The evening world. Newspaper, August 3, 1903, Page 8

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~— - -~—-- a ia artnet etna -—— -—<—-- Ve ryeet \ mmorwere = os THE «26 EVENING wt WORLD'S » HOME .¢ MAGAZINE . auauar 5 (om FOLD ABOUT ; ; HITT OINE. § | ‘ W AREN'T THESE LOCAL FOSSII XHISITED? Fine arg ™ ‘ % ¥ The BWiorld NEW YORK ; Penner fe ihe fom cme . ' rere fee ° , . : oF tee ee fen P 4 . ~ ) VoLunw } “ = PAnue A ne! GTEAMHOAT HAGING “ 2 a ‘ @ few oh ‘ aot “~ Lhe ? co ot fone on . if ~—s as ties on the + y . y Havok a0 the Geners ‘ »' f- 8 venue enn — ‘ ' Gere etramet Z « 5 9a e wire @ Thirteen " f ‘ “ - — y%s « é foment. rae © an » ant ‘ ) ewer . Se Govere tne pier the Prine — derigh eee 7 Port wide carrying a6 have heen a cere pre halt O® the part of the men mt the at : o fortune that a ow a mishap © ‘ 1 they imi . nile ty be ‘ ; \ nie Pegarding their reapon y f iif ‘ m . BUNDLE on THe PouTiOM, A wee GUEHOD stenmer gracefil of and amart in aw ——— ¥ UNEKPLAINGD VRAPTER,« ‘ serubbed cont of white paint t ¥ | VY “wRoEA waver Z oa i eo of the swan occurs of YS EMES, Hn’ DoKRsiT, weeduy :| Bue her beauty ts matched A sien heat, arp : ‘ 7 i @light impact from another an a omtan * i > he ana trophe. The very greatest care should he exercined ate w ' . : ‘ outta and annie @ master in eafognarding hie pre a careo from th heel Sahni ° atta Hew | ’ __ Nammets danger of collision in a crowded FF LR I] - ve or for thee " _ ‘ without thie atone, ? | ' OCTOBER IN AUGUST. i - bed a '¢ tinloved alone. i June tn her rarest mood has given us nothing finer 1 : abaalan en bas Avechiid : fm the way of weather than Saturday and Sunday It Tee se H 21 Are! rustling tn Baptembar’« was a gift of doubie timeliness, for {ta boon to woek- Rrookiyn. 1 “| Pht cure linbhues ce tke Wane. @H4 excursionists and those setting out upon their reg he a ik ICHAEL a ber. lar “two weeks off. It got them out of town con- than alt the THOMASUS AURELIUS | + | ie viclaate adds ham ted and happy, well started on thelr pleasure trip. and Brown : 7S GRAFTUS > dsr acre tedbaandul ) 6 vacation month does not often open so favorably Ap Calla degli Si me | 4ATTYAI- 4 And hope will iull the foes to rest. . ! : j : s November, But what a particular blessing to the city pleasure- 0 Mose ail tue doniees aadll geeker! How the saloon trade thinned out and the prowna put together, Blacks apa| Dusiness of the dives decreased! How the ball games Whites are sumerous. om vacant lots multiplied! How the parks filled up and tHe beaches and beer gardens and the groves pnd plenic grounds near the trolley terminals attracted their : : hundreds of thousands! t ding the Spoons. Happlly, there ts] A long, full day and hal’ of another of fresh air and | only one Anger, a good many Joys and the sanity and corrective influence of sunshine. It was ae a onears ta ax ‘@ Dlue-sky dispensation more effective for good than any yee Bnnltha: wl other moral agency. | again Who first came to the world below | With dull November's fogs and snow, Should prize the topaz’s amber hue, Emblem of ¢riends and lovers true. December. If cold December gave you dt The month of snow and ice and mirth, Place on your hand a Success will bless you it all hollow, even| MARCONI’S “NO OPERATORS.” One more step toward the millennium! It pow appears that Marcon!'s new system is not to merely dispense with the telegraph wire, but with the recetving ap» tor as well. : Of all the wonderful things that this It yi be on the rop A New Yorker who was at a 4! | SARATOGA’S DEBT TO CANFIELD. attended by Andrew Carnegie a sort . ernal beauties of the Canfield gam-| time ago relates the following atter-| & paiviswing the ext dinner anectote, which, he mays, the THE STATEN fonAND wizard’s ine : vorld’ PER Biing-house at Saratoga, as revealed in The World's |j iar) King told with great succes: RY 80AT7, aT vention has orlginated the latest !s a h typewriter, photographs, its lovely terraced garden suggesting the | on that occaston SOVBRETTE It is intended that ¢ machine shall be operated electrie best Italian landscape art, its fountains, its sculptured | “An old man reputed to be very deaf ANCIENTUS™ cally at a distance, MS wealth of rare shrubs and exotic flowers, |ON? entered a Scotch country dealer's aio ‘ The words of the sender will pass along the electric cum marbles, its wealth of r: NO SHES rent and work the keys of the machine typing them directly# * establishment to purchase material for| is it to be wondered at that the observer feels doubt a8] a nist of clotties. He hagsled over the| to'whether the gain in morals resulting from the clos-| price, and the master of the shop, ing of the temple of chance will be commensurate with (inking he could speak quite safely, the loss suffered by popular education in the esthetic aeet in an Irritated tone to the ceglatant: and the artistic? “Tt doesn't pay, dut let him have It In stopping the roulette wheel and !n putting the | at hts price and pin him with the trim- Me aRoKe; upon @ tape, says the Philadelphia North American. The ingenious device has the appearance of an ordinary, electro-magnets at the back. Olen back of the scheme claini that these mag- nets are so delicately tuned that inter n of a message: 1s an impossibility. The mechanical receiver will be just as secret, and even more accurate than a human being could 1 History contains American fossils dating back 3,000,000 years and giving a historical evolution of | omce machine. It 1s equipped with several during that period. A few preh till to be found about New York and here suggested by Artint n, might profitably be added to the collection. 'Tis an irritating mystery why those fossils of past history toric epecim: green baize tables out of business, are the authorities | mings’ Do not contain the ‘torse car and the merchant subwaydized, | nope to be at the same work. not likely to do an irreparable wrong to the youth of] “The old man, however, at once start- And the ferryboat to Staten, the soubrette of old Manhattan, @|_In England, where Marconi’s new telegraphy has made the is q ed to leave the shop when he had got 4 tt 5 eae 7 at @-| sreatest stir, they aré taking great Interest in this new Baratoga? Narghstht And the tale that Croker’s advent here will soon be realized, © | typewriter adjunct of his coming system. _ Some budding St. Gaudens, some untutored Olmsted | “son! called out the assistant, ‘you SASGOnG ‘§ ae . rn } 1 {these gardens might be moved | have forgotten trimmings!’ ARISON, THE DIFFERENCE. IN BOSTON. HARD LUCK FOR HUBBY, { Pee bce ie an iB ait these | "Ou, aye, the trimmin'a!’ replied the 7 ; GO HOME, YOUNG MAN. } ‘When a young man goes calling, if he can get his atten: tion off his own attractiveness long enough to observe it| ih he will find that near 10 o'clock the girl begins to look wors| ried, absent-minded, and ‘her laughs at his jokes are sup pressed and (iorced. At 10.30'she seems to be in a panic, and {f he should de} part then and shake hands good-by, he would find her hand fey cold. Notses are heard from upstairs. A’ man {s grumbling an@ @ woman pleading. Will the young man go before the ¢ather} » | makes a scene? Both the daughter downstairs and the mother upstainy are hoping that he will, but the young man stays and staya) says the Atchison Globe. Finally he gets up io go, and-the girl ts so relleved she} asks him to come again. A number g{.worrled mothers are getting up a petition/ to have the street cars stop running at 9.90. | inene ni e or in landscape gar- Peminuie eminence) in aculptureor tn OK deaf one, with a twinkle in his eye. dening. ‘Oh, weel, ye can fest pin the next one 'In contemplating only the tnfquity of the modern | wit the trim: gambling-house we are prone to overlook the benign | influence of the gambler-cognoscente who permits the LETTERS ‘ public to view the art treasures he has amassed. How | ° Many a chef d’oeuvre should we otherwise be dented QUESTIONS, the sight of—fine examples of defensive grill work, | ANSWERS. beautiful mediae bronze doors, objects of art and) virtu, even a Whistler portrait of Mr, Canfield! | _ In taking a snap judgment on a ganibdler we too fre- | Frlday, m 2 stice by lack of appreciation of To the EAltor ot The Fventrs Worth: quently do him an injustice ve - the part he plays in the dissemination of a knowledge) ©” What day. did Nov, 6, 1968, saith af the true and the beautiful in art 8} “Harker's wife is awfully dle- agreeable, but he says she is a Apply at Postkraduate H ‘eto the BAltor of The ening World fonind Darysi/ \ ‘ ‘ THE SECRET STAIRCASE. Is there any place in hia city where @ arti a \ ; = = ¢ r 1 crooked legs? A. B.D. P poem." jahcole—Me ould woman Is al- Miss Whing—I'm sorry to hear: The police discovered in the Tenderloin the other Not a Leap Year. { “Probably he means a magazine 3 ways tillin’ me to come straight Mr. Beans—I shall have to Im- $ you husband le Ill In town, on THE EVENING WORLD PEDESTAL. @ay house containing a concealed trapdoor by which | 7, the Eattor of The Evening Worl! $ poem.” home. mediately punish you. Mrs. Whang—Yes, It’s very un-, the inmates could secure safe egress in case of a raid H saya 199 was a leap year. K says| 3, “How is that?” Clancy—Bedad, yez are lucky. Emerson— You already have $ fortunate, just when | have to A-Chinatown exploration some time before had revealed | tt was not. Wh r Whe i understand and makes } Me cule woman is alwaya tillin’ done so, That split Infinitive Is 3 stay here to keep Fido away from Chinato 40} = 7 ¥ : me to come home straight. agonizing. the h he town. fa double wall spacious enough to serve as a hiding place Friday, Monday. WSU We epeese aan a owe RY of ti ANP R To the EAitor of The Evening Worl for escaping suspects. Now we have news of a filght of] Ga aay of the week was Feb. %, 1 3 2 chamt ead dow 7 On what day of the week was] . . Rae ee eee ee soak ee Bont wiser oe He HOMES FUN FOR THE YOUNG FOLKS. Some of the Best mumber of chairs. An odd rathskeller. Did the City It In In Greater New York. Jokes of the Day. Fathers of a bygone time descend these stairs for pipes Pot The Bras lag Were mA heepshead Bay ts not ta and ale? Was any hoodle Alderman chased down there York ant Reclama Sheeps-| _ FLIGHT OF THE RING. . bya guilty conscience? It would be Interesting to know Road jn G ais i Nt ee | You may cause a ri HEAT AND LIGHT. S Mil ta - A fire on the hearth and some art!- : | more about this hidden cftamber. So it is not only the writer of historic fiction who sonstructs Invisible outlets and winding ste and | shows us the panel in the dining-room which masks a| secret door and a passageway to a rendezvous. It }s mot only the cavalier or the fugitive prince who ts provided with these means of exit, but everyday per ‘ gons of a prosale age, even Aldermen and tin-horn gamblers. “We seem to be putting the most romantic of his- torfofiction stage properties to a most unromantic use, |! ficial ght from the chandelier help to dispel the prevailing chill and darkness incident to the opening of the astro- nomical summer.—Boston Herald, A DISCRIMINATING DOG, “Yes, the neighbors complain about my dog." “Does he bite?” “No, he's too affectionate. He has the reputation of being a judge of beauty, and every time a pretty woman passes along the atreet he frisks about extravangantly.” “I should think the women would like that,” Leap Year Query, of The Evening World was 1% not leap ne by 4 or a multip To the ase Tt was > thereof, JACOBS by 4 All years exactly divisible and by are leap year! m1. Tt occurs to me that may be Ignorant of Its tis CHANCE AND THE MONITOR. 6° Shet how much Pricason did to make the Union what |; ») ft-is, how large a “link in the chain of circumstances She was, to quote Col, Church's words at the dedication | of the inventor's statue at the Battery, we are not Ik ‘ever to be able to determine accurately, But from tl ae iefluence of chance on his own life we need not 7 d any estimate of the Monitor's influence on the} forid’s history as extravagant. 4 up \ postage stamp be place but there are only two pretty women on the street—and the others compliined,"—Cleveland Plain Dealer. CUT NONE SINCE. Dusty Rhoades—Willi, T hear yer fod- der was n preacher. Weary Willlo—He was dat, Dusty. Dusty Rhoades—Well, wid prospects | ike done, how did you come to do de j no your ac ary Willle—He had a country con- vad they} w it was owing to the British Government's ~ | bD , ? | reogation dat paid his salary jin cord wi 5 to h Government's dis nigunn During thta interva Rood, ant Thad to eut tt up into kind- | ement of Ericsson's experiments on the Thames Tf put on a inst nat tue anewer has been! “Philadelphia ‘Telegraph. thy vee mentioned tin NOT SO LARGE. a, “the screw propeller that the Swedish inventor “phe water Wagon must be a small ame to the United States. If he had rei (August Delmont, who has acquired contro! of all the Queens Comey? uined in Eng- . as the F Vo ilttie eR psn EAB BY hie i “Why, what do you mean, my son?” 5 “of y faethe Mls Aves ton A tho various kinds, | at hour mamma aay you couldn't ‘get Next, Children, from our Pedestal d, and the early Cunard boats would not much of « load-on the water wagon!"— , Great Belmont gazes down. ret ‘frequently outsailed py the fleet Ameri- a ae ae hand; and make them rem | GENEROUS. Yonkers Statesman, ‘The railroad prodigy who elgns cis the same thet has been lent to] yteBium—I ald want to Up you, walter,| NOT ONE OF, HIS FAILINGS. imate Hie heck. Ww Aeh this combinoe fF Abips. The connection between the indit- isy Of a governinent official and the con- (pei Lape Mia \rm8i| you, or that the mark ta right, Lit | have no change. Mabel—I understand that drinking Js d i bi Much dextority must be made use of] Walter—I can make change for you,] oye of his failings. shand © the same pl ‘The various Queens County lines, upside | 4 nt id coma > er antagonist is a most curious : SALA i puree ul he ensertaining - trek, hte hlutt—ttr—can—you? Well—er—giva) | Ethel—You And leads them, through sulzriver mings he} that the dece ‘ 3 3 n that the ring is come on thal s- sss eeu VAY gat #us-| me ‘Ave pennies for this nickel,—Phila-] {tis one of ‘ach anaphase: Dab a.

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