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ve orid Diaity Magazine, bionday, October. rhe Evening _ The Day of Rest. : | By Maurice. Ketten. Published Dally Except Sunday by the Pree ‘Publishing Company, Nvs. t rk Row, New York. Jasot's akaw a i MISTER | : ae 5 Mail Matter. | ' MISTER?! z z ss z sae H Bubscription Rutes, to The | AEA beta tered te oneirieanie IT BANE : : | Bvvnitficed: slates, year. | 2 Been eaton RAINING f < Cy | No. 43 EUGENIE; Countess, Empress, Exile, 4 : - HERE ts'2 withered sad faced little old woman who always dresses T fn black, and who is a familiar figure In certain English and Con- Unental European towns, Every one views her with pity. For fn her day she swayed fashign.: politics and public opinion to suit her own whim. Even her somber gatb calls up strong memories. For had she possessed one such black dress thirty-seven years,ago the destinies of all Europe might have been changed, The pathetic little old’ lady Js Eugenie, former Empress of the French and widow of “Napoleqn the Little.” - Eugenie Marie de Montijo de Guzman y de Porto Carrero was born in a ONE WAY TO HIT “TRUSTS. FEW weeks ago copper was selling at 26-cents a pound. To-day it can be bought for a little over 14 cents, a drop in.price of almost : : 1826. She was tho daughter of the Spanish Count of Montijo and hip | half. - The copper companies have ( nae R iy [Scotch wife, In her youth she was “known as the Countess af Doha We | i 1 3 “\S f Ake many-Spanish-girla-of-her-time, the -traveled —tiueh-and was big! ni teduced ‘d sens Heels = : f - a oe = " ; ‘ : y educnted. “Her Uoauty and brillladey won universal in for her, “fallen in- market price theirmi “ at - 4 - L ; z pl Snow AB. a5 - herever-she-went-—And ‘ f the) é SoS i by Sees: z Reeve ) 5 “ r — 1 London was At tinpovéerished, exiled young adventurer, Iouls Napoleon, are producing less, and still they : . ; ale: "TE =| |. This youth was the nephew of the. great’ Napdleon, beltig the son of the 5 haye millions of pounds of copper é : ; . \. _ S-= * -| jiatter's brother Louls, and Hortense, daughter of the Be ose ph ines Si i nnot-‘sell - - - | thus combining the Bonaparte and the Beauharnals blood: nelther-of whic BL on hand which they G@ ill 3 YENS STOP) aR i : Ten 5 was pf a particularly noble or {deal nature. After tho fall of the first without lowering the price sti tHe CEAR IN : ; i 7 : rae : {Napoleon France went back to the Bourbon monarchy.’ : Young’ Louis farther: g } OUR CEILING . 2 e . _ Napoleon, as ‘nearest of’ kin to his ue Oe dats Bee “IT. BANE RAININ » plotted to. win. the throne. For this. he was imprison So far as. the public are con-). f WW MISTER oan HELP IT- Sat iB Ane Se ‘ and afterward oxiled. He wandered, about America cemed as copper consumers, the Copper Trust has had a hard knock, | ‘ KITCHEN RANE : 4 = ancruty | Se } ’and England, waiting for a favorable chance back Into France and resume his conspiracies. At last France overthrew the monarchy In 1848 and declared itself lonce more & republic: Back came Louis Napoleon and soon had bimself : Several years ago, when copper was selling at about the same price} __ that it s now, Henry-H--Rogers, James Stillman and a few other men ithe time came. - : a = AR ay af 3G BAC Tete t 7 violence; fi o were interésted in Standard Oil and had control of the funds of gr aloes enviar é = : ib Ie ee stay anne oo CUP NOC der 1oLenCeey ROLaee ee thought that they would_form_a-copper-trust:—They bought. up| " Sain hee TEER sHedadverrner anda powerful Emperor are two = RA idecidedly differont sorts of sultors. So Ei je, Countess Teba, also umber_of copper mines, paying all that these properties were-worth. | : ; ant p) I ugenie, Counte thappenad_to come-to—Paris._Napoleon_tith—had made variow attempts to — They then Tecapitatized: these 1 mines, formed: a blind poo! jally himself with royal families, but his imperial crown seemed at firet too inew—and-too insecure to tempt any other monarch to give his daughter's WY 7 2 {hand to the adventurer. Yet before long this condition changed, and Re tn icon in eecomng peclaior™ <4 4 YS = wd ae dh XK 5 | Napoleon could probably have strengthened and made permanent his | “eu = i! ff position by a royal marriage. But about this time Eugenie appeared on the ‘The cast-of copper concerns everybody. : He. fell madly in love with her By skilfully coquetting with bim the-Emperor-to—threw—pradenec-and—sinteern “the-winde: ‘The “wedding ocourred-in- January 1809; the-amaze-— and the obscure Spanish countess became Empress of motors:— Every— “electriclighting -plant-needs copper. for the-economical +] = conduct of the current. In tools, machinery and-utensils of various kinds | At once her court’ became the centre of fashion, wit and political tm + trigueShe set-the-style-in-dress-for-allr Burope—The: crinoline-anit-other )fads had their origin with her, Her dictate: minine costume became [law for the whole world. Her beauty ST regal alr made the born prin- =eopper so that it might be able to pay dividends on i over-capttalization | ~ : ycesves, queensand empresses she met look Ike dowdy old frampa. Nor ‘and facilitate the unloading of its stocks on the-Wall Street public. It} t > OON T se % ‘She shel conleatenitt all thie? The ears of politics vastly, interested her. re : -(—s J — seizette eee faijf{fouw > ie wheedled her husband into helping the Pope—arainst—the—Italan ‘succeeded in this. -It boosted the market quotations for copper: and the} i 5 fee mali 4 (patriots, persuaded him into putting Maximilian on the throne of Mexico «market quotations for its stocks until both went so high that they-could | (one of the tragedies of history, which will be related in a subsequent and both colla ie aiert -article) and In other ways meddled with tnternational affairs. She also g0 no higher, a Mapsed tog acted as regent during, Napoleon's absences from France, and was the more me about because large consumers of copper stopped using | or less unconscious tool of a court party whose aribition and love of graft A val thei hi Meche c ). = . 7 eae oa = cre SOUT RTIghed Parisien, — The Ciniax Of ter eae ane When she “so much copper, a! g! i TA favored the war between France and I The Empress 1s credited > ‘The first thing the Copper Trust did was. to put up theepwice of | “The limit of © had been exhausted. The consumers of copper are an MUS intelligent, lot of men. Thé ‘great electric companies, like the General Electric and Westing- pared for France. i War was declared with Prussia {n July, 1870>—Within a few weeks France's brave armies, {Il equipped and incompetently Jed, were at Prussia’ @ mercy. and Napoleon III. was a prisoner. The French de toreoetexty people, furious at the humilfation, overthrew the em» pire and on Sept, 4 once more declared a republic. Om wu the.previous day Eugenie (who had remained {n Paris _ as regent) was told that 1f she would. dress in black ery imtelli- (as_though in'mourning for the count misfortunes) and would ride house, are managed by very thus through the streets the fickle people would be touched by the action “gent men. “The manufacturers of 1 : and remain true to the Napoleonic dynasty. The plan fell through for @ ~ copper utensi i : most absurd reason, Out of her whole wardrobe of three mundred Adresses, petite COPPEL BLeavine zl fA tid : = a - Eugenie bad_not-one_black-costume-for-steh-a-ride-——— gre-wise it their own business. ~~ J 3 The storm of revolution burst. Eugenie might have suffered Marte Soon ns hey. realized the remedy. for the — - \Do t- Take i L f G t ae soe : H, 4 il tet the hands of the maddened Parisians had not’ an z 3 = = a fen z z 28 BSA hE LEASE American. entist, Dr Evans smuggled ber.outof France and-actoss de ; pper-rnist-and-they-applled it — sora ite ¢ ONG. OF ofan Gt —— fa, | easla eon 4IT. hd her son Louls, the ‘Prince Imperlal,”. If everybody in the United States stopped eating meat more than = HERE 1s an old story of « man’ who wrote to they until she has been properly solicited by her multor. It 1s the law of the world.| soon joined her. Napoleon died In 1873, and the ‘Prince Inhperial was slain ce a“day, the Beef Trust-would have the same experience-that the 2 RE | editor of his favorite newspaper asking for simple | the usage of ages, that no mofest, self-respecting woman shall take the initiative by. Zulus six years later, aie iste tee had: Ako; the es ceaeTe ere theUnited_ States. ‘and-certain directions how to distinguish toadatesit}-n courtship. Widowed, childless, shorn of title and power, the once beautiful Em i |—from—edible-mushroems.—He-complained that he was unable The question as to how fara woman in propriety may_encolirage a man ranks! press-of-the French lHves-in-sectuston-in England, with an occasional visit to understand the difference as explained jn rr ‘oblems in the conduct of life. ¢to—some Continental city—or. seaside resort. -At—elghty-ove she has—tong— and sald that he wanted eoma@thing plain and definite: ‘The x STett her Wall nu ane te anked ;ourlived or greatness,—her ti qf oanewer given was: “Eat them. It they kit you they] : bea AYE TA ANOOTS TK You BUrVIve,“WITout the ald Of < atohi-"}Tropose marriage to any woman unless” theychaye reason (Deneve Tat tha | ach pump, you may conclude they are mushroema.”’ proposal will he accepted. In like manner, when @ man In in love with a woman and |" eve there are men posseeaed of €0 exalted an opinion of thelr owh"valus Bett ‘Vincent’ s- ae os Genires stoaknonewbeltar-shejneclprocatesanaattachmentslnaritheyventel Mttle or no doubt of their power to win any woman whom- mont_certain_and-aitickert rey St Rating out Ss TOON soever. Still; however confident.a-man-may.-bé,..t he.is Wise he will.nat let:the True, women are “kittle-cattle,”’ and do not always know | “oma? Of is sholce.fee that he Sat wu aa 2 sess o. = e —Advice- to- “Lovers, s their own minds. nor.mean what they say still. generalty,| A woman does not like to be us us x te 2 an imen—t: etn: toda so and. tain Jove. sill i Heuer necnb ae ene meek ed as to wound her.ewn heart in in order. to show her too confident has-been-overst are humility itself when In love, and who require all the encouragement which Tyindicated when a persistent suitor comes Ina triumphant winnerin the long | a woman ta capatis-of- giving them—Atterattthis te-rexsoning—in—a cin amt: run, 4 harks back fo the starting point, ‘Them that asks gits,”’.and In love it {s the| —=t=woman, however willing to be woh, must-not manifest that willingness man, not the Woman, who has the right to ask.—From Ghieaeo: ‘Tribune, oe speeieioe allt tell her? I have loved her for Gancing 2 schasse: two years. I tried to delude mynelt go-onca ta a while. What should I dl into believing that my friend was. for txa-I do not want to lose his friend-{once, in eaknast, but 1 am mire that he re Fe doesn’t a So cen er f 3 ; ( orge Ho mph 8, MG, {is vinyine with her. ee Reddy the. Rooter. . GQ sop kD bye ree here aby sate rn | a eee [make=a-proper-sejection= of xenbots. Bini deatiny nad the xirl'n Try and win tho girl yourselt it you \A Lovers’ Quarrel, G liove her, but do tol speak detrimentally, ot the other man tn the voune lady's >: hie if everybody who | bums a kerosense lamp were to go to bed one | hour earlier it would be better for them, and the Standard Oil would | 2 u 5 : Now RED GIVE 37, AIL OL i with a young lady of twenty-one —Fhere are some anarenals which-no one can escape, for they have for about two yoare.—but-I quar- the powers of government back of them. The traction monopoly. gives 2 ~ Res : : : é : » | relled with gher over her many Hematives cept to: submit -tonitor-watk, “Bats x 7 a: 7 zal monopolies aré few, f iP : 7. “ae J | [her many postain, but the last “two iy | aes ere align) pant The trusts in-commodities Of. which the general use may be econo: = if Z . z 3 Jy = ae thera Sa et ere re hich Ia | by name and sight. . Plow He knoe a mized. or.subs fites may. be used ‘are as—yulnerable as the. (e opper Trust : if ~ : Die Q : Hepa La ea) ou girl, Do you rela ik | ac ese Hee ae ea AMWithout waiting for the slow process of law and interminable appeals to 7 | ine ry ou had. Ms Tleiteto quarref over | her you “would lijco-very much to meet pis “the: courts the peoplecan-diminish the profits of any trist by- simply g 5 Ses ; J ie tn Pena aanais costal fetens Ber inter ee [few words-of-regret_ over. the—quarrel i bet win f by psi Reco nmrroT eT oc ohare ieee SAA iene ‘Letters from. the People==ar7Aeee ID a Staal , PSO oe Lea ce oo reducing the demand for the article which it supplies and’ monopolizes. = ; = 5 [birthday if you"wish and by writing a] Solution to the World saee Year Betty: It can readily: be proven thet Mra 0 course ste is tho sweetest girl In| Kelly's speed was to Airs Munpny's as The “Progressive’ Marringe Age.|rate of a mfle a m [engineer with a pls ©. can shoot the he bullet of the world and she favors the suit!& ts to 7, and ‘that .as they met at-4 Ta the KA or af The Byenin 4 Feat et pistol the: bullet = ; : Our grandparents married, us a rule, !trink the force whien lex back ot the | ARSED 5 of one of my beat friends. a man|o‘clock they must nave passed at @ Wien the man was ind Pracuitite ! Ath whom I haye known for more than|and 1-13 minutes after thi ! ) seldom 8t the sau and_women often discuss th Years ago a c five was deemed an Po:nted Paragiapis AUERBACH cen in the Country E™ the Nekle-minged compositor has set ways. A man Isn't necassarily bald because he has no helt. eye eguid be an b The man who has no,time for an occasional laugh needs a vacation, ~ on by readers on} MOTHER | Moet of the things we wish for are about as uneful as a counterfelt dollar pill, Nothing pleases a large woman more than to have a man call her a dear jitile girl, ‘ Marriage {5 seldom fallure Jf neither party to the contract haa any fool relations to} butt tn. xi y anewering tions: Are ye Which tx betrd: Occasionally a mai balks at doing a charitable deed because some one he disiikes expects hin to;do it. ou) NIGHT WORK EL Conductor and Bullet. logne Wa Advice to Girls. THE SEASON'S CHANGE. | When a girl's broath susgexts it is a sign that a certain oo lay" HON a gir) tolks to a mun on the sireet, and ie leans up! against a wall} Sandy Plxes—Winter'a comin’, Georg», |f young man Is due to. cail an aes, jo he talks, that is the kind of a man to shake, and shake promptly. |. Gritty George-Why 90? Ms = a man hasy') the enargy to stund up without a wall to lean against, ! Sandy Pikea—l wax offered ten xtra A poesimist euya.there ty ibut one thing more a to dance, and that Jn a woman lecrning to awim. vening World; pyle Be re conaucr re “Bu yed complication h t wh energy ke him worthy of any girls cha: platform of Al Vital Statistics, Sieth avenue und Fife Will necossitate, at least elghe | cc nash t enouult enerey (oma a z tain one mile long and going at the ty-neih street. Athoreaultacctiiustratedscs ithe BNI Gtobe. ‘ KWard than a man learning Atchison | hats before breakfast this morning. ' fi y Iilustrated Bits, cc tater ee aan Ao le AA SO Nntaclian istic aes