The evening world. Newspaper, October 10, 1903, Page 8

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@ibtehes vy the Prees Publishing Company, No. 5 to @ “4 Perk Row, iNew York. Entered at the Post-OMoe at New‘York as Gecond-Class Mail Matter. 75s ne secceee weenesegeseees NO. leeway ‘SIXTEEN YEARS OF SERVICES / On this day sixteen years ago The Evening same into being. It was » now departure in journaltem, an fafternoon journal that aspired to be both newsy and clean, both forceful and bright, and the value of the innovation was speedily demonstrated by the popular favor the young paper won forritself. Within a year fte circulation had feached 90,000 a day. Within five years:the number of eebies circulated attained the unprecedented daily ag- gtégate of 218,656, On its tenth birthday it could make orld GES9OOES9EFOO9990590000S 0H the proud boast that its clrouintion exceeded by 50,006) ; the combined daily isoues of ten evening papers pub- (thea in Greater New York. So fully hed its courage- Gum and constxtent methods of ‘presenting the news won, ible confitence. A. sbtvospest of Dvening World. achtevements shows @iuses uncovered, oviis suppressed and services per- fiined:in the:canse of humanity. Not a:yoor that has thet has.not been signatized by some contribu-. @f val tothe pulfic welfare, whether in check- | ‘iinaiatstering:the chertties of Christmas time or that : chartty, the Sic Battier’ Fund $24,000 Cor-the relief of the sick children poor. Bn corps of pirysicians have in one «1 treated 17/484 Ifttle t Yor an thet hes been brief as newspaper qp'ikte' Brexing "World bas ecoomplished ‘results ot \t its years. It is to e uniformypolicy i ama bonesty in the presentation, of the ‘epttgaritian 4c unflagging enterprise that! THE LAW’S DELAY. @ somewhat ungsunl wbility'to inquire into “the delays, ed in the administration of justice” in this eoanty Kings. With the newrcatendar congested with and the Supreme Court twentysever months betiind tts docket the evils which the commission was to remedy seem not to be improved. kt that a litigant who has been obliged to walt moro, two years for the disposition of ‘is sult ‘thas been @xiticiom tp cay that Judges do not work hard enough? The of the nation's Chief Justice returning from @ four vacation trip to Hurope lends some point |“ tw this The fact that in Brooktyn last epring,| giea. though of cases were ready for ¢rial in the. Supreme (heve was for some time no judge to try fi ‘them lends more, for the delay in this Mstance had far ‘ Teaching Gow, Odell has charged that the trial SS ury judges of Manhattan by eltting only four and a halt hours a day {for five days a week do not get rid of as aauch work a they should. Yet ‘himeelf-on record as say- tng that the past three years three New York Justices of the Sapreme Court tad killed themselves by Jest January) to double the number of «municipal court Magistrates Mn Greater New York and-to extend their & provision would bring reltef, But a root of ‘which % fe ‘iffcult to reach ts the disposition of MUR as oc arti cuits ot thet impartial favor ‘who tyrthe nature of their suits should havo Mo\etanding—cases in which the shyster lawyer and the Gent have wonspired to make use of the pub- ‘few for private ends. of this abuso of the courtroom any of the bar, who by concerted ef. they could not end it. aking their way to school in the pour- ; iia arses econssd to & drecstiing andln van the of w&Bing for hours in wot shoes and damp b Getting th-an éntloor atmosphere whivh, in spite of im- mi Methods of ventilation, was harmful even to ro-, a I © BusBoston on «day ifca. yesterday the fire bells sound Bhe'“no schoo!” signal half an hour before “taking up” ma Parents are thus officially informed that their ghildren may remain at home without danger of demerit marks. In Now York this eimple and practicable method of Sen@ing word is not available and it is doubtful if any feasible system of signalling may be devised. But to @xposc a child to the storm of yesterday was no gain to eBucation, while it involved a distinct risk to the sum total of childish health. Tm Aofault of 3 signal system parents should assume full discretion in the matter and keep the little children @ home. ce ae DEAD AT THE THROTTLE. Again we have an instance of a locomotive fireman “noticing that the engine was pitching badly,” and @ropping his shovel to spring into the cab and to find there that the throttle was unguarded, This latest of providential preventions of serlous ac- @ifent occurred on the Jersey Central's “Philadelphia iy near Scranton. The engineer had been thrown his cab and dashed to death while the train was @t a epeed of fifty miles an hour, the cab” The Evening World printed a list of whore vertigo or other eeizure or accident had lett lve engineer incapacitated at his post and the control until chance attracted the fireman's to the state of a(fairs, It was an appalling ditions to which within less than a year have sidera\le, hor camel-back type of locomotive IAbUlity of disaster will exist In all 6 fireman busy stoking out of sight pen can have his attention at- lity only after a lapse of o/ parents,.that this insubordination on the part of those who once obeyed their Children's Mghtest wish with cheerful alacrity would seem wenthy of atten- tion. BU0| partty with the children themselves; #0, for the Denefit of these youthful rulers of the houschol, a few-hints are here compiled: commission|in spite of appearances Papa and advice is worthy to go screeghing ‘down Jed Wttle scrawl from one parent to an abuse of the law. Is it a fair waaveayar ‘My nine children will only \t the time of the agitation in New Jersey for a “third |} The Import THIS LADY WOULD Dr Stat! 506008 TOOOOESGOEDOOOOOO WHEN PARENTS REFUSE TO OBEY THEIR CHIEDREN.. HIRDRON have sent eo many let- ters to this office of lmte, com- plaining of the growing dis- that seems to prevail among Pertaps, however, the fauit may rest First of all, children, remember that Mamma are human. Not as humen, of course, as you are, but still as human as they know how to be. Let that be & dona between you. Don't brutalize| them by 4ll treatment. “Be patient with your parents" wrote the inspired Uncle Tommyrot, and the g g $ g the corridors of time. We are in reseipt of a« pitiful tl. ° consent to call me ‘Papa’ on pay day. I'm the ‘OM’ Geeser’ ell the rest of the ook.’ Papa, they de s for your good, Be 1 q ‘Another tear-biistered document ts to the effect that one night Papa promised ‘Willie (aged seven), to come home promptly at 9,9 o’clock trom the Girls Friendly Association, But the girls proved so triendly that Rapa atayed till 945. On hie return home, he saya, ho found the front door locked, ana Willie on guar in the window above the door. | \ Despite Papa's pleas to be admitted, Widiie kept him shivering on the front stepa in the rain until 4.90 A. M. before] “ It hurt him | ¢ worse than it hurt you. Tuke shame for keeping ithe brave little fellow up till 4.80 at a cold window. A mother writes that Jennie, aged) 2 three, steals all the maternal cigarcttes. Whenever mamma has laid in @ stook| 4 of these death-dealing cubes, Jennie! 4 promptly discovers and confiscates them, feeding them one by one to the canary. Mamma, far better the canary should get tobacco heart than you. Jennie is acting for the dest, These are but a few of many such showing the tendency of parents wisdom. But with a little more for- bearance on the part of the children and @ great deal nore submission on the parents’ part all may yet be well. Re riot tt won't be for Iack of good ad- APT. ——— WELL MATCHED. Feed—Rotribution has finally overtaken that talkative Mies Chattington, | Joe—Indeed! How, pray? Bred—Ghe married Windlous, the bar- | « ber.—Philadeiphia Inquirer, ed WOMAN. ®or every man a woman Is born— Does she sing or laugh or cry? For every man a heart {s torn— A mother's or lover's—why? Beoause a man must curse and sin, Because & man must Sght and win— And love the best of another's kin, Ge loves, or else must dic, For every man a woman dies— Naught can her ilfe breath stay; For overy man a woman ites, Thrusts her salvation away; Though decades pass with ceaseless tread, Forsworn she'll be till still and dead, But through her love she wil be led From het! to th t of day -Stanley Dash | Adelphia Press. old.’ ! P ance of Mr. Peewee, the Great Little Man. oe a a a » “Il reckon you won't believe It, | @but that old rooster Scrow'd is more'n twenty yeare belleve and | am also willing to ®belleve that the old hen we had ? for dinner was POSOOOHOOS ertakes the Laudable Task of Te: inds It Very Tough Work. MY man= ' Am ADDRESS! Yep? \ REPEAT =: THY LABY WISHES A SEAT, He Und aching a Tough Man Courtesy, but Fi {You BiG RUFFIAN, RISE ING ‘D GIVE, THS 1 is re pubes GIRL, ATE | wen When Wall Street Tackles Itse®, | [HOSE people who tried to float the Trust seem to have got stung,” said the Store Man. “Stung!” ejaculated the Man Higher “They were lacerated. Their sores hurt, and that is whg; they are trying to give each other the ocofty gooft. made a Dutch book, and when they found it out they; started in to skin the Wall street ring from the inside! and fafled. The effort was a bloomer. ‘ “You take @ bad night in a gambling house, and wheaj there fs no chance of any more suckers coming in the; gamblers get busy among themselves. Of course, they’ are all wise, so they play a game of their own—some! game that don’t involve the machinery of the house: They'll et there and play until the milkman comes, or one or two men get all the dough, but you hardly ever; hear of a come-back. When the game is over it gs’ buttoned up. “There is a difference in the way the gamblers in Wall! street work. They frame up a game somoctimes for foolish people with money and find out that ithe people’ who have money are not foolish and the people who aro foolish are broke. This, however, happens very seldom.' “Bo they get In to take a fall out of each other. They) play the game to the limit and finally somobody gota the best of it Do they button up the game like the! gamblers who play with cards and dice? Not on existence! They go into court and tell the people of whole United States what one of them thinks of another.; It gives the people a lot of pleasure, and scares the ap-| petites out of the rest of the gamblers in the di overshadowed by old Trinity. “A man don’t have to be gifted with second sight @h/ see what is the matter with Wall street. The financiers, have overplayed themselves. They got the pazaz so cany! for a long time that they thought it would always comal ‘They had taken the remark of Abraham Lincoln and re- vised {t so that it read; ‘You can fool all: the people! all the time.’ { “It's a funny thing about the people. When they to a fake they all fall together.: For the past year they} have been stalling Wall street off. It is cheaper to bi an automobile than to take a chance with a bunch thi has got to a stage where it can’t imagine why the peopia, shouldn't march down to Wall street and pass out ke a boy passing out hand bills. Investors have ‘to know that they have about as much chance on the! Stock Exchange as a Chinaman in a priso-fight. “Beating the market is worse than playing faro ban! blindfolded with strangers. Chapple Moran, a moet pre- ficient crook, went to Wall strecteto work, and they didn't do a thing to him. Then ho went to Philadelp! and put up his Ifttteetand in the financial district andl! took out his shells and his little peas, and they diin's: do a thing to him. .Wherever you get a play that i recognized by iww and soclety, and where the gamblers) fare considered the high cards, @ real, honest crook i wise If he refuses to sit tn.” “But there must be eome honest men, in Wall street/? expostulated the Cigar Store Man. 7% “Sure!” admitted the Man Higher Up. “They have te have janitors and elevator men down there, don’t they?”/ - 1 } HURRIED A RAST AS BARY WOULD LET M ELECTRICIANS ADDRESS 2 } Horseshoeing. ; Robert Bgnner was the man who started fancy prices for horseshoeing when he paid $100 for shoeing Dex @re expert blacksmiths who work only for owners of stablos, and who travel with crack ractng horses wherever they go. Some of these biackemiths get $12,000 a year end expenses, besides a liberal present if the owner thas had @! lucky year. The blacksmith of a ctack stable ts constantly | asked for castoff shoes from crack horses by persons whe want to gid them end frame them “Just for luck.” Five! douars was recently paid for a ehoe from Hermis, is what jist tter how smart a man is he is sure to meet some who Is smarter. about 10,000 dear, in olden days the ladies used to flirt with fans. Ethel—With fans? Gracious, were there no men around? g GEIHOHOHHIHHHHHHY Ie all right Goe—Who's the large gent? Bang—That's Detective Slooth in plain clott Me- randmoth: = | was dreaming ‘nd all, give present, at from aR VI Recenctiintion, | ck of bi t ‘One ovening, when «he was well on the foad to recovery ell Into a Nght} pa e he sat reading to her, one near mm With a quick panting sigh, born of a : ‘wild has been exposod and” to Shaking off the last remnants} her fo rr; “How or you! oO the Longitude Tests, ‘Two hun@red and thirty observations, each ocoup: eighty aightw work, have been made to determine the i ference of longitude between Greenwich and Paris. The ob-' servations ‘were made et Greenwich ami Paris simultaneous afP?| ty amd in onder to obtain absolutely slmMar results the me struments ‘were frequently interchanged. The results ef ‘these observations bave proved both the Greenwich and existent merkilans to be erroncous—the : tory of a Loveless Marriage. htinke from him and shrini fen Wh a bitter sob US eg Wee “De ot compel me to wisti shat ar ip er tone, URRY: peek In your yower ¢ondo co. | should wake to find it a, dr you gave it to me; do not bse ee fhe, rere! a ne ees ee . ° Worse than useless to me re. dyer | (He Work now but you singe He draws (ef ev rae Reitero! dis arms. words and gen soothes her until at inst ane is ealiner | next he breaks the silence 1 dishearten- ‘ed and unsteady. “Once you saved my lft huskily. — Here dreams 1 was thinking—thinking of you.” the realty of the #nO bursting po a brighter flame s to her his but full of pu ACO, | rpose. tired brain, she so tter ‘8 hurriedly, | ng here! And | very not been | hand ito little time. I wish! mean me in ‘era~ob, ts Clon- Photograph Paste, or your sake.” | Was’ OR The | than she hae been. ev th ve ‘half an ounce of bard gelatine én three pati Sortie ZS WIM hore tur Use te it hope, or despair? |% event that has darkened her lito. Dissol! i reibly lonely You atone can say.” her answer. two drama of cold water until quite soft, then beat Othemn 1 ehoutd His eyes. all things wax dim, ¢] meted: now add one ounce six drams of glycerine, This will teeta e Ey pecael 2 | Dungy deat but he can aA tee cara, mend] set hard, and must We melted on the hob or tn hot mOUe of all. fiese i wo tender hands, (hag a time nt least, Y thought] for une. ‘fhe advantage of this preparation ds that theme why hi ped So nawar eee his face resets against another. LT inthe dearest ‘talng to him tn all this world. ‘ ? Did you “Did you never know ‘she ask tn. a, Whisper’ so ‘almost inaudible, ho etiokiness as with gum, nor does it leave @ etain, excellent for mounting both photographs and he rearon why | m mo this 1.Fosp ct fam glad now eat C ett refi t) co Op) It Irom 50! ‘By the henor of an old nave. nto find nome] Want you 9 not rerbap) know ie that human! But,"|( have leir.ed to love you since ow nnot bear to pic-| marritge far dearer than even the old Fame, or worldy fame or wealth or itfe tne ael first, and then, a dittle later, on, Italy, and ther “Don't eave ehind you, emeant: inter- 3 she. with 5 never eo me with you unerever sue oo. 1 faint, vt sare. Where ft 1s, out only He pauses. The terrible constraint te has lata pen himself has envb’eld him) A to say ail in. @ low, calm voles, but) ming, e aula hin. Hie dose a ‘ad us vaste

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