TUESDAY, DECEMBER THE SULTAN SAYS NO THE...

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V; 85, No. 21,077. WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1894-TEN PAGES. TWO CENTS. THE EVENING STAR rBLI4HE:1) DAILY EXCEPT gtNDAY, AT THE STAR BUILDINGS, 1101 l'esasyiranin Avenue. Cu- title Street. by The Evening Star Newepyper Company, S. H. KAUFFMANN, Pres't. rem York o%oe, 49 '"etter Bsildine. Tb' E.'ning Star is serrea to ,":scrlhbra in the City >y carriers, on their cwn u".wtnt, 't 10 cents r,r V rk. or 44 eouti per nrn;ah. Copt.-s at the rounter 2 cents each. Py mal. anywher' In The tni!'ed !tales or 4'an::l-ptstage- prepn!d-50 cents gper oa-n'L. Lnturday Quintnnle Sh-et st ir. $1 pe: year: a:t! fcreign ;0,k-.+-e r".t 4. $',.O0' iFatered St tl:. Post 'i!ie at W-7ashington, D. C. as -+e-mnd "ta-e r.:.! ,.Ttrr) (7AIll rn il r!'.!w.: rust t^ paid In n4viane. 1t ntrs t .1 rtl.t." ,r ,n i known on 'nwelleittwt THE SULTAN SAYS NO Consul Jewett Cannot Go With the Armenian Commission. TURI1Y FE18 11IS IIIEV IGATIOI No Apparent Way of Evading This Cecision. NOT ENTIRIELY UNEXPECTED CONSTANTINOPI.E, December 2-.-The sultan last evenir.g made a final reply to the application of Unite"I States Mmister Terrell for permission to have Consul Jew- c.tt make an indeper.de:it ir.qury into the Armenian troubles. The sultan positively decllr.ed to allow the consul to accom:pany the cummissluin. The refusal of the sultan to allow Mr. Jewett to perform the mission with which he was charged by Prestdent Cleveland was not unexpected at the State Depart- ment. For the iast week Minister Terrell, acting under the pressure of the Depart- ment of State, has been urging the porte to permit theu Irvestigation, but his advices to the diepartin,ent have siown that he felt little contidenee in a successful outcome. The reluctarce of the Turkish govern- ment to accelde to his request is accounted for by the formidable proportions to which the agitation in the t'nited States in favor of intercession on behalf of the Armenians in Turkey has attained. At tirst the porte was under the impression, probably hav- ing in view the outcome of previous investi- gations into alleged outrages by the Tutks upon their Christian subjects, that the United States was so favorably inclined te- ward their side that the result of such an ir.quiry as was proposed would not i.e harmnful. But the intensity of feeling dinplay"d in the various mass meetings and church ascemblles in the United Statue have . on- vinced the porte that it would be placing its interests in dangerous ban.ls, and. when it learned that the pErson ch.sen to mrke the inquiry was a son of an Amerl- can missionary and a native of the very country where the outrages were alleged to have occurred, a prompt negative was r.-turned to Mr. Terrell's requ"?st. It does not appear that there is any way of going behind this d_,ision, for Mr. Jew- ett being refused permission to investigate in his capacity as officer of the United States he could not undertake it safely as an individual. Therefcre it is probable that this last action of the Turkish government ends definitely in the participation of the United States in the projected inquiry, w hich will consequently be conducted en- tirely by Europeans. O1OLICE CAPTAINS St.M1MONED. Nine of Them Must Go Before the Lexu" Committee. NEW YORK, D,!-,ember ':.-Nine pol::e captains were this mornig subpoenaed to appear tomzrrov' before the Lexow com- mittee. The subp>inai were sent in a batch to Superintendent Byrnes at police headquarters, and he summo.ed the men before ln. The captains are Ryan, Wash- btrn. ilhela. W'estervelt,Gallaher,Strausa, durphy. Martens and Delaney. With the exception of Strauss, none of these men have. so far, tigured in the wjiness chair before the Lexow committee. Tfhe superintendent called the men before him and( told them that to each one a sub- poena had been issued person.ally, and notifled them to appear before the Lexow committee in their rooms tomorrow morn- ALg. COLOR LINE DRAWN. Colored Applieaats Excluded From the Sons of Veterams. CINCINNATI. Ohio. December 25.-A spe- cial to the Enquirer from Birmingham, Ala.. says: Commander-in-chief of the Sons of Vet- erans Col. William Bundy. having heard the appeal of colored applicants who had been refused charters as Sons of Veterans by southern comnmanderles, has sustained the refusal and counseled the colored ap- plica'nts to organize a separate Organi/.ation of their own. SIX ACRES DURNED OVER. One of the Fiereest Fires in the His- tory of Buirlithgton, Vt. BURLINGTON. Vt., D)ecemiber 25.-A fire started last night in the lath shed con- nected with a big lumber yard owned by J. Rt. Booth was not put under control un- til 4 o'clock this morning, and after it had done damage estimated at $l5,000. From the lath shed the flames spread to the surricandinlg lumber, and about six~ acres were burned over. All the lumber seeds were completely destroyed, and a heavy wind carried the lire to the mills owned by W. & G. E. Crane, which were burned. Twenty cars standing on. the Cen- tial Vermont tracks, loaded with lumber and merchandiLe, and the Central Ver- moint engine house were also burned. Almost li00j0,u00 teet of lumber was de- stroyed. The insurance is estimated at about $125,000.. The fire was one of the fieracest in the history of tnle city, but, so far aw knowni, no laves were lost. TACUIlA'S LIGHT AND WATER. dodge S$allupe Tries to Prevent An) Fuarther Payaacnts. ThCOMA, Wash., December 25.-John C Staliup. a superior c4 urt judge, has filed am equity suit against the city of Tacoma The plaintiff alleges that C. B. Wright, tie Philadelphia millionaire, and the Tacoma Light and Water Company, controlled b) him, sold the city the light and water plant for 31,7.".,000 last year. staiup alleges ta for its $1,50uu~ im bonds ali the city gol was sonme r'otten ilumnes valued not to ex. ceed 5500, wt'erefore the plamntiff prays that he be granted a dleciee against the city. perpetually enjoining the city fron the paying of any further or additiona interest upon the bonds, and that the cit: ofticials be 1,onii,ted from levying taxei for the paymenlt of interest on these bonds "UUME-RL N" Dt.FFEE DEAD. He Was a Menmber of the Local 189. Team. MOBILE, Ala., December 25.-Edwar, D)uffee, the famous base ball player of th, Mt. Louis Lrowns, died last night at I o'clock. Duffee was a member of the Washi ton base ball team collectedJ by .\anage Blarnie in lot t and which inished the firs season. unduer Arthur Irwin's managemen1 i seveath place. He came here from th Columbus elab. where he was known a "HLrn1e itun D'ufee."' His hitting fell o1 here. anid he was not retainied for the fo] iowing season. He was a go.od L;eider ani base runner and was popuiar. kiEA.VE DAMAGES AWARD)ED. Vr-at Gai-e. Aai.nst. eU.- Wet. shot and killed by the Skelton boys at Stevenson several months ago, because of his alleged seduction of Annie-Skelton, has leen awarded a verdict of $16,(NN) against the Western Union Telegraph Company be- cause of the company's alleged failure to deliver to Ross a message warning him that the Skelton boys were after him. Judge Boarman set aside the verdict as being excessive. 'Mrs. Ross sent the tele- gram from Scottsboro' to Stevenson, whith- er Ross had gone by p,rivate conveyance to take the train. The Skelton boys overtook him at Stevenson and shot him to death. SI ICIDE ON Cl'RISTMAS EVE. Chanrls J. Sthall Tnkes PeAson at liut er,1 ow U. Siweal Di-patchl to The Etenig Star. HAGE STOVN, Md., lDecember 23.- ('has. J. Schail, thirty years of age, whose residence is in Washington, but who came here upon the removal of the Crawford bicycle works to Hagerstown, committed suicide last night by taking a deadly poison of some character. After taking the dose he went to the garden attached to his 1-oarding house and lay down under a tree, where his remains were found this morn- ing. The deceased was a young man of pleasing address, highly esteemed by those u ath whom he was associated and at one time studied medicine. Disappointment in a love affair is attributed the cause of Schall's act. COMING HOME. The Columbia Will Now Get Her W. L. I. Bell. The cruiser Columbia, which has been do- ing service in the Caribbean sea for many months past, and which is now at Kings- ton. Jamaica, has been ordered home. The cruiser Atlanta, which has undergone ex- tensive repairs at the Norfolk navy yard. will succeed the Columbia in the West Indies. She will probably start for the south in a week or so. and the Columbia will sail for home as soon as she arrives. The Columbia rendered good service at Bluefields in maintaining the cause of the United States in the recent complications with the Itritish government. It is seid that her bottom is very foul with martme growth, and that she is otherwise in need of an overhauling In a dry dock. She will be repaired at the Norfolk navy yard, and when ready will probably make a visit to Annapclis, as the nearest available port to Washington, for the purpose of receiving the beautiful bell which has been presented to her by the members of the Washington Light Infantry corps, in recognition of the compliment paid the District in the selec- tion of her name. This presentation has been delayed by the sudden dispatch of the vessel to Bluetields early in the summer. RAILROAD POOLING. Strong Efort Will Be Made to Pass the Hill. Senator Butler, chairman of the Senate committee on interstate commerce, expects to call the committee together,immediately after the holidays for the purpose of tak- ing up the pooling bill. There are indications that there will be opposition in committee to the bill in the form which passed the House, and some remonstrances against it have been received from various parts of the country, but the friends of the meas- ure claim that when the voting stage is leached in committee it will have a safe majority. They think the Senate com" u.ittee will accept the plan virtually as 11 was adopted by the House. This opinior is based upon the fact that the Senate com- mittee had a subcommittee at work last session in conjunction with the House sub committee, and that the two subcommittees agreed upon a measure which was not materially different from the House bill With the bill reported there will be a strong effort to have it taken up in tht Senate, but the pooling bill was not one o1 the measures designated for consideratoor by the democratic caucus, and if it shoul antagonize any of the preferred bills Its chances for securing consideration migh1 be impaired. REVENUE SERVICE. Bill Providing for Retirement of Aged and Diualed Omcers. Representative Mallory of Florida, wht is a member of the House committee or interstate and foreign commerce, havini in charge the bill for the improvement of the revenue service by the retirement of officers who have become disabled or in. capacitated by age, says that he has nol despaired of getting the bill through. It is very probable that immediately aftei (he holidays an attempt will be made tt pass the bill under suspension of the rules The committee on commerce will, perhaps ask that recognition be given it to presi the bill to equalize the salaries in th steamboaL inspection pervice. Mr. Mallor, says that if the committee prefers to talc up the steamboat inspection bill instead a the revenue marine bill that he will try t secure individual r*.'ognition on a suspen slon day in order to pass the latter bill lHe has no doubt but a two-thirds vote necessary to pass the bill under suspeni sion of the rules, can be secured for th< measure. it is important to get the bi] through Congress soon, as it must be con sidered by the Senate and become a las before March 4, or pass over to the nex Congress. p THE PRESIDEN'"S DUCKS. They Were Eaten at Cabinet Dinneri Today. The President and the members of hi cabinet celebrated Christmas in the oldl fashionedl way-making it essentially family affair. At tha White Hogse it wae a genuine children's day, everytliing beini subordinated to the pleasure of the litti ones. There was a Christmas tree sot 11 the library, the first that the Cleveland children have called their own, and Mrs Cleveland herself added the finishini touches to the tree, which, while not c great propot tions, was very beautifull: trimmed and decorated with tAny parti colored electric lamps, in place of the old time vax car.dles. Gifts for the little one were numercus, and almost all day ei press wagons and messengers came lade> to the White House. As usual, the Presi dent remembered all of the employes in th house. Every one got a fat turkey. TI his personal servants the President gav gifts of money. Mrs. Cleveland also had i,etty lIttle pr~eent for each of the en plcyes4 She herself received very man Christmas presenats, the Presifient's toke being very beautiful. The only guest stopping at the Whit House i.s Mrs. Cleveland's mother, Mrs Perrine, andl toriay's dinner was strict] Slimited to the family. PrecedIng it, hioi ever, there was a pretty little lunchec Sset out for the children of the cabinet wh came to the White House to see the Chrisi inas tree. All the members of the cabinet ate the Christmas dinners at home in the bo.'om their families, and perhaps the larges gathering was at the Carlisle bomne, whei the Secretary and Mrs. Carlisle entertaina Stheir children and grandchildren. Duel ) killed by the President in the waters South Carolina formed a prominent pa of the menu of the cabinet dinner. Trasedy in a Lumber Camp. SENEY, Mich., December 25.-TImnottI Kane, camp foreman for the Manist 'Lumber Company, was stabbed and kille by Louis Stretcher last night. Stretche who is an employe of the same comnpan; Squarre!ed with Kane in a saloon, and whi "the latter assaulted him, drew a knife ar ile him. Stret.her is in jaiL. r .. SANTA CLAUS:---THIS IS THE TIE OF YE TWO SHlOUID REALLY KNOW EACH OTI'El THE SEAMY SIDE Pauline Pry Gets a Glimpse of a Life of Sacrifice. PADRONES RULE IN PURDY'S COURT A System That Makes Actual Slaves of Women and Girls. A BURDEN TOO HEAVY For the past ten days I have been living In touch with the Italians in Schott's alley and Purdy's court. Here I have found an American woman who is a counterpart of Tolstol. I have also found that slavery has not been abol- ished In the District of Columbia." First, you must know that Schott's alley and Purdy's court are practically under the shadow of the Capitol dome-the for- m:er running between B and C and lst and 2d streets northeast; the latter between Pennsylvania avenue and B and lst and 2d streets northwest. The latter Is In the rear of the row of boarding houses, most of them familiar to every person passing at the foot of the Capitol grounds, where the 14th street cable turns off the avenue. Six weeks or so ago Judge Miller officially recognized the truth of the statement I have made-that slavery still exists in the District of Columbia. At that time, on the authority of the court, the board of chil- dren's guardians took from their parents two children-Louis and Theodora Rosetti, the former nine and the latter twelve years of age-evidence having been intro- duced to show that the girl had been sold by her father for $30 to Marie Papi, an Italian abandoned woman. The complaint against the Rosetti parents was made by Mrs. S. E. Lucille Saffold, a missionary, who has, at 217 Delaware avenue nortieast, a school for Italian girls. A Case of Hausan Depravity. 0Since the removal of the children from Safold'sAlife, and las THrda TsE andY Occinero, ets to Gecurepte esaofa he hadibe ofce Sacrifie.bado hl Adren' hatas Maksctsual Snlthes, ofystl ome amnd thir pls. ha Fothe wpleain te day fro he beuee liin ahe Goody' oephr. ar e ofbdl Hfere kni vndwn Aeran woant also fother tha slerhe s tbeeral. se in theoDisedcts of Couma.eraiy IFth ou h musets ould thatlhto ca- ty. Purt' cohavt ered prat ically une then hao ofndre Citoled,omoethan for week runhing bewend andC n stuc and ad slaes norteast;Crsa theme beteemn pdraets nrhvest he lntaterdi in that rearye ter the "fbding oses, ostr row, thentail ia oeh ofeCrsnmassing athe foo oftha Cpiolgrunsy.hr IThe 14hstrand ablests of the avnuar- te reaize thcruchifn the satmln of wovemade-hae slf-aerilleist din the- Toistit of Coafmoid for three tier othae ithorthem ofShe haouarsu thether o chni- drens garian thefrm pthr partentsr that chden-pouis gant, Tdesprate,stt- thaed forearnie andghie latterwlv years if of ag dene haieeninro ducd t shoutat e girlward beeustnes by ther fathecratforn to rie buti ton itain abandolned oman.ouhhr od Then coain youamust the instheilpghtnof ae misiarylu whoyes, akn et eawarei ince the wisdova of he-boraen from thi hoe, tmost timsaret itio wmate stlti and,aYo suhthea tthe sn afof d'r vife, and atwhuresay seand th fthe aey anotherrotaliboutLoer ycouwandrtookt seurete escae gorf cihI sonr fomd rwgi the bautsa coo.wee hoe henpacdL towe bad of clom the wasith bt bamonghe ir pcrele that -tThewilrgay, then girl fro te wadse ofk Parhiano mabhepaherlarrsarletf boily fever. mothertee the gtadotrrohr but ahe isaed "Pcase on't huma dpravitng thto Gofl the stme, and apps ealin ochr as He.Bu hves leredta.''i nl Thmon of hunr. Inded,for'mreu thax- permencmery myk bo c a fromthe pity, and glaesrl events and ChItmas tme sep- tpcrofe. Iindave bee intatd in whprt ducarye terms thcesu divinetorsh ofban- doeher and eremns of thlanfer for arer dailye cruifin the saounte of scriber" saih he utca onteprth h ofp porsts hersl afd or idtherchast winge. Bresoofher sumedtaherence Stion that sayrounthem,le put ond the cove- a pnd work thoeir bultrthmainstae thel pratled grtreswh 'niharelihe aew.ythuh an carellyuteota. icmtne - o tisToneratioc to He,r. t ko Stihand, yustsi in the ligen oo ht ofs S ad woan her mchoot Thear room isod tute ofteearythging in the basemf onent tihonal whrite exloet budn chid' loeman LR WHEN I TAKE THE LIBERTY OF MAKIN( BE'ITEA. with scraps of mattig that have been pieced into a covering over part of the stone floor, and pieced to cover a dozen boxes thit serve as additional chairs. On the days that she has school she goes with- out dinner herself to give a lunch, of some- times bread and buttes-more often, dry bread-to all her chaltes. The Italians flock to Mrs Saffold's home like sheep to a shlpherd. I have been there when they have come for her to get a doctor, when they have come for her to get the doctor's.prebcriptions tilled, when Mrs. Rosetti has come for ven- geance. when the chitdrent have been as- stmbled there, and one day when a four- year-old submissionary came in to secure help from the supreme souirce. "Oh. teacher," said Anielina-they all, en, women and chil4ren, call Mrs. Saf- fcld teacher-"Oh, taacher; won't you please pray for Tony? I can't do nothing ' her. She be pretty good till she get dr...k and then she swears, and she swears just awful." A Itather Startling Proof. The next day I waa- the.when Tony- six years old this dinner i-cane in peni- tent and promised nevg' to get drunk any more. The same day I saw a less hopeful case recognize Mrs. Saffold as the fount from which all blessings flow in Schott's alley and Purdy's court. As if to intensify the shadow's on her life by contrast, she was named Lily. "I want flive cents," she said. "I want It, and it's nobody's business what I want it for. Wnen I had money I gave what I had and asked -no questions, and if you're a Christian, you'll give me a nickel and hold your tongue." "You want to buy beer," said Mrs. Saf- fold. "If you're hungry I'll give you some- thing to eat, but I can't give you money to get drunk with." "I don't want anything to eat," replied Lily. "I want what I want, and I don't want nothing elce," which was such a terse exposition of human desire, I ouldn't help laughing, whereupon Lily turned upon me. "Ah, you think I'm funny, do you? Well, I'm as good as you are, and I'm better looking, if you are a Christian. You can't come up 'to these,' " and without warning Lily whipped up her petticoats, displaying a pair of bare legs like chiseled marble. I admitted her superiority, and gave her a nickel to atone for the shortcomings of which she had convicted me. "How did you come to work among these Italians?" I asked Mrs. Saffold. She Wem Their CoaQdencc. "In reading the daily papers," she an- swered, "I was impressed with the fre- quency with which Italians were brought into the Police Court and fined 25 for a violation of their licensed privilege to sell fruit on the streets. I looked into the mat- ter and found that these men have what is called a 'moving-on' license, for which they pay $25. This insures them,,the privilege of selling to but two persons at a time. Sup- pose you and another stopped a banana man on the street to buy fruit of him and before you got away 'I came up to buy. If he sold it to me without moving on from where you stood, he would be liable to arrest for violation of his license. The poor Ignorant fellows, half of them can't be made to understand what is the privil- ege their license gives them. In trying to help them iqj this matter, I often found a man with a loaf of bread and a small piece of meat in his pocket, locked up in jail awaiting trial to take place the next morning, and his family at home, waiting for the food he carried to eat. Thus I became a messenger for them, going to their homes wit~ these necessaries of life. In that war, I saw the home life of the women and little children, and saw a work whuih nobody was doing. But the women were like stone before me, and the children, so maany scared wild ani- mals. The Italians are suspicious of all strangers, and the women have no will but that of whatever man is their master," So Mrs. Soffold began with the ma~n. For eight months she went night after night into Purdy's court afad Schott's alley and taught these Italian men to speak, some of them to read, English. She sat with them while they played cards and drank whisky Illicitly vended. She ate their bad-smelling, nauseating food and frally, at the end ot eight months had so won their confidence that she was per- mitted to communicate with their ives and children. Hard Lot of the WVoma. Up to this time the women and little ones still shunned her. Then she began having the women and Little girls come to her home. At this time Mrs. Saffold had a small house on B street, and as a re- ward for the little girl who made the greatest progress, in cleanliness and godli- ness each month sa took this child to live with her a wok. On certain days the women came, *d she. taught them how to cut and m4ke their clothes and how to wash the lyes and be clean. Afterward she taugl them of Jesus Christ and purity and holim es. The basic princi- ple of Mrs. Saffold' missionary endeavor is that you must cli lise unfortunate crea- tures before you can christianize them, and she counts It her greatest earthly gcry that, by her :efforts, nine families have moved out of alleys into streets be- cause Jgheir souls had come to abhor the social conditions prevailing about them. She has two other families wanting to go and waiting only to find a house within their means. "But while some measure of success has been granted me," says Mrs. Saffold, "there are times when I almost despair. I cannot begin to tell you what misery is the lot of the Italian woman from the time she is born. She is deemed flt for but one use, and until she reaches a mar- riageable age, which among these people is commonly as early as eight years, she Is treated with less consideration than a illi ALL MY FRIENDS ACQUAINTED. YOU little girls rejoicing, looking forward to Christmas, you hear these litle Italian girls talk about attairing the marrying age. Last week I had a child five years old in here, just so heart-broken with dis- couragement to think how long it would be before she could escape being beater. and starved to become the property of some man, that she couldn't sew or play, and insisted that she would cut the life out of her throat the first chance she got. Half was not told in court of the horrors of the life of Theodora Rosetti. Besides all that cannot be decently described. She was made, night and morning, to pick up coal along the railroad, or sift cinders from the Capitol fires, and drag home on her small back a load for a horse to carry. There was another man in the alley whom I be- sought the Humane Society to prosecute. He had two girls-one elevbn, the other thirteen-and lived in idleness off the earnings of these children. But all the Hu- mane Society could do was to stipulate the size of the loads the girls should carry on their backs. The burden of immorality on their pitiful young souls no law could les- sen. Bad Treataeat of Girls. "The oldest brother in the family heat these poor girls shamefully. This older brother cruelty is cmamon amng the Ital- ians. A boy in Schott's alley being en- iaged with his little sister for not going to the school he wanted her to attend, kickad her in the ribs, leaving black and blue marks; then, to prevent her crying, put his thumbs in each corner of her mouth and ore the flesh, so that it was over two weekb healing. When I threatenec the boy with the law he cursed me, naying he nas next man to his father In the family and had a right to treat the girls as he wanted to. "Last week the little girl who can e in and wanted me to pray for her six-year- old sister that swears when she gets drunk, was struck on the head by her father with t soap box, and for three days could not see to sew for pain. And what do you think was her offense? She objected to having the monkey sl?ep with her. Her father is an organ grinder, and the mon- key at night was tied to the foot of AnEe- lina's bed, 'and, oh, teacher,' she said, 'he would come and scratch my head for bugs, and there wasn't no bugs there. "The Italians will not, as do other for- eigners, take the oath of allegiance to the United States. They give as their reason that their church forbids them. Yet among themselves they denounce the au- thority of their church, saying this is a free country, and they will do as they please. "But they do not do as they please. They do to please the n..xt one above tlem who has more money. There are two liquor dealers on Pennsylvania avenue who ex- ercise supreme authority over them. These padrones rent houses to them; they supply' them with the whisky which they illicitly vend Sundays and week days. and dictate to them in everything. Not long ago some of the women I had taught to sew deter- mined to buy a machine among them, and they dare not get one only through one of these padrones, who charged them $36J for a worn-out thing worth scarcely so many cents." An Italian Curse. "In Schott's alley a thrifty woman has a store, which by paying for protection and support from the padrones, she compels the people to patronize. There was a child starving to death in that alley one time,and I went to The Star begging the paper to publish the need the miother and baby were in. W.hen the first supplies that came In response to the appeal in The Star arrived this alley storekeeper diverted all else that followed and prevented the needy woman from touching the provisions, telling her they were p~oion and threatening her with the padrone. The child starved to death, and after the funeral the mother, still under threats of this storekeeper, was obliged to curse me and my child with what they count an awful curse. She took two pigeons, tore them apart alive; in one inclosed a paper on which was written may name; in the other a paper bearing ituthie's name; hung both birds on the wall, where, after chanting incantations to bring down vengeance upon me, they were left to rot and drop to pieces. "I don't know how many times my life has been threatened. One sciss.or-ginder, for no other reason than the natural hatred his race have for Americans, sw~ore he would kill me. The poor creature was half- starved and half frozen. So I went to a woman who could well afford it, and got him two suits of warm woolen underwear. Then I went to his door the samz, night- it was almost midnight. I shall never for- get the terrible look that was on that man's face, as he opened the door and recognized me. It was the look of a wild beast that finds its prey within reach of its teeth. But before he could catch his breath, I thrust the clothing into .dis hand and told him I had seen how wretched and unhappy he was, ar.d that I wanted him to know I was his friend, however he might feel toward me. He shrunk into the shadow of the door, muttering to himself, then in a moment, grasped my hand, and crying like a baby, said, 'Oh. if you know how I have wanted to kill you.' He is my enduring friend now. A Visit to the Alleyn. "Another, because of the same hatred of Italians for Americans, while the small- pox was imminent, vowedI he would throw me down and stamp my life out, because, he said, I was vaccinating the children in the alleys to put AmerIcan blood in them." I suggested to Mrs. Saffold carrying Christmas among these people, and she said, 'Come wIth me, and see for yourself whether it is possible." We started in at Schott's alley. Here, by the way, is a neat violation of the ordi- nance forbidding the erection of dwelling hoses in alleys. After the enactment of ths ..-uaUosn Schott'. aywas= renhett- :ned Schott's court, and last summer a row of new houses was put up there. This alley, however, is paved with stone tnd is In excellent condition. I visited two houses here and found them simply barren and dirty. The alley was perfectly :ulet, not a child to be seen. Mrs. Rosetti has so far progressed since her encounter with the law as to have whitewashed her fence inside. But as we approached Pur- ly's court I would have been glad of an .ctse to back out. Tha alley leading rto the court was deep with mud, and n the curt water pipes were being laid, so that great banks of nasty, slimy clay were piled in front of the houses. Here chil- Iren swarmed-numerous and lively as an 3rmy of ants. Directly the first one espied Mfrs. Saffold they came running toward us Frorr every direction, catching hold of our skirts, including me in a joyous welcome. from which I inwardly shrank. In one loor appeared a woman holding a sick baby in her arms-a baby that would be the youngest only p few days longer. A lINial kL Room. Other women poked their heads from their doors, but we were seized upon by )ne who could scarcely move for the chil- Iren under her feet, and began telling Mrs. Saffold that the doctcr had been there. To this Mrs. Saffold replied that she was glad, ind told me that she has seen one of the physicians to the poor wait in this alley s hile a collection was taken up to raise him a dollar before he would lift a finger to relieve a child writhing on the ground at his iert in a lit. Genita led us into her house, at least a :ozen children swarming in after us-girls with but one or two exceptions. If there Is nothing to eat and no money but enough to buy a bunch of bananas for the day's trade in an Italian's house in the morning, he leaves the woman and female children to starve or steal, while he makes.hls sons with him, feeding them from the stock he buys, or off the proceeds of his first sale. Genita's husband was upstairs sick with pneumonia, and to him we went. I can no more give you an idea of the appearance of this home than I gould give you a real- istic sense of a dung hill. In the bed room where the man lay sick were two beds and a cradle. When Genita, Mrs. Saffold, and myself were added, we had to turn In unison or we stuck fast. Yet Mrs. Saffold told me she had been in that room attending the festivities following a chris- tening when it held ninety-six men and women, all dancing. The man in bed did not look sick to me, though he had drawn three prescriptions from the city physician. His rent was un- paid, but Genita said they had a good "boss." If he came and she told him she had only $2 or $1, he says: "All right; give me that. Oh, yes; he is good. Sometime the boss come, and if there is not all the money he say 'Get out.' and he throw the things into the street." For a hovel such as this Genita pays $8 a month. In ('lose Quarters. When we returned down stairs, among the horde of children filling the two rooms below, drawn close to the crazy stove, in which a fire was burning, was a young woman, holding a sick baby. The baby had been hit on the head by its father, and it was moaning and rolling its eyes and twist- ing Its head with a peculiar movement. On the young mother's face-she is only nine- teen-was a stamp of added wretchedness which Genita's worried face had outgrown. The girl yas young enough to count happi- ness her due, and miserable she felt her- self, robbed of her own belonging. She was resentful, sullen, hated charity for the measure it was of the injustice done her. In the adjoining house, three-year-old Angeima had been left in charge of a fif- teen-moriths-old baby-her baby, she called it, as she came hugging it over the bridge formed by a narrow plank thrown across the deep ditch dug for the water pipes. Tony, the unregenerate six-year-old, had hackslided, and, though she appeared to be perfectly sober, she swore at Mrs. Saffold with all the might of her few years. In this house, on two of the three beds filling the front room down stairs, macaroni was spread to dry. Here, in the four small rooms comprising the whole house, lodge nineteen grown persons, three children and a monkey-six men in the front room down- stairs, eight men in the front room upstairs, the man, his wife, a female lodger and the three children and the monkey in the rear room; in the kitchen two men on a cot. Fcr lodging and the privilege of the stove, these Italians pay $31 a month. Each man makes his own macaroni, spreadiig it, as I had seen it, on his bed to dry. A Youthful Missionary. In another house a beautiful little girl opened the door, admitting us into a room in which her gentle influence had created some resemblance to a home. When Mrs. Saffold first knew this child, she was a blood-thirsty small reprobate who, in a rage, would fly at the enemy, catch hold with her teeth, and not let go until she had a piece of the enemy's flesh. Last summer this child went one day to Mrs. Saffold, saying: "There are some new children come into the alley today who are bad as they can be, nd I've been think? ing, teacher, you look so tired and white, I might help you by having a little school myself and teach them all to thread a needle and comb their heads before they come up to bother you." So this seven-year-old misslomfry opened her school under the steps of her alley home, and took the four strangers through a preparatory course of civilization. Three or four men were standing about as we went from hotise to house, that dif- fered one from another only as the sights and smells of one barn yard differs from those in th' next, Colored men working frying the water pipes, mingled with Italians, and mangy curs were chasing and yelping about us. At night when the men, busy about town during the day, return whisky, freely, is bought and sold, and while we have not, certainly as in New York, anything in Washington of the nature of police pro- teetion of crime, it is remarkable how far from human ken--all but Mrs. Saffold and the prying gaze of a woman reporter-the horrors and crimes of Purdy's court are. A Burden Too Great. The day following my visit there I sat with the children while they sewed, sang, prayed and played in Mrs. Saffold's home- the pinched, pitiful home that for want of support has dwindled from a small house to this single basement room, Every face was clean, bright, radiant with intelligence and hope. Individually surveyed, it is apparent that these girls have been advanced b2eyond their parents' state through several cycles of evolution by the unaided efforts of one loving, faith- ful, but. oh: such a heart-broken, little woman. , Nor did these children go without a ('hristmas today, though there was no place to put it in their home. Mrs. SalTold has herself provided them with a dinmer in her basement, and last night they hung their stockings in a line along her wal not to find them empty of all token of Sanita Claus this morning. But I could not rejoice in their happiness, reading the price of it written on the face of the solitary life that assures it. I have asked myself, and I ask you, Is it right, is it human that one pair of woman's hand. and the tiny hands of a little girl, who last Thursday was taken sick with pneumonia, should have so much to do? PAULINE PRY. No Justinecatton. The President has denied the application for a commiutation of the sentence in the case of Cha-Nopa-Huath, alias Two Sticks, an Indian, convicted in South Dakota of murder and sentenc2d to be hanged D)e cember 28, 1891l. "After a thorough exam in.ation of this case," says the President, "I car find no grounds to justify my in. terference with the sentence of the court," Personal Mention. Mr. Ruloff R. Strattan of the United' States civil servIce coimmission office and his brother, George Win. Strattan of the Columbia Athletic Club, left the city or Sunday to epend the holidays among fenda nd relative. in Philadelphia, Pa, 94e proof of tee pubbing is in fee eating, "esterba's fiar containeb 33 cotumns of abverfisemenfs mabe up of 548 separate announce: menfs. ;epse aboertisers $ou95f pu8ficiff-not meret THE GAME WAS A TIE Columbia and Union Battle on Foot Ball Field. AN EVEN SCORE RESULTED Phil King's Splendid Runs Near End of Game. LITTLE ENTHUSIASM The Christmas foot ball game played to- day at National Park did not prove as great an attraction as that played on Thanksgiving ' day. There are several reasors that may possibly have tended to this erd. It may be that the Washington public had enough of sport which in the game played between the Columbia Ath- letic Club and Georgetown College re- sulted so seriously to one player. Or it nay be that Christmas is too much of a home holiday for people to be attracted to seats on hard benches. Perhaps, also, the rather threatening weather and last night's rain had a depressing effect on the attend- ance. Whatever the causes, the crowd that was gathered at noon at th' park to see the game between the Columbia Club and Union College teams was very small, num- bering scarcely a thousand. There were perhaps twenty-five ladies on the stands. There was little enthusiasm, a few horns being blown at times, but they sounded very like Christmas horns, rather than the genuine foot ball instruments. The spectators were mostly strung out along the rope line on the south side of the field. But few wore colors. The Union College players reached the park first and immediately repaired to the dressing room. Columbia soon showed up, the men complaining loudly because a 'bus had not been sent to carry them to the grounds. The general impression among the spectators was that Union would put up a strong game; first. because the visit- ors were in excellent trim, and, second, because Columbia played a number of substitutes. Shields and one or two other members of the Thanksgiving day game occupied reserved seats. Visitors Arrive. The Union College team trotted onto the gridiron a few minutes before noon, and was greeted with but faint applause. Half a minute later Columbia made its appear- ar.ce. A few tin horns were sounded and again silence reigned. The players were not at all energetic in their practice. The Union boys are a fne-looking, ath- letic set of young men, and they created a very favorable impression as they scientin- cally dropped en the pigskin. The first yell of the day was heard when Union College made a touch-down a few minutes after the game started. Then far down the field rang out- Rah, rah, rah! U-n-i-o-n. Hiki, hiki, hiki. That Union had sympathizers among the spectators was evidenced as goal was kick- ed, for shouts of "You're not playing with Georgetown today" were heard behind the ropes. A feature of the play of the Union men was1 the enthusiasm they put Into their work, and the hearty manner in which the signals were given. The crowd we.s an orderly one, no effort being made to get inside the ropes. The policemen stood about the grounds at In- tervals, looking extremely lonesome. Owftng to the fact that the Columbia players are very much out of condition, it was decided to have the halves of but twenty-live minutes' duration. Between halves not a spectator crossed the gridiron. A number of horn solos were rendered, but the peace of the patients in Freedmen's Hospital was not otherwise dis- turbed. Absence of local Interest in the contest was perhaps the most noticeable feature at the grounds. One Columbia en- thusiast carried a huge kazoo horn repre- senting a rooster's head, which was made to crow triumphantly when things looked favorable for Columbia. The familiar yell of Columbia *as given its Initial rendition of the day when the ball approached dangerously near Union's goal, a few minutes after the opening p the second half. A touchdown fellowel; Clark kicked goal, and then the first real enthusiasm of the day was displayed. The crowd warmed up when Phil King made two long runs in succession three minutes before the close of the game. "What's the matter with King?" "He's all right," was shouted, and several bunch- es of firecrackers were exploded. "That ball Is a pretty good thing-push it along," yelled the Columbia rooters when the oval reached the vicinity of Union's goal. The Lime Up. The teams lined up as follows: Union College Positions. C. .A. C. Pollock.........Left end..........Carter Palmer.........Left tackle...aunders Blodgett..........Left guard.........Ranier Terry.............Ceter..........,..Gapes Swectiand...ight guard..Dickinson Peters........Right tackle..Capt. Wells Mallery..........tight end.........efton C'apt. Brown..Quarter back..Phil King Baker.........Left half back...Barard Myers........Right half back..8. Johrsou Richards....Full back...........Clark Substitutes for Union--Gordenl, Cowe and Case. Umpire-Dr. James R. Church. Ref- eree-Frank Butterwor'th. Linesman-- Harry King. Commeaelug Play. Union won the toss and took the kick- off. The ball went down to the Columbia 2-yard line. A Columbia man fumbled ard the pigskin went foul. On the third' down Myers pushed through the, line to the l0-yard line and another down sent the ball to within three yards of'Coiumbia's goal. A slight gain was made in the next scrimmage by the locals, but this wh at orce regained by Union, and again the ball was right In front of the goal. An er rush and the ball was pushed over the fine between the posts In just seven minutei. Goal was kicked easily, and in les than ten minutes the score stood. Union, 6; Columbia, 41. Sharper Play. Columbia made a good kick-off, and stop- ped Richards in abcut ten yards. A good deal l.etter play was put up by the local men, and King t<gan to get better ac- quaintd with the Columbia tactics. The ball was kept in about the middle of the field for several minutes, and several rough pazn:s occurred. Clark got the eall at the right end, but lost ground. After a slort gain for Co- lumbia the ball was5 pr.ssed back to Clark for a kick, and sent dounn to Union's twen- ty-five-yard line. Sefton n.ude a good tackle and clinched the gain thus made. Myers made a gain of twenty yards for Union, being well ts.ckl<d by Befton just in time t.- keep him from a clear field. U'nion soor. made another gain, and then another, by mcans of hard center rushes, in which the great strength of the college men told henvily. Richards was slightly hurt and a brief delay followed. Myers made a gain of about twelve yards for Union, and Cass #nllnwad with two more. MYers made an

Transcript of TUESDAY, DECEMBER THE SULTAN SAYS NO THE...

Page 1: TUESDAY, DECEMBER THE SULTAN SAYS NO THE …chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1894-12-25/ed-1/seq-1.pdf · ofticials be 1,onii,ted from levying taxei for the paymenlt of

V; 85, No. 21,077. WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1894-TEN PAGES. TWO CENTS.

THE EVENING STARrBLI4HE:1) DAILY EXCEPT gtNDAY,

AT THE STAR BUILDINGS,1101 l'esasyiranin Avenue. Cu- title Street. by

The Evening Star Newepyper Company,S. H. KAUFFMANN, Pres't.

rem York o%oe, 49 '"etter Bsildine.Tb' E.'ning Star is serrea to ,":scrlhbra in the

City >y carriers, on their cwn u".wtnt, 't 10 centsr,r V rk. or 44 eouti per nrn;ah. Copt.-s at therounter 2 cents each. Py mal. anywher' In Thetni!'ed !tales or 4'an::l-ptstage- prepn!d-50 centsgper oa-n'L.

Lnturday Quintnnle Sh-et st ir. $1 pe: year:a:t! fcreign ;0,k-.+-e r".t 4. $',.O0'iFatered St tl:. Post 'i!ie at W-7ashington, D. C.

as -+e-mnd "ta-e r.:.! ,.Ttrr)(7AIll rn il r!'.!w.: rust t^ paid In n4viane.1tntrs t .1 rtl.t.",r,n i known on 'nwelleittwt

THE SULTAN SAYS NO

Consul Jewett Cannot Go With theArmenian Commission.

TURI1Y FE18 11IS IIIEV IGATIOI

No Apparent Way of EvadingThis Cecision.

NOT ENTIRIELY UNEXPECTED

CONSTANTINOPI.E, December 2-.-Thesultan last evenir.g made a final reply tothe application of Unite"I States MmisterTerrell for permission to have Consul Jew-c.tt make an indeper.de:it ir.qury into theArmenian troubles. The sultan positivelydecllr.ed to allow the consul to accom:panythe cummissluin.

The refusal of the sultan to allow Mr.Jewett to perform the mission with whichhe was charged by Prestdent Clevelandwas not unexpected at the State Depart-ment. For the iast week Minister Terrell,acting under the pressure of the Depart-ment of State, has been urging the porte topermit theu Irvestigation, but his advices tothe diepartin,ent have siown that he feltlittle contidenee in a successful outcome.The reluctarce of the Turkish govern-

ment to accelde to his request is accountedfor by the formidable proportions to whichthe agitation in the t'nited States in favorof intercession on behalf of the Armeniansin Turkey has attained. At tirst the portewas under the impression, probably hav-ing in view the outcome of previous investi-gations into alleged outrages by the Tutksupon their Christian subjects, that theUnited States was so favorably inclined te-ward their side that the result of such an

ir.quiry as was proposed would not i.eharmnful.But the intensity of feeling dinplay"d

in the various mass meetings and churchascemblles in the United Statue have . on-

vinced the porte that it would be placingits interests in dangerous ban.ls, and.when it learned that the pErson ch.sen tomrke the inquiry was a son of an Amerl-can missionary and a native of the verycountry where the outrages were allegedto have occurred, a prompt negative was

r.-turned to Mr. Terrell's requ"?st.It does not appear that there is any way

of going behind this d_,ision, for Mr. Jew-ett being refused permission to investigatein his capacity as officer of the UnitedStates he could not undertake it safely as

an individual. Therefcre it is probable thatthis last action of the Turkish governmentends definitely in the participation of theUnited States in the projected inquiry,w hich will consequently be conducted en-

tirely by Europeans.

O1OLICE CAPTAINS St.M1MONED.

Nine of Them Must Go Before theLexu" Committee.

NEW YORK, D,!-,ember ':.-Nine pol::ecaptains were this mornig subpoenaedto appear tomzrrov' before the Lexow com-

mittee. The subp>inai were sent in a

batch to Superintendent Byrnes at policeheadquarters, and he summo.ed the men

before ln. The captains are Ryan, Wash-btrn. ilhela. W'estervelt,Gallaher,Strausa,durphy. Martens and Delaney. With theexception of Strauss, none of these menhave. so far, tigured in the wjiness chairbefore the Lexow committee.Tfhe superintendent called the men before

him and( told them that to each one a sub-poena had been issued person.ally, andnotifled them to appear before the Lexowcommittee in their rooms tomorrow morn-ALg.

COLOR LINE DRAWN.

Colored Applieaats Excluded From theSons of Veterams.

CINCINNATI. Ohio. December 25.-A spe-cial to the Enquirer from Birmingham,Ala.. says:Commander-in-chief of the Sons of Vet-

erans Col. William Bundy. having heardthe appeal of colored applicants who hadbeen refused charters as Sons of Veteransby southern comnmanderles, has sustainedthe refusal and counseled the colored ap-plica'nts to organize a separate Organi/.ationof their own.

SIX ACRES DURNED OVER.

One of the Fiereest Fires in the His-tory of Buirlithgton, Vt.

BURLINGTON. Vt., D)ecemiber 25.-A firestarted last night in the lath shed con-nected with a big lumber yard owned byJ. Rt. Booth was not put under control un-

til 4 o'clock this morning, and after it haddone damage estimated at $l5,000.From the lath shed the flames spread to

the surricandinlg lumber, and about six~acres were burned over. All the lumberseeds were completely destroyed, and aheavy wind carried the lire to the millsowned by W. & G. E. Crane, which wereburned. Twenty cars standing on. the Cen-tial Vermont tracks, loaded with lumberand merchandiLe, and the Central Ver-moint engine house were also burned.Almost li00j0,u00 teet of lumber was de-

stroyed.The insurance is estimated at about

$125,000..The fire was one of the fieracest in the

history of tnle city, but, so far aw knowni,no laves were lost.

TACUIlA'S LIGHT AND WATER.

dodge S$allupe Tries to Prevent An)Fuarther Payaacnts.

ThCOMA, Wash., December 25.-John CStaliup. a superior c4 urt judge, has filed amequity suit against the city of TacomaThe plaintiff alleges that C. B. Wright, tiePhiladelphia millionaire, and the TacomaLight and Water Company, controlled b)him, sold the city the light and water plantfor 31,7.".,000 last year. staiup alleges tafor its $1,50uu~ im bonds ali the city golwas sonme r'otten ilumnes valued not to ex.ceed 5500, wt'erefore the plamntiff praysthat he be granted a dleciee against thecity. perpetually enjoining the city fronthe paying of any further or additionainterest upon the bonds, and that the cit:ofticials be 1,onii,ted from levying taxeifor the paymenlt of interest on these bonds

"UUME-RL N" Dt.FFEE DEAD.

He Was a Menmber of the Local 189.Team.

MOBILE, Ala., December 25.-Edwar,D)uffee, the famous base ball player of th,Mt. Louis Lrowns, died last night at Io'clock.

Duffee was a member of the Washiton base ball team collectedJ by .\anageBlarnie in lott and which inished the firsseason. unduer Arthur Irwin's managemen1i seveath place. He came here from thColumbus elab. where he was known a"HLrn1e itun D'ufee."' His hitting fell o1here. anid he was not retainied for the fo]iowing season. He was a go.od L;eider anibase runner and was popuiar.

kiEA.VE DAMAGES AWARD)ED.Vr-at Gai-e. Aai.nst. eU.- Wet.

shot and killed by the Skelton boys atStevenson several months ago, because ofhis alleged seduction of Annie-Skelton, hasleen awarded a verdict of $16,(NN) againstthe Western Union Telegraph Company be-cause of the company's alleged failure todeliver to Ross a message warning himthat the Skelton boys were after him.Judge Boarman set aside the verdict as

being excessive. 'Mrs. Ross sent the tele-gram from Scottsboro' to Stevenson, whith-er Ross had gone by p,rivate conveyance totake the train. The Skelton boys overtookhim at Stevenson and shot him to death.

SI ICIDE ON Cl'RISTMAS EVE.

Chanrls J. Sthall Tnkes PeAson atliut er,1 ow U.

Siweal Di-patchl to The Etenig Star.HAGE STOVN, Md., lDecember 23.-

('has. J. Schail, thirty years of age, whoseresidence is in Washington, but who came

here upon the removal of the Crawfordbicycle works to Hagerstown, committedsuicide last night by taking a deadly poisonof some character. After taking the dosehe went to the garden attached to his1-oarding house and lay down under a tree,where his remains were found this morn-ing. The deceased was a young man ofpleasing address, highly esteemed by thoseu ath whom he was associated and at onetime studied medicine. Disappointment ina love affair is attributed the cause ofSchall's act.

COMING HOME.

The Columbia Will Now Get Her W. L.I. Bell.

The cruiser Columbia, which has been do-ing service in the Caribbean sea for manymonths past, and which is now at Kings-ton. Jamaica, has been ordered home. Thecruiser Atlanta, which has undergone ex-tensive repairs at the Norfolk navy yard.will succeed the Columbia in the WestIndies. She will probably start for thesouth in a week or so. and the Columbiawill sail for home as soon as she arrives.The Columbia rendered good service atBluefields in maintaining the cause of theUnited States in the recent complicationswith the Itritish government. It is seidthat her bottom is very foul with martmegrowth, and that she is otherwise in needof an overhauling In a dry dock. She willbe repaired at the Norfolk navy yard, andwhen ready will probably make a visit toAnnapclis, as the nearest available port toWashington, for the purpose of receivingthe beautiful bell which has been presentedto her by the members of the WashingtonLight Infantry corps, in recognition of thecompliment paid the District in the selec-tion of her name. This presentation hasbeen delayed by the sudden dispatch of thevessel to Bluetields early in the summer.

RAILROAD POOLING.

Strong Efort Will Be Made to Passthe Hill.

Senator Butler, chairman of the Senatecommittee on interstate commerce, expectsto call the committee together,immediatelyafter the holidays for the purpose of tak-ing up the pooling bill. There are indicationsthat there will be opposition in committeeto the bill in the form which passed theHouse, and some remonstrances against ithave been received from various parts ofthe country, but the friends of the meas-ure claim that when the voting stage isleached in committee it will have a safemajority. They think the Senate com"u.ittee will accept the plan virtually as 11was adopted by the House. This opinioris based upon the fact that the Senate com-mittee had a subcommittee at work lastsession in conjunction with the House subcommittee, and that the two subcommitteesagreed upon a measure which was notmaterially different from the House billWith the bill reported there will be astrong effort to have it taken up in thtSenate, but the pooling bill was not one o1the measures designated for consideratoorby the democratic caucus, and if it shoulantagonize any of the preferred bills Itschances for securing consideration migh1be impaired.

REVENUE SERVICE.

Bill Providing for Retirement of Agedand Diualed Omcers.

Representative Mallory of Florida, whtis a member of the House committee orinterstate and foreign commerce, haviniin charge the bill for the improvement ofthe revenue service by the retirement ofofficers who have become disabled or in.capacitated by age, says that he has nol

despaired of getting the bill through. Itis very probable that immediately aftei(he holidays an attempt will be made ttpass the bill under suspension of the rulesThe committee on commerce will, perhapsask that recognition be given it to presithe bill to equalize the salaries in thsteamboaL inspection pervice. Mr. Mallor,says that if the committee prefers to talcup the steamboat inspection bill instead athe revenue marine bill that he will try tsecure individual r*.'ognition on a suspenslon day in order to pass the latter billlHe has no doubt but a two-thirds votenecessary to pass the bill under suspenision of the rules, can be secured for th<measure. it is important to get the bi]through Congress soon, as it must be considered by the Senate and become a lasbefore March 4, or pass over to the nexCongress.

p

THE PRESIDEN'"S DUCKS.

They Were Eaten at Cabinet DinneriToday.

The President and the members of hicabinet celebrated Christmas in the oldlfashionedl way-making it essentiallyfamily affair. At tha White Hogse it waea genuine children's day, everytliing beinisubordinated to the pleasure of the littiones. There was a Christmas tree sot 11the library, the first that the Clevelandchildren have called their own, and MrsCleveland herself added the finishinitouches to the tree, which, while not cgreat propot tions, was very beautifull:trimmed and decorated with tAny particolored electric lamps, in place of the oldtime vax car.dles. Gifts for the little onewere numercus, and almost all day eipress wagons and messengers came lade>to the White House. As usual, the President remembered all of the employes in thhouse. Every one got a fat turkey. TIhis personal servants the President gavgifts of money. Mrs. Cleveland also hadi,etty lIttle pr~eent for each of the enplcyes4 She herself received very manChristmas presenats, the Presifient's tokebeing very beautiful.The only guest stopping at the Whit

House i.s Mrs. Cleveland's mother, MrsPerrine, andl toriay's dinner was strict]Slimited to the family. PrecedIng it, hioiever, there was a pretty little lunchecSset out for the children of the cabinet whcame to the White House to see the Chrisiinas tree.All the members of the cabinet ate the

Christmas dinners at home in the bo.'omtheir families, and perhaps the largesgathering was at the Carlisle bomne, wheithe Secretary and Mrs. Carlisle entertainaStheir children and grandchildren. Duel)killed by the President in the watersSouth Carolina formed a prominent paof the menu of the cabinet dinner.

Trasedy in a Lumber Camp.SENEY, Mich., December 25.-TImnottI

Kane, camp foreman for the Manist'Lumber Company, was stabbed and killeby Louis Stretcher last night. Stretchewho is an employe of the same comnpan;Squarre!ed with Kane in a saloon, and whi"the latter assaulted him, drew a knife ar

ile him. Stret.her is in jaiL.

r ..

SANTA CLAUS:---THIS IS THE TIE OF YETWO SHlOUID REALLY KNOW EACH OTI'El

THE SEAMY SIDEPauline Pry Gets a Glimpse of a

Life of Sacrifice.

PADRONES RULE IN PURDY'S COURT

A System That Makes Actual Slavesof Women and Girls.

A BURDEN TOO HEAVY

For the past ten days I have been livingIn touch with the Italians in Schott's alleyand Purdy's court.Here I have found an American woman

who is a counterpart of Tolstol. I havealso found that slavery has not been abol-ished In the District of Columbia."First, you must know that Schott's alley

and Purdy's court are practically underthe shadow of the Capitol dome-the for-m:er running between B and C and lst and2d streets northeast; the latter betweenPennsylvania avenue and B and lst and2d streets northwest. The latter Is In therear of the row of boarding houses, mostof them familiar to every person passingat the foot of the Capitol grounds, wherethe 14th street cable turns off the avenue.

Six weeks or so ago Judge Miller officiallyrecognized the truth of the statement Ihave made-that slavery still exists in theDistrict of Columbia. At that time, on theauthority of the court, the board of chil-dren's guardians took from their parentstwo children-Louis and Theodora Rosetti,the former nine and the latter twelveyears of age-evidence having been intro-duced to show that the girl had been soldby her father for $30 to Marie Papi, anItalian abandoned woman.The complaint against the Rosetti parents

was made by Mrs. S. E. Lucille Saffold,a missionary, who has, at 217 Delawareavenue nortieast, a school for Italian girls.

A Case of Hausan Depravity.0Since the removal of the children from

Safold'sAlife, and las THrda TsE andY

Occinero, ets to Gecurepte esaofahe hadibe ofce Sacrifie.bado hl

Adren' hatas Maksctsual Snlthes,ofystl ome amnd thir pls. ha

Fothe wpleain te day fro he beuee liin

ahe Goody' oephr. ar e ofbdlHfere kni vndwn Aeran woant

also fother tha slerhe s tbeeral.se in theoDisedcts of Couma.eraiy

IFth ou h musets ould thatlhto ca-ty. Purt' cohavt ered prat ically une

then hao ofndre Citoled,omoethan forweek runhing bewend andC n stuc and

ad slaes norteast;Crsa theme beteemn

pdraets nrhvest he lntaterdi in thatrearye ter the "fbding oses, ostrrow,thentail ia oeh ofeCrsnmassingathe foo oftha Cpiolgrunsy.hrIThe 14hstrand ablests of the avnuar-

te reaize thcruchifn the satmln ofwovemade-hae slf-aerilleist din the-Toistit of Coafmoid for three tier othaeithorthem ofShe haouarsuthether o chni-drens garian thefrm pthr partentsrthat chden-pouis gant, Tdesprate,stt-thaed forearnie andghie latterwlv

years if of ag dene haieeninroducd t shoutat e girlward beeustnesby ther fathecratforn to rie buti tonitain abandolned oman.ouhhr odThen coain youamust the instheilpghtnofae misiarylu whoyes, akn et eawarei

ince the wisdova of he-boraen fromthi hoe, tmost timsaret itio wmatestlti and,aYo suhthea tthe snafof d'r vife, andatwhuresay seandth fthe aey anotherrotaliboutLoerycouwandrtookt seurete escae gorfcihI sonr fomd rwgi the bautsa coo.weehoe henpacdL towe bad of clomthe wasith bt bamonghe ir pcrele that-tThewilrgay,then girl fro te wadse ofkParhiano mabhepaherlarrsarletfboily

fever. mothertee the gtadotrrohrbut ahe isaed "Pcase on't huma dpravitngthto Gofl the stme, and apps ealin ochras He.Bu hves leredta.''i nlThmon of hunr. Inded,for'mreu thax-

permencmery myk bo c a fromthe pity,and glaesrl events and ChItmas tme sep-tpcrofe. Iindave bee intatd in whprtducarye terms thcesu divinetorsh ofban-

doeher and eremns of thlanferfor arer dailye cruifin the saounte ofscriber" saih he utca onteprth h ofpporsts hersl afd or idtherchastwinge. Bresoofher sumedtaherence

Stion that sayrounthem,le put ond the cove-a pnd workthoeir bultrthmainstae thel

pratled grtreswh 'niharelihe aew.ythuhan carellyuteota. icmtne- o tisToneratioc to He,r. t ko

Stihand, yustsi in the ligen oo htofs

S ad woan her mchoot Thearroom isod

tute ofteearythging in the basemf onenttihonal whrite exloet budn chid' loeman

LR WHEN I TAKE THE LIBERTY OF MAKIN(BE'ITEA.

with scraps of mattig that have beenpieced into a covering over part of thestone floor, and pieced to cover a dozenboxes thit serve as additional chairs. Onthe days that she has school she goes with-out dinner herself to give a lunch, of some-times bread and buttes-more often, drybread-to all her chaltes.The Italians flock to Mrs Saffold'shome like sheep to a shlpherd. I havebeen there when they have come for herto get a doctor, when they have come forher to get the doctor's.prebcriptions tilled,when Mrs. Rosetti has come for ven-geance. when the chitdrent have been as-stmbled there, and one day when a four-year-old submissionary came in to securehelp from the supreme souirce."Oh. teacher," said Anielina-they all,en, women and chil4ren, call Mrs. Saf-

fcld teacher-"Oh, taacher; won't youplease pray for Tony? I can't do nothing

' her. She be pretty good till she getdr...k and then she swears, and she swearsjust awful."

A Itather Startling Proof.The next day I waa- the.when Tony-

six years old this dinner i-cane in peni-tent and promised nevg' to get drunk anymore.The same day I saw a less hopeful case

recognize Mrs. Saffold as the fount fromwhich all blessings flow in Schott's alleyand Purdy's court.As if to intensify the shadow's on her

life by contrast, she was named Lily."I want flive cents," she said. "I want It,

and it's nobody's business what I want itfor. Wnen I had money I gave what I hadand asked -no questions, and if you're aChristian, you'll give me a nickel and holdyour tongue.""You want to buy beer," said Mrs. Saf-

fold. "If you're hungry I'll give you some-thing to eat, but I can't give you money toget drunk with.""I don't want anything to eat," replied

Lily. "I want what I want, and I don'twant nothing elce," which was such a terseexposition of human desire, I ouldn't helplaughing, whereupon Lily turned upon me."Ah, you think I'm funny, do you? Well,I'm as good as you are, and I'm betterlooking, if you are a Christian. You can'tcome up 'to these,' " and without warningLily whipped up her petticoats, displayinga pair of bare legs like chiseled marble.I admitted her superiority, and gave her

a nickel to atone for the shortcomings ofwhich she had convicted me."How did you come to work among these

Italians?" I asked Mrs. Saffold.She Wem Their CoaQdencc.

"In reading the daily papers," she an-

swered, "I was impressed with the fre-quency with which Italians were broughtinto the Police Court and fined 25 for a

violation of their licensed privilege to sellfruit on the streets. I looked into the mat-ter and found that these men have what iscalled a 'moving-on' license, for which theypay $25. This insures them,,the privilege ofselling to but two persons at a time. Sup-pose you and another stopped a bananaman on the street to buy fruit of him andbefore you got away 'I came up to buy. Ifhe sold it to me without moving on fromwhere you stood, he would be liableto arrest for violation of his license. Thepoor Ignorant fellows, half of them can'tbe made to understand what is the privil-ege their license gives them. In trying tohelp them iqj this matter, I often found aman with a loaf of bread and a small pieceof meat in his pocket, locked up in jailawaiting trial to take place the nextmorning, and his family at home, waitingfor the food he carried to eat. Thus Ibecame a messenger for them, goingto their homes wit~ these necessariesof life. In that war, I saw the homelife of the women and little children,and saw a work whuih nobody was doing.But the women were like stone before me,and the children, so maany scared wild ani-mals. The Italians are suspicious of allstrangers, and the women have no willbut that of whatever man is their master,"So Mrs. Soffold began with the ma~n.For eight months she went night afternight into Purdy's court afad Schott's alleyand taught these Italian men to speak,some of them to read, English. She satwith them while they played cards anddrank whisky Illicitly vended. She atetheir bad-smelling, nauseating food andfrally, at the end ot eight months had sowon their confidence that she was per-mitted to communicate with their ivesand children.

Hard Lot of the WVoma.Up to this time the women and littleones still shunned her. Then she beganhaving the women and Little girls come toher home. At this time Mrs. Saffold hada small house on B street, and as a re-

ward for the little girl who made thegreatest progress, in cleanliness and godli-ness each month sa took this child tolive with her a wok. On certain daysthe women came, *d she. taught themhow to cut and m4ke their clothes andhow to wash the lyes and be clean.Afterward she taugl them of Jesus Christand purity and holim es. The basic princi-ple of Mrs. Saffold' missionary endeavoris that you must cli lise unfortunate crea-tures before you can christianize them,and she counts It her greatest earthlygcry that, by her :efforts, nine familieshave moved out of alleys into streets be-cause Jgheir souls had come to abhor thesocial conditions prevailing about them.She has two other families wanting to goand waiting only to find a house withintheir means."But while some measure of success has

been granted me," says Mrs. Saffold,"there are times when I almost despair.I cannot begin to tell you what misery isthe lot of the Italian woman from thetime she is born. She is deemed flt for butone use, and until she reaches a mar-riageable age, which among these peopleis commonly as early as eight years, sheIs treated with less consideration than a

illi

ALL MY FRIENDS ACQUAINTED. YOU

little girls rejoicing, looking forward toChristmas, you hear these litle Italiangirls talk about attairing the marryingage. Last week I had a child five yearsold in here, just so heart-broken with dis-couragement to think how long it would bebefore she could escape being beater. andstarved to become the property of someman, that she couldn't sew or play, andinsisted that she would cut the life out ofher throat the first chance she got. Halfwas not told in court of the horrors of thelife of Theodora Rosetti. Besides all thatcannot be decently described. She wasmade, night and morning, to pick up coalalong the railroad, or sift cinders from theCapitol fires, and drag home on her smallback a load for a horse to carry. Therewas another man in the alley whom I be-sought the Humane Society to prosecute.He had two girls-one elevbn, the otherthirteen-and lived in idleness off theearnings of these children. But all the Hu-mane Society could do was to stipulate thesize of the loads the girls should carry ontheir backs. The burden of immorality ontheir pitiful young souls no law could les-sen.

Bad Treataeat of Girls."The oldest brother in the family heat

these poor girls shamefully. This olderbrother cruelty is cmamon amng the Ital-ians. A boy in Schott's alley being en-

iaged with his little sister for not going tothe school he wanted her to attend, kickadher in the ribs, leaving black and bluemarks; then, to prevent her crying, put histhumbs in each corner of her mouth andore the flesh, so that it was over twoweekb healing. When I threatenec theboy with the law he cursed me, naying henas next man to his father In the familyand had a right to treat the girls as hewanted to."Last week the little girl who can e in

and wanted me to pray for her six-year-old sister that swears when she gets drunk,was struck on the head by her father witht soap box, and for three days could notsee to sew for pain. And what do youthink was her offense? She objected tohaving the monkey sl?ep with her. Herfather is an organ grinder, and the mon-

key at night was tied to the foot of AnEe-lina's bed, 'and, oh, teacher,' she said, 'hewould come and scratch my head for bugs,and there wasn't no bugs there."The Italians will not, as do other for-

eigners, take the oath of allegiance to theUnited States. They give as their reasonthat their church forbids them. Yetamong themselves they denounce the au-

thority of their church, saying this is afree country, and they will do as theyplease."But they do not do as they please.

They do to please the n..xt one above tlemwho has more money. There are two liquordealers on Pennsylvania avenue who ex-ercise supreme authority over them. Thesepadrones rent houses to them; they supply'them with the whisky which they illicitlyvend Sundays and week days. and dictateto them in everything. Not long ago someof the women I had taught to sew deter-mined to buy a machine among them, andthey dare not get one only through one ofthese padrones, who charged them $36J fora worn-out thing worth scarcely so manycents."

An Italian Curse."In Schott's alley a thrifty woman has

a store, which by paying for protection andsupport from the padrones, she compelsthe people to patronize. There was a childstarving to death in that alley one time,andI went to The Star begging the paper topublish the need the miother and baby werein. W.hen the first supplies that came Inresponse to the appeal in The Star arrivedthis alley storekeeper diverted all else thatfollowed and prevented the needy womanfrom touching the provisions, telling herthey were p~oion and threatening herwith the padrone. The child starved todeath, and after the funeral the mother,still under threats of this storekeeper, wasobliged to curse me and my child withwhat they count an awful curse. She tooktwo pigeons, tore them apart alive; in oneinclosed a paper on which was written mayname; in the other a paper bearing ituthie'sname; hung both birds on the wall, where,after chanting incantations to bring downvengeance upon me, they were left to rotand drop to pieces."I don't know how many times my life

has been threatened. One sciss.or-ginder,for no other reason than the natural hatredhis race have for Americans, sw~ore hewould kill me. The poor creature was half-starved and half frozen. So I went to awoman who could well afford it, and gothim two suits of warm woolen underwear.Then I went to his door the samz, night-it was almost midnight. I shall never for-get the terrible look that was on thatman's face, as he opened the door andrecognized me. It was the look of a wildbeast that finds its prey within reach ofits teeth. But before he could catch hisbreath, I thrust the clothing into .dis handand told him I had seen how wretched andunhappy he was, ar.d that I wanted himto know I was his friend, however he mightfeel toward me. He shrunk into theshadow of the door, muttering to himself,then in a moment, grasped my hand, andcrying like a baby, said, 'Oh. if you knowhow I have wanted to kill you.' He ismy enduring friend now.

A Visit to the Alleyn."Another, because of the same hatred ofItalians for Americans, while the small-pox was imminent, vowedI he would throwme down and stamp my life out, because,he said, I was vaccinating the children inthe alleys to put AmerIcan blood in them."I suggested to Mrs. Saffold carryingChristmas among these people, and shesaid, 'Come wIth me, and see for yourselfwhether it is possible."We started in at Schott's alley. Here,

by the way, is a neat violation of the ordi-nance forbidding the erection of dwellinghoses in alleys. After the enactment ofths ..-uaUosn Schott'. aywas= renhett-

:ned Schott's court, and last summer arow of new houses was put up there.This alley, however, is paved with stone

tnd is In excellent condition. I visitedtwo houses here and found them simplybarren and dirty. The alley was perfectly:ulet, not a child to be seen. Mrs. Rosettihas so far progressed since her encounterwith the law as to have whitewashed herfence inside. But as we approached Pur-ly's court I would have been glad of an.ctse to back out. Tha alley leadingrto the court was deep with mud, andn the curt water pipes were being laid, sothat great banks of nasty, slimy clay werepiled in front of the houses. Here chil-Iren swarmed-numerous and lively as an3rmy of ants. Directly the first one espiedMfrs. Saffold they came running toward usFrorr every direction, catching hold of ourskirts, including me in a joyous welcome.from which I inwardly shrank. In oneloor appeared a woman holding a sickbaby in her arms-a baby that would bethe youngest only p few days longer.

A lINial kL Room.Other women poked their heads from

their doors, but we were seized upon by)ne who could scarcely move for the chil-Iren under her feet, and began telling Mrs.Saffold that the doctcr had been there. Tothis Mrs. Saffold replied that she was glad,ind told me that she has seen one of thephysicians to the poor wait in this alleys hile a collection was taken up to raisehim a dollar before he would lift a finger torelieve a child writhing on the ground athis iert in a lit.Genita led us into her house, at least a:ozen children swarming in after us-girls

with but one or two exceptions. If thereIs nothing to eat and no money but enoughto buy a bunch of bananas for the day'strade in an Italian's house in the morning,he leaves the woman and female childrento starve or steal, while he makes.hls sonswith him, feeding them from the stock hebuys, or off the proceeds of his first sale.Genita's husband was upstairs sick with

pneumonia, and to him we went. I can nomore give you an idea of the appearanceof this home than I gould give you a real-istic sense of a dung hill. In the bed roomwhere the man lay sick were two beds anda cradle. When Genita, Mrs. Saffold,and myself were added, we had to turnIn unison or we stuck fast. Yet Mrs.Saffold told me she had been in that roomattending the festivities following a chris-tening when it held ninety-six men andwomen, all dancing.The man in bed did not look sick to me,

though he had drawn three prescriptionsfrom the city physician. His rent was un-paid, but Genita said they had a good"boss." If he came and she told him shehad only $2 or $1, he says: "All right; giveme that. Oh, yes; he is good. Sometimethe boss come, and if there is not all themoney he say 'Get out.' and he throw thethings into the street."For a hovel such as this Genita pays $8

a month.In ('lose Quarters.

When we returned down stairs, amongthe horde of children filling the two roomsbelow, drawn close to the crazy stove, inwhich a fire was burning, was a youngwoman, holding a sick baby. The baby hadbeen hit on the head by its father, and itwas moaning and rolling its eyes and twist-ing Its head with a peculiar movement. Onthe young mother's face-she is only nine-teen-was a stamp of added wretchednesswhich Genita's worried face had outgrown.The girl yas young enough to count happi-ness her due, and miserable she felt her-self, robbed of her own belonging. She wasresentful, sullen, hated charity for themeasure it was of the injustice done her.In the adjoining house, three-year-old

Angeima had been left in charge of a fif-teen-moriths-old baby-her baby, she calledit, as she came hugging it over the bridgeformed by a narrow plank thrown acrossthe deep ditch dug for the water pipes.Tony, the unregenerate six-year-old, hadhackslided, and, though she appeared to beperfectly sober, she swore at Mrs. Saffoldwith all the might of her few years. Inthis house, on two of the three beds fillingthe front room down stairs, macaroni was

spread to dry. Here, in the four smallrooms comprising the whole house, lodgenineteen grown persons, three children anda monkey-six men in the front room down-stairs, eight men in the front room upstairs,the man, his wife, a female lodger and thethree children and the monkey in the rearroom; in the kitchen two men on a cot.Fcr lodging and the privilege of the

stove, these Italians pay $31 a month. Eachman makes his own macaroni, spreadiigit, as I had seen it, on his bed to dry.

A Youthful Missionary.In another house a beautiful little girl

opened the door, admitting us into a room

in which her gentle influence had createdsome resemblance to a home. When Mrs.Saffold first knew this child, she was a

blood-thirsty small reprobate who, in a

rage, would fly at the enemy, catch holdwith her teeth, and not let go until shehad a piece of the enemy's flesh.Last summer this child went one day to

Mrs. Saffold, saying: "There are some newchildren come into the alley today who arebad as they can be, nd I've been think?ing, teacher, you look so tired and white,I might help you by having a little schoolmyself and teach them all to thread aneedle and comb their heads before theycome up to bother you."So this seven-year-old misslomfry opened

her school under the steps of her alleyhome, and took the four strangers througha preparatory course of civilization.Three or four men were standing about

as we went from hotise to house, that dif-fered one from another only as the sightsand smells of one barn yard differs fromthose in th' next, Colored men workingfrying the water pipes, mingled withItalians, and mangy curs were chasingand yelping about us.At night when the men, busy about town

during the day, return whisky, freely, isbought and sold, and while we have not,certainly as in New York, anything inWashington of the nature of police pro-teetion of crime, it is remarkable how farfrom human ken--all but Mrs. Saffold andthe prying gaze of a woman reporter-thehorrors and crimes of Purdy's court are.

A Burden Too Great.The day following my visit there I sat

with the children while they sewed, sang,prayed and played in Mrs. Saffold's home-the pinched, pitiful home that for want ofsupport has dwindled from a small houseto this single basement room,Every face was clean, bright, radiant

with intelligence and hope. Individuallysurveyed, it is apparent that these girlshave been advanced b2eyond their parents'state through several cycles of evolutionby the unaided efforts of one loving, faith-ful, but. oh: such a heart-broken, littlewoman., Nor did these children go without a('hristmas today, though there was noplace to put it in their home. Mrs. SalToldhas herself provided them with a dinmerin her basement, and last night they hungtheir stockings in a line along her walnot to find them empty of all token ofSanita Claus this morning.But I could not rejoice in their happiness,

reading the price of it written on the faceof the solitary life that assures it. I haveasked myself, and I ask you, Is it right, isit human that one pair of woman's hand.and the tiny hands of a little girl, who lastThursday was taken sick with pneumonia,should have so much to do?

PAULINE PRY.

No Justinecatton.The President has denied the application

for a commiutation of the sentence in thecase of Cha-Nopa-Huath, alias Two Sticks,an Indian, convicted in South Dakota ofmurder and sentenc2d to be hanged D)ecember 28, 1891l. "After a thorough exam

in.ation of this case," says the President,"I car find no grounds to justify my in.terference with the sentence of the court,"

Personal Mention.Mr. Ruloff R. Strattan of the United'

States civil servIce coimmission office andhis brother, George Win. Strattan of theColumbia Athletic Club, left the city orSunday to epend the holidays amongfenda nd relative. in Philadelphia, Pa,

94e proof of tee pubbing isin fee eating, "esterba's

fiar containeb 33 cotumnsof abverfisemenfs mabe upof 548 separate announce:menfs. ;epse aboertisers$ou95f pu8ficiff-not meret

THE GAME WAS A TIEColumbia and Union Battle on Foot

Ball Field.

AN EVEN SCORE RESULTED

Phil King's Splendid Runs NearEnd of Game.

LITTLE ENTHUSIASM

The Christmas foot ball game played to-day at National Park did not prove asgreat an attraction as that played onThanksgiving ' day. There are severalreasors that may possibly have tended tothis erd. It may be that the Washingtonpublic had enough of sport which in thegame played between the Columbia Ath-letic Club and Georgetown College re-sulted so seriously to one player. Or itnay be that Christmas is too much of ahome holiday for people to be attracted toseats on hard benches. Perhaps, also, therather threatening weather and last night'srain had a depressing effect on the attend-ance.Whatever the causes, the crowd that

was gathered at noon at th' park to seethe game between the Columbia Club andUnion College teams was very small, num-bering scarcely a thousand. There wereperhaps twenty-five ladies on the stands.There was little enthusiasm, a few hornsbeing blown at times, but they soundedvery like Christmas horns, rather than thegenuine foot ball instruments.The spectators were mostly strung out

along the rope line on the south side ofthe field. But few wore colors.The Union College players reached the

park first and immediately repaired to thedressing room. Columbia soon showed up,the men complaining loudly because a 'bushad not been sent to carry them to thegrounds. The general impression amongthe spectators was that Union would putup a strong game; first. because the visit-ors were in excellent trim, and, second,because Columbia played a number ofsubstitutes.Shields and one or two other members

of the Thanksgiving day game occupiedreserved seats.

Visitors Arrive.The Union College team trotted onto the

gridiron a few minutes before noon, andwas greeted with but faint applause. Half

a minute later Columbia made its appear-ar.ce. A few tin horns were sounded andagain silence reigned. The players werenot at all energetic in their practice.The Union boys are a fne-looking, ath-

letic set of young men, and they created a

very favorable impression as they scientin-cally dropped en the pigskin.The first yell of the day was heard when

Union College made a touch-down a fewminutes after the game started. Then fardown the field rang out-

Rah, rah, rah!U-n-i-o-n.Hiki, hiki, hiki.

That Union had sympathizers among thespectators was evidenced as goal was kick-ed, for shouts of "You're not playing withGeorgetown today" were heard behind theropes.A feature of the play of the Union men

was1 the enthusiasm they put Into theirwork, and the hearty manner in which thesignals were given.The crowd we.s an orderly one, no effort

being made to get inside the ropes. Thepolicemen stood about the grounds at In-tervals, looking extremely lonesome.Owftng to the fact that the Columbia

players are very much out of condition, itwas decided to have the halves of buttwenty-live minutes' duration.Between halves not a spectator crossed

the gridiron. A number of horn solos wererendered, but the peace of the patients inFreedmen's Hospital was not otherwise dis-turbed. Absence of local Interest in thecontest was perhaps the most noticeablefeature at the grounds. One Columbia en-thusiast carried a huge kazoo horn repre-senting a rooster's head, which was madeto crow triumphantly when things lookedfavorable for Columbia.The familiar yell of Columbia *as given

its Initial rendition of the day when theball approached dangerously near Union'sgoal, a few minutes after the opening pthe second half. A touchdown fellowel;Clark kicked goal, and then the first realenthusiasm of the day was displayed.The crowd warmed up when Phil King

made two long runs in succession threeminutes before the close of the game."What's the matter with King?" "He's

all right," was shouted, and several bunch-es of firecrackers were exploded."That ball Is a pretty good thing-push

it along," yelled the Columbia rooterswhen the oval reached the vicinity ofUnion's goal.

The Lime Up.The teams lined up as follows:

Union College Positions. C. .A. C.Pollock.........Left end..........CarterPalmer.........Left tackle...aundersBlodgett..........Left guard.........RanierTerry.............Ceter..........,..GapesSwectiand...ight guard..DickinsonPeters........Right tackle..Capt. WellsMallery..........tight end.........eftonC'apt. Brown..Quarter back..Phil KingBaker.........Left half back...BarardMyers........Right half back..8. JohrsouRichards....Full back...........ClarkSubstitutes for Union--Gordenl, Cowe and

Case. Umpire-Dr. James R. Church. Ref-eree-Frank Butterwor'th. Linesman--Harry King.

Commeaelug Play.Union won the toss and took the kick-

off. The ball went down to the Columbia2-yard line. A Columbia man fumbledard the pigskin went foul. On the third'down Myers pushed through the, line tothe l0-yard line and another down sent theball to within three yards of'Coiumbia'sgoal. A slight gain was made in the nextscrimmage by the locals, but this wh atorce regained by Union, and again the ballwas right In front of the goal. An errush and the ball was pushed over the finebetween the posts In just seven minutei.Goal was kicked easily, and in les thanten minutes the score stood. Union, 6;Columbia, 41.

Sharper Play.Columbia made a good kick-off, and stop-

ped Richards in abcut ten yards. A gooddeal l.etter play was put up by the localmen, and King t<gan to get better ac-quaintd with the Columbia tactics. Theball was kept in about the middle of thefield for several minutes, and several roughpazn:s occurred.Clark got the eall at the right end, but

lost ground. After a slort gain for Co-lumbia the ball was5 pr.ssed back to Clarkfor a kick, and sent dounn to Union's twen-ty-five-yard line. Sefton n.ude a goodtackle and clinched the gain thus made.Myers made a gain of twenty yards for

Union, being well ts.ckl<d by Befton just intime t.- keep him from a clear field. U'nionsoor. made another gain, and then another,by mcans of hard center rushes, in whichthe great strength of the college men toldhenvily.Richards was slightly hurt and a briefdelay followed. Myers made a gain ofabout twelve yards for Union, and Cass#nllnwad with two more. MYers made an