The evening world. Newspaper, February 5, 1900, Page 4

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+ ' ~ Its Gentleness. “But, eheathed his sword. |AGITATORS AND LEADERS. “L regard ‘woman's 5 and sootety leaders in the of life as the worst en female sex, They that is amiable and kent! attractive; they rob her grace of cha in return but masculine bragen effrontery. They , Feb, 5A profound ren. has been aroused in thie city Goubtless elsewhere by a sermon yesterday by Cardinal Gib- sent broadcast throughout | te usually on the side of | the sword yesterday and language denounced | jo-day, who leaders, | the duties | rob WOMEN'S AlGhTS, Gibbons Says They Are Enemies of Their Sex and Rob It of and bere the great divine un-| woman of all eter and give her nothing THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 6, POPE LEO XII HAS AN OFFICIAL CHESS PARTNER. SOCIETY | ighte’ women lm@her walk emies of the ie, tender and of her innate boldness and are habitually OYEREIGN REMEDIES Preaching about woman's cights Preromatives and have not a word to Ess THE VATICAN ay about her duties and responaibilt- GAME OF CH ae ties. They withdraw her from those) Pope Leo XIII, has an oficial chess) physicn: text. and ited chess as! "Il know ail you want to say,” he re saered obligations which properly belong | partner. ile is Fatuer Giullo, a imine his chief pastime ther marked. “and 1 tell you that Bishop ¢o her wex and fill her with ambition to. ican monk | » have played ¢ for | Petrus, who first thundered against ‘warp positions for which neither God During his present iliness the Pope is) (Wen!y-one years, easy | chi snd the Treves Council were both NOE tialra ‘aver’ ialendad ‘tae forbidden by his physicians from per-| between them | mistaken. ‘The latter's decision soon fell “Under the influence of such teachers [orming the exacting duties of his off Father Giulio is a passionate contest: | ioto disuse, and my namesake, Leo X, we find woman, cepectally in higher | and his chief amusemen! is at chem, of |ant. but his adversary is always serene, | openly averred that there wus no harm Ciroles, neglecting her household duties, | Which he Is a skilled master though interested chess playing. Even the fact that never at peace unless she ts in perpetual) Father (Giulio was the entertainer of When Pope 1 ablished the gam Tarther, his adversary, was a | motion, never at peace unters she is in| Pope Pius IX. in @ similar capacity,| a* a regular some Cardinals fonate chess plaver, made no differ- | a etate of mortia excHement. She never playing billiards for his eminent em-| referred to Ln® decision of the Counc! © In fact, both the Pope and Luther feels at Bome unlens she ts abroad. When | ployer [of Treves, forbidding priests to play} hundered against games of chance, her | She ta at home the home Is irksome to, Pope Leo found billiards a trying | chess, hile preotiaing chess,” The| her. Bhe chafes and frets under the —== = = eee ties | Festrainte and responsibilities of domes-| a the |e life. Her heart is abroad, it 1s ex-| NY KI I indi-| ulting {mn imagination, in some social bond | triumph or revellfig tn wome scene of dig. | Sayety and 4 tion, Her aMicted } husband comes home to find it empty, M OR $ religious his-| or ccoupied by a woman whose heart ts Ld | Geny ft fo apparent that the part played| empty of affection for him. She is |!! e a SE Oe Gy women in the fostering and estad-| at ease. Hence arise disputes, quarrels. | Mabememt of the Church of Christ has! reeriminations, estrangements, or the + | - D Rene of tncateulable value. Taetre hes| last set in the drama is often divoree:|AN Expert Says Twenty Gourmands Die to! i | Beew the tack of supporting it, beside/1 speak the sober truth when I i. | | Gitte wrothers, and they have been carn-|amMrm that for the wrecks of families | One Tippler. GR and osit-sncrificing and \cyal. To is che eaeatty women has a large share| a ‘thelr af4 Christianity owes much, and| of the responsibility.” . 92 & reward for thelr fidelity it has! Its Eminence concluded his diveourse | “For every person who dies from over-|two cups of milk. two bananas and one| EX-Sheriff Hollenstein Given them of tts dlessings. with his approval of the exclumon of | drinking. or let say, the excessive! apple. My second, two cups of milk : P at Ro Congress as a| se of siconotice, there are twenty Who|My third, four ounces of moat and ott Saved Six from WOMAN'S POSITION uae” i , righteous act. Haid he: | perish from over-eating | of vegetables Peril. “Before the truths ef Christ were ac-| ‘There ts a ‘higher law’ than that! This statement was mad an Even-| "ts that your dally diet?” asked the! opted by the world woman had n0/ which iifts » Congressman into bie neat | Ing Worl ter by ane t phyel-| reporter ne Man was bound to respect./in the hells of national legisiation. It ts clan, of ‘his borough, who ranks as one Diet nothirg,” ejaculated the exper of a bondman—|the law which decleres that woman ghal| | of the experts on dipsomania. He] reproachtully 1 enjoy cach meal. 3 riff 1. Hollenstein, of Brooklyn, to hie commande and his whims;/not be dragge’ down {rom the lofty | wa" a wit a few days ago tn thelis thful food. | nfl vis home, 4 South Third | Of @ slave, owing to him her right to| pedestal on which Christ has placed | trie! of the sult of Joveph Wo Fuller ve you followed that die—beg pare} street, aa the result of a terrible expe- Hive; ef a toy, attractive to him only| her.” Who claims that he was forced to aign| don—that clase of food long® I rience yesterday afternoon ‘When he had no serious cares to occupy | away an inherttance while he war unde Bo long | can't remember,” respond- hree-quarte an hour he hung DMs mind. As = companion and a help- WOMAN IN THE HOME. the Influence of liquor ed the doctor, cheerfully es eo driver's seat of a carriage with mest she had no place, for it was the) The Cardinal delivered this exordium | One of the statements made hy the ex You are no: troubled With indiges-| 0% Mand. the driver writhing In con- Jew that she was an inferior being and|&# « parting shot to soctety and woman's! pert on the stand wae that he fad cures | yy, Vusions, while Mr. Hollenstein with the . when your hus-| been a hard drinker all ie life Th TaGheh | Withirel teu chink n of runa horses dashing a ] y, how great the change! Woman| bands and sous return to you in the, man is now five years old. Dar Fea ae ree rat think Ty ccomded streets | #8 man's friend and equal; not his| evening after buffeting with the waves ing pis lifetime he had consume r KAS Stas pith | In the cab were four shrieking women | slave. Her sepirations may rise as high | of the world, let them find in your homes | bar aiior, and his datly Is ali, ate othe: aver rh a] BY an almost super-human effort the DG bls, end in the world she may hold]* Haven of rest. Do not pour into the| was from twenty to thirty drinks HI atiilets Le helt Whe tlenbe | FuNAWaY's Were stopped a few feet from a bleeding wounds of the heart ¢ bof | appetite £ quor had cost: im fo ac aa by: sure death ~ fs high a place. In her sphere she has |} Be, Sathee ane dt oes Legg nig " Wii tiie Enuiaelaa’ stood out Tikal ay “on, oe absotute freedoin, and her bondage is solation your s , if wteel Wie str was re t Ne i cs ly with « ss @tanend, She has man’s resvect and atached | eg if f ? ‘ kable Whirkey never put the| Ma. and after the funeral services ove’ Sdmigation and he values her heip as 4 renaunine end is a. k enwth into those musctes,”” continued | the body of a friend at Cypress Hill friend. abound there,’ In def ts Joctor. with a proud smile on his | Cemetery yesterday he climbed upon the —— gies SS | sameies to eles gence gene Mall Nor dit overeating, either, The |X of a cab to ride, g ; nted to discuss the subject only AAAI GE ie apherits nly a] The driver was John Mack, employed e | | nublished. Receiving » ansurance| jin, ? di ea Firty-seventh street, Manhattan, The - — | # doetor eal Vir Gd et Forel maid Joce| Women tn the cab refused to give thelr Mt. Vernon Young Woman Found | te abs ques: | Hames : Wander ‘aaa. | RUM SHORTENS LIFE. i Oe ee : Khor! Wein she: seiiakeey’ Sleek 1 Attire. | Let ite fret tel you 1 bel the re. |lurche) forward tn an eptieptic fit. The SCommuters a: the New Haven K every dram hol * poured Into «ek hd ip ses oh pees te eee B Fad depot at Mount Vernon were sur e hums hortens lite week. in courtl Sap Hi ore ae ths morning t a £ Wo a se tinees toy y power are Wo CURR] oe Ee S MAN clad in ber nuehtrove come toward —- 4 physica pain tuaaA His poms 1 Phe station from Cottage aevnue fol-| rey . the individua’ rhe Hostile i is > Abele by @ crowd of men and boys. iter] Was Warned that She..." oy be a alta block fur Was hanging dows her back it ; : raked © CONVIN CRE I nn beet i Was noticed that whe had fe Was Exposing $800 e effect mn man depends uf of whtak ‘The ox-St pic up the . ed incoheren t = had ae cured four years a ; weir eA * bi ere in Bills. a nen there to ho. shee reins, ‘Then crouching, he pulled or q ton of Chest t a and is f whleke habie? ‘ them, at (he same time steadying the ron ol pester —— — i | y dear y. the best remedy is tol body of Mack to keep it from sliding te © the farhionadle x ay ar | cork the throat, Phat js the only | ty. sae . ° eae seme of Sa Jackson Taylo ‘MM Now, without conpoting it | re expe My ed her maniac, or offering a crumb of bo: ma Bay er five youth who woula 1 his brat tof 1y w sloohol ms query f 1 wih} Anothe +. Telegraph , Braged. Men 1. behind ‘ ‘ M ¥ er so" es from) whe wi Tame avenue ‘ ‘Sage 1 told strangely of ia and this morning, La n ened ie twe / ous the kuvwiedsy of the tamil me arth ise c « “y trolley car it the house in her nigntr 1 was ® ne ee The « * of. Ver-earine " would call sa . a Bae taken to ga ration of bag- [enduring and more permanent although A he abit wie tl nies en were entering port. My|leax manifest than those af irinw-| EASY TO MAKE HER TIPSY. pills was stuffed in the] ing. 1 will go further and be hold enough| “And I knew a lady who became tn of my Kenlekin jto say that the majority of all deathal toxt ifteen drops of brandy or At one side of me sar Mr ire directly or indirectly due to over- |" a * (e) OPR f | veiieve. ite « » the| “Bee here, ontinued the glasses, But that did not make | that my There | swinging around in his chair ts , t * | were 2” other passengers a signing | the reporter, “what did you eat or per 4 “4 the dentetons Paid Help j the bianks. 1 asked Mr. Lesser to help) “I'm a ight, early eater,” ¢ was timtdly inquired me off with my coat. He did so. Tiree | reporter apolaret My “returned th Wants in Minutes did not elapar vefore 1 looked | consisted of two ekR*. toast and fooltsh. “Tt tall yon tere ep 2 treat To-Day’s for my som. It w Thinking Mr | My tuneh, and potatoes. many men who ought to them and Lesser was ryt to frighten me, 1 And another meal before you, ent: {dont But you know, or perhaps World, | turned to him and laughingly asked him | inquired the doctor, “Now. young man, | ae ee or to give me my rouge 4 He was amazed, ou have over-caten alr . i you think @rinking an Inherit- | and assured me he didn’t hav | | “He requested that he be searched eo fow can any ne positively know? that he might be vindieat have such a thing Paid Help Wants in| . Thirteen Other N. = WLOw- | CORDON rERDrRS. 3 5) crocery x nl could get to Chicago. 33) HoverworK 4) HANDS . 4) saxtrons | KITCHENWoRK 4) MILLINERY A freshly painted sign Broadway aitrected th Charles Meyer, (wenty- of @ Kast Tenth street, ‘Let me see what ¢ muttered. He crowsed gust of wind bew the place and it hit Meyer, ti internal injury. Vincent's Hospital. wooet srt. j done cepted a loan of 809 f RUBBERED "ANDGOT HURT ANOTHER He was taken to St. |” Om the sign was painted “Danger!” —— DOCTOR A LIGHT EATER. What do y to-day? ed. | refused to Le 1 ae rom him so i oY suppose IT have TH tel you “L” ROAD BLOCK. 4 Brooklyn Locomotive Breaks Down aud Passengers Rewled About Delayed. wenue line of the Rrook- front of seo The Myrtie ye attention of four years old, to-day. hat reads.” he the street A board from its | t inflicting serious yn elevated nystem war held up a sec. ond time at 919 o'clock this morning. ‘The Dlock lasted half an hour. 1 Was caused by the breaking of a of Myrtle avenue station. |The train was under good headway when (he break let the shoes drop, jam- ming them under the locomotive wheels, The stop was so sudden that the pas. shoe lever on the locomotive train at the locomotive to be jacked ‘hauled away. When ne ote talway My first meal way spring.” Of course. there transmission of aualities, but 166 find manifestation in a tendency hysical and annot say that he to the al the bridge wus reached. carrying scores of passengers the full distance who Wanted to avt off at the Clty Hall, TRAIN RAN AWAY ON HILL, Broke in Twe the Seetions Crashed-One Man Killed, sev eral Injured. (Special to The Rrening World.) PITTBTON, Pa, Feb. A serious wreck occurred on the Lehigh Valley | Railroad near this city to-day, in which [Arch Jones, a passenger, was killed jand several train hands were injured, ‘The grade near this city is high and the (rain broke in two near the L. and B. Junction. Down tho mountain about a half mile the two divisions crashed to- car, was instantly killed, owing hgh t the piled ' PINGPANK OUT WITH PILPEL. oe Both Are City Employees and the Latter Held the Funny - Name Cham- pionship. Barber Process Server Held Up the Payroll Because Comptroller Stumbled Upon His Cognomen. NC AUGUST PINGPANK. scanning the list of Civil Service places on the Municipal Assembly staff. i, we can't stand for Pi mtv hold up the Munich; As- sembly payroll this month,” and the Compirolier went to luncheon, There Was much trouble in Guggen- elmer ofice when the news reached “August Pingpank.” “Here!” “Emanuel Piipel.” “Here! Jocelyn Johnstone.” “Present.” ‘Maurice Ahearn.” “Prigint, y'ranner,”” President Randolph Guggenheimer, of the Municipal Council, ticked off the tames of his office staff and closed the roll book with a slap. “Tam glad, gentlemen, that you are i that y would get any money all here on time this morning and ready of Pingpank for work Ahearn, who ruis the typewriter, vol- ‘The President ran bis eye over his staf | Gruen, (2 Wik to the funny-name bean Ahearn, when the subpoena server reported for duty, its up to vou to fie this up. I hat @ and appeared gratified at what he aw. His glance rested for a moment on Mr, Pingpank. “Don'd say anutier word August,” he said, “I wish to com:| plan alretiy. I dell der Gomptrolier to Mend you before these gentlemen for | iy name take off der rolls und you fel- ‘Bay, Pingpank, what I taink may be classed as a herote | °F, Msbace was action.” | except Pilpel. He still “T aim told by the Comptroller,” contine | ahip. Joss of the champion- ued Mr, Guggen| you have)” pin, M " of " pank hurried over to the Com acc feed a a tor the | trailers office and a4 Mr. Coler i. ‘our fe Payroll. trike his name from the payroll un: ou may hold your Job, ingpank, | |p be led "whether or oot he Now, don't thank me." Mr, Pingpank did thank the President, | however, and murmured something abor Ms being nothing more than any mi » Ket fally entitied to done and the his salary of $75 roll went would do. mM sacrificing man, You may yo now. and as the Presi. | Pingpank Is ponseased of much erudition ‘is sta’ away, Pilpel looked |for 4 barber He was asked to-day ; Whether Pilpel and he came from the me art of Germany Mipel_a German?’ he cried Jerman man Pilpel’ is der di on of der verp: ‘pa'al.’ vich means has worked mit very great diligence al- ratty ‘Thapy, needs some Lil nown, then, t pank Is President Gue est-server In cases wher mad» against auctioneer August Pin Imer's proc complaint are Besides serving the olty, Mr. Pingpank | This explanation of his origin was re- jamooths jowls nod trims hair in his peated to Mr, Plivel and he was asked arber shop at 412 F sireet. He to verify the chronological proposition. | is only required to report at City: Hall id Pingpank say that?’ exciatmed }in the forenoon. serve all thi ‘Perhaps you don't know that "t a German either. 1 Is Keneraliy able to | monks issued by Presl- t Guagenhelmer in an hour or te looking, up his family. tree He owes his appointment to Presidane | i that the first hereditary Duke Guggenheimer, who liked his. th f Hesse Darmstadt once made a journey first time he heard it Mr. Guggen-, W/th Marco Polo (o China. While a guest helmer is a connoteesur in names, as! Of ihe Emperor the Duk tention, may have already been gathered. from Was called to a very clever young China. man. Ping Pang by name, who was one the Ei retinue, er of his office. ie inperor saw the Duke was atuck is Mr. Guggenheimer's *'c fe held the funn ne y- secretary hame champlonshin of the office unt octet ie Teen to ey ingpank loomed (wo months ago, Its a ough hard to lose anything ke that, and) with hin to Hesse Darmeade ond Pine elt, sore: , German girl When Comptrolier Coler looked over | Pane married a nice little German girl the January payroll of the Muntelpa!| more in Keeping with the country of his Assembly fe spotted Pingpank'’s name So that's how the Pingpanks tsa ne 4 one He called Mr. Levey, his deputy. Who's Pingpank, Edgar?’ he asked. "You may search me,” replied Mr. ey service Job? queried the Comp- Mr. “T guess that'll hold him for a while,” concluded Mr. Pilpel. { i | answered om TRAIN WRECKED ~— BY UNDSLIE Two Miles of Cars Stalled for Five Hours on Central RR. Levey. to pase in either direction untit 9 k landslide came down from a large ankment on the eaet elde of the em tracks from the old Foster estate. The mali trains were aif held in the blockade, The earth and stone com- pletely covered the three tracks for a distance of fifty feet. RUSSITER ROAD WASH.OUT, Tracks to bat Passe: were Had to Pay Twiee, _—— The heavy rain last night caused the worst blockade on the Brighton Beach we heavy ‘ain sto last night Ce Te eine serinty Mi] road that {t has known since tt passed s}roud short distance north of Hast-| to the hands of Rossiter's monopoly resuiing in the wreck df] ANd became a trotley iine. ; i freight. train at a43{ Water backed into the cut near ik this morning. and the subee.;C2Ureh avenue, until there waa a foot [quent hold-up of (xo niles of trains, [40d 9 half on the atation floor and plat. The wrecked train consisted of thirty.] FM, and on the track It was three feet ; deep ¢ care @ engine No @& 1 Sri then sitend nag Pireman w,{ The line was tied up until 7.65, By thie J. Reagan did not see the blockade In| {ime the flood had settied til It was no a acs snitl Gham 6 twenty] More than a foot deep on the tracks and five feet away. The engine A train drawn by a locomotive was able sina: Ot atean abd ae A to slowly push ite way through the helaht went =f as hel bel : j Mine Hew Recital, Of a A eae ince nc] Miss Attemisle Bowen will sive lone teak Gavea "la Shakespearian recital at the Waldorf- toria to-morrow m1 cl the line for five hours, no trains beirg| Beggar’ and other favorite selections. GT iffenent Remedies for 7 Diet Dlowases, 3, 285c v0 Partial List of Cures: Clearing Sale of all our Ladies’, Misses’, and Children's Suits & Garments Tuesday, Feb'ary 6th,. at V6 to VG original prices Ladies’ Tailor-Made Suits and Gowns, Imported and Domestic, Comprising Tailored Suits and Gowns for street and house wear, and Evening Dresses, at less than one half former prices. Ladies’ Jackets, of finest kerseys and chev ots, single or double breast- ed styles, (blacks only), were $15.50 to $22.50, reduced to; $7.50 & $10.00. E Balance of Novelty Jacke ets, plain or fur trimmed, blacks and tans, sizes 34, 36 & 38 only—were $29.50 te $39.50, reduced to $15.00. Automobile Coats, and Imported Velour Jackets, all finest model yarments, sizes 34, 36 & 38 only— were $50.00 to $100,00, ree duced to $20.00 & $35.00. Ladies’ Capes. All Street, Carriage and Evening Capes, at exactly one-half former prices. Girls’ Reefers & Fackets, sizes 6/8, 10 & 12 years, only a small lot of about 503 colors navy and biown— were $10.00 to $15.00, re duced to $5.00 each, Misses Tatlor-Made Suits, Suitable for Logger and early spring wear, shapes fly-front, double-breasted and tight fitting coats, assorted colorings, sizes 14, 16 & 18 years, suitable for ladies, 32, 34 or 36 bust measure—fore merly $8.50 to $45.50, re duced to $10, $15 & $20. Lord & Taylor, Broadway & 20th 5b WO BETRA CHAROD FOR Ir. Advertionments for THE WORLD wtil te mm ceived ot any Americen District Messenger O@ep Penal Triegreph O@eo ia New York Chay @ (@iBee reten Coll o messenger Mf you beve o bam,

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