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__'THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 13, 1900. THE DAY’S LOVE STORY, ¢ ¢ Muriel’s \ “ | ¥ it were not that I'm @o desper- | ately in love with Clarice, pet, 1d! walt for you. Men when you Grew up wo'd be married and tive happy) ever after, wouldn't we, oh?" Whoreat Clarice would simile adoringly | at her lover, and the litte #e year-old on hie knee would cuddle her yello ‘tead closer and stroke the shapely hand held hee, But that was before | ehagrined at gome fancied in-| Dy deme had given three consnoutive to another man, Will Iardatoy ad reproached her, Clarice had fared up hotly, maying that she was tired of) his tyranny, And Muriol—the little als. fer—had looked on in hatf-frightened| eatonisbment when Clarion drew the) Deautiful, glittering ring from her Anger @rd handed tt back Matt an hour tater Clarice, on her} knees before a big, low chatr in her} room, was Jenly conaclous of @ pair of pott Httle Arms twined und her} Heck—of a wistful, email face clore to hers. | "He's gone, Muriel!” whe eried, and! broke down sobbing, ' one for | ‘The Wttle girl's big, blue eyes roved! over her ter'n lovely, temr-stained face, “Do you care much, Clarice? "Do 1 care?’ Bho wan looking down on the pictured face in the locket she! hela mood face, with Krave, nile eyes and a kind mouth, “I shall care al my it “Better do what 1 have to when I'm! bad’, the child ndvined, gravely. “Het ter gO and ‘pologire.” T cowlda't do that!" The locket ehut with a decisive little click. Abe ing (oO her feet and began to dress dinner, "Not ever, Murtel.”’ Muriel oat and watched her with a lit LAURA JEAN LIBBEY A Gambler's Wife, “ 1.” aayat “Lam a young girl keeping company with a younk mun whose only fault ie gombiing He in O0d and doe# not drink, but gambler a Jot, He maye he will give i up by and by, “Now, will you please advise me through The Evening Worlt? Me (x «| wendy render of that paper and would | surely road what you have to say shout in Ob, young girl! | bemech of vou, @iste? to a sisler woman pauee ou leap from the edae of the provip upon which you are standing, down int the fery furnacethat is the pertion of ann the pitifully unhappy gambler'« with Trust no promises of reform—after marriage. If you love him #o well that you will! not atve him up, pul him upon probation! for at least three year, Make him choore between gambling and a site much) He it entalls, and you Gambling ts (he open door which leads) @ every other vice, Of one thing you can rent assured, (he Wives of such men are among the mont unhappy and most to be pitied tn the world, They never know from hour to hour how long they are to have the roof over thetr heads which shelters them, and they usually end their wretehod, miaapent lives ay objecte of charity with "no one so poor as to do them rev. erence,’ Batter be single unt!) (he day the Lord alle you, dear girl, than marry a man a fediation, a le alr of pensive porptesity After a while the child went down | * Ghe souwht out her brother in} the fbrary She arked) ‘Tom, does you love me hard” ‘Harder than anything tn the world.’ sald ‘Tom “Then, will you take me now fo" he named a downtown hotel, “Why, my t d “That, Muriel gravely, amsured him, A secret.” “VL take. you, And he did Will 1ardaley Jooked up in unmitigated Astoni#ahment at the vision on the threshold of his room—a litte mir) all in th, with a bie pleture hat of framing her wide-eyed w | Jove!” he orled mayly. | face Muriel!’ he orled, lor king up trom tin taak of pulting a lot of fatqueminots in & vase before a photograph on tho table pleture of a Jauehtng fave I'm me! ane you ink Mowe luret Int! because-for the same non your pleture in har locket ying "Wan she orying “Dreadful! #he be morty for You da but the ovely ! Muriel “Wihy were « helore Clariee's pl rea-| she woa crying ove He caught her tn his arma Muriel jd she was aging to und eve ing! orled Bardiley inrelevantly woalat fenily That Charter bed of he ing: My i V after loft her lover had tly in and knelt oman oeter Bhe was an hooked sked, “Wh you say to thats a ne om poaure Hitwted, 1 de deolted with much He a dear ie Dood nigh BLACK FALL GOWN, | ne of black The dealgns mande Moe skirt is ar two round pihtts to the atdes, ‘The matertn), Autumn eo" ned Ww a deter a chert an ged at thie + draped leoviws have putt mame —— Native Beggars { Hoawall, be they ever N 80 poor, never steal or t These of fenses are confined almoat exelusively to the Portuguose residents of the (sland, ol The Chinese Plough Whom you know to © a gambler MAUNA JOAN Liubey, DOOOOOOOC000O TRY THIS leas; put them into & stone croc take them out, wipe each one quite & mixed, Lay on the top a half pint And tarragon leaves, a fow small be ready for wae in a month. RUSSIAN PICKLE, AGH two dogen large, full-arown cucumbers, thore of half an tnch and let them remain in the erock for two day wter washing and wiping it quite dry, Sprinkle @ pound of peeled and sliced onions and an ou Dipeced to cover the whole, Tie olled paper over A cool place, In two weeks pour off tho vinegar, add a iittle more to tt, © b Oil 1t wp again; Jet it wet cold and A Chinese plough te a tteht aftate mate of & crooked #ttek, with a steel pont fastened to Ht, and te pulled by a woter bulfalo 900000000000 00000000000 that are eeed- Ik, cover them with walt to the depth then ry and pack them again In the ervek, Between the layers of cucumbers T garite of basilicum leaves, the same of dill red chilies, Pour in enough bolling the crock and standin & pour It over the cucumbers. They § fame Telub together and ‘baton it | drawing-room partor Jeempanion in her her whether the subject for thought is music, art or twoentopn, Don't overlook (he boy, Tray to my fon, ‘Toan't understand your full he N@ISNS) * 1s eteleiers) eK oer ek RAYON iat RPL AISISISNS SHSKEKS SiS He 11S | veeleisrere: exsrsisn TO MAKE Al HAPPY HOME, THE FORCE, ave the head, the real Chief of Police Tdens of Some Mothera, Pocedneronorontrontronint Now what do you do, Bernard J WAH thinge, for the making of! York? What do you really do “for a living?” 4 happy home, were advocated 11 cresait aal ny it A Woinapts Club You permit and, therefore to all practical intents Arty in a,Woentern elty “If your son loves footinil, yournelt and diainguieh backs from right tackloa. ‘Nobody Is so poor he cannot have a home of his own, Working xteis should Tt fowtera learn the centres the home apirtt Phe hotel-wite life Ina thing to be lored. Hotel children are unfortu Don't be a ploking-up machine for air husband. Let him look after bia poaseasions, as you do yours. ver speak ill of any one nor to dining (able any one at ihe “The Kitchen atove should not be valued above the plano, ‘The kitehen Is wood only wo far as it makes better the snversatton. “hry to bo orderly, at least be as or derly as you can the Pollce Department-your department—not only with 4 ik the Tho discuslion was led by a mothe) vice but also with crime Not blackmail only; not “pros | who tured individuality (nthe home i and a home for everybody 1 believe |teetion” only; but actual offensive and defensive alliance, jn should ‘bateh ft she itn netual active conspiracy against the morals and the Ahould have a kitchen, bedroom and rhe home girl whould find a vnd pustivs and he answers ‘You won't) + OREMENAR VECR, iniess Locan take you to @ ai O11 | i sent tnerenentnenentenee The polley dives where young men are awindled tell you all about I Now, | have a foothad engagement with (hat aor and led those frst |mportant pteps down the road of crime are run jointly by Nhe happleat home Lever war in WA9) the Holiee and certain politicians, the inmost disorderly. sabl another, “and | fam an orderly woman. in that home Dons where thieves congrogute to divide their stealings, to plot fresh there was a Kool cook, everybody 64%) crimex and to commit crimes flourish under the Joint management of the the parlors were well dusted, | Mf the household Knew where They | ony hapoy vit none Would sleep at night wnother's bed, wore he or Jept in one olothe 1 have read every >| ‘appleat family members and if they they sald ‘very well yet i wae the rhe worrled thing, never eop on and slept on the foo W York houvewives ant moths his latter pant of view? 3 A FRUIT SALAD. 3! | Ol a pw and pear salad nto slices, Dhire the & Put them in layers into a@ with aweetened w hipwed » and quarter LOO Oho teint date ee tetas | { FRILLS OF FASHION, SO ee ns URBOTONUE mutts will be worn with the large pleture hate. # or coy the Winte Lace dusted with gold, allver! to beautify some of torstan and other Ortental embroidery denigne the newert Idea tn ehirt waist ation. Among the novelttos In black velvet Hbbon are gold embroidered polka dota, Which mre very effective Piald efike of heavy quality and bell Nant ots Are KEEN In A profi sion thal indicates thelr vogue Bomething pretty for evening wraps in color 4 nik Matelaese, goft, thick, light and warm, whieh comes in pretty pale | rhader owe meshed ribbons in gold and all ver in Harrow widthe are made up with Velvets and ribbons for hair ornaments, Tho shaped flounce which was so pop: ular two or three years ago ts coming Again into favor, and ts shown on wey eral of the models for Pall and Winter —— Rain and Snow An (he result of twenty years of exe perimenta at Rothamsted it is shown! that in the Winter months more than| half of the amount of rain that falls penetrates into the soll and becomes avallable for the supply of springs, while in Summer only one-quarter of the rain. fall Is absorbed by the poll, be Ah A Camel's Endurance, A good camel will travel 100 miles @ day for ten days through the denert, | final and eomp NO. 14298, Vol. 4 Published by the Press Publishing Company, @ to & PARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Post-OMce at New York As Second-Ciass Mall Matter, BERNARD J. YORK, President and Senior Partner. You are President of the Board of Pollee Commissioners. You are therefore the head of the head of the Department of Police. In one sense the responsibility for the conduet of is divided among you, Sexton, Hess and Abell, But nly in one sense, Without in the least taking any of thet! responsibility from your assoeintes, it ip still just to fix the en Amor THE WHERE, FORK RK. SPOON STI, FP tetnte tet te totntetete | the department ponsibility upon you, Come out from behind that divided responsibility where you lurk and pose, Bernard J. York, Let the people have a good look at you You are a citizen of the Borough of Brooklyn, living At 10 St. Mark's avenue, For the larger part of every day your nskociations are With respectable people, honest, decent men lending orderly lives, ereditable to their city, 400 men, ond their @ountes During business hours you are at Mulberry your living And how de treet, earning uu earn your living? You are directing head of There is nota lawful order that you might the police foree of Greater New York issue or nek to be issued which your associates or your sub- either publicly or pric} In this very substantial sense not only Devery and ordinates would dare to dispute, vutely the Inspectors nnd Captains, but also your three associates |, ave under your control, It is useless for you to skulk behind the plea that you would be deposed if you dared to do your duty, Until you are deposed you es PHRACTIOALLY ABSOLUTE ProWwRE OVER @BVEMY AND purposes, command the most unspeakably depraved ad-| ministration of N w York City in police matters that has} ever disgraced a elvilized community, Until you came, Bernard J, York, New York City had known two kinds of police administration—the Rooseveltian kind, with its combination of hypgerisy, silliness and pro- Vincial intolerance that exasperated and disgusted every broad-minded, IMberty-loving, hypocriay-hating citizen; and the kind which the Roosevelt administration succeeded ments which seem to Rive dhe almo erime held in cheek and certain vices blackmailed and protected, but rigidly regulated, You, Bernard J, York, have given us a new kind of police | odministration, Under your direction and control there is an alliance of safety of the community We may not write down the particulars here, There is no need to do so, for every grown-up resident of the city Knows them, But let us give just a few illustrations: oo ee THE POLION AL} MANOw WITH police and the “fences.” Dives to which young women are lured and even dragged by violence Mhore Wor no ayetem, [are conducted with the police and the divekeepers as equal partners, *Thleves’ camps” have heen organized and Heensed by the police in sev had eral parte of the city, and from them men and women issue to rob by en koging as domestics or by taking part in such schemes aa “panel” and badger” games, In the tenement disiriots monsters spread their nets and set their traps | yo | in the streets, in the hallways, on the very thresholds of the homes—neta and : | traps for little girls, mere children dueh net and each trap is jointly owned | by the police and the propagutors of criminal vice, From (hls jarge criminal population, the most of whom are called by ) }| Names that cannot be printed here, flows into the Pollee Department a vast revenue, which la divided on (he percentage baeia, | pollee, Hernard J. York, in the profits of the various enterprises in infamy Such js © mere suggestion of your management of the Police Department, For your official po- le ee ok ee ee How york sition and power make you the real, the HRALIY BARNS : i 1s LIVING, responsible, the senior partner in this Petreeetmertemee ® Hilinnce for blackmail, for the destruc- tion of youth, for the degradation of womanhood, for the promotion of crime and moral disease, lt is said that you are pecuntarily honest. It is aid that you never touch a dollar of these hundreds of thousands of dollars of depravity, But what of that? You do the “dirty work,” don’t you, your refusal to act, Bernard J, York? Your silence, your sins of omission, Linek as any sins of commission could possibly be, make you the real creator of this carnival of vice and crime, do they not? And you take money for it, Bernard). York! You take a salary of $5,000 a year, which is paid you to do this work. And you take additional pay-the expectation of future of- fices and “honora,"’ “Honorel" There you stand, Bernard J. York! What do you think of yourself? What do your friends and associates think of you? What would be the look in the faces of those whose respect and affection you wish to have if they could go Into any of those swarming and overflow- ing enst-side dives and see the young men and the young women sitting there, each with this sign branded upon the forehead for all who eee things, as they really are “RUINED BY PERMISSION OF BERNARD J. YORK, PRESIDENT.” Fi Le teeta e eetnee what woulD 1s BROOKLYN PRIENDS THINK, eo ~ ES ~ ‘This ts the share of your | [A GLORIOUS NEW HEAVEN], By Rev. T, De Witt Talmage, | HB stereotyped Heaven doen not make adequate impression upon us. We need the old story told in new | style in order to aroume our apprecta- | tion. T suppose if we should take the} Idea of Heaven, and translate |i into! modern phrase, we would find that ita Atmomphere t* a combination of arly }June and of the Indian Bummer in Oc- | |tober—-a place combing the advan jot etty and country; « place of | entertatnmenta-harpers pipers, trum. | [peters doxologies; « place of wonderful (irohiteoture--behold the temples! a place [wheer there may be the higher forms [of animal Hfe~the beasts which were on earth beaten, lash-whipped and walled and unblanketed, and worked to ath, turned out among the white whieh the Book of Revelation ribes as being in Heaven, a place of (OU6 Nterature-the books open; [a place of altatocrattc and democratio \traotivenese-the Kings standing for he one, all nations for the other, all botantoal, pomotogtens, ornithologteat, arto ', Worshipful beauty ond Krandeie, | ‘That brings me to the first thought of my (heme~that Heaven vaetly im- | roves 'n numbers, Noting little under {his head about the multitude of adults {who have gone into Blory during the Inst hundred oF Ave hundred, of thous and years, I remember there are lx teen hundred millions of people in the world, and that the vast majoriiy of [people dle In infancy. if Landon should j Add tn one generation four milion pops |Wlatton, What a vast increase! But what a mere nothing as ¢ mpared with ‘he five hundred million, and the two (housand million, the “murtitude that ho man can number,” that have gone to j'hat olty! Put five hundred million children In a country and it will be al Viowsed and lively country Again, Heaven tx ite soelety Vastly Improved a During your memory how Many exqulelie spirita have gone Into If you should try to make @ dist all the genial, loving, gractoun, Meased Rouls that you have known, it would be a very long Ilst=souls that have gone into glory, Now, do you not Suppowe they have enriched the soolety? Mave thoy not Improved Heaven?* You of what Heaven did for them IHtave thoy done nothing for Heaven? | Again, 1 remark chat heaven haw | really Improved In the good cheer of Announced victories, H the olden tines, when the events of human Ife were scattered over four or Itve centurles of longevity and the world | Moved slowly, there were not so many stirring evente to be reported in Heaven; but now, T auppone, all the great events | of earth are reported, If there is any | truth plainly aught dn this Bible, tt Le that Heaven Is wrapped up tn sympathy | with human history, and we look at (hote Inventions of the day=at toleg- raphy, at swift communtoation by steam, at all those moder Improv omb!presence-and we eee only the se War relation; but sprite before ¢ throne look out and see the vast and the eternal relation, Oh, yes! Heaven is a greater place for news than it used to beenews sounded through (ne atteets, etre. rliams ing from the towers, felws Meratded from the palace gate, Glad news! Vie~ torlous news! Wut the vivaelty and sprightliness of Heaven will be beyond all conceptton when the final victories come in, when the Chureh shail be trumphant every where, That will be the greatest day in Heaven since the day when the frat hock of Jasper was put down for the foundation, and the frat’ hinged pearl swung, If there is a difference between Heaven now and Heaven ae it was, oh! the difference between Heaven as tt shall be and Hedven as it is now! Not \ splendor stuck fast, but rolling on and holla on, and polling vp and rolling jp, forever, forever, | T. DR WITT TALMAGE, eatin | ee | SCOTS AND RED HAIR, | LORE OO OR Oreos 1) Dyed by the fun, (he PAltor of The Kvening World Tacitum or some other wine old hie jtorlan, records that the anctent Boots palited thelr bodies blue as a protec. jton from the weather, but the red-head |Dhenomenon has been explained to me Jan follows When William Rufus became King of Rowland, a Seotohman tramped down jsut and offered the King the sub- Mmineton of Maobeth, Macpherson, Mac- lanaeh and Macnevin. “Why do you come to me, chief, see ing that my war horn has not fet been ward north of the Cheviote? asked the King. | "“Pecause, O King," repiied the Bot, “we heard that your head waa red like our own, and we would have thee for our Mege ton” “How comes tt that Scots heads are red?’ asked Rutus, “Because, O King, the fitet Boot came jt Ife on the summit of Ben Nevis, | Whose crown is so high that {t touches the sun, After awhile he found that though hiv head was warm, belng near the sun, bie body was cold, #o he dyed | Mmeelf with wood, which kept him warm and blue, whereas the ferce glory ‘ot the sun scorched he head until tity hair was a flery red. Since that time all true Bootamen have red heads.” T have been unable to And this tradi. | tlon in any antique writer, but I give {t you for what it ts worth. TAM O'BHANTER, Irom tm Se To the Miter of The More Sootemen have red heads than any over nationality because more of them drink the native whiskey, There e more iron in the water whieh « Scotsman on his own heather tnvariably drinks with his whiskey than in any other water, A Beotsman begins to drink “mountain dew" as soon as he in weaned, and as, of eourne, no one ever heard of a Seotaman drinking bis Nquor without water, it stands to rea. fon (hat by the age of alsteen the | average Bootsman has drunk twiop an | much water he has whiskey and more whiskey than any ong élee of his age outside his country, It isa aclen- tithe fact that persone with # great deal of fron in their bloed have generally red halr—ergo, there are more Bcotsinen with red heada, I believe this perro heh Will be found logicaily and sotentifeally (perhaps even | had chemically) nese with this country how should the “Ah, alien, how Nappy would 1 be to “You expect too much, You cnn, th Bister-in-law!! ee oe HOW THE PUP GREW { HIS MOVE NEXT. have two such sisters yo jough, have my sister Maa here for @ ce ee Y HARD LUCK The Tin Soldier—Thtnk of all the bat. tle I've survived, only to be run over by a train! ce end LUCK's sonnow, Fortune came and loudly knocke@ At my door, with cheery ball, Hurt alas! for Fortune's labora, 1 was over at my neighbor'a Pouring out a bard lek telel ADDITION, “Bhe ie always looking out for num b one," » stnoe ahe became a widow whe'e been looking out for number two,"— Journal Amusant. [aioe nie ae See ee he ee te eee THE, FARTH § SHADOW, HB earth has a shadow, but few ever obterve it, ar, if they do, have no Kknowlelge of what they ere Jooking at fome us have @oon om beautiful Summer eventnge, just before sunset, a roweate aro on the horlson opposite the sun, with a blulshepray segment under {t. ‘This ie the shadow of the earth. The pame «hadow Is always olwervable om the occasion of an eclipse of the moon, Very few people are astronomers enough to pick up everyday nehalows pointe Whe thoee. "LETTERS FRO FROM. THE PEOPLE, ‘The Name of oa War, ‘To the Moltor of The venting World Referring to Spain's late unpleasant- war be termed, the Spanish-American war of the panish-Roosevelt war? ' B, PARR, Colleme or Businenst To the Réitor of The Tieng World: 1 am anxious wo go ty work and earn my own fiving, 1 am sixteen, have Just been graduated from High Behool and think Mt time to start ou. for my+ self, Hut my father and mother (who are comfortably off) want me to go to college, and Instat on It, Now, wit am I (o do, readers? Waste four whole years that way or gel to work at once and be & man among men? REBELLIOUB, Wrace Up, Who (don't stop the games, ‘The streets are not playgrounds to thin extent, ee Wastefal Farmers, To the Miktor of Te Nvening World 1 hear that Western farmers each throws away enough grain each year to almost support an Bastern farmer, What i kind reader from the West can give me any feots concerning this? IGNORM, Want Club Chrintoned. To the Kditor of The Rrening World WH readers kindly suggest some good, clover name for a sociable club formed by young men between the twenty-one year? DANIDL JOsIPLB, Father Verwas Founders To the Klitor of The Kvening World: to Paud A reownt publication refers Jones as the founder of the Amertcam ages of elahteen ‘ i é | Navy. Home historians call John Barry To the Baitor of The Rrening Workt | o , fi 7 the father of the American Navy. WeMie Shey key Seroating, Ihé. Youtis Father and founder seem to be the boya who go mashing pn Mivereide Drive they might be ay attention to cer tain bleyele polle who look more to | seo What pretty girls are out than if} bleyole lamps are lighted, There are fewer wheels, but there le often more danger on the Drive on evenings now, because rules of the road and the law about lamps ate not obeyed. Fl. MARTIN, Streets, World, Adphaited streets in various parte of the city Nave been appropriated by barged boy football players, Having ty hat knocked off and ruined by], am tna position cong same, Why |x Jones called the founder amd! Barry the father? In ali the iste {of names for the Hull of Fame I have not seen that of Commodore John Barty, the father of the Amerioaa Nave Why? uw My, aL Millions in Cotton, It Is wald that this year's cotton crop will pay for the cost of production and enrich the South with a profit of $30. 09,000. —— i Paris Hoir-Workors, About Rs mele in hg are om ot hewan Ra a7 | | =| |