The evening world. Newspaper, July 31, 1902, Page 8

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{ Ps / World has repeatedly pointed out, has the remedy tm-; + for the gentlemen who cared for Prince Henry on his! | Published by the Press Publishing Company, No. 83 to 6& Gord. Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-OMce at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. “VOLUME 45.. (NO. 14,084. THE APPEAL TO VIOLENCE, Tf the striking anthracite miners had wished to ruin their cause, to forfeit all the results of their struggles and sacrifices, to justify the applications for injunctions against their assembling and picketing, and to hand the victory over to the operators, they could not have done it more effectively than by the appeal to desperate violence and reckless murder made by the strikers at Shenandoah “yesterday. \ The attack on the two non-union workmen was a | alge of every pledge of peaceable and orderly con- / duct, the attack on the deputy sheriff was a defiance of ‘the authority of the State, and the fatal beating of Joseph ) Beddall, the brother of the deputy, was a murder as cruel as it was cowardly. ‘The Governor was compelled to order out the State ‘troops, and it is to be hoped that there will be no more rioting or resistance to law. The appeal to violence is almost a confession of failure. Whether it is or not it alters the situation materially. Until order is restored and the rights of all citizens are fully protected and guaranteed the issue is not one between labor and capi- tal, but between violence and law. ; i t It now appears that the Acton Library, which Mi rnegie gave to John Morley, was bought by Mr. Carnegie some years ago with the pro- viso that the creator of the brary was to have the use of it during his lifetime. If Mr. Carnegie “does good by @tealth he must not “blush to find It fame.” ines a Good Dee ; YESTERDAY'S RIOT. - A strict and thorough investigation should be made into the conduct of the police in connection with the east side riot yesterday. It is the duty of the Police Department to provide for If there is any excuse for the department having made | < no preparations beforehand for handling the crowd at the failure to act after the unprecedented crowd had |‘ gathered. Had this been done, had the improviseé pro-| ‘ eewsion received the support which should have been given {t there would have been no trouble. And if it is true that the tardily summoned policemen offending men and even women every one gullty of such fan outrage should be speedily dismissed from the force. While the stories of the origin of the riot are contra- witnesses will be ready to come forward and testify. The police force of New York is no place for club- bers and especially for clubbers of women. Too Faatidions—A patron of a Broadway chop house knocked down a walter last night because the Welsh rareblt he had ordered did not suit him, A man finding fault with a Welsh rarebit in the dog days would be fas- , tidious about a Christmas watermelon. 1 LIGHTING CARS WITH ELECTRICITY, . Another accident in the West in which a raflroad “wreck caught fire with the result that several persons were cremated whose lives otherwise might have been sgved, calls attention anew to a condition which, as The mediately at hand. The lighting of railroad trains with gas or oil is a relic of the past and should not be tolerated longer. Fficient and economical electrical appliances for light- ing the cars are being used on the finost and fastest rail- -Wway trains. The explosive gas tank and the deadly oll lamp have been relegated to the scrap heap on many of the up-to-date railroads; and in the interest of the safety of the travelling public electric Hghting should beeome | universal, If the railroad companies fall to look after , their own best interests and extend this protection State » and national legislation will in the end compel them to » do 80. THE STODDARDS. The sight of a good, gray poet, bent and feeble, and almost blind, watching with lover-like solicttude at the | bedside of his invalid wife, his bride of halt a century ago, is a goodly sight to see, Do the heedlees boys and . girls who married last year and are now quarrelling over » domestic triflee before the honeymoon hes waned ever look forward as far as that? It is a long vista, one that terrifies the unfitly tied. In the case of the Stoddards it has been beaytifully serene and even. Perhaps with the Stoddards the poet's inner eye tdeal- izes qualities of charm in the wife still visible to him béneath wrinkles and white hair. But there are unpoetic households in which the romantic love of youth survives after the personal heauty is gone, Such households are} not at Newport, at least not among the Cliff Walk colony. ey are not in Fifth avenue mansions. They are for the most part in humbler homes, quite commonplace as they are viewed in boudoirs from which fleeing lovers “have leaped to escape a husband's pistol. ‘There are| many of them. Publicity rarely chances their way to! reveal them to the reading public, but the world knows of them and admires THE KAISER'S DECORATIONS, Yesterday was what a Yale boy would cull “tap day”! tour of the United States, The hand of imperial recognt- tion slighted some deserving shoulders, but when the} Femony was over many patriotic breasts heaved with | A pride hitherto unknown to them. A king can make a belted knight. an earl or two and a’ that and a genealo- | furnish 115 a colonial society to order if given the | , but it has remained for the Kaiser to create an en- order of nobility offhand in a twinkling, an Augen ek, as it were, ‘The Mustrious Americans thus distinguished by im- " favor have abundunt reason to plume themselves. | Eagles and Crown Orders are prized possessions. may talk sneeringly about a man doing things for a ribbon to stick in his coat,” but let the povts “as they will; ribbons are beautiful things. the wearers will he obliged to live up to a bigher rd, Thuy sot apart by royal edict as superior to fellows they must flock together in the isolated n befitting such superiority. As members ) Order of Servitore of the Prince we shall expect lier standard of rectitude from them than as plain wm citizens. Fame and the Kaiser have united to ‘pedestals, and if they have clay feet they them, full protection of peaceable citizens under all conditions. |? the funeral of Chief Rabbi Joseph, there is no excuse for; » showed their understanding of the proper discharge of| « their duty by indiscriminately clubbing excited but un-) { ® parks? What do we find there that is @ always fresher and purer than jt Is tn aletory and confusing there need be no diMculty in ob-| OMe ye cea taining testimony as to the conduct of the police. The| prompiness)—Pop-corn, sir! — Cleveland DOYLE CONAN—has given $5,000 of the PADIAPLADDASO HADDAD? HHIEHHHD Ce eee) ‘ PPDFPH>D i4OKES OF OUR OWN of PUMA VERSUS TIGER. They sought for two whole days the BY puma flerce. } ‘The savage brute purred when restored 2 to charge, ete Tiger purrs, too, but through weary i years i Of hunting he's still very much at 4 laree. e : HE 18 UP ON LANDSLIDES. @ “Had Bryan anything to say about the @ earthquake in Nebraska?” * “No, But if It had been a landslide P he'd probably it to Clevelandism.” 1eto CLAREY have attributed XOOGre =} MINT JULEP NOT GOOD AT REPARTEE. ? “Did you hear Dr. Splint’s lecture on ‘The Spinal Cora?’ 3 . 1 don't care much for back- Beak.” UNREOCORDED HISTORY. Back and forth struggled the conspir- ators, each trying to get their knives into the luckless J. Caesar. “I'm surely losing my pull in this ward," murmured the wounded man, sinking at the bi “AN my old friends BORROWED JOKES. @EGREE OF LOVE. Sillicus—That fellow's head over heels in love with his girl. I wonder they" not been married months ago. Cynious—Probably he hasn't reached ? the stage where he finds himself more } miserable without his loved one than he could be with her.—Philadelphia Record. SUNDAY-SCHOOL PIONIC, ‘The Superintendent — Now, children, % why do we love to go to the beautiful Plain Dealer. POLITE LITTLE TOMMY. ‘Tommy was in a crowded electric car in Newcastle and was sitting on his father’s knee. A young lady stepped tn, and Tommy, who {3 nothing if not palite, at once junm.ped up, raised his cap and said politely: “May I offer you seat?” That was why the other engers smiled.—Newcastle Weekly ‘hronicle. m 24 c7 eet f someBopies. } CABBELL, BIR ERNPST—whom Lord « 6 cS Sallebury refused to raise to the peer-| 2 age, despite King Edward's request, began Ife asa clerk, 97,000 he received from his war pam- phlet to establish a Bouth African scholarship at the University of Edin- burgh. HDWARD Vil.—is said to wear a six and seven-eighths hat, This makes the circumference of his head where the hat touches 213-4 Inches KRUGER, OOM PAUL—is writing « Boer war history and expects to send & apecially bound copy to President Roosevelt, It 1s not known, whether or not the latter will counter with @ copy of his “Btrenuous Life." RAB, MAKONEIN—nephew of Emperor Menelik, of Abyssinia, has introduced the custom of using knives and forks Into his own country and has adopted other Buropean reforms and usages. 2 Ghe Funny JS ide EXPLAINED. Cholly Western—Why did they call BAIADIDODG HIGHER OTTETE EEE OOH ET EOEE . OLD SOL TOOK A dULY 0 ‘peccys M420 suir While Sol this month's bee: having a vacation-time for his St. Within and Old Boreas haye stuck right to their biz; On seashore and on mountain peak they've left their chillin, But they haven't worried folks who stayed in little old New LOSS AND GAIN. of Life. a eWay th Uy RN 864-9405 4-6-6-046 FF. 2 coney Islanders lie To see them come ig mark, York, THAT’S ALL. He—Wonder what would happen It eee NEW ARMOR. An “armored walstcoat, price 32 shillings, carriaze pald.” has invented by French tradesmau at Charlevilic, who recommends it specially for the use of am- bassadors = and members of Parliament, jour- nallets and others exposed to dan-, ger. “BUG. Bug originally meant goblin. The Welsh word bug means a ghost. The Hebrew word, which in Psalms xe. 6, Is repre- ented by “ter- ror,” was in the early translations rendered bug, the verse being: “Thou shalt not Ve afraid of bugs by nigh’ ART AND ATHLETICS. The universally increasing attention now being given, especially In Anglo- Saxon countries, to out-of-door sports and to physical culture Is a sign of the best omen, says Outing. No class can have a greater solicitude for the further- ance of this movement than the artists, for they cannot create beautiful forms without having beautiful forms around them from which to draw inspiration The art of a nation ts but the mirror of that nation’s deals, and faithfully re- flects their slightest change. This new conception of the value of ath- letics will add dignity, interest and standing, making {t a factor second to none in the deve:opment of our clvili- zation. It will be a mighty Influence !r the creation of a new and superior typ¢ of men and women. That women are growing more and more to realize this is evidenced by the av..etle tendency of the modern girl. If she will combine therewith an intelligent effort after well- balanced and harmonious development, the results are bound to be satisfying in the extreme, for In many 8 the fe- male boly Js quicker than the male to respond to trainin ——_—__— TABLOID TEA. In the Colombo paper I read that 4 company has just been floated in Cey- lon to turn to account a valuable dis- covery—that of “soluble tea," says the Straits Budget. It {s claimed by the inventors of this latter-day version of the “cup that cheers that by thelr newly patented process they have pro- duced an article which makes a sound, wholesome and useful, because portable, cup of tea, As in the case of ordinary tea, the “soluble tea’? must be kept in airtight packages. The inventors ask what can be more convenlent than the mere addition of hot or cold water to a pinch of the powder, which fs all that is necessary to make a cup of tena, Nothing, I shoulg say. At the samo time the biggest fortune les with the man who first comes on the fleld with the tabloid stengah. With fifty five- grain doses of quinine in one vest pock- et, and fifty assorted slings, etc., in the other, a traveller might venture al- most anywhere in the East England as of the wager OOCO6HO PS P82 The custom of settling disputes by wager of battle from the time of Charle- magne was In full force and effect throughout continental Europe, was brought {nto England by Willam the Conqueror, and was recognized by the courts of as 1818, There is a wide distinction between the underlying idea ¢ battle and private ducliing. The former was a solemn appeal to the God of truth to decide which of the partles had committed perjury. The Mlustration Is from a manuscript of the fifteenth century. io PATENT USED AT ALTAR. ‘The first patent probably to be used in a Catholic church ceremony has been issued to Rev. Henry 8, Nagengast, of Baltimore, It is an invention to be,used in the blessing of throats on St. Blaise's day, and which will prevent the Namen from reaching the hair or bonnet of a communicant. Father Nagengast provides umbrella-like shields for the flames, with drip-catchers. The illustration shows how the candles are held during the ceremony. SHE REMEMBERS SCOTT. A Mrs. Lillie, of Galashiels, who, with her husband, hap just celebrated her diamond wedding, has some interesting reminiscences of Sir Walter Scott. On one occasion while going liome from school, she was overtaken by Sir Walter, who inquired her name and where she lived, and afterw: gave her a drive in his carriage. He drove past the lodge gate she knew ‘best, but set her down at the next gate and showed her a way nearer home. Sir Walter's two daughters were in the carriage with him, and they presented her with a thimble and neediecase, which she prized for many a long year, OOOO OES % %# UNLUCKY AT CARDS. * X @ it Bunker Hill? Mrs. Blinks—Oh, John, I've lost my f 3. mM should: merry. bla ostens4 Miss Brown Beans—Because the $ diamond ring somewhere. yi 4 4 bg $ Miss Clickelick—Why, she'd do the @ SOURCES. @ British found tt a bunker when they 3 Mlinks-Yes, T know you have. cg a omellonen BY ees > (Copyright, 1902. by Dally Story Pub Co.) softly, “only givelae the right! The sirens whe ceaseless rushing || 2 foozied thelr approach. Mrs, Blinks—Why, how did you 3 be lina: were coming home from a card party| “Frank" (this fom (Mias Wilson, suddenly and seems to drain . ~~ } know it? and, with the exception of Donelson, were] rather irrelevantly), : $ . z y), “I wish you would walk « The land of all its Iife-blood and i's |] & JEALOUS. Bunks—I found it in my trousers NEARER NATURE ° a rather allent trio. Progressive euchte| uttle faster. I'm continually stepping on your worth pocket at the same time I discovered ‘| had deen the game; Donelson had carried off first| heels." Bbpil coms arain in showers to ban- that I had lost $%. @ | Prize and was mildly jubliant; or, a» Morton sald;| “Sure! And I hadn't noticed it, Edith, Your feet hea an ‘sone ? y aggressively cheerful must be as Nght as Jack's head, But anything to d fill the myriad springs with say- WAITING, It was a cold night; the snow lay deep, and only! please you. So here goes,’ and Donelson plunged ing rain ¢ Bae 3,|@ narrow footpath ran irregularly along the side-| ahead. 4 a walk. The last car ‘had passed some time before) y,ajth,"" leon ‘The lonely death of mouldering bur- |) Edith," continued Jack, “won't you prove there ied grain ne 2 Rnd they, Bere RHE, Wn singe ale tp nap: Out! ts» truth in that old saying, ‘Unlucky at cards. q ¢ the drifts. Donelyon assumed the lead, and] jucky in love.’ I love y with all mi That bursts ite heart out fle : ee exe. you, ear, sith iat my orbs erie ut under 11% Morton followed Miss Wilson, who carried jon Ol heart, Give me something to bulla hepe.on.!’ ' © jesultory conversation fore and aft. | Nonsense; don’ x a Bhall " ° ‘Nonsense; don't begin that all over aga! ani ate New life arise in myriad | “How long will you be in town this time, Edith?” | jn the street, too. Anyhow. I, for one, have not B Donelson asked > slip verb. If fandicoverinili teeaandtnititenteae fs the slightest faith in any musty old prover’ rei UAT EAE 1 am going back to-morrow: Just’as I was hav-) you are unlucky at anything It Is your own fault. > ing the best of times: Take to-night, for instance-you could have won Even so the song that flows from ]| % ‘I'm awfully sorry. 1 wanted to take you to the) time and again. But no, you pald no attention to deepest spring, bs | cotiiion next Tuesday, Anyhow, I'll try to see you | what was going on. You were thinking all the Tia waraishat unvata (com siltere dtl (ae | again hefore you leave. What train do yoy take?" | ime about something else.” dying mould : Lew “Half past ten to-morrow; I mean this morning." | ‘Yes, of you, Edith, I do hardly anything else.” Of tears, love, longing, Joy, or pas: || @ =a.) »| "All right, you walt for me, and I'll take you to) “Phen I advise you to seek a more profitable oc- ler ° 2| the station, Come up to the station, Jack, and see | cypation.”” Shall flood men's hearts and make . Py ¢ Wrongsan-Why are you s0 sure g,| me see Rdith off."" "Come, Edith, I've told you before what T think ‘hamimaeniant avin? : in vet your historical novel will be a su “hanks, Frank, I feel norely tempted, but I of you; what I care for and desire’ above all else Shall bear Its fruit in kind, af} ® Old Man—See here, my little man, seas?) Anything new in it? can't get off at that time, you know," Don't say ‘no’ again. Give me yes to-night, Tell myrtad-fold {¢ what is your Hittle brother crying how long we have waited Wrights—Sure! Instead of “Ming “Bah! You mean you feel sore because you|me, Edith. Frank has reached the house and And this shall be, till song and || @ about? ing her purse to the driver’ whon @} didn't ask her first, You could get off if you we'll be there in a minute.’ Silence. A donen passion dle | Kld—Because he can't have a Pana- dear, most of the } she hires a cab, the heroine tries to | wanted to. I say, Edith, do you believe in the say: ps bring them to where Donelson 1s standing, Curtis Hidden Page, in Critic ma hat like mine 4 be on your al beat him down to % cents, + | ing, "Unlucky at cars, lucky In love?" “Frank,” sald Miss Wilson, ‘here's the key, open re £$696040000000080 bids 69900066 PLES OSOHOOO | Why, Frank? tlie door, please.” Pa a er EGLO ts teeing sh, =: = a poles = Sette iit salivaless ‘Oh, nothing, only 1 was just thinking Jack) Donelson mounts the steps, and she turns to might console himself with it. He came out in to-| Morton, ‘Good night, Jack; good I ahould “4 night's contest way down the Ilet, and it struck me | say, alnce I won't see you to-morrow.”* chap. I wouldn't feel so badly aboutiti¢t were| “Let go my hand, Mr. Morton; let go, I say." Central Park Thefts, woman? Really, 1 thy men dress | things desperate. Solasurs, too, are al- of the attentions his beauty you, because if you really wanted the thing you! “Only on your,promiac, Edith.” Th the Editor of The Kvaning World more meneidy then it », and #0 | Ways playing hide and seck, There ta| Well, in my humble opinion tpat could get a duplicate of tt for a couple of doliars.”"| “Will you let go?" 1 saw a young hoodlum deliberately | 4° the women, Those who do not|that atrocious banana pect on the pay Iilot. 1d bel my “hat the Frater! “You make me tired, Donelson,” saya Morte “No,” walking {nto the fountain at the Cen- | beleve this shouk’ just note the style ment which makes a man loop the Ie aks of never even noticed hie, “1 don't care for the thin, you call it, 1 want-| “Yes, then; yos,"’ says Miss Wilson ow are tral Park Terrace yesterday between |f Shoe, whiter coat, necktie, etc,, worn |Diavolo style, but with disastrous agination, age eee may with some ed to win \t—for a reason of my own.” Maul Aetinaanane noon and 1 P.M, and pluck a water |P¥ the woman of today. |) [multe ‘That wicked wimorella endowed | good nok 1 pity them for wasting | "A reason of your own? Not ail yours, dear boys | “Not quite." and Jack mounts another step and My therefrom, Is there wny way to SIDNEY LUTZ | with the pros, enalty to eacape from ite thelr efforts on such a thing as he. | pry your tears. I'll give the bone of contention to| whispers something, Op ? " owner, There t , . K. ‘ A Q 0p thie Vandallam? “FRANK HiGE. The Lady Bbonld Row F OH, Daact ‘antes wees weatings| aie. tis ta dhe Mectidents Edith, Bo she gets It, what's the difference? “Well, it’ the only one I do beileve in. And that Dete Panama, To the Editor of Tae Kvening World cause no end of Woe ang worry to the r. “None, to you," replies Morto only because—Oh, Jack, suppos some one had sean To the Editor of The Evening Wort, I really do not wes where the “Pana-|0f course), meet on the street which | Will no dout pe the Moat onaurate maphoblac" widow comes in to crit. |*ould salute fret? = J. URSULLO. |animate ob) DEEKMAN,. |P? lee the style of hat worn by any man, A man wearea hat to sult his taste and does not copy his idea from thoes worn by women, This is more than can be eald of the women, By the way, (ao thie not a ACW departure, thls ‘evitl- at apparel To the Kditor of The mate objects, Now, ie familar with that If a lady and gentleman (acquainted, inanimate Perverse: I have rs) faith In ghosts and goblins, but I belteve in the deviltry of insni- very good eitinen by lbutien which daily temple him to ney To the This communication poor housekeeper. 1 vdurate i Pities the © mer. To te Edlior of The Evening World ther poor spect- men who is annoyed by so-called firta Hous females. The Portchester victim aimite thet ie handsome, well- revved, atc..fut would Uke to get rid PN ba World of fo te tr row imp of « collar | | A young miss {9 summer'ig at Park, sald it was a shame for the Pre dent not to have some flowers when his train passed through that town recently, Editor of The Evening World: named Basi Jenkin North Asbury “Brace up, Jack," says Donelson ing is not your forte. Now, I always equally fortui ran home and got @ large bunch fe out of By yard, fad when ‘perhaps you'd have better fortune at something elee, Card play- yet I'm an exception to the saying, too, for I'm te in--but modesty forbids me to us?’ “Suppose they had?’ and Jack laughs. thirty, Edith? Good-night. "Yew; good night, 3 Donelson comes down the steps and holds out his hand, "Good night, Faith,” "Good night, Frank,” As the men turn the next corner Donelsow enya: "Accept my saaeniiienien Mortons bas you “Ten- win, And Apt ‘ > ieee

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