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x } ee te be £ a neemenee errata LR FAL NOTE, Peeled by the Prew Publishing Company, @ PARK ROW, New Tork. SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1895. LD Miatared ot the Pout-Omce at New York os Foun UPTOWN OFFICR—Junction of Broat- Way and Sixth ave, at 224 ot WORLD HARLDM OFFICH- 124th ot and Madi. on ave. BROOKLYN—200 Washington ot PRILADELPHIA, PA.—Prese Building, 102 Cheot- fat oF WARHINGTON—Te0 14cm 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 Js considera- bly larger than that of all the other Evening papers In New York COMBINED, to wit: The Evening Post, the Evening $un, the Evening News. the Evening Telegram, the Mail ‘and Express and the Com- mercial Advertiser. GHILDREN KEPT IGNORANT BY A POLITICIAN. At a cost of a little over thirty cents @eoh a year this city oan send alxteen hundred children to schoo! almost imme- Giately in the Tenth Ward, where there are now two thousand elght hundred lit- tle ones growing up In ignorance because the city has no school-rooms for them. . The other day the Aldermen of this + eity refused to rescue these sixteen hun- @red children. Why? Because one Mar- tin Engel, a Republican. politician who has contracts with the city for the pur- Chase of poultry, used his “pull” or “in- Auence” with the Aldermen against the ‘ehildren. This poultry politician now pays the city five hundred and twenty @ollars a year for the use of part of the 014 Essex Market Building, Some rooms fm this building are already used for ool purposes, If It were ull used, alx- mm hundred more children could be Yearning their lessons, kept off the Streets and brought up to lives of useful- peas. Mr. Engel has got cheap rent. He benows very well that he is not paying half what he should pay, that the city i» being kept out of what these rooms are ‘worth, that he cannot hire a store any- ‘where for #0 little money as ten dollare ® week and he meana to hold on, and Phe Aldermen seem to prefer that he, Engel, the politician—one man with a @ontrect—should go on bilking the city @ut of its just due rather than that aix- teen hundred children of the poor should Be sent to school. ‘This ts almost a crime! Nothing should rouse the people of this whole city so quickly and #0 thoroughly as the knowledge that nearly two thou- wand of their little ones are kept out of school so that a politician may be kept in a fat “snap.” The whole east side should rise against this, It ts hard event but to let them suffer for the Deneft of a politician's pocket cannot be endured, Let the Aldermen end this scandal at once. A JUROR REJECTED. Joseph Haydock, one of the provis fonal jurors in the McLaugniin trial, was Peremptorily challenged by the prose- eution yesterday, and left the jury box. The rejected juryman was rhown by “The World’ to have been some years &g0 punished for contempt of Court by Judge Barrett, an incident abvut which he said nothing in the searching exam- fmation to which he was subjected be- fore he was placed in the box. Mr. Haydock states that he omitted to @ay anything about the occurrence be- cause It happened so long ago—!n 1881— that it had escaped his memory, The commitment was In consequence of hav- ing disregarded an order of the Court, Judge Barrett, in regard to the adver- tixement of certain patent medicine, This may have been true. But after the challonge, the juryman made the gertion that his challenge by the prose- cution was not induced by the affair 4m Judge Barrett's court, but by “a mat ter between Col. Fellows and himselt, of which he declined to speak at pre ent, but which he would explain at a future time ‘This Is of itself quite suMcient to show that Mr. Haydock should not have been fm othe jury box. If any trouble ex- fated between him and the District-At- torney he ought to have made It known How could he have truthfully sworn that he had no acquaintance with the counsel on either side in the McLaugh- lin case? Ht ia, perhaps, fortunate that Mr. Haydock ts out of the box, 4 SIGH OF PROSPERITY. One of the most gratifying evidences of returning prosperity is the increase in the building business in this city this year. ‘The plans and specifications filed in the Butiding Department for the first three Months in 1895 involve an expenditure of early twenty-eight million dollars, or ‘Detween thre than fer the first quarters of 1593 and 1994 together. ‘This 1s good for labor, good for capital, good for the people, good for the city. It tells unmisiakabiy of returning pros- perity. AGAIN THE MARQUIS. ‘The “Markias o' Queensberry” is again Before the public. Lor Sholto Douglas, the Murquis's youngest son, was yeste day married at San Jose to Loretta Addis, the pretty young waitress and actress, and the happy couple now in San Francisco, Bholte, having given the pretty @ place in Burke's book of and their families, intends to re- ly in this country until he his and ascertains how @f the. wedding, If athe ss em and four millions more} he receives the regulation “Bless you, my chyildren!” the happy pair will re- turn to England, There is no good ground why the knock-out Marquis should get mad ard blacken Lord Sholto’# eye, Indeed, he ought to be thankful to any reapecta- Bie, virtuous young woman who would consent to marry into his family. But it haa been sald that the Marquis has already announced that ne would not object to any reputable marriage his non might contract, nu that Lotta jis Hkely to be received} her nus dand's family, If indeed that ts an honor, and every one will wish her @ happy married life, SCIENCE SAYS THEY'RE NOT DEAD BUT Another actentist has crowded to the front, and makes the statement that eleo tricity does not kill, He says that erim- Inale executed In the electric-chair are not dead when the physician pronounces them to be #0, His contention is that the condemned man ta simply saturate with electricity for the time-—tis, In fact, too full for utterance—and that ‘f he were placed on moist earth the fluid would be gradually drawn from him, and he would open his eyes and ask where he was at. ‘This sclentist holds ont In Boston, and thinks his theory Oo. K. We fear, though, that his method of reasoning will not All Dr, Buchanan and other con- domned men waiting for the fatal chair with much consolation or glee. Keimm- ler, the first man to suffer the death penalty in the new way, was executed five years ago, The doctors pronounced ‘him dead, and he is dead yet, so fur ae he knows himself. If the Boston scteh- tlat can find the late Mr. Kemmler or any of the other eleotricaily killed crimt- nals and persuade him he ts not dead, he will no doubt feel very xrateful to- warda actence and the scientist. While George was doing it Washington Aldrilge with his little hatchet, he wasn't thinking of the Clvil-Bervice laws. His attention was devoted sulely and simply to the Republicanizing of the canal system. Now the Civil-Ser- vice Commission is after him for some explanations. It not be surprising if tt shall appear that Mr. Aldridge has seriously turned the edge of his official axe. The Philosopher of 2 on the history of the United States tn 1—"They were a wonderfully active people and always selected their Prest- dent from the men who could stand | public and private dinners for one year and not be sent to a sanitarium, Thus whoever was hungry needed only to proclaim himself a candidate, whereon | he would be given for one year al! he| could eat,” 09 making a note wasn't as much harmony at the | McKinley dinner as there was at Depew-Harrison dinner—not by three or four big harmonizers at least Harrison, Morton and Cartwhgel Dollar Carter didn’t go t the McKinley feed. It was a New York man who found that $00 in Hrooklyn yesterday and ave it to the police to find its owner ‘There's plenty of honesty in New York in spite of the unfavorable impression left by the Lexow investigation. “More Colima survivors.” That's news we all Ike to hear. Isut when the re- turns are all in, the total number of the saved will fall too frightfully whort of what wa all would have It Firebug Schoenhola served a year for arson, beginning in 1493. When he came out he resumed business in the same old ne. Moral; Give a frebug the longest term possible every tn It was thought that the Introduction of the trolley into Philadelphia would ive the town life, but it is taking some of tts life away, It has killed 103 Phila- delphians up to date, It will be a much bettor, hanpler, healthier and safer New York when ail the atreeta are asphatied carried on all carriay bicycles, after dark, and tights are as well as all ‘The investicators of the ganization bill whatever they are already snifing the the aniseseed bars Pollee Reor- charges or rumors, have arreved and alr for whiffs from or ur It is such days as these that make the Sick Bables’ Fund and the ald it affords to suffering little ones blessings beyond measure. George Gould ts to lease W. tor's house at Newport. George ts lke Caesar. If he can't find a way, he'll break a way into soctety, W. As Hill fs for sound money, thinks it can be bimetalite, diversity of opinione there sound-money question, too, but he Funny the is on this Foraker fooled ‘em, this time. He Aidn't gound any alarm, But all at once It was discovered that there was quite a flre in Obto. that Marti, the We hope for his is some truth in Again it is reported Cuban leader, {s alive. own sake that there these reports. Gov. Morton Is not ving into a decline Just yet. Nor ts tt probable that he will decline in ‘9. even If he gets the chance. With "Dad" Clarke and "Papa" Anson on opposing sites, it might be called the “baseball of our dadties,” The month of May should be arrested, A city ordinance forbids “scorching all parts of the city Tammany's reorgantzation seh: de fatally defective if it is lines of Crokerisin me will jrawn on t Let no opportunity be lost that ts sented through the c bug Schoenhols. ‘This is the sort of a Sat half-holiday is appre worth, You give your dollars or your mites te the Bick Babies’ Fund and tts doctors do the rest, Pity the sorrows of the to talk politics at man wt this temper. ture, McKinley {s reminded that the Napo- leonte fad is on the wane | ‘Tennessee first became a State ninety-| nine years ago to-day. No mercy for convicted firebugs, penalty every t The reports for Aj off in the number of Full BI show @ falling the in the Btate, 1 THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVEN NEW GIDE-DOOR IN BROOKLYN. THE GLUANER'S BUDGET. © ip Here, a Hint Thece aad Tr ‘Tales of City Lif © for women will now be pretty Minn Tt sprang reuse of Gov Morton when he fainted reviewing stand In front of the Fifyh Avenue Hotel om Decoration Day, with har porket flask. A dealer in such articles showed we & Deautiful oollection of ladies’ flasks aa dainty Ae alt bottles. There are no end of yarierios, the most attractive betng bottles holding two three-finger drinks, the giage being protected by ornamental ilver filigree work. Aluminum ip taking the place of ite lightuews, A great many soclety women Jearry flaske with them wher they ao ace cording to the dealers, but light wines and cock: talle fll more of them than brandy. ‘The bathing season at the big fountain in the City Hall Park has opened, much to the dise gust of the gray-coated policemen who are sup> posed to keep the treet Arabs out of the water, but who don't begin to do it, Passers that way can start a water carnival at any Ume of day by dropping pennies into the besin of the fountain and inviting the newsboys and boot blacks to dive for them. ‘The boys are mot handl- capped by any oonsiderations as to proper bath Some of the bolder ones affect the even {n broad daylight, and even Gressed and esape {n some m Brandy fia mand aince in de to t on the GEN. HORACE PORTER This {a a picture of the hospitable New Yorker who gave @ dinner last of sliver of late on account | j unin AMONG US WOMEN, Mra Theodore futro, who has charge of the musical exhibit im the New York room tn the Woman's Building at the Atlanta Rapoaition, {8 making & list of the woman composers im this city, and finds it to be an exten order to post myself thoroughly on th ald she to me yesterday, “I catiod at the m: Mtores and asked for music composed by women and Jaughed at for the absurdity of my ‘We never heard of such a thing,” sald 1 afterwards ascertained that whi women have composed It has usually been undi men's names [think Ue bigh time women recetved notice im this feld* oe Mra Lena Sittig, one of Brooklyn's most pre | gressive club women, is the tnventor of & clever design for @ dress reform skirt with bloomers attached to the same belt. She recon mends the combination garment for rainy weather and for travelling When arked how ahe came to Invent ft she said: ¢1t all came through my taking #0 long to @ one morning when ‘avelling n the sleeper that I could only ecram: ble off half clad in onder not to be earrted by my station. I concluded to invent a garment that | was to be mpeedily adjusted" Watch out for the condition of your xrantteware tea kettle, good housewives, If the porcelain cracks and ‘ poses the cement the latter te polson and is the of the porcelain lous way before the sparrow ‘cop’ can hands upon them, lay evening to Gov. McKinley, of Ohio, a statesman to whom one Napoleon, of France, bore a striking resemblance, o- eltement among the eranks in @ ewapaper ofce on Decoration Day as the frat ame between the Yorks and Chicanos drow out to ita eleven-inning length The boys were crowded about the operator's the Glanta went to bat tn the lant ha last (oping. ‘Let mome other man tal port,” eri the sporting editor. ‘That fe a htedoo."* No, let him chan called another member of the stall proffering, at the aame time, his own bit of lead, ‘The ohang was effected, and in less than @ minute came the report of Farrell's home ru | which won the game, The city editor stralgnt- j way orlefed the lucky cll preserved for fw | ture ve, when the Glante got in a ght plac ee Little Senator Lesow, of Nyack-on-the Hudson, s aawing wood (hone days, He comes to town every day, and anve he te up to the neck In hie law buslnens, witch petered out while he was Urying to reform the police foro Jatt myle There te consiierable speculation ax to future, Personally he doesn’t want any the legislative or business, but he will probably run for Senate again next Fall aud made a hot canvaas—to vindicate himseit TH® GLEANER, HOURS, ‘There was | toca If the recom! for May account the political mortality ef the Legisiature’s adjournment period, tne figures may go up again. ean take into ‘The gold reserve Is above the $99,000,000 mark, but a cold witve Is Hable to come from the free-sllver region any minute and shrink tt, This State continues to be a great health resort, ‘There was a big falling off In the death-rate during April, Think of It! A cyclone a mile wide at Omaha and here we were gasping for a wee breeae, It only tends to make a man's blood boil to tell him to keep cool these days. Gen, Harrison's frigid alr only makes those around him all the hotter, ‘i — HOKBEN'S LA’ ‘The Power of Removal month longer to lve. has but a (Gov. Morton has signed th Coraners to keep their oMe Albany despatch.) OW, Hoever! Hi, Hoeber, get right out of bed, The clock In the ateeple airtkes one, A report has come In that a man has dropped doad, And Uhey want you to go on the run. do not turn over, you can’t go to sleep, You kuow you're on duty to-night ‘To-morrow your room all the day you can + | Aud remain, tank the oda! out of aigh ome #0 roadtly Post bil) compelling the June had a warm greeting ready for us, Onan RIN SIEHS = —— PORTAL The ai att Survives the Cyclone, 1 Plate falled, Something more powerful than win is needed to topple Platt Elmira Gazette, eye has N Into the dust oman reaches the change ber min can sud chorus. Hi, Moeber! you'll have to get Neneh she» nt Got up! Ret up! si t uy as Sinan changed hie ain Diapateh, Say, Hocber, atop snoring and open your eyes, The clock int You must chap dies, For there's na one to take It but you, Lome, doff your pajamas Your high hat is there Your houre for working no more you cam choos, Out of doors you must now chase your Ohte and an “it ‘The Republicans of Ohio even things They nominate Hushuell for G MeKinley for Prewtdeat leadership Sherman in Thin ty w ehensive programme tf tt together, all parte: go. Phi Meyele a Family V The bloyele im getting to be a family vehicle In Ghat respect It In of greater me than the be You never nowadays ave a man tn the nadie with bis wife on the piliion behind, But you sometimes wee them on a tantem bieyole, oF more frequently alte by each mounted on a wheel.—Buffaly Courter. tako a man's and follow the publte policy holds an 1pdin Press, le. cHORUS. Get up! got up! Howber, tt ni, t upl 1 know you are aloopy, but that's no excuse, The clock In the steeple sirikes three! In the nighttime the people have made you some Which le more than you It you muat go to sleep, you ¢ As to-night you rh over town No wonder you're blinking, for ao are 1! ar I'll mot let you He down * before, are? ep ta the care, No Heform with Croker, A plan of having 100 prominent Democrate in vited to reorganize Tammany Hall Ie talked about te New York. Hut no reorganisation that will Amount fo anything i possible so long as Rtchant Croker retaiue actual control of the machine— Hartford Times, cuorvs. Hi, Moever, no fooling! get upt Noa J. Get up! get up THEY MAKE! THE SCHOOLS, Much Pardoning, ‘The pardoning business 18 overdone Not in Tilt noin alone, but alag in other States, men of erin ots commit all ertmes short of colds F with almomt absolute foreknow! clge that they will be pardoned out before the n of the full term for which they may be Chicago Mall ~~ A SONG, inal inst btooded mt expirat wentenced Ob. what beneath thing eye reposes, art the ight Empyre y gay above ve loose Batrayaya: Love, awee Heay fer The way ye it a amile, t thee of Dis the gods degutle, When wrapt a -o pierced with deep decay, te are nigh untasted ef; $ hours of love? trom ronee— at it ts bane When the Siete would not pass @ teach ts own pain Duboia No 4 under his vis re woe disc 1 Behiool Aa te the Pre again, and us JOUN DWYER, —— A Dramatic Triumph at L ' ne New York W How was the play last Wonderful! Hie Was There. (From the In s Journal.) The black-browed villain dragged t body of his victim to the brink of tha abyss "Now," sald he, “I will forever con: ceal all evidence of my awful deed, Non: but heaven sees me, ” cise me,” remarked the one-man, audience, “but you are mistaken, na, and the con-| know the orchestra has gone Weer, but I'm here, yet, you bow ekty.) Lobbylounger neh Pirstnighter te and dramatic Most artis- Production seen. tn years. Held the audience sp und from first to lust, Why, sir, in some of the Unrilling situations there Were times When not a sound could be heard but the hard breathing of Othello, the sup- pressed sobs of Desde Versation in the v cause of serious {lines sometime PRUDENCE SHAW. =e TO MAKE “MOVING ON” ZASIER. ING; JUNE 1, 1895. A LITTLE MACARONI HEROINE. She Figures im a Book Called “A Madonge of the Alps.” When he ts filled with keen apprehen- sion and seizes her burning hand, she al- lows him to take {t. Jfurthermore she strokes with maternal tenderness the fingers that are imprisoning hers, Then he gets vexed. Perhaps you imagine that she says, Don't, George," or shall tell mommer, Charley," but she doesn’t. She's a little macaroni hero- ine, living at Riva, and she bleats forth, “Zitto, padroncino, zitt It means, “Hush, young master, hush!" But of course It sounds much better in Ttallan. A heroine who says “Hush” when a gentleman tells her that he loves her is very cheap and uninteresting, but when she purre ‘Zitto” it's quite another thing. She's married, and—strange and moral though it may sound—she loves her husband, Felice Calluno, an Alpine sulde, She dotes on him, because he's & Hercules and doesn't dote on her. That's always the way, you will be pleased to note. Her name ts Guiditta, thank goodness, that I don't have to tell you how to pronounce the name, She Is perfectly good, never drinks any- thing but chiant), and lives in @ region where “solitary cypresses lifted their dark, pointed heads to the sky, and tall, opaque laurel hedges, breathing forth balsamte fragrance, gave themselves up to the caresses of flery-blooming creep- ers.” It ty only tn novels that Italians possess balsamic fragrance, caught from the neighborhood that they Inhabit. In real life, and as far as America 1s con- cerned, the only fragrance they utter is that of garlic, Btill, it ts just as well to catch then on the romantic alde oo- castonally, before they have thought of the luminous peanut stand and the boot- blacking niche. Gulditta Calluno has a history, but no conventional past. Her neighbors call her a witch because she lives 89 much to herself. So you see that even in the mountain recesses of Italy you are looked upon with suspicion if you don't Associate with the commoners around you. When ehe emigrates to Mulberry} street Gulditta will learn how dangerous {t 19 to be exclusive, She had a baby once, but it died, and she was accused of killing {t. So no wonder that she Is glum and gepressed. Tne bambino was the delight of Felice's eyes. He wanted to make a priest of It, but Gulditta hated priesis, and wouldn't hear of such a thing, So when te bambino died in the balsamic fragrance of the paternal cas- accla, even Fellce suspected poor Guldit- ta, Ali that happened before the story opens. When the story does open there 1s little more to happen. ‘The young artist who tells the tale, and discovers these facts, falls in love with Guiditta, It 1s he who selzes her burning hand, and has his fingers stroked with maternal tenderness. That 1s all he gets, and all he deserves, for he fa a fool, To exeuse himself for falling in love with her he tells her: "I would only love ari comfort you as I would my own mother—the dearest object on earth to me.” A man who talks like that, even if he 1s only twenty-three, is an idiot. Fancy doting on another fel- low's wife, and then turning round weakly and threatening to love her as a mother. It i> diatreasing, in my opin- ton, The work has been translated from the German of B, Schultse-Smidt, by Nathan Haskell Dole, of Boston, He! calls the tale “A Madonna of the Alp: and Little, Brown & Company publish it In @ pale green binding that ts very pretty. The debilitated story ta which IT have referred is merely a peg on which to hang elaborate descriptions Park Row Fakire Might Find the “Bike a Help in Their Busines: ere LITTLE JOKES BY THE W. The Day Can He Neither Toe Hot Nor Too Cold to Laugh at ‘Em. The question of our datly bread pearly this, we take It; ‘The men go out and get the dough And then Uie women bake it Philadelphia Inquirer. A Good Actor. Fudiy—tow did you itke Hammerton tm Jultus Caosar last night? Duddy--Well, [can't way that he was alto- Bother satlafactory Im the earlier scenes, but it Was a real pleasure to eee him die—Boston ‘Transcript. An Old Song. When other lips and other hearts Their tales of love aball teil, It’ dollars to a doughnut Bhe'll ring the chestnut belt, Had to Economia: Wabash—1 was carry to hear of your divorce, old man, Couldn't you ltve happily together? Van Buren—Oh, yea; happily enough, but mat- rimony was too expensive, You eee, I am try- ing to save enough money to buy @ bicycle —In- @iavapolts Journal. Wom Rights Complicati a4 complication, it te feared, These Woman's Rights enviroa, Men won't find work unless they're reered To cook and wash and trom. Washington tar. Lucky Walker, Weary Wixeine—Uneasy Walker te de lucktest feller on de road. Tired Traddiee—Mow'a dat? Weary W © somnambultst ant ail his walkin’ sleep. Dat gives him day to loat in —Harper's Basar, —_—— THE OTHER ONB, Bweet itl ma'd, with winsome eyes. That laugh all Way throvgh the tangled halr, Gazing baby looks eo wise Over the arm of the caken chalr, rer than thou ts none to me, Dearer than thou there can be none, Bince in your laughing face T see Byes that tell of another one, De relight softly glows, J and mate, snug and warm, is the wind 1 ” Driving the sleet ‘of thy or storm? Round your head the rudty light Glint op Wie Rold {rom Your treames pun, Hut deep is the drifting anow to-night Over the head of the other one. Mold me close am you sagely stand, Watching the dying embers ehing ‘Then shall t fee! another hand ‘That nestiod once in this hand of mine. Poor litle hand, vo cold and atti, Shut from the Hight of stare and eun, Clasplug the withered roses at That hide the face of the sleeping one, Laugh, 1 mald, while laugh you may, Sorrow comes to us all, 1 know; Better, perhaps, for her to stay Under the drifting robe of snow. while you may your baby soage, ‘Bing ttl) your baby days are done; But, oh! the ache of the heart thet lenge ight ond day for the otder one. Tas Beekman eu of Italian scenery, Mr. Dole has done full justica to these descriptions, This translation is enriched In perfect Eng- ligh, though even this scarcely makes “A Madonna of the Alps" endurable, More human nature and less balsamic fragrance g what readers covet now- adays. Even a gloomy heroine who has hair “like the translucent dusky veil of tough threads, blown about and dishev elled,” becomes tiresome, as she strokes with maternal tenderness the fingers that imprison hers, I may add that she secures her husband's love when Ff Schultze-Smidt has no more scenery to describe, and that ehe has another bambino to bring Joy to her declining years, For even ladies with translu- cent dusky vells of tough threads have declining years, though, as a rule, they do their best to conceal them. ALAN DALE. WORLDLINGS, ‘The oldest Universalist minister im the States ts said to be Key. Lucius RP, Cambridge, Masa He was ordained in 1826 Two iustrious English women who celebrate thia year the seventy-Arth annivers births are Florence Nixbtin; ‘The firet woman to be Andrew's University, Scotland, is sald to be Mise Blackadder, the daughter of @ Dundee arch!- tect. She ts nineteen years olf dent cr M, pear Marion, Mass, with hie famtly this Summer, The rector of the College de Prance receives only $1,200 @ year in the way of salary and perquisitas, This 1s the position Renaa held for TO CATOH THE BARLY TRAIN, (From St. Pay!'s), ea Exasperation! Acceleration! Black and White pherd's Piata. | garnishing the dis This charming gown is of black and| two white shepherd’ & .001 Hee ; . For dressing use | lespoonfuls of mi istard, plaid, designed with| tablespoonful each of eames and ait, fronted short ovat, revers, and| With a little pepper. Add diluted vinegar and two well ‘Seale eB" Cook, stirring constantly until it thickens, then add two large table: spoonfuls of melted butter. When per fectly cool, m'x part of the dressing with Jobster and lettuce, pour the rest over, Garnish with two hard bolled e one lemon cut in slices, a m Seenting the Finger-Rowls. NY one must, some time, how sweet the water is in vane ee ‘as held bouquet of violets, Thii usgests @ way of delicately scenting the water for finger-bowls. It never should have more than a suspicion of perfume, but if water used for filling the bowls in which violets have stood for a time @ very delightful suggestio: ass apc: Tre mn of their aweete Fried Bananas, Cut sound bananas in three lengthwise Slices and saute in a little hot butter, If the latter is as hot a: it should be, they will take on a delicate browa quickly. Serve on email plates, Canvas for Fancy Work, A new canvas for fancy work is in demand for summer pitied rn ‘The canvas is in color, a combination of dull copper, gilt and old rose. Imitati Valenciennes lace ts sewed flatly on it, and the pattern of the lace embroidered through the canvas with fancy atitoh in colored silks. If desired tiny spangles may also be used on the lace. Table covers, sofa pillows and all sorte of \ decorative houschold articles are made of the finished piece of embroidery. A Novel Flour Che: It has just been admired in the pantry of an enterprising little housewife, and it is certainly worth descripton, It is easily made and yery conveniemt, It is formed from a cracker box that is large enough to hold half @ barrel of flour. Strips of wood nailed to each of the four corners raise the box a foot or more from the floor. This gives @ chance to sweep under the “chest” without mov- ing it, and serves to keep the flour from becoming damp, and to prevent the mice from troubling tt, It 1s lined with mus- lin neatly fitted In and tacked closely in place. The outside is covered with wall paper. A cover fits closely, but can be removed at pleasure and used for a kneading board. When on the chest it is covered with @ piece of oils’ cloth, Asparagus Tops Fried a la Miranda Bend and break off the tender parte of the asparagus into one inch lengths} blanch them well in salted water, draia and drip in fine cracker dust, then in beaten egg, and finally in bread-crumbs; fry, drain, salt and dress on a folded napkin, laying a bunch of fried reer Parsley on top. Serve apart a sauct made with one hard boiled egg yolk mingled with one raw yolk, mustard, alt and pepper; beat vigorously, atir ring In ® Wttle olive ofl and tarragon vinegar. ‘ ® square collar faced with white and trimmed with narrow black braid in stripes, Asparagus Tops Fried a lu Miranda. Bend and break off the tender parts of the asparagus into one inch lengths; blanch them well in salted water, drain and drip in fine cracker dust, then in beaten egg, and finally in bread- crumbs; fry, drain, salt and dress on a folded napkin, laying a bunch of fried | green parsley on top. Serve apart a sauce made with one hard-botled egg- yok mingled with one raw yolk, mus- tard, @al: and pepper; beat vigorously, stirring in a little olive ofl and tarragon vinegar, To Remove Tan, A wash for removing tan, and which also makes the skin and lips look fresh and prevents wrinkles, 1s composed of three ounces of rose water and one tablespoonful of tincture of benzoin, Apply to the face after exposure and before washing. The Tambourine Workbox. A novel work-box can be made by lining the bottom of a tambourine with quilted satin of any desirable shade, while between the metal clappers are spools, thimbles, wax, &c. If desired, @ second tambourine a size larger may be converted Into a cover by lining it with satin ribbon acrpss {t in such a way as to form compartments for acl sors, papers or needles and other neces- saries of a sewing outfit. Loh Take a good-sized lobster and one head of lettuce, Chop the lobster and some of the lettuce, reserving the best leaves for LETTERS, [TAts colump. ia open to everybody who has @ complaint to make, a grievance to ventilate, in formation to give, a subject of generat interest to discuss or a public service to acknmoledge, and who can put the ulea into less than 100 worda Long (etters cannot be printed. | er Su {a evident that “The Chief Mourner ©." ts a9 enemy to the Cuban cause, and althcugh every one in this country ts free to express his fon upon any topic, I think this person wil that American sympathy always {e with all struggling nationalities who battle against mille tary despotiam and oppression. FRANCISCO PEREZ DP ALBSO, 4 Btate street, adty, Another Small Trolley Game. To the Raitor: ‘The Smith and Jay street trolley read (na wipposed to inaugurate ite five cent fare to-day, fare correct, tiut, T doubt not, numerous cases of | fares all the sume from people who got om th genuine kindneas and conideration occur which | cur betwaen Parkville and Prospect Park. When never reach the eye of the general public. Foran explanation was demanded the eemductor Monday al M. on my way | anid that the single tare obtained only where @ chanced to be an appreciative witness | person bought ® tickets for $1 at the Progpect ot an unoatentatious aot of humanity that made | Park terminus or the Company me feel there ®. much of the milk of human | ple this reduction was exp Knduens teft afer all in this much abused cyni- J able to Invest $1 at a whack im car tekete Ben ein, rently | shlea no such condition was named when the ane entered the car, She was| nouncement was made. This ts the line that says large bundle in her | \t will carry pageengers from the Bridge to Ceney ‘or came to collect her | Island and back for 2S cents, but perhaps it He asked her | sells its Coney Island tickets, toa, in a If abe eould not find tw) more. Sh sorrowfully | twenty vane replied in the negative. Ho then sald: “We do} June 1, not let even little girle ride for three canta, but never mind this time, put them back Im your pocket." Later ou, she timidly approashed him sing if auch a num! reach ‘Oh, yes,” he blocks beyond,’” but looking kindly dowa Into the frightened little face, he quietly slipped five cents into her amall hand, pulled the strap and helped her out, telling ber which car to take back, As she atoot trembling on the curb for @ second thie kind-hearted conductor called to a passer-by to ‘please put that little one on an uptown car, it waa a mmail thing to do perhaps, but It ts just these little acts of unselfish kindness that appeal to the heart and broaden oumdaith in buman na- ' nductor’a number was 140. ure, The oo a A Kind-Hearted Cable Conductor. To the Editor: I read many complainta in regard to the rude- careleasi nenoral indifference of the fe-car conductor towards the patrons of the examp downte \ al world noven years of aK poorly elad and ci arma When the condu fare she handed him three cen’ His Bete Noir a Cornet Playen To the Halt I want to air my pet grievance, whtoh te ta the form of & corne: player who lives im this Reuss, He goes through the most mouraful exerciees every evening and gives every one im t, Bouse the blues, I wonder why people who think # meces- sary to practise upon band instruments tm Sate do not use @ mute attachment, which eam be bad At a very slight expense, and not couse ae much annoyance to naghbora 1 te bed epouge ie be obliged to listen to @ plano on each Soa, each banging out a different cune, but whee the cor net ie added, It ia unbearable. WEST NINETY-NDOTH STRaNE, A Bowery Poet's View of It. Firtation, To the Walton: Thank God that et last we are now off the rack, Por Ryrnes, the deceiver, has at last got the sack “Retired with a penston,"’ is given out as a bluft, Fired out with « pension (s pearer the atu! For ‘The Worl’ aud brave Parkhurst are victors once more, G'er the last, and the worst, of the contemptible tour For Mac's getting tortured, and Williams retreats, MoAvoy"s given up bis connection with cheat And the robbers and thieves are all getting fired out, Give ua an hon payers shout ALEXANDER M. M'LEOD, 317 Bowery, New York. the Land at To the Editor: What is firtation? A great many knew bow, when and where it 1 but what tt 1s, mo doubt, troubles them. It le pot the writer's intent te coin @ stendard Websterian definition, but he cannot refrain from thinking that it te the idiotic exchange of nonsense between two braine less individualities, It 19, doubtlessly, that perlodic condition of lunacy where ¢ ferere Imagine themselves to be the cynceure ef each 4 other's eyes, hearts, and, most likely, purses, But bas this wonderful attribute: No meed of Prof, Morse's electric telegraph apparatus No, indeed; there {# a sort of entirely unelectrio connect! running through invisible though ine lensety magnetic wires, and the participants evidences the reception of the message by @ most Inbeciiic contortion of thelr respective counter Rances or by something pposedly “‘catehing.’* The subscriber, being greatly depressed by the multiplicity of this anomalous creation, suge gern thin cure; Corral them all in some gute clently large lunatic asylum, whet they will either seo the error of their way oF be trams ferred to some place for incurables EBENEZBR GRIMALKIN. t police force," all the tax- oni One Why Not To the Ed or: ‘As IT understand ‘“L. @, Sand’ single-tax doctrine, It 19 to pile taxes #0 heavily on the land that the owner will be mnable to hold tt, Why not out squarely and conflacate the . and simplify the platform? A number of formerly employed at our factory, have a Jemand for food and clothes, Being gut of work they have no supply. Will L. G. Sand please start hia old law of supply and demand working? It doesn't seem to attend to business down our way ag The Cuban Patriot Leaders, To the oom men, One of the Things No Fellow Ever Finds Oat. To the Editor: Please jet me know how this is: No law ts made against the manufacturers of clgarettes while children under sixteen have no right to purchase mor a dealer to scli under penalty of law? JA L, Tarrytown, N.Y Agstailauical He who begins with severity in Judging an- other commonly ends with falsehood, It is n. enough to justify any one in censuring and a nouncing thera, even if the evidence ‘of their faults amounts to probability; the evidence should be conclusive and Irresistible. The communtca- {ion tn ‘The Evening World’ of May 28, aligned by ‘The Chief Mourner ©.."" la & gratuitous slander on Cuben patriot leaders, who are doing their to tree thelr beutiful island from (he domination ef reimerte Gents, 8 Why Don't the Girls Write? To the Editor: Can you tell me why the young girle éené answer the letters that are sent to them Wp diferent young ment T have written seveul letters to different young girls, and I have sot recelved an anawa> from elther ef them, le it beeosuse’ they can'y write? The young gists Rowe Aday ave aot ‘a & with the young Bee. ee