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Jumpers and Pudliahed by whe Press Publishing Company, No, & to @ Vark Row, New York, Entered at the Post-Omice Overalls. 3 ¥ at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter, The Girl In iMary Ja WOCUME 48...0005 00000 seeNO. 18,686, By Borer: | wh = at Mind ANO SAFETY MUST BE ASSURED. Nixola Greeley-Smith. GENTLE ‘The steamboat inspectors naturally object to having | their work gone over by other inspectors who may be Uxpected In the light of the disclosures of incompetency| COLORADO SPRINGS—Miss Graco to perform their duty with less tolerance of unsafe con- re Cais ob ho ts iss: itions and less considerate methods, Their attitude of Peeusere ie i Opposition, however, hardly does justice to thelr seli-|for Jumpers and overalis, the young taterest. They should welcome the opportunity which The heranine a eae Secretary Cortelyou's order affords them of proving to Tihs miners’ camn 16 thtlr ows, too. ® somewhat sceptical pybdlic that there are no other jad they. ae att fledged miners — Lundbergs in the service, and they should bear in mind i that the public is In no mood to put up with a postpone- ment secuted through a “pull at Washington | @p the part of tho steamboat officials, particularly in ew of the measures which church authorities are tak- | ing for their own-protection tn cancelling Sunday- © @thool excursions, it would appear to be to their interest Qs Well to invite and encourage a reinspection co their As The action of the Men's Sorlal Club of Grace Church card evening gowns fh postponing all club excursions “until such time as for overalls and corpora. ons shall aasure the safety of the lives intrusted : ae a eh : to their care,” following the similar course of St, John's miners Episcopal Church of Brooklyn and other church | The idea that by discarding jumpers tocleties, foreshadows a reduction of excursion business | 0" Cvening gowns the | ad delvers which will materially affect steamboat receipts, It] 1) [rely mines cau ‘i m N this paragraph | * idea preva. lent among wom- sfen that the deter. nining barriers that divide them from phosed into full-fledged # should suggest to captains the commercial value of a nese s certificate of reinapection testifying to the safety and humored these stacement Seaworthiness of their boats, Few and far between, even In the, @ sturdy Weat, are the women evpable of | ¢ foal exertion which the @ mi ing to his tasks, | Woman has invaded reaim over \ ne brain onea held disputed sway Ww kingdom of brut which fis only real ascendancy Is, « vised, remains his, and the woman, 4 nose brain might refuse obsequious the men masters of the \ture must admit a meck to Jim Jeffreys or Yerry he Gang Again. Ing East Fifteenth street, neces ng the presence of the police to subdue a riotous dem ‘ation, will excite surprise in those who recall the police assurances of last * fall that the elty as the result of the Department's activity had been treed of gangs. This new evidence that associations of young toughs still flourish and fracture the peace would seem to call for a renewal of those Assurances with stronger proof of their truth, THE SUBWAY STATION MISFIT, Tn addition to {ts unsightliness, to which The Even- fg World has previously cailed attention, the subway Station at Geventy-second street and Broadway by Its Htuation in the centre of converging lines of traffic has treated danger conditions of a serious kind, ty the Introduction of ma- “On either side of the obtruding structure flows a} chinery, there Is very little of the work double stream of trolley travel north and south through | left. and tt is of the unaikled and Amsterdam avenue and the Boulevard, while in front, | Werne4 be eed ee a crossing and mingling with this and contributing to the| . Nahe tke PEE tke tae seu (WOREA congestion of vehicles, is the ceaseless flow of park | who have become miners there is prob- traffic on the broad avenue uniting Central Park with | ably no sraver motive back of the ex Riverside Drive. What was before a crowded wren Ete tae veleasy: tat teste paolh loses {intersection and destined within a few years by the that the difference between man's work| ¢ Raturel growth of the woet side to become a danger |#Nd woman'® work Is merely that be-| { tween skirts and overalls, je one com: point has now by the location there of the subway mon tt many women, ‘They Station developed a yet greater menace to safety. The| sirm belief in non-essentials d . Station both interferes with the view of drivers and |©nlldren who, when they aak us to “draw| @ - @ ploture of @ lady,” whether wa sketch Motormen an‘) adds to the risk of accident to pedestrians & slganilc head, 0 profile bust covering by making it necessary for all subway passengers to ine entire paper or a full Ngure, decline tross to the salddle of the crowded plaz to vonalder the portra!: finished until we From all points of view ft {9 @ misfit. As an archi-| Mave drawn her “foot and her umbrelia.” tectural failure it should never have received official Bid 4 ets ante Sui in approval, as a disfigurement of a fine park prospect {t| completing feet just under the frill one should never have been allowed, as a radical departure | Mad fnished the neck with or put the trom the stroet corner kiosk plan menacin; bile safe b haar Dig hp aan yy aiu m gol D 6 pUDIC safety | Often, too, if one Is asked afterward to its erection should have been prghibited. draw a man, cne has only to remove the determining umbrella and add « A week which records the appolntnrent of a woman! inustache to complete @ perfectly sati: Physician as house surgeon of Gouverneur Hospital and| factory metamorphosia, Teve A woman as acting superintendent of Bellevue! Some women who, whether for testifies strongly to the advance of the sex in medicine.| Amusement or from necessity, enter the| | These achievements ertadlish a new standard for com-| industrial feld in competition with meh Parison of feminine progress in the professions. seom to retain these nursery ideas, and to believe that by “rubbing out 1» }the umbrella,” ascording to the child- PARK PLANS AT “THE NARROWS, hood dictum, they do away with the Col. George G. Greenough, commandant at Fort] essential differences that must forever flamilton, has taken a very shrewd and certain means of bedi it Imposatble for women to do Yolisting popular interest for his plans, now betore the postap tated £ eaalon work mith success. War Department. to bring the post up to date. He An-|thix class the would-be women Ary nounces at the very beginning that his scheme includes | and coal‘neavers and stonebreaker the opening of a large and fine public park In connection | "one. And their efforts to do what they are eternally barred from dotng F women to attempt to do the ea-| % ally masculine work th equires gth is as futile aw it is atily FIRE WHEN! Kio 4! OCC8SEESSOET9* with the reservation Wellw ould be de \ plorable if Everybody to whom the military spirit can make|not so alt aan Moa dere appeal will indorse the proposition that an important ne army post at New York should be at least as fine os} LETTERS, anything of the kind {n the world. And the man who does not believe in war even to the extent of preparing QUESTIONS, for it in peace wil) agree that there cannot be too many open parks. So the Colonel gives all hands a chance to ANSWERS. be on his side. iene Beyond question, Fort Hamilton as an army post \s : Fall 4 small end, as to ite structures, behind the times, Col! ., in Mase, @ straight, Greenough says it is also particularly susceptible to the) Ine game ot PS varadoh iy stegight Approaches of spies in the foreign service who wish to ivy B had a full house, Both claimed et a line on our harbor defense equipment. Hi nts bot. Which won?t Oak bow buildings and room enough about them so that a On Side Nearest Curd, Andacape gardener can arrange to conceal the defensive | To the Biitor of The Brening World: works, This involves the in which the great park| Which is the proper way ¢or @ man would find place and double usefulness. ‘o walk with two women? @hould he New York can afford to indorse the Colonel's pjans| "4! In the centre of on the aide near- bs very heartily, Jn some giad day of an assuredly | *# the curb? ROR permanent pence the city will still have the park and|Apply to Federal ivii-s will net need the fort. Cotmmieston, ereiee i To the ie 7 A tax rate of $1.53 with 4 $10,000,000 addition to the budget Where. cant Teneo ne hyo 2 ‘will provide unusual opportun for Aldermanic junkets/ blanks for Custom -House savin me : and $0,000 appropriations for “fireworks and music.” But aves what has a hundred million dollar city to do with small ‘wonomies? > $ 3 t i “HAPPY JACK" ON BEING LUCKY. The Evening World of yesterday contained oh its athe Salice ot tae sporting page—which, by the w fs always @ page! Allow me to songr, Worth while—a remark that invites repetition. on his grand idea “Happy Jack” Chesbro was the speaker. Mr.|MeMt house fo; Chesdro’s 1s a name familiar to most of New York, most | Mus! De * dari ones, But why of New York being heaithfully interested in baseball.| house in Har Ne ting an apart. |' Atge families, He J { the de Ca similar . m? 1 would lige to be Bald “Happy Jack” {n the course of an interview on|4 T am a widow of success as he has found it six healthy ehtldren T'm lucky because I get out and hustle, Any man with F fe for mine Wipow, | #6 HERE shali we go thie summer? ay ability at all can be of the lucky ones if he digs They Are Half-Arothers. On, Mr. Nagg, dong ask me into the wowk. It's always the fellow who loafs that kicks]? !*% Eiitor of Tre Bvening w Why should we g9 anywhere? bout his luck. two boys have the sam: i a waste of money, and w he pur t comfortable right eb and 4 nt mothers are they: b: would ba far more co! a Ip the pursuit of his profession as a pitcher, Mr homed y Pee a nema ia DAW rk ©) Chesebro has become proficient with the curves, botn “gut” and “in.” On the occasion from which he {s he departed from all indirection. His words on constitute “a straight one,” right over the p not take a all eye to see that. fe recommend the sage observation of “Happy Jack’ follower of trade or profession, in 1896, i We could make little trips to the 7) the EAltor of The Evening World beaches, to Coney Island; we could go ; Did Sharkey ever win a fight from | to the roof gardens, and I feel sure tt Hate. | Fitasimmons on a foul? RW. | would be more satisfactory al) around Te 5 “But don't ask me, Mr. Nags, Don't To the Béitor of ening World consult my wishes. I am nothing tn On what day did May #% fan in| your life but « housekeeper you do not fourteen who siolo Hid? “because he loves tol 8? F. at, [have to pay. That 1s what a woman earlier generation have run away to Patrick Henry, gets for marrying sBoy have ween ag much of the worid| TM Bihar of The Bvening World: “A man will say ‘I gave you 60 much Who said; “Live or die, sink or money, and what bave you done with vive or periaar’ DW. RRR RRR TN PT Creer Oe” RED ERROR eR EVENING Mary Jane and H SOI ORIN ERE RRRERRES NRT RRE eT OH NO~ THESE WONT EXPLODE- THEY WvusT Go CRACKERS! YouRe Reavy “Doesn't a woman work her life out) |to keep the house rurring? Does ehe ket the money? Doesn't it go for bouse- 1old_ expenses to keep a tat. com: fortable? | “A man spends a lot of money on! imself and himself alone, and then he will groan about the money he gives tis wife. But doesn't the pend {+ on the house, om the table and for! necessary things? “Did you ever hear tell of a wite | who got so much money that she didn't know, what to do with it? “Who is it that tries to pinch and serape and save? Is (t you? No, it ts PPDDLLESLO-HO4-5-O04 | er Tabby Celebrate. s A Little in Advance of the Fourth They Set Off Their Fireworks, \ eres f 11S AU ._| OVER; Our Irrepressible Annual Trouble Maker # = # The Small Boy Whose Cannon Cracker Is Heard in Every Hospital and Fire-Engine House in the Land Doc By Roy L. McCardell. (Copyright, 1904, by the Press Pubiishing Mrs. Nagg and Mr. — “But you want me to eo to some hice cool place in the mountains, vou sy? “In the mountains this time of y Why, Mr Nage. people of any soc! standing never think of going to the mount tl late in August least, The seasiie is the only possib! place. Perhaps you want me to go & tome pokey, horrid place, where I wouldn't have any chance to wear a single one of my new dresses, “Or if I did wear them no one would de there to se* me in them. r at|and to-day around Mra, Dilger. wt $ | @ se f F095 9993-29999999990099901449- 99986 09 0G DE RERSDEEEOOEEESE OL TORS, PIDPPDDLI-SPP FODP-2DDVGOGGOOGVG-9-O-F9H9-99-G-9: 599599 9 -5.9.G-G.93 9090-0. Company, New York ‘World.) Rut Mrs. Dilger, who ta a lender of fashionable society, will be there, be- cause her husband is one of the pro- moters of the place, ‘Mra, Terwilliger is going to Mos- Reach ¢> show aff heer “[ want to go to some quiet place wh it @oean't matter how one dre and I don't see why vou come and fret me this hot weather about where we shall go. I don't want to go anywhere, be- cause I know you do not want me to -999-26-2956-9-9-9939-09-99-98955-0006963022-09990060000008 , |and A man who can live on the prairies long enoug! , ‘be a pioneer can claim that he was built in a botler she ‘ By Martin Green. What the College Boy, Will Run Up Against Out in Kansa SER," sald the Cigar Store Man, “that a lot of b | college graduates are starting for the harvest FP fields of iXanses and Nebraska to roll up & bank: “a roll by honest toil.” “Unless these graduates have worked in @ harvest : fleld in their youth,” replied The Man Higher Up, “the best they will roll np is a curve in the back that a steam hammer couldn't take out. Rowing a racing shell four miles {n competition {s like lying in a hammock eating {ee cream compared to a couple of hours’ work in a Kaa. sas or Nebraska harvest held. “The honest Western agriculturist in the harvest sea- son arfres avout an hour before sunrise—otherwise about '3 A. M—and routs out his harvest hands. They wah their sunburned faces in a tin pan outside the kitchen door, eat a breakfast consisting of fried hog, fried eggs, fried potatoes and third-rail coffee and hike out to the wheat flelds to get busy. “Perhaps you have been In a sweatshop sometime and seen the way the boss drives the hands at the sewing |machines, Well, Hank, the sweatshop boss fs tled to a | post alongride the Kansas or Nebraska agricu!turist when it comes to getting work out of the hired men. Most ot! the Western farmers who are successful are plongers, and get away with it. “By 10 o'clock in the morning a prairie wheat fleld hotter than the vestibule of the bad place, and even the | seasoned hand !s fried to a frazzle, At noon the farm | takce the hands back to the house and lets them eat | Cause the horses are hungry. The noon meal is made of zuch cooling dlshes as fried meat, fried eggs, fried tatoes, fried vegetables and third-rall coffee. As soon the horses are fed the gang goes out in the field ag! and if there is a particular rush the work is not ov unt!! 19 o'clock at night, particularly if there is a moo If the college athlete stands it the first day he can usually be found along about midnight searching for a grave,” “But look at the fresh air, the healthy exercise ani the companionship with nature,” protested the Cigar Store Man ‘ 5 “The companionship with nature {s all right,” sald The Man Higher Up, “but for mine companionship of a commodious tce-box and an electric fan,” ® Thermometer Noses. Although the process of injecting solid paraffin under skin was at first hatied with delight by persons desirow of remedying the defective shape of their)noses, it has” heen found \o have its drawbacks, aays the Petit Paris! At the last meeting of the Academy of Medicine M. drew attention to # t ‘The least pressure, | of the organs thus beautified. Paraffin ts also very sensitive to heat, and a nose admirably modelled by the ald of the new process is as responsive to atmospheric changes as @ thermom More serious fs the danger of blood-potsoning caused by the absorption of particles of paraffin into the Blood-poisoning sometimes ensues, and the results arelfr. quently very grave, bases i wiscas Sel Se "| Game of “Scents,” A favorite game gmong Japanese children® is wha known os the “game of scents."’ At entertainments corresponding to our Christmas pa various pastilles are burned and the youthful guests asked to give a name to the different kinds, A variation of the game !s to sprinkle handkerchlets wil perfume ana make the children say what each perfume {8} A more popular verston of the game of scents would be the ff me of tastes.’ Don't you boys and girls think so? Think what fun ft would be for us to be requested to sample a large assort+ ment of sweetmeats and cakes and to give each {ts proper name, ‘ Spider Web Gaine. Fasten to the hall chandelier as many lengths of red, yellow, grecn, blue and white twine as there are boy and girl Tell each child to take a length of twine and follow it through the different rooms until he finds the other en winding the twine into a ball as he goes, It will lead him upstairs and down, around table k through cracks {n doors, in and out through the bann: and so on, At the end you should previously have fastened soma, pleasant surprise, like an Easter bunny or a tiny box of} bonbons or an orange. f The Trusts Now Oppress Helpless Animals, ‘They Allow Rain to Fall on Imi- tation Seals. Capyret, 1004, by the Pranct PD Co The SP. CA! has been notified of the outrage, but CALLOUSLY RE! FUSES to take wp the case, But THIS PAPER will atlend to the matter in the interests of the COMMON; PEOPLE and the DUMB BRUTES, which are alike mab! treated by the Trusts, ’ q The fearful discovery is as follows: It has been) Proved that rain will RUIN imitation sealskin, Thex } THING, ob THINK of the unspeakable agonies that the) poor little IMITATION SEALS must undergo every time! {t rains! THINK bow they must DRBAD the rainfall | that Is DESTINED TC DESTROY THEIR VERY SKINS!, How they must shrink In HORROR from contact with the: destructive raindrop, even as the average New Yorker) | |B} sarioxs coply from being seen reading THE EVENING , | 1@ PUDGE! “ As the $, P. C. A. (DOUBTLESS AT THE INSTANCE ' OF THE CORPORATIONS) refuses to do anything for ; these poor little sufferers, THE EVENING FUDGE, as , usual, scuttles o'f to thelr ald. , As rain causes pala to harmless, inoffensive imitation Seals, bis paper will see ) {hat THE RAIN IS STOPPED. The Imitation Seal shall be no longer abused or defrauded.