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¥e by Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Office @t New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. aseeeNO. 15,088. TO CURE NEW YORK’S CRIPPLES. In response to the petition of some little cripples of New York, transmitted to him by The World, Dr. Adolph Lorenz, the great Vienna surgeon, will treat the afflicted children of the poor In this city for one week. He will treat them freo of charge, giving to each little sufferer for nothing professional services procured by a Chicago millionaire for his crippled daughter for $75,000. It will ‘be a conspicuous instance of the charity for which mon of great medical attainments have ever been distin- Rulshed. The visit of Dr. Lorenz, exciting at first merely the curiosity consequent upon the public announcement of his enormous fee, 1s likely to become memorable for ‘ts influence on curative methods, particularly in diseases of the hip. Chicago to watch his work, an unprecedented audience, erted anything like the authority of learning exercised by this eminent surgeon during his brief stay here. It ts an adequate recognition of a prestige notable ven in the home of the world’s greatest medical learn- ing, Vienna. The President's Assessment.—President Roosevelt Is assessed on $40,000, ‘This ranks him among the multi-mill- fonaires, MR. CARNEGOIE’S PLAIN TRUTHS, Mr. Andrew Carnegie, Laird of Skibo, yesterday, in taking his seat as rector of St. Andrew's University, spoke as an American Fourth-of-July orator might speak, but truthfully, of our greatness as a commercial nation. The eagle has rarely screamed with a higher note or on a more conspicuous crag. The spectacle of the barefoot emigrant lad returned rich and prosperous to his native land and honored by one of its most re- ally exemplified by the aforetime barefoot boy. a trust of the nations of Europe to “assure internal peace” and curb Amorica’s commercial ascendency is the most novel of monopolistic schemes yet devised. But _ something more than a royal decree will be necessary to Its success. The fault lies in the very lack of oppor- “tunity such as enabled the poor Scotch lad to become tho world’s great lronmaster. To make a similar rise from “the ranks possible in Europe means a reconstruction of society, and that is beyond a Kaiser’s power. Capt. Sheehan’s Aflment,—Capt. Sheehan retires because of a stomach malady, Trouble with the eyesight has been the complaint with most Tenderloin captains, JOHN KELLY’S CHECK STUBS, Sullivan appears twice. He is shown to have been pald A thousand students crowded the clinics in| ‘ No imported specialist teaching at a university has ex- $ nowned universities with its most conspicuous mark of; 2 approval—this is “Triumphant Democracy” as tndividu-} « Mr. Carnegie’s recommendation to the Katser to form | { On the stubs of checks found in the safe in “Honest | « John” Kelly's gambling-house the name of Timothy D. |» Ry Cound tT OF: SIR Sin WIL You Use THE ROVGHAM OR, ane ‘PHAETON This MORNING HIS TERRIBLE STATE, $2,365 at one time and $1,000 at another. ‘There is no occasion to suspect that the Senator was not legitimately entitled to this money, In his entertaining autobiographical address at Dan Finn's club-house he told of the many money-making Industries he had been engaged in. It appears that this was another, and if he made no meution of it at the time the reticence was per- haps due to modesty, possibly to oversight. At any rate, the Senator yesterday frankly acknowledged receipt of “the checks. “I’ve bet hundreds of thousands with Kelly,” he sald. “What do I keep a racing stable for? You can get better odds from Kelly sometimes than at the track.” Not all the money men make {s accumulated in steel trusts or railway mergers. The chief interest in the sources of Mr. Sullivan's fortune is that he is the future representative in Congress of Wall street, which is par- ticularly concerned with finance. AN ANCIENT KANSAN,. Fresh from their breakfast tables at which they had} read of the death of the originator of the Cardiff glant hoax the Internationa! Co: 5 of Amertcant: day discussed the “Lansing Man.” This individual, who, exists only in dismembered skeleton form and not in smoothly sculptured gypsum, was disinterred some years ago in a deep excavation near the Kansas town of Lan- sing by some farmer boys. Viewed at first with susp!- clon he is now vouched for by the scientists, They pro- nounce him authentic, and taking their word for it we must regard him as the oldest American of whom there ig record. He had mouldered in his rude grave for per- haps a hundred centuries before Columbus thought of constructing a caravel. + This aboriginal Kansan lived to be about fifty-five years old and was of medium height and average strength.’ At this late day nothing else can be learned of him—except that found as he was flocking by himself, in the middle of the road he may have been a prehistoric | “Populist. And except also that his skull resembles that | “ot a modern Indian, But where he came from, how he/ Mved, whether there were others of him, are questions Jong to be left unanswered. As the oldest of us, our great original, he must be considered our Adam and Kansas by consequence the Garden of Eden, In matters of sctentific tuvestigation credulity does not stickle at little things, 9 yester- BACK TO BUTTE, ‘Miss Mury Maclane is reported as determined to re- turn to her mountain home. She is going back to Butte, back from the sordid East to the freer atmosphere, the ‘ampler intellectual ether of the Montana hills. Miss MacLane says that the East does not appreciate her, but we think she is mistaken. Life has been more Jurid since her meteoric presence flashed upon us, She was a phantom of delight when first she gleamed upon © ‘ursight. The tris of existence took on a deeper crimson “Mnd the hues have not yet faded. Mary will remain ‘wweet in our memories as kisses in hopeless fancy Our only regret is that out of the superabund- of an intelligent Eastern manhood, our brain work- nd golfere and football heroes and all the fine figures | nothing but what you had seen hundreds! Maizie Fields—I should say Algie is Jealous of me! He sa,’6 he 1s 30 desperate that sooner than hear any one else call me a pet name he would’ — Waven Koughrn—Whatt Malzic—Stop up his ears with cot- ton! > her come: May—She THE WORLD: HER MAKE-UP, out with her beau. probably making up she does to her cheeks. The New Nursery Etiquette, Pictured by Artist Powers. Tda—She must be alwnys falling Sho says it keeps usy making up every time he means You Won SALUTE THE 2 BEG PARDON Siz WILL You HAVE » Your MILK FRom THE BOTTLE OR FROM THE CUT GLASS DECANTER SIR Mrs. George Vanderbilt hag commanded her servants to touch their caps to her one-year-old infant whenever they come into its presence. @ demands a like tribute of respect from children to their elder: DUBIOUS. She's no older than That's what I said. I tol she didn’t look a da the y over fort SERVANTS GUARD HOVSE THE RETORT COURTEOUS, Ta Id them you drink? The Haughty eee seeps eee eS | Mme. Judice Advises Home Dressmakers. must have the following winter; she 1 avold wearing the vivid green now 80 | not improved In cleaning or dyeing with realizes the vast possibilities In the 6- Mme, Judie», who is con- nected w tone of th: Icading dressmaking estall shments of this city, has been secured by The Evening World, and will corduct this dvpartment in which home dressmakers will be given helpful advice. cent all-wool Economic Up-to-Dateness. nun's veiling and tross cloths tastefully but Inexpensively trimmed with lace and ribbon. alba- She 1s the woman who probably had @ black crepe de Chine skirt last season and who knows that the separate skirt is not strictly up-to-date and yet she cat cannot afford to abandon her. Questions relating to d:ess- }| does she do? Simply buys enough more | making will be answered by: |) viack crepe de Chine and have @ walst Muie. Judice. made to match It, with little odds and Nee ends of lace or velvet to make It pretty. If she 4s a woman who can wear de- | fa y au ¥ hionadle, as it has the effect of pro- nz an over-heated appearance. ‘or the woman of Hmited purse ean afford but one street gown a seas and who contemplates buying one, I would suggest a twoéplece sult as the most sensible for all occasions, with a few simple blouses for mornings and a couple mgre elaborate for afternoons, all means have the skirt made dr gth, which just escapes the floor in mt and has a five-Inch sw in the back, and is suitable for all occasions. Last Yea If you must have a walking skirt, why In order, to be @ well-dressed woman some little time and thought must be spent not only in the selection of ma- terials and style of making, but to the Individual personality, and not necessarily at any great expenditure. My advice to all womankind ts to “know thyself,” beyond all else, and to cater exclusively to what you know | you can wear, what best afford, and what suited to your particular sphere in life, Many women who have very small Incomes to dress on have the credit of ‘belng always appropriately and well gowned, and it {s simply from a knowledge of what {s best sulted to their personality, and a sensible way of spending every cent to the best advan- tage irrespective of what may be the latest fad or how great the tempt tion to indulge in ft. For {t matters ts not how swell, or how stunning or modish a garment may be, she will only be ludicrous {f it does not “ft in,” as {t were, to her own self and her sphere in life, Tho Seeret of “Chie.” Individuality is one secret of success to the chic woman, the woman who 1s always considered properly gowned, and what woman Is totally indifferent to her appearance? If she exists, it is only as the exception that proves the rule, How many times have we heard re- marks Ike these about some woman: “Bhe ts perfectly stunning,” or “She al- ways looks so chic," when nine times out of ten, {f detafled account was given of what she had on, tt would be tainments sufficlently ot women wear time and again; perhaps it was simply a shirt walst; but tt was sulted to her individual type and the occasion on which she wore It, One often hears the woman who spends enormous sums on her dress re- mark she has nothing to wear, when her most intimate friend, who probably has one. her garnitures, nity Mary has encountered since she left the was none to attain hor ideal, She returns|and who in fact always has plenty to ole and fancy free, hs ws in her home in the highlands there {s some heart to which hers will throb responsive.| ways consider the useful ag well as be in store for thee, Mary, is our sincere|the ornamental. She 4@ the one who are to have the charms of our Hast-| Wntches not one-quarter the amount, manages somehow to look chic and well-groomei— Complexion and Dress. wear and something for every occasion. This is the woman who makes the best ot herself and her pocketbook and al- her opportunities, of a midsummer gale of lace who takes tar the evening gown she knows sho Women of ruddy collette and goes to operas or enter- to warrant a dreas of that kind she can have it made with an adjustable yoke of lace unlined and with a separate silk Ining of white or black to wear under {t. Thus, you will sce, she has really four dresses In The decolictte and the lace yoke, the yoke with tiack and the one with white. She can also change Sometimes all black (if she 1s a type that can wear it) or any of the pastel shades best suited to her complexion and coloring. untined In many instances the color of the eyes and hair should influence one’ lection of dress and millinery, A blonde may wear pure white to advantage but the brunette always looks better in cream-colored fabrics, Brown eyes and brown dress go admirably together, should not look over your wanirobe and see if some last year's gown (or tho season before) cannot be shortened for hack about? Have {t made two inches from the ground all around, as that ts the proper length of this season's walking skirt, which has done away with the exaggerated rainy-day skirt, For simple blouses nothing {s more practical than flannel or cashmere, that can be found in any of the shops for 50 cents a yard, as they wash well in fasoline and do not need froning, only & good shaking and then carefully hung in a@ dress hanger to dry in correct shape, They can be In simple shirt- waist fashion, with a few tucks in clusters, and the woman with nimble fingers and a needle and a few strands of embroidery allk can make them quite fetching and attractive by fancy stitch- ing, such ag fagotting, herring-boning, French knots and feather stitching. Eiven @ last year’e ehirt waist that bes a touch of such work will at once con- vey an {dea of newness, A Remodeled Eton, For the woman who must wear her last year's dress and who heartily wishes for a new one, yet can't afford it, I have made the accompanying sketch. I think it will be of consider- able help to her In remodelling the Eton Jacke: with its tight sleeve and old- fashioned five-gored skirt, until she yuld almost deceive herself Into bellev- he had one. By comparing the two designs she can readily see how the great transtorma- tion has taken place, and I know she will rejoice when I tell her it can be done at a very small cost, In the first place, you must consider your dress material before buying more to go with it If it 1s colored and smooth goods a velvet of same tone a shade darker will be the thing to use: If it is rough or shaggy or on the tweed order, use plain broadcloth of the predominating shade; If of gray or mixed goods commonly termed pep- per and salt, black broadcloth or velvet, either, would be quite stunning; and tf broadcloth is preferred, several rows of machine stitching will give it quite a modish appearance, Marked Changs. Carefully note the marked changes in the widened collar, the sleeve with the fatest fulness at the hand and the skint plain below the knee, wihich Is made by Inserting Van Dyke shaped pieces of the new material between the gores and making polnts upward in each seam. The yoke carries out the same idea, only reversed at top of skirt. ‘The bands on the blouse, skin and sleeve are all of the new material and buttons to match. The fulness or puff and cuff on alceve are also of new material. It of course will be far more economical to use the broadeloth, as it is 60 inches wide and can be bought at prices any- where from 7 cents to $@ yard; it will only take about 11-2 yards at the most, and about 6 yards of the velvet; and if velveteen cai be used it will be even cheaper, as it da wider and costs about half as much. On an all-black suit vhe _ motaille-dotted velveteen used would be quite new and effective. MME, JUDICE, ———___— TRYING MATRIMONY. The Ameer of Afghanistan married five wives the other day, but the Em- peror of China, a widower, has had an even more trying matrimonial experi- ence, says the London Express, All the marriageable daughters of the highest Manchu familles were ordered to assemble in Peking last month. Out of these the 100 most beautiful and mcat accomplished were selected. ‘Tho Emperor had then to choose for his mpress one aad one only, from these 100 loveliest and wisest girls. What would have happened had he fallen tn love with the lot we are not told, Fortunately in this all but tm- possible tes 4 has had the guldans and ad~ne of the Dowaardimoress, yak De Ta Fea ee All Get Ready Now to Salute His Majesty the Baby. How 1s that for a reversal of the good old rule which © But a Vanderbilt baby is some pumpkins, of course, where any other baby would be simply a very small potato. If, however, this defer- ® ence and respect for infants gains popularity it 1s easy to get an {dea from Mr. Powers’s picture of the Iimit to which baby rule may be carried in the home, The Good Deacon—My friend, do Tramp—Never with strangers, thank you just the same, Witt I DRive To SHERRYS OR Us WALDORF, BBD IOOO Oe 8900000906 O06 OOO oo O00 o ® A DEFINITION. © 0 4000000 Little Willte—What's a philosopher, Pa—A philosopher, my son, is a per- son who utters truths he doesn't be- Meve and can't make other people belleve. 0090-0. THE KILLING OF SEALS. Hunting ‘the seal from the Icy, stormswept coast of New- foundland is not sport; it is toll, whereby in part, the New- foundlander wins his scanty measure of bread, says Outing, The hunt fs a slaughter, dull and bloody—a leap into the whining, scurrying pack and the swinging and thrust of an dron-shod gaff; a merciless raining of blows, with a ailent waste of ice, all splashed red, at the end of it. There ts no sport In this, nor is there any fear of hurt, for the seal pleads and whines like a child, even while the gaff is falling, but the chase 1s beset with multitudinous and dreadful dangers, which are seldom foreshadowed and are past all fending off—perils so vast and uncompromising and willful that escape from their descent 1s by the veriest chance. The wind gathers the ice into floes and Jams {t against the coast, an immeasurable jagged expanse of it, Inter- spersed with plains; then the Newfoundlander takes his gaff and his grub and his goggles and sete out from his little harbor, making the start at midnight that he may come up with the pack at dawn. But the wind which sweeps the ice in Inevitably sweps it out again, without warning, in an hour or a day or a week; nor does it pause to consider the situ- ation of the men who are twenty miles off shore; it veers and freshens and drives the whole maas, eninding and heaving, far out to sea, where It disperses {t into its separ- ate fragments. The Uves of the hunters depend upon the watchfulness of the attenuated Ine of lookouts, from the women on the head to the first sentinal within signalling distance, MAGNIFICENT MEN. The hardest and most courageous of the human race are the miners who inhabit the mountainous regions. They spend their lives delving for the gold which almost ‘invari- ably passes through their rough, toll-stained hands to enrich the already rich, says The Bra. They are used to danger. It {8 part of their lives. A promising claim, half way up the mountain side, must not be abandoned because a quarter of a mile of thick timber near it has been hurled down into the canyon by an avalanche the previous winter. They take the chance of snow alides as they do that of warming glant powder and picking out missed shots, Daily they snowshoe across the track of avalanches, taking the risk knowingly. Nothing but the event itself will stop them; and then—the end of all risks for them. It 1s not so much what the mountaineers are in thelr daily lives that make them remarkable. It is what they are caba- ble of when a crisis arises, If a comrade ts overcome by noxfous vapors and falls in the stope or drift, or is dm- prigoned in burning mine, or buried in a silde, it Is amaz- ing and pathetic to witness the self-abnegation ‘that s shown by the mountain miners, ‘They rush to the assistance of unfortunates, laying down their lives with absolute dis- regard. No risk 1s considered when there !s the slightest chance of rescue for a comrade, or of even the recovery of @ burned, or mangled or frozen thing for a woman to mourn over. $OCOOSOO9OOOD 900d ANTS ON HORSEBACK, M, Charles Meissen, a French explorer, in travelling through Siam, observed a species of small gray ants which were new to him, says the London Express, These ants, says the Kobe Herald, were much engaged in travelling. ‘They Hved in damp places and went in troops. ‘To his surprise he notioed among them, fram time to time, an occasional ant which was much larger than ‘the others and moved at a much swifter pace, and each of these larger ants, M. Meissen saw, always carled one of the gray ants on its back. While the main body of gray ants were always on foot, they were accompanied by at least one of their own ort mounted on one of these larger ants. It mounted and Getached itself now and then from the line, rode rapidly to the head, came swiftly back to the rear, and scemed to be the commander of the expedition. The explorer was satis- fled that this speotes of ant employs a larger ant—possibly AFEWREMARKS might be revived just now as @ ¢imely, American anthem, What with all the new reform olabe, the poor policeman will soon be more clubbed against than clubbing, “I ifted an armful of umbrellas out of the rack; but the folks nabbed me end I went to the Island for a yean" “Served you right for courtin’ bad luck by raisin’ umbrellas in the house.” The only thing about faith-curism that doesn’t seem to die is the graft that goes with It, When men “cast thelr bread on the waters, (We notice It always is 80,) They do so In fond expectation That it may return to them dough, ‘Why should the Kentucky Rallroad Commission kick at Morgan's being made Czar of eleven States, when the big fellow already has the entire forty- five under his thumb? “You don't look as if you’ much from the coal famini “I didn't. You know I was never a very hearty coal-eater.” 4 euffered Cholly—Can you take a joke? ‘The Girl—Is that a proposal? Wife—When I was a chiid my mother used to punish me by making me stand in the corner. Husband—That was before “cozy cor- ners" were invented, I hope. Otherwise your mother was even crueller than I thought. The Doutery boys, of Butler, Pa., have amply avenge? the traditional rustic who comes to New York to be fleeced. He used to chant a silly little son The thing was called ‘There's Musio in the Air." @ |Since then paternal duties on him throng. ‘His infant @on demands his constant care, And when the baby howls night long Papa still groans: “There's Music in the Heir!" When the Bank of Summit was blown up none of the shareholders profited by the sudden and unexpected rise in that institution's capital stock. Having finished with Baer, the Prest- dent next month will resume his inter- rupted bear-hunt. Judge Lambert seems determined that Molineux shall have no cause to com- plain of unfairness in his present trial. “Ah kin moi a-week | cler! phy ruminating, “by de way he step up an! buy a ten-cent seexah. Smoke dat, Mistah Jackson!""—Baltimore News. “He says he's glad his vacation's over. He must be a freak. “Not at all, He's a coal minei allus tell er tendollar- sald ar A woman's plerced heart has been sewed up again. ‘That this is the age of progression 1s plain; And soon we may read on each shoe- maker's slate: “Broken hearts neatly repaired while you wait!” If a man wants the public to find out just what a splendid sort of chap ke Is let him t Commissioner Sturgia to nourish @ grudge against him. “My heart is in my boots.” ‘well, dear, there was plenty of reom there for it.” ‘ ‘The miners go back to work to-day; the Arbitration Commission meets to- morrow Thanksgiving seems to have arrived a month ahead of time. ‘why didn't she send you her love when she wrote’ “It's against the law to send perish- able matter through the mails.” Full many a gem of sable hue serene Up from the earth the miners now wilh bear, ‘The brick that erst we laved in kerosene No more is needed to supply hot air. ‘Why did you wear a mackintosh when you went to the Deaf Mutes’ Conven~ tlon?”" = “T Knew silence would reign. ‘The trust magnate cares not who makes the laws of the country as long as he can make the lawmakers. Manager—This play will never do, + ‘The villain dies in the first act. Author—Well, when you see the acton T’ve selected for that part you'll agreq it's a good thing. ‘The St. Loule Fxposition ‘will be the next to use the famous expressiont “Tm from Missourl. Show me.’ Didn't the operators “overlook a bet In allowing so lucklese a day as Friday to be chosen for the Artbtration meet- ing? “your New York oulldings * show the softening appearance of time.” “You lose. That's the soft coal appears ance of our atmosphere.” 4 SOFMEBODIES. , MISS M. B.—the mriten, tras a triple fad—for books, old china and dogs. ‘These three hobbtes take up all her leisure time. DUKE OF PORTLAND—is eaid to ba the tallest man in Dngland. He ts @Ulp young. DUCHESS OF BEDFORD—prove— jonows more about animals than does any other society woman of Burope, ‘and 1s a clever antmal trainer, HOLT, Pp old Australians actor and friend of Joseph Jefferson, is compiling his stage reminiscences, etretching over a perfod of sixty years, LUSK, SIR HENRY—Formerly Lona Mayor of London, 1s the only man who, while holding that office, had the honor of dancing with the Queen of England, He 1s now nearly ninety-two, SIBNKIEWICZ, HENRYK—Author of “Quo Vadis," is seized with a fever of unrest whenever ho ie writing @ book, a drone of the same species just as we employ horses to ride though soarcely more than one ant in each colony upon, eqems te be provided with ¢ mount and wanders from pases ¢e giase amtil it ta ait wratbions ray K ee Ww