The evening world. Newspaper, August 15, 1904, Page 10

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by the Press Publishing Company, No. 3 to @ | ‘ Row, New York, Entered at the Post-Office >” at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter, OLUME 46.............. \..4..NO 18,700, am | Number of columns of advertising in The Evening World during first six months, 1904....... sere 4 Number of columns of advertising in * The Evening World during first six ~ months, 1903......++.+. INOREASE 0005-006. 1,681 No other six-day paper, morning or evening, in New Vork EVER carried in reguiar editions in six consecutive months such @ volume of display advertising as The Evening ‘World carried during the first six montns, 1904, ‘CRIMES WHICH MUST BE AVENGED. ‘I the search for the abductors of the Mannino child police are likely, as Capt, Rooney says, to run Into 2 of vigilance for that reason eD only & blind lead may develop important results if pur-, | tuied carefully to the end. Certainly a trail which js traced back with Black Fland ramifcations to tho Btrocious “barre! murder’ may lead into the very heart the system of Sicilien terrorism and assassination hich for five years has shamed the ety ) What the long series of crimes, of extortion and has failed to effect, the stealing of this little) lan boy may accomplish, It should furnish an incentive, the detection. and dispersion of the band of cut- oat criminals who have grown yearly bolder as their! in thelr security has increased through the 1 baffling of the police. Surely the recent almost neous occurrence of blackmal! threats, dynamite and kidnapping, crimes which bear the ear- of A common origin, prompts a demand for the and relentless prosecution of the culprits re. sible for them. | Coming as the climax of a black record of lawlessness ‘hey provoke a resentment which can only be appeased | by the use of every resource ‘of the Police Department A y “blind leads.” Put there should be no relaxation) { What seems at first sight! “ ZA Pe 2 3 | x STUPIO way TO SELL News 149d hdb4 OED EOOADD DODD 4 ' Is It Best : to bove or Be koved. By ewww BL PRSSE ES PSTHISPH HOH HOTS Nixola Greeley-Smith. 8 a woman hap | pler in loving or being loved? This is a problem which presents ttaelt for solution in the lives of all attrac: tive women. rs 4 to find and punish their perpetrators. The city must be Fid finally and forever of a terrorism which would be fanciful and absurd if humiliating facts had not Made its existence 40 real. nal BA i BRIOGE TERMINAL PROSPECTS eat Corporation Counsel Delany 1s confident that to-day i witness the end of court opposition to the con- proceedings for the new site of the Brooklyn ige terminal. ‘This withdrawal of obstacles will mean that pre- ny imary work may at last be begun on thie great for transit relief and {ts realization brought thus > Minch nearer, Even in a day of big things tn munteipal ¢ improvement the now terminal with the expenditure of 68,000,000 involved for site and structure must be viewed an impressive enterprise. The terminal includes a building, the need of which the city’s present | Seatteret official quarters make urgent. But its main 7 diaim on public interest {s ae promising a solution of > the most vered problem of city trans with which any ‘Gaunicipality has had to deal. Whether the solution . be entirely satisfactory or not, the terminal as Planned wil! at least replace antiquated snd outgrown terminal factiities which have become a grave danger point with a roomy and modern station. 4 TE Ms construction can be accompanied by the ex- ‘ jfeematon of 2 eubway loop to West street to divert some @f the swollen stream of traffic to the North River | ferrice, returning via Liberty and Nassan streets, the ‘i 4 Pattet afforded should be in eloquent contrast to the @eagested conditions of the present. Wheat” an@ Dearer Loaves.—tn the train of |) S@oltar wheat" comes the threat of six-cent loaves, the > Bakers asserting that with flour at %.# @ barrel their i of profit te wiped out. The dearer loaf is for Rot yet @ fact, but the quick response of the the market gives the public another example, ease of the cotton corner and the packing- house strike, of how regularty ft ts called on to pay the Dill for any disturbance tn commodity values, however ; PETTY STREET HOODLUMISM. _ Persistent reports come from Riverside Park of the 7, prevalence of a petty form of hoodlumism which should / emgage the attention of the police, Carriages are stoned, difidren robbed of small coins end other acts of juvenile | yeffanism committed. The complaints of citizens that | Pla istrict is not adequately policed were given some Tom, who is madly | ¢ devoted to me and | Sponsive mirror, “or Dick, who seems just simply in love with having me love $ I think Bernard Shaw ie reeponsidl: for the etatement that self-sacrifice Is the gublimest form of self-indulgence Tt ts certain that women generally have & pronounced talent for relf4mmola- tion, and take @ pronounced pleasure In {ta exercise, Marrying the man who loves her permits a woman o grenter exploitation of this talent than marry- ing the man she loves—that Is, the first tor the latter wll Inter make as heavy drafts on ft as she will permit. Howover, & la the woman who ts sel- who would never be him? Shall I make the one happy with | « fish rather then eelf-sacrificing who any trouble to man- me or myself miserable with the takes the man she loves, at whatever » + “Shall I marry) » age?” asks the girl with the fluffy pompadour of her irre other?’ If ghe ts @ sensible Httle girl she probably ends, after muoh doubt and perturbation of spirit, by choosing the man who lovee her rather than the man she loves, But, oh, so very fow of us are sensible little gris. And, after all, oat. “Sometimes,” said the flancee of 1) @ man, whose chief interest in her seen: | ed to be in watching her love him, the other day, “I worry myself sick over) ® whether he really loves me or not, Try | ® aa I will, I can't make up my mind. there le something to be enld for those of ws who choose the other one, who than a lifetime of content ‘There are days when I am sure he| ¢ does, and others when I am equally! certain he does not. The wish Is sone: | does love tie, and then again ty the fear that he doesn’t. 1 worry and fret and sometimes ory over it, And then | § ‘the idea comes that my love ts the ou- prome thing for me, and thad if he is meraly pretending, it is his love, not mine, I know he has every reason to love me, and yet with men, you know, that l@ often the very beat reason not) to, Iam young and pretty and olever, people think. Iidecd, I know he thinks | @¥ so. And yet a woman who was none of elect to take @ little happiness rather thmea father to the thought that he ghow of fact last winter at the time of the reported tl!- “tgeatment of a woman in 4 Boulevard coal yard. The emailer breaches of the peace now said to be of frequent | geourrence are made possible only through a lack of police vigilance which a slight enlargement of the force at the One Hundredth street station should be able to rectify. The general subsidence of stone-throwing and other CPRORDADOSTSDODI EE ELDODDDOROUDDE OO49105 } Salita) ae a ve NG w WORLD'S LET ME SHOW You How To SELL NEWS FAPERS mY Mary Jane, Her Tabby and Sister’s Beau Ww @ 8 @ @ @ @ They Fix a Surprise for the Young Man, Who Doesn't Know His Hat Is Loaded. — Now MARY, VANE, TAKE MY HAT AND CANE ANO PyTIT AWAY LIKE A, GOOD Lrrmle GIRL, SAY, THIS Lu PULVER- ‘Ze Taar DUDE Aut aii ~ VAIN 7B aa KILLER4 re dB ddd DETD 47 PAAR MADE GOOD the three could Le avrer of hin.” LETTE od ties nee’ Ota ce ve Ra An Eccentricity of Modern Art. day after day for weeks at a time _ without being able to offer any conso- QUESTIONS, RON fs > m\be a lation at all. The girl Is or thinks she ye : 7} ; . fa madly in love, At the same time | ANSWERS. iy XY Bs there is another man, younger, betler —— r jooking and in every way more eligible who has been devoted to her tor aov-| 21 Peat wae oral years. She would tn all probabil. | 7 We OF ame Evening ity be {afnitely happier if she marrieg | O8 What dav 4id Maroh %, wa ye! him. But she won't do it. Up to @ certain point falling in love, Indeed being in love, {8 a more or less No, Son Mast Take 0 To the Editor of The Evening World | jut Papers, A man comes to this country from} ETRE TG AALS SOME OF THE BEST JOKES OF THE DAY. — UTILIZING THEM. ‘The Smithers’ baby's cutting teeth— Right plercing are its screeches— We think it’s cutting them upon Ita sharp and witty speeches, —Cloveland Leader, a HOME w MAGAZINE. w PP PRDOR EDT T Reed E DEES OER £99994 006-0006006 00 0008 66 as hal S29 299000090 0009 Willie Wise—Gene Carr’s New “Kid.” He Shows Mickey How to Sell ‘‘Extras!’’? yy, real WHAT 00 You MEAN, BY SeLuIN A PAPERA By Martin Green. Flat-H ouse Robbers’ Union Is Working Overtime This Summer, SEB,” sald the Cigar Store Man, “that the papers. are full of reports of daylight flat robberies.” “Robbing flats in the absence of the occu. pants,” replied the Man Higher Up, “is as easy stealing collars from stray dogs in this town, Not { the people who are robbed report to the police, There {g about as much use fn going to the station house wit h a holler after a gang of crooks has gone through your home and (risked |t to a fare-you-well as there ib in the whispering your troubles to the heaving bosom of river. “A scream to the sergeant results in a visit from @ couple of bulls who try to convince you right off the reel that you never had anything worth stealing; then the; y give you the third degree with the object of getting you to confess that you touched yourself. After careful! hal the lan in ot of one wil in the thick undergrowth height, was of @ general tawny color about its body and was striped over the loins, The natives say Major Harrison fs the first white man who has seen the anima! tn its nativé sorutiny of the jimmy marks on the doors, the broken locks and ripped up furniture they go away and you never hear from them again. “Did you ever so a policeman on a side residence street in the afternoon about the time the flat-house crooks play thelr matinee engagements? burglar alarm! But you can locate the cop down on the avenue keeping tab on the passing wagons and strest cars. Ifa woman sees thieves entering a flat across the Not on your ] there is time enough for the {nvaders to carry away piano and the jcebox before she can get out and da guardian of the peace. There is no police protec ton in the flat-house districts in the daytime.” “What |e the answer?” asked the Cigar Store Man, “The answer is,” retorted the Man Higher Up, “that' {f you don’t handcuff yourself to everything you've got New York you'll become a contributor to the treasury the Flat-House Robbers’ Union.” The Okapi. Major James Harrison has just returned to England after & prolonged journey through the dense forests of Central Africa, during the course of which he saw tite okapi in fta natural habitat. This is particularly dense forest, the trees being thickly interwoven with creepers and tangled under growth. On the sixth day his party encountered the spoor the okap!. This war followed for several hours, when suddenly the party came upon the animal fifteen feet in front of them, Before the Major could obtain his rifle from of the natives accompanying him the okap! had escaped It stood between 10 and LU feet in The “Fudge” Idiotortal Beer Should Have Froth at the Bottom of the Glass, HORRIBLE griev- ance of the COM. MON PEOPLE. Si wie tes! Did you ever notice (Cenyret, 1904, by the Planet Pub. Co) that a glass of beer manifestations of hoodlumism {n the city, reporte of voluntary p &. Wek onak hes be which were recently so numerous, would seem to point} come a fixed idea, to a stricter attention by the police to outbreaks of this/hopeless, — unchanging — monomania lives here the required years and be- ly character, The chance for @ little vigorous under heaven or inside the four walls | Comes a citizen. Can his son vote on of an insane asylum, his father's papers when he becomes ‘work of suppression in the Riverside Drive should not) wiry are times, to be paps: whan tha: | 08 eat! ARR be allowed to escape. victim struggles against his possessing Worse than Lions! Den, ir. To the Bititor of The Evening World RACING BETS AND DEFALCATIONS. But tt ts Ike any other poison that) ‘ralk of fi-lrg aden of tons’ That to} The showing made {n the Insurance Press that ono- of the defalcations in New York may be traced Sets into the blood It takes years and | not in it with a person trying to alert | A Pi betting on the races merely confirms with exact ALWAYS has froth at the TOP ? That means that the poor, tired, overworked, under- pald COMMON PEOPLE must take the trouble to blow i} this froth off BEFORE they can drink the beer. THE |] TRUSTS pat that froth there to ANNOY the Common People; bat this paper will see It ls STOPPED. Henceforth EVERY glass of beer shall have froth at ithe BOTTOM instead of at the TOP. Then the Common People can drink dewn TO the froth and be saved the effort of blowing it away. This paper also contemplates the of a SUBSIDIZED TAVERN, dedicated by where the Common People NEEDED A RE@T, Kate—She asked that question just out of idle curiosity, don't you think?’ Taura—No, busy curiosity, Hor curi- omy is never idle.—Somerville Journai. “HEAVE TO!” The Russian naval captain ts @ rollick- Ing sort of « pup; He sees Ris prizes settle down and his Government settle up. Ruesia with his son (who is a minor), | yeara to get It out. Indeed, sometimes | ¢esm ag car at 6H. M at the New York! it 1s never thoroughly eradicated [entrance of the bridge, Refcre he has! A woman possessed of this particular leime to get out the “mob” comes at! Portland Oregonian. ‘00! 0 7 r " { Ggures a prevalent and general beltet. frenay te foolish to marty any other | num “wild-eved” and “aavage.” T eew JUDICIAL PROGNOSTICS. BOTTOM of their beer and § than the object of It. For she merely taber naart hy P-SANDWICHES 1 A woman and her baby nearly crushed eet kind ot am ta Ge sou ICHES they The iniquitous results of this form of gambling are! ais to her own unhappiness and in- It} fliets it fone Cannot something be | las to preve Judge give the weather man?’ well understood to need recital. too obvious and too well rs “Falr, followed by clearing; hard la- pon an unoffending and utterly it thie “rueling’ Lefore the pas | Be | ‘ e that the defaications are made | Ms*rabie man e , n0% ot off? ‘W by the law’s connivance thai at Woehbun: wésisiauly have. the \dea that \" ngers from Brooklyn « i af bor, changing to variable; bread and Pomidle just ae it Is by the law’s connivance that @ 80-1 11 ig necossary to marry somebody, But is water toward evening; Sundsy, sean” 1 “plunger” departing for Hurope the other day there in really a certain melancholy | Why Not Inspect Ferry-Boats! —Buffalo Express. able to “flash a roll” of $40,000 as part of his sea-!{hit suggests tacit tor an ented being | Te the Palitor of The Evening World HOW THEY FIXED HIM, ey eceeaes winnings of $700,000. Legislation winks with equal to mare the man or woman of her vr | “ier Rly, . ; ‘ “i phi aaa A teuderfoot out tn the West, lity at this large return of lucky bets and at the| it is admittedly not a nice » tet It extend as far as the ferry-boate? Baid, “Afternoon tea's such a restt” ia iat HY A thing to he | let xtend a a ferry mate) fo they knocked off his hat an old maid but a blighted being ie al: |the inapecto: ould t of minor embezziements and betrayass of ali The nap ra would uM As they punched fils nose flat, together different, and nine timea out | which It balances racing accounts, of ten a dead romance is better than | hethe fl Mi i" ferey-Doat ‘. And shot all the checks off his vest. le the law countenances race-track gambling and ee Ce ee ee . —Limerick Up-to-Date Book. +: ———___ ’ +“ the enrichment of racing associations, through THE HARDEST BLOW. To the Muttor of The Want: FY tearing out of telephones and the forcible re-| A great man must be indifferent to| Tw people married in tus country A maiden who monkeyed with BB 1 keys from city pool-rooms must be| diverse criticism,” remarked the phil-|in 1891 They were not citizens. Four) vniy is “The Somuambultet,” as driwn by I, Russell Conway, an Eng- | While out in the yard picking PP be only futile attack on the outgrowing osopher, children were born here before the) jish artist whose sketches are winning him fame, The GOOK stoma to he get- Feit the plece on her head ‘es, answered the candidate Are the| ting In his work in the art Ine again, aa he has in newspaper literature, This ten-| father acquired citizenship. Where they stung her, and sald: ut an amateur photograph isn't| children United States citizens or not? Ie Nb@/Washington system which roots 3 « ae eae ty, is certainly @ very gookesque Creation and It wouldn't be well for a man to/“G! Don't they bite hard when U TTT’ " <inek cae H. | run agninat it in “the cold gray dawn. of the morning after.’* Gentine “ Saal hai . . ee t as é bw C08? teltietae tt ve he « ae “ tralia ll I hl ld La

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