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the ven-mile run to looking as slick and.as bright as a girl be FE SUorid by the Prose Pubiiehing Company, 8 te @ PARK ROW, New York. ~ MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1895. 4 GUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE EVENING WORLD (neleding postage): MONTH. B00. a pretty equal capacity. Martha's Vineyard she 414 some splendid work, and at the finish led Vigtiant by about six minutes, although the latter never showed to better ad- vantage. The owners of Defender never felt 80 well pleased with their boat nor such strong confidence in her ability to beat the Englishman as they did when they came to anchor at the Vineyard. The general belief now in that the cup 98.60 |!8 safe, But last Friday's experience proves that there are many things to fear in @ race between two boats of All we have to ‘Biatered at the Post-Omice at New York as [hope for in the cup races is a good becond-class matter, bre — ——= | well feel our chances a: BRANCH OFFICES: good thing ts that, according to the LD UPTOWN OFFICE—Junction of Brosd- f way ond Sixth ave, at #24 st @ORLD HARLEM OFFICE—12th ot and Mati- , ame ave. ATN—000 Washington st. PA--Prew Bull ‘Tea Ca wet ot WAMMINGTON—To2 141 ot. der w sult the new wonder of the waters. bring Tammany out of the wildernes It fs said that two-thirds of Tammany wants the handsome e: and no accident: Then we may the best, One tests thus far made, we shall not have to be praying and looking for ‘Defen- ther." Any weather appears to 18 GRANT TO BE THE ARCHITECT! Ex-Mayor Grant says he will not be the boss of Tammany, but he ts willing to help reorganize it. The boys," however, expect him to -Mayor for Critics ready assert that Grant THE WORLD'S CIRCULATION INJOLY WAS } PER DAY. ofkoularion of, ‘be op S3 aes earns (CARCOLATION FoR ely, 1895 - 656,178 per day duly, 1896 - 500,708 per day| || | July, 1801 - 341,060 per day July, 1883 - 37,660 por day of Grant means the bo Prince of Wales's friend Richard. But 554,178} | joreat a ship of the ice prepense. When Mayor, Grant showed a commendable spirit of Independence and refused to make sev- eral notoriously improper appointments at the machine’ dictation, Well, if ex-Mayor Grant wants to re- build Tammany he knows how to do it. He {s young, active, popular, and he needs new bricks to rebuild with, He may honor and respect the old material for the good it has done in ite day, but he knows that to make the politic structure strong he must have new ma. tertal of @ sort to command the public confidence. He cannot thoroughly clean he old bricks. He may not break them and throw them away, but he must lay them aside. A leader in the plot to restore Queen Fer Gay. Lil frankly admits that she is to be Gata tn ove your ——. 68,473 |} | | merely a figurehead. If the plot suc- Gein in four year.........213,138 Gaia m tweive yeam.....516,709 aberewed es afin eo danimad, ceeds the leader of the revolutionists will control the affairs of the Sandwich Islands.’ Looks like a case of “Heads I win, tails you los EQUAL JUSTICE FOR ALL ‘The law ie made for black and white, for rich and poor, for man and woman Beets of (“THE EVENTWO WORLD: |allke, It makes no distinction on ac- | pemsing Ge clty for Gs het mentta sheeid ema | COUNt of color, sex oF condition, If @ person wilfully and deliberately kills another the crime ts wilful murder. WORLD* mated fom reyuiety, § Addreme | 1¢ a person causes the death of a human being through carelessnes » Teck! nese ‘When Miss Flagler, the daughter of Roossvelttem is getting more and more|Gen. Flagler, at Washington, fired a “fampent. James Bacco was arrested | pistol in the direction of a group of boys yesterday for selling ice from a wagon | forty feet away and killed one of them, Hester street at ten minutes after|the shooting was intentional, although SESED gS Ati Bsberee Sogs i Qtrested the law-breaker and 5 * fi ‘clock in the morning. <A police-| death was not contemplated. The shot search of @ record dodged be-| was fired because the boys were stealing and followed the wagon| the Flagler pears, If it was intended to \w the criminal] who owns it/fire it into the ground in order to of ice to a perspiring wom-/ frighten the depredators it was never- baby in her arms and two/ theless a reckless, careless act and was hanging on to her skirt.| so designated by the Coroner's jury. It makes no diff eo that Miss “to the Tombs Police Court. | Flagler 1s a woman and = Genetal's was held in one hundred dol-| daughter, or that the dead boy was bail to answer for his crime at| colored. The offense is clearly man- I Ihave brought comfort to many @ sick- | {; ‘bed and relieved many parched throats ‘was left to melt away in the wagon. Another enterprising decoy-duck po- || on Bixth avenus, in-citiswhs’ dies He | t Knew no ordinary trick would succeed | t Sessions, and the ice that might | slaughter and Miss Flagter ought to be indicted and tried for it. A San Francisco typewriter is organ- izing @ royalist movement to restore Queen Lil to the Hawaiian throne. We. should think there was more money in 'ypewriting “than throne-filling, The ypewriter in the Capt. Eakins trial is ?m trapping the proprietor or his em-| making a small fortune, and it is from Dloyees into violation of the Sunday law. | t So he ordered a full dinner and a mod- |} his fact we draw our conclusion that it is better to be a good ‘eat sober pint bottle of mild table claret. | than an untested and unplaced queen- ‘But when his coffee was served the art-| restorer. ful policeman stretched out his leg! took @ toothpick, and assuming a lux- rious look said, brandy.” The waiter served it, the stool. | 1 The Sick Babies’ Fund increases in 'Garsong, a pony| popularity as it grows older. This is ts most successful Summer. It ts not tomsed it off, and then dragged | only doctoring the tenement-house tots, ‘the waiter off to the polic ation and| but giving them three fresh-alr excur- | @onsigned him to a cell. The police seem| sions a week, which should fill thelr to be under orders to miss no opportuni- | I! ty te disgrace themselves. Seven to one is the ratio of the big e yw. The ballots were cast in the |! of “The World.” The vote w: HH MASSACRE IN CHINA. accounts of the massacre il Kutcheng bring the gratifying info: ‘Kkilie i fi Mission, was erroneous ime @re al) English, and the/ itt i put the glow of roses in their cheek ittle hearts with ight, red blood and George Gould 1s on his way home. fm favor of a more liberal Sunday- | He has nothing to be ashamed of in own- ing the Vigilant, for the big cup-saver has done herself proud in all the races the count honest. No wonder|so far, and it takes a swift-winged unity is wrought up about this| creature like the Defender with all the yw and the blue law enforcers. fin-de- crowded into her to keep Vigy behind. lecleiam of the yachting busines! Be glad that you don't live in Brook- missionaries by the Chinese rabble|!¥" to-day, because you would have to walk the bridge, If you had lived in that no Americans are among | Brooklyn yesterday, though, you might Chief Tyhee, of the Bannocks, threat- fae horrible one. Beven yourg €P# tO avenge the Indians killed by Were massacred with spears and il one child, was burned to TT st of his other children had an eye gouged out and another had his knee- eap broken. Goubt England wil! compel the © iy pihinese Government to make © & more liberal Bunday tion as is possible, The punis of the murderers and al! thone SY€ hundred thousand people want Sun. | ‘Were accessurics w not be suffi- There must be & demand for Gegradation and punishment of Government and local officie megiect or indiffere: made such possible, and for tien to the relatives and repre tatives of the Victims as well as to Wounded and al] who were put tc Joss through the acts of the mur In this our Government wit fan interest, as the flight of the must have been tended by ence and loss 4 will have the sympathy an¢ of every civilized nation in thie Americans perished in the mansacre Kucheng. There's & melancholy sort @atisfaction in that, thougn it does Met lessen the horror. SRE NEW WONDER OF THE WATER!. That accident in last Friday's race @ most annoying and unfortunate But what difference did the break- | yachtemen engaged in keep- | the America’s Cup here, where it i? On Baturday morning, bright ‘early, the peerless Defender made appearance at Newport harbor P four feet the Rev Mr Stewart win ria @rement does not punish the a ites near Jackson's Hole if our Gov- ers uses death. This Bannock chie! his bouse, which was fred, Menscing language, but he chiefly makes us Tyheer'd all the same, “The World's” ballot on excise reform ow ling law, seven favorit. ¢ n that basis about one milion Gay beer and thr rot Vox Pi hundred thousand do alt, Mr. Roosevelt! But the Wyoming Game Li FRED HOEY. ‘This is a picture of a famous American hot, who 1s just back from Hurope with trophies of his skill as a marks- man won at Monte Carlo, Rome, Lon- don and Aix-les-Bains. to Coney Island we expect to hear of some great shooting of the chutes by When he goes shrieking for rapid transit would de- skipped along at auch a joyous gait! A letter in @ bottle from the sea says idea has not been abandoned, but work is going on for buliding an island on Cholera Bank. Here's a chance for Mr. Hickey to trade off his Empire of Trini- dad for this new country. that the Atlantis piles on the There were beautiful electric displays tn the aky yesterday, but nothing quite so corruscant or eye-daazling as Sena- protracted whiskers at tangled braid of Populiatic statiatics, Every storm counts victims on the river and on the bay. pleasure-boaters were caught storm yesterday and lost. tainty seems to attend all small Sunday outings In the water. A number of typewriter | ‘The row in the Police Board may be accused policemen can be better assured of getting a thorough defense and less likelthood of being convicted on trumped- this Sunday cause a beer-riot. Here we are peace-| able and suffer grave w rather endure any personal hardships | than break the public peace. Bo they are getting ready to form a Next thing some of there big financiers know there will be formed People's Trust: All of Us to Do Everything for Ourselves. It may be consoling to those unable to g0 out of town, to know that the past or injured, and that the first| Dave been glad that you didn’t live in| July haa been the coolest in twenty-four the wounding of Miss Mabel | N€w York. Then the New Yorkers had ford, of the American Metho- |‘? Walk the bridge, pel If the Brooklyn Fridge blockade con- | tinues much longer there will be a big| boom in the bicycle business across the | | ‘The Indian war scare seems to be a case of boy crying wolf. are now looking for the boy. The authorities | No disrespect to the City of Churches, THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, AUGUST 5, 1895. aws Seem to Give the Poor Bannocks the Worst of It. ‘THE GLEANER’S BUDGET. Gossip Here, a Hint There and True Tales of City Life. ‘The benches of City Hall Park are occupied keop vary quiet. The benches have so long been the sole habitation of (hese bums that passera-by have almost persuaded themselves that the are 1o possession of thetr rightful owners, As I crossed the park the other morning, the usual quota of the Sone of Rest ware enjoying their forenoon alesta, but right in their midst I saw a sight that was strange even to one who b paged through the park every morning for ten years, Geated between a Weary Willie and & Dusty Rhodes was a woman sleeping the sleep of the Just, oF the unjum, ap whatever it may have been. She was doubtless the now woman of the genos tramp, and was taking advanta of & privilege heretofore exclusively enjoyed by man. Two sparrow cope evidently thought no, for they simply glanced at her reclining f and continued thelr endless journey. Perhaps it was an old slght to them, but it certainly was a new one to ma | ‘A man who had evidentiy been dining freely ot out of « oab im front of a Harlem apartment houne the other evening. The cab Iamp nearest the curb had gone out and he told the driver to Wight It. ‘1 don't want to be fined,” ho declared, ‘wo you light that lamp." While he was in tho house the coachman tried to light the lamp, but it was out of order, He did mot like to dinsbey bia employer's orders, and scratched bis tirad reflectively. Then @ brilliamt idea struck him. Mounting the box be turned the cab around 9 that the lighted lamp waa next the curb, In a few minutes the bon vivant emerged from the bouse and was greeted by the bright fro. the cab, ‘Tha'e right." he sald. ‘Keep ‘er Mgnted then I won't be fined.’ And stepping Into the cab he was carried rapidly away. The ‘amile was aa bright as the lamp. oe ‘Jack’ Astor took to wherling, early In feason, he has become famous among the cyclists of the Four Hundred as the greatest “meorcher’’ of the emart eet. He prefers riding bis wheel to driving fast horses, and only giv hie high-ateppers a chance to exercise when soclal requirements absolutely demand it. He up the hills about Newport with his 78 gear machine in a style that makes some of the veteran rondatera of the town green with envy and talke of century runs with a familiarity that lends with admiration for hin prowess, he goes off for @ cruise in bin ht, Nourmahal, he always takes his wheel with him, and {ready for a spin about the sea coast towns and villages whenever tin choones to make a landing, In fact, Mr. Astor and his bicyele have become inneparable, oe ‘The ambition of the new woman to do, or Attempt to do, whatever a man does Is manifesting Iteeif In the increased demand for dlamonl frame bicycles for riders of the gentier sex, The diamond-frame tm essentially a man's wheel, ant up to the prement season the ladies, or at least very few of them, hi mptod to rite any thing but the drop-frame, which ts heavy and cus: bersome, besides being Yesw safe than the other With the adoption of the bloomer costume, white neema to be fast yielding to out-and-out kntchor pockers, the girls are beginning fo find that Uioy are at no divadvantage with the men, so far convenience of attire te concerned, and that the dlamond-frame scorcher te Just what th want. Any nu women riding mens whe an be acen on @ falr day along the Houlevant and Riverside drive, and it ts not too much to prefict that before Jong the epectal ladies’ wh will be @ thing of the past, at least #0 far Hidera of advanced Ideas are concerned THE GLEANER ee JUST FOR THE LAUGHERS, Dog-Day Doggerel. Somewhere, we know, the moon looks down Upon « trembiing ea; fomewhere the forest lifts ite crown Up towards eternity— And eomewhere else, ‘tis hot as sin, And wreathed in dust and smoke, And that's the place where we're shut to— We helpless city folk. —Wasbington Star. Rest They Could Do. Mrs. De Gtyle—Where are your stables? Mra. Highupp—We have not room for stables ry exclusive, very exclusive, indeed. — Weekly She Was Humly. that where one man ts opposed to| but Brooklyn nowadays 1s the side door of New York. Grant's mei to the Police! As fin ent yet, though): “Dry Bunday in Spots"' Which means that @ favored few were able to get their Bunday beer. How much longer In this farc.es! attempt to enforce an ob- noxious law Will this dry Bunday war resolve Itnelf toad “nich League Club champagne jage and Tealle free-for-all Girder Club vert hoistings? reste ndred and ten excise ar- antes York war looking fer, tuo. We're pretty 004 people The difference between Col Grant and T. Koosevelt in police administration matters is that the Colonel doesn't make as brillant a dental showing as his molario eague Hugh J. Grant doesn’t want to be of the gaff make to the spirited, Tammany’s boss. Who can blame him? Tammany has nothing to boss just now A Pennsylvania Railroad traiq ran five and one-tenth miles in three min: utes, This is et the rate of 12 mileq dour. Mow the Harlemites a) Brooklyn bridge re- | The age of ferry-boats has gone Hurry up thos It wasn't a very dry Sunday 1f you count the weather in, divided several between Teddy Roosevelt's families o far. | — WORLDLINGS. (Areyroepeira striata) & drignt golden ening down ite coloring when frightened.”" ay. And that’s all the kind gaia to have the power of of crime the whole police force of New. priliiant te exposed to the action of wes at the rate of an inch ia ron under the same conditions corrod Penny postage for London and ite suburbe dates e fret used tm the latter part o at crop of tea grown in Nat To-day Natal tea 18 common, At the Bon Marche (cheap markets) year, 662 persone were arrested for kieptoi At the age of seventy-three Darwin declared that © cigarette rested kim more after hard labor ‘There was a rich Mise Cholmondeley, | Who was not remarkably colmondeley; he bad as many beaux re and teaux, But, really, she was #0 holmondeley | ‘That nous of them would propeaus. | Chicago Record, Rallroading 1m Cannibal Land, | Station Agent—What has become of the con ductor? Engineer—The passengere ate him up —Te Sittings Tommy's Soliloquy. 1 hope when I grow up I'll be Aman, but I'm afraid IT-may turn out quite otherwise And tura into @ maid, grandpa says that my mamma, a child, When she was by Was quite a tom! The idea maki me wild. —Harper'a Bara Didn't Know H Hacket (tu 4 young woman th whieh claimed her to be a © find she is only a conk! Sacket (lnterestetiy)—A cook! You lucky dog — Lack. J=Do you know, I've marie ough a om montal age ntess, when Platt Wounded Again. MeCook's appointment will prove of ealt to the raw wounds wn Strong. but the people of ago that whens PI political pain int Philadel pa York i night and day by « crowd of very dirty men who | ¢ board our horeas; but the boarding-stabies are yw York | ther Put certain Unis: While mi b) Their received at the hands of Mayor, To litt Fned long All yndeterred by tt winees and howls with health of the body politic is IT’S A POOR LAW THAT WON’T WORK BOTH WAYS. TALKS WITH THE DOCTOR, Advice About Ailments That May B. Safely Treated at Home. | To the mattor: Tam quite nervous, and auffer frequently trom an attack of palpitation of the heart Please suggest a remedy. W. HD. Get a mixture composed of equal parts of compound spirit of lavender and Hoffman's anodyne and take a teaspoon- ful In water as required, oe Kindly publish a remedy for violent attacks of neuralgia; they affect the se of my head principally. RAO. You may obtain relief by taking a powder composed of three grains of acetanilid and two grains of mono- bromate of camphor every three hours. eo 8 What would you advise me to take for a dizey and dull feoling in the morning; my tongue is also thickly coated? J. ALR, Harlem. Try pure sulphate of soda. Take one teaspoonful in a gobletful of hot water an hour before breakfast every morn- ing. es 8 1 am troubied with mataria and liver aie: turbance, Will you please publish a remedy? SUBSCRIBER You may find a good remedy in War- | burg's tincture, Take a dessertspoon- ful morning and evening, increasing the dose to a tablespoorful if necessary. oe e Kindly tell me ¢ a remedy for dlssiness ned by riding on the care—a sort of "sea alck ness"? JR You may obtain relief by taking a teaspoonful or two of the effervescing preparation of hydrobromate of caffeine in cold water as required, ee e Tam quite nervous and greatly troubled with Indigestion. Kindly tell me what to take, TFB, Take five drops of tincture of nux vomica in water before each meal and a powder componed of two grains of pure pepsin and five grains of subnitrate of bismuth after eating. You should also avoid haste in eating and masti- cate your food very thoroughly. «ee Preane toll mo what to use for melancholia and nervousness, ABC. ‘The valertanates of tron, quinine and zinc may be used with good effect Take a pill composed of the grains of the combined valerianates three times a day, eee Kindly let me know what to do for the chest. I am twenty-two yeare of a REO You should consult a physician and ave a careful examination made to ascertain the cause of the pain, oe Wil! you kindly repeat the directions for treat {ing a face that In broken out with pimpleat HOB Ly Brooklyn. Bathe the face with hot water at bed- time, dry thoroughly and apply a lotion ‘mposed of two drams of lac sulphur, one dram of spirit of camphor, one- half ounce of glycerine and four ounces of rose water and leave {t on all night. | inaty tet me what wilt ratt caured by @ flea bite aioe tn HOTA. A lotion composed of one part of wa- |ter of ammonia, one part of spirit of | camphor and two parts of alcohol may be used with good effect, Apply it as required, Aes Hopetul, Brooklyn, N, de answered tn this co! will be gent to you by mall. time. MF. D.—Apply at the N Far Infirmary, Second avi et and Thirt J. F. WHITMYER, M. D. oe AT THE CLUB, “Tie yeare ago, but I can atill recall ‘The small, low- met A wore oF 0 good fellows, one and all, Imbued with vim and vigor, and all set Not om the trifling vanities of youth, Time-waating ple: dub Their only alm; ah! Dowa at the Clu they sought for Truth, When mighty lsnues swayed the minds of men | High in the counet From legislative hatla, came thund’ring th napiring bursta of eloquence played | Ntehdly, amid the Merce and toud bub-bud These legislative acenes were then portrayed | own at the Cup. That ther 1p, ‘tls idle to ansert, The cultured tone which art alone impart Dut minds there were, keen, vig'rous and ni Upheld the right, distained 1 And fused with hope & rub; Pure, honest purpose filed the hearts of all Down at the Club, 0 tyra " fied, the gallant souls dispersed alle of busy life, The years a To face the varied ace Is foremost in the eocial etrife e weak, to fight the cruel strong, rub; Theira still the spirit ‘Dowa af the Club, MALL the itching Mra. R.—Apply to the Superintendent of Bt. Luke's Hospital, Fitth avenue and Fifty-fourth Y.—Your query cannot mn. Send your address | Mansfield to "The Evening World” and the information Anxious Mother.—Try fluid extract of sweet sumach, Give her ten drops in milk at bed- | York Bye and ath Mra. H. L., East Site—Take him to the Good | {ty Samaritan Dispensary, Broome and Easex streets, !Iinged room, where oft had ures, which the thoughtless of our land, and hence or Which moulded thought, and wondrous lore dts. rt, And words impassioned, straight from honeat | sak and wavering by want be cursed, fought social wrong DRAMATIC NEWS AND NOTES. There's to be a new Leah this coming season. Tne lady with the large and voluminous cur-r-r-se Is not to be al- lowed to die, Bernhardt has had a fing at her, and Margaret Mather ex- hausted her well-drilled intensity for several seasons in an effort to do Leah Justice. But Sarah has shelyed Leah, and Miss Mather’s dramatic powers have drifted in the direction of Mil- waukee beer So the new Leah will have the field to herself, and as she is a lady who has had plenty of stage experience, and whose career was originally guided by Augustin Daly, her season looks promising. The new cur-r-r-se propeller will be Miss Helen Blythe, who has been living in_retire- ment for three years, but who has not lost any, of her ambition or love of the stage. “I don't think that I am quite forgotten,” sald Miss Blythe yesterday, “but, of ‘course, in this theatrical life intermissions are dangerous, and I real- ize that. Henceforth I shqll stick to my work. The version of ‘Leah’ that I am going to do is the Daly version, and I selected that role because I be: lieve there is a great demand for It. The part is a splendid one, and the possibulties unlimited. saw Bern- ardt’s Leah and Iked the performance immensely. I also saw a German actress play the part, and admired her work, too, Buc I shall not model myself after anybody. How can @ woman who be- Hieves that she has any individuallt afford to do so? I want to make Leal a little more picturesque in appearance than she is usually made, The play is @ wonderfully strong one, and of the list of plays I submitted to’managers you Would be surprised to know how many selected ‘Leah!’ Miss Blythe's tour will begin about, Sept. 12 at Rand Opera-House in Troy.’ She will play two weeks at the Columbia Theatre in San Francisco, and will go through Col- orado and California. Later she will make her reappearance in New York. Miss Blythe was Augustin Daly's lea ing lady when he first took possession of his present Broadway Theatre. Just the same, she looks about ten yea younger than Miss Ada Rehan, eo 8 8 Theatrical people who have been drop- ping nickels in the slots of the phono- graphs at Asbury Park are highly in- ignant at one of the entertainments provided for them. Over the phono- graph in question {s a large placard bearing the choice and sensational legend, “The Ravings of John Me- Cullough."" ‘The “Edison machine re- produces’ what is supposed to be the ngane utterances of the famous tra- kedian—quotations from “Virgintus, “Julius Caesar” and other plays, Inte spersed with demoniac laughter of the blood-curdling order, A more gruesome, uncanny and scandalous aftalr could scarcely be Imagined. If the theatrical people don't like it, the sensation: mongers do, and the Asbury Park lads and lasses, like bees fiitting from flower to flower, go from “If the Girl That You Love Loves You’ to “The Ravings of John McCullough," and from “The Ray- ings ‘of John MeCullough” to “The Laughing Coon." Probably we shall get oor Scanlan's Bloomingdale oratory ater on. This fs an age of enterprise. oe Augustin Daly offered Max O’Rell $10,000 to write him an original play and Max O'Rell refused the offer, Th wily who makes a lot of noney, by ctures, felt that he couldn't Jeopardize his ‘prospects with a play produced in th aly glare, He expects to do that later. fn the mean time he Is preparing the comedy for Sam Edwards, of which “The Evening World” has already told, It will be a tentative effort. If successful, O'Rell Will (quit lecturing and take fo play- writin . By the bye, Daly has on hand a new/| version of ‘the old Pygmalion and Galatea legend, treated in a very modern spirit, and probably a very ir- reverent one.’ It is a pantomime ‘play and is called “Mademoiselle Pygmalion,” and the manager fs to present it in this city next season, Of course Miss Rehan will be the animated statue eee Sol Smith Russell, who is at present doing the Summer’ resorts with Mrs. Sol Smith Russell and a brace of juve- nile Sol Smith Russells, ts turning over a new leaf. He Is going to produce plays Instead of monologues. ‘The, un- 1appy affairs he inflicted upon New ers. Will be remembered for a lon time, Sol Smith Russell will be one o: those who will remember them, for, he lost a barrel of money with them. This ning season he is to do a new play by, Augustus Thomas, not yet named; 4 comedy by Marguerite, Merington, au- thor of “Lettarblatr,”’ entitled "An Every Day Man: "The Rivals” and The Heir at Law." Joseph Jefferson recommended the jast-numed play to Mr, Russell's attention, saw him play it and was highly edifled. But the come- dian will not come to New York, He | has had enough of it, Mke a good many | other actors and actresses. He will play | Brooklyn, and go as far West as Den- ver. Miss Minnie: Radcliffe will be his leading lady once more. Miss Radcliffe devotes herself almost exclusively to Sol Smith Russell and Joseph Jefferson, Bettina Gerard ~ Padelford - Ordway. Raphael-Wolfe, who has been ke=ping remarkably unmarried of late, is to as: sist Eugene O'Rourke in “The Wicklow | Postman” at the Fourteenth Street The- atre. That means-for the benefit of the unknowing ones—that she {s to be a| sort of co-star, and that her name will | be printed on the programmes in larger | letters than are used for the common, or | garden, actors and actresses. This is | but a beginning. Miss B. P.O. R. W. ard will probably branch out for | herself later on, She is ambitious, and she ts not unclever. eo 8 The people who “can’t get on™ with Will McConnell's coming management of that gentleman, ‘They insist that tt will last for about five Weeks. Mans. field heard this, and buttonholed McCon- neil. "I hear.” sald he, “that you are to be my manager for five weeks only,” MeConnell looked at the actor-manager with paternal affection in both hie eyes. “It's not true, old chap,” he remarked, with perhaps ‘a dash of undue familiar: “you'll find me tagging along by your side for fifty-two weeks next sea- son, and 1 won't desert you. TI posi- tively won't, So cheer up, and don't worry about {dle gossip.” eee ‘The opening of the Standard Theatre Thursday night with "Dorothy" brings the coming season into view, but by the time August is at anvend It will | be well under way, and from then until the beginning of October there will be two or three openings every week. Las year the season began later and ended jearlier. It was gloomy and unpros- perous. ‘The outlook for the coming | season is unusually bright The incoming steamers are bringing back crowds of theatrical folks, but the ual Sardou plays are not forthcoming Every Tottie Coughdrop who walked down the gangplanks last year had Sar- dou dramas stored away among her Worth gowns. This Summer Sardou ts deader than a doornail. He ts out of the atmosphere, and Miss Elizabeth Marbury, his agent, will have some- thing to’ say on the subject returns shortly, The sloventy “Woman's Silence” did for the French playwright as far as London and New York are concerned. — a IN SUMMER Woops, te Summer woods the changing sheen Of wunlight soft and shadowy vine Against the trees di4 Mattens 1 While from the leaves in chorus keen Rose insect Lspings faint and fi And sweep of winds the bills between Through maple branch and towering pin Sang breezy melodies divine In Summer woods, ‘Yot all that this to me might mean Was lost--I saw no vernal green, Nor varying tint of abade and ant ‘The face of Christ might pass unsesn— I only knew your lips touched mine In Summer woods, re very much interested In | vhen she | Here is # smart, becoming and withal moderately priced cycling costume. It may be made of homespun tweed or serge, and consists of skirt, coat and knickerbockers, The coat is just sum- clently long, for instance, to reach to the saddle, and can either be worn open to show the blouse or waistcoat, or buttoned up to the neck, only revealing the tle, while the skirt Is cleverly gored and so cut as to allow of plenty of spring over the knees. It is also welghted at the foot to prevent blowing about or “working up."" For Book Bindings. The defects of old and worn book- bindings may be hidden by the beauty of new ones, embellished by lovely little covers made of old pieces of velvet, satin, silk, plush or brocade. Very at- tractive book covers may be made of coarse gray canvas, hand-painted with red poppies, forget-me-nots, wild rose violets, &c. These are especially neat when finished with a binding of gray or red taffeta ribbon, such as‘is sold for binding the inside ‘ams of dress waists, Some Parasol Don'ts, Don't buy a pink, lavender or blue cloisonne handle will fit in nicely with any costume, while for the frivolities of life there must be a chiffonesque, ruMy fluffy conceit, with all the ehoicest innovations in handle gear, Don't carry a fanciful sunshade if your gloves are shabbily fingered or your shoes noticeably seedy. Don't make an effort to carry a pare- Sol the tint of your gown unless the match ts perfect. Pienio Patties. Mix @ ounces of flour, 8 ounces of 4ripping and a teaspoonful of baking wder well together, then work into a stiff paste with a little water and roll it out 1-4 of an inch thick. Grease six patty pans and line them with the paste. Cut up 8 ounces of cold meat finely, season with pepper, salt, and a small teaspoonful of mixed herbs, @ little gravy, and dredge with flour. Fill the patty pans, cover with the paste, trim the edges neatly and bake half an hour, To Savi oe! Heels. To prevent shoes from making holes in the heels of stockings, & plece of wash leather inisde the heels of the shoes. This also will insure shoes from rubbing the feet and makes them At better. Soup Without Meat. There is nothing so truly comforting on a cold day asa plate of good soup. It happens sometimes, however, that it is impossible or inconvenient to get any meat to make the stock, For this emer- gency it is well to keep a jar or browned flour always on hand. To make it put about a pint of flour in the oven on a pan of any kind, and let it get @ rich golden color, stirring it occasionally. To make the soup use two tablespoon- fuls of this to a quart of water for tl stock, and add vugetables, rice and sea- soning, according to taste, the for any other soup. A pretty photo-holder may be made of Chinese matting. Make openings in this the size of a cabinet photograph, having them placed apart at regular intervals, Line with cambric, decorate with chry- santhemums made of rope embroidery silk, and finish with a loop of satin ribbon coming into a butterfly bow on the outside of the panel at the upper left-hand corner, sunshade, plain or in stripes, if it is the only one you can afford for the a son, Don't carry a chiffon parasol when shopping. This looks as if you hadn't any other, Don't by any chance let a red sun canopy creep into your belongin, it you are florid or fleshy, Don't imagine that your umbrella wardrobe is complete unless it boasts of at least a quartet of suitable affair One should be of plain pongee or dark shot silk for companionship with the, tailor frock; another for calling or car- riage use may show some dressine: about it; @ pure white moire with Huckleberry Win Take two quarts of huckleberries, put in demijohn whole, add one-half pint al- cohol, six pounds granulated sugar, six quarts of water, Fill up with sweet- ened water until fermentation ceases by placing @ plece of gause over the demijohn, You can decant easily. Good to Know. It 1s said that roaches are killed out- right by the polsorous water exhaling from fresh cucumber peelings scattered about the floor at night, and that two or three repetitions will exterminate them root and branch. It is worth try- ing. — —S—S==== LETTERS. [Tits cohwnn i open to everybody who has a complaint to make, a grievance to ventilate, i formation to give, a@ subject of general interest to discuss or a public service to acknowledge, and who can put the idea into leew than 190 words Long letters cannot be printed. | How to Save a Car Fare, To the Editor: I want to Inform the readers of “The Evening World" of a scheme that would save them many A nickel, Friday morning, at about 11.30, 1 was around the vicinity of Ninety-second street and Third avenue, and boarded a Third avenue cable r, intending to get off at One Hundred and Eighth sirect. T handed the conductor a Colum- bian half-dollar pleve to pay for my fare, but was very much surprised when, after examining ft for about two minutes, he handed tt back to me, saying that it was no good, and that the company gave him strict orders not to take any such money, I told him that he ought to be glad to get them, and that they were at a premium, but ¢ re was no use in arguing with him; he ed upon getting other money, or else he 4 put me off the car, 1 told him he could 4 nothing of the kind, as the money I tendered him was United States money. By that tlme I reached my destination, and told him 69, ‘That made him mad, and he wanted me to get off the car while it was in motion, but I wasn't going to let a thick head Ike him bulldoze me, I made him bring the car to a full stop before I got off You ought to have seen the expression on that conductor's face, to think that I would get ahead of him. Now, {f anybody would get a Columbian half-dollar and tender tt to the conductor in pay- ment for fare, he would not have to pay, as the conductor would probably act the aame as the one T had my experience with. CHARLES WECHSLER, P. B.A dally reader of your paper. 1 write my thanks to Bandmaster Rampone, of Abingdon aquare, through the columns of your paper. He was kind enough to proft by a little Advice given by & professional singer, who through long experience with the musle-loving classes knows Just what they want. He played “Only One Girl" and several other popular num- bers, which were recelved with cheers and re- peated encores, which, I believe, pleased our bandmaster as much as the music pleased his isteners, I have heard all of the open-air con- certa at Abingdon square, and can truthfully that never before did the band receive such applause, and all because the people got what they wanted, popular music. Let the good work 0 on, NINTH WARDER. A Kite Has Weight. To the Editor: In "The Evening World" of July 31 I noticed « letter in relation to the weight of smoke, The entleman says amoke has no weight because it him if he did not know the law. Again, as 0 duate of West Point, why is it that when riding he turns to the left instead of the right? Why, according to that any ber of the American Guard could give him lessons, Per a person filling the exalted position he holds as P. C. to use auch vulgar language as he did 9 few minutes later seems beyond the compre- hension of even Mayor Strong. Last ef all, allow me to extend to Mr, Andrews my deep- felt sympathy for the pains he susteised and Yould willingly pay for his doctor bills were it hot to be an Insult on our police surgeona Incl- dentally I will state that the lady wore ekirts and n& bloomers, To the Bo the ant to help Teddy enforce the Biue Laws. Well, they, no doubt, leve this gentleman, for who does not. But let me tell that young jackanapes ning Dimesif Frask . what if he was my boy I would ten bis jacket and give him @ dose of the old reliable remedy of bread and water fora month, If Ted depends upon the boys to catch us drinking beer on Sua- day he will be not much the wiser fer bie trouble, cr. Marriage for Love and for Money, To the Editor: “Valkyrie telle in his short note what the girls have done to him; simply shown that they are after bis money and not him. We ie indeed a bright fellow to have learned it before it was too late, We too often hear the expression, “She has married well.’ This simply meang her husband {# rich, It does mot meam that hia morals are good, he i temperate, Be has wood health and will make @ kind husbené and @ gentle father, Such men are often paseed foe one who ts rich and lacks all of them qualities, Can we blame men like "Valkyrie," whe ese o@ every aide women ready in a day to give thelr daughter to @ man who bas money, withest « question into his past o whether he hee ehar. Actor or neare? 1 have no horses, ‘but f have uses, bonds, stocl mortgages, 3 r do marry, willl care that the ‘as independent financially as myself, 1 shal then have e fair show of married tor love and’ not money. DEFENDER. Punishing Pupils 1: Schoo! a Vienna To the Editor: t returned from a very fashionable school in Vienna, and was quite horrified at the vulgar “spankings” your readert deveribe. Our Austrian principal almed at refine: ment in even in our school puntaly ments. When any of us misconducted ourselvet she ordered us to put on a pair of extremoly thig and excruciatingly tight-fitting kid gloves amd then hold out our palma while she applied ¢ thin riding switeh to them. Knowing well enoug? that the kid covering would prevent any traces of the moat cruel lashes, she seemed to take ¢ pleasure in whipping the beautifully smooth blact Kiace kid regardless of our pain, When kraver faylta the very thinnest kid was. Cightly right up to the shoulders, we were fear fully stung. bi ed cruelty, As the girls had tow ® Jong while after, “this does not gravitate towards the earth; but he will admit a kite has weight, though {t rises like |amoke, It goes up because it Is lighter than the | aurrounding alr and 18 carried by the wind, Place a large glass globe on @ scales, pump the hit, ‘Then Mil the globe with smoke and it will Increase in weight, proving ‘smoke to have weight. TAK Police Commi To the Editor: In your issue of July 30, you had a notice in reference to Commissioner Andrews's bicycle riding ability. Now, I may be able to give you some very desirable information om this point, In the first place, if this was P. C. An- drews, why does he not observe the regulations in regard to the speed of bicycle siding? If he cos not know them, please let him know that jaht miles is the maximum speed allowed by law and not twenty, the rate he was travelling at. "Also, if he would be es vigilant as our Mr. Roosevelt. he would have wondered why none ct, as the were much dreaded. Has this pecullar restraint been tried In America? KG. To the Editor It makes every kind-hearted person sad, To think of calling that dear girl bad: To avenge her honor was perfectly right, ° Although she made use of a razor bright, No hatred she showed, but the purest love, ‘As tender and true as the turt Bo juat burry up that petition to And among theif names you will sui “Sweet Nineteen" wou an L' guard's acquaintanc occurs to her that he might be ried man.