The evening world. Newspaper, November 20, 1905, Page 10

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| | } i ' \ f grip er aye fell on his flushed, clean-e f A mudklen glow overspréad her own Ne cheeks nnd she stretched bot hands toward hi ) greeting. \ \ The Evening World’s Mome Magazine, Mondoz Evoning, November 20, 1905.% Che Ge Pubiehed by tho Press Publishiug Company, No, 63 to 63 Park Row, New Zork, Wntered at the Post-OMce at New York av Second-Class Mall Matter, ean VOLUME 46 04.405 sossce verses sseces corees ~ Municipal Ownership and Cooks. Scarce, so well paid, so captious and critical about the duties required of | fem, so fastidious about the qualifications of mistresses as they now are, | | A-servant engaged for general housework commands as large wages | Bs a first-class sailor on a man-of-war, or $24 a month. A kitchen helper | fresh from Ellis Island will not deign to accept an enlisted man’s $13 a Month. Situations which carry with them wages of $240 a year, com: | fortable quarters, labors by no means arduous, abundant leisure, gifts of | othes and Christmas remembrances go begging, while for $5 a week | Places in department stores which feave an insignificant residue over car- | ‘ are.and luncheons there is a demand greatly in excess of the supply. ' What is the remedy to be? Where are servants to be found in suffi- | | gent mumbers to go around? ! Obviously not from native sources, In the thirty years from 4870 / Go 1900, while the number of women in occupations {n the United States Bhcreased from 1,836,288 to 5,349,3 of women servants increased by only 50 per cent. Meantime women Dookkeepers, stenographers, &c., increased from 8,023 to 245,547, or by 8,000 per cent., and saleswomen by The figures show how completely the home supply of servants has een cut off. The foreign supply in 1904 was only 104,937. As the population increases yearly by about 300,000 families, a year’s importa tion of servants provides only one for every third new family, The evil is beyond the power of individuals to deal with. It clearly alls for State intervention and control before it grows graver and results in domestic anarchy worse than that pictured by Bishop Doane for flat life. Why not the municipal regulation of wants as a solution of the problem? truest sense? In Cleveland they have undertaken the municipal control of suicide. Brooklyn Beauties {Why should not New York go a step coming animpelling cause to self-dest {The problem is a vexed question by comparison with which the city owner- 2 qi A ’ ship. The Saturday ship of trolley lines is unimportant. light plants, or gas. nh — — — The Three M’s Must Go. ‘A Group of Oddie | in Picture and Story. H18 {s the lantern of Guy Fawkes, Tis candle was to have ignited a mine to blow the British Parliament Houses to atoms and to Kill every legisia- vor in the great assembly, But for a chance disclosure this lantern would }} |have figured in one of the most terrible tragedies in th ‘ory of the world England has this month been celebrating the tercentenary of this famous Gun- jhowder Plot of 1608, Yearly on Nov. 5 the Waghsh children have a nolsy jollif Potion “net By J. Campbell Cory, NO, 16,161, From every household in the netropolitan area, from Staten Isl- and to Yonkers, from Morristown} to farthest Piermont goes up a Macedonian cry for Help, female preferred, Send us servants, is the plea, or domestic life must become a failure and the example to those about to marry a deterrent one. Certainly servants were never so) ation in memovy of the plot's fallure, Fawkes was the tol of Robert Catesby |and other disaffected Eng! politicians who planned to demolish Parliament, | His lantern is preserved In the museum at Oxford. A new postage stamp has been issued in Tokio for use 4 Corea, It bears the chrysanthemum as the emb) f Ja as symbolical of Corea, and two pigeons representing the the protectorate of ‘he plum blossom) al service, , Vy About twenty seats at the imperial theatre in St. Petersburg have never been Oe ? marked in the plans, and their sale has been privately exploited by the box-office keepers, who fn ten years have obtained over $20,000 by the fraud. \ AN A x | A new Iife-saving boat has been devised, which, by its odd shape and the \N \ * | /advantages claimed for it, is attracting widespread attention in Europe, The \\ . boat, which has been invented by Capt. Ole Brunde, is {ntended to lve tn any sea, It would be carried on board #hip, and shipwrecked sailors would ehut \ \ eomeelves up in tt and trust to its buoyuney for safety, The latest model is \ ‘ “ \\ \ N g-shaped and world. It isa litthe opens = like =the fmm =~ | valves of a shell It looks not unitke & fat sunfish, the deep, narrow keel and little i) sery ing to carry out the resemblance As illustrated, it \s resting on a trestic The single sail is manipulated from within, ‘The ovular shape of the boat fe suppowd to ald It to navigate seas which would swamp an ordinary craft | Lown of about 1,200 nhabliants, and on e morning of its annual fair day the population from bout elghty vil- ‘Ages come troop. ng in in swarms. To them go out all he young women, married or single of Halmagen, each ing a small wer garland and , vessel of wine, and ba attended by elr godmother last precauth s taken from Mri 97, or by 300 per cent., the number | 5,000 per cent. Halimagen, in Roumania, possess- - es @ public festival which !® probably roach the young yvomen offer to each a taste of wine and—a kiss, ers to Questions "8 cooks, chambermaids and house ser- Is not a cook a “city utility” in the Letters from the People 2 8 Answ Oriental gardeners are adepts at thelr work, the most striking production of Brook! 1s fie beatttias, Got ind also state how many ¢ Pr subject t yc vould do this. | . trl pil bd: H 7 nd and Tw Alaska is than Texas?” Ales Bitvila yt Subject. Tt you would do this, Ino.» of their number being @ natural arm-chair, in w the red shape was further and remove what is fast be- | To te Bator of The Bvening Wor , ies ooh af o % bared an SN AVIN EbOt teen cant re 8 you would “love io study attained during the growch of @ vine. Almost from Ite first appearance the vine I find’ Brooklyn girls far prettier than | tY-ffth etreet) are a Syne s beats ae you (AoW lov had been carefully treated in antic! t th which ft was to be put oti ? “ : "ANUELL. ada? ACR eat apout lovers, You state that you bad been carefully treated in anticipation of the use to ¥ i ruction on the part of housekeepers? | their New York sisters. ey a Bos bs: BIL Sound Adviee to tasy Girl w seat stories to magazines and theY) By the time Kt attained full growth It was formed Into a rustic arm-chalr, All tonian, I cannot be accused of particun Facts on Alaska, ‘ = we dd © been rejected, By studying €tAM- 1 4¢ the joints were made by grafting, so that the chatr (a practically in one solid ' 1d on | } mar 1 rhetoric ead. ng good ” by Ere Li be 7 v ’ noon crowd 09} 444 Eaitor of The Evening World h DOs oe ea ctls, Hell and reee re eyou| piece, and after it had attained a growth of some three feet it was cut end It is of more vital consequence to} Fulton street, Brooklyn, will show! Two years ago, while in a West Data MES eo aia for cxenporing by cont’nued AP: | thoroughly dried. Finally {t was polished, the wood taking a finish not uniike «,_ | three beautiful girls to one that may be! oity, I saw a map of Alaska, unde he Bee eae | Dlicatice fou can then earn "RIN' |) sas sean, more people than whole fleets of Staten Island ferry-boats, or electric- | founa in the Saturday afternoon “post-| which were printed several facte about 1, you will fn nt after @ ey easily I,K way matinee" parade on Broadway, Manhat- | (t, one stating that Alaska has recent! Ub A. Seed. Pebentaniiy | Laasly th Kew Yars E. W. Bweeley, a Justice of the Peace in Loyalsock, Lycoming County, Pa tan, Among New York City girls the | peen discovered to be seven and a ha Ok cao thie Waslk To the Evlitor of The Evening World SiesHGd the Reocnd (GP Oitaecholdlne Id awar tale Alioporher fos Kae nhid) WANRIO In the new Bureau of Licenses fhe difficulty. Why not follow the employment agencies and exercising a comprehensive control of domestic |deign to explain ehis mystery. Is it on} the world being twenty miles wide | ele a week.” ae vou say von te Thin | Aiheet, without being called a flirt, Poe-| Peace, vhirty-fve years; Aes bervice throughout the greater city? A New Yorker’s Strange # & , : % A Wonder-St Wild a oe Quest fora Prate tora * The Lion Tamer ¢ By Albert Payson Terhune € 4 WameSor ofa Wit a, | CHAPTER I, r Buried Treasure, OWN the narrow white lane gal- loped a frightened horse, From ae to side ewayed the rickety *carryail,” while the driver, an elderly fan with weather-tanned face and a ree ot white ohin-whiskers, sawed eipleasly at the reine, The only other | Pooupant of the vehicle was a bat on the rear seat, white and wild- | , but made no foolish outery nor | ‘ort to leap from the wagon. A young man striding over the short, | pele grass of whe downs, a few hundred! Yfards away, heard the cleuer of hoofs the driver's shouts. Quickening bis © toa run, as a glance up the road fold him the plight of the old man and Abe girl, he hastened obliquely across fhe fieid in the hope of intercepting the oe horse at the bend of the ‘The young man ran with the easy Brace of @ trained athlete, teking the fence in dis stride, and leaping down fato the mad almost directly in frone of the runaway, The horse, at sight of this apparkion Grovping sudde its range of vision, shied viol to the right. The carriage struck one of the roadside posts, and there was a grinding, crackling nose as a wheet “dished’’ and @ shaft enapped short The hore guthered itself for a bound Obey 4 bound that must have rought mortal injury to the oocu aris of t overturned carriage, But efore the maddened brute could make the spring a hand was at the bit and ractived skill was, combating the rute's excited plunge. _ The struggle Was very brief. The an was evidently a thorough maste { horeeflest: and knew just what to jo and how to do tt quickly Refore the driver could crawl out un- hurt from under the upset carryall the horse was standing, shivering, pant ing, but subdued The driver dived back Into the wreck and helped the girl to her fre Close call, that!" he « ted as fhe dusted off her white ‘And @nother Jump. an we'd doth been tn Kin, n't hu ere ye, miss Not at all," responded the girl. He Voice Was shaky with excite t, but she tried to laugh ‘The horse wos Blopped Just in time anks to this Entloman’s sour she stepped daintiiy for the dust, ¢ ’ rt who stl d through rune the horre's bit “Why, Btove—Mr. Gault! orfed "Bo it you who droppeal fron the fonds to our rescue! How in the world | go “Honest” writes of the loneliness of whone ter the State has taken up one form of | prettiest are to be found on or above times as large as the whole New The advantages of an education cannict | a soar rites of the loneliness Of township and county of 8 aggregate 109 years during his life of | good beginning by taking over all One Hundred and Twenty-Atth street. | land States, and that the Yukon has| ie overestimated. I would advise you, |ances. Girls are inthe seme Ae They | sisty-eight years, and he {a still adding to bis record Sweeley is a Demo- |Perhaps some student of beauty will | been found to be the mrgest river in| yowever, to lve up “reading four nov-|can't even look at any man on the|crat, and that he Is popular is shown by his record as follows: Justice of the account of climate or because New Yor} 1 “ sibly the New Work iaen are tos cen: | or, twenty-six Years; Supervisor, eight years; jaecount o om bi ’ ork twenty miles from Its mouth. Will any: {1s altogether too many, Instead try tol Sorious, Women dea’ like chat Behool Director, fifteen years; Overseer of the Poor, tix years; Township Auditor, $8 too busy to think about looks?! one who has visited Alaska verify this | ¢yay your Latin, mathematics or any CURIOUS. | twelve years; County Auditor, four years; Jury Commissioner, three years, nett He 80} CARE te tee Ranh tp Block rich man’s gon is when he's thrown the life at the cheap fisher-cottage merver of ta chrous: trove. Woon on his own resources. I was a Colum: | instead of at one of the island's hotels tents you eee over there, Miss Gray, So bia valedictorian—and yet I could not| All these and a dozen other detalles of you should up me instead of thanking earn fifty cents a day at any trade. that keenest misfortune, genteel poys me. wit even ae a Hog temery. asked erty, Stephen could picture the invalid Ky, vi y iss Gray, trying to rouse him from hia;maintained in a thousand petty com- she not noted the look of astonished Jo: | "Not at peysting at all, so far as I | number of privations on the part of the | that had Teaped. bidden into fi ayes | | then knew, was looking over some plucky daughter and the steady t leaped unbidden into his ey | ‘Want Ads.’ one day when T was pretty dwindling bank-account, whose rapid ' m recognizing her, Her feminine imut- tion, too, told her that his light words were forced, @he was about to reply| when the driver, who had been inspect- ing che wreck of his vehicle, led forward. Member of the cirous troupe, are ye?" he shouted wrathfully. ‘Well, I've & bone to pick with you fellers. Twas one of your pesky wild critters that soared my hose juet now an’ made him run away, Elephant, most likely, or 4 tiger that had got loose from ‘the show, an’ —— None of our animals have gotten loc Interrupted Gault. “If they had, the whole staff would be searching for them. I've just left the tents and the menagerie fs all safe, The circus is o away from thie road, as So it must have been some- thing ¢! that frightened the brute, He probably just took {t into his head to have a little exercise and “A little exercise!” snorted the driver, I've drove this hoss twelve year and he's never ran away before now. An’ he ain't afraid of orermoveels nor fire- works nor anything. Nothin’ short of seedy and hungry, and struck an Ad-) qoorease was bravely kept from the aick | Joremeeners. for a "panay man Wicd UN | man, eratands horses.’ Horses were the une ats wai " thing I really ‘id understand; 80 I|qg,yCt POOF oor little etrlt”” he sald From the first the carnivorous animals | ft his half Imeonactova fympathy. Bhe | attracted me, and I hung around thelr hastened to change the subject by cages when I wasn't busy, Rivedere!, beats ni Tel Jour old lion tamer, took a fancy to me sn't Block Island an odd place for He had a theory that there are a few ® cireus to come to? Does it pay the | people-a very few—who have 4 peculiar /[OMPANY (© appear at a littie place [iRtence over wild He claimed like this ih 1 was one of those natural animal! “Not during the summer season, But trainers, and that I had the faculty to, at this time of y the Islanders are 4 positively abnormal degree, H» made| heavy with money earned froin the clty |me his assistant, The Work was Just|folkx And when a tustic has extra the exciting, congenial sort that, at-|money his chief idea of Wissipation ta tracted me most hen poor Rivedercl to gu to the circus, Oh, yes, we're 4o- died I got his job, That's all Ing. good business’ here, ‘wat Teane fo “No, dt jan't all,” contradicted the girl. «day or twe , |'Tt ls hardly the beginning. You don't “yh |mean to eay that you, Stephen Gault, phon. jon. gh j [descendant of the old Kntekerbocker | sho nada tock, scion of a long line of states. | * ‘ . : | eae ad eof genius-that, you are |. Block Inland is such a delightful otd- § "exclaimed Anice. had spoken too warmly, golng to paas your whMe life asa lion-| World place, Uni) tamer? honor you for the progress | Visited. you have made, and for turning your |Possessing—this littl hand to the first honest work that offer- | the ocean, with (ts 9 cliffs, Its short jed {teelf, But it is at best a makeshift | dry grase, ts absence of trees, But tt At first six: wild animal could have made him pun. } until something really worthy of your|has a charm that grows on o: ‘akin’ a little exercise, hey? Just take | Hieite ean beetounds |the people-the reat nativeecare’ wang ra one look at there hoss an’ tell me hon- | "My talents seem to lie in the direce studying, I hear there isn't a jal, a { iif he looks ike he'd a’ just been |tlon of mastering recalcitrant long and criminal or ,a pauper on. the ‘whote { takin’ a little exercise. He ‘ain't run |viclous tigers,” he replied, "I oan se island, And‘ half the tlme there ten'¢ } but about @ furfong and yet | ‘at | |no long naw of people waiting to give leven ‘a policeman. They ‘have | m' Drippin’ with sweat—and yet it's me ponitions that are really worth policemay here during the sommes Bolt day. Bhiverin’ from head to while, But by the time T have been At Months, but they have none nog ee \ foot as if a hundred files was stingin’ this work a few years longer 1 hope to ‘poopie | are W-abiding “and. good him’ His eyes are all bloodshot and | A common Hion-tiumer, nothing more Just after’ my father died and leftyhave saved un money enough to stud¥ there is no need” —— i and good Tats true,” assented Gault, cast- A emmnamon’ lion-tamer,” commented me penniless and alone on. the face of jsome profession, Until then But he “They may be all you aay," laughed the gir, Thad's rath th. Ye . |L've been jabbering about my own af. | ¢ “but ; it? I've alwaye heard t rth, rem TL Gieappeared then. id i if Gault, “but If you want to & paradox, ixn't | tho ¢ et Who wouldn't? I couldn't stay to be |fairs, and I haven't asked vou a thin tonly the n ng an expert eye ; ‘e p over the shaking, ‘ouse Troe snorting horse: "a furloi D we er pul han In that mention, would Wicommon sort of men could sii 48 Jan object of pity and charity, among {about yourself, It is two whole years |{),.*°Ht!), aii the pet Ph i been scared half to death by some \Z lion-tamers.” |my old friends, you know, When a man |aince I #aw you~the week before grad-|i2 4 ned tor wit ho Soa a Surat been Nea hut he was not to be shaken from his | goes broke his wisest course 1s to drop |hation. I was to have met vou the| iiiro. of OF Wrecker Egle tg tt Hy ‘something,’ eh?" retorted the old >) purpose " out of the game before he makes ajnext month at the Grandisons’ house | vas one of the mont ee nnn: _aRY Jtomething ehe” retorted we a ; Laat month in Springfield,” he sald. /nuisance of himself. Don't you agree |Party at Nownort; I hid counted so on Thi? ON) 1 ty, melt lawless places & skeeter, | spose? No, sir’ Nothin ‘abot No, sir! Nothin’ short of a wild animal ever give that hoss such a "I met some old acquaintances, They | with me?’ ‘that meeting, for’— | tler's "Palatine?" psi akeeter, 1 anova? No, alr! Nothin’ ehort| ao) freoted ine effusively, But when they) “you know I don't, It wasn't fair to} He checked himeelf abruptly “The ship that @ hundred bet Sich @ aceite, Bee, he stare aa Jeon la taweut Paresh esata . leamed my occupation they quietly cut the rest of us, But tell me about your-| “Yea, T wongered—we all wondered—| j-/iie, thio tha: hundred years before, aan FOLEY bo Aion ce k a lawsuit on h : on aii f} of reliable witnesses to hev a | me, IT want gave you the bother of | geitt" why you didn't come,” she answered. | tn‘the anion of the qr icon ene ashore, Mepten Gault was send this, He'll pay yod money all right | these ro remains an’ appraise Aoing that. I won't presume on former) -phere’s Httle enough to tell, Just ‘A good many things have happened quoted Anice, "I f t the reat, but I with the eve of a veterina r the carryall his wild eritter made | damn You'll hey ter walk home, I acquaintanceship to speak ta you or tol ime world-old story of giving a colt @|to mo, too. In the past two years, My Pabst nn the wrichete | nn une beast had evidently. seen. ro nee et cum,* ipterceded tho | FiUhh, Mimd Gray. Til deduct the time | force my presence on you Ik Any WAY leacehorse trainiog and then, expecting | father. lost most of hie money In, thejrmembor the wrickers lured the Vaiw that had occasioned insane. rit wea baa iiscened with some amass Peter tng tins wi cite ; were on the Ielhnd together” | him to do plough-horse work, I wa®/panic in Wall Street Taat year, There| {ine roe ons med. nea girl, woo had listened wit @amusé- Laughing, th? girl turned to Stephen en Gault’ cried tne irl, and| brought up like « lot of other rich Now! was barely enough left from the wreck |"" Theres a wor: of poetic justice it F wire Roen ne 19 te anery aoltaauy, es yee Move wn unprotected Jn tho hore whe read pain, real York men's sons, with the idea that | to keop us allve, His health broke down], Theres, a fort of poetic, Justice ik der forn when for tt fone of their animals did scare | sa mock deepaine acl havering | ROW. Ui bor “What hiv I'd never have to doa stroke of work /at the sume time, This summer the| {ny being here, mused § was, as | rat Cike Brouwht into cloea areetiine poor horse Remember, if it! take me home, I'm afraid, Will yout? |¢ So't care @hather rou ates cireus | Mid ede wn ceies MRatE aus earns We Meamiant aftord vit very ait Ry Oe ; : Naretinty f home, I'm afra ver the | What do T care whether vou area clrous| had what Is known as a'rich man'sedu-| voyage, We couldn't afford it WrT lof centuries nga, 60 the story tube with camels or lions,” Bul he wes eauai t been for the courage ‘of Mr. | Her ready tact had glowed over the ous i 4 : Inland | {rom ibe circus menagerie to ooce have bern Kilted 2) 1 THAME Dot OF | moment. and it was not unsil the two | that haw existed for years between us. |earn Aa dollar, “Then, my father led. lrreinand you know, 6o there ip alwaya | Hound for Now (Tere ipe Boston. Bad ¢ fright. The forse, moreover, be- h yh Stine te ea ie Loa ID, the | Tugt became some allly people in Bpring-|He had b»en’ considered a multi-mil-|a pea breeze here, We took rooma at a/then would put in here with their booty. # longed evidently to the stolid, dull type, “Obs, I got nothin’ agin this young | opposite direction to thet taken by Capt Sey ° lAn olj. English {hack whose stuphi comporure nothing {sile".” grismbied Slocum ungracioualy. | 8l9:0m ant his horse that ine cloud | Seid phaoee co, crap Your sequalmmnce | onatre, | He dled worth | Dene |e: lle we ee atended carly in| Cont, lara 2 |) 1 bell short of & dynamite explosion ean rut- | He Gone ah Heb am te NO a | tant ee Someerenen, Gaul’ face. | vourselt off as a sock ariah, But. It| Wnon the ectnts Sas, eattied up, was |Beptember—nearly a month ago, The|@ noted pirate o i. ‘over “ h's boss han got to stand thampin’ Btimy. don't likes explana: |A0ean't Impose on me, 1 Insist thot ypu bworth just 19% in the world. 'T blew |ale does my father good, but I'm afraid agi A ar SA pe yy eto {Call While vou are on Block Island, and|that on a fraternity dinner and then 'he'll never be well again. i Slocum,” the old driver we. ttering | “How are we to get home? Can you! be for any length of tir on due"uny that you take me to see your animals, |dropped out of hg frienda’ lives, 1 ethene ‘waa a ithe break in her volee|But I'm very much afraid he pene wrathfully; “as sure's my name's Dan | mend the carryall?” “i fsland It is not unlikely we shall muet |t: Now, please be sensible as you used |irind here and there to get work, but |that went straight to Stephen Gault’s | extromaly industrious pirate, AO rus qi Sloeum, and sure’s there's law in Block Mend it? H'm! ‘The money of ‘Mister |imnin, and I don't waat you to auffer| to he We were s lto family tradition, he used ji once he ch good friends, vou | there was nothing | could do, T couldn't | heart. ‘ Island, and as mure's there's a Jestice | Myron Currier, Manager and Proprietor |embatrassment — or misunderstanding &"1_,7. ‘until you disappeared | Just) even keep a je set of books, or make You poor little girl!” he eaid,’Invol-|here after each cruise, ary of te Pesce here in New Shor'em iown | of Currier's Mammoth Cirous, ‘Il pay fer! through acquaintance with me, What I After" — Tlchange rapldiy enough to be a clerk. ' buried a hoard of stol ind," —jost 80 sure as all that, your mana-|mendia it. I'l! jest load the hoss pack gall {y Ow fi a ‘cirous |, She paused, but he took up the sen- 11 saw then for the first time what | His Keen intuition read the whole jewels somewhere on the tala) G's goin’ ter he the biggest ort of | ty the atahle an! then bring out a couple trouper” aw the talk hereabeut callus | tence: thoroughly useless creature the average story—her plain, almost shabby dress,» (To Be Contloued, An’ as sure as my nam Dan'l | big damage sult jest the same. tiona as a rule, but if

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