The evening world. Newspaper, May 6, 1901, Page 8

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COMMITTEE OF MAKES CRARGES ' CLAIM THAT EXIsTs ED GYM DENI JEROME PLANS OF JOHN: DG t1-i-t bling-houses and make $ bc gamble in gambling-hous (When he ; ask such sensalr Pei biieteininni-) gets to bean quoestior ARR RRR THE PERPL Me Asked Her to Write Dear srs. Ayer Waite on pened to went 01 nak when 1 returne! to know if 1 . right by writin to hin rR 1p would vane that t with the Uenkes of tH ter of ume corr she 2 of OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. _——. The Evening World's Daily Fashion Mint. To cut this 1 elze 10 yards of 9 yards 2 1 inches wide. yards 44,inches wide without frill. 0, 3824, alzes 32 in 42), GAMBLING AcTUALLy IN NEw YorR\K ON THE TRACK NEW YORK > CHOOLBOY $1,000,000 on the rise and? 5 | STARTLING | \ | () URPHY! RAID! | 1 stor 5) HARRIET sery If ut muon attra ay of w Y Me a young 1. e walked a rane! acteristics of thinking rex 10'cente. New,{York City.” ea &i igs ALBA Her love for tramptn NEVY S f ; | | | BULLS IN THE ASCENDENCY ! | | , MILLIONS ma ] MANY OLD FIRMS OLD TIMERS PREDICT A » pollee protect the horrid men who run gam- pr ks and turns of the market? n'tit just as bad to qamible in Wall street? he'll be HUBBARD AYER. he wi comm non t Anything lady for two ye THINGS USEFUL TO KNOW. wll ne Htening effect SPECULATION FEVER SPREADS AND THE “LAMBS* man ts res pein’ for Mer, three years OrN-OUt system. ney soon have al yy tecanter chop a large BULLETIN. | MAD SCRAMBLE ON CHANGE: | DE IN MINUTES!) + GO UNDER! COLLAPSE ! AS USUAL, SUFFER! | JAP HS UECER Eee for the men sho bet Tf it's wieked to ytecting ser and know better than to ° 3, SOLVED BY ow HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. year aro she asked me to give up| Irinking, which f did have kept | pledee Tt not this | that 1 owe | 1 prop. | she would antl tt At this | inteation to write will smolce to ree npany te About | teem and atte vag ts thin 1d always The Dew pie 1d ty on anting oymter i Feonntry, the other half in hostile country, jinen te keep his lines PT PARK ROV 1-Clase Mail Ma Vert and keen rett Hale is easily (he vrand old man of Boston. More than that, he is as fine a type of the thoroughbred A ean—the Amer helieses in his country, its ideals of govern- nent, its institutions; who is proud of its 1 DW ARID Err wana: AN So-y EAR oupovrimer, 4 no enone gne mene san who nd confident of its future——as there is to be found imthe forty-five States of our Union mnt of Dr. Hale’s many-sided life— r, novelist, educator, philanthropist, and view of Reviews some of his most salient In Boston they have Th a inost intere auth list. preacher M te party man-—in the and characteristic e recalled. alled him for vears “the city’s pastor at large” and “the minister of all the people who don’t go to ehuyeh.” Every human being in distress who had ‘no church ties,” or who was dying and had ne regular minister” to send for, has claimed Dr. Hale’s servic And never in vain, He never would allow himself to be called 2 t simply “4a Christian minister.” His story “Ten ‘Times One Is Ten” called into existence the myriad organigations of King’s Daughters and Lend-a-Hand Clubs, IPof qhem, like Dr. Hale, broadly altruistic in spirit and aiming to Doctor's famous motto: Look up and not down: Look forward and not back; Look on and not in; 1 hand, He has been a democrat in education as well as in religion- ings realize in “aetion’ the the stout champion of + people. This is his own platform: full view of the right of all God's children imit te any “upper class” the delights of he fll range of literature, and all which we al education, The sole reason for which America exist- 1s a nation, he says, is that each man may } standing depending wholly upon the measure “Whosoever would be chiefest $e eenen nen emenenenen enh Any serve others, his soei: of the social servies he renders. among you shall he servant of all,” is the motto in whieh he ex- presses his idea of our national mission, His faith in his country and in its demoeratie mission has been as these: Our Government is corselres united, tem In which the people rules itself and commands its Democmey ts “er prvants a Ring wtocracy Is not hereditary. ean systems no man may do anything unless he Is per- our people ts not a third estate; our churches Our Dre ire not hlerare In the feudal or 1 snding the highest education to all the]; OILED AGAIN! t + t iat HPAP P ert leleleiniciei-i-! EI eieleiieiniefei=! telelebicitieleleieieleinintelei-irinlelefeieimietel=! inicleleleleleteiates The manner in w the approach of trouble ts ve in # recent poolroom rnid. 1. the accused police captains are =! suggestive of some of the back-window escapades Has somebody tipped them off, too? MivieicieinivinicinieiePeicieieieicieielerteloivieinieleiotnl By FERDINAND G. LONG. rieleleiebeleieieleteleleteleieteteiet otfelnbetek getting out of the way on Ss tS THE EVENING WORLD'S. BIG which every good work and whe mental centrol of railroads, &c., and shai stringent legisintion aginst trusts, &e., thereby ending gigantic ratl- read pools and combines, and xiving the. Home rule for} people an open field and fatr shure of f Reforma, Worlt al things for ttizen should wish r American system he may do anything unless he ts ken of theorists, own affairs in ir Government have all been the mis wrought when the people took r! have baer ogenarian optimist of the Hub never coined hand and pushed them it And perhaps this o xi than the one he offers for overy man and woman nal: “This world is to be a better world because [ am a a finer m an indi in it KITCHENER’S HERCULEAN TASK. A London correspondent thus sums up Kitehener’s task in South Afrien: To sweep ont 18,000 agile and desperate men broken up into reving bands moving among friends in a most ditfenlt country three times as large as England, Scotland, Walea and Ireland together. And) Kitchener must transport all his esof every kind a thousand miles, half of it in’ semi-hostile Tt takes nearly 200,000 Me fas less than 25.000 inen available for hunting the “roving: bands.” of communication in fair working order, J And finally the longer the war lists the more expensive it becomes | and the tiereer the hatred and the less enthusiastic the English colonists at the Cape who are being ruined. No, the war in South Afriea is not “over.” Britain's $700,- 000,000 already paid are in the nature of a first instalment. SOME O ay NCH r F THE FU Feats| Mr UN OF THE DAY. | A FAIR QUESTION, mnie,” sak ttle Mabel to her als- at breakfast, “did you tell papa’ 1 papr what?’ sald Jennte, Why, you told Mr. Buster Inst night nowith {tf he did tt again you'd tell papa—and Lieve it,| ie did tt again, [saw htm,” And then papa looked at Jennte over “Two | his glasses, King in your} —=—_____ ma omay tonever happened ts vet remarked Ber me. prey Mways been Lac things have the art ane ——$—$—— LINES ON A “VAWws.!? A vers dé societe writer he waa, But he's now In disgrace, Me wrote a rondeau on an Austrian vase, But he rhymed !t with “lace,” ©, put them into the bee Ou ey Be e warm water and} oaks ea, H on 3 Los Bb imi fs, mined wits temal to use for a pud- ‘et apple’ Jelly LY LOVE STORY. * “ ela 7 Datly Story Publishing Co) imitting down to) rast on al primeval 10 where the pine woods fh rity ruad, He built her a Larry ON: Kup his coat nd down Into tt the O'Netl could whim was and he followed, vnd Now five miles {rom home they were] bly si y SR laieESENRU YN e RO ANAR US Te Se aveustomed to walking behing « plough, that kind of exercive presented to him only the rd labor, and he w My of the warm and jiiy shoulde: bzy Httle room they had le& at her "Cashier, The World, [imperious command, Uttle thre of yy me ansWered | As Mv roads were passable F © had promised to show her the inother | Foutes, 5 and over loved so) well he fre is golug out, Mr. O'Nel came the voice vid in hin es Horous, resinous brane and io do hin} 4 again, Then he threw ide her the soft Stes pat his arm aut her | watnt and ¢ ed her heat down upoa ind madly kissed her lips. A audden gust tossed the lames higit among the trees. Miss Harwood forci- 4p and looked at him in on aise iA TO-DAY’S AUTHOR, FF. B. Crawford. Ho nbeolute f ery Words, |hever went to school any and I never |*anted to tl T knew you. You'll be imazement ¢ 3 this un-| " sandsome t His eyes shone blue | going home now soon?" he asked, t the Wack curling hatr, the | "Yes, in the spring,” she answered A Showed red in cheek and |erteply. “Ant whatever will Ido without you, look holy it T know the that way VT otove darlin’ you so, likes of you wou t{dariin'? Sure | where y. You'll be going back Eas! “It be havin’ lots of, friend get to atay here, ive here, ed fercely, else] The fire had burned down to black- ened ashes. ‘The mournful win! blew colder about them. Miss Harwood done thut thix ind should be so ridicu-/ahtvered. As she rose to «tart on the lous? ‘The men she had known woud | long road home she atepped on a butter. nave unde: They could take carejcup Just above the ground and crushed jof themnelves, but this hot-eyed young {te Bhe could not realy. What had she Greater N the trie ittleal Jug . thereby terminating the products of the earth, which an all: J abominatie po-| wise Providence intended for them, but} ated by our “fMlim-tlam™ politiclans at Albany; jaw and too! of which wily, avaricious man deprives ant and robs them, J. McCORMACK. Our School Systems. ownership of street railroads, | To the of the Evening World: &c., on a system similar to the| The puptin of public schools are well Moe, thereby giving the people! instructed in secular knowledge, but as r orents, fares, light, taxation,! the ols must be now sectar- and ending the money-making ca-| lan, van be taught in them roof the railroad magnate; Govern-] about religion, the only true and in- often hereto: “flayrloodl nietpal xs, NEW YORK TYPES. THE STREET-CAR FL'KT. This Street-Car Flirt in ‘witching gown Mlyminzs the cars of old Gotham ‘own, With tripping step she begins the tl her And makes e’en the gripman lose his grip. And her passing glance at a pas- nger Make him pass his corner to flirt with her, 2 WITH THE PINE NEEDLES. [picture of herself among the enveloplug | Keon on the hospital staf! and a very cushions of the couch and prapared sto | wealthy man. |read the letters which the west-bound| ‘There was, little else except the name train had brought In. From among the| which was signed Kt the bottom, "The advertirements with thelr typewritten) same old story. A girl with money Is envelopes and the fashlonuble ytation-| just as géod as a girl swithout,” sald Jery of girl friends she picked out the | Miss Harwood aloud, with a hard’ little |niz letter with the Chicago posimurk, | laugh, ns she dropped the sheets to the |the letter that ahe watted fur froin day | floor an xtaring at them, to day, Taey were te: engaged—not | 's farewell words came yet, but she knew they would Ve some will be Ike death not day when he would get established in a Let me come onve }xood hospital position and should ark | her to come. fir | She tore the envelope open, anticipate | he ing the pleasure to come. But this one; her ca tebell furloustece was not Ike the others, It wa short! "Fell donn,” cho raid to the boy at the that he expected :o/ door, “to waddle his horse and take this mo she sat before the aho arose and went to Her pen flew hurried- axe of note puper. Then she rw writing desk, yo rane | ranchero-— vas burning low |~ Baek in'heriown room agaln with its jagain, A augel like you jeemfort and colce and’ photograplis an} other reminding bits of college life, Mire Harwood quickly ‘made another Sibson white wculdn't want to be chained to a olack Gevil iske me," Larry went on, te married in Maz: The lady was Mian] Mote to, the’ Malchero rancho. a take Estelle Manwaring, whose faiher Vir-| ty herself, another walle Mee {qinia Harwood remembered is chigt'sur-".morrow with Lagry, LETTER CL fallible guide for our Mves. schools the children should be taught how to get on tn the 7 also that all wealth which tee —— by any other method than ho. or trade Is acquired in violau‘'\’* God's commandment “Thou Sbejt Steal.”* The Man Who Sells His Lift To the Piltor of The Evening World: Recently an article attracted my @ temtion. It treated of a certain doct:| who to enable himself to set up @ pra| tice had hit upon tho {dea of auctionin} himscif off as a husband et $5 @ dbanc: Well, this does deat everyching! Twen ueth century personified! O&, where ar the days of ohivalry and love and de votedness! Does this madman know what bo {3 about to do? He ts east. ficing u Ife's happiness for the eimighty doilar. By his plan he may get the most unloving, the mest {gmorant end the mom selfish wommn in creation for a wife. And yet he does not care, but plunges into the abyss, Lowell mays, “Each ounce of dross costs its ounce of gold." Dhin-worthy doctor may find out the truth of this matement, fouls A. KERPEN, Ignorance of the Law. To the Bitue of The Evea.ng Worl ptrate Cornell 13 quoted as saying it 1s a hardship to poor men that they are arrested for spitting and locked ug In the Tombs because they cannot ge ball, ‘The Magistrate shows himself be a kind-hearted man, I am as muck opposed to spitting in the oars as anh one; but w I saw a laboring mas arrested who claimed he could not rend {t acemel to me very unfair, The publia do not want every poor man who hap- pens to ido this (for once) arreated. It Is the wilful expectorator thoy are after, ‘There in no neceasity for wholesale ar- rema without a waruing. J. MILLER, Defenda the National Game. To the Editor of The Evening World: I think your correspondent who mms himself “Ennuyant” ts just a ttle bit twisted when fe sneers at our great nattoral game of banchall. He says thae 4: bores him, Bah! I wonder ‘¢ he ever saw a good game of ball, with a few thousand people yelling themrelvos hoarse. If so, | guess he won abot the only one that felt bored. As for box- _ ing, I suppose he knows that thero is « law in most S:ates which prevents out smoking dudew spar for the benefit of OOK off, dear Love, across How long they kiss in sight of melte the sun, ‘Tia done, Glimmer ye waves, round else Never our tipe, our hands. good fighters from entering the ring for the ladi¢s, ENTHUSIAST. the sallow sande, all the lands, As Exypt's pearl dissolved in Tave, lay thine hand tn mine. unlighted san Sidney Laster, SSSEOSes Coereoesosoeeeoe Ss Tore than @ few rounds. But perhape | RODPROOE 29908909002 0080H And mark yon meeting of Ah! longer, longer, we, rosy wine, Come forth, sweet stars, and Oh, night! divorce our sun and Ww liken to see some of those cigarette- EVENING SONG. L the aun and sen, Now In the sea's red vintage And Cleopatra night drinks all. corort heaven's heart. sky apart, POVISISSISSSSSSS GESTS SISISEIIITES

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