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04 Park Row, New York. Enter | at New York as Seco: ass Mal! Matter. | VOLUME 42.00. ccs neers “NO, 14,840 JOKES OF OUROWN THE CHAIN OF EVIDENCE COMPLETE. CAL LOVE The testimony of John Lennon and of Frank Fay Miss Pre Chamberlain in The World yesterday as eye-witneesss of! : the disposition made of McAulifie is supplemented to- | > ’ ato ead day by the testimony of two other eye-witnes Aaron | 2 a Cohen, who saw McAuliffe of the station- | [ My self “ 1 los house by two men in plain clothes, and person, ¢ ries i ad a ; unnamed as yet. Who saw the victim, br fe de A HIE ing, thrust out of the cab. > der me fe : L This completes 4 chain of testimony in w ‘is Nad nex sabia single link is missing. With this evidence in pos- | 9 She « ack session the District-Attorney cannot syoid taking action. + ‘ a and arresting the members of the ¢ uspicion ; min coy The duty alike of the Distr and of the |? s police in the case is suffic! ted by the actr per mares taken in the Brooks that case, on mere) ¢ suspicion, with no direct evidence or statement of any > Ha eye-witness, Florence Burns was imm ately arreste . and imprisoned. In the McAuliffe case not only has tne | : . . Police Department refused to take any action whatever) [) ). . : in the Interest of justice, but it posed and dis | 5 tote Tate ara : Us credited and tried by every means in its ae © efforts of The World to solve the . egies aystery ee to bring McAuliffe murderer WoNDERFUL CORE to justice “ fneas The chief difficulty in the proceeding bas been tne | Y . on terrorism and intimidation practised on all who mignt ae Be be expected to testify and who naturally ead incur: bed from ring the enmity of “The System ‘The World has “made out Its case," and it has mad | it out alone, with no thanks to the Police Department Partridge ; or to Mayor Low's reform Commissioner, on a forbidden path in Hel wer here. The Prince probably t ean automot the law MANDAMUS. |: THE LAW STUDENT'S weer ee eee ee ee er cy lt appears from the case of joldstein, student . 1 Pe ae i . x re ated shley, teacher, that the pupils of the New york um | : Pern i is i me versity Law School are well instructed in the TUGE | fine poor pia inents of their profession. ‘ ein Was dismissed from | + the University a few cays ago on the « writing ’ ve a letter to a woman student. Yesterday he ared in|) as nan 8 e classroom, tanded Dean Ashley a paper and [ook | % ‘Just you wait till ¢ his seat. When it wos intimated to him that he had | tof of song ‘ better leave the room Goldstein said) “lk my ‘ ens to under the law. I'm here to stay, and if put out Fil have | CASK Fer, the Dean punished for contempt of Court Whe |} o “He used to wa saalthe omee} the Dean, taking a more careful look at the paper, dis- ” Us dampened sp covered that {t was a inandamus. Goldstein remained pA he) Sobel cured the snmosem| Goldstein is now nineteen At twenty-one we MAY | Cog waa. LAnet-rot1enegeee expect to see him with a little office near the ‘vombs, | = botedi fuer taking minor court ©a At twenty-five behold him | assistant counsel in a criminal case of national celebrity } { SOMEBODIES. al at thirty-five a stars; At thirty the adviser of the shining light in fis fession and a popular authority {Rope TNOTON GEN on legal questions, at forty rich, at fifty ready for the | Petes ee bench. It Is the smart law student's progress, and @] ect g¢ inchem tall boy who can win his spurs from a veteran can justly KNER. GEN 8 1—has presented | claim to be in that clase he town of Munfordville, Ky, wit - | Water works Mr. Jerome’s Pin: 1“ Tenderioin wil |bor RRAZA. SAV NAN the It | learn that the bi nus invested vaple in the emp nent . | Pong net It w ne of nights a ur alveaniannnn er end to white li we reward for twent ‘it BAXTER STREET'S DECLING. ' pwas ARDY given the flere Or Things are not what they e in Baxter street.) 4) My rs in posal) to tne Trade is deserting its celebra clothing emportums | Garp, ANSON A—the Canadian posit and other commercial houses. The “barker” has grown whome oN Hy itt ing’ | husky and is likely soon to be without a job. As one of; 8 President McKinley's re the merchants expresses {t: “Huater street is gone in} TN 0! Ulnar ay cepa soup; no beezanis in a Week tune. no beezs nal water | And Abe Lyons, the Rothschild of the region, | GREENE, A movert Says: “Baxter etreet is dead. Where are the crowds, | ment for the Holy | where is the noise’? Peo; used to think they could get things cheaper here. They know now that they can doy” well on Broadway. The big department stores are | driving us out.” Customers may do as well in price on Broadway, but | yyor ean they find the quality there or the ft? In the era of Ne the street's real eminence as a trade centre a would-be buyer within ear shot of the outdoor salesmen the “pullers-in,” stood As a steel particle due to a those days that the street near am decline of the v is losing its custom pro. | cession bas moved on to Canal and Grand streets, and the “barker’s" voice is no longer potent to hold tts attention. L not see Joh: all's Welght of W trade ret This smal! magician as he for March show porta and exports |B. eaves and with the United States carrying off Britieh car build. | ff SPelle of awent music while the | ree | ing trade, it looks very m has if ‘go way back and sit down n Bul was about to Dreams of green teaves A DELICATESSEN ROMANCE, | Modesty is apparently not o' Schwartz, He found Wurst was particularly of the traits of Israel | atessen the | aus- | appetizing a store where and the kraut Verzeichnet, while the iady behind the counter, the pro- | Prietor’s wife, was charming. This would seem td be all | that a customer need properly expect for his mor Not} go Schwartz. From an appreciation of the sausage and | the lady’s smiles he progressed to a demand for the latter's affections, He insisted that she should elope with him, and, on her refusal, he str her violently on the Sherman in head and face with an umbrella pheome oan @ehwartz is thus revealed in an unfavorable lignt fle wanted more than his money's worth and was un grateful as well. The shortest main line to a man’s} heart is through his stomach, ay is well known, but if a ‘wurst geschaeft lady, in making her viands desi $s to have herself regarded by male customers as the delicacy of all her delicatessen and coveted 4 such, serious domestic complications are likely to en ly if the charmer is married Boers will not give up their fight for independence to nave ct oe res with King Edward's wishes for his coronation. | wil) oring tie’ gravis ‘@ blot on the royal ermine is made by the report | ITTO KLEIN the Britieh atrocities perpetrated against Boer women | : Brookiy a Masher To the Kaitor of The Kvening Wo! I wish to reais A most deciled ky Crimsinale—Vigilance in the suppression of |againat the would-be masherr tmat its olimax on Grand street, where! fest ferries and street cars of Manhit- for selling umbretie« to pedes-|tan and Brook): * Ey ee re Morar ere ee ee becerrer a judament waa the caure he numere Flaurie omernink ¢ bruises on the child? Mow aid her ae Bhe really Innocent? become broken?) Why was pol A MOTHER. nose ] A rompectaole girl aon. found in her body, If not admisis-| it was 4 fine triumph for law Soa not go to and from work witnout tered by some one? And who was that Tot a peing ogied by theae bress-cheeked ob-| person? Why did the child's step THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 8, 1962. | “Xe Ghe Funny JS ide OF ‘Life. we ot THE GREATEST AMERICAN HOG. ——- MORE? \ If you can’t pay our prices yon can leave our What do we care if you and yours have shrank t You can't our tender rule, for Viet r So swell th nd that makes us ( f Poreus An THE MINOR LIQUOR EAMG IN LONDON. (Pail May, io 1 GETTING SQUARE. from all re hidden were her natural when an Phe Maines Verdict, racers D thelr Are They Unwomanlyt Buiter of The Byeaiag Wo In my opinion some.of our women of Cee ee ray a4 we ot ORIGINAL Mrs. Up) 1 read @ story that has at ere ts villainy enough in? t need it in litera « ONE. admire Re i a past aot Dy A NARROW ESCAPE, OF was born an’ a toky ting « was fur m casey —Was it so? Phwhy? fdy— Well, ye ne twinty-ninth me birthday, an £ lape year ¢ in't # a SPD Si O9 6 00M 5 Go 0 SOPHO Oe oS re trsrere 1s 0 0:0 Sierei0 geese eOb 9:8 6 ore Srd-erie orbiGsidregienere he SO: d-dperend onsre have a disturbs us at night tlelphia Press \ HOTH SIDES. back some itlan hat AN FROM IT. ard drinker® 1 It's the eastest yhta Bu HIERSICIOM. fag) —Yer i closed a been opened campany ter! hav Thats Press wh via CKY DAY. nit start } MICROBEOSCOPIC. ier c FOOTLIGHTS. } Blanche Hat! actress who was a very clever young aat seen here in “Lov has This with which has al- play P| ready on the road, Phelps and met was [Sr im written by Pauline Short Broadhurat & Currie managers and will present It York carly in the season imbing the ladder steadily are the New ni anche Hall ts right tome rs have been talking wit tng their purnt-cork atta k in Brook! purage TOO STRONG. to the sticking minus binck were rewarded their expectations, for the t better By anozher ae : to ha they clever, hart working and ve: young women ala nudeville cireul tn has men for his W play, °The Laat of a pri of the Nios ; Shiae Of Aipommone ? ef the fabulous King . his) beggar maid, this Nn eee theme as een imn en) > bs and tn recent years has hed ti-} sa =e “a WHAT HE SAID. lustration in more than One kingdom of © In this piay, which ts to be nted at Wallack’s Theatre, April 11, under direction of Henry B. Harris, Kobert Drouet and Katherine Grey are for the roles of prince and sweet- heart. The company engaged by Mr Harris for “The Last Appeal is an exceptionally streng one all around, in- cluding Dantel Harkins, Augustus Cook, Rose Eytinge, Cora Tanner and Clara Jendenning. JA —$———— A PARANOIAC’S LETTER, The Evening World has received a postal card signed “A Chriatian.’ The hor Is evidently a paranoiac, While card is tov diffuse and involved to ‘t worth printing here, yet the tof subjects embraced In It are cited, n interesting example of the num- ber of topics throug which a parano- “a mind will wander in an ineredibly broof space of time: Cecil Rhotes's funeral. cunt The New York World Phyaicians "tt must have Cpnationity. Mourning. The Wrooklyn Tagle. Brooklyn -}men. Now, I have lived in the city all my life, and yet I know absolutely noth- ‘ing of the game, Can some one tell me just how {t ts played, and If ft Is a recent ‘shooting | stil tried on countrymen or has been shame! [aay thet woman, | shelved J. VINCENT M'CLAIN, ‘ Seprenen’ he £82 Call in Pure: and kentleness and ening Worlt agalnet birds To the Eiitor of The Indulge in. such | If people start crusad y example make | eats W.p, |{n hats, why not call in furs, ¢ Fore are obtained by killing anim, As to Green Go X/ just as feathers in hate are obtained by killing birta, Let's be constaten | 1 have read time and time agatn of|and if we give up using birds on hats the simple unsuspecting farmer com{ny| because it Is cruel, let um give up wear- to the city for the first time, and there|ing furs, too. being “worked” by @reen-goods | To the Maltor of The Brent and immensely | a ets to) ghlnada she never again can reinstate the Callen 8 IBY IRINTON G AY OUFRIL JD") Mao He LET EEE CURVE PERILS on the Sixth Avenue “L, Oh iF oe eas the awful horror of the curve, "lL! road curve! How we brace up every nerve 24s $O40980 When we feel the whole t n swerve, o As with rattle, rusn and roar td With a slamming of the door, > 4 With a clatter, clang and clash, 4 With a terrort: dash $ With a creaking, squeaking sound 4 It goes madly dashing round Then st pauses on the brink, ‘Then {t seems to sink and sink THI we feel a swish and swirl As of water's mighty wairl Now another sudden jar Brings us back into the ear, And we roll from stde to ride lAke an apple on the tide Then we feel a dizzy ewing As with final vengeful fling, | With @ rattle, rush and roar, | With « slamming of the door, With a elatter, clang and clash, With a terrorizing dan | It sweeps with sag and swerve © Round the awful “L" road cfrve, z And we fairly hold our breath & At the thourht of ‘scaping death In @ amish of dirty care on the curve, L” road curve VINCENT B. KELLY. THE MINTYRE FLAT. | The Kleptomaniac and Another Pest Are Once More Pitted Against Each Other. ITH the ad of pring to the Mat-house whose Afth and top floor the MoIntyres sparse! abited, tre other nuisances awoke. One waa the k maniac on third floor woo awoke from her long Winter sleep and eran grabbing ¢ enants parcels off the dumbe end plied down, past her lisance was the Croton Bug. vie » evon to the me tw song with that trod with a m vis boards, when an along t step ax the sap besa glory of the landscape and about the first of 4 MeiIntyre flat An idea occu brought home a we how ared | bug P. prinkle ¢ fat maid, “and y morning o bow t wil have partaken and will Ne coid having exhated into the vast beyond The croton bugs fulfilled pa for they ate the “Si a“ greedily But n it 80 | far from killing them . anh hey had been spending & mon they were mi as little Instead of keeping a good thing to themsely favitations to their friends and gave nightly “St Pink Teas.” In @ week the flat wax overrun with There were nearly | sd of that time the ample package of “®urestay € Polson? was exhau So were the Mel tyres And then a grand. glor and deautifal idea oceurre: lon {! 1 package of “Sure to send it aroun¢ to Mra. Meintyre. and and acte out and ordered a ten-p yton-bug Polson’ and told t an Then MeIntyre, Mrs going to the dumb-waiter every loudly down to the janitor, asking package had yet ar 4 for them and sent up the instant arrived, Asa long before t “Sureslay Cooton-bug Polson came. ¥ vul on each of the five floea knew the MeInttres were expecting @ Bs passingly y.luable parcel of some sort At Inst the ten-pound package was drought put on the mb-walter and started upward. tenant in the house heard the dumb-walter go up Ae passed third floor, the kleptomantac, with a skill born large experience, deftly removed the parcel from the dumb-watter and dragged it to her tatr “N ‘ sald Mre MeIntyre happlly, “those croton dues will smell out the resinyer’ and trace tt to her flat fd Iie took them a week to eat our one-ounce sample package, itll take them 1%) weeks to eat 1 the ten-pounds she has ‘atolen. Ry that time maybe she'll be sorry she robbed a poor defenseleas dumb- waiter.” And the Joyful stilineas that followed her words wae | broken only by the swift patter of 7.563,421,191 tiny feet, croton bug in the house acurried in mad haste toward |" © kleptomaniac’s flat A P TERHUNE. “HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. | Advice That Has Been Asked For by Perplexed Lovers Let the Man Make Advances. Dear Mra. Ayer Sam a young girl eighteen years olf, and Tam tn love with « young man four youre my eentor 1 met him through some friends of the comes to the house once {na while with the frienfa As? 1 would Ilke your afvice as to bow to Owe my affections toward htm and how te yiain hie affections. RBL No modest young girl can ever afford to show her affec- tion for a young man untf he has firet manifested a similar feeling for dereelf. The man must always be the wooer. In the case you mention, you should simply try to be (not merely seem) the attractive, aweet-tempered, pure-mindat girl that a young man would naturally love. You will thur he making yourself ready to be a good wife for somebody, and propinquity is a great aid to Master Cupid An Opinion Not tterin MeIntyre and the maid took turns five minutes and shouting if a very tmportan: bemming that tt be eve to the Every how it the Dear Mra. Ayer Kindly give your opinion of this gentleman. When 1 @ret met him t 414 net care for him, but the more T in his company the more 3 liked him. Now I am very fond of him and he dorsn't mem to care for | me He wrote me a very loving letter just, I really thirk, to tease me LT anewered tt, but got no reply DOROTHY. Perhaps the opinton you first formed of him was the truer one. Only a contemptible man would write a love letter to a woman “Just to tense her’ and permit her to re- veal her affection for him in a reply. A creature capable of such an action Ja a cad and should be treated accordingly vy both men and women. He Reaped as He sowed. Deer Mra. Ayer {have been keeping company with « young lady for a short time, an@ Auring that period she has shown ereat affection for me, which ¢ reeurnet warmly. One night I happened to make an ungentiomaniy remark. @y was inmultet, and I tried to apologtee and bring back her good faith; but try as I would, T conld not regain her conf¥ience nor get her to epeak frientty. Refore I left she warned me not to send her any letters aoe try to be friends again. WI you kindly advioe me as to how f con ome Waa ner god wit and confidence ? Pariec. Your lesson was hard, but you needed to learn it. 1 wish every girl who reads The Evening World would act, in similar circumstances, exactly as your own friend acted, Girls cannot be too particular in demanding respectful treat- ment from the young men who visit them in thelr homes entertainments. They should respect themeelves too much ever to allow rude or ungentlemanly marks to be made in their presence. ‘The young men wtil then respect them enough to keep their language clean, You say you have apologized © is nothing else you can do except walt patiently Ull you regain her reapect by showing that you deserve it. She will probably forgive you ‘after a while. If she does not you jiave been propegly pun- ished. Once a girl has been so offended she may @at