The evening world. Newspaper, July 11, 1895, Page 4

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bs inde, 1 Oto PARK DOW, Mow York, sae After hour committees sitting in Brooklyn to in- Quire into the Brooklyn Bridge manage- Che ment, charities and other matters all of 4 which could have been much more effec- Pariiaet Pree Company, | tively done by the reform Mayor of the i, _e iu, ew city than by a body of legislative boobies === | better known for booty than for brains. THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1898. | 0. eor'tne funkeuinns of thee politcal BUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE EVENING WORLD| tax rate is mounting up in city and parties of 186, What wonder that the Btatet “Vigilant may beat Defender.” Of course ehe may. The chances are that she won't, The Vigilant isa fine boat and @ beautiful sight to see, and we are all proud of the way she accomplished her especial mission two seasons ago, But— the Defender has got to do better in 189 WORLD UPTOWN OFFICE—Junction of Broad-| than the Vigilant did in 1893. way and Bizth a at 824 st MWORLD HARLEM OFFICE—125th ot. eon are BROOKLYN—209 Washington st. PHILADELPHIA, PA.—Prese Building, 108 Chet. | eight hundred thousand people in this Waser city, About one million seven hundred elds and seventy-fivy thousand of them would Iike to know how many police- men Commissioner Roosevelt has de- tailed to capture Allen, Killoran and Russell, the Gerperate thieves who broke jail in this city last week. ‘The same number of people would like to know how many policemen, de tectives and others Commissioner Roosevelt has detailed to trace or find the murderers of Mr. Borden's servant, who was shot down a few weeks ago in his employer's house in broad day- Nght? Not to go back further than yester- day, they would like to know what he {1s doing to bring to justice the woman who disguised herself as a boy and robbed people in the Pasteur Institute? What is he doing, they k, to find Mrs, Korn, the escaped murderesa? Why did not the police discover the gambling den on Third avenue exposed in @ newspaper this morning?) What are the police doing to suppress gam- bling? What 1s Mr Roosevelt doing, they ask, to rid the city of burglars, who have grown so bold that they did not hesitate to try the other night to break HOW ABOUT CRIME IN NEW YORK! There are more than one million WYER HALE A MILLION PER OM The World's Circulation for the First Six Months of 1895, 553,813 Per ony. ARGU ERS Ree Ye |, the bai ot Pew boa ibe Mall and preas. oes ‘Ths World's Circalatien Per Day First Six Months of 1895 - 553,818 Pirvt Six Months of 1894 - 474,065 First Six Months of 1891 - 622,100 First Six Months of 1683 - 26,587 Gain in One Your - - 79,748 Per Dey Gain in Four Years - 231,713 Per Dey Gain in Twelve Years 527,076 Per Day CORNELL'S COLLAPSE. ? Phe Cornell crew were badly beaten Yesterday in their firat race at Henley, : : ‘jand {t ia now seen that !t was ridicu. |!nto the house of Police Commissioner fous to take them across the Atlantio | Grant himself? to row against such crews as they have | The one million seven hundred and tn Bingland, | t is said that the Tthacand lgeventy-Ave thousand people of New Were out of condition—that they cou! . hot etand the English climate, Weil, 1 | York who are asking these questions by (they had not the strength and stamina |leve that they pay the police and the to stand the climate they are not the | Police Commissioners their wages first wort of material to enter in euch @ con- | ty rid the city of criminals, to capture test. They should have remained at da SGGW DUfelatN eh Junta home, in the healthful alr and peace- |™'Tderers, to bring burg! pe oe A fulness of Tompkins County, and kept |t@ Stop brawling In public places an o1 to protect the citizen and guard him early hours, P ‘The Leanders must be ready to kick | safe by night and day. ‘That is not done themselves for not wtarting in Tuesday's heat. They would have won the heat cand been “tn tt” with Trinity for the | There are one million seven hundred face, They deserve what they have xot, | 8nd seventy-five thousand people in this however, for conducting themseivee like | city who are weary of having these du- -Dlackguanis towards the Americans | dey neglected while the whole strength oe Pi te tbulbiwasion ther owe and «| «ey of some four thousand po- Everybody will give the Cornell boys | licemen are turned to the task of keep- ‘eredit for their pluck tn going over to| Ing people from drinking beer on Sun- take part in the Henley race, But in) day +4 Mow of the poor showing they made| everybody will wish they had remained] Now 10 at home, When Americans go into a! whsther contest they ought to win every time th a cowardly murderer as quickly as It does not seem natural for them to| his crime and his cowardice demand, wet beaten. Kut never mind. We will now. Let the police do that. the ease of MeGowan show ew York can or cannot pun all “evens” with the Britishers in the eup races and in the Interc e| A FEARFUL TRAGEDY. Games, and give the Leanders and all) pye merrymaking of the lke at their “ether growling Engiishmen good cause! grand session at Avanue Clly had for saying: “Damn the Americans, any-| sid and terrible ending last might. by way.” Avenue Ca rmembers of tt tained by thi Tt wasn't Mr. Roovevelt’ who was mobbed, in upper Third avenue. Mr Roosevelt says so himoelf, Nevert! et there be no more mobt Many ha ts men and women, and the rs corey apnngy Jenatrman, Mr, Meade D. Detweller, of A JUDICIAL MONSTROSITY. th wiucing = Mr Judge Wilson, of the Cincinnati DL | Per Jiliams, of Bro for a tal Vorce Court, must be a man of indorita- | wh f the hall on the second ble courage and tron nerve. It goes broke in two ta the without easing that he iy a cor Vishts went ont ‘and hopeless bach. \o! 1 himself standing is the t of a dark Ments in an alimony elty, was just 4 the Chairman fou plication In the | aroae ag Behubert\divoree case, the Judge, iurens| The Cu dering judsmonk s. Any man who | and over Bives all his salary to his wife is a fool. |to be expected from the insane folly of My observation has taught me that the| using it for such an occasion, Some @verage woman hag no idea of the value | persons felt the structure shake, and of money. The exception is the old| left in fear of just such a tragic occur. German market wom renee. Hear that, ye advocates of woman's| If the flooring had not sunk tn the rights! Listen to that, oh, new woman, | middle, forming a “shoot,” down which who takes so kindly to bicycles | the victims fell, the loss of life would and bloomers! Mark the words| have been fearful, of this discruntied judicial misogynist | Who ts to blame? Who ts to be pun- and misogamist, ye divorcees, from mar- | ‘shed? Wil there be no punishment ble palyces down to tenement-houses for this crime because the guilty one What will be thought of a Judge who| Will plead “didn't know" or “didn't utters from the bench this incendiary | think?” advice to married men, who in a judi- efal opinion casts this cruel slur on alj| Ta™msen came out of the Grand Jury Womankind with the exception of the| Tom all red and flurried. Allen, Rus- good, old German market woman? sell and Filloran eame out of Ludlow It would be useless to appeal to such | Street Jail quite calm and collected, ® fadge'a conacienoe, for ie must be as | destitute of consei from which and groans. whs otd, unsafe nee as a Cincinnati! Two minutes were as good as an hour Porker. Lut what a fearful responsibili- | to Dr. Depew, Miss the Paris and the ty will be his when the Cincinnat! me-| Prince for a little thing like one-thirtl- ghanic meets his wife's appeal on Satur-/eth of aa hour? Well, sc: day aight for household expenses by reference to the judicial adjudication | that “the average woman has no ldea of the value of money," and that the man who gives his salary to his wife is @ fool, Yet brutal husbands will be found—| If Boston looks closely she will ai and plenty of them, too—ready to back | cover that the best of the Christian Up Judge Wilson's ungractous opinion, |deavorers |s that they really endeavor y highwaymen having taken to . {tis obviously the thing for A flourishing pool-room has been dis-| New York dosn't fovered within two blocks of a police | day Station in this city. The police did not to be a Sun- ks for the oppor- vreaker, She a tunity to be a respecter of Sunday. -dscover it. They were locating Sunday at @lde doors, Boston may be the hub of the uni- verse, but Asbury Park has most of the PETTY LARCENY LEGISLATION. wheels, just now, ‘The character of the Legislature of ——— 18% is written in the number and char- oter of the junketing jobs faste: the city ip the form of investigating com-| ern New York. Mittees. They are designed mainly to - i supply their members with @ litt A July frost is reported in Indiana Spending money during the recess, al-| And Harrison will take to the though some of them may open up al Woods. prospect of bigger things in the way of We have had specimens of some of|licans have nominated him so early, these legalized looters who live in New ‘York sending to the State Comptroller} Campos wants to go home. It seems ills for rooms and dinners and Junch-| as if Spain could afford to let him go. @ons and suppers at high-priced hotels —— - ky Andulged in at the public expense, and| Tammany will ¢ ‘aptece would have . the city. ‘Vhs WOM LL THE LAW OF MODESTY AT ASBURY PARK. wh FATHER BRADLEY—Here you are allowed to ride your bike in that costume, but “The Evening World's” Gallery THOMAS PALMA This in @ picture of the man who ts likely to be elected President of the | Cuban Republic, an empty honor at | present, but one which every lover of Uberty hopes Mr. Palma will soon find ness wae rushiny j ment di jelgare in hei outside Interent. fittest” Is to be the rule and the result of the turning over, conspicuous leadera under the old regime !9 the Ci 4o for @ living under the now order? urvival of the what will some Don't sny a word about the winning | Giants, You may break the spell. ‘Tom Reed will build himself a don in| which he can be the only lon, Courtney's cares Dry Sundays thirst for local option, increase Now York's Cool in New York, acorehing at Asbury | Misfortune set the stroke for Cornell. Vortr-eleht Rnglish pennies welgh a Poamible ane porn LWW RA GRAROUTRES | V's product of quinine te used Thee fecting expenses of the animale in the London Zoo are worll’s popntation Increa: 1 per vent per annum AL the rate of A few grains of boraw put into milk will pre- | y-flve pensioners of the war Amity was one | rank of Second Assistant ¢ ables to go and do lke- | URRY Ns he tyoninth street ew York for New Yorkers" ts not 1d on|the ery, but “New Yorkers should goy- North Dlackmail. Alas, poor Allison! The Iowa Repub- 4 cline, with or with- ef heavy carriage bills when five cents|out thanks, outside aid to reorganiza- carried the Investi-| tion. It will reform itself from within, 4 ‘The process of eyolutigy in the Hail mittee and sub-| will, nevertheless, be the Ydject of much don't you dare go In my ocean without a Mother Hubbard. THE GLEANER'S BUDGET. Gossip Here, a Hint Th Tales of City Li 1 learned the ether day why Bleventh street a closed between Fourth avenue and Broadway. When the atrseta above Houston street were laid eet in 1807 by Comminsionern Gouverneur Mor He, Bimeon De Witt and John Rutherford, houses and farma were scattered about the land through which the otreets ran. The owners objected to the streets running through thelr property, and ome of the housewives pelted the Commissioners with cabtagon when they attempted to lay thoronghfares through the fare. Henry Brevoort, through whose farm Mleventh street would have fun had |t cromed to Broadway, fought the Com- missioners in the courte and succeeded In pre venting the cutting through of the street, oe 6 Johu D. Rockefeller and Willlam Rockefeller ‘ere both enthusiastic bicyolinta very pleasant afternoon when he Js in town John D. Rocke- feller 19 to be seen riding through the park. He much at home on the wheel as he te in menag- ing the world-wide financial Interests represented by the @tandard O11 Company. William Rocke. feller mort of his riding now in the vicin- ity of Tarrytown, where he has @ country seat. Me, too, te an expert wheelman, Both Gres quietly for riding, and eschew the golf costame, During the tat thie @ign: ‘Don't bring lighted No more advertising needed. ‘The moral and the connection seemed enough, eo 8 A wagateh friend suggeste that the new-cor land family might be named Grover- the designation of "Junior so ee ‘Thomas Boss, Chief Clerk of the Superior \Court, 18 one of the men who stories of & New York that has been, wi t the same time he keeps right up with the New York that fe He has lived for thirty years or more tm the ame neighborhood, Just off from Lexington tn Kai yoelRnth atreat, and h tn the elty's employ for newrly @ hait century. Mr. Poese was formerly Clerk to the Toard of Education, He te white-haired ant whiter hearted, te extramoly affable and ta well-liked by everybody about the cours THE GUEANER, ROOSEVELT'S DOUDLES, ‘Thre are several contlemen tn this to Who, Ike me ace siigiitiy nearsighted, And whore teeth xleam white In the doad of night, Whoreat cops are greatly affrighted ‘Tie an unpleasant thing for a man ef reaowe To posers a number of doubles, Kepectal Thore bluntering men Hy their antics eo add to my troubles There's a rong that J once beard elown— It haw run through my mind al! the day, And, though Vin not quite Sure that I am right, T think 1c rune something “Oh, wouldn't 1 Like to Whoever he may he? 0%. nC give tim par ‘The fellow who looks like m My 4 may think that {t's fun to go ‘round In the gray light dawn through the etreeta, ‘When they oveht to be walking their beats, But the doubles are running things into the ground When they order the copa to Headquarters, Tt te quite trou! For mie, though It's fun for reporters Bo 1 hope that whenever oiy doubles are found Attempting policemen to worry, ‘Their glasses will emash, While their white teeth they gnash, And they're yauked before me io a hurry. Then won't Ith to guy them, ‘Whoever hey may he? Ob. will not T give them The fellows who look | = — : NOTHING SO ROYAL AS TRUTH. ‘True worth Is being, not seeming— In doing each day that goes by Some little good, not in dreaming Of what things to do by and by. For whatever men say in their blindness And spite of the fancies of youth, There {s nothing so king! And nothing so royal as try ALICE @its ag straight as an Indian, and te quite as bration season, when bual- ‘4 downtown fireworks establish- This would admit of am abbreviation {ato “Grove or “ Grovey,"* even though sex forbids ung by @ {number of bi y as kindness, CARY, | the water-—Rocheater Dem AMONG US WOMEN. amd True! The women of Grand Rapids, Mich, are ml tng earnest over the bicycle-bloomer orese. They | ether day and atepted the following reso- “Whereas, Our Heavenly Father, with divine and infinite wisdom im our creation, has made the mest truly modest nt drese te the one which clothes each log im separate coverings, and true medesy Fequires @ reform in clothing our legs; (here- fore, be it ‘Resolved, That in all casce where, ou dest Judgment, the regulation skirt te unheslu- fal, impracticable, uncleaniy and incsnveaieat, we mhall have the moral courage to reacunce OUF prejudices and adopt such other costumes as will eliminate these objections os nearly as may be. e ee Misa Wie Merour, who was the auczesstu! Competitor for the plan of the Woman's Bulld- {ng for the Atlanta Exposition, is a Pitted woman and comex of family. The Chief-Justice Mereur her unele, and his mother, Anna Hubbard Merour, became note- worthy om account of her Columbian Exposition j Souvenir, ealled ‘Cosmos and Other Poems."* Sho ts the daughter of Dr. Mercur, a physician of high standing (p Pittsburg. Miss Mercur had the qdvantage of @ four years’ education abroad, Bho has devoted the past six years to archi- tecture, ‘1 am growing olf, and I really didn't tnow it," I heard a dear olf Indy of weventy-oight say te he: daughter the other day. ‘I was chang tng care at Toledo on my way here and had be placed In the conductor's charge. As I left the I heard bim shout toe brakeman: ‘Here, Put thet old lady on the train for New Then T turned to ee@ who he meant, nd the shock almost knocked me dow PRUDBNO® SHAW. —_— a TRANSFERRED JOKES. Happy His Lot. lot 18 as happy as mortal could wish vith envy each patriot notes 0 fshing for fsb 4 of acfehiog fur voton. —Oncinnatt Tribune One Way to Play Even, by George, I've got « grudge against tho leycle and ride it down. Draw the Lim Ring out old things, ring in the new, Inferior and human, But draw the line on noveltl At woman, ~—Detrott ree Press. jaual Conversation, **¥ou will notice that T have you om the string,” ald the boy to the kite “And that ts what —Intianapolis Journal Cruel Fate. he talked of womai Te One Hench, Engi Tourist—How many persons de you seat ston—Pive men oF three wo- Dispaten. —9 —__—— WHEELS AND WHITE WINGS. No Over-Confidence in Defender. Valkyrie 111. will evidently prove wo csay vletim to the Defender in a light weather race, and American enthuslasie should mot run the! own hopes too far ahead of the wind.—Pallade pala Record. An L, A. W. We The L.A. W. week at Asbu moan the law ten't observed the rest of the year, but that the gospel according to cyclers ‘Will’ be settled. —Philadelphia Press. Wheels, but Ne Gum, It it te true that ox-President Harrison bas spoken up against female gum-chewere his course Ie to be commented. The wheel for women ts all right, but chewing gum In public {s as abom! Bation.—Syracuse Cour! A Time Com ‘The time ta tly approaching wh will estimate the value of an article by 1 the same amount of moni would buy.—<icago Post if Show to Keep the Cup. ‘The first performances of the Defender indic ow to keep the Ameri IF YOU DON’T SEE WHAT YOU WANT TO VOTE FOR.ASK FOR I1._ \stein's warm and penetrating gianc | Why did you marry so early? +: THURSDAY BViNLNG, JLLY 11, Lous, ORAMATICNEWS ANDNOTES Hamme Olympia Nearin: Completion--John Drew in “The Haven of Content.” The glare of the July sun does not aunt Oscar Hammerstein, and the mois- ture of the July rain does not dampen his effervescent spirits. He passes all his days watching the marvellous growth of his monster Olympia at Broadway jand Forty-fifth street, and not a slab of marble finds a resting-place until it! has been netified by Mr. Hammuer- Olympia begins to look ike something— something that 1.n't @ shanty, either, It is already beginning to rear itself) proudly in Longacre Square, and yester-| |day the altitude of the proscenium gir-| jder was reached, Four hundred men are| working as hard as they can, and in a few weeks their labors will be continued into the nights, The audacious Harlem manager has a weekly pay-roll of some- thing lke $8,000, but he has not lost his head. He is just as calm and collected @y ever, and just as ready to crack a joke with every Tom, Dick and Harry, “I ghall be ready on tim id Mi! Hamo romis In everything I know what I that I can in’ very emphatic ay, but that is because m saying. Olympia will be the grand the country Beo if it ien't. There will be nothin cheap or paltry about {t, The marble will go all the way D3 and won't end at the firat story. ‘That's somethini dan't it? No liquor saloon will mar t @rlistic beauty of the lower tory; there'll be no dry-goods store—nothing ‘Dut theatre, concert hall and their legit- imate ontrances. And wait tlll you see ‘the Interior decorations. You'll say they are a dream—half a dozen dreams, I'm pot taylng, much about Ulymplay am 17 ‘ou don’t hear much about it, do you? My friends ask me why 1 don't put up a 1g sign on this alte, setting forth the truth about it. Not I, Let folks ask What all this ‘chaos of marble means. They are beginning to do so, I can tell ou, Oh, i's a big contract, but I'm heart and soul init “And perhaps you don't know that I concelved this giant scheme the very dey after my little row ° with Koster & Bial.” ° “The Haven of Content” is the name of @ new play by Malcolm Watson, of London, the American rights of which have been secured by Charles Frohman for John Drew, It four acts, and John Drew will have character in @ fresh love stor: Watson has three dramatic belle! a of the opinion that a play have a plot; that it should have love interest, and that it should be inter- reted ‘by actors and actresses who Se prenticeship. ° Manager A. M, Palmer signed a contract with the yet entertaining Blanche W. 5 ™may make an attempt at Trilby, she has been engaged for the leadini role in the new melodrama by E, Alfriend 4 Nym Crinkle called “T! Great Diamcnd Robbery" People are beginning to wonder who is the victim of that diamond robbery. Gurely. it must be a ctres: Nobody is robbed ot diamon no ye but actresses, If Messrs. Alfriend and Crinkle ha vailed themselves of the epencid ma- rial furnished them b; je perpetu- ally diamond-robbed ladies of the stage, they have made a bright and chatty play. . rf Corinne's managerial mother, known to fortune and to fame as Mrs, Jennie Kimball, writes an unconsciously amus- ing letter to The Mirror. In it she natin “I have not been successful in finding a play or a comedy opera for Corinne. Next week we shall go to Paris, where IT shall see Audran. Possibly he may have something.” Imagine Mommer O'Flaherty, Interviewing the _ lordly jran, Can't you tmagine her saying: ‘allo, Andy, old man, got a play for my gal? Write us a piece for the popu- lar-price houses, and hurry up.” oe Miss Marie Millard, the neatly voiced woman who is now singing the primi donna role in “The Sphinx at the Ci ino, 1# the daughter of Harrison M ard, whom everybody knows, Mr. M lard’ came. to y York to hear hi daughter Monday bight, She was ex- ceelingly nervi she mace the most Is not n new to the sen contin y that she ig quite er energies have erto to chureh sing- i. “La Belle Helene,” Offenbach's jolly Dld-timer, that makes us think of the days when we were young, fiddlede- dum, will be sung at the Terrace Gar- den ‘to-night by the Conrled-Ferenczy hi comle-opera company. “where will be three nights of It only, for on Monda: “Boceacclo” will be revived with Fri, Englaender and Herr Monti in the lead- ing mles, ‘These good old operas make us feel melacholy, There is notht like them to-day, Now we get the hodge-podge, the ¢howder, the olla po- Grida, Tt Ty's kood thing to uark back- jonally. n uy 5 There ts just the i the merest #! “that Mr und 3} . Bancroft may mpany their old comrade, John i country. This shadow of a possibility seems too good to be true. tI ompaniment would materially n Mr. Hare's chances of auc conn, In London they seem to think that Hare will he a good go here. ‘The most interesting feature of his tour, however, will be the appearance of Mi Julin Neflson, an extremely handsome woman, and @ good actresa, — = THE MISTAKE OF EARLY MAR. RIAGE. ee, papa, how the Baron looks at me.” “Don't be absurd, Laura—an old mata like you." Well, if I'm old, whose fa mit is it? sult a young girl or a middle-aged wom- an, slightly adapted. It ts round, with} A cosmetic which Is said to be very @ jet coronet, adorned with a couple of efficacious and almost immediate in ef- paste stars on either side, and some high grass bows interspe: white chiffon rosette, and a cluster of/ 4 refreshing way to serve lettuce ie te green roses comp! complaént to make, a grievance to wenttlate, in hea Bccogee general interest to formation ce GA ‘end who encounter them on the midnight return from the Cesipad hylan Posi pect lode. A aubstitute can be made of the ordinary laters cannot be printed. } country has a large variety of humbugs."” Twen- ty-four hours later one of these buga of ques- Seneie sere says your correspondent: “It the Btate taxes the of “The Evening World," and wickedly attacks | 7870 20t ren oe Christians, Christianity and all that Im sacred 8 Ae endrswpere they will: opm and estimable in human nature. This same bug unblushingly declares that man hus no more soul than a bug, and the bug himself ts soul- lens and all this cheap talk on the part of the bug might have passed unnotiond were {t mot for the ap- allusion made by the bug about reason, which human soul, Op that ground the subscriber by the term To the Editer: Cones The Art of “Pourt | tnorougny, and wipe dry. Split so thas Few hostesses understand the art of | When laid flat the backbone will be im pouring tee and coffee, «imple as it ap-|the middie, Butter the bars of the grid pears. As a rule, the guest of honor is iron, and broil over a clear fire. offered the first cup, which is the weak-| Beef Toast.—Toast @ slice of bread est, and the children, if served at all, | delicate brown, and press the juice from are given the last and strongest. When | @ hot, rare beefsteak over it. it 1§ desirable to have all the cups of| Raw Beef Sandwiches—Between two uniform strength one should pour a lit-| thin slices of toast place @ small piece tle into each and then begin over again, | 0f Juicy, fresh, tender, raw beef, scraped reversing the order. In England this is| fine and seasoned highly with salt and 80 well understood that @ pourer of tea | Pepper. or coffee does not begin to replenish the| Gluten Wafers.—To one gill of cream cups till all are before her. add seven-elghths cup of gluten and one 7. Tunney ealtspoonful of salt. Roll out about as A Toque. thick as a silver dollar and bak ‘This is @ pretty toque which would Cocsannt Mil kb w Comncbetsi fect 1s cocoanut milk. Grate a fresh cocoanut and squeeze out the juice through a piece of white muslin, then wash the face and hands thoroughly with it, rubbing the juice well into the skin, and wipe with a soft cloth A single application will often prove its value. You Shoulda’t. You shouldn't wear a cloth cap in the Summer either for cycling, golf or ten- nis, It collects the dust and is very warm; straw or duck is more up-to-date and comfortable. You shouldn't ignore fashion altogether. Yo needn't be in the fashion if you do not want to and happen to be an exceptionally pretty woman, You shouldn't be extreme. You shouldn't wear tan shoes with @ @ilk or any dress gown. You shouldn't sacrifice your individual- ity at the shrine of fashion. ASi i Testing the A surer way of testing cake in the oven | Sduceze make a@ dressing flavored with lemon. First cut up the lettuce small, then small lemon or half @ large than the time-honored use of the broom | M® into @ tumbler; add a little sugar, corn, 1s edge of the oven and put the ear close to|®"4 pour the mixture all over the let- it, and when it {s not suffictently baked | tuce- @ slight sputtering nol but when thoroughly done, there will be no eound, aid to be to draw it to the|# little water and a good pinch of salt, will be heard, Hint to the Housewife. A source of much petty annoyance and unnecessary trouble lies in allowing Change the Baby's No household stores to run out, and neg- Don't worry about the shape of your |Jecting to supply them till immediate baby’s nose if it is a snub, nor be aure, | Necessity calls for them. A good way of if it pleases you by its regularity, that | Preventing this is to keep a written it will grow up with it, for scientists | list of all the regular supplies and mark have observed that no feature changes |¢ach as it gets within a certain distance more as life progresses. The length of | Of exhaustion, leaving ample margin te the nose increases so much faster than | Prevent its complete disappearance, ite breach tat the [poeanorae cits Women and Delicate Hi craft. may evolve @ long nose. The change! ‘The eye and hand of woman have been ee ane atany! nie aoe 80 carefully trained for centuries by foun in the tasle than in the female,” | thelr devotion to needlework that they & should by natural inference be better Recipes for Invalids. Atted to engage in many of the occupa- Squats or Quatis.—Squabs or quatis; tions requiring manual ekill and dex- should be split down the back and wiped | terity than men. For instance, the jew- dry before broiling. Sweetbreads must | eller’s or watchmakers trade, with the be parbolled, then blanched in cola| fine manipulation required seems pe- water and lemon juice. Brofl until well| cullarly suited to women; so does den- browned. Balt and pepper. tistry and a dozen other professions Broiled Mackerel.Remove head and/ now almost exclusively occupied by dark skin from inside the fish. Wesh/ man. amas a LETTERS, pancake oensoned with a little Chit pepper Garge ed), then tightly rolled {a a corn husk | [hie column ia open to everybody who has a | and dotled twenty minutes to @ half-hour. This of the mast appetizing morsele te find, particularly when we cornmeal, but 1t must be boiled at least hour. I would some “sure enous! halt. "avel far te set my teeth im tamales. PELEG WHITE. What Single-Taxers Will Do, Te the attor: ‘Mr. ‘Question’ asks: ‘Why cannot landlords make tenants pay the single tax?’ I anewer be- cause tenants are now paying the full rental value af land (single tax) to the lendlords But, “No More Soul than a Bi Tushes Into print in the columns pel the land-usere to pay 4 Lat us investigate: On Union Square stands an Mr, Tifany offered to remove the debria, erect @ building and pay the land-owner $26,000 each year for the vacant land, The ewner demanded $40,000 ground rent annually, Re- old ruin and bullding trades ingle-texers claim that {f that lot {a worth $40,000 @ year to keep idle, it’ Worth $40,000 @ year to use, and when we get th single tax im operation tax them $40,000 @ year, whether they use it of mot, and if they can get @ man chump enough to pay them $80,000 & year for that lot that will be bis business, Rot ours, * WII they? nly fit for manuring purposes, Now, pendix (M. D.) pinned to the bug and a certalm implied that he was an educated man and knows something about reason, though Ignorant about the respectfully aska the gentleman who wrote the bis reasons for not, nt manner what be means before he undertakes to D. CAVANAGH, Giscuss {t, and before he rathlersly consigns the Hi East Twonty-seveath street, cliy, poor subject to @ cemetery or to the dissecting pila x MD. | Not Invited Commencement. —_—— To the Editer: The New York Doy’s Let Not m| wy daughter is im the grammar department of Happy One, @chool No, 6% Qu last Thureday they held their vement exercises, It 1s because I live bee ‘The New York City lad has the hardest thme| tween Ninth and Tenth avenues that 1 was not iu trying. to eatey hitasel! of clty boy | !nvited to attend, for I am sure every mother '& game | Would be pleased to ave what her child has been of "Lie-Back" of of “Prisoner's | doing uring the season. She has also attended Which does not annoy | schools Nos 8% and 27, and as each reception tm the lightest passers-by, he is lucky to get| ay came I was most cordially Invited, and as way from the unruly hand of the police. Then, | the schools are all governed by the Board of Edu- if he and a number of hie friende stand in the| cation, I don't possibly see how they could be atrest to discums the nm promptly pounced upon by the unrelenting “‘cop."* Ot course, there {8 @ eet of boys who deserve to of the day they ere| 9 different. A MOTHER. im Gotham. To the Edit ted, Dut I have not as yet seen be et eee ane Shean On account of ‘business revival’ 1 suppose, ae at an hosect working led Heth po | Se stx of prominent manufacturers In South lice would stop the numerous robberies in the| Pitt Dlock between Prince and elty Instead of abusing poor working lads they| Houston street closing their factories, The sy ame at AE other manufacturers are only working with ones PRED BORN AMERICAN, | fourth thelr usual force, evidently for the pur phi tet ass pore of awaiting more ‘business revival."* Ti Had One Experience, Wants Am-| ‘olld Just as well close up, a» they only hi raaiad enough work for one-tenth of regular foros, It seoms “business revival’ is greatly wanted This only concerne one block In New Yorks have not Investigated the others, Lut suppose they are fixed the sain LOCKED-OUT SALESMAN, Childar, To the Editor: “Are New York ry few women sincere in 3 but, of course, there are some exceptiona All the most of them @ about is being dressed up like dolls and Sticking P: admired, I for one am sincere and honest. 1] To the Editor: had the misfortune to marry, when young, one| Noticing in your paper July 6 @ question about whom I thought my ideal, but alas! I found 1] punishing a child by sticking pins and needies tare had a drunken wretch, who made my young lite|{t, would say I can't belleve that In this ning miserable. After both my children wel teenth century of civilization there could be ee Separated. It has been long years now, but 1| degrading and brutal @ thought come to any ta- am still less than forty and longing for some | teiligent human being. It is @ pi'¥ that such peo honorable middle-aged mate for the rest of my ple are allowed to roam at large. But perhaps, if aaye, IN EARNEST, Newark, N. J. | the said party were to try the experiment om 5 ——— themselves It would bring them to thelr senses, The Succulent Tamale, cr. G To the Raltor: If the Leander Had Started, ae, T have been unable until now to renly to your lay ine Ea\sor correspondent as to the methot of cultivating | yee Var the auculent “tamale. She seems to be in somo doubt as to whether it is fruit or vegetabl Aa I live in Mexico, where It runs wild, 1 w be pleased to let her kuow how it is produced there Ip {te perfection, I fear that tome little trouble about them on account of Mouliy of producing the ground or crushed cornmeal, which Is an essential to the & some~ ness of the tamsie. There the corn is prepared by soaking It over @ slow fire in a {1 the Bull we loowened. This corn is then, A New Co while hot, rubbed om @ flat stone until it be-| To’ the Editor: comes very Guely kneaded and without salt. | Who's the Gayoor—MeLaughlia or the Jelge? Shredded chicken meat 14 (hea laid ane sant of tam "pa mamae chman, but T love to hear the You wiil, no doubs, © "thiewillow" on eins the Leander had started a had been misunderstood in their * what on earch would bave been the re sult? And if the same events had takea place in @ baseball gaine over here, what would have become of the umpire? I pause for « reply, AN ENGLISHMAN, dram, have my

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