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| | I ST sy Wednesday, ‘January 15, 1908. - Pudlishea Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 68 to Park Row, New York JOBEPH PULITZER, Prea., 7 Rast 134 Brees, J. ANGUS SHAY, #eeTre , 01 eet 119th Street, Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter, Canada. For England and the Con- tinent and All Countries in the Internadonal Gubscription Rates to the Evening Worid for the United States. The Evening World Daily Magazine Oh, Look Who’s Here! By Maurice Ketten. PuT us OFF AT $8.75 i Dnatysar cag || EREA saltone Suen WASHINGTON No. 37.-CIV1I, WAR.—(Part V.) Battle of Gettysburg. One meat «80 ] One month......eeeeee6 .601 One month EE, outwitting the Union leaders, had successfully invaded the Unfted - VOLUME 48.......c.ccessesccecesccesveeesesssssee NOs 16,048. SUCCESS. | PLUMP, amiable Italian woman will this evening earn $2,000 by skilfully using the muscles of her throat, lungs and diaphragm. She will add to the bank account of Os- car Hammerstein as well as to her own, because the seats for her ap- pearances at the Manhattan Opera House have been sold long ahead. As Miss Greeley-Smith put it in her vivid interview with Mme. Luisa Tetrazzini, “her throat will utter the golden notes in exchange for other golden notes bid by Oscar Ham- merstein.” States in the early summer of 1863 and marched northward through Pennsylvania with about 76,000 men. Such smaller detachments of Union forces as were sent against him were easily routed. In sevesal a} visions moved the Confederate army of invasion, the various sections ef £% coming together near Gettysburg, Pa. There they were met by such bedies of Northern troops as could be brought to the spot, and thither by forced marches was rushed the army of the Potomac, the finest body of fighting men in all the North. Gen. Hooker had just been replaced by Gon. Meade 98 its commander. Should the army of the Potomac uirive ot Gettywbumg) teo late, or fall to stop Lee’s onrush, the whole North might lie at the im vader’s mercy. New York itself might fall. It wae the crucial moment.eg the war. Everything hung upon that one event. Gen. Meade reached Gettysburg early on the morning of July 2 As the Confederates advanced to the second day’s attack, early that morning, a gasp ran along their line as, instead of the raw militia they had expected to Grud& easily from their path, the bronzed faces of the army of the Potomac rose be , fore them. A clash between the outposts at about 9 A.M. on July 1 opened the battle, A little later the full forces of North and South came together, Al y, all the next day, and the day following the battle waged fiercely, with varying fortunes. Meade's left centre was on a hillock called Cemetery, Ridge. About a mile to the west the main body of Lees army was massed on Seminary Hill. Almost a mile of open ground lay between, swept by @ f » Of the many thousands who will go to see or hear Mme, Tetrazzini, fearful crossfire. Across this space Lee planned } « bow many are there to whom the thought will not occur—how much Gp On uaa to send Ter Ceeateee niGeons ers iA i ts and Pettigrew to storm Cemetery Ridge an money she receives for a little pleasurable work? ISUISEY, Ex) cat) dislodge the Union regiments from thee aongeaa’ This is the common thought which any success highly rewarded 33 Rees uesennees > position. ; . rs 0 Lee tried to prepare the way for the charge by | financially brings to the multitude. bombarding the fortifications on the ridge with a 185-gun battery. An 85-gun Union battery replied. For two hours a deadly | ' When a man reads that a successful lawyer has received a fee of $75,000 for drawing a lease, or a successful physician received $10,000 for an operation, or a successful architect $100,000 for his plans and draw- ings, or a successful reconciler a million dollars for putting through a business deal, the common mind is inclined to fill with envy and to.at- tribute such a flow of golden fortune to luck or chance rather than to persistent effort. in When Mme. Tetrazzini began to sing in Italy her salary was $20 a month, less than a show gir! gets every week. She sang some time be- fore she was raised to $40 a month. She worked hard. She studied her voice, her health and her work. She went to other countries and sang and studied and worked there. Year in and year out she worked, studied, sang and hoped that some day she would be one of the world’s great artists and singers, It took a long time. There is where fail the majority of the people in whose latent Perhaps You’ve Been in This Sort of Mix-up With a Janitor Yourself, ability once dwelt the possibility of success. They want success to come at once. If it does not come, they try something else. | = y Y) A SSE —S— ayeveayauereuer enn) ex So You'll Readily Understand Just How Poor Mr. Jarr Felt About It. | When ne reached the Potomac he found he had not artillery duel raged, a duel whose magnitude was almost unparalleled in warfare. At last the Union batteries slackened fire to cool their reeking hot cannons. This was the moment for which Leo had waited. Pickett and Pettigrew, with their 14,000, were hurled at Cemetery Ridge. They had 1,400 yards of open ground to cross before they could reach the Federal out- works. Perhaps never had men marched in the face of a more murderous tire. The word was given and the charge began. Scarcely had they started when the Northern batteries opened on them, while from the nearby fortified hill of Round Top a furtous crossfire poured in upon the advancing Confederates. Unfaltering, Pickett’s n plunged 6n, falling by hundreds as the artillery tore huge rents in their line. Finally they came within closer range of their foes, and a withering whirlwind of Federal musketry swept their ranks. On st ed the Confederates, hope- lessly facing that battle wind, the intervening space between Ridge and Hill strewn thick with their dead. The Southern general, Armistead, was in the forefront of the charge. With 100 men, he broke through the Northern out- posts and seized, a cannon. Before he could move it from the spot he and all his tollowers were killed. Under the close quarters fighting the shattered ren nts of the 14,000 charging Southerners halted, wavered and tumbled back in hroken confusion, seeking madly to evade that awful storm of lead and return alive to their own lin Pickett alone of all the general officers engaged in the attack was not slain. The bloodiest, most daring charge of all the Civil W: with it had failed Lee's Invasion of the North >) burg was the turning point of the Civil War, s: turning point of the batile. Its failure spelled de} r had failed. And tle of Gettys- tt's charge the : the Confederacy. s in mad haste over the ground it had so hopefully traversed on its northward march, But on the field of Gettysburg were left about 30,000 Southern dead and wounded, Nearly 14,000 prisoners, with 000 small arms, three non and forty-one regimental standards, were captured by the victorious Union forces, whose own loss in killed and wounded had reached a t Almost 80,000 men had fought on each side in this most memo Lee, with what was left of his army, ugh pontoons to get This was Meade’s golden opportunity He had Lee at his mercy. By following up the fugitives and catching them while their further retreat was balked he might have made an easy conquest and have forced and Lee's Escape the South’s greatest general and strongest army to parr fy surrender. But blunders were in those days a part es and parcel of many Union generals’ movements, Meade delayed, letting the splendid chance slip through his idle fingers, ‘When, after a series of senseless watts, he reached the Potomac he was ten his troops across. OOOO Meade's Blunder * said Mra. Jarr. “We must cumstances would I permit "No; yo! | pay no attent you to get in a 't care Jarr, right down there and keep coo that sort of people. Under no c ulgar brawl with the Janitor ether he was a janitor or a general, a beggar or a baron,” It my wife and live!" sit <= a duys too late. Lee had by that time succeeded in getting nis entire army safely across, Yet even this mistake of Meade’s coul? not mar the completeness of the victory itself. The Confederacy had been steadily in the ascendant. The | f st day of Gettysburg had marked its climax of good fortune. From then If success does not come then they try still something else. In the end they have only many failures because they never went so far in any line as to reach success’s border land. By Roy L. McCardell, | CAN'T believe 14" sald Mr. “Why, he always Ja appeared to be a very ci o man ¢ “Of course you can't belie said Mrs. Jarr you mustn't be so foolish,” said Mrs. Jarr. “I never saw such a man = j ‘ly : you 3 egan to wane, stuking slowly but steadily to its final na great heat. “You can't belle ing I say. But I o a rage over every little thing. The poor janitor! You know. too, ounthe Bouthernicales|ueee e tell you that he was very tmpuder yf course, I migh' ypled up with rheumatism’ t that you wouldn't defend me. I could be struck sked Mr. Jarr, feting down a little. | in the face by the and I © you'd than 2 * said Mrs. J ‘Perhaps ‘he didn't | Th T i H f y Ch f him, If my brother were re he t me istn't take every Mttle thing so seriously. It was when| (G] Ta ning (0) a e . treated so!" and I think the dunvbwaiter fell down on the Janitor | A “Well, what ar 0 yo! asked Mr, . | By John Trainer. ER. ue Ue HE head chefs in all the large hotels and restaurants are Frenchmen, “You mind what he said to me!” replied the dumbw at our floor while he was fixing It, and foreigners can only expect subordinate places, whatever their experience good lady. “What do you care w he spoke to me? You with something, and the janitor asked may be. A man seeking this training must promise to stay two years, you would have encouraged him if you had nd I sald we pald our rent and I wouldn't take any orders fat least or the head chef will refuse to consider him. In some kitchens tened the dumbwaiter and {t fell down, and, oh, I do hope! man receives no wages during his entire apprenticeship. In other places they don't talk that wa |are paid $2 or $3 after the first year. self. You know I wo any or discour you n't excuse him swearing at you,” said Mr. Jarr. | The great restaurateurs, such as Foyer, Voisin and Joseph, came up from tht life, What did he say said Mrs. Jarr. “Why, he never s' at me. He doesn't ranks of chefs. Fayet 1s @ born restaurateur. He takes the same pride in his gm “Do you think I could repeat what he said?" red Mrs. Jarr, “Is {t neo-| use profa: time 1 fact, he was very Mice about it, and Iam sorry, | establishments that an artist does in his paintings. Though he !s rich and ea essary to do so? What would care? If yo! take my part on Tam afratd he's hurt very badty. Poor man, and yet you want to g0, could retire he is happiest when pleasing his guests. Frederic 1s the master of Mme. Tetrazzini is hardly what could be called a young woman. mply saying he wa Je, you wo t his language was keh You should be ashamed!” the school; he {s an artist at preparing game. He {s master of the duck. It Pew women or men elther succeed when they are young. That is be- * awful.’ ea f a said 3 eouldnlesrepest h pauldondal seid me ae. cece takes three ducks fon = ora el incel ate aad pony te onus ce is pre- 4 HE ea aa Pe eipeaie tre right! shouted Mr. Jarr, losing mness. ‘I beg your pardon! .) replied s. Jarr. nen the dur its lown he just| pared on a chafing dish. guests co: i chef On his cuisine he an- Cause success requires work; work takes time; knowing how takes time. I wouldn't let him look at nan na let a say said ‘ and that’s all I heard him say.” awers modestly that he has learned well. He was chef at Pallard’s for many Persistence is nothing except the utilization of time. I'll go right downst and ash him!" And Mr, Jarr jumped up Well, if be ts ever impudent | want to know tt,’ said Mr. Janr, shaking his| years. Now that Mme. Tetrazzini has attained success she looks upon it n't get mixed me, I think ld Mrs. Jarr, “Tt just upset me, that was all.” Some of these chefs have been known to spend $100 on making @ single dish, put they can prepare excellent dishes for almost nothing. They all have their janitor and found that the dumf>waiter rope| specialties and never tmitate one another, ‘They have certain dishes that none practically. As she said to Miss Greeley-Smith: “The great artist lives for up with people lik 1 fea “ iq? he wi hav. tary: Rey 1+ the man had been drinking, te and oblig- he hadn't been hurt at all, nor had he any knowledge | outside of the house could make if they tried. what we call ‘La Gloria,’ but the woman must have m ney to live at all eevctiines ‘An American chef who had received his training in Paris says: ‘The French That is the weakness of present day success. It is measured by how “and what right has he to be different now?” shouted Mr. Jarr, ‘The t possesses the women, anyway?" thought Mr. Jarr to himself. | put their ideas into their coeking, and they cook for the palate és go right down there penoh his head." ‘ame upstairs and told Mrs. Jarr that tho janitor apologized, “Though many of the large hotels in New York and throughout the East have much money it brings and not by the glory of it. ~ Letters from the People. scoundrel! The loafer! I Miss Lonely Is Ingenious in Pursuit of Mr. Man. By_F. G. Long You would A GOOD) French chefs, there are plenty of establishments preferring American cooke who have studied in Paris. Some of these men earn $3,000 to 4,000 a year, where their salaries were only one-third that sum before they had this training, Once a great chef was introduced to @ man whem he had known years before, He was introduced as "M. Rean.” “] thought your name was Ryan,” the man remarked, “ns I remember ft.” Traink youre) (T NEED A Hus- " an when I earned $% a month, but ainoe it has become Rean I Another Plank Road Record. duction would oceur we would So _GLAD TO a Wanna) SO HANDSOME. BENOG INGER etree ecnicces ‘Tribune, ss fo the Paltor of The Evening World wha, we need most—f SEE YoU We aie) HUSBAND - Hus — ici SS oe ea We, as a society, are quite inter street cleaners, &c Ky alee BAND -HUSBAND- in the records of Jerseyites in wal from Newark to Jersey City, plank road. A rer of our members | o have exken this walk, thelr record etme Laborers employed b. per day are now working ext Prison Cell Epigrams. By Richard Wilson, in Joliet Prison, AD company will take any young fellow to the bad, Being one neue pnd Dusty ale pinata. How is {t that the h (CED | I thought every young chap ought to sow his pwild outs, but I see 1 om Springtiel i and arent mare cant SHES ON) | now {t was a delusion. us POLE NAwSre iio Viel eareey: Oy houre were § to 6 and the eee | Eee arettes, poolrooma, dance halls, the red light district ts the well-defined fe! house. als longer han were cut down + ; from Broad and A i route to h—, I went !t, 20 I know, ark, We stand ready t 6 suve not lose | T have erted to live up to about #5 a week ons {18 exiary, The rest was Beers o rly in salaries Ua ae nanep 1 that will successfully "All the reformation i the world Will not reach a lot of young fetlews, 2 ' % e ate hours of from § to 6 and nq Most young men think they know more than their parents about. fest Itving, | Meher pay than $1,500 a year will be but they are dead wrong. Four More “Ship” Rensonn, avery. popular n with ali bu ‘1 had the best father and mother tn tte world. They brought me up right, but I envied the fast vers. ey its: A aa Blnecurisia of N | J a eee uate How to Avoid Heart Failure. Cony aude oe a te | ov ON'T fal to take care of yourself during moasies, soarlet fover, arte rho (erty pa Be T rheumatism and diphtheria, sie LOUIS *ZWICGKHL,ocIRa |e eco eel Den’t use alcohol in eny form, . sie ar Don’t miss slight dally exercise and deep breathing, “Waste ana Wane.” Don't sleep in im @ small, atuffy pedroom, eee rere Don't fail to eat fruits and vegetables as much es you oan. our and Don't dress 20 au to interfere with the respiration. . Want Don’t overfill the stomach just before retiring, sof the cit) t y Don't drink mineral waters with an exoess of cazhonto acid gas in them, Paye DAYele: Sommiseton ot th One Remedy for Insomnia, Don*t eun upstairs, ‘ of iemenatey and Ap \ Mallertorurneraven lie wane Dent drink cotd water m enips, sOver the payroll of elty esi Dee wens Don’ de mental work tmmadiately efter p hearty ment. ' ment and reduce salaries and ae ro RE SUT: Don’ jet your anger get the better of you, the hours of work. If any large Dust. Don't let shewmation get the mastery of you, as t& often reaches @re heart, Don't after the cere if you are Rees concern were to run its @o, like New York City does, bank- 92.24) Wuptey wouM result, If a ceneral re for Insomnie. ‘the haest. on the chet jus to sep ee ae