The evening world. Newspaper, February 21, 1903, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 21, 1903. bets eae! tit) PAY ‘ ii VW shows No Effect of Strain Inci- dent to Yesterday’s Celebra- tion and Is Now Expected to } Exoeed Years of Peter. IPIUS#IX. ALONE HAS DONE SO. int Pontiff Has Only to Live Until April 27 to Equal the Reign f of Peter, and Arrangements Aro Well Under Way. to Celebrate It. ROME, Feb. 21.—So well dia Pope Leo ‘the strain of yesterday's celebration the silver jubilee of his pontificate |pprehension of his not exceeding @aya of Poter have passed and prep- is are under way to celebrate l@ grandiose ceremony which will con- the Leonine year of jubilee on M #7 next, when, if epared to life, XT. will, lke his predecessor, Pius th have “seen tho years of Peter.” ‘When ® new Pope 1s crowned, part e(the ritual is the minatory warning, bn videbis annos Patri"<“Thou shalt gee the years of Peter’ uttered by one who placed on his head the tara. Peter was Bishop of Rome nty-five years, two months and sev- @ays. Of his two hundred and fifty- Phus IX. wes the first during his moments of recreation, but Chartran, the eminent artist, was one i of those 60 favored, while the Pontiff was sitting to him for a now celebrated y portrait. The sketches of M. Chartran show the Pontiff in characteristic at- titudes, bringing out strilingly the al- moat sptrituelle physique of the most wonderful old man In the world. Some- a —_-— ix guccessors, times the Pope visits his summer palace, ‘olate this tradition. He reigned for an ancient tower in the Vatican gardens, thirty-one years, seven months and dullt by Pirro Iégario in 1560 for Pius aa fwenty-one days, and in memory of the IV, and restored interiorly by the pres-| The William Shauber Goes to et a medallion of him was placed over ent Pontiff. 5 statue of St. Peter in the famous the Bottom at Her Pier and h which bears hia.name, A similar His Evening Work. Mon of Leo will be placed beside Toward 6 o'clock the Pope takes aj Three Men Barely Escape by of his predecessor éf he lives to cup of beef tea and at 10 o'clock a cup + pril 27 next. Sf thin soup. Ife cares Ittte for the 4UMping Overboard. —_— PENCIL SKETCHES OF HIS HOLINESS POPE LEO XIlIl., FROM LIFE BY CHARTRAN, THE FAMOUS FRENCH ARTIST, SPECIALLY DRAWN FOR THE EVENING WORLD. CARNEGIE IS ILL; WILL TAKE REST tron Master Wires from Florida that the Condition of fix Health Necessitates Cancels ling His Engagements. |... HIS AILMENT IS UNKNOWN. Telegraphs to a Friend that He Must. Take Care of Himself—Hitherto, He Has Treated Indispositions Very Lightly. Andrew Carnegie is very ill. He has been compelled to cancel all his en-" gagements and ‘has retired to Dunge- ness, the winter home of his sister on Cumberland Isiand, off the coast of Florida, News of Mr. Carnegie's fll- ness first came from Atlanta, Ga., where Mr. Carnogie was to have taken part in the dedication of the Atlanta public - brary on Feb. 28. J. R. Nutting, Chale. man of the Board of Trustees, yesters day received the following telegram from Mr. Carnegie. Fernandina, Feb. 20, J. R. Nutting, Atlanta, Ga.: Deeply regret that I am compelled to cancel my engagement owing to indis- position. I am confined to the house and am advised that It is necessary to take great care of myself for some time. CARNEGIE. Mr. Carnegie heretofore has treated” his ailments lightly and would never concede that he was ill. The statement over his own signature that he is con- fined to the house and must take care of himself for some time to come gives his friends great cause for alarm. They believe that Mr. Carnegle's physiclans have convinced the millionaire that he te seriously {ll and that he must care for his health, It was also known that Mr. Carnegie had been looking forward to the ar ep Ce afore eee ~ ee ers Italian wines, though he drinks sparing- jeate, the Holy Father has par-|or the memorable ocoaston already re-| Then begins his daily round of oMetal] brook disturbance and giv c! a gives his time to icipated in many notable jubilee cale- ferred to, when he wl bave exceeded! duties, First he sees the Papal Secre-| intellectual pursults, preparing his en- S The first notable event was| “the years of Peter. tary of State, to whom he gives an hour.| cyclicals, reading newspapers prepared the celebration in 1883 of the golden] Few robust persons could endure the! Audiences are given diplongitic repro-| for him by his secretary, or philosophi- “bparts of the Christian world. In 183 he| effect on the attenuated frame of tho|ness of the Vatican Slik rclacslotawice, forced to swim through the {cy water| 4nd m ‘Celebrated the golden jubilee of his ac-| Pontiff, His longevity and his recupera-| At 1 o'clock the Pope dines, the meal] Cardinal Gibbons, who has had fre-| tthe oler. They were carried Into @| ‘They were dragged out of fon to the episcopate, Finally, on| tive powers are adcribed to the extrome-| consisting of soup, roast ment and| quent opportunity to meet the Pontim, |%t#00 Rear by suffering from cold and| chilled to, the Dane and beaiven, Dyn itys|dred_and ‘Thirty-frat atreets, 3 of last year he began the year|ly simple life he leads, ‘To-day, despite] simple vegetables, with nothing but] has written: Pope Leo is the living ex. | S80C# GA ass he pew bleh they had | ore et ve can toh jubilee which culminated in yester-|the fatigues of the celebration of yea-| trult for dessert. After dinner, the Popa|emplification of the grand monastic There {s much mystery about the sink-| walk and were carried Nato a oneeee ire alarm ran most of ‘)@ay's ceremony commemorating his|terdey. he arose as umial at 6 o'clock. |dozes for an hour in an arm chair.| maxim, ‘Laborare est orare’ (‘To jabor| "& of the boat, for she was supposed! where they were revived only after cont had to struggle, -five years in the Pontificate and The Pope’a Daily Roatine. After this, If the weather permits, hel is to pray.) His life Js one long rouna| t® be in Kod condition. The cause of| siderable effort, _tactively participated. who arouses him, opens a window in his| hia only recreation, and he takes keen} ence to his ph ian, by short pauses| t¥® !8 brought to the surface, but Capt.| the pier. An effort to raise her ‘Rome has not in years witnessed such|sieeping apartment and retires, The |delight in the beauties of the garden| tor the relaxation of his mind and the| Parker hints that the same gang that made at once, She was valued at is manifestation of religious senttment.| Pope remains alone in prayer or thought|and the live pets, the birds and thelrefreshwgent of his body, without which| as committed other depredations along ————[——$$__ year has also witnessed the dia-|for an hour and then rings. Hix two|goata and the tame animals, whose lifel his burning zeal for the advancement | the river front opened the sea cocks. Nmond jubtiee of his ordination to the| private chaplaina attend hm and he|te maken pleasant by his special care. or the Christian faith and the spread| He was asicey in his bunk, as were “priesthood and the golden jubilee of his r > @ardinalate. The celebration will not they were awakened by the round of water rushing in. They did not have mass of thankegiving. On returning ed the privilege of greeting Hts Holiness] even his enduring frame.” in the World Almanac. im Many Celebrations. Graw to a close until the Pontiff’s| from chapel, he breakfasts frugally, on ey time to 4: began ® } ly of them sometimes while dining. In ress before the boat to During the twenty-five years of his] ninaty-fourth birthday, on March 8 next,| coffee and milk and a dry roll. Ma apattment Tor the nigant he dows not] A’ MYSTERY ABOUT — IT.| 2th: {matter mere foreed fo Simp zor CARS AFIRE IN BIG BARN. , ‘The tug had settled away from the pier ond the men had to swim twenty! Watchmen Rolled Most of Them feet or more. It seemed like as many | ‘The tug William Shauber sank off Pler| Miles, they said afterward. Their cries; OUt—Several Firemen Hurt. 7 of terror whe; h ‘}gubliee of his priesthood, when Rome|exoitement and fatigue inoldent to these| sentatives or tho hoads of the various|oal works, ar at tlmes indulging in his| N°? Bast River, to-day, and the owner.) water with thelr tiaited bodioa uaa ae PM are este uate et vere fwas the contre of pilgrimages from all| celebrations, yet they seem to have Iittio| congregations which carry on the busl-| hobby for Latin verse, which he writes | C2? Samuel Parker, and two men were Sept Sy ESO dfoDtl barns on Third avenue, between One ‘which 100,000 of his fellow religionints| He is alwaya awakened by a valet,|walks in the Vatican gardens. This :s|o¢ work and prayer, broken, Iw defor. | th trouble will not be known until the| ani ateut twonte nee Foe ray from | gimme pepcee eae hiecsnel eat must The ist of appropriations by says mass, after which he assists at o| Few are those to whom has been grant-|o¢ Christian influence would wear out| the Wo members of the crew. when| Congress from 1807 to 1908 is givem| seriously Injured, however, and the fire rangements for his entertainment in Ate lanta as one of the events of his life and vhey conclude that he must be seriousl, {ll when he voluntarily absents hims Exact details as to the nature of Mr, Carnegie’s iliness have not yet been se cured. ‘The nesrest telegraph station wo Dungeness !s Fernandina, whtch ls twen- ty miles away. The Carnegie place on Dungeness is one of the most famous on the Atlantic Coast. ‘To an Evening World reporter, who called at Mr, Carnegic’s th avenue home to-day, {t was sald that no ap- hundred stored for the night in the! Hundred end Thirtleth and One Hun- caugnt fire early to-day and after turnt 2 oe to ol Rive, Carnegie and little Margaret Car negie are in New York an not 8g South unless they are Instructed thet Mr. Carnegie te worse. The fact that Mr. Carnegie was india posed has been known at his home in this city ever since he arrived in jda. He sent a telegram to his wife say the cars out on the street, blocking {t to such an extent that the fre appa- dimoulty. WI be) winile the firemen were fighting the “|fire the Mghts in the barn went. out] and several of the firemen fell in a pit between the rails, from which work- men repair the cars. ‘They were not, i would be obliged to postpone his Piatto Atlanta. It is his ‘imeation. to Temain in the Gouth until he cred hin strength He has, not {thoroughly well since his illness in Bue rope last fall. was extinguished after doing $2,000 dam- age to the cars. AA Beacon Light NOW RUNNING IN THE Five Cents on All News Stands. “ Ce a ai PE PECIO ACO CO CIO COI AMOI PEEELE ECO O) IMO AIO) MOAI OE on Life's Road! 2 EE OF ESE OE 8 8 OF OE Ob OF 2 08 OF EO 0 OF 8 08 0 OF 8 OE Ob Ft Ot 0 8 Ut “SUCCESS” SERIES OF ARTICLES BY NEWELL DWIGHT HILLIS, D.D., Great New York Sunday World. Buy a Copy Go-Morretv for Your 3S on! Order It To-Night. rehension is felt about his condition. ° ing that the trip had tired him and that ~ & + e

Other pages from this issue: