The evening world. Newspaper, March 24, 1900, Page 4

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(Catetal eh fo Pe-Chen ot Hw Fort an Seowet-chaes Mel! Mattes SATORDAY, MARCH 24, 1900. + NO. 14,008 By the contract under which work be- gins to-day the city will own the whole rapid transit system in fifty years, By the Ramapo water contract in fifty years the company would own the whole city. Such is the difference between private work in the public trust and public works a8 a corporation snap. —_— ON RAPID TRANSIT DAY. | “Te Harlem in Fifteen Miputes.” 4 —Mew York World, April 8, 1898. «nd the people who go up there beyond the rtver —40 you kmow whet they will have? Room! Tlemed sunshine! Fresh air! Real homes! What - @ change for theummds who will migrete from the gRGowting tenements of Gowntown Now York! | What epentngs for thoumsnés more to whose hap- _—_- Pines and euceesn tn the metropolis our congested _ " living centres end tncomplete éransit eyetem have of the City and South London Rafiway, with tun- Relitag done by the Greathend system. Electricity furnishes the power on this line, trains run twen- “ ¢y-ctz miles an hour at three-minute intervals, | With capacity for 1,000 people each, and everybody @ets a cent. At a depth of Afty to aizty fest this tucael te “ery es a bone and the air ts eweet and = ‘The construction cost about $1,000,000 « Slatferm ctation in ffty minutes. thet will i Not a yard of street was closed while construc: Hon was going on, nor has a single building along the wove settied perceptibly e ¢ e ‘There fs no question about the material advan- tumpel system in New York. There will be nage PReeage at o speed unattainable on the surtuce, © t constantly, and well lighted; plenty of seats, Greedom from fog; an even temporeture and venti- Jation without draught; absence of steam, smoke, @inders and dust. No traveller can ask for more blessings. As to the financial returns, there are also the se ‘ssurancce. he Manbattan elevated system now carries Me 300,000,000 passengers in a year. Millions are carried by the various surface @ bines. It is certain that the coming tun- ‘Will canse a readjustment of figures by di- the long-hau! trafic to tteeit ly immense uptown population still ‘@welling under the rapid transit impetus a i ‘te the new line. @ubway eystem carries 60,000.000 pas- ee Bc cay imi 1 he bt yy i iii-i=: may e=-| BEAUTIFUL SPRING COSTUME (ages to passengers which will be presented by the || | | | year and ‘s expected to make up tts ‘entirely reimburse the city in forty of pro rata rentals. | REV They that eae Me worth an wot abumne 11 1 Aoetnehtans sfefelatelafelatetet THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 24, 1 DR. TALMAGE'S SATURDAY NIGHT SERMON. THE DAY'S samme mm rinieiona LOVE STORY. Uhess purest of f the drama as though ttl f ourselves is and the * |. QWritten & | ery eres « the prise offeret by The Bvening World to ameter , A HAPPY CHANCE, ec estabilehed, Leow iman nature f> lead you . t stity CHUL ahe tRUERaie Gab T THE crossing a youre woman Iaden with the bd i r purity, your Influen mr burdens of a days shopping was waiting for The amusements of life are beauti her car f x le. tak they enamel fey you for'th a A Tall gentleman who was passing rapidly by stopped 4 ir wow [In surpriee at seeing her there, then quietly took hie 3 to the drama of your life and mine, it will soon Place beside her unperccived, until « sudden turn on So a There will be no encore ty oring us back At| her part revealed bis intimate presence $ that then we attune our taste beginning of that dro ej ate wd al The woman was the first to speak, excited and s human inves horadle; at the end of ft will stand a qrave. The first *miling: . Not ata ‘ leome. the lant act, farewell. t steemediate “Mr, Baldwin! what brings you so far trem which Gor banquet and pbatiie, procesons trida) and) home? How + vo fs meen 6 gongs and tears. ‘aughter vod is New York, of al before gallery above ¢ , galiery | You know. ly a bove gallery. Gallery of our Jeparted kindred look- fectly worn out uses of wood, Ing down to see if we are faithful an after that in the elaborate tmpers, hristian ancestry, hoping for ov wanting —— demies of music to throw us @ garland. Gui martyrs look- DECLINE OF PUBLIC ke men responsible for it. They ere not re Gown! Gallery of ang down! Gallery | sponsible, They responsible for the perversion: the King, from which there wa scarred hand, | By F. B, Sanborn, of it, but mot for the original Implantation. God é1¢% ‘fond from which there comes a patherle votce | ROBABLY the most potent cause of the decitne | ‘hat work, and | suppose He knew what He wa saying, “Be thou faithful unto and 1 will give ef public lectures has been the great increase about when He made us. thee @ crown of life.” Oh, the spectacle in which of newspaper reading among the classes that| Because the drama has again and agein been ¢¢ you an@ I are the actors! Gh, the o‘led-up gaileries Atty” yeare ago went giadly and frequently to course graded ané employed for destructive purposes !-, looking down! T. DE WITT TALAMGE. | Jeotures—es other classes row go, but under very @f-| nothing against the drama, any more then musi * -—— | ferent conditiona Where one parson in ten read a | ought Ly Ve ese venues tt Be ee 9000000G80000000000000000000000005 tn my boyhood and youth, from sixty down | again and again into the saturnalian wa of 6.60 - ‘ ia ty Was ox, at least @ight in ten now read| years. Will you refuse to enthrone muse on the THE GIRL I'D LOVE TO LOVE. 4ailiea, Im the little town of my birth, Hampton| church organ because the art has been trample OR HE girl 1'4 love to love ts fair, Falls, N. H., where reading was unusually general,/again and again under the fret «f the iasctvions Amd modest, young, and kind a! more than two families out of one hundred aun- | dance? Her eyes are deep with love, and there sortbed to any dafly paper before 186 The exciting) Wholesale Cenunciation of all dramatists will never Ie beauty in her mind. Ntiend contests following the Nebraska bill agita-| elevate the drama Yonder stand a church and # tm 1884, somewhat inorecsed the number, but it/ theatre on opposite aides the ctreet. The ecnurch She speaks to all some gentle word, * not til the civil war that fumilies in gemeral, in| shouts over to the theatre, “You are al! offendors; Yet mever seemeth saa; raral towns, read even one daily. My father and all the theatre shouts back, ‘You are all hypocrites,” Bhe's Nature's child, just like a bird; hie rural aeighbors, including tne minister, the doctor, | and they ioth fuisity. To see her makes me glad. the local merchante—we had no lawyers—contented/ Dropping el! indiscriminate jereminds a themesives with one weekly political and another! dramatists, and realizing that the drama te And in the peaceful country where weekly religious or agricultural paper, with An ov- | necessarily connected with this | ation or with Sho sings and works and plays, caatonal literary weekly in a whole neighborhood. | nat, I want to show you how t matio element Her loneliness ts pure, for there New, in that eame town, slightly diminished s in our natures may be harness She treads not fashion'’s ways population, and with an infusion of the seldom-read: | civijization and Christianity a . " ing foreigners who have taken the place of the! sty idee of Christianity Is that 1 can and will cor eg eer oe eee ae aes migrating young persone of both sexes. I fancy there | cuer everything. In ihe good time comtig, which th Bub Wiehe Aad Sore cen 4 sings; b are fifty dafty papers taken or bought, while weeklies) worig calls the golden age and the post ‘he F Mt aM eda HE STOOD THERE SILENT AND DETER ‘ané monthiles, almost unknown before the year 18%, Wwe have p Scsicael nad aa tndiennid MINED. devoted to Mterature and art, abound in every house- E oe The Fastest River. ‘The fastest flowing river in the world is the Butie), tn India. Its descent 19 1600 feet tn 160 miles. w LESSONS IN EATING. vs | By Harriet Hubbard Ayer. 6--HOW TO EAT GAME. ‘Do Gisest 0 ematl het O68 or oven ame that bas lead of Her Gracious Majesty the Queen of England and daintily eat the leg or wing of @ smal) brotied mt oad te 0 dcttento enteveating, and Geapite the! 1114 while holding {t in the fingers Of course where a sauce ts served with the bird it im euntact, the best-Ored men and women fellow the| must be separated and eaten with knife and fork. eGiet tertiéding fagere and partridge wings to come The Correct Way to Dissect a at the bottom and very narrow at the belt These plaits are stitched at the edges ‘n graduate’ ef- fect, the atitohing of the eemtre back one reaching down one-third of the way, the centre front one two- thirds. A band of the violet ever the slightly wider white cloth ts amply stitehed once, through the centre. | This te over a drop skirt of violet taffeta, with a| platting round the edge. The jaunty little Jacket Is tn the same box-platted @ge and the Christian the millennt: tive announcement world are to be under Christian sway. want is a reformed ainuserent association in every city and town of tho I'nited States end explained ant {iustrated, philanthroplo capitalist will come forward to estab. F you were bern om March % (this \s the | meaning of the day for you: {eo fraught with some anxious conditions this {| year, and unless the greatest care te observed misfortunes will crowd thick and fast. Sick- nese, bereavement, heavy expenses are apparent Th te generally coming year le somewhat favorable in the main, and with care and attention on part, the ending should show @ balance tn your favor, changes In your domestic fe are tndiosted, with some possible additions.Copyrighted by the Sphing Magazine, Boston. She's sweet and true; ‘twill do to seek In love her heart and hand A future all that home can speak In lovers’ lovely land Wilton W. Murray. the amusements What we that Bipenny end this transfer ts the only thing that een- Di nects me with my distant home Don't frown eo, | Mr. Baldwin, and say something!” | “I've been trying to think of o Me te enews my D | presence in the city. I might invent ene, But I won't. Emily, | heard you were here, em@ 2 heave w One® announced ment Shristlan and! meet and ive tefead the dra- A FEW THINGS JUST FOR FUN. come to see you!’ “Wasn't !t agreed that you were net te fellew me? Didn't you promise to stay away until I sent fer ur ‘onfound it, Emily, you're net playing fein” TWO LOVELY BLACK EYES. | OH, THE FLATTERERI “ah ony ew cna So Cy she concluded, Geflantly. “Wart’ he repeated, with drooping faca, “Yes, war to the last! she cried mervily. “War be it, then!” heanswared. ‘You won't @utie oame car with yout’ . “Be good, and I'll let you tal to ‘They entered a car, which immediately besame jammed with perspiri oppere. “You don't look cheerful,” she ouxtltag. "I can't live on hope, thank you! I need comeiitiag more substantial. Hope may be very geed fer @e system, but it's deucedly tasteless. What ere yeu looking for, may I asst” “My transfer ticket. I held ft in my hand, en@ 2 must have dropped it on the street. Dear mem “Well, ite only @ matter of five cents!” “Didn't I tell you I had spent my last genay? Ane there's the conductor coming!” Ghe loehed at Bim ir ploringly. He remained ellent. “Mr. Baldwin, it's a perfectly awtul but I must ask you to pay my farel” 5 i i z ‘The Blue-Eyed One—Brilliant and impulsive people] 4 weually have black eyes. "If you go ter the front an’ gits made @ carziat, The Other One—Yea, and if they don't have them | "ould ye still fink of mer they're apt to get them if they're too tmpulsive. pther—even if I wae to eo mete a Seon’ . NEAR THOSE RUSTIO LANKS, ‘The Geifer-Gay, fellow, 414 you see anytiing of a stray drive out here? i The Fetlow—What king of drive, bess? Hem, mare or mule? a AT THE MODISTE’S BIRTHDAY LUCK For March 24. Tt te @ very evil day. Your anniversary home diMculties and For March 25. favorable to-day. Your Stout O14 lady—I Gealare tn this {ll-fitting gar- ment I look no figure at all Modisio—Really, madam, I Gon't eee how you ean? Governess—No, Nellie, 1 am sure your mother would say that! not allow you to say such things. Young Lady (behin®—Figuratively speaking, of} Nellie—But you don't know my mother as well as ourse, ma Judy I do. You never saw her except in company. THE WAR IN ENGLISH NURSERIES. your QUERIES > ANSWERS "st EVENING WORLD READERS, Bome social advantages and May Be Served Through Mail or im Person, jury notices always served in person or some through the mails? on Consult Germae Coneel. My father was born in Germany and came to Amer. when very young. Where and to whom can | write oe lan’t It Strange—

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