Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘Peake by the Prose Publishing Company, @ te 02 PARK ROW, New York. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1895. ONS TO THE EVENING WORLD ncluding postage): MONTH. _ Vol. 86 No, 12,43: (Matered at the Post-ofice at New York as eeonnd-class matter BRANCH OFFICES: UPTOWN OFFICE—Juaction ef Broad- “way and Wizth ave. at 224 at. PPORLD HARLEM OFFICE—125tn ot and Mati. ) + ae ove OKLTN—$00 Washington ot. PA.—Prese Building, 103 Chest. PER DAY. 6,477 GAIN OVER JUL THE WORLD'S GRETT AUGUST CIRCULATION, 560,055 PER DAY. ‘Ths RXCHEDS the COMNINED EROGLATION of ten New York or, to be more mpecific, | OVER 100,000 more than the | GERBINED CIRCULATION of ‘TRLeonaw Tam L.veiwa St THR TRINUNR, MOIKG' Powe, THe Mit AND AL ADV RM | { | Gata in one year .....— Gain im four years... 226 680 | @ain m thistsen year..536,423 ee Beaders of THE EVENING WORLD leaving Be elty for the hot months should send in Uicir ad= @remes and have THE EVENING WORLD mailed them regularly, Addresses changed as am a8 desired. CITIES GROWING BETTER. “One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.” A fine old proverb, dealing ‘with @ principle of much wider applica- Sion than the mere quoted words seem fo indicate. One is apt to think of the © “temoh of nature” merely as a mow Bary impulse which leate to an im “Mediate act of heroism, of generosity, er ef sympathy. There is more than ‘his behind the proverb and tts prin- wiple There is the idea that every good * Bnd creditable feeling coming straleht from the heart of man spreads its tn- fuence quickly and in broadening wircles among groups of other men. At the present time there is a health ful optimism about. Men are looking ut the best side of things, Hecause trate fs better and times are better it begin to be felt that men » be feontentment and pros being wepted right as go many human {ii Right in line with this tro Ang comes the declaration of | Kingsbury, of the Ameriean Bolence Association, t elties are growing b tmost comforting rever @ry cry that cities are finiquity and of the idea too prevalent fn rural regions that they never can be anything else. Yet Mr. Kingsiury does not bring news to the cities themselves. Whey have long known that they were growing better. Espectaliy ts this true of New York. The metropol.s has heen jas steadily marching forward is Morale as it has in the matter of popu- Bation. Its further progress te fo well @esured that not even 1 i velt handicap of too much enforced gool- Mess can stop it. This is a happy thought, Let us give it ull the con- @agious force possible and thus spread the Better New York idea in useful « operation with the better times inspira- tion. pority " 1 med esldent | Boctal in Keep your eye on the moon to-night Big minstrel entertainment, ‘he man’ $e going to black up and the entertuin- ment will last about three hours, QT WON'T BE AS HOT AS IT USED 70 BF, ‘The Weather Bureau, which has been faking the heat of Sumer all the hi fer by telling us with somewhat gh feb joy just how high the mercury mounted on the most sizzlesome d fs now going to reform and soothe with statements that will us out of our discomfort and prevent ovr col Jars from wilting and our clot from Sticking to us during even 1 ridest Bpelle of weather. “Chief Moore explaina that his Murean will achieve this refresting result @nnouncing the sensible as well ¢ ir temperatu: The sensi e tk \ «| tempera- & and 4s, eleht degrees | lower than the alr temperature, which | has heretofore been taken and given ou) This promised relief trom umer | woes will come a little late, but !t may @anse us to look forward to next July end August with something akin 1 Pleasure. If now the Weather Bureau @ould devise sume plan which would re. | @uce the Winter frigidity so that on a @ay when the mercury Is six degrees be: Jow zero a man w! fur overcoat is] fn “hock” wouldn't feel the need of ) the size of the boon tt confers would hx } eppreciably enlars , Our Gian | eal reformers —<lo! ) when it can have S) WILLIAM BREAKS OUT ACAIN, William of Germany sain and again in the Peaipstrain that is entirely personal and Seaeumr to him. Once more he talks of pele” and "my army" and “ny t he finds this a new m to destro: t has been talking game strain, ti pointed at them and hopes of now tells his army that he may soon have to slip its leash and let it loone on brothers and friends of “his soldiers, War he must have! If he cannot have it out of Germany, then in Germany, but anyhow, war, war. ‘Tho best thing for the young man would be @ writ de lunatico inquirendo, Tho Boclalists, he said yesterday, are @ rabble, and if the whole people would not withstand them then “I call upon yon to re- {sist the treasonable band, and to wage | & war which will free us from such ele- ments."” The Socialists are fighting with ideas, and whether right or wrong, cold steel, nor squadrona, nor gunpowder can crush ideas, If the German Emperor would crush Soclalism he must fight it with Ideas—new, not old Sdeas—for ridiculous and extreme aa some of the Soclalistic theories are they are bound to triumph over the worn-out props of aulocrats, divine right, personal loyalty and brute force. William II, was born too late in a world that has got about three centurtes ahead of him, Shake hands with Policeman Neushat- fer ax quickly as you can, Mr, Roose- velt, Right into the Bast River he plunged, uniform and all, to pull out a drowning boy, That's the stuff to make “the finest" out of, WHAT WAS THE ENGINEER'S DUTY} When Engineer Frank Jensen sumped from his disabled engine on the Bea Beach road yesterday and left the ateam-driven monster to do its work of cestruction and bleodshed further down the track he failed to reach the heroic fdeal, Whether he also failed in his duty as a man and an engineer Is a question not to be decided without a full and fair inquiry and calm deliberation He had stayed at hin post through one h, His own story ts that he then found his engine to be #0 damaged as to be unmanageable, He knew that an- other and worse crash was coming, that he could not prevent ft, and that to re- main where he was would be suicide, ‘The hero engineer would have rinked the suicide, ‘There were four miles of clear track ahead, Within the time quired to cover the distance something might have been done, Tho throttle might have been reached, after all, An alarm might have been sounded by whirtle or bell. Someway, somehow the people might have been saved. As was sald at the beginning, this engineer was not a hero. Was he a man faithful? ‘That ts for the Investigators to decide promptly as may be, but with- out prejudice and not in a spirit of too keen a condemnation, It 1s weil to acknowledge that even upon a raltroad such # thing us a real accident Is pos- sible, Last night's feast of theatricals would more than a surfeit in any than New York. ‘But the took cure of all of tt very have been other city metropolis handily. PREBTIDi An army overcoat verted ft use ITATION IN THE ARMY. that can be con- into a V-shaped tent—dog tent to be called during () late un- pleasantness—t9 under consideration by the War Department at Washington. The Austrian army is supplied with these coat-tenta or tent-coats, which- ever you choose to call them, and ft In said has found them to be all that has | n claimed for them, A dozen of (hem have been sent to this country and Will be given @ trial The garment {9 diamond-shaped when spread out, and when worn by the sc dier fold’ so as to form a wack coat Which falls below the knees. When the Idler is on a forced march or picket duty he can take off his coat and using is musket and bayonet for a pole con- vert It into a tent, Ifa large shelter s required # number of the coats can be laced together by the buttonholes. To make the American $13-a-month soldier entirely happy something more than an overcoat that can be prestoed in tent will be necessary. If he ‘ given a cap that could be verted Into a kettle, rie that Wil be turned Into a frying-pan, a red necktle that could be cooked into -jucks and cartridges that would make good beef tea bouillon, with a few other convertible accoutrements, he Isht go through his term of enlist- ment with a Nght heart and feel that there was some satisfaction in being a bold soldier t uid ety points refuge Treasurer Kelley, to consolidation as his elty’s from pro tive bankruptey, But th is a higher motive than a merely financial one to actuate those across the bridge who push the cause of union with New York, This motive lies in the fact that the people, by their own free votes, have di eed that the nsolidation shall take pla It is not for politicians and wire-pullers to inter fere with the carrying out of the popu lar desire. of Rrooklyn, of signatures, wholesale brib- perjury, malfeasance in ottlvet are some of the charges against corporation seeking a fran- Nearly always a simi ere corporations ar path to every right of way 4 way of wrong Hise in Chicago, wry why Th lar st corned. ms to Engineer Jensen, on the Sea Beach road, jumped and was eute, Fireman Preston, on the New York and Gree < Insisted on bel rida’ leture: akon "The Evening W: Living MME OTILLE STEPHANIE This iw a pleture of Street Ce sioner Waring’s private secretar attended to her bt and work cleverly and capably, but w her posititon and several month on account of the Allen law, a other people wl Former ready to the recap Warden Raabe will welcome with a clean ured post-office UMeves, It was most deple th Beach disaster must upon so bright a Labor able that vast ay. The New record. Ob, Grounds fe Yorks broke for such work at months ago! th “L!' road opposition to real transit can accomplish nothing a @ faithful commission, ‘The young man over In tuo much. He should ¥ put to be jerman spank In the country's should be no fre ‘Trusts, prosperity h opportunity Labor generally preferred n. volce to the voice of the orator day, Mayor Strong appeared not at worse for wear and tear u fleld, on The day of the Defender's re approaches rapidly It shouldn't hard to wing flrebugs In West Brighton, 8. 1. — = Nor THE OYs' THE RETR There's an When Fac with sa Buce and moe r With of And a te To 1 Ana. s¢ condi Salt and pepper tend « relist To thie extremely fe del * mish ay decayed diges savory bivalvel You miqut take a With your sia: (Vhat ia tf ey Aad stout, Y eat a era a 1 burte wood Lake road, stuck to his post a was killed. Preston's was the herok It remains to be decided whether | y retreated from his| ndoned tt ath Jensen post or selfishly ab, disereetly It will be worth while to-ntgne wateh en Luna fifrting with Sul over Mother Earth's shoulder, other words, with clear rkieg to fay you will tind the eclipse of the moon, | ginning at 1 P.M. an interesting event to Watch | to ont | In In w York n with th on might aling an Louls they 1a whol chorus girl, Some. mes they do these things more thor in the wild, wild West. content | actress's have kid In the Better New York whieh ts! steadily on the way there will be scata | fer all the children who should be tn Harlem will breathe easier r fat robbers tn Jail, Capt, O'Brien's de- | tectives bugged good game that ume. | with Even under the eyes of his Jatlers, Murderer Holmes has added to his list of crimes. He has written a book his hope be- yng cherish peace The letter-carriers in convention at Philadelphia ought to get as full a | And I'm ghia will uttel LA ToveLn — eo MILADELPRIA TE « EMS OF Patriottc Extrayagan said that alread Ameri They Would! deiphia 1 Ph Noads Next, Tre horse tt will teay posal of the hia beat girl subject to some « carriage if the ri ouutry road. sa gre te and arnie Ww who goes Philade Times The Oyster a It te not the fact that tie midst aon that - 6 rection of ihe opster joke, saler than {ts subject as ka. aten Philadelphia Prem the Jok ser te but is ju to Chi Gallery ARBRE aid measure of good cheer ax they carry to on thelr daily rounds. its shadow a Labor The oyster's holiday is also over, NAN! tnventl Ills wife bought his neckties, dng muste UESD eeeiaaianetantks! Tr a ¢ , 8 WHY HIS LOVE GREW COLD. / box of cigars, are broken. vorsion that out Uttle ea ad shady wal aiving Mother Gi man was mer K ton, and with advantag A woman i them with the word vmimia- who her ho loat ns" pay Ye She c: Upon ty aire f ed Feachod The w rence a not shave ne Sea nied was much tak Look bh pa aunt AMoayt Day he Polo Nike Sean rapid against y talks ed ana] “* n With gay there for the To wee Ant where the wild white iites gleam, Hor face a ature's: yester- But laughing, hand to aide te st!it Deating of her hi 9 upon the lonely AND with Ips all the 16 ball The gay rout pastes, and there f co in the plac Again the cuckoo softly ealla, The watchful equi al test +8 those hen, Aw! Ant, 1 The For ones style, and (ile te what the iittlo rizing Lift up your feet, turn out your toes, town ful a business head 1 telling her friends how careful and methodical she fy in all her transactions woman spent all the forenoon writing important letters to New York firms. firm name and ity th sup the mountain aide valley is antir ompanions racing wide In vain pursuit of her, a leat blown Gown the breess, do=ts a gon THE GLEANER'S BUDGET. p Here, a Hint There and Trae) 7, Tale One Summer girl, @tancy made a good course, almant all of these Su That olf anying ‘Absence mak heurt grow fonder,’ 1s Loo aweeping. Absence Is like a high wind & candle and inorearea a conflagration tains the rule and all exceptions to tt we've hardly even got back to ies, born of moonilght and rea and man wand gong output, puff, puff.” Tn one of the park his eon a yur contain a goodly ‘an be remembered by most pedesiria downtown and took her letters with her to post. ried them around In her h then went to Brooklyn to see @ friend arrival in Brooklyn, membered to mall her Lettem: sony, all the notes wore dolayed and nome have ole n'a friends found out about the ocour 1 they arg till ‘vuslness caretuln A friend of mina who weighs something over buarde cigar rod of the driver back by this reply nigh to be a ff at the next cor thinking deeply anies of @ language tn which a ty able to fall buck #0 heavily tts chance abuser, In every tangled co} her atr stands, Mke a sigh among the trees, thinks of mould upon Rer Mpa And dust F PERSO Bishop Thorold, 4 botire be be temperance Ie cont patches of day DUGHT fusing bier . pleved his es have | declared thal ad r has tare | wer | te Ito we arcing | | horseless e to be in he resur a wide cae Lioa | He wana wi Bishoy Brooks, erred upon bi ‘I ‘ nt the other da: whose guest he frequently w Sir Henry Irving £100 to answer the congrat he ann the che Tnatit st fora d “ moment then shi Tuto the world ut her heart re ogo Law af City Lite, when reproached for tneon- fatd omhe “OF ar enearem! bealis ant the Paria by James 1 in dinpute between tense, Foi the The Franch tt puts why, a city, and the evtabliched the Order F nubjects oja-vu, Tho Queen © newly arrived, Flagler. addressing rechorshent tot K ts the ¢ mant of all, aentiment—are ‘The frienda of Mrs to know that ax Mrs she has beon diatingy the anthem at a ape treated quite as the Mra, Wright wan the of Louisiana, and this experience. Dut nore n rlages was her brief with Mr William coded hin own pert Hage with Mine Kat x recently, @ gentleman was Jing lesmn It was in shoulders and breathe your amount of tnatruce Hen nalders that abe hi t whe 12 constantly “Dolla writen to fay that ate ts ninete, she ts not a Mint, qualifeattons 40. enough to call a sevon: puzzled and begs for « of war, Detla, to learn gaya Chat Ulysses w gulded by the siren In the woman the sound of his own wy calls, Della, A few days ago thie 8h es nidress and afternoon ale went adres Ia the voices for reveral whe suddenly re As they were all but Intended for New York It he bas nothing bet Della, get “Love MeL. Charles Roade, anit early part of the Fountain seduces Sal! @ description of a with such spirit that tempiress, and thoy destination at thia writing teasing her about i bo @ Fourth ayenu f A 1 Mis hand and pleavantly Can DP Mgt upes He “Well, you The quawitoner ke next ear the tle verb AS TO THE et rand t and ungratefully 6 ees Tre VALIARIE ee aeatlt ee ae they seem ming hate, ly the rt, race. tly heard, eas bind, part; tn the ank Tooker, AND THINGS. rohenter, Het wheel ts of Her bloomers up And when che's ri Enetand Shin always acta ted this cou tn the tnterer, ym friend of the who t é And She tainte tf aw { baw & bishop, on received by Men the kniphthont is spent £108 ment th Me y) 0 fs to Dave a France having ption for the p abat nt him to the sat ay wntit bal n eof your satin Texas 8 of Sarrament by r American & reservoir three m An, Mias FROM EYE-GLASS te oi Ls Thg Evolution whom {t sooms encourage him to talk about hime his experiences, his affairs read rival of the Baroness Martin wef the Baron Har who a few ye of the little Tal nidad y but spirit Harty ine Tra 1 thn) solution, tr aa great of the who begulles a map a the Me David D ot uw ge A MASCOT IN “| Se FR SMALL B06 DE HERE ARE THE JOKES, The Same O14 Girl, ho latent o-date with he gett, But when her whee! 1 to make . Bi Jags to Order, herself. by agement Hickey, of Trin Brazil and advert rensations who te th John 1 1 Mr 1 be intereste, vice and w Hote ¥ nl mat thon he ed onane and ma’ Perfumed his handerchiefs. And, worse than all else, bought him a OUR WOMAN PITILOSOPHER, | ner re| ot 2 ago net up aio Kin headquarters tn front of a cate King James 1 tr 1 a attractive ve naturally It ts A wil to retal 4 weak fr Meanw MeL h ng." by Mistress Minto giv Thth ha with atly married RICA'S CUP, SHAPE oF sche Tae FONDER_ | | vie, the boys a ded, rooklyn Lite, a y Why not let the yellow dog mns- cots settle itn ownership. you have got @ lovely at it ts turning ont to 4 you would Injunction Wonlda't Hola, oly wont, tears, v em to be ta Fanny ES Lu TO could not letrolt: News, Digb tenth ‘Then he consulted a lawyer, CITY OF PLEASURE.” ‘The season will be a long one, but It n have ne store for us ve Incompars ash produced he Empire Theatre last night under t “Phe of Ph ine a big, pollte, well-kempt iit bowling with unholy lan wes the intention of the they should be quiet w jued excitement or enthusiastic with intensity of a half-dozen assorted emotions. “The City of Pleasure," dub- bed a drama—in reality a farce-melo- Jram. or a farce-drama—is an adapta- from the Freneh of Decourcelies Tarte, slaughtered into English by we R. Sims. Sims is a Jonah, He # Jonahed hefore, new farce-drama Is a hopeless tncongrutts theatre ever saw any Ike them, rayal, abduction, fights be- women, fights between men, me- 1 in various stages of agony, loud “My Gawd!" and the old- ating @ Joseph Wheelock us a performance 1 with absurdity, And Incoherent, the —_ action on all occasions, leading absolutely devoid of de- houement and teeming with bath- the plot exclted merriment from the second act to the end of the play. Jean Maras, the murderer-hero, had kept house”—as Mrs, Tanqueray would yay—with the utiful Mile. de la Hate. He was married, but he skittish- y murdered his first wife and was forth- | with sentenced to twenty years beyond the seas, IH» had a child, Terese, by the murdered wife, and another, M. ion, by Mile. de la Hale, While he was 1 prison the Hate charmer married M, Margemont, who had prosecuted dean at his trial, and she had a ehild by him called Genevieve—or, as every member of the cast mispronounced 4t, “Jonnervieve.” Such a chaos of chile Iren! It muddled me, I had to say to myself Jean plus wife equals Terese; Jean Hale equals Marion; Hate plus mont equals Jonnervieve, up to be naughty and with big Charlie in order ull grow up good, Of Opportunity for quarts of cheap Marion was the Image of Jon- nervieve, who fell down a precipice and Hed, 80 that Marion could be u stead. Itig Charlo fell in love with Marion, and it was only after fearful uggies that she was saved from him, When he tried to kidnap her the audi- burst into loud guffaws. Poor Efe aunon was whipped up from the stage, a hood thrown over her face, nd big Charlie, concealed behind a canvas tree, fled away with her. Noth- 80 primit has politan stage. ‘Then deighttul bit of involun- t in the scene between Mme. de“ Margemont and Marlen, when the latter was trying to palm herself off as Jonnervieve. “Play me one of Shopang’s Whopin's) rey * said mommer; “the one you used to play.” Poor Marion! couldn't piay the plano. She sald xo, hen," cried mommer, “you are not my Jonnetvieve, You are an imposter, 1 rate you.” “And all on account—not of iitza—but of poor Mr. Shopang's reverie, Miss Elita’ Proctor OUs ‘struggled nobly, and showed us once more what @ really admirable actress she Is, In the second uct she scored a veritable triumph, by her natural, Duse-like micthods. No woman on the stage to- Jay could have made as much of so excerable a part. Miss Os towered assoc!) The cast con- eople ‘out of their ele- lock ruined the role of ntiquity of his In his agony his favorite idea his head, wag his arms ss closely together. Miss was Insipld as watered UM. Yorke failed to make out of big Charles. Miss Suth- 1 Wag y Vulgar as La Saut- Hema Pr woman is never vulgar 1 Misa Dleanor Carey occasioned an purst of mirth by suddenly changing mpassioned tones to those of @ man, Her “Get up!" was a thing worse Ima drama the and tissue of No Bow- |simply a the plo layed nowher de Marg herotes, hods. was to wy and keer Me Shan mulls and ny thin he her sherw marvel. And what sh sale massa M1 be satd of the whole- f the French language? Why produce plays with French ac- if nobody ean be found to unfortutiate actors and ac- h the labyrinths of pro- This Clty of Pleasure" 1s venly, and quite unworthy of the Metropulis, 1t 1s alvo coarse, Inhuman and maudlin, Tt isn’t even” a peanut melodrama, ‘The ttle gallery boys would roar at tt as Inconst ly rid Julous. ‘They wouldn't be abie to digest jthelr peanuts, which would stick” In their In’ the fover of new produc- ns "The City of Pleasure’ will be tor- en, Bye Miss Otis—an- actress mit is a privilege to watch—can- save It, ALAN DALE. BLOOMERS, ‘ ) ZF 4 A ¢ of the Bostom Bicyclieane, The Doro! White chi of overlapping cored lace. plattings, ack and yellow ostrich plumes; w under the raised back. m at the side and ‘The Girl in Yellow. An Amer n girl who is passing the season in London is called “the girl in yellow,” because she wears nothing but gold color in the evening. A gown re cently worn by her is thus deseribed: It had a very full plain skirt of yellow corded silk, while the bodice was fash- foned of accordion: lted chiffon, with a slight fulness to the front, It was trimmed with bands ef gold galloon, three of them being drawn down ¢ the front of the core while one bu was placed down the sleeve, reach to the elbow, Two rows of this adornment were used in the back, and the entire effect of the glistening gold against the soft yellow eh on Ww charming. It was finished around the shoulders with a narrow band of ma bout, and this was also used around the sleeves, at the elbow Yellow satin stockings and slippers, with a tiny gold buckle and a great fan of yellow gauze, completed the toilet, Clothes Do Not Make a Lady. A woman need not be dressed in silks or satins to be stamped a iady; Indeed, she will look exceedingly vulgar in such richness if she lacks the possession, so nocossary, of graceful bearing and gool breeding. Moreover, a woman may be as plain as possible, but let her gown herself modishly, not expensivel sert her good taste in her clothing, an then carry herself with an air which | speaks her own perfect self-re her perfect consciousness that she fe a. lady; let her step out in the gracefully athletle way of the fashlonable woman of the day, and hold her head proudly, and ten to one the result will be she will be called “a deuced fine-looking woman, Mins Gould's Pet Flowers, Carnations are among Miss Helen Gould's pet flowers, and in her green- houses at Lyndhurst there are reported to be forty-five varieties in bloom all the year round. One, a white and red striped blossom, has been named the Ors te and yellow flowers yy, | sHteten Gouta.” Among the maay othor p hat trimmed with a series | beautiful blessoms produced under the in butter-col-| cars of the accomplished gardener in | charge orchids hold @ prominent place, jand it is his boast that he has had 600 in bloom at once. Despite the array of brilliant floral beauties always at her command, Miss Gould 1s said to prefer Violets and pansies fer herself, and @ pot of flowering mignonettes is always in her epecial sitting-room or boudoir, A Woman's Tongue. “The boneless tongue, so small and weak. Can crush and kill,” declared the Greek. The tongue destroys a greater horde,” The Turk asserts, “than does the sword.” The Persian proverb wisely saith: lengthy tongue, aa early death. netimes takes this form instead: on’t let your tongue cut off your head.” “Tho tongue can speak @ word whose Say the Chinese, “outstrips the steed,” While the Arab sages this {mpart: “The tongue's great storehouse is the heart.” From Hebrew wit the maxim sprung: “Though feet should slip, ne'er let the tongue." ‘Tho sacred writer crowns the whole: “Who keeps his tongue doth keep his oul.” To Make Good Apple Dumplings. Pare and haive the apples and core them; allow one good handful of flour to a dumpling; rub in a little salt, some lard the size of a walnut and a good tea- spoonful of baking powder; moisten with ice water; have water bolling hot; roll tha dumplings after putting them to- gether the flourbox so as to avoid them sticking together, then drop into | the boiling water; boil moderately twen- ty minutes or half an hour, This will make four dumplings. Serve immedl ately. Chow-Chow. One peck green tomatoes, sliced thin and salted down over night, the next morning drain off the water, then add elve onions, sliced thin, one ounce ound black pepper, one-half pound low mustard, one-half pound of mustard seed, one-quarter pound of y seed. Put alternate layers of atoes, onfons and spices into @ kettle and cover with good cider vine= gar, then boil two to three hours or until tender, Quince Honey. Four pounds of sugar, three pints of water; boll ull it gets hard when dropped in ice-water. Then add two large grated quinces or three small ones that have been quartered, and all cores and specks removed; boil about fifteen or twenty minutes and put In tumblers, while warm so the scum forms better, LETTERS. [Tis column ts open to everybody who has a complaint to make, a grievance to ventilate, in Formation to give, a mivieci of generat interest to discuss or a public service (0 acknowtedge, and who can put the iden into les than 100 worda Long letters cannot be printed. | The Business Man and Busines: Woman, To the Eilitor: While the chivalrous gentleman prot to be "A Lady's Ch ( t be elyil to all and acknowledge himself as Tho Laites’ Cham plont I myself am a lady's chsmpion, and Would always sacrifice @ seat for “her.” 1 am hot Jealous of woman's Invasion 0 usiness world, but now that ehe is there, whe must not, wason of her sex, to monopolize tt must business courtesy; no no love, Certainly no revenge ts planncd and no comfort obtained by keeping her stant- ing. If she secures a reat Dut T still contend chat mould not expect any adve ness man, A FIN-DE. Learned the Vile Lan His Father, no expect riot I welcome her to it, the t buries woman ver the busl- <TLEMAN, unge from To the Edito: ‘As T was passing Vernon avenue this morning T heard a little boy of about five years ojd call his mother vile names, und EroWN person to Feprat, Set tressed on account of tha child's conuct, A sympathizer, took the liberty of @ child how Jt learned such language, Tho reply wea: "I always hear papa call mamma t names"? T would Like to know what can be to punish and break a child from exch bad Ita? Also what opinion you have of the fashort Brooklyn, N.Y. for any respectable Valkyrie 11 To the Eiitor I was astonished to reat your efiiorial about Valkyrie III, You say it ts practically an Ameri- an boat bullt In England, Now ton built tn Scotland, and, more than # not an Englishman worked on it? And ts Mr, Watson not a Scotchman? 1 don't understand what you are dr waving tt ia an Engileh-bullt boat. y sro by that Tama and T want my, to get all the credit ts due to tt, T. Me. D. a Scotch Rontt t count Is This Being on Guardt To the Edi: ‘There was great ex. about @ P.M. at Ay ©, near Fifth atrect. Two thieves » scovered by a woman tn her house, They Jumped right out thr dow and ran across tle wail dal was 6 policeman on sight, They w tured by je of brave cltizens, who brought them to the atation-honse, Do we call this bein Wolnestay ta 87.50 Own, Imagines Already Her > per month, have mispriated his desires ne wite he requires-it ou dozen at the pr sh ono that he wishes, He wo because tn ht to be 1 would Like 1 find me ¢ 1 pre hand over the entire amount unaffected by expensive d tripa to ¢ hot days, and as full m a tt be only tte to me every n Is welt nt, ae tas it for theatres, oF sultry, y deat tho Ngure, No, dearoait I thought for the 1 ment you were really ay own loving bubby, and I your darling petsy-wetsy. We shall have to live on love, Frank, and by careful cal- eulasiva 3 fad J should be able to allow you fo nitne week for your pocket, and by studying econom: If not live Like lords, at least save a few dollars monthly. Do not think Iam bluffing you, Frank, T misure you I am not, I am writing from ex- pertence, and my eyes tmagine that $7.50 of yours already {n my grasp, the luauriant home which £ know you will furnish for me, the bilss of meet Ing you on your return from work (excuse me, I mean business), the Joy of watching you eat from our bountiful table, the pleasure of blacking your boots after you have finished your meal and I have licked the dishes, and to mend your clothes and wash your shirt, If It rune to of after you have gone to bed, to make you pi the next day, But I cannot trust my further, The thought that all this happiness may be mine sets my longing, loving, aching heart throbbing with an unde seribable happy pulsation until I recelve your wer. When you reply please tell me what your fighting weight ts SELF-RESPECT, How She Can Get Nid of Him. To the Fultor Having nottred tn a recent insue of your em teomed paper Violet's protest against the unap- Preciated attentions of Clarence, I take pleasure in gietng ber advice which ts the result of ex- ver If she 19 real anxtous to get rid of the poor deah fellab she must pretend that she adores him, that she is jealous of him and that she want him to speak to any other girl. She so Insist on bis calling evory night, and ¢ should fall to show up make him give ount of bimeclf. It would help matters rably {f rhe were careiss about her dress her halr, appearing to intentionally neglect, these matters, She should assume an air of pro- prictorsitp over larry, and give him to under viand by her general conduct that she didn't need to bo particular now that he was all her own. This u never fails to chill the antor ef the most violent lover, and T think that {f ape piled to the troublesome gentleman in question his visite will in a very short time become Ifke thove of the proverbial angel—'‘tew and far be tween." JACK BERNARD, The Nike Make To the Mditor: eC. TL Po" takes @ eonsible of the BM mas far as gi re concerned. Ib 9 much that homely girls ride the bicyele, but tho wheel makes them appear homely at all I do not beliove there ts @ man of com- w admit that a girl looks ndeone astride a bieyele It Is not pleasing » the eye from a masculine polut of view; there {4 @omething uncanny about tt to eee @ girl working her lmbs f 0 ie worth; whether In skirts or bloomern tt is the same, Why have the tri boen discarded the fair sea? Surely they are mora eultable and becoming. ventable f Imagination an should in cane ana Women Homely, cycle q ray mon sense who will a Her Folks leve Plenty of Work, To the 1 y o any re: n should work mn owhy @ young girl ming home, whem e tll § o'clock evenings, Thurelay evening? Her that store girls have no things without lle sho {6 given rome there (9 no reason why Do you not think she ANNIOUS FRIEND, she Is h wed In am 1 to think many for Amateur Musician tunity ts offered a to any you al ability to join @ The following instru Clarinet, piccolo, cormety Intora can be aK, started or b a STON, ty street et Little Game, wootg for a party of ate ly and play poker for @ {ours call tt gambling ute of Uuings for us if we Beep eads J. Mel. Davin &