.1W10.U" 'J K rv i ' linijiiinwiiimim,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,!,,,, Gleanings Interesting Bits of News from the Greut Metropolis. maMnmriwiiiMMiwimaffiiiiivaanainaaf--fl wBtumammiaasamammmmMi New Hotel for Boys Only Is Opened BOYS vTv- jl Cg- HOTEL M$ IT3 NEW YOUK. Tho only hotel In tlio world exclusively for boys began business In tills pity the other dny. ' Is nt Ixxlnston nvenuo und Ono Hun .tired and Twonty-bovonth street. Fifty boys are registered thoie already, and there Is iooni for 100 more. The minimum Kite Is $1.0." n week 15 cents ti day and that Includes, be sides lodging, breakfast and supper, bath and. .Jaundry. The most that a juvenile plutocrat ono whose Income Is, say, 51.50 a. week can spend there is 10 cents a day. This Inci eased price affords him tho luxury of greater priv acya bedroom and a sitting-room all for himself. The handsome five-story flrepioof hotel building and the ground on which It stands representing an ex penditure or about $150,000 in all is due to tho generosity of a woman who will not allow her name to bo io vealed. Sho lurnlshed tho money for tho establishment nnd equipping of the enterprise, which will be maintained by the Children's Aid society. This home for boys, however, is a hotel not a lodging house or a charitable institution. It lias on its walls no printed rules of conduct for tho guid ance of its guests, any more than tho Thaw's Trials Cost U IN papers submitted to Justice Mills 1 at Newburg tho other day when ho was asked for an older to show causo why Harry Thaw should not bo brought to this city for hearing on the question of his sanity, tho ex penses of tho trials so far hold hero became known for the ilrst time. In nil, the shooting of Stanford Whlto . ha? cost Now York county $51,837.15. y ji suvuiiu wuuhh HK" mo justice tie- vM'i(ieu 10 noiu mo sauuy iiku ucioner 12 when ho Is sitting in Westchester. Tho district attorney opposed tho move, claiming tho action should be brought to this county. In making his Boy Steals Deadly Germs from Hospital ENOUGH germs of dlsonsos to kill all Now York If thoy wore let looso to multiply were found by two venture some but shaky detectives when thoy broko In upon a boy of 11 years, who, In his actlvo pursuit of bacteriological knowledge, had stolen nnd was gloat ing over dozens of glass slides. Thoso llttlo transparent plates, viewed by n person who didn't know where tho boy scientist had purloined them, would havo called forth only tho remark: "Kind o dirty, hoy? Need to havo thoso llttlo specks 'cleaned off." Dirty specks! Tho man who said It would havo turned gray with terror had ho known that thoso pin-point sized blotches wero bacilli of small Mrs. Clarence Mackay Now a Suffragist vM kPS, w MACKAY joined tho Intorurban "Woman Suf frage council a few days ngo. This was hardly surprising In view of tho fact that sho has been elected twlco T. In (tin cr-linnl linnrrl nr Hnalvn ,. I.. , , ::::..:,::",::;:," ; '. mill nus recently uiiuiuu n imsu iu f tho public school pupils of that town for tho beat essay on woman suffrage. Still when sho appeared at tho suf frage hoadqumtors at tho Hotel Mar tha Washington nnd olgnifled hor do slro to join there was n iluttor of In torcst. Sho wroto hor namo on tho members' book, paid her dollar nnd then asked if thoro was anything sho could do to help. Sho was Interested In tho plans for Ml 'V tho bazar to bo held In November. Sho had a bazar for a charity nt hor homo a few years ngo at which $11,000 was Mma iftl of Gotham Waldorf or tho St. Regis has. if a guest makes himself obnoxious to the others In the house ho Is politely re quested to leave, Just as ho would bo If he were older and lived In a hostelry where rooms were six dollars a day. "A youth up to IS years old is con sidered a boy here," said Superin tendent Abel C. Kenyon. "We have some boys as young an ten years, but there are few under 12. This place Is designed to appeal to the homeless oungster who wants to do something for himself, no matter whether he is city born or comes from tho country to seek his fortune. Whoever he Is we try to help hlm over the hard places. Another object of this hotel Is to aid the lads in building up good charac ters, to show them what good conduct, discipline, order and cleanliness mean and what they sue worth. Every thing. In fact, that goes toward the making or a good man and a good citi zen. 'I hat Is what we try to give In addition to the hotel accommodations. If we simply furnished cheap and clean lodgings and food for boys and paid no further attention to them we would of course be doing something, but we aim to do not only that, but a great deal more. If a boy Is out of work we try to help him get something to do." Cleanliness Is insisted upon, though n boy docs not know generally that he is being forced to bathe. Hut tho In iluouce of those around him and tho firm and gentle guidance of tho super intendent, added to the sumptuous marble and njckol pinto of tho bnth rooms, makes him want to strip nnd get nailer the shower na soon as ho gets his locker key. County a Big Sum motion ho said Thaw Is now suffering from paranoia, and Is dangerous to any community. He stated important witnesses would not be able to ap pear at the trial if it was held at Westchester nnd that tho caso would suffer. Tho expense, he said, would bo much lnrgcr, and could not bo borne by Now York county. Ho mentioned to the justice tho cost of tho trial here, saying stenographers alone coat $7,2111.15 and alienists $21, 799.80. Mr. Jerome then went Into detail as to what the physicians testi fied and says nil sworo that Thaw was a paranoiac, Incurable and dan gerous to any community. Ono physi cian, he says, was paid $3,102.50, and he was not called upon to testify. This nmount was paid for tho study of diseases. Continuing, tho district attorney de clared n number of the witnesses were out of tho state and that commissions would havo to be appointed to take this testimony. This, ho ssorted, would add greatly to tho cost. pox, typhoid fovor, diphtheria and tho still deadlier typhus. -Ambition to become, a great scien tist hail so seized upon young Irving JJeuton of Drooklyn'that ho was de termined to get material for his studios, no matter how he got it. His mother Is a scrubwoman, earning so poor a living tlint If cirrhosis cultures wero on snlo nt bargain counters for a (Unto n tubo she could not afford to buy one atom for her boy. So, handicapped by poverty, but de termined to get material for study, tho boy stolo It. Ho was arrested at his home, whero ho had fitted up a laboratory. Ho was working over n culturo of typhus germs when tho de tectives entered tho house. At police' headquarters tho weeping youth admitted that ho had stolen a microscope, an X-ray machine nnd tho bacteria slides, to equip himself for a sclentltlc career. Ho snld ho could not nfford to buy tho apparatus nnd his doterminatlon to study and his poverty drovo him to tnko tho npparatus from tho labora tory. cleared, and she said sho know what It was to get up a bazar. "Mrs. Mackay bollovos thnt woman suffrage Is sure to como In tho United States, and that it will bo a great consorvntlvo force," said a woman to whom sho explained hor reasons for Joining the council. "She believes that tho power of tho mothers-' voto will bo a strong factor In tho futuro development of American civilization. "She believes It unjust that tho class which gives tho best years of its Ufo to tho caro and nurture and mental and moral development of tho next generation should havo no voto to ef fect tho conditions which surround that genorntion nnd tho laws which protect Its Interests. It Is tho moth er's sldo of tho question which np peals to hor nnd forms tho ground on which sho bases hor demand for tho ballot." Mrs. Mnckay will bo ono of tho patronesses of tho bazar in November. Good Substitute. Customer (In book Btoro) Havo you Danto's "Inforno?" Clerk No, but I can give you "Who's Who in Chicago." Life. EX-MAYOR OF l'hoto lijr JloiTcU Hluilln.C'lilcitKO. Seth Low, mayor of Greater New York for the two-year term beginning January 1, 1902, has a national reputation as an educator, being president of Columbia University. He was mayor of Brooklyn from 1881 to 1385. Mr. Low was a delegate to the Hague Pence conference In 1809; he io 53 years of age. GO AFTER ENGLISH COMPANY IS SEEKING $2,500,000 IN GOLD. Novel Machine Perfected by Which It Iq Hoped to Recover Vast Sum Known to Be In Ocean's Depths. London. To tho mouth of the River Colne, off Urightllngsoa nn extraor dinary machlno has been towed and anchored. It Is to ho used in a final nttempt to recover tho $2,500,000 treas ure of gold, In coins nnd bars, which is said to havo gone down in II. M S. Lutlno In 1797 near tho island of Tcrschelllng, off tho const of Holland. A portion of tho treasure has been recovered, but any ordinary dredging plant is now useless, as tho vessel has sunk into tho sand. Tho new dovlco Is a great steel tube, nearly 100 feet In length and wide enough to allow n man to walk erect down its center. At ono end Is a metal chamber provided with windows nnd doors nnd at tho other a medley of giant hooks and other tackle. Tho npparatus has Just been com pleted, nftor years of work by Forrest & Co., shipbuilders, in their Wyveu hoe yard. "Ono end of tho tube," explained a member of tho .firm, "will bo clamped to the sido of a steamship or barge. Tho other end, by means of watcr-bal-. last tanks, will bo sunk until it touches tho bottom. Then, by means of compressed, air, all tho water will bo forced from tho tubo 'ami' also from " MAIL-ORDER COUPLE HAPPY. Oklahoman Went 2,000 Miles to Wed, "Sight Unseen." Hobart Okln. Traveling 2,000 miles to marry a girl whom ho had never soqn, but whom ho had courted through tho malls, Is tho oxporionco of Ben M. Southern, a rural mall car rier out of Mount Park, a small village soutli of Hobart. Five years ago Southern moved to Mount Park from Dallas. Ho was 21 then, an honest and hard-working boy, but unpolished nnd scarcely ablo to read or write his own namo. His ad mirable qualities attracted tho atten tion of Grant Mitchell, tho only at torney in tho village. Mitchell took an interest In the lad from Texas, and many tedious hours wero spent by tho barrister in instilling into the mind of his protege tho principles of education. Southern read in a Chlcngo matri monial paper an offer to insert an ad for a wife for any man who would send them two dollars. Southern sent in a money order for tho nmount, and a week later tho paper found its way Into tho homo of William Dutcher, a retired contractor In Halottsvlllo, N. Y. Bessie, young and pretty and tho favorito daughter, rend tho ad. of tho loncsomo Oklahoma youth. Dcsuto took a dare nnd wroto hor first lotter. This was tho beginning. Tho parents gave tho consent to tho marriage of their daughter providing tho prospective groom proved all that they had hoard of him. Would South era como east? Certainly. Southern stnrted east, arriving at tho quaint old Now York town n fow days later. Ho met tho approval of tho parental eyo und tho mail-order girl was married to tho mail-order youth. Southern returned to Oklahoma with his brldo, who, although hut 1G and unused to tho customs of tho world, Is happy and content to spend tho re mainder of her years In Oklahomn with hat mail-order husband. NEW YORK TREASURE the chamber at the bottom of it, which will be Hush upon tho bed of tho son. "Divers will walk down n stairway In tho center of tho tubo until they reach the submerged chamber. Hero they will don their diving costumes, nnd opening n series of wuter-tlght doors will step straight out Into the water. Engineers will bo stationed In tho chamber, and following tho Instruc tions of the divers, who will communi cate with them by means of portable telephones, they will opornto tho me chanism of two powerful suction pumps or dredgers which are lltted to tho sides of the tube. "These diedgers, it Is hoped, will suck away the sand around tho sides of tho heavy chamber until It gradual ly sinks by Its own weight right down on to tho deck of tho wrecked ship, "Then the divers, making their way from tho chamber to tho deck of the ship nnd thenco to the hold, will he ublo to transfer tho treasure from the ship to tho chamber by easy stages." "In connection with the attempted salvage," an otllclal at Lloyd's ex plained, "an arrangement exists whore by tho salvors, if they do bring up tho sunken treasure, will receive an ndequuto roward for their arduous work. "Unllko many tnlos.of treasuio upon the sea bed, thoro is no doubt at all that the gold coins and ingots are In tho hold of Iho Lutlno. Iloforo" 1Kb ship, sailed upou hor Ill-fated voyage a list was compiled of the bullion she contained Tho work of salvage, how over, promises to bo a tremendous task.'' - '"'' i l' ''i'v Long Street Railroad Tunnel. A tunnel moro thnu a mile In length, said to bo the longest In existence for uso by a municipal electric railroad, has been opened for operation by the Genoa street rnllroad. It connects Genoa with tho adjacent largo com mune of Hlvnrolo, which previously was reached by circling tho moiintnln, tho dlstanco being now shortened 1 1-3 miles, and the trip is made in 15 minutes' less time. Construction be gan Juno 1, 1905, SCENE IN THE Krom troorpti,cop7rlKlit, J Underwood & Underwood, N.T. Filipino nlrln picking edible plants In a branch of the Paslg river near Manila. FRUIT-EATING BATS QUEER CREATURE FOUND IN THE PHILIPPINES. Returned Soldier Tells of Shooting Combination of Dlrd nnd Beast Unlike Anything He Had Ever Seen. Los Angeles, Oil. "I think tho hnrd pst thing to kill In the Philippines Is a Hying fox or fiult-eutlng bat. Thoso fiult-eatlng bats como Hying over by the thousands fiom tho Island of lias salan to tho Island of Mindanao just at sunset, and fly back between four and live In the morning. "I went out hunting with two ship mates about two miles outside of Zam boanga one day, and about three o'clock In tho afternoon tho natives took us to some ilce paddles, where, about live o'clock, the doves nnd rlco hens wero flying mound so thick wo sat In one place and kept on shooting till our shells were very near all gone." says a returned soldier from the Philippines. "Just as we wero going to start back to the ship a Mora told ono of the Filipinos about nonic big birds which roosted nt night In tho trees close by. As near as wo could make out It was some kind of a wild tur key, so we concluded to try to get one. "While vn wero silting there wait ing patiently for turkeys tho Moro camp running up nnd pointed Into one of tho big trees, nnd what did we see but n big frult-enllng bat sailing mound the tree. My two partners weie disgusted over the funny turkeys and wanted to start back, but I want ed to get a bat and see what it looked like. "After wanting a box of shells 1 finally succeeded In breaking one's wing. When ho came down he started tn screech, or rather l don't know what kind of a. nolso you would call It, till we couldn't hear. I lilt him un tho head with the gun barrel about four times, and it didn't Bccm to feazc him. Ono of tho Moros said no wanted him for 'chew eat, so I blow tho bat's head off and gavo It to him. "These lints nro about tho slzo of a half-grown cat in body, and this ono's wings spread from tip to tip about three feet. They havo a head Just like a fox, and their bodies arc cov eted with lino fur, something Uko a muskiafii, hut not as thick. They havo two hind legs with heavy claws on them for hanging on trees, nnd they also havo n hook on ench joint of their wlngB, so they enn hang either way. "I examined this bat and found out it had no stomach. I wanted to find what they lived on, but all I could find was water of tho fruit. I think all they cat Is fruit growing wild in the mountains. "Their wings nro Uko flno rubber, and you can 1111 them full of holes and It won't fenzo them. If you hit them bad in tho body they will Bail off and drop so far away that you won't bo ablo to find them. "The only way to get them Is to break a wing, or go whero they hang In tho trees in tho daytlmo nnd kill them with clubs. 1 never Baw them hanging in tho trees in the day time, but Boldlers told mo they saw them in tho mountains hanging on trees, bo thick thnt the brandies wore about to bieak under their weight. "Tho .iur bearers "out there don't amount, to much. The only thing I saw that might bo of any uso wns a mo'iinFafn cat and thoso flying foxeB. The-'iVedr hides liavo only got coarse) linIr"onthcm, and they hnvfen't got n nlco'PQltUke tho deer in tho states." Unexpected. Mrs. Gramorcy What do wo need for dinner? IJrldgot Sure, mum, Ol tripped over, the rug nn' wo need a new sot of dishes. Puck. Table Luxury. "How was tho table ut your summer resort ?" "Splendid! Never hnd such canned goods In my life!" Life. PHILIPPINES I THE JOY OF FORGIVENESS Sunday School Lcuon for Oct. 25, 1908 CpoJally Arranccd lor This Paper VBsnsn I.IWKON THNT lValin SJ. Moinory voi He i, ; (loUTN Ti:.T "llli'HHcri In lie wluno tnu'i:i v.li'ii n rm plv I'll, ulioao hIii Is co ml " li aim !1.' I. TIMI!. iiiIiI'm hIii nml rrpoiitniicp, a lit t to liryniiil the iiiIiIiIIk nt tils rnlffn, iiiiotit li c tail lui'iuiliiu; to (lio nmi-Kln of out IIIIiIi-m. IIIh capital ami puluco writ at .IcriitmlcMi. Iinxlit wun almost CO vimim old, sMirri-mftil ns ii Ki'tii'riil nml n r.llltl'HIIHIII Till' lllltllllt- (if till' l'HIlltll W'llH pi-olmlily O.ivlil, with poHHllilc mlilltlniiH 111 llltl'l- tlllll'n ll) llllllpt It lO HC(lltl DO- i'iimIiuih, un uflcii nee urn In our liyuiliM. IM.ACi: .IctiiHiiti'in. Comment and Suggestive Thought. Some time in David's later life, look lug back fiom the llculah laud heights of the icstoted favor of God, as tho Prodigal Son after ho had returned Io his father's home and love, King David puts into n hymn his own ox peilenco for the comfort and encour agement of nil who havo iilnnud anil long to be resloied to their fnthor's home nnd heart. For like Adam and Kvo. he hud been driven out of Para dise for disobeying God, and tho llamlng cherubim had kept hlm from (ho Tree or Life. Hut he had at last found the waters of lest and tho greeu pastuies of forgiven sin. So ho ulngs: V. I. "Mlessed." The word here, as In Phii. 1:1 and Prov. a: 111, Is In tho plural, Oh the blessednesiies of him whose, etp, "to denote the most sit pn'ine mid pei feet bleititedness," and "Io express the manifold naturo of tho blessedness, tit all times, fiom nil noiirceB, In all ilepaitnients of life, In all. circumstances; blessed In body and In soul, In time and In eternity." 'Transgression . . . iiln . . . Iniqui ty" (2). "Sin Is hero (as In Kx. !M:7) spoken of under three appellations, so as (o Include the whole Idea of sin In all Itii manlfestntlons." Perowne. "Forgiven," That Is given away, removed. "This Is, according to tho Hebrew conception, tho taking up of' transgression ns a burden, a heavy ( load, resting upon tho tinner, and .hearing it away from hlm to a plnco whero It will trouble him no moro." O. A. Iliiggs, In Int. Crlt. , Com.' "Covered," so ns to htdo it nnd oh- ' literate It. "It is commonly used in coiiiu.'ctlon with sacrifices, as staining and defiling the divine altars, wns coveted over by the application to them of tho blood of tho victim of tho sin olTeiing." Prof. C. A. Hrlggs. V. 2. "Iinputoth not." "Docs not es timate, consider, or think of in con nection with the sinner." Professor Hrlggs. "In whose spirit there is no guile," no deceit, "who concenls his sin neither from God nor himself." Pi of. S. H. Driver. Other Iilblo words for forgiveness nro remit, send away, destroy, wash away, cleanse, make them ns If they had never been. V. .1. "When 1 kept silence." Try ing to hide his sin; refusing to ac knowledge It to himself, to others, or to God. ".My bones (tho most solid and enduring part of his body) waxed (became Increasingly) old." Exhaust ,0(1, enfeebled, worn out. Tho secret sin wore him out anil madu him sick. "Through my roaring all tho day long," "The llguro Is drawn from tho loud nnd unrestrained outcries of ono sufforlug Intolerable und unremitting ... pain. Ho wns enduring, nn . agony . . which1 forced from him Bobs and -gronns that ho could not stifle." W. II.. Green. - $ r "A sin concealed Is Uko nr-hidden flro. It eats Into tho very life." Van Dyko. . jc "Tho Spartan boy hid tho fox bo ncnth his coat, ami denied tho theft until ho dropped dead, tho fox all tho while gnawing at his vitals. David felt tho gnawing of romorso, nnd It wns enting out his heart." Dr. W. K. Harton. V. -1. "Thy hand was henry upon mo." "God would not Icnvo him to go on in sin. God's hand wns heavy upon him In chastisement in order to bring hlm Into a better mind, ns n father chastises his child in lovo (Hob. 12:0 11.)" "Not merely by its pressure of weight; but, as tho context Implies, henvy because of heavy strokes Binlt Ing him ngnin nnd again with his pow erful hand, so ns to mnko hlm ronr with tho ngony of suffering." Prof. C. A. Ih legs. "My moisture" (v. 4), otc. This sentence Professor Hrlggs translates: "I was changed (from a formor condi tion) Into mlsory ns when thorns smlto me." Tho blows of God's linnds aro very appropriately compared with tho Binltlng of tho body with thorns, ns when Gideon taught tho cldora of Succoth with thorns and briers (Judg. 8:10.) V. C. "I acknowledged my sin." Wo havo Been nbovo how tho bitterness of concealment and tho reproof of tho prophet led David to tako this stop. 'Sin . . . iniquity . . . transgres sions." Tho threo forms of sin men tioned In vs. 1, 2. "Acknowledged . . . not hid . . . confess." Tho threo words expressing tho completeness nnd thoroughness of tho confession. Nothing was withhold. Forgiveness. 1. Wo nil need forgiveness, for sin keops us from nearness to God; wq. , cannot look him In tho face. 2. Forgiveness takes away tho bar rier between us and God. It is1 a restoration to God'B family. 3. I-'orglvoncss Includes tho wash ing away of Bin and tho lovo of sin. It will bo remembered no more, 4. Forgiveness, whether by God or ' man, does not romovo nil tho conso- quenceB of sin, nt least immediately; but it does romovo tho punishment of eln in tlmo; it docs Immediately tako away its blttereat stltiQ', w"4f dzrt. 7.T. iyfZZtv,m.t if, Jf.F'gBHfliiiSa-9-JK3G. 5563 sssjfe afr wmssm&msmisssmsmsf