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one MES acon Published by the Press Publishing Company, ‘8 to @ PARK ROW, New York. FRIDAY, SEPT. 6, 1895. WORLD @@ BRANCH OFFICES: (WORLD UPTOWN OFFICE—Jonction of Broat- way and Sixth ave. at 124 ot. SVORLD HARLEM OFFICE—106th wt and Matt. son ava, BROOKLYN—900 Washington ot. OMILADELPHIA, PA.—Prees Bul! aut ot. WASHINGTON—T0 Meh PER DAY. 64 abolition of capital which is the wild dream of desperate followers of the red flag. Beyond causing the death of one man, making his own execution sure and leaving behind him an example of pur- poseless violence which would possibly have found crazy followers, the wretch- ed bomb-thrower in the houre of the Rothschilds would have, accomplished nothing. It ts this blind following of a fanatical impulse, this unreasoning rush to crime, this murder-madness, that makes vio- lent Anarchists the most dreaded of European blood-seckers and the most diffeult to deal with, They are not men of thought. Their absorption tn one idea has bent all thelr faculties one way and made them incapable of thought. They seem at times blind to ordinary risks and fears, yet their methods are invariably those of un- speakable cowards, It ts one of the large blessings vouchsafed to our own country that we are so free from the presence anf works of these mentally and morally unbalanced desperadoe Warner Miller can't seo any virtue in Mr. Billss's anti-Platt State Committee | plan. Is it possible that thone breast- works have obstructed Mr. Miller's line of vision? THE GREAT YACHT RACE. “The Evening World” has made all preparations for giving its readers to- morrow the first and fullest reports of the great yacht race between Great Britain and the United Stat Here are some of the agencies de- pended upon to produce such @ re- sult: The monster balloon, as usual, in midair, the reporter will have a bird's-eye view of the whole course where THE EVIL OF 100 MANY LAWS. Senator Hill talked to the farmers of Chemung Cogpty yesterday. But there were other People within the reach of his voice, It in estimated that he had at least 20,000 hearers when he used these words: ‘The average legisiator appears to have a mania for the making of laws, to which, like the Ing of books, there seems to be no end. In ry plicity of laws there is no safety; there 48 contusion, @ tendency to corruption, a waste of valuable time, unllkellhood of thetr enforce- Ment, and general demoralization. It encourages the people to seek for real or tmaginary eviin et society a remedy through legislation which ft {= usually impossible to furnih, * * © Lewisiation cannot change the course of nature or much affect the natural laws of trate, (ood Jaws may ald us, apd bad laws may retari us 4 sreat struggle of life, but good, vai, oF ferent laws do not control the seasons or thape the dispositions and habits of men or Teguiate the Incidents, the fortunes or the misfortunes of 1 These are good seeds of political and eitisenly thought, Their sowing was timely, and it is to be trusted that they fell upon good ground, They ought to help the State to secure, later on, a richer legislative harvest than that which came with the last reaping. In all 1,049 separate laws were garnered at Albany last Winter. There was some Good wheat, the larger part of the crop was pure chaff. Quality bore no pro- Portion to quan‘ity. The next legislative season should be Gifferent. There is really more room at Albany for repeal than for fresh enactment. Few new laws are needed ‘Those that are passed should be in the interest of nobody's doctrines and for the promotion of no selfish individual nor corporate alms, Law's only mis sion is to make easy, plain, fe and simple the government of the people by the people and for the people, It was hardly expected that the Span- fards in Cuba would follow a wholesale laughter of the news of battle with the tergible massacre of a@ village popula- tion, ONE OF THE “ Bore. As women grow old they grow wise. As men advance in years they lose their heads and grow giddy. The trouble with the men fs that they all make the same mistake that Oliver Wendell Holmes made when he wrote his poem about “The Boys: re twenty! who says that se more? He's tipsy—young Jackanapes—show him the door! ‘Gray temples at twenty? Yes! white it wo please Where tho snowflakes fall thickest there nothing can freezi There are too many Oliver Wendell Holmeses with the frosts of several scores of years on their heads going @round imagining that they are still frisky young boys and will never be men, One of them has just been heard from in Indiana. He lives at Evans- ville and is seventy years old. After Aifty-two years of married life his wife 4s now suing him for divorce on ac eount of his fondness for another wo- man. There is giddiness for you, with a large G. We suppose this septuage- Rarian Lothario thinks himseit still in the boy class, and could recite Mr, Holmes's poem with joyous gusto. Despite the League of Republican Clubs, municipal home rule will con- tinue to be the issue in this Fall campaign, THE UNTRINKING ANARCHIST. Suppose that bomb-thrower in Paris in killing yesterday had succeede Baron de Rothschild, What then? There would have been one rich man the less, but his riches would «imply have fallen into other hands—into hands already full to overfiowing. would have gained nothing, There "would not have resulted from the crime | of murder even the most inconsidcrable and whence he will send his observa- tions by @ special telegraph wire into “The Evening World” office; A reporter and a speclal telegraph operator on board the Commercial Cable Company's cable repair steamer, which will lay a cable out to the atart- ing point, whence despatches will be gent direct to this oMce; and A tug with reporters and artists aboard, From this tug trained pigeons will be lberated as usual at ail races. Mere also will be stationed a naval signalman, who will vessels. of the of transmit the From this tug glso Japan- fireworks will be set off as signals to other observers. Besides all this, every vantage point on the New Jersey and Long Island shores will be covered, “The Evening World” be first and best, ive from other signals the race and cable boat, ese day progress them to usual will Watching the erratic course of base- ball at the Polo Grounds, the Mournful rooter becomes convinced that for New York, anyway, there is no music of the upheres, SOME MEDICO-LEGAL RECKLESSNESS. The Medico-Legal Congress, now in session here, has had a great deal to say about sutelde, and several pre- sumably well-informed gentlemen have read papers making agsertions concern- iy > self-destruction and ite causes with the same serene sangfroidness that amateur astronomers display when they talk about the distance to the star Algol or Schiaparelli'a assumption of the existence of canals on Mars, Of course, the medico-legal gentlemen know all about it, or they wouldn't say vo; still, there is much experimenting koing on in the psycho-medical fleld, and allenists and neuropathists are kept as busy guessing as weather prophets, There is one man at this Congress, though, who deserves to have blue rib- bons tled on the hemispheres of his brain, which should be put in a glace case and exhibited in the Central Park monkey house, He says of the unfor- tunate who methodically arranges his business affairs before taking his life that “He ought not to be called a fool, His is rather an act of philosophic quality—the result of deep thinking and ripe Judgment—than the doing of an imbecile." If this medico-leszal expert's saying 0 makes it so, ail right; but the whole World, outside of the medico-legal crowd, will still continue to hold a con- trary opinion, and there will be a deep- Seated impression among those who J the gentleman's opinion that Max ordau ought to round him up and put him in just behind the band in his narade of degenerates, When a ghost appeared in the road- Way in front of a Delhi (N. Y.) gird bigyclist’ the young woman stepped oft| her wheel, picked up a stone and “winged” the white-robed apparition at the first throw. Friends picked the ghost up and carried him to his home, He may get well, It is feared that this herole style of treating wandering spirits will produce a marked depression tn the ine of supernatural industry, New York's ambulance and emergenc hospital service ought to contain no men who cannot detect the difference between @ plain drunk and a patient with the| fractured skull, The MeShay case at the! Hudson Street House of Relief ts added to a list of mistakes which was already so long as to be a scandal and an out- rage. Hope, without prejudice, ts the true American sporting spirit for to-morrow. Let feeling as well as conditions afford fair pluy to the visiting yacht and her crew. A model police station in Charles street goes a very little way towards equipping the whole department with the best modern applunces for police work, Of course the North River will wait for that bridge but New York is get- Ung Ured of waiting. Putting the green-goods circulars tnto the dealers. To-morrow night we will all know much more about the Valkyrie and the Defender, Anarchy No, the League of Republican Clubs did not declare for “the American Bab- > step in the direction of that overthrow- : @f wealth's axfsiccrecy and that) be o bath.” A real American Sunday would French won't prevent the translation of | THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 6, 1895. JOHN Vv. CRUM. ‘This is a picture of the fastest runner in America, He ix now in training at Travers Inland to meet the young Englishmen of the London Athletic Club who are coming over here look- ing for sporting laurel: be no more hampered laws than he Is upon the week. The New Yorks seem to climb hills only to show how they can roll down again, by arbitrary other days of ‘The light that fails tx usually found in @ Manhattan “1.” road cur. What! Not even a still small voice for Gilroy, in Tammany councils? “The Evening World" balloon will be ‘way above deck as usual. uterbach, mind of Platt. — EDITORIAL POINTS OF VIEW, Voice of Ls Short presidential campaign tlal third terms will please mont of the Amert- an people.—St. Louis Post-Disy Correct. legislative enactment can make the people observe @ holiday in any other aplrit thau the spirit they really feel,— ectady Union, mr Home Hale. ‘The Irish Home Rule question ts scarcely the tor In our politics It used to be. In ite place! das up the tasue of American Home @ particularly the problem of Good Government in our eitt nd the increased at- tention given to this question by the best minds of the country te anything but m banetul siga.— Philadelphia Record, American Labor. American labor hae no tnterests in common with Boctaliam and the red flag. It represents brains and intelligence and patriotism, not anarchy and revolution and destruction.—Rochester Demecrat, Gorman the Source of Pertl, ‘The silliest political statement that has been noted of late is that Senator Gorman is Aghting to keep Maryland Democratic, Maryland 4 atay Demooratic all right If Senator Gorman bad Kept out of the Aght.—Providence Journal. The New South, @ few years ago there were no lines of fteamera running from ports below Baltimore to foreign parts to-day no Tews than atx firat- | clams lines are sending thelr ships from lower Southern ports laden with Southern merchandise | for Kurope —Syracune Courter, TEDDY TO THE TEE-TO-TUM CLUB, 1 fear I've teen misunderstood; My only wisn in to bo good; For I was taught at Sunday: To always Keep the Golden Rule, My cope must for true goodnens try: No politicians need apply; All ain by them must eer be shunn’d; There must be ruption fund. Their consciences m to them the truths 11 tea these, to wit ever Joe, The truths To rush tha growler tn not nice; The Sabbath-keeper cuts no te Of story writers speak no 1M, But try to be a Christian ati By me and all my methods stand, And 1 will let you abake my hand; For true Reform forever try, For thus do 1, 1, 1, 1 1 THE SQUELCHED Port. —— AGE OF THE HEROIN The age of the neroine in nor; only alightly to meet the taste of the adi ing centuries In Shakespeare's day she was the beginning of her teens and at the time of Dickens she was only et Bhakespeate was very clary of mentioning the of Mis heroines, evidently believing that @ woman Is ay olf as she looks. At the restoration a bunch of dramatists came forward with an array of heroines, gi to morals, bright as to wit ant of @ youthfulness Most extraortinary in combination with the! knowing minds, Fielding, the frat seventeen, but she w a has atvanced Tealist, had a heroine of truthful to the The great romancera wrote of women whom they tell ua were eighteen and twenty, but whom we know were twenty-eight and thirty, Sir Walter Scott, with plaintive subiniasion to the popular desire, meekly deacrited his heroines as seven though they were really thirty. Rebecca w: youngster, though he says @o, Thackeray war too great an artist to eon form to the popular error and his two w omen heroines he touches Dut Lightly tn the first bloom of youth, waiting till they are past twenty-five before the real story begina Dickens has orly a few young girls tn Ne books—ella Wilfer, Dora, Dolly Varden. the Agnes sort of woman, strikes ong having never been young. George Filot fell tn with the popular error, Dorothea is not yet twenty according to the author when she displays a broatth of character lovging to @ woman of forty. Her only equal Gwendolen, sith her w Woman-of-the hea who fe described as being but twenty-one Modern feition shows an olfer heroine. Cather: tne in “Robert Elamere” ts Cwenty-aix, Marcella twenty-four: Misa Wil es herself to people of forty ant Mfty; Cable has his crecie heroines still eighteen (Prom the Somervilie Journal.) You can very seldom Qnd @ business man who te & hero to his offce boy p to the pr man’s righ! have been any man has left | The bloomer question (from the ungrammatical | woman on (he aidewalk)—"Don't ahe look bor- ria A man can really fove only once, af course, but he cam have lote of tnterestii be learning bow When people are boarding they goon learn that it 19 usually profitable to be on hand promptiy when ther hear the supper bell. ways tell @ woman that she looks as pretty as picture. Some pictures are ne upon which theWcltisen would mot at all beautiful, you know, | Inbor OUR WOMAN PHILOSOPHER, ident of the Court that answers court says that female criminals always put thelr ages in nines They are twenty. nine, thirty-aine, forty-nine oF nineteen, as the may be, Every woman prefers to tell « tit tle Hie to telling a big one. When a woman says Je twenty-nine that means she in in the She peta an near to It as wie can. Ag plutely unscrupulous woman would say ahe is twenty-three or five, A French Pri to our erimin In Chicago they have observation parties for eniid ‘The observation party invented by & mother who wanted (o Instruct as well In firat place all the furniture is taken out of one room, except a large table. On Uuintabl @18 put articles of every sort without any Drevension to arrangement. As many ax Atty dif- ferent articles are desirable, ‘The procedure tn to take each child tn the room alone. She in walked four Umes around the table and taken out agal fe then receives @ card and a pene to write down the names of ax m ae remembers, The child that re freatest number of articles gets the prize, Mrs, Carliste te regarded as the ablest general of all the women in Washington tm the wars of etiquette, and these are numerous and bitter. 1 Sido the Intricactes of Washington etiquette que tions of statesmanship and diplomacy are plain sailing. During the Arthur Administration Mr. Carlisle aa Speaker waa next {0 line of the Pr dential succession. As the wife of the Sp Mra, Carlisle beld stoutly to her rights of dence over the Cabinet lade Wives, as second lady ta the land. An the ot Senator Carlisie Mra, Je held her own over the wiv the Cabinet as strictly as w! was In the Hine of the successton, Wi tor Carlisle entered the Cabinet Washington novlety was deeply agitated to discover whether Mrs, Carlisie would abide by ber own rules, By these she would have to make the first calla on the Senators’ wives. The Cabinet women, on the other hand, welcomed her eagerly, belleving that under her akiiful generalahip the President female household would finally attain the rank to which {t had always anpired but never achtey- ed. Flisle's nomination to the Presidency Would be accepted in Washington, so wou hese matters become, as an attempt rather to fix Mrw, Carlinie’« social status, (han to satiety Mr, Carlisle's political ambition, — Curiously enough the letter recently published announcing Mr. Carlisle ax a prospeotive candidate for the homination Is sald to come trom Mrs. Carlisle. A clever, thoughtful girl among the strikers sald the other day: "The manufacturer is just as often as not @ victim, and it 1s we who make him 4 vietim, But Just walt until all the workers are organized, and, by compelling uniform prices, we WII release him from the view of the competitive m, which, more Ikely than not, t# rutn to On the other hand, wo propose to benegt more largely in the improvement of machinery and in the simplification of methods, If machin- ery ts to lighten labor, let it begin and lighte We receive more waxes than women €o on the other wide, but we work longer and we turn out four times as much work. exhausted old women at twenty Any more our Individual interest than it i9 the Interest of the public that this nervous, long-con- tinued atrain of work that American women un- ergo tn the trades should be lightened, “Of course, to you It seems that nothing could be any fairer Wan piecework, That Is where you are wrong, Tam a clever worker, but if my bot finda that I am earning too much money told that wor ts slack, and I find that there is only work for @ couple of hours or wo for me; my day 1s broken Into, and I can earn no more money than If I was a slow or poor worker. Perhaps we find that he ts sending the work over in Jersey, where he can get it done cheaper. Then he aya, Wright; If Twill do tt for the mame price, I can have {tA half loaf ts better than no bread, and T take It for the lower price, Those are only | samples of the way plecowork can be jugglod with againat the welfare of the worker. If It 1 @ question of the complexion, ane could have safely confided girls to Mr. Squeers, of Votheboys Hall; for, as to treacle and aulphur, hie! view sound, Pertodical draughts of sulphur and molasses are among the best cosmett Important to Delleve in the remedy onw selects, Faith ta of itself a motor: It inspires the heart that propels the blood, and senis tt through th fyntom on tts quickening, renewing errand, which {4 manifested in a sound, healthy akin, Happl- nese for the maine reason ts an admirable co Women are never no handsome as when they have recently become engaged, —— TET OF JOK It in A QUIN Es. He Had ‘Em, “Ha, bat ha, hat’ laughed the great detective “T haye them now. For ve day he had been on the trail, and had Reitner eaten nor alept He had done nothing but Arink Under the ctroumstances bis Jovoun assertion that he had ‘em bore the aimtlitude of verity, = Indianapolis Journal An “R” in This Month, The gentle oyster comes agnin, And shouta of Joy are heard, But, knowing what our welcome meang, He answers not a word. —Detrolt News. Higher Education, The Motorman-Yer, I'm a Yale man. In the boat and on the nine Td have had that conduc tor’ place by this time if tt hadn't been for making change and adding up. The Passonger—Who 1s your conductor? The Motormaa—Oh, he's a Cornell man. They study arithmetic at those amall colleges you know. Cleveland Pres A Real Hero, Unatinted praise wa must bestow On him who eweareth not When stepping on the marbles that Delight bie youngest tot —Detrott News, jearce Poltceman, to engage a detec The Very Business Mca tive. Ordinary Man—What for—to ui emergency? Business Man—No; of emergency in case of to find a Philadelpaia Press, eS TWO KINDS OF LUCK. pollvemaa, ow Jones lost a dollar and he felt eo bad, That at once he began to piuch, and when He'd quite recovered, he found he had In that thine saved a crisp new ten. Browa w n't 90 Tucky—he found the That Jones had lost tat ‘Ant when he was done wit Me found he was juat fy 1 and rout, drinking bie ait do} Chicago Record A CURRENT PHRASE, | pumpkin seeds a: TALKS WITH THE DOCTOR. Advice About Al That May Be Gately Treated at Home. To the Editor: Kindiy tell me what to give a baby of three Months, He auffera frequentiy from colle, Mrs. B. HK. Give him from five to ten drops of tincture of cardamom in hot water as required. ‘Will you please print the directions for making the tonle for tmproving the growth of the hairt The one I refer to con quinine, cantherides, °. GRETCHE! Take thirty grains of sulphate of quinine, one dram of tincture of can- thartdes, two drams of spirit of rose- mary, one-half ounce of glycerine, two ounces of bay rum and four ouncen of Infusion of sage leaves (sage tea). Ap- ply it once a day and rub it thoroughly into the s Ip. My eyes are inflamed and very sensitive to Light. What bail 1 do for them? L. H., East Eleventh street. Bathe them several times a day with a wash composed of ten grains of borax and two ounces of camphor water, and wear blue or smoked glasses, ry What tis take for ‘distress tn the stomach after cating’ M8, Plainfield, N, J. You can find a very good remedy in “The Evening World” of Sept. 4. avise me to do tor an ob- struction in the ieft nostril? It interferes with my breathini CHARLES M. Consult a surgeon and have the ob- structign atid a. ? Whenever I am out In the rain or get my | feet wet 1 suffer from rheumatism, What ts g00d remedy? M.D, W. Salicylate of soda is a very good rem- edy. The dose is ten grains to be taken | in water every three hours. You should | avold exposure to cold and wet. eee I would Mke,to know what I could ure to| soften and whiten my hands, LILLIAN. | Try a lotion composed of ten grains, of citric acid, one ounce of glycerine and ‘one ounce of rose water. Apply it sev eral times « day. Please tell me do you consider quinine «| god tonic? ow should it be taken? J.J, My Harlem. Yes, Take it In powder form, one or two grains before each meal. tonight, rap. | and rub your} What would you My feet are wery tenier and burn What can I do to relieve this Take a hot foot-bath feet with alcohol. Please tell me of @ good dusting pow. raw surface, aH R. Btearate of zinc is a very good prepa- ration for that purpose. Kindly print @ good remedy for colle in little children, MRS. L., East Side The tincture of cardamom is a very good remedy, From five to fifteen drops should be given in hot water re- quired, Will you please nt directions for using @ remedy for tape worm? GHG. Take one ounce of pumpkin seeds free from shells, bruise into a paste oy make an emulsion with two ounces of water. This should be taken in one dose early in the morning, fasting, and followed in about two hours by a good dose of castor oll, say from two to four tablespoonfuls, | Kindly tell me where to go to have super- fluous halr removed with an electric need AMO Any surgeon can remove it for you, be Please tell me how to treat a sore on my foot. Tt does not heal readily. CHARLES M. | Wash the sore with warm water and | pure white castile soap, dry thoroughly and dust it with aristol. J. F. WHITMYER, M. D. —— > TRE GLEANER'S BUDGET. Gonsip Here, a Hint There and True Tales of City Life, | all sorts of disguises, “THE GREAT DIAMOND ROBBERY,’ Money to burn? M'yes, You betch Ufe. The season is still young and lissome, but ponder over the reckless- hess that has already been manifested, Only a week aso Mrs, Agnes Booth, with the easy aplomb of a child buying five cents’ worth of mixtures, bought the Derby winner for $125,000, and this week Me. Kyrle Bellew, just to win Mrs, Potter's favor, presented her with & little necklace costing $32,000—though I believe the jeweller consented to a little less for ready money, Further- more, Miss Blanche Walsh has taken to herself » ccllection of diamonds with one big ruby worth $250,000, which for- tune she carries about in a long black silk bag. In five days of the new season, therefore, these theatrical fa- vorites have juggled with the stupen- ous sum of $635,000, Yet people talk of hard times. Isn't it bizarre? Miss Walsh's $250,000 worth of dia- monds, Including the ruby known as Heart of Life, have been invested by Messrs, Edward M. Alfriend and A. C. Wheeler in # local melodrama of to- day called “The Great Diamond Rob- bery,”" now running at the American Theatre, “The Great Diamond Rob- bery,” however, turns out to be not merely a melodrama of to-day, but also one of the day before, and the day before that. In fact, I feel quite con- vinced that poor dear grandmamma and poor dear grandpapa saw something very much like it, It quite recalls the days when we were young, tiddle-de- dum. Mesers. Alfriend and Wheeler, how- ever, are not Jn the least abashed. Why should they be? We don't complain because we eat to-day bread of the same quality that we ate when we said ta-ta to our nursing bottles, Melo- drama, like bread, is the staff of life. Impossible to get along without it, And “The Great Diamond Robbery” ts a rip-roarer, which will gladden the hearts of Swipesey and Pete, Oh, Swipe- sey, me boy, don't you fail to wee It, and take Pete with you, for goodnes sake, by hook or by crook, Your jolly Uttle innards will be tickled Into ex- ceeding joy. Messrs, Alfriend and Wheeler have lost absolutely no oppor- tunity to give you satisfaction. They have been prodigal with their kindness. It 1s a wort of detective story, Is “The Great Diamond Robbery.” You have seen Swipesey reading just such a story when his day’s work is done, You have noted the folded pamphie& thumb- marked and tattered. You have seen the keen ox-eyed look of Intense exclte- ment on Swipesey'’s face. Well, the new melodrama 1s all this, and a good deal more, staged by Messrs. A. M. Palmer and Edwin Knowles. Swipsey{ can see a bold, beautiful lady—danger- | ous and fascinating—who wants to get possession of the $250,000 of gems. She {x married to @ hoarse-voiced gentleman named Bulford, whom she uses to se- cure the diamonds, And when he di covers her woman's perfidy she gives him a dose of South American polson, which she tilts down his throat. And a good young man without a mustache, who loves a sweet young girl with a pale, pale face—just the sort of maiden Swipsey sees in his dreams—is accused of the crime, Oh, it ts quite terrible— quite terrible, Dick Brummage the de- tective, works up the case and wears Bwipesey simply, shrieked with juvenile, eanut-laden Joy last night, when Dick traced things down to an underground den, kept by a fat old hag known as Mother Rosen- baum. And after the awfully thrilling fight down there, when Dick Brummage appeared with a clot of limelight titil- lating his nose, exclaiming, “But how are you going to get away witn Dick Brummage?” 1 really thought that Swipesey would have fallen from the gallery down into the orchestra in his enthusiasm, He howled. He whistled. He yelled. It was worth the price of admission to hear him, Messrs, Palmer and Knowles have provided for Swipesey a recklessly ex- travagant cast. I am fond of the boy, but I can't help saying that it This (s the tale of “L' road woe unfolded to me by @ friend: ‘Yesterday afternoon I decited to | take my family to Coney Island, and for that| DUFpOse put myself Into the clutches of the ‘L’ | road at the One Hundred and Forty-ftth street | Station, Desiring to connect with a certatm bot I asked tho gateman the time to Battery place, | my destination on the road. On informing ma ‘he aided that { could save six minutes by chang | tng cars at the neat station, One Hundred ant Thirty-Afth street, and taking the Ninth avenue line, which starts from there, This I did, but was (old by the guard that that particular trata only went as far as Rector ati the Rattery trains starting from Fifty-ninth street. After & walt here of seven minutes by the watch another Ninth avenue train was boarded, only to fird that stopped at Rector. 1 that, too, Finally, at this latter station, 1 mauaged to coax @ conductor to | run his train as far as the Mattery—perhaps it wae going there anyway—and reache! the final mark in one hour and three minutes, elapsed) time, aa @ yarhtsman would nay,” - 8 8 “Ob, Its splendid tun," aad a bloomer girl, 4 I don't think the farmers mind, You nea, Just watch out for & promising looking cora field, and then one of the boys jumps over the fence and gets a Goren or two ears. It don't take to start a fire and bast them and they taste jovely. You get your bands and face dirty, but one doesn't mind that. Every time I see @ bunch of corn husks by the roadside now T know what {t means Every one almost has been to a corm party, and it reat pity that we dido't know about it eariter. ‘Rallway aurveyors meet some queer charactors tm thelr wanderings.” Said one of that {1k recent- ly, ‘One that I remember was a well-educated man and a fine elocutioniat, but when T met his be was stranded in a small ecuntry village, wiitre be was acting as clesk in the hotel, In the even: | ing the guests passed tho time telling stories and| used to recite for our benefit. But his memory was defective and he was very often at lows for the proper word, When @ lapse occurred he would tiride over to the wall, strike his bead againat it three Umer and exclaim: ‘Oh, memory, mem- ory, how thou perkecutest And the word ways promptiy forthcomin, eo 8 eThia morning.” sald a Kentleman in a bridge +L heard momo one calli i cai World! Ustra!’ and Tran to the door to see what was up. No one wae in sight but the letter carrier, yet as 1 turned to go back It broke out) gain: ‘Uxtra! Evening World! Uatra!’ Once more looking out I saw the letter man grinning ‘and pointing to ® parrot which was out taking @ gua bath a few doors below THE GLEAN ————$—_ — CLIPPED VERSES. ER, I've found a place tm his treasured book, With my verses of Jingling rhyme; For, with meire unhinged 4nd sentiment rough, He bath nevertheless Leon kind. ‘Mo bas clipped them out of the pape With his scissors so sharp and kee He has pasted them in with a daub of giua, ‘And they Ie im the leaves between, Lat the critica scoff tn derision wild, . ;a was foolish to go to so much expense for him, I admired the work of Mme. Janauschek, myself. It was splendid, She simply dominated the stage. She made all the others look foolish, I’ | seen @ good many stage hags in my day, but none that could hold a candle to Mme. Janauschek. Facial expression, gesture and every accessory were all wonderful. And I do hope that she will not be los upon Swipesey. W. H. Thompson «= Dick Brummage changed his clothes and his voice several times, He had what actors would call a ‘strong part; what non-actors consider rather cheap one. Miss Blanche Walsh, who had to say rude things about politicians, oblivious of the fact that she called the ex-Fatty popper, pleased Swipesey immensely. And the other members of the cast did no harm, Odell Williams, as a matter of fact, betng particularly happy. ALAN DALE BICYCLE LIGHT. Each might I stand beside the gate And taten down the street Whence dusky bi bring the scent Of locust blossoms sweet, Of Summer eves and Winter nights I wait In peace to see The lantern on hie bey: Shine up the road to me All cheerily the other Ighte Stream out across the dark— The lights of home, to which he rides, ‘The long day's happy mark. and yet, for all thelr cozy glow, Those lights are Incomplete Till the star upon his bieyete Comes shining up the street, © Hight upon his bicycle, Thou art my Deacon star, And, shining through and through my heart, Sendst grief and pain afar, T have no shadows on my face, Nor worry any more, To show within that light that comes ‘And lingers at our door “Florence E, Pratt, —— A COMMON RESSION, This is 9 new and pr chine silk, trimmed fon, fastening down the collar and waist belt are Grape Je Grapes are one of the have for Jellies. sidered by many as eve the cultivated fruit. 1 stem the grapes careful well. cover and heat slowly. and cook until the fruit and has boiled. Take fro squeeze through a jelly upon the stove to boil. Juice allow one pound sugar and while the juice the sugar on tin pans ai oven, stirring often. Ww has boiled steadily twent: the hot sugar and etir ri dissolves. It will make a as it falls in and melt qui stove. Have the glass perfectly cold cover the ating the pulp and skin and cooking each one by 4 French Laws Conce: It Is not generally kn France it is forbidden unless such be ordered prescription signed by a fled medical man, confided to under any pretext whate Grape juice mak and a tablespoonful of has been dissolved in a When cool add a half h Valence: lace. The vest is of Kilted silk or chif- Wild grapes are con- Put them into a preserving kettle, Stir frequently | the juice into a porcalaine kettle and set For each pint of Jelly boil up once and take from the standing them in hot water and pour the liquid jelly into them. When it Is of two colors and different flavors may be made with the same grapes by separ- be purple and the other amber. penalties for any one to give infants, under one year any form of solid food | Nurses are also for- bidden to use {n the rearing of infants thelr care at any time or ing bottle provided with a rubber tube, Grape Juice Sherbet. Put in @ saucepan half a pound of gran- ulated sugar and one quart of water. Let it boll a few moments, the fire and add the juice of one lemon from any dark, rich grape and tum Into a freezer and freeze, When frosen and before you remove che veater add the white of an egg beaten to a froth | with one tablespoonful of powdered sug Stir thoroughly into the shere t. Cover and repack, Stand in @ cool place for two hours, tty bfouse of nes r. Ginger Peurs. Ginger pears are a delicious sweetmeat, Use @ hard pear, peel, core and cut the fruit into very thin slices. For eight Pounds of fruit after it has been slleed [use the same quantity of sugar, the Juice of four lemons, one plat of water, {and half a pound of ginger root, sliced | thin, Cut the lemon rinds into as long jad thin strips as possible. Place all | towether in a preserving kettle and boll slowly for an hour, oy ce. A novel and attractive way to serve tartar sauce for fish is as follows: Take ;@ fair-sized cucumber and cut off one side; scrape out the centre and fill this best fruits we cucumber canoe with tartar sauce, Place on a dish some delicate lettuce n better than leaves, and on top of these leaves lay ‘0 make jelly, Plenty of parsley, Then put the cucum+ Hy and wash | ber on this bed of green, Cheese Crackers, A dainty morsel for the hungry half hour before bedtime is “cheese crack ers." Spread thin gephyrettes or salted crackers with a little butter and sprin- kle lightly with grated Parmesan cheese. Piace on a dish In the oven long enough to brown them a¥ghtly, ‘These will keep for several daya, centre, The of white satin. is well broken 7m the fire and bag. Measure of granulated {s boiling place nd put in the hen the juice | y minutes add | ‘apidly until tt | p hissing sound ickly, Let the Ficha Trimmings. Accordion-plated materials will egain @ used for trimming evening gowns, Marle Antoinette fichus of white silk muslin, edged with an accordion-plaited ruffle of lace or tinted muslin will be sen on many a dainty dance frock, es heated by Autamn Petticoats, Lightweight alpaca and black satin are the materials In vogue for Autumn petticoats. These are trimmed with an accordion-plaited ruffle of the material, and are lined with a very thin cotton or silk fabric, glasses, Jelly of the grapes itself, One will ing Babies. own that in under severe Novelties in Silk Shirts, Silk shirts are made in every way identical with those of cotton or cam- bric, They have the tucked fronts, stiff collars and cuffs of the washing ones, and are of shot glace, merv or surah, In fine twilled striped flannel also they are seen. by a written | legally quali- Pench Float. Beat whites of two eggs, add o: quart of mashed peaches and one cup of granulated sugar, then beat all to- gether tor half an hour, keep in re- frigerator, when cold serve with cream, ver any nurs- fine sherbet. Fewer Marringes in En Perhaps the new woman Is responatble for the falling off in marriages in Eng- land, For the first quarter of this year only 10.6 persons in 1,00 married, which ig the lowest rate on record, Take from gelatine that gill of water, pint of juice can put the idea into leas than letters cannot be printed. ) Soft and Valgar To the Editor: In answer to Frank Gallant’ fortunat Brighton Labor Day with two c: in such @ vulgar way as to to pass jokes about them, en, I presums were “pick x tent. Girla be more prudent, mand the respect of those you witt A respectable woman or allowed Bim to tako that these young women did. tapher in 2 New York office looking af « cigarette picture. ood, sensibl regret it st To the Editor: In reply to Mr. Gallagher's state that bis aide of the quest circumstances any, ‘The Third A pany's banding of Its patron Fageose And 4 wish to state vious conductor, but to the general bave notified the President of Met to date. TI as they are all willing to stop allow their patrons time to get ‘The anxious to Rot {tn line extended ‘ailowsé its patrons to get on then be “Jump cn. fa lengthened." The Company pelled to the hour, so many hours to be not by the trips; then there w sity to make up lost time and another would be a thing o! HENRY the Editor The ttle of olf maid Uke to carry, #0 through “Ti my favorite paper, I hope to vand. 1 am thirty-three year plexion and nice De Voc's Wen ‘To the Editor: About Aug. 15 “The Evening De Voe's prediction of the claiming ‘hat in 90 per 1 have xty ye For August he was off his pr days in thirty-one On the % tornado to sweep four State: hours, taxed. Everything was to be her Lat them curse my meaningless measure Wer he hath seen At, and that 1s enough, ‘Bo Give me o piece in bis treasure The Government can't sce thi he ald, “and five days from Deip wit be ma LETTERS. [Mia column ts open to everybody who has a complaint to make, a grievance formation to give, a subject of general interest to | diacuas or a public service to acknowledge, and who say that he fs right Girls are soft. enough to get into the 9.95 train from spectable woman in the car and cause the men The young wom- the young men held them on thelr laps and 4 and caressed them to their heart: carried on in her own home with her husband the freedom with her yet I bave let my influence be felt to fuch an foxtent that they would not allow me to see them Christias gir) and you will never The Third Avenue Cable Again, ted I Ald not aim at the gripman or! the way the public are handled, but sce no re- ere Is but one way to get ro-| Gress, and that ts by patromzing some other line, | "hird Avenue Cable Company was over- ing thetr gains and I suppose decreasing the time No time to stop. mploy {ts gripmen and conductors by} Lillian Wants a Husband, im something I don’t | and I know how to dress, People tell me that no man would be ashmaed 1 am a pretty good housekeuper. and keep Na such tornado has yet been materials ———SS=s De Yoo says he can pre correctly nine times out of tem for Atty years."" He cannot do It for one day or two He 1s one gigantic fraud and weather sharp of this century, Why then do you em. courage him In this blatant nonsense? BAYOU, Brooklyn, M. Ye kets at 42 Cent was r clear, hot day. dict “tho wea to ventilate, in- | 100 words, Low To the Editor These lines wei World adverti Am T going to le cold and shiver, Blankets at 42 cents, One cold, as cold as the frozen river, With blankets at 42 cents, Packed ine fold of th Blankets at 42 cont Chill-cut by the breath of Boreas bold, Such blankets at 42 cents, Girls. s letter I beg to I was uae ouples, who acted disgust every re- rxtract of cold ups However, To groan through the night with no sleep sively Blankets at 42 cent Blasted at last in one blast of blasts driven, And blankets at 42 cents! BLANKETLESS THE BLANL con. endeavor to eom- come in contact would not have An Adventure with One of Teday’s Men, To the Editor: While walkice up Third avenue last Saturday evening with @ few friends, we stopped in tromt of a photograph gallery to look at some photos that were displayed in tho showcase, when aud douly I heard some girls giggling in the hallway, which attracted my attention, But five seconde had elapsed, when a policeman approached ma, Haying questioned me as to what made me lool at the girls, and I having related the clrcume venue Cable Com, |Stnce® He fald, “Get to -—- out of here, or I'll Ste almply oute|@™44R you in the face.” T sald nothing furthe chat iu may pre | Out Walked on. ‘Then he accosted my friend NeFe on the opposite side of the showcas spoke to them and told them to move on. They walked away slowly, but presumably not fast enough to sult the Dluecoat, for he made & swinging blow at one of them, and had he not dodged the blow, something serious might have roaulted therefrom: as it was, only his hat was Knocked off. He then threatencd to arrest my friend, but after reconsideration thought best not to and quietly walked away. Now, I desire to ask whether anybody of his calibre should be @be Jowed on the force, FREDERICO SYLVESTO, Doesn't Think Dunn Knows. To the Editor: “Old Subscriber” ts perfectly right whem he that there are others besides himself whe express divaatlsfaction regarding the so “weather-casting” of Farmer Dunn, & Tam a stenog with eight men, Mea, marry a ENOGRAPHER. Jetter I wish to! ton does not alter | management, avd the Company of at a crossing and! t into thelr cars there by increas: | the cara It will Our line should be com: a day's work, and ‘ould be no neces cars racing after f the past, utd called 8, BCHENDEL, for one, and there are innumerable others, have very Mith. faith in the predictions of the Signal Service oMce, for there is hardly a that the weather tallies with the predictions giv forth from the Sign! Service in the morning papers. It 1s a total failure as far as accurasy fs concorned, and the public at large would be a5 well off if #ich an office never existed, F Evening World,"’ | wet a good hus-| sold, light com ¢ usband . a at i: Wank T'SSAt 8p MONEE Wan He Related to Hoebert spect and give me a nice home—a ma ‘ st pe | Ta tho Bitar wii think something of me and that 1 won't b aaa roe t can ansure his be von't make| He Must have becm a near relative of Corénee Z fay mistake, T never pay a cent for the making] Hosber of whom Max Adsler wrote: “A Coton f of my cl am naturaily very handy, and/ Of ours selzod an Egyptian mummy that was it BY cathe Oe brought into towa, summoned a jury, held tin a verdict of and charged the @ usual fee, with eompound Interest from Ue time of Moses."" AN ADMIRER Hin Friend Bill's Hired Girl, To the Editor Kindly end a Glspute between my felend BID and mo. Mis friend's wife hived a girl as @ do nd rhe earns $15 per month; but when @ vited she comes into the parlor a1 5 if she were one of id herself to the BiLL and & nummy, bro LILLIAN E, 1. ses unknown’ Guensen, World" weather cont. pubdtished for that of cases he Kept te weather now ediction seventeen 4 he promised « within forty-elght guest Is "the conversation BAM said ae adap but 1 say no, What a Filrtatte sweat before 8 storm formiug, how an appeal for| To the Editor: & big storm] We wish to know your idea of @ & em Aug 9 ond it will be @ bed ome” 1b really