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THE EVENING TIMES WASHINGTON MONDAY APRIL 28 1902 4 1 THE EVENING TIMES FRANK A MUNSEY PUBLICATION OFFICE Tenth and D Streets njBSGRTPTIOX RATES TO OUT OF TOWN TOI TS rOSTAOK 1KEPAID w 7 r > 3IORJCING KDITION one year S5 six Jijgaiiil Sunday 7 six months 533O three xuontlts 170 Snnilny nfl tion only one year SS six mentlis SI llirfce months CO cents I months months Sl2 Morn one year 2O three ETKNTXG EDITION one year 83 six months J5O three months 75 Evening nml Sunday ono year S3 six months S25O tliree months 125 Morn- ing Evening anti Sunday one year 510 Ix months S3 three mouths S25O cents ¬ Any person who cannot buy the Morning Afternoon or Sunday Edition of The Times on any news stand in Washington in suburban towns on railroad trains or elsewhere will confer a favor by notifying the Publisher of The Times corner Tenth and D Sts Washington D C CAUSE FOR REJOICING r There is twofold cause for rejoic ing over the prospect that we are to 3mve a Municipal Bulging at last of course that it is to be built second that so desirable and a site has been selected for The location is central taking account of the constant trend of the city in a westerly direction is easily and in the line of the proposed Improvement of Pennsylvania Avenue In the evolution of the Greater In planning1 this structure regard should be had for the general char acter of the city the Capital of a First appro- priAte it Wash- ington accessi- ble F L ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ great and wealthy country Thile the building need not be larger than the needs of the local call for it ought to be comparable to structures of a like nature to be found in the capital cities of other countries There should be nothing cheap about it either in material or design It ought also to fit in well with the other great public edifices already existing here anti to be erected in the future Washington has long expected this consummation It is to be hoped that the expectations cherished in regard to this public structure will not be disappointed go ernrnent architecturally ENGLISH VIEW OF MOROAN The Financier CompellIng Eye i HE biggest commission agent in 8 the world In these words a London financier described Mr J Pierpont Morgan who has arrived on his annual trip to Europe says the London Express Cobody but himself knows what Mr iMbrgan is coming for Nobody but is in secret as to the full extent of his plans He believes in the sudden onslaught in business matters It is stated variously that he is coming for a holiday that he is coming to see biy anything in the market Mr Morgan has some points of re semblance to our own Mr Hooley but more points of difference Like Mr Hoeley the American financUir plays for high stakes states precisely how much be intends to make and sweeps away smaller men by the breadth of his schemes and the curt way in which be arrives at a settlement Unlike Mr Hooley he bas the knack of continued success It is a futile business to try and com pate hew much of a mans success is due to character and bow much to ability Lack may be left out of the question Bst it is certainly true of Mr Morgan that character has iliad a good deal to do Swfth the amai3ng of his millions and tie growth of his power He is a big man a masterful man and a curt man He lets you see that he intends to have his own way and that you must not waste his time before surrendering The Morgan eye is said to be a fear- some weapon The story goes that when Mr Morgan wants a new railway he calls up the president and glares at hum The bewildered president shivers and sells Hang it said cne of them it that man held only a singl share in a railroad he would boss it The compelling eye and the masterful mind are great things in they have the necessary millions behind them In his dealings the outer world Mr Morgan hIs ierce but no fascination for which reason he is powerful rather than popular His power Is that of wealth used ia- ceeeantly for the purpose of making more wealth The moves of the game are daz aingly swift and as confusing as a In the early stages or a negoti atian you can generally be sure that whatever Mr Morgan la doing it Is not what 3 u think he is This faet causes fittttorJBgs in the financial devecot When can never be sure whether he intends to Windsor Castle or only collie pup Mr Morgan is not the richest man In ffi tb coronation and that he is coming to c businesswhen With con- jurors the great man goes out for a walk you buy a C C 1 hIm- self ever the i ¬ ¬ ¬ > THE MATTER OF POOR SPELLING I reporiea I x sixty students ia an Eogltefe class at JL yS5erth western UnIversity were able to pass a simple examination ia spell iag tfeeagh they have actually bees tlwuabiag tile spoiling book the last twe months There is just a gleam of encouragement ia this evidence that speH fag books are still printed but the stu- d Btc Jaber the sane dWadvaaf ages M the fftat eaiaa who imagined had solved all the knotty prefc JeaN of fiaanee after two months study They did act begin early eaough in the pitied ef application te the beak too short for any time of life Qljbe stttdy sbovM begin with Srst- letnyns at school ad proper ptiaci Instruction were sever better ii JtMtraiad than IB the aid Webster spell lug book Words should be tears In grettpe to Which is a similarity of JSMBd aaaspelliBg sad fastened In the tor maay repetitions This is the way to fix tbera for life and though lit Is not a Bowery way with allmfag- jpmspecte of knowledge pined without You Know f are some g o tiaa about tkisgs- y a v seen every day aad all your life are a wonder you may pewfMy aa Otherwise set What are tb exact werda oa a 2seat stamp aad IH which direction I the faee- M It turned In which ir ctlea Is the face turned Oft ee l Oa a quarter On a dime iHew many toes has a cat on each fore- feet n each hind foot r g ati5Urdo Ltfae crescent aeon turn Te the right or left What color are your eatpleyers eyes The eyes of the man at the next desk Write down offhand the Sgaree on the face of your wat h The odds are that you will ma at least two mistakes In doing this Your watch has some words written or that on1y twenty out or for under nat he me- a their w the the ot lsory t What Do X two of the fIMtetI egbaud A i pies there hare If you ewer ene < << America But r fur practical purposes he is richer than all the rich men The capital represented in the interests which he Steel Trust the rail- ways the steamships and the estimated at the amazing total of 200 000800 He buys and sells again collect- ing large commissions on every deal and he invests his own money In the concerns upon which be operates He Is the em- peror of commission agents and his movements across the globe are as min- utely tratchad and recorded as those of any other king Mr Morgan is no fool He does not trust to luck and be is not conceited enough to think that he knows it all ihrself His method of collecting a staff was like the rest of his operations He has eleven partners and every one of them Is a recognized expert In some de- partment of finance He appointed one of them without seeing him surely ca strength of his established reputation and paid him a salary of 19009 a year with a share of profits With men of this kind at his elbows Mr Morgan ices not seed to waste weeks on inqurles when there is a big deal in progress He is s nina of few words and he waits for the other man to begin the talking- A young broker went to bins to borrow 200009 for a client Being warned about tilL great oaans methods he said what he ranted in half a dozen words and hand ed hii 2e list of securities to be de- posited He looked st me as if he saw clear through me said the broker and then glanced wilily down the list Then he said Ill take the loan and handed me over to one of his partners Alto- gether I was in his room about a minute and a half There is another story about how Mr Morgan this weapon of brevity A man owned coal lands in Pennsylvania whirls he knew were necessary for one of the great mans schemes He went down prepared to have it out with Morgan and to extract such a price as would make his children happy to the third genera tion He was kept waiting for a long time and then the man of millions came out bulky and impassive and looked him coldly in the eye 111 give you so much for your property said the big man at last The impressed coal owner agreed on the spot and walked out of the office Finally he Is a man who builds up rather than destroys and although small- er men and weaker concerns may perish in the procees his object Is always to weld tottering interests together and make them strong Competition is crim inal be says when It destroys the in- terest on investments and that is the ruling principle of big business life I I controlsthe restis I thc i I used ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ I I effort It provides an excellent drill which ceants for something besides spell Ing It is a pity that the discipline is so ranch neglected now a pity also that several of those unfortunate Northwest era students were so far demoralized that they spelled thorough there This was not a natural error because thoro does not sound like thorough and it was clearly due to a lamentable in fection from the falsely called phonetic system With that disease following upon a neglect of the early education hope raaet be absadeoed For the encouragement of the spelling reformers Jefcn McDoaaM of the West era School Journal has made a calcula tions by which be assures that at Ute rate they are BOW if the people and press w uld approve the Eng 38 years this takes no accouat of the constant accessions to language which anabera 25 ia the decade tram im to the road of the spelling reform er is a RecordHerald printed OR its face You have seen word a thousand times Write them out correctly can do this Also what is the number ia the case of your watch How leigh ia inches is a silk bat Hew maRT teeth have you What are the words OH a zvelieeraans How many iHtltess has the vest or shirt waist you are wearing How many stairs are there in the first Sight at r ur house How many steps lead from the street to the front of your bouse or flat any 1 2 5 or 10 bill you ever saw read dozens of thoso names Can you remember one The Counts Impression Edith Tioy say her husband the Count acts dreadfully seems to think ho was ad- mitted to the United States free duty Lire I them proceeding ilak might he reformed in But I the Verily these Few shield 7 door What Is the name slgnei1 in facslmile on EthelYes of lEsuse Sli ioere ¬ ¬ ¬ < EFFECTS OF RECENT BENEFACTIONS ON POPULAR EDUCATIONSo- me men of doing great things for their development fa vorable conditions arid these are the men for whom the Carnegie and Rhodes gifts are meant n i CHARLES G BUELTIfGHAM President of the New York Board of Education f oli capable By w squire ¬ tendency In this country is extend free public educa beyond the limits of the elementary schools and high schools to the college The extraordinary increase in the number of high schools in the last decade the development of State uni- versities and the change of public sentiment toward the free colleges here in Xew College of the City of New York and the Xormal College which now rest securely on a basis of popular evi- dences of this tendency- As the college supplements the high school so the university supplements the college Universities in the true sense of the word eannot at present at least look to the State for sup- port For this season the gifts of Mr Carnegie for an establishment at Washington of an institution the chief purpose of which is research and the founding of the Oxford State scholarship by Cecil Rhodes are to be regarded as a natural supplement- to the public educational system of this country In order to obtain a Rhodes schol AT EVENTIDE By ELIZABETH EIXICOTT Through all the day we live for now At eventide we live for then And heart and soul both backward turn And in the Way of Memory wend The sun through yonder blue and cloud Of lovely colors noble grand Breathes swift his dying hour as too Breathes out the soul of dying man Like echoing bells at vesper hour Ring out the chimes of olden days Across the bleak of other lands Across the tide of other ways OHC note prolonged yet deathly sweet Remembers all the childish years As In and out lisa shadows play About the shore and foaming weir O childhood gay O innocence That knows no wrong norquestions why The Judas should the Christ betray Why those who love him fearing fly No conscious evil frights the soul Of smiling infant fresh from God His way is bright fron Land of Pun To mystic golden Land of Nod Within the note of childish days An angel cadence gently rings An echo of the songs the host or guardian angels sweetly sing As oer the path the baby feet Will wander on its happy way They hover with calm folded wings Until the twilight shadows gray Confuse the tired closing eyes And baby sinks In slumbers rest And knows the flowers and thrilling songs Heard in the angels gardens The branches bend to kiss the beams Halfdancing on the purple waves And through the wood the note of night With thoughts of peace our memories laves THE Yorkthe supportare roE 1 I blest I ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ PASSING OF THE WHALER T WAS Prof Agassiz the eminent nat- uralist who made the prediction i twenty yours ago that within fifty years the whale would become and the prediction made may be verified In less time than he mentioned- In the yours gone by when great fleets went out from the United tates England Germany and Russia to bunt the whale in every sea even to within a few de gress of the North Pole he was annually slaughtered by the thousand and one might have safely predicted its total ex tinction If the fleets continued its work But they did not Other oils came to be preferred and In place of fleets vessels went out only by threes and fours The whales have been given a quarter of a century in which to restore their num ber It seems as it the respite came too In every known sea they have been growing scarcer year by year antt hunting the leviathan of the deep is now as uncertain as huntIng the elk of the forest The hunting of the whale for his oil ceased several years ago as the price dropped to a low figure but there are quite a number of vessels pursuing him ex- tinct but rate ¬ ¬ ¬ for the whalebone be yields This Is found in the Arctic whale alone as no other species is thus supplied and he must be followed to the frozen seas of the north There are uses for whale bone which no substitute can fill but it seems as if there would not be a pound of it to be bad In a few years In 1726 no less than eightysix whales were taken by the Nantucket fishermen and old Southampton L I was famous for the taking of the whale as far back as 1669 when the catch off that port was twelve To this day the men of Amagansett put off from the shore to the stirring cry of There she blows The American whaling industry has had some serious setbacks In 1871 thirtythree vessels be longing to the Arctic fleet were crushed in the and during the civil war the privateer Sbenandoah captured and burned a large HeeL There is prec- ious little romance left in the whaling business as well as mighty little profit Whale fiehiBg was about the first in Off to the Woods Off to the in the early Spring Off and away where the swaet birds sing Off to the woods to a grapevine swing Oft and away like birds on the wing Off to where the fresh green tips Speak to our hearts with their budding Call unto us and none jriiiy resist Off to the woods to make thore your tryst Off to tho wopds ye or ye gay OK and away for the livelong day Off to the woods make haste to obey Off and awayoff off and away Gertrude Okie Gaskill In The Chicago Living Church Too Quick Lady to bird fancier I must get you to change that parrot Sir Chickweed Ive only had him a week but quite half a dozen times he has shocked my visitors with his horrible language Bird Fancier I thought you wanted one that was to maam Punch lee the woods Ups ad I earn Con- federate woos ¬ ¬ ¬ arship TIO man need become a sup- pliant for charity The youth who has obtained his preliminary elementary high school and collegiate from the State not as a matter of charity but as a matter of right as a citizen may enter into competition for one of the Rhodes scholarships offered as a reward of merit If he succeeds he enters into the society of scholars which knows no limitation of race creed or con- ditions If I understand correctly the pur- pose of 3fr gift for the establishment in Washington of an institution for research it will give to graduates of our colleges and uni- versities an opportunity to pursue their studies far beyond the limits set in other institutions The criti cal period in the life of a scholar or investigator is the time when having received his university degree he is looking forward with hope to the ac- complishment of something in isis special field of work which will make the worldAviser or better Often such- a man finds ifc necessary to take a as tutor in some college there educa- tion I po- sition j ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > dustry engaged in by the colonists All along the coast from Wilmington Del to the mouth of the St Lawrence it was pursued with great success During the year 1842 fortytwo ships were sent from the town of Sag Harbor L L That town and Nantucket were the principal whal- ing the country Today there is not a single whaler hailing from Sag Harbor At the present time the ma- jority of alL the ships engaged in this trade arc owned in New Bedford which is now seat of the American whal- ing industry Latest advices from the whaling fleet are woefully discouraging The catch for a twelvemonth amounts to thirtynine whales best for one vessel was twelve and three vessels had no luck at all During the present season only twentytyro were taken the others being credited to the season of 300 A few years ago there were 200000 pounds of whalebone in the American market and on October 15 of this year the supply had declined to 75G0 of which 64500 were held in New Bedford At a recent sale the price of whalebone a pound was quot- ed at 250 and New Bedford dealers say it will advance to 4 a pound The whale lives principally upon the devilfish or ctopus and its mortal ene- mies are the shark and swordfish The meat of the whale tastes something like beef but is coarser and has a strong flavor Ambergris is the most valuable product of the whalefishing industry rarely found by whalers upon removing the blubber of the whale The substance- is of enormous value and is found only in the sperm whale The largest quan- tity ever found at one time was from a whale by the schooner Waterman of Nantscket It weighed 640 pounds and was sold in Boston for 7500 Whales are groat travelers For ex- ample the ship Catawba of Nantucket struck a whale off the coast of Brazil and twenty years later the same whale was captured by the Andrew Hicks off the Galapagos Islands In 1882 Captain Paddock of the ship Lion of Nantucket struck a whale off the River La Plata forced to abandon In 1815 he captured the same whale off the Galapagos Islands Penn Yan Democrat ports o The taken but It i the It- s sperm ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ to wear out his youthful enthusiasm in teaching the rudiments of his In Germany and in France uni- versity fellowship are provided for such men This is what the Carnegie foundation will do for young men in this country Thus it seems to me that the effect of these gifts on public education will be to supjplement the work of the State and to make it possible for any man who has it in him to make him- self a scholar in the true sense of the word Men of genius make their own opportunities but some men capable of doing great things require favorable conditions for their devel and these are the men for whom the Carnegie and rhodes gifts are have spoken of the effect of these gifts on individuals there another side to the question The influence of the universities is felt even in the kindergarten As Dr William T Har- ris the United States Commissioner- of Education recently said it is im portant to conduct even the most elementary education of the people- in the light of the highest and best in human learning meant- I is sub- ject ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ AMERICA SHOULD HAVE A- NEW NATIONAL HYMN By J PRAISE RICHARD In The Evening Times of Apirl 25 Is an interesting and suggestive edi- torial on the subject A New National Not I trust your sug- gestions mdy stimulate some musician to compose amelody American in origin anti commensurate with the richness and dignity of the poem My Country Tin of Thee Pcrmlt ne to suggest further that a slight change in the first stanza of beautiful hymn needs to be made Let the word peoples be substituted for thET word pilgrims I mention a few reasons 1 IJrom the fact tbat Dr Smith wrote the poem in Boston in 1832 the word had reference originally to the settlers at Plymouth Rock and adjaSont territory The word is too local It excludes the settlers at other points along the Atlantic Ocean My ancestors were GermanSwiss and as slstedin the Revolutionary War to secure our independence The people of Virgnia New York Georgia and the Carolinas were just as patriotic as those of New England 2 With this change the poem appeals to every portion of our country rec ognizihglno North no South no East no West Bvery one under the protec- tion of the grand old flag will then be able to sitg with greatest pride 3fly country tin Sweet land of liberty 2 r Of thee I sing V- r Land where my fathers died Land of the peoples pride r From every mountain side CV 3 Eis v n I substitution be made in the singing of this precious collection and the texts itll soon conform I I t HymnWhy j this pilgrim I PennsylvanIa of thee i h r J c z y Let freedom ring e Lab the i- v ¬ ¬ ¬ > > < Play BalL Play haP I The old cry echoes oer the peaceful vale of Cherry Creek and from the conies a roar as rows of a leak The batter grasps the willow club the pitcher strikes an attitude the catcher gives his hands a rub the umpire with glued upcn the and once again the seasons on Way up the telegraphic pole the eager small boy porches high and In the fence each knotty hole and they arc many frames an eye The score card merchants voice rings out the voice through all the winter the peanut loudly kid guns and that same cushion man is there to our pantalettes from wear The knocker with his noisy knock the kicker with his xnuHlsh kick the talk- er with his bally talk upon the seats as flies are thick The ladies in their smart attire enthusiasm in their are there bevies to admire and the players to the skies and their dainty hands when one of some figure makes a run The old excuses now are fed to bosses from employes lip The grandma on her dying bed the wire at home down with la grippe That will be spied beside there the rick wife bT her bus bands Side and bow those will blush and stare to catch their employers eyes lit up half amused surprise The game Is on the seasons here the stricken ball outs through the the batters fan the ntmcsphere the runners round the bases tear the umpire calls the strikes and balls puts runners out when they are in nor heeds the rooters angry squalls that they wIll kill him suro as sin The seasons here the same old muss and on the saats the same old us Denver Post SECOND PLACE- BY HARKY ROMAIXE You heart ma belle coquette As your glove And I know youd pine and pout and fret In the chains of a lifelong Jove If we were married youd flirt with Jim Or wheavrthe man might be So Im esoteric you should marry klein For then youll flirt with me bleacher std ken eye dub vender wIng Eve eye in sank ding wit aL chang i sit- ting fraud ¬ ¬ OF THE GREAT NORTMWEST To Miss S By ANDREW ARMSTRONG As the in glory leaves the languor of the East When of evening settles over palace and bazaar And are burning dimly over revelry and feast And It roams the drawn by magic force afar Tin It glows at oer a distant mountain crest Lighting up the hills and valleys of the great Northwest- So I dream the brightest glory the Levant has ever known Fwas the light of womans beauty in its highest brilliancy When the shadows closed her ami the fame of ages gone Lonely lit the fading grandeur and the passing pageantry Moved through depths of trackless distance dawning lastly in its the vision of the maiden of the great Northwest r TH ADEN L I i Aim crimson the umps tackles yens l I 1 I t- In I h F fei around a OUTLOOK OF M C A IN THE TWENTIETH ByE 0 SELBERS Assistant Secretary Washington Branch TM C A THEY J C tRV- w i r f HE dawn of the twentieth cen I tury finds the Yotirig Mens Christian the most potent factor at among young men for their moral physical and spiritual welfare The association will always remain true to the great fundamental principles which have been so often reiterated at its great conventions including the socalled Paris basis which is the platform of the association movement throughout- the world and was adopted at the firsfr worlds conference held in Paris in 1S55 This platform is that The Mens Christian Association y unite those young men who Jesus Christ as their God and Sa- viour according to the Holy Scrip- tures desire to he His in their doctrine and in to associate their efforts for the ex- tension of His kingdom among young menTo successfully accomplish this the association makes use of the gym- nasium educational classes lecture courses socials in fact all of the best of club life JTo money has to supply the wants of all young men make the Young 3FeRTs Christian Association the next place to home or as it is sometimes a home downtown I Assoc ion Young seek ing disciple element sad 1 < ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ The American work stands well to the forefront and the history and development of tins movement in all parts of the world in past fifty years are but oregleams of the pos- sibilities of the future of the asso- ciation There are in this upward of 1700 associations ship well approaching 300000 while the property owned by the associa- tion in this country alone reaches 22000000 The work has probation commendation support of such men as President Jloosevelt President A J of the Pennsylvania JlailrondV President M E Ingalls of the Chesapeake anti Ohio Railroad Commander AYadhams U S JT Miss Helen Gould Mr W K Vanderbilt Senator ChaunceyM Depew Samuel Spencer of the Southern Railroad Bishops Pot ter Hurst and Sntterleeand all the leading clergy business and profes- sional men throughout the length and breadth of the country With the history of thcrpastv the support and cooperation Jf as those mentioned and the Increased resources incident to successful outlook of the Young Association the twen tieth gives promise of as suc- cessful work as any branch of Christ- ian effort th count r heap men a work ns f r Cassett President 3i ¬ ¬ < ¬ ¬ THE BACHELOR GIRL OF THE SHOP AND I STUE5IO first problem which confronts bachelor girl in a big city at outset of her wageearning ca- reer is Where and shall I live the St Louis Star are entirely selfdependent- on wages of 2 to 3 a For suck limited purses there are two re sources the homes tapper ted by charity private or public and the selfsupported boarding houses which furnish rooms and board at 250 to 3 a The homos are the cleaner lighter and more wholesome but the rules are rigid and irksome The greatest ob- jection however is their savor of charity which to the independent American girl spoils the taste of the best bread in the cheap boarding house Is much less attractive Jt is usually In the most crowded section of the city and the necessities as well as the tory rooms are furnished So each struggler here at least the incentive of discomfort to push tier way up in the world as fast as possible into a little stratum of where she can afford to or d weefc at low- est for her food and housing For this sum live very cozily There are two doors ppsa to the sevcn dollaraweek girl BeyoJd either Is a spot fatistjrfeat rushing city peace and homiUness will warm the is studio 1 e or light Our can week and up a sun- ny room commanding a wide expanse of cr three flights up perhaps she can have marvelous housekeeping ar- rangements of her own a roomy settle which on loosening a peg may be turned into a table a couchbed Orientally draped that opens to swallow her entire wardrobe a chiffonier which as a sideboard and hosts of pretty makeshifts which lead double existence The other dollaraday alternative is the boarding house halt bedroom And the bachelor girl Is at night to bother with her own or whose tastes are not domestic swarms by thou THE low say week wet word brest brest pure shecan com tar heart room housekeeping chimney I sere who toot d has ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ sands Into the coffinlike narrowness of the hall If she and a taste for she can soon at small expanse tiny wilderness to blossom as rose What Is a bachelor den without a cozy corner Of course she must have one She puts In a plea with for a couchbed with wire instead of the white Iron one and an Oriental cover as well Sofa pillows next For this purpose the possibilities ot fivecent bandanna are endless She may buy design from Persian to polka dot bright scarlets She sews two for each slip Oad she leaves open to take the pillow from at night This oflo she ties together for daytime use with of pretty ribbon the India cheap and ef as well as the endless designs stamped on linen to be embroidered at odd A screen may be constructed with the aid of three brokcnTJanels front an old frame a few yards of chintz and a paper of tacks The hinges are bits of cloth doubled pp several times and the band decoration sf the crepe paper Japanese umbrellas of Various sizes suspended open above the cozy corner or from the arch of a daorway add a quaint Oriental touch They can be purchased for 10 or 20 cents The effect may be heightened by Japanese lanterns by string or ribbon from an doer arch These also may be had for 10 20 and 50 cents Then Miss Bachelor Girl tack a few folding paper fans or oddly cut palm leaf ones beneath her umbrellas or above the lanterns to hide the handles Tho fans can be had for a few cents each A wire frame for photos cast be bought for 15 cents or a larger size for 25 cents Another pretty way to arrange or snapshots Is to fasten them on long streamers bright ribbon about two Inches wide acn hang them panelwise or window casings you go on beautifying your little kingdom new ways of decoration will suggest themselves to you and you will take In your surroundings the personal pleasure that the word home implies room make I sprig ever blue end Ten moment cent tope dangle might photo of upon coziness the landlady 7 THE MORTGAGE ON THE FARM By AGNES REPPLIER < X HERE are some things which hap I pea so often in stories that they have become part of the novelists stock In trade his tools in fact which heemployes as regularly as a car- penter does his saw or a burglar his jimmy Occasionally they grow oldfash ioned and are replaced by newer or more complicated articles warranted to stand the wear and tear of a few years usage The tool box Is filled afresh and each In- ventive artisan goes to work with the same admirable apparatus Brain fevers for example are no longer de riguer as formerly when no tale was held to be complete without one Forged wills too are growing rarer in fiction grim family secrets nave almost passed out of record and even Eliza- bethan houses with latticed windows ap pear to have fallen into decay In their place we have cbeap restau rants cooperative workshops sermons and lectures unabridged a new and not very edifying type of clergyman an end less variety cf old maids and some in timate revolutions of poverty One of these is the inevitable and mel aHciHJly mortgage which has the same disturbing prominence in American fic- tion ia short stories especially that the landlord to have in heartreading English tales Of the two evils I prefer the landlord because he at least is flesh andy blood has On the Use of the Word Get- A Harvard professor after telling his class in composition never to use got ten added that most persons should use get and got about oaetenth as much as they do Is he not right Get means to acquire to gain or to procure It is used correctly in such sen- tences as Get understanding Please get my book I have got it for you from the shelf Ha ts getting what you want and also in the get at to get away to get down to get home to get near to or on to got to a place to get the start and to get up If we restricted ourselves to these uses of get we could net be criticised but we are likely not to do so especially when we use gut with some fort of have Two mistakes have got in- stead of have and have got to In- stead of must are the most common used f idiomsto gestalt t I ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ a body to be kicked and a soul to be damned We can say roundly with iliss Bella Wilier I hate our landlord arid feel that we are hating something nail somebody But this dreadful mortgage us out of irritation into despond- ency In Western stories it absorbs all the proSt of the farmers toll and leaves him poor soured and disheartened In New England tales it generally come down as a heritage cr trouble from some involved grandfather and seek gen- eration is bowed and bent under the weight of Its grievous yoke In all cases the uncompromising touch of realism gives a pawful distiactivenefl to the pictures and seems to say la liner This Is called fiction but it Is the truth Resist its power who The work is well well 4eae By far there is no wttaatendias its appeal But life fe sad and the w rki is gay anti many dejected moments ge to every Give us at least in the warm reals of romance something more blithe to us on cur way If Is a Eng land farmer who has BO mortgage SKl farm toll MS about that happy H there Is a New England wamaa wfease home is really her owa tell us about that prosperous spinster Give usa little now and then to melt the ice gild the unguarded moments we steal from time AN ENVIED PLACE Happy happy Little Jappy On a fan Though you are not statH s Yet youre very plctuseiskjv i Funny little not sadly No but gladly I would take your place For your coat of height feranilleni Much has pleased my SqkUiUliaa And she kissed your face Never Whatsoever Coat of mine Is she aughtto be but Scornful Thats the reason Ita so mournful Oh my Japanese The King has every donetoo beer cheer there his man t i- 1 paper kr man- TIS chills san New sun- shine cad 1 never she sees ¬ ¬ < < >

THE EVENING TIMES EFFECTS OF RECENT C …chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024441/1902-04-28/ed...1 4 THE EVENING TIMES WASHINGTON MONDAY APRIL 28 1902 THE EVENING TIMES FRANK A

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THE EVENING TIMES WASHINGTON MONDAY APRIL 28 190241THE EVENING TIMES

FRANK A MUNSEYPUBLICATION OFFICE Tenth and D StreetsnjBSGRTPTIOX RATES TO OUT OF TOWN TOI TS rOSTAOK 1KEPAID

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3IORJCING KDITION one year S5 six

Jijgaiiil Sunday 7 six months533O three xuontlts 170 Snnilny nfltion only one year SS six mentlis SIllirfce months CO centsI months months Sl2 Morn

one year2O three

ETKNTXG EDITION one year 83 sixmonths J5O three months 75Evening nml Sunday ono year S3 sixmonths S25O tliree months 125 Morn-ing Evening anti Sunday one year 510Ix months S3 three mouths S25O

cents

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Any person who cannot buy the Morning Afternoon or SundayEdition of The Times on any news stand in Washington in suburbantowns on railroad trains or elsewhere will confer a favor by notifyingthe Publisher of The Times corner Tenth and D Sts Washington D C

CAUSE FOR REJOICING

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There is twofold cause for rejoicing over the prospect that we are to3mve a Municipal Bulging at last

of course that it is to be builtsecond that so desirable and

a site has been selected forThe location is central taking accountof the constant trend of the city in awesterly direction is easily

and in the line of the proposedImprovement of Pennsylvania AvenueIn the evolution of the Greater

In planning1 this structure regardshould be had for the general character of the city the Capital of a

Firstappro-

priAte it

Wash-ington

accessi-ble

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great and wealthy country Thilethe building need not be larger thanthe needs of the localcall for it ought to becomparable to structures of a likenature to be found in the capitalcities of other countries Thereshould be nothing cheap about iteither in material or design It oughtalso to fit in well with the othergreat public edifices already existinghere anti to be erected in the future

Washington has long expected thisconsummation It is to be hoped thatthe expectations cherished in regardto this public structure will not bedisappointed

go ernrnentarchitecturally

ENGLISH VIEW OF MOROAN The FinancierCompellIng Eye

i HE biggest commission agent in8

the world In these words aLondon financier described MrJ Pierpont Morgan who has

arrived on his annual trip to Europe saysthe London Express

Cobody but himself knows what MriMbrgan is coming for Nobody but

is in secret as to the fullextent of his plans He believes in thesudden onslaught in business mattersIt is stated variously that he is comingfor a holiday that he is coming to see

biy anything in the marketMr Morgan has some points of re

semblance to our own Mr Hooley butmore points of difference Like MrHoeley the American financUir plays forhigh stakes states precisely how much beintends to make and sweeps away smallermen by the breadth of his schemes andthe curt way in which be arrives at asettlement Unlike Mr Hooley he basthe knack of continued success

It is a futile business to try and compate hew much of a mans success is dueto character and bow much to abilityLack may be left out of the questionBst it is certainly true of Mr Morganthat character has iliad a good deal to doSwfth the amai3ng of his millions andtie growth of his power He is a bigman a masterful man and a curt manHe lets you see that he intends to havehis own way and that you must not wastehis time before surrendering

The Morgan eye is said to be a fear-some weapon The story goes that whenMr Morgan wants a new railway he callsup the president and glares at hum Thebewildered president shivers and sellsHang it said cne of them it that man

held only a singl share in a railroad hewould boss it The compelling eye andthe masterful mind are great things in

they have the necessarymillions behind them In his dealings

the outer world Mr Morgan hIsierce but no fascination for whichreason he is powerful rather thanpopular

His power Is that of wealth used ia-ceeeantly for the purpose of making morewealth The moves of the game are dazaingly swift and as confusing as a

In the early stages or a negotiatian you can generally be sure thatwhatever Mr Morgan la doing it Is notwhat 3 u think he is This faet causesfittttorJBgs in the financial devecot When

can never be sure whether he intends toWindsor Castle or only collie pup

Mr Morgan is not the richest man In

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tb

coronation and that he is coming to

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businesswhen

With

con-jurors

the great man goes out for a walk you

buy a

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hIm-self ever

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THE MATTER OF POOR SPELLINGI reporieaI x sixty students ia an Eogltefe class at

JL yS5erth western UnIversity were able topass a simple examination ia spell

iag tfeeagh they have actually beestlwuabiag tile spoiling book the lasttwe months There is just a gleam ofencouragement ia this evidence that speHfag books are still printed but the stu-d Btc Jaber the sane dWadvaafages M the fftat eaiaa who imagined

had solved all the knotty prefcJeaN of fiaanee after two months studyThey did act begin early eaough in

the pitied ef application te thebeak too short for any time of life

Qljbe stttdy sbovM begin with Srst-letnyns at school ad proper ptiaci

Instruction were sever better iiJtMtraiad than IB the aid Webster spelllug book Words should be tears Ingrettpe to Which is a similarity of

JSMBd aaaspelliBg sad fastened In thetor maay repetitions This is

the way to fix tbera for life and thoughlit Is not a Bowery way with allmfag-jpmspecte of knowledge pined without

You Know

f are some g o tiaa about tkisgs-y a v seen every day aad all your life

are a wonder you may pewfMy aa

Otherwise setWhat are tb exact werda oa a 2seat

stamp aad IH which direction I the faee-M It turnedIn which ir ctlea Is the face turned Oftee l Oa a quarter On a dime

iHew many toes has a cat on each fore-feet n each hind footr g ati5Urdo Ltfae crescent aeon turnTe the right or left

What color are your eatpleyers eyesThe eyes of the man at the next desk

Write down offhand the Sgaree on theface of your wat h The odds are thatyou will ma at least two mistakes Indoing this

Your watch has some words written or

that on1y twenty out or

for

under

nat he

me-a their

w

thethe

ot

lsory

t What Do

X two of the fIMtetI egbaud

A i

pies

there

hare

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America But r fur practical purposes heis richer than all the rich men Thecapital represented in the interests whichhe Steel Trust the rail-ways the steamships and theestimated at the amazing total of 200000800 He buys and sells again collect-ing large commissions on every deal andhe invests his own money In the concernsupon which be operates He Is the em-peror of commission agents and hismovements across the globe are as min-utely tratchad and recorded as those ofany other king

Mr Morgan is no fool He does nottrust to luck and be is not conceitedenough to think that he knows it allihrself His method of collecting astaff was like the rest of his operationsHe has eleven partners and every one ofthem Is a recognized expert In some de-partment of finance He appointed one ofthem without seeing him surely castrength of his established reputationand paid him a salary of 19009 a yearwith a share of profits With men of thiskind at his elbows Mr Morgan ices notseed to waste weeks on inqurles whenthere is a big deal in progress

He is s nina of few words and he waitsfor the other man to begin the talking-A young broker went to bins to borrow

200009 for a client Being warned abouttilL great oaans methods he said what heranted in half a dozen words and handed hii 2e list of securities to be de-posited He looked st me as if he sawclear through me said the broker andthen glanced wilily down the list Thenhe said Ill take the loan and handedme over to one of his partners Alto-gether I was in his room about a minuteand a half

There is another story about how MrMorgan this weapon of brevity Aman owned coal lands in Pennsylvaniawhirls he knew were necessary for one ofthe great mans schemes He went downprepared to have it out with Morganand to extract such a price as would makehis children happy to the third generation He was kept waiting for a longtime and then the man of millions cameout bulky and impassive and looked himcoldly in the eye 111 give you so muchfor your property said the big man atlast The impressed coal owner agreed onthe spot and walked out of the office

Finally he Is a man who builds uprather than destroys and although small-er men and weaker concerns may perishin the procees his object Is always toweld tottering interests together andmake them strong Competition is criminal be says when It destroys the in-terest on investments and that is theruling principle of big business life

I I

controlstherestis

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effort It provides an excellent drillwhich ceants for something besides spellIng

It is a pity that the discipline is soranch neglected now a pity also thatseveral of those unfortunate Northwestera students were so far demoralizedthat they spelled thorough thereThis was not a natural error becausethoro does not sound like thorough andit was clearly due to a lamentable infection from the falsely called phoneticsystem With that disease following upona neglect of the early education hoperaaet be absadeoed

For the encouragement of the spellingreformers Jefcn McDoaaM of the Westera School Journal has made a calculations by which be assures that atUte rate they are BOW if thepeople and press w uld approve the Eng

38 years this takes no accouat ofthe constant accessions to languagewhich anabera 25 ia the decade tramim to

the road of the spelling reformer is a RecordHerald

printed OR its face You have seenword a thousand times Write them outcorrectly can do this Also whatis the number ia the case of your watchHow leigh ia inches is a silk batHew maRT teeth have you

What are the words OH a zvelieeraans

How many iHtltess has the vest orshirt waist you are wearingHow many stairs are there in the firstSight at r ur houseHow many steps lead from the streetto the front of your bouse or flatany 1 2 5 or 10 bill you ever saw

read dozens of thoso names Canyou remember one

The Counts ImpressionEdith Tioy say her husband the

Count acts dreadfullyseems to think ho was ad-

mitted to the United States free dutyLire

I

themproceeding

ilak might he reformed inBut

I

the

Verily

these

Few

shield 7

doorWhat Is the name slgnei1 in facslmileon

EthelYesof

lEsuse Sli

ioere

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EFFECTS OF RECENT BENEFACTIONS

ON POPULAR EDUCATIONSo-

me men of doing great things for their development favorable conditions arid these are the men for whom the Carnegie and Rhodesgifts are meant n i

CHARLES G BUELTIfGHAM

President of the New York Board ofEducation

foli

capable By

w

squire ¬

tendency In this country isextend free public educa

beyond the limits of theelementary schools and high schoolsto the college

The extraordinary increase in thenumber of high schools in the lastdecade the development of State uni-versities and the change of publicsentiment toward the free collegeshere in Xew College of theCity of New York and the XormalCollege which now rest securely ona basis of popular evi-

dences of this tendency-As the college supplements the high

school so the university supplementsthe college Universities in the truesense of the word eannot at presentat least look to the State for sup-port For this season the gifts of MrCarnegie for an establishment atWashington of an institution thechief purpose of which is researchand the founding of the Oxford Statescholarship by Cecil Rhodes are tobe regarded as a natural supplement-to the public educational system ofthis country

In order to obtain a Rhodes schol

AT EVENTIDE

By ELIZABETH EIXICOTT

Through all the day we live for nowAt eventide we live for thenAnd heart and soul both backward turnAnd in the Way of Memory wendThe sun through yonder blue and cloudOf lovely colors noble grandBreathes swift his dying hour as tooBreathes out the soul of dying man

Like echoing bells at vesper hourRing out the chimes of olden daysAcross the bleak of other landsAcross the tide of other waysOHC note prolonged yet deathly sweetRemembers all the childish yearsAs In and out lisa shadows playAbout the shore and foaming weir

O childhood gay O innocenceThat knows no wrong norquestions whyThe Judas should the Christ betrayWhy those who love him fearing flyNo conscious evil frights the soulOf smiling infant fresh from GodHis way is bright fron Land of PunTo mystic golden Land of Nod

Within the note of childish daysAn angel cadence gently ringsAn echo of the songs the hostor guardian angels sweetly singAs oer the path the baby feetWill wander on its happy wayThey hover with calm folded wingsUntil the twilight shadows gray

Confuse the tired closing eyesAnd baby sinks In slumbers restAnd knows the flowers and thrilling songsHeard in the angels gardensThe branches bend to kiss the beamsHalfdancing on the purple wavesAnd through the wood the note of nightWith thoughts of peace our memories

laves

THE

Yorkthe

supportare

roE

1

Iblest

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PASSING OF THE WHALER

T WAS Prof Agassiz the eminent nat-

uralist who made the prediction

i twenty yours ago that within fiftyyears the whale would become

and the prediction made may beverified In less time than he mentioned-In the yours gone by when great fleetswent out from the United tates EnglandGermany and Russia to bunt the whalein every sea even to within a few degress of the North Pole he was annuallyslaughtered by the thousand and onemight have safely predicted its total extinction If the fleets continued its workBut they did not Other oils came to bepreferred and In place of fleets vesselswent out only by threes and fours Thewhales have been given a quarter of acentury in which to restore their number It seems as it the respite cametoo In every known sea they havebeen growing scarcer year by year antthunting the leviathan of the deep is nowas uncertain as huntIng the elk of theforest

The hunting of the whale for his oilceased several years ago as the pricedropped to a low figure but there arequite a number of vessels pursuing him

ex-

tinct

butrate

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for the whalebone be yields This Isfound in the Arctic whale alone as noother species is thus supplied and hemust be followed to the frozen seas ofthe north There are uses for whalebone which no substitute can fill but itseems as if there would not be a poundof it to be bad In a few years In 1726

no less than eightysix whales were takenby the Nantucket fishermen and oldSouthampton L I was famous for thetaking of the whale as far back as 1669

when the catch off that port was twelveTo this day the men of Amagansett

put off from the shore to the stirring cryof There she blows The Americanwhaling industry has had some serioussetbacks In 1871 thirtythree vessels belonging to the Arctic fleet were crushed inthe and during the civil war the

privateer Sbenandoah capturedand burned a large HeeL There is prec-ious little romance left in the whalingbusiness as well as mighty little profit

Whale fiehiBg was about the first in

Off to the Woods

Off to the in the early SpringOff and away where the swaet birds singOff to the woods to a grapevine swingOft and away like birds on the wingOff to where the fresh green

tipsSpeak to our hearts with their budding

Call unto us and none jriiiy resistOff to the woods to make thore your trystOff to tho wopds ye or ye gayOK and away for the livelong dayOff to the woods make haste to obeyOff and awayoff off and away

Gertrude Okie Gaskill In The ChicagoLiving Church

Too QuickLady to bird fancier I must get you

to change that parrot Sir ChickweedIve only had him a week but quite halfa dozen times he has shocked my visitorswith his horrible language

Bird Fancier I thought you wantedone that was to maamPunch

lee

the woods

Ups

ad

Iearn

Con-

federate

woos

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arship TIO man need become a sup-pliant for charity The youth whohas obtained his preliminary

elementary high school andcollegiate from the State not as amatter of charity but as a matter ofright as a citizen may enter intocompetition for one of the Rhodesscholarships offered as a reward ofmerit If he succeeds he enters intothe society of scholars which knowsno limitation of race creed or con-ditions

If I understand correctly the pur-pose of 3fr gift for theestablishment in Washington of aninstitution for research it will giveto graduates of our colleges and uni-versities an opportunity to pursuetheir studies far beyond the limitsset in other institutions The critical period in the life of a scholar orinvestigator is the time when havingreceived his university degree he islooking forward with hope to the ac-complishment of something in isisspecial field of work which will makethe worldAviser or better Often such-a man finds ifc necessary to take a

as tutor in some college there

educa-tion

I

po-sition

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dustry engaged in by the colonists Allalong the coast from Wilmington Delto the mouth of the St Lawrence it waspursued with great success During theyear 1842 fortytwo ships were sent fromthe town of Sag Harbor L L That townand Nantucket were the principal whal-ing the country Today there isnot a single whaler hailing from SagHarbor At the present time the ma-jority of alL the ships engaged in thistrade arc owned in New Bedford whichis now seat of the American whal-ing industry

Latest advices from the whaling fleetare woefully discouraging The catch fora twelvemonth amounts to thirtyninewhales best for one vessel wastwelve and three vessels had no luckat all During the present season onlytwentytyro were taken the others beingcredited to the season of 300 A fewyears ago there were 200000 pounds ofwhalebone in the American market andon October 15 of this year the supply haddeclined to 75G0 of which 64500 wereheld in New Bedford At a recent salethe price of whalebone a pound was quot-ed at 250 and New Bedford dealers sayit will advance to 4 a pound

The whale lives principally upon thedevilfish or ctopus and its mortal ene-

mies are the shark and swordfish Themeat of the whale tastes something likebeef but is coarser and has a strongflavor Ambergris is the most valuableproduct of the whalefishing industry

rarely found by whalers upon removingthe blubber of the whale The substance-is of enormous value and is found onlyin the sperm whale The largest quan-

tity ever found at one time wasfrom a whale by the schooner Watermanof Nantscket It weighed 640 pounds andwas sold in Boston for 7500

Whales are groat travelers For ex-ample the ship Catawba of Nantucketstruck a whale off the coast of Braziland twenty years later the same whalewas captured by the Andrew Hicks offthe Galapagos Islands In 1882 CaptainPaddock of the ship Lion of Nantucketstruck a whale off the River LaPlata forced to abandon In1815 he captured the same whale off theGalapagos Islands Penn Yan Democrat

ports o

The

taken

but It

i

the

It-

s

sperm

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to wear out his youthful enthusiasmin teaching the rudiments of his

In Germany and in France uni-versity fellowship are provided forsuch men This is what the Carnegiefoundation will do for young men inthis country

Thus it seems to me that the effectof these gifts on public education willbe to supjplement the work of theState and to make it possible for anyman who has it in him to make him-self a scholar in the true sense ofthe word Men of genius make theirown opportunities but some mencapable of doing great things requirefavorable conditions for their devel

and these are the men forwhom the Carnegie and rhodes giftsare

have spoken of the effect of thesegifts on individuals there anotherside to the question The influence ofthe universities is felt even in thekindergarten As Dr William T Har-ris the United States Commissioner-of Education recently said it is important to conduct even the mostelementary education of the people-in the light of the highest and bestin human learning

meant-I

is

sub-ject ¬

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AMERICA SHOULD HAVE A-

NEW NATIONAL HYMN

By J PRAISE RICHARD

In The Evening Times of Apirl 25 Is an interesting and suggestive edi-torial on the subject A New National Not I trust your sug-gestions mdy stimulate some musician to compose amelody American in originanti commensurate with the richness and dignity of the poem My CountryTin of Thee

Pcrmlt ne to suggest further that a slight change in the first stanza ofbeautiful hymn needs to be made Let the word peoples be substituted

for thET word pilgrims I mention a few reasons1 IJrom the fact tbat Dr Smith wrote the poem in Boston in 1832 the

word had reference originally to the settlers at Plymouth Rock andadjaSont territory The word is too local It excludes the settlers at otherpoints along the Atlantic Ocean My ancestors were GermanSwiss and asslstedin the Revolutionary War to secure our independence The people ofVirgnia New York Georgia and the Carolinas were just aspatriotic as those of New England

2 With this change the poem appeals to every portion of our country recognizihglno North no South no East no West Bvery one under the protec-tion of the grand old flag will then be able to sitg with greatest pride

3fly country tinSweet land of liberty

2 r

Of thee I sing V-r Land where my fathers died

Land of the peoples pride rFrom every mountain side CV3 Eis v n

Isubstitution be made in the singing of this precious collection and

the texts itll soon conform

I I

t

HymnWhy

j

this

pilgrim

IPennsylvanIa

of theei hr J

c

z

y

Let freedom ring eLab the

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Play BalLPlay haP I The old cry echoes oer the

peaceful vale of Cherry Creek andfrom the conies a roar asrows of a leak Thebatter grasps the willow club thepitcher strikes an attitude thecatcher gives his hands a rub theumpire with gluedupcn the andonce again the seasons on

Way up the telegraphic pole the eagersmall boy porches high and In thefence each knotty hole and they arcmany frames an eye The scorecard merchants voice rings out thevoice through all the winterthe peanut loudlykid guns andthat same cushion man is there to

our pantalettes from wear

The knocker with his noisy knock thekicker with his xnuHlsh kick the talk-er with his bally talk upon the seatsas flies are thick The ladies in theirsmart attire enthusiasm in theirare there bevies to admire andthe players to the skies andtheir dainty hands when one ofsome figure makes a run

The old excuses now are fed to bossesfrom employes lip The grandma onher dying bed the wire at home downwith la grippe Thatwill be spied beside

there the rick wife bT her busbands Side and bow thosewill blush and stare to catch theiremployers eyes lit up halfamused surprise

The game Is on the seasons here thestricken ball outs through thethe batters fan the ntmcsphere therunners round the bases tear theumpire calls the strikes and ballsputs runners out when they are innor heeds the rooters angry squallsthat they wIll kill him suro as sinThe seasons here the same old mussand on the saats the same old us

Denver Post

SECOND PLACE-

BY HARKY ROMAIXE

You heart ma belle coquetteAs your glove

And I know youd pine and pout and fretIn the chains of a lifelong Jove

If we were married youd flirt with JimOr wheavrthe man might be

So Im esoteric you should marry kleinFor then youll flirt with me

bleacher

std ken eye

dubvender wIng

Eve

eyein

sank

ding

wit

aL

chang

i

sit-ting

fraud

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OF THE GREAT NORTMWESTTo Miss S

By ANDREW ARMSTRONG

As the in glory leaves the languor of the EastWhen of evening settles over palace and bazaarAnd are burning dimly over revelry and feastAnd It roams the drawn by magic force afarTin It glows at oer a distant mountain crestLighting up the hills and valleys of the great Northwest-

So I dream the brightest glory the Levant has ever knownFwas the light of womans beauty in its highest brilliancy

When the shadows closed her ami the fame of ages goneLonely lit the fading grandeur and the passing pageantryMoved through depths of trackless distance dawning lastly in

itsthe vision of the maiden of the great Northwest

r TH ADENL I

iAim crimson

theumps

tackles yensl

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OUTLOOK OF M C AIN THE TWENTIETH

ByE 0 SELBERS Assistant Secretary Washington Branch TM C A

THEYJ

C tRV-w

i r f HE dawn of the twentieth cenI tury finds the Yotirig Mens

Christian the mostpotent factor at among youngmen for their moral physical andspiritual welfare The associationwill always remain true to the greatfundamental principles which havebeen so often reiterated at its greatconventions including the socalledParis basis which is the platform ofthe association movement throughout-the world and was adopted at the firsfrworlds conference held in Paris in1S55

This platform is that TheMens Christian Association y

unite those young men whoJesus Christ as their God and Sa-

viour according to the Holy Scrip-tures desire to he His intheir doctrine and into associate their efforts for the ex-

tension of His kingdom among youngmenTo

successfully accomplish this theassociation makes use of the gym-nasium educational classes lecturecourses socials in fact all of thebest of club life JTo moneyhas to supply the wantsof all young men make theYoung 3FeRTs Christian Associationthe next place to home or as it issometimes a home downtown

I

Assoc ion

Young

seeking

disciple

element

sad

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The American work stands well tothe forefront and the history anddevelopment of tins movement in allparts of the world in past fiftyyears are but oregleams of the pos-sibilities of the future of the asso-ciation

There are in this upwardof 1700 associationsship well approaching 300000 whilethe property owned by the associa-tion in this country alone reaches22000000 The work has

probation commendationsupport of such men as PresidentJloosevelt President A J ofthe Pennsylvania JlailrondV PresidentM E Ingalls of the Chesapeake antiOhio Railroad Commander AYadhamsU S JT Miss Helen Gould Mr WK Vanderbilt Senator ChaunceyMDepew Samuel Spencer ofthe Southern Railroad Bishops Potter Hurst and Sntterleeand all theleading clergy business and profes-sional men throughout the lengthand breadth of the country

With the history of thcrpastv thesupport and cooperation Jfas those mentioned and the Increasedresources incident to successful

outlook of the YoungAssociation the twen

tieth gives promise of as suc-cessful work as any branch of Christ-ian effort

th

count r

heap

men

a

work nsf r

Cassett

President

3i

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THE BACHELOR GIRL OFTHE SHOP AND ISTUE5IO

first problem which confrontsbachelor girl in a big city atoutset of her wageearning ca-

reer is Where and shall Ilive the St Louis Star

are entirely selfdependent-on wages of 2 to 3 a For sucklimited purses there are two resources the homes tapper ted by charityprivate or public and the selfsupportedboarding houses which furnish rooms andboard at 250 to 3 a

The homos are the cleanerlighter and more wholesome but the rulesare rigid and irksome The greatest ob-

jection however is their savor of charitywhich to the independent American girlspoils the taste of the best bread in the

cheap boarding house Is much lessattractive Jt is usually In the mostcrowded section of the city and thenecessities as well as thetory rooms are furnished

So each struggler here at leastthe incentive of discomfort to push tierway up in the world as fast as possibleinto a little stratum of where shecan afford to or d weefc at low-est for her food and housing

For this sum live very cozilyThere are two doors ppsa to the sevcndollaraweek girl BeyoJd either Is

a spot fatistjrfeat rushing citypeace and homiUness will warm

theis studio 1 e or

light Ourcan week and up a sun-ny room commanding a wide expanse of

cr three flights up perhapsshe can have marvelous housekeeping ar-rangements of her own a roomy settlewhich on loosening a peg may be turnedinto a table a couchbed Orientallydraped that opens to swallow her entirewardrobe a chiffonier which as asideboard and hosts of prettymakeshifts which lead double existence

The other dollaraday alternative isthe boarding house halt bedroom Andthe bachelor girl Is at nightto bother with her own or whosetastes are not domestic swarms by thou

THElow

say

week

wet

word

brestbrest

pure

shecan

com

tarheart

roomhousekeeping

chimney

I

sere

who toot d

has

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sands Into the coffinlike narrowness ofthe hall

If she and a taste forshe can soon at small expansetiny wilderness to blossom as rose

What Is a bachelor den without a cozycorner Of course she must have one

She puts In a plea with fora couchbed with wire instead ofthe white Iron one and anOriental cover as well Sofa pillows next

For this purpose the possibilities otfivecent bandanna are endless She maybuy design from Persian to polkadot bright scarlets Shesews two for each slip Oad sheleaves open to take the pillow from atnight This oflo she ties together fordaytime use with of pretty ribbon

the India cheap and efas well as the endless designs

stamped on linen to be embroidered atodd

A screen may be constructedwith the aid of three brokcnTJanels frontan old frame a few yards ofchintz and a paper of tacks The hingesare bits of cloth doubled pp several timesand the band decoration sf thecrepe paper

Japanese umbrellas of Various sizessuspended open above the cozy corner orfrom the arch of a daorway add a quaintOriental touch They can be purchasedfor 10 or 20 cents The effect may beheightened by Japanese lanternsby string or ribbon from andoer arch These also may be had for 1020 and 50 cents

Then Miss Bachelor Girl tack afew folding paper fans or oddly cut palmleaf ones beneath her umbrellas or abovethe lanterns to hide the handles Thofans can be had for a few cents each

A wire frame for photos cast be boughtfor 15 cents or a larger size for 25 centsAnother pretty way to arrange orsnapshots Is to fasten them onlong streamers bright ribbon about twoInches wide acn hang them panelwise

or window casingsyou go on beautifying your little

kingdom new ways of decoration willsuggest themselves to you and you willtake In your surroundings the personalpleasure that the word home implies

room

make

I sprig

everblue

endTen

moment

cent

tope

dangle

might

photoof

upon

coziness

the landlady

7

THE MORTGAGE ON THE FARM

By AGNES REPPLIER

<

X HERE are some things which hapI pea so often in stories that they

have become part of the novelistsstock In trade his tools in fact

which heemployes as regularly as a car-penter does his saw or a burglar hisjimmy Occasionally they grow oldfashioned and are replaced by newer or morecomplicated articles warranted to standthe wear and tear of a few years usageThe tool box Is filled afresh and each In-

ventive artisan goes to work with thesame admirable apparatus

Brain fevers for example are no longerde riguer as formerly when no tale washeld to be complete without one

Forged wills too are growing rarer infiction grim family secrets nave almostpassed out of record and even Eliza-bethan houses with latticed windows appear to have fallen into decay

In their place we have cbeap restaurants cooperative workshops sermonsand lectures unabridged a new and notvery edifying type of clergyman an endless variety cf old maids and some intimate revolutions of poverty

One of these is the inevitable and melaHciHJly mortgage which has the samedisturbing prominence in American fic-

tion ia short stories especially that thelandlord to have in heartreadingEnglish tales

Of the two evils I prefer the landlordbecause he at least is flesh andy blood has

On the Use of the Word Get-

A Harvard professor after telling hisclass in composition never to use gotten added that most persons should useget and got about oaetenth as much

as they do Is he not rightGet means to acquire to gain or to

procure It is used correctly in such sen-tences as Get understanding Pleaseget my book I have got it for you fromthe shelf Ha ts getting what youwant and also in the get atto get away to get down to get home toget near to or on to got to aplace to get the start and to get up

If we restricted ourselves to these usesof get we could net be criticised butwe are likely not to do so especiallywhen we use gut with some fort of

have Two mistakes have got in-stead of have and have got to In-

stead of must are the most common

used

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idiomstogestalt

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a body to be kicked and a soul to bedamned We can say roundly with ilissBella Wilier I hate our landlord aridfeel that we are hating something nailsomebody But this dreadful mortgage

us out of irritation into despond-ency

In Western stories it absorbs all theproSt of the farmers toll and leaves himpoor soured and disheartened

In New England tales it generallycome down as a heritage cr trouble fromsome involved grandfather and seek gen-eration is bowed and bent under theweight of Its grievous yoke

In all cases the uncompromising touchof realism gives a pawful distiactiveneflto the pictures and seems to say laliner This Is called fiction but it Is thetruth Resist its power who

The work is well well 4eae Byfar there is no wttaatendias its appealBut life fe sad and the w rki is gay antimany dejected moments ge to everyGive us at least in the warm reals ofromance something more blithe tous on cur way If Is a England farmer who has BO mortgage SKl

farm toll MS about that happy Hthere Is a New England wamaa wfeasehome is really her owa tell us about thatprosperous spinster Give usa little

now and then to melt the icegild the unguarded moments we stealfrom time

AN ENVIED PLACE

Happy happyLittle Jappy

On a fanThough you are not statH sYet youre very plctuseiskjv iFunny little

not sadlyNo but gladly

I would take your placeFor your coat of height feranilleniMuch has pleased my SqkUiUliaa

And she kissed your face

NeverWhatsoever

Coat of mineIs she aughtto be but ScornfulThats the reason Ita so mournful

Oh my JapaneseThe King

has

every

donetoo

beer

cheerthere

hisman

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1

paper

krman-

TIS

chills

san

New

sun-shine cad

1

never

she sees

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