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4 "Font pe OBiorld ‘Published by the Pras Pubtiching Company, t 8 w& @ PARK ROW, New York. -MONDAY, APRIL 8. 1895. —————-—. CURSCRIPTIONS TO THE EVENING WORLD Eatered at the Post-Offce at New York as acon d-clase mation. UPTOWN OFFICH—Jumition of Broad way and Sixth awe. at 324 ot. WORLD MARIAM OFFICE—125% ot. ton ave. (BROOKLYN—s00 Washington ot. PHILADELPHIA, 1A.—Prem Bull ding, 12 Chet. eat st. RVASHINGTON—Te2 D4th ot. THE WORLD'S Circulation for March, 1895, 560,195 pec aay For March, 1894, 481,316 por day For March, 1891, & 326,846 per day For March, 1883, ner. He struck his landlady over the head with @ baseball club and fractured her skull. Now this is altogether out of rule. A boarder might win some sympathy if he should cut open his landlady's heed with one of her early breakfast rolia or seek to beat out her brains with a fancy cake. But to use a baseball bat for the purpose is wholly unjustifiable. For the Protection of boarding-house keepers in general, and of Brooklyn landladies in particular, Seery's punishment should be made exemplary. His assault might have had a serious result If he had chosen a plece of ple crust or a loaf of ‘bread as @ deadly weapon, but a baseball club gives a land’ady no show at all. HE HADN'T READ BENNETT'S MIND. A mind-reader just beginning bus! ness in this country was shocked yes- terday to learn that his manager ts one of the most dangerous thieves the New York police know, This mind- reader can take hold of your wrist and tell you all about the thoughts that are surging in your brain, He can find artl- cles that you hide when he is not look- ing, and read strains of music that are humming around in your head. He is @ wonderful mind-reader, of course—in his own mind. He says he M@dn't know that his Manager was such a bad man. He never took the trouble to lift the cover of Bennett's brain box and peruse the yearning that stirred there for other People's property. Consequently he is astonished to learn that Bennett ts such a clever all-round crook and amazed that the police have had to jail him, [t's the usual way with mind-readers and fortune-tellers. They know other folk’s business so much better than they know their own. “When it {9 known that every Rep & Mean Senator at Albany considera him- self under personal obligations to MS. 24,595 per day Per day. Gam ta Ow Year, 78,879 Gain ia Four Years, 284,349 Gain ta TwelveYears, 635,600 —— = THEY WONT DASCE WITH PLATT. Good citizens will view with eminent fontent the present situation in the reform ballroom. A person named Platt, who obtained access to the floor without any invitation, seemed for a time to be the belle of the ball. The Platt for campaign contributions, do we need seek any further for an explana- Uon of his power to use that body at his will?’ This ts the way The Tribune expresses its idea of what Mr, Platt does th the political funds paid by the cor- porations in return for “peace.” Isn't it pretty near right, Mr. Platt? It was once stated by an eminent authority on such things that a man should know at least three things, v1 Where he is; where he is going; what is best to be done under the circumstances, Are the members of tho majority at Albany quite sure on all these pointe? ‘A cycle-riding Brooklyn policeman claims to have overtaken a wheelman ™anner tn which this party took pomses- sion of the floor at the opening was ex- tremely giddy, to say the least. The ‘Music, the decorations, and, indeed, the whole programme seemed subject to the will of this singular person, The triumph was short, however. Powder and rouge, blackened eyebrows and false curls falled to conceal, or, Father, only the more quickly revealed the real character of the creature. The young and handsome Mayor Btrong dropped the person after one @ance, Mayor Schieren never had more than « transiont fancy in that direction. That gay old boy, Morton, seemed at first to be strongly attracted, but the + ehgsal was not permanent. m4 now the Platt person is left all lone in the midst of the merriment. It may dance with itself, if it pleases, or it may go down into the kitchen and Grip the light fantastic with the legisla- tive ‘coachmen and footmen, who still Femain faithful to its charms. But @ay in high political society is done. NOT A BEFORE BILL. ‘The Kern Excise bill now before the Legialature is a measure to make free trade in liquor. All Excise Boards, and hence all the restraints and safeguards they tmply, are abolished, and a saloon- Keeper who can pay the fee required by the law can at once go into busine ‘The character of the proprietor does not enter into, the question, A disreputable Person can open a liquor saloon as Feadily as he can open a candy store, and the saloons are to be under police supervision. It seems tolerably certain that the People who are interested in the preser- Vation of law and order, the protection of the young and innocent and the ad- Yance of public morals cannot be in favor of the law. Can the liquor dealers favor it? Has their experience with the Police encouraged them to hope for better treatment from the force when ‘the police power is greater than ever? ‘The proposition comes at a bad time ‘when a Reform Excise Commission has Just been appointed, and when a Mayor bs in office whose views on exc se matters @re sensible and liberal, and who seems Gisposed to use the power of removal nd appointment in a manner more @atisfactory to the people than to the politicians. SANGING OUT HER BANNER. Mra. Posy Poleocostra, of 15 Murion Street, in this city, disappeared yester- ay from her rooms, which she occupied with her husband and child. Whe Went away Posy wore a re? anid white skirt. The ekirt was found by a police- man eariy yerterday morning pinned the Brovklyn Bridge, but Posy was not innide it. Instead of Posy the p Giscovered a piece of paper atta t the skirt, containing the into: that Pory was drowned Posy is twenty-three years has @ record. fore. and when ance on the d ber bustand that Because she wanted to go. she had her red and me had gone Mr. Poleocostra feels very that Posy is not feeding tho the East River, the po.te: MO preparations ‘co drag the river, : Bteve Brodie does not feur tne adven @f @ rival in the form of @ shirtless te- Mle bridge-jumper. LANDLADIES’ LIOKs?. All classes of citizens are entitled to e@qual protectioa under the laws. The Doarding-nouse keepers of New York and Brooklyn form a very large cor munity, and whatever complaints may Justly be brought against them, they have ft Jeast the right to enjoy life, liberty nd the pursuit of happiness. going at the rate of twenty-five miles an hour in Prospect Park yesterday. ‘The policeman makes this etatement and his gucas may be several miles an hour ahead of his bike, Henry George takes a good, sensible view of the proffered Bingle-Tax Pre: dential nomination. ‘Theortes are all tight, and dreams sometimes pleas- ant, but a candidate without votes be- hind him ts @ lorn and lonesome object on election day. Two New York policemen were con- fronted by men with pistols yesterday. One held up his hands, the other held the fellow with the gun. We are happy to believe that the course of the latter Is more in line with the general spirit of the force, Corlears Hook people are quite right, Col. Waring, in their protest against the use of the new park lands of that vicinity as a site for the open alr burn- ing of clty refuse, Call off your new pear padiowgnd z When Summer days bring soft and balmy a ee weather, Gen. Harrison is down asa “receptive ‘The all-prevailing erase may bring before our candidate.” Messrs, Reed and McKin- ht cahrt ley should endeavor to convince him] 7 Trby im He staring alight that it would be more blessed to give them a show than to receive the nom- ination. Honest Democratic legislators at Al- bany could serve their party in no better way than by Joining with honest Repub- leans to beat the Platt-Tammany com- bine on the New York reform bills. Bismarck's birthday receptions have been resumed. With a little more of this sort of thing the man of blood and fron Will be ready to fill an engagement in a continuous performance theatre. Lieut.-Gov. Saxton fears for the City Magistrates bill. State Senator Raines says it will pass, The Better New York —s determined to reform ite Police Courts, Now the Ridiculous Boss hes a fight on hand in Brooklyn. The two great ivisions of the Greater New York must stand solidly together to down this fellow, A vast Increase in postal receipts is the latest additon to the signs of re- turning good times, Letter-writing does not flourish in perlods of depression, N fons without a crisis are reepect- y invited to stand up and be counted Way and Sweden produce the latest le In that line, Two Lrooklyn girls fought Ina vacant lot fur the love of a truckman, He's a very poor man if he bothers with either of the girls y ninety exclse arrests yesterday: as become of Supt. Dyrnes's Jerire to enforce the Sunday law? | Gen. M Pore Kerwin ti] u ful a taan for the Police Board, because he Ls useful on the wrong slite. | an trotters In France do {r r to have been embarrassed | through unfamiliarity with the langw Major McKinley ts coming Bast, He as been paving a brief visit to the Stat of waich he is Governor Rumors are in the air of a yet bigger Coal Trust. This will interest almost | everybody but Mr, Olney, The Giants discovered that they had run up « fellows well met Can noboly keep Elbridge 7. ¢ from trampling on the reform grass? ory ‘Mre. Ellen Buckley keeps a boarding- spouse in Brooklyn, and Thomas Scery is or bas been one of her boarders. He ia who always \Weak and the butter meat Platt Senators angry.” They might better be tired of Platt-serving, Henry George's Presidentia) boom jatarts modestly enough. eee 7 comm fled Me dissatisfaction in a novel man. | To slip ahs Aes Aa A DAILY Exit Wilde. pe PATHER KNICK ERBOCKER’S DIARY, April 7, ‘85.—An April shower 18 coming on, a@ 1 write, and looking out from my window T see that @ slight fog hax gathered since the darkness fell. 1 am depressed and would skip this entry in my diary but for the firm resolve which 1 made at the beginning of the year. Leaial tora, it Ie being demonstrated at Albany, may break sacred pledges to the public off-hand and with apparently undisturbed equanimity; but a Knickerbocker I# not willing to break a. resolus ton even upon the small, pormoual matter of keeping 4 diary. oe Tt te Pai Sunday which ts closing. Another Will be celebrating aster, © coming days, up to that reat festival occasion, will be @ perio! of Joytul expectation and of renewed faith, I wish that expectation and faith could be mine, also, for this week, with regan! to performances at Albany. They bave crucified the public sentiment of my beautiful city, up there, and in ite resurrection les the great hope for much moral an well as Worldly good, to the people for whose interests I care so much. eo 8 Not so many of Piatt’s fegislative followers are 1m town to-day ax have been here in some pre- Vious legislative recesses. If the city were not 40 big that they can lose themselves in tt 1 think Mt must be that fewer yet of the servitors of the boss would have the nerve to come down among the people whom they have been cheating out of just rights for more than three montis. News comes that Patt has carried his war into Brooklyn, too, His aspirations to dictatorship are unlimited. Fortunately, the patience of the Greater Now York has @ deciied limit, aa has been shown on occasion and can be shown again. —— RILBY!" The land (9 all ablaze with such funny erase, Which came to us across the briny ocean, Mt hatle from gay Paree, its mission neems to be ‘To throw our fair ones into wild commotion, ‘Tie proper now, we're told, and not considered oid, For ladies without any hesitation, Frenchy boot and show a Trilby foot, To win @ lover's looks of admiration. ‘They'll pull the atiken hose from off the Trilby toes, And ask for close and critical Inspection, ‘The naila they manicure until they feel quite sure ‘Their pretty feet a And many have the ‘They almost kno: By talking Trilby twang, calling thelr adorere “Little Billes."* mote! dno very, thelr doting lov ng with naughty Frenchy a They alt In Triiby pose In fleecy Trilby clothes, ‘And try to imitate the Trilvy graces; Their sunny amiles fled and now they wear Anstead A lock of Triiby sadness on their faces. Have we not cause to fear the day In drawing — BY OTHER ED! The State Senate Show. ‘The Senate of the State of New York thene da} fe not exactly transformed into a bear garde but the exhibition made by Mr. Raines and others beats the bear ahow all hollow.—Syracuse Courter, Providence and Its Burglar: Perhaps some arrangement could be mate with snow operating In this elty to accept a weekly nol ant forego -Providenve Journal, these nightly raids, A Prohibitive Adjow Only elght saloons were closed at Topeka after the adjournment of the Kansas Legislature, Kansas City Star. ‘Tom Reed's Happy Sta Tom Reet's health (# such that he Is able to remain at home and refrain from becoming unduly excited,—Washington Port Not Even the Pieces Left. Platt cannot find even the fragments of tho falth."—Butlalo News. Mr reported “broke Dad Impre: The present New York Legislature im rather high-priced, and a good deal of money has to be raised in order to get a measure through —St Loula Poat-Dispaten. — GREAT MEN OF OUR OWN TIME, The Brooklyn Astembly e0a surname Vrank— wh ' 1 tine | to ble district, und prodabiy dors, sine he w born init, Thie im hie frst year at Albany ond | he has rentricted party. record. novessarity ‘aune der minority of bis dof Monenty. O14 Gentleman (hencvolently)-Let me sea, 1 believe you are the bay I bought a paper of yes terday, when I didn't have change. I owe you a Dalfpenny, Here it is, SS Newshey (who t0't the bey’—Never mind, mia- ter, Koop it for yor howesty!—T-Lite, THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENIN INT wROM mpovoaLs. | DRAMATIONEWS AND NOTES| @ventns worse Newest Play- bell May He Ii Charles Frohman was asked a dozen times Saturday if he stili intended to roduce Oscar Wilde's latest comedy, ‘The Importance of Being arnest," of which he has the American rights, and which has to be done by the stock com- Pany at the Empire Theatre. Mr. Froh- man is @ sensible business man, about Whose constitution there lurks, never- theless, some sentiment, but he smiled ut the oft-repeated question, "I shall most decidedly produce “The Importance of Being Burnest.’ he sald. “I have @ good deal of money invested in It; scenery has been painted, and many Cther preparations made. Mr. Alexander and | own tins play, and the fact that its wuthor has come to grief since we bought it ts really none of our busin It] buy @ house in this city, and learn afterwards the architect who planned tt w criminal, there is no earthly reason why I should pull down the house, burn Euison's electri light. Su; se Edison went out one morning and committed a murder; would uu think me level-headed if I had all torn out of my theatre? ik about Oscar Wilde's play: a by this Lond: ort the siillest sort of ‘The Im- portance of Being Earnest’ is a bright rothy comedy, of an absolutely ure. It has been a big suc London--an enthusiastic su fact—and as I have taken gre in resenting to New English dramatic efforts as "Thi op,” “Tie Masqueraders’ and ‘John-a- Dreams,’ I feel a certain managerial lory at giving them another good zondon work, ¢ cable messages from London about changes ng made at tne Yheatres \here Wilde's plays are running are virtuous but tnaccurat At che house they uve been rehearsing a new comedy by Jones for some, time, and at the other a new play, by Carton, has been announced for Weeks. I look at the matter seusibly—or try to do ao. I don't see why the patrons of the Em- Dire Theatre should lose the opportunity. of seeing one of the wittiest plays I have ever read, slmply because Its author hag kot himeelf into a scrape, 1 am not offering them the author, but the play, ‘The play's the thing, anyway, an G Importance, of Being ” Earnest wero the work of ‘fom Smith or John Jones, It would be euaily worth \pro- ducing. By the bye, the original tite of “The Importance of Helng Earnest” was “Lady Lancing.” ‘The name was per- fectly irrelevant. Once during the prog: ress o fthe y, one of the characte remarks, “The former Lad} ncing: says," Mr. Alexander changed the name. The knowing cnes on the Rialto roared with laughter Saturday at R Coghlan's frantic efforts to be “in 4 by telegraphing from Detroit that she had declded to drop “A Woman of No Im. er repertoire. portance" from As matter of fact, Miss Coghlan couldn’ Present the play if she would. She o money for royalties on it. She leased tho play from Charles Frohman, whi has had to pay the royaliies that Mis Coghlan failed to remit. Frohman sent for John 'T, Sullivan, when he was at Sinn's Park Theatre in Brooklyn, and told him then and there that Miss Cogn. lan would not be allowed to play Woman of No Importance’ again, That shows the matter in a new light to the admirers of the Angelic Rose, And as this lovely lady is so particular about the authors of plays, how Is tt she an- nounces a new work by Brother Charles. Surely Charles Is no saint; scarcely « few months ago the entire country was ringing with talk about his execrable behavior, se Tt is said that John Hare is making every effort to secure Mrs. Patricl Campbell for this country. He wants to bring her over, and allow her to be seen in Phe Notorious Mre. Ebb: which both this actor and ac dingly good parts. Mrs. is Not a versatile actre: Her specialty Is the lady with a past—and the more pasta the betes. “T don't think I should care to be an actor,” sald Charles H. Hoyt yes taiking about h 1 appearance in "A Milk Wh at the Harlem Opera-House Priday night. “If tt hadn't beon in Hammerstein's house that we we ft in the lureh I should have the theatre close rather than act. [wi dressed for dinner, hun’ and down- n when I heard that there was no one to play the General, I rushed up to Harlem and went on at a me ti Hammerstein off the sta; saw him at all, Ws no- I told them to be sure anil keep e, and | never the T let Mckce di ing. Fortunately, T knew the cause T have rehearsed the play so much, Hut it wasn’t easy to play’ the part: Everything seemed ‘left-sided to There was one part In Texas Ste that T used to like to pla and on th oecasion 1 appeared tn ‘A’ Htrass Mon- "But L may say that [have no at- tack of stage fev 1am not anxious to on. W. A. Brady has the following to say: “Mr. Charles Frohman in your column. shine In that dine again insinuates that I have appro- priated his ‘Patal Card’ scene tn my production of ‘Humanity.’ If he thinks so why does he not prove tt In court as he attempted to do In "The Pace Tha Killa’ case, instead of throwing out slurs, as he has in your interview. My play ts tn Brooklyn. fam in New York within reach of his lawyers, and I will present the Actors’ Fund’ with $1,000 If he can clo: y company up as he did Sunford's. ‘0 this Mr. Kroh- man says: “lam more merciful to Brady than T was to Sanford. Lam afraid he would have to pay the $1,000, although there are many guilty people about whom it wouid be hard to con- viet. BAe Prof. Herrmann was to have opened at the Boston Museum to-night, but he will not do so, owing to his dimiculttes with Lederer,’ who, according to. the Massachusetts Debtor's law, might har he magician at every ‘perform- errmann 18 a marvellous nece nuit might not be able fully accomplish feat of appearing at the Museum ey night ever! actor who suffered fromthe Debtor's law in Boston took the pau. per’s oath every time he was arrested, folding up his theht hand and swearing if he were arrested An that he was penniless. He did this for five consecutive days. The sixth day he was again arrested. ‘Turning to the Judge he sald, “Your Honor, if sou will Kindly allow ‘me, VM hold ‘up my left hand. I've tred’out my right The arch winkstress, Cissy Fitseoralt, ts not onty doing her’ usual Dut LHother As we he has entirely recove ed, and her Wink is not tn the least paired. THs, in response to several stant Realtors,” who evidently find ft caster to write ‘postal carts ty onice than to fnquire at Hove's Where the box oftlee hamtnary with the Iutest Information, yetleld waa to Gursick Harri ban's, with Miss J Achureh in the Verditus turna wut to be a plece In which the fomiaine part curries of the hors sa Achureh woul have been beon tn It.” Really, one cannot blame t genial actor for sh i What say you? NAC MUSIC. ola Is singing! 1 with touch of Spring a deope throbe the guitar tm ploading-— heforw Eros where the leaves are green. we t thou lovest me, AR! to-day thou flower bling? In garien decpe throva the guitar in pleading, Tr t my heart, and my heart is trem- In garden deeps the violins as The faun is mocking, tree The chilly moom has tinged the marble frieze, AML things are mortal! Hark to the houre anty- ag, Aa garden deepe the violin are crying. ‘Prow the French of Charies Berard. crying, peering through the @_APRIL 8, 1805. Gallery of Livisg res. Pie Four hundred Dunkards have taken their houwe- hold goods and gone to settle in Dakota. Thie reminds me of the mistake of an English pert- odical which commented on the fact that an organiration of Drunkarda had done so and #0 in the United Statea By the way, It bas always neemed @ atrango and Inoxplicable thing that #0 large a class of people an earth's Inebriates make 1p. whose common Interest {8 of necessity a rare | bond of sympathy, should never have organized tn these days when organisation is rampant. Men having the same idea seek to sustaia thelr prine by banding together, all save the drunkards. A {tte legislation Im favor of licen tng tnetriety would be @ fine bit of diplomacy that would do credit to feminine tact and busi- Beas management. Drunkarda might in time or- kanize, wear a badge, submit to parliamentary ruling and declare themselves. Here's @ new chance for club work. ee Avatraiia has no orphan aayluma, Every ehttd who is not supported by parents becomes the ward of the State, and is pald a pension for support and placed in a private family, where board and clothes are provided until the fourteenth birth- day. After that he may be able to go to work, in which case the pension {s placed to his credit until the age of eighteen, when he becomes a citizen with a balance due him from the State to begin life with, This Inculeates @ humane and charitable and responsible spirit {n all residents, decreases the chance of paupertsm, and places every young man on a fair and square footing with the world, GEN. EZ CAMPOS, This is a picture of Spain's Ficld Ma shal. He arranges time-tables for put- ting down insurrections, Now he is on his way to Cuba to quell the rebellion there, and says he will finish the job in time to be back in Spain in November. at THE GLEANER' BUDGET, Here, a Hint The: Tales of City ‘The {dea has not departed trom Brooklyn of forming @ cavalry company to emulate New York's Troop A. T find in the current Issue of Brooklyn Lite the following: “Enthusiasm and earnestness of intention are all that ie required and True le. . . She was a bride and she was young—very young and very inexperienced, She had never done any shopping in her life, nor any sewing, and was as tmpracticable as a child of six. She went out to buy thread the other day—white (0 produce a troop in Brooklyn In every respect | tiiread—and when she asked for No. 70, and equa: to the New York organisai There Ja] they didn't have it, she just sald, like any fo Feason to Coubt that those qualities will be] experienced, self-reliant mother of a family, forthcoming im the men, and the only momentous! “Then give me No. 6." ‘There doesn't seam Sonsideration 1s that of obtaining # commanding officer with the requisite knowledge who will equally possess them. A man, in other words, who will throw himself heart and soul into the work ns Capt, Charles F, Roe did when Troop A Was organized.” There is a fae compliment to @ fine commander, And here's hoping that Brook- lym will find Its captain and produce ite troop. to be much that'a funny about it, but every om te smiling about it y . A bonny, blonde bachelor, who hes a good law practice now In this city, has been telling me how he managed to be @ social success at Har- vard, where a fellow had to possess nome remark able advantage over other fellows in order to be within the charmed circle of the University town, “The society of the town," sald he, ‘required about Atty feliows to attend the social functions Some fellows were eligibie because they were athletes, some because they were musical, some because they were from {llustrious families and some because they had great expectations, I had none of these, but I was fond of nociety, and it becanie © problem in my own mind how I was to be regarded with favor when a party of & dance was in progpect. After due deliberation 1 reached the logical conclusion that I could gain & foothold by proving myself indispensable to the comfort of the girls, So I made it @ point to carry @ small pincushion in my vest pocket, and a threaded needle and a fan and a vinaigrette, & lady's pocket handkerchief, @ hairpin or two and a button-hook. When a girl fainted I was on hand to revive her, and when some clumsy person stepped on her gown T was on deck with my needle and thread. Then she adored me and hated the clumsy offender. Or 1 could button her shoe when she removed her slippers afier dancing, preparatory to walking home with me, and when she lost her handkerchief, 1 happened to have one tn my pocket. The fellows made fun of me, and called me a lady's maid; but I went to the parties all the same, and was on the right aide of the girls. They appreciated my import- ee, and I posed as the most unseifish, adorable fellow in town,” A representative of the genus homo, species dude, with an 18-carat jag attachment, aldied into Warren street, from Greenwich, the other afternoon. Hie eye lighted on a box covered with suspenders which a vender wan selling at 10 cents a pair. "Whoopee!" yelled Jagsey, with delight, and then he “swooped a lot of suspenders on to the sidewalk with his allver- heeded umbrella. “Whoopee!"? he again screamed demoniacally, as he tried to brush off ome more ‘xalluses* The handie of hia um- brella broke and he fell Into a neighboring door- way. The crowd on the station overhead @ & shout of laughter, while the patient su Pender man took his turn at yelling ‘Whooper and gathered ina prikesful gf ahekela ‘There ts one New Yorker among Shakespeare's many admirers who takes more than ordinary interest in study@m; the works of the celebrated band. He is Dr Charles Carter Cranmer, of West One Hundred and Fifteenth street, who Was bora next door to the house where the great poet lived in Stratford-on-Avon, Dr. Cranmer hi served in the British Novy, was a former sur- eon of the old Gulon line, and is one of the visiting surgeons at Roosevelt: Hospital, THE GLEANER. —— i TALKS WITH THE LAWYER. Out-of-door life Is becoming a feature of educa tonal life In New York. The various schools are organizing hoilday cluba and on Saturdays visit Various places of Interest in a body. Some atudy botany and others entomology, and still others are Interestod in the geological cons‘ruction of the places around about. Saturiay, Grammar Schoo! ST stationed a portion of ite algnal corps at Mount Tom, Riverside Drive, while the remainder Went to Fort Lee; and by the aid of flags and the signal language they carried on a very thrii Ling conversation The boys partook of luncheon Advice to Those Who Owe Money or Have Given Credit. To the Editor T got a judgment two yeara ago for $0 for work. The defendant i= @ contractor. Ho hax & shop, with bis own toolg, consisting of two sewing-machines, tables, all together worth about 975, Can I collect my judgment? How? F File a transcript of your judgment in the County Clerk's office and have the defendant examined in supplementary How Is This Fo! This charming dress Discult-colored face cloth, with strapped and besides hem, The coi than usual, and hangs well, the collar and lapels being faced with velvet. The double-breasted waistcoat white cloth, and the vest Is here repre- in benga‘ine, over collar and tle. sented straw, with bunch of Parma violets on each aside, and a brown emu aigrette on the left. | Fro. A pretty little frock for a child under eight is made mahogany vel velvet is formed on a close-fitting bodice lining, and to this yoke the full skirt 1s sewed with a tiny heading. vet ribbon ts attached to sette of vely the centre of ends are carried under the arms to the ‘The neck is finished by a collar band of velvet, side seam. puff sleeves manches of cloth. either buttoned or hooked down the back, and is a very effective model for two materials. Sulphar Buy an ounce of flowers of sulphur, put in a can with a quart of boiling water; use w taken off more may be added to the residum of ceases to be question is asked whether this may not tend to bleach the hair, gray, and how often !t may be applied. and passed @ day in camp, PRUDENCE SHAW. IE BRITISH WITs, Proceedings. aae Gome time ayo I transferred womie property to AGAIN TH! my husband by deed which he has uot recorded. : ‘The holder of a mortgage 18 going to foreciore| A Freah Inatalment of } jumor from It, If the proceeds of sale don't pay the debt and expenses can they Interfere wiih property Acrons {he Atlantic, that Is In my own name, Mas. 8. Gudhusband’s words: “In old times, 1, When my wife became hysterical, Would whatsoe'er ahe wanted buy, ‘Though T did it by a miracle. If you are the mortgager, and there ts Judgment for deficiency on foreclosure, gt broperty of yours may be levied Tut now 1 never care one bit oe 8 When my wito becomes hysterical ; A morchant tailor owes me $1.500 for good For I've learned that every sobbing ft fold and for rent. He has now romoved trom Is cunningly chimericat my premives, and, having transferred all bis busi Ally Sloper. ness and reul estate to his wife, refuses to pay. Can anything be done? Is bis wite sible for his devia? There are besides m at respon. few more debtors AN EVERY-DAY READER. Get judgment against him and bring He—t'm awfully love with ber, wouldn't have her know it for the world, She—So ahe told me.—-Pall Mall Budget. in but 1 suit to set aside the transfers to his Old Jokes, wife. She is not responsitie for the sparkling gems of wit, debts, but if the tran: were fraudu- h I positively elow, lent the property m: taken, era my languid soul; for it ? Recalls the duys of long ago, And as these Jeate around they fing, I listen with a chastened glee ‘And wipe a toar up, for they bring ‘The hours of childhood back to met —Pick-Mo-Up, To Keep Sunday Whol EMe—Please, Uncle Arthur, do come and play chess with me. Vnele Arthur—Oh, Emet It's Sunday EMe—Well—we can let the Bishop win!—Pall Mall Budget. Mrs. 8. R.—You can safely move to New York from Jersey City without fear of having your furniture taken be- cause you owe a grocer, J.T, M.—If the money in the savings bank be necessary for your support, the Court, in supplementary proceedings on the judgment against you, will not order It to be patd over towards liquidating the debt. se A Victim.—It would be useless for you to try to enforce your judgment against the cigar dealer by levying upon his clgars, when there are so many other judgments, thus necessitating the giv- ing of heavy bonds. The better way would be to have the debtor examined in supplementary proceedings. World Reader,—Your creditors in New York, if you came here, cannot arrest you for a debt you had contracted here Don't ycu remember? What Familiarity Breed: John Barleyeorn, my Jo, John, When frat we were acquent, You turned my brain ere glasses twain Adown my thorax went. But now, alas! my purse te Nght, Fk score of pinta, or 9 Tecan drink, before you make me tight, my jot “Ally Sloper. except Upon allezations that you were — guilty of some fraud in contracting the | "EVENING WORLD" SKETCH-BOOK, debt. No process in a civil suit’ can vs i be served on Sund Anxious.—Get posses: ing plant from Kx by Ings. Flends of the Cane and Umbrella, ton of your print. replevin proceed- A. FE. C—The Jewelry having been purchased by your friend in your name, with your consent, you are the person Mable; but if they secure judgment against you, having no property, as you say, the matter need give you no anx- ety. are An Employee.—The only way to ens foreo payment of money due you for wages, and to have the judgment you may secure satisfied, Is by levy on exe- cution, EMPIRE STATE BrTs, There are chi ken es at Niagara Falta Ogdensvure’'s street railway ta to ¢ ore: for the trolley It fs promised un the river that the Raster eK crop will be imme North Tonawanda flehermen are making good hauls wiih neta, tn the harbor A Leroy houve burmlar effected his own ca by locking himself im the bathroom ‘A Giasco hunter brought down nine du & ten-pound goose on a hulf-day's trip. From one cow at Olive Bridge. the owner go Atty-elaht pounds of milk In twenty-four hours Ih Rew record, The subjete treated in this sketch are not now. People who di now how to carry canes and umbrellas In crowded strocis have existed ever since canes and umbrelias came Into use and misuse. They are brosght into print again with the hope that some of them may be forced to see (7%te column complaint to make, @ grievance to ventilate, tn formation to give, a subject of general interest discuss or a public service to acknowledge, und who can put the idea into (ese than 100 words, Long lettera cannot be Ventilate the Churches, To the Ealtor: “A Minister of what I feel when she say: the churches t for the benefit ‘The tad alr in] Mttle ‘‘gun,"* and practise shooting for ‘fan'* & real grievance.” I consider it | before they are in their teens. And before they 4 wieked Imposition to let people attend church | are of age, we may expert that a loaded Wine of their souls, and at the same|chester will be thelr pet bric-a-brac, What Ume to wertously injure their health while there. | then? Maybe a boy becomes a mechanic, maybe In these days of general education and tntelll- gence, all know fresh al services have c posed tn great measure of carbonic acid gan It the congregation do In church, feeble ones would doubtless succumb and be carried out, dead or dying. ters know thi & Christian act to careless sextons, who a the dead that life and health take on a different pret to then the churches of and formerly all know {t would polson into the lungs every Sunda; 1m consequence From a Friend of Ex-Sheriff O'Brien To the Editor Tam pleased t nection with O'Brien has m comlums of hundreds of the readers of That Mr. ‘a of last Fall been grossly misrepresented has been made manifest to every citizen during the But when his boyhood’ World."* Ps campaign. portrayed at thi press the statement is not in accord with the fecl- fuga of his friends, philanthropy and ch: fact In to be doy ways been rerog ing classes stiould be stigmatized as a person bi Charity Knows No Sach La Auye At to hold a public of ¢ where = ” To the Editor: If They Had Light to Read "The | yy there a taw in New Jersey to punlah a pare Evening World" They Wouldn't | ron who giver a poor > aa something to eat whe 1 Mind Fifteen Minutes Extra, asks at the door, or a so-called tramy 1 EM eds Tih hidden to give any food away at the door. Rather ¢ Be ee a tee ey sell than: refuse a pose musm,, {let bits buoek watit ip eee a aaee er Unch ee could vad png | Be tires cf It, My mfstresa waked my reason § Sok elaar aah P for not answering the door, and whon I told her, ff, Evening: Worl!’ en: our: wer:‘home \ta oe een | she said; “Well, t 1s against the laws of the |” wsinaiadoste! ox Jon uels nok be of cnn eons OEY! ian’ Naot sinciy' inte etal sequence, However, the scheme of running alt 191° (0 feet wramps” Now, kindly Inform me Second avenue trains uptown and all Third avenue ! trains down seems feasible, Give us ight ang} Poneivie for men being tramps, 45 1: Seew, many) arian tai Too, | 2%! men who cannot get employment, althoug® After One Ditter Experience. To the Faltor: 1 married a man for spite, but made him food wife, but he was 60 cruel WS me | To the Editor: 4 abused me xT took my two chil] Kindly tell me why they will not hire ® mam dren and left hi Ho would not sup |on the street cars Lecause he wae not five feet : port ther et 1 haven't lived with | weven or over. Iam sure we could do the work him for two years quaintance of a it way cal 7 for he want signify anythin The Beginu: the error of thelr ways before they have punched out the eyes or punched im the ribs of innocent fellow-ct and the Salvation Army make new converts every ay, ‘Thore i aii the dally chance alee bringing Une cane fend oe.umbrolia toad te Vanity is no respecter of ‘The Auburn Advertiser, Afty-one years old, comes out with a brand new Spring dress, A violin sold for 35 at Corry proved to be « Sirediveriua, worth $1.00, Such ap ot en she BA a To the Editor: ‘What may be ma. Keligion is old, but the churches| ism become @ rulli 48 @ question worth considering. Con- tee public | Seat noes tot a not stale alr, to begin with, and after Eani is made in a ornamented 4 seams. The skirt is full, the seams has a strapped at is cut with fewer scams It is not generally considered wise to wet the hair more than once a fortnight or so, but this wash was used in a cers tain case at least twice a week for some months, and has been tried as often a@ that in other peculiar instances where the hair fell out so rapidly that em treme measures seemed necessary. I no case known has it harmed the coler of the hair in the least, or failed to help its growth, Lemon Pudding. Add one quart of unskimmed milk te two cups of-bread crumbs, and whem well soaked mix in the yolks of fou® eggs beaten very light with one cup @€ granulated sugar; add two tablespoons fuls of butter melted and the grated rind of one lemon. When well mixed, turn into a greased pudding dish an@ bake, Do not let it be overdone, for it will then be watery, Make a meringue, of the whites of the eggs and one-half of a cup of pulverized sugar, and flaver with the juice of the lemon. Spread on the pudding when cold and brown im @ quick oven, Household Hints. Grease may be remaved from woollen goods by sponging it with strong cold coffee, Fine laces may be cleaned by being packed in wheat flour and allowed to remain twenty-four hours. If a shirt bosom or any other article has becn scorched In ironing lay it where the bright sunshine will fall directly upon it. Black silk may be renovated by @ thorough sponging with stale beet placed between newspapers and pressed with a hot iron, 1's made of Pineapples for Breakfast. Sliced and sweetened pineapples make a delicious breakfast dish; it may be served with wine, orange juice, a rich lemonale or cold cream, An equally Dleasing dessert may be arranged by chopping pineapples very fine with oranges, peaches, plums or bananas and serving the mixture in dainty glass cups. Pineapple fritters are alao very nice for breakfast, and so is preserved pine= apple, accomanpied by whipped cream. Cups with Thermometers. The latest fad is cups made with small thermometers to tell the temperature of the beverage, so that the man in a hurry need not sca!d himeelf. This ts probably the Invention of some victim of hot coffee at a railway station with “ten minutes” for lunch, or maybe tt {s to satisfy the Imbiber who shouts for red-hot stuff, and 1s liable to shoat the mixer if he does not get it. as also the turn- Hat of brown white velvet crown, A k for a Child, of etectric blue eerge ant vet. The round yoke of A ro- f the front, whence the and the velvet fitted into lower The dress may be are Water for the Hair. Southern Pancakes. Beat four eggs and half a pound ef flour together until smooth, melt four ounces of butter and add with one ounce of sugar a little salt and half @ pint of milk; put a spoonful at a time in a greased frying pan, spread evenly. over the surface, turn and serve hot. hen cool. As the water Is the water The sulphur until impregnated with It. or to turn it LETTERS, ts open (o everybody fee that tn less than one generation this glorfows country, once destined to lead civilization, will be one vast military camp, =.vided up into as many feudal tenures, hy right of might, as sew we have law-ablding communities sustaining the holdings only by what united interest and pax triotiem dictae, Under military training Among promiscuous elements of society, while the minds of boys are most receptive to the tm fluences which cultivate the lower instinets of Vainglorious pride and pomp, we must expect, as @ consequence, a majority of boys who have thelr. 0 has a printed. | Daughter” does not express halt an operator or a trainhand—aye, who can tell but he may become a striker, equipped by education to meet a real or Imagined foe. Shall this ime bectle movement sprung upon the nation as @ Pestilent Innovation, at the time when clvilisas ton stands aghast at the cruclties perpetrated im the East, while America stands pledged by record & ploneer in the appeal for seii..ng dieputes by way of reason and arbitration in preference to the uss of bullet and bayonet, be permitted to go om Without consent of the people expressed through the allo CHARLES DE MEDICI, © West Twenty-second street, the necessity of breathing pure, continued a tf com- rt tin remained much longer than they Now, minis nd doctors know this! Is it, then, to leave thet airing of churches 0 ured to caring for than to us? I am familiar with both Washington and New York, ways atiendad chureh, but I now be sulcidal to take a dose of and be feeble The Polson Laws of This State. To tho Euitor: I see in “The Evening World’ that the come Posite picture of the State Legislature ts a walle known animal. 1 think the legislators that framed the poison laws for New York were chipe of the fame block, You cannot buy five cents’ Worth of chloral without lot of red tape, but you can buy a quarter-of-a-poun4 bottle of Pow. era & Welghtman's chloral without any fuss af all, You cannot get one grain of morphia withe out the Grugetst trundies out his polson register, Dut you can buy a dram of Rosengarten & Sone rphla, ant no question asked. You cannot get, five cents’ worth of Paris green weighed out to yon without « lot of trouble, but the druggist will amilingly give you a box of Leggett’s Parle green at 10 cents, and say no more about it, ‘Such are the asinine poiron laws for New York, C. ©, CROLLY, Pleasantville, N. ¥. all the week. LOUISA JAY BRUEN. 10 see that your statement in con- he affairs of ex-Sherif! James et with the approval and en- “The the cam- O'Brien has durin, escapades are Is time before the public in the who are cognizant of his ity In years past. And the precated that a man who has al- nized as the friend of the work- @ cook in a minister's house and have been fore thoy have travelled from one city to another, PRINCETON, N, & What Chance Has a Little Mant T have lately mate the a: gentleman whom I really love, nT let him eee that I love him him so? I think ne cares tor me to get w divorce. Does thi N. EB. 8, Jersey, just an w police fo 1 as big men. We cannot get on the ¢ or on the fire department, and if we have not @ good education we cannot get om the letter force. What chance have we little fellows got in thie big city? 5 FooT é Avenue -Houred ‘To the Haitor: 1 would Ike to say a few words in regard to ‘the east aldo dry-goode stores, There Ie one en Avenue where the aslesiadies have to werk every evening until 9.45 o'clock. and sometions ; Sundays aise, from 8 in the moraiag walls = barrack and the afterneca, walfermes militant make much prophetic wisiem to tone dag ing of a Mammoth Mil- the consequence should millitar- wwirit, fostered tm chil ‘school into « mimic