The evening world. Newspaper, September 4, 1895, Page 4

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‘The plant, with ite gymnasium, its ball grounds, cricket grounds, baths and all ite other facilities, is for the public use, free to all comers. New York's public gymnasium, public baths, public Mbrary and other resorts which the city could well afford for its teeming and anxious population are long overdue. The metropolis can go to fchool to Boston and to many a smaller city in the matter of providing legiti- mate sources of phys'cal and mental training and recreation for its people. Shall it be much longer true that we | fall, in this respect, so far short of our needs and of our possibilities? ‘eIe RES worn Publichel by the Prose Publishing Company, © to 63 PARK ROW, New York. sss WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 4, 1895. ———————— GUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE EVENING WORLD Gueluding peerage): ‘The uniform idea has spread from Col. Waring's bureau to the Department of Public Works, In Ume it may «0 higher, Even the Aldermen may come to wear a regalia, And then, perhaps they will get a salute from Governor's Island, Metered at the Post-Oflce at New Tork as wecond-clase matter, ee Mar BRANCH OFFICES: WORLD UPTOWN OFFICB—Senction of Bread- way and Sixth ave et $24 et. WORLD MARLAM OFFICE—inta ot. and Madi- oon ave, BROOKLYN—009 Wasingten ot PHILADELPMIA, PA.—Prees Building, 108 Chest- fat at ‘WASHINOTON—Te8 1th ot TEDDY PUTS TEDDY ON EXHIBITION. Police Commissioner Roosevelt made @ savage attack last night on “The Evening World." Oh! Bo very savage! He clinched his fist, both fista, and stamped his foot, both feet, on the plat- form and said he waa indignant even at the memory of “The Evening World's’ ime—a crime than which, PER DAY. he said, “murder 1s about the only 6, GAIN OVER ET. THE WORLD'S CREAT MACUST CIBCELATTOR, 560,655 PER DAY. crime that can be deemed meaner or more infamous.” ‘Teddy was a living picture, with the legend beneath, “Making a Holy Show of Himself. The other day “The Evening World’ published on its editorial page @ signed sketch, #0 good, 80 touching, 80 sympa- thetic, that it reprints it to-day under the same heading, “The Law Is Bu- preme.” Read it. Teddy says the story is not true; that there was no weary | mother, no dying child, no Sunday ar- reat, no ice-wagon, no ice. Bure! He says it Is @ crime to publish such stories. ‘There was never any Little Nell, there was never “onemoreunfortunate,” there was never any “‘atitch, stitch, stitch!” There was never any touching story that was true. No! They were all just Agel, 1008 - - 000.088 per dy made up—thoy were all lies, The men Amped, 00h + ME per dey who wrote them were all criminal Augen, TH - - 0, per dey Oh! Teddy, Teddy, what an awful show dagen, Wh - 8B per doy you have made of yourself. From being a statesman out of a job Mr. Ingalls has come at last to be a tesman on the stump. LOST HI8 LOVE AND HIB 83. J A Stanton street fruit dealer bought =|. watch and a@ plush case and gave the Readers two to his sweetheart. He told her the thee for he eae hae eo seawtng | watch cost $9) and the case 84, and when Gremet and hove THE EVENING WoRLD |e thanked him profusely for the cost- srodled them regularly. Addrewa ehaaget an |) kit be waved his hand nonchalantly, Gis ao deaes, and with the indifference of a multl- x ee. | Millionaire giving a penny to his favor- re ee ite child remarked: “Don't mention 1 ON WITH THE BRIDGE-BUILDING! Now, women have a way of finding ‘Ten years ago there was ample en-| out how much the presents they receive couragement for the belief that by this] @re worth. The fruit dealer's sweet- time at least one bridge would have| heart has the weakness of all her eex, been stretched across the North River|and she took the watch to a Jeweller, from New York to New Jersey. Great | Who frankly told her that $2 was a larg. interests demanded {ft even then, Those| #mount of money to pay for such a interests, it was plainly to be seen, were| “turnip.” Of courne, the information bound to become marvellously greater | made her gad, likewise mad, and when within a decade. They have become wo, | her merchant prince returned in a few They are still growing in importance, | Mlhts she indignantly threw the gold And yet, to-day we are acarcely nearer} Watch and plush case at his feet, and the building of that sorely needed bridge | tld him never to show his face in her than we were ten years ago. front parlor again. Congress was first to block the way,| Benq 4 man of good business sense, ‘There were selfish corporate influences | he took the watch to a neighboring enlisted against the bridge enterprise. | 1007 to raMe it at 15 cents a chance, How much the desire of w certain great | 80me wretch stole it from the saloon, trunk Ine to continue to be the only| "4 bow the poor fellow mourns not railroad having a direct entrance into| N'Y the lows of his girl, but of his $2 New York had to do with the non-action| #40. There Is w lesson in thin for all of Congress is a matter of general un-| YUM men In love. When you have $2 @erstanding, if not of definite know!.| !® YOUr pocket, burning tt, don't buy a edge. Congress finally had to act, how.| ld Watch or diamonds earrings for ever, and it scemed as if the bridge | YOUF #weetheurt with It. ‘Tako her to might be forthcoming. But then the| Comey Island and blow the two in on War Department turned up with a neod.| faukfurters and high hats of beer. leas objection to certain plans and there| THEM she can't complain that there was was more obstruction and a further eall|®"% Marepresentation about what you for Congressional action. Seve ery Now, with all other obstacles cleared away, private property owners are com- ing to the front with objections to the location of the New York end of the bridge at aay point which will affect their particular property. If they all get their way the bridge won't bo lo- cated anywhere. It is about time to stop humoring the selfishness of corporations and of per- eons. That bridge has got to be built. Let that be the absorbing idea of its projec- tors and of the authorities who still have to deal with the matter, The place for ehe New York end of the structure is where the public convenience will be est served, Let that place be promptly Gxed, and thea—on ‘The Valkyrie is to be @ lady in white after all. Dunraven has many sympa- @hisers to bis distaste for the piratical black bull. ——______ THE ALDERMEN'S REVENGE. From this time forth a bitter, if not Bloody, feud exists between the United @tates Government and the New York City Board of Aldermen. The Aldermen ‘themselves are authority for the astate- ment. Uncle Sam has refused to burn $3.9 worth of Government powder in a Salute to the Aldermen as their chowder Boat will sail past Governor's Island, and the City Fathers, with wild and Geep resentment rankling in their hearts, have gone down on their knees and sworn to have R-r-r-reveng ‘We can't see why the United States Government should hold this threat Ught and unimportant. President Cleve- Mand should hurry from Buzzard's Bay ¢o Washington end call a Cabinet meet- tng to see about it. If necessary there @hould be @ new issue of bonds to pay for the powder necessary for the desired @alute. There ought to be some noisy @nd exultant way of informing the na- tion that it is not @ boatload of common every-day excursionists that 1s sailing down the bay when the chowder boat passes, but an august and majestic body of statesmen. If the Government doesn't quail and give in when it heurs of the Aldermanic threat, we move that patriotic citizens ebip in their pennies for « few barrels ¢f firecrackers to be set off at the Ba: tery or on Ellis Island as the Alder- Men's boat goes by. In this way di aster ty the Republic may be averted by @oaxing the avengers off its trail, A sclentific gentleman addressing a convention at Springfield, Mass. took @ hasty glance into the future, reaching as far as the year 1920. To his prophetic eye it appeared that London would, by the date indicated, be enjoying a popu- lation of 8,344,000, while Chicago would come second with 7,797,600, and New York would follow with 6,337,560). The other chief citles of the world he left out of the running, It ts hardly worth while for New York and London to lle awake nights over these figures, The estimat- Ing of @ census twenty-five years ahead of time has not yet taken its place among the exact sciences. Comptroller Fitch says he has no quarrel with Col. Waring. This is a cheerful assurance, It is, however, lt- tle more than a confirmation of a cur- rent opinion that the Comptroller's real difficulty is with @ disposition not to confine himself strictly to the business of his own Department, “Received 1,700 volts and is as well as ever.” The same could never have been said of any victim of legalized and per- fected electrocution, ‘There is a great deal in the “how” of the electric shock, As the season of closed doors and win- dows draws near, the smoky, dimly burning and unsanitary lamps on the 'L" road become again matters of deep concern to the public. It strikes one as singular thet in a reformed Police Department a special order {® necessary against raising cor- ruption funds. Is there a side-door stage to reform? It 1s worthy of remark that the Cor- oner who was surprised yesterday to find that he couldn't take ball for a per- son charged with murder was not Hoe- ber, Notwithstanding his startling perform- ance last night, there is Mttle lkel!- hood of Teddy Roosevelt taking his place in continuous performance, ‘The guilty always seek delay; the in- nocent demand a quick opportunity to prove their innocence, What is Sheriff Tamsen doing? ‘Wyoming's most pressing duty of the hour ts to bring to justice the white murderers of those inoffensive Ban- nock Indian: Well, the moon didn't disappojnt the @stronomers, Bhe eclipsed on time and drew no curtain of clouds, 4 WEW PRIDE OF BOSTON. Nay, nay, said the State Democracy to Tammany, it may be a very nice par- lor, but we won't trust ourselves even to look at it. THE WORLD: WED. WHY SHE Put his feet on the best furniture. WENT BACK T Was @ nuisance in the kitchen. O HER MOMMER. Cy <a ia Slopped over everything. Kept her waiting for him for hours downtown CHARLES A. CULDERSON. ‘This is a victure of the Governor of who looks very who hag very emphatically announced hia intention to prevent Fitesimmons from fighting in his State. Texas, Roosevelt and boomed him for Governor He has distinctly stated, in effect, that he is not enfor- does not appear. negligee, Corbett and Fatled to mail that same old letter. And had seven lodge nights a week. Was it any wonder she went home to her mother? but THE LAW IS SUPREME, (From The Evening World, Aug. 6) A little child lay dying in # room in ® crowded tenement-house. By the side of the poor bed wat a pale-faced woman. It was Sunday, but the woman's fingers were busy with her needle. So long as) there was daylight, seven days in the | week, she must sew constantly upon the garments which later would be sold by greedy merchants at so-called “bar- gain sales.” ‘The merchant would make his goodly profit, for the “bargains” were made possible by the miserable | wages paid to the woman and her tired | siste ‘The lttle figure on the bed stirred and a thin little hand was stretched out | towards the woman. “Mamma!” “What Is It, darling?" cooed the wom- an, as she put aside her work for a| moment and bent over her child. “Lam so hot, mamma, My head Is burning up. Give me some water, mamma.’ “Yes, darling.” The mother rose wearily and went out into the hall to fill a pitcher at the sink there. As she entered the room again she looke out of the window into the crowded street below. Many chil- dren were clustered around the back end of an ice wagon. The woman's eyes brightened. Sho went over to the bed, and, bending over the tiny figure there, sal “Ginlle, mamma will get you some tce, cing the Sunday law in the interests of} and that will make your throat cool, temperance. Mr. Roosevelt wants the police to walk upright. But how, then, can they look through the keyhole of the Sunday side- door? ‘The Bliss murder got out quickly. It it could be so with every murder, trage- dies would be far less frequent. The Grace Democ ‘acy has lngering doubts of the sheltering capabilities of the Tammany umbrella, There is a first cause to be diligently searched for, in that matter of the Sea Beach raitway disaster. The State Democracy ts not buying a gold brick this year, thank you, ‘An unobstructed course and fair play all around for Saturday’s Cup race, Who couldn't find life worth living in such a September? — THE GLEANER’S BUUG: Gossip Her a Hint There and True Tales of City Lite, “Paderewaki is well sald the long-d here on Coney Isiand, tot Thai plano acceptably here one & mere artist Bature, When a party of to the ‘Marscilluise hail from the Green Iai (A snap of the Bnger) must He must be a Jul Germs nd alt down to enjoy their beer do 1 tr And should some who atop to listen, in his pha er, “but down 4 he amount To play the be more than of human come in ¢ them do they hear ‘The Hoyne Water?” Nit, I cater to (hy customers, and [can reach thelr nationality and eharacter at a glance That ts why 1 havo been bere for fourteen yeara Lam Paderewak! and more, 1 am Profesor,’ every one knows me If Twas uot m dill ah! who knows what I might not be? I pla 2,000 pleces and over from memory, and I have played for epventy-two hours without taking both bande from the plano at once Yea Leer, ef course! eae “TL can now appre my wife's annual re marks about strawberry boxes,” maid a Brook lymite recently, "Steins to be found tn al most every saloon uowadays, and tho thog!t JOKE Vernet How radiant would be Ant yet weld miss, Bome mighty entertal ‘Boston is stirred to a just pride by the pening of & new city gymnasium, equipped, and declared to be eutdoor athletic plant in the ta confidently expected to do for the physical culture of s “There may be a few wooden-headed policemen, 3 Commissioner Roose- velt. Don't be modest, Teddy. Speak up for yourself, Just why the Prohibitionists, at 8: toga, should bave cheered I’resident —— 8 GATHERED IN. ty. Lite’ of @ rink of cool beer out of an tce-cold eartiiens ware mug 1s oaptivating to @ thirsty man But how diaguatiag to discover th ne bot tom of the mug i in the middie! There are honest steine to be had, however, and I ani very caroful not to be caught more than once by the same fraud."* THE QLUANER, Ite still for a moment, back.” ‘Then, with the nickel which had cost her two hours’ hard labor clutched in her hand, she ran down the narrow stairs and Into the street. “Give me five centa’ worth,” she sald to the tceman, He selected a plece of ice, weighed It and was handing It to her, when a po- Mceman sudlenly appeared from the other side of the wagon and laid his hand upon the man's shoulder, “L arrest you,” sald the policeman, “It Is after 10 o'clock, and it is against the Jaw to sell ice on Sunday at this hour, 1 will be right You will have to come to the police sourt with me. And you muat come, too,” he ade to the woman. My Uttle girl is very sick; T mustn't leave her," cried the poor woman, in great distress, That don't go,’ said the policeman, “Come along.” And she had to go. At the police court the feeman was held for violating the Sunday law. The woman was ques- tioned and told to come back in the morning as a witne: nen she was allowed to go. She hurried back to the tenement where she lived. She ran up- stal and ente 4 her room. “T was kept away and couldn't get back sooner, darling,” she sai “I couldn't 5 the ice beeay — Suddenly the words died on her Ips. She knelt down by the bed and took a Mitte wasted hand in hers, ‘Then, rats- ing her face, sha gazed up with dry eyes that yet saw nothing and wht pered “Thy will be done, O God! Thou knows est best Wor the child was dead. N. A.J. — MORITURE TE SALUTAN Upon a green ineadow a horse loves to graze, Whose maine ts quite long, and so are his days, And he muses and muses somewhat tn this etraim Ya animal language (whieh Jan’t quite plain) agod-by, ab, gont-by, I've retired from the fray, Vd love to go back, but I'm bound to aay ‘neigh! Machinerys taken the place of my youth (Por whtoh Tam sorry, to teil you the truth Your steam and your "bike," and electricity And petroleum, too, ace,’ No whip do they ne my blood both, But only a email application of o! Bo bury we deep, for youll never Vive afforded the world ant Ant, if you would write me a ft ep It atl we knew were good and true twixt me and you, Washington Star, For Appearances. “Why, woman alive, you don't mean to aay that fe all one sult? And for Summer?’ Yee; it takes a lot of clothes to eone look — thoro cool, you know roit Tribune. The Only Chance, “Do you think,"? said Chapple, “hat a ge! man ought to speak to hls barber when meets him on the street? Certainly,” wad Brigga, “It te about th only chance he bas to get a word tn 1 lapapoils Journa Strange # slish tongue We're wont « When we reture We give a man A Complete Collection, “Who are all these? asked the v “Ob! That album?’ said the languid yo man; “that ia @ collection of photographs of the only gitie 2 ever loved," Iudianapo Journal, anh, A would, piraps, raise Which ta rhy @ laugth By ‘Heo Provided by * w the new medicine Ba LA TOUCHE HANCOCK. Here put Im the name of your favorise bicycle maker. ———— - ILLUSTRATED ADVERTISEMENT, LID A yo) ly able to 6 Would lke to et hold of someth! whieh he could advance. Of good ad- dress (city), speaks in seven different languages, f disposition, of 3} its and of a joyous “LE COLLIER DE LA REINE.” The American dramatist will laugh and grow fut and healthy in sheer joy. Here's the terrible Decourcelie (Ww heard that It was quite impossible to keep him quiet) simply playing into the hands of that discouraged person, and After “The City of Pleasure’ one was prepared for doing it ostentatiously, too. the worst, but "Lo Colller de la Reini produced magnificently at Daly's Thea- tre last night, is—-between you and me— because it is irritating part about {t {8 that It is not trashy, and it who stitched In other tenements. mundoubtedly has literary merit, while worse than deadly dull. the worst, And the it has been cleanly Engilshed by C. 1 Meltzer. as heavy as dough. scene, and you sit there in silence wishing for anything on earth, You listen to courtly, polished speeches you see pleture the Marie Antoinette days, walt—you walt-you walt. will surely come, you tell yourself. but you The thrill You will either laugh, or cry, or gurgle, or Darkness then und nothing more. You feel that you are a Mariana in a Bad taste It may be, if I had to take a second dose of either “The City of Pleasure” or “Le Collier de la Reine,” 1 should prefer the former. I really should, At any rate, it moves Collier" in- spires you with a keen longing to knock grin, moated grange. you to mirth, The “Reine’ your head against a stone wall It ts in five acts and eleven scenes is also in 178. The “human Interes supplied by a diamond necklace, posed to have cost 1,600,000 livres, Queen iy In love with this necklace, an¢ In spite of which facts it is Scene succeeds opaque charming pictures—of sup- The OUR WOMAN PHILOSOPHER. On board Yachts all affectations of tint are laid aside, The colors of the aea are the white of the clouds, the blue of the ea and the yellow of the sunlight. Wherever else there may be Nellotrope and mauve, petunla and rose, green and crimsom, when the salt apray files and the deck leaps forward like @ thing of life there te place for none of these. Wherever the yachte are guthered the colors for yachting eulte are white and blue, White serge 1s picturesque and cheerful, but gets no auch rellet against the white sails as the immortal blue. © At Cowes, where the yachting season {s earlier than with us, blue linen has been in great Yorue, as it i# im France. In its frst froshnei With white collar and cuffs tt f= the smartest and most sallor-llke of costumes, But it soon musses, and when mussed 1t has that air of forlorn un- tidiness that everything about the trim yacht | puts to shame, White linen and white duck are alike worn, but seem rather amiss in our late season and winds from the open sea, The aallor 1 | collar as this yoar invaded the shore and borne 1] everything before it. The exaggerated effects of |More are not to be copied at sea, where the aspect should be trim and taut, One of the most interesting yachting sults 5 Like a suggestion from @ last century’ uniform. The wearer looks like @ feminine Paul Jones. This was composed of @ plain blue serge skirt, with a blue serge skirt coat buttoning over a white a The coat was faced with white as re coat skirt w facing beneath. yachting costume @ waistcoat. ra, aud the turned back to show the white Even on the more ordinary the open satlor-collar, the striped chemisette, the lanyard and the merry bow'n's whistle, which used to be regarded as part of a yachting woman's sallor costume, 18 seen no more, The yachting cap’ has alike suf- fered eclipse. The akirt is plain and not too a : = full, The blazer on shore has become the reefer excluims at intervals of five minutes, | ago, With it Ie worn @ blouse or a ett in staiely, etiquette-injected tones, | bosom ahirt “How beautiful!” sionally with, “Isn't it beautiful? Bu she 1s proper about her udmiration, and so meek that you feel—even though she is a queen—that you could forgive he She varies this occa- Women at sea have | ned that the stiff front, the col t men 0. and ¢ long appropriated, withatand the salt air and dampness as neither do flannel and slik. t Briefly the modern ya ting costume {8 close- recfed, smart, jaunty, compact, It is easy, ad- if whe would exclaim, “Hully Jee!" |sustibie, convenient, but still formal, and. de- Cardinal de Rohan, who is very wily|signed to present a smartly correct alr. Aw (only wily cardinals are used for stage | women do not pull at the ropes or steer and are purposes), gives Marie Antoinette the hemuelven agreeaties hey. de net mes a necklace in order to win her favor, She rough and ready siyle of costume. than had declined to buy it more advantageously in ships, Cardinal loves her, and somebody love: him, she compromises the Queen by mean: of Oliva, a young woman who looks so er that the two can scarcely much like be distinguished apart. The Queen's name suffers, and even the Cardinal believes that he has really met her. Hoe is arrested just as he {s going t celebrate mass, and later on Marie An- The mate- you will thus see, might have made a singularly interest- Decourcelle has ob- scured it by petty irrelevaneles, and by the time that the point is reached it no toinette's name is cl rial used in the play cared, ing drama, but longer possesses any interest. cat with a ra Like haustion, I don't wonder that Mr. Daly mad such a point of the clothes used in “I, Colller de la Rein Mrs. Potter was simply a dream and more attractive than ever, But sh Was really dreadfully bad from a dram- Her pulpit delivery diss atic point of view, was absurdly out torted her of place. sentences, Jei She 1 forth thi most commonplace phrases in a pertl- ously ridiculous wa and declined t vary the perpetual sing-sing monotony Resides her acting lacked of her voive. the touch of nature that the new ani the desirable school demands. deeming quality was he and to her credit be St said, attempts to emphasize {t dev She js an odd woman, Potter, She will not abandon visible mechanism that marr fer efforts. Her constan: schedule ts a disease. mood of the soubrettis by clap-tra to her ow because she thought that she could spend the money The And this somebody is Jealous, so . Decourcelle has played with this drama until {t died from ex- ‘They are lovely. of beauty—moro distingue, more piquant, Her re- earnestness, Her beauty, of course, she cannot help, she never ig Mrs, the too d her earl- In the lighter ed ING EXPRESSION, ° le e e “A Heavy Plunger.” —— THD ISLE OF BOREDOM, e As you sa!l through life tal ‘Away from the island that Het The The But And paing and steer too near Ile of Boredom, which all men fear. o ‘sland sets up lke @ shelf of rock woe to the sailor who lands at the dock offers the people @ chance to talk. a For they talk all night and they talk all day; And try as you @ill to get away, hey pin you down and they make you stay, p They talk of the things they have done and said, ‘They talk you awake and they talk you to bed, Till you almost wish they would talk you dead. n | And the queere: About the dweller thing, and one to deplore, upon that shor Oliva, Mrs, Pot-| Not one of them knows that he ia @ bore, ter Was out of her element. Her friv-| go gtecr away from that island shel olity was forced, and her efforts at Par-] ynat is governed, they aay, by a wicked elf, {sian chic, of the Rejane order, were| Lest you bea bore and not know it yourselt, lamentab Inadequate, Kyrle Bellew effaced himself in a very Phis excellent actor for the bad last 8 has done little else. It may be gallant, but it ts a pity. Bellew showed us how sterling a character actor he fs When we saw him as Mu) in “Charlotte Corday.” He has no such opportunities in “La Collier de ia Reine." Th members of the cast call for no special attention, They are merely bits of color in the Decourcelle pletu ALAN DALE oe CURE FOR INSOMNIA, Buffering mankind now ehould blame me night and merbing on thelr knives Fort ad @ cure unti Known to doct wak 18 as Insomnta at nig # pores of balr to white \ Misfortune, Lhe some of nus greile, cha! And 1 tett atl thoi seo) ‘That the way to cure incomnla 1s to sleep It off, Charles J. Colton for that terrible which keeps people tims crazy and turne gitig nothing who suffer (let the unbelievers Roi QUITE STRANGERS Now, ter Post-Expregs, Miss Summer Girl—You seem quite a stranger now after our being together go much at the seashore Mr, Beachwood—We did see consid- erabie of each other then, did we not? Two Meycle Comtumen. Here is a smart costume for bi It is made in dark blue alpaca breeches are put in in very full tat plaits all atound the waist, the coat ts of the Eton shape, the shirt of pale buft- ulverized suwur, one half cup of butters x well, then add yolks of four em, leaving out two whites for feing. Stir in the milk and chocolate one teaspoohe ful of vanilla, two heaping cups of flour two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, Beat the whites of two esgs and stir im | lastly, ne, Hints of the Moden, | The latest in sleeves is a modernized bishop, which is full from the shoulders to the wrist. it has a lining of fibre chamois to retain its graceful contour, White satin shoulder capes, velle@ with White or black accordeon chiffon, j are much worn at the watering places, The much-admired box plait now | forms part of the back of many of the fashionable skirts. Its garceful effect ta due to an Interlining of fibre chamois. Braided white’ mohair blouses are worn with black or dark skirts. Sorts.” ‘This is what the mother of the Bishop of Huntington did to cure herself of being “out of sorts," when she was fifty. | nine years old, as shown by an extract from her diary: "Took physic and con- sulted the family physiclan, all to no | burpose; suspected the disorder to be nervous; tacked about, put on great res- olution and made mince p! and found <2 myself no worse than before. Napoli Glan Rose bowls and loving cups, artistte and graceful {n form, are seen in the new glass, called “Napoli,” a New Bed- ford manufacture. The most delicate tones of green and yellow blend beautl- fully, the decoration being cleverly dong on the inside of the glass, suggesting the pure Venetian so strongly as to be deceptive to a novie Pickled Plums. Seven pounds of plums, four pounds of sugar, two ounces of stick cinnamon, two ounces of cloves, one quart of vinegar and a little ground mace. Fill a jar with alternate layers of plums and spices and pour over the mass the boiling vinegar and sugar. Repeat the Process three times, then scald the whole together and put in glass jars, Bolled ¢ Dumplings. For about nine dumplings take one- half ound of suet chopped fine, one pint flour, two teaspoonfuls salt, scant, water enough to make it stiff. Roll thin, Pare | A Cure for “Out o = shoes of Russian aiters of cloth the leather, and over them {o match the breeches. The other costume has a skirt and ts of brown covert coating with leather colored pique, edging. | Cold Catsup. | One-half peck ripe tomatoes, one pint of nasturtiums, one dozen medium- sized green peppers, one horseradish root (grated), one cup of galt, one cup of sugar, one teaspoonful each of black and red pepper, one cup of mustard seed, one tablespoonful each of mace and cinnamon, one quart of vinegar, all chopped fine and mixed well to- gether, Pack in glass jars, seal tightly; will keep one year. Mate for Lone Wom There 13 a woman in a Kansas town who has invented a new calling for women; she is a professional companion for women whose husbands are away. She will go to a house and be com- nd core uppies, cut in half. Boll pany for lone woman at $% a week, or! twenty minutes. she will go out for the night while hus- bands are away for 7 cents an evening. Sauce, She knows all the gossip and will tell gossip for 60 cents a night extra. Woman Ahe: One of the Springfleld census enum- erators is a woman. She alone of the whole force employed finished her duty in the specified time, In any kind of reckoning nowadays woman counts. ‘Take one-half cup of butter, two cups powdered sugar, one wineglass of brandy, one teaspoonful of mixed cinna- mon and mace. Warm the butter very slightly, work In the sugar and when this is light add brandy and splices. Beat until hard, Buttoning the Glove. When putting gloves on ulways begin by buttoning the second button, Then when the glove has been buttoned to the top the first button can be easily fast ened without tearing the kid, Devil's Food. One-half cake of chocolate melted in @team, one cup of milk stirred in choco- et thia to one two cups of LETTERS. to the following passages: Eccles. xit., 18, I= a this Is Solomon's beliet. Then read the expres- —— sions of his father, David, in Psl. xxlll, 4 6. [This column ts open to everybody who RAB A x4. Giunter delved Into the book of Job, but he complaint to make, a grievance to ventilate, im init have overlooked chapter xiv., verse 14; also formation to give, a subject of general interest ohorter xix., verses 25 to 29 inclusly discuss or a public service to acknordedge, and who | xor wilt we forget to look into the New Testes can put the idea into (cae than 100 worde Leng! mont tor language upon this vital subject, Here letters cannot be printed. | wo find much of tt in Matt, vi, 20; Matt. xxv, = [ft-2s; Luke xvilt, 16-30; Joba f1t,, 1-2; Johm After Death—Nothini |xh, 25, 26; John atv, 2 3; Acta tv, 1, a, Zo the Kaltor: Linten to the grand old apostle to the Gentiles im T agree Yn all ‘*Ex-Guard’? gaye about a soul. | 2 Cor xv., 42-68; H. Cor, v., 1-4; and ponder But was amused a little to aee after what he had Over J. pbs fy, 18-18; TL Peter tM, 10-185 fala he quoted from the Bible to close. I took J John tit, 2 and Rey. xty., 13. If man's soul does not live on after “his spirit returns to God, who gave {f,"" then the eo-called Holy Bible ts a myth, Josue of Nazareth was an imposter, cbureh bodies might us well cisband and morality te a usciess thing, as man goes no further than the beast when it dies But the soul imbued with faith {n God may safely rest on the above quoter tions that I have referred to. | B.A, BELLOWS, i 253 Greene avenue, Brooklym, | to nature and find in the possession of health and enjoyment of life to shrink from death 1a the natural spirit of animal self-preservation. When life bas run it# course, ond age. or dly- ease makes it no longer desirable, the fear of death 1s the result of beilet In @ religion which made a God {t called good and pictured him as evil. It aprings from the idea that happiness ts not @ reward justice renders a well-spent lite but a gift mercy may bestow if earnestly sough tn the last moment of conscious existence. On that last moment, religion teaches us, eternity depends. A good lite may be blasted, an evil one recrieved, in that flickering second. Demorallz- Ing belief that after death comes the judgment, and that that judgment te passed upon us, not for how we have lived, but for how we have died, Consoling thought for me that before death comes the judgment and that at death the Judg-| ment 1s over and the sentence has been carried | out. Yes, before death the judgment and the punishment and reward. 1p life we pay the pen-| alty for our misdeeds, We seek no mercy, for there .s none, Mercy never stays the effect from following te cause. Our good and evil dels follow us, not In another world, but here, close At our heels, and when we come to die we have no more to fear, for we have suffered all. JOHN G. HUNTE glewood, Concerning the Yachts To the Editor T stood on the doc! and heard an Engi Marria To the Editor: “Dally Reader’? would be ringes really wera {dea!, but unfortunately they are not. A man only sees the lovable traite im a woman until after he marries her, and vice versa, You know the old saying that we have to live with m person in order to knew them, Unfortunately for a good many of us the laws of this eountry do not permit auch @ procedure before marriage, So frequently @ pure young girl finds herself bound to « physical | wreck, @nd to me the continuance of such @ relation is @ crime towards their Maker and the community at large. ‘Dally Reader? doubts my marriage, Nevertheless I am married, and happliy, too, and I have what few women have, my own self-respect and the devotion of my husband. Mrs, RICHARDS, Not Yet Id right 1f mam FF Only an Amateur, Wants to Profession: To the Editor: amateur gain entrance to the profes T have been an amateur for a nume ber of years, and have had great praise for my work in character part, I can also speak the Eng! wh and Scotch dialects well, 1 have to & good many of the agencies In the city and when they hear that I am an amateur they will not even allow me to show them what I can do, or listen to me at all. It any of your kind readers will come to my rescue and tell mo what to do to gain my desire T will be ery much obiiged to them AMBITIOUS, kat Ernie Masin last Sunday man say: ‘Well, if Valhyrte does win, she won't get any credit. They will say, ‘Watson stole our ideas’ " A more absurd piece of rot was never advanced. How you, pro- feasing to be up to date, can say beyond my comprehension, ply beat you on your game, and you know it, and Herresho has deliberately built an improved Dritannl, and let me teli you, dear editor, Val- kyrle won't want patching up like Defender; sh tw ready to sail the rave to-morrow, and don’t for- tft. Glve the great designer his just due, and, for goodness’ suke, don’t lapse {nto those ungen- erous criticisins which characterized the previous races, Let the eagle scream after the race has 7 been won. and not before. FAIR PLAY. Another Man Got the Seat. To the Editor: Th Abingdon Square Concerts, Let me tell you #mall incident which hap To the Editor: : pened to me in the “Lt cars the other day. & As a fopreasntative of several bighly respected {Had a seat and two young ladies entered, 1 citizens of the ‘Ninth Ward, we are desirous of a| 400 to give one of them my seat, and one was trying to make the other sit down, time we had reached the In the meas mth street station, change in the programme rendered by the "Old Guar! Band," of which Prof, Gustave Rampone 5 and @ laborer entered and took my seat. & peer’ and “You Don't Find @ Girl Like My Giri| S¢P) 40 oid man or woman. KOCHER. Lent a Ring and Afraid to Ask have of late become chestnutty in that vicinity through constant repetition, Some wecks ago I for It. wrove him requesting him to render a certain | To tho Editor popular selection, but 40 far he bas not compiled | 1 am @ young Ind handily making my Iving With our kind request, To be brief, what we| and Inst May while atten a party Twas Yant ia popular inusic, but moc the same oll] asked by a girl friend of mina for a loan of my ehestmuts, JOUN L. GRIFFIN, | gold ring, which I lent her, Since that time sho has never worn the ring and If ar she hae The Bible vs, Immortality. lost it, whitch T valued Mighty as a death-bed To the Editor gift. WIL your good readers advise me tf 18 In "Tho Evening World’ of Aug. 27 1s a letter) Would be an insult to ask her for kt from J. G. Hunter, who would have ail mankind ANXIOUS. believe that there is noihing for them afier this| eee lite, be they ever a9 good and hopeful of a bettes| No Wa Fair Medals Vet, existence, by referring us to such passages in the | To (he Editor Old Tentament as Job vil., 9; Bocles at, 3, 6 19, Eccles ili. 13, 20. Undoubtedly they all refer to @ natural state, and, without taking up your valuable space with full quotations from the Bible touching the subject of man's Immortality, allow me to refer all doubters of @ life hematter Can you enlighten me as to the medais by the Wor wiribution ef s Fair Comission, whitey Attor a disagroeabie delay of nearly two years and 4 half was announced for the first week of the present month? Is it altogether a ‘take?

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