The evening world. Newspaper, August 8, 1895, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Che BEA aaiorid Partianed by the Press Publishing Company, 62 to G2 PARK ROW, New York. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1895. SUBSCRIPTIONS T0 THE EVENING WORLD Gneluding postage): PER MONTH... Aa BRANCH OFFICES: WORLD UPTOWN OFFICE—Junction of Broad- way and Sixth ave at RLD HARLEM OFFIOR—i26th ot and Madl- eon ave, BROOKLYN—S09 Washington ot PHILADELPHIA, PA.—Press Building, 102 Chest- mut ot ‘WASHINGTON—T03 1éth ot. af THE WORLDS ciroouanon | 904,178) | NJULY WAS | PER DAY. |) ena, comes | | F the H) i JERE ood” tae” MORNING | | | CIRCULATION FOR July, 1895 - 554,178 per day July, 1894 - 500,705 per day | | | July, 1891 ~ 841,040 per day July, 1888 - 87,469 per day Per day. | Gain in one year .....0. 63,473 Gatn in four years..........213.138 Gain in twelve years......616,709 Readers of ‘THE RVENING WORLD tearing Ue city for the het months should snd Ch thelr addresses and hove ‘THE EVENING WORLD’ wailed them regworly, Addrees RwES elem 0s desired, /@ MOPOPOLT UWIVERStTY. Jt & admitted by the President of the | ‘sity of Chicago that Prof. E. W. Bemis “yas vemoved from his position becouse of his opinions on the evils of 8 and trusta and on the neces- ‘uty of restrictions in granting fran- elses, X¢ is diMcult to see how a professor @2 political economy can teach the his- Gary and fundamental principles of his Ombject without pointing out their effect Qa the coinmunity and the evils as well | Q ta> benedie to which they lead. If ko fin@ that franchises are made the instrument. 0? vsurpation and encroach- ment on public right great roacvolies are harmful to the commonwealth; ihat the denial of pro- tectivo rights and privileges to labor 1s @ source of Canger as well as an injus- evident in his instructions and conclu- sions, That these are the fruits of Prof, Be- mis's study and reflection is evident. ‘hat they are the cause of his remov 4s notorious. The President of the Uni- versity may insist that no interferenc with the politica! principles of its pro- feasors 1s attenpted, but no one doubts that if Prof. Bemis’s conclusions had been that trusts are public blessings, monop- lies productive of nothing but good to ® community and labor unions a public evil, he would have continued to teach Political economy in the Standard Oil institution He would have been + ded as one of its brightest orn. EE How woull {t do to put Waring and| Fitch in a twelve-foot ring and let them settle thelr differences, Queensberry Tules? WHAT CAUSED THIS DEATH? Acting Capt, Dillon, of the Park Police, appears to be satisfied that the lamentable death of Mr, E. . C, Davis in Central Park last Tuesday evenir was not caused by the reckless ri of the mounted policemen in haste to get off duty or in the frolic of a gal- lop—perhaps a race to the stables, At present there is nothing but the men’s stories to sustain Capt. Dillon's epinion. They are, of course, entitled to belief, but they have a very impor- tant interest in making it appear that the accident was not due to any ¢ lessness or Violation of rules on their par. Capt. Dillon would show better Judgment and a more honest desire to Bet af the exact truth if he would dili- gently search for evidence from any one who might have hay geen the refleved policemen on t way to the 6 stead of Jauntily Pronouncing published statements by al leged eye-witnesses as tae "pu cations 0° a reporter.” ‘There ie certainty @ great deal of mystery a steady, careful man, mounted on a ¢ horze, rides thro ut the arre! customary evening outing gets to the rocky ¢ ree policemen come thundering along or their way to the stables. Mr. Davis's horse Is next met riderlese and the ur fortunate man is found in the road wit hig, head crushed and his body bad bruised. ‘This certainiy needs investi¢ more,searching than Capt. Dillor to have yet made. It tx to be hope the Coroner's inquiry will be more Asfactory. It remained for “Tne Wor usual, to tell the full details of + Chinese massacre. YOR THE PEOPLE, NOT FOU PRIDE. ‘The fuss bet the Vigilant has been decided sot yachts have their supporters in the oor troversy as to the alleged “jockeying” | What ts our Government going to do | tors, who will never be caught or pun- that trusts and) | million dollars by lending the Treasury | considered as fairly capable of protect- | tice, the fact will, of course, become | and he could hold his place for | | outflow will be away was right—others insist that there was good ground for the Vigilant'a com-| plaints, Some persons praise the Vigilant for Yielding her supposed rights to prevent the calamity of a collision. But Mr. W. K. Vanderbilt, who was on the De- fender, says: “Nonsense, The Vigilant could not have bit us if she bad tried— we were going too fast for that!” But the matter ts settled. The Re gatta Committee has refused to sustain the protest made by Mr. Willard on July 22, and has denied the assertion made by him last Tuesday that the rules are not properly enforced. ‘This is final, and will be so accepted by all good yachtsmen, It 1s to be hoped now that Mr, Willard will re- consider his refusal to sail the Vigilant again against the Defender after he has done so well with his great boat. ‘This is a public matter. The sole wish of everybody ought to be that our best boat shall meet the Valkyrie, The peo- ple care nothing for the Defender more than for the Vigilant. Hut they do Want to seo the fastest boat pitted 1s too good a yachtsman and too true an American not to do his best to secure that end, and not to be willing to sacri- fice all his personal feelings in the com. | mon cause, “There !s no labor question.” “All men are laborers and get wages.” “The returns to capital are decreas- ing." ‘That 1s part of the monopoly-economy of Prof. J. Lawrence Laughlin, of the Chicago University, owned by Rocke- feller and Yerkes, He has not been discharged, He knows that his job de- pends on his good behavior, and he is going to stay In it for life, “THE WORLD'S” NEWS FROM CHINA. The detailed account of the brutal massacre at Ku-Cheng sent by cable by “The World's" special correspondent, and published to-day, ts the first full and reliable story of the horrors of that outrage. This is as usual with “The World.” ‘The story comes from an eye-witness, who was on the spot, and not from any hap-hhzard report, Thus it tells the whole truth. Nine English were murdered and one Amer- ican, Miss Hartford, was Injured, A large amount of property was de stroyed. it is reported that further outrages on the misstons are contemplated. about it? Are we to be satisfied, and will tho British Government be satis- fied with an “indemnity and a pre- tense at punishment of the perpetra: ished? Where are we to get -ompen- sation for Ives lost—for the misery and suffering inflicted on the friends of the victims? How are we to insure our citizens protection in the future? The annihilation of the wretched Government which has neither the power nor the inclination to prevent such crimes would not be too great a penalty to exact, Here are the intending grabbers of the Kingsbridge road franchises quar- relling about the “stuff” before they've got it, Who gave the Board of Alder. men the “knock-out drops?" WORRY ABOUT THE BOND SYNDICATE. It is a curious fact that there are many people who worry a great deal about other people who are eminently able to take cure of themselves. The | bankers of this city and London who | recently entered into financial relations with the Government and made nine | sixty millon lars, might well b ing themsclyes from the fluctuations of exchange on Europe, They know more about the business than anybody else and for the past two months they | have virtually held the buying and | selling of exchange in thelr own abso- lute control, Yet now ari and the highwa » people in Wall street sand byways leading thereto who are beginning to fear that the syndic: will ‘pinched when gold ts exported in large quantities, a probability of this week. These people need not worry. The syndicate will not be pinched. On the contri , it looks as though the train had all been luld for a new pinching” of the Treasury, The syn- dicate are not bound to prevent gold | xports, but only to do all in their} power to prevent them, If doing so ns letting go of some of that nine million proiit, the stoppage of the gold “beyond thelr power,” If, then, the gold continues to Jwith its ned to have anvil mn the Defender and » and 4 ther panic seems imminent ho syndicate will stand rgady to lend ore Money at the same rate of profit Don't worry about the syndicate, It's | all right—tirst tn 1, first in bonds and st in the coffers of the Treasury ne Niagara and the Isolde, American built, ave the best W-raters, and the Yampa, American built, is the best nooner at the English regatta Cowes. The French Government has two cruisers to be constructe jtation of the mba, Aw Ht. We do know how to mak: against the Englishman, Mr. Willard} ‘This is a picture of the sound-moncy | qtty-tno times man nominated for the G by the Democrats of Iowa, ours seem to run to long beards and to! pained tomer Smith. It ncema Mr. Smith had Independents are declaring for another tramplings on us platforms and prin-|# buncoed man, We waiked across City Hall ciples are going to count for as much Park togother, and he went to bis ofce to draw One open door was overlooked by Mr. | ‘ity friends, entered @ Broadway cate the other Roosevelt's police Jast Sunday. It was| “sy. Att nett the entrance to a cell in the Ffth street | countryman suggested cigars, The bartender pro- Ne station-house. A prison: and after enjoying a holiday, returned and gave himself up. The young womin who donned male| handed out « bor of ‘Rankerino attire can thank her costume for one | tryman select her to her family. Brooklyn had its first trolley excursion lnat night. The bicycle gnd the electric wire are fast leaving no occupation for poor old Equa, the The reporter bullded better than he| targer business in that time than he had done Knew when he spoke of Chicago (Monop- | day tn many oly) University being put up with "con-| tenders to assist tn serving the thirsty crowd aclence money."* which poured into Nothing remains for the allver ques-|of the Post.om: tion but burial. The Towa Democracy | card info yesterda at its funeral, he was told he could not get the letter unless he Keep it up, Glants. Even tf you don't | get It tor you,"* said the affable clerk get first place, but will only make a| to his office my friend sixned the card Good allde for it, all will be forgiven, | oflve boy got th letter without @ question being The boy who gre escape from a Kentucky jJall was ‘very Rurglars loot Harlem flats, Police? | President noo Police!? All watching side doors, “Roosevelt won't let up." Nelther will | And @ resular “Jim Dandy, toot the voters next election day, It you have any business a the mortuary tine, | We're very, very good, as. at | Ebave ve take your pi They're expressed in lang trans | Well, hardly anys tere— wick Commissioners’ Chorus— fno mistake, Fetch on your Valky When you want new paper. See The World" nearly buy a news is mor ree colume tat sble from Chins telling about the mas sacre of Christi No other paper in| America would think of doing such a thing. When there's news In China The World" gets it just the same as Ugh It were in Hoboken, s t Mrs. PT. Barnum and 1 would not live in take fiz © Phineas ere w » chop, woolen efhgy of her dead r fF onew lover's tues, We have sor @nd disregard of the rules by the De-| own, but they do not seem to de as fepter. Some agy the new champion) vicious as the Coinese kind. Nags ewe Biase ike Ones blank | daa "ve hold my mighty oMce I have been mis 4 Vegetarians of our! Most of] aud of tess vai THE WORLD: ‘THURSDAY EVENING' AUGUS' THE RETORT APROPOS. “Why do you girls wear men's clothes, Miss Sprightleigh ?'% “Why do YOU wear men's clothes, Mr. Dudely ?” SCISSORED SMILES. THE GLEANER'S BUDGET. ip Here, a Hint There and Tre Tales of City Life. (From Tit-Bits.) T went to bed very thirsty tast Sunday night,| This 19 what was be and dreamed that Police had passed tho day at my hours, He came early, | both pretty and weil dre and an the diainal hours wore on we developed | bad temper because sha could m & marked inclination for beer. But there was] ‘Why,’ said ho, hothing to be done, as the sidedoors were fant, | Rot bring your opera glass?’ fant clubs of the Union League variety were far] ‘I did, but 1 can't uso it." away. Just as we were becoming dosperate 1] ‘Is tt broken?” remembered that 1 had a cass of beer in the "No. cellar, Down we went, and I vegan to open the bottles, I passed 0) fore T could opan another he ha Anisiiel his, and, (From the Bortoa Tran: handing back the bottle neck downward, the dregn| Teacher—What Is a desert? ran all over my shirt-sleoves. As fast as I could) Pupll—An arid w. open (he remaining twenty-three botties Roose-| Teacher—tiluatrate. Velt drained them, and all I had to show for my| Pupil case was a Very wet sleove and twenty-four empty | regim: bottles, Roosevelt got ali the beer. I call that | Teacher—W' & most horribie dies top te an oasis? Pupli—Tho elud, eo T met a young newspaper friend of mine Ing in the doorway of a War AL 9 o'clock the other morning. Me writes a col- hima of pugilistic gorsip every day, im which © personal pronoun {a ured on an average of Tonly mention this to show that vernorship |e i@ supposed to know i: all, 1 asked Bim What ho was duing in that part of town at auch 48] they will last." | lnseemly hour—he works nights, you know—tol on, that mak Which he replied that ho was looking for & man! cheers, Usefain: ago Post.) Its Term, (From ¢ “Haven't you something JUDGE W. 1. BABR. | eoting, 1 908" feplied the enter: no dim ‘Varation, no use for oko devoting thelr Kray matter to tryIng 10 introduced himacit to our young aporing trend) what y'gttd TH Mate no une for & pocketbook solve the Whichness of the Thence and) the nigut before In an uptown cate, and, to make y to some hom: the Hereafter of the Come-all-ye. | long story stort, had aucceeded in borrowing Couldn't See Them. $% which be promised to pay at No. —- Warren reot the following morning at 8 o'clock. The local ticket this November. | victim had teen waiting an hour when T came enough, but after Teddy's |4long, and had just persuaded himself that be was (From the Chicago Post.) “itere we are, Maria!” You wanted to see those seashore costu ead eo much about, and here we beach with the bathers all around us somo money. ok the costumes A countryfed looking m mmpanied by two The wre: (From the Chicago Post.) Absorbing couple of drinks the duced @ box of the three-for-a-quarter brand and the city men each took one, The couatrym looked uneasy for a moment and then aald: “Well, but 1 preter | 4m ent amoks."” The bartender diaguatedly | | “Damages walked out, asked the lawyer, r threatens to 8 Af T do," replied the actress, * exclaimed the law: one, lighted it and puffed away It was the means of restoring | with evident relish. He probably thought he had WORSE STILL, faved a nickel by the transaction, He must have = becn related to the man who Invited his friendy (From Ally oper.) Take what you like, tellers, ee An uptown saloon-keeper, who availed himself of magic hour’ between midnight Sunday and k Monday morning, told me he did @ rm eka, He had to have four bare Wonderful and riysterious are the red-tape waye A friend of mine recelved @ ming him that a registered let awaited him, On golog to the proper department erformed the last glad rites was identiqed, Rut you fend a boy be can Golng back 4 the GLEANER, ass aaked hin, ™ ee ed himself to =—--—— culled by your surname?" ~—= (Air: "T Am Captain of the ‘Pinafore.’ ") elt It, Vm President of the Police Board, What t3 your susname?* Commisstonera’ Chorus Darling -— Drenident Roosovelt— You're very, very good, a But T want It understood, SIGNED IN BLANK. Tam boss of the men in blu Commiestonera’ Chorus— Who committed the crime of 1871 Loulsville Courter-Jour Gn my uptodate new method you may bank; | (Repeata last three lines.) a Just call in at the Cuurt-House, my name le on | President Roosevelt Why Kalickerbockers W. the algn ‘Tho’ fond of wine and bers, Knickerbockers for mea will never come Into “Emil Hoeber, Legal Papers Signed in Blank."" A ne'er get “on my ear," universal ume because out of the $900 .000 mea In For that wouldn't do Mutly Geet i GauBITeS MRONODG Ala BaeLinaee T bave ante-mortem statements made to fit to 1 won't for sal A Es On Bows leagea, “ won't p eae jor sale Knock-kneed and 2,180,000 spindied ehanked, leay- any case: Any whiskey, beer or ale oniy 150, en whe wor For « murder or @ sulcidal erank: In the poor man’s saloon on Sundee! TERCERA nee 0) ae Any one can sult bis fancy when he's filling tn CRRA asvantage th-cebact trpusarsic- New Or the space at aes — Just above the name, for they seldenti Rodeayalees They Have Reformers in England, viank, |! a; viowherat Too iota by the dozens, you may come and) Commissioners’ Chorus What, nowhere? fe open, free and | Presiilent Roosevelt the theortst Is Gat the former a Aition® under which he { your relatives should suddenty get) Eacept at the Union Leaguet {mpawsibie.—Louton Truth, A Trifle Mistaken, those verdicte-signed In| Then give three cheers oF chon!) | Por the President of the Police Boantt few York Many was allowing the saloons fh ry President Roorevelt— No: nowhere! Commissioners’ Chorus Whe', nowhe 6 Willing Oh, a bacheloy Auent Roowevelt-— Weil, hard Kavept at anywhere | e Union League | Commissioners’ Choraw Weristvels) Phen bree cheers For ihe Mathy Wute of the Police Moard JPSSE A. HEALY She Kuew From the Cleveland Plain Dealer) Pittedurg club's tm tor a," "9 Double Chionae watt mage wu power ) wciou hinges elton Roshes"# Potley lustitute, White Plains **s°" | fesdquarters until to- R,_ 1605, ] DRAMATIC NEWS AND NOTES. Why She Couldn't Use Them, din a theatre the other mraiastoner Roosevelt | Olght. They were in a private box, and she was ed. But she was ina the ying to moilify her, "did you} the: Jen —sue “It It won't. It in gradually ade every play-house that seeks traditional fame needs. Henceforth, tt won't be | given over to minstrel shows one year, | rural comedies the next year and trained horses the third. It will be the | home of good, old, uproaring melodrama. on my braceleta, Romereit, but be-| Q¥eations in Physical Geography. | doah” and “In Old Kentuck’ ‘Bunday in New York under the Roosevelt | ab heaper than that?” | ic iy time to rebel. ws he put dowa the pocketbook he had) the actor-p! tertainer-and-goodnenas-know: {4 to make her debut in this her native land In “Fis Excellency,” at the Broad- We have ones, but we can’t guarantee that he explained “Pm going away on a two Weeks’ he exclaimed gleefully, "L eee the bathers,"" she replied severely, E ee + “but iil comes’ from Edgewood, Bennings, ett GL creel Seen mee jeu Gnd really: something’ will have to |be done to suppress it, Just one more quotatior | "fielenay’ ‘a tragedy from the pen of the the most’ successful dramatist of the jage, Victorien | Bardou, author | of | Tedora,’ ‘Theodora’ (ie) ‘Gismonda, has been secured by Robert Downing for. his forthcoming tour. It will bo made one of the handsomest_ produc- Hons of the year, nothing ‘shall be spared to make it perfect in music, properties, costumes, lights and Had Seen Her. the company,’ ald ‘and the coun-| #98! He wouldn't have any sort of a case."? Gones. And ¢ “Daphne? Oh, that's much too pretty Z & name for a servant, especially when ue = -,|there are young gentlemen boarders, SIR TE! OF THE SUNDAY, BND ME DRY SUNDAY, | \osume you have no objection to belag ‘Oh, ho, ma’am; I'm quite used to AMONG THE PARAGRAPHERS, the Nftieth performal Askin presented each lady with ‘a pair of silken bloomers, Hia agent says that the bloomers were patterned after those worn by the ladies of the company, and were of Turkish design, Such souvenirs may be valuable, but they are surely somewhat intru tinues in hit fond ¢ there is no knowing to what limits he ang | Will BO. Holmes Under Suspicion, or Peffer. Sh! May be it was this fellow Ret lvely of a bis the theatres were closed, during June and July, there were breezes and cool The difference between the practical man and epts the con- to work, while the latter refunen the possible im @ vain chase for the tre and advertise nights; when the thermometer touches the nineties, the company can be seen, at Long Branch or Saratoga.” It's a | good idea, A warm September is dea Ty. It gives the season a slap in the face at the start. ‘papers are queer, When Tam- A widower, Gus Thomas Will Nut Go to Earope to Look After “Alabama Acndemy's New Polley, Gus Thomas is not going to Europe after all to superintend the production there by B. 8, Willard of “Alabama” 8 80 deftly arranged by Charles Froh- man, Mr, Thomas is too busy with “The Capitol," the play that J. M. Hill Js to produce next month, and he has cabled to Willard that he can’t come, Of course, it's @ pity. How they will manage to inject Alabama atmosphere into the Londun presentation of this dainty play 1s hard to imagine, Still, the two Americans in the cast, Agnes Miller (who has been here long enough to be American) and Jack Mason, may be atmospherically useful. Willard's plans jn London are teresting Just now, because he will probably return to America next year. He will follow thu Production of “Alabama” with a new play from the pen of the delightful Author of ‘The Professor's Love Story,” J. M. Barrie. After that, he will do W. B. Gilbert's new comedy, and. then he Will tackle a play by ‘the incessant Henry Arthur Jones, Out of all this material Willard expects to get enough to bring him over here next season, and when he dose come, he will ap at the Garden ‘Theatre, ‘The English. actor has not forgotten the good fortune that t him in this country, They say that fh hu gushes profusely on the subject of America, and will talk by the hour of the various places he visited here. It was uphill work for him, too, In this country, Unlike Irving, Willard had to | work his way into American affections, and it was @ long time before he settle down into the cheerful and exhilarating pursuit of making moncy, The Academy of Music will one of e days be the Drury Lane of Amer- ting a fixed policy—and that's what The Girl 1 Left Behind Me,” “Shenan- have al- ly broken the tce, and with ‘The Sporting Duchess” at’ the end of the month, the pollcy will be established, nics can Say What they like aboat melodrama, with its well worn charac- ters, but there are thousands of people who go to the theatres who ar by it. Anyway, In its own home It's toler- When’ it ventures upon Broadway ee e Miss Nancy McIntosh, sister of Burr, faywrightathiete-auth sr-en- -what-else, ay Theatre. Miss McIntosh is the Iat- Savoy Theatre prima-donna, and | she has made a very favorable impres- | sion in excited about her appearance in Lon- don, and it is sald that he hi started In up citement anent her return to America ingland, Burr was immensely | already M another stratum of ex- oe e Thomas A. McKee und his Robert Downing are getting to be nuisances. reat the Day after day, Thomas turn 7 of typewritten’ matter anent ‘America’s out reams rugedian,”” and sends it broadcast. It and then, Thomas, farewell: scenery, ntly Thomas doesn’t shall be downed, ° And now they are all gushing about San Francisco. It is such an enterpr:s- tng place, such a splendid show town, so exceedingly moneyed, et patatl, et Mitata, Dan Vrohman intends playin his company there every year, and Charles Frohman is in ray the reception aceorded to 2 Jonuson. oon we shall near that Lil- lan Russell has forgotten vld scores and taken ‘ris n and that Crane has forgotten the Indif- ference that greeted him there, For- give and forget.” Let bygones be by- re . to her bosom again, yu are. . Herbert Hell Winslow and Will R. Wilson are at work upon @ new roman- tic melodrama, ir which Willard Lee will play the’ star part, ‘The scencs of the play are all laid in Florida, and a number of patented effects will be in- troduced, Of course, this is very Inter- esting, but the question bobs up: Who fe Whit work, whieh th ation, Messa. Wilson and Winslow. will each ‘have four plays upon the read the coming season, urd Lee? In addition to this are doing In collabor- eee Really, Harry Askin's souvenirs are assuming the shape of a disease. If there be such a malady as souveniritls, Askin has {t very bad; and he should take something for It. ‘They say that it ja somewhat catching, which makes it of course all the more dangerous. At mont Theatre In Boston, for the ce of “Kismet,” Mr. ive. If Mr. Askin con- se after novelty, oe Just as the theatres are beginning to comes the odorous propheay nd Vigorous hot spel . and people—to use their own ie expression—"slept under blank= ets” Do you wonder that several man- agcrs ure already discussing the advisa- Uility of keeping their houses open next ear during June and July, Charles rohman says that he'll open his thea- ‘performances on ¢ool Presl; Roo el there was a merry row all the time, Now that * * 1 1 uy my best to outshine you all citer Hocaevelt ls ontoning the Excise |,.1f Miss Grace Horton, of Stormyille Ant iyo heen offen called a mounteban Penal eer ets Ae Sale sees Commiasioner oosevett ty enforcing the Racine | Tt County, N. Y., who suggeste: q plan of simplifying legal work 1 think * . tow, there Js another merry row, louder thao the/ the name for "L' Hotel du Libre Ex- my i | Nit You we Bave to be content fret Louis Siar-Saying change. sending tn the ttle’ of the Preside! sevelt (showing teethi— si = * Gay Varisians,”” w call at this office, Don't you Want am ARMANI Og en eee oon ey palive A Tip to Croker, and be identified, she will receive the MEA; SRUNINGR ||) ROE CORO Doss Croker wants to dle ia America, AN right, | cheek for $%), which Mr, Frohman prom- ——.- 1 retura that compliment Richard, ta Ui cave the venue ix really of Ol And its a $50 bill mightily easily WORLDLINGS, Commissioners’ Choruw secondary import. Kansas City Star, | OR: oe os We eelingly polite, €e. i Miss Georgia Cayvan is still dispens- A deep oll well at Los Angeles, Cat, hae oud- | (Mepeat last tree lines) te Rhea New Womant ing her luminous amiles in Europe. It : ai [Busi t has remained for @ womat rgentine to | APDE: that etress has been’ of- y begua gushing at the ri 800 President Roos Rod esata ‘ bade af beds ATEERLINe tO Pee the Pas i" for this country, | Mad whiskey or “tug Juice’? noek a s ae but that she polined tt.” Why. the it doa denibn wae’ bai L never, never use which she has wot ahead of men, She did what guthors of “The Passport” should’ ima- i Gian acie'k gros aabaAi doraeei J many of them have often felt that they gine that any woman would want it et Tame pica ie ste oye Wanted to do —Pritadotpile Inqulren Rfter it had been trotted through. the i am golng y - —— — [eountry, from San Francisco to N: American Mible Soctety distributed more | 'f‘t thse Git Jadgment a maily Suited, York, by Misa Sadie Martinot ts some- nee w ait bave-go booms sold on Bunteat reli Rien thing of a mystery. But dramatic au- o last sear thas © | Commissioners’ Chorus : . ¥ bp thors are incline 1 to egotism. Probably Lites el Oty Miss Wilitag—What kind of man would you Mike | N Stephenson and Yardley belleve has stamped itself Feeceh ards). gear ies (ah X hl pait'sa om wore asin tad ak eae t he offie alt dyy—what do you wane with tt' | @) It's extremely curious (2) And how effusively wo (3) Yet, when we leara a email bit of glass Fant it—that‘a onough-—sh, here 44 fol"? how our heart warms drag to the near that he's won nothtng, care we , ta As niotae tonieicaea “4 towards Rrown when We est hostelry and insist on that {t's a mere canard roo As Rover took is and walked out the goat laty| fear he has Won some- treating him to the best well! if Brown were dy like @ thousa?! the best the house affords. ing of thirst apd ap- z pealed to us—I he A New Dathing ‘This new bathing gown is of Turkey © striped with biue braid, The yoke red twill, wit ‘black of nay which fastens on the shoulder with red buttons, black twill. is of navy Hamburger Steak. Heat a lump of butter in the dish: when hot place the steak in the melted grease and cook until brown; then turn ing place the meat on a hot platter and pour over it one spoonful” of butter flavored with salt and pepper. acter in Teeth. Character reading from from shoes and from the face, has now been succeeded by from the teeth. contemporary handwriting, character reading A dentist explains in # eful study of teeth will reveal the fact that they in- shape and setting, the temperament of thelr possessors. One has only to note the teeth of one's friends and relatives to verify his observations on pointed, projecting, short, square, tangled, even and pearly dentures. long and narrow, we are assured, denote vanity; those that are long and project Indicate a grasping disposition; treachery is shown by the possession of small, white separated teeth; and in- is revealed by overlapping Those that are Cream Cookies, ‘Two cups of sugar, one cup of butter, one cup of milk, two eggs, one teaspoon-! two teaspoonfuls of Make as soft a dough you can handle and make into small ful of cinnamon, baking powder. Bargains to Be Sought. When it comes to real pretty and fashionable Summer those of ecru, batis not expect to get them Some are plain and some are embroi- dered with tiny dots or flowerets, Some or lnen, but do | very cheap. have dainty patterns outlined In open work und some of the newest hays ines cf fine ¢ Id thread running through them, The preciest of these dreses a made over white silk foundations and jaro trimmed with black or white lace Jand insertion, ‘The yellow rarely aps pears on them now, ‘That pretty, | fashion has been so run into the earuy, 8 like these is real bare the style of them may de ventured upon with wbsoluie cers tainty of endurance into the second jumier, One can of salmon minced fine; drain off the liquor and throw away. For the dressing, boil one pint of milk, two ta- ble nfuis of bu salt and pepper to tuste, Have ready one pint of fine bread crumbs, place a layer in the bot- tom of the dish, then a layer of fish, then a layer of dressing, and so on, having crumbs for the last layer, Bake ull browa, Maidens Who Wound Th Up At a recent wedding a very pretty feature was the “chain maidens.” Four attractive young ladies with chains of 8 preceded the bridal party up th d centre aisle of the chureh, tying ail guests in thelr pews, and stationing themselves at equal distances, holding the ends of the chains until after the ceremony and until the bridal party and immediate friends had left the church. ‘Then they gracefully twined the chains about themselves and followed the party {to the carriages, thus releasing the guests from their pews and preventing the crowding of the bridal party, whica so generally o: maelves | bro: One cup of butter, two cups of sugar, one cup of cornstarch, two cups of flour, cup of milk, two teaspoonfuls of buking-powder, whites of five egge, twe | teaspoontuls of flavoring. ‘o Prevent Broade| ting. Most women know some of them te thelr sorrow, that any material at al, like breadcloth has to receive certain treatment before it is made up or ft will spot with water, or even with dampness in the air, til it looks as if it were covered with grease spots jInstead of having the material, before itis cut Into at all, sponged by a tailor, some authorities recommend that it by hung out tn the air over night in please ant weather, It has been “tried, hot ever, to hang it near an open window, when the rain was falling, and that h no effect upon it whatever, pth from Spots jow to Make an Artificial Pearl. | ‘The French artificial pearl is product |by boring a hole in the shell of th; oyster, and introducing a small bit glass, which the animal covers wit jacre” or mother of pearl, to stop th; Irritation, Such pearls are flat on on jside, and of less value than those duced naturally. * LETTERS. [7Ate column ta open to everybody who hae a complaint to make, a grievance to ventilate, tm Sormation to give, a subject of general interest to discuss or a public service to acknowtedga and who can put the idea into lem than 190 words Long | letters cannot be printed. } Men and Women, To the Editor: In answer to 8, P. James, men and women should never be compared; the conditions are and always have been too different, Consider the un- encouragement the universal custom of sup- ‘ouraging woman's intellect and ‘The few women who have forced their the mountain of prejudice that prove what Ww. pressing and dit Weighed them down, it we only looked around boldly and saw what} men really think of us, and not rest content with What they pretend to think, As Georg (the equal of Scott and the rest, and who had to take 4 maa’s name to suc: may worslilp fame, but a woman choolgiri T used to think enpectaily when I'd 1 manners and means try- Ing to rouse them in the morning; when I'd see the house in ten minutes; while they Were rough at play and awkward before company, and my companions and self neat, pretty, industri- ous and self-possessed. But arrived at maturity, T saw that while women exc excelled In a fow great ones, being about equal. indly excuse thin long letter; I believe T could write @ book about It, just ridiculous to try and separate the sexe “Aa the tow ts to the arrow * uscless one ALICE PRESTON HOWE, boys very interior cr hear my mother by led in many litte the! two, taken all in all, jae ay Longfellow says, fo the man {a to the womai without the other: More About the Weight of Smoke, To the Kaito jerestlag Lette ‘h I read in Satur- Fegarding the weight of amoke have aroused my who asserts that sinoke has no favitated 1s absurd. weight because it is n To transform my thoughts Into cold type, 1 will there te but one substan without welght, the conclusion of Werner R. erroneous, Now if smoke has weight, what do much as the weight of the tobacco minus the weight of the oxygen iu 4 minus the other The answer which , that smoke ts lighter than air, hence the ascent, Is correct. A YOUNG SOI-DISANT SCIENTIST, state that sini minus the ashes compounds in the tobacco. Here Is « Beautifal Boy. ‘To the Editor: I have a son elghteen years of age: 1 do ni know what to do with him, It L give him money to buy something ho goes and shoota crap or playa cards, zo law in New York to compel him to do some- He does not want Why Arrest for Misdemeanors? Why is a man always arr Geimeanor or even in civil uit? editorial columa, 4 for any mis You say in your apropos of Waring, 4 from what 1 0 there are more arre ave ween I would pro rata of tie than tn Moscow ioe not be a nd address of perso (and of course, correct) rather and axa rule nome too gently to the police station, geant or Captain states ‘Then a summon Magintrate’s offer, then a warra demeanors be take proof being given, that they are could be served by aud mhould this not be an of arrest could day the case of & man ch of promise, }ahe was Bol ® proper person to marry. Wea 8 fo me, an Englishman, the irony of calling this right? DOUBTFUL, & sult for br the “land of liberty’ t= something exquist We speak of the “liberty of the subject,” ang, as far ax my experience goes, 1c 1s much more Fespected than that of the citizen, Some yeart ago I took out my first papers for intended natus rallzation, but until I see more real liberty @ don't want license) T don't think I shall irre ocably "go back on the old lady."" Perhaps I am mistaken in some of my ideas. If so, doubtless some of your readers und writers will correct me. I should be only too happy to bo #0, for I hay great regard and sympathy for Americans, I only some » the institutions that I can't etome cht Who will defend his country to A SON OF JOHN BULLE ! Ice Water Baths, To the Editor: Could thelr be some action taking in regar to Duane street free bath No. 9? It {s surround: ed with ice barges, and all small pieces of lop are dropped or thrown tn the water, which 1s kegh ¥o cold that {t Ja Impossible to go bathing. Ala the wind pumps aro kept going and empty all the cold water from the barges, | NED'S SONS AND DAUGHTERA Miss Fingler a To the Editor: In a country where the laws are supposed Protect rich and poor, black and white, alike ® Yerdict- such as has been returned by the comaer's jury in Miss Flagler’s shooting case cannot fail to excite indignation in the unblased mind. I do not for a moment suppose that Mint F. shot with intent to kill, but nevertheless ap shot; shot twice, and killed. When a poor éev@ {© motorman, who works to keep himself ant family alive, runs over a chil@—not because te wanted to do s0, but because he could not bring his car to a stop in time—he is arrested, hauled up before the pollve and held under ball on w charge of manslaughter; but when a high-spirite ed fociety lady and ‘daughter of @ General” t4 at a boy ytwice, simply because he was suspected of ateafing a pear or several of thea and kills him, the jury find that on the evidence before them they cannot hold her. If the former case presents good grounds for prosecution tor minal carelessness how much more eo doeg the latter, where certainly some kind of intimte dation was premeditated. © tempora, O morest DAILY "READER, Her Pistol, Justice for the Rich a To the Editor: Of late there has been quite a lot of talk about Ragilsh justice, English fair play, ac., but allow me to say that in England a person will receve Justice whether he has money or not, which they cannot do here, For example, take the case of er, of Washington, who shot and killed a colored boy who was attempting te steal some pears, She was exonerated by @ ers jury, Why? Because she was the daughter of a wealthy and influential man, If above erime had been committed in Englaad different, Why shou! ari , be exonerated from all blame tor committing murder, while Marla Barberi, « post |. who can hardly speak the English language focked In @ closely guarded cell in Sing Sing of death, when her crime Who can answer? Poor, the result was more justifiabl ASHAMED AMERIOAN, Mast Spank Her Husband When She Gets One, To the Euitor T hay oa girl for six months Some time agy While calling, she produced some clippings from ‘The Evening World on the aube Ject of ng nds, and said she would marry no man who would not give her the same fearlog het z, howeves were mare soon after been engiged power, Sha questioned im temper 1 congen not to det it #0 far wien fi. She anuat have suspected t [ane av ly requested to show the hom fot my statemea lacing myself knees, Lovking upon it move in the ig Joke, [ consented and she gave me ten ptinging Diows wilh 4 Uhm rattan. Ou afverthought 7 saw t indignty of the whule affair, and conclede

Other pages from this issue: