The evening world. Newspaper, October 31, 1902, Page 12

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Published by the Press Publishing Company, No. 63 to & Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. “VOLUME 4 NO. 18,046. A LIVELY FINISH, *» The campaign which began with lethargy and pro- fsressed with apathy attained a lively climax {n the| ‘rowded mass-meetings held last night. It is computed ) thet nearly 70.000 voters gathered to hear the orators at Cooper Union, Durland’s, the Grand Central Palace and |< Madison Square Hall or took part in the attendant pa- rades and processions. Able oratory it was with four Governors, Hill, Odell, Foraker and Carlisle, a Cabinet officer and men of local} party prominence like Shepard and Grout expounding | ¢ party doctrine. And the strongest voice of all that raised in the Jersey suburb of Morristown, where Mr. Cleveland, returning to the stump after an absence of) ten years, arraigned the tariff and the trusts with char- acteristic vigor of utterance and with at least one re-| minder of his cift of phrase-making when he referred | to the “hoary-headed, bloated and malodorous old frawi and pretense that the tariff should be revised by its friends.” The cheers and enthusiasm at the Democratic meet- imgs were encouraging, but more significant was the “gathering together of party leaders on a common fight- a ground of opposition to the Republican fetiches of Bigh protection and imperialism. PRISON FOR AN AUTOMOBILIST. By sentencing W. Byrd Raymond to a term of four mnths in prison City Judge Kellogg, of Yonkers, has @one more to check recklees automobiling than had been previously effected by the imposition of any num- ber’ of insignificant fines. Raymond, held responsible yesterday for the collision of Sunday, is already in the Kings County Penitentiary, his hair clipped, his mus- tache shaved off and his street clothes replaced hy prison stripes. He will be released to-day on a writ of babeas corpus, Whatever we may think of the fast processes which ave 60 soon railroaded Raymond into a cell, there is . ho question that the severity of the sentence meets pub- lie approval. Raymond said yesterday that he “could not understand why the Judge did not give me the usual ' alternative of paying a fine.” It is for denying him that We alternative that the Judze deserves commendation, The _ Hine is nothing to an offending chauffeur, a term in Privon a serious matter, We have progressed since the time. not a year ago, when a rich young automobilist, * contemptuous of courts, could jauntily flip a gold plece ' {nm the air and let it fall on the clerk’s desk in payment » Ofhisfine. Raymond, having been clearly proven respon- _) Bible, by his reckless driving of an automobile for the .* @ecident that caused injury to twenty persons, has been Properly held to an accounting for it. THE “SCIENCE” INDICTMENTS. ‘Along with two other Christian Scientists John Car- Lathrop, a Christian Science practitioner of high Standing, has been indicted by the Westchester Grand ‘Mury for manslaughter in the second degree in failing to cure a chlid of a malignant and infectious disease. it is to be hoped that the case will be carried on appeal to the highest courts, so that all the resources of the law “may be*exhausted to establish the exact degree of re- sponsibility incurred by Christian Science healers in _ failing by their non-nse of drugs to prevent the fatal . fspne of disease. Christian Scientists have hitherto occasionally figured in the lower courts and escaped con- wiction. The very remarkable increase of their practice as healers necessitates an authoritative judicial pro- nouncement on its validity and the Lathrop Indictment _ offers the best case in point yet presented. » | Bociety nas grown tolerant of all religious beliefs and nearly all medical theories, The fires of fury that once Taged against homveopathy are quite burnt out, and even Mormonism lives on. The time would seem to have ar- Tived for it to determine how it intends to view this re- Nigio-medica! faith which within a quarter of a century has gained so many converts. Hundreds of patients are treated dally by Christian Science practitioners. If they are treated in violation of the law it is high time the ‘courts 80 decided. JUDGES AND DRESSMAKERS. Justice Rasquin, in Justice Joseph's court yesterday, Decame painfully Involved in the intricacies of dress- making. The Justice was called on to give a decision } in the suit of a modiste to recover $150 for a princess gown and pink silk waist made for a customer from| whom she could not collect. Payment had been refused | on the ground that the gown “had no expression” and there was a disacreement about the use on it of em-| broidery not hand made. The technical discussion of ‘the gown’s construction revealed details of the modisto's | art, particulars about padded hips and bust lines which | -are said to have brought a blush to the ingenuous cheek of the Justice. Finding himself beyond his depth he reserved decision. The Justice should have followed the precedent of) Magistrate Meade, who last week disposed of a vexed ;@iiestion of tailor-made skirts with as much self-con- " fidence as if he were a Mantalini of magistrates. When questions of flares and gores and flounces come up the only safe course for the justice is to assume a virtue if “he hath it not and pretend to the knowledge that {s not| ‘his’ A judge who does not know a princess gown from @ raglan may thus emerge from the difficulty with the - ‘reputation of a Solomon. : THE SULTAN’S AUTO. “4° Phe automobile has invaded Morocco, seduced the . Sultan from his old affection for elephants and palan-| + qaing as conveyances and become the carriage or chariot ot piate. ‘The result is that a revolution 1s imminent. | ‘Wis loyal subjects put up with the telephone and with| “American innovations introduced by Mulal-Abd- but the automobile they refuse to countenance, | yeccording to despatches from Gibraltar Mulal’s| je is in danger. deyil wagon has upset nearly everything in the OO3-> o ooe > TESDIDTIGIDE CLSIDOSTSSISORESSINGIIDM a $06 x PS DPTOPIHDIS ISH IDOGOM™ SSS8GOOD D9OFS9O00HH00-999OHFG9HF- DOG HOGOH HO OHIO | tn ev w oh or a@ty we shall have a comic opera situation worthy B-of the librettist. Perhaps Miss Blanche Bates| experience “Under Two Flags" in adjoining Al-| th I Moroccan local color. All for an auto, | ° ) well lost, The theme offers limitless /Mevelopment to the facile pen of the I @llce, Mr. Kahles’s with one of the leading dress- making establishments city, has been secured by The Evening World. duct this department, In which home dr helpful ing to dressmaking will be an- swered by Mme. Judice. T has frequently en only by variety tn color and limited These two materals certainly answer admirably for the purpose, but there 1 no reason why any light, tweed) should not be turned into the same useful garment. been In vogue, the single-breasted front, the small bishop sleeve and the turn- down collar? It a style In question 1s capable of much improvement, for a dressing gown does not Keep one warm unless the loore able to suppose that a closer cut would bf ita mad career, but if it succeeds in upsetting al" Productive of greater comfort and S assuredly more yolume of material about of the opinion that a seml-Empire mode gives us an ‘deal garment; to the material of which it was fash- with sandstorm accessories and an|ioned, would answer equally the callé simple tea gown. tross cloth; or chalile; for dressing gown, onl Ghe Newest Chicago Way of Receiving Burglars. The Function as Pictured by Artist Kahles. WHY, Gob EVEN" ING! $0 GLAD THE BURGLAR CALLS (Tq Mavis’ TH TIME OF ME LiFe! (ila Chicago does not wish to be rude to its burglars. the feelings of the Knight of the Jimmy or the sensitive second-story man. A TEST CASE. Deacon—You ought to love your school. just really Truants—We do, sir. We're stayin’ away to see if absence tnakes the heart grow fonder. HE HAS THE TIME OF HIS LIFE. THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, OCLUBEK 31, 1903, ‘TR TICKLED To DEATH! PRELIMINARY NEED. Well, ccme on. to get It done. Bet a check, THE “FEW FRIENDS” ARRIVE. White—But tell me first where I can HE GETS DINED AND WINED ~ 15 ALL MINE ~ COME AROUND TO THE POLICE, —S; CW Kanes It wants to arrest them, of course, but it tries to nab them painlessly and courteously, so as not to hurt Out of this consideration for the marauding fraterpity has grown the latest Chicago func- tion, which might be called a burglarklatsch. The crook calls, 1s received with proper ceremony and is wined, dined and feted before being handed over to the po- picture explains just how nicely and joyously it is done. SACRIFICE. Black—Want to get a check cashed? I can show you where my sweet sale? He—Naw! But I'll refrain @ auto, jest for love of you. PIOHOHODGHDYG HHHSHHGOHHGHH® G1 GOHHOHOHHGOHHHH9GHHHHHHOHH0H9O0H9OH 99009 HHOOHOOOOOS STATION AND VLE INTRODUCE YE TO THE HIS FINISH She—WIill yer give up terbacker for EVENING 24 AND INTRODUCED TO HER DAUGHTER, APT TO WOBBLE. @ Ps Mrs. Jaggsby—Yes, you can go to the lodge to-night, but you must promise to come right straight home after you leave there. Jaggsby—My dear, there are some thinga in this world that are possible, but not probable, The thing you ask is one of them, from buyin’ | Mme. Judice Helps Home Dressmakers. | | jbric or thin flannel, !f extra warmth !s)a certain amount of goring Js desirable Mme, Judice, who Is connected of this and will con- makers will be given advice. Questions relat-}' puzzled me why the dressing gown has been doomed to tread the path of monotony, brok- materials to cashmere and flannel. It is not, how- ver, so much with the material as ith the fashioning that I propose a hange. For how many years has the more y less skimpy Watteau-plaited back 8 to me that the alstband {s fastened. Thus it! 1s reason- he limbs would be Snfinitely warmer, I pave studied several styles and am therefore have worked out one which, according f a matine: a dressing gown and a | desired, All my readers are doubtless | aware by this time that I advocate paper patterns as a guide, and will only detall the parts of which this gown is made in writing, Take the skirt first. ‘This should measure five yards around the bottom, with 3-inch hem, We will suppose we have single-width goods. Gide pleces would be Imperative if we COMBINATION DRESSING AND TEA GOWN, had not a seam in centre of the back. at the 8 of the fronts to prevent ‘The back seam is, of course, ‘The little bodice should frst be cut Itke @ zouave jacket or bolero. ‘The wash, coilar and cuffs should be of contrasting color, of a harmontous tint, and of eome soft silk, sfy China, which {s soft and pliable and very inexpensive, All of which makes a dainty and smart ap- pearance at a very slight cost. In ite aspect of @ tea gown certain alterations must de desirable, for instance, substi- tution of lace for the collar and cuffs or even the entire little bolero. Over the flannei, a Chinese silk frill inside the hem would also make It prettier and more sultable for such wear, The ‘ack of the bodice 1s cut in one plece and seamless, taking a curve upward In the centre, where the skirt is plaited very full, to give a fine pretty sweep to the train. As an opportunity for the use of rem- nants this model ts very good, and its possibilities In this connection are too obvious to need pointing out, A true Empire gown without bodice at all would also lend itself to the need of the dreasing gown, and whether cut on this plan or like our model it would require quite ten yards of single width material. subtracting In case of different yoke and sleeves two yards, and getting that amount in the other fabric If of same width, THROUGH THE SHOPS, Black adorned with three little rues of black are serviceable and: pretty, Dolly Varden fans, being on the order of one carried by Lulu Glaser in play by that name, aro the latest fad for ‘The skirt, therefore, has four pieces, a Panged one at the back and one at either Zo make it a useful all would suggest nun's veil round affair or alba- ly nothing js more serviceabie than © the batibe alde, starting from under the arms one inch more to the back of the front of the armhole, The front, bein: breasted, one full width of material in tire side gives adequate around the fest. The front edges are, of for ning | course, kept straight, mit evening wear, - ‘Women's automobile coats of ieather in red or black are extremes and very jaunty, Neat little cases gil fitted out with single | sew! fullness | 8% and white taffeta petticoats { OUT OF BABES’ MOUTHS. Little Bessle—What's a widower? Little Harry—Why, a widower is a widow's husband. I should think anybody ought to know that. eee Sunday-School Teacher—Tommy, can you tell me why the Israelites made a golden calf? Tommy—'Cause they didn't have enough gold to make a Beef Trust. eo ee “Lattle boy,” sald the parson, "I hope you don't read those horrid dime novels.” “Not me," replied the wise youngster. “I know where to get better ones for a nickel.” oe “How far back can you remember, Willie?” asked the In- quisitive visitor, "Oh, ever so far," replied the little fellow. “I can re- member when I couldn't remember anything at all.” see “IT wish,” sald an ious mother to her Indolent son, “that you would give a little attention to your lessons. “Why, mamma,” replied the little fellow, “I do give them as little attention as I possibly can.” DOCTORS’ INCOMES IN ENGLAN ‘The British Medical Journal ventured an estimate of the average income that might be expected by the general prac- ttioner in England, and put it at £000, says the Medical Record. The estimate was copied into several daily paper: and hae produced a large crop of correspondence, teeming with ridicule and indignation, The genera! practitioners who ought to know, declare that only a small proportion of thelr number earn so much even after years of arduous work. The competition brought about by the overcrowded state of the profession is, they declare, so great that it is a cruelty to Induca men, by inflated estimates, to enter it. { $ SOMEBODIES. @ } BALFOUR, A. J.—Is sald to be the first British Premier with musical tastes. He js a Wagner enthusiast and also a great admirer of Bach and Handel, DOYLE, A. CONAN—has forbidden his publishers to use his title of knighthood in connection with his writings, ‘This fs taken by many as an ‘acknowledmsient on his part that he was knighted for his South African services rather than for his literary work, HEGNER, ANTON—tha American ‘cellist, recently played before the Danish royal family and received from the Queen of Denmark in acknowledgment a handsome ring, as-foraeriy ewond hy John Hooch, the Dutrot” arisen heh K Few Remarks. Mostly on the It Ital}'s brigands get Schwab they will make the Ellen Stone ransom case look like petit larceny. Plans for celebrating ‘Baer Day" are not yet made public. Miss Corelli says we Americans are iliterate. Her books have had a good sale here. ‘ou are always behindhand.” es, the only thing I can keep ahead of is my income.” “He sald his tuck was so bad he felt ke doing something idiotic. “Do you suppose he could have been leading up to a proposai?” He—I think she wears a very short fing skirt. SBhee well, why shouldn't she? She has fect a iS iefler left looks all right, too.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Devery says the “common peopl only chance {s to “put in a Congres man who'll stand by ‘em."" Now, whom on earth can the “Best Chief” have in mind for the job? The Turkey now doth cull from life Such pleasures as he can; Ere he shall quit this mundane strife To clothe the inner man. “When I came to New York, six months ago, I didn't know the name of @ single Have you learned any of them yet?” ‘Oh, yes. I've discovered them all— except Easy street.” ‘The employer sald: ‘What can I do? ‘That my cook's wed my butler is true; But, since they are one, Why, under the sun, Do they still demand wages for two?" Though Shaw may think it hard to prove that trusts exist he'd find it a lot harder to prove they don't. “She has money to burn.” “I wish I could induce her to regard me as a good match.” If all the plano-players among New York's vast army of flat-dwellers should MR. WYMBS' tim a Bea HE {dontity of the person who | first said that the shortest cut to a man's heart is through his stomach, 4s lost in the mists of antl- quity. But James Wymbs, until a year ago mess cook for Company EB, Fourth New Jersey Regiment in the Philippines, ‘holds the record for discovering that there {s a culinary byway to a wo- man's heart. Many women have succumbed to mill- tary glory, but others more obdurate, have turned a deaf ear to masculine pleadings even when volced by a stal- wart good-looking young fellow in the uniform of Uncle Sam, “Miss Caroline Knapp, of No. 416 Adams street, Hoboken, was one of these. In discov- ering that her vul nerable spot was ple, and marrying her upon the strength of the dis- covery Mr. Wymbs hag ‘earned the gratitude of lovelorn swain undismayed. Sol- diers had won brides by military JAMES WYMBS. achieyments In the tists by masterpieces uf form and color, why not the cook by the choicest pro- duction of his mind and hand?) Why jot b} le ple? Hi The deed followed quickly upon the thought. Mr. Wymbs meade an apple ple, kneading into plastic dough that ahaped itself beneath his hands all the tender thoughts and dreams of his sweetheart. And promptly Miss Caro- line Knapp succumbed, The thought of the luscious pastry she had tasted when she first met Mr. Wymbs at Sea Girt had been always a pleasnt memory. Under the benign influence of the appl ple which he fondly hoped wouhl be his chef d'oeuvre, she succumbed, They were married forthwith. Last night when The Evening World reporter called at their new home, No. 606 West Forty-second street, he found the young couple dining alone togeth: And in the middle the table, whenco Mr. Wymbs politelf rose to greet him, large, luaclous, delicately dusted with sugar, was an apple pie! Mrs, Wymbs, a brunette of twenty- four, with a stunning figure, dented em- phatlcally that ple alone had won her heart. But her husband, a good-looking young fellow, whom a woman would be Justified in taking with or without ple good humoredly told the story of his eulinary courtship, “To tell the truth,” he sald, “I think tt was as much a matter of time as of ples, I have known’ Carrie ever since ehe was sixteen. liam nota cook now, but a stereotyper. I never was a cook ull I went into the army, never expect- ed to be one. One night when the reg!- meut was at Sea Girt wasting for orders to start for the Philippines an assistant cook, who was very drunk, Into a tub of hot fat, On the minute the lieu- tenant detailed me to take his place. I cht, but the a. tbe porter te Topics of the Day. follow the example of the Paris om , chestras and strike with how vast & volume of sound the rest of us would shout the magic words: ‘There's Noth- ing to Arbltrate!”” The cold snap was anything but & “snap” to the coalless. ‘The audience yawned from first to last, Which fact received this mention: “The audience watched the clever cast With open-mouthed attention.” vaca- Cholly—I'm going to spend my tion on the broad plains of the West, IT want to give my mind a chance to @x> to your head?—Baltimore pand. Birdle—Golng to have something done i e Herald. ‘The Girl—Papa has given me fifty rings? at various times in my brief life. The Youth—Generous man! Were hey all birthday presents? A rafiroad man owas beaten by thugs in front of the Metropolitan Opera- ‘House. Two men were chloroformed and robbed at the Hotel Marlborough.” Verily, Broadway is fast becoming “The way of the transgressor."’ : In the Latimer case Penitence seems mightler than the Police. Now that the arbitrators have “seen” the mines, will they “raise” the miners?” Newspaper Editor—Somehow or other Tam unable to see any sense in thie thing, ‘Poet—Oh, I beg pardon, I made a mis. take and ‘handed you a poem intended for a magazine.—Chicago News. “Why do you refer to that young Jaw- yer as Necessity?" “Because he knows no law."* “He is in charge of the depot on top» of Mount Washington.” ‘ “He looks like a man of high station.” Expert Kinsley feared ‘'a terrible mis- take’ had been made, It ts to prevent such “terrible mistakes” that he and his kind are employed. Hicks—Bjones 1s very particular about , his dress, isn't he? i Wicks—Yes. Why, he even wears @ decent office coat.—Somerville Journal. S$ LOVE PIES. They Had Apple Filling and Were 50 Good They Won utiful Bride. + the time we were in the Phitippiness ‘that Is, until July of 1901 I ‘picked up everything I know about cooking, in- cluding ples and everything elee, out there. Not from the Filipinos, of course. They don't know anything about good }eating. They live on rice most of the time. Why, the smallest loaf of bread sells for about 12 ents, and they never taste ple!" It was a tragic recollection to Mr. ‘Wymbs apparently, but in a moment hi had recovered his smiling good humor and continued: 3 “I don't think my ples are so very good. I haven't made any recently. Carrie 1s doing the cooking for this household now." “Then you won't make the pastry any ¢ more?" yh, no; my wife Is a good cook.” good a cook as you are Mrs. Wymbs glanced apprehensively at her husband as though fearing the ‘pronunclamento of the culinary expert. But it was surely the new-made bride-, grcom who answered with decision: “Well, I'm satisfied.” “The best ple made," continued Mr. Wymbs, “Is the apple ple." “T think s0 too,"’ interrupted the pride, “To make apple ple you peel the apples and them off the core” into a pan. You’ must take one- quarter of a pound of apple sugar and a alice peal for flavoring, ' them — alto- ! hut in with | a tight ild, just let- , ums ting them cook in” the steam. mash them through a colander and : are ready to be baked in the ple. For the pastry you use one pound of flour, three. quarters of a pound of butter, a pinch | of salt and a tumbler of water, " “In the Philippines, of course, they ; used dried apples, We did not have ple ery often, though when we were sta-| tloned at Sea Girt we lived high. “The first ple I ever made out there | was of prunes and a paste made of ground-up hardtack. The boys called Sty Nght artillery, But that was only @ Joke, of course. ‘They were perfectly’ satisfied with my cooking.” % “Jim does not make pies now," inter rupted Mrs, Wymbs. “I can ‘ them, too, an’ I Intend to de all the cooking*— x Nevertheless the fact remains that al- though Mr. Wymbs has retired on his laurels his experience as army ¢ stood him in good stead. His 4 Tay fill the New York cooking scligote with bachelors anxious to discover the open sesame to the chosen one's afteo-/ tions, But.a maiden's tastes in ple are as varied as her choice of perfumes er neck ribbons. If at first the swein tries apple and fails to make an impression Z lw a@ whole world of other ples which Will have to conquer before giving ap in despair, She, the obdurate pty dl NE KNAPP WY poe eerie eagthiagne A © mice |, { v 4 /

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