The evening world. Newspaper, September 20, 1895, Page 4

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Puttiahed by the Prose Publishing Company, © & 6) PARK ROW, New Tork. FRIDAY, SEPT. 20, 1895. SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE EVENING WORLD (including postage): oH MONTH. a YEAR. Metered at the Post-Office at New York ao excond-class matter. WORLD UPTOWN OFFIOR—Junction of Broat- way end Sixth ave at 324 ot. WORLD HARLEM OFFICE—125t) ot. and Mati- eon ave, \BROOKLYN—s00 Washington ot. PHILADELPHIA, PA.—Preee Bulldi aut ot WASHINGTON—T03 14th ot. ‘102 Chest- PER DAY. GAIN OVER JULY. GACT thin THE WORLD'S | GREAT AUGUST CIRCULATION, 560,055 PER DAY. ‘This EXCEEDS the COMBINED CTRCULATION of ten New York mewspapers, or, to be more xpecific, fa OVER 100,000 more than the COMBINED CIRCULATION of e Evening San, 7 mates acca Pred Phe Morning Yournal CIRCULATION August, 1808 Auguat, 1894 Aeaguat, 1901 August, 1848 800, 088 per day 497, ba! per doy 838,975 per day ‘£4, £99 per day Gain in one ye 73,234 Gain in four years... ..226,680 Gain in thirteen years.636,423 OUR TWO-FACED BO8s. ‘There was u god !n anctent times who {Ved on a Hil in w temple that faced (two ways, with a door en each face ;Bometimes one door was upen and some times the other, according tu whether | Peace or war prevuiled, and Janus be came known us the two-faced gud. But Janus, uncertain as he was, al {ways faced one way or the uther one door was open the other was #hut ‘Thomas C. Platt, whom many worship |mowadays as alncerely as the Homans }Worshipped Janus, has introduced a | modern improvement tn the idew of the | jewo-faced idol. He faves both ways ut jonce, and whether the #trait-laced, clder jeensuming countryman or the Jovial, jDeerdrinking city man appear at his @ates, he is always ready for either. He {s for Sunday-seiling or against It, According to the tastes of the worship- ter, and during the busy hours he is jboth for and against it at the same time. | Old Janus was not tn it for two-taced- eas with our own Tom Jatt! With his expressed views on local j@ption and home rule, Dr. Parkhuret eahnot indorse the Warner Miller plank, PARKHUKST’S RETURN. Dr. Parkhurst has returned from Eu- Fope strong in his championship of re- form, He declares his determination to “wage unremitting warfare against Tammany Hall.” It 4s not easy to nee where Dr. iark- burst.atands politically, nor how he would practically carry forward the war for good government in which he has done @uch soldierly service in the past, He is ‘of course the unyielding foe of Tammany and all {ts men und methods; he regards “Platt and the spirit of Plattism” as “worse than Croker and the spirit of Crokeriam;’ thinks Senator Lexow, “that ttle man up at Nyack,” ought to be “consigned to a political gra’ favors a combination ticket this year and urges a legislative crusade against ‘the “political minions” of Plattism. Dr. Parkhurst does not like all that has been ;@one under Mayor Strong's administr: tony but he justly claims that the city overnment is greatly better than It was. ‘The “American Sunday” that fits Po- Bunkville ts too short and too narrow for New York, Brooklyn or Buffalo. A GOOD RECRUITING FIELD. Minneapolis glories In a moral police (Borce and a modest Mayor. When Miss Bleanor Beatrix Morton appeared on a Meading thoroughfare of that beautiful yelty sn a very advanced type of “new woman’ = knickerbockers, Policeman per WAS so shocked that, holding his jelmet before his eyes, he compelled the young lady to turn her wheel off the avenue and to return to her resi @ence by back streets, where there ‘were fower people and less keen sensi- Dilities, Yesterday Miss Morton made a com \plaint against the policeman before ‘Mayor Pratt, who desired to be shown the objectionable costume. But when the complainant proceeded to loosen end drop off her skirts in order to di: play the bicycle dress beneath, His Honor hastily and blushingly sought Ghelter behind his desk, and requested the witness to retire and prepare her vidence in @ back room. When the complainant reappeared in full wheeling rig, the Mayor, with his ‘eyes shaded by his hand, refused to rep- imand the policeman, and directed the fady to have hep knickerbockers made Jonger and fulle: Mr. Roosevelt would do well to seek recruits for the New York force in There should be longer-headed lead- ers at Byracuse—leaders more in touch mith the age and the people. 4 FLIMSY DEMURSER. demurrer to the indict- Tameen for aiding in the post-office rebbers treme Ladiow Street Prison through neg- imcompetent persons in the jail te teo flimsy to admit Fitageralg, tm the Court | tow now bulids h Ith), of General Sessions yesterday, Gen. ‘Tracy sald: “The only duty enjoined by law upon the Sheriff was to safely keep the prisoners, and there in no allegation that that duty was neglected. The prisoners did escape through the Bross incompetency, neglect and cow- ardice of the oMcials in the jail ap- pointed and rhtained by Sheriff Tamsen, who in responsible for the acts of h fubordinates. In the next breath Gen. Tracy argued that the three United States prisoners who escaped wers never propesly In the custody of the Sheriff, and he could no therefore, bo held responsible for their safe keeping. ‘The prisoners were in Ludlow Btreet Jail in accordance with provisions of the law, and Sheriff Tamsen received pay from the United States for keeping them there. How, then, can it be con- tended that they were not properly in his custody, which implies that he could let them go free if he felt so disposed? No one can doubt what will be the decision ot the court on such a de- murrer. It {= pathetic to see how hard the anti-boss Republicans are trying to be contented in Mr. Platt's yard. THE HYPOCRITES PROGRESS. Hypocrisy is ike lying. It grows on &@ man. Police Commissioner Roosevelt used to be a fairly consistent citizen before love for notoriety led him to sacrifice his common sense for a chance to make @ sensation. Now, look at him! “All law must and shall be en- forced," waa the triumphant announce- mont with which he started his cru- de. There was no question of public opinion about it. OfMicial discretion Played no part in hia idea of duty. To enforce all the laws all the time was his sole alm. The Sunday law enforce- ment was to be but the beginning. THE WOR GEN. JOHN BR. GORDON, This te a picture of Gen, Lee's “Right he was called during the war the rebellion. Hts address at Chickamaugua was a ringing and elo- quent tribute to the non-sectionaliam of the American patriot, are to be felicitated on showing better feeling than tho projectora of the en- tertainments. Gen. Antonio Mnceo anya Cuba will be free in mix months. Hope so, The McKinley parrot is being gently but firmly urged into his cage. It fs a long time since the Jorsey Re- publicans have had so much fun, The New Jersey contont was between Kean men and keener men. ‘Times change and the Sunday law It was a great programme, but {t has been sadly whittled down in the per- formance. Excuse after excu each weaker than the last, has met the fall- ure of the Police Board to enforce one and another of the hundred laws and ordinances that are being daily violated with impunity. At first it was “all In good time; we must not undertake too much at on: ‘Then it was @ question of law that in- terfered. ‘Then one thing and then an- other, until yesterday the great head of the Police Board, the man who knew no god but law and no Interpreter of Justice but his own mighty mind, pro- duces, am justification for his admitted failure to enforce the law against clubs, @ letter from some one in a distant part vf the country, whose name he will not eve, In which the opinion ts mildly ex- pressed that ¢here ie some uncertainty us to just what the law about clubs ia! Upon such a basis ae this the great man of manifestues and pronunciamen- polley! How worry Mr Roosevelt must be that he ever took that first step in hypocrisy! ‘The door of the hospitable New South 1s wide upen to friends and to enter- prising tradesmen, SPOOK DRAMATISTS ROW THREATEN. Spiritualivm seems to be making the shining ehore less and less attractive every day, The more we nee of spirit- ualistio mediuma the more emphatic grows the impreasion upon us that there 1s pomething that very much resembi work in the hereafter, and that folks who shuffle off this mortal coll cherish- ing the fond hope that & nirvansesque rest awaits them are iiable to be very much chagrined when they get to spook- dom, and instead of being measured for wings and fitted out with golden harps, find that they are still sons and daugh. ters of toll and must earn their ambrosia and nectar with the sweat of their brow ‘The worst part of the business is that men who write plays in this world keep on writing them in the next. Not only that, but they have the same wild yearning to see them produced that they had when they were tn the flesh, and produced on this shore, too, mind you, Bartley Campbell has written a play, it ts claimed, through a local medium, and he is now looking for a manager to read and give it production. Isn't it tough enough, O ye departed dramatists, to have to endure the plays that living authors inflict upon us with- out having invoices of theatrical woe shipped to us from the other world? Often an audience has been heard to soulfully wish that the man who con- cocted the play {t was worrying through had died before he wrote It, Now even that feeble dream of release and relief has been wiped out, for poor playwrights may keep on play-making in the tomb, It appears to have been a fortunate thing that the Edam was but lightly loaded. Had she carried a full load of Passengers it is probable that the glad news of “all hands ed" would not have followed that collision. Two hours and three-quarters—short time for a modern steamer with collision bulk- heads to remain afloat in a smooth sea. Accident helped the Cuban cause yes. terday to the extent of removing one Spanish warship from the waters about the beleaguered island. There will be those who will claim that it was not accident, however, They will say that Destiny im getting in its work; that Fate will bring freedom to Cuba. ma there is a question as to who sawed out that Sunday plank at Sara- toga. It makes little difference. Warner Miller held it, the Convention nailed it and the Republican party has got to risk floating upon it, It President Freedman promises a team of frisky baseball colle for next sea. son, It will bo an agreeable change. Polo Ground patrons will appreciate a wallop in place of @ canter, Following the illustrious example of Bir Henry Irving, to-Gay’s tilustrious ar- rival will appear as plain Dick Croker on the play-bills. As Roosevelt declares that he won't let up, it becomes imperative that means should be found for letting him down, Dr. Parkhurst has finished hia vaca tion. The enemies of a better New York did not take any. must change with them. Boss Platt knows what it Is to “look two ways for Bunday.” Glad to see you back and feeling well, Dr. Parkhurst. Honestly, Mr. Croke: get it? where did you ee ee STATE PRESS ON SARATOGA, im Pity’s Name, Be Calm! ‘The Republican position ts so atrong that it 1s best to state ft tm calm and temperate language, —Kingston Freeman (Hep) Wh Relief Must Come. ‘The Republican party, therefore, stands com- mitted to the enforeement of the Sunday laws In the Interests of labor and morality, and it is hat If there t# to be any local eption re. farding Sunday Iquor aelling it must come Ahrough the Democratio party.—Rochester Peat- baprens (1nd ). ‘The Standard would be wii sought to arouse a prelim: Snary Giscuasion in the party press Without such Aiscusion for their gi lesa prepared than they might have teea to commend @ poltey to th dard (Rep ). this morning to be proud of their party. Saratoga Convention bas magnificently justin the falth of the people. We are still the party of moral deas—Albany State (Rep). 7 on and administration of the State me even greater and more absolute thi and that this power will be extended to the great cities, the government of which he has not beea able to evnirol thus far —Buttalo Courter (Dem ) A Narrow, but Sufficient PI ‘The excise plank in the Republi THE GLEANER'S BUDGET. > Here, a Hint There and Troe Tales of City Life. “7 ane that Huck Taylor, formerly of Ruftale BINS Wild Wert show, {# going to Cuba to he'p Aight againet the Spaniarda”’ aid an ex Tense nenr evening, “Taylor comes of Aehting stork. ah L have reason to know, He tx of th family of Taylors of Te Witt County, Tex For twenty years In le Witt County there wan a foot known aa the Taylor-Rutton feud Two gene! tone of them fought each other, In IAT 1 went foto the county with MeNelly's Texas Rangers We were called there by Judge Henry Clay Piwamanta, of the District Court, to make acres The Grand Jory had indicted acorea of men for murder, but the Sheri wan a them fo Judge Pleasants sent for the Rangers We had boen Aghting cattle (hieves on the lower Rix 40 and Aeaparadooa on the upper Rin Granite, we didn't think much of tackling & fend jade a hundred and twenty arrest month. he first . “White engaged in thin w Aight to a ranch about ale miles from the county seat at that tima of fe Witt ¢ Liout. Lee Hall wax tn command of the mqued of fourteen rangers. We had warrants for the are rest of ax men for murdering aa old doctor and hie son. Ona of the men for whom bad Warrante wan being married at the ranch that Might, and thore was @ frolic the of the Taylor gang had gathered, fully a hundred tn the hous surrounded It at abut ® a’elock In the evening Te wan a rainy night and we were not noticed until Lieut. Hall went up on the porch of the house and stood tn the doorway of the room where the dancing was going on. In an in & score of revolvers were drawn and it looked dangerous for Hall, but he was a man of reat daring and nerve, and all he said was for them to put up their guns an he had the place sarrounted. A man named "Pink" Taylor, a cousin of Muck Taylor's, stepped up to Hall and asked: ‘How many men have you got? ‘Four- teen, counting myself,’ sald Hall. ‘Well, we eighty and we'll Mght It out,” orled Taylor. ‘All 1, aatd Mall quietly, ‘Til give you Just five minutes to move out your women and children, and then my men will turn loose, We don't Want to kill any tnnocent persons, but we do want a fight if woe can get tt. My boys are after a fight and it has been as much aa I could de to restrain them, Hurry 4 get your women and ebildren out.’ es ee “Hall'e great antiety to accommoda in 1k owe went one atom, ate The on when brief, but It covers the ground. form excise ton American Sabbath.—Roch: unt 4 the protection of the Democrat (Ri Lezow and Fis! ‘The State Convention, by honoring Lexow and indorses the last Legislature, And the feome to de mo objection from the antt-Piatt reas to honoring them. * * © Apparently the re Dossed.—Butta! THE JOKERS’ FULL HAND. a seated Improve: ‘The aliver lining of the cloud Would be more use to If they'd but turn the cloud areund Till 1 ite sheen might @ —Datrott News, only tools ai of & conve He P: “Wise men hes! erved, in the cour ler pon “To don’t know about that? she sald, “Well, 1 am certain of it," he excia TH Bite certain,” ation with teattly “4 — Strange. but True, ‘The oyster to a a) And yet You often nt beast, Us atrange but true, it tn a broil, around op bis seat and observed to the passen. an ‘From thie paint the road is only avcessibte to mules and donkeys; I must therefore ask the gentlemen to Ket out and proceed on fox Feuille @ Avia de Vevey Accident, “Ab, woe te me,” Tim woven wiles from town, And bere I've lost the pin tha My knicks from allpping down Detroit News the maiden ertea, keene No Weather Cock N. Am-My welling ts bounded on the north by rasworks, on the # Works, on the west by @ vinega on the east by a B—Nice neighborhood, 1 must A—Quite #0; but it has one adva Alwaya (ell which way the wind diows without looking at tbe weatherlook.—Humorimiche Blaet- er. eded. —_—_— DISGUISED, ‘When poverty enters the door," ‘Sweet love from the window firs. She laughed ax ane but be sam unshed Bright tears in ber earnest ey os tis sata, “Proverbs,” be Vare a musty lore. Sweetheart us prove It ao ‘There should hereafter be a long time Detween alleged Jumpers from Brooklyn Brigg Bull-fghting tm California received something of @ setback from .the fact that the bulls wen't fight The animals For a love that is trong can guard the door *Gaingt any and every for lor gang with a Aight took them aback, and, © consultation, they decided to ai and surrender the mix men we wanted, Hall promising, upon those comditions, to let them have thelr dance out. I remember that Piak Taylor was with GiMculty made to sudmit to these terms, Me wanted to fight, Ie was so mad and mortified that he cried like « baby, ich, by the way, the bravest man will do upon We wot thet gum ded the hou all night, and the next day at daylight excorted our alx mien to Clinton and lodged them in Jatt, That ratd and the arrest of John Wesley Hardin, at ‘bad’ mo man as ever terrorized the Texas derder in the old Gaya, broke up the feud which had lasted for a acore of years.” eee I met the “Mon, Fatty" Walsh the other da: and was surprised at the change tu him since te Gays when ho presided over hin faro bank at 40 Bowery. "Fatty"? tt was, who once explained to © group of playern at hie faro tale why the wreat_ majority of those who “buck the tiger* lost. "You wre." aald he, "a man who comes @ with @ hundred to win ten has an even chanre, and 1 don't care for hie company, but thone who come here with ten to get @ tindrod are my game, One of that clase makes a Let ant wing, tots tt ete enthustastic and pushes it all over to another oard, and then I win, it I ouly win one bet out of four from one of ‘howe fellows 1 am mire to break him, because he tw alwaya playing for all T have got THM CLEANER, oo SOME GIRLS AND OTHERS, Folbles and Charms of the Fair Sex im Prose a Editor: Tau young mam who got acquainted with a young Indy about ® year ago through Dusiness, and have met her quite @ number of times tn that way, aud a couple of mouths ago used to go out with her, but owing to th seemly tndifference in which she ment I broke off with her, 1 lately In a business way, Ule to give her up. 1 wrote to her, but revel no anawer. Can some of your kind readers me what to do In such a case, an T must confess iy inability to cope with matters of love. 1 think the world of the girl, and {t seems ae tf I could not give her uj nner and un- ept an engage- have cen her 4 find that Tam una. BROKEN-HEARTED, Ma. 1th love's beguiling dream, A dream I find tilusory sweet; A amile of friendship, nay, of cold esteem, Is dearer far than passion's bland deceit Deard you oft eternal truth declare; ‘Your heart was mine I once belteved. Ob, shall I eay that all your vows wi And mus rt T aay my hopes were all deceived? longer that our souls are twined, Joya are felt with mutual seal; tis pity, pity makes you kind, You know I love and you would seem to ter You know I love and you would seem to tee! But ahall T still go revel in thos On bliss in which affection taki No, sol Farewell! You give me but your charma, When I have fondly thought yoo me your heart JOSEPH F, John and Gus Love the Same Girl. Te the Fiiior ‘Thare Is A certain young lady whom 1 think a reat deal of A chum of mine, 1 have goot rea gon to Ddelieve, also thinks soineihing of her Now, of course, 1 do not know for certain which one of wa this young lady pref the same time I want to be perfect Joha, my chum, and not have any gu: tween Would you advise me to go to John and let up agres to leave It to the ett, and prom ive, no matter what the re would wti1! re main friendly to The matter has bothered me greatly, but T Rave been advised hy & youag man named Jim to leave it to you « your readere, avavsr, ont 4 and open to rel be J----e's Reply to J. H, Yo the Editor Oa Tuesday when I read the sonnet To J how I pondered on it! I tried to think who "he? couid be Who'd write such pleasantries of me. Me" has bive eyes, « loving heart Aut brown bair with @ “natural part;'® In stature tall and pretty t Whore lines of manoish beauty trace, Terhaps you'd lke hia name to know. Wat that, of course, would never do; So if initials you will take Lib tell—they're almple—juat JH. es SNAP SHOT! (From the Galveston News.) A merciful maa le mereiful even to another man's beast Good luck hag cost many @ young mans great fortune, Attention to business ta the @) ust pa t tiOR & young people tance made solely for them to ale The man who Persimmon. that ine 4 brow into 8 the North Pole Long yoare went by and they know not, thoy, ‘AS together they boned and #isove, That poverty looked at them. day by day, With the eyes and the emile of tov, Harper's Weekiz. Men with wheels in thelr heads are naturatty inclined tomarda revel DRAMATIC NEWS AND NOTES. | Joneph Herbert Doctore Up “The | Trigane"—The Nussell-dones Dream at an End Jomeph Herbert, who hath a Wit,’ Nas been 1 the somewhat \ “The Tzigane,” # brand-new third act opera was hort the crities Boston they must condition ¢ was Aa himself hu hand at brie if nobody else But the rumor Schoeffel lnurhed bert is a very 1 as he showed us in he tas been Taipan heart fel mu Tillian Russell wing, fo far drain upon t South or enters new very much as of things wou This enterpris have three winn the Italian Sarah Bernhardt can afford to “The trouble with sald a manager yesier pride will not allow > fact that there Is not? in New York, ¥ the lac i He ® w Pe for the barrel of money Managers tn the Lilian Ruaseil ts kr cigarette pa ture do the small tow a je quence im that she gets rons if course, Russell docsn t even when her managers are on t Wrong #Ge of the ledger. She gets 1: cent. of the gross recetpts. fe want 1 t love's At Was Lilier remarked Aan ar) and Walter Jones, is at has been an awakening who awoke, ani he can | is Jones if no thank his tu declined to r tract with sought release to Join 2! it is gaid tha epg. the Harlem OBE Hos timated that he feit towards Mise Russell G28, about i fat feck.” At least th i by one of the members of the mpany It Is hard to belleve that Walter Jones could have done anything so ungente manly In fact, we eve th he did. roducing ry told | People hear #9 much coout th woman” and see her that they Veving that che she really Is. into a swell shop on Yesterday to buy herself with her new won Widow Jone Hadn't th she was doi ing extra The clerk luoked In open-cyed ment at Miss Less, who happened to be Wearlig @ talios-made gown With. standing collar le gaye the tip other clerks, and in a Nifty Mies Ls was surrounded. She very fortable, but she bought the shirt go a dawn dress, te and Mk When she left an elderly clerk remark ed, with waturnine grin, that he wish: Misg Lewis Were his daugiter for about ten minutes. He would teach her a wholesome lesson. . a fr Howard Coveney, the young who is now playing in Miss rs's company at th» Fourt Theatre, ts e happy posse heart and hand of Mrs. W. that was, A good many agined wien they say hi cast that he and blus! bride had agreed to differ, But ‘tis not so. They are living together like turtledoves in @ flat in this cS Young Coveney was with Clara Morris just before he mar- ried Mra, lorence, fact, he left the company suddenly nd two days later his associates. h that he was @ husband, actor J. Florence Heople im- ame on this nd Wil McCongell wishes it to be dis- tinetly under od that he did not write “The Great Diamond Robbery." He de elaresthathe {8 one of the very few men in New York who didn't write it, and he is willing, Ih case it should be ‘insisted upon, to furnish affidavits testifying to his fhnocence. Mr. McConnell needn't worry, Now that the warm weather threatens to leave us, and theatrical business promises to brighten, we shan't hear of any more Claimants to. the authorahip of this melodrama. These claimante had thelr uses during the non- theatre-golng spell. . er Duff han discovered a new fonna, and he tx going to intro- her to New Yorkers in T, Pearsall ‘B comic opera at the Garrick . He won't say anything about her. This “genial” gentleman is cer- tainly a good discoverer. He gave us Miss Eleanor Mayo in “King Rene's Daughter" at | Herrmann’s, “and he brought out Miss D. Elolse Morgan in “The Mikado.” So he is to be relied upon. ‘The Courtice Pound whom Dutt promises us is the voung tenor who made such a hit in D'Oyiy Carte’s orig- inal production of “The Mikado" at the Fifth Avenue Theatre some yeara ago, At that time Duff was running an oppo- Sition “Mikado company. He has evt- dently forgiven ound for making a@ bigger hit than did his own tenor. it James Hardie and Sarah Von Leer, who used to “fake” around at the very “papular price’ houses here, and just manage to make a living, have just had the handsome Regent's Theatre in Sal ford, England, built for then. _ ‘The house Was opened a few nights ago, and all the elite-in the shape of the Mayor and Mayoress, the Aldermen and. the Counetllors were there. Hardie and Von Li with their frontier dramas, have made a big hit on the other side. ——— WORLDLINGS, Ry ri he ed tt Hodies for 400 ha’ he could ently prep Charles Vit, on a 11449, wore w felt hat of whlen had been prose use of me han said that al devices now em mun can make the Ry the hand process ry Into Rouen, enoh manufacture ed to him by the hat mak. Women prompiers have been tried at arden Theaire with success te found that thelr y y age, and are 1 the a According. atk used ta hatemab: which ts ead to plueh makers ta any The best foreign { in northerm climates aud the Domig: berla, aro said to prod A peaweod of the S be thirty to 2,000 4 Covent has by oF across the torium, os the best foreign the F plusb astained by the y In Europe bet vé a finish 5 produce together with @ the best felting ture Pacife often grows t a dia: and 1,500 Russla, Swe 8 of Canada, tin length — — — A COMMON EXPRE 1 An Arkansas young man who was biitem by a bores Urader Aie4 of moruscation Maia le merely on autocratic cook th ung ROME that may be thrown as eons to SMITEBS lene grins round the elbows. and huge hat CrRRDIEALIOn and taiunte’ | Sve west CDA.gt | and whoo andy to clinch thingy wet sok around @ bit | ore ot a im the mmeletion Every mornin aused, T believe, by @ stomach or liver disturb- sulphate of soda, In a gobletful of hot water an hour be- fore breakfast every morning. condition of the blood, 1 Please print a good r fam greatly annoyed by dandruff, and my bair does not seem to grow. tile soap, chalk, one ounce of powdered orris root and ten drops of oll of wintergreen. Please tell me tongue, Take a five. time and a good dose of villacabras water before breakfast the next morn- ing. er union a few months before. I keep my w Of your dear face, Of your dear eyes upon me, MEER $f, 1805. OUR WOMAN PHILOSOPHER, Anehaty @ ha (MINAS ERAT tne feminine petiticy ont a PR ie miotaton pa) Langue diebanded, tt seat Ue Ratitioal Rituow eager ant Ihe various tees ernment wis cation Womans We at sinenein Pattiioat wnmhee ane » wat petitiiane potty oe taking The muditie over Anwning Some men erjor Paceaman s wite At career thaw Ihe ark Nome Ne Some meer Dim UMA IT he haw ane Hoo De 8 getting Unread Dik AnAmIAR Ane PART emouER te Apinee at Dik weaknemern 1 Ye wife whe mar he the mare be aries and 6 encime quewinn oh many 0 perma! Hane ’ herd hohie maken ot + sake A asne thin Te uke te (he weeiian band after the wer eewne men vere, * noone te rine t0 Delehie of omannae ant mpemeh then A hee Die nar ee Wak and com feanon wher Billy Me hat Neen the pride af parting bie hele im ihe own Mare wan th ®y lonks ot the hare De cemacks named on ibe street funtes Bi was nereniaciouniy Pack ane Died whan be rook of bie bet jandenss card A0\e ana pamering hea * new have & obureh May nl nt the eintetet elaine omen iinn When Ame ame making up thei al Mame eDme pacino ahr Grape a wont mew then, renee wa For AdOUIe & AA man Ne given e Bi 3 place © Digheprived man be inaniiet by 8 lew SANE there are alware empty Rewer nie May be umetu) Nerwafer Mary tee waik- pai barometer and can event me the DOTary @rpreamor and ft aren Agninet ware prepared Betore there were any vacencian in the eireet-clean- C€ | ing force er among the scrubwemen In ule mate fire: for ber husband nert for (he thirt for the party mary @ br Binding @ place fer enme of werk hungry anf cold. baa a scpply of olf coats an@ bate sre can No, the women politicians edberent creature out TALKS WITH THE DOCTOR. ice About Allments That i: Safely Treated at Home. To the Bitar: Kindly publish a good remedy tor somnia. Sulphonal 4 fifteen grains in hot milk or water, and repeat the dose {n an hour or two if necessary, vows In. FJ. K. an excellent remedy. Take Tam troup aused by perspiration and friction, set treatment. Bathe your feet with warm water twice a day, dry thoroughly and dust ‘cely with stearate of zinc powder, eo. when I ry @insy, Will you tion & remedy? JOHN H, RB. You may find a good remedy in pure Take one teaspoonful Kindly print a good remedy for @ very poor quite pale. N. R. ‘Try tincture of tron, Take ten drops in water (through a glass tube) after each meal. ely for my walp 1 H.R. K. Shampoo your scalp with green soap and tepid water several times a week and apply a lotion composed of one dram of tincture of cantharide: drams of spiri ounce of glycerine and four ounces of bay rum once a day and rub into the scalp very thoroughly, two of rosemary, one-half Please tel me how to make a tosth powder contal orrie and enap. OH. ‘Take one-half ounce of powdered cas- one ounce of precipitated Kindly print a good remedy ter callowme ea the feet Get an ointment composed of one-half dram of salicylic acid, five grains of camphor, five grains of chloral hydrate and two drams of simple cerate. R. B.C. Apply to the callous at bed-time, cover it with a plece of cloth or adhesive plaster and leave it on all night; soak the foot in hot water the next morning and the callous may be removed. Tam only twenty years of age and my hair ‘9 qu coal the color? Nothing but hatr dye, and their effect 1s but temporary and some of them are injurious. ay. Is there anything I can use to eon- c. H. P, it to take for a costed HON. rain gray powder at bed- Tam greatly troubled with dandru®. How can Ip tree from it? FH. G. Shampoo your scalp with green soap and warm water several times a week. eee Please inform me of @ good remedy for dry, aly eccema of the ta FOB. Get an ointment composed of equal parts of tar ointment and oxide of ainc ol niment and apply it twice a d J. F, WHITMYER, M. D, oo FORGIVEN, eam of you last night! T thought you came, T was eo glad, 90 gay I whispered—those were fooligh werds to say— meant them nol— + cannot bear the sight T cannot mest the light Sit, 1 pray, turn your look awa: on mine” Til dreamed eo dear a morning 04a forgiven your arma round. Swift 1 long, wil Burawas 1: bursa with rour cheek’s pressur aud, Helen Must Jacksom, dwetrane | things | M+ | Rot we Gemoratized abe alwara managed te Bnow | A Contume Seen at Onte: Godet akirt tn white pique, Bodice Vest, with tapering fluted basque and short puffed sleeves In rose-pink ilk, veiled with white lace. In keeping with | | ‘neck ruffle On each side of the latter Lh be used, Cheap combs do not have xmooth teeth, which will make their way unresistingly through the hatr, but rough and tear and break long sirands, A comb with some of its teeth missing doen effective work in ruining the hair, Rubber or shell is the Proper material for a comb, The teeth should not be too sharp, Brushes should not have metal backs, no matter how attractive «ilver may appear, for the metal makes them too heavy. The baok should be of light wood and the bristles should be long and thickly set. More. over they should be bristles and not weak Imitation! Vells That Are Hecoming. If the skin is clear, white veils are very becoming, though apt to give an impression of a made-up complexion. The woman with fatr hair and blue ey and without color generally looks beat in a large-meshed black veil, with the dots—if dots are worn—far apart. A navy blue vell makes the skin look clear and fair, and a gray veil shoula never be worn by the pale or sallow woman, How to Roant Reef. Roast beef is common enough to be better than it is on most tables. The tip of the sirloin ix most juicy and hest; after that the first cut of the rib is a good plece to buy. Remove the bones in the flank end; this the butcher will do, but will nev nd the bones, which you should have for the fat in them for sting, unless you fight for them. Wipe the meat over with a wet cloth and skewer, Put the bones in the bottom of the pan and roast the meat on o ‘ack. How many housekeepers there are who roast meat in the bottom of a nesties a black rose. Pouch plain in| baking pan! It should rest upon a rack, white gros-grain silk enriched with Louts XVI. buttons. The Left-Ove: and pickled. luncheon. This 1s especially nice when served with sliced corned beef and vine- far. Scraps of corned beef left may be utilized by chopping very fine, adding twice the quantity of mashed potato, frying brown, thus forming a relishable breakfast dish. Care of the Hair. According to a certain distinguished hair-dresser women do not know how to comb the!r hair. Their sins of ignor- ance are almost innumerable, and the result is not only unattractive locks, but headaches and scalp diseases. A cheap comb and brush, according to this au- thority, belong in the same category with cheap soap. They should never Belt in black ay A boiled dinner carefully cooked and! jeerved will by no means be found to be |a very hot oven, and baste often. After an unpalatable meal. Beets and carrots|the meat is partly done turn the bone left from dinner should be cut in slices | side such as can be bought in any house- furnishing department of any shop for a few cents, Put the meat on the rack, bone side up, rub over with salt, pepper and lastly with flour. Allow twenty minutes to the pound for roasting. Have down and finish roasting thus. Cabbage left may be| Barte five or six times with the fat im warmed over with @ little butter in a| trying pan, slightly browned and served | of the meat and the bones, and do not as fried cabbage for the next day's! the bottom of the paa, which cooks out add any water to the pan till the meat is half done; if the water is put im earlier the temperature of the oven docs not get above 212, the boiling point of water, and for the first half hour of the cooking a temperature of 400 degrees !s pepper, a teaspoonful of catsup or any| needed to make the meat tender and good table sauce, pressing Into balls and | juicy, Landscapes on Tea Cloths, In Germany just now—and the fash- fon will reach us in due time—dainty tea cloths are being decorated with tiny landscapes worked in shades of blue cotton and arranged in the corners among a setting of suitable scrolis and lines. The idea is taken from some of the old blue tiles so familiar to travel- lers abroad, that are used as a decor tion for the back of stoves and else- where in some of the houses, = LETTERS. [This cohamn to open to everybody who has a complaint te make, a gricvance to tentilate, in- formation to gtue, a subject af general interes diacuss or a public service le acknowledge, and who can put the idea into less than 100 vorda Long lettere cannot be printed. | Seventeen Too Early for Love. To the Edit “Carrie W."" being only seventeen years old, 1s too young to fall in love—that fs, girls at that age think they are tn love with any and every falr-looking young man that comes along. I doubt whether It ts really love. But if {t is, she {8 expending her love on a man who, though he bo “fine looking," 1s certainly unworthy of It. For aay man who will remain away © month at a time, and then bob up serenely and pay 8 little weation, 1 not the kind worth while worrying fartie W."" not to think of falling tn love etore or twenty, when she will have more matured dens on the subject and will then probably fll in love with a geod ma be happy to be only in tae eut other girls for four wi and then give other query, 1 say of & girl of seventa to be kissed ““good-night."” Kissing at the age of seventeen & young man to whom one Ia not engaged, of a brother, oF parent, 1s not proper. BAM. of individual that it About. Let me advise * at a stretch hour, As to the yr think well Another Explanation, To the Editor: Prom across ¢ British boat Her name it sas Valkyrie; hor mascot was a goat; Her mission to this country was to try and win cur cup, ‘The reason for not winning {t—her goat was not @ pup. DIC Qu Should She Love a Policemant To the Editor: Tam keeping company with @ policeman of this elty, and my thoughts and hopes are all set on marrying him ag soon as our circumstances will permit. He {8 @ goof-looking, tall and well- bullt young man, and of very regular habits And I may as well mention that I love him dearly: and feel satisfied that my love ts returned. Bi the trouble is with my friends, When I tell them he js a policeman, they exclaim, in surprise, “‘Oh, Gracie!’ But a peculiar thing about it ts that when they. him they greet him most cor- diaily, and he always leaves @ favorable impret ion wherever he goes. My parents end relatives all think well of him, and I chink it's only Jes ousy that my friends act a® they do. Now, 1 would like the readers of "The Evening World” who are more experienced than I, to tell me what to do. Shall I do as my heart dictates, or listen to my friends, The only objections they seem { Dave Ip because be [8 @ policeman. GRACE B. Driny ecoan came @ hi How Does She Kuow She Is About to Be Engaged? To the Editor: Tam & young lady, Just about to be engaged 1 do not wish an “At Home" reception. Which { the most proper manner of announcing my en- Gagement to my friends? 1g it customary tor the young lady to give her intended « present? ETIQUETTE, Popular $1 To the Rattor Delleving that the insane poli the taxpayers to pay control the currenc More millions by ano! 1 to be resorted to again, 1 di Dot time that the people become the bankers of the mation, by e@ conversion of greenback», National bank noses and all paper obligations the Government, into an istue of popuiar, stand ard bonds, to be pald ail Government emplovws Deasioners and internal indebtedness, and to lard Bonds, ¥ of compelling to the bloated bank of tne | Poon, on sale in all post-offices of the fir class, sub-treasuries and custom-hou ™ bonds being of a denomination of $10, $20, $30 $100, $500 ond $1,000, drawing Interest at the rate of 8 per cent, and to run Afty years, won’ de eagerly sought and would make every holder @ true patriot, who would not be robbed of hii small depoalt in some savings bank by the di» honesty of its ofc A POOR GOLD BUG, S, Columbia, at anchor of Stapleton, vu. 8. Beginners on the Bike on the Bou- levara, To the Editor: While riding up the Boulevard Saturday after- with three friends, I was run inte by @ man (@ thing would be a better name) whe could Rot keep his wheel on its right course. He kept wobbling and wobbling, and just as I thought I had gotten at a safe distance from him he struck me in the middle of my frame, sending me off, with three other wheels on top of me, all of them eighteen-pound wheels, except hie, w truck. Cannot “The E crusade against these nut know how to ride go up there and ride @ll over the street, imperiiling the life aad limb of riders behind them. If the party in question were @ man he would have offered to pay tor tbe damage he did, instead of telling one of the wheel men to go to a certain place MAP. start A Brooklyn Or; To the Edito A little orphan boy on Jat on & poet's nes And fondly he caressed the ebitd, Who gazed imploringly. Where is your papa gone, my boy? ‘The poet to him said T have no papa, sir, anid he, For mamma saya he'n dead, Boy, night T ait and watch the whole day lon, And hear life's busy bum, While hundreds 1 see paseing But papa oes not come. ‘The men who used to work with T see them passing by. But none of them do bring Or hear my orphan cry. dread, I had some boys to play with me Betore my papa died, When I had clothes as good as them, Rut now I'm cast aside They say that papa till looks dows, Upon me every day an angel guarding oye cast me away, I onty wish I were @ man, To calm my mother's fears And cheer her up in troubled And wipe away her tears, Until such time as that arti t angels give ber Joy en send her means to rear Her lonely orphan hay JAMES O'PARRELL, 129 North Sisth street, Brooklyn, N.Y, Should Drog Stores Be Clos Sundayt To the Kaltor Soine time ago the question of opening salosms fon Sunday was discussed, for and against. Rev cently I read Philadelphia newspaper clipping which stated that over 200 druggists had beew arrested for opening thelr stores in violation of the law. 1 never knew such a law existed, Nom, can you devote any space in your columm ument of the qu ‘Should Drug Stores loxed on 8: aM, Chess Players, Ahoy! who! To the Editor T would be glad too players living and Sixteenth street “1y'" forming a game of oh sired, At locate the it will operate with any chem. uity of Que Hundrea station, weat aide, in dy and practice of the oF wih additional objects IQ ening World’ will he: to ese players of my barked, eatly oblige Y. €. BELLY 440 Manhattan avonus, elty, 8 Jub for the The

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