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ening World Daily Magazine, Wednesday, January 29, 'When Bankers Meet to Talk About Hard Times, { Pablishea Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos 88 to ©! By Maurice Ketten. . Park Row, > Gi x SS POSEN PULITZER, Pres., 1 East 134 Sires. J. ANGUS BILAW, Bee-Treas,, 2¢1 Went 1tth Ptrest,, The Ev Office at New York as Secon Canada, One year... wee ee SBT No. 43.—CIVIL WAR.—(Part XI.) Abraham Lincoln, .30 | Me month... T outlining the great events of that unnatural combat of brethren One af .6 | One month, 33 | NO. 16,962. known to history as the Civil War, the part played by the man whose os to reunion has been account of the Civil War, no ete without a fuller recital of VOLUME 48,.......ccescccccescrsceeter coves RIGHT WAY TO PATROL. WT =e) OT waiting for the “system ‘ ie sition, Commissioner Bingham commends The Evening World's pa- trol plan. Not more men but less “system” is what the Police Depart- ment of New York needs. calm, wise brain guided our nation from ch é| | implied rather than described. Yet a 4 | matter how brief and superficial, is not ¢ this man’s deeds. While North and South were at death grips, while the forever rent asunder, while graft, in tional strife hampered the Governmen tred about one quaint, picturesque figu oppo- ution seemed tence, eross purposes and tac vemments, t yrim ever cen —Abraham Li: 7, Seven \ AutoriaBiLes, rugged face, only ly, dark A gigantically tall, bony, ungatr ed from grotesque hideousness by melanc there were 5 mer ; ul cele Saeraae pe bla) I To NEW a slow speech, Interlarded with k« stle an awkward man- they wo not be as effect un- Sea PALACES ner and a@ personality wherein crude stret and infinite gentlen were der the present system as 8,000 po- AT et d, such, at a glance, was 1am Lincoln, emancipator licemen can be made, Everybody NEWEOR and martyr. and working his way lerk aud finally n utter poverty {n the Kentucky backwoods farm hand, boatman, s his early ¢ In't much. Still, so was all. I have not been schoo] ince, e advance I now have u this store of rom time to ume Bor up gradually as ra{l splitter, knows how unusual it is to see a po- nat night in the residential neighborhoods, where the flat bur- glars work, and how rare it is for a policeman to be on a spot where crime of any importance is committed. good to have 10,000 more policemen if the men lawyer, LAncoln wrote later “When I came of age I di read, write and cipher; but t The 1 Sais nalli@enttert woe 3 tn how, I coula a) + recon were not stationed where they are needed, and if the patrol work is NV raat’s THe 3 , : Presitent» Mena oe hater not improved. \} Weueteer: ASTRO 3 <=> = aes ) The E 1's plan, whict printed with diagrams so plain | STORY IVE q ws tem of concen- that anybody can comprehend, would provide for a trated beats instead of long walks. A patrolinan’s beat should be compact. It should comprise not a street but a neighborhood or section of ter- titory so that any citizen needing the services of a policeman would not have to go half a mile or a mile on a chance of finding one. At present the beats meet at corners. One man a long be: ZO Graded novente s ods of the extre RAPHAEL FOR T ($99,000 Marked Down From ice in the new Repub= it in 1860, the South, at once withdrew he aggressors!” one street and other men have beats on crc hus resulting i fe most He “tad nae frequent sight of three or four policemen engaged in earnest and pr George Was darkest hours, that he South and m: The more rabid, r Im in uproar or to for patriot- longed conversation at the corner where their beats overlap, while at the further ends of t spective beats any number of 1 work with the knowledge that for an hour at least there will be no liceman in sight. res of the Jacks out his he was ng world calm, unswerving course, toward united An Ship of State t e------ his chosen ng to the Union cause, Ei ed abo to take sides with the these perils and kept the country free than once see: 3 plans began to work out. Little by Ittle the nation real 4 done and was doing for it Europe too commenced to TE TRESENT LAN OF PATROL 13 A 7 ae Seba KEEP POLICEMAN understand that the despised backwoodaman was a Br al one Ae oe mr ate BAT * statesman and patriot to whom the whole world oe sre 0 ea aren WESTER CRIES C2, The Only Way to Circumvent a Wife Who Keeps You Late for Theatre Sea Triggah fight wt to reverence.” He had carrod the Couns Instead of having beats meet at corners or cross one another, they and the End. try safely through {ta most terrible erisis, And should touch in the middle of a block and not overlap. The distance for Is to Put the Clock Back, as Mr. Jarr Did, and Then Nag Her Along. °~~ ~~~ the countrs, somewhat tate in the day, adored the the policeman to walk would be less and the area which he would cover a man {t had mocked. would be more. Instead of having the long [mm At last ized all he <= —1__]_— "THE EVENNOVRRD PUN ATE vou | ———— rr == nat Mra, Jarr t of that room The war was over, the Union preserved, the slaves freed. No pratse g distance on the numbered was high enough for the man who had achieved these miraclea. And in Streets where there are long blocks and the short distance on the avenues xo t to bet on @ sure thing. the briet moment of his boundless popniarity Lincoln preserved the same where the blocks are short, the plan should he reversed, thereby savi the long walks on long blocks and enabling the covering of more bl Bee a een ea aeons) ataniapertotannee| was] even et) ; Washington theatre to celebrate the triumphal close of the war, As Prest- aE SSMS dent Lincoln sat watching the play (his appearance having been greeted Remodelling the patrol s 1 $0 as to sub t > with mad applause), a disreputable actor, John Wilkes Booth, member of brains for the excessive use of the legs would make patrol duty © wolng ‘© 4 gang of conspirators who sought to avenge the defeat af the South, erept fective and enable either a c:tizen or sergeant to see how it is perfec The uniformed force should be confined to patrol. Commis Bingham took a step in the right direction when he ged the de tive force so that it shall be composed of those policemen who are behind him and shot him through the brain. fitted to detect something. All the other policemen should be patro! By Roy L. McCardell st go sneered Mr. Rang’e t mn the lacks. € eyes, ears sympathy for fifteen i = ny Gown ae ahs Thus died Abrabam Lincoln, herowmartyr; struc moment ard in Mra, Ran-’ yoo unjust hatred and ridicule against him had changed to e—atruck down when he had barcly tasted the reward of his years He had saved his country; and he gave his own diameless lo hankless labor. life In payment. tre to-night? cried Mr. give ma time to get my things on! came back or be teamsters or drivers or tele- 1 bleeding for| By Victor Herbert. TPO not know what hidden power is at work on the American =amgy loving public to influence {t, but of late years there seems to have bean a merked tendensy on fts part toward something better in mami, phone operators or clerks or any- thing else except patrolmen. With eve 1an a patrol- n't eare to go at all, seeing with a rising Inflection to 1s to put on my set to come over at dresses I saw in man on the job, and detectives Tsang sald Mrs. Rangle com- It reems now to be striving for higher ideals, as it ae ickly . ‘ than: ' ther women's husban Cee oo ea This arkediy apparent in oll branches of music, from tm, uickly on the ground to follo: fs) placent er women's husba es me, and she's te marke: quickly as id is f uy w up mien eeaia v towntown at all, latest popular song to the imported grand opera, It may be due te the fone the patrolman’s work, the crimes of bled Mr. Jarr again, ‘We'll be ne?" fa broader musical education in our great universities and inland colleges, er dinary violence and theft would late as we tisuall car danee, and, after may b> due to the fuct that the American musto tenahers of to-day are striving ordinary violence and theft would MRRIRTE SD) AED “but T know we'll E ted for better things, and that they are spending thelr spare time in conactentiogs be greatly diminished. bo there a . oy z rr. "We'd have y and research of Furopean music, and are in turn imparting this great your things, then, dear, ald Mrs. Rar had t t { , ar Ca e@ #0 I just ern’t talk to her. You wiedge to the aspiring young students of music, writes Victor Herbert tm the Then if New Yor trict-Attorney who would pro: the crimes of Wall street, New York in the course of a vear or two would become a place where the Penal Cote really amounted to some- thing in the way of being enforce ~ Letters from: the People. Drinking In Public, | disastrous to our your To the FEtitor of The Evening World: the races, and robberies Your recent article on women drink-\ times in the city be worse tng in public {6 timely, The question . should vigorously agit by all who wish to have this degrading sight ex would @bolished. A more disgusting creature {0 relleve the cannot be tmagined than the gir! acarcely out of her teens sipping a cocktail and acting like one affacted Tt ts Pron with a “brain Let ree:aurants| To the Editor of eater leas to the cocktail drinking ele-| What ta the Ment and more to the people who go| “W * for a good meal. Then per! we will The Courter Problem, wee less of this fast growing evil r the myateries of the post-preparation, a PI “T ntarted at ° head) pn the ot! Le ze hand, the modern composer may be responsfble, for he, Ike te toacher, has “builded for himsolf an Weal" far above that of the past decade topes “and tw striving, hard though {t may be, to #urmount this pinnacle of perfection, === | It has, indeed, been a task for these workers !n the vineyard of melody to edu- cate the mass of so-cniled music lovers, who have been educated up to the lower standards of * Mariuooa,” “My Mother Was a Lady” and other so-ratled 2 By T. Sk Allen pepular se chich ara ground out over night, exist for a brief spel and are t s ) the boneyard of pubiio fade along with the “Teddy Bear’ and ted rettectively on a stogle and re- of time And Mra, Jarr was so mad she alt I honestly fool that the public hae gone too far for any retrogrossion, and T tuink that from now on the davelapment of American music, while slow, will be puro; that in the future generations our descendants will turn back to the mu= Sisal compositions of a fow years ago, If indeed they do not destroy them out ‘jf ehums, and marvel that their forefathers should have been so Incking im musical education and tastes. to The Vices and Virtues of Animals. | By William T. Hornaday, n even than ne are of everyday oven Director of the New York Zoological Park, HE killing of natural prey for daily food t# not murder, A starving wolf ‘on the desolate barren grounds may even kill and devour a wounded pack-mate without becoming a criminal by that act alone. ‘True, such \ifemation of hard-heartedness and bad taste is very reprehensible, but , hunger, not sheer blackness of heart, writes William ‘T, Hornaday To the Ellitor of The Rventng W eaiae Jo M. B. Some ong asked a solimion of the ) Moclure's, Among wild animals the ‘wanton killing of a momber af the What Ie “the Prime of Lifet” ‘Arm T Geta eee killer's oun speoles constitutes murder In the first degree, Sevond-degree raur~ rhe) Evenleg Ny |ewenty-five miles long. Courter starts (der Is unnesesary and wanton killing outside the killer's own Kpecies. BY apes ie Sens cere ong In gome of the many cases that have come under my notice the desire te commit murder for the sake of murder has been as sharply defined as the tangs and horna of the murderars, Of the many emotions of wild antmals which ave revealed more sharply In captivity than tn a state of nature, the crime-produc- ing passions—ealousy, hatred and the devilish lust for innocent blood—are most | prominent, | Bears usually fight “on the square,” openly and aboveboard, rarely commit | tinge foul murder, If one bear hates another, he attacks at tho very first appor- B says fifty yeare speed delivers desmatch to com- Which ts w te er in front and returns to reat @e prime of life? E. J.C. |the army im the meantime having acelTrncieGamblines marched forward twenty-five miles, (th SO ee How many miles did oourter travel?’ Concerning the biil preventing betting i#t_X = distance army travels before courter reaches front While the the prime of life at the races, Iam not a race s Gend mynelf, but what will be the result COUMer ‘# overhauling the front he |tunity; he does not cunningly walt to catch the offender at a disadvs when ff this bill ts passed? Wil the sporting W!!! have travelled % ~ X miles, while |e is bayond the possititity of reseue, Boars frequently kil one or, and often maul thelr keepers, but not by the sneaking methods of the human assas- lain who stabs in the dark and runs away. J do not count the bear as a com mon murdeves, even though, gt rave intervals, he Kills 9 cage-inate smaller ang (eae than himself. One Killing of that kind, done by Cinnamon Jim to a smal} the army will have travelled X miles, In his total trip the courier w travelled 2 + army will bh @lass who to-day make their living at ft gambling and join unemployed I doubt 1 irercftnersa oiiiiral rasataceh gain | Kid—Say, Henry, I want to Introduce yer to dat big brother Johnnie “When you git sick Kin we have a em st dat! piack bear thet hag enmoyed htm beyend ali endurence, wae intloted am im the city that will prove more ' ¢ore’s always bragging about. Clann, Mie ee rt han arte ~+ = | tegitimete genichmest, and wee so sectelied + >