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Said on the Side. the Press Publishing Company, No, 63 to 63 Park Row, New york. ft the Post-Oftice at New York as Second-Clusa Malt Matter. HE Women's Municipal League} takes up The Ry THE NEW REIGN OF TERROR : sttahge, nor is it altogether lamentable, that Terror reigns in ; and sea in her war of aggression in with her Czar “cowering in his palace,” the royal family hiding and the people ripe for revolution, the sole surviving Tyranny in has just ‘cause for alarm. “rescued trom the mire Into which It has undeservedly Success to thelr effort! eaten’ disustrously on land against a word is usually, however, strongest Opposition and “banier” sur- Vived a campaign of protest, The dic- onary ts full “Cadet's” prosent fall from grace 187) ach and ths American Revolutions it is} one of the tragedies o! ‘Now ap in the days of the Fre } magic word Freedom that “makes tyrannies tremb! dan ‘people ask is neither more nor less than freedor "Everybody should have some ofl in his lamp," said the Rey, Mr, Johnson to Rockefeller Sunday-schoo] class. Kansas agrees, but is a little con- cerned as to who has ¢! ee m—freedom to} brk, to'think, to speak, to print. They ask for the right t j though to a limited extent, in their own government, ¥é Some voice in the momentous question whether they shall be m gunpowder” in such ‘vars as that which has aiready sacrificed the lives 0,000 of their sons and brothers in the East. St ds monstrous that these rights should be denied in any country funirs: to be civilized in this dawn of the twentieth century. The autoc- ‘of Russia: must learn, even under the dreadful tutelage of Terror, if “unalienable rights,” and that among happiness.” ‘There will be, as ssia until these rights are recognized, USTICE, The only final answer to the hangs of the own, “Three bellboys arrested for theft.’ Too many cagea thi police magistrates’ call of “froat’ Las} ® been answered by & bellboy, ‘ . Officer—Another boat has gone down toith all on board. Pasvengo—Horribie! What ep Officer—One of those submarine doale,—IMustrated Bite. year where the ‘be, that “‘all men” have certain are “life, liberty and the pursuit of jBhould be, no peace in Ru remedy for injustice is J mand of a people for freedom is LIBERTY. TP RO SNS RROGANCE OF THE MILK TRUST. destruction,” and the arrogance of the Milk Trust downfall. Since The Evening World has been “Tt ain't Jooke that wins a girl, It's what a guy can do,” says “Kid” Yanger, pumuist, A true saying, Lady Ham- Uton's hero, Lord Nelson, was minus a: eye and an arm, Many of the world’ greatest mashers were ugly mon, the case of a pugillet it's not his mug but hie dukes" that win the duchess. Pride goeth before fll Ahelp ‘bring about its d ng accurate statements about the em! ‘consumers have been testing thelr millk and insisting on its the milk have announced their inten: Navy needs 100,000 new eaitors' can} } ribbons tp replace those given as sou- venins to warship vistors, Almost | equals the deficit in anmy belt duckies | 6 |} due to @ elnilar * ity. ‘The farmers who produce try to deal direct with the small milk dealer. ‘Milk Trust did not wait. It promptly reduced'the price ft pays) nas already put three rival aaloous out | farmer, and it has caused to be intimated to the farmers that if they milk movement the Milk Trust will blacklist them,) fren tne Tenderioin no ear for music tt does not known the real “Bool It pays to advertise, Subway Tavern Lqhat after it has defeated the co-operative movement it will buy no ‘that il ftom any of the farmers who take part In any mesting to co-operate sca hi the east sldc nuilk dealers. ” trom the imitation? eee Little WillieBay, pa, what 4 meant by “courting danger?” er—any hind of ft !s not the farmers who are depend. them. It isnot the Milk} courting, my aon.—Uhicago News, a fraction of what the of toll-gathering jr eight cents, of surprising arrogance, ‘on the Milk Trust, but the Milk Trust on money they receive for their milk, but only The Milk Trust Is nothing but a en, who proposed that all co ‘the farmer shall get one-third Consus enumerates 11,68 draymen, hackmen aod delivery wagon drivers who are under fitteen, stand at a etreet corner waiting to cross know that this is an under-esti- nsumers shall pay and they take'the remainder tess a will refuse to sell to the Milk Trust, if the consumers) yew version of an old story by Cole- the Mitk Trust, and if the Board of Health will) man Drayton: “My double and how he establishments maintained by the Milk Trust to ¢ of thelr leayings and spoiled mitk, the milk situation will be solved. poe LATOR NAGASE OF THE DINOSAUR, the butcher at the Museum of Natural History, according to the ul reporter, the dinosaur suggests thoughts of an. age, all too ré- 1 which there was meat enough to have beaten the Trust. fhe small boy the monster brings thoughts of a period of after- is which he bas happily escaped, or of hunting adventures to} a, looks longingly at the dinosaur’s claws, thinking of yahod horses and their struggle on slippery pavements, ‘Observer at the Museum the thought nearest to his life, Yet} j, Some reflection upon a marvellous age when the world , but well worth knowing about, worth while, not because he is big, but be- Also, because he is inducing 80 many ‘that the ‘Museum Mself is no small wonder, SUBWAY NUISANCE, subway system is such a blessing, even in Its incompléte Bvening World always hesitates before printing a com- 43 one nuisance which tt seems to us the management thing ¢o abate, And that is the spectal form of hog who or cigarette into the cars, there to “smoulder and d alr, regardless even of ‘1e presence of women. company forbid this, as they also properly do And. yot inquiry of many patrons has failed to oe in veep id has ee to enforce the rule, |1ch problem, officials Interborough will kindly explain what} .. ‘ He ea hatter ‘hp grated! pu ban any sighs eect ck sistent i cota stub sneakers are bound to respect, ietiout woman who favors the whipping-post for wife-beaters | ™ he same punishment visited upon “sulky, sour-faced, nagging a case where sauce for the gander is not suitable for the ng stool shouldbe ‘the limit” for naggers, ‘1g ready toccry quits on the “old-fashioned winter.” It knows shad enough. If Old Prob has any mercy he wil give us a fuse to buy from Hetty Green gays that if she ted to begin over again she would live the, simple life, What kind bas she been ‘The success of New York detectives iy thelr disguiges as sailors, top-hatted sports and college boys arouses hope that they will add boy bandit and burglar disguises to their repertoire, ‘HE USEFULNESS 0 keep on to tackle the new book on Russia says that a foreign}, iiitary attache, seeing a barefoot regi- ment among the Czar's troops, ask: “Where are the soldiers’ boots?" the pockets of the Grand Duke,’ was an officer’s answer, "The poets, the artists, the thinkers,’ says W. L, Courtney, people, set apart for certain offices which they fulfil in the economy of the world—voices through which the eternul Bpirit of Life telle ite message to a Iis- tening world. But we have this treasure dn eariien versels, and it by no means| follows that the men and women the: selves who have this spoolal mari upon first thelr fsrebeads are bel can like, or even live with. ne People’s Corner. we from Evening World Readers “Mesened by Chaplain, ‘ot The Evening Worlds the benefit of some other nate man ike myself, Two day night I beard some Mofizon Square, I was in ) the verge of auicide, 1 the Worth monument, proach there. They “eho chepjain," and he gave f thing to eat, and would make the employees of the Will- famaburg Bridge clear off the sidewalks there he would be doing his business instead of bulldoging citizens, “Didn't 1 sce you taking a drink vesterday with Dr, Kloser [ib bet he didn't pay for it." “My dear man, don't you know vou hare to pay jor it when a doe you?"—Philadelphia No, 48 Bouth Sixth street, Brooklyn, In The World Almanne, To the Hditor of The Byening World: Where can I get a list of legal holie| Gays in New York State and elsewhere? | Mrviving heve are men,” the Greek Venus which the National Arts Club, Warning Against swindler, OHARLES GMITH, Choras, Cooper Union, ‘of the Evening World; & place in New York City ® Youngs, man cap ovltivate his '@ nominal sum? i in City Bmploy, itor of ‘The Brentng World: @ saloon and aaw @ foreman borers employed by the city two hours, I told them Haxparers Ilan the altar of The Bronine World malking| 1 wish to write a play, veing the char. To the Editor of The Evening W T would Ike to give a Teadera to beware of swindlers Ground from house to house whesd! Deople out of thelr own ov rala photographs and prom will make them large plo for advertisement, ‘Mien agk @ very large amount fo: frame, and if you are not wisit Day they will probably fail to your photographs. and been velused, her hatplu next Ume, In bis Intervals between novel writ- and title of 4 cortnin novel, Doljing during the pagt forty vears Dr. to wet permission of the author! Weir Mitonell has Interested bimoelt ‘ conducting researches in enake venom. | years ago, and the wer | Heme @ 10} () (0) (®) 10) 0} ) _e Emperor igor Put to Death in a Barbaric Manner— £mpress Olga’s: Revenge on the Drevlians—Wine Drunk by His Slayers Out of Sviatoslaf’s Skull, ‘T Was not until the thin’ generauon of Norse Emperors that the iy btood came into the Russian rung family. Rurik was a pure Norseman, two more of snow frta type of the old Vikings of stalwart 00d measure doesn't matter in a foure foot total. But shall we bo recognize tho streets of New York when we eee them again? bulld, great stature and long goiden le 101 heir and beard. It Jn this olf dominant strain of Norse blood which sti’ ap- pears in the Russian aristocracy, who Pride themaeives on their descent from Gulick's theory about the injury | Rurix and his chiets, ‘of epboo! children's spines seems to be that it's better to carry an ounce of sound learning home from echool than fncot be forgotten that 1,100 yeara ago pounds of book» and In considering the posstbilities of lib- eral government in Russia now i must Ru was a republic—not n republic in the sense that tho United States and He~I think we had detter be France are, but a republic like an- married in the daytime, It's more eoonomical, We can save on the gaa. Sho--Well, look hore! We're boon eoonomising on the gas ull during our courting days; it's a pity tf we can’t blow @ little in on gas on our wedding day.—Yonkere vlent Greece, ancient Rume in the time of the Senate and the consuls, and, with more resemblance, like the Han- pene League and Venice in the midule rs The old Russia was an oligarchy with the merchant nobles at {ts head, the freemen for ite warlike citizens and o Sreat mass of slaves to do the tilling of the soll and the mental labor, Novgorod, one of the great towns of Hichmond police have decided that |'%® Russia of to-day, was a free city gaudy stockings displayed on forms in shop windows are not guudy if they are 1,100 years ago, It was governed by an Assembly of citizens called the Vetche, which elected the Prince and removed him at pleasure, Rurlk became Prince by Invitation of a popular convention of the citizens and his title as ruler of Rus sia was derived from popular vote, In Mke manner, for hundreds of years no Hmperor was enthro without the noe, however, js to teeth, ears, Angers, |oopular approval of the ¢ltizens of Nov: fe, Speaking of gratt, a writer of a/sored red, Rurik, the first Emperor. was slal miracle, His brother, Oleg, assayain, ated his two sons, Askol and Dir, 0} In turn was killed by his enemies provid. Ing a venomous snake after thelr other “Infattempts had failed, No. 4—Igor Torn Asunder by Trees, HE fourth Russian Emperor, and the fourth to die a violent death at the hands of his enemies, was Igor, a young son of Rurlk, whose life his uncle Oleg had spared when he ‘killed Askold and Dir, the two older brothers, Igor was of puro Norse blood, He married a Slay woman, Olga, the marriage of the Scandinavian rulers with the Slay native population, It may be explained heve that the Magazine, wt “ ad rd LOHHODOOSHODOHSDOWOOIDDHOOOOOCOOHODHE GHDHOHOOTEWOHOSO LOHOTHDGOTODDOOEMPOGODHOOG, CIOODLOGHOOIOHOHTOOEOHODOIOYSOHOOGOOIAGOOOHOOOOOOSOO GHDoOooeaoe K Long Red Record of Assassinated Russian Rulers Poison, the Axe and the Sword Employed as Freely Formerly as Dynamite Is To-Day jeteamed to death. This form of bath|mitting her pantomimio expressions, but otherwise she says it was a welnd DDOTOODDOOQDHOHHOHOHHIE GHGS. ‘ Not Art — ‘Little Tommy Rot and Miss Heartless Flirt ead OF Wasn’t It Real Mean to Spoil Such a )catly Planned Elopement ? WODDDOOODOOHOHODOSOHDOHOOQOOHDD |sassins Empress Olge besieged their S VIATOSLAF was the first Russian | He was not tall and blond, ike Rurik —— ~ ede tion, ‘he Drevitens were a tributary tribe who had already paid what they regarded ag reasonable taxes for the year 06. Igor returned later In the year and undertook to collect taxes over again, He had only a small army with him, The Drevitans took Igor and as a protest against double taxation they bent two young trees together and tled thetr bent tops with ropes, ‘I'nen they ted Igor’s night arm and right Jeg to one tree and his left arm and left leg to amother tree, When se- fon, came of age, curely bound they cut the ropes which had held the two trees and sprang apart, tearing Igor In two, died the fourth Russian Em- the first one to be assassinated the people in protest against his methods of government, After Igor's death, Olga, his widow, ruled as regent unt. Sviatoslaf, their Olga first got even with the assassins of Igor by burying some of them alive and by putting the others In a Russian bath, where they Slavs were not Mongols or Tartars, old Gevthlana, who for centries made war upon the Roman Empire. And this states ul d his ehle t wag corroborated by the ve ¢ Yariar blood in year-old bride who had married ° oe 10 Dog" before the law gives her pel i ‘ slo: ved any one, tty an nability, | lesion 0 Wed any ne api hol a ‘y continued the war! 4 1 ha | lew i ‘| th sonfessed, “I knew could against Gie Bygantir cies whiet | fe Tove another.” Ik had begun and witeh Oleg had! jot it be admitted at once that "The en uned | Dog’ is right In saying that “it aln't/T i f [zor was defeated by Em-| jocks that wina ” apue » but in the! certainly help, But ts It the aed Poise 2 with ane) ping’ quail by Wy ana the Greels ; WORIBAT Mgnad & ireaty Of peace, In ho|be sure they don't all 1 iyreed to pay trlute to the Nussiang, | tenders of the priz> ring, popular as put an Aryan race, descendants of the} How to Win a Woman. By Nixola Greeley-Smith, that wins a girl," com: | mented a young named “The Dog," on ac- sount of his lack f personal pulls snritude, who 1s how under ‘or abduction, "I's what a guy can do, what he can make HI sood at that gets em," igor was aseavsinated by the vrey.| those heroes undoubtedly are, but the ‘ana io the yeny Hb A, 2. tt is q quality which enables a champion curds analogy between this and tho OAUES Of Unis ansaeNnetion of the fourth Russian Emperce, most a thouwand fighter to hold the belt against all comers ts fundamentally the same as thaa which permits men in other loss which women r ai ain't looks | thelr rival: Jinarvel? Only If Rmersi nf own excuse f lly meet « few unsympatt tradesmen who doesn't agree with them, the husband or wife of ons of them # to discount the Gr » ig no use in pretending bia Odthinsty punsults to triumph over Wibaai its AAA. hl ll a le want to 1 3 to his are aesthetic | old ady once summed up he husband t) me as a man pos Kind heart and a good Income," and railed at the fastidloursness of a genera. tion that requires more, our day, the greatest factor in the Y timate of i quiafted the wine tinged with the bluod nd it Is therefore the one ognize as being most essential to thelr ease and comfort. n will talk by the hour of their "te whoover will lsten to them, and generally expressing t on of a man's looks the that he Is like a young ¢ nd women alike, the most Intensely practical creatures in the world, and It may be -| questioned if they have in themselves | Inherent love of the beautiful, is the modern Russian bath, only Em- press Olga raised the temperature higher than is now customary, After steaming the leaders of the as- city, The Drevlians kept many pigeons, and Others, By Henry Tyrrell. New York a few years back— on a flying visit, to serve on | Vv Frits Thaulow was in some art jury—he painted a genuine impressionistic view of Washington @ |Square North, ‘Those old Knicler- jbocker mansions of rich red brick, with their whitepainted Colonial | Wooden finishings and marble door steps, contrasted with the luxuriant Kreonsward and trées of the park in summertime, appealed strongly to the: artist's color-sense, The Washington’ Arch was in the way, so he left it out, Waverley place as an asphalted atrest 4a likewise cheerfully ignored. But the residences of Mayor McClellan and eg- 2 | Mayor Rdward Cooper, just east of the opening where Fifth avenue begins’ are there, as big as life and twite ts 2 | natural, This picture, which has even more than the usual Thaulow-esque breadth, gayety and exuberance, is in 3 | the possession of M. Brandup at hie? art galleries, No New Yorker can ses 1t without looking more lingeringly aad more lovingly at the real Washingter Square North e' afterwanl, . . ° has just had its first New York hearing. ¥ellx Weingartner, of Berlin, 1s visiting these shores, and B EETHOVEN'S “Battle @ymphony® 4s the musical hero of the hour, This conjunction recalls the fact that the two names, Beethoven and Weine Bartner, have literary association im» the latter's interesting monograph, published by the Oliver Ditson Com pany, entitled “The Symphony Since Beethoven.” In allusion to Beathor ven's proverbial contempt of restraint, whether artistic on personal, one of his, biographers makes a remark, which, (¢ applied to th musical critics of this town to-day, sounds strangely pro. phetic: “The propriety of represehig oftensive remarks ls a thing that neveg enters his thoughts,”’ . . ° 188 JULIE MACKAT, the pair M tomimist, has just come over from Europe on the Oceanto, se first of the Whito Star vessels to re celve the Marcon! «wireless telegraphic equipment, There were greetings and falke all the way across the Atianti¢ with other Mners that were passed, but never alighted. These messages ‘went without saying,” really they did! Julle found the wireless ineffectual for trans: and thrilling encounter tn mid- with "ships that pass in the night” ° . ° RS. GENERAL TOM THUMB M yes, the original and only one, of Barnum fame—tis sixty-three The Empress offered them peace if they| years old, and very much alive, though would pay a tribute of pigeons, which not kicking, She and the Iittle General they did, Collecting all the pigeons, Bm-| (who died twenty years ago) were mar- press Olga had lighted tow tied to their tails and get them loose, Every pigeon ried In Grace Church, New York City, in 1803, just forty-two years ago thig flew back at once to its home and the/month. As a remembrance of thet bise city of the Drevilans was burned to the toric event in midget high life “Dre. ground by this novel method of simul-| General” during the past week has been taneous conflagration, The Drevilan| ending to personal frends some tiny men, were killed and the women were| blue boxes, with contents jndloated distributed as slaves. Olga was the first ruler not to be as- sassinated. It has never been the Rus- sian custom to assussinate empresses, but only emperors, and if the Nihilist assassinate the Dowager Emypiesa it will be a violation of this long-estab- lished custom, by @ card Inscribed: Mr. and Mrs, Charles 8. St: (Mr, and Mrs, General Tom Thumb), Feb. 10th, 1863, Feb. 10th, 1906 | Wedding Cake of ‘Two or three years after the General's death the wee widow was married te No. 5.—$viatoslaf — His her present husband, Count Prime Skull a Drinking Qup. Emperor with Slav blood, which| came to him through his mother. and Igor, his Norse sires. He was the! ! first Emperor to have a snub nose, but of Norsemen, the big, powerful chest Magri. The Count fs a miniature Jtalian nobleman, an accomplished musilan and actor, member of the Elke, end @ naturalised American citisen who says fhe votes the Republican ticket early and often, The Count and Countess have a fine country house near Middle~ boro, Mass, where they are great social ho inherited the thick bushy eyebrows |‘Vorites, and the long mustache, Adopting a|§ illie’ Slav custom, he also wore one earring Little Willie $s set with diamonds and rubles and he shaved the top of his head, all but a scalplock, which was the custom among the chiefs of the warlike Slay tribes, a6 It was the custom of the American Indians, As soon as Sviutoslat ascended the Guide to New York. THE BATTERY. the batery is the plaice where man- throne he too made war upoa the By- | haten tland stops and whare immigrenta wanting eniperors and tried to conquer | start, it 18 the breething spaice of tired COubluntinuyie, ‘Lae war tasted ny. years, trom 967 A.D, to 972 A. 1), Prive ; nu yoarkers in summer espeshly when Zimiscea commanded — th q the wind bloge frum the glue factrys ang army. Worn out with Many Barta barren fland, the batery is full of Emperor Sviatoslaf made a temporary | benches ockupted by men who. look aa peace with the Byzantine Emperor and | ip thare batting averidge was sévven retired to Russia to recruit his army and to rest @ few years hefore making war again on Constantinople, nites a week the batery 1s also crowded with peeple who hav grown grayhedded On his way ta fight the Byzantines! wating for the statten land bote to By iatoslat h: On his way back to Russia the Patgl- naks lay In wait for him and attacked conquered the Patzinaks, | start, sumday the bote will start and then statten iland will at last be dia- him at tho cataracts of the Dnelper, | covered the batery 1s alea Infested by They captured Emperor Sviatoslaf and|an acquartum whitch !s oapen all the led him before their Prince, whose name | time exsept during the hours when pee was Kourla, In the presence of the assembled | ple can get away from bigness to see ft, Patainak Ww: rors Prince Kourla cut! on april ferst a lot of boarn youuinerista oft Sviatcklaf's head, and hollowing spend moast of the day in calling up out the skull of the dead Russian Em. eror fillod it with wine, from which| the acquarium @nd asking for mister ne first, drank and then passed the| Fish. the batery is tho last glimpeq of bloody drinking cup around the clrele the yoonited staltes that peepte get. bes of his assembled chiefs. Wach one of the fifth Russian Emperor. foare embarking for brooklen and koany and statten {land manny touching scenes This serics will continne from| parting and falrwell may be wits day to day until all the stories \ nessed dally at south ferry, the moast nepyring thing about south ferry fs the have been told of the forty rulers | prommise that sumday {t will be toara of the great Russian Empire that | (own and replaiced by sumthing moare have been assassinated, moddern than the 15t centehu AP, THRAUNG, The “Fudge ” Idiotorial Get Next and Stay There! (Copyrot, 1905, Planet Pub. Co.) “Close ts my shirt, but closer Is my skin,” wrote Theocritus some TWO THOUSAND YEARS AGO. The thought Is GOOD TO- A HAY, Its modern interpretation Is “GET NEXT.” For example, sce what Charl ley Mutphy has done! SNUG. GLE UP TO SOMETHING GOOD, Remember that ALL ts not GRAFT that GLITTERS. Some very good things have been dug up on the sidel A PUBLIC FRANCHISE can readily be made into a PRIVATE TRUST! When you see what you want solld rule for success. GO AND TAKE IT, This ts the If anybody else grabs at the same time KNOCK HIM OUT! Do not be a WEAKLING, Do not cry for SPILT MILK because the MILK TRUST did it, REMEMBER; “O Polyphemus, while With apples Galatea your flocks you kéep, our sheep.”