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FRIDAY EVENING. AUGUST 29, 1902: by the Press Publishing Company, No. 8 to @ Park Row, New York. Hntered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. NO. 14,983. GETTING WORSE. “Whe-attuation in the coal mining region {s un- Moubtedly getting worse instead of better. Regrottable fexhibitions of the mob spirit were made at different points yesterday. Several encounters ‘between the troops fand mobs of striking mivers are reported in Panther (reek Valley; at Pittston and other points non-union qworkmen have been attacked; the disorder has extended to the bituminous coal fields of West Virginia, where at- tacks by mobs on working miners have compelled the + Government to call out tho militia. t It is to be hoped that the leaders of the strike will}; | be able to keep their men under better control and to | prevent any further outbreaks. This Mr. Mitchell has i ; | oODp!TY CORNRR. ALICE ROOSEVELT AND SANTOS-DUMONT HAVE HANDS READ BY A PALMIST. JOKES OF OUR OWN DUKES AND DUKE! We don't go much on fore! ‘The only dukes we know Are those McGovern and big "Jef" Put up when they've a "go." n dus MORD EVIDENT. . He (ardently)—I would like to bare my {innermost thought to you. Would that I had windows in my soul! She (bored)—Wouldn't a pane in the stom do? solemnly promised to do, and the leaders cannot tgnore |; the pledges he has given. No excuse for their violation can be accepted. Wo cannot even plead that the dis-)% © orders arise among newly-arrived foreigners, ignorant of Wnglish; the names of the rioters under arrest prove q fhe contrary. § " : Riesorritie tne operators @o not operate, Nolminea|®) aa cteatreay siti wa. eiater fre opened, no coal Js mined. The coal mining corpora-|) wr. Avenuesee?” tions, as far as the fulfilment of the purpose of thetr| Not yet, Mr. Cortelyouroad. If the fnoorporation is concerned, have been dead for nearly Seana ee ura a alert four months. It is to be regretted that their charters @re|® jystaiment furniture is away cheaper}. not subject to forfeiture for such failure to operate, but! ¥ than coal at $10 a ton, especially when fn this as in every other instance the corporate creature] {* you haven't mu h pata on it." 4s greater than its creator. The end of the strike {s not yet in sight. THE COOK. Swamps—It takes true courage to charge the enemy. Skeets—It tales more to discharge the enemy. Boog Whe Unspoken Word.—Will not some one amid the admir- g ing and enthusiastic crowds surrouding President Roose- fe | elt remind him that tho country would Ike to hear biec coal strike? Be | Word from him on the subject of the coal strike BORROWED JoKEs. in Sas f THE DEATH OF ADA ORAY, ERSATILE. ‘The LAnes in Mins Roosevelt's Hand. (The Lines in SantosDumont’s Hand, 7S f ‘Ada Gray, actress, died in a hospital yesterday. Few Mrs. Bjones—Your thusband, I hear, is “Martini,” palmist, of Allentown, Pa., who read | brought about shortly. ‘The sun line shows I 2 z Miss Allee Roosevelt's hand at Mrs. Stuyvesant | cheerful disposition, that Miss Roosevelt likes-to ? scatter sunshine among the afflicted and dis-¢ tressed. The girdle of Venus tells that her quiet, + modest nature often gives way to @ nervous / strain. The influence line on the mount of Venus | demonstrates a power or influence over others { and the faculty to make friends—personal mag- | netism, The marriage lne shows an early union | to the one of her choice, ‘The travel line indicates extensive travelling. “The first and second fingers delng so Tar apart | show rather independence in action, though there 4s no indication of a domineering spirit. On the mount of sun there {3 an Indication of love for literature, though rather as a reader than as @ | producer, and marked a preference for the classi- cal and deep Instead of the sentimental and frivo- lous." “Martini” read Santos-Dumont's hand at Brigh- ton Beach. He found it knotty and philosophical, | tho third finger Indicating an inventive nature, | The mount of Jupiter shows that his hopes and | ambitions will be realized. ‘The head and life lines | separated show that he has great ae ‘New Yorkers could have told off-hand what her char- ‘acteristic roles were, but in a hundred smaller cities and \ towns she was as well known as Bernhardt. In point of E tears shed over her “East Lynne” she was the most | bewept member of her profession in America. In the} { emotional role of the injured wife returned from exile!‘ E she had saturated more hemstitched handkerchiefs with |) | dewy teardrops of rural eyes than any other actress on | ( quite versatile Mrs. Brown-Smythe—Versatile 18 no name for it. Why, he can actually stay out late every night in the week and not give the same excuse twice.—Phila- delphla Record. Fish's placo in Newport, explains what he found there by the typical hand printed above, in which the lincs of his fair and distinguished client's hand are faithfully reproduced. “Miss Roosevelt has a square hand," the palm- ist writes, ‘the fingers tapering to a cone, which signifies a practical nature, yet a taste for the sublime and the beautiful. The fact that the fin- gers are long In proportion to the hand proper shows that she 1s a lover of detail; a stickler for etiquette, such as a leader of society 1s supposed to possess. The thumb, being long, shows a great deal of will power; very logical in reasoning, ‘The thumb also coming to a cone shows that she Is not contrary or stubborn, but exercises good judgment {n reaching conclusions. “Tho Ife line 1s exceedingly long, showing an age of about seventy-two years. The head line takes two courses, signifying the practical and the beautiful, but the practical part being the longer overrates the artistic. The heart line shows a deep and lasting affection, an ideal love. The fate line shows a great deal of distinction and will, It takes two courses, which shows that some marked change or sudden rise will be a . — CAN YOU READ THIS REBUS? GUIDING HR. May—T met some one to-day who 1s very much enamored of you. Fay (after a thoughtful pause)—Who wan {t? May-Must think a moment. Fay—I am thinking; thinking hard. May—You'll never guess that way. Think of something soft.—Catholic © Standard, record. For twenty years Ada Gray had simulated grief and |‘ undergone slow-music suffering. It might be thought ( that the nervous disease of which she died had its source| in this forced use of the emotions, But she lived to be _ Aixty-elght, an age beyond the actor's average, Whe Vitality of the Pensioner.—It wil! probably surprise @ great many Americans to learn that during the last » fiscal year they paid pensions amounting to $183,619 to F pensioners of the war of 1512. THE ONLY REASON WILY. 3) & rhe jolly plente party on the Upper QPotomac, after wandering happily @ through the aylvan forest, returned to ® open the lunch baskets. “Twenty to one," exclaimed the ) humorist of the party, ‘that the custard ples are full of ants!" %) However, he lost. ‘There were no custard pies in the bas- 5 kets.—Washington Post. CNLAGO SYA. Wi “i \ ~=Dainty New York slippers try, Boris, when you're wine consumin’, Slippers, wee, that won't recall and knows no danger, . A NICE DISTINCTION. In the Centre Street Court yesterday Magistrate @ammer discharged with a warning a lady by the name of McKenzie, who said that she was a well-known liter- ary woman, but who was brought up before the Magis- F) DYING TREES. The decline of the trees on Bos- trate on a charge of sleeping on one of the benches in} GUMVOOOGOHSOGOGVOO ® Hoots of prehistoric woman. ton Common ts (City Hall Park. = ~ now attributed to Miss (or Mrs.) McKenzie insisted that she had meroly mmm | FROM A RECENT NOVEL. TWO POINTS OF VIEW. NO OTHER WAY. the clearing of pecupled the bench while working out her literary prob- SOMEBODIES. | Wer tesco Jems, but the policeman testified that he found her sound | angry, LIl-Y—owns @ Nevada gold — practice leads to rapld evaporation asleep among the male vagrants and tramps, who have the exclusive use of the benches, and that that was no place for any woman. mine, said to be one of the richest in tho world. In mines as in other mat- ters Lily 1s lucky. of needed motsture and lessens the fertility of the E " . BECKER, CHARLES. rt forger, t B Miss McKenzle’s conduct was reprehensbile and the) "iS UCl iy Si Palen ‘ oe Le soll, 4 WELL-KNOWN PROVERB. * e policeman was right in treating it as disorderly. Under 4 : Enna ANTES ; Bree ge eer ietivcoeeaicut tus beneienl int Osein agent, who writes that Becker 1s to be ideal al Bi ent the benches in the New| syndicated; also that the banks offer ’ HUNGRY YOUNGSTERS. + ' Work parks are reserved exclusively for the uneasy but} him $500 a month not to forge any THE BOWERY GIRL 5 DOVE. Y ' pictureeque slumbers of male vagrants and tramps, and| more. \ i we draw the line strictly against any attempt of the) HANNA, GENATOR—dldn't lke being i ‘ Owen Kildare Finds “The Party” to Be gentler sex to share in this privilege. a Volunteer Member of the S. P, C, A. addressed as “the next President of the United States." Hanna is noted for his coyness M LIK, EMPEROR—has decided to grant no further concessions to Euro- peans. ‘They must be as great hogs as some American capitalists. ‘TERREGIANNI, DR.—the Catholic Bishop of Armidah, Australia, ts the largest prelate in Christendom. He welghs nearly 30) pounds. — TIME’S WARNING. Wine Retirement.—W. K, Vanderbilt, jr., holds the world’s automobile record for a mile, but nothing in his auto- mobile career is more credit to him than his retire- ment. Automvdiling ‘pursued chiefly for the purpose of making a record 1s a menace to human Ufe Listen! ‘There are many things which @ man cannot do without getting himself into a barrel of trouble and which a girl can do with all the easo in the world. The home of my Mttle woman and her old lady !s as near to the skies as you can get in a tenement-house, And there {s no elevator, which {s fine exercise for those that need it It 1s only a few steps up to the roof, and it ts almost as good as being up to Newport to alt up there at night and tch the breeze. I fixed up a hammock according to a pattern I saw in a MORGAN’S POWER. The friends and supporters of J. P. Morgan have been Aisposed to resent his being held responsible for the con- tnuation of the coal strike. Yet Mr. Morgan personally owns or controls every The Lady—Aren't you ashamed to beg? ‘The Bum—Well, yes, mum; but folks don’t set ples in the windy sills anny more, and so, by jimmy, mum, we jest got ter como in an’ ast! No rerererelerelerer one of the great anthracite coal-carrying roads exce} The young doctor's cruel retort ie Lackawanna'and the Delawaro and ae PEI] ram Time. Though men abuse me, hurt te benutltul tel © seer) magazine, from an old blanket, and The Party and I make } a e ware and Hudson. I that ein will ghtly scan, ourselves believe we are a spoony couple at some fashlonable , The Reading and Jersey Central are controlled by a|] If at last they only use mo CAUTION ‘ } country-place, who talk that funny talk you see !n the fllus- " Singleton—A pretty girl's face ts trated papers. ¢ i woting trust, consisting nominally of Morgan, F. P. Olcott|| For the common good of man. and C. 8. W. Packard, but in reality Morgan is the sole But it is apparently very hard to find anything in life which her fortune. you can enjoy without having something bitter creep into tt. H Wederly—Yes, and it usually turns @) Bevererer Though for years they may be idle, trustee. the trustees of the Erie aw ” yhil ee heen 2 he Brie he has Lewis Thouah a while they doubt or out to Ue some poor fellow’s mis- On a roof not far from ours—or hers, rather—a man ap-| Snapshot of two young thrushes walt- r Charles Tennant as CO*! becipeld , ed th e ’ eC his co-trustees, I my righteous wrath will bridle fortune, peared the other day with a lot of boxes and baskcts and| 11g to be fed. zs} began to erect little shanues, ——— How absolute is Mr. Morgan's contro) over any prop-| erty which he holds in trust is shown by his circular to the stockholders of the Southern Railway, as explained| {In this morning's World. The stockholders of the road have no voice whutever in its management It is not doing Mr. Morgan any injustice to say that If their folly they redeem. Naturally, we watched him, and had not long to walt for a solution to our puzzle, ; He's a bdird-fancter, and woe watched with delight the graceful filghts of several flocks of pigeons, released trom their boxes, ‘The Party was simply charmed with tho birds, and it was THRIFT. ORIGINAL ATOMIZER. Let them have a while of pleasure; Let them have a time of rest: But remember, I wiil measure soul—the final test | j he has {t in his power to end the coal strike if hej} 1! them sin. if 5 ants 1 to see her enjoy thelr alry gambols, i; wishes to. Let the: stead of toil, | he man would send them {nto the alr and then, by ; oe TYaa erent | whistling and waving a long stick with a rag on {ts end, Baa for Din rh BIOrING ik ane ail | would keep them circling about in ever-Increasing curves. ik Sturgis to for let Cro Bit Tagine are nana ‘The other day, while watching them, « few of the birds {without ¥ gx Silltattend thaie fatal iach strayed over to our roof, and The Party was lucky enough to {| well for the oft 1am Time, and 1 am m catch one of them Talk about petting and caressing! Why, that bird did not , ales = None can turn the dial dack = re . | care to leave at all, and I can't blame him a bit, THE COMING OF BORIS, Drones your Arabia At dreamy Aer ‘The man, thinking we wanted to freeze on to his pigeon, Boris, Russian Grand Duko, is here. Three Greeki| <,. UE? YO , Uncle Sussel Ruge—How much will hollered over, but I told him in my quiet and convincing way| ‘Take a cork and cut off one-quarteras. priests met him at the depot and blessed him, but thel] thac ms wyath at vast will emite you allow me on this porous plaster, that we would return the bird when good and roady to do so. |shown in the dilustration. Insert two shrine at which he will worship {s not the shrine of St.| Preict mt a a young man? cite Saar 1 had 0 shoone between this and ‘The Party's desire, and quills a night angle in suk op i i af ot; = “ 5 k-We don’ uy second-han that is dead easy. at the nts touch one another. Michael. It is where the glad hand of Tenderloin Ita s unl hour pews, , Mrs, Bun—Don't swing too long, § pinsters as if I was eatin’ The Party, In the mean time, began talking about the|the perpendicular quill in a bottle filled hospitality 1s extended to him that he will go for his|] “Wong pascbispaten St Edwin; {t will make your ears too} Uncle Suss—But thia has been worn $ dinner. Dis yere hypnotism pigeons to the neighbor, and in that way found out the real|With perfume or any other liquid ‘anal Aevotions and there burn incense. PMS SLOAN only once good object of the pigeon industry. blow into the horizontal quill. ‘The resulé c YOO, e ODODE GOODE ‘That scoundrel ts training those innocent little birds to he | Wit! be a cloud of vapor that can be for any purpose desired. COSTLY MANUSCRIPTS. Bome intimation has reached the East of the carmine trail left by the Duke in Chicago. He denied yesterday the story of the wine drunk from a chorus girl's slipper, Killed—to be shot by a lot of fellows who think {t great fun to be blazing away at poor pigeons that have never done them any harm and that they won't even eat, but Just kil) “TIMELY LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. ' tour,” but the itinerary now includes “the States” most 1 iscoveries for the visitor, The former is “splendid, Mportant feature, This is a land full of plea-|7° the Editor of The Kvening World ‘The two native producta gays the Duke. The latter that he takes them between courses at|#°t over the habit. I know of a case It) Collector of Customs for the United It must be kept constantly in| States, some twenty years ago, through the mouth, It might cause # little in- | information galbed from the Indians and A Care for Stattering, In the volumn of “Timely Letters from the People” I noticed a requeat for @ cure for stuttering. If the party will take a small-sized marble and place it under the tongue he will agon cured, return mail, But it4s already two weeks and the party did not send stamp back I suppose the party needs the stamp for his own use LAPITERS, Lote of Coal Far Away, To the Editor of The Bvening Worl While stationed in Alaska as Deputy part of our "Wild Weat" will ultimately derive its supply of fuel from the land of the North, JOHN A. CARR, No, 26 Washington street, Portland, Ore. Baldheads, Ahoy! To the EAitor of The Rvening World: I desire to inform you that two friends of mine have manufactured @ preparawon with which they claim that lguia | B Is Right. ‘ ‘To the Editor of The Byening World A says that an American cltizen who goes to live in Austria, his father hav- {ng been born in Austria, can be com- pelled to serve in the Austrian Army, B says that the Untted States Govern- m is bound to protect citizens wherever they may go, and that the nor aby other Government can- not compel them to serve. AUSTRIAN, | wholesome gnd always to the polut, more pigeons being educated for death in our nelghborhood, Tho Party ts wearing badge and calls herself an office: and every tramp dog and cat in the district 1s taking up a great deal of her attention, Nhose that have no friends need them more than tho: that has," she say: ‘This, doubtiess, ts not the most Incld maxim, but, ydu know, I am not looking for philosophy tn my Party and am perfectly satisfied with her sentiment, which is straight, OWN, Never, never had he done such a thing nor never would.| $05) ho pleasure of killing, Owen Kildare, you got to stop! mwenty-three letters by Charles Lamb| ladies who cherished am} > be Mike I i But 1 shed ambitions to be Hkewise dis-|¥es, im 1880, Amatnat Hewitt andy convenience at frat, but that will dis-| through their Kuldance, I made explora, they will restore the hair of any lady or] “Oh, now, how can I stop that?! AIA ARR wy HERURD FACR S tan | pair, and the Cinderella footgear ran ue, appear RA the supposed coal regions of; gentleman. ‘Chey claim to have made| “How can you stop that? And T thought you was writing | sold in one lot brought $66. ae parperesG| ded for the occasion will not be relegated to tho} T the, Editor of The Evening World Kept the Roy's Stamp. . and found a country that will) recent experiments, and the result has|for the papers! Well, 1f I was writing for the papers and|manusoripts of Keat's ‘“Unfelt, Un- t just yet. They will have a try first to see 1! they| Dit Theot velt ever run fOr] 7. ss. caer ot she Evesing World prove truly wonderful fn the amount and) been wonderful, ‘Thy now propose thal had my name in them, I'd stop it quick enouwh! And I'm|heard, Unacen,” and the “Hymn to ! y ae lae thaielt New York? | [To the Editor of The Evening Wor quality of the coal deposits to be found! yo ect one-half dozen persons | going to do it a can’ ot ho i MERE provall over the Gt. Anthony-like attributes of ny |MAor of the city ot New York? If w.|7 asin she employ of a frm for tenl ie” Noten | deposits to be found | you select, aay. on-halt doxen persons | going to do Mt anyway! I can't think of how that itt thing | Apoliq” aold for €M6, and that of parts " {who were his opponents? Also, what] weeks and after 1 entramd iohed Wie 4 Jooked at mo with 1t# soft, brown eyes the other day without | “Gap and Bells’ $1,735, Lamb's “Th us rounder, ear did the election take place? ; was released I #ent] outcroppings and of the formation were) Will Undertake to do i) Kenton ishing to send that fellow to Jall.”” ae aay es ¥ the firm a letter for a recommendation 7 7 ‘ 4} can truly “ “4 JOHN KAISER, wishing to send the King and Queen of Hearts’ | Princes used to be sent through Europe to make the Bo dW. [pe ene totes t toicacd a atanie far the | *ccurately made, and 3 oan truly say) No, sa Fortyssixih street, Brooklyn, | Well, there was some correspondence, and e stranger, sort | 9.200; & firet edition of Keats’ that it is my firm. bellef that a large of official looking, called at the house, and now there are no P &c,, $355, and of his “Hndymion'’ S96. Pope's autograph manuscript of ‘The Pagtorata" brought $355, and D, G, Ros | tUl's manuscript of “Henry the Leper” #280. A first edition of Pope's “Phe, Rape of the Lock’ was sold for $906; one of the Waverley novels #43, and one | of Charlew Lever's works $505, Gawain | Douglas's ‘The Poles of Honor, 1668, - brought 476, end “The Mamous Voter’. L. Nee gf Honey, the Wet, iL 90