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| | Taggerty raphe 2-If she carries the bundles ca 1—She begins as a cash girl, fetching of the Company To 8—A smart cash girl soon learns how “How to Become aBaseball Player.”’ } Lesson by ¢ TO-MORROW $ JOUN MGRAW and all New York Gtants. 4The duties of an inspector of Sun- | and carrying bundles and delivering lessly by the string and loiters when to wrap a parcel neatly, so that she dies include an examination of all goods vouchers, She wears a black overall on duty she won't do for the busin apron and wears at all, ber. 6—It a mistake is made, which little 6—Dhe next promotion from the bun- girle cannot help unless they are very dle counter Is that of stock girl, where @mart, the inspector-girl is gently re- she carries goods back and forth, be- minded of the same, which we hope coming acquainted with their quality, never happened ‘n this case. price and texture in one department 10—As head of the stock she makes orta to the assistant buyer of just stock is wanted in her depart- 9—After she has ¢: nad been a ealesiady in the skirt department a long while she may become head of the What stock, which means complete knowledge ment of the goods in her department. own Up) may be promoted and become known as to be parcelled, to see that they tally A good Inspector of bundles. 7—If a stock girl 1s careless and al- with the sale voucher, and to stamp the bundles when they are wrapped up 8-She makes her first sale on some lows valuable goods to drag on the special bargain occasion, when a aspe- floor, for instance, and be¢ome soiled, she will never be a saleslady. ll—When the cash girl becomes a cial line of goods is offered at attrac- tively low prices, In this case it fs In the skirt department. 12—-Finally, like the buyer, Mrs. Mc- buyer she actually purchases the goods Velgh, the cash girl may become, if she in her department that are called re- is industrious and intelligent, the head tall. of her department. several years, Others, agaip, seem endowed with eternal Life. ‘The nettle protects !tself from the too careless hand by means of poison stings armed with formle acid, or the same n which produces the evil effect rising from the bites of ants and spiders. Polson ivy is another botanical form into which poison enters. In pol- son sumach, or pdison elder, a danger- ous toxic secretion also lurks, The OF PLAN) wonton. § | | ~ ry WONDERS Plants are fill of very curious devices ‘oy means of which they accomplizh that which would at first seem imp s- ible, They ingeniously scatter the'r seeds by explosion, by means of wings that sali the wind and by the birds and animals. Even man himself pressed into service as an uncanscious stings of some species flourishing In but effective seed distributer. The|the tropics are very acute. Pasture young plant is given a good start Im |and other thistles are armed with lfe and no f tale Is stranger OF /thorns, as are also the Irish gorse, the more Interesting than the Hfe history |nawthorn and the orange tree. of flowers, The object of vivid coloring and striking form in a flower is not merely for man's delight, but rather to help the production of seed. By such means the stupid inseots are attracted to the nectar-yielding blossoms, and, while they rob them of their treasure, they re, aocording to the more recent find- Some plants are day blooming amd others blossom in the night, b roy their insect visitors, upon whom their very life depends, are diurnal! or noc- turnal, as the case may be. Some plants are luminous, that the insects may th more readily perceive and reach them | 4m the dark. The sundew of England jings of botanists, made the unconscious and the Venus fly trap of tropical or |inatruments to fertilize other flowers subtropical North Amerios both feed|which they visit. i wpon insects, Bome plants live but one | The fungi, ferments, molds and mi- year. Others oontinue to @row for lcrobes cause biight on fruit, discase nd death among animals and men, Upon them falls the task of bringing back ‘dust to dust."* cases invisible and also parasitic. The sensitive plant closes together when roughly handled. Some plant have odors or perfumes in the flowe: or leaves to attract or repel. The gera- nium, white water Iily, 1-1 robin, hawthorn, pickerel mint, pitcher plant, whit eysuckle and the rose art these varying types. weed, hon. 0: BIG GAME IN MEXICO A civil engineer recently returned from the hacienda of Jimuloo in Coahuila, an immense property containing over 3,000 square kilometres, these wily habit of alwaye placing one or two on uard while the rest of the herd is teed- ng. duty, remain and ‘sniffing to the four points of the compass, and give a swift alarm the mybment an enemy appears in sight, THREE FREE SCHOLARSHIPS IN ‘Three free and complete eourees of instruction in the National Sahool of Caricature, whose class- rooms and studios are in the Pulitzer Bullding, will be given to the three boys or girls who sketch in or draw the best faces for the incomplete plo- ture shown above, A pretty face should be drawn for the young woman anda funny face for the young man, Cut the completed drawing from The Evening World and mall it to “Caricature Bditor, Byening World, P. ©, Box 1,854 New York City,” Messrs Dan Mo Curthy and Moses Burger, Director and Assistant Director reepectively, of the National Sahoo! of Caricature, wil! aglect the winning plotures, Mr. McCarthy makes this suggestion to oom tri’ face to be a typics! American feoe and will be Judged from that point 7 ’ Ug i} SKWTOH IN THESE FACHS AND WIN A FREE COURS! IN COMIC DRAWING. petitors; “Sketch in the faces where they Have Down ms ~=> OF vee ploture in pen or penal! in @ distinct manner, the} ronarked of view; the man's face to be @ broad cari- CARICATURE. © HOBSON AND THE BARBER. When Capt. Hobson was at the Chau- They are in some} tauqua Assembly he entered a barber shop where he was not known, says the Ottawa Herald, He got into a ohair and the barber commenced to discourse. ‘Os course it was a nervy thing to do, and Hobson did it well enough, but cented wake| that Hetle trick at Santiago Bay turned wild} out to be boy's play. 7| Kissing business—say, if that wouldn't And then that make a man sick. Any tme I pay good money to eee ® man it'll have to be somebody ‘at ain't made such a ring- streaked end striped fool of''-—— Just then a man came in and asked: ‘lg Hobson here?” “Not #0 you can notice Ht," said the tells some stirring | barber. tales of shooting wild game, says the] “Over at the Mareh house tho: yy told Mexican Herald. Antelope abound, but|/me he had come over here to get great care l@ necessary Im approaching| shaved, persisted the men, Then « creatures, owing to their| great light broke into the mind of the ‘barber. His knees felt wabbly, and he The sentinels, falthful to their| /0oked @ trifle pale, but sorewing up his with head erect, peering] courege he grasped the hair of the man in the chair and turning his head looked into his perfeotly demure countenance. ‘Are you Hobson?’ he asked Yes," came the reply in that deep, full voloe that belongs to the hero of the Merrimac, “I’m Hobso} ‘The shave was Anished in @ silence so intense that the waving of the midday heat made @ strange whistling roar outaide. —— PRONUNCIATION PUZZLE, The perpeual puzsle of English orthog- raphy 1s well set out in these verses, says the London Express: There \s a farmer who \s YY Enough to take his EE, And study nature with hi. And think of what he CC, He hears the chatter of JJ As they each other TT, And sees that when a tree DKK It makes a home for BB A showman to the jungle went And caught a flerce young gnu, Bald he, “Ill teach Bim to perform, And sell him to the #00." ‘This man was very much surprised, And quite delighted, too, For, 10, each quick and novel trick the new gnu knew. ~London Express. — - A LIVE TOWN, pretty live town, lan't it hot it ls,’ replied wo, | “This “You “We've into a corner at her feet with doth Two pe One of Stufty a den lows If you'll a “me warmth at once y a Tex to the mount strat Thank hoaven there's a little reese rising/™ of the aleove. ‘The desk was am © wan holding her heart ed hands, ane bi and ol sed the door behind # gave a deprectative sniff, oy Y he growled, “Let me open the witir iow me to remark, Wil," he satd with h, “I'm preity sorely tried. Here © grown aa cranky and unmanageable . as bron We were just ready to state ains—trip we've been Guking about for nd here you must fly off to this Mttle mi this room. Now, ’ Ml dead place—and this house, O NL Y ke 5 wt jit in the nation is there about this house and this room ~— T was happy here, once,” the other said, hie voice shaking a little under its studied composuréy By JULIA TRUITT BISHOP. LI br my wife here when we were first married, [—this {= wedding day, you see"—— a On!" ‘ae explanation carried with it apélogy [and sympathy. ‘There was a long silence, broken at ps Wiping her eyes. There were a few moments WHEN teat ty the friend: \ plat’ st kod it, look famillar things. She} saty, jut this breeze feels good! Hope it'll keep Vatag-roomy W#ed to stand at this window once and wateh for some-| 14, “you never told me the cause of the trouble.” 4. Han a it was tim hin ome home, On this “LT don't think thera was much cause—prineipally Mave Sindow-ni he had kept her itite array Of MOWETE | eio hinge” aad Will wearily. “Tt waa my Rault reamed Violets and gerantuma and primrose ni ae I'm pretty sure now,.though I couldn't see it then, flowers that ahe had brought, a bride, from per gad] She used to have her flowers in this window: Tve ine her head) ho LPR LAU Sud bateayd iy eae {seen her bending over them—when I've been coming the] t 1 Je <0 triumphantly at her sa le \ iH Meta 2 ee eema | c'Wehy don't you go to her and try to Ax it upt® Ram Dat ot ie Fe a in net ad trom thelr | aaked the friend bluntly after another long silence: (5 lookin’ so wi een sick? Mrs. waiting for an answer, An’ telling many In a little while ONT Bh ANY They (1. e., the married couple of the future) will probably not keep a servant, for two very excellent reasons—because, in the first place, they will not want one, and in the second, they will not get one if they do. A servant 1s necessary in the small modern house, partly to supple- ment the defictencies of the wife, but mainly to supplement the deficiencies of the house She comes to cook and perform various skilled duties that the wife lacks elther | knowledge of, training, or both, to per- form: | But the great proportion of the ser- vant's duties consist merely in drudgery Uhat the stupldities of our present-day method of house construction entail, and which the more sanely constructed | house of the future will avold. It Is the lack of proper warming ap- |pliances which necessitates a vast jamount of coal-carrying and dint-distri- ution, and it Is dirt mainly that has so painfully to be removed again. The house of the future will probably be warmed {n its walls from some power-generating station, Air will enter through proper tubes in the walls, which will warm 4t and cap- ture ta dust, and it will be spun out again by a simple mechanism. And by simple devices such sweeping as stil! re- mains necessary can be enormously lightened. ‘The fact that in existing homes the skirting meets the floor at right angles makes a sweeping about twice as All Druggists’, 25c. and 50. or NEURALGINE CO., 24-26 Vandewater Street, New York. MALARIAL NEW YORK Malaria is much more prevalent in and @round New York this season than usual Foul airs and stagnant water are a fruitful pource, and the Kerms propesate 0 quickly disease spreads rapidly. As a se feguard take Dr. Decker's Stinke No More two ree tines a day. FIRY canta ot ll drug: Amusements ANHATTARI *BEACH | SHANNON'S PAIN'S arate ap FLORODORA *: ‘An Immense Oust & Chorus, 4 P.M, 24D aid, BAND TO-DAY wt 3.80 P.M, ‘W-NIGHT AT OP. M. ‘TO-NIGHT aT oP. Mw ACADEMY OF MUSIC, 14th Bt. & Irving Place. THURSDAY LVENING, QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER. ‘The greatest rural drama eve written. Prives 25, 60, 76, HL Mais, Wed, & Bat, 2 Eve, 6:15 NOCI9ON 8Q.ivry wvstascont suo wont ADMOOC JAPAN BY NIGHT, doponese “tc MIKADO, Gols ‘ Oirie, Japanese Novelties, 6 Aquin's Oroh. KNICKERBOCKER 2.4.32," fs THE WILD ROSE..." 4 The One Hundred I Pretty Girls & Comedians how's he? Hanley bustled joyfully up the stairs without things as shel to her he she had controlled herself and stood SERVANTS IN THE YEAR 2000 A. D. sh make up, Will? She was up and away, w here and t Tam herein She had written slowly, as though every word went art with a separate ere a gleam issen of her futty try it—aft 1 at a worn, wishiye her andy Males En ty tle while she: would be and worn— te he h ites aaeoeaitl trom her satchel ana] 2nd thon we'l » the 1 int low «old eto write me for Le ae Ww n 1 ins she 1 way It he ld room anak come right int An’ w ve in with a hand thot nr firm at ee ch “I have only a few h M AE wae RGOR SHEEN Twitch wilt ine Es ad ack ae TIGy TEAL NY | : yu will be sul she wrote, “that T have} ote so |room vacant? 1 though 1 ike to have itleome back to Hanley’s--but It is our wedding Gay, | aig and AMSA Ee 8 ilui eel saya Will-have you forgotten It? Ard were so happy [EON ; “Oh, there ain't been anybody in it 1 dunno] here, I have nat seen you for three years—and most} 7 May | when,” said Mrs, Hantey, “It’s one o' the big rooms, | of the time I have been proud and bitter—but Fam so} ye see, an’ travel's mighty dull, Let tak sad and so alone—and I can't hoid out any longer. T] ON satchel an’ thinge—an' come right on up. Yo ain't] think !t must have been all my fault, Won't you | ‘Tina te our old room"— arose a ‘Ange un: ang, The nolse of the went. Bhe had more to tell, but a look on the face} southbound train coming tn dtd not reach her con- he anid, with his back to bis tend) Weel of her guest eave her the {fea that !t would be better] sclousness. She had not heard the confuston of an- of aownitolcthe parlor—for @ Uttle to make coffee for her. Jother arrival below, but the loud voice of Mes, Hanley | Y90) 2 Pe Mrs. Gladney slowly removed her hat and threw \t} calling up the stairs arrested her hand. abil Oriltheubad du cihe eure néalaicwal IKHalartani@ noni | (ae Benyou Juet go on up to your old room, f'm| Jack started up, and ie es ta) haat ig for time she cel her gloves bes it, She had been| that glad it was empty! As [ tell you, the lady"— ther Te nark about crankiness when he saw ough gazing silently around the great room, but now, alll. “That's all right, Mrs. Hanley," called back another | the waving curtains the hat and gloves on the Bed. at once, she dropped to her knees and burled her| voice, almoat at the door, “All T want ts my old| He had an Inspiration, and fled face against the pillow, and wae shaken with sobs room. I'm glad tt happened to be vacant.” ‘The man he had left went on, and lifted the eur lke a frightened antmal, | teins. troublesome as ‘t will be when people| have the sense and ability to round off the angie between wall and floor. ‘Dake now the bedroom work. The lack of ingenuity in sanitary fittings at pres- ent forbids the obvious conventence of hot and cold water supply to the bed- room, and there is a mighty fetching and carrying to be got through dally. All that will cease, every bedroom will have its own dressing-room, which any well-bred person will be intelligent and considerate enough to use and leave without the slightest disarrangement, ‘This, so far as “‘upstatra’’ goes, really only leaves bedmaking to be done. If a window {s cleaned and left wet, St dries in drops, and these drops con- tain dirt In solution, which remain as spots But water containing a suitable sol- vent could quite simply be made to run down a window for a few minutes from pin holes in a pipe above Into a groove below, and this could be followed by pure rain water for an equal time, and in this way the whole window cleaning in the house could, I imagine, be re- duced to the turning on of a tap. ‘There remains the cooking. To-day, cooking, with ts incidentals, is a very serious business; the coaling, the ashes, the horrible moments of heat, the hot, black things to handle, the silly, vague recipes, the want of neat apparatus, But with a neat little range, beated by electricity and provided with thermome- ters, with absolutely controllable tem- peratures and proper heat screens, cook- ing might very easily be made a pleas- ant amusement for intelligent invalid Bwayelth ay Bve 8.15, 16 BIG VAUDE- aud S10. CROATORE & VILLE ACTS. His BAND OF 60. BARGAIN MATS, (600) BATURDAY. ad | W-GREAT ACTS Iho] PRICES B50" an CHERRY BLOSSOM GROVE, ¥x+7. « EDEN WORLD IN WAX. New Oroupe MUSEB. lorintuival Cousens oct Asolte Casino sf 6 CHINESE HONEYMOON pas, HERALD Fie ladies, Amusements, SIT F Goop-pY | 2 VISIT PROCTOR’S fiscrone_ | t.! 23D 81, '28"toieoait: features, CowTiNuOU IDGTH 81, } cor*Vataeviia Datiy” Natinsee PASTOR'S, HTH 8T. & 3D AVE continuous: 20 AND 30 CENTS. | Wilds H. FOX, chotnY. TH BOWAND @ BETH, FON A FOXIR, ine, Fe lath, Mins Mortee aon Ohare No, G—the sh that we ied around the Kime! Tower on ex ibKion Brihtoo Gay and evens Bantow's Adminsion 25 FLOATING ROOF GARDEN. fA* Be Beach every M tons ) cents Al bourly nl Bvary eve. BT. GRAND REPUBLIC. Fri. except Oonterno's 14% Rew. Band & Hi ro Weitoth, BPM. Ww, 20th fattery 9 Pal Summer N'g'ts' Band Carnivals | 4 Arctic breezes. lith week t Mat raday TERRACE GARDEN 58% 4 th 3 vir “THE BEGGAR STODENT,” Pies {ware GYPSY JACK, ____ Brooklyn Amusements, — * BRIGHTON BEACH "7 ARTHUR, COLOMBINO, Monroe & re Slater's Brookiya Marine Band. Excursions, Entertaining Beyond Comparsion. Aitraction Fishing HANOH-8T 000 100), AM 616 POM Bridge . 9.00, 1020, 110 A. Mi... 12.20, $00, 600 POM. Haat ad, 89.90, 10.00, 10.45, 1G AM A848, 20H, | 2%, 3.15, 1.80, 64 Leave’ Glen inland, 11.00 A.M. for Cort st only; 1d A Mt for Kant 924 at. and Di 2.00 Mand 1.0¢ , a ‘uly; 3.09, 6.00, 6.30. for hil landings Prequent extra boats on Sundays and holidays. SION, 40 CRNTS, » to all attractions 6%, | softenin, MILLIONS OF WOMEN Tt MEDICINAL yoy | Preserve, Purify, and Beautify the Skin, Scalp, Hair, and Hands with ti Penis Mruzioxs or Women uso CuTicuna Boar, assisted by Curicusa OTMENT, for beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp, and the stopping of falling hair, for whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashos, itwhings, aod irritations, and for all the of the toilet, bath, and nore, {women use CuTicusA Soar it baths for annoying irritations, {uflamma- tious, aud excoriations, or too free or oifen- sive prespiration, in washes for ulcerative Weaknesses, aud'for, many sanative, antl Septio purposes, which ‘readily sugg themeetves to women, especially mothors Complete Treatment for Humours, $1. | Consisting of CUTICUKA S04P(260.),tocleanse the skin of crust and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle, CUITICOKs OLNTMENT(60c, ), t ibetantly allay tte hing inflammation, ant irritation, and southe and heal, and CuTIOURA R&SOLVENT PILLS (260,), to cool aud cleanse the blood. Coricuns Rusoverr Pris (Chocolate Coated) aro s new, tastolens, odorlons, economical qubstltate for the celebraled i quid Curiouma fur all oF er blood pur ‘be, ritish Depots i Excursions. THE LONG ISLAND RAILROAD, MANHATTAN BEACH. ve Sin at, BOR, NY 10, 7.40, WXCURSION M 420, 00) 6 P/M EXCURMON FAR ROCKAWAY BEACH. Hih ot, 2 RN Y., week days, 6.40 ‘ $0 A.M 1260. 1.50 Z 2, 8.2) ‘and 10.2) 16, P. 3.20, 3 Going Steamers GENERAL SLOCUM GRAND REPUBLIC NE LONG BRANCH AND BACK—50c, 80c.—ASBURY PARK AND BACK —80c, HIGHLAND BEACH—PLEASURE BAY AND ALL NEAKHY SBASIDE RESORTS, Sd, Day Peeks. Mee Want a et . Mend Woot Lik oe ah Ob A. Me LY. We WE 400, 2 a SATURDAY bE Ae Mic ENE, 1 LV. BATTERY $90, 0.2). 11.404 M310 B SATURDAYS O20. 11.90 A. b, 11b 3.10 P LY, LQNG URANOM 710 A, M., ab AR t has gone too far—she wouldn't listen,” was the tel answer.“ ‘nd his face flushed and paled: am herein our old room"— used in the middle of the room, | oy op | GROWS--A proved m {j.| tens of thousands in New Yaa ily stron ae nd I wouldn't have the nerve ter the way I've—just let me fight this I'll be over it by to-morrow, perhape— 1. go to the mountains.” there, trembling, blind with the tears n her cheeks. Her ps moved, but there ly blew back the curtains of the alcove mething white into the other room. In ent it would have been out of the win-" but it caught against his sleeve, and aptured 4t. ance of wearied indifference widened to ed recognition. He read, and his hand nd was walking toward the aloove with steadiness come suddenly upon him, but Railroads. INEW YORK” ENTRAL & HUDSON RIVER BR, |THE FOUR-TRACK TRUNK LINE. VIA NIAGARA FALLS. Pegi ing Sete login eer) M160, 2 . 8.90, 8.16, 11.90 P. Me State Bxpresn stop at es before arriving time at Grand A. M.—tMiDN! . 0 Hustla JouT EXrRees. | pee mious train inthe. worid. Puttelo 446 Niagara Fala, Sas F. cago. Due Buttale TG, Niagare 8p. pPag, Bumato a 8 Falls 9.55 4. M—tSARATOGA AND MONTREAL SPECIAL Via D. & H. and itland. 10.30 4. M.—toay’ expRe: 11.30 2" hen Np! Breese, Doe vey Rutland 7.65 POM. | 8.45 12.50 P. M—BUrrALO Limrr, 1° But falo ll P. M. Niagara Falls 18.28 A. Mu | 1.00 8. M—*soUTHWeSTERN “LIMITED. Due Cinatonatt 10.45 A. M., Indianapolis 1LB0 A'M Bt: Loule G0 PM, next dae 1.00 P. M—*ciicaGo ‘Limirep.’ 24 hours | to Chicago via Lake Shore, 27 via M. G. 1.8 2. M—ISARATOGA LIMITED. | Sature days only; other week Gays at 3.20 P.M. 45 PM —*'The 20TH. CENTURY 2-45 Fred so sue tein ke Onegai Lake Shore. Electric lights and 3.20 P. M.—$SARATOGA LIMITED. Leaves Saturdays at 1.50 P. M. 3.30 F. MIALBANY FLYER. Due Albany «0 P. 3.35 2. M—*ALBANY AND TROY EX PS e*DETROIT. GRAND RAPIDS 4.00 Kivp onicago sémctate 5.30 P. M—*LAKE SHORE LIMITED, 24 6.00 hour train to Chicago. All Pullman Cars. EXPRESS. 38 bourne P. M.—* WESTER: to Chicago via both L. #8. and MC i EXPRESS, via D PM AND | TOR BPECIAL. Due’ Buflelo 1.20 A Niagera Falls 8.33. Toronte 10.80 A. 9.15 f. M—*SPECIAL, MATL, lecping car only tot Rochester. M.—*SOUTHWESTERN I Cincinnatt 7.50. Indianapolis oH He aah tive 5 71g cols ; mth at., Grand Central Station. i Todd ae atationn, “New York: S18 and na iis Breadway, eb, Brooklgne palin checked from hotel or reddence by Wentcott Express Company. NEW YORK CENTRAL ROUTB | ETWREN | NEW YORK, BOSTON AND NEW ENGLAND, if Via Sovingfield and the BOSTON AND ALBANY RAILROADS & iudaon Hiver Bit, BY Avpive Boston, 3.40%. M, B40 P, My Leave Boston, 19.00 AM. T1Z00 neon, 4.00 WEST SHORE RAILROAD, « rapkiln Sta 16 min, later toot We F point wis Bx | r (4) For Hudson, or Roch. Butt + Roo! But. Det yr Mich. Ning. Pale. Date except Sunday, Lesvos Bi s Mei (th at 480M p cht y rer itigo, a Mei (3) ay the a8 PME” Time tabiae ax prineival B Tee ntegase checked from hotel ap Wastcor a Exprest ‘4, sitH. ® Auverint ‘Ow WHY WORLD ADVE