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worid’s Daily Magazine, monday, August 27, 1996. | aw No. 61 to @ Park Row, New Tort Pedtiened by the Press Pooiiehing Company Gatered at the Poxt-Omice at New York as Second-Claae Mati Matter ELWOLUME 47.00.00. see THIRTY L ld E st RANGERS. { Thirty little stringers are in New York, having ar steam- @Bip on Saturday, secking refuge from a terror. 7 ‘ hans. | Curiously, they } { from the land of a “Little Fathe T bear the marks of ( is and°hammers. Th . men f mothers and aged not ed and t Gnd grandfathers shot bef Os : . These littl fwould reach at f 1 p from persecul 1 pe “= | Iberty ind a ar @nd are threatened a their way with red tape. Despite 4 i wision for the care of the children b a socleties—the Ellis Island Board of Sy I! ' boys and girls may become. public f It is said of the thirty refugee: \: telligent as any who have come to thi : t Mot well which loses such possibilities inf future cit b | Children -have been driven from Russia is another link in ' i . Hi } vents because of which Nicholas II, has been called the unlucklest of | fiving men, | If they are also to be drive: nm America on the strength of a red-| Inded board, we have fallen far from our tape decision by a narrow-r old, generous, open-door estate. A plea for the children has already gone to Washington. There} rruled. The tragic tales that | swell y pre- fs hope that Ellis Island may be quickly ove the small refugees have to tell should aid tt the arguments of human right and human pain wail ine new Russia Wi r Russian ld boy among the little man who left a long, fearful “chazarim,” which means “beast ely term ; at large in Russia; not the legendary tear of the national symbolism, " but an ugly usurper whose day ys are numbered Says a bright girl of thirteen, whose head bears the terrible scar cause, even as th ] left by a hammer's blow: | ds 1 fell down in death. When 1 came back to life 1 was In the home of fri In the land from which the children have fled, liberty and justice fell down long ago in death, but they, too, shall presently come back to| life in the house of friends. First a great mai ae men and women} ps will die and more children will flee, but not in Like the little girl with the scar the thirty domes In New York; ‘ should find themselves in the house of friends. They may be expected to i = grow up into the kind of Americans least likely to abuse the freedom of the land. LONELY AND NO ONE TO LOVE. New York is a lonely place for many of its inhabitants. Every year) tetts of thousands of young men come here from everywhere. Their | ambitions, hopes and desires lead them to this great market place. Their fathers and mothers, their sisters and the other men’s sisters whom they khew in their childhood and boyhood stay home in the country villages, widows’ syndicate that ted so many men had its work evalence of toneli The appeal to avarice was a k for financial profit, but natural desire of ¢ companionship in the syndi- uccess, The widows’ state ) « thei " coal ee property and the visible dns of more tHective I in improving tt i ym than as a {ity J —_W5-Jonely an. noone i I thea t | he thoughtimaybe there was some n Ne The hall bedrooms of hundreds of boarding-t (young men who do not know any young women of the kind they knew at home. In ever) t are bright, struggling young me: whom fer soc Some of tt middk age having any their men and the all-r are lonely, k Git to love is a real substantial | from their lives. khows everybody « A new young man ‘ha ¢ week be looks like and w open to tion. Th The Evening Why Jerome Will Run, Campbell on the fart... and in the smaller cities where these young men were born, | 7 Not 10 per cent. of the men in New York City to-day had two grand- THE MEN in THE NEWS- es - Straight Talks to Them ms Nao! a ye Smith. fathers resident on Manhattan Island. The great cosmopolitan popula-/ The Young Man with the Missourl Mind Who tion here has its family traditions Jngists that Even His Father Will Have to “Show Him.” BAR THEODORE the atzh of the antelope that ao" father as on your the mrizely you “4 ou KhOW neltoer the gristly nor the Ning ahd hunting st t the governors word the Den You simply can't wet wway from the old saw agin ie to be mathered ogether Cor your sake Hon at the end of y you that hi grandfathse pérlahed at the bagheoras and te tracks to tel hkelan wil! tale toy at the bigger father’s ' LETTERS FROM 4» THE PEOPLE. cnc THE DIARY OF A BAD BOY.’ «By “Pop. WZ Daan Lames: Zoe CHEM Of TEACHER errs ” DAT wore MELL Say * POOR wit iit 18 DICK AAT” That Extra Ntoket. | | jto send a coupe of The Evening World T read of the plan to charge twenty tnmtond of Atteen | | lote ot places Unieas he fives @, ten-cont 8) mor then now? egoversation and @ possibly ogntamt! |e&ted razor, and an often careless or competent operator weam to me quite Garlio-fringed | Jone of the indies in tte party, and jabout ft tll today, wh the lady re Joining tn the | jin the carriage. When sho heard it was Jwetual price of ah: SERVUS TONSORIS. A Vont of Fortitude. To the Eaitor of The Evening World | ne rar Hab BREN S1U0- LATELY. Guees . . vival of the fittest lve In Brooklyn. (N vive the Jamming of maddened Into Bridge apd “ trembling and ext old Manhateantsa, I find that fragile, | women have undergone SOME ICE CABAM FOR io SUPPER reward, &c. He ls a new man and I little Brooklyn the same crush is the Brutal Roug Here's a Record Name Cb WHAT WRITES Key Natucal History Query. OF KOAD! wen 119 BONE & ame AN! PR ee 18 Mth MAG INY OWN 4 Oy ihe Girt off ste face Wt liek the dirt off its piw Welly Newak Ned, ‘and weiter, but pery« hewnnwweht. elded Ww move to wha ity because A ££ The FIFTY GREATEST EVENTS in HISTORY by Albert Payson Jerhune Ne, 19.—JOAN OF ARC and the Fresing of France. H oa er % flattering sper ¢ Det aer My " aed Wan ushered. Hor t t blu ‘ f d Seraciata at on Dorrie’ \ Quen : AAAs anid 1 ° { France Rng 1 } Devastated ud Ly a ths ) by the Engiienh > Jued F 4 K ; re atiies's 8 3 helther « ew » ‘ 7 x r “ af astom H S ae at # r w J s st 2 ‘ 40% t “4 t i " t Y . evens = 4 He flocks a a a k er ' to ; the Holy Maids § her divine cali. Charles: : ie } Mission ‘ masa or bar Ww tS Beeter ; { Accomplished. ‘ ‘ pt. 5. Lim, taches : TWO-MINUTE TALKS WITH NEW YORKERS, By T. O. McGill, fi AEE spl Pair wf and VM bet f ‘nook ine | “Once in a while wo x Kr with e it om : had er,” aid as n men who are running the nnn ay fe buninewa in nse yrennen iy a * ninewn ng man ® An ne * of ’ 4 > the ‘ ’ ow ae ng Instances of honesty eabmen, and with the excaotion af whe leghthawk’ fellow and hig sort, they Mable ke could be expected from men who have had no more eAvat 8 tages than they have herv. he other day we got a call from an excliteive Madinon avenue renidence for shopping and to} gers finally at the] n the driver A puree with a deliver the paw Dentral depot. W back ha turned in of personal memoranda tn it $26 tn money. It had bewn left in thy carringe by Gran strangely enough there Wasa no inquiry turned to town and callfd ua up on the phone to ask !f she had lett auch a purse ¢ said: ‘Please send tt up! And ked us for returning it “While the man who found it never sald anything on the subject I know yw he feels about virtue belng its own The abolkivn Obesity Cure. By H. Burke, UF men—a lawyer, @ doctor, a, The rand past a Pav noted “Two Jobns* of comedy fame. ioe minut It wis nearing 6 o'clork and th 2 pra bridge rush Was on, The iman pas * em “el " 4 stew ? ery A ty Jout they aren't fat aid the man- | Not > 1 t age Look ot ‘em Every one's as Am «um "| . joan aw Pat MoCarren ; my tormignt 1 five pounds ‘And M Was truematmost. ‘Toor | every time 1 go by bridge.” were feathers, bantama, Hght-welghte Tho four ManHitian fat men dem = ey ee 4 ee ee ee, et eee