The evening world. Newspaper, November 22, 1905, Page 12

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| | j t | ee | No, 63 to 63 Park Row, Now Tork, Published by tho Press Publishing Pompany, red at the Post0rt w York us Second-Ciass Mall Matter. A cencinene VOLUME 46... Pee vecnwe ceeees connen saree cnerer NO, 16,168, Sp RirateaBatiicctritet Who Are the Anarchists?—1 In Pittsburg there has just been preached what a prominent lawyer calls “a sermon in Anarchy.” And the important thing about it is that the preacher is not a shaggy follower of the red flag, but a $30,000,000 steel corporation. This powerful company is enlarg- ing and extending its plant. As aj site for its new mills it needed the| land on which stood a little frame house occupied by a widow, When the widow refused to sell her prop- erty the company sent a body of workmen armed with picks to take pos- session of It. They swarmed through the little house. A pick was driven through the tin roof, a long rip made, the roof was rolled up and dumped to the ground, In a jiffy the house was demolished and level with the (round, while the widow's son who had defended it was in the police station on a charge of trespass. “One outrage of this sort perpetrated by a rich corporation against a widow,” says Mr. Richard Watson Gilder, “does more to breed an- archy than all the speeches made by Herr Most and Emma Goldman in a lifetime.” This particular act of aggression Is interesting for the corroboration ft gives Mr. Joseph Medill Patterson’s charge that it is the law-defying Capitalists who are the true anarchists, “They defy the law, they laugh at the law, they ignore the law,” says Mr, Patterson, “For them a law is as if it did not exist.” If an "example is wanted the Pittsburg case will serve. Mills Hotels and Others. The projected new Mills hotel, which is to cost $1,500,000 for build: | fing and site, is more interesting in some respects than a new Waldorf fwould be. Mills Hotel No, 3 will have room for 1,900 guests, while the Waldorf capacity is 1,500. But the chief point is that a well-built hotel in a location where land fs dear will be expected to make a profit, as its predecessors have done, from rooms rented for a quarter of a dollar a night. Such hotels are a boon to the impecunious, who are relatively as well accommodated for | THE the price as are the guests of Fifth avenue hostelries. But why is there nothing between the extremes of hotel construction | for guests of moderate incomes? Why not a Golden Mean hotel, some- | thing half way between the Mills type and the gold-and-onyx palace? Except for the occasional fashionable hotels of a former generation, which the tide of progress has left behind, there is little for the guest who desires comfort and unoppressive elegance, along with a simple cuisine, | for a charge within bounds. No hotel so far as can be recalled has been built to attract this kind of patronage. Reaction from the excess of lavish decoration may some day give the city substantial hotels of this character, At fs thought that the landlord who makes the innovation will find it re- Homo Mogazine, “Wednesday Evening, Pity the Blind. By J. Campbell Cory. WwAY OF THE TRANSGRESSOR No munerative. Two Interesting Women. Bernhardt at sixty, full of the ardor and enthusiasm of youth, com- ing a 9,000-mile theatrical tour, and Mrs, Hetty Green celebrating seventieth birthday while yet active and energetic—these contrasting pres of vigorous womanhood are specially interesting in a time of Osler ries ‘of early decline. . | In the forty-one years of her business career Mrs, Green Is reported to have increased an inherited fortune of $9,000,000 to $60,000,000. By @ coincidence, it is just about forty-one years since Mme. Bernhardt went jon the stage, As actress, playwright, sculptor, painter, novelist, en- ‘thusiast in outdoor sports, she has lived a life of extraordinary fulness, Is the secret of the active age of each of these remarkable women Yo be found in their busy lives? A New Yorker's Strange i & Quest for a Pirate Hoard SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTERS. | tint the lover's tongue. Biapuen Gaull, & youig Ld 1 have come across match {tt 1 ‘ stanciationistically.”’ bas takon up thi on the uptown trip. ‘was on trains He could not | who /ask the girl he loved to share the for- ' es of A circus attendant—« mere an!- trainer, She saw the obstacle, but | ot with his eyes, and tt irked her that @ should so belittle her nature as to eve so Silgit a thing as accidental social station could affes, her regard for ulm, Yet, belng a woman, she could at walt and hope, and strive not to let Jault sae hyw wholly her life's hopes were bound up in his And #0 Mr, Currler regards Mr. * Slocum’s change as unjust?" she juerled. “I can't how, ‘The \poor ’ } man's carriag rulned, and hi th sig Mant ft me has never been the same since | ' } though the conse \ empty, (Honee hae B bjected Stephen, "Mr. Currier CHAPTER III. wasn't to blame for the runaway, That Is Just the point, | Sigeum claims th ion’s 8 horse wets scared by one of our The Lion's Den, mal 4 escaped and hidden In te )"" #aid Stephen n the Now Mr, Currier words of the « e, d is prepared to prove ‘ ; f animals were loose at hs als A ail for %, aod that, therefore, none of them the princely sum of $67.99. 1 have caused the runaway, But "Bo Capt. Slocum has act brought {l@ Justice of the Peace at ow, re Bult tor his wrecked Guhed | Carrey vwathell never bay ond Gant | Anice Gray, eurprised, “I ey ed tie najasty of the | @frous proprietor would com nise the | a Block islands | "You don't know (° reel | |¥eughed Gault, “Mr stay © freezes over’ | @ spend money lavie efor any wort of a Mt comes to sett!!ng he ¢ \ ney here Unjust claim’ he's tho most obstinate, Yet lohe has | man elive. {a penny left on earth, so n jalong the summit of ore time here w @ week after t c said th (Metford's dog y ha was 4 ir copse Remen @ack other during , and | SEPA eae @he sunny October 00 ewiftly for the y Years defor, ! flown all) ¢ 4 certain awe vole a@ te gazed the gleauning waters to where AOA Juntor, ° @ault had met An haa! dith rose shadowy and forbid 4 ¥ fallen in lo ver, Ho | ding In the distant tuze; yee 80 ‘< Ne ava 4 t indervua was there, There cu Rover spoken HOVE! TB: 901 the t doutt, about that, But it was not Words, but, womaniike, she tad | one animals,” hee long in guessing its exister “What waa {t, then?” she also guessed yt , % you're keeping some Not speak w » was at me! It tan't fair! College boy, bu: would walt unt Ing back from you ; * wiOW Wihat It wg that shite Jog and frightened Sio- foolish | ouin's lagy old horse, I only know thai 4 the dog started to run Into the copse @raduation, when he to share his lot without th @ngagement” so common to col- led there and had escaped my eve inly would have ven found du ing the careful search of the copse that Metford and I made directly uffenmara ran her life peralsted. “T can't say,” again, and the old, Tt ts; "pronatantitransub- | that winter Is coming on us, and more | tions daily TO. Cc Another Uptown Sufferer, To the Diltor of The Evening World Tam gied to see at last some one! oould be ‘run through on the Ninth avenue local Before and since then, I, among othe! have to wait in cold or rain @t One trouble by getting, right |!s, I notice, the cause for complaint of at do you mean by ‘yet?’ she! W ‘over nouning he answered vaguely | omy, expect to leave Block lsland?’ Letters from the People ~ ~~ Answers to Questions word, which { send you aa a curiosity, Qan any reader give @ definition or|not be considered a Hundred and Thirty-fifth to go ae f8F ot @ time when there js no rush on. 44 the One Hundred and Fortieth street Elven the time of going to the ticket Mtation, Leaving my home at 4 A. M. window to buy «@ single ticket, when T feel tt very much, Why should We /no one ts ahead of you, {s thus saved. I little more NOW| go through the same station he n and have no waiting, as I live in Harlem than ever be-|use the above method. I wish ta make LW. ® complaint, however, that I think Penalty with his life, thi |people ot which we nave read. fore? the'me How to Avoid Subway Delays, |Si0uld be made in large type. Is it cease, If they send e Réitor of The Bveniag Wortd: not @ Bhame !n this town of reasonable hat eN Poircderprtet eed bgp Ma Subject of Ninth ‘The fact that there js but one ticker working hours t the subway em- gured the mass: ree will cease, Avenue locals not going clear through eeller at Seventy-seoond street subwa es-hive to work so many hours a LOUIS BAYER. When the strike station during the morning rush hours | gay? LER | ‘Three. Plea for Ru Th jan Sufferers, May | give him @ Evening World | or: himself time @nd | Jt {g inconcelvable ‘hat in the twentleth | , twenty tickets | century, while we are always boasting| win In these fights. ome of your readers, @ tip? He could sa How many : The Lion Tamer * By Albert Payson Terhune ‘ others inight follow the 4: le. golf, but for me, That Is why he wants) siip of the foot and hey'h hi me to leave Block Island, But if there! ¢ Bs is any danger, I'll stay and share it with him, IN" “"A penny for your thoughts!" he cried, His momentary dread was con- yuered, “T was thinking,” she replied with de- Ngbtful disregaid fur t itn, “that you've le shudder, oner Don't talk ao!" she by only get our ner’ » | Close quarters. If I get too enthuslastic ou weit EP | and wk 199 long abo ‘lyawn om TD atop.” 80 In They bent tholr steps toward the line} ‘Th How sewn di jut my pets, Just hooks," Hi i ¥ I ho} \« She looked at bh in amazement. camed wild animal,’ ‘ered Pane Was eeinait: Pleas: | Or, it It had broken away and reached] at CH” T hope gion shat nethine ce he | The coctcheaded ilo tesney Man esemeiis | o¢ white teres whose loose canvas was | Gantt “ie Gevoted to notht ip the here k had bear brokey off. | failed to ate tte’ "SNe NOt have Pr, Mill ever bappen here again, I" frightened. She read hls feat in every ‘lapping nolsly in the brlax ves wind, . meet ‘uncertain creature, le 7 0 3 Ay. “But, ve, It's an Insult to one’s In- tone is repressed volce, is man) ° J ¥ a ‘Shother and Greater weruple —“But—Dut,”* protested the puszled girl, teliteance to suoncee that a dog could Whose trade {t was to play with death 1 met pouhere,” she vata aa they walked nature to be thee and to hve ity of! an Cp. um Aes lle gor of our civilization, and the law qlearly states that a murderer must pay the in Russia thousands of poor, helpless, unoffending Deople are being tortured and butchered in @ manner outrivalllng the dark ages, end a demand to Russia res mu Ruhlin Won Last Two, To the Editor of The Bvening Word; times did Ruhlin and arkey fight? How often did Ruhlin J 8. At the same instant Gault had hurled him violently backward, ave me And then?" asked the girl with @ nd then the show would probabil; causo work for the Block Island Cor- well as for the Justice of the | fa “But ‘I always thought animais came devoted to their (ralners, I've read vember 22, 1905; - THE MAN HIGHER UP. ii By Martin Green, SEE." sald the Cigar Store Man, “that Senator Depew has a friend up the river, but he can't remember his name.” “Why shouldn't Senator Depew have a friend up the river?” asked the Man Higher Up. “Wasn't he born in Peekskill? Every man in Peekskill ts hig friend, Maybe Senator Depew's friend up the river i drives the hack from the Peeksktll depot to the Eagle | House. But the man up the river, according to letters written to Senatop | Depew by Mr. Nichols, gets rantankerous around Christmas and wants we know, | “That couldn't be the Peekskill hackman—unless the hackman was eate ing at the Eagle House at the time. “Senator Depew has a notoriously bad memory as to his friends op the river. You know the old gag—very much on the Depew It {8, too—about the Senator at the Westchester County Fair asking a man whose face he could not forget how his wife was? The man told the Senator that his wife | was dead, Half an hour later the Senator met him again and asked him how his wife was. The man told the Senator that she continued to te dead. Can !t be that Senator Depew’s old friend, whose wife is dead, gets rantankerous around Christmas and wants to know tf Senator Depew has oa finally found it out? “Gov. Odell lives up the river. So did the missing Andy Fields, who is SHE STILU Sonny yes) said to have held the leash on the Yellow Dog. Mr, Fields Hved up the river quite thoroughly. He had places of residence {n Dobbs Ferry, Fishkill and Albany, Andy Hamilton, another reputed trainer of the Yellow Dog, lived up the river so Jong that the thought of another winter along the Hudson terrifies him to the extent of keeping him in the south of France, “The term ‘up the river’ is widely used in New York. In our most re fined and considerate criminal circles a person who has been sent to the Island {s referred to as having ‘gone away.’ (One sent to Sing Sing is said to have ‘gone up the river.’ It ts necessary to go up the river to reach Albany, Poughkeepsie, Hudson, Tarrytown, Haverstraw, Troy, Sarato nd | many other thriving communities. To say that a friend lives up the river is enough to lose the friend in a great expanse of territory.” “There might be some significance fn the fact that Senator Depew’s | friend wants to know just before Christmas,” suggested the Cigar Store Man. | “Sure,” agreed the Man Higher Up. "We have all been dippy. Senator Depew's friend up the river {s Santa Claus wanting to know what Senator Depew wants for a Christmas present.” ———-4¢e—______ A Little Study in Sociology, T the Seward County Teachers’ meeting held at Seward, Kan,, the other day each teacher waa called on to answer the question, “Why am le teacher?" Here are some of the replies | BecauseI thought I might do more good than by being @ preacher, It was & choice between those two professions. | Because I wanted to be respected, Teachers are all respected by ohlidren. Had nothing else I could do, so I tried teaching, and like it. Tam a teacher because I like power. I #il] long for more power, My ambi- i tion in that Line fs not yet satisfied ‘ Because I could make better wages than by working out as a@ hired girl. eagecnad my friends and relatives sald I would make an {dea} teacher and old maid, Because {t runs in the family and I love children. Because I think Carnegie will pension worn-out schoo! teachers. Only way to get on pension rolls, since wars are al! over Because it is such a y way to make a living. Sit three hours every morn- ing and hold @ little book and ask questions, Do the same thing for three hours in the afternoon. Then just have a good time the remaining elghteen hours, Nothing to do on Saturdays or Sundays nid a rest of four mont and more every year during the hot weather, Because I need the money, that ooeeely A Wonder-Story of a Wid ws ws w & Duel with the “Unseen” grudgingly followed in their wake, Nero | at full length fn the bot- age, his great yellow eyes and everything would be over.” “And T had all my frig at for noth! complained Antes. room. We coop them up in tiny cages.) Gault’s guests w 4 force them to do crazy tricks and wor) | Mettord, “bigs awarthy, “ene, Surtomtty. } the lives out of them by coming iif uid with drown, haggard tare and pute 4 crowds and staring at them. If a ma: [i'n eyes, was a'man to draw attention Were subjected to that sort of treatmen, | anyw While a rl of Anices evi- 3 ;49 you think he'd be ‘devoted to his de re was an unusual vistor trainer” Some of tine animals seem for a Non’ tamer, Gault was very pop- |relly fond of me, But it's wild antinal Y “t “mong the clrous folk, ‘Tey ' nature to Late man aad be treacherous, St frst been Inclined to make fun i |Sooner or later most of the beasis gu {IM M8 a “swell.” But | |bal,' as we call it, [ have to watch I bis Ar pet gh { them closely, The only one I feel bean aig iy ee oor ruple 42 .tee, ] actuady hank on is my big Numidian | ahi) ue ete she Feree | Ho: Nero, He ie really fond of me.” fitinulsy Nad aulckly won for him the | "That gigantic black-maned Hon ypu whom he was assoolnted, saad did ; |made jump through a hoop? But he)” sq, - | Jerowled and struck at you with his fore-| 47 Well’ § ad PR 2a PB | | Paw the nfeht wag there," 1 feriee a ut wer baste ey Hest i tephen laugned heartily, ike dime-muse u as cae eae ook Like 8, dime-museum lecturer or @ ) | the tricks of the tr “Oh, show me the Numidian lion— see, people don't wa nit Gatooal heetiies ai P74 be too docile and gvod. hey it? ene ‘Al favorite—firat!" decided 1 Sple of dangyr. Poor old Nero : jose’ Ade ‘ingy i; trained to growl and to slap at me at) ,..\",, bJected Metford, ‘Lave, go je,certain point in the performance, Il Romant ions pene. me" 1 | thri the crow ut e really eo gal } | meant business It wouldn't*be a growi | ,Sthiien and Anice Were alroady on the [snd a slap. but a roar and one bound—| Wis to the Hons cage | ani ; | hiy sprawled tom. of “I trembled when he rowled at you, and you seemed go! b!lnking sicepily at the moving attend. rave whoa you shook your whip at! ails At sight of his trainer the huge { his and made him go on with his per- | best raised his bead, and a pleased look M formance, It waa funny to see you in| leaped tnto the round golden orbs, yt Ughts aad spangles and to read your| Gault with u Kind woal passed bbe ¢ hand tn through the bars and began to seratch the tawny head and mane. A rumbling sound as of distant thunder | broke from the Mon's massive throa| name on the pareorns as ‘Signor |Galtini’ Ten't it hand to be a lion. | trainer?” They were crossing the cleared space ‘Loo! ye!"* lated Antoe, s in front of the circus ensimpment as| “look outl”’ exclaimed Anioe, Metford slouched out of the main tent, | tawling at you. He may bite” The dark man seemed more morose | “Gtowling?”” | eck L(y poor old Nero's purring. you'll, notice his growling a cat's purr magnified,” "So it \s!" orted the girl after a mo- ment, “How funny! He's just a big purring beosuse he likes to and ill-tempered than usual. He bowed to Anicee it replied to Stephen's cold salute with a curt nod, “I've just been to see your boss. Gault,” he sald, "1 want him to pa for that dog of mine one of hi just ike ani- cy dp, h 1d 1 ‘ ” q mais killed, He won't do It, and’— | petted. Can I pet him? wuery os to her prospect of leaving the) "I'm afraid not, Wien I'm on 1 have [Stephen hotla you know parte dee tile bors of UA Tedey Feet island! to keep eyes for my animals, It) 1,99 tera whee pine oer ae Tiles Raters” BRFANREES ChOTe HIRE Womanty intuith ve her th -|t 00 that . . we i iY, intution wave her the an ey, Sangh me looking the other You entered the copse @ second after,! “Danger! emeered Paul Metford “He knows—or guspects—more than he| "Well?" and nothing was there, lurching forward, | "That's the mame ol Gays!” sho thought suddenly. “He has “Well, some enterprising tamate of|, “That doesn't prove that one of the! ks all you wild animal cranks get off. @n idea of ils own abou. that matter, | the cages would jump for me, and the| beasts hadn't been there!” bled | You beat and lwmimer and surve your And the fear he feels is not for him- One | Metford, “I'm no fool, I saw the doe's beasts till they're so cowed and weal that they are as harmless at kittens; me md you say gaa oy Teg nybody can pat them with lf. It {9 just going show me) It's foolish to warn me not Mates his pets,” broke in Anice, seeing the| “1 qian't wat ” Steph- feloud gathering on Stephen's sunburned jen, "IT warned.) (ny ‘arey, ten are at 02, fa , {liberty to pa: all the animals you want H gee a aad Metford, quickly; | ¢o—4¢ you'll first sign a paper peer body, and I know nothin all yr & tiger could ha' hard. i, eaker than | truck it Bo “ ; ; segues. Ing, tho show from all responsibilty, Jove affairs. Yet simost dire I stooped down and looked through tenets Wee M84 and horribly | BMV’ cruised ius 9Wi Body in chat W8Y: | nover fulfilled your promise of showing |“Oh, how can you k p on working at Stephen's frown deopened, and even | "Srnere you go again with your Was prada’ Anane ranches, I could see clear through 1 : | SUN De AOPTIOAR! BRL doves, | |me over the menagerie.” such @ horrible tra Anice, looked | a0 at taken tack talk of danger! chuckled. Metford, bad come, and tie young lover esi ve oan Wiad] middle of uke Bo utt ‘Ay Tuald, [ ca ing We can't understand, Nothing @ fais 8 nem sai agreed ale : : ho oly thing know how to do, Q r of the tents of these brutes than’— words of love un oe iby had been | explain it—yet."' eiuatural, but something inexpilcad! ope * won! re you ove bs) wen! cag wee pot wer For, as he spoke, Pau thru arm rg tye reached for be-

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