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{by the Press Publishing Company, No. 53 to 63 Park Row, New York. Hntered at the Poat-Omice ‘at New York as Second-Cinss Mail Matter. | VOLUME 42. NO. 14,012. * % OUR STORM CENTRE. Paterson's riot of yesterday is far from being @ local ; Ht concerns the whole country. It was an outbreak chism pure and simple, led by avowed Anarchists, “glearly setting forth the anarchist objects and : Tt illustrated the teachings which led to the "Ives of our officials and the security of our free system mnt. forcement of the law justico leans to the side of mercy, ‘pat there is no room for mercy toward the Anarchist. %n dealing with criminals of his class the utmost severity FG the most effective remedy. The Chicago Anarchists Rave been very careful since the hanging of the Hay- S market bomb throwere. In New Orleans the Mafia was _ gubdued only by the parish prison lynching. ‘AN, or nearly all, the Paterson Anarchists are for- eigners. Other nations provide for the deportation of all pernicious foreigners. It {s time that we should follow » ther example. This country is the home of the oppressed © of all nations, but we should draw the line on the _ Anarchist. —_—_— Coming Back.—Perhaps the most convincing proof of the atrength of Richard Croker in ‘Tammany Hall tw the Mst ‘of names of those who are opening the door and peeping tn, now that they are sure that he ts away for good Se THE MINERS’ CONTRACTS. ‘The calling of a national convention of all coal miners for the purpose of passing on the question of @ goneral strike brings into prominence the fact that with many of the bituminous coal miners a strike would be @ viola- tion of contracts to which thelr unions are solemnly pledged by every consideration which can bind an hon- orable man. Out of the 450,000 men engaged in the work of mining + yoal in the United States 144,000 are anthracite coal ‘miners now on strike. Of the 306,000 bituminous coal miners 184,000 have contract agreements and 122,000 of © them are free to join the anthracite coal miners. Geographically, all the bituminous coal miners east | of the Mississippi are under contracts except come 30,000 4 rike, and 45,000 {n West Virginia, who are now out on st " | in Pennsylvania, who are reported as willing to strile. Should the whole body of the bituminous coal miners egreo to strike it would probably force the stiff-necked presidents of the anthracite coal roads to an agreement, but any agreement made under such circumstances would | obviously be binding only as long as either party chose to respect it. —— Churehill has money, ‘where He Got It.—Police Sergeant and he freely tells the public where he got it, He got nd trading in diamonds, Any {t betting on horse races a ene who would question the acouracy of this explanation would be a heartless cynio. —_————____—_—- THE MEANEST OF ALL SWINDLES. The generally accepted assertion that the policy fraud is the meanest of all swindles received ample confirmation yesterday in the testimony in the Adams trial of William E. Nolan, & former employee of Adams. It is a swindle in which every one who takes part in it is a willing robber and Aespoiler of the poor. It 4s crooked from beginning to end, merciless in ite ras- cality and without one redeeming element of pity, t shame or self-respect in its degraded workers. Its victims aro not merely the very poor, but the | hopelessly ignorant. “Playing policy” appears to be | * form of mental disease akin to the craving for al- cohol or onium. It ts doubtful tf even the revelations | of the total dishonesty of the management will have | any effect in discuading its credulous votaries from | consulting their dream books and wasting their scanty savings on the fascination of the game. A more serlous aspect of the matter is the ruption of the police necessarily involved in the con- tinuance of the swindle, To assert that it can flourish | ‘as it does without the connivance of the police Is an} {nsult to common sense, and as long as the current receipts of the policy king continue the promise of police reform is a delusion. cor } The State Agricultural Department of Minnesota has issued an officta! bulletin showing officially the digestive values of various foods. All that Ie needed now {s a supplementary bulletin showing the rich how to get a digestion and showing the poor how to get the food Facts About Food THE DAILY AUTOMOBILE STORY. It has been urged in favor of the automobile that it} 4s a powerful ald to the good roads movement, In prac- r of President McKinley, and which menace the |: How to deal with tho evil so as to extirpate it 1s a |: practical and important question. In the ordinary en) OODDORODOOOOGOODED OOH ® MARY'S LAMB UP TO DATE, Mary hed a little lamb, Its fleece was white as snow. And one day into Gotham Town With Mary did dt go. ‘The soft-conl soot got In its work Kre they had walked a block, And strangers now declare that lamb The black sheep of the flock. ——— OBLIGING, “My poor man, do you drinkT’ 3 “Not ase rule, ma'am; but, seein’ tt 3r you that invites me, I don't care it > do." ° —— 3 IN KNICKERBOCKERS. > “[ hear that members of the Beet 3 Trust are going to the coronation.” “To get an estimate on Plerpont Mor- fan's calves, I suppose.” — H ART. “Here's a piece of music, miss, that costa 40 cents.” ® “Oh, can't you give me anything more difficult? Last week I played one © that cost 75 cents.” * BORROWED JOKES. $ THE PEACH CROP. “Yes, indeed,” safd he, "Miss Love has a complexion like a peach.” “That's so,” replied her rival; “ital bound to fall.’—Philadeiphia Preas. : EVIDENT. “You're an old acquaintance of Shorty, are you not?” “Yes, but I haven't known him long.” —Ohicago American, WIFE WILL BORROW IT. “I woe that the King has given the YDake of Marlborough the Orer of th ® Garter." QTM bet handsome the 2 Duchess will borrow it sometimes when @the Duke {en’t looking.” —Cleveland @ Plain Dealer. ® “Can you tell me why It Qerowied as he began diving under the @ bed, “that my slippers always seem to @ get pushed clear over against the wall?” $ “Yeu, dear,” she answered pleasantly. @ “You can?” © “Yen, dear.” um ® phen why $e ttt" @ "Becavee you don't put them away in Othe slipper rack when you take them Soff, dear.”"—Minneapolis “Tribune. £894-06609000-0000O00O00000, » SOMEBODIES. }|> DYPR, COL. D. Bs the only Re-|< publican who has ever been on the staff of a Democratic Governor in| / Georgia. DIAZ, PRESIDBNT—of Mexico, works over ten hours a day, Such an ex- ample has not yet led to the forming of « Presidential unton. | FRENCH, MRS. W. A.—Inst week visited for the firat time Pike's Penk, which was named in honor of her grent-great-grandfather, Zebulon Pike. | FRYE, BENATOR—wears the finest Panama hat in Washington, It will not, however, materia!ly influence his views as to canal routes. JAVAL, DR.—the blind French sctentist, pays the blind are gifted with aaixth sense that Hee latent In most persons. | ‘ ‘This wonse 1» said to have ite habita- tion In the forehead and 1s known as “The Sense of Obstacles.” LAJOIB, BASEBALLIST—has a $7,000 salary; which ts more money than 1s paid to the President of Harvard Uni- versity. PARKHURST, DR—ts in Ireland study- Irish agrarian question, FLOWER OF THE SEA. |): tice the automobile shows a disposition to monopolize any one else to use them. This has already gone so far that a great many people would prefer a poor road with- as the penalty for using it. the good roads for its own use by making {t unsafe for | out automobiles to a good road with the perfl of death | From ehell-strewn sand to rippled || purple pool, \@ From the dawn to twilight hour, ‘The sea spreads out !ts petals wide Like a morning glory flower; Emerald, opal, amethyst and blue In ite nectar-cup it holds, and cool, ° "Does SOME ARE LUCKY. ata Mise boarders just now? “Yes, some, but most of them man- age to escape.” DESPERATION. Another unpleasant consequence of the introduction + of the automobile is the opportunity it furnishes of | proving that we have a small and select class in the} community who are permitted to defy the laws which the rest of us must obey. This is not only unpleasant ‘but dangerous. Ta with the explanation that he did {t tn partial repara- | tion for the apples he stole from trees on the academy | wn when in his younger days he drove a stage along/ road that passes in front of the academy, To his @ he is said to have added the remark: “Mill- q “fons to-day are not as sweet to me as recollections of Then, it y ds each lov Garkness and the And the great sea blossom folds, | wrought rimmed in rainbow A poryphyry goblet ites Where the dazzling waters scintiliate -MR. SCHWAB’S $25,000 APPLES. and whirl ’ wnarles M. Schwab, the steel magnate, gave $25,000) na the gion of the lustrous skies; to Mount Aloyslus Academy at Cresson, Pa.,on Tuesday, |] °°" eq Mding: aplenders: tn’ ihe: dene And the full-blown glory breaks, When radiant petals wide unfurl at morning tide, And the great sea blossom wakes. ly hue to the dew, with allver, ari, and |) Pall Mall Gazette, — taste of purloined Baldwins from that old tree down | ‘TIMELY cluded to c Rjones (gloom!! mm: Those appalling tmuses About the use of tol that what little 1 use any fce, anyhow | Oe e004 oo8 Millionaires are given to saylug things of this sort the above poetic tribute. Apple mer- n the idea that the steel magnate is }he now pays $25,000 for a hatful of} ™ ago had better not back their and expect to sell thelr crops to figure, because they will find “Apples as $6 apples, but that hear ter from it your 1 believe baldnes Jwhich made his youthful mouth water and/\HA® was tte pr | ; arbors and from other people on this subject. jo for Morningside Park. To the Mdlior of The Bvening Work 1 have followed with consid behalf of the re west side to seoure music in Morning: leceasor? In any case, ja increaging. Let me GARIBALDI ble In- nendable efforts on jonts of the upper comm can imagine, therefore, nent of many hundreds the weturally Morningsld from the inhabitants ably intended to ent han cl fensely por air Dirty Above To the Editor of The Bvening World In other days it was said, An atreets but dirty sel New York has dir "Now, und however, akies a» well as dirty streets. A cloud henge over the clty day and night, ! other DBDORDOOMDOODDAY When the modern Enoch Arden wanders home to Tammanee A strange, sad, stirring sight before his keyholed eye there'll be: His picture turned toward the wall, his doughty foemen three, And each with a de-Crokerized milk-maiden on his knee. A GOOD GUESS. (Ss “What do you suppose Is the cause of so many divorces?” “Marriage, I think.’ ROBBED BEFORE, Little keep many those days. such clothes—an’ fronin'! cans First Bunco Man—Let's get after he that Jay eme Second Bunco Man—He hasn't got won't cut any money. I just saw him pay app! hie Oil at a Broadway resteurant. Kid—Aw, I don't oare; tt’ ee co) brood LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. ening and ine! you have an outlay already of bh cents, takes his wire Is Baldness Inere: ‘nothing to give them utterance. Of course the T,ee0 more bald-headed people nowa- ide When they found|9ld ynu will see a foxny, dim moon, | 1s $110, No ment is nol true. Mr. Schwab wouldn't trade his Gare ag E ery oi, toe twenty-five} that the band was not in the park st| With a nimbus of dirty haze avound It | us for all the rod apples this side of the Garden of | which we work tend to PRR ATL Pe Nar ar eee TEPER HET Fug canted ha aoe ant te te ae p + mo, not even for all the sweet apples| of 18 the modern hat worse for the hair] tundred Under the viasiig aun #6 One wt rian to wire night ire alr We used ts Affairs, eh? houses at 7? Vor Che. To the Hatitor w presum a or M The Hi A. LUCAS. The bathing # about to begin. Below, In view of th Me suggest lower rates for the privilege of dipping 4 London faster twalne while streets but clean. the soft-coal re- ew York hus dirty Mother Ocean, Usually one pays a nickel to the ferry or the boat and a nickel That's 10 cents. Then the boat is usually about 9 cente the round wip The bathing sult Is 2% cents. Often one pays extra for extra towels and Recessary acgommodations, There York. for ‘ork to and Ghe Funny JS ide of Life. NO ned LOOKING BACKWARD. Mra. Simpkins—Law sakes, 8 Jenkins, I'm glad we didn't live in 2 Just think of mending 4 the washin’ SACRIFICE Old Man—Little boy, I'm giad to ® wee that you gave your sister that PDD 9490 GOOODDDODIOREGDPDDOOSOD y, this is more than mai ts can pay three or four times a week, Also, many of us can't get to the beaches before Why not haye more night bath- neape: ing instead of closing most of t CLERK. A Commuter’s Plea | no tho maitor of The Hyeuing Work! ‘The various railroade covld make @ Jot more money by running move and from suburban towns within @ forty-mile radius of New I am @ commuter and I am greatly inconvenienced by the slow and NEW ROCKET. Capt. Andre a Chicago life-sav- ing oMetal, has devised a steel rocket which, when ifaed to throw life lines to wrecked vessels, leaves a trail of Nght behind it and enables life-savers to locate the dis- troased ship. WORLD'S STEEL. The worlt's steel output for a year would make a column 100 feet through and a mile and a third high, or build a steel wall 5 feet thick, 2 high and 10 miles long, THE SINGING MOUSE, The power of song among the brute creation has so long been associated in our minds with the feathered tribe alone that we ‘Jo not think of it as be- longing to any four-footed animale. Yet there is a mouse that sings—why, novody knows, says the Toledo Blade. It ‘8 a small animal with very large ears, which are moved about much while singing, as if that were neces- sary to the success of the vocal per- formance. ‘The song is not, as you might think, a prolonged squeak w variations, but a succession of clear, warbling notes, with trills, not unlike the song of a canary, and quite as beautiful, though some of the notes are much lower, One great pecultarity 1s a sort of double gong—an air, with accompaniment quite subdued. Upon first hearing this one believes he 4s listening to more than one mouse, ¥o perfect 1s the illusion. So, you s2e, the birds are not the only singers—that this little mouse can do better than some of them—and that ff Jt should ever come to live in our houses there would be no use of keeping canaries, “BUSTLES” FOR MEN. In extreme cases men have been known to wear corsets, and now it looks as though bustles might be added to the wardrobe of the heavy dresser, ‘The military cut will be ithe proper thing in men's coats this summer,” says a fash- jonable tailor, according to the Phila- delphia Record. ‘There will be a’ de- cided flare at the bottom, and unless a mun has good hip development ithe gar- ment will hang loosely, and the effect will be just the reverse of what is in- tended. Consequently the man with slight hips, if he wants to look well in one of these coats, will have to resort to pads, The padded shoulder has long been adopted, so why not the patded p?, Yes, I suppose you might call it a bustle if you choose. $$ B. B. FANS IN CONGRESS. The baseball contingent in Congress ts quite large. Hepresentative William Alden Smitb, who 1s a crank on base- ball, says that there are at least 100 members who would rather see a base- pall game than eat dinner. Certain tt ts that on the opening day of the season in Washington fifty Representatives, headed by Speaker Henderson and Chairman Payne, were in the grand »|atand, saya the Washington Times. On the Senate aide Culberson, of Texas, and Dietrich, of Nebraska, are just as wild .] over the game as Senator Kittredge, and that {s understood to be saying a great deal. —————T KEEP MATTING CLEAN. Little-used matting, as In spare cham- ?| bers or upper summer rooms, should be swept very cloan, then wiped with cloth wrung out of sweet milk, Do this once year—t keeps the straw alive and to a degree pliant. If the milk wash is used in a living room or on a plaza, follow it by wiping with very hot, clear water to Mrs. an’ keep the floor from drawing flies, BEARS TINIER THAN ANTS. i Echiniscus Asctomys. rotten, species akin to the rhinoceros. oDp!TY CORN ER. MAKE A BLACK SQUARE OUT OF THIS. Echiniacus Nov, Spee Macrobiotus Hufelandit, These strange eight-footed monsters @ supposed at first glance, fosall representatives of extinct This design if properly manipulated will fold into an exact square. The square j should be solld black. Cut out along dotted lines around the edge of the desigm | and then try if you can fold it. ‘THE HARP TREE. ta ‘This Is a pine tree which stands—or rather les, for 16 @/ lyre, at least in appearance—not far from a thriving mama facturing town which bears the high-sounding neme @€) Bhrenfriedersdorf, or the Town of the Honorable Pesos tm! Saxony. Provably [t was blown down in a storm, efter which some of its branches assumed the attitude and ap-| pearance of independent trunks and the others withered ev‘ have been removed. It {s locally known as “the harp,” and‘ will probably bear that name for a long time, as it ie ine very flourishing condition. Similar malformations are now uncommon, but this one {s notable for its striking form aa {ts size, A WAR AUTOMOBILE. An armored motor car designed to carry an array of | formidable guns to be used on land as battle-ships are used at sea has been designed by an English inventor, Frederick | Simms. The car ts designed to support a welght of twelve tons, but it 1s not anticipated that {t will often be calle@l | upon to carry more than six tons. The engine which supplies » the motive power 4s a sixteen horse-power four-cylinder hy | dro-carbon engine. The fuel burnt 1s petrol, for which tanles} are supplied underneath the main frame, capable of giving} the car a run of 200 miles, The car is equipped with twe pompoms and two Maxims, It can carry 10,000 rounds small-arm ammunition, and has also, at a pinch, carrying ee | pacity for twenty men. DED. mee. not, as might be ‘They are still with us, and we have probably trodden many of them under foot, for they inhabit moss banke and are only from one-hundredth to three-hundredths of an inoh In with him it 1] length. For inoes flelds neom ° of protozca, worms und the singular "tardigrade mn bath. for the same reason, but Prot pigs’ ax more appropriate, diMcult to class them, ormatac allroad je Jam vel, No with fat- CT to possess a distinct fauna ax well as flora of thelr own and harbor many peculiar forms rieuiate animal "or “slow movers iMustration, They are #o called because of their mothod of fon, which is ke that of fat or tired bears and some naturalists have called them ‘'bear animal Richter, who has just plb- Hahed a minute account of these curious little creatu the sclentific Journal Prometheus, suggests the name Interesting to the casual observer by reason of thelr strange forme, which parody those of higher animals are sii more #o to the naturaltats for other reasvis, Whey are not worms, or insects, or ns, or centipedes, As they have eight legs thoy have been put provisionally with the spiders, but they are theme ‘They are covered with a sort of armor, oe the whole body, is Wanaparont, Here are found * shown tn the is,” or “Hittle bears” in little they It ts aie Je bow the ry) ive deaort Brening World are put to ~~