The evening world. Newspaper, November 11, 1904, Page 16

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by the Press Pudlishing Company, Park Row, New York. Entered at the’ Post-OMce > at New York as Second-Cluss Mati Matter OLUME 45 -NO. ‘8,788, Evening World First. Number of columns of advertising in The Evening World during the first nine months 1904 .,....., 10,652 MOVED TO THE FIRST PLACE. 0) an ~ ™ BUBWAY HYPOCHONDRIA, And now {t is the alr in the Subway! The dire news fi broken to us that there 1s not enough oxygen in It,! im fact it contains 8 or 4 per cent, less oxygen than {s! needed to furnish an {deal health resort, Consequently if wo persist in riding in this alluring death-trap we " and we all know what that would mean! | effects on old people and fat people and tleket- | All these should eschew them with Spartan) _ fortitude, and even stalwart men and robust women who. refuse to relinquish the delights of subterranean travel | “a fears as well as in our hopes! We blithely spend at that goes for office atmosphere. We complacently bolt | And thus systematically abusing our constitutions, we) 2 By all means Jet ws have the atmosphere in our Sub- | way as ary year absorbed 857,046 foreigners. For entering these cargoes the ae zi on our allen immigration, was surprised to learn the admission fee of $2 0 head not only pays the a of the 40 officials and employees at Hills Island Jeaves @ substantial balance over, THE WORKMAN’S AUTOMOBILE, " the new departure In popular {nstruction to ‘ The Evening World has previously made refer- _ fned,,Mr, Winthrop A. Scarritt, president of the Auto- j mobile Club, made a forecast of the automobile’s future | which fs of Interest. Not only {s the auto car to free - the horee, as the trolley car emancipated the mule, but! To the Btitor of The Evening World: Where can I find a list of legal hou. | +¢ days in New York State? L. A. B. If is destined also to “relieve the terrible crowding in the tenement-house district. By and by automobiles Will be #0 cheap as to be within the reach of WorkiNg~ | ay ty mattor of The Evening World: and when that day comes the workman will be 3 live out In the pure count where he can ride| but the only way to atop firting ts to ; 2 ‘ Ag bave the young ladies refrath from Pacing “I auppese I amiling and smirking at every respect- Was (oo much of a coward | The arrival of that epoch will see a greater shifting | anie-looking fellow ae pen, ‘Phore axel Population than any subway could effect. It is to be of course many exceptions, but I have], fach day to and from his work in the great cities.” a to and from the home and the office or| | shall all run the risk of becoming “deflclent in blood-| mains aul. deadly Subway fumes are especially alarming In | commonplace, and marvel that the o must be prepared to languish and to die. | pressed and chanced to encounter the ope” What Inconsistent people we are to be sure, in our ‘brilliant conversational!st and the dull, least eight hours every day in the steam-heated miasma ing with the one and the entire restful- & Variegated assortment of indigestibles which we oall| esr ‘© live with than beauty or our lunch. If we are men we blandly puff continual | woman ta, the world te she whe does black cigars; tf we are women we nibble endless candy. | not talk too much, no slightest fear but that we shall reach « green | Hence eee healed erty bid age, But when some one comes along and tells Us) pu: there are degrees even in this, No there is 4 per cent. less oxygen {n the Subway than| matter how well he talks, the person We good for us, we aro seized by deep anxiety. who talks too bacco bore, But the effect he produces on ieee cet lenge with to smoke for the best other people ts of altogether minor im- Of eight hours with equanimity, but to ride for! portance compared with the result of ‘ minutes In “under-oxygenated alr!" That ts a! his prolixity to himself. He Very different matter! We serenely take our chances continually like a tilted bottle of his affairs and his neighbore’ affaira \s a deficiency of food-digestion, but when it comes to bound come day to get inte sirious ‘B “deficiency of blood oxydation” Heaven help us in our troubie and to sufter dour of peril! | deserved penalty for his uly of selecting interesting subjects of Rearly perfect as possible, Prof. Chandler Of) conversation, and thelr error te merely & haa been appointed by the Department of | one of quantity. But the great majority ¥ to investigat: the Subway alr, and let us hope become lost in a chaos of platitudinous will find moens of making it as pure as the undriven | 4*tall that dazes and ovetwhelma the vert unfortunate listener, , iy But tn the mean time let us encourage ourselves With those gifted with silence. We have ally the thought that if wo don't manage to kill ourselves) frit if we have not analyzed the With eight hours of respectable diss!pations we are not) truly sympathetic and that which moat brilllant conversation, teh} “al Cargoes of Immigrants.—On the day after election! who inti nue basa an Burope sont us a consignment of 6,00 immigrants, We) she never has anything to say and is s . | Not talkative and scintillating like Miss “ore tho Romans of the modern world, the great aasimt-| yo or Miss brown le wasting her j lating nation,” said Oliver Wendell Holmes. And this! time and had better cultivate her pre- efty of newcomers will not strain a digestion which| clous gift of ailence and envy no one. apt to witn fifteen minutes of Subway, merely uncomprehendingly dull. Bui eamehip companies pay $12,068. Sir Howard Vincent, who has just reported to Pariia-| LETTERS, ‘At the opening of the Y. M. C. A. “school for chanf-| 7? the Eaitor of The Evening World: that the bicycle survives chiefly as @ means of found nfeny tnetanoes of such Airting) ie, | durti Ika in th ing. i! ‘The treveller notices {ta general use for this pag gp Al py piers A Golden F ' Gift Is {Mary Jane Is Interested in Port Arthur 2 Silence, — By Nixola Greeley-Smith 4 O" all the Pars imo nous deities presld- {ng at human birthe confer | aparingly upon mankind that of allence is) eurely most to/ be desired, The | power of retl- | cence Is the) @reatest In the world, and 10 him or her who possesses {t all thingw are pos- able, Empires have tottered, thrones have crumbled because of a careless word, But few indeed are the) catastrophes which may be attributed | to things left unsaid, | One of the great compesations of dul- news !s that It tende to allence, Silliness) saddles and giggles, but good, comfort- able old stupidity ruminates and re- People often wonder why men marry ‘women who in society appear dull and drilliant and vivacious ..jss So-and-8o, who dazzles every one by the aptners of her repartee remains unawed, Yet it any of these people happened at anv time to be {ll or tired or very much de- silent matron, they would realise at onee the maddening knpossity lity of liv. news of the oth Bilence ‘s Indeed ‘braine or charms, and quite the rerest Of course, th re as many kinds of uch unmitigated 0 gurgies rievous though rullty, Bome excessive talkers have the fac- There is a similar difference among Unetion between the silence which In vain inquiring because, of hie Ra having at Mra, Myloe years betora, ANSWERS. ities _. Rare tn 1808, When was President Roosevelt born? On what day did Deo, 10, 1872, fall? fs W, fates tuna. | Gltl’s Dire Peril. In the World Almanac. Flirting on Care, \"we by travetling on the cars of this city " phirpose in all cities of the second class, As it 18 possi-|I know, so if a fellow sees a girl 90]... they were a novelty, there may yet appear on the mar- ket a serviceable automobile of four or six horse-powor retailing for $250 or $300. Given @ machine of that comp ® reality of the near future. But does Mr. Scar-! allowances for garage charges, new tires, re- ‘ _ AMERICAN MILLIONAIRES, | “+ + Aman with whose career probably not one Amerfean _ tif ten thonsend was familiar died in Pasadena the other! “) dpy“leaving an estate of $36,000,000, He was a Michigan berman whore pine lands happened to cover the rich- fron deposits in the world. Divorce litigation a tow Trevealed the incidental {nformation that one of Parties concerned was worth $7,000,000 and that the| had fortunes ranging from that amount up to 1,000,000. It la not ao long ago thet Nest of fortunes would have made |ts possessor a man of Ho prominence. ePhe multiplication of millionaires {s one of the most Markable products of American industrial development, Mm World Almanac in 1902 gave a list of some 2,509. to date it wou show a yet more impressiv» The formation of the Steel Trust was credited ting one Auadred new millionaires in a bunch, on glassworks, coke ovens, candy factories, th a yearly output no longer amazing arity with it has bred an indifference to lf century ago would have been the marvel of The proprietor of three retail cigar | th occurred the other day had become in « fow years. In the shadow of a what was once reckoned |» ble now to procure a last year’s automobile for but little | Arasn ‘a than double the price asked for bicycles when | ‘#X!ni | To the Editor of The Evening World: | Te the Editor of The Evening World anxiou ‘vantage of the opportunity? SUBWAY, To tt + Editor of Tie Evening World: “Rul What is the meaning of the Greek No, 100 Seventh Stroet, Where is the nearest girls’ high sehool to Avenue D and wtreet? PUPIL. | Rhyming Word Puzzle, |‘ me tol stop me — ZZ ) “in Paris Fer } words, which all rhyme, Each word is of three letters, their first letters only EVENING w WORLD'S w HOME w | D4 PABADLDODESADAD DOD PEOG-D D4ADDSD DODD DEDG4 EDDDED DD PH O66 OSOEIGIH4G 1449-941 DOH144D 9O9405 F990 FO HTODGE DOD DD A ei So Are Her Dad and Kickums and Thereby Ensued the U:ual Dem:stic Disaster, THIS MAP WiLL snow You THE WAOLE Business! Run Away now! | Iii sHow You Now You SEE~ THERES SHAN SHIZIN GO PUTZE~ SOOO SCSLSFSSL OS SHS SE HOES er, HOW FAR 1S IT FROM TSING-TSANG~ TSUNG* GOBINKSY 4 See THAT LITTLE BLACK SPECK? WELL= THATS CHIANG~ TU KI - SANG~BEDELIA 2 FS -S-SG-8O-OO OO ¢, ~e 2) WAY- WAY-WAY UP Mary JANE! THERE LIES VLAUI- VO STO GOTO MOE SKY ao SCLSOSESE = 5 4 By Treadwell Cleveland, Jr., Author of “A Night with Alessandro.” yles. SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, watch them. There Mre_ My’ disppeare more olaying blind-man by one, each clue led In Its turn to| country, blind and blank defeat, she was on her way home one morning, the post brought me a@/ and just as she passed through one of ; and when | had rend/ the quieter quarters across the Sel rt Indeed that I had not{ suddenly on fall or my repeated fallures overwhelm me. as a result of one of the many devices h youth and very little her i that Phi QUESTIONS, _Wrsiorte. Weare: later becomes convinced dren “Bit they were grown men and young ranging all the way from. iifteen Or thereabouts to, say, twenty-five. that sylvan setting Food to look upe overcome with a strana She know not where she was, recall how she had come to the spot or ould take to get oe waa A ie Ror ters an exptana dfoappeat CHAPTER Il. n.30 |A Tale of the Past—A a Wendt Fatal Spell—A Young Myles—I thanked but In dire need of succor; id jin fact, In imminent distress and danger. Grabbing my hat, I flew into the street, ut catefly T was at- tracted by a slender sylph of a maid, t the moment was playing could not see her ned to her that even home itself had become vague and uncertain. | It was as if she were no longer tho same Amalie La Roux that she waya been, but a new person, or rather w soul in a half familiar bod: ‘Of her next actions she wa Impelled for somo rea- which she ha: , but In paint of Pp mouth, her willow at a gatlop to the ad- not clearly aware, son to follow a stre: never trodden before, as tt seemed, almlers! fact under the guldance of some mys- terlous force which bh She reached the front t last and mount- on a par with and strolied over to the group. The me in a friend) Terust be one 1 agreed readily enotgh, and tle manoeuvring managed at last to let myself be caught by aylph, who thereupon tore the bandage from her eyes and blushed very er that @he had caught a all played together for a} after that, and as we ntly homeward through dusk a sort of intinac between the girl my name, and CHAPTER Ill, | American Chivalry ys, French Cunning— A Husband’s Doubts, orying out that steps of some hou | ed them, knocking at the door. “Her hand was extended to 6! when suddenly jltted from her mind. HLERE you ere again! toved you, how could any man . meal her from yout don't you come out and @ay in plain S doa't Wolk be datend Sou car setae, words that your wife never loved your" My‘ee started to hie feet and began She was her- ENDOVER paused, tread the name of the attentive tat 4 found that he: Wore quite on a par with the res} she lived with an aged grandmother, but went to work datly in a confection- , ers and that her name was Amelie La ened, she turned and fied, thoush the door opened and some one nor did she stop till of ht chair, his head bent, | but his tight-clenched fingers revealing the suspense with which he was follow. ing Phil's narrative. “Soon the flacre to face the truth,” he sald at last pursued Wendove ¢ very much n you know, My fret question I should have asked in your place?” “Then,” rapid flight through er pace and tried to d hated in front of a|termino what was to be done modest pension,” the latter presently |thing told her not to go ba “I tried to hide the trepida-|home, not to resume tion with which I inquired for Amalie La Roux and then my overwhelming | rellef on finding ¢hat she was still there. come to In the tasteful French parlor—1 ean! veo It clearly yet—I waited feverishly, Wer letter had hinted of dark things | way which now I was called upon to clear | drawn id T was upset at the chourht that she had seen my perhaps I might prove unequal to the Written to me, It was ‘a terrible responsibility, | i Then she came in, looking fragile and the depths of his watchful eyes. Our greeting was brief | and constrained, for we were both over- | wrought; but [ could see that she was | sponse. as eager to tell her trouble as I was to | , And when she had a little re-| Paul de la Roche covered her polse she began of her own | from her that Paul de la Roche. though | is real name, was well Phil paused and. glanced at Myles, fixed upon his face with the glaring Intentness of confusion her work, but to keep herself in hiding. Jobeyed the Impulse, murmured through trem- which proved “ 6. to meet him as ® certatniy I should have asked how you, that Is, 3, have you ever been in Paris?” why always blame him for|!, first came to know Amalie La Roux.” Pi Clave Myles 4/4 not correct | \ time, but let the name > Side Nearest Curb. | But he came to a halt tn front of Phil's chair and, frowning down upon hi When walking with two young ladles | manded ee price, the interest on the Investment not amounting to! #uld you walk on the side nearest the & year’s carfare, the workman in bis own auto may be- | °U'” of between them? fin Saath gel tit a Then, if you sit down and 4 stop that Teatless tramping I'll get {t over in a I suppose you want the the house where we to what was best, | from time to time) @ was on the verge of givin, Lut you know symething of the life?’ with me, Wendover,” in that I am to understand"— opped short, breathin: Then |a cigar In thts house! dvertisomnet and Odd case, isn’ her so close to danger. “That's tho very question I intend to ot Amalie La Roux except what |} Myles, In those days | was very young, romantic; | could not for the world have done ao base a thing urned Myles, a suspicious | extremely pale. few words And other incidental burdens of automobile owner=| word “Archon” REG T vequire it to the letter.” “4 eu If it te not altogether agree: able’ “No matter what it ts." had not asked the man's | and I have never sald a wor pene wan thas Now she mentoned It ry Paris was then, ag now, the oldest c and the moat unehivalrous ot herolgs and * I managed to hide most affecting, for it appeared, Myles, that she bh innocent of blame.” sin Phil paused; and this time Myles raised hile head, and his face, which had been quite blank, grew wistful and known to me." 8 going home fro Aris as was my wont me 7 th Good! I'll take you at your word. | Sone But TH say that there are some things | > whivh vou will not ike to hear, If yuu} well and good: but If you your patience, you are [kolng to keop guessing the reat of your [lite and ft won't be a very pleasing un- been absolutely by way of answer. I knew enough of De Ia Roche to fe re that without help Amalie my succumb at laat to to look her wp at her La Roux had not led upon me to look for her, to “It could not be otherwise,” he sald, heaven and earth; ¢ aped woman | at any plans I might set o But T asked her If she would agree to meet me the following night and afterwant follow my sug- She consentet. , had greed upon the Renate tre as the rendezvous, IT took my leave “In a few words her story was this,” continued Phil, lighting a fresh clgar- “Some one else had seen her in the confectioner’s—some one who typl- fied Paris the aged, the unromant.c, the ruthless, the material for her safety, | that you are rhuring me now?" Vaid aus teak kecade be vnawer I could get there re you a forolaner, come to the police “In Paris?” pw 064 fet di MS Nd not understand. But the fellow, eturned to my lodgings, let me tell the story susceptible as the beauty of Amalie was raro enough and her charm to make che part of | get to work to pu ardent gallant seem to him a pleasant| off with a int of not hia heart but his whim upon the conquest of the defense-| Potts. ard a wood friend, and I let him pleased by the ap-|inty the rcseret far enor | ntions, rather |® hart In an adventure the next even. | | enjoyed bis protestations at first, deem- | mi helo re de nd by a Ba bigs = them as harmless as her friendship nor sleep. | tor me, He was assiduous in hie devo- and {0 all anpearances deepty thould see the Bois and the con the game of bi i And did t Amalie of the wo Potts T told some heat with a convuisiy ba son, "tty (oward Paney, 9 my qua’ * dropped his eyes nan's-buf! no more.” that was almost relf entaneted In rome afar me. but T pat him | anid he | curtodty over | quatre chen, wae orlous May day, ort | T waa wo'king back to | vs from Auteuli, Steeplochise, Passing throug! de Toulrane~it wi 1 sat down on ¢ wa forsed to be out regard to t h to alve him 0 alive | the fete of lowers | | parent flattery of his a’ #rass in the shade, The above pleture illustrates five | REAS, 068 othe iy neipal aaa i mass of costly blossoms, The cries of | w Sr aPT it Li that I had appointed myself the protector of her youth, low I recro.ed | &y MARTIN GREEN. Young America’s Partiality$ ‘ for Red Blood and Ginver. E30) eaid the Cigar Store Man, “that Chalre $6 man Rodle, of the Democratic State Executive Committee, says that Parker is the natural leador of the Democracy.” “Maybe he 1s," replied the Man Higher Up “Ho certainly did a fine leading stunt last Tuesday. As a discoverer of a hole jn the ground for the Democratia ty he gets all the press notices, “Ever since the election and for a long time to come the men who were predicting Democratic success for four months have been and will be telling us what did Ity It any of them know they will not tell the truth. Mos# of them had a hunch that Parker would be beaten, bud they had no idea that the performance would be 60 brutal. Had they been wise to what was coming they would have telegraphed to Cortelyou to use ether, “The chiet reason why Roosevelt tin-canned Parker fe because the peuple like Roosevelt. They like him bee | cause he ls Jolimny on the spot. He {ts always up and |coming. He doped out that he would be elected Presi¢ = dent of the United States a great many years ago, and * he always played the same numbers, “He didn’t try to tell the people that he was being 3 | dragged shrieking from the allurements of private lite | to the calciura that attends the star in the White House, That isn't his way. He let the people know that he @ brags band. As 4 public man he played the part. “Roosevelt got the young voters. He copped off the voters with good digestions, red blood, ginger and a natural dispoaition to fight. This is a virile nation, and the man who goes before {t for honor or preferment on @ sissy basis is due to get stung.” | “Ie the Democratic party dead?” asked the Cigar Store | Man, i “Not on your life,” answered the Man Higher Up. “The Democratic party is the Joe Grimm of. politica, Joo Grimm has never been knocked out, and some day he may win a fight.” FSA OCH MR A “a WISH you would stop whistling, Mr, Nagg! It gots ) ] upon my nerves! Of course brother Willie whistles, | but then he is only a boy, and one does not expect. anything else of u boy but to be idle and mischievous and to whistle and want spending money. “I remember that cousin Charile Dusenbderry married @ widow with eight children and because the oldest boy used to break windows by throwing rocks and shoot his ttle playmates with a cat rifle, although It was only his boyish | tun, cousin Charlle hated that boy and never raised a finger to save him when he was sent to the reform school for hite ting an old lady with a slung shot “He never had any luck for M, elther, Six months afters ward he was hurt in a railroad accident and got $10,000 from the railroad company, and not long afterward his store burned down and was a total ic the Insurance repaid him | several tines over, but everybody raid it was a warning bee cause he didn’t love his step-children, “And there's Fanny, my niece in Newark, ¢hat has fits; , the hates brother Willie so that she will go right off into fits at the sight of him, just because he used to kick her on ‘| the shins in his playful way when he was a tot and because he used to throw lighted matches !n her curls. Of course, he meant no harm, and {f you could hear the way Fanny's mother carried on {t would mako your blood run cold, Brother Wilve admitted throwing the matches in Fanny's hair, like the noble, manly lad he was, and he ead to them frankly that he liked to see his cousin Fanny have fits. Of course, he was only a child, but, would vou belleve it? Ine etead of giving Wilite a good talking to, Fanny's father beat him ina horribly brutal manner, Willle never goes to New- ark to see them any more; ao you see what they get! | “Why don't you sav something? Why don’t vou talk? jam trying to be nive and pleasant, but nothing I can say or do Inter vou, | “IT have been cleaning house to-day, and If you could haye | neon the dirt I found under the sideboard In the dining-room! And the ice box was In an awful condition! Half of that new set of dishes I got just six weeks ugo 1s all smashed, and the handle is off ihe new teapot! “That is how tho money goes and you think I waste It! If you had to put up with the Impudence and carelessness | of servant girls I!ko Ido, Mr. Nagg, you wouldn't have the gentle, joyous nature that I have. “Aa Mrs, Terwiliger eald to me just the other day, ‘How do you stand {t, Mrs. Nagg? And I sald to her, sald I, ‘Mra Terwiliger, I think it ‘# because I never fret or worry! f never find fault or grumble or say a word!" And then she said to me, ‘Mrs, Nagg you have the petience of a saint ang ‘| the temper of an angel,’ she says, Where are you going, had | Mr. Nagg? You have an appointment! Well, you tay right jf this house this blessed night! "I want somebody to talk to, and Iam not going to pug up with the way you are out night after night any longer! ‘You sit right down there, and don’t you dare light a pipe or ‘ “Where Is that beok you were reading? Mrs, Terwiliger! wiin| “You never mind your book. Why can't you make yours | melt comfortale In your own home without smoking a filt o'gar or pipe or reading a stupid old book! I won't It, Mr, Negg! T have put up nd h your abuse of me too ldng Compass Pictures. ‘ow | It is wonderful Nhe SS F hecqtecieclit Tay f —— oe a

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