The evening world. Newspaper, June 6, 1895, Page 4

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a om a ce iS pointed judges to try the slippere on the Puetided by tre Pree Publishing Compeny, ‘ @ w @ PARK ROW, New York. os 8 SUBOCRIPTIONS T0 THE EVENING WORLD| cccompiished 1s the approval by 1 (including postage): PER MONTH. PRR YEAR... 68.50 Vol. 85 No. 12,343 pads Entered at the Post-Ofce at New York as second-class matter. Se" BRANCH OFFICES: WORLD UPTOWN OFFICE—Sunetion of Troad- yy and Minin ave, at 24 at. (WORLD HARLEM OFFICE—125th at, fon ave. BROOKLYN-$09 Woshingtos ot PHILADELPHIA, PA.—Press Bullding, 702 Che: nut at. WASHINGTON—103 14th ot SS = and Madi DVERTISEMENTS In the Evening Edition of THE WORLD are taken upon the specific guarantee that the average bona fide ‘paid circulation of The EVEN- ING WORLD Is considera- 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 Mail and Express and the Com- mercial Advertiser. INVESTIGATE THE DISTRICT-ATTOR- triot-Attorney Jimmy Oshorn teclingly remarked. | to Oe. years once to gat a law passed go that | 0 the third act Mr. Whytal Ins made ‘And the reason of all the sadnesn was this, to- Yi . Tih a climax that every actor in the housa NEY'S OFFICE. An article on the American educa- wit, a8 follows, vie: In being sworn 19 an an | Omen coule Mare Oe ee thee tenn vent| Appreciated, It te thoroughly theatrical, Some day the people of New York and] tional system, in ‘The Forum, brings th Ameatant Diptriel-Attorney Cal. ttob in that | {4% Uae Damm’ RO Nomad of tee te wesring |@nd the curtain falls upon a “striking Brooklyn will learn that all thetr efforts| reader face to face with a condition as moment ceased to be Chiat Dewu'y Acvistant. For | tnt husbands’ clothe tableau.” Nell tus been shot; Zeb haw to reform their cities are useless unless|to college endowment which is Pry m 1s the Colonel's bosom has ewellet with pride eee tried to save her; villain has attempted they have theactive help of the Dis-|atrikingly connected with the pending | very morning when bis friends xrceted NIM OS] axiy iy the time of your when the family be-| to look at the wound in her arm; young trict-Attorney's office, Hero in this clty| enlargement of Columbia College into a Chiet, ‘Dut swith the fatal oath which he: took | Alm J” Oe On Te ee of the aoe Altover has interposed, apd wife has the District-Attorney’s office is the home| fuller universitysbip. » needs of col-| yeaterday ax a full Asaitant his tity of Chlet | ramiy in Kighty-elghth atrect recently hit on al stepped forward with herote utterances. of scandals, ag “The World" pointed out|Iexes increase by continuous ailditions Aenarted forever, and hy hmaue gain PIT) iitte acheme, worked up by mater familas, ike | ‘The villain kus made himself more ob- ‘before and after the last election. In| to the flelds of sclentiNe knowledge and Col, Dob Me lmnselt did not fully rrallae el this: ‘There were three cats in the family, and|jectionable than usual, and the poor, Brooklyn Mr. Ridgway, elected by the/endeavor. The idea Is plainly brought | cela Chatty have Coohaned the paltry ‘800 | {2 ech of the two children and thelr father she | persecuted Virginia has said, “Let me wople to prosecute law-breakers, acts, {out that It Is not enough simply to e = alo} iat Mea Lanta tanataal aid, privatey, Inadvertently: “Can't you take * Heroines on the stage al- Mer rattae: talla/ to aati an (hough Hel teblah- A univoraltyy bub money must | WILLIAM MK. oLcortr. Ree ee ee eee rece hiaeaceyas When he ava | bitten this morning and drop It as you go along| Waye say, "Let me pasa,” when were the paid attorney of the trolley] be found to increase ite Income almost | ‘This Is a picture of the New York! fais that he: ted. lnwt. foresee the proud. title | {9 street? Don't way anything to anybody, only | they get’ persecuted. It is the companies, year by year. Alderman whose eye to public safety led | of chiet of Deputies he bitter teara, aad | {7p the cat over a fence in the next block. 18] Woe: extraordinary thing. The stage It does not need the last exposure to- ABs applied to Columbia, this me ss that him to introdu the ordinance requiring’) gaquid not be comforted. ‘There can be only one | 2°" place where you think It will have a good may be of unusual width, and the scene day of the disappearance of papers|it Is not enough that the college Is rich | lights on all passenger vehicles In the] chiet Deputy in the Diniriet-Attorney'n flee; | Rome” Bo, Hike the wives of the man of St. Ivea, | TEN kN Anois ee te from the New York District-Attorney's| now; that {t has some beautiful build-| streets and parkways after dark. SHOR LOOK A iCue ONE ATED OREO! ABADI ++office to foree, people tq belleve that the work begun last November will be| 1! largely of no avail until a clean sweep] Present needs, It is the future Columbla | iceman be a member of the New York | Dama thelr dignity to anever questions, po- hs ie made In the public prosecutor's office.| about which wealthy New York should] force, Messrs. Commissioners, say a | II. ue of them is statoned in the etnies | & Ono of the best things that could hap-| concern Itself, ‘The University must | week from to-day? See Castles ate oniinca Gs Glacsaae? i pen that Augean stable would be to| expand as learning expands, or it must — ~ — nik alegre Kosei aldbwain, theard 6104 b have it thoroughly Lexzowed, cease to be a university in fact. It can The Democrats of Brooklyn cannot do} man the other day, after dismounting, : “Papers atolen!" “Papers disappear:”| not 60 expand unless its resources are than get together and harmonize. | paticeman if he could ride along the board Why does not Mayor Strong investigaie| such that tte conductors can Ko ahead | and speedy success, to the} walk, A aimple “No would ht been gut and find out whether there 1s not some] fearlessly on all new and broadening | efforts in that direction, ficient, but the biuecoat worked himselt up| © ‘means or some authority to examine the) lines, oo into @ frenay, denouncing wi records of the District-Attorney’s office] a. a, . a t Folica Board ts proud to} intimating that those who rede bicycles were “ . f " ‘ day ele o S ice Board was always giving| to arrest, any man who dared “viol Pibertyt ren panes Beating eminently sound and humane, ‘The mls | good copa the glad hahde nn | erdinance’ by ‘ding’ on the walk. More, W8 criminals who have been indicted and never tried would startle this city. Investigate the District-Attorney's office, A REPUBLICAN TAMMABY HALL! ‘Are the enemies of Thoman C. Platt ‘taking a leaf on organization and control Out of the Tammany Hall book? The Question ts an interesting one, in view f the Incorporation at Albany of the new Btate Club. It was understood not #0 long ago that the end and aim of thie club was to be the knocking down and dragging out of Platt, When the names of a number of sturdy adherents of the ‘Tioga boss were found among the In- carporators, however, some of the antt- Platt impressions began to fade away. Mr. Milholland, when questioned upon the subject, said the club, the principal offices of which are to be in New York, was Intended mainly to provide a ren- dezvous in the city for the Republicans of the State. In the articles of incorpora- tion it is stated that the club is formed for the purpose of disseminating Repub- lican principles and doctrines, Do we not find in these declarations of Milhol- land and the articles all the indications of an establishment of a Central Power —of @ bossism maintained by the strict: est sort of organization? That is the essence of Tammany Hallism as it has controlled New York City, FORTY YEARS FOR AR‘ON. Another Harlem fire, this time on the east side in Hast One Hundred and ‘Tenth street, put in peril a hundred lives @t nearly midnight last night. The house- keeper discovered the flames just as she Was about to retire. They originated in @ vacant store on the ground floor, and while many of the inmates had narrow escapes, the fortunate discovery pre- Vented any loss of lite. In view of these repeated tires, evi- dently of incendiary origin, and the startling developments now going on in the courts, the people will be glad to Jearn that Gov. Morton has approved the bill making forty years’ imprisonment the extreme penaity for arson, It is cer tain that in these times any person con. Victed of the horrible crime will receive @ full measure of punishment. . ‘The penalty ought to be lite imprison. ment. A man who, fer gain, would burn people in thelr beds, is unfit to be ever again let loose on the community. HER FEET ARE HBR FORTUNE. Inga provided-for, on a superb site; that | tmtors, Mise Carrie Ellis, of Dedham, won the prise. There were five hundred contestants, A number of Boston man- agers are necking to engage her. My feet are my fortune, sir, she says PRACTICAL WORK OF CONSOLIDATION. BtiN, in spite of the politicians, the practical work of creating Greater New York goes bravely on, The last triumph Mayor of the bili authorising the con- struction of @ tunnel to Brooklyn under the Bast River, somewhere above Six teenth street ‘The tunnel {s to coat six million dollars, and it is expected to carry paasengers to Brooklyn im four minutes, Taere is no doubt about the Governor's approval of the bill, hug the work of uniting the two great cltles which will form the bulk of Greater New York Is constantly pro gressing by means of enterprises which of themaelves prove the certainty of yentual political consolidation, The two citles will be actually one through bridges and tunnels before the law which will make them leg: be perfected and in force, A GREAT INTERNATIONAL OONTEST The English universities, Oxford and Ny a unit will Cambridge, have declined the challenge of the University of Pennsylvania to meet the winners of the Mott Haven games for a contest In England, but ex- press their desire to send a team over here next September compete with a selected team representing Harvard and Yale. They would have n glad to have fixed the time for Ju'y, but ar prevented by circumstances from doing £0. ‘This ts as it should be. We have sent many teams over to England, and it is proper that the English universities should respond by paying us a visit. OF course, their challenge will be eagerly accepted. Of course, the English ath- letes will be warmly welcomed and hos- pitably entertained. Of cour y will have a royal good time, and, the best men will win. Bo all hail to the contest and all hail to the gallant collegiates from the world- renowned Hnglish universities UNIVERSITY GROWTH AND RESOURCES js it has chairs generously endowed up to alomries, who asked that the island be closed on Sunday, may find it difficult to underatand why the mere comfort of a few thousand immigrants should be respected beyond blue laws, Other peo- total devoted to one beautiful charity Mites are as welcome as dollars, Se them all 1 Three times his executioners fred into his body, Even a Brooklyn trolley car would have cut him off ina much more mereiful manner, Phe carriage-light 4) Now let the police enforce the the road on the Houlevard, b wheelmen nor pedestrians ation ts of w h e safe whily drivers go us they pleaw, ‘The uptown, and downtown Ines should be strictly drawa, Mayor Wanser, of Jersey City, should come over wome fine afternoon and take tea with Mayor Strong, They may not like the sume brand of tea, but they both use the mme big, bis D, and this! fat should put them on a f ly foot- ing. Hetty Green has another suit on hand. Mary Irene Hoyt 1s after her for $100,000 damages for slander. Before Hetty gets through with the courts she will know more law than she does now, and probe} ably bave @ great deal less moncy. Bieyelist Kahn would not have been injured yesterday if downtown drivers ‘on the Boulevant had been compelled to | keep their own side of the road, and| vice versa. Where were the police? New Hampshire tries to full into ine with a $500 State Treasury steal 8 fails miserably, as the robbery was the {work of plain outsiders, neither legis: | | lators nor State officials John Henry and Patrick Shann be pardoned. Mut what can It is many years since the tair and fortunate Cinderella flourished. Con- fusion to those dyspeptic and heartless enemies of the dear children who sneer- fngly deny that she ever had any ex- fstence. Jt ts curious that her story should now be revived or reacted, as it were, through the remarkable Trilby craze that once prevailed in New York and still prevails tn Boston. A pair of slippers, not of glass, but made valumble with real diamonds, were Offered in Boston as a prize to any young woman who would get them on her feet and prove them a fit. They were made to adorn only the most per- feetly shaped foot. Of course, no person with a Chicago foot could hope Wea them, They were not the gif(ot a prince, but of a shrewd Yankee shoe- maker, who desired an adyertieement, end three seiected cobblers were ap- * feet of the fair competitors. _ Phe trial took place at the Boston ‘Theatre yesterday afternoon, in the Bresense of @ large number of spe them for the ten monthe they teve spent on Blackwell's Island for the! | crime of other men? | Gen, Harrison looks fine in Bastman Johnson's pleture of him. ‘The pleture 1a destined for the White Hou: The € J eral wonders if he will ever got th | again himseit. | aftssinsipp! will send 2,77 men to the Memphis Himetaliic Convention. The Btate will probably be an Adamless Eden during the absence of the delesm- | ton, It ought not to be necessary for the Becretary of War to spend much time on those new North River ridge plans We want that bridge, Col, Lamont Gen, put Again men to Campos calls for more down the Cuban revolt, | Does bis avprectation of the rebellion | Krow as fast as his army? | “A drunken cop knocked down.” He had raised a row and insulted a waitress im an east-side cafe. He had shown his shield mm an endeavor to bullioge the proprietor of the place into letting th matter drop, the gold bug remarks contemptuout “No Bia ple will comprehend the situation! Gan a man who fired @ revolver at clearly, his own head four tlmes without hitting THR OLBANRR, phe Byening W + Sick Habtes| ft be Kertously accused of attempting Fund affords to everybody a chance to | Meide? _ ales ue WAR SONG OF THE ATTITEA. Beene eecording to hig means.| ‘The courteous policeman tn quite aa| "nM? comraivel foe the warning i contributions and ttle contribu- | necessary aa the brave policeman to 4 , tlona go together to make up a sum Ld thin @] Parkhurst on the State's advancing — A shudderful thing was the shooting of Shy ome. Flatt weve (itt Major Clavijo, assailant of Capt.-Gen. If President Cleveland ts hoping for a Fierce the battle will be raging Primo-Rivera, at Madrid yesterday.| third term the Illinois Democrata have Tn the ming Pall; c » full Oo” empty seate—too blame hot te pray Lips ed to Keerleas worda mutterin’ pro | Miidest wurt THE WORLD: THURSDAY HOW WILL OLNEY DECIDE? Hi J! 1 OFFICE oF GR OF way! Will He Give Up $40,000 a Year Private Fees for the Honor of THE GLEANER'S BUDGET, |p Here, a Hint There and Tree Tw ity Life. t tay tn the Criminal | about with troubled f hing had Robert Townsend Men were unhappy ye Court Building. ‘They wen sand thelr hearte were fone out of their lives A there are a half-dozen or more full Assimanta, . are some ry « polloemen who n consider it Will this particuiar po- chance for Acting-Chief Conlin to send out 4) Teminder of Bis recent order, on police courtesy, Iilinots 18 howling for free silver nd | the Sucker wonder... Tlinota is foree which would rank as he finest. We must do or dis, Speed the St. Louls! And may she be speedily followed by a long line of Amer- loan-bullt steamships as fine a herself, “Hold the State, for Parkhurst'a coming," Laaxow signals still Anawer beck from Raines to Coggs all, not filled his vista with any rosy dreama,| We must win, or we shall porish ‘ Roya, machine and all Olney's successor as Attorney-General should not also succeed him in the ate fection of the ‘Trusts, “Hold Ure State, ™ for Parkhunw's coming!" the warning hri!l eriaon senda back (he 2 i who are to the n, Why does not the League of American ‘Tell the How we wit! areater extent of Cernan ancestry, will make | YQHUB LURRCEAN. oy am givin’ yor, Whoeelmen attempt to have the rule of We've ner A we've the hoodie ‘The rist av thim was all Orangemin and the road enforced on the Boulevard? They're the Uiingw that wins Duteh. Keay tha we a0 On SEASONABLE AND CLIMATIC, Tt Was with great satisfaction that Mr, . ‘sep the one ant epend the other Grogan downed his schooner as he lis- Oscar Wilde didn't go mad, after all, Where the votes come in. eee tened to the rattle of Mr, Finnegen's What @ fool he would be to do such an. “Hold the Mate, for Parkhure's comin Can we lowe tho atrifet Mear the Boys tn mighty §nsane thing! It looks as though Inspector Me- Laughlin were really on trial this time, chorus NOTE, THR FALSE (From Fitegende Mlaetter.) With all the booms that were in town lust night lightning never hit one of ‘em, ‘That was @ good street-c aircleansing rain last night, There is no law of any Btate against millionstotlar weddings. A prosperous season to Captain-Mane ager Doyle. — JUNE, SWEET JUNE," This is the glorious Summertime to talk about, Mercury a bilin’ tn the hottest sort o' way, Qin’ tn the shade too fur gone to watk rhymera like tempers gittin’ Jangled out a City Jos a sultry hive of awelterint humanity, An’ yet the dreany poets sing o° June, sweet June Sun up yonder tm the sky bia Kaiuin’ streaks nY with malignity, on our dinay heads Linen eoliare melt away Every stiten pin’ threads feom to Lome thelr ai rlomhee we wear a Lot a drips | Bvery breese seems but a breath from aulphure | } Bue comes as a » | Is it hot enough for yout we hear the cheat: | Aut topteal, yet the dreary poeta sing a’ June, June. An’ et Lie upon ur eda o' toring, Not a breath nighe im awful torture ft atmonphere to @ush our h In pools 0 ing | rranie perspiration we eternally are welters | | Corrid language with our erstwhile pious Parga | Bua would fate color of an Alabama eo Give & million dollars for reliet, but t from it yet tie dreamy poss sing o' June, sweet June, +» BARTON, a the whade, the other place of | An’ been offered for the occasion by courtesy of Mi she sal family Pussy to become a vagrant No. military uniform shall be worn by publie sehaol boys end that his 3.000 puplis, EVENING, JUNE 6, 1895, ward te? Being Secretary of Sta AMONG US WOMEN, Mra, Theodcre Sutro has set Che the reproduction of her tableaux vivanta, ich will be given for the bene of th tate Exposition at Palmer's Theatre, which has M. Palmer. 1 understand that the sale of ‘The women of Massachusetts worked Higrimage, and it waa a mere coincidence that ach cat was dropped over the same fence into he same flower-bed. ‘This was found out on com- aring notes afterwords, when thelr duplicity was icknowledged. ‘There was a regular rain of cat in the hime of a simple gardener in the ni porhood who owns @ home with @ fence around eae Bend your cat or a postal card to the 8 P. ©, Don't Ko away for the Summer leaving the PRUDENCE ®HAW, ———— ee THEY MAKE THE SCHOOLS, pree, Rayard W. . Purcell, Principal of an 1895 sehogl, standa out for two things: ‘That ao Walt for the i To croas bridges before you wet to them wi the sun (a out for business, na he has been for the last few daya, is ta make tho undertaker amie at the proapect of a growing bank ao SONNY. Cincinnati Times-star, Ne Taste for Weather Records. ‘We should much prefer that the records should be eonfined to the Polar Regions and the Rquator. As for our weather, we like It mld= Newark Advertiser, ay ime in Virein! An if 10 ad4 to our suffering in this area af torridity, comes the newa over the yb anow lies four fect deop at Dillon, & Colorado mining oamp. Oh, for a lodge in some snow-clad mining camp.—Richmond Timea, Philadelphia's Record Philadelphia seems to have been the heat gentre in the late crisia Seventeen fatal prow trations from heat entitle her to the recon 0 fer this sesson.—Loston Herald, On Chan With what skill does the over-ruling power of the alr impress us with the variety and wultadle syccemion of its manifestations = Waterbury American. A Seasonable Hi ‘The only vate place in which one cam change hie seat in a row of sail boat is when it fs drawn up out of water on Wie shore,—Boston Globe. — = WORLDLING The wales used in weighing Aelicately polued that the Yash will turn the balance ‘Twenty-three hundred and seventy: polyese are engaged in handling the annual out- pat of Chicago's past-omce. No tree has yet been measured which was taller than the great eucelypius in Gipsland, Australis, which proved to be 450 feet high, ‘Almost without axeeption the American leaders im the revolutionary war were thin, while the British generals were stout men, fome of Whe eighteenth century tables and chairs very popular im England are said to be made in and shipped from Connecticut, ‘The German housebuilders alwaya contrive to Jeave © email flat place on the root of each house for birda to reat and build on, Hore meet ax an article of foot in not new to the people of Oregon. ‘The olf missionaries trom 1883 0 144 ued it as @ regular diet Five-cent telegrams are to be tried im italy. ‘The government 1s ale trying te have the tarif diamonds are 90 of & single eye- ‘For Fair Virginia’ no offense. Playgoer. not absolutely expected, Not a solitary breath of originality kisses the arid des ert of Mr, Whytal's tdeai one—a very pretty little comedy scene between the usual boy and girl lovers, which unfolds itself about the making of a cigarette. ing as it dos tumult of all threshed-out bullt around the war, Of course, it Is the war that separates Edward Esmond and Virginia. Virginia is such a dreadful person that in Ed- entious artist. from the war. (From the Indianapolis Jo “Fwin Of kem over, In ‘68, Grogan, “Oi was the only soul on board the ship." . “Aw, what are you glvin' us “Hey, Chimmy, le'a go fellera where de game ia goin’ ‘FOR FAIR VIRGINIA.” Nobody can indignantly assert that * is a very bad play. Its author, Russ Whytal, who is in its ceat at the Fifth Avenue Theatre, has concocted a four-act affair that can give It does not contain an im- proper {dea, it Is couched in irreproach- able English and its construction quite follows out the rules laid down by those inhuman authors who declare that you can make a drama just as a tailor makes a coat, or @ cook a plum pudding. consequence is that “For Fair Virginia” ts dreadfully tedious to the accustomed The Nothing happens in it that te Yes, It is most gratef in the midst of a there is hil, com- positive situations I should have hailed such @ meaty excuse as the war to away from hi yurl, and he, alas! belongs to the North, He enlists, and—oh! for poor Virginia!— he goes away from her. stantly that there is a rejected suitor, who crops up as Edward goes. John Laughlin, young man, She is a South poe Attorney. | tickets will be ® private one and wet through the| regular dish. I felt go nervous that I had been made © full Amsistant Diatrict-Attorney. | KO ¥ had to make my lense shake in sheer They knew that Nereaftar he would got @ salary ens 7.8 te 000, but the relf-defense, A neighbor chewed gum, bed ad BIER haat la neadlted but they | anna Shaw ie the wittiest woman in the wom- - mourne| and would not be comforted, and even | gity Suffrage movement. In a n pecentty | 2" told me that he always did when Col, Dob himself was distrait, a Assistant Dis: | o0" Sut om Suse he saw plays of that sort. ably draws herself up to her full height and says, occurs in the third act, when it is filled with dramatic material. my roamings, have I heard a woman in real Mfe say, wish I could. i Wher Virginia says tt, she immediately passes, and I don't belteve thmt the vil- lain could have obstructed her way had he wished to do so. In the cast of “For Fair Virginia” the best work is done by Miss Minnie Du- “Let me pass.” It Neve et me pass.” It would sound the comedy maiden. very dwinty little actress and a conscl- She quite redeemed some of the stupidity of the ‘romantic play. Marie Knowles Whytal, the “Let me pass" lady, ts perfectly out of her ele- ment, and you feel quite pleaged that she Is persecuted. You could tolerate half a dozen “Let me pass’ would only pass off the stage, and stay off, The men are better. Morgan, Frank Doane and Russ Whytal are perfectly “in the picture," and if the picture 1s a daub, It {s not their fault. IT have omitted to mention a feature of “For Fair Virginia. a retreating horse's hoofs. It ts the quisite, for it suggests the beating of ets, and it quite takes you away pete DALE. ALAN —_————— The Only Son! dime falling into the till, ast di ‘The perse- Edward J. It is ex- t me ern gee- You know in- ‘This in @ rather nice-looking Bull, you lose all interest in him when you know that he loves Vir- ginia, who !# another's. Joining the Union army (he leaves South- erland, Virginia, at a moment's notice, without even taking a valise or a tooth- brush), confides his wife ani child to Stephen Dunbar, hia friend and overseer, and then Mr, Whytal leaves the play to work Itself out. Of course, you know exactly How it will all be. cuted wife, the rejected lover in power, the stanch friend, the absent husband, me cheeyild, the flippant lovers—it ts the Edward, before usually r, in all I only so odd, She Is a 3 if she sound of ked ‘These Youngsters Leok Neat. ‘The girl's coat in this picture is of drab cloth, with a tabbed collar outlined with red cord resting upon a frill of cream lace. In this the bishop sleeves may be seen, with the cuffs trimmed with The boy's sult is made of of mysterious stuff. The tub ts filleg within a hand of the edge; the patroneg getainandstaysthere until she issoent through and through. There ts no 4 ing after this. Each bathroom containg & lounge. Over the tub ts a bell-pull, When the bather rings a maid comes ig with two pelgnoirs—a linen one for abe sorption and @ woollen robe for warmth, Angels’ Pad Two ounces of flour, two of sugar, of butter, a pint of cream and the whites of three eggs. Bake in patty Pans; cover with icing and serve with: out twp js Teachers of Science, It is said that the demand for wi fitted to teach the sctences is greater Proportion to the supply than in any. other direction. The girl with a natural taste for chemistry, goology, mineraj- ogy or astronomy may now cultivate her special science with a reasonable expec tation that she can “put money in hi purse.” Indeed, it seems to be just the one fleld of labor that is not ov crowded, A Salad Dre ‘Without O11, A coffee cup of cream, either sweet or Sour; put on the stove.in a hot water pan; then beat one egg with « teaspoon of cornstarch, adding to it, beating till it thickens. While it i boiling a little Put in @ cup a teaspoon of mustard, one of sugar, « small one of salt, add- ng vinegar enough to dissolve them, and put Into the mixture. This te a useful recipe, as it utilizes the left. overs of cream, which will collect im hot weather. Milk, of course, may be used; then a plece of butter must be added to enrich it, We May Re Happy Yet. It is sald that a fabric made from shredded wood will soon be on the mar ket, and that the women can have their Gowns as stiff as they please without annoyance of heavy and expensive Jin- ings. Now, if some one will begin to make their big sleeves from sheets of iron they ought to be perfectly happy, brown Venetian cloth, with the knicker- bockers set into neat little straps at the knee, the coat fastened with one button, and showing a shirt made in one with a collar, which shirt may be of serge or ailk or cotton, according to individual fancy, Drop Cakes or Buna. Half pint of butter and lard, one-third ‘urd; two cups of granulated sugar, three eggs—not beaten separately—not quite half pint of sour cream or butter- milk, light teaspoon of soda dissolved with tablespoon of boiling water; aad some cream or buttermilk to this; suffi. cient flour to make stiff enough to al- most drop from tablespoon. What the Thamb Indicat The thumb is now regarded by the thoughtful student of palmistry as the lttle bird that whispers secrets about character, The new woman's thumb ne de! stands at right angles to her hands Whistler Rouge. 1 every time. If a man wants @ submis-| Mr, Whistler, the great little man who: sive wife Jet him see to it that he weds & woman whose thumbs He flat or droop a little, The weak man's thumb is weak/| and pendant; the strong man's thumb Is strong and erect. This same little bird can be relied on to whisper Into a mat- den's ear secrets she will like to know about the man in whom she Is Interested You can tell at a glance at a man's thumb whether he {s an almless thinker or a man who carries his ideas or some one else's into execution. Rathing in Pa: What the French are pleased to call a delicious bath has ax many ingredients 8 a Christmas pudding, barring the plums, in Heu of which lavender buds are used. The tub is lined with a linen sheet. It has a hole in the middle and 18 gored to fit the tub. The bath bag usually contains almond meal or oat- inadvertently placed the author of “Trilby" under everlasting obligation, has a most remarkable set of Ilps. They are a bright cardinal red. ‘The students of Paris, where he now is, says he paints, and the girls are willing to be- Neve that he does, tod, At all events “Whistler rouge" is the latest lip stuff in Paris. Lace Handkerchiets Again. The revival of the lace handkerchiefs {a assured, not only for ceremonious use, but as a fitting finish to & smart gown that might be worn to a wedding or euchre party with equal propriety. It does not take a fortune to buy these pretty mouchoira either, for at © eent comes one with a fine narrow edge, while for 7% one can absolutely revel in @ border and medallion corners. From this on the price goes atep by step up- meal with orris root. At least a dosen| ward, according to the elaboration Pottles contribute a dram or an ounce | wrought out in the lacey tracery. Sam at SS ee LETTERS, [7M cohumn tasepen to overybedy who has a complaint to make, @ grievance te ventilate, in formation ta give, a subject of generat interest to ‘Giaowss oF 2 public service to seknowledige, and wha can put the idea indo teen than 100 words Long tettara cannot be printed, } Socialiom Moans Universal Happ. Glera of political issuen, and If you are an inteltt. gent voter you will ally yourself to the pelitical Party whose victory will give Justice to humanity, REFORMER, 1m Favor of Closing the Schools Barly. To the Editor: ‘The present excessive ‘hat apell” end the crowded condition of our public scholle suggest the powaibility of en! Bena, ting your ald towarda ‘n- Panes @ucing our school authorities to close our pal or: schooln earlier than the time heretofore provided T read with intere m. Dia! Weld OR ton, 2 hoastil planation of the vast difference that existe cated tacos wie ae coe ‘and hard-worked teachers who are compelled to Submit (o the necessary discipline of the sehool- room during such weather ag we are now ox- periencing. PARENT, between Socialism and Anarchism. He is right in saying that Sociallam makes a tremendous monopoly, which would take the place of the any grasping ones Row in existence, and which would contrat the eatire fleld of labor, but| Confiscatio the Single Taz, does he not know that the people would com-| To the Editar: pono thin master trust, and that all profi! In answer to ‘0. @,'s" queries, the Gingle Tax derived theretrom must fo direct to the peoplet| will disturb no one's peaceful possession of land The poopie the government will ase to @s long an he pays the tax on ite value. Nor will | there be anything to prevent one from gambling im land valu@s (the only clase who will ory eon- Ht that tho high offices are held by the Attont, amd heolers would have mo chance at all. Th Would be absolutely no use for them. Ay for! fiscation!) If he ean do so and aleo pay hie tax. the epprension of the weak at the hands of| All wil! have but ano alngle tex to pay, and none, the strong, "B. D' evidently doesn't know that pou property, buildings of farm improvements. Now, GG. where will confiscation come ia? Users" of land will be benefited in proportion to their individual enterprise and industry. As the fundamental principle of focialiam | brotherly lave, and means that the strong will US up the weak to the same level ax thom- ig baseball ter 4 salves, Under Soclaliam all that is required of | to the law of supply and demand, te the lew of & man le his deat effort, no matter how much| universal gravitation questioned because & mane that best ia or how little, In conclusion, 1) 1a obstructed befare reaching the earth? Is the law make the assertion without fear of succosstul | that water sceke {ta own level impaired because contredition that fociallsm means the hap-|@ river ts obstructed and diverted from its natural Piness of every human being, but Anarchisin| course? The same obstruction that prevente ch would be a reign of terror and bloodshed, 1/G.'s men from obtaining @ living also prohibites Yeave it to the readers of your valuable paper| labor fram natural opportunities The feed of to decide which Je best. A.B. J.B, | publte opinion, however, Js rising, and will, ome by one, aweep away all obstructions, Hw, Lal s for Hannigan. Boya Want @ Place to Play Ball. To the Balter: Do you think {t 10 right for the police to stop boys from playing ball in the vacant lots of Harlem? We city bays are always stopped playing Hm the stresis, but we do mot mind thet, but I think gome law should be passed which Would give ue boys the liberty of playing ball | constantly all the year with the exception of out of the city, I hope that you will help ua, |® fow days? Docs he know why the average ur paper has accomplished so many | air! will nat marry the ‘honest workingman?” A cITy Boy, | I know, and could tell him that his avenge A Girl Speak: To the Editor: Lot me reply to B. Hus ‘"The Bvening World’ his statement in to-night, Does he ot know what it le to be @ business girl, and work “honest workingman’ haa no desire to tam An Appeal Touching Our Poets, Prove himself; not ail, but aome, And this te ‘To the Bator; Pot exaggerated, elther, "‘Audeces fortuna uvat"- Mow ‘long, dear editor, must we suffer these] is a good motto, Hannigan was breve, and 1 hope lovi posta (1) to fill up the space on the page he will be pardoned. He has my sympathy, al- boat? ‘Tie not inuch we ask thes, sad therefore | though I have an. aversion to murder in aay We hope that you'll choke of these terrors and | form, NINSTRENTH CENTURY OIRle five us & rest. We don't mind their rhythm— the lack of it, rather—nor do we proclaim them After Tangible Result: WnAt to make rhyme, but send them, we pray| To the Kditor: thee, to some foreign country, to some foreign ‘The sllvor question, the golden bug, land with @ much hotter glime. There'a one Is but @ tired feeling dirg whove initials are strongly sumgestive af Nice ‘What I want and what I wish, Apple Jelly, with “caps! large and fine; just Is a plece of duck trom Grover's dish, z. | iva him thy blesping, and toll him in, hipdnoas Paar y to study the number of ‘‘feet’’ in a line, A man who with pencil af makes aforethousht The Killing Metal Band, ‘arte out to write verses with ‘‘feet'* that don't | Te the Editor: mate should be wont to the workhouse, and there} For years our equine race has been cruelty in the gloaming be taught the ret lesson of 1 (ortured by thoughtless man, through the peral- " uth and hate, All other shortcomings we'll | cious prec‘ice af fasten & band of brass er. freoly forgive, and the rigbt hand of frienaahip | other metal over our forebeats, aud then driving exteod wi we meot. Perhaps im the fyture| Us lash in hy carrying @ heavy load, im the he'll think of the ondness we feel when we strug-| Duraing midday aun, with not even a sponge of gle with ilvmated ‘*feot."" kip, | cooling water or covering to our heads to keep —— from sunstroke, slong the granite roads oft A Firet Lesson in Politics, the cltles, with the overpowering rays of jhe To the Editor: sun directly striking the radtating heated metal Im answer te the Jelter in your columns algned | into our bre I make this lant appeal to the “Young Foreigner,’ who wants to leara politics, | American race, as I am being carried away BY Allow me to suggest: Listen to the claims of all | the ambulance at 2.40 June 3, hoai-breaking Pe- political parties, You must use your reason and| ord day from Madison Square, where I fell, Dae your reseqnings upon justice. Comider sll] noarly opposite the great reformer's ohurch, aad sides, apd Ge Bot allow yourself to become| aa my last dying words I say it was that creel prejudiced—t 1 harmful, The mont accurate in-| braas metal baad that did its fatal work, formation ogm be obtained from the following | as my master has not the comman sense, books: ‘Labor apd Finance Revolution,” hy | cover what is killing us, 1 earnestly requ Heath; ‘The Coming Revolution,"” “Progress and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty Poverty," "F. P, Campaign Book," by Watson; | mais will at once come (o the rescue ‘Populist Compendium,”* hy Biisa. These can be| suffering race, and fine every owner of procuret from any reform paper, oF of American | who puts a metal band around our hi Nonconformist, Indianapolis, Ind., and ail for the} drivea us through the scorching rays um of 18, Rood © leading paper of each political |qun with that me:al burning into our far, sonalden righla af mom, beware of cing?) TE NODULE ANIMALS MO ov

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