The evening world. Newspaper, January 1, 1901, Page 5

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"THE EVENING WORL It Enters the 2cth Gantry With a Splendid and Unparalleled Record of “Pub! lic Service and Brillant Achieéverents and With Best Wishes of Many Representative New Yorkers. Here is What Competent Authorities in their Respective Lines Say of this fanens Work: What The Evening World Has Done R THE HOME. M2S. RUSSELL FO 1G —- E. HE EVENGING WORLD'S heane | manua: arts. have been among the department ought to be of & it! home features worthy of commendation, help to the home-mak of 3 | while it hints and kindred artl- York. Its kindly advice to those owhO | cles have been a help to many All deck Ite counsels, Its hints to h@a8e- these features in an evening newspaper - wives, its articles on household economy | which ts iailiavallieeiecntemaeat - its lessons by expertenced and expert/ presents the news in decorous way, teachers in the uscfal arts and sciences, | commend ‘t to thore who have the hi | like stenography and needlework; its TERESI KS | Jetsont ian ghyalcal training at the| SEERUGSETCEAG rn What The Evening World Has Done R THE PEOPLE. | FO e | petuated, Keres must give pine homes, social must be provided everywhere with ch Mbraries, lecture classes, &c. Pu 1 gymnasiums must: put thank you heartily for what you hal alreddy accomplished, and with my con- gratulations urge a resolute continuance of a aimilar policy. We are in name a democracy, and we are facing a century which I, with many, belleve {s destined to see great progress along demucratic | developing a fine physiq’ Jines, and the assumption by the people! reach of the poor ‘of the control and rhe operation in tho! must be pald. Interests of all, of many pubte utilities/ We are not In those ages when now used chiefly by and for private in-| blindly tereats, as fore-ordained, but In the clear da But I do not look for sudden changes. | modern scientific thought we know I belleve rather in evolution. In pro- portion as the people are qualified to aa- sume larger responsibilities the cnange shoulé and will come gradually. Mean- while, earnest men of all sectiona of #0- clety must meet ani compare views. Tae honest men and those who prefer the welfare of all to nelf-aggrandizement the price of others’ suffering are in the majority. But they stand In Isolated ‘wroups to-day and lack the strength and inapiration and the all-round grasp of the situation that comes from union. With the dest intentions in the world they are constantly misunderstanding and thwarting each other. Another need 1s of a widely diffused Popular education ‘n history and social @ctence, that we may all learn what we within Li transgressed, and that such condit can be changed by obedtence to Undexerved poverty and inivery have therefore neither moral Justification Ings, sclentitic gence of modern New of the Umes show « gradual but. awakening to a consclousness of hu: brotherhood. apeed th: vpectfully. Lhartn S fs pee Sue I~ ope pod work. j can cf the laws governing social prog- ++ --______ FOR CHARITY. By EDWARD T. DEVINE, What The Evening World Has Done ; 3 General Secretary Charity Organization Soci ome By CHARLES SPRAGUE SMITH. » UNDERSTAND {rom a memtyer ot ress. In the lost ] your staff that The Evening World| we are brothers, not sentimentally #0 } has initiated many progressive dem: [but by the laws of social Inte ocratic measures, such as the free lee-lence. Tt Is therefore the duty tures, the small parks, public gymnasi-) the privilere of the fri sof legisiation | ums, playgrounds in the parks, recrea-[and of those who hav overabund- cd tion plers, &c. If ro, and I have no ance, to see to tt that the present con- - son to question the states . for one, | ditions of in our city are not p halls for evening hours uubs rblie. per- aniiness and the possibil'ty of ying wages men accepted exleting evil conditions y of that evil and {njustice are the results of laws ions flaw. vice and crime bred by unhealthy #urround- nor for coexistence aide by side with the wealth and tntel- ork. All signe sure man May The Evening World 1 am, yours re Ie ety. THE WORLD: BY TUESDAY EVENIN JANUARY 1, IN THE XIXTH CENTURY Jefeieieteiefeleinieletebelcieietebetefele-beicieleb-febebeiehivinbeinbeteielelefebef-telefetmtefufatet “CHARACTERISTIC OF THE BEST IN AMERICAN JOURNALISM.” ALFRED HARMSWORTH, The Greatest Editor All Europe Has Yet Produced. dition to its task of issuin 1901. rtat it ean, in ac AN Newspapr noamerous edition -—-_—--_-+00-— + DEEDS AS WELL A AS WORDS + OTHING is more characteristic of vof the Ameries t the best in American journalism than the efforts of The Evening rn 2} power to the cause of doi World to direct some of its great y in providing free medical advice to the denizens © good, Fg wie work of the tenement-houses, your Christmas Tree, sions for the mothers your free Summer seand children of the poor are all striking proofs American journalism not only thinks, but has been said of newspaper charities that One could h that all business were as charitable. are all in the way of business. And it is a sterling sign of the organizing abil- y HE End of the Century Christ- | century Idea well carried out. mas Dinners served to 1,000 tamtites | Thia ia by The Evening World anonymously, growing jon of Tae Evening and unostentatiously keeping the tdentity | World, ax siown by Its other charites of the reciplents private, Instead of com- | as weil, of what the real spirit of char- pelling them to waste the time and in- | ity demands, The twentieth uury eur the disagreeable publicity of going | Will undoubtedly reveal a larger and | after them, and not heaitating to Incur | truer conception of charity on t the additional expense of deliv fall than has been exhibited in v these baskety at the homes of th nineteenth. ciplents, was the highest newspaper charity which h 07, Denne snigattcai antgsttswesiienlssan artietn | cena eee sheer eli ietlelininbleleliieiinlelnininininielniolelatete! +2—-—____ « A Weird and Stirring Romance. You take off the foot or tall rien Janda new grows in Its place. dowt suppose that nature’ works a SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Violet Gunnery, wife of Mark Gunnery, young Englishman, elopes with Horace De V possessed of strange o-cult powers. They of a Meard You tire What The Evening World Has Done R EDUCATION. By MILES M. O'BRIEN, President of the Board of E. FO FTER the beginning of the last cation, elty school-house will be a neighborhood decade of the nineteen! ry | ce a 5 O better dawn of the century The Evening World has e tn behall s . . the achool-houses of se aed iacntat cena nae ee saere ey N cold be uttered in behalf of fof much protective 1 Hon as, the {ape hits, and hints that should have been | Including Uttle more than exaggerated dry-g0048| catherines every evening; a free brary labor, than that much friends as|Eight-lour law, the drug clerke’ hours] a" Rom as Kioks (0 boxes of brick, divided into badly ven-|gymnasiam acd’ othee Imarorenena| The Evening World hax been in the [of service enactment, the Employers’ | were Inten The tated and unsanitary class, and aa-l valuable as uifters of the peonle lant quarter of the nineteenth century | Labilty Jaw, the y lawe, anti-|alwaye teen tiret w cmbly rooma having four blank walle| whom the schools belong (Ten ‘cay | MIERL be muluplied tn the firat quarter |sweating lawn aid such Keneral legisla- lem, und nev and some windows, making little better | civilize a man best by stimulating hin | Of the twentleth. Pee ancetinn: the ners as the| nouncing any than cella, In which the boys and girls | self-respect. The working peop'e are in need of | Income Tax dill 4 ranchise Tax Pela mo aos eee were doomed to certain hours of daily! Aq! these things have been adyceated| Such champions as The Evening Worta | ia, aultiain Marts to compel | Imprisonment for the crime of being | earnestly. urgently, consclentously, In-| HAR proven Iteelf to be. ‘The pulpit and ) 1M entrrrenant of thine laws, | What the Evening World Has Done 4 boys and girls. telligently and consistently by The Even-| {¢ press generally, Institutions of learn MAK opposition to politleal x To-day, at the end of the century, our] ing Worl! ever ring it» lMrth [n 1857,/ 19K the Influence of wealth and culture, | 2nd Indust mends Th : schools are beautiful, inviting places, and thatis'what hpf-made-The Evening | Fe all marshalled on the other #ide,/ Evening World aeminded ettl- | i wlth all the atractiona, which architec: | Worid an up-to-date, of, better, a twen. | While there Is only: now and then w votee | 7°08, era particula yrno a ae ture, art and science can produce to) tieth century news! r, worthy of the, heard expresaing the aspirations, the Leite eee ae en eine mind through the | etree teen ereea per, wormhy of tne | needa and the rights of the most useful | OM these great economle questions The | By Rey. Dr. R. S. MAC A ‘RTHURe ‘Among the great | Even! has been In the fore-| Pastor of Calvary Baptist Chareh, eye, the ear and the imagination. In MR. ALFRED HARMSWORTH. neti brett ricbitbiibicbbb bite itelemeletenineeiiih ricki ice eebbbitirihniicbb brie ning World Has Done FO been in the strugcle in behalf of better Clement In soclet each day, themselves What The Ev R LABOR. its time to side issnes of w aud paid seeretari Ww and ramifications of The World Building it ist not difficult to realize its eap other kind of ext May the ty in the good deeds of the he one | particular. MD Men mele devote so considerable require the service: that usually i of committe jes and workers has examined the vast resource neous effor pntieth century see no falling o} tebelete By HENRY WHITE, Prosident of the Garment Workers! Union. champlonship A DOER OF DEEDS. an amount of 3¢ sity for this or any Atnericen daily news ht, an up-to- | What The Evening World UH. FOR WOMAN. * By Mrs. ELIZABETH CADY STANTON: i World has be rand nf $10,000,000, properties. On dlored man went proudly ¢o the as the voting representative of hough 1 aca 1. wtvocate the t tl) hese twelve wemen. any one 32 wht ; of our Governme The mignt have thrown him cver the fences World was amon the tlest te |r vening World Is advancing. of Y tac Onward marek of my sex troee that In the Twentleth Century IE) 1 portern, wil again assert Itt claim to primacy iin: nt Te has) ihe « * of women by championing the’ if my elnning « ing W jon and a u about whieh the valuacl olored | th wos lame about an aot a Ld pS {FE |xave bis wages as servant ¢ Ble; fe rally sth ae: 1 Ale tes Flof women, ans ef whom pald taxes on C > 3 Cc —+¢2- — What The Evening World Has Done Fo | R SPORTS. By JAMES J. JEFFRIES, The een an examph Joby other papers. ate pusill world | nas he followe any other paper tn the 1 has | rate news on pugllirm has be ' sporting pa- hy iS PSS 7) eee contury acd, |WeFul over, and tt has publleb | exclusive stories relative to th ing events carefully of completely defy | 2 experts, while ax briatled with | ve beea recurs le during the last year than “pi rivals, It begins the twentleth, well ahead of all rivals, and cuerlés ft the best wirhes of all true spai falr ni town to the polat each new school-house there is provision | educationa! methods, and the rearing of | authorities there are but few such aw for a free circulating and reference | fetter citizens by bettering the condi | Toiatol, Howeils and Lioyd who dare | date flees champlon—as {t surely Uprary. There is a Summer as well as|of the working wommunity, the atimula-| say a word in behalf of the struggling | “1! h century newspaper, wD te a Winter kindergarten, while there are | tion of their self-respect. and the render-| Masses, | { newspa free lectures of the first class to the/ing unto Caesar the things that are! Through organization the working p { n of busl: |xocd. ‘The best sources of informatios people In the schools, and attended by a | —for the schools belong to the| ple are learning to speak for themselves, ML | (than In new*-|as to the worthiness of’ the» famili half million earnest people each Winter. | people: they pakl for them, the poor) but they certainly appreciate the effort cs | atded have been employed. Indust and needie-batha are being Snatatied in} raan as muc3 ax the rich one. iualrewi liberate ral nded anu eniternriae i inp nd worth have thus been encouraged schools in congested tenement-huuse: Spare! The Evening World. CO | spaner work te ‘ districts. Vi L, M Vp ‘They will certainly not. forget what! t Z I imitate) the en practioa'iy rebuked. I predict that at the end of the firat | eC jthat in this c decade of the twentieth century each | a lees me ch nen, doubtless, would) ——— What The Evening World Has Done jaitirim thant ADA eae te ne Bing male jstelane ited on.) ‘The pty erves and recely What The Evening World Has Done ILLUSTRATING By W. J. ARKELL, Paubll hor of Judge. For 1 Evening World ,titlon of the news, In short, hax been K: fe N nothing has ‘The pride al : | excelled 40 conepicuounly as In nit | bett es on Se TE Soniite| period aimont pncellel with the existence nx Worl! 4x 4 public ervy Aiuatrations, T's cartoons Maye ot eee eae perfection In newspaper {=| of The Evening Wield Ie would he ele AN etn the cwotketh off the picturenque siiuntiona of the OY |justration for the twentleth century, | Vanity In me not to apmicis tan te aclu Da ena with pungent satire, presenting Mv ahieh tt hae Ina measure Interpreted |acknowledge the great public s eles cot aba xeakness 0 ‘sas gods in celllr, weakness of our jriltica: Kod In the feature of tts {iustrations. weekly cations. “he Evening We fashion, while the Mlustratlons of cur: | Hs rent events, noup with ‘ightning | speed und published concurrently with | severe iets the atory of the happening, would do aay credit to many pretentious monthly or eo pictorial oresen- when I was told the whole of the trouble 1 felt quite bad about 1! ur they: can't do much to me, besides 1am told that in this dashed country money goes a tong . and It sell the Churen-Con- tate rather of know him t Jete manhood, teward you! Better 4 ernon should nd soul and tore me finally t apleitually and. ph ity? thousand times that Jonn the piri body of Mark Gunnery phould be longer ncFO R JUSTICE. By JOHN F. W?INYRE, Ex-Ansistant Distele a public sadom Ir. 10 has rself: Gunnery loaked from on rere! up, It merely mout ds ne! ofand SV lols at its! ds 'ainew limb upon Retter, too, a thousand times, | sett than run short & xpiritual form already In. extatence.| Meparated Metia be “one wholesome, Roney to Rrease their dirty parma with: | of whowing his frlen “ The soul is the Ife, and 1€ you look up| complete a perfect, Mabel Chen erneld Seceroau cnet thes wyerceayait teey with an oath, . > uld con! 10 ve “aul 5 the frat chapter of Genesis you will sce than that (ee rrudes ont glriitess | will ‘pull me through, somehow, for it], Dont go, doctor.’ igperhee, an.- (he exaet counterpart merlby the marginal reference that In the] § elt ae aiawt and yet not slrtera,|the worst comes to the worst. theyll galnimadel Tame ani eatales and a living in J uh the word translated "life" Is Ynclded to use every argument nn} Manage that po true bill abail be found Sydney, Asetrall ley fearne that Violet Tein rantiated “liter la! ne mormom to persuade him to reatore/agalnat me. Stickfast la a smart man lin. have cleared Déew'co we at Sydney and that Violet is| ‘ ‘every moving | Me MOPS to tne other'a counterpart. |He went very carefully Into the matter, creature that hath fe," ° jor the death and|and f told him all about my money’ af. but “every, fi 1 freely. fairs, Tn fact, he made.more noter over te Bark lays his cave detore a doctor. who | expert in, paychology, The doct ir manage Mark's soul for one hour into the body of |moving creature! that hath soul. quotation, cf te T irre, refera to animals, un: and ood, ‘ould that J Ble man who is bie physical countssourt. Mark ‘and the form of all antmal soul is Fushra cf to vee his wife and child. “Om th] doubtedty the rare as th waypaamean stops him. Mark srikes bliin dead! bY as that of the aninal and narriee on. Inthe ides | If you had an arm amputated ja wife and cl 1 pou , “ved Bese boty ne ae bales come te Wrron | ZOUF body survived the loss of bi him for the. murder. you would r pain; but you wi ain pieeras: ie impersonate” h have n palning consvtousness of mb vtil) being the tains to him that the arrested man 5 lark's body. Int that the ho human seul, But peopte ite to, the deat by infusing ite, the corer [ftranxe consclousness of the old shapel" ; Rherlmene on two wiris, aimers, one of whom jf the Iimb beng there as long as, they P dae jurt died. live, ‘The fact Is that you cannot ampu- ee nat Tei tate hee hoor thee iemee| fate the spiritual form, which, In every vives. Her real nature ts dead and she Is merely | limb, underlies the.flesn. Gunnery, of the Ambued with part of her sister's personslity. |Golden Gate Hotel, your roul form, (s — under the flesh, and { might amputate Copyright, 2900, by the Pree: Publishing Company, his arm, but he id never losa the 5 eek vorki wate gonse of Ws one, Of course, Leannot this mathematically CHAPTER XIV. 1 only positively prov You ought to, then, for It's plain enough,’ he replied, ‘Let me put the whole thing in a nutshell. The ordinary Man {s.odmposed of, three parts—Splrit, Boul, Body. Tho soul ts a -piritual form, elmilariin ahspe to the body, which is! marvellous experiencest moulded upon It and fits it as the glove|erles of ihe day. ther test when you meet fac ce with your own cul and body incarcerated in priton.’ “I left the doctor in the early mi ing hours and returned to,my becaure you have Keneraily be- the The Prisoner. eof truth. But f should think 6667) A3 not sure that Leven now] thit you have seen and experienced thoroughly understand you.) enough to-day to believe what I say, @octor,’ I raid. You will be able to-morrow to put it to eto now jorn- cham a but 1 could not sever myself. trom the Muves bodies. How roper permn, he vuneral, of John Ver- ter of that, of Ger- ‘The spirits of both ‘a had parsed Inte another Ife, and T thought it was only decent ant reason nble_ that the bodlex should be at orce: burled and return again to Gate t wan the following evening. Thad return hambers after visiting the prise musing upon the strange events of the day. TAttle hal come of It, excepting a change Up elf gain tom: rhown. the ha dene. understond put together. that than all’ the reat y well expect they will bleed me ‘pret before I am through—hang them eladly in m: have’ attended or, for the mat ‘I don’t seem_to know the name. & Buckfast, of Grorge jo jailers rec- tor. “ ‘Bouncer street. It was one of ommended them—a tout, no doubt; geta & commission T suppose. But you sea I don't. know any one Itkely to” helt me now, ao [was glad to be able to consult with some one, [ thought, Vernon, that u would have been In to see me before this." “He made the last remark reproachful- ly, almost asa child or younger brother might. have wpoken. “Why do you think that?” sald the doctor, sharply "OH! he aald, quaintince of mine, that bourne, “TL gave such a start at this that both “Tus the doctor and Gunners notte he {vou hay latter Jooked at me long and cu Wernon, he sald at last, 11 that [ would Ike ave a‘talk with you alone.’ AN right’ + “Ti eave Court ts ‘Do wo for a minute, doctor, I laying my hand upon his arm, ‘Gunnery, old man,” d continued, ad- of drensing my other self, "l hav fan good a friend to you as I untgnt have|d wn in MM been, but I am determined ta bdefriemtlyou, and Ou new, if you will let mo. The doctor pened. san intimate frlend wf mine; in fact, 1 belleve you have met er mind about that,’ sald the lontor, breaking tm abruptly. ‘If T ean to rou I shall be ‘ou may rely uponime, Mr. | for Ihave Gorve, Mr. ty. told me, a unt! “ nf which more hereafter. # almost with ine (course, somewhat ng like the «mien wan, o! there was not and anxiety 1 ad expect: wt Vernont he excin med. tT got Into avdevilish scrape, haven't Um dashed if 1 know why drunk, [ suppose: and vet thing ts,’ h turning round. to the doctor, ‘I have an tmpres- drank nothing that morning hiakey and soda before break- fart ¢ ay he asked to drink with ein "hetore you him, To sald Mie hes told you that?” Ne exclaimed, “There were. a number of “people pout,’ | sald, somewhat taken aback by, the nuda nness of the question, he yen! he replied, "l remember; but ¥ you know I was not exactly myself thaemorning, [have had a lawyer jn Junt now, ard have given him san ac- Rohit of the whole affair from my stand. int; he says that I must have ie Avs lifterence. depreaxed, but deaponden> in only ing anythin ‘Vernon #» old ace have I knew in Mel- 1? But atruck hia the queer tion that [ except a w wakd the coct ip zled about not been}an tliness him ' before think! Lani Ht “gow ul Seat barrasament nUppoRe You al man I knew, belleve that "IT will go out of my mind, every Treason to for sour chamber here, Zidronkc that y other self, friendliness: The fact ts you 1 yet, alt of sorcerers. and with him Gunnery." HEARTY greeting to Th World for the twentleth c prosecuto} |The Evening Werld as an ail tant to thore charged with ¢ | covery of criminals and their pros all that The Ev I gave valuable ald tn the casen | ce kidnappers of Baby Marion | Clark, all now tn prigon, and in the Moil neux «nd Dr. Kennedy cases, of recent! eee RRR PR RPE RRR REE rere PERERA a pepper eetiniiebbteiettetelobebelelolelob-iefetatetebebetepetot tape ty a very friendly feeling © ip 1 ex an far In the presence of a friendly wi Yor dl tw the other lon, as though shed queer way he to me,’ claimed, for though he would leay en a mystery bet ble, ness, ald, ‘hat Uhave ne which f thas 1 altogether, ‘Who are the firms asked the dus-|have not known me properly.’ Look here, Vernon, ‘I'm pertestly dazed, have not seen you for a week, and seem to have been with you and know a lot of things which you hav: unless I eed, have not set eyes upon you for a week to-day.” think the doctor noticed my and guessed couhin’t tell Gunnery the truth, f fall, he would not hetleve tt; he woult ‘et the doctor and myself down as a ur chance he raid sudden. To migat have mis- And know that I yet 1 mewhere, am m™ en- une. tts fire 7 ald be Kon have not but 1 am a rotation of » i tthe family, likeness nment. myself,’ sometht Mr bourne hen L try after meeting T got mixed. nd thinkin; n. ena Jus night, old ug tly eva e night but <0! @ brother of my dead but [ never heard of you, me you to call upon’ me that 1 my chambers at T asked my heart beating wildly ‘Now that's the very thing Tam ne sald, ‘ten wanted to afk you fand 1 ree, Thad the sort after I met Wowhat hw with a Lrometimes tt does no ‘and I generally wind up by ettine ‘The nirht I frat met you In Byd- me up from zh. and of omurre I made straight bat you were awfully: you a Temple long oft This wugurs w Hu tury fat me lik trooper i 1 eoodne s kno: or rout, | i Uh you rem have won stuck toy wrod of with om in here a possible Mu yo a Sut ther D n nnery and myself, which I should lke turning youl, Non ang ff many th nee k a denpe: until after the “1 should sy Inquest that ie Gunnery" was charged at the po of trial ut Qu: forset that night. Ph down by ArTANBEent tf chambers to tell me et had They as in pul at seem te bord wall tot that rughly man tears fred my wl Meron from the Was totaly expert 1 mo my other self nove. Twas ath en th Thad sca But, at hand, 7 an teenty paine lated, to see what my lover nature come to when left te Iteiat, (To Be Continued.) oor, and humil. fiat duet Jand may a | forme on veo congratulsiion and ‘commendation: for, has « ebuadant ae enterprise, {i ard other ev m munlelpst and }oin has ring OLD DUKES IN ABE mise Resorted to HisOld Game of Riaging in “*Dum- mies- Has Been Gov. 5 Odeli’s Family Horse: | for 25 Years. © ie wenty a4 been thy famt’ Nenjamin 2, Odell, whe Governor of nundred: vnawe! awe of mane, and the os would frighten a highs” But the children of! the: ting a candi accuunte » more were love Old Duke. Their ing sick any them to drive him, bes. layed by ar even an auton Just en sud six-year-old Miss Odelbig scvelt # successor yesterdays} > not Old Duke going with us to ‘Ale’ chug. replied her fathergs room in the stable up thet We must leave Old Dukevat is ye were marke + | antl-Quay rs daring the . [don't want to go to. us, anid were in the eaued Mr. Roosevelt’ a1 i hte mean man. (Cryes cpondent sw ke Od Duke. witha spoke to them at ‘Quay. up tay quarters, They. wer lgnant at Un ‘The Gov and sail they wonld not vote New York ati or uny Q hating led to talker Wy. Send him down. to Sich the arrlage tea int has tn the House eniats de Daeaonis and desir hw will have 12 in the Senatorial caucus, way from that of any ontinary human} The insurgents Are poattive that he Steamship» Steward. Pair being. Of a al inatinvis and! pardons {cannot get these votes, and his strensth} yy o:coynor, steward herlin the House to-night was really 9, even jad | counting in ‘Thompson's, It looks as though Quay had toat his Jast and greatest fight. Line stmship Comanche Pler No. #6) North” vee

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