The evening world. Newspaper, July 3, 1900, Page 6

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——— The Evening World's Daily Fashion Hint. - ‘Do cut this Ave-rored skirt ta medium se © 1-3 yards of materia inches “THE PERPLEXITIES OF LOVER JOYS OF FLY TIME. By T. E, POWERS. He falls asleep while waiting for the winged terror to commit su!- Ge and rolls into the sticky meshes of the paper himself. Marry from his muctlage mayonnaise dressing. of a Lever Whe Gets the) money is enough to get married on, a ianeetl | JH. VAN R Door tre. Aver: 0, T do not think f ia 1 am keeping company with a young support a wife and possibly a fam- a. for the pam eight months. tly. Tf you lowe this girl petter | tention as @ very bad habit of smoking | ‘in You do yourself-and if you ‘on't. | G@agaretion. 1 have asked him to sive take better care of her on an income of #8 a week. H [ei i ibe iis #07 If you have good ‘Must know thal what « man for his sweetheart he is cer- not likely to do for bis wife Bight Detlars Is Not Enough. (Deer Sore Ayer: I & FOUNE man nineteen years of on am engaged to & girl eighteen | yeare old. There ie only one thing keep- fing Me from marrying. Tha: is money Tam making & per week now and have Proapects for the future, Kindly me % you think tha; amount of OR Home = DRESSMAKERS, ij oe © 1-4 yards 82 inches wide or ¢ | | MRS. (Coprrighs, Wii. by HEN € himeeit ress everybody wald his wife we back of it He lacked ambition. Mis wife did not Daly Story sharpest politician In the county The other polit Co Pos's game and made a fight to keep the county from electing a ( delegation. This complicated pugh to |eannot do wi comes aiong Dl oll VERT SEPT THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY 3, 1901, we eeeetrer TT Ctoese etl lor Coeeeeee cele ee ars) — Glueyfoot Harry istributes his purchase about the room and watts for the wicked Tittle fly to light. ‘When he awakes he ts st ch on himself. Tt takes a lightning Third avenue barber and a gatious colored porter two hours and a half to separa OE ee ee ee SOLVED BY s NO. 16541, *ubilahing Company, & to @ PARK ROW, t-Office at New York as Second-Class Mat 4 Published by (b z! Entered at the F ;| ? MR. CLAUSEN IS SELLING SHADE "AND SCENERY IN CENTRAL PARK. At the h f f the vouth arrested for refusing in their places, If you wish to have a good view, if you Loff in the shade, you must pay Mr, |Qeeceeoesoooe ( jaicon's acquaintance Spate for the privilege. seault upon the people’s rights. If Mr. wieh t | | Here is an intolerabl: Clausen is too stupid of too stubborn to see his blunder, surely there ‘ie some one in Tammany who has the authority to bring him to his FOO-00S 0002 2-e+erereesescceees , Senses, No wonder Mr. Heit langhed until he all but fainted when he entative of a “democratic” adminis- [raw the spectacle of the repr tration arresting a man for trying to exercise a right which would be disputed in few despotisms, ‘ HOT IN NEW YORK, HOT EVERY WHERE One of the axtoms of climate for this country is: When it is hot in New York it is hot everywhere. And the New Yorker can find some con- solation in the fact that, although New York is sweltering, the rest of the country is even eusmwuene. $ worse off. There are mitigations here even) rocecesoosoe for those who live in the crowded tenement streets, But what mitigations are there in the boiling, sizzling in- land villages and towns and cities? OUR INSOLENT SERVANTS. eeeed WE (RB NOT 80¢ MISRRABLE AS THEY ARE ¢ Mr. Vreeland, or his bosses, Messrs, Whitney, Widener, El They have a monopoly of the) They are! kins, &e., are very short sighted. streetcar business in this city, 3 worn $ operating under franchises, every one of them | SFRReF Bale tolen from the people, every one of them $ wave perry mary AND Anuen tons Cnormously valuable, They are servants of | } rem, — the publie irding to lnw—permitted ¢ Qececcccccoeed) transportation facilities. To earn exorbitant interest, dividends and surpluses on seandal- REPRE ESE REE ERE ARE EE PER RE REE ROSE REET E EERE Fee e onsly watered bonds and stock, they swindle the public in every way in which they dare, The most conspicuous and exasperating and inexeusable swin- R &6-2-5-5-0-8- dle is this matter of runniny too few cars If they had to operate at a loss they wonld still be bound under HARRIET HUBBARD “ven the law to provide proper accommodations for the public, ‘Tale a matter for cold arithmetic. without luxurtes, but they! pushes ? If Hines ust have medical at- en come they must be eared for, and a man who undertakes ou shouldn't marry her-you will not) to provide a home for wife and children! streets as switching yards, as stables, as their own private property, Ask her to share your life until you ean | "eed only apend ten minutes tn count. . fe porsibie | (M& Up Comte to make him realize that §§ A week will not Lovers can do t necemmitton. y If oth do it. ny SEASIDE TYPES. THE BRIGHTON STROLLER This is the board walk Sum- mer Maid, Who'd be bored to walk with one less staid. The seaside reaches she’s sure to reach, And oft helps to brighten Brighton Beach, Waves weep when bathing he doth go ; She treads upon thelr under- COMSTOCK’S CAMPA spd ill-rmeliing crew which on the tables amd polsoned the took are mosphere with biaek cigar smoke Com- reveliiows, Then Mrs Com: | meat ook gave two or three dinners that) drew from him che only protest he had) « cali from John Weldon She secured an alliance at once with | Over Made to her since (heir marriage. | ¢ » | The dinners were attendel by a motley he a Maurice Fox the man reputed to be th weed po poo Prccat and in. the service of his fa ‘once detected | YOPMation was an offense. “This will not do,” he said sterniy.| Nenstock | "We must not nee our self-respect to tears in his eres, “forgive me, sir, for matters Accomplinh a result, however greatly we disturbing you, but I can't et and Mra. Comstock were in| desire 4. i never will sit down to din How do they dare to run so few ears in the hours between the | How do they dare to run almost no ears late at night ¢ For the same reason that they dare to take possession of the public streets at varions points convenient for them and use these For example, go up to Sixth avenue and Fiftieth street and see | the amazing spectacle of impudence the avenne almost blocked, | Fiftieth and Fifty-first streets choked with enipty cars. on for this unrebuked impndence, this} aceful seizure of public property for pri- ? Now, what is the dis Oeeccccccceced WHY Is WavoR 3 vate rises! VAN WICK 80 a tole! uae he Ask Mayor Van Wyek! TAME 3 Mr. Van Wvyek, what instruetions have | ering e vast | ti pay for a seat in the park this was the chief point brought out: The free seats hay en removed from the attractive outlooks | | and the shady places. Pay seats have been put | ee SS Se See eee See ee Se Se Sa ee Se a a aS Sees Sa earn their dividends in exchange for providing! ATE CAR W ABROAD. Sirenery Hirving in Private Life. No. 9. SEE EEOOPEEDEOECEE EER Abe : t > | tees doreoeseo HOW TO KEEP AIS is (he most important way | to keep any sort of house cool: It hould be clomed—every window and goor about it—early in the morning For q small house this method * especially effective. A latte houre Keeps itself cool The wi nd it * usually of stone, Bui youre, of frame or brick, will tle bake-oven by noon means are taken to Keep It yee It is the firat thing to be At 5 o'clock somebody should rise and close ail the windows and Diinds 0 south and east. This should be done ed eet tee abet petmaenaniindieeh even if a breeze comes from that di- Tee’. yn, becaus ha br is always hr. The windows and doors on the vaady side of the house may be left wen for a few hours until the sun creeps about to them, and then they, too, should be tightly closed. The aom- paratively cool alr of early morning fe thus left in she rooms and the hot outside air is kept out Doors small and especially hot rooms, under-staira closets an shouls be kept carefully closed. And t Oeocceweresoe von from your owner on the subject of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company! Why is it that not one of your subordinates ever thinks of trying to check these bandits ¢ PHILBIN, THE GIANT SLOTH. Mr. Philbin alleg several of the most « « that he has found ont and can prove that pienous city officials have been cheating the city and otherwise conducting themselves so teecceeeeed) + that they could be jailed under the law. ‘ H TI Mr. Philbin has the est possible pubtie duty, one to be dis- is means that charged without a moment's unnecessary delay. Oh, no, savs Mr. Philbin, October is soon enough, And not until October’ is there to he a moye to try to punish pnblic rascality. H Of the many ludicrous and lamentable failures of Roosevelt's career of noisy promise and no performance the most Indierous and lamentable is Philbin, What is the explanation of the mystery of that appointment! Why did Roosevelt, looking for a capable Dis- triet-Attorney, decide upon this timid, se!f-conseious, languid, -ob- seure realestate lawyer who had never tried a criminal case and had never si wn the slightest public capacity | TABLOID OF KENTUCKY HISTORY. A Kentucky feud whieh peen lasting thirty-five years grew from the fact that bor male fun of the pateh on the trousers seat of another boy. any in this case to locate (he seat of war.—Cleveland Piatn-Deater, one vote more the opposition and + they cant touch war phalaom, It has coot a pile of money, but it is our olf man what ft Was all about, and In broken accents Weldon told nim that the day before Mra. Comstock had come to his house and told him that Com- stock was about to be defeated for the nomination There Was but one way to save the day Tim Maloney, the saloon. keeper, was in low! @ith pretty Mary Weldon, bie granddaughter. He was an ‘The next morning Comstock received an old man eho nad been in his service for many ther before him. Some tune before he | had been retired:on a genston “Mr, Comstock,” sald Welton, with is Of the utmost Importance that doors “Old woman, old woman, shall we go a-whearing?” “Bpeak « little louder, ait, I am very thick a-hearing.” Pind her IGN, + + ya cHauncev.se DAIbY bOVE STORY stock know of It “1 would go to the poorbouse willing» y, str,” said Weldon, “but the girl won't hear of It, and ehe has consented to do as Mrs. Comstock asks of her, The poor thing efted all night, for in ove with Barns, honest a lad ? won't bulge in her decision and I > On his own playbills he continues to figure as plain Henry Irving, but when you behold him walk- ing down the steps of the Garrick Club you are at liberty to think of him as a vailiant and faithfal knight. No figure in all London is more widely recognizable. to “Sirenery,” and the passing Cockney pauses to stare reverentially after “the gryte Hirving.” “lerates abut DAILY PICTURE PUZZLE. PEE EEE EE EOF OOSI8 DOPE ONE EE RNES G6 06-5 SG Cabbies touch their hate as they offer their services SSPE PPIOE ADE DIE TSOBREDHSE © DPHDFSEEPEEESS FSSA OOS SEO REMODEESSSOSSPSSSSO9OSORE FEED RE OEE ETE EET REGRET T TT EL EEE EEE REDE EOEED VALUABLE TIMELY HINTS A HOUSE COOL Yawatte Taeuy wats Yeading to the kitchen should be peril bss some little difference im the ind opened as infrequently as pos |amount of heat reflected. An old Blanket atble. |thoroughly saturated with water thrown porches and jon the tin roof porch and frequently be aprin- | wet will low: * temperature of the at the house »! led Uberaily half a doaen times a day. |feoms overlooking the roof. ‘This wil! cool the alt wonderfully, | Every vie iraught all over the A towel, ilehtly wrung from cold house shoakd be watched and econo- water and hung ra wintow left open | mised. Transone should be studied and before the sun Teaches it, will coot the | left open or cihsed, as the temperature Atmonohere lof the communicating rooma suegeste. All chimneys and open firepiaces| If there is a skylight about the house should be | nT ss and cop. | this should be provided with a dark per covers placed over mouth of | curtain or with wicker Ditnds. of « source of draught All the windows should have awn- These are closed In the winter because |ings Even if there are Diinds the shade ulvey let old air, Why not have them [cast about the window by the awning open in summer for the same reason? | Will make the rooms cooler. The gai ne of, The perches should be shaded by the sources y to|#ome sort of Venetian blinds, if there be Watched. The attle ti usually the! @re no vines. The sun should be kept hottest place possible, and no attempt from reflecting on every possible sur- lis made to keep it a Httle cool, If tm) face, é soultle Is left open at night and clowed| Care and attention to “these details in the monning it will be found to make) Will cause the temperature about a several degrees’ difference In the tem-/ little house to fail surprisingly, and will perature. mateflally affect the comfort of the | ‘The tin roofs of porches under second. | Inmates. story win bedrooms | A Word may be sald about preserving very Warm, Painting these a dark color, the Appearance of coolness about @ house, Darkened rooms, light draperies, matting, thin curtains Wat will catch the alightert breese, a few fresh fow- ers, and cracked Ice In as many dishes on the dining table as it can be Intro. @uced, will make a house look cool, and this im next best to being cool, TRUST. ITHIN the slender chalice of W thy hand “Hola fart what I give thee,” and drop down, too, ‘The fringes of those tender flow- ets of bine, Thy wondering eyes; nor ques- on por withstand What I may give. Perchance my love hath planned Some «weet surprise, of test if thou be true; What if tt be a sprig of bitterest rue; A strange, sweet summons to an For love to bring; but wouldst thow trust me otili? Quick, dear, thine answer! “T should trust until ‘The hidden meaning in thy gift should show.” Ah, sweet, when God sends fast uch gifts to thee, Canst thou not answer Him as thou dost me? daughter. table with binging eves. She ‘threw up one arm nd BOURKE to a of (

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