The evening world. Newspaper, August 7, 1895, Page 4

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sm) She BLA atiorid ee ree WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1895. QUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE EVENING WORLD Batered at the Post-Office at New Tork as pecond-class matt ——$—- Mr BRANCH OPFICES: WORLD UPTOWN OFFICE—Junction of Broad. way and Gina ave at 104 ot (WORLD HARLEM OFFICE—issin ot and Mati- oon ave. BROOKLYN—200 Wasdington ot PRILADELPHIA PA.—Preme Bullding 103 Chest- eet ot WASHINOTON—T3 14a ot | aly, 1895 - 554,178 per day | Jaly, 1894 - 500,705 per day July, 1891 - 841,040 per day July, 1888 - 37,489 per day | i +++ No. 12,405 | rupt Tammany and the know-nothing, ——$—$ = | hypocritical Republican party the Ger. |trust monopolists are found {t diMcult to affiliate with Tam- many. So they became an tmportant element in the recent reform mov ment Now comes the trouble, Reform ha disappointed and disgusted the Ge: mans. They are displeased with Mayor Strong's administration, They detest Rooseveltism. Their Democratic prin- ciples reawaken. But, according to the German organ, they find Tammany re- | Viving as the Democratic party “with | the same old rotten gang on top.” Bo the Staats-Zeitung says “between the purely Irish, through and through core mans find themeely enviable position. They will probably find their way out of the dilemma by going back to their first love and voting some with the Democrats and some with the Repub- licans, according to their aMiiations be- fore reform in an, indeed, un- ‘ohn Bull acts at onea.” “Inactive at Washington.” Two headlines which Geecribe the attitudes of two great na- tions towards the massacre of mission- aries in China, RELP WARTKD: ‘The robbers of old times, the Barons, who took mos: of what the poor people raised on their miserable farms, buflt chapels and appointed chaplains to preach to these poor people the virtues of humility and submission and the Deautiful doctrine that order is heaver, first law, and therefore you must do nothing to change existing evils. When the chaplain go far forget what he owed to his master thief and dared to preach anything that might open the eyes of the poor tc the fact that they were cruelly robbed, the chaplain soon found himself without a chapel. Names change, things remain’ The robber barons have gone; the robber in their places. People go less to church and more to | ban mel eal ne ene es THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUGU 7, MONOPOLY -ECONOMY AT CHICAGO. CHICAR(Y) UNIVERSITY “ monopolists insist on dictating doctrine, Per éay. Gata tn one year... 53,473 @atn tn four years. 213.138 Gain mn twelve years.....516,709 © Gat eddremm ond hem “THE EVERIO | WORLD' meted them reguiory Addremn Ganget a qfem os desired, ‘WHAT DOES THIS WEAN! Am incident at the meeting of the Board of Estimate and Apportionment | yesterday, seemingly slight in Iteeif| @nd attracting very little notice, has Really wide and marked significance. | ‘The Boani at a former session had | @uthorized the employment by the Fire | Yerkes. Prof. Bemis was teacher of | political economy. Recently this pro- fessor lectured on the evii-doings of trusts and monopolies, the In Chicago there is a university richly gifted by Millionaires Rockefeller and fraudulent getting of public franchises | by debauching public officers, the wrongs practised on workingmen by most corporations, To sum it gil up, he began to tell the truth in this mil- lonaires’ university. The shock was awful. Here were young men being sed to believe that millionaires who gave money to schools and hospitals were other than great and noble benefactors cf their age and race. There is a vacancy for @ professor of monopoly-economy now in the Chicago University. Prof. Bemis has been di charged by Rockefeller and Yerkes, who are getting up an advertisement some- what in this shape Help Wanted—A_ profi sor who be- Department of an electrical expert to @uperintend the stringing of wires tn buildings. Commissioner Sheffield ap- | peared before the Board yesterday to| @sk that the Fire Commissioners be @uthorized to select and appoint such expert themselves, and that he should Mot be obliged to pass a civil-service| @zamination nor to be cer ed the} Civil-Service Examiners The reason given by Commissioner BheMeld for the request is the eingular end artling part of th affair, He stated broadly that the pos epen to the temptation of ing and extortion, and a fo be filled by some one on whom the | Pwe Commissioners could entirely rely @R4 not by a person certined to them By the Civtl-Service Board What does this mean? Is it a clear] or intimation at civil sery fa ure, at least in the opinion of the Fire Commissioners” W) be tf the Fire Commiss t they are more likely to svle nest em- Ployee themselves than t Main one through the civii-service machine The Board of § and Appor- @onment, sing n, did not Fesent this imputation on the civil-ser- vice machinery, but referred the re- quest of the Fire Commiss Corporation Counsel ners to the When Monopclist Yerkes ¢ tha! $500,000 telescope to the Chicago Uni. versity the jokers said wanted to Keep Chicago mar gazing while he wa franchise grabbing. A joke is good when tp true That was good joke. LET GRAY GABLES ANSWER. ‘The later news from China shows the American ss well as bt missionaries have been subject to out- Pages and that American iives and prop- erty are endangered What is our Government going to do @bout it? Are our people protected? Are we ave Gray Gables and consultations fishing excursions before Am of-war are se: for ction for the past ané safety for marist: the future? Are we & powertu: ® little con Pa Are our }» savage foreicners a Gestroyed, or are tection of the Stars and ever part of the giobe For what Ravy? ell what was We Bee how cry next aid, but walt unti Bunday will ve ALAS! THE POOR GERMAN. According to the German-American c! re, in homely pa: evil and the dee; Germans general ing. Their leaning is towards De Facy because of their belief in politica! end legal equality, their onal liberty, their oppos: @istinctions and their Gislike of at Plutocratic aggressions. During War their sturdy love of liberty inclined cir own love of per- on to them towards Republicanism, and im- Mediately after tho war they gonoraliy Femained with tl.at party But Germans are alwi @tiacks on persons) iberty, ‘The in tolerant policy of the Republican party Claas the 8 at wor with | In leva) Wat Ge) ie kites ae u1as aoopuas cape ia shin Daas duit Gar wy aking A! Om soma emvest wit ethane that lapor-unions are always wrong: | This te a picture of the Alderman | about?” whispered a ercieiy laiy to Lady Bule | $tisiis soc tre a part of eras that public franchises are the just pos-| Whose resolution calling for @ more|¥er ats should wo like to invite Bim| f TABRY oe Hes eds \onsial iit Sessions of those who firnt grab them, | Mberal Excise law war passed unani-|t one of my receptions lpatticelar branch of ihe ootveas where the es: ‘nat any method to crush @ rival is Mously by the Board of Aldermen| “Ales madam, tne dean hae done something cancy i athe p right if it 1s successful; that the poorer | Yesterda Solana eau oralaiclat | + 1 ¢ |the man the heavier hie tax should be, | = —=—=—= Te Un Dany | eines sn ton tay fae hrmth nates |, Ylom Blaine eh luerer ono te epponed to that corporations should have the right | tak recently that everybody te get 0 | was HiT she ested Soke. Faseous initeo dispstion ever tee oodate of approval or veto of all laws; and a jittle tired ] we ok Danie: Bi Farerwesther, came dowa town @ few other similar do: rines, can find = = micas morsine in the mame Elevates car with | @ vacant chair in the Chicago Uni-| A five-year-old boy in Harlem fell | ter Plaikie Yad a enat and the Bishop versity ROCKEFELLER, | five stories into a Y carriage and | A ened that the lawyer knew YERKES. [escaped unhurt. There's a practical!“ eotlection of the: Rb ISR ees -enacy Examinera | suggestion for an apparatus to be used | Site! t Nites AIBC whit eat besnicd x Jat fires pate ten 5 The professor that teacher political = been asi YOU went. 6 + Bist ey “You economy in the Chicago University must) Ambassador Bayard likes English so ft mata ob ee: rary _et8 baie atone : bseite 1 gently withgtrusts and be aweet|clety. He finds It full of humanity | ™ ‘ Shed wp Peseta aly non . Sisome. of that Here /ours ——> = Bishops peat” replied Lawker Blaikie arising A monopolies if he would hold his Job | Well, we have som o that h ui THE CIVIL-SERVICE EXAMINATION and giving > he Bishop, who thanked $$ selves, but not much of it in our ‘4 = nia awa' pocesaca ashi a | STEAK IN PARK ROW. —_ a A hundred men gat tn a root Ho Choate presented Blaikie * The Montreal police are looking for |” yan arg rte Hh ee the three ps going éown t her Ele. There te a8 good eating and drinking lene Ludiow Street Jail fugitives, Killo Ther easwered questions put to them: ate " Fare Row ae can be bad anywbere| san, ation and Russell Tht je more] scar as they were able WO jcise, You can get a meal for 10\cents or! than our own police are doin Tre . you can ret a rattling a la carte dinner ee 2 They'd gathered (here to try to pase women in ® for $1. The size and quality of the menu! yt e unfortunate that the yachtemen Wine ee | vary mopotony of are governed only by the feeder's! are quarreling. The boat selected to) W2iSM must be done by erry cop has taken an 038 form Por finances and appetite. Men and women | 4, erow fat and jolly on the meals they buy there and wash down either with school and college. Where a baron | built a church, Rockefeller endows a| When Monopolists Endow Colleges Professors Must No’ Teach that Robbery Is a Crime. university. Yerkes gives a telescope — ee eee = ——— where his forerunner appointed a| “The Even Wor Gallery of FOREIGN FUN-MAKERS. THE GLEANER'S BUDGET. preacher. Like the old robbers the new Living Pictures. I 7 - jut There racer without doubt of ability. The Seaside Seneon. | Goestp Here, a} He—Where €14 you and Charlie go off to last | 1 aight? fhe—We strolled dows wo fi what the wild ving He-Yea | beant par e1r conversation my- salt was) ‘Chari you @o know how to kina! Pick Me-tp Not So Foolish as She Looked. Mra Hiram—And have you any references? Appileant—No, mum 1 tored ‘em up Tree| lee of City Life. | Commiadone: Ronaevel: tes a costs tn Bayete peach to bear!) > wr sioop yacht | 1, who recmatiy ann and fitted up we The launch, Der wine nor beer Youre Ronseve: 7 wetted | Mra Hiram (in surprise)—Tore chem up? How | Col Bawant C James te one of the few men Naas at the American wise defeated Appiicant—Yea wudn't think eo mum if yes | Joneph Ho Choate | fame cane This | what the Coin In person Col upon most manrire had even ‘em !—T-Bie The Ghost Gave Him Notice. “Tow look very crow, Jantion’ “And for a good reason, air) in these ruins you Jost been looking over there was a ghost that used to draw & heap of wightscers to this Pisce. “What ef that’ “Why! be haa given me motice to leave"—Le Figaro The Dean No 414 in the Laidlaw-Gage case pa th over Aix feet and dull men Hie torre of tna tpt phreique play no amal! © tory, “gtenography is 4 fm the Siantard the other ¢ teppine-stone te higher things Company 1 was informed officers tenographere A medium enographer by thrugh whieh the er im It. about @ hundred years ago be diel! — jto jump 1895, DRAMATIC NEWS AND NOTES. Louise Be dom for a Year--Ri uu ing Proof. Another comic-opera lady out of the feld. Little Miss Loutse Beaudet, who last season, has gone to London, and sends word that she had signed with George Edwardes for one year, M Beaudet is at present play Marie Tempest's part in “An Artist's Mode at the Lyric Theatre, and is to continue ready, “I had the part of Adele for a week, and was studying it when Miss Tempest was taken $11," writes Miss Beaudet, “The management begged me to appear, and 1 did so, without having «ither met the company or had an or- Chestra renearsal. I was well received, but I can tell you that it was nu jok in as'I did. 1 am, however, well repaid, us I feel I have half won my battle. Mr. Edwardes is having a hew song written for me entitled ‘Don't Blame Women for Flirting,’ by Lesite Stuart, the composer of ‘La Petite ademoiselle,” which Vesta Tilley sang Tony Pastor's. It's a dainty ttc song on the style of “The Chaperone, which ‘Jacinta.’ * So that Ing season, She went to London in des: eration to look for a comic opera for America, and, like a good many other desperate Women, has won success. In fact, it seems to be lucky to visit Eng- land feeling desperate. Something in- Varlably turns up. (It is to be hoped that this statement will increase the outgoing passenger lists and depopulate the plethoric Rialto.) eo 8 The pyrotechnical display at Manhat- tan Beuch was simply not “in the thunderstorm Su 4 tower of the Oriertal Was shattered and splintered by a streak of forked fire, but the lightning bolt which tackled Edweni E. Rice as he sat on the Man- hattan's bread Veranda glanced off, harmless and impotent, Mr. Rice calmly leaned over towards his “press agent and aeked for w light, adding thought- fully that it looked as if there might be @ storm. Chain lightning is power- less against a man who has managed burlesques for a quarter of a century, It merely suggests picturesque porsi- bilities in the way of spectacular efftcts for a new transformation scene. youth walked ent's office yesterday. His umid yet intellectual and in in both of his eyes—was the of an unquenched ambition But he was quite unknown to fame. and the dramatic agent brought him down to prosaic everydayness by inform: him t his hame was not down on the booke. “Bat,” said the agent, you can register, and Til do what. { can for you, You | 1 presume”" “An amateur!" cried the youth with the incandescent eyes. "No, indeed. 1 have successfully appeared as Richelieu, and in ‘A Rox of Mon- keys.” ia little story circulated around. 1 verify it, you can do so by going out West, as it is said to have occurred there’ A company was out in the wilds laying “Othello” with a superb cast n one town—a rather Puritanical com- munity—the manager thought that he would stimulate popular interest by means of the sandwich-man. So he hired a number of them, and upon each | put a@ letter of the legend, “Go to Othello.” They wandered through the town until they were weary, and three of the men were ao exhausted that they An aspiring into a dramatic Here's a that is being you want to became separated from the others These three were the men bearing the letters O, T and © of the word Othello. withont them the lecend assumed a pro- fane meaning that caused a great sen- sation, and so eds ran the public feel- ing that no performance was given in the town that nig! This comes fresh from the breezy and inteliigent agent: “The Bible has been read by every one, and by Robert Inger- soll it has been denounced, But we have 4 Man more famous than he who upholds or denounces it, and that man fs Wiil- tam’ the most euccessful of all the American playwrites (sic). He has Written a beautiful three-act, straight, eitimate, musical domestic comedy on well-known Biblical subject, "A a Calf’ This ts Wiliam Gill's terpiéce, and is by far the best com- produced It ts clean, pure and dat the same time the vein dy is 80 great that everybody ye it to the highest degree.” Serioue- though. doesnt it seem incredible that_a sane person should send in such twaddi ce? This is an en- htened well, were not a ail hard up for matter. “A Fatted Cal Neath Teddy's domin | Their hair was And they were ~ | tomer bands the Jong. their forebeste high, |for a purchase ihe asleew pomensore The call wc jefend the cup should meet the English Pints of red wine or “Righ hats” of beer.| Matt Quay anye he representa good | spectacles that mate them look or @ ama!) ir) eturrvine | The fact that a man was found dead government and better politica. He has M8? erudite professors [Then the roung women changed to jin Park Row with a piece of steak|been measured for a new halo and ip, They figured with the restos ease Seen enestnhepeattes st | stuck fast in his windpipe must not be| practising daily with winks sums in mathematica few weeks the pirie have ae taken as a reflection on the bills of fare = = extreme facility [ie rere: New | that abound in that street. Park Row] The Defender, {t is complained jockeys TH+! wrove of bydrostaticn Eien cs on | | steak 19 as likely to be tough, once tn a| the Vigilant out of her right of way at | they told im Latin and in Green lyeakeua’ of abaas while, as a Delmonico steak. Steak ta| the start. That ts where she puta the| Arcot the anciest porta | pretty much like a:lottery ticket. You never know what it is until you’ get it | The mistake made by the poor unfortu luff on the Vigilant [omiy to try and get mmeching [don't know any other reason tor {+ THE GLEANER ——~ = | And wrote a thesia on the ways Of prehistoric 6 “The World's If the story told to | Hot sudteriy their faces tell, pate that was choked to death by the! special correspondent by the Indians be acd al) berun e-teimag No Love for the Home Team. Park Row steak was that he didn't iet|trug the recent scare was all on thelr |About te meer pet cctthem + | Bawerart on the stage appears to hare een « the cable-cara run over it a few times before he tried to awallow it. Queer case that of Mri A. M. Gard. He knows where he got it and he prob: ably needs some more, now. side. | On Sunday gife-door stalking succem in New York Perhaps the Browne ca> be : eventually unioaded on the thea: Dick Croker ts coming back Sept. 1. A®¢ ach one swore and tore his batr Post-Dieapatch. And said that Teddy ought ™ etter thai | anybo. had rather a checkered stellar career | with that role until the new opera is| 1 rang in settles little Miss Beaudet for the com- | e not an amateur, | of wh Sloping Shoutde: mixture into a small greased pail, then The effect of sloping shoulders, which | Steam tt for one and a half hours, If is now considered desirable, is sometimes | there ts need of haste, pour the mize obtained by means of a very deep yoke. | tte Into four buttered cups and cook Doucet sends over a model which would |!" @ pan of hot water for twenty-two ke a very pretty Autumn dress, It|™lnutes. This may be served with hard jis of green wool, having a perfectly | OF Soft sauce, |piain skirt, with the yoke of green vel- jet cut very low over the shoulders and straight in front, This yoke ts embroid- over a design in sieci bodice and sleeves qual ful How to Get Thi: woman who wants to be thim t drink large quantities of hot tea, t not sleep too much, | She must practice with dumb-bellg before meals, 1 ali ds; are plaite ey look as , the] a bodice bet 1 into a deep corse-| 3° Must eat salt on dry toast. aren Ivet with steel em-| She may drink tea or coffee sweetened a sleeves, being made | °@lY With a saccharine tablet. | She must omit ofl from salad dressing. After breakfast, rain or shine, she must exercise, though Rome fall. She must keep her mouth closed while walking She must ride a bicycle to reduce her hips. She must take a bath every twentye four hours, he elbow, held down i ig fr by fine plaits New Blouse and F Blouse of clear white musi! front of tiny tucks, yellow lace inser- ton and fi i muslin fr harrow y lace; cuffs to Orange Jelly. One-quarter box of gelatine soaked tn one-quarter cup of cold water, and dis solved later in one-quarter cup boiling juice, one-half cup lemon juice, one- half cup sugar. Strain into moulds wet with cold water and place where it is cool. If orange-skins are used for moulds soak them first for half an hour in cold water. The Chiffom Veil. The white chiffon veil still holds its own, There seems to be no symptom of its doing otherwise. About every other woman that you see upon the streets has her features so shrouded. The shops say that the supply is really not equal to the demand for the stuff. The reason for its popularity is self- evident-it 1s becoming, than which there can be none greater. It casts @ rice-powdery glamor over the most in- different features and the worst com- plexions. The Summer girl swears by it and “girls” who are not especially sum- mery find it both useful and orna- mental. neck band and bows of muslin. Fa’ te gauze, with painted flowers and inserted edges of lovely Honiton lace; carved ivory stick: 1 One quart of milk. one quart of Indian meal, two tablespoonfuls wheat flour, one-half tablespoonful of butter, four eggs. two teaspoonfule baking powder. ‘Mix well together and spread out in a biscuit baking pan about two cr three inches thick. Bake twenty-five or thirty Good Salad Made from Crabs. The ingredients necessary are picked crab meat, two tablespoonfuls of sweet oil, one tablespoonful of vinegar, a head of lettuce, one saltspoonful of salt, and pepper and cayenne to taste, It will take the meat of at least twelve to fifteen crabs of medium size to maks Pick tt care- Fashioned Corn Br: minutes. Cut in squares and serve hot. | Salad for six persons. fully, keeping the pieces large as A Hot Weather Pudding. possible. Lay !t in the bowl. Mix the A pudding which tastes good and| oil, vinegar, it and pepper together keeps well is made by taking one cup of soft soaked bread crumbs, one tea- Spoonful grated cinnamon, one-quarter teaspoonful grated cloves, one-quarter teaspoonful grated allspice. Beat two eggs lightly and add one-quarter cup | of milk. Mix one-quarter cup chopped figs with two tablespoonfuls of flour and add to egg mixture. Pour this into bread crumbs and spices, and add one tablespoonful sugar and turn the whole LETTERS. for the dressing and pour over the crab meat. Mix thoroughly, surround the dish with lettuce leaves and serve. Don't Know Too Much. Do not strive to seem well informed about your friends and neighbors. Al- though the homage you receive as a wise woman is pleasant, the result will be disastrous, for your friends and neighbors will cease to confide in you. Aug. 22. warm, cloudy, showers an@ windy; Aug 2% warm and cloudy; Aug. 24, warm. clou¢y and windy: Aug. %, warm, cloudy [The colemn ts open to everybody who hae @) wna windy; Aug. 26, warm and cloudy; Aug. 2, complaint to make, a grievance to ventilate, © | warm and cloudy; Aug. 28, warm and cloody; formation to give, a rubjert of general tniereat 10) aug 2%, warm, clear and windy; Aug. 30, warm dracuss oF a public service 10 acknondedge, and whe | ant clear, Aug. $i, warm, clear and windy oan put the idea into lem than 190 worda Lomg| Note.—Local storma cannot be accurately pre cloudy; letters cannot be printed. dicted, but the following are days on which — showers are most likely to occur: Aug. % 8, 3% 22, 2. Another Single-Tax Explanation. The Police Force's Side-Door Day, May be a classic, and William Gili a| No doubt A. Kaplan thinks be has completely | To the Editor Shakespeare, but—er—we doubt it. | ridaiea tier The way to pick fawa bow-| 1 have lived im a very quiet, respectable een Jever, te not be the use of balr-epiitting argu: of on East One Hundred and Twenty- Hammerstein, will get Yvette! mente It will hardly suffer to prove that art, and have never rt with hair of a more golden | singie taxere generally dissent from the praltioa ume naw a fight on the block Before this OF ree enganed ner. 30 SHRI ve. he prone ting to'0ils i peeve where von, when two citizens who had eleded Nation ‘of contract? Lew Rosen, j! am wrong A Kaplan, however, entirely evades | Roosevelt's de-door guarda some time during riting from Paris to “The Evening | the main point under consideration. He bas yet! che day, created @ @iegraceful disturbance aboot UCR Cs eae me tebe yt show me why & single tax om land values! 230 P.M. trying to settle an argument with ee th entaen eee And ‘La | cOvd pot agequaiely rurntah the necemsary | tneir fiste They were nearly half am hour at it, Narde’ The one e risque, the | revenues of government All ingle taxera main-| and had the male and a portion of the female ther is dramatica Sou- | tain that tt could And stneular enough, too, | population of the etreet trying to separate them, He or ge rene, VATIOUs stages Of the | Me Kaplan tencedes the entire contention when |And fot a policeman showed up. all that time, ife of a vive ni of arin Rosen says that Sarah Bernhardt just how has two secretaries busy aiding her in preparing her memoirs Tt is said that Marie Jansen will not Star next season. She did very well with “Delmonico's at Six" when she first loomed forth upon the stellar horizon ut Miss Dynamite” was not a go, as a RAW At will readily’ belleve nsen is wise she will go back to the leading support of some popular ¢ It Miss t comedian. There in a place for her st bat jt is mot at the head of her ow npany .. Helen Tracy and her daughter Virginia in the city fr ss Tracy last season played h Seb: dignant wife [In “The Foun PRU ala incr Gear co aa , an On sunday onde w Eres Hugh Grant acknowiedewe a2 admiration raing with children and, having changed her name, | Milk dealers have raised their price 4”* 4. M0 Rae Hel specaere Revevalt s Money,” which opens the sea- | Went {0 lve as @ domestic in Norwich, |one cent quart. The poor people will lati te Jeb be was laeees Ee ae | Conn. The woman had no cause to | have to raise the price also. To Bunday side-door sneaking pluck and sin: ““much-heard-of play “Heart | leave her home, where everything was NA JENNINGS | Herald { Maryland.” |comfortable and asant, and there Business was resumed tn Chicago to. — —- --— a — ——__—_—__-_--_ GP pin ereaaniiice! at meen Hela tl RE GE Renate: haa WHEN HARLEM TRAINS RUN 150 MILES AN HOUR. jess it be an overwhelming desire, | end pout? such as Is possessed by most of the 'wowomen, to be what they call in- ‘The Aldermen want a portrait gallery tependent. Whether this is the fact or) Wouldn't some of the portraits be too | there ts little doubt that the woman | r # looney | would not Against t because there The Emperor of Gerr ace his boat the Mete neuen yachts yesterday Was too much wind. Since he took tha: race from 1 Dunraven two ae nay Ae given Ger peace end how great the provoci Justin McCarthy's appeel # full of sound eenee 7 ferences in t Reve prevented ty ie maintained the cause of Ireland will never be a4- vanced What! Bounce Tamson ané appoint Hooher in him place?” lent this wity suffering enough with the blue laws Without adding another infliction? Por SeoutlOn We ran BENG, but Kot Fidic ieyolere whole be hapyy. The nth Avene Mophall pavemunt ie Lo be Continued Al Che Way downtown t Chaminore etree wherever 11 held power drove thom in @ great measure opatic cide. over we th Dee An thie city, however, ne- eerding to the Btasts-Zeitung, they | Wille nus \ William | of Germany made tig war lath OK fle Waite uahoe yesterday Velked Huck & hemp of war, 4 sent He! stainers' Conver: edhotly rn went? This morning's deluge was evidently as a welcome to the To Ab Vernon asks for a dry Sunday. | h this city Defore it ae a horri- & Brook}: QUITE 4 La MonR. (Attar Ternyaon—a long way ‘The rain hat AG eWadtied her whee! \n hoomared trim Ané a mormur same from As ther 6 # prow Kron, Geveions Du A Lucha 6! etaation be eee what dher't de, CHARLIE—Gee whis! Dut these care go AE dey iva i ae ute moie GLADYS—Yoe, ft inkee such a aly | whtie gett be TOL CHE Kanoooy ‘ttime to Go from the Battery to Harlem that it he saya tbat the Usiuele tax is | localities but not in | Mount to saying that land at oF mear the margin of cultivation will always yield rent for taxing Purposes, while on the other hand, the sources of revenue w Loy be replenished as soon a8 tt becomes posaitie to use poorer land. But why abovld puch @ trivial comtingency as a possible Gefciency im the revenues under the ible ip some ra” Thia te tanta- Where were they? Watching the sidedoora suppore, Ought we not to have more police om patrol duty and a few lem at the sidedeore? HARLEMITS. es Roosevelt. John Henry To the Editor: The Police Commiasioners are doing only thelr duty im enforcing the abould net Sad engle tax hinder men from working for its) fault with them. If the people do not like the sublimest conmummation—the freeing of naturai| law, let them change it at the next election, and | Opportus from monopoly’ rasp? A. Kaplan) bare the saloons open om Sunday; bet let it be needs | into bis bp | *'t0o much retreah bis mind occasionally by dips | one way or the other; that is, let beer and He will Gnd them that not only | Whitkey be sold openly on Sunday, or else mot land ownersbip’ is bad, but even | s9l4 at all—no half-way business, nor siée-doora; the spec rm of ownerabip be believes in ie | no hypocrisy; no, sir, When men say mo they Pot manctioned by moral law I would also like| should mean it, and not mean yes, as bas deem eming Mr Kaplan tbat it ts not the poor | one so often in this city. The wives of hun- mouse tbe single tax cat ie after, but the| drets of poor men in this city are glad the aa- tw great big dog-tn-the-manger. Vertiy! the wonder. | Joon en Sunday. Workingmen should {0 magacity of this literary feline in- beyond | M7e their money for bread aad clothing for thelr humao oomprebeasion. © DE CAT, Wives and children, instead of spending it for Brockiyn, N.Y. | beer. Beer and whiskey are not necessaries of It rich men and members of the Uniow How Lena Lost Her Frizzes, League Club ¢rink ant even get tipsy on Sua- that any reason why « workingmas S week's wages in a saloon ow To the Editor tay, te Pathers at the bathing pavilion, foo of One| sould m Hundred and Fitty-tre: etreet, North River, got fet tipey, too, an he often has done together to wet the frizres and side comte of Goors have been open. pretty Lena, who had been bathing all day and JOHN HENRY. who had on an olive green tatbing suit and ction of the day. The women Dathers became so Jealous of Lena and her frizzes, ae their frizaes were wet, and decided Lena's| If Go¢ made the earth and gave it to the chile abould go, toa Gren of men as stated in the Bible (Pealma, 16th Yeatercay they enticed Lena out om the ficat | chap. Sth why ¢o some men have te then all (be bathers got on the end wich Lena | poy other men for the privilege of living upem was on and nearly turned the flout over, splash. | and using 4) A. CORKER, be water, wetting her #ide 6 From Singletaxville, had A Biblical Bas! To the Editor for Single Tax. es tbat whe care. His Lonesome Let. the Editor u| There are many young men in New York an@ wkiyn of good appearance who are kind and pd pommens ocher qualities necessary a, Dut, Mevertheless, on account of have a very limited rosex. It ln to be re ne must viait the beak ere are so many refined » would Ne pleased to accompany acquainted tn a legitimate not as particular, able companions HAPPY MEDIUM, Weather Guesses for Auguat, Te the EA Brookiya, P| * in the Magyar Tongue. were A wening World’ of July $8 you pate fer and clear ee 1 Love in all Tongues"* es Various languages given, you ame ay; Ave ° the Hungarian lanruage ‘1 lows? clomdy and winc. Ang. f as “Varck” Being wf the above and windy; Aug 10, cold. el windy which fact | am very proud to mate, mer ang clouty and c Greatly obliged to you tf you will | Aug. 13 colder and clear: Aug 14, warmer f Lie that the above-mentioned Aug. 18, warm and clear, Aug @ Incorrect, the proper meaning ef warm and clear; Aug. 31, warm, cloudy eYAr Longue being ““Szcreteet,"* mowers: Aug. 18, warm, ‘cloudy, showers the word ""Varck’ means ‘1 mm wind; Aug. 2, warm and cloudy: Aug Warm, cloudy end windy; Aug. 51, warm 4 VERY PATRIOTIC MAGYAR GIR Water. To this add one cup orange,

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