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Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Otllce at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. THE-WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 5, 1902. TT Kiba _ VOLUME 43. -NO. 15,051. ODELL’S ELECTION. _ ‘The vote for Governor sustains the main predictions of ‘The World's Sunday forecast, which pointed to the prob- (able election of Odell by a small plurality and showed a_ Strong trend toward Coler in this city. Coler's strength in Greater New York, indeed, surprised! the sanguine expectations of his friends, exceeding the allowances made for off-year gains by the party out of | fice. His vote in Brooklyn is a far warmer indorsement » than a home town usually gives a favorite son. It was up the State that the fault Jay, and Mr. Coler may well wonder wha* was the cause of the slump in| », Hili’s domain. Tammany carried out its programme to the letter; a party leader's predictions are not often so closely verified as were Murphy's for the city. It wa im the very counties that Hill was supposed to car in the palm of his hand that the Republican gains were * made which overcame Coler’s handsome city majority. * THE BOWERY’S WEBSTER. With Timothy D. Sullivan returned to Con have reason to anticipate that the Bowery, as al promised, will be better represented than if W were its Congressman. We look for an oratorical up- Ufting trom “Tim.” Even now in our mind's eye we ean see him rising to repel the aspersions of a latter-! day Hayne and making some such eloquent apostrophe as this “The Bowery; there she is. Behold her and judge for youreelves. There is her history, the world knows it by, ? heart. Did not Hoyt write it and have nota million lusty! ¢ throats chorused it? There is MeGurk’s and Brodie’s| + and the Little Jumbo. Some are gone but the past at least | 7 4s secure. Her sons are found in every land, in Klon- ? dike plecers and in Deadwood sample rooms. There + where song is raised and elbows crooked, there the joy, > of Nfe is still sustained. : “Sir, when my eyes shall be turned for the last time 9 to behold her beauties may they still behold those lights + 4s blazing as of old, undiminished by the absence of a sin- gle incandescent bulb. The Bowery, now and forever, unique and inimitable, long may she jast!”" Yes, we feel sure that “Tim” will “make good." And not only as an orator shal! we look for great things from him. In those arts of the statesman that are acquired » by long experience in practical politics, in those arts by| _ which a man’s real capacity for serving his constituents 4g developed and put to the “touch,” in those we ex-| i. ELECTION DAY GOLF. | fF} —-_ Bllection day has come to be for the lover of outdoor! sport at the close of the season what Decoration Day is | at the opening, it is a particularly active day for the, | golfer, coming as it does while the autumn weather is "still fine. By Thanksgiving Day the links are usually too | gett to be at their best. The number of golfers out yesterday in the metropoll- tan district was such as to indicate in a pointed way the astonishing growth of the sport. Krom Batusrol Be | to Shinnecock, from Ardsley to Lakewood, the links were crowded. On the hills of Jersey there were more red | coats than Washington had to worry over at his Morris- > town headquarters; and red coats are not quite so much uM en regle and de rigueur and comme i faut as they were _ when club membership was new. It has been thought that golf was declining. Young women have been putting aside their caddie bags for tennis rackets and old men who thought it a panacea for! all the ills that flesh is heir to have found a round of the links a somewhat strenuous performance if the heart or other organs are not in the best of order. Nor is s0- clety 80 indulgent of it as was the case a few years ago. © It fs not the “fad” it was. But though golfers may go, others come, and the arrivals exceed the departures. And)? _ the number whom the highball held in thrall seems to| * | be lessening. 3 In an address at Clark University, Worcester, Senator Hoar said: “Wheu wealth expends in a single evening p< upon a vulgar, brainless entertainment an amount of Bice “money the income of which would mean aMuence to} thousands of families it is hard to overestimate the peril | which it portends.” | But as between $10,000 spent at a Bradley Martin din- es | ly st ‘cause you're digger'n me you brings luck?” ain't got a right to say you'll tick me “So they say, dear. But sensible peo- , If 1 were te “My madme dresses me ike Uttle I don't give yer me papers an’ me ple don't believe it nf y Vy and give the ot Lord Fauntleroy.” ‘ 1 Hiviy "Then why do you keep one tn your turee Umes as many pen what Well, T dress oneself. An’ 1 dress like ‘taint, neither, Its binev'lnt Dureau and rub It all over your cheeks Unndre sy. sir we'd full dend Uttle Jimmie Jeffries, See?! *ainitlation avery (aay BE DERRE®AGIRDRIDED TE 74 AG EESOVECEGAGLIOGDSD Pee ore rie How Millionaire Schwab Is Getting a Rest. Some Moments of Repose, Pictured by Artist Kahles. THIS SCHEME IS GREAT FOR TIRED RUN DOWN SYS~ TENS WITH PLENTY OF DOUGH. ONLY THE FASTEST AUTOS BUILT AFFORD HIM REST. == a You wer A QUIET Rest on (raat _ ( Ars =e SEE IM THE FASTEST BOAT Sa ResriNa ? AFLOAT. ((7350 SOOTHING a ) Myseur? STO MY TRED NERVES 4 wat Do You W| PEND MY DOUGH THINK ABOUT , ) | — NY THE & SPENDS ®& MILLION A rainy Te HE Finns THis VERY AM, WOW THIS me RESTS My PooR ACHING BONES OF THE CHASE ts YERY RESTFUL TAU peare SLEEPING CAR a a! e HE EVEN SLEEPS AT THE RATE.OF A MILE & MINUTE Cwkaaeey Steel Magnate Charles M. Schwab's European doctor says his millionaire pa-|ord-smashing auto rides, his hiring of limited trains and skippering of speedy tient is tired out from the continuous physical strain he underwent here and that | yachts be true, and this represents the millionaire at rest, what a tied-up and an- he is now taking a much-needed rest. If the cable reports about Mr. Schwab's rec- | chored-down object a man standing still must be! STATESMANLIKE, A SIMPLE PROBLEM. THE POPULAR STYLE, FOR ROUGE, {Wy = TF fe: 7) ny CIF | fn “Mamma, Is it true a rabbit's foot CRACK IN A FAMOUS BELL. An ominous crack has just been d) most famous bells In the world, the Mme. Judice Helps Home Dressmakers. | ‘La so-called a * | ont.” ‘overed In one of the ©." In the Cathedral St, Peter at Geneva, says the West- ENING == Mostly on the A lot of prophets went out of business terday arge Oddly enough universe at always has i of going on. along the same old Ih whoever Is elected. Now we cin look for rd uninte: pte edly to the turkéy “Behold!” whispered the Angel Death In the ear of Mr. Slopay, who I breathing feebly, “there is a debt that ali nations must’ pay. 1” the sick man Interrupted, he Tih, won't ?"—Ph ord. When Norse heroes died they laid on a ship; the ship was set afire sent out to s TH bet those were the only fire-sails on record where no women were pres- An English noble's auto Has a roseate-perfumed breath That people it runs over May meet a sweeter death. “What hackneyed old stuff Scribbler writes!" or, Why, his writer rings the bell on every line of ft" indeed. even type Th Alderman Dowling the ‘Best Chief! seems at last to have an oppon ent worthy of his steel, If physical culture experts could but change figures as suddenly as have yme of the political forecasts, what fortunes they'd make! ‘The Government's cash balance ts $8 187.361. There Js no immediate fear of the banks asking Uncle Sam to withdraw his account. Tom—Why so melancholy, old man? Jack—Miss Jones rejected me last night. ‘Tom—Well, brace up. There are oth- ers. Jack—Yes, of course; but somehow 1 can't help feeling sorry for the poor girl—Chicago News. “Men of my temperament are seldom electrocuted.” “Very seldom. In fast, I can't think, now, of any of them to whom it hap- pened more tnan once." Cruelty to her pet dog is one of the charges brought by Mrs. Towan agalnet her husband. Maybe he thought he had won not only a wife, but also “some- thing to boo ‘Tis now sald that Christlan Sclence Can cure domestic trouble, | If that fs true, in country towns, The converts should redouble, To it commuters all will look To help to retain the errant cook. “Well, if the trolley cut off both his K Few RKemarks. | were Topics of the Day. legs of course he could have no kid comin) . but he won't stand for It." ow think that by enlarging he skull they can eure Idiocy, Up-to« date swelled head has usually been looked on ag one of {diocy’s pet symp+ toms, Surgeons “Why are you so angr thought you sald you'd no attention to his claim that you were a bribe taking, perjuret swindler.” 1 forgave him that. Rut when the iret his assertions it wag step too far.” s the difference between a ‘fat and a ‘iife mission? “Depends on whether you other fellow adopted it.” Baynor—There goes Hiller ‘in his asstos mobile. How quickly he has learned ta run the thing, Shedd.-Yes: I sunpose It ts a faculty that Is Inherited. Hix father used to ba atte an expert ai the wheelbarrow. Hoston Transcript at him? J proved or some Could Chicago's have caught the oreina Slureardet Ren?” Morgan is rumored to have made $42,« 000.0) this year. If he keeps on at that rate dell he able to spend a whole monty at a summer hotel next season, “Why do yeu take a third perrerd long every time ypu go to the opera or thoutre with her? It must cost you About $300 extra every season. Hut It saves me about $0,008 prot damages.” A hot-tempered colonel from Pha. Used language that dally grew Look out how you talk," Folk advised, * 1 walk Some day te tds ta." Lots of people never rise because they're content to walt for the elev: “Why did you throw stones at poor kitty “'Cause T wanted to nit her, Whatdjes s'pose I did it fer?” Minlster (to one of his members, @ venerable old gardener)—You have reached a great age, John. John—"Deod ha'e 1, sir, for gin I leeve tll the 1th of next month PN be an 004 tageranium.—Glasgow Times, Capt. Walsh might employ some of tho Juvenile Asylum jall-breakers tot help him force an entrance to the steal<« clad gambling join! “I notice I am very lke the moon,"* ‘Thoughtfully murmured Man-Afrala+ of-Water; “For, when I have been full, I very soom Find that I am reduced to my lest quarter.” A ROMANCE OF .THE DAY’S NEWS. FADED magnolia blossom wan buried recently tn Denver, clasped in the hands of a once beautiful woman, whose name not many year ago glowed in the head Jines of the leading vaudeville houses of two con- tinents. Behind the magnolia blossom lurked a mystery which the gentle nuns of St. Antonio Hospttal could not fathom, All the theatrical qWorld hus heard of the beautiful Cy rene, whose acro- bauic dances wetre the talk of terpsi- chorean devotees land at the tiny the little ) Ber and distributed thereby among r Urant-keepers, j if " y Patets) waiters, butchers, flotlats c 3 Naaeld F velvet one inch garment a tblaar pearance. The} minster e. It Is the bell whloh was sounded at the gint, lovers _ /ehefs, era, butchers, florists and all the long train me, Judice, who is connected Hiske about the | sleeves speak for ves=just sit! “Kecalade’” of the dark aight of 6t. Thomas's Day Dec. 21, CN oe » of those who derive erpport from man’s habit of eating—|] with one of the leading dres ind edt with | elbow ste with clreular Nounce of when the 8,000 Savoyards made their attack upon the ‘eKed for favors, fs between the money thus disbursed in this lump and) makin tablishments of this Fontes tacked ton the sete tha eka erst tow and bottom with) “Rome of Protestaniam.”” ‘The assailants had orept close to tee ' SPE Drees, * the same sum paid out by the Senator | ity Hit isla ate atc ornaments tacked to the cei- the Oriental irimming. ‘The color of! the fortifications unobserved, and had planted thelr lad- ats f ok, which was : 4 t by § rina year for living |] city, has been secured by The , make the fancy mming In the velvet and girdie and thy band at the! dors, the Jesuits exhorting them in whispers, ‘Climb, climb, : Althe remaining con- expenses, what's the difference to society? The distribu-|| Evening World, and will con- 9) Shoulders and at points where the capes | (op of the yoke collar must be deter-| every rung of the Iadder is a step toward heaven!’ when solation of her Reaeanithe main’thing, Pore was better ad | and hanging bolero Join the bands of in- mined by the colors in your Oriental] ine ioud clanging of La Clemence waa heat, calliog the olti- laying day; \Cyrene Pon t advised than|[ duct thie department, In which} |sertion, The cuffs are the same in- trimming. Old blue or burnt orange are aden dhe Tea sd . the Senator when he wrote of lavish expenditure: * ‘Yet hence the poor are clothed, the hungry ted, Health to himself and to his infants bread ‘The laborer bears; what his hard heart denies Dives's charitable vanity supplies. | | home dressmakers will be given helpful Ing to dressmaking will be an- awered by Mme. Judice. driven back and t! into the cathedral, where they sang the 1th Psalm. From 1602 to 1901, on every Dec. 21, the now silenced bell has been rung in memory of the ‘Hecalade.” advice. Questions rela’ zens to arms, and Geneva was rescued. The @avoyards were aged Theodore Besa called the people CYRENn. would pore over the eulogies from the Paris Figaro, from Justin McCarthy, from the leading papers of the world, "It fe all I have now to remind me Of the past—except—except,” and be- tween gasps and repeated coughing she PRINCE AND TYPEWRITER. | Deer, seme, futons fealkne CROWNS BY WHOLESALE. meu beldzes fale magnolia blossom |} TAM about to @ married an my oO ‘parc! 5 ‘The Crown Prince of Siam spent Monday in Syracuse | trousseau is almost completed, T They did many things in the Old World better than in the] Cyrene was sent to Denver three "examining the typewriters which a local firm js manu-| ced two or three dressy waists New. Coronation processions raaione a Sze ara a) months ago by the Actors’ Fund dying ae the: |Slamees \Gover i mmething for theatre and dinner wear. James's Gazette, It ts told of one of the ancient kings of|of consumption. Overwork and care- Beers for the Siamese Government. They arelayi, you kindly. offer wome ANZEVAtlON Egypt that hts coronation procession occupled a whole day| lessiess had brought the dread disesaso )) equipped with Siamese characters and their introduction for them, and if asking too muc in passing through the olty of Alexandria, and that 3,200) Into the little dancer's Ufe. Adversity iim the Land of the White Elephant is expected to reyolu-|muke a few sketches, 1 want someting crowns of gold were carried by the servants, One crown! and trust In a husband who had mis tlonize business methods there, ish-looking (as 1 am only twenty) was three feet in height and twenty-four feet in circum-| managed her ane she sald, depleted 3 - ‘ | elaborate well, 1 can wear a ference, There were also carried in the procession sixty-] her means until she arrived in Denver dou y will; but we fancy laborat . risa a i No bt thes d e@ fancy that {1 will be a put me wha i" four sults of golden armor, two boots of gold four and on-| 4 pitiable wreck. olution of only Panama proportions. Hor to send the RELLE M half feet in length, twelve golden basins, ten large vases of| The story of Cyrene and her lonely chine without the fair girl operator is to send the! | pre dit feeling c perfumes for the baths, twelve ewers, fifty dishes and a| death Is a sad one, ly without the soul. If for e Y typewriter ordered #!t he walt que large number of tables—all of gold, Twenty-three of the| Lying alone ih the Denver hospital, 3 : ere Nad) to Wenkde crowns were valued at £434,400, and it ds not surprising |80 far from the gay New York she Prince would contract for the engagement of a types), ah. for Wd that the precession was guarded by 9,000 soldiers, loved, she would talk of the days when ter girl, then should we expect to see Slam soon in F ROMER UIE fi and plaudits overwhelmed her yan of progressive nations and Maba Vajiravundh ex. | sketeles | give will te ¥ and when the love of the one man of “Shit. ‘Bo the inexperienced eye th i | her heart was in her keeping. as @ public benefactor. But the Prince a iit, Roane tn 1 they * APPEATS | ow 1 ww hey a ™4 Like all consumptives, sh altars sul above staaten He devotes antiga etait tat | $9 SOMEBODIES. @8 j], \ir.t,cmmnte: te treameao ela] and commercial problems, with an eye single whatever trimming fs aie ST ten. BERNHARDT, SARAH—will celebrate her fifty-seventh birth-| “Next year.” she said, with a gto material advantages for his realm, A more en-_ i," 8{er the etapa J ec mee a day on the 22d of this month, Although she is a grand-|*W4y look In her big gray eyes, "1 will d prince on his travels, a Boris for example,| x. | we ' re cnt , mother and dangerously near the sixties, she plays| be back on the stage. When I am well Gs uhown a greater catbolicity : i k prna wally good, but the predominating} 1, Aigion' with more youthfulness than many a forty-(@"@ strong perhaps 1 will see him sa : oliclty of comprehen- | pale blur even or nun's 4 € the trimming Is the safest and) carol ingenue dnatils Into the part of Little Eva. again.” And her fevered hands would ‘He! would have seen at a glance how impo: ing or some soft, delicate material tac sin 1) surest way pak ahaha fondie the faded magnolia blossom: girl le in our financial att portant) v1 raid, Just in blouse, sts im tt pale yellow crepe | ‘tre Owe very beautiful watste[BOND, SILAS W.—ot Iowa Falls, has voted for oighteen| which had for her so mar laeine 4 celal affairs, recogniz-| run) at the neck ang with the new fulll de Chine, or any woft material less ex: in be built as expensively or as] Presilents. His first vote was for Henry Clay in 1882, Rie cpaat Biy. memortesiof her the important personal equation, and Siam | bishop sleeve a tiny yoke collar of| pensive, made simple blouse \r rferately: in price as one chooses LIK, EMPBROR-of Abyssinia, who has started al “te called me hie Heer mincerentee re been the gainer. eream lace, xet ly with a narrow band | cluster tucks of three or tye, fastened | THROUGH THE SHOPS, temperance movement in his dominions, expects soon’ to| whispered the dancer, “and it was to i mee aeret eee ts ey Dlaske Nelvet Fiobon yan Avs Mar An ithe Back. ‘The deep patted yoke | Midms or White tnen shirtwaists, ake a tour of Burope, Perhaps he may even follow the| him 1 owed the inspiration of my best | bows, from the chin to the point of the |and part reaching upward from the beit | plain or embroidered, are " oat rates to Ni PemAres-The email boy did not pave xo halcyon! velvet, ‘The outer capes and hanging | is of deep cera lace, that shade known | Ure pe winter wear ae ese OF FAYAI CRSA GLE: dancing, Yer, there was a misunder- siferous @ time with his bonfire Jast night as of old. | flounce below are just a full bolero, with! as Gewny, Arabian lace ts verpgeffec- | Hlack” chiffon face yells, shining! MORGAN, J. PIERPONT—has bought the manuscript of] standing. I :narried—but we never for- off the aephalted streets whore it was pos- | shoulder revery of the ilue, edged with! tive, but almost any heavy all-over lace | BONN with widte, are! Ruskin’a “Seven Lamps of Architecture” &t® private salc,| got. The last time I saw him I wore ry having been made that the melting of |cream lace anj Mack velvet piping. | will do. It iw set in with silk band trim. Igy iM iain hats at-| and 's sald to have paid 996,000 for it, magnolia blossoms, his gift, in my halr, ough this means cost the city nearly $20,000| Bands of cream tnsertion from the} ming of shade of Jace, embroidered in’ tachments In aterial and color, |SWANSON, C, J,—the Minneapolis manufacturer, has just|!t broke my heart almost, that parting, e-viow, Up Bome of the stde streets was con-| shoulder: to the walrt line, edged with| Oriental design. But be careful in your hed with git metal ornaments, | celebrated his silver wedding by giving each of bis em-|and I have kept the flower ever since. Dic tesaue ay lt has been known to be, taxpayer. in yn Mae the velvet and narrow cream lace, full] selection and have the tints of the soft ust in the order of a ey crop. ane bor two tabs back and front under pastel shades; otherwise It will give the jquit | Yate fOr © Carey ployees who had! boon t sores of land, forty } If 1 die ft must be buried with me; but [i cannor, am 100 young remembrance came, too late, out :|THE FADED MAGNOLIA BLOOMS. ——___++. Kil That Was Left of Her Life’s Love to the Dying Dancer. 4 a for that. Only thirty—and the stegm. has much in store for me yet." Cyrene was the introducer of hig kicking 9 long skirts, of the split of many features of acrobatic dancing. Her press notices show the high stand-) ing In which her dancing was held by critics all over the world, Cyrene had two ttle sons, and in hee! last moments her thoughts for the wel re of these children were most pitiful. But it was the memory of her old love, of her lover with the magnolia blossom: that sweetened the dying hours of the: poor little dancer. “If only I could see him again; of onty| he knew of my trouble, [ am sure 1! 1d recov: she would sigh in her| hospital bed as her body shook with) coughing. ‘Perhaps he will come—some- thing will tell him—though he may be! miles away.” With the thoughts of her old love Oy- rene would gaze hopefully Into the fu-! ture. “When I was very young I met him, and he gaia he woumM never forget me—| that he would be true til death, Tull! death—oh!" and the lttle dancer shud-| dered—"til! death, He used to say ma no matter what separated us he would understand {f trouble befell me and that he would gend eome eign. In @ frame on the dancer's table near the bed stood the picture of a handsome, | dark~eyed man—tho, an of the mag- 1oa blossoms. ' “I have never brought out hia pleture tn all my married 11 ehe whispered. —now that I am dy- Ings perhaps T must look on his fac! As Cyrene'e strength grew less, her hope and bellet In. securing som sign from her lover TMB MAGNOLIA increased, BLOSSOM. “Oh, It Is so aw ful to die all atone out here—~away Sram: New York, away from those you love, I'm sure—quite gure though—that he will come." ‘The hopes that buoyed the dying stage favorite up beyond the anticipation of the good sisters were not to be realized in this life, for one morning just as the | gray dawn of a cool Colorado morning was creeping into her window the soul ;/ of the little dancer, who had longed so ardently for the footiights and for her love of her brilliant days, passed away. That morning a strange thing hap: ened. A box arrived at the enver jospital. It was for Cyrene and within were magnolla blossoms from one waeee the ‘Away from all of her friends the dan laid to rest. but ip her Nehiie Rosue her at i aoe : ambranoe ; |