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

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" SUBSCRIPTIONS Mpcleding postage: PER MONTH. PER YEAR... a Batered at the Pes Otee « sesso !-clase ma She SEA Mord sSengers can cross the bridge by the tajiroau, not only with the customary See SiKk HO. hee tee comfort, but with improved facilities oe <:] which will Increase as the work be- comes complete, TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1895. It Is gratifying to be informed that ——-— 10 THE EVENING WORLD fo over the bridge, and who on this occasion used the ferric To-day the trouble ts over and pas-| [such an Interruption will probably never cour again while the bridge stand Oe | Tn arresting Brockway and his gang $80 of counterfeiters Secret Service Chief Magen has rendered a valuable service 404 fo ine community, They should be acet bevond the reach of piates and | Mes for a long term. CROKEX 18 OUT AT LAST. bi umrtaln Urrown OFvice ee neat.) Tammany Tall seeme at Inat to have] way and Sixth ave at 3d got a little sense. It was expected th WORLD HARLEM OFFICD—:. Me end Medi. the reorganization would result in the oe ave. permanent retirement of old and dis-/ BROOKLYN—200 Washington aced lead In the reelection of PHILADELPHIA, PA. peas Duliting, 162 Chest- < Md crowd every one of the 4 gabled T howe « ens who voted for the Tam- | : Seecror ea many chndidates Yast November must >, have been deeply disappointed. Other mocrats Who had been expecting bet s$- things Were disgusted and turned hy = iway all the more quickly ag these por iW he district leaders began to sneer at he plan outined in the Spring by ex-| —— as Mayor Grant for a committee of 1% wphe Evening 554 178 in JULY | rats of all shades of faith to com. Livin ~ ? | plans for a harmony ticket this) — y and next, THE WORLD'S CIRCULATION IN JULY WAS The ts OF ion COMBINED CIRCULATION of HERALD, the TELEURAM, IN, th EVENING SUN. Me a the MAIL, the COMMERCIAL ond the MOR: Bi aL. CIRCULATION POR Yer tay. Pah one TR a ‘This t« Geta in one year... 53,473 ‘ je tast bate! Pi ictars to The W aa + Go a tees pean ‘218.138 shows a vote of 9 to 1 in favor of a Oita in twelve yuan. | Uberal excise Sunday law. They mean nothing to Roosevelt. The wishes of th TRIBUNE, the EVEN: AXD { 1, 556178 |: PER DAY. CHRSUTAHION ot ten New ore | fog, to be more xpec: A 000 “more than the x. De NING | July, 1895 - 554,178 per day July, 1894 - 500,705 per day | Jaly, 1891 - 861,040 per day | July, 1888 - 87,449 per day | oaaibeel| ¢ then two things have happened, rouse some Democratic hope. Best Mis the fact that for the first time since he ca of age Richard Croker ] has b 1 out of the sxecutive Division of Tammany If the b is to go up, It will go Up only by | jhe is “not mm tt." The Jonah has been cast overboard. Good, too, is the news that ow!ng probably to pressure exerted by ex Mayor Grant since his return home, new Tammeny ts to make @ fact the ota [harmony committee of 100 Democracs | from all organizations to secure victory, With Croker out at last and such a | committee in sicht Democrats are hop- jing that they may find a party stand- ard which they n orally around this Fall with pride and prospects of glory | on the istanc most of the people are all yellow prim roses to him—he doesn't wish to and he won't try to see what they mean. ive Rooseve we don't ATTENDED HIS OWN FUNERAL. Mr. | O FLIES ON the World a credit (From Galler: for one THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 6, 1895, Fil y of GEN. RAFAEL DE QUESADA. pleture of a gallant leader of | the Cuban patriots, who has just suc- | w violators will be brought to trial hing! | than sawdust to make Rates gf “THE EVENING WORLD i John H. Clarence is tr under- | It will oe m taker with warerooms at 8 Livingston | his lose his sand Waving Ge city for Ga het months should end street, Brooklyn, and ap rtmente | ~ nf i © Gut eddremm and hom THE EVENING |in the upper part of the build-| The sawdust in Mr, Roosevelt's “bomb" + WORLD' mated them ropulary, Addrema |ing. Yesterday afternoon he went | Was appropriately ¢ dectret. upstairs to his rooms, when, on | 2 SS alah ad His) way, Ne. encountered a altanne| EDITORIAL MEDL fs = young man, who brushed against him = rather rudely, as Mr. Clarence thought To New York's Advantage. ET YOUR PAPERS TO-DAY. |The stranger said he was looking for a| snnen, of New York, has been Inilicted ‘Onder the new State Constitution thie |(resamaker. When asked why he did Heglect in permitting Uhtee postofice <4) the last day on which an allen may | not ring the bell he replied that it was to escape. The robbers Lave lett: New ‘De naturalized tn time to enable him to |"5t necessary. He was then told to. York st 1 If the robbers who have never vota in this year’s election. He ts re- | “make tracks double quick, and the been in Sherif! Tamsen's custody should depart quireé to have been a citizen ninety | undertaker conducted him to the door | #l% What a fine etty New York would beo Uthoa dey: te entitle him to a vote. | and showed him out as promptly if not) UP*r''r ‘ It 19 not worth while to discuss this as politely as he would hand a mourner | New Pertt few Womees fev provision now. It ts law and must 10 @ carriage, lc cAuspatlp: et Ateloal, oxnlacera, bare: Uibeaverdd be obeyed. It is desirable that every Vl be sorry you sent me AWAY | aying mice in the Cameron country, Thus is a intelligent man who is entitled to hin! #0 unceremoniously,” sald the stranger, | iy horror added tor the new woman to combat «papers should obtain them and secure, but he did not delay his departure A ARIE WONid ot HG Ja SOLAN: OF uatatyts the franchise on as he is entitled | The young man was evidently & WAR. | femininity againet a mouse with bata wings — “te tt, It is avalible privilege and one, His prediction came tr When Mr. | poieto tiade. ‘Which some politicians desire to make as; Clarence ascended to hig rooms h - @imcult to gain as possible. At this found they had been ransacked and an| — Weald 8! je Hee ReEpeRt, time it fe as well to have the ballots | his fewels, of which he had a good! It Chicano chose to brag about moma of the of as many legal voters as respect per- supply, Was gone, He had buried them | things which have been token out of the Chicas | fonel liberty and have sought freedom himself, ax it were, and had consigned | River that New York reaterpent would not be) in place of oppressicn as It {8 possitle them to the grave when he conducted | *nmdered worth notion Chicago Record tc obtain, Naturelized citizens are just | the strange visitor to the door and com- ean Example of, AJ much entitled to vote as native-born | pelled him to leave the house, A. pecuilariy: eed ase: to. -repeeted! from: New citixena when they have properly filled -_ _ - York, It appears that a society widow of that the requirements of the law, and ft I! fr foosevelt’s efforta to enforce the | town pald court to her coarkman, won hin yous Just a> wrong to throw unnecessary ‘sunday Excise law have been marked @0 | affections and then tired of him and Noartlortly estroia: in their way thraugh the sur py « series of petty persecutions and | threw him over, The betrayed young man haw i courts a> it ts to ber the road of legal jijunt arresta, caused by excens of zeal | MM fF damages for breach of promlae to marry ‘ Yoter> te the ballot box by vexatious | oy °ihe part of hin policemen, Nor are | V@ hope the recreant woman will be mate to medjrerienta the officers to blame In every cane. ‘They | Me" 4 an trample to alt designing fervaten ood :% It Is to be hoped every tntelMgent man |i. heen harassed and lectured until te petnalond Nee vial +s Sntitiea to hic papers will secure them | icy pave lant thelr nense of judgment " ASE 9R ‘ ee : | Meanwhile it has been demonstrated | Cheap Notoriesy: f Harldy has the steam locomotive been | that despite police and citizen sples it is | The man who has offered to take Marla Rar: i completed when it ts old-fashioned, The | !mposedble to close all the saloons all of | berl's place tn ae el are Ls onened up a i @ Baldwin locomotive works past over to) the time, qe | Sasulds foe: Le ppekatal ot near ee /AAara oak old fashioned as a windmill is to-day. were still binckmailing the viclous. ‘Th | journal, | J attention of Mr. Roosevelt ts called to Gave at ihc Muawe. CUR NAVAL SERVICE, [Aiko to the Tact, that, you can't, make | Some of the Tresientat tome are now ken | The successful speed trial of the Co. | UNO 10 the fact that y keeping an, | MEMer glass, and some, ke skeletons, ace yet ta : lumbia last week culled forth some coms | Cinep got of mea thirsty tHe TeloNeh, NEE ERD (Ge CAL iim KOs) Rarerilly ; Meets At ow nano ianion tho ainioulties aty _ Hurted Is the more likely to come to an untitae i” Under which our war vessels labor, One! phe Commissioners of Accounts con. |" Ten Merah _ : Poe crate Merah Qncer compliting that que their investigations inty the Dock Want Grub, Not Mood. ' gine dipartments of our cruisers Honartment too recretly. If crookedness| At tast we have the truth, ‘The Inflan te on 5 Quence the endurance of the men in tt nore quickly ascertained turning | chicago Post ] engine and frerooms is more severely | on the public searchlight, | pi ae _ % taxed than in foreizn vessels or ships | Sra 4 of the merchant service, and thus their | Wo: the ‘two! 8 vinters in| efficiency is impaired. re Hoard, Grant and Andrews, | orwas tn the prime of @ummer-time— He draws a comparison between the! yy) “spy system?” Right in| The alr wae filled with heat 3 Columbia and the recently Anehed tine with the training and traditions of | Ant two of Teddy's new fy cope English cruiser Terrible, wh the Military Academy, isn’t it? ] Went crawting up the treet eetive if the figures ‘ hey gave a Sa Power, the Terrible iwenty-tive $ probing ne predicted AMAL (baie clhie THELE hearts Went ODS Columba has im selo. Philadel. | T c 1 for the river ent fou: ein h dred ans n When it i . r na > | A 4 ¢4 a3 F double the Cole) Larry Delmour, Punk and Jimmy | Ther t aiadly Riven up thelr socks j work fartin called on ex-Mayor Grant, but i gneer oReere Is 9s ay ' s "t talk polities.” No, they The tox contaliind He bomb # che Columbis 1 met to dra resolution @f sympathy | To blow Ted up #kyshigh hems r with persecuted) Armentans wily Rucased {t had come ope third in oe the: i J Fem en © who'd gone dry latter. Senator an has visited Secretary ‘AS Taat! thay Fanchadn Lesaly donk Certain 6 ¢ aff Toa h the Maryland papers | FAC truih’ She: AMIN chee a? — ought not to ea . owt w maybe you will] ants te stream it w en preg rs ‘ eur they talked about | The cops laughed | Rot let us : Hos, Hanon | When it had soaked a) ciency br s F kinr Aiseraced Kentucky not AUNeE ee babi ia ef whic ent t through most) 78,0" Net Monned a be ashemes 8 trie ng by the series of | s ’ . ee ee ee . 1 es which have followed ine 4 Bote csaaey tr = 1; bis b the Roden: fs t re OW n kway ts seventy-three with pine of being due To lynch the murde ¥ s fi 2 Would only brand r torr n ake tind of Bi ny A GREAT HIGHWAY , DO RRAEA up coceni aba eriments ted hr of horse tate Fallroad travel on the } Fi } behind the we to remind the people » u une Oe - Oe m valet ta highway — betwee the “ * neeuae hints: 4 the bridge has e 28 genere} subilation over the De te dreading the vinion the night had in store 7 page of the train e fora litle f¢ oe aefornianean Ge face] UL eeeel se win a miind 1 at ease a leas than two de ous archarea’ Valkyrie 111, | ereke! With praises my lipe buddied oe ; Venienceé more than half 4 million p Teka chnat ten When} saw at ber gird of aneet peas Py ple. Between 7 end $ in the morning + we gta Daapasca yesterday more than one hundred thou. Platts Senator, ts to bel The Cheerful idiot. Band persons walked over the Hr wr’ Now, ff Platt only had! ies tks eA elie Ge from Brooklyn to New York w ted to bis office—wouldn't he woul ein cue oct . 8 i a: pF 4 and 63 P.M. the same numu dow Giigk Danse AML alee Ge ote @f foot passengers passed from New ” areca ania (ha: aid dastleand’: boarder. nach as j York to Brooklyn, This was inde- ow that Col. Fellows is back, © “Of course mot.’” said the cheertel idley ‘The 9 Pendent of the thousands who always|han, the slugger, and all the Excise| siavie woman would preter (ue horse.” Because He Knows How to Keep Them Away. OLD GRANDPOP. de Biaatter.) PILFERED PLEASANTRIE: In the Country. (From the Detroit Free Preae) She-1 presume the country editor's pathway ts hot atrewn with flowers? Hy (pleasantly)—No, not exactty; but we atum- big on a bushel of potatoes occasionally, oF @ ord of wood, Spent His Wife's Money. (From an Exchange.) “DIG you see Jabergon last night? money like @ prince." “Like @ prince? He blew in about $4. Spending his De you call that ike @ prince?’ | ceeded in outwitting the Spaniards and | sixty) landing a large force of evolutionists | heard any of the | about ‘Sure. The money was his wife's” Told the Trath. (From the Detroit Tribune.) “Ah, 014 man! What are you doing these daya A street car company,"' rejoined the corpora- ton lawyer, absoatly. Too Terrible to Contemplate. (From Truth.) Ethel (who has just married @ young thing of How happy we should be If never yerecable things people way us Howom friend (who ought to know)—Rut how should wo feel If we heard all? The Bilivitle Banner. (Prom the Atlanta Constitution ) We have sold our cattle, and we're going to ee that butt Axnt at the exposition, wear our a married, t hard hitter \ We understand’ that the new mother-in bloomers, Perhaps we'll get a chan: pendera. then, don't believe in hanging a woman, We're and we're not allowed to belleve tn tt. Wo congratalate the Governor on his recovery rom seven doctora We have kaown men to give under with Just one, w How It Happene (From the Oakland Tribune) MeSm{th—How did you come to know so much avout Ker family affairs? Numpus—He ang P both get rber shop. a ‘FAIRS OF NEW YORK. The Growler Will Rus! ‘That ‘Tammany striped cat tm not a sick kitten, A New York workingmen are now preveuior vse “rushing the growier’ op Sunday, but about next election day the growler himself will do @ tue rushing Chicago Dispatch, All with the Sanday-Closers. Aotect any murmur of protest against the Sunday- losing Jaw (in New York City) from the eax loon-keepera of Long Isiand ant New Jereey. ‘They are with the temperance folks to @ man.— Huftalo Courter, Gen, McCook. Gen, Anson G. McCook, who was yeaterday ap- 1) City Chamberiiin of New York, the highest salaried position in that muntcipallty, comes of famous Mehting stock, and he has shown by hie foarlens attitude towards the Piatt machine that ho has not lont the family trait, Possibly re nition of this fact may have had something to do with hia appointment, for Piatt rather Iikes Philadelphia Recon That Midnig! Midnight has been supp hour when ghosts troop forth, Ja to be merely the but now It seems to be the thine set apart for the Sunday New Yorker to take on hin Jag, Mis muferings up ty the moment when NO In free must be excru- clating St, Louls Posts Dispatch Wanted--Hear: T Jove awest Dolly's soulful eve, So att ant frank and blue; And then there's Ruth 1 highly prize, Recause her heart Is true And that’s the cause of all my woe, Tim wretched, aad, where'er 1 go Tor man” loves T have, 1 know Whatever shall I dot I worship Mabel's perfect taca, And Wke her figure, too; Admire Edith’s supple gra: The shapely foot of Pru J like bright Polly's sparkling wit, For nothing quite surpasses tt; In fact, 1 think my heart ts aplit— Whatever shall I do? ‘Then Martha's voice enray And Holente thrills me though; When Joasie amitos T would age A phantom to pursue. Alas! Um sore (rom Cupid's darts, And each one burns and stings and Dut, as [have not twenty Whatever aball [dot t Flower, in Louisy. —— FOREIGN COUNTRIE: te Courter-Journal. cnepr In Italy but Uttle credit business 1s done, and e without good security being given. In Cuba the time fixed for pa s trom four ty five monthe after delivery of the gooda, Jy the Hermudas accounts are aettled but once a year June 30 1s the day unually Axed for the Mayananla In Austela tt te acarcely possibie to dy business Sichout allowing a long credit, which is usually one of six moatha In England a payment of price of goods de. livered ts required at the end of three months, dating from the day of enipne In Spain four-fifths of the fons are done on a cash basis, while tn Por te ona al owed In Turkey even 4 oa cred great Wberality asity are asia Ja Mexico the large commercial houses witiing kive credit of from etx to eight months, and ta real estate trades lomg terms are given cus, omere in ttle thelr a 8 not customa, credit. | ney tm obtained from lenders, who ex: {of from 8 to 12 per cent. Busisess ways conducted on @ cash dasia the with a dtecount of 6 per cent. & credit of from three to ai in Ghia case there ta Bo discount k from Naphtha Smoke. The ink used in printing the Bank of England notes was formerly made from ufactured from naphtha smoke, | must you TRE GLEANE! BUDGET. Gossip Here, a Hint There a Tales of City Lite. ‘Fine sunset Friday meane rain before Mon. day.” 1 have tested this olf proverb several times and never knew it to fail. A friend to whom I quoted it recently was sceptical, and After seeing tt demonstrated two weeks in suc coumion made @ small wager that the third time would fail, Last Friday the sunset was particu- larly fine, Sunday's storm won me the weer, ‘The friend 18 not sceptical now, Trae On Sodewick Just beyond Van Courtland | Park, Sunday, 1 maw two “new women." They Were clad in knickerbocker wheeling costume and were reciining on the grass by tha road side, each holfing a clearette between her tipa Tt may have becn a brazen performance, but they made « preity pleture oe A pretty younk New York woman, who is) spending the Summer in a little town not far from the city, has engentered the dislike of mort of the young women of the place because of the attention pald her by the young men Laat week a party was given, to which all of | the young women in the place of good soctal | ponition were invited, except the New York | miss, On the night of the party the uninvited | young woman with an excort sat out on the | lawn in front of the hotel and danced to the music furnished from the dancers attending the | Party. Soon many of the young men attending | the party were out on the lawn dancing attend- ‘nce upon the young woman. When the tn- Vited Rueste went to nupper the New York rirl, ‘accompanied by ten or a dozen young men, went to another hotel aad had an enjoyable little supper of her own, . Jn On my way downtown one evening Inst week on a Sixth avenue “L/* train a young man about thirty, who from hin dress was evidently @ theological student or a young clergyman, aat beside me, At Twenty-elghth street a young man much the worse for overindulgence in Hiquor entered the ca: and anated himself oppo- ite the young theologian, In a few moments he drew from his coat pockets a flank of whiskey And offered it to the people sitting near him, focluding the theolog, The latter amilingly Geclined the flask of whiskey. As he did so the man who offered it noticed for the first time the clerical dress of the man opposite him. "I be your pardon," he aald, he stood up, ‘I didn't notice you were @ preacher.” He then hurrtediy went into another car amid the laugh- ter of the other passengers, . - e ‘There 1» a new conductor on the Broadway cable road who has been attracting considerable attention ately among the patrons of the road, Particularly the women, because of his courteous treatment of all passengers. 1 undersand the young man worked his way through one of the Well-known universities and was only graduated In June fast, He 9, Tam told, studying medi- cine, despite the fact that his hours of labor are very long. ee There t9 a bright young lad about stxtern years ol who hangs around the Grand Central Depot, makes a good living and supports a widowed mother acting as a guide for atrangera who are | Passing through the city and wish to see an! much of It am they can In a limited time, The boy Is known to the pilicemen and railroad em- Dloyeen. He ts honest and thoroughly reliable. He frequently escorts women suburban shoppers from and to the depot when they come to the city In Urs morning without other escorts, THE GLEANER. —o_ QUESTIONS OF ETIQUETTE, The Nales of Rest Hehavior Ex- plained to Inquire: To the Editor: Would it be improper for « single lady, accom: panied by two gentlemen of long acquaintance, to see one of them off on @ Sound steamer? AW. M. If the men are old acquaintances of hers, and if her parents have no objec- | tion, there ts no impropriety in her “‘see- ing one of them off." ee While viatting « lady friend of mine @ customer | of here came in intoxicated, and when she} went to ght th he prevented her from do- | tng no, I thought he was very aggravating, #0 1 lighted the myself without being asked. Was [right to do sot BROOKLYN. Yes. oe Te there any harm for a young lady to go Into shoe store where gentlemen go to get her tan| shoes cleaned and pollshed, as I do not like the| stands on the street, and we can't pollsh our own shoes? LH. There ta no special “harm” in it, but | {t would be better to go to some store frequented by women, ee Which fs proper to have engraved on my cards, ‘Mr. John Brown’ or ‘John Brown?’ AMS “Mr. John Brown" ts correct. eee Please Inform me whether the rules of dress @emand that a man must wear hia overcoat over his dress sult, or can he during hot weather carry It on his arm? HOT WEATHER. In Summer the overcoat under such circumstances 1s often carried on the arm, . 1. When teeuing wedding Invitations ts It cus tomary to send to all relatives and friends of the groom? 2. Would It be appropriate to have | the home decorated with the National colors? LB Mt. 1, Yes, except in the case of a very quiet wedding. 2% It is not customary, Flowers are far prettier and in better form as decorations on such occasions than are the National colors, eee Tam engaged to be married and my lover persists In saying that he has a perfect right to hold me on his lap as much as he wishes, 1 aad that he had not the right. Kindly tnform me which of us Is right. HONEYSUCKLE, A girl is as a rule not supposed to sit in a man’s lap until after she ts married to him. Young people, however, seldom act on advice in such matters, and it might be better to trust to your own! Judgment. Ie tt Improper to call a young lady with whom you are well acquainted "My honey?’ I merely | gaid it as a Joke, Is it an insult or not? HERMAN. The girl in question may or may not | regard it as an insult. In any case it was decidedly “fresh” and in wretched taste. 2 8 A. In being introduced to a young lady on | the street what formalities must be gone through? tip your hat and shake hands both, and {fo in what manner? 2 Also what formal {ties must be gone through in being introduced to @ lady in the house? ANXIOUS, 1. It Is only necessary to raise your hat. 2 Whether or not to shake hands on being introduced ts largely optional, Asa rule it is not necessary, OLD WORDS AND THEIR MEANING. | Corpse once meant a body, whether living or! dead. Many old writs are extant in which the Sheriff or bis deputy ts commanded to bring the corpse of such « man Into court Libel once meant any little Look, but as many tracts in the early days of printing were persona! and offensive in characcer the word ace ined Ite present significance. Yard was once any stick, rod or pole. The expression is at!!! used with thie meaning when applied to various parte of « ship's equipm es yard-arm, sall-yard and the like. Clown was at frat tattooed person, Ia Bri- tain and France the country people retained t habit of tattooing or of painting the faces in Grape stone charcoal, but now it is man-|tmitation of attooing long after it Bed beew abandoned in the citien, CHANGES AT THE THEATRES. Bonnie Thornton Renews Her Suc conse at Keith's, ‘The programme at Keith’ tre yesterday was up to excellence The tong 1 Misa Bonnie Thornton, the unual ndard of the metropolie; the National Trio, Lina and Vani, who do an acrobatic act In evening dress; Gil- more and Leonard, the Irish humoriste; Tmro New Guest Cards. often true. So that cheery and wide. Fox, Adele Purvia Oni, on k wire; Mile. | Guest cards of Holland delft are an-|@Wake mother-in-law, Marguertte, the contortionist; the Nawns, Bryden! other novelty for the table, The cards | *Mmiling, makes no suggestions, offers no and Mitchell, the Waterbury brothers, the Nel- criticism, thinks everything splendid—or son trio, Fannie Mora, Hila Carlington PROCTOR'S THEATRE, Union Square Thea- of attractions included who Is always popular tn eridan and Forrest, and are in odd shapes, showing the conven- tlonal deift scenes, The name is written cn a white space at the bottom of the Chates B Lavloe who Te hae ate tor vane] cart, and may be casily rubbed off Sidewaika of New York,” was the atap ateraction| when the luncheon or dinner is over, Provtor's continusae performance yesterday, {14 may be used again. This make His avtoviates nt that theatre were the Tie Four, | them ar ather economical investment, Joe Fiynn, the woll-kaown parodiat: Helle Miack,| DUt this fact will not commend them 4 and Young, the ‘trangatiantie acrobatic | to foclety, as economy seems to rather comedy duo," Rive and Malvors, Watson and Du-| militate against anything of the kind. pre, the musionl Holbrooks, the Freemans, chara To be lavish and the reverse of econ- ter sketch comedians, Kity Gilmore, Miles and| omical is the order of the day. Raymond, Dorothy Drew, the ‘lithe imbed a Kicker; Gilmore and Boshell, the Quatrele| SPOnwe Lemon Pie, One Crust. brothers and others, Piece of butter size of egg, 1 cup of KOSTER & BIAL’ sugar; mix with the hands; rind and Le Bloom, the well-known tramp tmpersona-| juice of 1 lemon, 2 heaping tablespoons tor, who in the cast of “A Milk White] of flour, yolks of two eggs beaten, 1 cup Fing."" made his first appearance at Koster &/of milk, stir well, add beaten whites of Bal s Root Garden last the programme were Le ent Other features of and Lesite in their eggs; bake slow!; clever “Triily’* burlemque: the Burt alaters, ax| To Brighten the Silk Watat. “the Droadway Swells."’ Fielding, the deft Jur-| To brighten up the silk waist, which ler; 1 Yberri, the Spanish danseuse; Join| was bought in the spring and is now W. Tansone, wht likes to be known as “the| perhaps a trifle worse for wear, there 1s Ruter of New York:"" Mason and Healy. come-| nothing more dainty than the plalted a) Belloni, Clairisxe Agnew, plastron of nainaook or fine ile, ‘ (eal ae jets consisting of a soft turned-dow American Root Garden last night, and mang a[(0Ch are selling in the shops. 77 rie S humber of songs, among them being “The Boys| Slimpse of them and then make of New York Town." Miss Ellis has now estab: lushed ‘herself in the affections of New Yorkers, and she will not be easily. dethroned, Other a tractions of Manager MeDonough’s Programme were Pat Rellly, the Irish comedia AI Wilnon, the German dialect comedian; Thomp: fon and Collins, parodiats, and Mae Lowry, soubretta. The attendance was large. CASINO ROOF GARDEN At the Casino Roof Garden last night the per- formers were Rexo and Reno, who call them- selves the acrobatic Svengall and Jocks, In de erence to the unwaning ‘’Triby" mania; the Electric Quartet, whose performance In well worth seeing: John M, Turner, who is able to play two or three banjon with perfect factiity at the same time, and Harris and Fields, whose knockabout t Is remarkably clever. The root gardea well patronized. Roof-gardena can exist even though the thermometer ts not up in the nine- es, MADISO3 SQUARE ROOF GARDE! The Madison Square Roof Ganten wan breery lost night, both as regards the tempera ture and the programme. Among those who con tributed to the entertainment were Mise Gerile Gilson, Mark Murphy, the Irish comedian and ex-star; Elise and Louis Sator!, John and Harty Dillon, Press Eidridge, with his {nexhauatibie budget of fun; Senorita Tortajada and her troupe of Spanish singers and dancers; Falke and Simon, the Bannacks, Rennetto, the La Porte sisters and Lottle West Symonds. TERRACE GARDEN. Lecoog'n admirable“ Glrofle-Girofi wa whieh Lillian Russell comic opera company, was sing last night at Terrace Garden by the Conried- Ferenczy people. The twin sisters were charm- ingly Impersonated by Fri. Carla Englaender; Emil Sondermann was the father; Ferdinand Schultz was a capital Marasquin, and Ida Wil- helm was Pedro, The opera was extremely well staged and was liberally applauded. For the last days of the week ‘The Mikado” ts promised. HIUBER’S MUSEUM. ‘The principal attraction of Huber's Fourteenth Street Museum yesterday was the representation of an Irish village, with {ts lace workers, dancers, pipers, hand painters, flower makers and flax spinners, The village squire was rep- Fesented by Myles Morris. Among the features of the curto halls was the sea serpent, which claimed a great deal of attention. The pro- ramme Included a number of other curios, and in the theatorlum was a big vaudeville company. Mr. Huber’# season has opened very auspiciously. MANHATTAN BEACH. La Belle Tina, who made her American debut at Rice's Circus Carnival at Manhattan Beach yenterday, 18 an aerial performer of much re- own In Europe, She is very comely and grace- Interesting ax revived In this city rome time ago by the | airy nothings at home, If the silk waist is made with a box plait down the front cover it with a plastron which fastens under the collar at the neck and under the belt at the waist line. It is ex- tremely dainty and fresh-looking if made of sheer white lawn plaited and edged at each side with a wee frill of fine white French lace. When this {s worn the collar and cuffs must be made to match, Green Pen Soup and Cabbage Soup. ireen peas, enough for your family, pork, potatoes, onions, salt and vinegar, about 1 teaspoon and water; add butter when done. Cabbage Soup—Make as above, only add chopped cabbage instead of peas. t with chopped pickles, ‘seful Arrargement for Babies. It Is sometimes advisable to cover the head of a baby or invalid during very cold weather, or in summer when flies are troublesome. This may be con- veniently done by means of the velled sheet. Ths arrangement consists of a square of suitable gauze set in the sheet where the head of the sleeper comes. It admits plents of air and also allows the nurse or attendant to see the face of the sleeper, Mothers-in-Law, Attention It would be a good idea for mothers- in-law to let their daughter-in-law alone where domestic matters are con- cerned, unless their advice Is aske ‘This sounds harsh, but {t is meant to be sensible, The husband's mother, as a rule, is too fussy about her son. Of course it is difficult for her to realize that another woman and a comparative stranger, can know as much about “sy boy" as his mother does, but it's véry | who comes in says she does—and isn't full of tiresom reminiscences of “how she used to do,” is likely to be the power behind the throne if she covets that position, / How to Grow Fat. Become a hard drinker of water if you wish to get fat. Take a drink of water on rising; this rinses out the stomach. If constipated add a pinch of salt. Cocoa, milk and an average amount of coffee are all right. Eat something every night before retiring. . Take a nap every day. Avold irritating subjects. Bones and a bad temper are always synonymou! 39 to bed early and only rise when you feel that you have slept enough, Let meat occupy a secondary place In ur diet. Take frequent warm baths, If you do not care for vegetables culti- vate a taste for them. In fact, live to extract all the sweets of life and you will find yourself on the road to suc- cess, Flour Muffins, Sift one quart of flour with two te spoonfuls of baking powder, add a ta blespoonful of salt, a teacup of swee' milk and threo beaten eggs; bake well-greased muffin trons. A Novel Occupation. An English woman has solved the problem of self-support by establishing a genuine “stille roome,” where she leads a quiet existence in distilling and brewing beautifying washes and sweet rerfumes from the old-fashioned gar- den flowers and herbs, whose virtues were so well known and appreciated by our ancestors. There she watches the red, red rose distilling {ts sweet essence like ruby wine in the huge fantastic glass receptacle, while she makes the elder-flower water invaluable for the complexion and concocts countless ex- quisite tollet preparations from ancfent recipes. The business has proved prof- |{table as well as pleasant. Pantry Soap. A pantry soap which fs especially use ful for cleaning silver is made as fol- | lows: Boil together 1 pint of water, 1-2 pound of good yellow soap and & pounds of prepared whitening. Let all boil to- gether for half an hour, and stir till the mixture becomes a thick paste; then put into jars for use, When washing silver use this mixture instead of com- mon soap, and I think you will find your plate is brighter than usual, even without the usual weekly cleanin, \ | Corn Pudding. Cut corn off five ears, three eggs, one Pint sweet milk, one tablespoontul of flour, a pinch of salt, one tablespoonful of sugar, a piece of butter the size of an egg. Beat yolks first, mix all to- gether, stir in well beaten whites last; bake about twenty minutes, LETTERS. [Tis column ts open to everybody who has a complaint to make, a grievance to ventilate, tn formation to give, @ subject of general interest to diseuas or a public service to acknondedge, and who can put the idea into less than 190 words Long lettera cannot be printed. } Another Trou! To the E | some Cargo of T. ful and her acrobatic achievements upon the! There are two remarks that have been made by Hel bars auspended in midair are full of | prominent men, whose names I am unable to r and daring, ‘The Rosatres, court acrobats; | call at this moment, but they are as foll “A Nobby and Tommy the boxing clowns, and the | pad law is better obeyed in the breach than in Morris trained pontes are much in favor. The! the observance;"* ‘You cannot indict a nation. programme, in arrangement and quality, mgges!s | Thebirthof the Republic of the United States took in Paria; every wa that of the famous Winter Circus tin high class Rice's "1492" again. crowded ———— oo THE SIGHING OF THE SUMMER GIRL Oh, yes, T've had @ Jolly time (I'm nearly dead, and more's the pity!), T've realized the poet's rhyme (And think I much prefer the city", Tse been upon the tranquil wave (And what I muffered can't be told), Tve mat with Edwin in a cave (And caught a most disastrous cold"), I've seen odd changes in the sky (Which, p'raps, might please the British nation’ From dark to bright, from moist to dry, va ruined my articulation’); I've climbed up many cli 4 ron (Give mo the sidewalks of New York!); I've watched the farmer feed his stock (And eaten quantities of pork!). Ye flirted and I pledged my hand (Um rather sick of such romancing!); T've waltzed until I couldn't stand (And I'm extremely tired of dancing’). We're coming back on Monday night (wish to goodness ‘twas to-day!): Oh, home, sweet home, you're my delight (When 1 have HAD my hollday!!) LA TOUCHE HANCOCK. ——— -— WORLDLINGS, Prof. Young finds by invei Nght 1s about 300,000 times an great as the moon's Fixteen pints of the Juice or aap which mak Imation that the sun's plave when the people rebelled against oppressive laws, and tho cargo of tea was thrown overboard Jn Doston Harbor. Let history repeat itself. New York City Is now suffering from a surfelt of “7 (Teddie), If this incubus could be dumped into either of the rivers that inclose New York City, the residents would be the gainers, and If every man who Is licensed to sell liquors in the city ‘would open their places on Sunday, they could not be indicted or punished, for they would In a meas- ure represent a nation, The police celle would not hold them, and the courts could not try them, Dut the result would be that we should get rid of our very Ureseme perambulating advertiser of dentistry. Please help the good eauge along and try to down the bigots that would “rob a poor man of his beer."" Yours with a Sunday thirst, A NOBLE DODGER, Makes Her Blood Bo! Those Spankings. To the Faltor: To “Brooklyn Mother? I would like to aay that 1 only wish she had me for a daughter-in-la for about a week, I can’t understand what “Re- and her daughters and other women of that they could allow thelr husbands or mothera-In-law to spank them more than on | Haven't they got any nails or teeth to Aght with, if they are mot strong enough to prevent the spankings? I would leave a few marks and scars m that they would carry lives itt were In the place of those weak, nly ere tures, They deserve all sp for allowing {t. Bah! think of 1 unw the spankings they g It makes my blood boll to SELF-RESPE Boys Are Made to Moy On, India rubber are frequently taken from one tree! 7. ine gaitor: In White County, Ga, there is a mountain! tas it come to this, that a few respectable ream which runs up bill, at @ steep Incline, for | hoys cannot congregate on the corner of a vacant Almost half a mil The climatic limit to the cultivation of whe 48 not so much the cold of Winter as the he: of Summer, The accidental dropping of a fare into the ted floor of a street car constitutes the legal pa: ment of the fare. In the Bank of England sixty follo volumes «1 | ledgers are filed daily with writing in keeping the accoun toner ip Vienna was vacant, woman of twenty-eight applied for place. fhe said It would comfort @ man about to die to have Dis lam eartbly gase reat upon # besutitui yeusg woman, 4 a fine looking lot without being driven away by an officer, who | treats them as if they were committing @ misde meanor, ad of quietly chatting? 1 don't be- Neve the laws of our free country hold that «peak -| ing in the street ts a crime. If 40, where doen .| the fre country come in? If the officers would attend to real criminals instead of assoclating with them, they would have the praises of an INDI r NANT AMERICAN Boy, The people who die annually In London numbor Sailor 11.00, ad ie taken alg acres of around alee Hts) fon ation 35 (MD nan pated respect for saying whet he doen in a way which The nearest approach to the north pole w ee aimplicity with I, pute a pertinent ques feet in diameter. It ts fed with lard oil the mind of the one man who didnt die, ‘This sagt 4 on estensively in China| WHICh Cape Cod fishermen think herrings. have Fn ORs carrie an stiaastialy aot. fut the hnman soul 18 Hiving principle ashe are he Rented) vr whine aame thing, tt tn certain tdentt-| Ben matte Oe ti racieiaica, experienced “mentally whereby @ humen belog knows himeelf, wo mat | Tn Ledyard. @ town tm Connecticut, te « ter what boty the being finds himeeif in. If, for house Dallt prior to 1718, which Beare the ttle! ciample, ‘, HH." bas any dlgtingt character, of the “Devil's Howse.’ A curse 18 euppoeed t0| wnich he knows by good motives, by self-deniele fest upom it for the aake of oluern, byt @ forgtving disposition, A short time ago the position of public execu-| or by abhorrence wenerally fi all that {8 wicked, selfish and bad, then he te entitied he has got @ soul, for that i the substance uf which human souls consist, Now, suppose the body of BH." decomposes, then certain parts f the cerebral tissues im molecular form escape know that the decomposition as #0 many germinating vest- cles; and as every one of these vesicles environs some conscious substance through which ‘7B. H.'* in the past experienced his own identity, 1. hin soul (if he had any), it follows, then, these migrating molecules carry 19 conscious principle, which, of course, can recox- E nize as his own, If there ts enough of it to dis {ngulsh it from the humdrum molecule emanat Ing from the soulless body, Now, if “E. H.'* will multiply 9% by the number of consclous characteristic molecules of the 999 defunct bodies, barring the soulless ones, he may speculate on how many may come his way and lodge in his mind, besides what was left behind on the un+ known {sland in the mind of the man that did not die, x. MD. The Virgi To the Faltor: While softly glows the candle light, Adown the dim walnscoted hal, Upon the silver, shimmering bright Gf antique candelabra tall, In merry eyen It coyly peers, The love-lit glances to reveal Of happy maids and cavaliers, Who dance the old Virginia reel, Clad tn a gown of ample flow, Coquettinn patches on the face, With powdered hair, as long ago, And quaint and pretty air of grace, Fach tripping maid with lightsome tread, In dainty shoes, most bigh of heel, ‘With eyes that laugh and uptosned heady, Glides through the old Virginia reek The gleam of mellow candle Hght Weaves golden meshes of romanoa, And Cupid speeds bis arrow's fight Amid tho mazes of the dance, Just as in past colonial years, When, to the music's frolic peal, ‘The happy maids and cavallers Danced In the old Virginia reel. ELLEN PEOE : “ Wants “Black Shades,” To the Editor: As long as the “immutable certainty of ‘ re ang an long as rites and ob- ected therewith all Incom- gruities should be prevented, Being forced quite revently as a matter of duty to attend funeral rervive, [noticed as T came near the place two kentlemen leaving the house where death had [entered stop a moment to look at It, This drew |my attention to the Yact that the window shades, being yellow, seemod to me to be ip- harmonious with the band of crepe—symbol of @ decease—fasiened to the side of the door. . Could not the undertakers keep in stock holland shades, tn black, of various sizes and styles, perhaps of Various materials, to be used for the time bes ing, easily and quickly substituted, manent ones belng removed unttt be pant? In the country this might seem out, of place. but tm the city, considering raplé changes and tra Me, this kind of emphasis might, tn most cases, seem allowable, and at times more than that—the highest kind of good taste, How doon one know, | At the effect. be woot untll Ie'le tried What say the people? The Monkey and the Ma To the Editor In the debate on the soul's immortality, I and the athelst, or agnostic, Just as bigoted as the rankest orthodox, Darwin Is the Bible of the istic, Will some om his followers please tell va when the animal stopped evoluting? When 414 the monkey cease to evolute into the man? the give up the Joh in disgust? Tam a m of no church, but were I to start a colony, the rankest puritanical soung man to Al eo fing fresh youth, who vathe and foul language breed out of the Puritan. servances are con pre! Sppoatte, the alt with * i thine t'd bs ewer Sticke, & bett G. More Flowers and To the Editor: ‘Awa lover of the beautiful, 1 protest against the unaightly sticks placed tn the pond at the morth- west corner of the City Hall Park. They not only crude and ugly, but spoil the effect of the Then they are useless. Th doen not need ft appreciate « loug ‘batty hame for the every-day lily. Take your numbered aticks out, Mr. Commissioners, and give more Qowere im their piace —~—

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