The evening world. Newspaper, July 18, 1900, Page 4

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, ee 2 RTI Re WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY 18, 1900, euekBaon THE SUMMER WOMAN'S VANITY. 1 HUNG CHANG AS HAMLET: . (Free the Westminsier Betget) w w w ww we w ad w we @) pipette BY LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. f Rew Yon. 4 te RRR eaten ot Now Vert co Semmens Mall Wethe. | (oupyrict, 1900, by the Freee Pubiinhing Company, WY. Werld) | home one can fod a cool breete on the front poreh, or —. = | HON all the houses around and abou bar on the rear ona, at all times, if there ie eo much ase ? DAY, JULY 18, 1900. Ficaded Dehind heavy wooden ebuttors at (nt breath of air stirring ” ™ we ad ww “ a Od w WEDNESDAY, id | windows, and stil) heavier boarded oe, and = An what & jusury the home bath fe! @he A Pareereohie. Bacyel fa of Posts Figures, | Wethaiwet (Litukuntao), Brttich base of opera. = le nhal yt! he: pily owt of town y renilges {tow she bs deprived of tt all james a. cee to Keep Handy for the Next | ty rrisoned por th a | a very rele oi fee whisked | m foam ‘ | x 9 | pater y mite . tans he te depriv oo echo Foie yok ‘About the Country fis A garrisoned port with a large, sate an ee ° » 4 fe w en hapy umm « ba a bow ich Promises 1 ne ol erage. zy eoough Im her own well-ordered home, locks| The only consolation she has for suffering a) this World's Greatest Ware. ” * — uefully about for gome piace to which «! ne 1 t aylog #0 high a price to ‘23 Petho (north river) rises beyond the Great Wall, For go ahe must mewhers, anywhere rather than b ally weary, ts the long - ¥ flowe past Peking and Tientein to Gulf of Line to her friends and tung. Navigable from mouth to Peking, 10 miles, T at lem pretentious places. | & thal the ptoture of the hotel If they tmagine she @ whirl of] Gay letters whe is ati t neighbors, Who aie There te bo THE PEOPLE. ae soldiers range from sixteen to sixty be whispered about among her nelghbore ase atay at | home Heangho, river of No'thern China, emptying be no end of dlacomforts into Gulf of Pechtit from shows ows that there waleh dhe bee chosen and Umpoaic gly paper yeare of age. Yangtee, river in the which the Port of Nanki PRINCES, RULERS, GEN« ERALS. . HANG CH! TUNG, Viceroy at Hankow, @ Man of much Influence with the people, and o péliever in China for the Chinese. angsu Province, em Devome & eoldier is a humiliation tn China ‘The magistrates outrank military, socially, ‘The population of China ts nearly $99,000,000— mere than the combined population of Great France, Russia, Germany and Japan. Pesple tn the interior of China seldom real news- papers. They get their ideas of foreigners and outside doings by gossip. ‘The Chinese boy's amb'tion Is to become o = magistrate, Even servants save money to edueat their sons with this aim, Chang Ti, Director of Mines and Assistant Diree tor of Northern Katiways. Favorite of the Dow- ager Empress. A rising man, much tn toueh with foreigners. Baglish bankers in China give native commercial men a name for strict business honesty Hou Ching Ch’en, Vice-President of Board of ‘Works, ex-Minister to Russia and Germany, Pree Meat of Chinese i If @ Chinese criminal is a fugitive the police ar- reat his father, grandfather, mother, uncle or aunt. Family affection speedily brings the man wanted to the relief of his relative. tern Ratlwey, Kang Yi, @ Manchu, anti-foreign, President of, the Board of War. A native priest says of the Chinese articles of feligion: "The men televea them The women @on't. There is no religion in China.” THEIR RESOURCES. ‘Cus could raise an army of 1,700.00) men; Kang Yu Wet, exiled leader of the Reform party, Kwangeu, the present Emperor, eon of Prince ‘Chun. “To Bex, or not to Box that Is the question.” ry Avot, du Kun Yi, Viceroy at Kankin, trusted ally of the Dowager Empress. _—-— - — A MODEL VILLAGE. but it woult be undisciplined and only one-| 14 stung Chang, Acting Viceroy of Cantos, trust: All the “Geneve” (Clubbeve and P addiers) aan | 9 S0000000000000 BOO00000000 C000000200000000 HE Dalecaritan village of Orsa seems to offer third equipped friend perans tm cites, high-sounding names on the menu cart fashionable, delightful guyety rantages ae a place of | ech to persons =_— ” ” oo a —GBBGSOHOHN0000000000000 for the pialnest of fare, and It le served ridiculously) That knowledge repays her for all she te enduring. ht million cartridges were taken to Peking) prings report. ¥ Lerd Cham ‘ ——wemee | apartng!y. She knows, though ehe will never edmit it, that the eerron ago, and porte additions have been! seriein at 9 RagpcsoMote! ot Poking 5 But, dear me, people go away for the wonderfully | summer outing is a delusion and a amare, but shelthem the v a rev made. field ped oom ol THE BVBENING W ORLD Ss Invigorating alr they get—not to eat. keeps it up year after year, thie away from The | pay no veking the house and bey The Chinese possess Mauser rifles and Norden- ‘The doctors tell us it ts good for the constitution tome and ft up pomp rate education ts provid thelr children Prince 14, eenlor member of the Cabinet, much ‘DAII Y FORUM to fast once In awhile. That is wh Ny, for tt . y¥ they recommend ously, for {t woull never, never do r fiends (| without the coet of @ penny, « ach village in the AY As | going awny for the summer to eome fashionable re tmagine her a homebody worse @till & thou- | district has {ts telephone, which ts open free to the 1056 He ene =— i ‘rusted in imperial family Milvet of 0 Series of Signed Articles on Leading | *rt 8° seubt sand times worve, that umband w tightly | public use There 1s no .roperly organised medical corps! prince Sheng, Administrator of Telegraphe end ‘The good little woman does net take kindly to | pinched for money to let her heve a » ‘8 outing. Toples of the Day by Recognized canned goods at home when there are fresh vege.) And it remolves {nto this fact, three-fourths of tadles and fruite to be had in the quarket. But when the seen at the fashionable eammer resorts Authorities. one is hungry anything oan be eaten heartily and | are not for the beneft of change of air and —e——__— A VERY GOOD LAW. ‘transport service, or ieee in China ‘The barbers in some towne |r A favorite Chinese weapon ts a native made rifle Ratiways, head of the Imperial Bank and ef the Chine Merchants’ Bteamship Company. Man of Great power, alway te be reckoned with. petled by Taw to cleanse and e——___—__--—a WHAT PENALTY MUST CHIN@PAY? B JOHN DEB wit WARNER. The slaughter of the Ambassadors of foreign powers by the Chinese in Peking 1s unparalleled in the Bistory of civilised nations. It stands as the greatest outrage of its kind, Only once before in modern times ts it claimed that plen!poten- tlartes of nations were murtered in cold blood ‘That was on the renewal of war between France ent Germany after the secnnd Congress at Rastadt fm 1708. ‘The present ettuation tn China is unprecedented. TD deliove we chould keep our troops out of China fate the eountry and almost any satisfaction de- ' which the nations agree upon, or ear} eation insists upon. ‘ Demand of reparntion, the propriety of any! ven Gemand ant the getting what te demanded | ‘gee, however, decided! distinct matters. Saternational law has little application in euch anes. It is @ system of loose conventions handled ipemetioally et will by the nations from stand- \ peinte of policy rather than principle ‘We ought to demand reasonable indemnity. | |famve no doubt that China will be prompt to ofter | |#% Bf net we ought to entorce it. ‘The great question is as to the guilt of the (Giitnese nation as a nation. | ' 1 do not for one moment think that China as a} mation te wilfully responsible for the massacre. |"° Prince Ching fighting to protect the foreigners (1!! | he was overcome with wounds and olf Gen. Wang | ‘Wen Ghao dying at the head of the ‘mperial troops | tm Ble eflorts to eave them vindicate China's beser. Ie ouch « case indemnity should be compensa- Gary and apologetic. There is nothing yet known | @o justify ettemp..og to punish China for the acts @f her covolutionists. The Christian powers are fe Gener bound to evold using the occasion as an ‘ @pouse for greet. China is equally bound to be prempt {n meeting reasonable demands. ‘Talk of taking vengeance on the ("hinese te un- ‘worthy of civilisation; and the adoption of what ‘we condema as the atrocious feature of Chinese eerminal law—che punishment of innocent families | Y Ger Geo transgression of their relatives—would be csademn BR would be even lees consistent to lay waste Ciimase villages and cause the death of thousands of peneetul, Chinese, with their women and chi! tem, tm 02 outburst of “Chrimian” indignation. ‘The roused national spirit of China is something merit our sympathy rather than our conn! vance Buropean powers to crush {t. The influence United States should be thrown bearily demands ¢0 exorbitant as to give an er- f, W. Astor's new Broatway b tel is But it won't be dig enough to b nee” of the Honorable Capt Of the Queen's yacht bea 1 the Milne, ‘has arisen to lessen the forming in Rom fe the cholera. After its visitations ty © left to be hungry. a It dows at home-tf it im not de: out an a o 0 reduce ourselves to the level of those wham we 4 fe “mnecessary proof that their civ-| shells of reliehed. | The evn seems to shine just as hot at these resorts | At) THE A BIG MISTAKE. “Hello! gai Dudeking, “there’ Jolly girl with smbretia. I'M Just eo and offer her half mine! But when sh deking just ned her bead round to thank him one huge spring into the middie red! AS OTHERS SF rateer of a cabbage head,” remarked Biggs, wore for humanity than ail the theorists tn the “If your assertion 9 true,” rejoined his friend Diges, ‘your mother ought to be awarded @ medal” WEATHER. FOR WAR Fei M A pretty house or dreseing jacket. ny PEARL IMAGES OF BUDDHA The Chinese have discovered a method by which mall pearl Images of Buddha can be produced. The Dave taken to counterfeiting | tiny Agures are cast in lead and are inserted in the Homer sight, David hie little lad! ire sere afew owas weg Weetwesd Ress, i Cortecre, (ares coat them with a layer of pure pearl, UNNY SIDE OF LIFE LAUGHINGLY of one-inch calibre, requiring two men to handle it, brushes and razors Immediately the: Laare Jean Libbey writes tor The Bveniog World by arrange |, mast eich the Family Story Paper om er use and before applied to the hair or head of another cus- scene, simply for a show Toung 4 Tamen, council! of tea members esting on foreign affairs, Prince Tusa, father of Pu Chun, hetr-egparent, and now leading the anti-foreign revelt. The Chinese have ® field batteries, with Krupp and Armstrong guna. . “REVEALED, | SORRY HE SPOKE ‘The Chinese navy consists of four cruisers and a few useless fighting vessels. rt “ ‘Teo Hal, the Dowager Dmpress China has new colleges in engineering, naviga- Ps tion, military tactics, electric acience and medi-| vung Le, the Emoress’s fnctotum, Genoralnstme of the Army. + cine, with European professors. Generel Tung Fut, Wish ond Kang Ou, anth foreign leaders tn revelt. ee ceee. FINANCIAL NOTE, Good newspapers are printed at the treaty ports of China. CITIES, PORTS AND RIVERS| EVERYDAY NAMES, nnn nAAANRRANANGAR ALS | RAARAANRARADARARRAARARARARADD U, @ prefecture, = Putal, the geverner of « grevinca, r Getown, © since for tering genta, Madirwan, Chinese maritime eustoma, 1A, © Chinese mila, one-third of « British wile KING, the capital of Caine, bes o popula tien of more than @ million, Cantea, 1- (20.000. Tientsin io a treaty pert em the river Peihe, seventy miles from Peking, ~ Ghanghe! io the largest am mest important treaty port. Twelve miles from the mouth of the Yangtee-Kiang River. Population, 409,00 Port Arthur, leased te Russia te 108) fer o ma val bese. In the Far Bast, ” Chefes, en the Shantung pentaoula. A treaty port, with the best elimate for Burepeans. -“ Taku forte, now destroyed, were three tm num- ber, af the mouth of the Peihe River. “A gigantic copper deal ts on."—Datly Paper, weeeeccecec ee A LITTLE TWISTED. heard njuns blowin’ off steam, an’ im sirens, ean’ dogs barkin’, an’ other horrid noises eee. HE WAS CLEAN GONE. Teak, © ate of etiver, worth trom 44 conte to ‘TLS conta, acsording te prevines. a Byres, general term of extortion, Biang, or be, 0 etver; bu, 6 lake } Pot, north; nam, south; tung, east; of, west. - - Newehi treaty ef the British con-| Shen, o mountain; sheng, « provinces; Geng, o sams aoe Wo tales north of Port| tows; Detang a village; Neten, a dlstriet; ling. © Arthur. Bill, peak or pase. + [QUERIES AND ANSWERS On what day 414 thé 20cm of June, 1M, fal? one THE ST. ANTHONY STAMP. 19 Peet 11.8 Inches. J, Darby. ‘What ie the record fer the standing bread jump (witheut weights) and whe helés it? 4.3. Me nevis. What to Mr. W. 1 Bryan's (eanéifate fer President of United @tates) heme town in Nebraska! J. A FP. Im the World Aimanee, ‘Where can | edtain the game awe of Now Jercay? 4. 3. SURGES. te Ip Chere any cance ta the Ceastitution of the United A Is Correct. A dew Gat Fitshugh Lee tok part ts the etvil war, B myo that be G14 net, Whe to right? JOGEPH R BECK A new otrange etamp has been attracting the af tention and wonder ef the Post-Office authorities It usually appears in the lower lefthand corner of a- velopes, while the regular postage is in the upper right cornet. The Crane-Gractous! What are you éaing with Yes, ‘The stamp te used by good Catholics to keep their hat knot In your neck? Are the British new in pesscesion of Pretoria? ‘uitge tam wise enees ‘The initials f. A. O meen The Swan-t'm iad that you reminded me of ft.} “T think this would be our best wart BDWARD MACK. | vat. Anthony Guide.” This eaint 19 supposed to help My wife put It there so | would not forget to Dring} “Why, It's twiee as long as the etherf Prigey. find fost articles, and the guidance of all articles ie ¢ home the Meh | promised ¢ “Bxactly sof” oem een es oe eee ne eee What day @14 Nov. 12, 1008, fall on? @ B placed under his special care. Upturned ‘Men's ¢ Characters ¢ Read ¢ in Their « NO SUNSTROKE IN FLORIDA © } rousers, In Florida gunstroke is entirely unknown, although the temperature often reaches 110 degrees Pahren- ' helt, This ls attributed to the extreme moisture ida as isis iefe the atmosphere. ee ee eee ee eo TEARS HEN! sider Life and th Fre the last ech within our ears ¢ A tore choked In the grass; an Sour of fears; The guste that past a darkening shore do beat The burst of music down an unlistening Jer at the idleness of tears » 1 dead, and ye of yesternight, | * and bards, and keepers of the | sheep, | By every { sorrow that you had, Loose me from ¢ nd make me see aright, How each hath buck what once he stayed to weep: THE PROFRABIONAL MAN. THE BOW.LEGGRD MAN Cee ee ae D OME gentus has discovered that a man's or) His left trouser leg may be turned up five inches and) of fashion, they yet rise above the business man's eter may be read in the way he turns up hig) the right one inch. If he is & commuter from Pomp-| carelessness ‘The giase of fashion, for t ton, N. J., the turning up ‘process is still more unique The bow-legged man strives th vain to secume @ and {s punctuated with mud. | graceful roll to hy \rourers fie le not bullt thas wag, teres Bie ep in neat creases that exhittt the well! The professional man rolls up his trouser legs plain.| His trouser are full of eccentric angen Sven shod feet and profusely f{liustrated socks. ly but neatly. The rolls are of even length and are) the effort to straighien them with rubeep Ganda ‘The dasiness man hes ne time for such elaborations. | fatriy smecth. Lacking the elegance of THE CHAPPIC. ee eee ee eo the gevetes| proves 6 rank failure

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