The evening world. Newspaper, September 8, 1903, Page 12

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BDd-Odd4-06 OOO-E /@ublished by the Press Publishing Company, No. 83 to a) Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. Si acs WOLUME 44.. pee se eseeereeeeeees NO. 18,388. . THE TRACTION EVIL AGAIN. BELSON me Bae MY 3 "> ° ‘The fall anti-traction evil campaign Is opened by the (see aaeaeecren ¥ publication of the report of the Engineering Committee S i ot the Merchants’ Association on existing defects and abuses of trolley service. The facts alleged are interesting and somewhat over- familiar. The car-ahead evil is righteously denounced. ‘The suggestion is again made of the urgent need of two conductors in the longer cars during rush hours. The! 4, Volunteer conductor on whom the company has come to| $ ~ Gepend docs not suffice. It is pointed out that some cl) 5 ° ODS ORE EDE The Importance of Mr. Peewee.) >— > = ~_—— 4 Ne sx <4 — $9696 O9-0006H006400000 000069 ry 4.3 as? 2 Showing the Usual Fate of the Little Man Who Tries to Cut a.Lot of Ice in a Crotwwd. SAY Geoncel DID You READ ABouT How] AvERTED pos try wm To monsow | inrEeno 10 FLOAT $39.000 209 IN GAS RAILRCAD HOLDINGS, TOCM UNLESS THE CONSOLIDATED ‘A MERE DAGATER » f Tomy Ficuae. NUGNY STEADY man on THe <L wiek PUT Ther, STREET. wun’ een, \ ar the reprehensible overcrowding comes from the failure! @ to furnish transters, by which much of the traffic would | be diverted to les« congested lines. Thanks to individual | © "protest carried into the courts passengers are better off | this year than last; transfers are now granted at more | { than a dozen points where formerly they were refused. An examination of the ground gained in the contention of tho public against the trolley companies shows, in- More than concerted effort. The work of the transfer patriots and the car-ahead martyrs {s not forgotten. TO bD ABOUT One good point made by the committee is that in K R Boston “the maximum number of cars run per hour in NEW YOR E Ss ne diroction on a single surface track exceeds by 40 per New York.” The presse nienest number rancho” me ad 4 that it 19], 4 millionaire collector of antiquities Metropolitan officials have repeatedly state 2 ANNA EY GIGI Ih wbeakiNg SoPChelivar Bee impossible to run more cars in the busy hours. How 18} rjous auction sales he had attended, Boston able to do so under the adverse conditions of} said that he had for a long time been ’ ‘ puzzled by meeting and sometimes being iperocts narrower than ours and as badly clogged by Rotulaves Vecrenhacvalchaen andi buigste sepric? eyed woman, One day he learned that Certainly some improvement must be had this winter.| . grandfather's clock, from a New Jer- ©) Burfece and elevated lines together are now transporting | sey Revolutionary homestead, had been + pearly one Dillion of passengers a year! It is a total {94 to some one connected with the old Lyceum Thatre company. As he passing the ready comprehension of the mind. This year thought the ‘clock had been’ bought for * py the normal increase there will be nearly 50,000,000) sto¢¢ purposes and was therefore still ) additional passengers to be cared for. If the facilities| purchasable, he hurried to the theatre. fast year were inadequate, how much the more are they | He bought a seat and prepared to walt Jew | till the performance had ended before © mow! It Js going to be a bad six months for the New] jegotiating the sale. His astonishment Yorker from Oct 1, when the Intest summer bird of pas-| may be imagined when, as the curtain © gage has returned to town, until the opening of the sub-| rose, he saw his rival collector on the gay for business. stage. She was Miss Annie Russell, peepee and at sight of the star he knew his precious clock was lost to him forever. 6 BACK TO TOWN. ‘This clock, a Mayflower chair, a Marie “i Antoinette sconce, a Spanish couch that ‘The summer resort season is to-day unofficially at an| gates back to Columbus and some really * gad. There are those who will stay a week longer St} remarkable Chippendale furniture are » the seashore, but they are fow by comparison with the | *mong Miss Russell's choicest treasures, vast human tido that yesterday set homeward. The Pa) whereidolthe cowl wet the saDk?! mountain houses will remain open for some weeks tO} auieq ttle Virgil Markham as he ome to extend hospitality to the wise vacationist who] jooked up from a foaming pan of milk = postponed his two weeks off to the time of year when | which he had been intently regarding. ‘nature is at her best “Where do you get your tears from?" th “The % It has been a less profitable season for the hotel-|**ked, ‘he author of “The Man with the iz Keeper all around than he had reason to anticipate. At| “Oh, do the cows have to be whipped?” Ya @ time when the nation seemed burdened with super-;commented the youngster after a > fuous wealth he courted confidently on an unusually | thouhtful silence. ¢ oe e Jarge ehare for himself. Unpropitious weather and other| a. gtanaard Of Toagnaten TOnniee: ~ gauses not wholly determinable have disappointed him. | riagier, and his young and attractive Many hotels have had only two-thirds of their normal| wife were guests on the Erin patronage. Others were on the verge of closing in the | “uring several of the yaoht races, Mr. Flagler was proudly wearing a middle of the summer, but pulled through with reduced | s5"ana hia infatuation for {t wai profits. a3 to cause considerable anxiety to the The seashore harvest time Is brief. and that may ac-| Young Southern woman who Is his #ec- ‘© © eount for the higher prices. It is the $4 and $5 hotel that |ON4 wife. Mr. Flagler's conversation is Mb now confronts the vacation tourist. Of old he could get | teeny numorous turn. and one : afternoon he sauntered Into the Erin's eae half a week's board for what a day’s now costs him. His} music room and began to crack joken railroad fare is rather cheaper than formerly, but in the| With the Indies assembled there, his 2 cherished yachting cap upon his head. agaregate he pays a higher cost for his coat of tan than|“\y,5 jiagler, who is not the best of he used to. esallors, gazed fixedly at the cap, but « But tt is money spent to excellent advantage. These! with no effect. Mr. Flagler went on at _|talking with the group, who were ap- oats of tan are soon gone, but in mental effect they ex. parantly, oblivious: of the aniotiett: ercise a prolonged influence for good. They conduce to| Guette, and finally his young wife could improved health, make life the better worth living and | stand {t no longer. She half rose from the. possessor a saner being. And a good thing about | her seat, coughed significantly, and as them 1s that the Coney Island brand of tan in equally|?" trim ot her own Mec achat: eMcacious in its way with Newport's. Nature fits its|she sald in a tone of friendly warning, beneficent effects to all purses. “Johany, my dear!” And Mr. Flagler, realizing for the first time that the cap was on his head, fled precipitately to IT DOESN'T PAY. the deck, o 8 « Last week the Wabash joined the other railways, David B. Hill strolled across city Hall _ The drunkard long since lost his usefulness to so- elety.- It appears to be becoming a hard world also for the habitual drinker whose pride it has been that he| ‘ never got ‘‘full,” In these measures the best of temper- f@nce methods are seen, When it no longer “pays” to @rink drinking will go into disuse to an extent not pos- @ible by moral suasion. SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. | village, of Co frebriel, Indy Mx. Ge for by Mra. G jen him aus s:range tie soema to Rephew end adopted ‘4 ees oppaas local ™fhureh a Uaautitull wrought gold 7 (Copyright, 1902, by G. W. Dillingham Co.) | LILLIAN BELL’S BABY. CHAPTER IL "Be good, sweet maid, and let who will be clever.” The Dinner-Party Plot, YAllian Bell goes Kingsley one better and hopes that UILT on the lower slopes of the ) her new baby girl will be not only not clever but not un- Castle Hill, Mr. Pratt's residence, ily fair to look upon, No fatal gift of heauty for her. commonly known aa The Nun's ‘And the novelist hopes also that her offspring will not | House, stood a little distance back from cursed with brilliance or wit and trusts that the pub-| the hixhway which led down to King's! ‘will “pass her by in utter tgnorance and never know | meadows. There was not a man, wom All she asks for the little girl is ajan or child in Colester that did no nted spirit. Know it wan haunted | © much the novelist has said for publication and no| Pratt iavghed at the superstitious, as she thinks she means it. But down in the depths | did the guests at bis dinner, He showed Maternal heart does she not wish her daughter to| them the treasures he had accumulated, the sweets of fame, of which she herself has had| Mrs. Gamoriel kept a vigilant eye on portion? Or to see her picture in all the Sun-| Leo. Whenever he tried to edge up to D ents because of her beauty? Or to have her) Sybil she contrived to ger In the way, B® Coronet becomingly and playing Lady Bounti-| and, finally, by a dexterous move, she h estate of untold acres? Or giving freak | placed him ‘longside the baronet’s sister. at Newport or spending a wheat-pit| ‘The buronet was a pale-faced, hunch- ms spectacularly? back, lame creature, with a shrewish iN to doubt that Lillian Bell | expression and a pair of briltiant gray “regard her as a most un-} eyes. , “Frank,” oad Mrs, Gabriel, eddseaa- 1 rg + deed, that individual initlative has been reeponstble for weseroocvouse ses eeees sree sy rs rs Seems TO (BEA Stump. IM THE MARKETS SS, / $FEOS4EOO0OHOOC OOO ® The Evening World’s School of Real Lessons from Life. ae MM MS The Oil King Is Posing Daily for a Couple of Portraits. Thos @ Two Rockefeller ictures.--< ae, 36s ra eo —_—_ : ¢ Now of course 3 I.— A RIGHMETIC. a pe H MAKE 184 > This money — vouree é = Three twos are more than COUNTING GETS $° TIRE SOME- TT NAARLY Hines Me I! “Sacra PRICE AS T RYRNISH ALL THE Vagh 01L FOR your On eh 900 - SaWing 15 Coe six in a table stake poker game, oo Ten mills make one cent, ten millions one magnate. Two pints one quart, four quarts one “still.” Two divided by one results generally in a divorce suit. PTOPI®OGVHDS: “- i? A aingle thing Is called a unit—if feminine an old matd, Multiplication is a process of increase not considered good form in the “400.” 4.30 COmUNG te way — 4 Sixty minutes make one hour, except In the Tender loin. 1 ’ *t ‘That which has length only {s called @ Ine—on Sune days a sermon. 5 SF POVONGSHODEH2S Problems. A man with stocks worth $2,000,000 and land worth $6,000,000 has a good lawyer and a political pull. How much tax does he pay? FIRST PORFRAIT 1 ="woRN our." Gnenr'ee “ane THe WERT ONE IN WATER COLORS! A lady, who was a church member, brought over @ 1-2 carat diamond from Europe. It was unset: What was the duty she paid? e ‘A dairyman has three cows, each averaging a gallon of milk daily. His brother is a Board of Health inepeo tor. How many quarts of milk does he sell daily? Jones four years ago Invested $1,000 in 10 per cent shares of the Just-Like-Finding-It Gold Mine. Hov much has he received in dividends? WILLIAM JOHNSTON, THE MATERIAL OF THE BRAIN. Whether it be the brain cell of a glow worm or one treme bling with the harmontes of Tristan and Isolde, the stuff 1 is made of {s much the same; it is a difference of structure, apparently, rather than of material. And the chemical dife ference betwéen a‘brain or nerve cell and that of the mus- cles or the skin seems reducible mainly to a difference im the proportion of two substances—water and phosphorous... Lean beet, for example, 1s from 70 to 8 per cent. waters the brain is from 90 to % per cent. water. And a brain oF nerve cell may contain from five to ten times as much phos« phorus as, let us say, the cells of the liver or the heart. The actual quantity is, of course, extremely small—by weight but a fraction of 1 per cent. About three pounds avoirdupois of this very comples phosphorised stuff make up an average human brain. There | is+@ Iot more of it distributed down one's spinal coll PO STLSLE ETA Y} DPPONDGG-999S99-0059H6 94999 1DH2HDHHODGH HE 4 and little plexuses all over t! orever making the use of licuor in excess sufficient ground for eee Suaserteenen eee of 3 EF fiitg erigedin “arayisi tal avi ad BS a he ‘eee, on an employee's discharge, and yesterday the report came| Roost had not been in New AG Ade 3 Reeling: reatind srnlenl ar serwnes Tt fs hard to find ¢ from Pottsville that “in order to reduce the danger of tome time, and |feperter who bap. ¢ . cubical half inch out je bones where they are not, @ccidents in the anthracite mines to a minimum and to} Pened to see bim tn his brief transit | > How the nation will enthuse when those two views | apsure steadier work by the men” the oMctals of Distriet |ccrern, cay qr inte tuare halle him) Entitled “Tired CoaURE Teaatmer Me Getting Rich!” YOUR WEIGHT AND HEIGHT. No. 9 will hereafter discharge all miners who become in- eiveerts sald My" Hitt somewhat | © While, to pay the painter's toil, kind John D. supplies his oil Tn the race for beauty the average young woman by no competent by reason of drink. hess 'Benldes, ? never stale patton bole $ And leases in Fame's Gallery a large-sized double niche. ® . Larragy At aba hedenais = Tan sacuten) a ksi Because of the greater laxity of the miner's life this| vee" July and September.” {| OeOROO SONGS CHEE PEDDLE E444GF649HOOOHDEIOHHEOODOHHE 5 14OOOHOHOOS aoe a mistake, ahe may be va athletto panei action in the mines is all the greater an innovation than SS i == eee eee ee be called plump.’ A woman, so long as ehe ‘sy not stout, will, that taken by the railroad, and the interesting thing 9 = not worry over her weight provided she is physically pre» about it Is that it was suggested by the employees them- | E Pp A G A N Ss Cc U i he Pomesting. At the ame time the scales are anxiously felyes. They recognized the risk to their own lives in- IH feces —» Pe italia aaarig & ORF ieee | reese x oo volved in the carelessness of a fellow-workman befud- Autieeiot ers By FERGUS HUME, | give the correct welght for the sex: © dled by intoxicants and their course was dictated by self- of "The Mystery of a Hansom Cab," “A Coin of Edward VIL," &¢, + 120) 6 feet 6 inches... _» © protection. Printed by Permission of G. W. Dillingham Co. Wo. °. A MYSTIC LOVE STORY, ‘196 | 6 feet 7 inches... + 183| 5 feet 8 inches, ing him thus familiarly, as she halypiayed to thelr wondering eyes Mrs.) to the lght and transiated the inscrip-)to be liked, and hitherto I have ‘Bot ae icerees’ a. und nite Uinaes known him from his cradle, "I want]Gadrie! maintained her haughty silence. | tion, “To the great god, who maketh | secured the good will of the peopl tneh to speak to rou about Leo, It is time |Sh@ surveyed all the beautiful things in| the heart joyiui,’"* he said, then added | “You will have it now,” eatd Raston, y S i =) A cold, unemotional manner and kept) dublously, “Does that refer to a pagan|‘‘and partioularly that of Pearl Darry. LEO XIil. AND THE ARTIST. ; he was married, Nothing but marriage | 5, on the movements of Leo. | god, or to the Maker of ull things?” | She loves beautiful things for the altar, ° O will meady him.” “You must have spent a fortune on| “If the cup is Roman, probably {t Is|and as she attends to the decorating of/ All Paris has been ebuchliinithese days over a little re “Leo does not see that," wald Hale, |! this,” said Hale, Inspecting a tray | an Inecription to Bacchus,” sal the |the chapel tt will be a constant pleasure | buff of the Pope's to ® young Faris artist with more pusli who implicttly of antique coins, r'| curate, a shadow on his face. “If s0,|to her to, keep this, cup bright and epot-}than talent. He wor Leo XIII. to let him paint his pore ne petty Rabeves: fo) hie come lace. achutwt lews,"* tralt, and eventually the Holy Father allowed him todo aa Panton; “he is infatuated with Sybil. /roa: to see these lovely thines and] Pratt laughed and raised his eyebrowa| ‘I hope i will be safe with her!''|The picture proved to be a daub, but the young artist @i@ ( = + A word against her,’ he} hear you talk about them, What 1s| at this scrupulous regard. ‘(You can setjeried Mra, Bathurst. ‘These insane |not think so and begged the Pope to write a Bible verses bee \ ly; “I want to marry her/this cup, dear Mr, Pratt?” | your mind at rest,” he said. "The priest |peopte are like magples, and steal any neath it, with his signature, Leo XIII. signed and quoteil myself.” Ant” said Pratt, taking it up. ‘This! who old it to me on account of the|thing glittering that attracts ‘the't} the twenty-ninth verse of the fourteenth chapter ef Of NIENe Anioed is the property of the vicar." | poverty of his parish church sald that|weak fanoles. Are you sure she will] Matthew's gospel. and when the painter looked the quotation 8 in order to expiain my scheme| up he found {t ran as follows: ‘It 1s I, be not afraid." Ang - his friends chortled gleefully and rudely, A LITERARY MONARCH. The most literary monarch in Europe ts sald to be @ait Mr. Tempest {n mild] the inscription was'inscribed during the|not take {t away, Mr, Raston to vou that I have brought about thi “what| Middle Ages. It refera to the God of} The ‘curate was indignant. ‘Prart conversation. Listen. Iam not yieased | You mean? ake hel my | Christendom, |would tio more do such a tng co with Leo. He has been leadis vig [SCR stipend to buy this | Mn that cas wald the viear beam-| take her own hi 6 has been leading @ WHOL te te the cup of which T spoke to/ing, “I accept the cup with pleasure and |‘Bhe in devoted to the church. Religien fe fa Town, and isin debt to the tune! sou, wear.’ Pratt handed {t to Tem-| with many thanks. It shall be conse-|so far aa her own poor brain. tinder. of three hundred pounds.” {pest and than turned to the group, "Ij crated and placed on the altar by the | stands it, te her one ennrolatione” .* | Victor Emmanuel of Jtaly, He speaks English, Freneh 5 “T don't ike lending money,’ said {Wisi to present thia cup to the chapel, | end of this week.” “She ought to be shut up,” sald MPs |'German equally as well ax his native language, and has a Hale, who was something of a miser, {M1 Raston.’’ he eatd, “and T hope that| While the others were thanking and | Gapziel Jatt reading acquaintance with Russian, He spends at Iast Mt y i * | Sou and Mr. Tempest will ancepe {t on congratulating Mr. Pratt, an expression| ‘There T differ trom you,” #a'@ tb@] three hours every day in study busy with current Hterature you want to gain Sybil and make! ceraie of the town. Tt is an old Roman| of relief might have been noticed on his| vicar mildly, "She {s nat of every kind, He fs sald to prefer the monthly reviews to | your sleter happy. you must lend Loo! gowet, and has been used for centuries | face. Mrs. Gabriel, who knew his every {enough to be place’ in duranc daily journals but, however this may de. it ts quite certain | three hundred pounds, When he is injam a communion cha'tse in an Ttalian’ look, wondered to herself why he her enjoy Vherty and eanehire.’ Mrs! shat no monarch’alive keeps himself more thoroughly posted your debt, weil--the rest is ea: city, T bought It many years ago, Is peared to be so pleased. Evidently he Gabriel. Tt i=} in all questions of the day. Hale nodded. “I see what you mean." |{r nat ii?" | was thankful to de rid of the cup. How-/ As Mr. Pratt stood at his Sopra Gil aoa oe ‘ sald he, pond Ky. “The idea is not} ‘The cup was indeed an exquisite ob-| aver, she said nothing, as she was a/ing @ hearty good-by to h'@ gue be " . & bad one, Put Io-humph! Three! ject of art, OF coneitaruole sige, It wae| wlee women, but added her coneratula- beside Leo and o LIKE THE: SERVIAN TRAGEDY. hundred pounds! A large sum!" jet pure gold. The rim and the atem| tions to those of the others. ‘The murder of tae Emperor Paul of Russia, in Marolf, “Oh, Twill be your surety for tt," sald] wera set round with ema of great| “Every one will be delighted,” she aald * the baronet wae P1Y-1 141 ie the nearest approach to the Servinn tragedy. Paul! Mra. Gabriel. impatiently Malden naehedon a | coldl uch gen y is unusual tn “T want to apenk to you MoM PAY} FAG one to bed in nfs accustomed manner, wearing his unt The host came to disturb them. He} wt: faces peering eof | olemter.” But her glance hinted un-|ticulariy.'* form, as well as being booted and spurred. was awakened? regarded Pratt. He received| “Moss, sparticularly," echoed Pratt, “Humph! | What's wished to take the whole party round his hous While Pratt discoursed and the con i part ran an inacrip pany exclaimed at the treasures car held the gobiet in the aight by hearing the struggle between the sentries and th sine. Grasping « sword, he killed two, but was then eo ond

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