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r Pubdlished Daily One year,. One meath.. —— Ge & POE VOLUME The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, January Ane month.eeeeeeeee 60! One month { DO our Resoturi STAND JOHN 2 ‘YOU To GETUP EARLY ( AND It ToGo To CHURCH? SauceT) seoeee NO. 16,959. interest. When Mr. Morgan cal was not put into circ but was promptly dumped in the Exchange gamblers ow that the p would it not be w it and from whose pockets It would be as profitable to the banks again. own this money And it would be immensely bett Industry has slackened. them to work. The irrigation of whom they were collecied in taxes Provide profitable emp! e Un the ch Stock Also the for PUT EVERYBODY TO WORK. \ the 6,625 vere raised by taxation. t in the pockets of the workingmen from they would stimulate indust do not even draw! had been 1 business m the banks ed St is money was taken? er for the rest of the country. Many men are out of emplo} allie x AUTUMN arid West is adding greatly to the country’s wealth. The draining of the swamps of the Eastern, Middle and South- ern States is no less necessar\ larged and more trees planted and properly cared for if the people are| Not to face an increasing lumber tamine. The dredging of the new chan sippi and Missouri river improvements should be pushed. ments of the Hudso ith water transportation developed in and France any cit boat can go into the transporta ducer and the consumer would be off, The whole length of t in German preserve. Far better t useful purposes than to army and navy more belli the people from which these two hundred milli vith 1 busine Allegheny Mountai The Admi are on deposit ich belongs to all tok able on demand current e { to provide ates Treasury for aid in} dd $25,000,000 and manufacture, Exchange to save the Stock | nels of trade street brokers are gamb o the people who need did their business depositors | 3000 BYE OEARIE ANO DON'T HURRY BACK ¢ SS UMM st preserves must be en- 1 the lower harbor and the Missis- The improve. , St Ohio, Tennessee, Cum berland and other navigable rivers and the Great Lakes should be fi : When it Comes to Economizing the Women Understand How to Do It; thered promptly. They Just Cut Off the Money Husbands Spend for Beer and Cigars. fii .°oie iu: By Roy L. McCardell, idays are over.’ the United States as it i a barge and tug- and both would be better s should be a fores “I'm going to keep one and put dow Ss Treasury for what you spend night lot of other—well, med Mrs. Jarr, sirative offices, to make e, and to leave still empty the pockets o: I come home and give you al Letters from the People. The “Four Boys! Problem. To the Editor of T have solved “4 Teesive 1-8 1-4, (1-3) equel ona bos 1-8. Let X16 (1-4) eta 1-4. Let X that gets 1-6 Lo’ boy's that gets Where Are Low renders Phestod to f the pinc in the cost Wants to Wi way to new y cember t lows $10.72; #ecounts ble, § ding $60 amo: Identitientton npression could be made and publ: 1 coulal The Latter In Correct. Wages Here and in y S$ « I rstand Vv r 1 hig t ft ont to lived re, W Vhe + aking have a little you raise an awful | with more than two dollars spending money for me. | to be trusted with large sums like t " asked Mrs, Jerr. “Do I go bowling, do I go out wwast- | no 6, The Day of Rest. | By Maurice Ketten. | VLLmaAKe THe GETREADY A FoR cHuaeH No. 83.—CIVIL WAR.—Part 1.—The First Campaign. N EVER since the news of Concord and Lexington heii the wnole coun try been so stirred by any tidings as by those of Fort Sumter's fafly The North was dumfounded, and woke from its dream of compromine to a realization of the terribly pressing need. President Lincoln issued « call for 75,000 volunteers. The wretched, out-of-date Navy was patched up and replenished. Every sort of vessel was put to naval use, Even ferry- boats were converted into men-o'-war. (One Fulton Street ferry-boat later Won a sea fight near Havana.) The suddenly-aroused nation responded without delay to its Presidents call. By June of 1861 the Northern Army © 250,000 strong; the Northern Navy increased to 69 adequate warships 4 1,346 big guns. Patriotism flared up, in somewhat belated but no less ardent for ‘t,@ North buzzed with warlike, hurried preparations. The South was equally active. In reply to Lincoln's call for volunteers four more States seceded and joined the Confederacy, These were Vir- ginia, Arkansas, Tennessee and North Ca 1, A dof Virginians cape tured the Norfolk Navy Yard, containing twelve ships of war, 2.000 cannon and boundlese ammunition. The ied to capture the arsenal, too, but {ts Union commander set fire to the flants stimated by Le z that by March OLETME HELP You! ' DON'T WANT ived. It is sionists had seized $30,000,000. w national p yards and other pe tou, #e and ofticered than those of the North they made a sudden dash for Washing whe lured, the nation’s om : al t read nto their hands, h Sides | { k ind and eparation ATRenet ry of the Davis s commerce, and a state of block: ‘om Montgom ady massing. A ceas: ashington in anticipation of tive move. The Un began | Such Northerner: lwere doomed to bitter ¢ next two months’ happen tacked a Confederate f and w ed. 7 ed the . with ¢ beaten {n bat at Vienna, n B. MeCleilan, with A (whieh had ser yp (June cing back a second ex} » the following month the ¢ tack forces invaded \ DIDN'T RESOLVE To) STAY UP ( _ mortifica Washingt on under Gen. well with ho w in chief «+ a Ad nce McDowe Washington, moved Mel men to begin stationed in into inia toward Beauregard, lay en- a skirmish at Blackburn On July 29 Gen. John- regim ook command of the battle began. The scene of the stream known as Bull Run, This over which ran the road from Alexan- Manassas trenched | Ford, with a | Jetone came up with 1 \Southern Ar N fencounter was just eam was crossed | of about of the carnage was on t turne war—a fight in which e men 1 States had ever put into the 21, 1861, the Tnion troops opened the ty Sunday 1 1 & any especial ad- and for two what iittle in * said Mrs, Jarr er side g: j toa eRES vantage the Confederates were driven ne ms backward ery point. Their line was ham- eter times?” , Piece that used halt cent yeu ask me to keep ac- | Sattle of mered inward, and the road toward Manassas was js to have better times?” | PO tt Q es : ered Frentingneonthenne i as Jo #0 hope we will, now that COUNT $ Bull Run jammed retreating Southerner looked Hke a said Me. Jarr pene reietn e Union ops. But at about Hampton and Kirby Smith came up with strong Confed The Northern advance was all my days’ ered Mrs.|checked, Then. as more reinforcements arrived, the Southerners forced sla piles their recent victors back, The tide of the battle had turned, Ex Rennes mnonn as: ‘At first the raw Union solitie ed in good order, But soon an unreasoning panie sw their ill- ed ranks. Retreat changed to rout. sO EERO In scared, disorganized groups iy CCRT Ch wey LA) CaanyLReS) «s--things lof order 1 fled pell-mell. Into W treamed the beaten rabble, Gehan tearing the Confederates were at their heels. It teas beer and ten centsland tt spread horror throughout the North, ‘The Union | were about |£.896; the Confederate about 1,082. 7 ation was aghast. Lincoln, Scott aie of "said Mr darn, “I'l put down) and McDowell were everywhere 1 ‘Scott retired, and McClellan took his place. ‘The South rejoiced, and the Confederate cause received an iste any incredible Impetus from the vieto | Little moro fighting of importance oer busy establishing their Nnes and prepa tiny feelings! cried Mrs, Jarr be a life-and-death struggle of long duration, bm lecisive 3PM we woul might do without thin creat Ing else but ex- ey made Jarr. was growle Mrs. Jarr nd a cent that i: both sides being now saw would money “But I'm only | “You are only t will hurt can, T never sp did have an account |vqme men that account of what they spent;| —-—— — F night when you go out with thar | It’s like the tell ne Low bo radse iny babies!) Hl : Th . U I won't say what I think of “Oh, & edn't wet mad about it," sefd Mr, Jarr: Some Tails and elr US6S. “But I will get mad about ' snapped Mrs. Jarr. “Don't you ever talk! t I spend the few times I go out don’t amount to much!" said Mr. Jarr| household accounts to me again! If you don't trust me, if you think I'm etealing By C. William Beebe. and then if T ask you to let| money"-— but Mr. Jarr had fled | ae : i I've never seen you come across ye:| 9 When he came home that night Mrs. Jarr was all smiles. “Look at the beau CAT never actually wags its tal, Why should when | n purr? You em to think I'm not tiful ‘House Account’ book I bought to-day." she said, ‘and the patent, unspill- But, nevertheless, it seems to serve the same purpose In permitting dollars and twenty cents!’ able inkstand and tri all in Russia leather. They were reduced after the a temporary expenditure of excess nervous energy when animal ts under greav strain. For instance, wnen carefully stalking a bird or a man, as in the case of a kitten or a iton, the tip of the tall is never Ca¥ Lh Se, sult for a moment—ever curiing and uncuriing. We may compare this to the 8, from seven ninety-elght to four ninety-elght.”” “Have you put that down in the book?" asked Mr. Jarr. “Certainy not; they are not necessities! Miss Lonely BERTILION, a . William Beebe, in the ‘us tapping of the foot or fingers in & man, says C ee ceteis paxine ‘When an angry lion fs roaring his loudes,, his tall will free Makes Another Try for Mr. Man. By F.G. Long. semua conn tte oan cc ee ot nt of (T WONDER. IF KINONES WOULONT CATCH A MAN STie wsr cat UP MAN AND TRY ad] IT ON H/ Universnity ao iar walks along a slender bough, or a house cat perambulates HAVE AY 7 ‘ HAVE A LOVELY near ienears fence, we perceive another important function of the tail— cece 771? ) OMET CIGAR~ SMOKING \ || nat of an ald in balancing. As a tight-rope performer sways his pole, so the USES ONG AN Yet feline ehifts its tall to preserve the centre of activity. ~ The tall of a sheep seems to be of Iii"le use to tts owner, although in the breed which is found tn Asta Minor and on the tablelands of Tartary, this organ |runctiona as a store-house of fat, and sometimes Teaches a welght of fifty pounds, When viewed from behind, the animal seems all tail, and when this | appendage reaches Its full size Iv 1s either fastened between two sticks which drag on the ground, or it 18 suspended on two small wheels, ———_++ Millions for Picture Post Cards. - By John R. Meader. HEAP as the price of a single post card may be, the aggre gate of money that 1s expended in purchasing them during the year te something enormous. As an example, one 1 tako the New York City post office, where an a one hundred thousand cards are bandied every day, writes John R. Meader In The Rohemlan for Njanuary, Basing one’s calculation upon the cheapest cards—the two-for-tive and | Janusey. ive varietles—this would represent an original expenditure of fully | $220,000, while tho British pomtal authorities havo estimated that the value of the sete maiied and delivered by them during i806 was In excess of flye million | dollars. SUSPICION (@> | (Burt cockrans! \ (NO WEDOING |) PROMISE Yo TREAT)|| RorTEN ccans? ) BELLS FoR. SAME OLD, CHIM! e+e Delightful Japanese Hotels. | By May B. Rasmussen. ARRING + 1th, and pe 1s, Japanese jotols are delightful, ‘All during your stay in thelr spotless precincts you are made to teal that you ara an honored guest, Japanese etiquette is lavished upom ‘ou and when you depart you are aiways given a token to remember B vour visit, a whito, coarse cotton towel with blue pictures Inted on ft, says May B,: Rasmussen in the Travel Magazine, You must thank the little maid for thia vith an elaborate bow when you go, and the chorus of ps the be “Sayo Navas’ from ali the hotel force gathered tn the doorway will seam to have in it, not only the regret of good-by, aa we interpret the words, but the Vaeeper ling which they really mean, “If it must be shat we must part,” fe conn pc te DON ne teen IR PE ARSENE AAR ar