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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 24

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 24

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Brooklyn, New York
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Page:
24
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 18. 1905. THERE ARE HOWEVER, SOME rambler booth at the automobile show, madison square garden FINE ARTS.

STIGMATA OF DEGENERACY. ALFRED P. SMITH. Jr. Brooklyn.

January 16. 1905. PROTESTS ON SANITARY GROUNDS To the Editor of the Brooklyn Eagle: Frederic Remington, who requires no ln troductlon to his cWhtrymen as a drafts- of life. All these peo-rs. drunk and "shooting grim old army sergeant.

ending a stiff slope til orse has thrown him, th otherwise persuaded ers least Interesting of the s. exhibiting boundless vitality-They are breezy personalities Sorry tn have In mention it. hut it appears quite positive that mankind ha rot made I BsjaWpKifrlWii ZjSSTTuft" that there is such a ars. saaaaaaaaaaaaaWaaWfcasi-i iiQHsyffSjfflaf iMsM.i mBWtBSSHUtnOSaiiSSiSiflM I 8 now plan, enugh whs 3r didn't submit to a I "God given" powers. SI sse and action.

Mr. Remington goes a ibject with a sincerity and a spirit tha ilss in the academic work of our tulptors, who follow European prescrip ad i ideals are renned to accord mventlonal standards. He models wi romptness and briskness we seek In parallel In the nymphs and goddess, Is predecessors, yet with a knowledge gra ZhuHBiK Wi I wh ho SIMPLE LIFE URGED STORY OF A PHOTO SPIRITS. JihVkiiijhim1' oJlttSSSpud'w marked. P.i- nts is i Plea for a Less Strenuous Existence by a Physician Accident Was Remarkable, and Some Other Features Not Less So Wirewicks Contributes to the Discussion of Spiritualism, Writing in Lighter Vein Many Other Subjects Considered in Letters to the Eagle.

my mine; oflo sitions and guei WIREWICKS ON SPIRITS. '0; -x. o. the jaw nurly well marked. 1 Hfcrf crw of prognathi nally seen.

The vertex sho 1 riorlv. a longitudinal central rid (i. Frank Lvdston, M. spending to the sagittal suture, en Author Of "Discuses Of BOClety." a moderate oxycephaly. The cepb; crime.

Who says crime is science? Crimo Alas', poor Yorick! lr photographsof crimnils marriage 'h'ovuf herewith are not presomo i purpose of proving the correlat Society begins its self-contamination at o( BKUn 0r physiognomy the marriage license window. Here i the offenses In general; least of al fountain head of the stre am ef degeneracy to show the correlation of that sweeps through all ioi lal systems The of wllb given kind of foundation stone of matrimony. edency. I desire merely tn that hum in ml b. mgs in general the moat Important Inter.

at our lo lal Codicil to last will and testament iorf shows the lobe I think i -Very well, doctor little fillers of excellent thing for doctors h.cally to patients as compiler, Dr. Porter Davies. says It may be put In th" hands of "our friend. apothecary, the oculist, the dentist, the the dr.mkar i are ai'rh'-l i by begin Doctor-Your case Is ser the -f li mns-il- it should he hold a right to protect Itaell against its own off- i Patient (weary of life)- Dr. Lydston believes that it not only has Doctor-Didn't I tell you a month the right, but the means tn protect itselt.

1 you would have to go South or .11 and he refers to a hill brought before the Patient Yes. I know. I paid foi Gideon Lincecum. who a I charge to let me die in New York? mayed'byThe eho'of I.ydMnn Yoti "must vaccinate whew byisurgery. "To reduce th- on, mi i to its the doctor.

You see, she was oni ultimate." says lir. Lydston. will advance chorus girls. matrimony upon strictly hunnss prin- The above are some of the clplea." "The Doctor's is ire Hear Enough said. to.

is a large volume of human and animal faithfully reproduced. They II considered In spite of their aneity, for they endure Inspec-pointa with advantage. Tha Six 3 Alberto Pasinl They suhjec with figures that fairly glitter in the sun. clad as they aro In the colors of the rainbow, an i grouped in seeming disregard to harmony. There is an engaging frankness and seeming naturalism in the work of this paint-permanent and a love for color.

His long residence and studies in the East gavo to him an Oriental viewpoint which rejected tho moody, the gray, the tame and the tonal, and rejoiced in an almost barbaric splendor of light and hue. He Is the. reverse of lra-pr, ssionistic, yet his little canvases aro painted with a force and positlveness that enables them to "carry." In the largest picture in this group, a door opening into a garden, with a dome rising above tho shrubbery and trees, and a figure In red stationed outside, there is a suggestion of Dlax In the painting of the foliage, but it la Melssonier who is recalled in the deft painting of the horses waiting their riders. Tha modeling is always sound, and the shadow have depth and transparency. A dozen or so of well-meant landscapes by Venry C.

Lee have been placed In tho liurainl-liuel galleries. They Illustrate cues Maine and Florida. Hie largest being a study of ruddy ledges at the sea edge. Mr la aints pleasantly, and with a certain down a trough of land inward a distant mountain, cold and blue under threatening sky; but be is a secure in his style, nor does he always invest his picture with eet. Ho promising a cced the) or and opacity In his lights Impress I.

first glance more sharply than tho mier excellences that the painter i with most of his fellow artists who divided that are engaging.P Most 'of the topics aro is' th chV." seen' across a little chmltiL- warrnlv through the trees. Mr. Bleknell is evidently observant and Industrious, and men who have those qualities' In an adjacent room In the Clausen gaN leri. is an interesting and for the best part ,1, light fol exhibit of water color, Hirschl Yoshida and Fuji Yoshida. brother and sis-have been si.u, lying in Europe.

These pictures are eighty In number and represent hushes of chrysanthemum, gardens, villages, brooks, mountains, including, of course, Fuji Yuma, fields of clover, bouts on the water plum and cherry trees in bloom, effects of rain and shadow and bits of natu- I wall or a figure anything. to prevent the observer from feeling lonesome. It Is a good sign that people are willing to stand apart from the throng now paintings of that older world the searcher necessity Involved the human race in Ma contemplations. 't In the loneliness, not pools and woods that some of the later Japanese painters have wrought Into their come by the dreadful communism that drives the people of nearly all races Into unrnmmerelallT.ed and wholesome. The pictures of the Yoshldns are all Eastern In subject, but are European In treatment.

Possibly. French or Amerlcnn painters would not have given to them ipilte the touch that they have, or quite the sympathy and comprehension; yet there are not many Indications of what was distinctly Japanese a few years ago. The old way has been modified by tho new thought, and Japan has hecoma modern In more than in war. In all these the i th. a sense of season and atmoaphare.

They nre nlwnys painted with the auThnrHy of Mikado's lands, but they are eonsclentlou and they show an excellent taste. Marie Nordllnger. of 4M Fifth ayenue, announces that she has acquired the collections of tho famous Bingo, of Paris, well known as a connoisseur of Oriental art. These collections Include Japanese color prints snd lllustrsted books, antique pottery, metal work and objects from Egypt and Persia, as well as from Jnpsn. lost its novelty and a lg Is her Impudence an spoil the surround- ing of a beautiful reslden crowding out its people ANNE O'NEILL.

GIFTS TO HUNTINGTON SCHOOL. (Special to the Eagle.) Huntington, L. I January 18 There Is on txhibition at the kindergarten department if paintings, engravings, prints, lithographs, ndia ink sketches and photographs, valued it many hundreds of dollars, a present from ng a residence a'oroad. The list in-pori raits. Iigures, landscapes, land-wit lieiins, seascapes, moonlight OLDEST RESIDENT OF SAG HARBOR Mrs.

Anne Charlotte Sleight, who recently the 72d anniversary of her wedding, is 'the oldest resident of the village of Sag Har- whloh has been her abode since her marriage. Mrs. Anna C. Sleight. She Is the widow of the late William R.

Sleight of the firm of Muirord Sleight, ship owners and agents In the days of Sag Har- Na haebl who became proprietor of Shelter Island In 1111. Her grandmother was Mary Sylvester, daughter of Brlnley Sylvest.r, who was a grandson of the first Nathaniel. She married Thomas Der-ing, a descendant of Henry Derlng, who came to Oils country from Dorchetrier, England, in lth.0. and was a merchant in Boston, Mass. The Uerlngs are an old English family who tune oi the Saxon klna.

Mrs. Slelght'ii lather was Henry Packer Derlng. who received his commission as colli of the I'ort of Sag Harbor from President Washington and was also postmaster. He continued in both positions until the time of his deth in 1 Her mother was Anna Kosdlck of New London. Conn.

She was married on Jnnuary 2. 13.1, at the house of Captain Retil.cn Bromley In Bleecker street, New York City, whose, wife was her cousin, and a descendant of the Gardlners of Gardl- ti Sag Sleight, cam. lea, and ttb ,1 al Esopus on the Hudson. Mrs. Sleight has had ten children.

Threo an llTlaf, II Hannah R. Steuart. IBM Height, She Ml eight grandchildren living and thirteen great -grandrhlldren. Notwithstanding her advanced years, sho kMa remarkalde vitality. Her mind is A CAT-ASTROPHE.

Dr. Lydston. who is a roi-fornian by It would be birth and at present In practice at Chi- to administe cago. Is protessor of surgery at the I an aLcrnati andYoTnVtriai Will it? And th While on the sub; why the prose, ry people twice for Well, th DR. COSTALES EXONERATED.

Grand Jury Dismissed Charge Against Him, Now He's Happy. 'o the Editor of the Brooklyn Eagll Consit Icity i given the fact that Ji 3 Grand Jury on the charge of having mdulently obtained from Druggist Huels by means of a check drawn by Htnton G. Lee. kind enough to publish at that sion of transaction wherein I set forth that I did indeed cash the check, ALFRKI COSTALES, M.I). Brooklyn, January 16, IMS.

MR. WHEELER IS PLEASED. Thinks a Great Service Has Been Ren-dered by the Eagle's Pepper Story. To the Editor of the Brooklyn Bil: Is country for Ihe trouble you haw hy W. T.

Dnvls, lend, re 1 e.ncl- who boldly stated opes transparent ir by wel- hol, and llM slating lhat If she pM sessed any gift at nil. did not go Lcyon. telepathy, 1 felt that he had made ver; serious charges against her, and won, lore, whether ihoy were luatlfiabl. hut vout grand expose In to-day's Eagle settle, th. rpetrated In ihisse, Hot, oi ih, THOMAS It WHEELEIt.

AN OBJECTING PROPERTY OWNER. To the Editor of the Brooklyn Eagle: State liiiv. i-sity professor off the riti.im.1 r.n-i.r..; cy rbi ago-Kent safe! CRIMINAL TYPES, TOUGH AND REFINED. ft JF Sl cir, the Nauh.im treatment are those who have an enlarged and feeble heart. This jkf 3fvr JL I f.

htm a inter-st In rai Ja' Wir and knowing the great benefit to be derived -SET JKt-' Am" treatment. 1 hope you will consider this k. JbSt I MW A k. fommunlcation of sufficient Importance to MODERN LIFE AND WEAK HEARTS Dr. Tracey Warns Against the Strenuous and Recommends the Simple Life.

diseases touched high water mark in 1904. there being 3,600 deaths from heart disease 9,000 from Bright disease. This is stat-that thirty persons died in every 10,000 one or the other of these diseases. The JOUS life nPlS68 or -liir per 10.000. to 3,600 in 1904.

as medical men, not only usually considered fatal disc icerning the treatment of chronic heart ease, by the saline carbonated baths, asms. This treatment originated in Nau-tm. Germany, where thousands of invalids the sense has no, progressed loo reli, obtained from these saline ca baths, combined with the Schott suffering from func- ACCIDENT WAS REMARKABLE. So Was the Picture of It, and So, Mr. Hull Thinks.

Were Some After Events. To the Editor of the In your Issue ot Ja of Strange Kailroad i "Kare Pletuna eldent." This with Innal photographer. The man who submllt M. 0, L. Rice, was awarded a special for the same.

Mr. UN, In a description accompanying the picture, says: "This picture was taken on the second day of thf great blizzard or Lttl, Just east of Spring. That It was a strango accident, most p. op), it atlll i i atranie. On 1 Charles II.

Harris-sent for fharlen Coukltn. a photographer then doimj busm, In Jamaica land, by the way, he is there), and him to go out Waverly and make photograph of I he dent. Mr. Conklln did ao, had the pin copyrighted and sold a great many ut th feeing the print In th Kagle. I Ballad Mr Co, kiln si, uy and showed i.

old print of the same, and we conipar, with one published In the i i'iV'i'i'i' ir" i lh" 1 II. nil, I lie went nod pho'eio 'Hole hU blll'liUhl. wtU 'u counterfeiter, Anarchist and He Eegards Attempts on the Part of the Dead to Eeturn to Earth the Editor of the Brooklyn Eagle: The delightful old bird deserves and will he spirit world, a imbibes spirits I ably has plenty to do. All interference 01 le s- methods of housekeeping. Sue let Is Intolerable, and in his aim pom punished by a reduction of grad claim I would sug- toaraphla and rttai Invite the public Hons and Bights fr hi and be soeinMe.

them invite common departed philosopher! tec. Xpat.de, I prncnt of a higher life. SRIIAHTIAN WIUKWir-KS. COST OF THE CITY GOVERNMENT. "Civilian" Not Amazed at It Being Large When He Considers Some Sourcea of Waste.

II Mitt of the do not wond city of Now II rook I mi Eagle: the police II doers, but arn man He being ll family physlcl: tone 1 For" I Jurlously the will need to exercise 1 in administering the Jok. tance. might affect In- HonoMly. these doetort: nr, when it comes pepping la.t will on 1 The total coal production of the Inllf. Stales Is now at the rate of l.ooo.OOO tons i day.

and th consumption of coal by railroad Is equal to 40 per cent, of this, or 400.00 MM day The fuel bill of a railroad con ir.bu-, about 10 cent of the total ex MM nf operation, and 30 to 40 per cent jaratorv i0 mating It I'hysl-ery often wrong in their dlog-are crlmlnololl. Physician, ound limb to cure an Imaginary Doctor I knocked the f. IWfe of Patient Oh, doctor. Doetor-IUrdly that, nia'nm. Hut you 11 ty Porter Davleii.

I WINTON 16-20 H.P. MODEL AT THE GARDEN. sMH nB3MMMMMrl3 i 1 db ted and tried. Thar.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963