The evening world. Newspaper, October 29, 1902, Page 10

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nee Published by the Press Publishing Company, No. 8 to G Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. waeeeNO, 15,044. WICKED BROOKLIN. IN “The Excise law never was so openly and flagrantly ‘and shamelessly violated as it has been this year. Vice ‘and crime have increased to an alarming extent, and go on unchecked. The police make few arrests, and when they do arrest they seldom have evidence to convict. The records will thus show a decrease of crime, but every intelligent citizen knows better.” This is not Dr. Parkhurst back from Burope and ex- coriating Comniissioner Partridge, though it seems an echo of his “worse than Deveryism” interview. It is the Law Enforcement Society of Brooklyn calling the! Governor's attention to existing conditions in the City of Churches, It has wholly to do with Deputy Commis- sioner Ebstein’s department and indicates a state of af- fairs just the opposite of what was popularly supposed to prevail. ‘The surprising nature of these charges reminds us that we are left with too little intimate information about affairs in the Brooklyn Police Department, Is the! { requisite and necdgary attention paid to the discipline of the force, to the cleanliness of its gloves, the position . of patrolmen on the pavement while on beat, the details of deportment that make a force great? Are captains shifted with proper frequency, and does the Deputy Com- missioner muke an occasional unamnounced midnight tour to dircover derelictions? These matters are a necessary preliminary to the ele- vation of a force to its highest standard of efficiency, and if Ebstein has neglected them he should be held to have been remiss in his duty. b4 A STEEL KINO IN ITALY. Mr, Schwab last fall left a lurid trail over the Con- tinent from Paris to Vienna via Monte Carlo. This year his itinerary has taken him into Italy and reports indi- ente with what wonder he is regurded by the natives. To them he is an Attila in a frock coat Invading scenes of classic quiet, but paying the bil so Mberally that his eccentric behavior is permitted to excite more amazement than protest. Desiring to go from Venice to Milan and impatient of | ‘ @elay the steel king hired a special train, a royal act 1h Mself, but one betraying royal recklessness about funds in the “regardless of expense” way in which it was paid for. The train cost 2,000 lire ($400), but Mr. Schwab Willingly gave his check for £2,000 ($10,000) in the beltef| « that the latter sum was the one demanded by the com- , Pany. On historic Como the millionalre chartered | < @ steamer and rushed up and down the lake at full speed. On the roads round about he made alternate dashes’ ; against time in an automobile and behind a pair of met- tlesome horses. Altogether he is bout the fastest American the Italians have ever seen. Wherever he goes the eternal speéd madness draws him on as it used to draw him across Jersey on his express time automobile trips. Shall! “ We expect him back in a specially chartered ocean liner | « ‘with a prize fur the captain for breaking the record? 4 —__ I, 4 THE SPELLBINDERS, ° Elsewhere this may be an apathetic campaign, but not fa “Florrie” Sullivan's Aesembly District, where twenty | 2 ¢art-tail Ciceros are making impassioned appeals every & evening from twenty trucks. They like a little warmth | with their speechmaking in “Florrie's" district; cold tacts | ‘ charm them not. From 8 o'clock P. M. till 11 the stratum| © Of air enveloping the region from Chrystie atreet to Clin-| $ + ton Js superheated with spellbinding. Three thousand | 2 o O9086-09-9< as O99S2OO words an hour poured forth from twenty throats, a ‘Niagara of eloquence. Lies nailed, reputations rent, tri , Barty doctrines set forth in thoughts that breathe and | words that burn holes in the circumambient atmosphere. And how many votes are changed by it? Even if we had “Florrie's” private expense book and this year's } vote to compare with last year's we could hardly ap- Proximate an estimate. Private arguments of brevity Dut force with “considerations” accompanying them }make an clement with which we have to reckon—one| 3 More potent than the impassioned public appeals from Pacts } THE MASHER, ; Most of the letters received by The Evening World _ from women who have been made the target of the “L" } masher’s unwelcome attentions exhibit the innate and eharacteriotic modesty which makes the victim of the in- Bult shrink from the publicity of an open rebuke, A {woman thus msulted {s given the peculiarly distasteful alternative of putting up with the slight to her seif-|; respect, mortifying as it is, or exposing herself to re- “mark by taking notice of it. She should remember that Mf ehe “calls down” the masher she will be commended, and If she takes pains to effect his arrest, as resolute Women eometines, though too rarely, do, she will per- form a public service. A masher comes near boing the ignoblest work of God. He counts on shielding himself behind the very modesty that he insults. It is a great gain for decency when ho 4s expczed and puniehed, Swered by Mme. Judice, THE DEMON CHILD. Alea ee . AM at my wits’ end to know how to Latter-day Froebels and Rousseaus and others who | make my. Itte girl, twelve years old, study children should investigate the singular cage of, * anice dress. ‘Tae material Ina satin Ute Harold Hartshorne, whose governoss, Marie Betz, in| finan brondcloth and a coat of phic ‘< yelve ed vhite sat . ' suing for $50,000 damages for injuries inflicted by him.| rere eens mise way to male them, Warold was nine at the time of the alleged maltreatment y] am tired of seeing the yiain box coat, Of Mies Betz. Now, at eleven, he is a lad with chubby,}and as it will have to do her for two cherubic face and with eyes innocent of guile—quite the| Winters 1 ross Nice au thing: very port of boy that Mrs, Hodgson Burnett would have picked | P"°' ee : 7 Ke Ha ‘ x : ae > 4 ' ‘ Why not make your little girl's broad- pat:to play with her Little Lord Fauntleroy. cloth dress the on blouse, and gored | But, how deceitful this angel face and what a Jesse] suirt, 1 think this a very good denign ©) Pomeroy of a boy is our little Harold, if we are to be-|for broadcloth, as it Is too heavy for @ Mis3 Betz! Those little feet have stamped on her mas ners an eli gas if made man plain flat folds, machine stitched, ts till it was one mass of contusions. Those rosebud |) omening out ot the ordinrrs nda Have pinched and punched her and the pulpy in-| Fasten the blouse in the back and antile knuckles landed uppercuts on her rounded chin|make quite long-waisted. A good Idea fi cs is to attach the skirt to a ilttle skele- “Wntll now her nervous system has become a wreck and in long train of neurasthenic symptoms is hers— , ataxia, partial paralysis. No battered pugilist got groggy before the sledge-hammer. blows of mons suffered quite so severe a punishment as icted on the helpless governess, according to her n, by the demon boy with an angel face, A look to the jury to lend a sympathetic ear to wes bey at a a cltal of her woes and to inflict on Harold \- ene V5E TUS ANYMORE LerTHin PULL THE CATS TAIL VE NIM4 NOTHING Buri Sonia LITERATURE It 1s not probable that the Assembly of Mothers, now sitting in this city, will indorse any of the original ideas for training a child which The Evening They will, no doubt, stick to the same old threadbare method of training that has obtained since Adam's first boy was a baby, Worid cartoonist here presents. with the exceptioi, perhcps, that they will want him stuffed with health foods and swathed in health garments, and all that sort of thing. induced to try a fsw of Mr, Powers’s suggestions the next Assembly of Mothers would have some new and mighty interesting types of youngsters to discuss. ASKING THE IMPOSSIBLE. WN i do Ihe UT Oa “That photographer has very poor “The telegraph compantes are always Judgment." looking cut for Improvements.” Cholly—If 1 go to the barber's at this “In what way?" “Indeed! Then they should equip The Men—You're taller than elther hour of the day, I wonder how long I'll . ne made a remark on the high every. measenger boy with a bottle of of us have to wait for a shave, price of coal and then told me to look smelling salts for the women that fuint The Girl—Yes, I always try to rise Molly—About five years, if you wait pleasant.” when they receive a telegram." above disagreeable surroundings. Mme. Judice, who Is connected ©OO8006800606: | Mme. Judice Helps Home Dressmakers. watch gives ripple effect and is entirely RR ee a THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING; OCTOBER 29; 1902, ee WHISKERS wn: MAKE A MAN OF HIM, FEED HIM DEER AT CONEY In ano AYQENIC ENCOVRAGE HIM Te BE ACROBATIC ove Him ALATCH EY REVIVERS. SHE SUCCEEDED. 529 $e6OO ge eee LET H13 Fooo BE UTTERLY “Hoar dissects the Trusts.*) What pity he ever put them together again. | Since Prince Maha and Prince Henry DEVELOrE: | praise New York in terma so strong: His Musa ®\Since Wales and Germany's Crown HE May 3 Prince are coming here ere long; BE OF Some It wouldn't be a half-bad plan (to cele- EAI 2 | brate our fame) till your chin gets bristles. To re-baptize New York and give it “Princeton” for its name. ®She—Why won't you lIlsten to reason? He—Why will you never give me the chance? Wigsdy ts a Uttle inclined to before he thinks. * pi enebody said in his hearin milk had gone up a cent a quart. 1 BY Ume” etled Wigsby, "Lm ging a cent @ gaf Plain Dealer. een eecieve ane that dOOOOH “The army of gas companies seem to have combined to send In bigger bills, “It's a case of ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade.’ Should the Strike Commission strike out all possibility of another strike in the strike region ‘twill be the richest strike the public has struck in some ume, ‘ 9809990 69096 “I bought this hat for a song.” “Then they probably gave it to you as hush-money,"* Dont Tan ET HIM COLD ‘Walter Damrosch says the hand organ Is no test of the popularity of musi:. May be it Isn't. But, with a whole tot of peopie, it's a crucial test of that art's unpopularity. “Not much in this life,’ complained the chronic kicker; ‘not much for me, Everybody else I know seems to get along, but I'm left out in the cold.” “Well, that won't happen to in the life to come,” remarked the sly Mr. Pepprey.—Philadelphia Press. DEEL® FADO ISIES: Elderly Bather—Save my life, sir, and I will kiss you. Life-Saver—Madam, don't imagine, please, that threats will deter me from doing my duty. ® © A medical Jourral says the body of an avernge-sized man contains about sixty- one ounces of calcium, which, at the present price, of $300 an ounce, makes the value of {his constituent alone $18, 000, Tt Is to be hoped the tax assesso's for personal property will not see the article. We Powers ¥ ; : : But if they could be ‘The bandits bold held up the stage, The mait-bags they demolished; But found no cash, and learned with raga Stage-money'd been abolished. A LONG WAIT. 00000. Hcax—It doesn’t pay to get hot in the collar, Joax—Oh, yes; tt pays the laundry- man.—Philadelphia Record, “Haye you read my last book’ “I wish I dared hope so.” Instead of trying to hang a lot of histori: events around the Hall of Capt. Piper pipes, and Mutb'ry street Shows signs of demolition; For folks acquire, on hearing him, A “retiring” disposition. While Odell's charges against Hill may ‘be regarded as gross, yet Hill accused Odell of being grocer. ‘enier is wonderfully proud of his wife's grare. He says ehe ts a living exemplification of the beauty of the curved line.” “Yes, he told me in confidence that she can even put a most lovely curve inte the sugar bowl when she filngs it at him.""—Cleveland Plain Dealer. “When men annoy you on the ‘L’,” the cautious mother satd, “Just speak reprovingly, and they will wish that they were dead.” The daughter answered, ‘I've a better plan to make them fall down; If they should flirt they'll learn the hatpin's mightler than the call dow: If the youth in the Newark Hospital who has forgotten his name were ‘Dlossed with some such appellation as Somdetch Chowfa Maha Vajirudh there might be more excuse for his mislaying a few sections of it. An auto met a trolley and the Intter was knocked out. Now that the light-weight honors are no i longer left In doubt, | Why not arrange a scrapping mafth, the sporting world to bless, Between an ocean liner and the Enpine State Expreés? poe Meas absend-minded, isn't Browne—Extramely so. Why, the cther night when he got home he xnew 9! there was something he wanted to do, but he couldn't remember what It was until he had sat up over an hour try ing to think. Towne—And did he finally remember Browne—Yes; he discovered that he had wanted to go to bed early.—Phila- deiphia Press, “One of the French balloons has @ sort of wart attached to iit.” “I guppose they call the machine ® cartoon."” Now that agricultural “grafting” one of the courses at Wellestey College let the self-taught “grafter” tremble! The Prince of Wales was evidently taught, when little, the maxim: “Walt tll you're invited." “{ married you for your money.” “I didn't even have that excuse for marrying you." There once was a hand-painted Sioux Who wed a notorious shrioux, TIM his keen scalping knife Put an end to her klife And the p'lice are still seeking a clowm Mr. Jerome, for once, thinks he sees a “plot” instead of an “accident.” “How did he ever get the title of ‘Hon.'?" Records in order to save that mooted edifice, why didn't its defenders think } er ined a nomination for Alder Chicago Tribune, He de man once, LOVERS’ quarrel in Kentucky—a | iA young soldier fighting for country | and forgetfulness of soul sorrows | in Cuba—a beautiful young housewom- an's rescue in this city of a coaching | party that was at the mercy of a mad | Inches bust, the coat is 38 Inches, Is It too old and out of date to do anything with? J.J. T. lifferent from the box coat you mention, IN PRAISE OF CHECKERS. As a mathematical game checkers ranks higher than chess, as dt requires greater exactness, says the Chicago Chronicle. ‘The game Is several hundred years old and {s a product of the English-speaking world almost exclusively. Poe, our talented poet, ead of checkers: The unostentatious team of runaway horses—the sweet.) timely aid of two charming sisters of the soldier swain to the wounded hearts of the separated pair, and the happlest of happy love make-ups with now a the Incidents in one of the prettiest! romances of the news that have ever Edgar A. fh BLU GRASS IDYL. How the Beautiful Castleman Sisters Pade Love for Their Absent Soldier Brother. December wedding in prospect—these are! p the field without telling of their charme ing friend in Lexington. In every letter they sang her praises, They were cun- ningly laying siege to the soldier's heart, while another foe was menacing him at the front. A few months and the war came to an end. The troops returned victorious, and the gallant Major Castleman was the hero of admiring Kentuckians, Fate planned that the Misses Altce and Elise Castle man should make a visit with A bell sleeve is very new—tight at the wit! ing dre Huene sth tne. leading top and hanging loose and full at the | making establishments of this Nothing je too old-fashioned this sea- hand, The large cape collar is shaped son in materials or styles, for with a city, has been secured by The} three-cornered, one point in the bark | little additional “fxing’ both can be Evening World, and will con-§ 4nd two in front, Fancy tassels of | modelled into the Intest taodes. Your duct this degartment, in which | black silk and stlver threads hang to | plush coat can be utilized nicely and home dressmakers will be given helpful advice. Questions relat-]) ing to dressmaking will be an- game of checkers ts superior to all the elaborate frivolity of chess.” There are more than three dozen text books on the game, and there are several scores of weekly and monthly publications treating of new discoveries and de- velopments, The Mitchell Library, of Glasgow, Scotland, recontly spent several hundred dollars for checker books for general circulation. The colleges in Great Britain and the) United States have recently taken up the game as a men- tal recreation, and club devoted exclusively to the game, which ts equipped with text books and current publications on the game, The kame Is recognized as an exact science, and the greatest of its class ever invented. I. Is no uncommon thing in New fngland, Old England, Ausiralia or Scotland for checker tournaments to be held when there are from seventy-five to one hundred players, and recently in London there wae a match between two clubs in which there were over elghty checkerbpurds used—160 players! and the houses of Parliament have a room! MISS ADA RAELEY. been painted. | The delightful at-| in New plomacy of the two York some, months sters—famous Blue ago, ‘the “same beauties—tn | kind fate brought sestoring the entente Miss Ada Raeley to and skilfully repair- | this city at the ing of the damaged same time. Nelthe: feelings of the es- knew of the other's presence in the elty, One morning Allee Castleman read a newspaper MISS ALICE OASTLE-account of a coach- MAN. ing acctdent, A daring young Kentucky girl had stopped the coach hofses is a mad runaway and ed the party from Injury or perhaps tranged lovers is the | attractive and novel feature of the ro- mance. Major David Qas- Heman, handsome yaind dashing, the son of Gen. John B. Zastleman, of Louls- COMB HATS WHEN WET. It is reassuring to be told that even the longest haired, ville, and Miss Ada Raeley, a typical d@aughter of Kentucky and a leading Lexington belle, were devoted to each other, It was generally understood that at least a tacit engagement existed be- tween them. The whole Blue Grass death. Tho daring girl was Ada Rael a skilled and graceful horsewoman, That newspaper report went speedily to Major Castleman at Louisville, Along with it went a let ter from his de- fp ‘He deserves. Certainly if such a kinder- i be remain at large no gover- ton bodice and allow the blouse to fall THE MONTE CARLO COAT. THE GIBSON BLOUSE, down over It to the hips with a stitched broadcloth belt and fancy buckle, Make thexe points. The cape extends well over |cut into any length or design, the cloth sleeve the new full bishop. A bit of iace}the shoulders and gi becoming | Permitting, 1 would suggest -your se- or Perslan embroidery cap be used on | brendth to the ‘figure, It may be /lecting a pattern that wii be as near . 1 “ith st pe as poss! 0 avold plecing. neck, cuff, and belt, aT down the| trimmed with silver and black bratd, or | {he enhe as possible, to avold plecing. broad centre front, If a dressy garment} 4 wide lace collar; elther 1s equally | or bengaline silk and appliques of ecru {s desired, Several rows of machine | pretty and girlish. Select ix large but-| lace or black and white embroidery or Jet, which Is the most extreme novelty this year. Slash your sleeves at the wrist’ and insert Vandykes of the alk. With a few hoavy silk frogs down the stitching on a three-inch hem gives pretty finish to bottom of the skirt, tons to match the collar trimming, all- ver or cut sleeve if silver trimming Is used, or white pearl for the lace, AN OLD PLUSH MADE NEW. Dear Mme, Judioe: I have a long coat of black plush in A black velvet coat of the Monte Carlo des is strictly new and appropriate for a girl of twelve, and can be worn for several seasons, and it 1 easily made. Duy @ paper pattern of the above'| good condition that belonged to my {J name, as the east way for cutting the}mother, I am tired of keeping it. Is i length, umuall naterial too old-fashioned to cut i ; ‘ ia cont? I am | front to fasten it, you will have a stun- ning Mack plush ‘coat. $< THE SOLACE SEKKER. te hot. T stall is un; silklest beavers if wet by rain or snow can be perfectly re- stored by combing with the coarse end of an ordinary hatr comb, after having been allowed to dry out naturally. After the combing a Hght “beating” with a small switch or atlick will make the nap stand out as fluffy and freshly as when first from the maker's hands. { $ SOMEBODIES. @ } BEVEREDGE, SENATOR—has, it {s said, the largest book of newspaper clippings of any man in either House, The volume covers 500 pages. Since his affair with Balley, it 1s, perhaps, only natural that Beverldge should take tn- terest In such “scrap"'-books. MASTI8, DR. RINA—who has Just been made professor of anatomy at the University of Milan, Is the first woman to be appointed professor in any Itallan institution of learn- ing. i MENBPLIK, EMPEROR—of Abyssinia, whose ald may, it Is rumored, be Invoked against the Mad Mullah, can put an army 300,000 strong into the fleld. SHAPIRO, DR, MAX—an 01d pupil of Prof Lorenz, will en- tertain the professor during. the latter's atay {n Baltimore. N—will not, 4¢ is, said, be sent back to im It Will Somt $90, maisch ter Keep ef State watched the courtship with in- terest, All at once a cloud came between the They were no longer seen gether, pair, of a MI came visit otrengthened by young Custleman's enlistment. Ho went to Cuba and won promotion rank of mmnjor. and soon Lexington and Loutsville forgot all about the interrupted ro- mance. not forgotten by the Deautiful siste Major who had from the first constituted themaelves. peacemakers between the lovers. They, too, tiad fallen under Miss ‘s and, bad voted sister, Alice. She emphasized and eniarged on the printed xeport of his some time aweet- heart's daring. And then she went fur- ther than she had ever ventured be- fore in her cam- paign of match- making. With the skill and logic vf @ practiced jurist she told of the charms of her olster Keu-yiss guise castum. tackian. Finally MAN, Y Miss Castleman pleaded with her brother to make peace with Miss Rae ley and woo her, That loving. plea did not go unheeded. The gallant young major hastened? to New York. He, met Miss Raeley and the romance that had begun years be fore was renewed. The announcement of thelr engagement is evidence of the ekill of the beautiful sisters of Major» to- Suspicion quarrel was to the s Raeley North for the gossips But it wi MAJOR DAVID CASTLEMAN, of Castleman uns = ‘Li & EY LON ENG 8E499OO00O004 Mee vies eee Neerb eet wire tleremer ge ie eee te —_! 5 What Is Needed in Child Training Is Something New. 3 k ew Kemarks c Artist Powers Here Otfers Some Novel Suggestions. 3 Mostly on the Topics of the Day. 8 Dave ae 1s the bull. in the Odell 3 suggest ome a might makem good 3 grocery shop. emporary school-house?

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