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Extreme Wlo Bot Free 39: Tips and Tricks for Using the Most Powerful Bot



rE11114I 1lj = n T1fII rN SUNDAY NOVEMBER 41 901LpunSUNDAYSUNDAY NOVEMBER 4 lONIICntoreU at Ibo Host Office at New YorkiClaa SecondClassClass Mal Matterjfejfe Subscriptions by Mall PostpaidDAILYi DAILY Per Month so BODAILYI DAILY Per Year 6 oogg SUNDAY Per year 2 OOII DAILY AND SUNDAY Per Veir BOOII DAILY AND SUNDAY Per Monthpostate SOPostaget Postage t foreign countries addedFuMlnhed3 FuMlnhed bTe sun Printing anil PublishingJJ Association at 170 Nassau street in the Borough ofManhattanc Manhattan New orkIJf vvr trtfnti who apr us irur manuitrlfti forptilttatlonptilttatlon vithto Iwrt rejected article returned Shevbuslplalllfc fiuti In all cases unit stamps for hit purpottf4f Marphys Judge Hearsts JudgesJohnfc Leonard A Glegerlcbfc John W OoffSamuelfc John J BradyT Samuel SejburyJolinT Mitchell U ErlangerM Jolin fordCharlesM Warley PlatzekPeter Charles W DaytonEad> Peter A fiend rtclChIei Ch rle t OUffEad of theOn CampaignOnOn one side there has been a tremenii dou amount of concussion and dlsII charge of epithet The political methcdagrgr of Mr HEIST have been Justly describedscribed by the Democratic candidate forSS Governor of California n the sack andthethe sandbag money nnd Billingsgateaa Much IOOBO talk about predatoryyy wealth has been heard In the lastyearyear or two The pecplo of New Yorkhavehave had I chance to see an instance ofitit To buy or to bully to prey upon thett credulity of the ignorant and the envyofI of the unsuccessful to disseminate falsePitelgenc and to ituo impos8iblepP promises t stir up social discontent tol9 answer arguments with abuse worthy ofBB A Whitechnpel Thersites such his beenff the canvass of noise and noisom ness bywhicht4 which the plutocrat demagogue hassoughtpatgn for the PresidencyBuncombeBuncombe and Bedlam have doneJXJX thoir worst The saving common senseofof the voters the shrewdness whichpjpj penetrates false pretences the quietftft thought that has been going on in thePP midst of all this tumult of declamationfiJ t these the honor and the safety of theii tato are now to be committedjjjj But what a reproach it must continueifptoifpto be to the Intellectual sobriety of thecommunityt community that the Hearst campaignKK hao been possible The catties that madeIr Jt possible the responsibility for theueyi1 uneasy public temper for the pasionforf for general denunciation and legislativepanaceapanacea for the prevailing neurotic politicalUlc sentimentality can b studied at8T8T liueElectioni Election Law ConfusionTheThe demand after recent elections thatiiUiiU the complex confusing and impraoII tlcable provisions of the election lawff bhould be simplified or abolished hasbecomebecome imperative this yearfj Ifj The Board of Elections has been inii almost continuous scssiort for ten daysitheithe printers charged with the preparationi ton of the tickets have been rushed toflfl the verge of breakdown and entangledTbyTby contradictory orders the time ofpb cntraictor orer tmep Judges has been needlessly taken and1SLSL the work of the courts seriously Interruptedjcuptod by a flood of inexplicable disJy ery i more confusion in the ticketsVV w the names upon them than in thebeginningbeginningvv Notaries have worked overtime coraff Ssbslonora of deeds have been diligentlyCertifyingeying to nomination papers invalidfromfrom the beginning and in some casesfffm te bgiig ceex the crime of forgery by candidates hasfeeenf ttinnn the larceny of petitions forged orgenuinehas been allegedClearness> genuine b aegpulneClearness and conciseness in definingbej t methods of nominations is a nest I> nary a in the provisions for votingrrldcbwhich a subject t very little disputeThay0 They a plain simple practicable ando4o Dot require frequent Judicial LnterpsetatlonJ etatlonThepsetatlonLttonTeL The right t nominate candidates forAA fliective office con b made a simple asVheVhe method of voting and a officialWJlotWJlot Instead of being a puzzle t thepatiencepatience and a challenge t the forbearacac the voter can b made so plaintVftbat it can b intelligently marked byUvotertfasay votrSuolvehave evadedttfa Successive Legislatures evadee t duty of clearing away the tangles ofDominationst Dominations and have thrown the entireburdenl burden of clearing up the ambiguities ofjuju the law upon thee courtaSledgingSledging to tbe PolejA gng4 Unto Commander PRY I able toSjdetails of his remarkableMSj apply more det hi rmakablegM Hedge Journey few comments can beonI TBade on his work His brief despatchMpplleeMppllee at least convincing proofthatrij1 splendid struggleto got tothe poleLfLf f ecarccly paralleled by any previousff sledge Journey on the Arctic seas Iimy prove to be the last of these attempttt reach the pole by means of dog or mantedgesr lgEjt I The faith of many students of theii Arctic that PEABT with a land base onlygfgf 1 miles from the pole would have 0s fair chance of reaching it rested partlyff upon his great qualities OH a sledge travtflttflt ter and partly upon the belief thattt be wosikely at least to have solid 10rJY under him and t escape Horiouu cmburff raiment by Ic drift such osi that outt served between the Now Siberia islandstiti and Spltzbergen The only ramon forjjjj this faith was that similar drift of theseA> seA Ice had not been bbservixl tcnny largoextentif A > viu jcona ho wiu to traverseHe> He reached lilA land buito within aboutii > BOO miles of the polo but the highwayto1 > to the north proved exactly as unreliableandand baflllng a NANHEN and tint Duke ofthe> tb ABRUZ2I found It t th north ofAsial The drift took hi for tq the castjustjust a It curried Captain CONJ sUymilesmiles t tho west when ho was trying twake a Rtralghi Journey q back t the bl Istation of the Abruzd expedition Ittooktook him away from instead of towardthetok b awy fm Ita tthe pole for it landed biro in Greenlandandand the final brooking up of the icedestroyeddestroyed all hopes of further sledgingtoI to the northWhenWhen NASEN and CAONI mndo theirrecordrecord sledge journeys they r greatlyembarrassedembarrassed by weak new Ic and openwaterwater but their field was not utterlydestroyeddestroyed for sledging purses by thecompletecomplete disruption of the Ic a wasthethe case with PEAKY last springInIn spite of the terrible difficulties hemademade the highest north Probably theleastleast of his hardships was that he wasdrivendriven t eat his dogs There is poorerfoodfood in the Arctic and CAONI who wasreducedreduced t the some necessity testifiedII that dog meat I excellentTheThe Army as a CareerItIt seems strange to BrigadierGeneralWILLIAMWILLIAM H CARTE U S A who discussescusses the army as a career in the currentnumbernumber of the Worth American Reviewthatthat the leisure las in this country doesnotnot follow tho example of the correspondinging element in British society and senditsits sons into the army and navy Thereasonreason cannot be found in want of patriotismism or in indifference t military rankandand distinction one hos only run overthethe list of volunteers for service in thewarwar with Spain to see that the old famHieslike and the newly rich families whichconstituteconstitute the socalled leisure classwere Iwere well represented even in the ranksWithWith tho conclusion of peace there was asubsidencesubsidence of intere4Un the army and imost cases the young soldiers of wealthandand family returned t their office desksoror resumed their places I fashionablesocietysociety because the army did not promiseiso a career which was attractive tthemCasteCaste and tradition account for thedevotiondevotion of the leisure class In Englandtoto the military service of both arms Acommissioncommission in the any or navy givethe holder a superior social status suchasa is not conceded in the United Stteto rank in either service and theret rak senlc ad ter aremanymany families distinguished for theachievementsachievements of their ancestors in thewarsaievemets tewawars that England ha waged in everypartpart of the world so that it i a matterofof pride to be represented in the militaryserviceservice by at least one member of thafamilyfamily Such a sentiment does not existinin America outside of the army itselfandand it I not general oven in the armyAnAn officer sends his son to West Pointifif he can not because he wants him toperpetuate Iperpetuateperpetuate his ow pride i the serviceandand add lustre t the family name butbecausebecause there Is nothing better for theboyboy to do There may b exceptionsbutbut they are not numerous or strikingMoreoverMoreover the British service holds outmoremore attractions than the American Thestanding istndingatractons ercastanding army is four or five times aslargelarge and little wars are of frequentoccurrenceoccurrence while the responsibilities ofcommand icmmandcommand are greater Captains of battleshipstleships and Generals of brigade under5 are not so much the exception inEnglandEnglandGeneralGeneral CART does not make out astrongstrong case for the army as a career inAmericaAmerica rather the contrary He admits Imite that promotion under normal conditionsditions I extremely slow the presentpaypay table i thirty years old and oughttot be adjusted to the increasein livingexpensesexpenses and service in the Orient I aembarrassment to an officer with a familytot support I i no compensation oradvantageadvantage that since the United Statesbecamebecame a world Power there has beenthrustthrust upon junior subalterns the detrmination of grave questions involvingdiplomacydiplomacy commerce and the law internationalnational civil and criminal I theBritishBritish seryice such wouldifBrtsh se c responsibility oudII efficiently discharged bring promotiontion and honorable mention seldom soinin the American serviceNoti Aerc sercNot for a moment would we decry orsaysay anything t undervalue the armyasas a career In America The wonder ithat It I so splendid a service for therewardsrewards of moderate success in businessandand the civil professions a disproportionatelytionately larger and by tradition this Isaa peace loving country i which thesoldiersoldier has no place except for defenceInI the process of tie and a the intrests of the country extend the army asaa career will become more attractiveItI should b sid that the present planofof promotion and pay schedule are notInIn keeping with our growing Importanceasas a world PowerTheThe National Forest Reserves BillVisitorsVisitors t the Presidential Rangeduringduring the summer have returned withmelancholymelancholy stories of the havoc madeonon the flanks of Madison Adams andJeffersonJefferson by the lumbermans axe IHABVET N SHEPARD of the AppalachianMountainMountain Club reports that a cleansweepsweep i being mode of the standingtimbertimber Not sparedbytimbe even saplings are preby the company which I felling hemlockslocks for the pulp mills at Berlin Fallsandand cutting other trees for the lumbermarketmarket Nothing is left but unsalableslashslash which bums rapidly if ignitedTheThe side of a mountain burned overbecomesbecomes 8 feeder t floods In I rainyseasonseason since no soil remains o wlfichtreestrees will growItI Is calculated that unless the Houseofof Representatives con b persuaded toPusPus the bill for tho preservation of theforestsforests about the water sources in thoWhite IWhite and Southern Appalachian Mountainstains the Presidential Kongo will be entirelytirely denuded of trees within throeyearnyean Tho damage to the farmingmanufacturingmanufacturing and shipping intercutsofof the Now England States affected hasbmnbmn pointed out again nnd again andhclplemlyhelplessly admitted A city an fur southaaaa Hartford reports iin unevenness in theflowflow of tho Connecticut duo to operationstions of tho lumbermen the result ofwhich iwhichI which on the authority of PresidentCiOODiilCHI CiOODiilCH of the Hartford and New YorkTransportation 1I Transportation Company Is that whenmillsmil on the upper river are obliged tocloneclone their dams Htwimboata cannotleaveleave Hartford or come up t theirdocksdocks The summer resort businesswhichwhich brings millions of dollars t thepeoplepeople of Now Hampshire every yeartartar also menaced by spoliation of theforestsforests but it Is a phase of the agitationthatthat makes no Impression upon CongreMD EWA EVBBEXT HALE e Itmakesmakes a man cry t see the devastationtion of the White Mountain woods andnono doubt ho is set dow a sentimentalisttalist C nge listens however whentoldtold of the damage in dollars and centstoto the herdsman and tho mill owner byfloodsfloods poured into the valleys busthe the hillsidesrestraining tree growth onsides has been cut and burned awayIt biII I obvious that unless sufficient presure can be brought to bear upon theHouseHouse of Representatives at the shortEiessioncession of the Fiftyninth Cqngresswhichwhich meets again in about I monththe Ithe White billwillWit MountainAppalachian bi Iwiwill be on the docket a unfinished businessness when the time for adjournmentcomescomes and the forts of the PresidentialRangoRange wU b doomed The campaignofof education would have to betaken upagainagain when the Sixtieth Congress motandand meanwhile tho skinning of themountainsidesmountainsides would go on Contractsforfor cutting have now loss than threeyearsyears t run and it i t the interest ofthethe lumbermen t make haste unlesstherethere I a prospect of selling t the Governmenternment at a reasonable profit TheNationalNational Forest Reserves bill whichhashas already passed the Senate and Unownow on the House calendar appropriates I3000000 to preserve the White Mountainforestsforests and 12000000 t save a tractini the Southern Appalachians In Bostonton the other day there was l motIng attended by officers of the AmericanIlean Forestry Association Now EnglandStateState foresters and others interestedincludingincluding exGovernor ROLLINS of NewHampshireHampshire to consider plans for advanceIngIng the bill in the House It was decidedtoto continue the education of Congressmenmen That is well enough in a generalwayway but the friends of the forests wouldgetget quicker action by communicatingdirectlydirectly with President ROOSEVELT nndSpeakerSpeaker CANNON In a speech at RaleighNN C about a year ago the Presidentdeclareddeclared that neither State nor nationcancan afford to turn these mountains overtot the unrestrained greed of those whowould Iwould exploit them at tho expense ofthethe future Now I vigorous Paragraphgraph In his forthcoming message toCongressCongress rai ht do wonders for the Nationaltional Forest Reserves bill and nodoubtdoubt would make something of an impressionpression upon the mind of the SpeakerTheThe forestry commissions and the Appalachian Mountain Club would savetimetime and expense by taking the shortcutcut but they must be prepared witstatistics t win the House and shouldnotnot neglect t enlist members who canworkwork 8 well as speak on the floorNotNot Parallel CasCSincSince the Japanese Government protested to the United States against theallegedalleged improper treatment of its subjectsjects by the educational authorities ofSanSan Francisco a attempt has been madetoto draw a parallel between the situationthusthus created and that which existed bthe United States and Italy Intween te Unitd Sttes ad Itly i1801 and resulting from the lynching offourfour subjects of the King of Italy i thecitycity of New Orleans The cases are infactfact widely differentTheThe subjects of the King of Italy whosufferedsuffered death at the hands of a mob inNewNew Orleans on March 14 1891 were accusedcused of complicity in the murder of thechiefchief of the citys police DAVID C HENNESSTNESST who was shot from ambush onOctoberOctober 15 1890 Nineteen men of Italianian birth were arrested charged with thecrimecrime Nine of them were brought totrialtrial in February 1691 After 8 montspent in hearing the evidence a juryacquittedacquitted six of the accused and disagreedagreed as to the guilt of the other threeTheThe verdict was brought in on March 13andand caused great dissatisfaction amongthethe residents of the city This dissatisfactionfaction culminated in the formation ofthethe mob which on the following daywentwent t the jail and shot eleven of theprisonersprisoners Including the four unnaturalIzedIzed ItaliansTheThe victims of this demonstration hadreceivedTe vbtmreceived the full protection of the lawupup t the time of their acquittal Whathappenedhappened after that was entirely illegalthethe work of persons holding no Governmentment commission and acting in defianceofof every enactment designed for theprotectionprotection of life and property Thecomplaintcomplaint of the Italian Governmentwaswas not that any law of the UnitedStatesStates or of the State of LouisianaStt Luisiaa operatedated unfairly against its subjects butthatthat they had not received that protectionton t which every person was entitledunderunder the existing treaties and statutesInIn S Francisco the discriminationbywhich subjects of the Mikadoby lkadi arerestrainedrestrained from attending white schoolsisis not the result of mob action or of uofficial proceedings The Legislature ofCaliforniaCalifornia ha passeda statute requiringthatthat all pupils of Oriental parentageshallshall b educated in special schoolsTheThe legal school authorities of SanFranciscoFrancisco i obedience to this statuteestablishedestablished such separate schools Thereisis no mob rule no violation of Statelawlaw in this action The law under whichthethe school authorities acted may be impoliticpolitic unwise or unconstitutional violatinglating the supreme law of the land aadefineddefined in the second section of Article Vof the Constitution of the United StatesItsIts constitutionality will b decided inthethe proceedings now in progress in theFederalFederal courts Whatever tho outcomeofof those proceedings may b howeverthothe San Francisco authorities will not boputput in I position resembling in any waythatthat occupied by the leaer of the mobinin Now Orleans fifteen years agoII dont llie Mr fEARS any better ttan MrHIAMTHIAMT like meitorarMcRPitrMcRPitr and HBARRT tell the whole truthforfor publication only when they apeak theirmindsminds about each other This mutual dielikoisIIkols no fiction To bt pictured In fltrlpesIAIA not conducive to mtoem for the authorofof the Ignominy on the other hand tbomanman with a knife ready to plunge into ononvitalvital cannot bo an object of love to himwhowho U threatened After election AnyMURPHYMURPHY and HEAHHT will like each othereveneven lessTobuttaToTHiCDTTOKOrTMSvxTo T roa or Tis STJnSfr I predict thattherethere Wl b Una of thousands of animated featherduatertduster flourUblni on the nitbt of the electionWilliamWilliam Randolph Htarat will be douSed out oftittit hi that d A Booou ICI111W ToM Niysmbr SEQUALITY OF O JWJJrtWJTFToTo IHB EDITOR or Tax Sow Sir MrJohnJohn Conway who does me the honor ofnoticingnoticing my lost letter holds that equalityft opportunity i the law of nature andthatthat all animals have equal opportunityexceptexcept m Would he regard aa an illustrationtration of his axiom the lotwhich happensjustjust to have fallen under my notice ofmou amousemouse in the claW a cat Not equalitybutbut Inequality of all kinds whether it i tholaw Ilaw or not baa surely e ta been the factofof the universe Mr Conway admits thiswhenwhen he says somewhat poetically that wehavokayo been despoiled o opportunity ofequalityequality for thousands of yean ever sincethethe Garden of Eden This Idea that at eomeperiodperiod undetermined and unknown t historytory I universal robbery of one claw byanotheranother took njace i away recurring it Isbutbut a angry dreamInequalityInequality of capacity surely Is inequalityity of opportunity and the existence ofinequalitiesinequalities of capacity Infinitely variouscancan hardly b deniedII wish t Bay nothing disrespectful ofsocialismsocialism It is a natural aspiration bredofof the inequalities of the human lot and theharihnewiharihnewi of competition I h been thedreamdam of gifted intellects aurt earnest loversofof their kind But before we leave thebeatenbeaten track of gradual improvement wecravecrave to b distinctly told what i thechangechange which it i proposed to make bywhat Iwhat means it ls to bo brought about andwhatwhat the constitution powers and functionstions of a Socialist Government are to bAs to the mode In which the change I tb brought about Socialists a present aroconfessedlyconfessedly divided in opinion Some areagainstagainst force some are for it and some areforfor a bomb throwing anarchyTheThe mode ono Socialist writer tells meofof bringing about the reign of justice andfraternityfraternity ia very simple It i the gradualIncreaseIncrease of the power of the labor voteLaborLabor I simply the wage earner Andtbethe leaders of the wage camera in the Brt IIshish Parliament have plainly intimated thatthey Ithey are there to promote not the generalinterestinterest of the commonwealth but that oftheir Itheir own clam The use of political powerforfor the purpose of transferring twcnlth bylegislationlegislation from one class to another is anobjectobject definite enough and evidently beingveryvery practically pursued As to Its brotherlverlv beneficence people will bo apt to formdifferentdifferent opinions according to the claw towhichwhich they may happen GOLDWIS to belongGOLDWIS SMITHTORONTOTORONTO November 2nOnO ltG tlREKXEarlyEarly History or Ihl F mou Knickerbockerbocker Recreation nronmlFromFrom tin DankattHfAtAt first the loner part of Broadway facing Bowby Green was called The MarUet Field afterwardwad It vat spoken of as the Heere Stall orchiefchief street and later named Broad Way andllnealies of streets and boundaries of lots were laidmostlrmol by chanre In March 1732 the AldtrnenResolvedResolved that this Corporation will lease a pieceofof land Iptar at the lover end of Droadwar frontlnIne to the Fort t some of the Inhabitants of thealdlad Broadway ID order to be Inclosed t make aBovllnBovlln Green thereof with nraliis therein for thebeautybeauty and ornament of said Uriel 8 well as forthethe recreation and delight ot the Inhabitant of tbocitythe each side thereof SO feetbreadthcity leaving Ile meet on eab fetbrradlbbreadth and three public spirited and sportlovingloving cltUeni John Chamber Peter Bayardandand Peter Jay hired the Plalne for eleven yean Inreturnreturn for the payment of a peppercorn I waaatat once Itt up for the playlnc of bowls and whenthethe lease expired I was renewed by John ChambersColonelColonel Phllllpse and John Roosevelt for anothereleveneleven at a rental of twenty shillingsreu rrnt hUIDI perannumannum Thus originated the name BowlineGreenGreen though for what reason the sport was notcontinuedcontinued after the second leaae Is not eearSeveralSeveral famous house have stood near BowlineGreenGreen and one of these was a bulldlnr at 1 Broadwayway erected la ITM by the Encllih Captain Kennedynedy afterward Earl of Cassllls which In timecamecame t be used by Washington and Centrals Leoandand Putnam a their headquarters A boardInghousehouse known a the Washington Inn followedandand later Cyrus Field called his new structurenllaler Cra Feld caled alrctur ontbetbe same site the Washington Building Atwhatwbat Is now I Broadway Benedict Arnold livedafterafter the capture of Major Andre and I wee whilehehe was there a be Just escaped being kidnappedbackback Into the patriots line by a band of daringcolonlstacolonists Nearby also Captain Martin Crctlerbuiltbuilt In 1638 a tavern which stood under his nameuntiluntil I gave way t a hostelry known flrst a theKingsKings Anna Tavern and during the Revolutionasas Burns Coffee House This was among thefewfew buildings that escaped the fires of 1776 and tMand as lat a U40 I was still standing under tbenamename of The Atlantic Garden only th secondItruetureItrueture as a matter of fact to occupy the siteslncasince the foundation of the city A advertisementBient of Uay 27 te concerning this place baa tbopostscriptpostscriptNN DTbe concert la to begin exactly at I oclockandand end at 10 O account of the coolness of theeveningNo will be admitted without ticketsnorevening 0 Body wI mlled wlout trketnor no money will be taken aithe doorChinesChime CordonPrtmnoronFroFro the Wtitmtntttr IttvtcKOnceOnce In the Sudan having inadvertently Injuredjured a lizards tall by switching bis riling wblprendered miserable for days by thebe was redered miserble remembrancebrance of I At Woolwich be pent much timeandand care In trying t cure a canary belonging t aladylady friend of his which bad broken Itt leg Nomanman ba written more feelingly of the horrors ofwarwar or baa more strongly denounced those whoenterenter upon I with a light heart To him I wasaa dreadfulnecessity and nothing could JustifyItsIts employment but tbe hope of puttlnT an end tsome evil greater still When he quitted China hewrotewrote t his mother I know I shall leave Chinaaswhen I entered It but with the knowledgethatas poor as weD rted I wth IDowledletbatthat through my weak Instrumentality upward ofO80000 to 100000 llvea have been spared I neednono further satisfaction than this His sole objecttntn undertaking the administration of the Sudanwaswas t put down the slave trade I declare solemnlyemnly belay thall would give nyHfewllllnglytot save the sufferings of the people and If I coulddodo this how much more does He care for themthanthan such Imperfection as I arofSanSan Francisco Insurance LosiesToTo TUB EDITOR 01 TUB Sw Slr The businessmenmen and property holders of the country owe a debof gratitude t you for publishing the list of fireinsurancecompanies who paid their lossesinsurance compne losaa andthosethose who are doubtful and otherwise On readingthethe list I looked up my policies and found severalInIn the unsatisfactory list One agent here explainedplane that the cause for delay by some of thecompaniescompanies was that the big companies paid theirownow losses and refused t pay their reinsuranceoror underwriting IlblsrelTbeThe matter Is of vast Importance and all wouldvaluevalue a little limelight on the subject Manynewspapersnewspapers did not print this important newsII wonder why Broixus MayScxtAJqScxtAJq rOlf Pa November 2ToTo atop ScorchingToTo THE CPTTOB or Tna sen Sir There II Justoneone effective way to put a top to automobile scorchinging That Is to refuse a license to any machinethatthat I capable of exceeding tbe speed limit fixedbyby law In other words before a license Is Issuedletlet tbe machine h examined by an expert In theemployemploy of the county or Slate If this expert findsthatthat tbe machine lit capable of running nt a fasterraterate than I lawful let tbe county or State refusetot per the operation of tbe machine on thepubllopubllo road at all W a Bift8 Louifl November 2TwoTwo for OneToTo TUB Bono or Tax awSIr Your newsarticlearticle describing the umpUn by our soctaliitloandand paternal city government of the Thirtyninthstreetstreet ferry to South Brooklyn contains tbls strikingsentencesentenceTheThe old employee were all retained while amany more were hired from the civil service HutsTwoTwo men t do the work done by one under prvate management la about right under socialisticmunicipalmunicipal ownership Ilea Is It pett I I UUHOOKLTHUHOOKLTH November 3KnttiDstasmKnttiDstasm a DrummerToTo nsa EDITOR or Tni am sir from mrotlralonobservation through the State of New You aacmmeral acommercialcommercial traveller I believe that Charles BHughesHughes will have the largest majority of any candldatadldata who ever ran for public ofice I will beawayaway ahead of President Rontevelfa My estimateIla 300000 for Hufbea This may sound t manylikelike acraiy prediction but under the circumstances1 do not e bow the majority can be any leOuuts JMUJ November I DstnooaCULt UIER GKXKfUI RKOOKElielie Released M n > lOC Victim ofSpsjiWiSpsjiWi > lalttlnilni tratloaToTo THE EDITOII or THB Suw Sfr In THBSewSew of editorial onCuba8t 0 October 2 appears a etorCuba In which occurs tbe following It Is afactfact though that two years after the Cubahad been Installed under ou protection theoldold Spanish method of treating prisoners waastillstill observed by them Not only that butnono attempt had been made t ameliorate oreveneven Inquire Into the mae of hundreds ofunhappyunhappy captives then languishing behindthethe bars neglected actually unknown GenJJ P Banger who took the census of Cubaunderunder Secretary Aiders Initiative found menInIn prlon concerning whom there was norecordrecord whatever Nobody knew what crimebadrcorbad been alleged against them They dldntknowknow themselves In many canes the oldestInhabitantsInhabitants were Ignorant of their namestheirtheir Identity and their origin The situationtion had not changed tn any Important rspect or to any considerable extent aftertwotwo years of the Cuban r6 gime The IneommunbaJmunbaJ system had nt been disturbedthethe writ of habeas corpus was still undreameddreamed ofTheseThese statements made as they are In connectionmotion with the taking of the census leert me to Indicate that the two real rferred t were the flrnt two years alter Americanican occupation lnd the question at oncearisesarises no matter what the Cuban thoughtoror did What were the American authoritiesthorities doing all this time I It IsIntendedIntended to convey the Idea that this conditiondition existed during the America militaryadministrationadministration the statement Is certainlyaa gross misrepresentation of facts reflectinging upon me as I was the Military Governorernor during the flfst Tear of the periodmentionedmentioned I will not touch upon the yeamy successor Gen Wood wee Military Governorernor for he Is fully able to answer for hisadministrationadministration The facts with reference topersonspersons found In prison are as followsSomeSome prisoners were released by directionofof tbe American Evacuation Commissionbeforebefore the date January I 1890 of militaryoccupationoccupation numbers releasedbyocupaton Largo number wereby the Generals commanding the militarydepartmentsdepartments Into which the Island was dividedvided Investigation began Tao recordsshowshow a cal referred t me by a letter of GenLudlowLudlow written January S five days aftermilitarymilitary occupation and be continued hisInvestigationsInvestigations with the assistance of anofficeromcer of the army detailed for the purposeGenGen Lee released a number of prisonerswithoutwithout awaiting my action which act It laterbecamobecame necessary for me to ratify althoughthethe Audlencla called attention to the fact thattheythey were not legally released and underthotho Uw were liable to rearreat These aresomasoma of the Insttttteeattnder my ImmediatenotlcnotlNMy successor continued the Investigationreleasingreleasing or discontinuing prosecution acalnrtlargelarge numbers of prisoners A single orderof Iof February HIDOO covered 170 names Imust b understood that all these were notpoliticalpolitical prisoners all known to be suchwerewere released Immediately their friendsappearingappearing for them when the American Governmenternment took charge nor were they Innocentcent persons but with hardly an exceptionpossiblepossible they were persons who had benarrestedarrested for oTencs committed or were heldawaitingawaiting trial or were persons alreadyunderunder sentence of the courts But many hadbeenbeen In prison for long periods without trialoror had been sentenced to excessive punishmentment for trivial offerees 1 this was duelargelylargely to the lethargy of the Spanish courttot the methods of procedure under the Spanishish laws and the corruption perhaps of courtofficialofficialTieTie Insormjunlcatlon of persons theretoforetofore existing under the Spanish law wasabolishedabolished July 13 109 by order No 10 Ihad received earliest attention after the organizationganization of the departments of governmentandand practically before thenHabeasHabeas corpus was considered a early asSeptemberSeptember 7 1839 but was opposed by theCubanCuban Secretary of Justice a not beingadaptedadapted t their system of law the civil lawAfterAfter a long consideration of this subjecthabeashabeas corpus became a law October IS 100byby Civil Order ill of that date Efforts tchanae rldBecomeBecome of that fact It I a movement ofImmense noclolngtrnl significance When Itsresultsresults as a constructive social fnrce on thesmallsmall scale to which It has already expandedoreare comnared with the dlanrmintlng futilityofof ninetenths of our materialltlc philanthropythropy and with the confessed failure of nvrtofof our schemes of beneficence one can hardlyewoixewoix the concltivlnn that now us In thetotteringtottering day of Hainan power the Havlnuofof humvi society from ItOlr must dependInfuseprimarily un the callt or religIon toInfuse Into tho lives of men and women thetandinirtransf4rm Inl nower ftIHHI1l hlrtnllnltandinir without which no people has everii been able t escape the doom of those whoforiret GodSihSih Is the movement with which the nameofof Mrs Eddy Is Inseparably s oclated IfIts success provoke Its detractors t dpnouricenourice It as + pious fraud It proves thatthey have a yt nnt cot the spiritual rmlntofof view and It remind us that oil of theworldsworlds Brent rellolous movfmertt have beenbelied tn recognition at the start by eucbunsympatheticunsympathetic oproilrlonJOHN ftpJOHN FrtANUJJi CJIOWELI INEW YORK November N COWLJoCold Sflnieg In Wes AiitralfaPramPram nnttv Trade ana Connlir ReportiGodGod is stll to be foind In abundance In WstrrnAustraliaAustralia and constitutes the Slates chief ire ofwraithwraith Since 1W1 when practically the tnt discoveryrover was made there ba been a constantlyIncreasingIncreasing oJtput with tbe exception or 1000 1MMand Iandand ISiS when the yield tell slightly below that ofprecedingpreceding yearPrior IPrior to 103 the entire production amounted toapproximatelyIapproximately f2400flooo bpt tn that year workwaswas benin In earnest with the rerilt that In thesucceeding Iaucleedlncsucceeding twelve months more than tro0000on wastaVentaVen out In 1M1 the sterling value of tbe rodminesmines was 8T1B81 ZTfl3fIOlI In DM2 7609143137 029 0241 In 1M3 SSS5679 W MS08S1 In IDO4tZ15123435 WIM2fJW1 In IMS L7tset 142 and up to May 31 of this year the yield amomtedtoto 10447S 4140MI rot purposes o comparlsonparlson and to show the position which WesternAustraliaAustria occupies tn tbe world aa a void producInIn State the Oeure of 1 04 showing the yield laoincesoinces 0 Western Australia Australasia tbe UnitedStatesStates and tbe Transvaal are shown OtmmOueWestern Australa le 2 oAistratMta 420774Tnlted states 4nno2o2Transvaal 377SS17TorFor several years the proMem Of a water supplyforfor tbe cold fields was most difficult to solve for tnthatthat territory about 400 mile from Perth the capitaltal of the State there are no rivers few natural suppilepile of surface water and tbe rainfall is light Thevitalvital Importance of overcoming tola difficulty warecornliedrecornlied by the State and some Idea of tbe nagnlrudeallude of the undertaking may be ormed by thecoatcoat of the construction which wa more thanmOOOOOOmOOOOOO In ISM tbe Premier of the State obtainedtainted the approval of tho Legislature t an expendtturependtture of 1260 for the provision of a alIply of SDOOOOO gallons of water a day The workwaawas energetically pushed and brought to successfulcompletioncompletion In IMS Te supply which Is now regardedgarded a adequate to the demands of the goldfieldsfields ta pumped 851 milesFullyFully 13000 men are encaged In mining and thewageawage paid are sufficiently high to Induce firstclassclass miner t remain permanently empovedIn the gold fields the value of mining machineryIn use amount to approximately S20ooo000 andtherethere have been erected about 4000 Itamp Teaoncrafigure how conclusively the splendid Industry thatbaa been built up and all conditions now pointtopnttoto a continuance of tbeeODtDuaDo prosperous conditionsDeerDeer U FrnOFrom Dattv Consular and Trail HtptrtiThe consumption of beer I France bat Increasedby more than 40 percent during the past five yearsandand reached during tbe past year the Imposingtotal of 12000000 hectolitres or 317040000 gallonThis result can hardly surprise any one who hasnotednoted tn Pall and other large cities of France therapidrapid development of the brasserie or eatS restauranttaurant where beer Is sold Much of thin beer IsImported for purports to be sl from PUsen andMunich though most of the leading breweries Inotherother German cities have Part agencies and distributetribute their beer to retailers This entails highpricesprices t consumers as there Is an Import duty offromfrom tl73 t S231 per tO kilograms 20 poundsweightpundswrlrbtweight of cask Included on all foreign brewedbeer brought Into the country and under the stimuluslus of this protection the brewing Industry Francehas developed rapidly both In respect to quantityandand quality of Its productIt quDttI does not app the Increased use of beerbaa diminished to the slightest degree the consumptionsumption of wine and elder and the one encouraging feature of the situation Is found In tbe fat thatthethe consumption of alcohol especially In the tbttbeous form of absinthe Ii slowly but ateadU prcreasing The statistics of 1004 show that duringthat year 177438 hectolitres W7938 galons ofabsinthewereabsinthe were sold for drinking purposes Francewbereawhereas 190 showed a falling ol to 172503 betlitre 4A5720 gallons or 23 per cent This Isnotnot a sweeping or conclusive reform aa the abIIDtheuntie habit la still one of the gravest peril thutthreatenthreaten the manhood of France but the lttllcsaohow that the malmum danger point has beenpastedpasted and the decline of even s small a percentageage t absinthe consumption Is accepted n eroundorfor encouragement and hopeToTo Ballif Rolling Stock In IndiaFromFrom Win Indian ToTldOneOne of the main schemes ofman abemf 0 the Hallway Boardla t have rolling stock built In part In India whichwillwill give manufacturing Urinelu thisWl Iln Irs country anopportunityopportunity for tender for the construction ofwagonwagon frames and hollc Tbe experiment will150 be extended to State line Iall et nda ltslr Inr lenders being reoeelvedceived up to K per cent of the total number ofwagonswagon sanctioned for construction yeirly whileaxlewhloairair wheels t will be obtained by each railwayway administration on Indent from home and bsupplied UJ contracting Urrnn From what theboard have seen o the bg workshop jn tbe linethey have traversed they feel atlailed hat rollingstockstock of the bee quality could be turned out In IIndia although the all would have to be Importedported The waioti building Industry would makerapidguarantee rapid progress In meeting orders which the boardguaranteeA Flih Tale of the MinteFromFrom the lolO Dally UnitAnAn angler In the Illvrr Ueu e In lieigliim whilenlilngfishing recently fell a light bite as he wu pullingIn bllne Then there was a orond pull and JustMM the fish was appearing on the water mi enormouspikepike made a spring at It and went oil with hU preyandand 10 feet of lineAfterAfter much trouble It wu wound lu aD theastonishedastonished angler found tbtB had caught entperchuUra perch of about one pound weight and well en tbohook then a pike of four we thblk tbe pll pound which bad halfwallowed the perch then a pike 0 thirteen lndweight who bad seized on toe smallerwrrl ll 01 ler pike la hidMm to wrest the pcb frees Jr 1GRAB AN A A STENOGRAPUKMmMBMmMB Declared to Hare Owed HimNoUUnNoUUnToTo m EOITOB OP Tuz 8tm Sir Whttwifeat la reporting entitle the late Andrew JII Graham to be eilled the greatest shorthandwriterwriter of his timeWhatWhat principles of shorthand or combinationtion thereof entitle him tb credit for orljInallty >Inallty naming a measly down esatiolaaVAA P B dos not appear to U aware atthethe fact that this matter baa been threshedoutout pretty thoroughly In the phonographicpresspress during the poet twelve or fifteen yearsAsAs regards Mr Walton will he please takenotlonotlo that B V Murphy like his late brotherandand David Wolfe Brown three of the all strorwtDoirWrs ever projaa l > y this countrylearned the Ninth Edition Isaac nirraashorthandshorthand known in this country A theBennBenn Pitman systemTheThe charge that Munson was Indebted totoI Graham for his Ideas on slorhanl la enoughtoto make that worthy gentleman turn In hisgraveBrave J T ALBERT llosoxcnPHILADELPHIAPHILADELPHIA November 3ForeruneForerunnerFromFrom I tptcch bu Dank Welter in tiie SenateMarchMarch 12 1Q31TheyThey excite the poor to make war upon therichrich S They complain ofoppressionspeculationspeculation and the pernicious Influence ofaccumulatedaccumulated wealth v They cry out loudlyagainstI against all banks and corporations and allthethe mean by which small capitals becomeunitedunited In order to produce Irapo tent andbeneficialbeneficial results They carry on a mhostility against all established InstltuflonsTheyThey would choke up the fountain of Industrytry and dry all Us streamInIn a country of unbounded liberty theyclamorclamor against oppression I a countryofof perfect equality they would move heavenandand earth against privilege and monopolyInIn a country where property ia more equallydivideddivided than anywhere else they reed theairair with agrarian doctrines In a countrywherewhere the wage of labor are high beyondanyany parallel they would teachtbethe laborer that be 1s on oppressed claveSirSir what can such men want What datheythey mean They can want nothing but toenjoyenjoy the fruits of other mens labor Theycancan mean nothing but disturbance and disorderorder the diffusion of corrupt principle andthethe destruction of the moral sentiment andmoralmoral habits of societyRovkwoortRovkwoort HoarToTo vies EoiTon OP THB Sim 5 death of Congressman Rockwood Hoar ofMassachusettsMassachusetts while expected by his friendforfor a number of days was neverthelessshock ashockshock to them when It occurred last night atthethe borne of his father tho late Senator GeorgeFF Hoar In this cityTTieBoiflrMrrwlTrTTieBoiflrMrrwlTr tlreprtratr ofltfwtuutbeforebefore him apparently a long publlo lifeandand had already made a strong beginningatat Washington Not only In Ma acbuettbutbut tn New York and other sections of thecountrycountry Rockwood Hoar will be missedHIHI service as District Attorney In this districttrict was notable In that his aim to havejusticejustice done the rich and poor alike was appreciatedpredated by the people who were Intimatelyacquaintedacquainted with his service In office ofwhomwhom the writer was one M CWORCESTIBWORCESTIB Mass November tTwoTwo Mammoth ChimneyFromFrom ConenttTheThe electric power plant now being constructedforfor the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company atDelawareDelaware avenue and Laurel street PhiladelphiaPaPa Is larger than any such plant now In operationanywhereanywhere In the work though several monster concerncern of the same kind have recently been plannedforfor other places This plant la designed to furnishaftaft the energy needed to operate the elevated andsubwaysubway lines on Market street and will still havabundanceabundance of power left for other usesTheThe most Interesting feature of these plants Isthethe Immense chimney They are constructed ofeenforcedeenforced concrete with points In their deatcawhichwhich make them very different from the ordinarybrickbrick chimney for similar numoae While they arespokenspoken of as 171 feet high that is only the lengthefef the chimney The top of the chimney is really251 feet above the street level the bottom of thechimneychimney belnr about seventy feet above the hotterroonrtroonrt floor The construction is unique In that theboilersboilers are beneath the chimneys and the smokedeedee not enter them throurh a aide flue but fromtheUthethe bottom which ta 18 feet 7 inches above the itrptofof the bollcYa The chimney flue or core It 14 feetInIn diameter In the clearKatbKatb of these chimney serves a battery or set efeleht tsirbteleht boiler Each boiler has a capacity of awsboysepowerbonepower so that each chimney baa 0400 horsepowerpower and the entire drht tl200 bonepowertermIs term of electricity each set of boilers will venerateerate 5000 kilowatt and each chimney will furnishnatural Unaturalnatural draught for the consumption ot 25009poundspounds of coal on hournomination0hlnniiltationnomination of the SnlunFromFrom Vu Cmttmprarv RntntTheThe fftltan of Turkey who never leaves TUrtU 0ifloskKle proposed to end various high dignitaries tocclv receiveceive the Kaisera be stepped on the bot of theMoKMoK Hs at the official landing place on bit visittoto ConstantinopleThe InTheThe Kaiser required that the Sultan must receivehimhim In person and the Sulun had to yield for hekeenlykeenly desired the glory tn Mohammedan eye ohaving a European sovereign come fo pay his respectsspects to the Commander of the FaithfulTheThe Sultan was waiting then to receive tasEmperorEmperor aa be stepped fron hIs boat and twrcarriages tecarriagescarriages were In readiness one to convey the two Osovereignasovereigns and one for the Empress The Kaiseroverturnedoverturned he arrangement by putting th Empresspress Into the dm carriage with the Sultan while apressbe himself occupied the second 5o the Sultanenduredendured the Indescribable humiliation of drUtngthrough the street of his own capital before theeyes ieyeseyes of his Mohammedan subjects sitting side byBideBide with a Giaour woman Nothing could bemoremore humiliating to the Sultan than that situationandand the most effective counterblast to his PanIslamic propaganda would be to circulate throughall Callall Islam the description of that drive If anyMohammedan could be Induced to believe Itnow wflownow Tom Pool 4 tile Old DayFrom tiFroriFrom me If fie Enflamt UitjitntThereThere was a feller In the town where my mothercome acome from whue name wa Tom Cook Tom wasaa pretty rough ort of a customer and It teas commanlymanly believed that he was In league with the deviland randand he ww too Well by and by the devil concludedcluded heil like Toms company down below Sn Idbehe called on Tom early one morning and found Tomhad lust got up and was drtaslngTomTom said be youve lived In this town longenoatbenoatb I want yon to come down to the pit andstaytay with me So make Matte Ive got to keepthe flies coin down there you KnowThenThen the dvll took Tom by the arm tn hurrrhim and make sure of him Tom didnt like thelooks of the devil andthe devil fingers were awfulhot Tom tried to pull along and it the vane timehe said Walt alt cant you until I ret mycalluses onrTheThe devil looiied him all over and then be Cgrinnedgrinned and be Mid Yes Illwait tin you get youreallugaliusee onHeHe no sooner Mid that than Tow threw thegalluse into the fire The devil saw hed lost hisman and went off In great anger and Tom neverworn calluses tenlnAA Fastidious Roiton SUtcimoaFrom UFromFrom tin notion IttralaOneOne iilht uy a friend I met Tim CoaLkryat the Parker House aa be was about toatari onround aroundround of speeches He Invited me to go alongandand an wn topped Into his carriage hepasted muu small package to take care of Our Orst stopwas at the old Franklin schoolhouse wbcwhere 11mnbo started hiseq on speech hadon ocollar tnitanyany man from Troy wouH have been D wid ofTen minutes later when he remItted tb a a mesa Ripping ofT his tie he tore tie collarorfoff ani threw tt out the window asking at the sametime for the package from which lie took anotherIMnjaculate one Thl performance he repeateiif ptat half a dozen placea and when ne fInally hailconcludedconcluded bit Bights labor be bail left collar a 11over the townAnotherItAnothrAnother H iptrlorlty of WornFromFrom She IrotUcnce TrtbuneoUThe average man can anj easily does Imy lre 1withwith a five dollar bill than the aierge nomaanctjmwtth IsrcIlqseWIlhnctjmwtth a dollar and ninetyright cents andU0lI4WomsnUBHIMtMvWoman the man eon rarely eirlMa twhere that bill hagoe CrHsSebentUirBchtmmeluWbymeluWby did sue marry Into the nobility iBelleBecauserkllaDecouse she said that was the best way Mkp away from than




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