The evening world. Newspaper, August 24, 1904, Page 10

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. fed by the Prose Publishing Company, No, 1 to @ | New York, Mntered at the Post-Otice York as Becond-Ciass Mat) Matter. AB. noes eevee «NO, 18,700, he Evening World First of columns of advertising in ‘aero World during first six Rew, 7,700 sarsoe ins of advertising in ‘orld during first six 6,019 ix-day paper, morning or evening, in New carried in regular editions in six consecutive AUi AND EFFECTS IN TRADE. yy seem a far cry in cause and effect, . ere Heton cOuld the prosperity of the mills be restored. { _ ot - #f more than one million head. Of ready comprehension. They furnish an im- labor dispute—a wage quarrel tavaiving @ matter cents a day tos few thousand unskilled em- totals are impressive as well as MMustrating the | ru] eat, ‘the stock raiser is ndw called on to pay another i fm the depreciated value of his cattle, while the kere pay theirs in diminished output and {dle fac- It is‘s costly business all around, THE NEW HAVEN SMOKE FIGHT. it Mellen’s statement that the New Haven “desires to avoid any controversy with the city Vernon and will mitigate the nuisance of and gases as far as possible” on its engines while through that city, would seem to remove all ab that the Westchester municipality has won its | Setinst that great corporation, It has been a Y contest, intelligently carried through to a finish. ) question will now arise whether Mount Vernon fe t be exempted from the soft-coal smoke Anes, or whether the other protesting towns are to lly favored. extension of the fight to Pelham and its progress ‘Will be watched with interest. This village now worse than before from the smoke nuisance for that on the completion of the smokeless run Mount Vernon soft coal is thrown into the fires and the locomotives belch forth the blackest a pass through Pelham, A second surrender the road to aroused village sentiment will prepare @ Way for a general capitulation af along the line in may share, reaping the fruits of a of civic rights in which it has taken no part, AN IMMIGRANT GIRL'S FATE. Phe story told by the young Russian immigrant girl, Bechnovitch, of her robbery, ruin and sale immedi- ly after reaching New York, is a tale of infamy which r be almost incredible if the city had not grown Ml to ite repetition from the lips of helpless girl im- The entrance to the city of women from ig now better safeguarded than ever before, The the municipal authorities and private phil- t have combined to remove most of Its pei ee ‘4 case such as this exhibits in all its hideousness the risk still rematoizg for them to run at the h of ‘ cr! us acquaintance or relative, If this story orated the detection and conviction of the | betrayers offers an opportunity for police activity If successful will gratify the entire community. “SPOONING” AND THE LAW. Atlantic City an ordinance forbidding “spooning” the beach has recently been strictly enforced, At Far the police captain has put a ban on all acts ity among bathers, arid expressly reproved practice of sitting on the sand after dark. In fs the Common Council is about to vote on an barring wnescorted unmarried womer from parks after dark. it length is muhicipal prudery to go? Are we to the mofal standards of blue-law days? Has ) Be right of open-air courtship which village f are bound to respect? City fathers sitting in ‘fo devise ways and means for tue repression of : cut very poor figures. The right to " an inalienable right, and a’) ments fare by their very nature orpreas've which will be resisted ILOSOPHY OF TRADE, ith good sense has got something to sell World Wants—and all's well, have got something to buy, nt ads they atraightway apply. he Sage oy ‘THE 2 Sieeee st coveetbonrty poker” in New York t.to the grave discussion of the cotton criais by the Association, with the Prime Minister taking Met Wt tn as the direct result of the cotton corner Mat these Waldorf and Hoffman House gatherings ft Bally clique of speculators that English cotton @ince been running on short time with 2 jR British cotton interests, as estimated by the Vice- of the British Cotton Growing Association, of ®& Week. And {t is because of the market arranged at these meetings that Mr. Bal- the proposed extension of cotton cultiva- West Africa as the only remedy for that im futures” which has brought distress to ag It wae pointed out that solely through the < of Bagland from dependence on American raw ‘@fample is un instructive one of tho far-reaching of trade conditions trom @ause arising. No leas interesting for pur- Comparison and as» parallel is the great falling Reesipts of Hive stock due to the packing-house in July, last year 2,620,046 head were ‘at the five great Western markets, Chicago, Clty, Omaha, St. Louis and St. Joseph, the re- for July this year amounted to only 1,654,451, a figures expressed in pounds of dressed meat are @xhibit of the momentous consequences of a @eting effects of a trade disturbance, whether ite source in a strike or in the monopoly of a| ity. From Sully to the Lancashire district the strewn with starving operatives, wrecked mills Operators, In the packers’ strike, the having paid one part of the bill in dearer aad} Tage [The Man Who Knows | How to hbove. -_>—- By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Dear Misa Greeley-Smith: Of the com- petitors for a heauty’s affections, which ts the most formidable-the bold, dar- ing, indomitable, homely man who knows how to, make love and will re- turn to the attack if repulsed, or the good-looking man who retires discon- certed, with all the starch taken out of him if he loses on the skirmish line? Gg. B RST honors to Fe: bold, daring, indomitable, homely man course, But is he knows how to make love? The good- looking man is us- jet as far as the skirmish line unaid- ed, The mob of ad- females Mine, and ft ls no wonder that he sometimes retires dis- concerted, It tf the man who knows how to make love, whether he be homely or 004 looking, who wins out every time. But there ave a great many men who think themacives past masters of the gentle art who don't know the first thing about it. Moat of these place too high @ value on mere words, They belong to the Henry Harland achool of love making, weaving @ chiffon fabric wf «seana, spouting words like soap bubbles, airy, unsubstantia), colored with @ faint rainbow tnt of love to be sure, but giving @ distinct impression of belong of the moment only, If they make an impression it is usually on some very young girl to whom their apt phrase- making seems @ continuation of her favorite novel. Perhaps the man who knows how to make love need not be sincere, but he has to seem #0, And the love- making of the skilled crafteman in words often loses Io steength what it gains In polish. Nevertheless he is to be preferred to the crude citizen who regards words as altogether unnecessary, I heard an amusing story of one of these—need- less to say @ foreigner—-who, when dining the other evening with a very pretty woman whom he had just met, expressed his great pleasure at meeting her, ‘Actions speak louder than words,” quoted thoughtleasly, meaning merely, as she told me in re- lating the at that he should come and see her, “But, alas!’ sighed the Buropean, reaching @ tender hand be- néath the table cloth and olasping hers, “my dear Jady, 5 san't Kise you right here.” No man ia born with the knowledge of how to make love. It is learned slow- ly, often by long apprenticeship. Even when thoroughly mastered he will find many women who will be stone to his blandishments, But there will be many more the walls of whose hearts will erumble like those of Jericho before ils trumpet blast. Unlike he will seldom have to and poetic phrases. Once a woman has learned to juggle words she realizes what a mere sleign'- of-hand trick it Is, ond the maa who seeks to win her will have to use subtler devices, Strength, gentleness and merve are the three 1s of successful iove- making and the greatest of these is nerve, Of course, whep it Is successful, it 9 not called nerve, but mere charm. ing Srreatstible audacity, or perhaps the overmastering impulse of ® great passion. It is characteristic of women that very often they like to be taken for what they are not. The blase woman of the world finds a certain pleasure In being treated like the mont gulleless of debutantes, while the litle girh just out of the echoolroom experiences « wild exhilaration In the though that she seeme very up to date and worldly wise, It fs the man who flatters the wom- an's preconception of herself, who ap- pears to take her not for what she is but for what she wants to be, who makes a hit with her, unless he laa very forceful man Indeed, and is able to make her accept what he wants her to be as herself, If he can do this she will love him much better, and ft will not be because ho is homely, indomitable, &c.,, not because he ts good-looking, but Just for the woman's reason, the lover's reasbn, the very beat ‘reason— because. —— MYTHOLOGICAL, Paris was just about to award the golden apple to Helen Then he paused and a emile rippled across his Grecian features “Whit pleases you?’ inquired Vengy, “E was just thinking,” Paris renti™, “that I'd awap an apple for a peach aay day."—Cleveland Plain Deale= —__— ee es, MOONSHINE, OF Miss,Moon, she wink her eye While she sallin’ froo de sky Bees dem young folks han’ Strollin' on the ocean san’; Hyuh dem talkin’ foolishness Like ‘twus tru an’ nuffin’ leas, Jes’ go on an em be— Can’. fool ol” 989 Moon an’ me, han’ Talkin’ "bout de broken heart Dat would come if dey should part. Dat same gal was roun' last year; Bet nex’ summer she'll be here, Makin’ up bes’ she can ‘Po & Gifferent young man, Jes’ gO on an’ let ‘em be~ Can’t fool ol Mise Moon an’ me —Wasbington Star. oe of the only one that! ‘ ually not allowed to! a Why, 7 +e Bee HOM 44 NGAAAAIAAEAIGDDEGES DEIAGAIDIRIDEDT EEE REGDEIODED BF IAEEDEREEEDEREDS | $464500046646808 $4900040049 iWittiE WISE,’ Gene Carr's New “Kid.” | ea s What He Doesn't Know About Cameras Isn't Much, but This Time It Surprises Him, | EVENING w WORLD'S AH, YOU ARE TRYING TO Take A PHOTO, IT's A STUPID way, IT AINT EVERY ONE THAT CAN TAKE A PHOTO, (Lu SHOW You DS OO8-8 8-8 FFP POOH EGF PEEPLES E ED DEEDES STE PESIGEEEEES BD BSH 4 -8G-8-4-2-2-2-6-2600OOSOO88 A ~ Jane, Her Tabby and the Bishop, w#& w& w& # A Genuine Subway Tavern Welcome to the Prelate When He Visits Her Papa. Mary An! MARY VANE, TELL YouR PAPA Ive CALLED His IS HOW To START A i) SUBWAY, Au Bw MAGA tor day, 1s dippy.” is By Martin Green. ~ Tim Woodruff’s Passionate Vest, Which He Doesn't: Wear, Han- dicaps Him in Politics. SEE,” sald the Cigar-Store Man, “that there le rf § 4ome talk about running Tim Woodruff for Governor on the Republican ticket.” “If he should happen to equeeze out the ‘ Romination,” replied The Man Higher Up, “he ‘ would go into handicapped like a poor owner with « big feed staring him in the face, He is a inillionaire, as smooth a business man as there is ig ’ town, and as a politician he classes, but once in the dim, distant past he got in wrong and his bad break has stuck, “It was the time of the invention of the passionate vest. Mr. Woodruff, always a natty dresser, on and off | the stage, fell to the feverish waistcoat and at the Fulton street emporium laid in a supply that looked like an exe hibit of terra cotta at the World's Fair. After thatvis was all off. “Bomo cartoonist got wise to the vest and ever elnow Mr. Woodruff has heen pictured attired in # fortissimo waistcoat. It matters not that tho closest garment to the outside of his shirt is invariably plain to the point of‘dulness, the cartoonists insist upon dressing him above the waist line. like a drug-store window on Christmas Eve. somehow or another his reputation as @ wearer oe. fifty-seven varieties of vests has taken on a top dressing of frivclousness which makes the paper-collar voter up- State shy like an unsophisticated colt at an automobile, “President Roosevelt has made a trade mark of the sombrero and Senator Fairbanks has cultivated a set of sea-lion whiskers until people who see him the first time wait around to hear him bark. Judge Parker's fad is pitching hay, and Gov. Odell makes a specialty of a set, stern expression. Every successful politician has some peculfarity of dress or demeanor or whiskers or haircut to distingulah him, but it does not appear that the free* and untrammelled voter will stand for a man who has ever let his fancy run to the circus-billboard style of woeehat difference does it make what kind of clothes a man wears if he can deliver the goods?” asked the Cigar- Store Man. “To you or me, no difference,” was the answer of The ' Man Higher Up, “but there is a percentage of the elece that thinks a man who changes his shirt every Hypnotizing Drunkards. ‘At a meting of the Boclety of Hypnology and Psychology, in Parle the other day @ report was read from Dr. Korovine, of the Moscow Asylum for Inebriates, where experiments for the cure of drunkenness by hypnotic suggestion have been carried out for hree years, Dr. Korovine claims 2 per cent. of radical cures out of some 300 patients, He says that | out of $88 patients hypnotized #44 per cent did not dria® ‘any alcohol for @ week, 3.8 per cent. for three weeks, 9.7 per cent, for more then a month, but only %1 per cent, for * the whole time of the treatment—that is to say, for six months, A Parlor Trick. Balance a cane on the back of a chair so that the slightest touch setsait to wavering. Then tell your friends that you can make it fall from the chair without touching it in any way or even blowing at it. Although no one will believe you, it is a very simple thing to do. Get a postal card and rub It very briskly on @ woollen cloth till it is thoroughly, magnetized. Then hold it near one end of the cane, which will slowly turn toward it. By holding the card below this end of the cane you will attract it downward until it overs belances and falls to the floor, adil Armada Relics. Some Armada relics, which have been recovered fromthe bottom of the sea, were sold the other day at a London auction. A breechloading cannon, with wad and ball still + In position, brought $275, coins realized from 6&8 cents to §% & fair, stone cannon balls brought something under: 9s apiece, and two iron shot sold for $10, abt Boy Bandit in Real Life. A aixteen-yaar-old brigand has risen to fame in the neighborhood of Trieste, Austria, He has already come mitted several murders and has organized an “intelligence . bureau” that has enabled him to defy the officers of the law 0 fn The “Fudge” Idiotorial, i E if 2 & I i - § 3 ef HH stat LA 2& 3 Fd z ii z s i +f | af Eri i E = & i g ra E Euee i

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