The evening world. Newspaper, October 26, 1900, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PPM graciously given before Mk The hungering wpirit is ted— PLS a ic ll (CORY’S DAILY CARTOON. Unele Ban (perplexed) —1 miust be a durned hard eifizen, | reckon! Roosevelt says that aa a Democrat I'm a coward, @ repudiator and an Anarchist! An’ Hryan, he says that as a Republican I'm a plutocrat, a Poowanl, an oppressor an' a gowh-blamed tyrant! Makes me kinder hate B m'self—durned tf it don't! GEORGIE, PAW AND MAW, “", I nenrly got t the virehew, people have fo rite le a hollow k plugmed with Led Trubbvle comes in eakwul, You can't that way 1 don't ¢ enkwul a per Ie wh life the first thing Yono that neve read Washingto burg speech and wouldn't n the Von stitution from the reaolutionn of @ Mother's ¢ mee along and has Just ag me the man thal le A moddle he Wellfare of ig country and paying Taxes on TT od for} ail he oun get ‘Hut the worst part of jt ie the , Domes. Look ar the way they run Wump and neary always thinks Both things, Here the firet Using you no | sides are ao rawtun that he may aa well Bome fellow Why t inore/atay at Home and Show hin contemypt @mmmer than a or home comea] "That's where the Tuff crowd gets the along and getr to a Nen |advantidgs, What's the use being @ nun rowned King when sumbuddy in the next block that Started In life by clean: \e Syitoons at the City hall oan get the n tye} Gang out on Leolwhun day and oaet olllige [Minety Pour votes just the Bame as if pritty soon he and weventy-four voles tracta and lives jn a? thurty thousand dollars 1 street a Littl: mitrole @ viel Geta olty HARRIET HUBBARD AYER "5 ate Cake, \@ Dy OOOO DOO UO UUUOUUDUCUG Dear Mre Aver Pleane tel) me how to make a choca late layer MEM () well powder Jelly tins Vor the joing, take whites of three CMR, Deaton stiff, one and a halt eupay of powdered rus spoonfuls Brated chocolate, iW nila When app cuke ait would i wis ified. a is Hake in three layers th teop oe tule ve 4 quite he running Wine so me a recite for making nuit uae IM Ik» of twelve evga and the! bowl of go whites of six into ay A je) lahing soup also for an invalid. nd heat them thoroughly, then - pour in one and a half cupfuls of water Recipes Wanted. MDA hte: ouinaah Of 1dkt aees, (he cPaled THA, Pyening World readers come rind and etrained j ¢ lomo my ald and send me recipes tor end one and onehait 4 whi te tollewies ie! Pat the aden ever w fire) A kood recipe for making the com BIN]: tasowien. Fret Jol avout Pou!) Used th rubbing off brown shoes to Doll, then take it off immediately, | DFO being pollahed, and one for mak lies fide a ious ( te bowl and ines wed in eldning brown werve with a plata of faney biscuit re 4 Rod recipe tor making @ lube ant for maohinery auch as bieyeles, be served as soon as] froth will soon subsld The soup may Peady, as the the betier, so that { can be formed int ntioks, such as the present Uleycle oheln graphite = a oT A ROSE TO THE LIVING. ROBE to the living Is more Aw Excellent Cateup, Than sumptuous wreaths tog | Dear Mra Aye the dy : Weare filling love's intinite store, ©] celient tomate NE peck of ripe enne; | tableapoontul cloves (powdered) lah the recipe for th IBA rose (0 the living is more, ished thia time Jaat year of salt; 1 mace; 1 tablespoontu: 7 tablespoontu.s ground must | Mra. 8 and Mre. D WA rote to the living tx more | (0) biack pepper; | (ablespoonful eay sumptuous wreaths to the: —Nixon Waterman, ory oved (ied tn & thin muslin bag). ‘ ° Gjage crop from these trees wae trom i the fire, fo, in the form of a grease; the harder catsup whieh you pub natoos; | ounce i 1 Cele _TS_Weere ALL ABOUT APPLES. | Where the Cores and Skit Go, (R exports of apples to England and Germany have steadily in oreased, until (o-day our abipmnents | represent more (han the entire crop twenty years ago ‘The laat conmus howed that (here were 120,000,000 apple | trees in thia country, and that the aver 140,000,009 to 200,000,000 bumhels. Bince then mammoth apple orchards have eon planted all over the country, and if ous of the trees wae taken to-day ao probably five (tines aa inany trees would be found Apple @ red tore generally now tn this country than pny other frutt, and eclonce has discovered many new formy in which they can be preaerved | for winter food ‘Thousands of barr are required (o keep the can: litte or no mumar in (hen } can he employed for ples, puddings and jother deawerte In winter, Hakera make tal ise of thene apples than Hesidoa the thousands of apples that are dried by tho barrels farmers tn (he sun for home consump tlon there are na of factories In | dally operation bleaching and evaparat+ 4 apples for home and export use, ‘Those evaporated apples are th consid. | able demand in South Amertca, and | we export Immense quantities of them | the year around, In this form our ap: ple exporte nearly equal those ehipped to Burope in the natural Ivap: | orated applea will keep without cold) storage !n almowt any climate, and ft) la not unusual to find Amerioan evap. orated lem carried by soldiers and | travellers in tropical countries of Asia and Afrten Bolence has decreed that there pall be) no waste to the apple crop, and every | part of the fruit ie utilised {fn some] way, Not even the core and ekin are | wasted, In ordinary apple years the waste of kin and cotes amounts to | #0 or #90 carloads, and during years of abundant yleld it rune as high as 1,20 and 1,50) carloads, All thie waste now 008 to the tae! Wiloh manufacture cheap felties, ‘There are upward of 10 of theme factories tn this country, and they have an anal capacity of some 2,000,000 pounds. There cheap follies have an thelr foundation the apple waste of the deying, canning and evap: orating fectorion, and from a health point of view thelr product la juet as gor an the higher grade of Jelliee ‘Thin wante of the apple factories Wa almply subjected to hte pressure, and the jutoe obtmined therefrom ta used am the foundation for the jellies, In abun. nt appie years thie apple Juleo te used for a variety of jellies, blackberry, nirawberry, raspberry and pineapple With @ little flavoring added the Jelly ts ready for market RE GOING TO SMASH, After paw got the ashes that fell offen ie clear acraped up maw ast Him tf surnthing couldn't be Done about tt, "Yes," he any Could be done but the trubble ts the arate tntelligent ma keep no blame Diegy looking Intelligent and telling everybuldy what's Going to happen that they don't get Out and Huse and 4 Together, If they would do that Evorything would be fate ut while the man that (ot school three seasona before He came up to the elty and got to be @ Took Keqper in a bumpy fack try Io oltting at Home talking about tt the fellow that has a job in the Bottling works around the corner and spella Tommus Jet with @ litue g is out marohing in @ politickie parade and the firat Thing you no he t# an Alder- mun or goes to the Lagislecher when they are a senator to elect, They don’t hatt to send a carridge around To qet him to voto Hf t's raining, nether, Ie Ain't afraid of getting hie Meet wet or having hie plug bat mussed, His vote counta just ae much as tf he wae the Proaident of & bank, and cometines two or ‘Three times ae rmuteh, they don’t watch him, and’ ‘Paw, 44 you regtoter?' maw ast Kind of sudden, Paw looked geared for a TAttle while, and then went over and commenet to Play with the baby, GEORGID, fh Chicago Mimes-Horald, ERS INQUIRIES OF HOUSEWIVES, Cota silt tn the tomatoes and put tn a metal or portelam kettle, and Boll unt (the Juloe bs all extracted and the pulp Missolved Strain and press through a Ander, and then through @ aleve, Re: » the fire and add the season: at leat five hours, if and requentiy throughout he time it ts on Lot tt atand twelve hours in a wione Jar on the cellar floor, When cold 614 @ pint of trong vinegar. Take out the bag of celery seed and bottle, seal: jing the corks. Keep in @ dark cool pla | i This dainty and charming tittle Jacket is of cream caracul, the facings and trimmings being of turquoise panne vele }} vet, braided in white and gold, The | double-breasted fronts faaten with large i] mother-of-pearl buttons, and the ie creation Is as delicate and exqui thing a8 the pranon boasta, w'pote sumthing | | \ ‘Kis aii —E & to @ PARK ROW, New York. an Becond-Claas Mall Matter, ee eS OUR DOMESTIC BREEDS OF HUMAN WILD BEASTS. sometimes terrible, often repulsive French man of genius, Emile Zola, fixed os his life-work the portrayal of clvil- Published by the Press Publishing Compan; Entered at the Post-OMce at New Yo That mighty, Fee gee eee oe monte ZOLA'S PICTURE OF THE WBAST IN HUMAN NATURR, tury. Aided by tireless industry and a lil Ril iia powerful imagination, he set out to make a great gallery of faithful pictures, all-ineluding, all-|§ revealing, naught-concealing, that would enable this gen- eration and future generations to see just how the civilized human race lived and thought and acted in his day. One of the resulting novela was 4 study of civilized de- pravity, of the human animal that uses the superior Intel- ligence and the superior appliances of civilization not for|§ progress but for an abandoned degeneracy of which a anvage would be Incapable, Of all his books this was the most furlously assailed. Zola answered that the book wa but a condensation of thousands of cases of crime tn varl- ous civilized countries which he had collected and studied, But throughout the world the book was rejected as im-/¥ possible, as wholly a creation of # Satanic imagination, as/& having no resemblance even to the most depraved life, as a/G libel upon the human race, Paterson, N. J,, tw one of the old centres of elvilization : in this country, There the influence of chureh and school, |/¥ of newspaper and book, of refinement . and humanity, of home and family and|§ all civilized Institutions and Ideals, per-|% oe PATERSON ANA ORNTRE OF OLVILAIBA TION, Trorerentrorennorsrore-eee = omentos every stratum of tsoclety. Yet Emile Zola, after years of search and study of the eriminal annals of Europe and America, found no hint of such de- pravity as is revealed in this crime at Paterson which te/% sending a shudder through the ¢ivilized world, Emerson sald that if he wished to understand any erime, however atrocious, he had only to look within him« self, But trace this Paterson crime step by step from the|x deliberate plotting by four men of good family and good standing In that community until they Mung the dead girl from the earriage, making sure that her skull would be crushed upon a carefully selected rock, At no stage can the average civilized human being by any downward plunge of the imagination get a glimpse of an understanfl- ing of either motive or action, Then read on and learn that In the essentials of horror this crime is not at all new to Paterson or to other communities! No depth, no height, is reached: by a sudden bound, There are always intermediate stages connecting each step up or down with the one before and the one after, Bear this In mind as your imagination hangs sick and faint yet fascinated over this erime-depth, tf you wish to get its leason for the com- munity, for the country We spend millions on millions annually upon foreign missions, We reach out into every quarter of the globe to do, or pretend to do, a work of elvilization, But what do wo leave behind us at home? What foul things do we cever up and permit to breed moral pestilence? Why do we shut our eyes to conditions that finally evolve such mon- sters as these “rempectable’ men of Paterson, three of them married men and the fourth engaged to be married? What community can spare misstonaries even for its neighbor community a few miles away? Let each community, north, south, t and weat, examine iteelf be- fore it atarte missionaries to Paterson , at home or abroad, Let New York ex- sTRes DOWN THAT PATERSON prrrTn. ee es it naan enenanenananel WHAT COMMUN. ITY CAN SPARS or any other pla amine itself, Only last week a reporter just happened to see a policeman laughing as two men dragged a half-in- toxtcated, proteating girl of sixteen from the public street into a dive. It will not do to dismiss the Paterson case because it is abnormal. Is it not true that these four men are the low-~ lying centre of a whirlpool of infamy? Is the main point the low-lying centre of the whirlpool or the whirlpool itmelt? Why are we always lying to ourselves about the condl- tions under our very ¢yes-not moral conditions alone, but also social, industrial and mental? Why are we always pretending that we are thoroughly olvilized when on every hand there are the Naunting evidences that give our pre- tenses the lie? Why do we send out “foroes of civilization” to distant lands when there are morasses and sloughs of despond and dens of misery all about us at home; when we have not earried the gospel of civilization to vast masses of our own brothers and sisters; when in some quarters civilization is actually being beaten back or ore a WHAT THERE 18 TO DO RIGHT BERK AT HOME, Jcorrupted into conditions worse than savagery? Why so much excitement about beasts abroad? Why so litte about our own beasts, prowling through our own domains? From hypocrisy, self-complaisance, Pharisesism and attending to other people's business, near and far, with our own pressing business neglected and decaying—Good Lord, ization at the end of the nineteenth cen-|§% Chorus Willieboys. in New York N GAY NEW YORK. By GE. POWERS. AT THE WALDORF-AGTORIA, "| “He used to. swallow ewords for 9600 a week of Barnum’s.” ( “He missed that last mouthful by one-fifth af @ escund,” “Ho's the Prince of Wales in disguise, setting @ new Cashion,” of ( "Oscar's getting points from him.” “He'll win in a romp,” “It's on @ $12,000,000 wager that he won't cut himeelf.” “Put your money on him,” . Rustte Struckitrioh—What are those gasabos rubberin’ about? 1 guess folks 1s too poor ¢o eat pte here This breed of etiquette goes all right up in Pompton, N. J. ; NOT MANY FRILLS ON HIM, Mickey—Stivlyin’ Interior decoration, eh? Well, I'm de champeen exterior decorator of dis block, and if yer epring any of yer fads roun' here dere'll be “gomethin' doin’ in my line, eset THE DAY'S SHORT STORY. (Copyrighted, 1900, Imatly tory Pub Om) much?" nie wae convinced that he wae a@/ etared at him with @ bragen face. Pm hts earliew ctiti@hood Tao Bor-] The git had ¢ollowed him and now poet, Ile was in Parts penniless, “Please let me alone,” he murmured, Yor three days he had walked the) The expression on the face of the girl wireste, for thre: nights he had not|@uddenty changed. Her big dark eyes slept and not & mote of food had} rewarded the unfortunate young man pamsed hiv line for nearly forty-eight houra, ‘As he turned » corner he suddenly heard a coarse female voice addrenaing him: "Well, my dear blond chapple, won't you even jook at a «irl? He turned around mechantoally and looked at the meaker, Ghe was & Healthy brunette, past the youthfu) period, Bho was tnreheaded, s dark dress and @ Linck cloak, @he might have been taken for a working gin, Wot the rouge on her cheeks and the painted ey@rown betrayed her ‘The young poet hal heretofore only Joved the fairies and princemes of his poetic dreama, and this person Inspired him with terror, ‘My (oar, my dear, what te the mat- ter with you? Did you take @ drop teo = HONORED BY FRANCE This #0 pleture of Miss Jane Adame, who ie the ploneer of soclal’ settie- ment work In the United Crates, and, with Mies Ellen Starr, the founder of Hult House, at Chic In whieh alt ‘classes meet on an | plane, Bh has been Honored by the French Gov. ernment with a medal of merit as the romult of lectures recently delivered Parle by ber with deep pity, "Are you eick?” Tt seomed aa tf the question overeame all his pride. Tho wone was tender as if hia own mother or or had uttere it Cloning his eyes he sald, sighingly: “I have not eaten a thing since early jay morning, I am hungry and we ‘The woman hardly gave him time to finioh the sentence, Bhe grasped him by the arm and almost carried him to an open door which led into @ small apart- ment in the basement, It was a poorly furnished room, She burried to a took from it @ table cloth, a bottle of wine, a loat of bread, a large pleco of meat, As ho began to stammer his thanks And offer to explain hia condition she interrupted him, saying: “Bat, for God’a sake, before you do Anything eine.” As goon as she noticed that he was eating ravencusly she had the delicacy to leave the table and busy herself with the fire and other things, Finally she returned to phe table, feel- Ing that his modesty would stop him from satiefying his appetite, She placed another large piece of meat on the plate and filled hie glass with fresh wine, just ag a mother would care for bia non, Leo regarded her with motst eyes in which tenderness and gratitude were retlected, And white ehe poured out the coffes and for company's sake took a cup herself he asked her her name, Bhe did not anawer at once, Bho re- mained standing on the opposite aide of the table as if sho were bashful, crossed her arms and reflected, At last she oid: “Why should 1 toil you my name? Between me, & castaway, and you, a re+ speotable young man, there can be no bond tn common, What 1 have dane te not worth speaking of, and 1 know that though you are now unhappy you Ww ih soon see more fortunate days. You a young and don't you give up courage. Wisat is your business?" A Ditter amiie spread over Leo's face, “LT have written vorses,”” he #atd, Without displayiig the least astonish. ment she continued: "Ah, 1 understand, You compose wl hy bd _ ‘Visttor—T'm shocked to see you carry ‘Ing emdieme of war! Native-Nuttin’ ob de Kind, aah. Dig @ only @ platter for baked reformer, A GOOD GIRL. BY FRANCOIS COPPEE, gongs, You find it hard to esoure enlee for them, Don't worry, Have patience, You want to know my neme? : E upon ita kiss, To him it w of @ queen, eel THE HALL OF FAME, Brief Biographies of the Wen Whoee Nemes Are Firet Chosen. 11,—WASHINGTON IRVING, ORN tn New York City April 113. Took up study of Jaw, but aban. doned it for Mterature Th 1808 wrote “Knlokerbook. er's History of New York.” Pudiiehot his “Bketehbook' over the elgnature "Geoffrey Crayon" in 1818, Published "Tales of @ Traveller’ in 1884, Became Becretary of the United Mates Legation in England tn 1s Became United States Minister to Spain tn 1942, Finished hls “Life of Washing. ton" In 1860 Died Nov, &, 1860, Irving did more than any other {i writer to immortalize early New York times and customs, He ales % wave foreigners thelr frat concer tlon of cae idea! Amertean litters tour, To rrow ® short bie, wraphical sketch of Jonathan Hawarite will be printed with * portrait, x

Other pages from this issue: