Poland - Centre Of Anxiety, Ny Tribune, 25june 1906

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2vEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE,

6 Amusements.

a half, six and mx miles in length, respectively. The actual distance to be traversed in Manhattan Is not far from seven miles, so that passengers from The Bronx are likely to have a ride of more than twenty miles after they •> crops Harlem. Woodlawn ii live or six mlloF. aud Yonkers seven or eight, still fur-

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volume with him, lnsfearl of

MONDAY. JUNE 25. lOCa

m* the middle of an asphalted roadn«y surlthey do Dees threaten no danger to others, but them, imperil the safety of those who IsMpi in obnd they often result in an objectionable '' struction of ln« highway. inIs,«n made and1M« roadway is For after all. the for rhiiand not tended for arlring vehicles in. to wnlk in dreu to play to, or eveu for people a Ha* to except when crossing. No man has street drive a horse or nn automobile nlon.cn it tttlag to is -neither pace. But \ u 0 8 4 furious nt walking pace require him to drive only Si \u25a0 of the roadside from side re to swerve and pirl* who an way to avoid disturbing boys nn.l Ike asphalt for p!a.v!np Bttfttei or for M .-. rosy." Many willregard Ittlu» around "*rinc a hardship to have the children driven from hardship to streets but it would be a greater have traffic excluded from the streets In order that they might be need »s playgrounds.

returning it to

the desk.

Whether or not the malignant use to which our libraries are beins put will have the effect of chanpin*K the direction of Mr. Dareegle't l>enefactlons. it is too early to predict. Fortunately, there n<>ed as yet be little fear that

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libraries generally throughout the country will ther away. An engineer of the new company dr-.-l:>res be phut to the public as a result of the disthat hi« employers intendv to charge only If* closure. It Is more likely that they will be cent* for Iride over the entire road. Ifthat kept open ns convenient traps for eetcnittg the promise Is fulfilled literally, this city will wit- enemies of the ttnsehrn autocracy. ness a great revolution. A person cannot now reach Coney Island from points up in Tin? OsssnjajßSi WOV&D-BE REBELS. some days MANHATTAN BEACH— 4-l» -Dm-f and Hl« Band— «:lS Bronx for less than 10 rents. except on Some persons down on the Eastern Shore of Pain* firework*. of the week over the Smith street line, half of to diKgrnce Hit Honor th# Mayor that sum being required for the trip to the bridge Maryland seem Is be «> anxious to murder HEW VORK-S :ls_GARDEN—S:S9— Vaudeville and feeMBW VOP.K ROOF being demanded In Brooklyn. their state that they must resort other nnd Hie half .nr N«w Tork when a legal execution would as quickly jt?t Merely for the privilege of avoiding all change WEPT EN*r>—«:ls— TTriel Aeosta. victim. A Negro who on< escaped of tan and for the great saving in time from rid of their committing a crime in their neighthe construction of a through route, many peo- them after borhood Is now lodged safely in Baltimore uncents. A idejr would MOT* than 20 pie gladly pay to dvertisc men Is. Ji A having been chased by IfO.TJST ASH BVBIXEBB. reduction to live cents would mean ;: charge of der sentence of death, ' fe»lln? Pis'*. Col. only Pair* <"\>'. lyncbers into Virginia/where he was would-be war. some evidence of a better a fifth a cent a mile. The There quarter 1 a or of week, when Air««enienti 52 'FAn»!«r**'t >£«*<•>•<» * Krok*r*..l« 11 4 leading ' security market early last '1 Ex<-ursl^n» railways uive to patrons living arrested and banded over to the Maryland au- lin th Jl»r**r» Poomii... steam •» 1 » 1 Km »=«!• a itnusi ore 1 in the suburbs thorities for legal trial. It is now proposed to the sharp decline in grain prices Indicated ap*>ir I?- om« to Lri public buying 11 4' Fur. H'Mi>e» to Let. County outlook, :>.• take for but tittle crop him bads to Prince** Anne i company half \ u 25a0 Mr. Gates's better 11 rate of about cent. supBrooklyn Vroprty for ! Onastry 11 Wanted S~S* would probably not lose money, though. Tito legal execution. Reports from that county. ipeared an It soon became evident that no pools 5o!» * 1*;H»lp lln*tn»ctir>n O»rp»» cj«in!r.r :--'l expected from the various by be taken back the be long might lay | port A he more than offset the hn\vev*'r. that when is could 11 I>«th«.. «;M»mmi;es City Hotel* '> «n Ftpaim-r* » «•> short rides Property Otr for rides for which the same fare would be baffled fury of the pnpulare will prevent his !and syndicates that hesitated to become further 11 4 rmporai* 12 S»-« of 9 II A'ftanraadl received. execution according to law. and willinsist upon |1 involved when there was the probability by Ou-'-T TV«rd J-e II 1-ip«v!nr» Country Property for i**nk» • « a lynching. Mr. Dryden. the Assistant United higher money rates. A setback was started «;?r.*<-ial '•«• Sml* 11 Interborough and other Cmintrr Prr^rrtj to IHteairhcats States Treasurer; is 'quoted as saying that a '\u25a0 the aggressive attack on 11 »••" IjH '. 11 4 Putrn.«i R»*om POPULAR! COSTROL OF CONGRESS. ..II 2-3p serve to keep the people itraction Issues, and later in the week the Steel regiment hardly 'Far-cTVt !ffattoM. would Ceur.tr>- Property fw 11 4 •< t~nr Ar»nri.>« .11 rejected on away from the culprit, and thai "if the Governor j stocks took the lead in the downward movsSale 'or to M The House of Representatives 6 n»«k« *!>elng es<» 11 1-2 Thursday a joint resolution submitting to the UTrust mranlf nitiir* "sends militia to protect the Negro from the 1rrient, a HOW low record for the year Ar*r* rivi'.^r'" Nntleep 10 1 T'r.fuml*hwJ « state legislatures a constitutional amendment "Infuriated citizens it will cause bloodshed. by United States Steel common. Al11 rMvldctt4 Not!re» ..II 1' m»nt« to I/t tablished ' 9 2-4 lengthening the term of Representatives to four T>«m Pit*. TVant«»a.. » 4 Work Want** We- should be sorry to see the citizens of • though the International outlook improved, parPT**»mi>kiii|f ... 1* 1! years and requiring the direct election of Princess Anne County made the victims of ticularly as to the condition of European banks, Senators. The defeat of this measure was due militia rifles. Nevertheless we are bound to there was no increase in the foreign demand for to the fact that it coupled two propositions say that no men could more deserve to fall be- stocks, but the weakness of exchange and the which have no logical connection. Indeed, it fore them than those who should act according lower British- bank rate renewed talk of gold may be plausibly argued that the two changes to Mr. Dryden'a prediction. We have heard Imports, rates reaching a position that might proposed conflict in theory, for while the sec- lynching excused as a necessary substitute for make shipments profitable, provided the SecreMOVPAT. JVSE 2.1. 19nda?me. Financial developments have been somewhat a natural for the \u25a0.- M. Yermolofr. loader of one of the parlies the tamers of the Constitution had they must Bout it even when it Is doing conflicting, but the net result Ib a slightly firmer that in the Council of the Empire, advocates the distrust of the average voter's capacity for selfmoney, accommodation over th« Fubstitution of a responsible ministry for the government. They were more bent on devising their will and punishing a criminal whose pun- tone for time less Goremykin Cabinet. '. The municipal elec- safeguards against hasty popular action than ishment they want? Is lawlessness for Its own end of the year becoming unavailable at tion at Colon passed quietly; a disturbance Mary- than 5% per cent. Foreign Influences tended to so. sake better than law? If the State of early in The morning was quickly suppressed by on giving a free rein to the willof a temporary exchange its rebellious citizens to re- make conditions easier, a supply of th« police majority. Rut the democratic Emperor William entertained ferment has land should teacheven in Pennbeing by at bloodshed. French Investment spect power, provided its the cost of Mr. and Mrs. I,onpw..rTh at dinner on board worked a gradual revolution in our ideals of the Hamburg at Kiel. They need the lesson. sylvania Railroad bonds, which more than offA punitive expediwe found a to cirway government, and have tion pent a«ai:is! the BodSJMsa killed ?..V> men If tbe culprit is taken to Princess Anne for set the demand for remittance on account of and took lit*prisoners. King Haakon re- cumvent the restrictions of the Constitution. exchange ceived tb« Norw^eian-American delegation, and The Electoral College long ago became a fiction, execution and he should be so taken if that maturing finance bills. As rates Of regular procedure, regardless of threats— customary speculative is declined there was th» William Jennings* Bryan left Trondhjem. the gone long way a and in recent years we have is POMEPTIC-Fcair were expressed In Washabolishing the indirect method of elect- the Governor should send a sufficient guard, be offering in anticipation of gold imports, but it ington that Senator Bacon would defeat the toward any specie will be secured Rut if the voters have gradually it a company or a regiment, to protect him from hardly probable that : ing Senators. treaty framed at ih^ Iforroocan conference. in asserting their right to chose a mob violence. That guard should be Instructed abroad in view of the present heavy indebtedwas not expected that the nominations of succeeded It Mesprs. Fhonts, Uscooa and Bishop as canal President and Vice-President without the inter- to set' that the execution takes place in order ness of New York and the relatively larger incommiJtpinner», WhMl were held as) In the Penvention of a go-between Electoral College, and according to law, to treat as rebellion against crease in imports of merchandise over exports. ate because of apposition to the las?- named, the State of Maryland any attempt to interfere A sustaining Influence in the money market is :A Net- their right to dispense with intermediate agenwould h« confirmed at this session. cong, X. J., man pet fire to the home of a girl cies In the choice of Senators, it is not logical with that process. If the result is bloodshed, the customary preparation for semi-annual diviand also the probability who rejected him and shot her as she was flee- to suppose that they will consent to waive that the blood will be on the heads of those who, dend disbursements inp from the dames; later he killed himself without excuse, seek themselves to shed blood that the agricultural districts will soon begin A man and his wife were drowned after the hard-and-fast control of the popular branch of The foreign horn to withdraw balances from the {few York Congress which has been assured to them from and to destroy government. overturning of th*>lr canoe on th^ Potomac River, near Washington. •\u25a0iaiiy conanarchist is not half m dangerous to this coun- banks, which are not holding much heavier reA the outset by the biennial system of elections. FtructPd car rvas wrecked in its first test trip up Something may be said, undoubtedly, in favor try as the native anarchist, who. professing serves than the law requires and are now being th« Orange Mountain, near Orang*. N. J.. the of a four-year term for Representatives. loyalty to government and a desire for order, called upon to help the trust companies provide Frework; failing brakes on* man was killed and to eg \u25a0Beat a dozen persons were more or less injured. quent changes in membership lessen the effi- tries to make disorder prevail over the protest the 3 per cent reserve under the new act. While Congress will adjourn this week, probably ciency of a legislative body. A member of the of law. it is probable that new gold from Alaska will V>y Thursday, according to the plans of leader? seat before he offset the contemplated withdrawal of $10,000,•- It was reported in Pitts- House is hardly warm in his reelection, in Washington. = finds it necessary to stand for and 000 government deposits, regular operations of burg that the J*net & Lauphlins St*el Company POLAND. and the Republic Iron and Pteel Company would much of his time and care is absorbed in the Treasury take cash out of the market albe consolidated and fight the Steel Trust; an mending his . fences and courting popularity •'The fair land of Poland" is again to the most ever:/ day. which is helping to advance ore carrying line would be built to the Great constituency. But, on the other hand, fore, jind will not be put aside. Amid all the the high-water mark of gross gold holdings. President Arthur T. with his Lakes. It was wild. Hadlr-y preached the baccalaureate It Is equivalent to a decided Increase In the sermon to the knowledge that he must ask a fresh In- uncertainties of Busfdan news and the contra* th«> Vale prafluatinK claps of ttmw Haven. Conn. dorsement every two years acts as a wholesome di'-toriness of many items, this one tiling may volume of business when the advancing season ClTY.—Captain rri-< and his detectives restraint and forces him to realize that he holds be ac<-epted without hesitation, that Poland is brings no change, because at this time of year worked on a new tack in »lie Kinnan murder a commission not in his own right, but as the an increasingly acute centre of anxiety, not 'here is usually a perceptible contraction in the mysiery. An automobile containing four responsible agent of the voters who elected him. only to Russia, but also to the neighboring em- volume of trade. Sensational reports of dampf-rsons ran into a moving train near Hack^nMck. N*. J.. and tin occupants had \u25a0 narrow The House itself must have felt that in sug- pires. Tbe movement for Polish autonomy, for age to the crops are so persistently circulated e.'-.'flpe from id Transit conductor was at- its defeat baa no significance. The House has entitled to a restoration of her autonomy as terially by the reluctance of the general public, '" repeatedly tributed to delay in calling a physician. voted to submit an amendment pro- Finland waa. for it Finland's betrayal and pub- to speculate in stocks, capital going more freely Three persons were hurt by a runaway at Coney viding for the direct election of Senators. But Jection were of much more date than Po- into the development of real estate and supplyIsland. such an amendment is no longer needed, for land's nnd therefore not sorecent much of a chnsr ing an abundance of labor for wage earners in THE WEATHER— lndication for to-day: any state can by indirection commit the choice ivq.f. on the other band Pnlnml is far the Tartly cloudy. Th-> tein|*raiure yesterday: the building trades. It Is always possible that of Senators to the people. The voters of Ore- larger and Highest, SH deprees; lowest, Oil. more important nation of the two. structural work may be overdone, but thus far gon practically elected \u25a0 Senator three weeks This I'itter fact is one of the serious features there is little occasion for anxiety. ago, and id fourteen Other stales the legislatures Commodity exchanges have shown the cusTTf desire to remind our reader* who are now merely record \u25a0 selection already deter- of the <-nse. Poland is Indeed a large and important nation if nation it may now be called. tomary response anonf to lon the on,-, that The Tribune wttt mined in party primaries. to dally conflicting reports, The Poles are a prolific people, and they have activity and irregularity being secured, as Is ) le seal Ifmail to any addrettt in tola country been Increasing more rapidly than any of their often intended, by Inventors and circulators of or abroad, ami eMn changed an often as Ac. neighbors. At the present time the\ Dumber tirrd. Bubspipti<ms mm§ be given to pour reg. LIBRARIES AND ANARCHY. rumors. As cotton nears maturity, there is more than twenty millions. If. therefore, the more evidence that an ample crop will be se\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Healer before having, or. if more <:,„,\u25a0,„. The propensity for establishing libraries, as ient, hand them in at The Klngbotn of Poland wen. re-established, with cured, which probably contributed materially to Tkiriw Office. manifested by Mr. Andrew Carnegie, has called See opposite pane for tubscription rate*. to racial lines, it the decline of about $5 a bale in the July opforth much adverse criticism from persona who boundaries fixed according are always ready to burst into print with sug- would outrank Spain In size and be the Bixth tion. No other section of the market showed as It would be wide a change, spot quotations declining very gestions for spending other persons' money to nation of the European Continent. j better purpose XFVT SVBWAYS. Belgium or Switzerland, but would be a slightly because of the support given by Liverthan those who have the money no The wiDOaneement of the formation of \u25a0 can do it themselves. The strong candidate for \u25a0 place among the great pool cables. British spinning has been fact that \u25a0 person powers. remarkacompany which will bid fcr the right to Even were only tlio Russian part of bly well maintained, despite the high cost of con- has i>o money seems to confer upon him apodal struct an extensive system of subways in the ' Poland king raw material, restored autonomy to under the for determining the best ways and domestic mills have a good metropolis Is pood news. There Js no lon-er «inalin>ations of using it for the benefit of others In the same ship of Th- * changes of over a cent a bushel find responsibility of wealth, It would appear, in leasing them when finished. Still, trouble were frequent it would leaves the mind more free to work, just as the much the lesser partner. in the cereal markets during the last week, the be more satisfactory to have the responsibility screw But the most serious the phase of case Is widest change being the early decline in coarse of j| steamship will revolve much more of construction and operation both assumed lV rapidly, if perchance less efficiently, when it not merely the size of Poland, but its division grains In response to well distributed rains that a Blrgle corporation. Moreover, among if the latter emerges from the trough of the pea than when three empires. Austria and Germany revived estimates of a record breaking corn " k ::! cot be identical with th» one "hi.'h con- i meets with the resistance and friction of are interested in the Polish question as well Top and allayed fears regarding the extent of trol* the existing subways, tlwe would be it Germany's as Russia. interest is especially Injury to oats. The fall was less striking in the the water. occasion for hoping that better provisions would : The objections to the multiplication of libra- great, and that is the secret of the close under- wheat market, and the subsequent recovery was be made for the comfort and convenience of '\u25a0 ries have been as many and as varied as are the standing which has existed between Germany largely due to an excessive short account on th public than have been afforded by the Inparticuinr fads or Interests of those who can see and Russia for so ninny years. The whole Influ- narrow margins, which hastened to close conIn^ereogh company. no good thus pandering to the literary appe- ence of Germany has been exerted to restrain or tracts at the first indication of recovery. It !s interesting to observe bow much work jtite* of in masse?, making any concesstrange inadequacy to dissuade the Czar from by the but \ u 25a0 are unchanged Conditions in the leading it \u25a0* proposed to do north of the Harlem imagination the real menace and imminent sions to the Polish national spirit, the Prussian manufacturing Industries, steel mills and footWithin the last few years several more or less of dnnger of library extension bare hitherto es- government knowing full well that the rehabil- wear factories making the best reports, and cotindependent routes have been under considera- caped the attention of the critics of the move- itation of Russian Poland would provoke a ton spinners receiving the least new business. tion. Mud have received Borne decree of official ment. It has remained for Russian officialdom great crisis in Posen and Silesia. It is even Producers of cottons report more irregularity sanction. One of the?e, for Instance, was d«to discover in our American free libraries nur- not Incredible that the Czar would some time signed to connect with a proposed each week, anticipation of cheaper raw material Si !e series of crime, hotbeds of anarchy and ar- ago have restored the Polish constitution bad keeping purchases down to the minimum in the \u25a0\u25a0• in Manhattan. There has also West been it nihilism, forth, talk mories of not been for German Influence to the contrary. furnishing without c( runuiEj? a subway from Lexington nverm« ! money and without price. ireapona ready forge.] The persistence and growth of the Polish de- domestic markets, and the accumulation Of through Jerome avenue to Woodlawn A goods in China will have to he distributed bethird aiming at the heart of organized govern- mand and the opportunity of assertion which is project embraced portions of the Souther-, for export Inquiry appears. In the and for striking at the divine right of now afforded to it make the matter one of the fore \u25a0 normal goods division new lines of serges were Booferazd and West cheater avenue. In addi- ment woollen kings. How real this library danger has come most perplexing with which European chancel' opened at higher prices ' tion, three or four short spurs than last year's initial or extension? are to he recorded in Russia was brought to pub- lories have to deal. t-omenpiatcd, smonjc them a hit of rand from the figures, but below the position subsequently atlic attention an arrest last by made week in j»r.*em terminus of the Broadway tained. Broader interest Is noticed In hides and line tition for Latin-American bides caused a furOne of for Yoakera, All of these enterprises will not cent novel by Inlet Verne, but the other was us-- of public roadways as playgrounds for chil- ther fractional advance In price. Although hembe undertaken «t snee, of course, hot the esc a work by Peres, entitled "Schrifton," telling dren, and, while the prohibitory order which lock sole is the most active division of the e disputed that r.n»t Siflo KMdown to the Buttery fome day. en be gathered of the methods of the dreaded some Mich playing Is decidedly offensive, The suniiii'inliw Of Japanese seamen »nd At pr**ect. however. Improved facilities for | "third sect 1 .-,..• as exploited in contemporary much of It is improper and unsafe. The while play- sturgeons to testify in Admiral RoJ« a response from the authori- j recklessness aßpenrs to have afforded the Rus- some of the densely populated residence streets tell Of his doings, and of the boneless impossities. Over in Brooklyn at least three sections i sian secret police an opportunity for employ- of Brooklyn, to the Imminent peril of passers. bility of the task which was assigned to him. are «ÜbWSjr of e£fc<-!itial to «-<>ni;ilefe the route Ing the machinery of the lnw. The fact that by and to the frequent destruction be may they, reputation of than and we sure his OB* frota the Manhattan Bridge to the Long he had called for a book on the Russian penal pine*. A vicious game known as "cat," window unduly at their hands. Island lUUrw^ elation In Flatbush avenue, an- system caused him to be marked for observa- ii bear) and sharp pointed block of in v.hlcii and honor will not suffer wood In other iron, that point down Fourth avenue to tion, and when, on the closiny of the library, burled at random through the air, is similarly If the government breeding bureau succeeds Vavt llsnlltcn ami the third from the fort to j be was followed to his homo it was learned, objectionable. As for playing marbles In extensively rehabilitating the Morgan horse, Cones Island. These section* are about one aal so it is vow charged, that he tad tAktn the Jackstones and tag and slumping the rope and in U will confer a treat benefit ucon the country. Greater Us»s ParV—l>r»fi.:3:»3d BoMorlc'a. E3BIK MCSdD-'Tfc* World In Wit: HAjofsasrrßore \'ICTOniA- « Vlsbsbvssb. LJ«n and the »*» Z.YCEUM— X.TlUC—# s2O -Th* Minion the Rot. *— MAX>rsox SQUARE OAltf>EN" HOOF— lXam*el>





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The Morgan Is one of the most valuable of horsesj and for some uses it is simply incomparable.

THE DAWN'

After a number of rebaters and other deflera of the law of the land, have studied matters in the enforcer! privacy of prison walls it Is probable that br. iking laws will not be considered such Rreat fun as it has been In the p«*t

Mr. Nevinson's

[N

RUSSIA.

Impressions of a Struggle from Darkness to Light. London. Juna 10.

A vigilant correspondent* notebooks in times el storm and strew contain material for history told, has slKn^fl Morocco, Titf> Sultan of we are Of | Mr. Henry W. N>vin«on's "The Dawn In the Alscolrns protocol without amendment. 1 sla," published hero this w»»k by the Harpers. course. He had to. He is of all potentates most a volume of Journalistic Impressions si -. v. interested in that settlement, yet he has had IIs olutionary scenes during the last year, and bears least of all to say about it. and as for hie ventur- evidence of accurate observation and painstaking to alter what th«» trrent powers had deing explain to a effort series of extraordinary termined concerning him. such presumption events which has culminated in the- establishwould have been intolerable! ment of the Douma. ItIs Journalism of the best order, written with lucidity of stylo Mayor McClellan follows Colonel Bryan'* exand with ] the candor of an honest observer, who Perhaps he has ample In taking a trip abroad. has noticed that Democratic lead?rs gain In stature known that h? sat toyinr with the fringe of a great subject. Perspective Is lacking for a nowadays when studied at the grentesi possible com. I prahinafti survey c,t the revolutionary movera gel ; ment as a whole, and the author does not at| tempt to estimate events In th« order of. la. PERSONAL. pertanc» He makes the outbreak of the. | war J. R. Booth, the Canadian railway magnate and j with Japan his starting poir.f. well knowing that lumber kine, sOgaa life as a mill hand. Not hi previously there had been nihilist crimes, upris»;.' v"'> square miles of timber land and is possesses ings of students, outbreaks among peasants. the largest owner in his own right of railways In mutinies among soldiers, ! lemstvo reform pn> British North America. grammes and other signs that the masses were Sir John Gorst. of Encland, made up his mind feeling their way from darkrws to light. when \u25a0 youth to be a barrister. Then he decided He furnishing content with a bar* outline of to become a missionary, and sailed from Liverpool events for New 2"aland, meetincr his future wife on the since the opening of the fatal campaign, which voyage. He took a post under the government, and subsequently returned to London and was admitted was not regarded by the people as their the quickly up to bar. where he built a lucrative j but as a badly managed government affair;war practice. and ; then he passes rapidly to the Industrial and railMrs. A. Morley Wllcox has given the George way Oapon'# i strikes. Father leadership, the revWashington University a model of Jerusalem and olutionary press and cartoons, administration a reljpr map of Palestine. la Italy, open country, The King of the old and new orders la whose fondness for music is the Moscow, probably prince rioting well known. Is the first of the in Kteff and Odessa, the bloody house of Savoy who has token an interest in musi- assize In the Baltic provinces, the disorders la cal matters. His grandfather. Victor Emmanuel If, frankly detested music, and said when the can- Poland and other scenes* witnessed by himin the roaring: non were at the Battle of Solferlno: "That I stirring drama of freedom until the assembling Is the only music Ihave ever been able to appreciate." And hi? son. King: Humbert, was much of of the first Russian parliament. the same opinion. One of the best features of this volume la ths Thomas R Youn*blood. of Boor.ville, Ind Is the j reproduction of suppressed Russian cartoons. sMh sf justice of the peace in that state, and will This has been done in the startling colors of the is famous for marrying per- originals in several soon be eighty. He conditions, Instances. The design on the sons under unusual but says that he established his record when he unite! ,1 couple suf- cover, depicting a woman with revolver and fering from smallpox arid had to stand across the taker, flag, is from the revolutionary paper road from th**m to do it. The Machine Gun." which was suppressed for They have "new women" in Japan. One of them recently arrived In Tacoma, Tessa Hattorl. a widow [ printing one of the Czar's manifestoes with ths of thirty-five, to enter Witworth College to study ; impression of a blood stained hand stamped upon domestic science. She said to a "Tacoma Ledger" ;it and the superscription "Signed and Sealed." reporter the other day: "Oh, I am only thirty-five; of the colored cartoons are from "Jupel" I have plenty of time, I can stay in America five- :Three ten years. If it takes that long." Tessa Hattori or "Sulphur." and, while as lurid as the title, comes from Formosa. Island, where for ten years she has acted as trained nurse in one of the hos- they are not without artistic qualities. One Is pitals. it has been her ambition for years to study a satirical Christmas picture entitled "PacificaAmerican methods of nursing and to perfect herself in the Knclish language, and it is with this end in tion." with the Kremlin afloat in a sea of blootZ, view that she has worked and paved elnce the above which rise the crosses and pinnacles of her husband cast her on her own resources death ofyears Christian temples, while a sky with sulphurous ago. She has one child, a daughter, several who is fifteen years old, and is taking: a course in clouds Is spanned by a bow of red and white. a high school at Tokio white her mother is acquirAnother is positively savage in Its irony—"An ing a college education In America. Idyl," with house walls and pavement Autumn Dr. Daniel Bonbright, dean emeritus and head of ; smeared with blood and a child's doll as the sola department the of Latin of Northwestern Universiand a third. "The Han ty, has completed fifty years as an instructor in survivor of massacre; the college. The parents of some of the students in :Era." is even more, brutal, with a skeleton the class just graduated studied under Dr. BonDeath, red handed and enveloped la flame, bright. Glenarvon Behymer. of Los Angeles, is one of leaping over the street barricade where soldiers the youngest students ever graduated from a law are firing upon a mob of workmen. ItIs not school. Mr Behymer. who is only nineteen years Btrange that cartoons so terrible as these inold, was graduated last week from the law school volved the immediate suppression of the illusof George Washington University, not only carrytrated eheet. Perhaps the most artistic of thesa ing on his legal studies there, but taking two lanrepresenting the imguages in the first year of his course and three in colored cartoons is one perial government as a hideous vampire bendhis second. He will have to wait two years before being admitted to the California Bar.' but Is well Ing and gloating over th« body of a Russian satisfied in the belief that he is the youngest bachgirl, and hissing "I think she's quiet at last." elor of laws in the world. Pictures like these illustrated the situation so broadly that the revolutionary sheets producTHE TALK OF THE DAY. as econ as copies ing them were suppressed Petersburg. Other the were seen In of St. streets always have understood the great The Chinese art of making the punishment fit the crime. Man cartoons in black and white represent WttMi or joss, if he offends, gets exactly his deserts. with a constitutional pipe which he could rot Viceroy Shum. who was anxious to pee the end play; Dubasoff as a butcher calling the death roll of the heavy rainfalls, was very angry with th» in the streets, or the bells in the church towers guardian joss of Canton, who remained deaf to ail ringing out "God with us." while above and beA "Welprayers to bring about a little sunshine. low them were riflemen where they could shoot yuen was despatched to the temple with orders people on the pavement. working These picto uncover the roof over the joss's head, and let torial summaries of the political situation were him have his fair share of the rain! hawked about when railway traffic and postal Summer Boarder (just arrived)— Why. when I was facilities were suspended and towns were Isohere last year there were three windmills, and see, only one. lated from one another and the empire cut off now I Landlord— Well, you see there wasn't wind enough from the world. The cartoon was the grim keep going, all three so we took down two.— to word of freedom to a nation In outer darkness, Fllegende Blfletter. and the strike was the blow by which liberty The German patent office comes in for much cenwas to be gained, because it made men and sure. One would suppose such an institution to women c? every class rebels against author exact no more of inventors than Is needed SB pay current expenses, but in reality the charges are so revolutionists with a common stock of grievhigh that the state pockets half the Income a3 ances. profit. It is pointed out that for poor inventors Mr. Nevinson, without striving to be theatrical matters are almost as bad as they were when In Ms descriptions, gives a most vivid account . Gutenberg, after inventing the art of printing, lived of a period of intoxication when Russia, after in poverty, and finally had to pawn his apparatus. centuries of suppression, was revelling in a • HER HAUNTING SMILE. debauch of words and ideas. Anew paper was started every day, and meetings were held every Her bright smile haunts me still, although We meet no more and never may; night, with crowds fighting for entrance in order The seasons com-*, the seasons goto hear discussions on th» first principles of And she has wandered far away. government. Without practice or tradition men palms, We stood behind the and I who had never spoken on any stage found thereRemember well my happy thrill As, looking down, she heaved a sigh. selves orators addressing breathless audiences; Th< n smiled a smile that haunts me sti'.L and for the mass of the people the privilege si A perfume lingered in her hair listening to a political harangue was like an That shamed the fragrance of the rose; escape from prison. For a few weeks after the I fell upon my knees, to swear— I swore some, too, as heaven knows. manifesto freedom of meeting and press was complete and exiles who had been hounded out Full on a nail I set my knee! owe it to the surgeon's skill I of the empire reappeared in Moscow and St. at present chance to be That I Petersburg. Vera Sassoulltch. the assassin, who smile haunts me stilL bright Here where her —Chicago Record-Herald. had escaped conviction In girlhood, returned "Bridge" Is not so modern a game as has been from Geneva, old. gray and wrinkled, and almost , supposed. A writer In "The London Saturday Re- any night was to be seen at a revolutionary view" mentions a letter he has received, in which meeting with a beaming smile on her withered It is stated that the game was played as far back, face. The people were drunken with ideas, and as the 70s by the Greek colony In Manchester. everybody was on strike for a grievance or a was very principle. Safety in Flight.— multimillionaire "Not only were the workmen, tha considerate of the strange young man's welfare. revolt, but trainmen and tone.3, my the postal clerks in poor brother." he said In silky "Ah. in the parading "are you serving Mammon?" were "No, good sir." replied the young man. as he even the house cooks for streets and the hotel waiters were striking reached in his pocket. "Iam serving subpeenas." With a wild leap the multimillionaire reached his higher wages, the nursemaids for Sundays out. motor car and vanished toward the state line.—Chi- the housemaids for rooms with windows, thecago News.

RusJ

i

j

.

-

Chess by cable Is a familiar game, hut a telegraphic nililard match played by men three hundred miles apart la a novelty. The table was small marked in squares, like a checkerboard, enough to place the balls accurately. At the end of position each play the exact of the three bails would he telegraphed the other, and the balls on placed precisely table In the same posithe second tion as they were left on the first. It required four days to play off the game, as no special wire was sees made for direct used. Had arrangements communication the gams could have been concluded

in

little more than the usual time.

HOMELY HYGIENE.

It's often Mighty hard to tell The ways of drags an' Ucker, Sometimes they help you to git well. Sometimes they make you sicker. —Washington Star.

GENERAL

STRIKE

OF

WOMEN.

The Anglo-Russian. Women rann do everything In their power to make man's pi «enl exclusively comfortable position no longer tenable. For this purpose we maintain that women can and should organize a, general Women c:in strike as strike of their own \u25a0** an servants, as wives, as cooks, i's housekeepers, teacltera, clerks. factory hands, as taxpayers. From

lessons an.l their masters After social Insurrection repression and massacre; and as reaction

schoolboys for lighter for pleasanter pupils. <\ame

-

the cartoons might hays beea in blood and the faith of orators in th» promised institutions written in water. The sequel to the Joyous revel of intoxication

g&w

stronger

looted

closing with liberty is well told in the author's was the strike, which general chapters. The ironly genuine weapon of the people, was an weapon so long as it was used simulThe government comtaneously and seldom. pelled the leaders to use It piecemeal and often. It starved the women and children by confiscatand ing the strike funds, and employed Cossack

resistible

Hunger to shake the determination of the

men.

It discovered the fighting weakness of freedom and the security with which men In uniform could be trusted to kill at command. As soon *•" as the Moscow rising was crushed troops ths and Poland, the Caucasus let loose upon provinces, and preparations were mace

Baltic for the

|

Executions^

i reconquest of Finland. _.. general: prisons were crammed; pub* meetings were prohibited; and elections for ths douma were ordered under police supervision. A STAMMERING VERSE. The triumph of reaction was apparently coatperFrom The London Chronicle. plete; yet there was a slow but unwavering The roper conduct of a stammer Is. el coursa. sistence in rebellion, and revolutionists were embodied In a limerick, for limericks cover nil Indigt!n>^ and all exist. m c ! drawn together "by that Just and savage old man of Abinger Hammer. BaM the which Is the strongest bond of union. nation Who was blt?s«erl with a wife—and a stammer: ta« 'The plague ol my life Even when the day for the assembling of la* w-W-wtl Is !iiy first parliament was approaching martial D-d-d-d- cl-d-dammer!" was maintained and every art of provocation UNDER THE OTHER, POCKET. was employed to excite a public outbreak so that peoFrom The Boston Herald, there might be a pretext for thwarting th* It was a triumph of passive reErnest W. Hardy, law partner of th»* genial Dick ple's hopes. Irwtn, of Northampton, And well known in the pomet, with 170 members litical circles of this state, la a great reader, an! sistance when the douma often Indulges In that pursuit until the we« hours of the peasant class and as many as 15 work-

—•—

came

.

of Ihe morning Not lon* sin \u25a0••. while reading a most Interesting treat!*' on eomn important liw ca*e, ho wan middenly :>iv-. (l with severe pains, but at first paid no spa liU attention to them. As the hands of the clock pointed to near a. m the pains became so intense that he he was having on attack of appendlcttts, so feared lie at once telephoned h's physician. Th« sleepily uri»\v«T»vl tiie cull, and the following doctor • rations exchanged: "Say. tloo. la my appendix under my watch?" "No. you fool. It's under your matchbox. Rin* on and so to tvdl"

-

men from the towns; and. disappointing and Illusive as was the address from the throne, when ' the demand for amnesty was raised the w assembly rose in answer. Mr. Nevlnrson's words, written within the douma itseltf. arc noi* unduly sanguine. Yet ha la apparently con **~ vlnced that something has been gnlmed by representatives which no iiolcnce \u25a0» Russian the world can compel them to

*"* J*°v^

*

surrender. *». _

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