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2 @ @ PARK ROW, Mow York THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1895. a ‘a Beancn orrices: WORLD UPTOWN OFFICE—Jenction of Broat- wag ond Girth ave, at #4 ot WORLD HARLEM OFFICE—ishth ot and Madi. “\ en ore ‘BROOKLTN—s09 Washington ot QMILADELEHIA, PA—Prose Bullting, 172 Chest- wet ot, WASKINGTON—T00 14th ot DVERTISEMENTS in the Evening Edition of "THE WORLD are taken upon the specific guarantee that the averace bona fide paid circulation of The EVEN- ING WORLD Is consider- bly larger than that of all the other Evening papers in New York COMBINED, to wit:: The Evening Post, the Evening Sun, the Evening News. the Evening Telegram. the Com- mercial Advertiser and the Mail and Express. —————— DICKINSON AFTER GRESHAM’S PLACE. ‘When Don Dickinson was Postmaster- Beneral, and active in Federal politica, be wae credited with a hound's scent for the good things beyond the wall of the near future. When a week or two ago he let off a flight of American eagles @nd called on the Fourth of July to wit- fess that we should not, could not, nay, would not let the British Lion make a Jair of the best gold-bearing lands of . Venesuela, the wixe In politics asked, + “What is it Don knows, what ts it he * pees, and what is it he aceks?” . Behold, now it 1s published that he knew the President had astunished his Cabinet more than a month ago by say- ing, with great strength of words, that ‘Venesuela’s domain must remain in her ‘pwn keeping; he foresaw soon to be ap- “pointed in the Cabinet a Secretary of +Btate who would have to deal with this ‘Very problem; he secks Gresham's place. Bence these eagics! Phe course of England in Venezuela may be wrong. It generally Is wrong towards weak nations with natural wealth. President Cleveland's resolution that the Monros Doctrine applies in ‘thie case, and that it shall be applied May be right. It probably is right. A few eagles let loose in earnest might do good by forcing into our national viens (> Wed blood instead of the stuff that is now +) getting: black and sluggish with contin- ‘Gal corruption of trus nd monopolies and policies of tariffs and policids of Sinances—elways money, money, gain, gain. ‘This may all be true, but the people ef this country hardly care for Secre- tary of State, in a delicate moment, a “man who declares in advance that he| fz armed cap-a-ple for a fight, and the sooner it comes the better he and his bird will like it. Mr. Don Dick- fngon spoke too much. Secretary Gresh- &m's place must be filled not by a man seeing and seeking a reputation in for- eign roils, but by one who will preserve Peace at all times, one who values at all times higher than peace the pres- tige and the honor of his country. ME. DEPEW AS BELSHAZZAR. ‘The harmony banquet given by Mr. Chauncey M. Depew last night is likely to become as famous in history as the Belshazzar feast of a few years ago. . Whe Belshazzar feast disposed of one dential candidate, ‘The Depew din- } may dispose of four or five. jf & harmony banquet, with Platt and Lauterbach opposite Strong and Brook- field; with Levi P. Morton and Harrison vis a vis; with McKinley and Steve Fl- King near neighbors, and with Frank ‘Hiscock and James J. Belden at opposite entis of the table, looks like Central a Park near the animal cages. Perhaps the only Presidential posst- Dility helped by the Depew spread was Tom Reed, who was not present, He would have done better duty at the @ishes and with the wines than Harri- gon, Morton, McKinley, the host or even than Steve Elkins if he had been pres- ent, but he makes more political capital by his absence than was secured by any of those around the board. Pernaps it was intended he should go ®0, Perhaps the banquet was a ‘put up job” between Platt and Depew, both supposed to be Reed men. Who knows? MME. CARRE WILL STILL TYPEWRITE. # Col. Waring will retain Mme, Carre for his private secretary and typewriter and pay her salary of $1,500 a year out of his own pocket, Good for the Colonel! He's a man after our own heart. We didn't think he could be one of ihe Mean and sneaking gang that was bent on pushing a competent woman out of a Job just because she hasn't @ vote. The ballot, like education and air, .@oesn't cost anything in this country, _@nd the man that goes around blowing about his “divine right’ and all that, urging it as a reason for his superiority and presenting it as a support to his elim every time there is # in sight, Generally hasn't any large quantity of Personal ability aboard that he can do ‘ny burrabing over. Col. Waring has shown that he docan't » Believe in the voting value of the people he employs to do the work of his De- > partment. He hires his typewriter to typewrite, and he will get $1,500 worth Of typewriting out of her every ycar, ‘Whereas a professional citizen would try Sen. is salary on his “divine right” LET THERE BE LIGHTS. U |) Phe Park Board, by formal unani- 7 vote, has approved the suggestion by “The Evening World.” that Greased. It is estimated that there are Bearly 100,0% bicycle rigers in this city. ‘They are all obliged to carry lighted lamps at night. Arrests have been fre Quent for omission, That is right. Now make the law general, so that not only the pedestrian croscing the stree' may be safe from the bicycle but the 100,000 riders of the wheel themselves may no longer run the risks they do at present from the carriages and light wagons that come upon them suddenly ‘and without warning. Fair play for all. Let the oriinance be passed, and the streets of the city and the roads of the Park will be as safe by night as by day. “The Evening World" has no axes to grind, It seeks only the greatest good of the greatest number. The proposed ordinance is just, it 1s necessary; it counts towards making New York the dest city of the United States, Let there be light District-Attorney Fellows says the de lays in meting justice to offenders is caused by lack of courts. Nonsense. Let the Judges do a full day’s work, and let them all work at the same time. The Judges of all our criminal courts have too much vacation. Mayor Strong indorses Col. Waring’s victory over the trucks by vetoing the mischievous Sullivan bill. That is right. New York City streets were not laid out for truck storage purposes, but for the use of the whole public, Ex-Chief Byrnes appeared at Head- quarters yesterday in the character of an adviser, There is no doubt that he can give good advice, And there was a time when he might well have taken some. “For miles of asphalt pavement.” Gvod! Good for the wheelmen, good for “His Immediate Neighbors Include Sir John Millais and Baron de Reuter, *—Cablegram from London to ‘“‘ The World,” May 29. the drivers, good for the pedestrians, | whe ivemim good for the street cleaners, good for the public health. On with the asphalt! Bo the Board of Aldermen wish power to look into the city affairs and offices. Suppose they begin by Investigating themselves about the delay in granting the uptown railroad franchise. Lat the bicyclist beware the light that fails, But don't let beware alone. Put ‘on the same list the man who drives out o’ nights in the rubber tired sulky or other dangerous vehicle, Platt was at Depew's dinner, but we haven't heard that any of Tommy's ex- Press wagons backed up to Depew's door and left the Republican nomina- tlon for ‘9 there. For the"'L" roads to get into contempt of codrt is only to add to another of- fenae of long standing—that of getting into contempt of public sentiment and public comfort. Yesterday was the hottest May day Wort Living Pictures. SUSY MOROWITZ. ‘This is a picture of "Busy, the Emanci- pator,” leader of the striking hat-liners, whom she calls “white slaves. Poor girls who look to her. . \e Gallery of HALF A DOZEN JOKES. Led by a Rhyme on a ject That Is Yet to Be Discovered. the mannish Fair Devotee—I don't see any way to raise our church debt, except to have a lottemr, Minister (shocked)—That WIN’ vor ha sanction, mada! owe ther name, my r, untess you call it by York Weekly. The Reason the Cook Lett. You ask me why I loft there? It really made me grieve But master and missus quarrelied so much That at last I had to loa ‘Their langwidge It was dre And awfully they looked, You ask mo what they quarrolted about? ‘Twas the way the meals were cooked, Harlem Lite, he de- Not Tommy's Fault. Father—Tommy, stop pulling that cat's tall. ‘Tommy—I'm only holding the til, the ea for the Chicago has had in twenty-five years. pulling 1t—Lite, woman and the mart The mercury got as high as 9% degrees, Subterranean Chicago must have had the lid off. to say there was no ambu- call from Chauncey Depew's last night, although the materials were there for @ first-class McClosky evening. Down went the Dom Pedro, That wa No, 1. Then down went the Colima, ‘That was No, 2. What of No. 8? Those accidents always come in cy Gov. Morton has signed the Raines Ballot bill, and it goes, Under its benefi- cent provisions, corrupt votes will go later—to the highest bidder. Now ft !# Acting Chief Conlin who is reorganizing the police force of New York. Mr, I-Told-You-So isn't very nu- merous in this connection, Russia has a new Premter, Prince Lobunoff-Rostovsky. His name is pic- turesque enough to make him an orna- ment to any ministry. Extremes meet in the parades to-day. ‘The boy cadets are in line with the gri wled veterans of a war that was over thirty years ago. Candidates for Pollce Magistrates must spend another Sunday of hopes and fears, The appointments go over until next week. “Fighting Bob" Evans wants to com- mand the new battle-ship Indiana, Why go back on the New York, Bob? ‘Tho skeleton at the Depew feast kept himself decorously out of sight—behind the sideboard, perhap: Mayor Strong says that a man who was working for him ror $60 a month 1s now employed in the Street Clea: vehicles carry lighted lamps ‘That suggestion is now before ing Department at $900 a year, and doesn't have to work half as hard as he used to work for Mr. Strong. The city is paying thi cy" price for your ex-hired man's “pull, Colonel, and not for his work alone. The jails are full of prisoners, the District-Attorney's office is full of In- dictmenta, The District-Attorney him- self is “full of sympathy with the Grand Jury presentment,” the atmo- sphere is full of bluff—and there you are, Hard luck and hard blows fall upon the Giants together these days. The season lasts several months longer, how- ever, and there are 105 games yet to play out of the acheduled 132, It ts not time for the calamity howler to devastate the atmosphere over the Polo Grounds, Bo far as China is concerned, there ought not to be any foundation for the report that the war in the East may be resumed. Later returns from Ohto do not ex: hibit McKinley in the role even of a al- lent partner, Foraker is the sole pro- prietor. ‘We remember our heroes every day. To-day's 1s only a special remembrance, ‘The Sick Babies’ Fund call you given your response? Have It Woks as if the McKinley boom might be retired without half pay. May begins to remember herself, But it's pretty late in the month, Why not a crusade against dim lights in road cars? It continues to be the Harris murder “mystery.” Tom Reed isn't banking on harmony banquet: A Looking-For Not Cheated, His teeth are all loose and his nose is a sight, And hia head!—they've in bandages hound tt; He went out to look for trouble laxt night, Aud he found it, ‘Boston Courier, Happily Expressed. oy—A man ealled kere to thrash What “1 told him I was sorry you weren't tn,""—Lite, GETTING INTO A HANSOM CAB, Ht you say to him? @rom St. Paul's) Where to?" “Peach” Knew WhAt Was Gol DEPEW’'S HARMONY DINNER LAST NIGHT, . THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 30, 1895. MB, CROKER IN LONDON SOCIETY. Geosip Here, a Hint There and Trae Tales of City Life. ‘The mont’ superstitious man I know ts an east- side politician He ts @ devout churchman, but Jove a horm rane next to his creed. Not oniy does he divide his attention between the two, combines them im an amasing manner. For in. he makes a bet on a race and ng, he invariably ‘“telle” hie beada, and has implictt faith tm the efficacy of them ax luck tokeng ; In & Broadway cate, during the intense darkness Yast Monday, I wes rather mystified each one of four elderly gravely clasp each other's hand. After the quiet handshaking, the Quartet lined up to the bar, solemnly took a drink then retursed to seate, apparently waiting for eomething to turn up. I learned later that the four mewy hed convinced themselves that the end What @ load must have been lifted from thelr minds when the atmosphere brightened shortly after, ee & A allght, pate-faced youth, motteatly attired, at- tracted considerable attention on the occasion of | and, a few | the Smith-Ry ht at Coney Rights ano youngster was Harry Grin, « Jockey, who I recelving the largest retainer ever pald to & professonal rider. He gets $17,500 year from Gideon & Daly, who own @ great ot of thoroughbreda, and, in addition, he ta fer outside mounts, which mount up to many thou sande @ many of his fellow-Jockeys. He 1s supporting and educating two siatera, and has a comfortable bank account. Grin ta popular, for be 1s qui gentlemanly in his manner, and success hax not turned his head. THE GLEANER. iin Gea mneh RIGHT IN THE SWIM. Manny Roades—Dey any it’s quite de ting to ride de wheel dese days, Waleney does it. ©. Inder Pathe—Yes, an’ it's a dusty day wen we ian’t right in it wid Princelet SINCE TEDDY RUNS THE FORCE. “Since Casey Runs the Flat.'*) Commissioner, and Roosevelt 1s (Ate: We've got his nam ‘The way he runs the ‘Finest’ ta anything but tam He holds his chin high in the he owned the town; He has a frightful, rasping voice in ca pers don. All those who work at Headquarters must be there just et nin And if @ minute they are late they have to pay a fine ‘At meetings of the Board each day on new rules he'll discourse no pantata has @ pull since Teddy runs the Force, Ir, you'd think cop- ‘There’ CHORUS, Cops cannot work the alde doors, they can't take a ely ball, They have to get a permit if they'd ait down at all They can't Insult @ citizon, thelr manners can't be coarse, They don't know where they're at at all since ‘Teddy runs the Force, Ho seems to think & cop should work for every cent he earns, He knows no one is {n his way since he got rid of Byrn Now rules he pt must play craps, “Detectives mustn't change thelr names," "Arrest fall green-goods chaps”? “Poltcemen must turn in all gifts to swell the pension fund,"* “AN officora will be Gismiased who bills are dunned,”* No slang allowed; as, ‘Cheese it!" ‘What'ell?’ or ‘Horse and horse;' "* Morality ts all Force, out every 4a “No coppers for thelr the go since Teddy runs the AM captains must enfores the Excise regarding the received his orders and he won't re- celve ‘ein twice; Detectives must find murderers, for Ted will show no quarter from a reporter. But Teddy 1s a gentleman, he te not overbearing, And though he's more original than even Col. Waring, i find him ready all good actions to have to do thetr duty well since the Force. VEE ANONG US WOMER. Mra, Gen. Custer te the best of story-teltere and puts enoug® dramatio action Into her stories to bring the scene ahe picteres before the eyes | of her listeners in a charming manner. ‘I never j open my dock, ‘Boots and Saddles,” sald she recently, ‘because there are so many errors in It The fact 1, some of the mistakes stand out in golden letters on the wall in the nighttime” eee “1 hadn't opened the book in yearn” added Mra. Custer, “wh one day I received @ long letter from @ soldier from out West. ‘I don't know as you will remember mo,’ said he in the letter, ‘but I am the mas you refer to on page 17.’ That was too much for me, and for the sake of identifying the writer I consulted the book. On page 17 was written someth! ike tht ‘The General and 1, after travelling im the storm, reached an inn, all billed and wel, We were placed in @ warm room and an attendast brought we @ry clothing for the Bight! + ‘ ‘ Mra. Custer satled for Europe about a fortnight 860. for | of Amer Grin ts not a ependthrift, 11ke| and | life, To Hawkshawa who to get their man ask help) larity with the t He hung to the railing on the back platform ot @ Broadway cable car yesterday afternoon, and ho was the prettiest picture to be seen im & day's Journey. He couldn't have been more than eight years old, and he was bare-footed and ragged and soiled. A scrap of a cap covered the crown of his head and he Jnrge bunch in Beauties up close to hie ftace— hugged them up in his arma, you know—so that thelr blushing faces reached out of the waxed tinue paper to nestle close to his own face. He had never borne such a burden before in his liked 1€ In one hand he carried atationery, the latest and when the man whe stood next to him asked him about the Sowers he showed the envelope and its address, and explained all about how and when and where, the questioner eagerly drinking the Information. I belleve ite sald women have more curicalty than men, Go tot eee There ts to be @ big conv clubs in Saratoga in July. All the clubs in Now York are to be invited to send repre sentatives, and half rates and good entertainment are promised, PRUDENCE SHAW. —_~ ___ HEARTS ALL FULL 0 TEARS, tion of women's ‘This 18 Memorial Day, Bee the flags a-fy! the soldiers march away Just "bout halt @ cryin’, Every heart 1s full o° tears, Every throat a-chokin’, ‘Thinkin’ o' the bloody years, An’ the tles now broken— ‘Thinkin’ o' the comrades whom Death has hidden in the tomb, See ‘em try to march along To the drums a-rattlin’, Like they did when young aa’ When they was ‘When the war ates ‘They were young an’ activ Now they're leanin’ on thelr canes, Bodies all defective; But their hearts yet have the bare Kindled in the battle Rairo your hate In reverence, Wave your ‘kerchlets at them— Give them cheerin’ evidence That you don't forget them. They're the men ‘at heard the call When the war was brewin’— Men that stood « livin’ wall ‘Twixt the flag an’ ruln— Stood an’ bravely fought a Till @leunion hung ite head, dled ‘Try to cast the world aside Fur a little season: . Blow the coal o' loyal pride TH tt gets ‘Think o' why, These ol” men are trampin’ Blowly out to where thelr dead Comrades are a-campl Movin’ ‘neath the weight o' years, With their Rearts all full o' tears, BARTON. $<» 2—_____ THEY MAKE THE SCHOOLS, Some men by talking much about themeely: try to create cn impression that they are what they would like to be, Eugene D. Bagen, Assiet- ant Superintendent of Schools, never talka about himself, ‘The character of his work and his popu- era speak for themselves, — The Night Man. (From the New York Weokly.) She—The man I marry must, be “only a little lower than the angel! He (suddenly flopping)—Here I am on my knees a ttle lower one of them, He got her. s Covert Coating. ‘Thin coat and skirt are In green covert |coating, of @ light make, suitable for | Summer wear. The revers are a new ‘ shape, and the coat is made to button over or wear open, if desired. The coat has overlapped scams, and is lined with fatin of a lighter shade of green. Delicious Asparagus. :paragus freshly picked, if rim the tops and scrape or ks; then pare them into and tie them in small rating the larger ones from the smaller. Fasten them well with string. Boil the asparagus in plenty of salted water in an untinned | copper basin, plunging them into the lquid; cover the vessel and let them cook slowly. As soon as they are done drain them on a sleve, and afterwards untie the bunches on a cloth and dress them symmetrically in a pyramid on a folded naplin} carefully reserve the handsomest ones for the top. Send to the table at the same time a good Hol- lJandaise sauce, or else a vinaigrette sauce, equal length: bunches, sep: An Effective Tea-Cloth. A tea-cloth is very effective of coars cream colored canvas embroidered in a conventional design with gold floss and tinsel, and edged with cream lace. Pe t Frocks for Little Girls. Seldom have we seen anything more comfortable and becoming for little girls | than peasant costumes, but however nice these fancy dresses look for chil- dren at home, they should always be varded for school wear, or at the age hild is supposed to go regularly | LETTERS. [Te column ta open 0 everybody w'o has a complaint to make, @ grievance to ventilale, ine formation to gtve, a subject af general intered to dtecuse or a public service to acknowledge, and who lattera cannot be printed. | Why Not » Female Militia? To the Editor: n we not join as well as men. as any man, and perhaps moat, ‘Therefore, why, militia. Why of New York and in Brooklyn who are of the samo service to thelr country should they be needed, are they not allowed to gratify thelr heart's dearest respected and honored for those very same acta? Gren, and will be, from generation to generation, ‘Then why not us, the daughters of the Revolution, tainly more practical one? Can we not, if needed, pay back tho debt due to our fathers and and Stripes, MARTHA TOMBEAGH, For Free Cul To the Editor Uncle Sam 18 not doing Ms duty with respect to | To tho Editor: Cuba, in her desperato struggle for independence, belligerent rights to the Southern Confederacy 1 Occur, so He Carefully Excluded Reporters, (Tae picture shows the “Peach” in the actvet crying “Harmony! Harmony, Gentiemen!") can put the idea into leas tham 100 words, Long | matter at once in full earnest, and ur sentiments and would be only too glad to be of | pala by tenants “if thi ‘And haa 1t mot been handed down to their chil-lt» their property by. the preacace and growin when this country was In the throes of a terrible | out of everybody's way. to school. They made of flannel, or fine cloth, the loose pie py ing fulled on a heart-shaped cretonne or flowered yoke, with red ground, The skirt reaches to the ankles and has @ broad band of cretonne stitched on round the bottom. The full sleeves are made with several rows of smocking or gathering, and set into a flowered wrist~ band, to tch the plain collar, The frock 1s hooked behind. In case a red cloth trimming {8 chosen, it should be edged with the flowered material and the yoke collar and wristbands of the ground of the same, A dark green or blue flannel frock trimmed with red is a ver, retty vai a y¥ery Pretty variation of the same Think This Over. Any one can be kind to outsiders; only, good people are kind to home folks. Pineapples Cure Dyspepsia. Pineapples are considered now to be very wholesome food, and particularly good for those suffering with dyspepsia, But they should be ripe, luscious, tender and succulent, and not the tough, stringy, hard pines which we so often get from the fruit dealers. If the fruit is found to be not in perfect condition, cutting it twelve hours beforehand and pouring @ wine glass of rum over it will add to its wholesomeness, Sugar freely, an hour before serving, with good pow- dered sugar, Emphasis ts laid upon the good quality of the sugar, as in pow- dered sugar it is possible to buy abom inably adulterated sorts. Sk Lotion, An excellent skin lotion is made by grating a fresh cocoanut; then put in @ cloth and squeeze out the milk. Wash the face in this milk, and rub the skin briskly for a few moments, and wipe off with soft flannel cloth. Hairpin Work the Latest. Still another use has been evolved for the ubiquitous hairpin. Some of the most exquisite doilies and centre pieces shown at the fancy goods shops and woman's exchanges are made by what is called hairpin work. They look like the most delicate filmy lace wrought with charming designs, and it seems quite incredible that the whole effect is wrought by means of the humble hair. pin, ‘What Phys! Tt ta said that 61 cate unreliability and weakness, and square shoulders strength of character, The elbows thrust out from the body in walking while the wrists are held {n Indicate self-love, egotism and auda- city, while the elbows held closely in towards the body signify humility, timid- ity and self-repression. In hand-shaking the person who gingerly extends the hand without the arm loves himself bet~ ter than any one else, and one who heartily extends his hand and entire arm may safely be regarded as philathropio and kind-hearted, clvil war, which threatened her National exist- ence, Justice now demands that Spain be paid off in her own coin. It ta the duty of the present Administration to give belligerent rights to the Cuban insurgents, and show the despots of Europe that the Monroe doctrine 1s still alive and well. I trust the right-minded press will take up this ener getlcally the Government to do now what it should have done long ago. This ea Government of the people, and the whole nation demands that Cubs shall be free, with tho least possible delay. A patriotic girl, who has the interest of America| Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God. Dowa at heart, appeain to all girls to try and join the) with bloody, murderous Spain, now and forever. _ ru Single Tax, with Lower Rents, when thore are plenty of energetic ones in the city | To the Editor: “'G, G." ralculates the enormous amounts to be Single-taxer pute Gove tenant.” But thi Is upside down, The single-taxer ment expenses on the supposition wish? Look back to the women of the Revolution | seeks to have tenants relieved n of all taxes and see what they did to help thelr country and} now pay, directly or indireetly, and the ee firesides, And have not those good women been | ponses of tne community met by taxation la upon land-owners in proportion to the value giv: of the community, ‘They could not shift such taxation (o thelr tenants in increased rents, for who take, if not a womanly point of view, a cer-| not only would the available supply of land be increased through all being fut’ to its best use (the single-tax making ownership of dle or poorly who bled In battle? Yours, forever | used land unprofitable), but all speculative de mand for land would disappear: and with greater supply and less demand, ground rents would ine evitably fall, B, Diy dt, Joraey City, Boys’ Baseball Play Stopp: There {8 a large vacant space of ground facing We cannot forget that proud, cruel Spain granted | Canal Street Park, where the young men, after thelr day's work, asscmble to play ball, it being Now, for the past week — | oF #0 the officers on the post facing the docks have Amused themselves chasing the boys away. Now, to my knowledge, we have played there for the past five or six years, and have never been dis turbed till now. 1s this reform government? The Champion Squeaking Shoes, To the Editor: T have @ pair of shoes, half worn out. They squeak. They squeaked when new. They squeak just the same now. I have had squeaking shoes before, but these take the cake, I will bet om their squeaking powers against any pair of shoes in the country, though I am not a betting man, If any one can suggest @ remedy, they will for ever havo the gratitude of BQUEAK. Another Working Boy for the Drill, To the Editor: I bellove the idea of HM. H., of 125 Columbia street, 18 @ good one, in favor of @ drill for Working boys, and my opinion 1s that most of the boys would enjoy it. 1 am als> an office boy and think it would be a ver: t pleasure if we could 4rill. GO, ky Luquer street, AH To the Editor: 1 wou'd say to ‘“Puzsled’? that such as she Droak men's hearts and spoil thelr lives, There should be some way of punishing flirts, and I hope the poor fellow whom she jollied will give her what she deserves, 8! ry heart Jone and cruel girl, and certainly inf dlagrace to the female tender heart tless Flirt. to love her, sympathize with the and 1 nev abe reform, te the only wiah 2 to make for hen INDIGNANT, A Demand for Later Martyrs. ‘To che Raltor: Apropos of one rinus, @ youth of sevens teen, who was tortured to death in Rome sevene teen centuries ago by pagans, and whose re- maine have been brought (o America to work the matter with Import