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fi) THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 30, 1902. a ~ i —_ i: 7 CUS) shed by the Press Publishing Company, No. 6 to 8 _ Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-OMco at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. OLUME 48.... «NO. 15,045. 844994000466, ‘Soyne Things That Might Be Done a, D34996-04996O4204946OOOO2098068 999409900 to “L” Mashers., o WAR ON IMMORAL PLAYS, ‘The Actors’ Church Alliance has entered into a proj- for the purification of the stage which will be + Punishments Devised by Artist Powers. ehed with interest and encouragement. It has un- + IED Ti m to establish a censorship of the drama, a laud- Rusy PaeAe| THE RUBBERER NUOGER Sable undertaking, and to that end it has appointed a ittee of clergymen to visit the various theatrical mances and to ascertain what plays are fit for of reiijtous rearing to see, and what should bo under the ban of the committee's disapproval. In the nature of things the Alliance's ban put on a ky will advertise it far and near to those to whom this ind of drama appeals. There will also be an occasional ous outcome of its efforts to establish a suspected y's exact moral status. The line of toleration will bo d@ to drew with consistency; {n some cases we shall find a minority report perhaps more convincing than the majority’s finding. But in the main it is a good idea out of which good should eventually come. | The manager's theory about plays is Danton’s—be Et oom ‘person MARTIN ‘THE ATASHER d, be bold, be ever bold up to the limit of public en- If the Alliance can direct an enlightened and ed opposition against an immoral play at Its first | ction it can at least reduce the size of matinee dieuces and keep schoolgirls and the Young Person wally from its contaminating influence, and this ounts, even with the boldest manager. Certainly thero opportunity and incentive for such a work as the Alll- has entered upon and a fruitful field for its en- THE STEEL KINO'S PROORESS. Further details of Mr. Schwab's speed madness which the wonder of the Italians picture the American mill- re as never at rest. “He is continually on the go. hen he is not chartering a special steamer on Lake | Como he rides all day. He has purchased two mo.e! cars of the swiftest type. mains has become his pi 01 of the di ‘The first news of Mr. Schwab In Italy reported him in Venice, city of lagoons, a slow town as regards traffic. ° stood in Venice on the Bridge of Sighs, a prison and @ palace on each hand,” but not for long, for there are no Me to break there. Gondolas are the snalls of trans- "Portation. Then came the special train to Milan tor | 4 swhich $10,000 was paid; then another “special” to Como "and on Como’s lake the special steamer in which to race and down the lovely thirty-mile waterway against KICIER ‘Travelling on special time and driving motors the a 4 . Rs Lx ee, be Kx A? One, ney LIL RLDY ASS: LYE OLD MAIS L.008E on JACK mE HUGGER The adoption of these and like masher-curbin g devices would probably reduce the number of pinchers, nudgers and goo-gooers who infest the New York and Brooklyn cars during the rush hours. i TRY THIS ON THEM HIS LITTLE JOKE. PROOF POSITIVE. USELESS CLAUSE. USELESS. * But the best is yet to come. “All roads lead to ” and once in the eternal city the steel king can be! counted on for achievements worth relating, 4 ¥y 2, A motor) { ip down the Appian Way, for instance, at fifty miles)” hour! ‘That ancient road, greatest of all the world’s thoroughfares, has borne many queer specimens of hu-} nity im many vehicles on its hard bosom, from em-] | Perors in gold chariots to humble peasants from the mpagns in rude wains, It is used to humanity; but a “gurprise will be in store for it when Mr, Schwab comes along in his auto. FOOTBALL FATALITIES. With the football season just begun five deaths on} gridiron” are reported. The percentage of fatalities | | not alarming. Football more than baseball is now | the national school game. Every school the country | has a “team,” a scrub team and individual players numbers. Five deaths in this great aggregation of ers need not cause apprehension. Even a timid “mother magnifying the chances of injury to her son may Tejoice in the added manliness the game {s giving the} Old Gotrox—-I had a clause Inserted In my will to the effect that If any of my é é ¢ | “Tho flats in New York are no places Telatives should contest it they are not Sue—Yes, it was terribly lonesome [Beboolboy. If Waterloo was won on the cricket ground,) + 44 saige a iange famlly."* to get a cent, down to the beach, No one to make © es the Iron Duke said, the football fleld 1s nurturing You are mistaken. When we wero 7 Mr. Nelthbors~That was altogether love. | heroes for something greater. And Incidentally its rough | there our family was just twiee as unnecessary, Belle—But you said there was onc man ‘es = : large." Old Gotrox—Why was {t unnecessary? there? 4 ° ma are giving those who take part pe tumble pe Maes ceacuiae aoversomlag eppos| fow did that happen?" he Indy wasn't Mr, Neighbors—Because if there 1s a Sue—Yes; but he was no use tous, He © > in them their first valuable practice $ “Why, the rooms were so small we contest the 1 rs will gee that your was the “armless wonder" from the {{ ition, in “downing” the other fellows. nd to doubl »* . relatives don't get anyt Museum. cece O28 The growth of the came in importance at the greater universities is partly indicated by the action of Harvard ‘in leasing the Pequot Club house near New Haven for “the Yale match. This large house will be entirely filled by tho players and their retinue of managers, trainers, cooks, and ali to the number of sixty men. And the POO _ mecenune | Mme. Judice Helps Home Dressmakers, |: 0 2919 1 toe sna soures of power has made —————SSSSSo —————————Ee———_—_———&—————————E EEE wonderful strides during the past decade, and present Indi- ut Y methods of production and systems of lighting, heating and single afternoon's contest will bring financial returns of |» made with the full ‘ont of plaited % looks part of the original sktr 4 SRearly $60.00, more in one lump sum than was raised Mme. Judice, who is connected titan and alate back and cout sleaw .| Your gown can certainty Haven dates Hee ata Annee " and ceeierae the anally in subscriptions for “the eleven” at all the col-}} With one of the leading dress. J | hive a piece of crtuin alous oneill| with velvet, slik or almost ai yeosent time, depend for their ficiency wholly upon the wes only a few years ago. It is an astonivhing develop-|J Making establishments of this 1 be made of later style and If; weave, € think velvet will be the pret-| heating power of gas, rather than on its luminosity. Water ‘Ment of a sport. city, has been secured by Thef i: can ve trimmed with black velvet,|tiest. From the picture of your bodice} gas or producer gas will undoubtedly be the future heating : a Evening World. and will con-[) broadcloth or silk. 1 thought perhapg] 1 would suggest Ie sit is and| and lighting agencies, and od the a ot Neat Pieceenen :. i IE ithe skirt might be trimmec me way) dust change the t will be directed most of the forces of investigation ai is zi THE NEW BUDGET. : dust, thls department, inated with stitch bands on | i Why not get a 0 | provement. The future trend of gas production will proba- Bap ane new budget though smaller on its face than lust) | home dressmakers will be given } SMITH, | ming and put around the edge, vo lly be in favor of generator rather than retort gases, which » year io really larger, the difference being due to the)] helpful advice. Questions relat-}} your piack erepon all right] bottom of the bole tip ought to result in purer gases, {e., gases of a fairly saving of nearly $4,000,000 to the city by relief from the|}ing to dressmaking will be an- J! in being made on a drop skirt, as it will | back of your coat ve from the elbow | constant chemical composition, insert the chiffon—same as on bodlee front—into a soft, puffy This will change entire sleev swered by Mme. Judice. State tax. ‘The subtraction of this item prevents the pormit your using with very litte extra from reaching the one-hundred-million mark long ST FORMOSANS CUT THEIR HAIR. i i ee © predicted. Mme. Judice with very little trouble, Have collar he Formosans are cutting thelr hair, whereat there ts aa creased expenditure that portion devoted to *LY tell me} y and cuffs of trimming to correspond] gi tion in Japanese Government circles, says the ~ Of the increased exyenditur p ; new vill be most wisely spent. Can as much be t with edge in bolero. London Express. is pa te mR contt i - > the Depart- Totti Ae RENOVATING LACE. It must be rstood ‘that to say “Get your hair cut!" to P said of the added appropriation for the pi wast meas Ue ee Oa eae ata ll atiia VONOL Weal toe merie: orate ner dheule mpenye Or that for the District-Attorne BL AN MOS Heate that tha ate papularly known {| AkBOKt as soon the would have cut off his head, ie Cae x Mako your black lunstowno walat Ike! derwoh, fabriee’ Will, require| NON, Mowover, as a sign of submission to Japanese rule, CASTLE FARRELL. RMAC NEIGH re in rer f Ming, [atx In conformity with civilized custom, he ts beginning to hirsute growth. Formosa telegraphs to Tokto } castle style of | § r off his supertiva: ht em _ ‘The increasing use of the media it Is Impowst D conetrid! “gentlemen's club-| |, without Injury by of the 1 Barcerre)wmithp construction (of ‘gentlemen é: Clb: tates | oe Nea pik) Oe ho) vane additional number of natives who have cut thelr halr, | es” in the Tenderloin, a use frequently noted in this | piece HOEY MCHOUE shld lie ine (dae du oral Klhetones! (steersphed rom ime tay titel the amin, finds ‘ts latest and fullest exemplifeation in the | walst in surves tw tiie “eeoute » satu method of cleansing them ex- | 2umvers of Boers captured, rouse in West Thirty-third street of which Mr. Frank]; % . ace Brass by professionals, and it Js claimed Eas is reputed to be the proprietor. In this very y owtit fs the method frequently employed AMERICANISIMS e i the pre Lon cleaners. 2) example of a castellated temple of fortune the pre-| “# ts alro the it ai ees e stulruchara SA “Brocton it nage, a Ruatam itectui Small silk bi f Whether t it has proved] According to the late Mr. Richard A. Proctor, the pl x ing form of gambling-house defensive architecture) (© Th Se Oa Bh aacHok Ritistactory for the housewife who 1s] “1 guess," to English cars so ridiculous, {s really Identical Wieaches its hichest development. Tho backs are tucked to correspond with the possessor 0! ss too delicate to} with the old expression “I wis,’ meaning "T know,” ane " )The hostile police captain seeking to Invest this] fronts and close f contre invisibly be trusted to laundresse word “guess” has changed its meaning entirely in Eng vie Aa regan EA Ha first by a high tron fence} With phe little butt an ineh ap. Select sn round bottle and} hut has partly preserved tt In America, where, of course, the fh vee {Phe steove te gulatton bishow wrap the lie it as pos-| native says, “T guess,” when he’ls more or less in a state of peemere gate serving as a fortified outpost, or bare) ica In the centre of top this| certainty. There are many other examples of words that Tale This passed, a flight of stone steps in Hea of &) yioy iit rs running across b vent Its wrinkling m the wash-| have played fast and loose with “g" and "ww," such as “guar- * ‘bridge. will carry him to the stout bronze door of; tow ch and Jo! with the bu e that { ythiy and evenly} dian’? and “warden,” “guard” and “ward,” “guichet’ and castle and its steel portcullis, the demolition of which | (ly “The scant or the ts ef black Byu sttly together by | “wicket.” : 5 wls net, with blas ents neatiy hemmed 8 here and t necessary before entrance can be effected into the | (fin io just us anpronrhate for mes Matertornoa ieamavello ; y ley where the baize tables are. Steel lattice! ing, but not oulte ax new as the ne of onl musiin over} % Giants tho windows aaninat entrance by the| su ftw the deat of tucbie an A { (3 SOMEBODIES. @ | 5 z i int olor feet you WI have a mos oe — 3 Beares by Canty Walsh In his descent on “Hone | ie ey wack M HUE RI BlGne ie wa lan ind cana cise BPLMONT, AUGUST—Is to give a “free pew" system to St. Kelly's castle recently. And a stecl-strapped OCHS DIOR HO WALA UU e : AGT ae ROR EO UaE Pe Gann Tampaleea tle I @ prevents approach by the rear, ir that the investing forces will have to im- . SqQueegn, HS hinds. ¢ 8 box xan the DLA SALVATORE, COUNT=is making a walking tour of the world, His 9,700th mile has just brought him to side 3 Wrinkles may be removed from ol with th fit by fy 4 dresses that sked or y V inte tel se ort ee holy military machines to keep pace with these jy trays ng Ove BN ae Richmond, 2 ves, ‘Axes and sledge-hammers may do of hot wa team will also srfuoiis material’ at KIPLING, bs DY Anos Teenntd 987 NORD OT Ey nae Reger esole cline oaks doer, ‘but thay a a Me eit picecas ‘ | the Af all skirts enug fitting hau ; Hae ‘ty ‘Spb hie tadee Sv eey aherat the twenty a ; may 8 etal sleoves with issu . ees ne WHApDRal 8 8. 1 emer sees stichidetenses,:nor will'a Are lad | tay whites nut | anton Ao. Races sine wi taken kegn it tly| originals has met with ill-luck. as a battering-ram against a bronze 70 REMODEL BLACK CREPON. ! tho plece you hi as | MATERNA, PRAU--the first woman to sing Brunnhilde, has vl will come tn to fix over the bottom of the| skirt into the popular flare, Cut fan- shaped pleces avout twelve inches desp skirt of erepon made in ane piece, x-| and five or six inches wide at enn end, cept the plece set in in back) and with) und dnsert in each seam. This gives w sutaide, double box. plain The wales wo) pretty sipple eifect and with good b increased thickness of armor-plate on pht the ten-inch gun into being so the b derloin strongholds will lead to! ‘of ba 1 and mapgo- hemmed pcan lost her wealth and !s now a Vienna music teacher, f lace) POWBLL, LIEUT, JAMNS—who has just died at Conneaut, ths] Qu» Was @ lineal descendant of the Stuart Kings of ie! Kngland, lee] SHIRK, JOSBPH—who made the ret died, at Lancaster, : Doar Mme. Judice: T have a black erepon dress with drop i the under layors around the been thorougyly ers of the mat erigats ving. thy 3h an Satna eleaused as Fa ii i | Actors ™ Does Odell aspire to become “Kalser Benjamin der Grocer?" “Invisible” love letters are figuring in ithe courts. The recent six-cents dam- | ages awarded also introduces the “in- visible’ verdiet, “This umbrella of mino is used up."* “Well, you didn’t expect to use It down, did you?” Commuter—Why are you leaving? 1 only engaged you last week, gageme: She—Which is the longest day in the year? ie-The one w wt hen I don't see you.~ Somerville Journ: al, “Here, more than in European coun- tries, Is the child left to the mother’s | personal cari says Mrs, Hastings, of the Mothers’ Association. Which fact may explain the workl-skating strides “young America” has been enabled to take In the “March of the Nations,’” Even the rumor of Hii's “bomb”? doesn’t wake up this dullest of dull campalgns, They say a ghost walks in the room of Captain Donohue; And shivering patrolmen all imagine it is true, jeve tt too; bee found hidden the Was quite enough to “make the ghost walk,” Thesplans deciare, “Father, what is an umpire?" “An umpire, my bow, is merely a hu- man excuse for a row.""—Chicago Dost. use the cash ‘T've just asked twenty-five people living far uptown to tell me just where Harlem commences," “Well, could you learn the exact start- ing point?" i They all said tt began just one orth of their varlous homes.’ block n The searcher for paradoxes who. re- Jolced to learn that German silver was not silver and didn’t come from Ger- many can now add to his collection the fact that the average “divine healer’ 4s not divine and doesn't heal. That history repeats itself Js true, whate'er they eay. Girls who were thfrty five years back are twenty-five to-day, Rayn will su jor—Don't you think automobiles persede the horse entirely some ne—Sure, 'y I dream about ‘em now wien I'm asleep. They have superseded my old nightmare.—Chieago Tribune, “Wien you asked that milltonairess to marry you What did sbe say?" t to a still more marked advancement in the “ald she did't care to ‘husband’ her wealth.” Jerome seems to doubt the willingness of Jersey justice to ford the North River. “Why do you suppose Wellesley Col- ege 1s going to teach girls farming? "Since all the coun! boys are leaving their farms for clty life, somebody has to be put in their place; If the agricul- «Cook—Oh, I don't helleve in long eu- | K& Few Kemarks. fostly on the Topics of the Dar. tural and gold-brick industries aren't te become lost arta’’ Visitor—Exhibit anv very big hen's essa at your county fair this year? Country Editor—You bet. Why, some of 'em was pretty nigh as big as haile stuns, Meanwhile soft coal continues to make its mark on Gothain, ‘The Doukhobors are Out Maz Perhaps they'll wander to New York. We rather hope they may. settle, once for all, the t we are In, If a Doukhobor’s a dog, a bird or # patent medicine. n the march “TI tell you,” said the doctor, ‘it’e the man who can push himaclt along that Succeeds In the world." ‘ot at all,” replied the professor. “It's the man who can shove others out of his way that succeeds best."'—Pear- son's Weekly. Lonl Beresford says he thinks Eng+ [land's “entering on a centrury of peaci Somehow that doesn't seem to fit in pecially well with his idea of an Anglo American alliance sparring for the Heavyweight International Champlon ship. ‘ew York girl has slept “T see that a over ten day: “Well, the paign isn't likely t excitement of the cam awaken her,” It !s no slur on Uncle Sam's dignity to hope he inay soon be “infra dig” om the. Panama Canal. In James Wimbe's case the Ple lod te the Wedding Cake. | She—Do you think a woman should ge to church Without wearing her hat? He—No, J don't. I think she should do everything that would tend to at tract other women to church.—Yonkers Statesman. There was a coal magnate named Baer, Who was talked of last month every~ whaer, But, for all that one hears of | He (like “nothing to arbitrate’), Might have vanished long since in ¢thim aer. Tt {s not avery one who has Devery’s| public chance to “support” the Demo» cratic “platform,” im ¥ “But before you married thought you agreed to live In a cottag' “I did; but I was referring to one im Newport, while he seems to have meant one in some such place as Pompton, | N. 3” \ “What are the ‘dying embers of the year’ That poets write of, pa? Do you re membe “I think, my son, the meaning is quite clear— c Those embers are Nov-ember and Deca: ember." \ This ttle te(a)te-a-te(a)te between | Dave Hill and Ben Odell {s a “tempest | in a tea-cup"’ compared with an crup=| tlon of the “Pelee of de Nit’. “Thad something I 1k ye the p n't do me any goo! “You don't say. What was It?” nit pmagaificent appetite.” —Philadebe by @ for my man, JHE COSTUME WEDDING. Fashionable Brides and Br + idegrooms Show a Tendency Toward Theatrical Trappings. HE costume wedding is bidding for favor, with a fair chance of success among Urides who tend to the the- rical or the ultra-romantic. At one nt marriage the bride carried out an idea which resulted in every brides- mald and groomsman being garbed in il old Puritan style. This {dea was probably taken from tho style of haying the bride attended by Uttle pages clad in royalist suits. From royalists to to Puritans was a natural step and the lttle pages gave way tired knee breeches, buckled. shoes and road- Y brimmed hats. It in probable also that the bride may have been of “Mayflower descent” and thus pald @ tribute to her ancestry The result of her SOsTUAE, idea was striking, if not theatrical, and probably would not find great favor wits young people who prefer a quiet wedding. A pretty style has been gaining favor which fluds Insptration in the old poetic idea that romance and pastorals were inseparably connected—an {dea dating from the time when the poet wrote of the faithful shepherdess, For these cos- tumea weddings the bridesmaids woar chaplets of flowers and tulle veils, and instead of bouquets carry flowers af- fixed to shepherdesses’ crooks. Such a wedding lacks the spectacular features of the other and will find more friends. In another wedding the dressmeker to whom had been given'the task of plan- ning the dresses carried out the {dea of, an “autumn wedding." ‘This suggestion was conveyed by having the dresses of in BRIDE AND BRID! GROOM IN PURITA the bridesmalds vary from yellow to green, representing the various stages of the growing and ripened grain, In many ways tho wedding customs of to-day would surprisa the bride's groat-grandmother if she could step into the church as her fair descendant was being married, The Engilsh grcat- grandmother would be the one most surprised, as since her time there have been great charges made in the time of day allotted to Penge to men at-! {the method and hours of wedding, the jtme used to bo limited to between 8 A. M. and noon. In 1886 an act of Par Nament extended this time to 3 P. M. Society found the extended time a great boon, as there was more time for Preparation, and the heavy wedding breakfast gave way to the more con- venient reception, At present in London the fashionabl hours {s 2.30 P. M. For a quiet Engilsh wedding 9.30 A. M. is favored. Then the bride is married in her “going away”! dress and the couple leave immediately | on their honeymoon, Fifteen years ago there was a crate London for evening weddings, for which especial Hcenses had to be w- tained from the archkishop, as the ceremony was performed at the un- | canonical hour of ¢ P. M. The English \ clergymen, however, did not favor the idea of having a sacred ceremony tae forerunner of a xreat oven!ng reception, and the Church put these weddings um dev the ban. In America, where there is no Church to dictate absoiuteiy in tnese matters, there have been fewer ma-ked changes | in time and the evening wedding Is not barred. Three vr 4 9’cloce in the after. neon fz a fashiunabie time, A man has compiled a curious table of statistics regarding the days favored by | young people 23 ae weddings. He finds that 40 per cent, of the marriages take place on Saturday, ay and Thurs- day each get 20 per cent. of the wed- dings. Monday is next in popularity ; with 15 per cont. while Wednosda: only gets 4 1-2 per cent. eat howe Friday, naturally, is found to be the least favored. Few people wilt risk the {1 omens supposed to be connécted with @ marriage of this day, " It has been discovered that brides are endeavoring to secure novelties in the Way of wedding dresses. Something uncommon, not only for herself but also for her maids, {i ueht, It ise being relic of old days that the brides. should choose not only her own dreas but those of her Oridesmalds, although she nevep ° pays for them now, as once was ¢he; ‘customs