work, aa the professor explained, “Who's de swell guy wit’ yer, Happy | completed the company. aimed a red-nosed. bearded A few minutes later there entered the 1o stood with his coattaile tucked |froom a suspiciously clean young man up warming his back to the fre. The tal th @ jovial enance. He seemed others present were rewarding the two Ithough his appear with much tnterost, and it wae evident @ delled the fact that the red-nosed man was voicing the ‘ked the professor away from the curtoalty of all presen’ stove and imade the crippled beggar ‘Dis Is me old col friend, Jimjmake room for him on the bench ————————— nee | Ga¥ing “Get over! Get over! you lead- "The iodoform-scent ° rit; t himeelf-on the bench and 1 pita. don't know who di rok th f ne len of ‘capected ‘an’ outbreak an assault on ti guardian. I have left a home where am no r persona grata for some Fearon unknown to me, and | start out pleymen to Bee if je get fome em- joyment somewhere. 1 am porry to aay it. but T have never done any work in In my Ui ind 1 afraid I have a hard row hefore “Oh, youl gt along all right. Say, I 8 FOU. I've given myself away and 90 wi * u that my real ois ith. I'm @ reporter and I have been fn this awful dive beg ten days on @ Dig ot i i Bot you to respect cont can G00 Fou are a gen- eman. Happy Hours brought you here, Jack nodded affirmatively. two chatted on various |cirele in the centre of veep on the n: er, lover and stealing your clothes.” Jack nodded, although ae was to have! his first introduction to such an apart- ihe two went to und se, wo Hoke |ane, Se, ee CU wee Sa ts Hours. And walle Helen Merrinton lay in her enowy bed t of tee ie Giri nat totkng owe f well-dressed villains—Helen tri was i ste MONBY FOR GIRL-RESCUBR, Jeunte Melaren’s Priends Give Her Money te Get Her Father Out pf Prices. The fevotion of nine-year-old Jennie McLaren to her convict father won for her a benefit in Bernitt’s Hall, Hoboken, last night that netted the child over 630 ‘The gallant fight the little one started, unaided, for a pardon for her father 9 neighborhood to feat him at ie pol neat a The bitterness of the war th Trades Councti tnd the Board ‘alking Delegates was shown terdny when the latter called Talons SMillated with f out on strike on Hotel Lorraine at Forty-ftth street feb a The strike was the result loyment of alleged non- and (he strikers ise * meinen Watts, iMerence di Not affect the members of the councli who remained at work. Four new bodies have now ta tives in the C. FU", They were ad- mitted by the Building Trades’ Section, and the delegates were all pledged in the usual order, The unions are the Safety Amociation of Engineers, United Plate Glass Workers’ Unton, Up- holsterers’ International Union and the an Coppersmiths’ Union. 2 the national unton of that craft and also to the K. of L. and the A. F. of L. against granting them a charter. The union is not recognized by any central body in this city and the chances of the new body existing seem rather ¥ ictal Marble Workers’ Union, that body which it is claimed by the and Ornamental Plasterers’ So- » to be intruders on thelr kind of been ow Jed to be- SNUBS JERSEY LILY. Declines Her Offer to Recite the “Absent- Minded Beggar.” Absent-Minded Beggar’ after all at her Gaturday aight (o-morrow, Mra, Langtry volunteered to do the | ( fecttation, without charge, but Mrs. Fish thanked her and declined the offer, | Kipling'a poem ts to be recited by a |young society woman, Carol Birdsall of the Iate Judge | @ I, of Brook, anda Grandniece of Daniel Webster, She is a clever girl, who hes just returned from / } Geesiecsicawslend eee | ed ee ing next Friday, Boys’ Knee Pants of BA — FF 95¢ $1.45 $1.95 teme reciting “The Absent Minéed |} Beggar.” ‘London, where she resited in Ambaam- dor Choate's and other swagger draw- | 6, ing-rooma, She Is to do the piece in khadl ese- tume, with Sir Arthur Sullivan's muste, ‘This is only one of the lot of surprises © OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL 10 P.M OTHER DAYS UNTIL 690 0:35 WHAT NEXT? EVBRY FRIDAY SER PHB AD, OF THE SURPRISE STO > 188 TO 146 WEST FOURTRENTH ST. BET. (TH AND aves. Mrs. Fish has arranged for the edif- | % ‘cation of her guests. Didnt Faney the IAly’s Werk, ‘The story ie that Mr.. Fish dosen't care for Mre, Langtry‘e work. Anyway when she offered to recite the poem be asketl hie wife to thank her and say they were sorry—such a lot of people em know—ewtully kind, 4 sid, | gaged, don't you -emeliing|#nd all that. Then Mrs. Fish saw Mise Birdsall, who 1s pupil of Boucicault, and is to join George Alexander's company in London next year. eal Students Pleads Guilty ta Court, Acting Captain McCormack, of the bicyele squad, had George McIntyre, of 44 First avenue, tn the Yorkville Court om & charge of grand larceny this morn- the tuefs were of such character that nobody was able to give & clue to the guilty one McCormack’s son ts a student tn the coll and was robbed of his overcoat last. This the acting the case & mysterious =ea gees om Flaked Rice; For Gale by Your Grocer. ae, Guide. BDGAR way, New York. te lect, to buy, sol or accomplish rum dotwa cdi The

Other pages from this issue: