Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| & The Evening World’s Daily Magazine, Saturday, June 9, 19067 — BIRDS! | Says the HIGH-BR_OW. By Martin Green. aa ie said the Taw-Brow, “for this now and beneficent legistatfort that ¢ Is an Immigrant to haye 40 bucks in his kick and a0 least eipt for an education under his hat before hela allowed to land. We are getting too many foreigners” “IT don't see any Indian signs on you,” remarked the High-Browy “Where is your badge entitling you to holler ‘America for the Americans? “Does the name of the farthest ancestor you can trace to sound kd the name of a Tammany district organization society or like the name of the leader of the same? “It {t wasn't for the nerve and self-reliant spirit of some down-troddem forebear of yours the chances are that you'd be carrying a gun in a foreiga army for $3 a month and cheering rapturously at every mention of the name of the king, queen, jack or whatever the ruler might be. “This ploneer of your family who made your existence possible cama over here in an old tub of a sailing yessel and was probably two months on the trip, “When he landed here the chances are that he didn’t have the price of two consectitive eats, and when he changed his clothes he had to go to bed, “The United States Government didn’t ask him then {f he gould read or write. He could swing a pick and shovel or an axe, and he was neededy “But even in those rem days there were sensitive Amerteans wha were afraid that the influx of ignorant foreigners would put the country on The PedNehed hy the Press Poudlishing Company, No. Entered wt the Post-Omce at New York as Se VOLUME4 | By J. Campbell Cory. NEST-FOULING. Yesterday we had some words to say t Congressman Wads- worth’s insolence and infidelity e amend- ment. To-day, unfortunat words about hfs silli He said yesterday in defense of fe: “I do not believe in} fouling our own Americar a as members of the Agri cultural Committee of the House of Représentatives to promote Ameri- can agriculture, not to injure it or cast < ns on it.” | This patriotic Congressman probably never did foul his own Ameri- can nest till he began his ° i Beveridge amendment from chicken to bob veal. ¢ packing portion of that nest has been found a very vulture’s nest | of corruption and dec unfortunate vultures are | haying a hard to the suddenly fastidious gulls. Most people wou friendliest service the Government | the fritz. could do its poor vultures w clean their nest thoroughly, watch | “The idea of barring a man out of the United States because he can’6 them very closely to see t hey didn’t start fouling it again, and give read or write is putting a hurdle in the path of progress. “Wo have a surplus of clerks, bookkeepers, salesmen, professional men and small storekeepers ‘© nway shy of laborers and embryo skilled mechanics, Let the nt bring in the muscle. xperience has shown t rant and the immigraat’s wife will take care of the brain develop: of thelr offspring. The average immigr: can make a ng the English language in addle tion to own before b $ re long enough to get accustomed to the use of ice, “The loudest howlers against immigration speak but one language, an® thelr use of that {s open to suspicion. “There has to be an end to ever ng some time,” declared the Lowe Brow. 1 ire,” agreed the High-Brow. ‘And as soon as the United States hea no more room for immigrants the immigrants will stop coming here,” ee The Embalmed Muse. By Charles R. Barnes. them a trustworthy certific: quickly to recover the market for their newly immaculate eggs, | But app: ntative Wadsworth is too silly and too sordid | to see that. “But for the ation of this report,” says he, “the foreign demand wo' it had in the past. There was absolutely no complaint. nd he evidently believes that without cutting the roitenness out of the idal he can pump enough deodorizer into it to conceal its ste thus in “promote American | agriculture.” ; | It is because Mr. Wadsworth believes in curing a cancer with a court-! plaster that we m illy. It is because he believes in the “promotion” that U ion into “prosperi that we must call him sordid. If he is a sincere man he is much to be pitied. EAST SIDE “L” TRACKS. The Interborough has won over the State Railway Commission to its plan for third tracks on the Second and Third avenue elevated lines “from the Harlem River as far south as practicable.” These recommendations should have no more weight with the Rapid Transit Gommission than a petition from the Interborough itself. The question is one for local sentiment to settle. A vital objection is that the day the tracks are laid dooms east side subway projects to indefinite post- ponement. When the Interborough wanted a mile of extra track on Third ave- nue it adopted the simple expedient of stealing it. { It now comes a petitioner, but the i of a cash offer, in default of which the | Proposition. * i | — | “MOTHER EDDY.” The $2,000,000 cathedral c! ich the Chri to dedicate in Boston to-morrow is by all odds the most important monu- | ment ever reared to a woman in America if not in the world, | nained for the ap the richest re-| ward, Others have ¢ rfully to woman's advance along | material lines. But what one of them has so stamped her impress on the| age as Mrs. Eddy, who gave her sex a new religion? It has taken only a quarter of a century for tian S come an established re hurches in this tres in London, Paris a early church, “Heal is significant of the v modern religious thoug’ CAAA AAA EATEN TEETER OANA AAA ESTEE SETA SSTRONGAAAAL CUDVUSUSOSERVS DHE RETTASEETSREUEDETES TES SE LUESTTSATASE STATE TSINT CUTILTTEN ELSES GAUTT EN SSELTEUEUEESGTETEETTESEDEDSOSASETREDIAASARTAAS 15 004: Tha ath No. 3.—Revised Anarchy, was a raging Ano Scientists kings to rout . x in the etreet, Old Man! Come tarry hi And let us rush this can one who appealed to the spiritual side of her sex to r Cr buted. won cience to be- | yuntry L'CANVOIr The rest ts not #0 nice to tel, But i¢ I must, I must: a substantial foun n. It} s ideas that they have permeated | to an extent unrealized and unacknowled ee oe (Copyright, 1903, 1901, by Harper & I nd teen toniwalts yt tal perform the same fantastic evolutions, The slght|long dreaded—so slow in coming—fell with nos y, before the after- } Yjand the thought stirred him curlously with an| cumulated force. CHAPTER XXIII. | uld come i | unlooked-for sense of youth. He drew himsclf SS! ; ies th 95 s face thoughtful, his hands ful |together with an added touch of decision as he CHAPTER XXIV. : ND it cor ne #) and, dropping into one of the comfort- nd Out Into tho corridor; and as he w HE letter through which the blow fell-was IN? ape 3 lous chalrs, would ask laconically for MOWDAtAI ral Tiel ebiatiad fal (balers trolctranline not voluminous, It was written on cheagh ; pred on the vite moment of triumph and recom- spiring tune. Paper {n a disguised hand, and the con< 3 r pent ¢ @ very unconselousness of his com- tents covered on! Lod i Ae RG chains etaria cone er Tn the morning-room Ewa was already watt-| etowty DY pelt) pees) Lodet read fe i d its value, He would sit for half an | + mentally articulating every word then p i eT Ea Ing. Ghe looked up, colored, and smiled as he) no tata tt down, and as he did eo by i eon Gwin taosataertsa entered, Hor face looked very fresh and YOUNE| oves ratsed in concern, Agal ne © caught Eveld : DIM SPIE UN ETNA OEIY toa foitvinteilina’f Somekines kelteae and she wore a gown af the same pale blue that| of hie own feelings reflected ta hee tees wen et t read and planned with tireless ¢ ea ati I HIN IO z she had worn on his first coming. ‘ : ed in her face, and thé t ale half-hour, sometimes he com- Shock braced him; he picked up the letter, teams ft quently forgot to eat, an If 28 he ec 4 his notes; but | She looked up from an open letter as he came| ing {t {nto strips, eheer exha nj in ut he talked, speaking into the room, and the sun that fell through the! “I must go out,” he sald, slowly, "T must ¢¢ : he lived for the c and thec , with the enjoy- enon caught her fn a shaft of light, intensify-|now—at once." His voice was hard. : bring him failure or an who f fully tn his {ng her blue eyes, her blue gown and the bunch| ye's surprised, concerned eyes etill searched Ho seldom jet. Gre Eve tea or’ stitched of violets fastened in her belt. To Loder, still] his. Now—at once?” she repeated, “Now 2 rc t ae under the influence of early memories, she seemed | without breakfast?” that followed, excep tae embodiment of some youthful ideal—some-| “I'm not hungry. He rose from his seat, and, Pp All his int ¥ thing lost, sought for, and found again. Reallza-|carrying the slips of paper across the room ig work and tfon of his feeling for her almost came to him| dropped them into the fire. He did ft, not « as he stood there looking at her, It hovered|much from caution as from an imperative wish about him; it tipped him, as it were, with its|to do something, to move, if only across tha wings; then {t rose again and soared away. Men | room, jlike him—men keen to grasp an Opening where| Eve's glance followed him. “Is {t bad news? thelr careers are concerned, and tenacfous to|she asked anxiously. It was unlike her to be ins hold {t when once grasped—are frequently tho sistent, but she was moved to the impulse by the Pr a y he moment. to look into thelr own hearts. He glanced arity of t | a y. “It’s—business, at Eve, he acknowledged tho stir of his feeling, pie geeloashory te ‘This was written yesterday; I should have got {t last | but he made no attempt to define {ts cause. Hel night,” ;could no more have given reason for his sensa-| Her eyes widened. “But nobody does business tions than he could haye told the precise date| %t elght in the morning’—she began, In aston- | : ; {shment, then she suddenly broke off. |upon which, coming downstairs at eight o'clock, Cie conaaueay jhe had first found her waiting breakfast for him, |The time when all such incidents were to stand ——— Jout, each to a nicety in {ts appointed place, had [ HE BE | RAYAL not yet arrived. For the moment his youth had wae like a solid w and keen as steel. The mo aration sheer mastery of will he p out of sight. Man—not because he ch Ot Eve he s pressure, Wher capacitic eyes stands p area 1 to him; he possessed the knowledge of ee aa the dept ing ct: hae returned to ae 8 Dp : Lie Ry bon eee LOVE MYSTERY INTRIGUA nearer to a 2 activity 1 incre {s great effort and dre It was aj work done, tho sense of present companionship By E, Phillip» Opy Sane Giie rae annaion ieee vous str lendid morning: the spirit of the spring seemed|in a world of agreeable things; above all, the ee ptay who stood r, in the pale blue sky, In the/steady, quiet conviction of his own capacity, All Ned In the who, by a si ‘ar | f cool sunshine that danced from the| these things camo to him in the moment of his the sand r feet, tt thread of m > the dreasl . from the dressing|entering the room, greeting Eye, and passing to on her face; and | nacaeriandnrete |table to the pictures on the walls of Chilcote’s}the breakfast table; then, while his eyes still eatisted. th her unattested evl-| And so the ing of his probation! vest room, Inconsequently with its dancing rose| rested contentedly on the pleasant array of china “ly | dence and ephemeral interest, gave him no| dawned, and for the first time he breathed fr ely. a memory of long-forgotten days when, as a]and eilver, while his senses wero still alive to the ‘There were hours when Lod ‘ 1 Bc occasions | real uneasiness; but Chilcote and (Chilcote’s-pos-| He-rose-early.on the day that was to witness | child, he had been bidden to watch the same sun| fresh, earthly scent of Dve's violets, the blow so conscious of her existence; se