The evening world. Newspaper, September 24, 1904, Page 8

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TVR p+ al The Evening World First Number ef columns of advertising in The Bvening World during first six months, 1904....secessesesseeees 7,700 \Number of columns of advertising in The Evening World during first six months, 1903. eocccececee 6,019 INOREASE ..0sss..essose 1,681 carried in regular editions in six consecutive & volume of display advertising as The Evening World carried during the first six months, 1904, A WEEK WITH THE NIGHT PATROL, ' For a week The Evening World has been revealing Through its news columns the shortcomings of the 7 police patrol service of the city in the important hours} ) beginning with midnight, ‘What has been shown amounts, for large portions A Model Of the city, to a practical abandonment of that service. $ . There has been no denial or attempted refutation Romance in I$ ©f The Evening World's statements by responsible Real Life. 3 Police authorities. There could be none, ; ‘Indeed, individual policemen have testified to the " eccuracy. of the reports made by the reporters in * automobiles, and at the police trials, yesterday, Com- _ missioner Lindsley made free use of points provided, bby The Evening World, jamie | | Among the other newspapers of the clty, two have Printed half-hearted disavowals, one has presented a Column rehearsal of the facts gathered by The Evening World and one has emphasized the truth recognized | and stated by The Evening World from the beginning, | that the great body of the police will be found ready » and faithful on post when the men and methods » “higher up” are such as to encourage and compel duty- © @oing, The Tribune alone has given The Evening World direct credit for its discoverles and disclosures. | @ NA ae ren ‘The taint lingers in the Police Department of a] w.54 Ciesla saith, ee ae: > System” thoroughly bad. It lingers because there has passed frum, Wot been devised as yet the effective scheme ot] tence condolence, from condolence © onganization’and COMMAND which shall thoroughly] "78 t2 love ites Now, widows and widowers were in- > gehabilitate the force. tended to marry each other, They BE het schema, when. detalles ant put in operation, don’t do tt as often as they should, to de sure, but that ts thelr, manifest dee: | quill establish— tiny, and when « widow fixes her aus-| 4 ‘Mary Jane Plays Circusfor Her Pop. «© ws wo ey a o A Feat or Two oa the Slack Rope, and She, with All Hands Concerned, Comes to Grief By Martin Green, —_ Just What the Latest Report in the Slocum Disaster Seems to Mean. | “l SEB,” said the Cigar Store Man, “that local terday con tained a very Interesting ac- coum of what may from all 4 points of view, P be regarded as the model ro- mance, They told @ touching tale of a mid die-aged! widew and = widewer, who, = -visttlog the mame comes | | tery to deco a steamboat Inspectors Barrett and Dumont re- -bort to the Government that the Slocum dim , aster was due to the ignorance of the crew.” h Higher Up, “Mr. Barrett and Mr. Dumont plead net , | guilty, Two of their subordinates, Lundberg and Flem. © | ing, are under indictment by a Federal Grand Jury foe negligence in improperly Inspecting the Gen. Slocum, ‘The local inspectors are only @ short reach away from the two indicted, and !t would be playing the law of | sel{-preservation to lose if thoy should put in a report incriminating themselves, “Here is the situation: Supposing you give your high Urowed and handsome clerk the key to the store some evening and tell him to lock up. He goes away later og and forgets to lock the door, A policeman comes along and in a fit of temporary insanity tries the door, He ' finds it unlocked, “When the case {s slid up to yon the next day you follow the course of the United States Government and “In other words,” commented The Mam “ me ‘ piclous eye on @ recently bereaved wid- | ask the clerk to mako a full and complete report. Me Discipline tn place of politics, merit tm place Of) ower ine doserves every encouragemnt goes over to Hoboken, N, J., and mterviews a locksmith, : | Mpell” hopetul diligence in place of easy dereliction.) and th thanks of all eligible maidens | ape Who tells him that rust on a key makes no difference in alock. Then he mterviews several hardware merchants , and Warns that age does not diminish the power of 9 spring provided It is given occasional mild exercise, He tells a conductor on a Broadway car that he would like to examine the policeman who found the door open, and after a couple of weeks expresses much surprise bes cause the policeman fails to show up. “Finally he submita to you a long and succinct state | ment, includiug excerpts from the Revised Statutes, » history of the War of the Rebellion, passages from ‘The Lives of the Saints’ and ‘Mr, Dooley,’ a table of weights and measures and comparisons of the relative weight lifting properties of limburger cheese and aluméoum derricks, Winding up, he lays the blame for the um locked door on the man who comes around twice a weet and washes your windows.” , “I'd be a four-ply ass to stand for anything like thats? D} tthe Evening World has worked without prejudice} "It & limited sunply of bachelors to | sand with no impulse except to secure to our citizens aie teentrecs of th widow tn make A er matrimonial intentions “Fe the protection for which they pay, to show how great] ary practically limitless, ‘They have "and pressing is the need of these substitutions, The’ not been known to fall her even tn the | comet Itself, Wi he at f facts t has gathered may be ignored; they cannot be. iis teartol tet, Wiok ioareueed 1c ioe denied ear of @ young man she had brought | 7 to look upon the rave of the late Ia-| It is Mayor McClellan's opportunity to take what) mented. “rnat is my lot, How would public advantage he will of revelations here made inj ¥ou like to share it?" ; 1 lone . the public interest. Material is offered of which én W-ade widow ate a tater i ow I . lt ec: i + eamest commission on police reorganization should be pairing us Pobe ae} Bi pal 1® © able to make excellent use, one of the most subtle of his short Will you not seek, Mr. Mayor, the counsel of wise] trea tells of an adventuress who, > dttizens as to how the police may be brought into the ot ea tayananiy aired ere threefold respect of the public, the “gangs” and full widow's weeds and sous! er victim in the cemetery. The refin.uy themselves? quality of black attire Is a distinct asserted the Cigar Store Man, tO influence in the widow's favor. Many “ " ; ‘The head-on collision has yet to be Morganeered. & woman has been assiduously vourted “Of course you would,” agreed The Man Higher Up, ' because of the Bt ~ j@ melancholy cf hor $ sombre widow's garb that would not ¢ It ts agreed that Coney Island had @ hot time, despite attract @ second glance if less soberly 5 Geptember's lapse of temperature. 4 c attired, To prove this one has only to note the Fortunatoly the Giants had the pennant out of reach! wonderful transformation that is ef- ef the frost. | fected when one's cook lays aside her Warships of Oak. The old three-decker Duke of Wellington, once the prige of the British Navy, is being broken up at Portsmouth She was launched in 183 and headed the fleet that went te / > PS2ALF£G09OOO S04 OFC 980 OS-90 60-96-5068 OS SHI OGO GODT HOHE FTO HD 3006 —_—— Samboyant greens and pinks and goes ¢ Nee tans phayplivg fo tone oho ve Rags da Y into mourning for her mother. “d sd gM bon Dy g vi A PART-TIME RELIEF IN SIGHT, More widows, therefore, are proposed though her tonnage was only G07. But she carried if By a procees of consolidating upper classes in th#)| to in their weeds than at any subse. @lementary schoo! course, the part-time congestion of | quent period of thelr lives, And any , this eeason is to be greatly relieved, if not wholly, Pours woman of sallow complexion | : J ‘remedied. There have always been vacant deeks where| *'® wishes to seal the doom of a wary ¢ 3 guns, “She can fire 80 shots a minute. What can stand up to her?” said a London paper, She was of wood, of course, and represented the produce of seventy-six scres of forest oak, reckoned at forty\oaks one hundred years old to the acre, ‘ Vachelar cannot do better than to lose| & tho upper classes sit. Whole rooms will now be made/a distant but well-beloved relative and | Yacaat by transer, and in these will be seated the over.| put bermit Into mourning, flow jondes especially are irresistible fe bupths in the primary classes, When thus attired, but every woman ‘This solution of the part-time problem ts very almple.| with @ good akin benefits by It. It has been suggested before, but never put Into general) The reason for the masculince predi: | practice, The law under which, in carrying out the plan, | lection for black—or for the widow's the Board of Education is able to arrange for carrying pet mre blba aru goog Apa 4 “pupils to echools distant from their homes is due largely | may parade the most elaborate Frenon to The Evening World's plea for a special scholars’ fare| gowns 11 color hefore ininy of them on the street cars. and they will not recelve as much recog. nition as a simple dress of black and| ¢ ‘ But the transfer remedy for overcrowding, while white pin-cheok taffeta, or even ging-| ? @imple and good for the time being, is nevertheless of | nam. | he character of makeshift. It makes it | ble for! 90 though It is not parnitted to all ty ‘ posed |) Guarrelling builders just now to use the need of new °! M1# to be widows, ws may Ot least ~ ehools as & lever to move public sympathy. It does not *¢*t! the widow's shunter-the demure ¢, “Pawkiness,” A traveller in Scotland tells a tale of Scotch He was on a@ train in Invernesshire with a Saot whose taciturnity he failed, after many efforts, to ‘The Scotsman still stared dully, fixedly from the train, last intelligence began to show in his face and grew ecstasy and he shouted tn his excitement: “Look here, here, that's whaur it was.” His companion rushed to window. “In yon wee town,” continued the Scotsman, wus charged saxpence for yin cup of coffee,” ip ak First Woman Motorist. 6 The first woman motorist, {t 1s sald, was Mrs. John Bid. duiph Martin, of Morton Park, Worcestershire, England, the widow of ¥. Martin, of Martin's Bank. Mrs, Martéa was not only the first lady to appear on @ motor car te Hyde Park, but also the first woman to take a motor on the English country roads and to visit scores of | villages almost entirely unknown to travellera, jacheme of her gow. the demand for the completion, as soon as {+ nay be urged taat the averag Of all schoo! buildings under contract, or under | mn likes red. And peraage ho dees, But if he were to seo Si. Thersss in a ‘Things will be really right with regard to New York's | sey ‘wnite ue would reflect” thatthe . and white he would retlect that the tady-rooms only when the supply is well ahead of tho saint wis a little bit Kay, notwith- . | standing her alr of general blessedness, }and that the lady in black and white ically, it Is because the report of the steamboat Was the dest and dearst little woman won't float that its indorsement of the Biocuin ° the world. Sawe 9¢ Gown, | If the widow will only confine herseit Newest Arctic Curio, The latest polar expedition is a gigantic air bag, in which | Peter Nissen, of Chicago, intends to roll to the Pole, blown by the wind over water and Ice, rough travelling and smooth, as a thistle 1s blown across a field. Nissen he was driven to adopt this device by his endeavor to plan pneumatic tires for an arctic automobile, — ty her natural prey- that Is, the wid remaine the baseball season to remind us that wa |ower-hower er, no such general going into half mourntig wil be necessary, a —— But she has. unfortunately, a decided on the move.” If they only would pause a Preference for the young bachelor, Just as her masculine protciype, the wid- might catch her breath amd do Some | ower, has for the young girl It eas ¢ —-_ - . + jead as it Is true, as Mr. Kipling’s hero- |ine natvely phrased it, that “sixty takes &@ Better, brighter fat? to seventeen, nineteen to forty- i Want ad. will get you that. And, after all, we find our best consola- 2 tion In her conclusion: MOTHER—Whatfor yo’ doin’ wid dat“clock, Gee’ge Walshingham Brown? GEORGE—I’se waitia’ for it to run down, so’s! kin hab a ride. Jong, weary fiat-hunts bore yout dust ihiek thet he'll be eighty-one e ‘ 2 She says no newspaper shall ever have When I am forty-nine," : SEERAADEGIA EDS OEE DEDEOEASE IEA DOORS ELIE D DODDIEDED OE ? . for publication, partie tion no Shuns Notoriety. tf Mrs, Thomas Taggart, wife of the Chairman of the Demen cratic National Committee, has pronounced views against the publication of pictures of public men's wives the | | | SOSEDSEDES 2-2-2-2-44468-60-090-09-000>

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