The evening world. Newspaper, October 14, 1902, Page 10

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e Published by the Press Publishing Company, No 38 to & Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Office et New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. -NO. 18,029. VOLUME 453. THE END OF THE STRIKE. Jove in his Broad street office nodded and the coal strike came to an end. Baer and Truesdale and Olyphant, Thomas, Wilcox, al] the coal road presidents who derive their own great powers from this mightler power, saw the nod and knew its import and bowed to the superior will. | | What an exhibition of autocratic authority it has been given the nation to view in Mr. Morgan's attitude toward the strikers! And what a debt of gratitude !t owes him for putting an end at last to the unhappy deadlock which might have been prolonged at his pleasure to a crisis of riot and bloodshed. He signifies his assent now to the use of arbitration to settle the differences between miner and operator and an industrial army of 140,000 imme- diately returns to its labors. He yields a point that might have been yielded months ago, and the entire mil!- tary force of the great coal State unfix bayonets and draw cartridges that meant death to thelr fellow men. _ And thousands of anxious employers and hundreds of thousands of distressed householders sigh out their thanks of relief at the ending of a situation that had be- come “intolerable,” in the President's phrase, two weeks| ago. Does history present a paralle! case of a privato citi- sen possessing equal power? Few modern kings, indeed, | exercise anything like the despotic sway acquired by this eftisen of a republic. Ovcan Gambling Rooms—A wardman reading of the high play that goes on in the emoking rooms of ocean liners must wish that some of them were in his precinct, THE ARBITRATION COMMISSION. ‘The terms on which peace ts concluded between the mine operators and the miners create an arbitration Gommisaion of five persons “who shall examine Into the @vestions at issue between the miners and operators” and by whose decision the operators pledge themselves to be bound. | This commission {s to consist of “ | engineer officer, an expert mining engineer not connected “with the coal mining properties, one of the Judges of the | United States Court of the Eastern District of Pennsyl-, vania, a man of prominence eminent as a soctologist, | and a men who by active participation {n mining and} selling coal {s familiar with the physical and commercial features of the business,” Its findings are to govern con-' ditions of employment between the compantos and thelr! own employees for at least three years, | But ts the committee's personnel such as to sive | promise that its verdict will be satisfactory? Who 1s the miners’ friend on the committec Not the army or navy engineer, not the mining engineer, not “the | man selling coal Possibly the judge, 1 the man | eminent 28 a sociologist. A study of science of soclety, gives the student n point of view of | the Jaboring wan which the operator nover olitalns | Another Ordeal.—The Pennsylvania tunnel franchise ts likely to come up before the Aldermen to-day, ‘The silence about thelr future course of on of those who have heretofore opposed the gran iy omtnous, Will they again seek to hold up thin great project, de- signed to be of immense beneil: to lavor tn THE MOLINEUX TRIAL, \ ‘The new Molineux trial opens In a characteristic way with a postponement. It fs to be hoped that tried as it will be before a country Judge reported to be Jealous of the court's time delays will be excaptional. The case has abused the patience of the community ," far too long and the extreme care exercised to safeguard the right of the defendant has come at times perilously near developing into a travesty of justice. ‘The spec- tacle of the chlrographic experts on the stand testifying with learned intricacy of phrase about the significance of an undotted “i” or a crossed ‘‘t’ and of other equally competent experts demolishing this testimony In rebuttal 4s doubtless unparalleled in court records as a grave ex- hibition of professional buncombe, Supreme Court Jus- tice Woodward, writing in the current number of a re- view, points out the length to whtch the abuses of expert evidence have gone, they being now grown “'so notorious that if not checked it seems inevitable that a reaction must come which will abolish such testimony al- together.” Let us then be optimistic and hope for a verdict in ac- cordance with the facts and a speedy end to the costliest and most prolonged criminal prosecution of modern times. THE WOMAN'S FAIR, ‘The contending elements in Che Professional Woman's League are still at war over the Women's Exhibition at the Garden. Mrs. Paimer, as the spokesman of one party, yesterday reiterated her opinion that !t is “very, very Jmproper."” Whereupon M Knowles remarked: “The voice of envy, making ground! accusations, hurt the fair.” Viewing the exhibition broadly, regarding It as a con- crete expression of woman's work and endeavor in this era of her enlightenment and emancipation, we must Pronounce it a great success, From the time that a man enters the fair until he it after tour of booths and “streets of na congratulates himself on the advancement of nnot ry eend? 44 Oe OLDE: O06 3 CNer untie 3 WE GET THROUGH 9 ~ $ 4 ¢ > eges which thelr employers had come to regard as velonging exclusively to themselves. The paradise which the Servant Giris’ Union of this resort has laid out for itself is attractively pictured by ‘Ihe? Cedarhurst ought to be swamped with cooks and chambermaids next summer, THE MODERN WAY. \¢ Evening World's cartoonist, and if the girfs can only make ita EXCITEMENT. AFTER THE HONEYMOON. O24 3 rs E238 used to call him call him that now Brown—No: she Just calls him a erst. plain THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, VOODEDGLGD9S 59645 4096-259 FHF4945O06250OO0000600000O JP Ghe Servant Girl Is Monarch of Ali She Surveys. Je If You Don’t Believe It. Just Look at Artist Powers’s Picture. 2 Dh deni 14, | (Gea OE HER FRIATE Bitte SWE WANTS BIG WAGES ted A TY Aditi? > (ween oo we see HAVE DINNER?) NATURAL CONCLUSION, Jenkins—Before the wedding she May—And so they were married in binnacle abaft the mizzen scuppers?” ton.” Does she and six months Inter me all season to carn nautical terms, divorced and lived happty T'l! try to spend next summer learn- ever afterward bourbon Is going up, Cosy CORNER “Waat did you mean wnen you told that sailor to ‘brail the gabboard “I don't know, I'm sure, It's caken at they mean ( AUTUMN GOD WIITE slown in this display of femin nt and his heart swells within him with prid for. He thinks of this when he i his fortune told by any one of a dozen Gypsy-garved astrologers, or muncli Popcorn, or squints into the hundred j five for a nicke moving pictur ” throws rings * canes, He misses a chance to hurl a ball at a necro’ head, but remembers that a recognition of feminine lin tations in the ball-throwing linc omission. But there are tintype opp “permitted to negiect, living pictur the dieplay of lingerie an’ 13, cigarette girls kro Mammies, and as choice an assortment of the enuty of all nations as co: 1 from the:eo fopolitan east side. hen Manager Brady was endeavoring to collect reg 1 ayening remarks about womanly beauty were slanderous. But after oft and growing familiar with the facial and asa mediuia > gath | emer arava Senet ea The Water © " CUleaning denahaont don beneficlal work when It causes Fe sprinkling machines to go up down Fifth ayenue watering the gut- ters, Undoubtedly sprinkling ts neces- vary. Were Wonat toe oy Velvet gowns are in favor again, “Trianons,”” “Bace! A characteristic feat of many of the latest of this mode! é costumes in gray also in yorue. this material; effect, and some MAKING SOLIDS INVISIBLE. | A transparent body of any shape disappears, states Prof. R, W. Wood, when immersed in a medium of the same re- fractlon and dispersion, und if we could find any transparent solld having these physica! properties equal to those of air It would be absolutely Invistole, A eolld laving the refractive index equal to that of alr for ight of a certain wave-lensih can be found, but it 1s not a transparent substance, says the Pittsburg Gazeite. Chioral hydrate may be dissolved In hot glycerine until the solution has almost exactly the same dispersion as glass, and a glass rod dropped into this liquld dixappears completely. On withdrawal the rod curiously appears to melt at the end and run freely In drops, Lord Rayleigh has pointed out that In untform {umina- tion perfectly transparent objects would become absolutely invisible, and that an approach to uniform illumination might be had on the top of a monument In a dense for. Frof. Wood gets the desired condition in the interlor of a luminous globe, This he Improvises from two equal trans parent glass evaporating dishes or plain hemispherical Anger bowls, which are painted on the outside with a mixture of Balnvin's luminous powder and hot Canada balsam, bolled until thick enough to harden on cooling. A small hole {s made fn one vessel, After exposure of the Inner surfaces to strong light the dishes are placed together, and the interlor of the ball Is Alled with a uniform biue glow, in which a crystal ball or cut-glaes stopper is quite invisible when viewed through the aperture, Tho closest scrutiny ehows a solid only through some effect of the dark Mne joining the two hemispheres, PAGAN TREE WORSHIP. Nearly all travellers in Central Africa have referred to the curious custons prevalent among almost all pagan native tribes of driving quantities of nalls into sacred trees and other objects that have been adjudged worthy of veneration, and this not in malice, but as a religious rite, the nails In question being Intended as votive offerings, says the Phila- delphia Public Ledger, xactly the same thing may be witnessed to-day at the sacred well of St, Maebruha, in Loch Maree, Rosshire, we re is an ancient oak tree studded with countless nails of ull size, the offerings of invalid pilgrims who came to wor- ship and be cured, Pennies and half-pennies also are to be seen in enonmomus quantitles driven edgewise In the tough | AFEWREMARKS Farmers visiting New York nowadays should make sure that the bricks they buy are oiled clear through and mot merely on the surface. “He says he'll do {t just as soon as he can." “Well, from what I know of him, he jain't able to do it nearly as soon as that.’ Do you Ike love stories?” “Yes, at first hand.’'—Detroit Mree re: Kalser Bill, to get on naval work a” firmer grip, Ts calling on some expert to devise a new-style ship. To call on Morgan for advice is what he ought to do. He'd tell him how to build it, then he'd annex {t, too. Instead of bullding Bull-pens for the Pennsylvania rioters, let the operators induce the Baer pen to write “Finis” to, the strike. a Browne—Why aid 8: Womans y aid Smith marry that ‘Towne—She fs not on speaking terms with her mother.—Town and Count: “Whittler said ‘It might have been’ ~ was the saddest sentence in the Ian- guage.” “You forgbt he lived before the daye of ‘has beens,’ With racing autos out of town Numb'ring seventy-flve, New Yorkers stand a splendid show Of getting home alive. ‘The death rate, though, when they re- turn Once more may hope to thrive. “Yes, both clothes lines and clo Ping have phegn advanced in price ° ‘More holdups!" — Clev: ara Ps Cleveland = Plain Visiting Chicagoan—How many feet high Is the Pulitzer Building? New Yorker—By standard measure- ment its over 375 feet high. Measuring by Chicago feet it's probably su:nething lke 100, If only some genius could convert mud and dust into fuel, what beautifully glean streets New York would have! Doctor. that cod Iver oll you gave me makes me drowsy." “Maybe che cod had a torpld liver.” “Sathanus,"’ sald the new arrival as eft the Stvx ferry-boat and waved ‘on a farewell, “how 1s that auto- mooie caaufteur that Just come over along sald His Serene Majesty, feetly at home alread: c# 6,788,230, scorching." —Bal- timore News. We've had the same old silly jokes Since Adam's adolescence, Naught new't devised as yet by folks To mse us of their presence. The merry jest anent hard times Whica now our ear displeases Was doubtless read in runic rhymes Unto the Third Rameses. The stale old one on ma-in-law Which erst was wont to bore us as chanted with a yawning jaw some oll Grecian chorus, gently with the Jokesmith, ye ver much his fests bore THEE, They bore HIM twice as badly. Girl with the Clara Morris Byes— You'll never speak to Fan Billiwink again? Why not? the Viola Allen Voice—She me any of her divorce cards of her oldest friends!i— une. The proposed Grocery Trust may assist prosperity by tying up the few commo- jdities not already cinched by the Coal and Beef Combines, “Do you belong to the working clase?” “I used to, But since my relatives found I've made a fortune I belong to tho worked class. A warm friendship 1s sald to exist be- tween the soldiers and some of the miners, An increasing coldness oo: tinues to exist bevween the coal and the ccnsumer, ‘ “I've been two weeks trying to coax ee to buy @ my husvand to give me 2 bi new dress.’ complained Grazzam to Mrs. Wimte: I never do that.” What do you do? “I have my new dress charged and leave my husband to fight It out with the collector.”"—Harper's Bazar. “What we want is war,” says the Bacolod Sultan to Uncle Sam. He come to the right place to get tt A ttle more kindly talk of that sort, and Bacolod may sidestep from the map before the world at large suspects it was ever there. Will his hungry compatriots refer to thelr musical compatriot who kept in- ner waiting five hours as “The Late Mascagni,” “Don't you lke grand opera that has no ballet in it?" “Yes indeed. I always prefer Calve to calves. “They're Rotting rich, aren't they? “Yes; they're just rich enough to have trouble with thelr servants,” “Ts that 30?" “Yes; they're tring te. keep an En- lish butler and an Irish oook-lady.", Pniladelpiia Press: ell-worship has always occupled an important place In paganism, and the sacred oak, before which each pilgrim must thrice kneel ere humbly presenting his offerings—what {s It but an obvious survival of the sacred groves of Druld- ical mes? BELATED MAIL. ‘A letter mailed in Yankton, 8. D., In August, 1886, has Just been returned to its writer, It followed the man to whom It was addressed for several years, passed several more in the e of hotel clerks, and was finally started on another jour- ed off with cord ss ‘| se je) TEMELY LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. 2» IS AN MRSS 14 justice. 0 y erificed all for It. the) selieo! teachers do ETAL ce, chances for the ef- LAST REO RODRAOR Us| Gola 12 Ounces Troy, Feathers, 16 i windbary | Ounces Avoirdupots, n you blame @ | m, i wenting thie? | Tete BA nd soldiers nd Gen. In rewanl he was sy: ally snubbed and gress, and Gates (an oll: ag set above bim, hot-temnere} man His soldiers adored flo not adore stratt i tl eth” Thea” ntanarte, he historteal study there is much to q ng |of the man. g be sald on the other side. ing could wholly offering to yield West Point. yet pré= vious record should count for aome- je waa one of vdent natriots of hia action in Henedict Arnold. of The Bven'ng World: T wee taveht oan obit to link Rene. frostna tens y after the man who wroto {t., TWO CHANCES, | In Guatemala the Indian, population tries to doubie Its RL! ficacy of prayer by worshipping at a Christlan altar of The Kvening World: ® SOFIEBODIES. CARNEGIE, ANDREW has donated $75,000 to Belfast and $35,000 to Lime- rick, for the founding of Ibrartes. The gifs have been accepted. BYELAND, MRS, B, J.—the Jersey City, Publle Szhool principal who hus just retired, has a record of fitty-four years of teaching, HADLEY, PRESIDENT—of Yale, Is about to make a tour of the West, despite the fact that college has just opened SOTIRIADUS, Dr.—of Athens, an- nounces the discovery in Mavedonia of rd a skeleton 2,200 years old. The ex- wearer of the skeleton lived before» the days of the Coal ‘Trust jokes; but In his youth the mother-in-law joke wad doubtless etill In its prime. A says that a pound of feathers is | with Images of Its|..niNGTON, BOOTH—drawa plo- heayler than a pound of gold. heathen detties. B says two woret that a pound so £0). js just heavy, ait ua tures for all his stories before Segin~ ning to write them. meet =

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