The evening world. Newspaper, July 21, 1903, Page 10

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i va tow fcolld ranks. t ayhouses. en whe are vitally interested {n the weekly distribu- Wi the possibilities of acquiring perfection ef realistic Oa Wand Morrissey were regular frequenters i. TUESDAY EVENING, JULY 21, 1903. Netorld Published by the Preas Publishing Company, No. & to 9 Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mali Matter. VOLUME 44.0.0 .006 ceevereeeseees NO. 16,300, BACK TO WORK AGAIN, An army of 20.000 men returning to work js an im- Dressive sizht, ti siftcance of whtch could be mere ‘readily reniized if they wers to march up Broadway in At \the present moment, with building Operations so lone delayed beyond the contract time ot eompletion, with schools and theatres faring alike | with business blocks from the costly postponement, the ‘sight {s one to inspire as well. Yesterday a corps 0+ [plasterers and bricklayers to this number took up thes ‘tools they laid down in May. ‘To-day a division of sey: | ‘eral thousands more will return. Yet a mightier host, more than half of the 100.000 who became Idle ‘“vlt\ of the Building Trades tie-up, remain unre and out. The prolonged idleness of 100000 wage earners en- tails serinus consequences not alwa eppreciated, It means the locking up of more than $2,000,000 every week ordinarily distributed in trade channels to the smaller dealers, The traction compaziies alone lose $10,000 a day by it. Butcher, baker, grocer, dressmaker, find their sales reduced or their bills less promptly paid. Rainy. day funds diminish and a nocessary period of economy euts off all indulgence in luxuries. The protraction of a strike from week to month gtances in many a comfortable home. So the jubilation at the return to work of even a vision of this great Idle army js not confined to the iIdren who want to go to the new scilvols or the eatre-goers who want to see the inside of the new It is Joined in by hundreds of small trades- a re- onciled 3 Yon of wages, on which thelr own allowance of lux- ures and their cwn new clothes and rainy-day funds depend. In the close relationship of all members of society to each cther what harms one harms the rest. A MILLION NEW AMERICANS. We may look for 1,000,000 new citizens next year,| Qecording to ihe estimate of the Commissioner-General of Immigration. The figures are staggering A million new residents within a year! A St. and a Bostun combined added In a twelvemonth; within two months moré a Philadelphia, ‘The nation's entire foreign population by the last census was only ten times| Touts Gf {Have put a finishing touch of local color on her “Darling! away with that tr of the Gods?" Miss Walsh as a Tolstoi pilgrim, Miss Viola Allen in palaces of kings, Mrs. Carter at Versaiiles detail by travel are too great to be missed, “A DECAYED LONG BRANCH INDUSTRY. The prospects are good for the sale by the Sheriff of ‘Phil Daly's famous Pennsylvania Club House, ne fall | of the auctionecr’s, hammer will sound the knell of gambling a: Long Branch. Other houses may survive, | but the passing of Daly's will end the gambilng great-| ness of the celebrated resort. | At Daly's gambling had Monte Carlo-like attributes, play was high and the elite of the high rollers were attracted tc the tables. In the old days, at the time when “on the beach at Long Branch" was the scene of e greatest seaside ectivity in the country, Jim Fisk Those were tho times when Daly played eribbage for $3,000 a game. high play antedated by a few years the historic Ode of the evening when Daly left a United States a at the faro table to gg to supper and returned y€@ find the house in debt to him to the amount of $21,000. ly once sail that the energy and ability necessary Make a successful gambler would win success in any ‘business, If he had stayed in Wall etreet, where ¢ touk a large flyer on the rigbt side of the mar- might not in his age be on the verge of an | | | | | | “we means straitened circum- 5 wt THE # EVENING w WORLD'S # HOME ‘TOLD ABOUT NEW YORKERS. Mra. Dora 1 Wemen's Fede! Vice-President ¢ tonal ganizations, laa enterpris ms op and ver State ue. Mrs nce thr Louis Into proml- given by the Lyon first ca uh the lectu 1ub, of which whe ix Prevident wwe given an opportunity to air thelr Views before the Eclectic, and whatever Is new Le news for the newspapers. oe | Now t Dave turesque turf plun th man matte fre and whe er this is tr ix certain tha six months sald to be worth a qu Around the cafes whise of this Kind is mostly to bs heard, the small sporta a Ing, * lay 1's day you've no mone opinion seems to be milk und ti got that Johns broke t because he goes up & percentage that will beat any frat place, he takes the w many cases, and he p) that has been id to give tho jars away night to ¢ trainers, prices that he a sure way this, added has to take at Umes, 1s to ruin, . The first cars Charles whiel built ear on the H. P. Bel- . with an oh for four feur's 8 t to carry ast | J is Mnished in rich Jeather. | Jaya windows, which can be] swung open from any sile of the in Closed part of the automobile to nfferd ventilation, are previled. The machtso| is abso comajructed to carry consider able baggage. It 14 painted a rich red and la co 1 difference imag of Rishop Pe ntl believe we Wil have salved the proviem, 1 have yoen interested In flying machines for a number ¢ dam positive a body heavl 1a be made to fly without the balloon attachment, IM O3d Street and Amatemdam Ave. the nearest Hi Veaty-eighth street? ening World A. 3. rr Is Once More on Deck, tor of The Eve | To the is World | Down at the boar use, where I exist; two helps of ve they don't resist. When the landlady sees the star she exclaims you Pass the hash times a day Sir Innae Newton, of The Bvening Wo: Who discovered the attraction of grav: dtatton ? 8. A. 1 A nelacure, To the & Ars one “Jacques,” howes is French for ‘Ja GetQynburg or Waterloot Will read, of history y County officials closed Daly yp cep to “‘Monmonth’s spasm acy of: which recom- greater battle, No. To the BAitor of The Evening World: v ichard Croker, former leater of y Hall, ever Mayor of New Clty? B, MARESCA. | Daa iclhica Snes RE 3 bY ‘York AGAZINE | THE PRICE OF DUPLICITY. A Weird Tangle Caused by One VacationIist’s M 4B2AADOODYALDYOROD>ODDVDODE4 DELO D4DL9OD9O0O3 4 WIFE TO HER HUSBAND—NO.8. BEd OO ae - - Pet ary, Va Ga) ED tS CsAv, 515, G/7 ON VERYTHING i ees P 4 yes 02K, . Coeug Yea GLAD YACHTIN’ ERYTHING had been done except carrying the bir sea elA Ay) _ eee oul oa over to the Dunlaps. Tae canary had been a member (revit G 4G me of the family for more than (wo years and Mra, Ken- HIS CRUISE wWiT US! yon disiiked to part with It. but Mr, Kenyon had aosolutely LOTS DO/N IN 08 Boots LING! refused to travel for a dey and a night, with a bird in @ ti ae gilded cage. and neighh Mabel Duntap. Dickie was a beaui.‘ui yellow in eolor and kept himself nice and clean by dally baths, but he never sang. : Finally one morning Mr. Dunlap turned crossly from’ the unresponsive bird and calied to his daughter: “Mavel, { am going to telephone, to the nearest bird store And tell them to send up two good songsters and to take this stupld bird away.” ; “But, father," objected Mabel, “I can't sell Dickie. Mra Kenyon gave him to me.” "Mabel" her father replied, gravely, “Dickie died and we were so lonesomé afterward that we had to buy two birds to take his place.” After thinking over the entire ist of her friends . Kenyon had decided to present Dickle to Bobble and Peek-a-Boo were such beautiful songsters that after their artival the Dunlap house was always full of mek ody, says the Ch ‘Time Mrs 1 been forgotten, when, one day, Kenyen rang the Dunlap bell. vel opened the door for her and che was greeted by w VA Dear Henry: You will be glad to learn that I am going with Mra. Divvy, the vtor’s wife, on a yachting trip, and as we will be away for threa weeks you will be saved the trowdle of writing me nasty letters about money. Of course, there will be no board or anything to pay. 1 for a while I can get rid of the awful worry about expense » which seems to give you so much concern, Mr. Divvy is here and is “—_ ™ nee > (ae een =) (8 wo ois-2.° © mucn Ce ER- $) ; WHat Wee MAS. AROHUSTLE! TE TRICT SHE i" tives in!) HAY: wes anxious to get away, He 1s a very vulgar man; has never even seen a game of golf, thinks tennis !s rot, and has done nothing since he came but drink, drink, drink. I am really disgusted with Charley Summerer. He just does nothing bul toady to Divvy, and has been drunk for two days. cont sn't Dickle made no re: * she gasped. She did not want to tell Mrs. Ken- it that she could not tell her that yy had sold Dickie to a bird store A plan flashed through her mind. 1f Mrs. Kenyon did not see the birds why shouldn't she belleve that one wus Dickie? Unfortunately, Mrs. Dunlap came tn then and’ insisted on Mrs. Kenyon taking off her hat and staying to dinner. Mabel nade a dash for the dining-room and hung the birds on the nack porch. She could not speak privately to her father vhen he came home, and he had long since forgotten that irs, Kenyon was the donor of Dickie. “Where are Bobbie and Peek-a-Boo he dining-room. Mabel frowned at him, but, not understanding, he turned o Mrs. Kenyon and explained that they had two of the hang- fomest and best songsters he had ever seen, Nees is," he added, “that a poor, dumb bird was siven Mabel some months ago, w' v" een Fs hich we sold and bough? “What ma the bird's name?" Mrs. Kenyon softly asked. “Name? blankly sald Mr, Dunlap, looking hi «fe and daughter. don't remengnel alco da “Was {t"— began Mrs, Kenyon, stiffly. But at that moment tho couk rushed Into the dining-room "nd announced that the cat had just killed both the canaries. SOCIETY KNITTERS, Before (he country-house, and seaside migrants left towm they were talting lessons in knitting with all the needles re- gulsite for the marufacture of stockings. ‘This time the women were not tearning with the unsefish purpose of manus facturing golf dee for thelr men folk; they were making the stockings for thelr own use, For country wear, when yacht- LONG TIME "TWEEN TW EORINKS! he asked on entering SE AA T suppose the yachting trup will be a horror, ‘but we are to stop haven't got brains enough to be a contractor like Divvy why don’t you 4 te RNa ta , s ing, golfing, motoring or tennis play this number, s ‘ Feilingham, eral summer resorts where we will meet a lot of wealthy politi- get elected to something? Mrs. Divvy says there's lots of money in It. more smartly original and atronsly durabio CapeG eal Attention is called to the fact that the new immigra-| who vas to whom Mrs. Divvy will introduce me. Isn't it wonderful that Then, perhaps, I wouldn't have to make up to such awful people in or- a eee: a ie ee with calfskin, pigskin and en+ a Inte “euch vulgar people shou any wealthy p p? v . j led leather ties, vh knit in th tion is largely frem the less desirable rountries ony veuch vulgar peopl ould know 60 many wealthy people If you der to economize. © | Ghetkevaddeivican ther Pie eed order of r Bouthern’ Eurupe. Last year the Ja 3 Tae woman with thick ankles must avold them, but for ; all was among the Itallans, of whom 230,000 came over.| wh ° Calinn youre Canine WER Lis the slimly built girl in the shirt-walst auft they are the acme Pi «© The figures amaze by comparison with the total of only| Ml drummer a als ¢ L eae a YACHTING Jeph AGH 2 of good sporting form. ; 484,703 Italians en by the census of 1990 for the en- i * An A " ’ i "| In the Outlook Rev, Walter §, Rains: | WHITE woao YORK! r fire uation. At this rete ‘of Increase we might 1cok for! ford toils how once, when he had been} 5017 ON TINE (ey ees THE LOST CHORD. ‘ mw @ specdy depopulation of Italy. long away from civilization, he was rld- | « wit Among the lot of inmates at the asylum the most con+ ? ti Re harnrderraer ee tee sa of the United |!ne with a lawyer friend to an army | ¢ TRIMMED splcuous was a long-haired man who sat by the window q w One reason of the present attractiveness of the United | ¢ W\00T 4 post. “I wore no writes. Dr. POLK pLue drumming his fingers excitedly on the window alll, as 4f i" Statea for the Itallan Immigrant is the opportunities It) po inerord; “my shirt heacliy enate ls Blavingve plane! » ives him for work on railway construction, In ¢his with blood from butchering our | © “What was the cause of his aberration?’ I asked the lino of Jabor he has almost entirely replaced the Irish;own meat and carrying it into camp on | keeper. “His is a peculiar case," was the answer. “He is © excavator. He has come with the steam shovel, and tho !¥ apa debe eit de Guhises piste, Mosdultess arece tate Hay Got on All Rune aieee . he por we met ree or four rough- | % Alike : Fallway cuts ere full of him. looking Western fellows; they looked at | 2 and he unobservedly played the mosquitoes tor notes, The , So also was the subway in the earller days of exca-!me and at my friend, gave us the time | « harmonies resulting were more beautiful than any he tad fs vation, But our local expenditure of $30,000,000 islof day, as they alw do there, and |‘ ster Beerd before. He ey Gat bie tbe He a - ve vipassed on to where out outfit was be- | 2 quitoes flew away and a repetition was {mpossible. Ever. equalled by that begun on a single Western road, the Nine They, ‘halled (hie. rivers’ ot: our'| Mace ahen Hevfing een. weciing tor thee tha tontNat cane | ‘omb! Burlington, in straightening its line and reducing grades. | pack-horses and said: ; find {t, It was ‘the lost chord.’ " The Pennsylvania has enough work of similar kind ‘Who are those two fellows in|! ahead to keep the population of an entire province of /fTmy Sicily busy for some years to come. The newly arriv-| jsreon? ae g SUNSET. ‘ fag Italians and the railroad work correspond In this] «suppose the big fellow is the law-| « that there is enough of each to go around, |y¥er?” 3 HE path that leads from here to Paradise particular, ere is enoug! 5 TUNA Hinla eHeEDATEON CE f Gleams softly through the radiant western skies ar — “Well, he looks big enough to work | = At sunset, There the sun goes to renew : THE ACTRESS'’S VACATION. fon his: living,’ they answered, as’ tt 3 I hope, av T have planned so hard to save money, that you will see got a cont. Don't delay about this for everything depenas upon it. ae Pala riae clase otlevery: day, ss BY Time was when an actress's vacation trip extended Coe a P to it that [ get a check large enough to pay all my bills here and pro- You might sell the plano. It cost $1,000 two years ago, and you know 2 Phat eo tee eahlina leony: SNE pg to Nantucket on the east or the Catskills on the norih.| LETTERS + vide for my yachting outfit, I haven't a thing fit to wear on a yacht, the man wo bought It of said {t would improve with age, May be you 3 The other points were not in her compass, Now sho bea te and as the time is short T shall just have to run into town and work could get $1,500 for it now. When I come back from abroad you can We need not travel blindly here by faith, crosses the ocean to begin wit) and from England maps QUESTIONS, {a dressmaker to death, and they all think people who come away from buy it back. MAYSIE, ‘The way uncertain aint proved Leis A : eet * ie ' ERS. |: home for the summer are rolling in wealth, and you know I haven't ane portale dally/are Unk Open swicel out an itiner that may include a sight of the mid- Delt Iilumined is the way that all may see. jeep ee ha — 1de ‘ Right sun, » t®ur on a camel's back across the sands of i = 2% = ‘The light ifrom Paradise at event! } g F S Sh lear for you and me. the desert or a pilgrimage to Budthist ‘shrines HM. Quirk Tx Superintendent (Not! 4 KICK ID OR H Is DI N N BR-—NO W IN ASYLI M. ¢ Shines clear for you ond ie. GREE : may climb Swiss mountains, like Miss Marlowe, or im-| Chief). [ INLBAY Z mure herself in a convent, like Miss Adams, or remain |™ ening Worle | w othe rame of the in England in a Thames villa, like Miss Maxine Elliott.! of Gr pounce of Patiads LK | < In the parcelling out of the profits of the modern drama| rn HUNGR the actress gets a larger share than her predecessors of! 75 ine Kit : L SPOWREH EAT the last generation. And wit beauty and good clothes} Who is Colle E.R. GOT DINNER : and money to svord fs it surprising Be she is the most = 7 Labs Machines, READY: is an ¢ American summer tourists? @ the Editor of The a Blar 0 , years ago the experiments of oe my The educational advantages of these summer jaunts} . |) Dune Taterka choMewonid' Ee to Evrope are not to be made light of. Miss Bates, after| again inthe aig ship problem. Since » @ view of the Sahara, might be enabled to give an other-|then numerous inventors haye sprung & tel ealism to the zeppa scenes of|"%p aad built machines var, very i “ pader £ u aU eed aD. § DE the overhead gas: Why we can do A Harlem broker went home last Saturday night and made trouble for his wife because his dinner wasn't ready. She called in the police, and now he is in the insane ward of Bellevue Hospitat. Which isn’t ont-half as funny as Artist Volght’s picture on the subject, printed above. ¢ Bese Bee Bodooe Ooo: $90O-061990$O 6004 &0O04 $000 ooo ¢ oome of the Best Jokes of the Day. TWO OLD RIDDLES. As T walked out and in again, MACHINERY TARIFF, Out from the dead the living came; ‘The German manufacturers of machIn- ‘Two there were and five there'll be; ery are loud in complaint of the new N ake Sears ‘ tariff which puts 3 to 5 per cent. on SUSRS TEENS Od Le Re MStaeM heey thelr product, while the tariff! of the Answer—Two birds had a nest in an United States is 45 per cent, and the old dead tree, three Pininente new Austrian tariff Is 20 per cent. 1 was as small as any straw PROOF POSITIVE. When J began: to:grow; ‘Hicks—Tompkins {a a fearfully con- But coming on to riper years CEH Gg UTE 3 rs per y Wicks—Why, no. I heard him aay hm- My shape has changed go. self that he jen't conceited at all.— Then 1 was taken from the soll Somerville Journal, Where 1 was be bred, A DISCRIMINATING DOG. s And to defend my ters cause “Yes, the neighbors complain about (Frank J. Gould, who Gemanda payment from the Interurban Compaagy A knife cut off my head. my dog.” for the mmashing of his automobile by a trolley car.) | nent ihe bite?" i Next, Children, on our Pedestal, “Noi he's too affectionate, He has " J. Gould I moke false lovers stop and think; Pee erate iit, Oe eee 8 ANaee oe gore ens Pe Sipouee Late j 1 make true lovers glad; piece of cardboard draw| woman passes along th i bagi 1 turn true friends to deadly toes; as shown in the Mus-|frisks about extravagantly. And knocked his auto all to smash. hese fisures represents somo I make all friemdah!p fail; tration, ‘The trick is €o cut the card-{)7 atpuld think the women, would Then Gould, emerging from the crash, mn musical term, Any boy or. I make the poorer ones to weep board into four pleces of the same site|" “yoq but there 3 f where I etrike. : girl who has taken a few plano lessons And ‘the richer ones to wail, and shape, each containing three apples, | women on the at ‘3 Fs : oan readily decipher the puszie, Anawer—Goosequill, without cutting into any of them, C | . 4 4 Wes “hoes inate —

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