The evening world. Newspaper, January 15, 1895, Page 4

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Published by the Press Publishing Company, 83 to 63 PARK ROW, New York. TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1895. SUBSCRIPTIONS 10 THE EVENING WORLD {including postage: PER MONTH. PEK YEAR... Entered at the Post-ofice at second-clise matter. Ba RANCH OFFICES WORLD UPTOWN OFFICH=Junction of Broad way and Sixth ave. at 3ud 8) ss WORLD HARLEM OFFICHK—125th at. ant Made fon ave. . a BROOKLYN—308 Washington rt 4 PIUILADELPHIA, PA.—Inguirer OMce, 1109 Mar- ket st. WASHINGTON—7 FOR DECEMBER, 486,104 Per Week Day. For December, 1893, 3 414,253 Per Week Day, ain Over 1893, “LAUNDRY- IN THE SENATE. Buch Incidents an the Hill-Gorman row in the Senate yeaterday are good things for the country. The more of such busl- Ness goes on there, the quicker the peo- ple will realize what a farce the so- calied dignity of the Senate in, and how 7 utterly misrepresentative @ body the Benate has become. ‘The true character of the Benate once thoroughly realized, reform will come very quickly. When Senators are elected by the People, a Governors now are, they will hesitate to waste time in situation that demands immediate av- tion, by washing each other's soiled Unen. Under « system of popular elections, we might rometimen get « Walte or 5 ® Pennoyer in the Senate, but we should ; be spared the Brices, the Smiths, the g Murphys, thé Camerons and the Quays, ‘ while the Gormans,and the Hills, who are men of sense and discretion, would cater to the people, inutead of the cor- porations and capitalists who are their Present masters. he never killed a man, This will be * aera a cruel, cruel blow to the fraternity of ON THE OTHER LEG. dime-novel writers. Why couldn't Bill President Chauncey M. Depew wan quoted in a recent interview as defend- ing the action of the railroads in with- drawing the half-rate privilege from clergymen on the ground that the con- cession had been abused and the tickets sometimes sold. Yesterday the Methodist ministers of this city and vicinity held a meeting in which Mr. Depew was soundly rated for this supposed attack an the ministers and was requested 1) give the name of any Methodist preacher by whom a tick- et had been sold. Mr. Depew is a man of resources. : When the request was formally made of | bated breath, him, the Central Railroad President a ~ Opened his eyes with amazement. He! Let the Brooklyn strikers remember declared that he had never breathed | constantly that they cannot win sym: &@ word or entertained a thought prefu-| pathy by violence, and that the posses- @icial to the clergy What he meant was that wicked railroad men had abusel the half-rate practice by issuing such Feduced fare tickets to persons not con- Mected In any manner with the chureh, but, on the contrary, very far from Md Mt, and he had no doubt these tokets had sometimes been sold But then, if unsernputous railroad men ] Biche abused the privilege, why make the clergymen suffer Mr. President, by uy depriving them of the reduction? i The plain fact is that the Issuing of hacf-rate tickets to ministers of the r Gospel ‘ike charging them a reliced 4 price for board at hotels, is all non f Rense. Clergymen, as a rule, ere fairly i Well paid aud their work Is not labori | ous, They can afford to pay full rates 4 No self-respecting man cares about q being treated ax a sort of semi-nauper When he is away from home, and the t withdrawal of the baif-rate fare, ought to be sattefactory rather than objection- +4 able to the ministers. BS 4 GROSS INJUBTICE. | 4 A man was taken befcre “ ‘ . Goff yexterday who hus been hebi af j prisoner for two months, it is alleged! i] Without any proves er form of law i simply through the neglect or indifter. re ence of some of the authorities When 3 the facts were made known in cour i the prisoner was prompt'y t Mberty ¢ and the Recorder commente| severely % on the carelessness and disregard of law a through which be had been unjustly de- oa Prived of his berty, without vifying + to whom the blame attaches | a It the election of Recorter Goff is to} e lead to the stoppage of such flagrant, abuses as the one thus exposed, the new departure will give general satisfaction It ts evident that the man unjustiy hell & prisoner must have a good suit for damages against some person, and it is to be hoped it may be pressed as a sate- guard against such gross abuses in the future. FILIBUSTERS AT WORK. S| “The World's" exposure of the sus- piclous movements of the yachts char- tered here by mysterious persons for Pretended business and pleasure trips in the Bouth has led to the seisure of the cases at Fernandina consigned to N. B. Borden, one of the charterers. They are found to contain everything to equip & smal: army—Wincheater repeaters, Remington repeating rifier, Colt'a re- eens ea tesa erty to a man who has been in jali two months “ without color of right or war- rant of law.” the name of justice that must go with. face of ®]out explain them. desperado, late at lar abolishes not only the present bench, but the very name of Police Justice. It tn well. Divver, Martin, Grady and ther lke have made even fense to public decency Peacemaker between | HIM from the position he | Ser expedition has been organised, Bome re- ports say It was almed at Venenuela Others declare that two Cubans, Martell and Miranda, are at the bottom of it, and that they Insurrectionists, At all eventa the affair tn evidently an ille- mal one, and the yachts wil be seized wherever they are found. The Lagonda in already in the hands of the officers. The arms seized at Fernandina will be held until the owners explain for what legal purpose they are intended or give & prohibitive bond to take them out ¢ the hands of the Custom-House author- itlea, THE JERSEY STANDARD OF JEST. The funny man who expects to be permitted to do business in Jersey City must go carefully over his jokes and be sure that there ts a laugh in every | line, ‘The manager of the Bon-'To ‘Theatre over there has set himsclt up as a joketester and general all-round connoisreur of everything cacchinable. He sits in his box and passes judgment on the gags of his hired comedians, If the gags don't come right up to the Jersey City standard, the qagmaker geta word immediately that the timekeeper is waiting for him in the box-office and will pay him off. Yesterday a song and dance man asked the leader of the orchestra: “Why does a chimney smoke?” And when the leader said: “I don't know; why does a chimney smoke?" The but- ton burster answered: “Because it can't chew." He was discharged on the spot, and because he felt that hin ca- reer was blighted and his hilarious halo somewhat damaged by the dismissal, he punched the manager in the nose. Tt in a dangerous and difficult task for any man to put himself forward as a Joke diagnoser, and he must expect more or less trouble when he rashly attempts THE WORLD: fr A DAILY HINT FROM WDOUGALL, FATHER KNICKERH Jan. 14, 1896 er A fashto ' it? In my ow: Been positively no excitement. — Mayor Strot gout In better, and the office-seekers have been no worse, The only remarkable plece of news Ja the announcement that Hyrnes's resignation rent to Mayor Strong when the change in the city administration occured, was returned to th to uphold so high @ standard of article an Jersey City insista upon. We can hardly blame the monarch of mirth who punched the Joke-tester'n none becaure he didn't think there was anything tunny In a chimney smoking because it couldn't chew. Commissioner Andrews han written a letter to Mayor Strong in which he say “The streets of New York are kept much ner than those of any other large in this country." What Mr. Ans olty drews meant to say was: “The streets of New York are kept much cleaner than thone of any other large city on this tel- Renator Gorman ia wrong. The in- come tax In not an emergency tax. It 1s the embodiment of a just method of placing shares in the burdens of government. It has not come to meet the need of a passing hour, but to stay as part of an equitable revenue system. Recorder Goff has just given bis lib- ‘Things are often done in explanations because nobody can ‘om the talk of a six-day legislative k at Albany, it appears that some great expectations have a living chance of being reallzed at Inat. ‘The anti-pass amendment seema very likely to have the effect of expediting public business. Another idol Is shattered. Bill Cook, confessen that have kept his confeasion to himaelf? The new Police Court Dill, at Albany, the name an of- “Chris Mr. Magee’s operations aa a Mr. "Matt Quay and Mr. “Dave Martin, anent the Philadelphia Republican disturbances, will be watched with more or less of a sion or the lack of sympathy Is a vital point In such a movement as theirs, The gre how Senator ublic Will not readily soe rman can drive Senator kes that able to do a} Senate majority be something puld ‘The Brookiyn physician who, after the | Ue-up Is over, recommends exercise to his patient will be paid his feo in the finest kind of scorn, Gen, Jackson's expressed hope of al bright future for legitimate racing tn New York Is echoed by every man of true sporting blood Three hundred and three policemen are sick. Only one of them ts in jail. The | Lexowing the force got wasn’t #0 bad after all, was it? Platt to be Morton's gue And it) is unfortunately true that Morton ean hot dnvite Matt without inviting susp! | A particularly mean thief that Dover NM. cashier, who destroyed tie bank's books before blowing out his er brain nator Guy has Introduced the to reform the Coroner system. ‘The La islature cannot do the rest too promptiy Farewet lrow vreprers Wa Co’. Waring! Here's looking at you and hoping for you It was fun for Hil and Gorman dns) ®, Dut what does the out of itt country get Pedestrianism adulterated with bridge is dluatly nity oming across the France has ¢ whole Cabinet, Olney. ee w of while we can't lose oven Mr. "Gas" Addicks seems be turned off by lature. Ukely to the Delaware Legis- There's one thing in Brooklynites’ fa- yor—the walking I» good. No whipping-post for the ‘volvers. Kill the Gerry bil. ‘population 1s taking 3 vie; "s Brooklyn’ | a eaten Se. Buperintendent full two weeks rR That prot ably meana that fyrnes In to atay, and to have # leading hand in the polivo reorgantzation eo ee But why should the Mayor have kept me so Jong out of his confidence? 1 have not scolded At Byrnes, even if I do not like those trannac ma in Gould and Vanderbilt a It he {a to have @ chance—why, give him a chance. ° Dr. Parkhurst han announced his intention Of going to Albany to fight Platt on what in un- derstood to he the latter's police reorganization scheme. The Doctor'a campaign will be againat © bi-partisan Police Board, in which 1 aym- pathize with him, and against Byrnes. It will be @ merry war. I can only hope that the in- cldental bombs will not endanger any of the works of real municipal reform. eo 8 8 Miss Hrooklyn haa excitement in her house hold to-day, over a general atrike of trolley care. Her people must walk until tt ts over, untews they can reach the Elevated traina and manage to squeeze aboard, I aympathize with her and would ike to help her, but 1 4 offer only advine, which I fear would be taken At ® discount just now. — WHEN SUNDAY COME: AGAIN, Dedicated to Supt, Ryrnes'e Forty Fly Coppers (Airs When Summer Comes Again”) Forty fly coppers, of verdant youth: Each one ambitious to be @ sleuth Looking tor crime AML of the tims At Hendquart met one day Rach had a rosy and beardiens the of aly cunning bore not a trace And even their shoes D4 sternly retue To give thelr vocation away CHORUS. Fly cops! Sly copa! Ready to crook the elbow ~ Roady to buy a drink—ready renown to gain Got out tustle=put on a terrible huatle There'll be more work for when Sunday comen again Rach had hie orders tn work the can— Ruph the growler, arrest hia man, Try the side door, Settle hin wore, And to stay sober all day To look out for jollie and take no Sample his booze and be wure it was beer Gracious, what liek! Chasing the duck While bartendera gasped in dismay enone Bly cope’ Fiy cops! Hawkshaws for only a morning! | {all my |Care a Han he figure us ¢ “MME, SANS-GENE.” Why ie it that the Chinese laundryman, in the might of his glossy superiority as An American Institution, does not arise and smite those managers who are try- ' Gallery of Living Pietares. ‘The Ev ing to glorify the every-day washer- woman, the ordinary blanchisseuse de fin? “Trilhy" Is going to have a hear- ing shortly, and last night “Mme. Sane- Gene,” the story of a washerwoman, by Victorien Sardou, “of the French Acad- emy” (aleo of the Lyceum Theatre, New York), was produced at the Rroad- way Theatre. It is all very hard on poor Wun Lung, of the United States, It diverts attention from him, to the detriment of his business. Arise, ye dramatists, and bulld us up a play that will patriotically extol John Chinaman. Avaunt, ye Sardous and Du Maurlers! “Mme, Sans-Gene," which ts explained on the programme as meaning “Mme. Don't Care," haa been very widely dis- cussed for a long time, and those who went to the Broadway last night in the belief that the present version would prove unwittingly droll, were disap- LADY HOPR (MAY YOHE.) pointed. The play is a dainty, charm-| his is the picture of the fascinating ing, witty affair, and it was mont de- lghtfully presented, I had some sort of {dea that Pitou would Introduce a quarry explosion, a limited mall train, or & .opteal song about “Mme. Don't but he didn't. Nor did “author with M. Sardou, American burlesque actress whose long- rumored marriage to Lord Francis Hope, & susceptible British nobleman, is at last to be accepted as un established fact. Lady Hope is claimed as a Philadelphia girl. She played the title role In the London production of “Little Christopher which was a strange yet lovely Columbus.” Her voice has been de- on his part. All that he did was to fur-| scribed an a deep baritone. ‘That does nikh or to have furnished a villainous | ay well am any dencription. translation, that made Catherine Hub po Geile scher at times suggestive of the New 5 ; York slums, She was supposed to be a ae eee oe tlangy, outspoken, unconventional, un- starched creature, but in Paris It is Tees possible to be slangy and chic at the same time. The Broadway Theatre| Searchers for loral color find a oral odor ae Catherine was slangy and vulgar, She] well these days in the section of Park Row op- had the coltoquialisms of Delancey | posite the Posi-Omre, Among the many fakirs atreet, with w soupcon of Hester atreet, | there are numbers who deal in Chinese incen She talked of faces that, “stopped | Mach one of then han a wick of the auf’ con- Socks," of clothes put on. “which. [Sanity burning, and the pecullar fragrance Alls all ways," she revelled in “Oh, mya! and|("e Stmorphere about, “Dear! Deara!* and she had the ag- gressive commonnesn that one can't A favorite and common mecha of advertising certain sorts of evening entertainments about town-—leolures, church fairs, &c.—in the placing of transparencies over corner atreet lamps. It In effective both In an advertising way and in the way of destroying the usefulness of the street pardon, It was the fault of the tra: tion, of course. The play Itself wan otherwise perfectly Prewented. It ix one of the best come- dies that we have had for ages. It] Mi ane ner’ ihe ashore te. permit. tee sparkles like a pure cut gem, and Ith] ducing of thene traneperene! episodes are most entertaining. It is aaa hts not as good an exampie of dramatic con- etruction as “Gismonda” (I say that be-] Dr Talmage, in starting regular Sunday cause I feel it is my duty. Hang dra-|rresehing, Jn ine Academy of Mun, keepe up ak i : 0 the matic construction if you can be gratl-|{e sngleue which Ie maid to pay to fied without it). Ita story is not as direct. and in the last act Mme. Sans- Gene is almost dropped, and you find yourself grappling with a new episode— Napoleon's jealousy of Marie Loulse and his suspicion of ber Intimacy with De Netpperg. That {s annoyingafter youhave been gloating over the eccentricities of ther with the salary for rermons and hi turing tour, may yield him an aan $20,000. The Doctor, it in reporied, launch a book at the public in which will he will trea: of theosophy and the land of ita birth. 00n While Sunday's small bilszard was at ite Catherine Hubscher, Mme, Sans-Gene, | {irh" I ran ino monet ee tee ce and are anxious to carry them awa: Mood between their two horses, Presently « with you, Sardou has given us a very agreeable heroine, and the humor of his play 1s supplied by the sharp contrast between the wWasherwoman, who be- come a duchess, and the aristocratic people of the court, who have been nourished on dukedoms, Her attempt to he proper, her sad behavior at the reception in the drawing-room of the chateau, her free and easy treatment of Napoleon when he remonstrates with her, from some polo: suspiciously near ‘ance to @ corner liquor store. He carried something in a ‘One policeman took the glase and carried it to hia lips, f don't know what wa in It. 1 don't care, But I am jad the policeman got i: and 1 hope {t warmet hin inside sufficiently to counteract the chill that his outside must have been gecting. . . New York may. before many moons chance to hear a new pianiste, wet the ho Ie aald to Le and the stirring scene with the {Wo | remarkably well-gifted. She is the daughter of Gigh-bred ladies are all exceeding:y | chiet Jusiice Melville Fuller, of the United Staten felicitous. Tt ts high comedy, and “Mme. | supreme Court. She goes by her maiden name, Sans-Gene™ will live as a claxsic--not Mary Fuller, though she |e the wife of @ young as one of those nasty classics that en- | Southerner named Manning, She iss dright, nand- tertain you heavily, but as a light, | «ome young woman, of medium height, and de- frothy, effervescent picture of Napoleonic | ®ribes music ax ‘the detigh? of my soul.’ Her debut 1# to be made in Chicago, THE GLEANER. days. It is quite casy to believe in the European success of this comedy, Pre- sented with a great cast It would make A profound sensation. (1 wonder why sensations are invariably profound?) Iss Kathryn Kidder did some sur- Prisingly good work; in fact, she was something of @ revelation. She dig not spoil the play, as people thought she would do, She is deserving of the high- _— LISH AS SHE IS WROTE.” Some Examples of the Laxity of Newspaper Literature. (From the New York Journaliat.) Hove are a few examples of how men, otherwise admirable, will take Uberties with the mater JESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 15, 1608 TALKS WITH THE DOCTOR Advice Given to Sefferers Whos Allments May Re Safely Treated by Themselves at Home. To the Falter: T am trouble with © disagreeable stuffing up of the bead after I retire at might. 1 cannot Ad @ through my noes, Will you kindly eat a remedy? A.B. ¢ You may obtain relief by spraying your nostrils with the following solution just before retiring: 5 Menthol, five grains. Kucalyptol, five grains. Liquid albolene, two ounce: ° an To the Eaitor: Kindly inform me through your evening medi- cal column what I can do to keep the head free from dandruff; also give a remedy for excessive perspiration of the hands. ©. BH, Went Thirt; th street. }. Shampoo your scalp several timen a week with a solution composed of one part of green soap and two parts of cologne water, 2, Infuston of white oak bark may be used with good effect. The hands should be bathed with the hot infusion several times a day. oe To the Editor: Please give in your evening medical column & remedy for frost-bitten feet. They o not break open, but they awell up, expecially In the evenings. CONSTANT READER. The following olatment has been used with good results: Carbolic acid, thirty grains, Tannin, thirty grains. Tincture of jodine, thirty drops. Simple cerate, two ounces. It should be applied several times a day, eee To the Kditor: What Is good for a bad taste in the mouth in the morning? LIVINGST Bulphate of soda is a very good rem- edy. Take one teaspoonful In a goblet- ful of hot water one hour before break- fast every morning. . To the Eatior. Will you please print In rour evening medical column a remedy for chroni: heartburn; aiso one for constipation? W. P. V., New York. 1, The tincture of kino is usually bene- ficial in such cases. The doe for an adult Is ten drops, to be taken between meals. 2. Take the sulphate of soda as direct- ed above. t eo 8 To the Raitor. Please tell me of a remedy for heart trouble. TILK. You should consult a physician. Self- treatment for heart trouble is not safe; in fact, it is dangerous. eee To the Editor, Kindiy inform me what to do for an icching of the skin that troubles me on retiring, H. H., Tenth avenue, Carbolated vaseline is frequently bene- ficial in euch cases, . J. B. 1.—Self-treatment is impos ible in your case, Apply at the Vanderbilt CUnte, Amsterdam avenue and Bixtleth street. . . H. B., Brooklyn, N. ¥.—Apply the car- bolle acid, tannin and fodine ointment as directed above. . oe To the Raitor. Will you please tell me in your evening medical column what T van do for weak eyes that cannot stand strong hunlight? EDWARD B., Brooklyn. Wear dark protection glasses when out in the sunlight. . ee To the Editor: Will you kindly print @ remedy for hard hands —some'hing that will soften and whiten the akin? READER. The following is a very good prepara- tion: Citric act, five grain: Glycerine, one ounce, Rosewater, one ounce, Apply it several times a day. oe est credit, and I congratulate her with heart. There were objectionable features in her work, though. 1 could apeecn Was tendered 4 receptio: “He opened wine ad Nbitum." not see why she used a New England | Th op took @ drop.” accent of the Aunt Abigail Prue type in| (78 He J = the first act. and whenever she wished a Ry oeplonten: it was out i The committee unanimously * * © without to appear at her ease. She untntentton- |. y'aenting tare: ally recalled the hayaeed drama, and Sey engtand Yankee goodness knows we have had too much| a qyeacEen Rostecing of that. She can easily rectify this] Retore soup was finished © © © made a posi= Rlaring error. and I hope that she will | prandia! addres do so for her own sake, as well as for ne large business s joner and Treating the weis-heer yarn with absniuie Aindain Swoop down in bunches piay havoc with tree| lunches The Super will send you out one more when Sunday again X. CISKLAW ——— to = AY OTHER EDITORS. He Did, Little ald Carliate think that in jugeling with the gold reserve he was going 1) discover per- petual motion —St. Joneph Herald. Goud Word for the Tramp. Atter all, aomevhing may be sald in favor of the tramp, He ik keeping no expectant h In auaponve Sing no job that ane Nelrt) guecess, They say that she has clonel ours, She suffered, too, from the | bibi f evil translation, and in that re-| ‘There is ® * © an actor and an author at spect, — merit€— nympathy. Sti, | ioxernoade. she was #0 winsome, so graceful, | ‘Pronounced an orien over the couple.”’ and se conactentious that she made a| "He indorsed the bill by word of mouth.” “Gave him the The weatner grow i option of the jug."* colder tell ther man weet St Lote Tort-Despatey [copied Rejane, and has all that lady's |... 7" weather we Ed a ae |tricks, but, of course, that fs hearsay | ric te of mul © © © wes @ mouncan.”” . : Jovidence Augustus Cook, Harold Rus: ry gay ia the anni sraaty utes Yoo Good to Ne Tr |xell, James K. Hackett, Henrietta Lane A numecous attentance * © * attended, Amor. foo mod to be true ie cir ulsting (9) der, and Marte Shotwell were the best ‘Though Jimmy can put up hie hande eters the mining carpe of the Rockies that thei members of the cast, in whiclit there | ye ne talks theivgh hie hat en paper wh ne he pil a A Kane ee aaa | er weak spots, Miss Lander and Mise|to jolz.”” Mere ke doawais aerhatee Na Gane Shotwell made beautiful pictures, and $ decease jranspired.”” ¥ Philadetphia hecord jm y hoth possessed the “air of distine- | “He was too woory fv betel Hon that was bo Necessate’ ea & Cont Ja the matter with our bright young men? Sg ae VanUlo Mie BABKCene THB TIES Soe O where, 18 the gentleman with the ” Words Ap Ne | very handsomely staged, and if it be — oo The Slate Legislature has a aieat opp ytuntiy jever posable to judge of the effect of SMILE HERE. {0 pals Ma bs ene ant ba att “id any play upon a “first night” audience =| geben: badd ciate an Aine foal sch ihe) a gathering that is relentlessly cruel in ¢ Wits Give You Every Exco Uyrnes and Soctety. Perhape George ‘ may lead mote take Supt. Byrnes New York so: slety Washington Poss Takings by 7 ¥) have taken more ywaches and things jm 8 than Philadelphia's Phila Times ) —— | A Fargo itittiesoe « ie ne [nen |. re af residents wh rhe bal Wot \ A Corn her bor 0 computeory education ia Rev. CoM. Jones, of Un the frat horseshons «ver Tt weighs 10 and a hi at Troy it 188 Woman was fied #9 fo. shoo! Firat pmia, owns one of made by machinery — A Voor Way to Fight, Tne efor: 19 a he income tax by rety Img 12 eppropriate modes 10 carry {i iato effec: Ye not Wkely t2 atone much enthusianm, mone the opaque =e nama ia + reeves ae. | \ ane under the new | admit this f pounds, and wax made| p, ‘eree | self almost one of the tamil; Wap poor] thle werd? ite ill-judged kindness—"Mme, Sans- Gene" made a highly favorable impres- sion ALAN DALE. VANTS THAT im Rhyme and Pros Spend and the world Is with you, rimp and you scrimp alone This age eo sublime likes a deuce of a time ‘On some one elaets change th. Boston Courier Some Who Have Been Many Yeara — In One Place. An Ambitions Cat. To the ae Mr Bowievard—Wha a dreadful noise tha: cat feolag. in Valuable paper (hat one Mr, | makes ut im the back yard SWiniAa asd natok Aarrenly | Mra Roulevard= Vea, since eye ate up the Aiacaninitha. avin teraiges (ae canary bird she imagines she can sing —Texan Was with Wi (wemtystno years lamt August Sittings we an boat able raeord Tt chem sate th | Po Ne | They found a man who drugged twenty-four Years Th | And robbed was suffering in pain c “ | Thes called 4 do.tor, ant the man ‘ tone ah a 1 wn Was drogast ant roped again ay tas T have a aervaa sens oie ‘Tribune weuty years H aN Ample Suppor Motes ¥ have oniy 85.000 4 sear airs s y-five-Vear Record, but f think 1 can support your daughter om tha: Bator Pacher (enthustastioalls) Support her, my dear I have head of a servant ina family in thia| toy! Why, you can support her entire family on Liy why ba. been tm the place for thiriy-Ave | {t.—Detrolt Pree Press + and lkely (> remain many yeare longer — CAR Sweet Alice Up to Date. OR, don't you remember aveot Atfee, Ben fo’ Swe: Allee wits hair ap brown | How she clipped it ali off and bougat a blond AS A900 a ohe got {9 town YT pat Halt a Century, We Hiallenged by Mr George Wilken your tnsue of Monday evening to show « better than twenty years as a servant. 1 will 2 8 long time to be employed in ried, any capacity, and such services should In some ma y Net Miated. ay be rr ded. It may be of interest to Mr, Mr. Candid Chumiy—How 40 you and your new Wilken to know my mother up to the time of with get on together? death, one month ago, had employed con- ‘Mr. Newlywed—Well, all Bot to say te that T y one girl for forty-four yea thi | i me mother-ia-lew wes 00 O14 maid. —Toxes stil in our ti uy | Métings. Mother when about four re old, consequently i now about Mfty. Ake has been @ good, falthy ful servant, and although considers ber- | There ahiuld be Cap any one beat }ae that of ia iphia Record i ee \y Wanted, care tor ouch ennne 14 late of eighty ine he Some Cure Sure! ’ ® Keeley > Mr H. T., De Kalb avenue, Brook- | lyn.—Use the infusion of white oak bark | as directed above. . eo. To the RAltor Piease let me know through rour evening medical column what will cure habitual conat- pation. REGULAR You will probably find an excellent remedy in pills of aloin, strychnine and belladonna. Ask your apothecary for some pills, each pill containing one- fifth of a grain of aloin, one-sixtieth of a grain of strychnine and one-eighth of & grain of extract of belladonna. Take one pill at night and, if necessary, one in the mornin J. ¥. WHITMYBR, M. D. —-.-- a “EVENING WORLD" GU(DE-uOOK, Clabes of New Vork--V.--The Metro- polltan, felt feathers are placed with the tips in- clintng towards the front. intended for young ladles, or a young married woman, for visiting purposes. Black velvet shoes with tiny paste k . buckles, are worn with black velvet) ai cteait nate hb ectah gowns. A feature of London shoes is Portraits of Mrs, William M. Chi the broguing, which is holes punched In the leather in a pattern. color tu match or harmonize with a cos- tume ts introduced under the broguing. White shoes for dress wear are being made in a white and silver brocade, on the supposition that the pattern of the brocade breaks the ness of plain kid or satin. Most of tho ultra-fashionable veilings, whether of course or fine mesh, show widely scattered black chenille spots. Little girls’ dresres with velvet yoke: shirred waists, full sleeves and velvet collars and cuffs are preferred for ordi- nary wear. Evening dresses still at the hem, but it is the sleeves which cannot fall Are gigantic, witn puffs which are shaped to the elbow gether inexplicable. Double-breasted bolero jackets of Per- sian lamb are very modish and hand- some. Th of the fur, wide revers and rolled collar, and are worn over silk waists or blouses corre- sponding with the skirt of the costume. Whole yokes of fur are shown on some very swell gowns, but except for street or carriage wear such extreme warmth ie moat undesirable, for the fashionable women who alternate between such covering and none at all for the neck and chest. should he seasoned with of grated cinnamon, the same of black ! ing. Pepper, a teaspoonful of ground cloves and the grate1 rinds of two oranges and as to attract more dust. complaint to make, a griewance to ventidate, informa " their views will not be accepted. John Boe Hen to give, @ Bubja’ of general tniercet to discus | witt recoive iittle beneft from the single :tax. OF @ public servies to acknowialge, amd Who Oa) Tie yearly bullciin upon the land will Be: the 4 pul the idea ‘nto tess (ham 100 werda = Le”. letters eannot be printed, } To the Editor: Ke Atupld aelfishoovs of man ds well tlustrated in your letter column, which yo cats—and, venom upon bootjack at give The To the Editor Who ace the peopla that advertise under the ton, but riagen ever made in thin way? a rule, turn out well? to publish such rot? ate | while withhold those tear: y break:ng bear: to dust! thy pweet spirit wears, my bowom aleo must Those @lamond streams of opal lakes, Sofi plentiunar beauty's snows, My heart with frigié anguish breaks And mingies all ite sighs with those, Bver thine image mates my soul, Though mist deloaguers love around, And still love ministers contro! When deep, hareh words ite worship \woand. Oh, ie aot musle wake thy gre! «Tp Groom within thie word of woe! ‘Mast thea Bo © give tne thier we diew? honed Maer v ownership In land plied contract land-owner, the aa ‘this ansurany the accumulation of ten years’ hard ipbor ano Dulld when Ne shall havo oarhed a few hundred more, and thus have a home singie-taxer: pay taxes eguel & lemon, stirred well together and Stand a day. Then mix with it enough for a stiff batter, fuls of baking powder and a large speon-] ful of lard. Roll into strips as thick a your finger and cut into nuts half inch long. Bake brown and keep 80 that they will not stick. ce Fraite and Nai Take two pounds of eugar (coffee thoroughly crushed is best) and: one-third of a quart of water with { letting it stand for some hours. At one-third teaspoonful of cream of te’ well dissolved. Cook in a deep pan your syrup is thick. Have your nut blanched and your fruit ready, You Use whole Milaga grape ‘but halv cherries or apricots neatly so that th stones may be removed. Tiny bits slices of oranges and pineapples are ni | Dip them jn the syrup, und when tl oughly covered remove them one at time with a fork and drop them om tray to cook. A novelty is a velvet hat with a deep fold in front, filled in with a flower or rosette, and edged with a plait of fine Five or chenille. large ostrich ‘This hat ts Modish London Shue. are always much admired, Her hub in fond of painting her dark eyes pensive face, She is much younger thi Mr. Chase, in fact, herself a mere cl although she is the mother of three litt! girls. These children are the beau models used in many of their fath pictures, One, Alice, i# named for mother, although she is better kno for her quaint speeches among thei artist set as “Coxy. Then there Dorothi and Yot! Roberta, named fer japanese friend of the Chases an@ Robert Blum, who ix her godfather, This reason a unbecoming white- jodes of the Moment. Women's Precions Autograp! A girl who is making a collectioh o autographs ot noted people says. thal she sometimes becomes disgusted _ writ! {her sex. Women, she finds, are, nat | neurly so polite nor so obliging as men. ‘They, moreover, take up a great deal of their ‘secretaries’ * time with long- drawn-out refusals to send tha, asked signature, and seem, many of them, neither to have a systematic plan of utterly ignoring the request nor a pleas- ant response to it. have ruchings to attract attention. They in a manner that is alto- Double-Brenated Bolero Heavy Underclothing Versus Wraps. Some doctdrs are beginning to advo- |eate the abolition of the Winter flan-s ;nels, They say that their experience with patients is that it is better for People to don heavier wraps when ne cessary than to begin to wear at thi ~ first of the presumably colder month’ thick * underclothing, which is> pe. ' changed to lighter, no matter how Wow the house nor how ciose and “muggy” the day. have very full sleeves also These jackets have short, Fer Much tn Eviden: especially The Proper Care of Shoes, Use a plece of an old suede gle’ rub vaseline on your shoes, rub | thoroughly, over night, and‘ yor. | Never try any other sort of shoe-dre it preserves the leather, @nhd 1 done as directed, will not be so greasy, nger Nauta, One quart of New Orleans molasres a tablespoonful std in houres and goods, stocks and bonds. Joni Doo 18 but one of a clars of thousands, Sf taxers: mut solve th blem of how the Imter-! of such ay John Doe may be conserved, oF LETTERS. (The cohimn te open to everybody who has @ same—taxes being equal to the Interest ypom a Mortgage unde, presen: conditions, The cost Pulling will not be dimtnivhed, unions wages for wages form the greatest item of east. will, ug the Job On. Pa consequently, com: him as much t@ -Roundsman’a' explanation of the East} cure a home under the singte tax as ander one Hundred and Thirty-eighth street store-| present syscem 0. TINBANES keeper's snow-shovelling conundrum amuses me. = : Of course, In this as in all municipal regula- How Is This, Dr. Smith? tions, espediency and votes are considered Arata i. i nd Justice after, Mr, Storekeeper, however, | 7 te ate ar ould ne saionen if he could shave the oo | 2TA0IME feud in Tht ening World® oom Gato Mr. Landlord — The latter does not roe | Nek AK? abou: Dir. Smich's mackerel cure for why he should clean the walk, which belongs to[ JM¢mPeranc®, | ined she same and had to pay the city, and not to him, ant on which the)® DE Prive for mackerel and xo to Rrookigm for Shits 2 1G T tried it cwico and Ke never acted an: the - by hea equal rights, The mean, eliedl dada a hh ta Aoctor savn Now, 1 would ploane like 19 koow if there in a certain way of alving 1 hearccbroken over the dings of my husband. 1 have to stay up to all howra of the night-and { morning. and sometimes nights and dave. He apends: his money and has been making good — Wager, 1 am not In good health at present. 1 suppose nothing can help me, and I will have fo go 10 & horplial till my trouble t over, fo Please, Mr. Editor, if there is a cure in what the dostor wrote please let me know at onée, as Tecan hardly etand much more such treatamemt Mra. BL, Greenpoint, Kindly throw open free back-fence for contentious tom- I fear, tabbies, too—to squall and swap Drat the cats! Here goes my tem! Seat, alngle-tax cats, and courting vats a chance! TIMON OF ATHED & wort ersonal” Column Ipitating headings of “personals” in newspapers? Are they peeves Alncere. or are they adventurers? 10 they really wi mean whet they aay, that they ore looking for] *P® There & Mean Drammeret and expect to find a reepectable husband or wite | 7? te Editor, in this way? Inany of them of good social stand-| | am a sive man out of work, and 1 gemme ing? Ie there any one who, If he or she in] **" att A Saturday aight Joh on account of the wealthy, (® fool enough to proclaim it In print, | "9% drummer. who works ali week st the ‘whole. and think by ao doing they can get a trie end Py mais and earns from $15 to $25 per ( Joving mate? Would any ono but an adventureas | °°. 30 Phils decal eet a ‘or a tall snow advertise that she had an affectionate dlapori- 1 Nore y aloleale aelempin yt wond Atv it holesale Aalesman 1 would at , k te the wholesale business, ant not shove a poor retail salesman out of @ Sqtuntay night Job, when the §2 or $3 that he would cara would keep bedy and soul together for one week, anyway, of till nted a husband of means? Are mar: 1 a0, do they, as In it a credit to any paper Readers, give us your opin- INFORMATION. fons he got a measy J A SHOR SALESMAN. For a long time it was only a dub in tne ‘The Promised New Juaticen, air When kc Yesame & xed organization, | po ane gator “A Never Failing Remedy." Aida’ Snow Nat to cal Pinsilss Ite | rug iow (Pallog Jusitoe ii" an- tormutatea'l seine alton Hed ta be the Metropolitan Club. But It 19! yy ane LXX. Commilter, should be amended ad | "3. Newark, says, in substance: My Meee ant very aptly known an the {ag to make the ney duniices elective by the pe | cousin and I hava “sworn of" clgoretcee cen eee cut tte new marble palace | pie, nat by dintricis, but by ite city at large at | heer, and axk an antidote tor the conrenrece erent Bande at Fuh avenue and Bisiterh street, om | tooal elections, ani further, that the Special Sex| ing, ani a remaiy. tor the nereruenn eran formats waned by the Duchesr of Marl- | siona Judgen shall have no higher pay then the | tesaneas which followed. wiving up t croush, Resides building Itself 4 mard!e pal-| potice Jusiices, The peaple ouRnt to have the] nahin, 1 recommond tat ther ae te reenact MA Elven fenator Wolvot! the | right io choowe thelr magisirates: appointmenta | Army meetings, and there, nearly: every. micte ae marble eari. |The onator was a mitilonsire. | gre more or teas a matter of favoritism, the week, they, or anylody else siuiterie’ ap ail right enough. but the Moisopaitaniten or 6 THEO VON BREMSEN, 245 Broadway. | uated, will learn of a never-tolling seedy part of them, opined that even his possemsion : ‘4 ‘ | And how to take it, ‘Thin ia not jentn Jot wild gold hada't made him saiid enough on A Schoolgirt Inventor, deed (a gtanltg Mme ten oe ee the sliver question. The Metropaiiian Club wor et AEE Se ormanin) bn 1881 Ths cone for | To the Kaitor MW, RUBHELL, Copiaie, 1.000 members There are th to| | hee thought of @ e008 plan to avoid ave. eet whiaper that It fm coo cumbersome with ft own eRt# ox railroads stmilar to that which bay~ ther Warning to the Board of wealth to trae ae much fun as meny @ poorer | pened i Hrooktya on"the ‘1, Raitroad, Why Fie Cat and shat t's mullonaren are to ich ty 2% extend the rallroad racks abont 208 toat Beef Give any aiteniloa 2 « little thing like paying | 084 Shere tho bumpers are place, ee ; a , are old, and attend Grammar Schoot| © 8% thorotighly in sympathy with “Rp. ae. OF duen, ‘The Millionaires’ Club in New York ix tn Saturday's “Evening World." 1) x. tot tobe conser a In any nen’ Drape | 8 94 40, Wea Fite trai, 870°" | Yin Bataan» i nai da eat | Set $2 be canal i brane, ay oe para of Pharmacy do mot do thelr duty, ang oF connection of that at WaaMingion, known bia Wee Pee GA eooia, NIGGMENE S0 Going wauia atebes tag tue Mette am the United States 22 ' e Wi ineads Who allows his junior, or even a clerk tatered in New York, $50, there takes. and better clerks and graduates would be abl Ket respectable talaries and employment.” A Mt now Is Junlore are doing the work of gradua and juniors at & Junior's salary. Go for the of Pharmacy, and hot, too Who Wa To the Editor I have bn my pelasshion « tabi wee when thevies wae thrown over IC the} tqn Harbor, also & -plano- Si here todo 2 Mt to whatyhe com ralit (Be sang brome mn ‘neler ok tor, sad (ho HCO Qe Toes font et tense Wil gain by Bis loas? The community. | most be ohter thai be robbed to Increase the] der. Where tan I dinpose others, meaty of whom ee} ate Ownership not reg. ‘ould be fewer mi joverament has always recognize private ‘There in, therefore, an im. en the community and the that the latter shall be protected, other property-hoiders. Relying upon . John Doe invented im year $1,000, hanic, in @ lot im Haxjem, intending to bia own. aurceed, Jonn Doe of them to ond must part f

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