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th. THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 16, 1895. cheng affairs by a desire to maintain {DRAMATIC NEWS AND NOTES. profitable prestige in commercial and = diplomatic concerns in China and oe East. It fears the interposition of Rus he Gatety G ‘allure of “The Swordsman’ a and Mr. Daly— THE GLEANER’S BUDGET. Gossip Here, a Hint There and Tree ‘ Tales of City Life, “The Evening World's" Living Pictares. Mery of OUR WOMAN PHILOSOPHER, ‘The Moomer has appeared beto: one of the guardians of the pul Incident has started the The Gauiois moral Ampropriety. The againat, 9 verdict 1s overwhe! Madame Adam begs all women to ri skirts, and finds her argument in wisdom claims of song. son. between evils, Mme, Severine, the considers bloomers so ugly as the existence of the bieyclette, ‘wears bloomers tn called Comedie Francaise throw up horror and exclaim, dramatically, fdlculous'’ As for Mme the says must be quoted: approves ouly the flowing skirt, fe moral as well as aesthetlc. 1 bieyele and the bloomer the rider thelr “Brutal, “My arttatte tear thi outside which can only prove that the number of people Sir Arthur Sulit Gilbert caviai {fftuence was neither the mu! except to the few. advertised as such. was transformed from @ Quaker community one of the best thratric to hear the choir sing before; she went to hear love with the Captain. Bhe went #0 far consequence, trope cloth, and sleeves were of but the writer added: everal seasons’ old. these two girls do not appear in print, nificant, In the recent photographs then young women wear dark speckled shirt wi and sailor ha the manner of English girls, full effects to their bang: He was speaking of Maud retted by all the stablemen. bilt employ. tenderly ri have seen them all. when Flora Tempie made her great ra seen Lantern and the Amertcan Girl bring record down, but none of them In form, beauty of disposition, for hers ts one of the sweetest horse natures I ever saw, ever came near Maud red to Mr. Bonner by General Grant for Maud 8. was 8." It was belleved that the $60,000 of for Mr, Vanderbilt, who regretted her sale. The glory hi stables Small Hope Commodore used to drive, are dead. Aldine Early Rose, which were given to Frederick derbiit, nave heen long in retirement, horses that are now there are Mrs. carriage horses and the hacks of Mr. Vanderbilt, Mr. departed from the bilt has such a stable that the model of It attention. There Is Honor and Honor. ‘The law against selling clubs Is to be enforced, but, according to Roosevelt, only honorable means are to be ployed in the collection of evidence. ton Post. MUSIC AN See - Paul's.) i. (They don't mind him.) qv. Published by the Prose Publishing Company, [sin and the supplanting of British in| "A UeEY : Conversation lunches are a eociety innovation. 63 to 63 PARK ROW, New York. fluence by that of the Czar, ‘The United | AnehtervmA Gag Defender, At each guest's plate, Lenide the name card, te States Is not handicapped hy such eon | What with the yacht race and the No. | placed the menu, with « tople of conversation siderations, Its pathway is ax cloar as) 2 "Gaiety Girl company, the interna-| written bende each course, All conversation MONDAY, SEPT. 16, 1895. ita duty is plain. The situation as it| {onal bickerings of 1895 threaten to be| cept that pertaining to the epecial subject te SS latends is a reproach to America and a |tnemorable, ‘The alety’ girls have | forbidden, 1 appropriate trom ontemporary col- SUBSCRIPTIONS 10 THE EVENING WORLD| menace to Americans. im China. ‘Therm |Started in to make things lively for Au- | umn this outline story of « recent function of (indtoding portage): should he a prompt change In the atthe | gustin Daly, as it was intimated in] thie natere: “With the 4 the questa é © Administration at Washing- | these columns that they would do, as | @scussed the quertion, idea PER MONTH tude of the Administration " i " af ton and its representatives in the Bast, | #00n as they reached thir native land, | % apes = of ar P ; Ah oe wae and one authority declares that "the Se) SSE esvnies Srurely OL Se Seen An ex-Mayor of Chicago wants to] complaints are from so many quarters] and the say abe will clotne tell New York how to clean {ta streets. [and are 40 clrcumstantial that the Eng. | wat eetee while bicycle alee Giiered ot the PomOtice at Nee York Thanks, vut New York has found out | lish public, which hag so warmly wel-| Qi" joe mlwl mat daca ectond-claas matter, for ftxelf. The method ix simple, It /comed Mr, Daly and his company to OUr | \ersation turned towards the weather, and the SE ===] consists In putting a man at the head | shores, will expect an answer to them."'| coffee was sipped during the tntereale of @ ga BRANCH OFFICES: of the Street-Cleaning Department who] Among the complainants are Miss Mar-| heated discussion for and agains: woman put WORLD UPTOWN OFFIOR—Junction of Broad-|dors his city’s Work Instead of bis|garet Frazer—Cissy Fitzgerald's under-| trage,"* H way and Sixth ave, at 424 at party's siudy—Nina Martino, Miss Beaugarde eee : - ere | own man, whose wite was {o the country, H. 8, SANFORD, WORLD HARLEM OFFICE—126th et. and Madi, and twelve others. ‘They claim that] A® ‘ptowm man, whose wite was {o t i fon ave. THE HERO OF THE MARVELLOUS JAW. | Oi ty arrived in Amereca, atrangers| St 2Wa at his plano the other frening. to] This is a picture of the man who BROOKLYN—309 Washington et. When our soldier heroes—Grant, Sheri-|in a foreign land, no representative of YG ee ces ae le lives! “downed” Patrick J. Gleason on the lat- PHILADELPHIA, PA—Preas Building, 708 Chemt-| dan and Shermun—were alive we were! Mr, Daly received them; that they sat] l2 * Mt At tle striking of the drat bong ter's native heath, when bosses were Sood Le very proud of them, and the attentions |on their trunks for two hours walting | yin, 5 Shae eine the wires pace forth, An| KROcked right and left some time ago WASHINGTON—T08 1éth Ot. showered upon them by foreigners Kave | to hear from Daly, and were then told | favestigation as to the cause of th curloua| 7 the cause of reform. He seems to be us Kreat delight. They are dead, and|that there would be a rehearsal at the | syed tel to ne dicovery of the absent witeral ted of hin Job for he says he does not we dearly cherish their memo It] theatre the following day. They allege | winter cape, wrapped in newspapers and tuekea| WANt to be Mayor of Long Island City may be a long time before we will again] that they had to look after their own] away in the front of the plano, over the pedal] @M¥ more. Gleason is going to run for have fe co-soldiers like them, because It] trunks and seek thelr own apartments; | attachments The garment had been snatehed| the office again, which may have some may be # long time before we will have | that although they were engaged to play | from its repose in a cedar chest and put tnto| thing to do with his former competitor's LSUNMERESTET RIT: any war in which United States!in towns for never less than a@ week, | its queor hiding place as the remult of ® bappy, | unwillingness to be in the fight. PER DAY. troops will engage The people of this|they were marched off to seventeen one- | anti-burglar last thought ee Oa 6,47 GAIN OVER JULY. country seem fully conscious of this! night atanda; that they met with the! 0 ot 8 4 ule SOME GIRLS AND OTHERS. sel dnt AO permanent peace condition, for they |greatest discourtesy everywhere; that ae tye ge hoes A a | aetny anew nixte 1 THE WORLD'S have turned their thoughts and hearts| salary day was changed so frequently id Gund ch ibe Whe dated teil i wea f to civilian heroes, a few of whom are|that sometimes they did not get their Wace. telned aa APE ANE ‘eel fy ges Prose and Veree. The most populas of all, probably, 18] the rules in the theatre and on board | {ie 0 OMe | Tae ene ced to| fam in love with a young lady of eighteen ' Dr, Chauncey M. Depew, who 48 Just} snip were quite Insulting in their sever-| iq oi4 Sept. 30 by order of the executor, it] Summers who I Know loves me, and we have ‘ back from Europe with a new Kit of|\ty; that they were threatencd with the| was in the Pond house that the Gott Club had ite] DO together om many occarions to parties and PER DAY. gee se a large and pence stock | most arbitrary fines; that the girls had] peadguarters last year an4 opposite this property roth fend we a ie Fig tone en — hatin = of fresh experiences with princes, po-lto sleep two In a berth, and that they|G, M. Hutton ts Qullding the most expensive old a gos sition, can prot } ‘This EXCEEDS the COMBINED tentates and promiscuous social and} were told not to “strike,” because If] private residence ever erected in this country, | Comfortable home for my sweetheart, but her CIRCULATION of ten New York political Hons on the other side, The|they did so they would have to shift rer) parepts aay they will not consent to her marry- newspapers, of, to be more specific, | Doctor's forte is Jaw-work of the most| for themacives, So, you see, things are | G M. Mutton married « Mine Winans, of Bal-| ink until she ts twenty. 1 have kept company SEE nT Mahal Nitin d asa ad ornate and charming kind, mebody dreadful, In Mr, Daly's defense, it | more, whose father left her many millions of} with her for the past year, and know that we are PAS EMBL ES LAC] has told us that he uses less than 0) Maa Ae that the stringent rules | ‘lars that he made by building railroads tn] well mated and could live happily. Of course, ‘The Hernid, ‘The Telecrarp, words pn all the talking he does, but Liha pro nly exceedingly necessary, | uss. It is with this money that Mr. Hutton | we wet e . ign de right ta! at par- renin he oaaeele 5 feirell hd ; + Jia building the extraordinary realdene A fea-| ents, but I think they are a little inconsistent, The Evening on how rapturously he Jugeles them las, from all accounts, the members of} 11," ene nous will be that It will cover more| ae I am respectable and worthy of er love, press, The Commercial Advertiser and with what melodic magic he rhymes} the No, 2 "Galety Girl company Were} iid than any other residential structure In| and am old enough and have sense enough to Ihe Morning Journal. them off into thoughts that tingle and | of an excessively frisky turn of mind, | FUUUBT man aly. sllier tullential tn ite know what fam doing and think under the cir- CIRCULATION FOR Hee tree suoe un cu eeyn be uction, ‘The proposed ew hotel will, Wt taf cumstances they ahou!d consider me with favor. i He has won) his way to our hearts! r isn't exactly pleawant fora New It the deal goes through, be of marble,| Now will some of your kind readers who have ee eee ae with the honeyed Chrysostom-like elo-| york dramatic critic to be boomed about} rye tand han been held at a very bigh Mgure, ax{ probably had experience In a similar case tell me a ee ee ee quence of his after-dinner remarks, and} ine country as having gushed over a] there are no other water-fronta at Newport pur-| what they think best for us to do. Two years ts August, 1801 + + $88,975 per day his name is quite as well known at} yaa play which he has never seen. That | chasable. ‘a long time to walt, and we fear that in that Sori acetal coda) the furthermost points of the old world there are unscrupulous managers who eoetes time something may come between us in some ; Gain fn one yea 73,234 as George Washington's or Abraham|ugtiok at nothing seems to be evi-| Speaking of Newport property, an acquaintance} unforeseen manner, and we shall be lost to each > Gain in four years... ..226,680 Lincoln's. He ts truly one of our here lent, A company has been out in the |*o!4 me the other day the story of the purchase} other forever. NA & MAS. Gain in thirteen years..636,423 a little bit guffy now and then perhaps, | wos Sabra somthing entitied “A {ot the around where the W. K. Vanderbilt ——— but a hero ull the same, and our eyes| wetted Cait’) Nobody has heard of its] Mace stands “It wan the only plece of prop Like « Rose. l followed him lovingly all through his Kae je ted. in ‘New. Vorle. (srr teat sppeated, 10: ba avaltablel:ca) Bellerme (ay the: waiters Wuupoan tip? Wei arasglad that Helo ee een ce A avenue,” said the narrator, “and it was oceu-} Like a full rose when the soft dew is failing repaint MA ere, will Cs ania ptsee, WES gitle Ot Be Omaha pied vy the old Bout homestend, where lived the] “And tragrance trom heaven enriches the alt apace atts uy a4 ‘) paper says: “*A Fatted Calf,’ whieh | stout poy 4 their mother. Vanderbilt went t ail annkgta be lots of new dinners for him to im. |PaPer say pita Wis fhectcee whae abit riba se 2 | te Nellie, the fairest tn all beauty's calling; ——— — a 2 furnished a seven days’ repast at the] the boys They shook thwtr heads, Not while] The maiden whose smiles lure me into love's = = eben rane my Holbal bib Y tongue.) Creighton, 8 far from meriting the | the mother Hived would they sell the place, “Bat snare. A SHAM AND A FRAUD. eleome home, Chauncey. More power] jaudatory” epigrams Alan | wuppove t make it an objept for you," sald Vi ho your vocal chor: Dale, of the New Tes] ene ssuppene I offer, You $26,000 an. acres | Spring's balmy aweetness {s always rectining ‘The hypocrisy which has marked the = “ ot "woods it is hardly can ok That wan @ifterent. The bova thought tt over| UPON her bright face, where youth's loveliness whole action of the Police Board in the! ‘rhe pronunciamento against Sunday [sented ty Omaha IC fs not even well] Tas er Rimemel Tie tort ae ee lies; matter of Excise law “enforcement” | drinks in the clubs accomplished noth-| and performance of this kind would. be| mada. Next day, the homestesd came down. The] And Summertime's sunlight ix ever a-shining ‘Was disagreeably conspicuous in yester-} ing and deceived nobody. That it should | to break a buttertly on the wheel, w day after, the palace wan under way. Vander.| From out of the depths of her beautiful eyes, cl 7 \ ‘ i i for the much-vaunted comin ; _ “against the clubs. it failed to deselve the masses for whom | whieh, Deln. felleliously. phrased and THE GLEANER. | Which over her shoulders contusedly flow; That law for the saloon-keepers was| a hypocritical police administration has| presumably rightly bestowed, had the —— While a straggling dark curl oft her soft neck also to be law for the clubs was an-| transformed Sunday into a day of | *fect of alluring many to tut eee 'TO LAUGH OVER. pareneee; nounced with # great flourish of trum-| weariness and oppression must surprise | brbiht tem cine it, earnest and more. oF = ‘And purer te she than the Winter's white pets a week ago. For six days the} the dictator in Mulberry street. He] less patient researeh has not ed to Tragedy. snow. Police Board revelled in the glory of] coud have expected nothing leas than af unearth 1 iegual vend ae aa GNKE cabs (halbaner Wea MORSer Tt amn oeatiaalll. drasyilag this new sensation. It was patted on} rousing popular testimonial to his cour-| Lawyer A. H. Hummel t« not painful He humped upon his wheel to race— Bright Silastol’ dreams, which may never come: the back by all its friends, and the) aye and fairness in bending the rich} ly bashful nor is hi larly anxious And now @ sculptor works to tra true Bubye was invited to fall down and] ciutmen to the law, even as he had bent | {at concealment should prey on hits ‘Another "“Requlescat In. pace And ever ts mo this fair cresture 1s seeming worship this Hoard that was too high) ine toilers, the efforts of the managers “Th —Chieago Record. ‘As sweet as & rote steeped in morn’s pearly and incorruptible to oppress the poor ry World” to boom their show at his aa) den JOHN J. MIYTYRE, without also oppressing the rich. “The World's" budget of news from ense, OF ¢ rse, nobody really be- Quite a D rent Matter. Port Richmond, 8 I. Bunday came, and the six days’ sensa-|China, printed this morning, will ex-/Heved that Mr Ttummel would consint 9p working that free-lumch counter,”” shout- =e tion ended. Not a club was interfered | cite av eneral indignation through-| [fret patron and. friend of] et the bartender. Wants to Love Him, but Doe: with. Liquor was sold as usual at most) out the country. Will it interfere with] every ind. everything theatri-| "It tan’ work; 1 a pleasure,”” replied Know How. of them. Not an arrest was mado or! the fishing season off Gray Gables? wn Na Gama ee To the Editor attempted. 1 Mt he ne Tam a fair looking country girl, refined and The widely proclaimed club crusade,| ‘With an American will In evidence, |The Canary a Was rathe Ob; Deas! pausbend At alantgan paca Wenph corapany) WiKUS Uke all the reat of the Pollee Board's | China would soon find a way to pun-feruel, Mero Hummel dorsn't mind any | There wae an olf maid trom Mobile Gals teas Unie iad GARE eka ver estcslee! Excise work, was a sham and a fraud. | ish the authors of thoan Kneheng out. |<0P) ot Remepaber comments nien | Wha ment out to ride on her waite, who I know loves me dearly, which I have al- a rages and to prevent the recurrence of | his appearance: In ie burlesque would Dusuvite Corea, ready proved, and comes a great distance every In another column appears a brief | SUch horrors. “PYM eR Te (EE ara CSUN Waidh: caused (bia: Male Alden ta ayaile week to eee me. I have been to several place poetic effort by the author of a sketch} ona nas the sympathy of the Ameri- | hearance in propria: p na would dis: Minneapolis Journal, | of amusement shy him and enjoy hie company about five cents’ worth of tee, which | 4 neon © There is no doubt ‘about {Pet future ditustons, ae oe Ia rotemetege eda Lt) bes “The Evening World" recently printed. | ings” And the voice of the people is| We shall probably not get the latent Very Likely, Feat WLHAIWURIRE AN RIL Bo oe and which excited the intemperate ire) oniited to an official utterance at Wash-| Adelphi melodrama, “The Swordsman’s) op aw a trolley car in Brooklyn the other] ynow how it 1s, sometimes I love bim and other of Police Commissioner Roosevelt. In] ih gion Datagiter,! ty Wrandon Thomaw, and | yighe “sompietey tovered with elerti=ghta | trary | do aoe, I'am lig to ane then eace order to save Mr. Roosevelt any fresh - = pia sant tH in vague. One| Why do you muppose they used eo many? f ‘ napPiy Still in vogY on all my heart, if I could do ao, but I do not know trouble it is hereby explained that the} The Broadway Cable ¢ “ompany | of ete thd te eat shows the | “Dor't know. but I imagine st was ao that the| how, 40 T would thank some of your readers whe incident related in rhyme did not occur. | has the most valuable franchise in the [launehing of 4 lifeboat. | The’ XillaKe | motorman conld keep count of his victims without] have been there if they will kindly enlighten There has been no arrest of a clubman| city, An effictoat all-nticht transit ser- [MEER FR ae tana the or 1) atopping.”"—Urookiyn Lite mean th Wea Team pissed t6;leatacts sees bite for using cologne with alcohol in it on] vice ts the least return it might be made |jaunehed an the howling the better, ANNIE. Sunday to render to the ot Nugricane upon the angry This Doubtful a - Be Be MPa ee ANthe Rare And (HO Rreathes there a man with soul so dead. To Beatric TODGING AT SARATOGA. a ren ees Be Sitain that goes well, but cannot wave] Wr never ip Rimoat hath a oe fo the walter: tee i ov, Saxton to go out of his way tol the play. hen rising from intemperate Awe, Mr. Platt's)Conyention at Saratoga ia) oon eratulat Lexow on Rockland «0 & “Is this my own, my native head.” ries Pledged to ignore the excise question) County's indorsement. Was It policy ‘The warm weather of the last week Atlanta: Cons Lagat in its platform, according to the reports ’ : poet miscey to. tho managerial a Tou are soarmlee sty dancer. om a pre of trusted na ° . but in ‘ou smile, Trom a preliminary council of trusted eid acanasier okey The Une re-| heart miy in New York Onty ‘Thing He. Hes: Neth Ueutenants. Of course a policy of SI-l rors to a gang of mail-box thieves. Rut | Ober Reuitiw os é Mean ice circumstances 1s a policy of cowardice,| i146, too, has a master key ed at leisia Business has not]! the comer? heed by whatever party adopted, ‘The excise| i Si Veen "phenomenal by any means. The | West Side Drugaist—He'e dropped a dime inte On mat i - { [productions that have really been fortu-| the telephone slot and ts listening to the trotley DAE you notice how she twisted? . ouestion is a live and important feature) Plarvard and Yale are patehing up| hate are "The, Prisoner of Zenda, faricChloces Gaeiee Sia ein, ef the home-rule and personal liberty) their football differences. Presently it Lyconm "Toe Sporting (Duetioss,” eae reagan issue which Is bound to play @ leading | may he their foothall anatomles that mS RRR yre AN Ure CAISEERIR A QUANDARY. It you don't observe, you will mies it part in this Fall's brief campaign, and] will take the patching. see (6 SVANVARN resis later, in the season of legislation at - ‘ . rane! on can take rt. The | in the true poet's eyes emi o low Liveoold Albany. It cannot be pushed aside by| ‘That young Mr. Croker should have] ) QUAM Suis can. (RA Heark Q (TnS | 1 ihe tru Asian eae Agrees) Bide, step, “'Aplit""—AN! up bow now. the process of ignoring it in a party) been laid out ina Httle affair Uke a col-| fond, but from which he conscientiously He falls in raptures o'er her tiny. glov Encore, platform. lege cane rush must deeply shock his} abstains,in "The Chbettain” has found |) SNe Tt Menkes Oe tee any a ace ‘Cae ay Mr. Platt's dilemma is easily und experienced sir a dele “Ol only iP i . ‘The audience makes a row now. * Neen. Sh a “So long as authors are too lag Stood, He saw the danger in New - Se ante nwrlte come dice | know fall well that fairer matte there are ena ake, York City of a declaration against | Parthquake reports continue to come | tugue Cle come actor will gag, and his] Than she who holts my heart in Cupid's T my, more liberal laws; he saw also the peril |in from places far apart. It is evident | Basing Wall be acceptable. uccording, to thrall, ‘ncceps tule emai bowaeatt in the hayseed districts of a plank which | that Mother Earth took her latest shock Of humor. “Phe tate Bred Leslie | O Meese love ner by no shining, star, Beatrice, would satisfy the anxious citizens of| in sections, Possessed that sens: n congequence | Her gloves and slippers charm me not all, What bliss, the metropolis, The question was one Paar rales . Re ee ene eee ee tiie’ woul | Atds therefore, I'm in great perplexity You are lovely beyond question, he couldn't straddle. He decided to let| The Polley of cowardice on the Exetse | \ seo eee mig | ta doubt my mind between two thoughts doth #2 owes it go by default and trust all to the| @Westion may pass at Saratoga, It won't] f Me course, t Ke can be move-+ Petite special providence which so often acems| 10 at Albany, ‘The issue will be forced | harmless. | ‘Phe trouble with comedians | That one of them ty true seems plain to me Give me one Kian for bashed fe Ss tn tanchins on this Winte -- os Dractee they’ Become offetaiver amd vile] 14% 8° Pat on elm 1 do not tong “ fenton Jameson, 's that the rural districts may Py aera "eel Bar Cie a . pci ta a) Lost Him and His Mustache, Too, Fest comfortably under the late Sunday |, The Unlon Teague bar was note} ; ; histo' t i yesterday. Why not subpoena Roose-| On the road "A Modern Mephisto" is AN EDITORIAL MEDLEY. 9 the Editor Dlue law resolutions of the League of | iit and see what he knows about it? | uplicating the success It scored) when I have a young gentleman friend I used to Republican Clubs. He trusts that the| ** : 3 Ss ~ fortetnally, preiuedd a i be very fond of last Spring, but while 1 was Byracuse Convention may do nothing to * 7 pile part, white | cr PEA pre) nie ; fy Among this year'swauses for Thanks: {1s how played by Sh K. The t away in the country this Summer he rairel a magnity to New York City eyes the! giving will be the Kolng out of the New| is a. vitaracter of a modern. maid es pe fact that BAM the world ‘dhes)inot Kaew. y mustache. When 1 saw what hole in the Baratoga platform where| York liaschull team of IN, sumed, by Helene Mora. who is “tea.| how the other half tives will he true tn ait] g mean, low down trick be had played me 1 wa the excise plank should be. A ured’, that attracts mich attention, | ereat clttes, until atreet-car frodere are the wad and wo hed GAht. I told him he wasn't Saree Lord Dunrav latest letter might | called gowns, because they're not built] ee ee the same man I hat loved and that he didn't Bellevue Hospital records show a| just as well have been that which never | {at way—iltustrates the Stridex dress | . ee look Ike a heavy English swell any more, but marked increase tn the Sunday cases of | name feform haw taken, “One advanced wom: | 4 wee fae 3 more ike a races track tout, He said he wanted began. Mr. Roosevelt's policy of one-| Mr. Platt is once more in State con fest" That is a combination. ‘Tt's| to cena. eho Take thie] gee at, ith ND Bnd told him to choose ve x cation that eyewitnesses who make thie day euppression has, naturally enough, | vention assembled, MEE OOM MORIN WONIS AGING $8 seamen ame eliloind Uo opium of Olhernieg | Mal tgs Grace” nce taste Jed men to a Saturday night of ex a tlona.—C kK ‘i Bier ak OO HASTY, Sa rlecee. 3 : EE {lable to mental halluctnations —Chtcago Record. #ive indulgence. How do the Proulbition-| DF Depew has got back, We couldn't COME TO ‘THIS? 8 Pretty Della Darling, “7 ists who 50 lately indorsed the crusading | !28* Cur leach, MeWinler No'Judae of Horses To the Editor Comn i = ? { McKinley was any judge of a hore he wo missioner Uke thie phase of the] str jtarrison had a quiet Sunday, So Rub-a-dub-dub, Me Mods tatey: udge of @ horse he would let! ar old town beyond the britgy, situation he has created? ia u Hea uvcay asin’ th 9: eit realize that the poor olf protection nag which The part they call “B. D. id the clubs hree men in & et he is riding (9 ring-bone, apavined and sad There deel ans calllag aioud tae ere daells a charming laesie— CHINA NEEDS A REMINDER Bundays are not yet dry down by the Dut they fell ins @t ssien and eihout wind emueh toa Parhaps there's two or three harbor bar. When the wall N ME Sas Se we eae, . 5c sspate: . Cuy Bt ry dandy, aj ows it In @ special cable despatch from Foo: | Sa Rieeare Ae cai aie Star mol en 8 dandy, and she ko chow, printed this morning, “The World” | WORLDL a . But “there are others," too, Giscloses a state of affairs regarding | PRLDLINGS, There, with They Are Kind to Platt. This maiden fair has lovely eyes; the late Kucheng outrages which ought | the largest bee-tive tn the world is prohably To their side ‘The majority of the New York Republicans They're either brown or blue to convince the President and the State | 1 je Rock, Cale It ie & granite boulder “rears a BOX ERO TPANDE St ESD OUST LAR. Maas Rracetul as a goddens Department of the necessity of im-| rising abruyiiy from the bed of a tite ade ses qlettai datas Ham Natt eels Ieee, thee May Amey tram tia tripe Mediate and energetic action. It seems | if We Aros Avaie, and | is we SE ee Te Ee ca uum: oe NE EIA S8Glete panies She's Pretty Delis Darling, Tet Chins Hae Gutercieies sicaiae | aura vs anaes o) diries aie. Vs0 aenm Bent Bre 40 UOROIG te WH." J eAtOA. an advantage Bo never fall 0 resp eae eleva Caley attan Denby's “policy of moderation” as eh by population of bees Ahh Bess GAL SEUACE shat —— oe She mays that he is not « firt, indication that the United States, eit Md . Ae ee He Etlanette for a Bride, But with that [ won't agree through indifference or prudence, is not & . r of the : hein wad Shes a y fair with @ haughty alr, Gusoasd 40 ‘cress Abinas 100 vlc aidaiia & od ie Haaie By Teddy's been chioklag A bride does not necessarily take pre- ‘il the han Ho ae tae ee Hence the Government at Pekin not) bs [oH 4 hes wy} nested Gira sd Orel bk be Gee ai, ACK WALTON, only refuses to condemn to death the | {is Sure of 8 tre when og ell Be Oe Pa SOUrteey. 4 the Brat Alas LP renerhenpemigenl Guthors of the outrages upon the mis. |{"%,"47 {2 Navini ies 36 Shen GhAlaagear mame dear net parties to which sho ts invited, Ghe nuit aan ent Daisen sionaries, but conducts itself in such @| yoo terme) va cence | sai Reider esc Meith Just at first, for the frietsls of bore rae, | , 8098 oF late this Government must make 1 Way as to encourage the Vegetarians | tia ie honest tor weet i \ A ned Ba ee woe UL eat te mar Rds Of Doth par=| qeciaration on the (Cybea) subject. Will it be to the formation of further plota. Aoi he aia te wnnelé tn, thi “come,” the cop ented, "you the flew il Bet up various entertainments | ang leat or the Are to offer & courtesy which the ‘The British Legation iw hindered in| arg s ling in lato at $1) a docen, with hore Suits te bleonct tee oh ever, e5cept Bn LAVIIATIe eS ae ee jae ant MTN SR laments WALA we the efforts to obtain redress for the Ku- | leas carriages loomiug vp on the Yyrirou. ai NA JENNINGS 5 Ghee ave culled ares Rat ary, (OMe. tneeligh Ne 1o0: sirseans, siotimeaia: of fakerma 0 Jeauw they have called upon her first. bumaaity?—Chicago Times-Heralé the legal tribunal fn Paris at the Instance of M. Lepine, watter of all Paris, and s undertaken to gather the opin fons of the notable women on thelr propriety or ingly on the score of morals, but gt taste. nt that always have at the bottom philosophic Gyp payly says that everything about the bicycle is ugiy, and {tis merely @ toss up of Journalist and apostle of Woman with che tallest of capitals, most to endanger The actresses of the hands often Bernhardt—but what Inatinct but the danger will carry young «iris y trom the Jife of the family into a world nprostable. Which is an admirable but unexpected comment. ‘The success of ‘The Chieftain’ recalls the fact \ded to the theatre- gong public by Pinafore’ makes one of the most remarkable records In the Ulstory of the stage 0 was unknown, the humor’ of The chiet nor the Itbretto, but the choir singers. Finally whole companies formed out of choir singers and as widely Philadelphia, for example, 1 cities in the country. All the deacons and elders and thelr wives went ‘One olf Quaker lady ts remembered who had never been in a theatre “Pinafore” and fell in only to ro again and again to bear him sing, but bought and sent him a huge bouquet of flowers, ‘The young Princesses ot Wales were at some Goings the other day where thelr gowns were of These were dagerived ax of heilo- “The bodies Princesses are never in the height of fashion." ‘There is scarcely a week that the costumes of such is their simplicity they are almost insig- ‘These they wear forward after ‘American girls wear their sailor hats tilted backward, giving The' dean of the Vanderbilt stables was an old man, the third of his generation in the Vander- 1 was on the Union Course I have renderbill and Lady Mac, which the ‘The only anderbilt’ Georg: Cornelius Vanderbitt i in no fense @ man devoted to horses. But Mr. Vander- sent to the last Parls Exposition. It conforms to| bric is another excellent dress lining, the architecture of the Fifth avenue palace. Injand ,although of closer texture, re- the graceful gablen are medailions, from which | sembles greatly the old-fashioned paper protrude hounds heads in terra cotta. The string BS course above the first floor is marked by other medallions, in which corn, oats and grasses trednled ta terra colin aro grouped. Tho hl- LETTERS. tecture and its significant ornaments are ft tures of the street and would anywhere attract Nquor in New York We pr sume that in the prosecution of tho saloon-keep- ers the same old methods will obtain. —Washtny D THE SAVAGE BREAST. “I have brought my daughter for her lesson, professor, as you appointed.” “This silence quite disturbs me, What has he stopped for? Why, he has his |" 4 puyMcally shapelene Mer appearance arms" — ax bebloomered, ahe ploughs space, often verges do you mean by this inso- The Contame with Decor: Here is a new and seasonable cos- tume. It is of green cloth, with the, who the into peresnaiecrellthinatscenso tabs decorated with tiny gold and green bone buttons. The Domestic Diplomat. Never describes her aches and pains. Never dwell on unpleasant reminis- cences. \ Never apologizes for the food. Is never a martyr. Never corrects the children in the presence of any person, even the family. Disorder of a temporary nature does not visibly disturb her. Never tells her husband anything of the least unpleasant character. When the family diatribe threatens she knows how and when to deftly change the subject. She gets rid of a guest who bores her by simply folding up @ newspaper and the other never suspect: Sne lets every one have affairs of .| their own, ‘| She is always pollte and cordial to the children's friends. Bhe never communicates any news be- fore dinner, She never divulges her methbds. Caraway Sced Cake. One-half cup of sugar, one cup of but- ter, one-half cup of caraway seed, beat- entoacream. Three cups of flour, one- half cup of water, three eggs and two teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Modiah Linings. Changeable mohair 1s the latest thing for skirts and dress lining; it ts an ex- cellent substitute for silk when that) material {s found too expensive. This mohair is of light weight and suMeiently wiry to set out the dres: Rustic cam- not The two tate, the and "an cambric once used, The soft-finished perculine is quite out, as it Is useless al long as the present fashion of inflated skirt continues, Silk-finished ortnoline and lawn are good where a light stiffs ness Is requisite, such as Mning for siceves, collarettes and revers, Citron Preserve. Cut citron in pleces one inch square, boil in water until soft; drain off water and add one pound of sugar to each pound of citron, and to every five pounds of the preserve add one pound of raisins, one lemon sliced, one-half ounce of whole cioves, one ounce of stick cinnamon; dissolve the sugar, and when hot adi the fruit and simmer slowly two hours; put cloves and cin- namon in a bag. Watermelon rind ie as good as citron. Sweet and Dainty Sinmber Robes, One of the prettiest fads of elegantes is the long nightgown sachet, which, holding the gown in present use, Hes across the foot of the bed during the day. It is as long as the bed is wide and {s about a foot and a half across, It is made of a handsome brocade, of cretonne, of embroidered linen, what- ever material best suits the room, is wadded sacheted, lined with quilted silk and tied with ribbons. In this sweet nest the nightgown lies folded once near the bottom. Simple but Popular Dis! Bake cottage pudding in gem or pop- over pans, thus giving to each person an individual pudding. This way not only adds to the attractiveness of this simple but popular dish, but conserves {ts lightness, if, as often happens, a careful hostess attempts to cut the pud- ding with a steel knite when hot from the oven, The usual sauce accompanies the individual serving. Stylish Hair Dre: The tendency in hair dresing is towards extreme simplicity. It is considered bad taste to make any addition to the natu- ral hair, and false frizettes, puffs and switches are very little used. The most striking innovation of the sason is @ distinct parting of the hair In the middle from the forehead to the crown of the head. This may undoubtedly be traced to the influence of the 18% styles. For morning the hair is worn in some soft, fluffy way round the face. There is a slight fringe of hair over the forehead, but this fringe is parted in the middle, curling in on each side, An Oklahoma Girl. Miss Celina Gray is a young woman who occupies a unique place in the Government. She has recently been, honored with the appointment of United States Commissioner for the Third Ju- dicial District uf Oklahoma. This is the firet appointment of the kind of a wom- an in the Union. The duties of the Place call for close application to work and unrelenting activity. Mise Gray is only twenty-four years old, and going to Oklahoma in the early days, has had only the usual training and experience, [ This column és open to everybody who has a complaint to make, a grievance to ventilate, wm formation (o give, a subject af general mterest to discuss or a public service to acknowledge, and who can put the idea in lesa than 100 words Long letters cannot be printed. } Mr. ‘Consistency’ in your issue of Bept. 9, would say that labor as a whole would pay the single tax, of course; but there ts @ Aifference between individual labor and collective labor in that respect. Wealth when created con- sentrates and forms a general fund, The term labor does not confine iteelt to a man that car- ries the hod, but applies itself also to a man that paints s picture, hands down a decision from the bench, or a man who onters the destruction of « burning bullding that the surrounding property | might be saved, So you see the term labor has a wide application and does not confine tteelt to gommon labor. Therefore, labor as a whole does pay the (ax. ‘The only non-producer in this world fe a land-owner. He not only doen not produce, Dut Keeps others from doing #. What we single taxers claim is that labor will get a far greater share of his product, while under this system the landlord gobbles up every penny the laborer left after paying expenses for a bare existence. Besides this there are comforts of lite too numerous to mention, Perhaps ‘Cons! cy"? misunderstood the speaker's answer. As the tax cannot be shifted to the tenant, and if he! be @ common or any other kind of a laborer he does not Individually pay the tax, because he is/ relleved from paying taxes on everything he uses This ts equivalent to paying no rent at all. if this Is mot clear enough for ‘‘Consistency,"" 1 would refer him to Henry George's “Progress and Poverty." aL F The Two Yachts, To the Editor: From England there came A yacht of great fame, England's pride of the ees, To capture a prize Which we idolize But, alaa, that never can bi From New York there came A sloop of reat tami America’s pride and delight, And how ahe did sali, And the Britains did watt, For she left them c: F out of sight. J. W. O'ROURKE, All Bicycliennes Are Homely, To the Editor: After a careful scrutiny of the faces of the Wheelwomen of New York, Brooklya, Jersey City and Hoboken, Tam constrained to agree with those among your readers who aver there isn't a pretty bicyeltenne In any of the foregoing cites, All fair-minded persons must concede that the age woman who rides a wheel is offensively on the grotesque. If there existe within « radiyp of ten miles of the metropolis a comely “woman wheelman,"’ I crave the felicity of an introduction to her. W. B.D. Shoppers May Help Clerks, To the Editor 1 read with pleasure “A Victim of Saturday letter referring to the non-entoreement oliday law. While 1 doubs if the authorities will enforce the law, I know that the shopping public ean compel its enforce- ment. Let our shoppers remember that none of them fa a0 fortunate that circumstances may not yet compel them, or their sons and daughters, to endure the same slavery, Let the people of York observe the tr tment which these em- ployees receive, and remember that thelr own lit- tle daughters may yet be ccmpeliel to earn the same miserable pittance under the seme slavery. Let them note what stores are closirg at 12 o'clock (hege September Saturdays, and patronize * [emom casiualvoly tm the future, taking gud cane) = to let the employers know why they do #0. A it~ tle thoughtfulness like this will do a wonderfal lot of good. To the women shoppers I will say: Try and do your shopping on the other five days of the week. You can do so quite an easily; and when Saturday no longer profitable our mer- chants will gladly shut up shop. EX-COUNTER JUMPER. * A Rara Avis on the “L” Road, To the Editor: ‘ T have been a steady rider for a long time om Second and Third avenue “‘L'* roads, and I hav seen but few guards who are as polite as guard 1,507 of the Second avenue road. As I was tting on at Hanover Square on Thursday after- noon, I heard @ passenger on the station ask him to “let this old couple off at Rivington street at tlon,”* and he told the gentleman, ‘Yes, sir," and I noticed when he came to Rivington street he * called out the station, and this old couple did not get up, and he came In and told them very polite: ly that thia was their station, and helped them out, I think a man like this {s a credit to any company or firm, and just the kind of man they ed. W. H. WHITE, Yonkers, N.Y. No More Races with Dunraven. To the Editor: I firmly believe the action of Dunraven should call forth In no unmeaning terms our dtsap- proval and indignation concerning his positive unsportsmaniike action in to-day's (Sept. 19 race, and we should also demand an apology from his English yacht club or disqualify them for fever from competition, although America's aria tocratlc Four Hundred, with blood # compo of two-thirds English and one-third lukewarm American, will declare his action justifiable and to be commended. The boom of American yachte , on Valkyrie U1.'s crossing the line first 1s ame other proof of our American Engilsh-inclining 8 citizens, ONE OF THE MIDDLE CLASS, Must the Government Pay for Their Fant To the Bditor: This morning as I was coming across the East River trom Brooklyn I noticed the United States Government towboat the Nina apparently going own to seo the yacht races, with quite a large party of ladies and gentlemen aboard, including * & few officers. What power has any one te uso the United States boats other than for what, they are intended—viz., for Government use? If thone people w either hav, thelr owa private boat or pay the same as thousands of others. I think some peor ple in this world, especially Government official © want the earth with @ fence around it. YOUNG AMERICAN, on-Religious Temperance, To the Editor: It you will kindly publish this letter, I may find among the numerous readers who peruse the correspondence column a few who will asaist mo in forming @ temperance soctety among those whe have no religion. Like myself, many have read of the glaring untruths contained in the Bible; have looked 1m vain for the truth, and, Mnally, despair ing, have taken to drink. This is a worthy cause, and Iam sure soe of your kind readers will aa ait me. 1 am a poor young man, but will devote ‘4 much of my tne as possible zo help those whe are living @ wretched life SINCERITY, Brooklyn, N. T Are There Such Bad Girlet To the Editor: IL the police would wateh the two tough girte who stand on the corner of Forty-txth and First avenue and would put them in wagon such as we catch doge in they would some good to the world. If they are let to roam the at) 1 2 in the night at the age of neventeen what will they be at eighteen? Am@ what an example will they show to small girls and boys who pass them! Their actions am@ conduct are diagraciful to womanhood. If Gerep would come and get a held of them be will do much good. The men that stand and tear areun@ ‘with them are just as bad. ul : TWO YOUMp LADIES on t to see the races they should t “i ae