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Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York es Second-Class Mail Matter. 4 VOLUME 48., NO. 18,060. A FINE EXAMPLE. Yesterday a splendid railroad did a splendid ening. The Pennsylvania voluntarily raised the wages of 59,000) of its employees 10 per cent. This meant an increase, 4 to its payroll of something like $4,250,000 a year. And this {s the eecond of such voluntary increases within + the present year. For last January an addition of from ‘+ 10 to 12 per cent., amounting roundly to $1,000,000 per | * @nnum, was glyen by this road to its employees. All those able minds now attempting to devis> some | method of reconciling Capital and Labor should find in this wonderful railroad and {ts yesterday's act at once an object lesson and an inspiration. Its clockwork pay- i mient of dividends, its almost automatic payment of extra | « fo dividends, and the enormous sums which are left over |} to go into permanent improvements along the 11,000 + qniles of the system's road, all attest to the success of | 4 Daplital in the ideal firm of “Labor, Capital & Co." The} Dleasant faces, neat dress, self-respect and conspicuous | courtesy of all of the 80,000 employees with whom a tray- eller may come in contact bear witness to the prosperity (in this harmonious partnership) of Labor. ¥ 33556 Truly, if all our other combinations of Capital and) 5 Labor could model themselves after the Pennsylvania| q Railroad we should soon reach a sociological Utopia |} where there would be neither watered stock nor mulcted | + stockholder; neither labor agitator, nor labored ngita-| tion; where dividends and salaries would flow and g ow and dynamite would rest together in museums. But alas! Though the Pennsylvania seems to dis-| ‘ prove it, it is a sad fact that human nature and Utopia) 4 are incompatible! The (L's New Pansengers.—A gain of nearly 30,000,000 passengers by the elevated road within one year ts a sur- iy prising thing in connection with the greatly increased | ‘ competition of the surface traction nes. What part of | it Js due to the use of electricity 1s not so profitable a Matter to speculate on as whether the resulting increase in earnings will not Justify thé banishment of some of the road's outworn rolling stock. There are cars on tho d Ninth avenue line that have survived since Its opentng, a ® quarter of a century ago. QUITTING THE GAME, “Deacon” White leaves Wall street after forty years | of it, quoting Latin as he goes, “Times change and we! charge with them,” he says, and rather too modestly re. gards himself as a veteran who lags superfluous on the stage, | To quote back at the Deacon we may say to him in| the words of the pious Aeneas that h» has seen most of; the big deals that were made In “the street” up to the} time of the coming of the present giants and been a! large part of most of them, He has “sat in" at many | big games. He has seen corners collapse and others suc- | ceed with stocks at $1,000 and bonds at 10, He saw | | Wack, Friday and recalls tho days of the gold pante, For | mor? than @ generation he has watched the shearing at| ; the lamb. Hie quits the game because the stakes are too high | for him. It 1s the same old game, with only the ante! yaised. Only this week a jackpot was opened trom | which the lttle fellows found themselves frozen out.| + ‘Those who had bought St. Paul Rallroad stock last Sep- | tember discovered that they had lost $23 a share. If the | investment was in Rock Island the loss was $25, if in| Missouri Pacifle $20, It does not appear that any of | these roads has been earning less than two months ago| ; or that the outlook for the next quarter's earnings 1s |? unpromising, The intrinsic value of the stock {s the s:me, It simply happened that certain gamblers were trying to <f get the better of other gamblers and the small speculator | Pe? who was slow in getting out from under found himself | squeezed, | The principles of the game are the same as wien| Mr. White was engineering his corn deal of 1891, Only the players have changed. Im the Wey.—The Hall of Records, Leventritt on Oct. 10, ts still there, If ‘tls to go 'twere well an it went quickly, for its presence prevents the completion of that section of the subway and by so much delays rapid transit, MURPHY’S CLEARER VISION. Leader Murphy, ordering the Tammany Aldermen to doomed by Judge » (aa WORLB OOo DOM . The Music Cure Now 3 sitios x RVENING, yi iiiR 14, 1902 EVENING = for Artist Kahles Shows How the Remedy Works. Makes a Bid THE Bass DRUM Is A GOOD CURE FOR DEAFNESS: NULIAY, 2 7 > Hh eee THIS WILL CURE YOUR FRIENDS OF VISITING a «400d CURE FOR SHORTNESS: OF BREATH, SLEEPING H. Muste sounds like a nice meicine to take. CHICAGO AGAIN. LAYING IN COAL. “Morrison has invented a pad for wrapping around the fect when one has the gout “Then he should put it on the market in Chica “And why? “Because there there than anyw with houses “I am, bed last night.” ly? the cheap beds in the are footpads, ere o| more STRIPS | [ ‘ACH, SucH | | FuNnyness! THIS KIND OF MUSIC WILL CURE THE “Tt 1s @ wonder you are not disgusted Dat is why I slept on a very GLOTOHOHOSO SE MELANCHOLY __ peace | A WARD LL Spurr NAMINUTE wuTE) v7 —— ‘THe EFFECT OF ONE DOSE 2. THE MELANCHOLY WARD (SE FORE TAKING) Wik ABIT. It has just gotten itself into the | used in New York restaurants to uid digestion, Ist of new cures by soothing the excitement of a Poughkeepsie maniac. A savant |cure is suggested in Mr. Kahles's picture, which, it can be seen, takes cogni- some little time ago urged {ts eMcacy as a remedy for nervous disorders. It is |zance cven of the therapeutical value of a yard or two of hand-organ melody. FOOTBALL TE lodging- “That big footh: me. but I rejected hi “He's only a left-guard, Mt oe e ocvan VERY STIMULATING % MELANCHOLY VWVYARD, WHAT'S DER A MATTA Him? WHERE, OW WHERE SHALL inaaas Chimerne up “THE AOUDER Stains. . BE FOUND FOR AM. Miss Giraffe (to going to be a grand to go as Mary 2OODO® $ 3 | Recognition. TURN & GERMAN BAND LOOSE IN THE FEELING TRYA HAND ORGAN, The possible scope of the new LARGE ORDER. Queen oo THAT TIRED K Few Kemarks. - Mostly on the Topics of the Day. Lots of Mississippi bears will experi- ence “the strenuous death.” Rheumatic Richard Canfield isn't the only local gambler whose “Joints are out of gear, One political party's Johah may be the other party's mascot. “What business Is he in?” “Everybody's.’ “This mighty city wants some real Re- form!" ‘That is the old, old chant, and one who heeds it Sizes things up in these few wélghty words: “It doesn't want reform; it merely needs It." “My love for you," he wrote, ‘1s #0 deep, so vast, 80 powerful, I cannot ex- press it.” “Why don't you send it by freight?” she wrote back. And then it was all off. —Philadelphia Record. “Da you believe Chrigtmas presents?" “You bet I do, That's the only way we commuters manage to Induce our ser to stay in the country 4111 Decem- giving servants doesn't It occur to Foxhall Keene to establish an alibi? “Why am I unpopular in my district? I always treat my constituents with de- ference. “Try treating them with rye, and you'll soon notice a change. ‘To save all future ships from harm Let's get a law enacted To print on the new. bridge this sign: “Sfasts Painlessly Extracted.” The temperance and antl-smoke re- formers may not share in the rejoicing over this year's unusually big corn and tobacco harvests. Corbin, in urging folks to sing, ‘To Canada should roam: And there should teach the Doukhobors “There's no place like sweet home. “There is a text that ‘The meek shall Inherit the earth.’ ” “Really? I didn't even know Morgan had made his will. The Kentucky wife who has secured divorees from two husbands at the same time, no doubt got reduced legal rates on account of the wholesale nature of the job. President Baer, who now declares that miners are prospering. and have all the pay they need, can't make the same clam about consumers and their coal. The man who gladly blows his weekly pay k The hour he gets the same on salary day, Has at least one sweet retrospect that cheers The “beet and'—poverty of later years He'll know it scarce can be his daugh- tere fate To be bought by the Marriage Syndl- cate, “She has @ very poor figure.” “Why, I thought it was very fine.” “So did I, ‘till 1 looked her up in Brad- street's." isnt’ he? Grocer—-Not. much, he ain't. He owed me a bill these three years.—Ch: cago Dally News. A bald-headed man remarke: ‘Think I've brought immortality nigh; ‘My cranium will last When old age 1s past, For a bald-headed man cannot dye.” In the excitement following the free- ing of Molineux, it 1s well to bear is mind, that, in only proving who did NOT commit the crime, the law has done but the lesser portion of its full duty. “How can I teach these ballet girls to kick more vigorously?" ‘Hold up their salary.” Perhagp none will regret the advent of royalty into our national legislature more than those in the House of Repre- sentatives, upon whom will fall the né cessity of nouncing the name of the Hawalian prince just elected delegate te that body. ‘Thanksgiving was a plous feast day once, . As students of old histories may see. But now, ‘tls clear unto the veriest dune It savors more of pie than plety. “Prof. Garner says he can translate the language of monkeys." “Pretty soon he'll be trying to trans- late college yells.” “What experience have you in photog: raphy? Do you know how to fit up a ‘dark-room? ** “Well, I've furnished seven Harlem fat: Detectives found $12,000 in jewels In @ coal cellar. It would have deen far more surprising if they’d found coal. A ROMANCE OF THE DAY’S NEWS. _K MINISTERING ANGEL. Moylan’s First Sight of His Bride Was as Nurse at a Sick Friend’s Bedside. HEN James Moylan left the hos- W pital he was pronounced cured by the house physicians, and though he accepted their decision with- ‘out comment, the stern middle-aged bu iness man knew that within the silent precincts which he was leaving he had contracted a malady far more sertous than the trifling fllness which had taken him there. James Moylan was In love, 2 He was not a ro: costumer)—It's ball and I want f Scots. vote for the Pennsylvania tunnel franchise, shows him- ¥ self a better friend of labor than {ts self-constituted | champions in the board. They have'held out for an evi- dently unconstitutioual provision in the contract, a| minor consideration at best. He looks to the main Proposition and endeavors to expedite the beginning of great enterprise which is certain to be of benefit to the entire community. ‘The construction of the tunnel and terminal will dis- . tribute an immense amount of outside capital in chan- oe nels where {t will do great good. | t / a A MARRIAGE BROKER'S STOCK. | ‘ The London marriage broker who made a specialty ; of Huropean noblemen had a choice and varied list of eligibles at all prices, | ' There was Prince Heinrich yon Hanau, held at} |, $2,000,000 because of his very superior eligibility—an old | “boy of fifty-six deep in debt, but a double-eagie peer of | the first water. There was another German prince, ‘A slightly shopworn, and not a drawing-room ornament ancient lineage and approved pedigree, cheap at $1,500,- 000. And there was Baron Eberhard von Danckelmann, handsome, presentable and only forty—hochgeboren, - hofaehig and a bargain at $200,000. And yet they went | beauty averaged up with pedigree? What addet valua- ton did a kalserly mustache g've? What dita Heldelbo: g Sear count for? How much extra for an army comm sion? Did a bar sinister in the escutcheon value or detract from it? e for further details, mmis- increase tho| The questions whet tho appe fi t Slap for Masher—Annie Greenfield sapped a man tn “the face «iueezed her hand in the crowd leaving a Fourteonth street theatre. Mon of Deteotive Bimnings and he arrested the youth on 5 of disorderly conduct. To secure the arrest of a 4n a better remedy than simply*to write a letter | it. 1f Mins Greenfeld proves her case against thu ‘anvexample should be made of him, 1 ace because of bad features and hereditary ditfidence, but of | 8%! i! two years ts dec | begging. Are helresses growing captious? Was there!) the Yokes. top of sleeves no silver king's daughter ready to exchange @ block of fk? together and solld, and mak the paternal mining shares for precedence in a Ger aslo With: Jacelibanda: and. zt Jerman tucks for the lower portions principality? low a band of 1. Cut out uy Fuller details of Broker De Pokorny's businegs | [awn velow Ince so as to allow] jj Methods would be interesting, How did he inventory | °°", bale FOVEan Ow, his stock and how were the prices graded? With a prince ee ee fi are (Vowel halekweyiane At the top for $2,000,000 and a baron well down tho ccaje| then allowed to flare gracefully ab ont at $200,000, where did landgraves and margraves come| (ht foot. Bale bl ns for casa ‘In-and frelherrs and jonkherrs? How. y, sith}long Rowing; en nd: sho fow was personal and a neck ribbon to match, hand, one-piece back. and a pethim Bottom at t The ro Waist line, and fastens with & belt. 1 reas oa the atten- | Rave some ‘small pieces of the velvet loft over. and what? wear with it to match very large? micerable at the prospect of weart Mme, Judice, who te connected} | oot all winter tke the one you dewerthe Jbut I think ft can be remodied ve with one of the leading dress: | easily for, from what you tell me, T/ making establishments of thi8}) infer it Is simply too small for you. Rip city, has been secured by The]/out your sleeves and put on the coat Evening World. and will con-f ami clip all around the armholes with i arp selstors, but be careful and do duct this Sao Rh Hi whee Avot eut too much, as you will then be home dressmakers will be given }|~ - helpful advice. Questions relat: | Ka} ing to dressmaking will be an- swered by Mme. Judice, he LY let me know wn dress over pal 1 would like somet trimmed with ribbe ue & plain but] Vatenc evening ual, aid This dainty ly white lace of the trimmed dress usual way of King. In that the u tud nd tn touch. | wants te eet WINTER'S COAT. Madam Ju: The how to fix my jnat wins | Worse oft th eit is almost tm- Te is Ught in tae neck armho| is 1a the Armnoten proper sin at- iB across the bust. Teds binek ev. . Dur, With stormcollar and large rev RUE CARE the lantie, waist line of mink; blou: os Mo. widert) the: coar ront, siceves pliin, a little bel across the front from neck to the waist | line you can insert a vest of some other material. A white broadcloth braided in gold wii be quite stunning with the black velour. Turnback cuffs to matca att of coat which just comes to Can I line with anything, | entirely 2 | Mme. Judice Helps Home Dressmakers. | your coat. Mink tails are stiff an} un- | katnly. For a foundation for It a rotl of cotton batting, left In its natural shape, make @ fine one. Two pleces of silk! or black cambric cut and sewed Ike oblong bags, left open at both ends, with one silpped inside and the other ltd outside of the cotton roll, make cover- ing and lining. Draw these together at each end with elastic and the body of your muff ts ready for the velour and fur. Any fashion of trimming {s effec- tive, but your scraps of velour must determine your method. To make muff the fofasptilo ape, Just | it Mat Instead of round. NEW USES FOR RIBBON Ribbons used to be thought cap Ing worn in Just one way—as ribbons, Now they have grown distinct and apart from First, they are employed in things that women make for home nto a dozen uss that ations, then they became strin in undersuits, Now, in Reneral outburst in ribbon u they e not only knotted, bowed and tooped nto hat » but are # q into butterfly forms and myriads of Hower designs, such as roses, buds and caves, so cunningly devised that as they rise from blue and pink stems they are so natural in appearance 48 to often adorn a corsage Instead of veal tow Bright yellow «stamens, a jUranching, aggressive pi a round ace for them «row upon and ye ¢ the centre of the itest flower ribbons, They tried at first to make them Wholly of gathered riboons, but that {produced no buds. 4 pink, red, yellow and white “sir es adoen the hair, made of sat custers with buds at © ieis are quite the latest | are eo. nacur aL aperved, Kulwes of rayon’ are worn In pi coats And gowns, anu often form th Hons in ace and’ d ey are J iaany dainty articles of fancy work, sewing bags, opera giass and eyeglass’ holders, rlybon Can you also tell me hi o make some kind of om | the vest will change the sleeves sum- retty ‘mutt dainty, hot_so|clently. In reference to the muff, utilize A. 8. | your leftover pleces for that and trim You certainty have reasons 10 be with bands of mink to correspond with Adiovons are particuiariy popular be- vcatise they lend themselves to so many purposes in thelr natural form, for they n be twisted Into a bow or’ added in ‘and there when all other Q to receive he Alexander, for all her fine dress this momentous visit to the Rus says the Detroit Tribune, © eannot wear them in Belgrar ple, she gave out Fume time ago the national dress only, Phe fro tlons of y two yours _ oma pec wear dia are most exqul Drag ent her thom--and if the spolled on account of th a mot change fn tno be abandoned Queen D ran thi g shoeless, her naked shouldys poepiny hatr, The Queen wrung her hand would break, and taking ata without holding meetings or a mancipatod themselves, rays th en work hard, while the men a compe! wife, mak duty to abuse the husband, and if she be scorned by her tribe. The wife, wit strike her tent and go, taking with lor possessions. The husband, unless he live out of his tent. s owner in this country, His estate and Is scattered through seven Stat BARING-GOULD. 8. any other Hving Englishman, old, and Is still robust, RUTLER, PRESID 'T—of Columbia, tour of the W. tion, BST, 5 christened, B.—a well-known Cincinna at his father’s wish, JPSSUP, ALFRED—of Brooklyn, has reorganize Chinese currency, Alfonso XIIL, in the game. fan court, now g9 because, empress doesn't give in soon they will be Upon being advised that the proposed visit to Russia must place as she came from her dress ng-roum, waistlesas and sobbing as if her heart on from no one. HUSBANDS HONOR AND OBEY. re is a remarkable community In Abyssinia where the tion the house and all tt contains belong to the At the least unkind word she turns the ausband ont at night, In storm or rain, and he cannot como back until he amends by the gift of a cow. The wife considers ita phow any love for him in life or grief at his deaih she would ts tray SOMEBODIES. @& } BILBY, J. S.—of Mitman, O., Is probably the large<: Innd} —18 the author of more books than is He {s over seventy yeurs . where he will speak though few of hi friends know what his Initials stand for, QUEEN DRAGA'S NEW GOWNS. n Draga is prostrated over the refusal of the . Which followed her recent q) rina rrel wita King the purpose of for naught, de fo to Matter the t harvafier she would ke Intended for Liva. Pacis modiste’s art— in udvanze to secure fashions, h the 2 ors of the through her loosexed gitations of any kind, ie Golden Peany, All re fdlo, but by way of were weak cnough to hot any reason, may dne-third of the joint eling, may rot numbers 190,000 acres es, 1s about to make a American edies- ti business man, w “Good Better Bost, been chosen to help mantle man, only a practical lumber tealer. People who Md not Mke him said that his heart was as wooden a the deal boards among which he spent the working part of his day. He would have been the last man to suspect that there was a soft spot in his heart. Yet when he lay MRS, J. T. MOYLAN. helpless and nert on the white cot of the hospital ward jand watched the sympathetle face of the white-capped nurse as she bent over his couch he experienced a vague feeling of tenderness that ‘he had never before known. As the days passed he found himself courting the hours be- tween the nurse's appearances, and when she brought in a dainty tray epread with tempting food and placed It before him or placed her cool, firm fingers on hts forehead or patted his pillows before she sald good-night, he felt thal he was keenly allve to every motion of her strong, graceful body, every turn of her beautiful head. He waited anxlously for her coming ev pathetic Interest as to hls symptoms, for the first time in his life he actually felt every moment as It passed. Gradually MMs brief conversations with the nurse grew longer. He talked to her of the outside world, of his busi- ness interests. She was, he thought, the first women to undérstand him, And one evening Mrs, Baird told him of the tragedy of her life. Tt was the very old one of the woman who married and expeoted too much of a man. Belng another man, and in love with her, James Moylon thought he vaderstood her. “You hi nink, ght that I was a wid 2 coniided, “I am not, My hus: 's alive, but I ave not lved with him for years, and re- cently T obtained a divoree from him, now, and yet some- times I am almost sorry that I-had the courage to do rigat. For I am lonely," The eek man reached out a symja- thetic hang that st.ll trembled with the weakness of convalescence and placed {t on the firm white fingers of the sad- eyed woman, After 4 moment's silence 1 do not love hi QUEDN DOWAGER OF SPAIN—is one of the finest billiard players in the world, and has carefully coashed lier gun, | lined the room. she drew it away and rising passed slowly down the long row of cots that But fram that moment fe wore a day, ead when she smiled good! morning and then inquired with sym-, rosier aspect for the convalescent. For that eflenco of scarcely a moment's éu ration bed drawn him nearer to the woman he now knew he loved than hours of guarded epeech, When he had first become an Mmate of the ward he hed anxtously counted the moments to his recovery, For he had hated to leave his business, which he felt needed his personel euperintend- ence at all times. Now he began to dread! the hour when he should be pronounced well enough to leave. Would he not be aeparated from the tall, dark-eyed woman who had come to be so much to him. Of course he knew he oould eee her after he left the hoapttal, but they would meet on more formal grounds and the old silent intimacy would be lost. When the day before that fixed for his departure came, he watched her come into the ward and for the Grat time was ‘jealous of the tender ministra- tons which she bestowed upon all the suffering invalids tn the room. Yet he had begun to love her for the very ten- derness she showed in tending the sick under her care and, long before se had shown any personal interest in him, had ble! The day of part- ing came. ‘The all, sad-eyed nurse ind the business man, st weate ind thinned by convalescence, and ‘ach knew that they would meet again, : Tho next week James Moylan de- voted himself strlotly to his busl- ness interests, But the narrow same- ness of his life had JAMES T. MOYLAN. become suddenly \nsupportable, He could not live again {n the narrow groove which had once made ail his happiness, A month passed before he realized that life without Eleanor Baird was an DIlty. But when once the con- came to him he acted with the promptness which characterized his business dealings, He went at once to the hospital and ‘ to see hs nurse. When she came Inco the spare, uslovely parlor of the hospltal all the sharp angles of viction the mathomatica'ly ranged ehalis, the Mos. tones of the gaudily flowered carpet were softened and ande beau- ur Mrs. Balrd held out her hi anda caarming emilo of wi ed her fl ips tor am Bufore she speak had selz sr hand In doth of his, ani wi Mout you muat 2Pry MN he sald in which ote of love sounded st ly as a metrument (ong un= y fon & er they were married at \re's father, Capt. William 1. of the ‘United Statca Revenue Murine Service. jriion tila tn tag, true atory of the moet- g of James Moy.an, a wealthy lui erman of Sax Prcdgatty rat E eanor Baird, until e ital A month 1 the hone of 3 Drummer—Crabtree's an old settler, ay i ' j