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| Beauty As a Civic Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Office _ Padlished by the Press Publishing Company, mote | at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter, —_ "By Nixola Greeley-Smith ROM Nor- come@ the (atemt idea in muntetpal im- vement. The ty fathers of Western realising 1 its merit tar outstripped prosperity, de- cided that what Norton needed w young —_— — VOLUME 48..064 cesesesceeeeeeesNO, 18,784, D , morning ot evening, in New York editions in nine consecutive months men, that noth- | ng attracted | a young men like | ‘ 94 Nixola Greeley-Smith, Pretty young | Bs | women, and At, consequently, the photographs of | | Norton's most beautiful girls should be __| athered together and scattered broad: cast by the local press Following thix dectsion, the amiling The New York Glucose Company, which has been tho {ces of lovely women now make thelr | Main offender in the amoke evil complained of by able Cony Aopee a net fi netah An Norton : Gents of the Riverside Drive, announces that tt Is pre- if ay eb af sai ie ter ws pared to spend $125,900 in altering its furnaces for th jeospority the beauty of {is women may ‘ _ Mee of hard coal, The upper west side will still remain bestow? Perhaps the Kansas town {9 @xposed to the acrid fumes and poisonous gases which mere!y “head of the times in recom- ‘are wafted across the river from other factories on the "!* ne ag the La! iPad ge ei 4 low many of D ‘ | New Jersey shore, to the injury of health and the dam- P''"'" ree earelation Prati a Sge of property, But the relief to be afforded by the wwe io irs pretty girls? y Suppression of this worst source of the evil will be con+ siderable, and is to be thankfully noted. The importaht thing about the company’s action is that ft is taken not in obedience to a court order, but tn 5 Feaponse to popular protest and [n recognition of right® traveller ¢o loiter within our gates and s Which it had not been shown that the company was finally to marry and become one with 4 Bound to respect. The threatened suit of the West End &* | Association in the New Jersey courts could only have . y York, unlike Nor:on, does not suffer f initiated litigation, the outcome of which was problem- aay bs aS eee ee A GOOD NEW JERSEY EXAMPLE, | The dream of a pletured face has drawn men Actors moun- tains, and among the great, unsalaried ranks of New York's beaut! mute, Inglorious magnets that lure the over seas, ore mon Kan a luck of appre Indeed, if the plaintive advo tical at best, ¢ of the reairiction of immigration It is not observed that moral suasion or respect for are te be believed, ts appreciated too public opinion has effected any noteworthy decrease of MCh. Bur why, ever If such be the} © * the smoke evil in this city. The conspicuous offenders Ooty Magis tae trate tana “ot years gone by, the power-houses, illuminating plants, ys. jaar of Aldermen ae onl e railway lighters and large manufacturing concern @ the tisly women in the elty to be photo- 4 the conspicuous oftenders of the present moment. They srapned and the resus pulished in the continue the pollution of the atmosphere in total disre- Steat dailies? This surely ought to be | eMeacious, Fi Norton theory that Gard of & half-hearted oficial prosecution. It 18 Mot tO prety women allure the immigrant {+ 4 be supposed that they will be moved to reverse a settled | yrrect. tt fol that uete women mu A policy of obstinate opporition to the public dntereat be- likewise repel him. In this way the ki case of che sentimental New Jersey example, But the ‘lowing tide of population may be § checked or Increased by a Judiclous selection of feminine photographs, and gly women and pretty women alke 1 by appearance in the public precedent is nune the less encouraging and creditable. Police Control of the Sirects suggestive sights of the cily is the irregu jiele of whitewash On the asphalt around the Columbus monument at Pitty: Prints ninth street and the Park entrance, $c is the line beyond It remained for the Wemt—always which the truck driver may not pass, oud that it is there more progressive in ite treatment of i, and respected is an interesting Must-ation of how much Women—to accord this final recognition has been accomplished by the Department in the of her power, Tt ts to be hoped, low More efficient handling of street traific. ‘The progress of, eVOr, that our Eastern towns will fol. : the mounted policeman up Broadway ty new centres of low the example of enterprising Nor- " congestion anc his capability in bringing order out of a ton, Kan, and that soon the position ia : chaos of vehicles command general approval, ‘This pollee Of official beauty and oharmer-in-chiet | § of the pe wought by youn sible setticr will be women r before in the # much 4 duty at least fs better performed than ¢ ny of the history of the city THE DAILY RIOT AT THE BRIDGE. Yate to te benatifil for one’ Artist Mortimer's pencil pictured In Saturday's Even- reir e » be beautiful for one's! ¢ rush-hour « F frends, But how can elther of these | ; ing World a rush-hour scene at the Manhattan end of | te. With. the. Geotious mriviione ot the Brooklyn Bridge. The story which the artist (lus- veautiful tor one’s clty trated was that of a woman who was knocked down by Bs id aa ra ie & brute in trousers making sure of his seit. More forcefully ‘ould be swallowed 8 than any words cou!d have done It, the drawing conveyed |), t70, Rioghect elare, the miner o ta the impreesiov of the brutality which Is set loose in the pea saosk hn elk stronger sex in the daily mad scramble at the bridge ° iitvence LETTERS, ‘These pushers and jostlers of the rush hour are rlot- ‘ QUESTIONS, | @rs, pure and simple, when one comes to consiter them eee «in thelr true light. The temptation {s strong, ther:for», ANSWER>. to recommend for them the usual riot-call treatment by a and healthy night-stick squad. If The Evening a World refrains from meking this recommendation, at 1 the moment, it is out cf an aversion to the clubbing | dyperd {nm general, and because of no consideration for bridge brutes in particular. In 1886, To the Editor of Tae Evening World In what year did Henry George run for Mayor of New York the first time? But something should he done, and it ts, of course, Re tw police who should do it. Can the powers that have A Permit Is Required, tt order out of chacs in the street traffle ai the ‘ro the Buitor of The Evening World Bridge approach fall in an earnest effort to bring de- ts there a law ow 1 amateur ig @ency out of Jastardly dier among bridge passen- taking pictures in Broux Park? : Bs; gers? wom 4 9 ed Working for Education, ° DIVERTING CITY TRAFFIC To the Edttor «* The § «Worl : It appears thut while the Subway {s carrying more he Sell nit te % (ian 200,000 passengers n dav, traffic on the « | : wud by Hines so far from suffering diminution shows a € a B |’ fncrease over the figures for last Novem Some part rr oerd Pe : ft this new business is obviously due to the normal w «a? yearly expansion of city traMe. But how much of It m ; : is : has been derived directly from the surface roads? : At the time of the elevated’s rema: {nereased business a year ago The E g World avg gested that the Inferior accommodat street To the Euitor of a Hines and their unsatisfactory treatment of patrons had allenated to the “1.” a large volume of short-haul traffl It was inferred that the advant gained in faster end more orderly trar were sufflclent to overcome ¢ tions to stair-climbi 4 the longer walk necess'tat ble showing of 4 MICHAL Prinsived aw If the Subway {s to make still further {nroads into the Dusiness of the surface lines, the need of an improved Veritas service will be brought home to their management tu PR . the vital matter of diminishing dividends. Sea The street railway reports of Oct. 4 showing a marked Evaland and general decrease of carnings due to a falling off of !!€8t and Truth.” itronage from the figures of the previous year were in Where Does the “Salat Come iut| | ; | nature of a symptom of undeniable gravity. To the Editor of The venirg World pot sisal’ WE some Russian reader piease form me why | . ut e Rus HELPING ON A MERRY WORLD. As another Presidential campaign £8 Pleasant to lock about and note thet not even in Of politics has a great people become lost to those var Hy) OGs matters which go to make this a merry world, wall) ,.) . PF sorNes of é Worth # lifetime's visiting. | 1aes a: Yeas Within the Inet few days in New York the Hon. a World : i) Sfeny” Wamser has made a new record in beefstrak 18 an's salary? | 4 SP 8D pounds eaten at a sitting. Moreover, a Brooklyn po- ABE H |¢ a | has added to the herole traditions of the ; | consuming sixteen pics in swift succe ere 4 ere Accomplishments which thrill while they fill. And é yen after. : SeThen, a popular actress, not content that counties 2 ere swear by her eves, has heen found making af™- 4 vit in court to the beauty of thove organs, and besides, le age which is supereminently that of adverts landlord is detected complal that, as re- palatial hostelry, the pubit job has been and often preposterous days! It is well ting that, come votes as they will, the for pure whiskey is to go on un- When wearled by:the morn of toll, Burned with ambicion's flame, Tis #weet to se Edith Livingston Housekeeping. Smith in Good w THE # EVENING * * ad GWANI!- TAKE OAT! YER CHOCOLATE Echaial! TERRIBLE OVTOREAK OW THE WEST Sivg !! Beavrirur | NOW DONT SMILE FOR A DAY OR \T WILL CRACK iSammy Smudge, the ‘Evening Fudge’”’ Wonder. w Asset. Bantams “Scrap” in the Street and This Little Incident at Once Grows Under His Master Hand Into a Huge Big-Type Sensation. | OR Muc’s BEAUTY PARLOR NELAO,"TENDERLOM, STATION P+ SEHD THe AESEAVES ON THE Tume!! GY WAS THERE NO REPORT OF COMMISSIONER ME ADoo a F Oy ana ——— Geel! it Must Of GREAT Ter BE cRazy!! The Smile She Cracked, but It Wouldn’t Come Off. The Editress of the “Home Agitet or" Has Her Face Enamelled, but It Is Beauty that ls Not Skin Deep, VICTIM—Dat razzah ob youah’s appeahs rathah punctuated. TCNSORIALIST—Ya-as auh! Dat Abe Mokeby am sut’nly de ha'dest-skulled niggah Ah eveh ah sed politica wif. PEOOOOSESEGEE OE POHEH: 106 a SF S SSS IOSF9-0S999-93-6096 G92 FOS SE-¢ SEF POSEGHP-HE- HSS S TOSSES THSE -O-8-6 PODS DOTSSE 5 $2 -9S-9S982 HOH DOS SePe eee PEPE HE ESOS POR CeSe es F8SOS4S3-308 Ooo 28 oe $6 9S2H0 ee re LP POPSET POPE SS ROS SEK OPE OH BY MARTIN GREEN, Most of Wall Street’s Big Election Bets Are Made with Stage Money. SEE,” said The Cigar Store Man, “that nummer ous thousands of dollars were wagered on the resalt of the election in Wall street.” “It you had all those numerous thousands of dollars,” replied The Man Higher Up, “and invested them in taking a hundred children under four years of age street-car riding, the children would be | walking after the third round trip. There ts about as much identified cush in Wall etreet election betting as ‘there Is solid sustenance in a charlotte russe, “There are brokers in Wall street whose names never get Into the newspapers—except In case of a pinch—until & couple of weeks before election. All at once you read that one of these brokers, who has desk room in New street and feeds his face every day at noon from the paper-box lunch-wagon, has bet $10,000. When you get him into a corner and ask him where he got the money he confides that {t was placed in his hands by a cuse tomer. “But when the pay-off time comes, a couple of days after election, do you find these daring gamblers there? Should you pledge yourself to buy every one of them that settles a diumond ring it wouldn't cost you an office ‘boy's cigarette money. “Tho real betting 1s done on election day, and it ts (not done in Wall street. Professional speculators don’t risk huge wads on elections, because no election is a cinch where there are candidates on two tickets. Thero | will be lote of money won and lost on the count of the ballots, but it will be handed from friend to friend, and the most of it will be spent right where {t Is trang ferred, There is nore money bet at the race-track on a big day than there is in all New York on a general elec tion.” “But nearly everybody that comes {nto the store tells mo about big bets,” asserted The Cigar Store Man. “Well, you keep cases on how many of them are put ting decorative friezes of mazuma on their apparel dure ing the final end of the week,” advised The Man Higher Up. &6 HUNAN ANAK KY MMP RAE ARR ERR A ANH AK | Mrs, Nagg and Mr, — % bar By Roy L. McCardell, 5 PESOS CRESTS SST CCR CEST RES TOO) 5 She Gives Some Hints on the Complexion, “ee HY do you glare at me, Mr. Nagg? I say you are “Didn't you ever see @ woman use a powder rag before’ If there la anything I hate it's a woman who puts Anything on her face, My complexion {s my own, ¢hank goodness! But whenever I am nervous my nose gets so shiny! t horrid Mrs, Flyppe had the impudence to call me ‘an urtistio kalsominer,’ just because she eaw me using a ictle powder at the Kind Words Cluy, But I gave her such a dig! T'll bet she will remember it! “She was saying she walked ¢wo miles every morning for her complexion, and [ sald, ‘Dear me, you must live a long Way from a drug store!’ Everybody tttered., ‘There, I'l) put a litt ‘olor on my cheeks. If I have te use a little rouge, Mr. Nagy, !t ts all your fault, If you were kind to me my roses woud not have fled. There! I look bete » ‘ter now, only my lips are white, I will just put on a little ip ® salve I see some here on the bureau, from? Perhaps brother Willie got it without knowing what was for, Poor boy, he knows go little of such things, “Of course, if 1 put on a little lip salve I wii have to darken my eyebrows a little. “I do hate uny one who uses such things constantly, but if one ts going out of an evening I think ft Is always best to darken the eyebrows a little, “Bome women look horrid with dyed hair and thetr faces plastered with pa’nt anil powder, but I think if one ts looking pale there is no hagm tn fixing up just a little. “Not that I care myself, Mr, Nagg, but I know you want to see me looking my best, and for that reason I do pay @ little attention to my appearance. “It is just as mamma says, men do not care anything for a Woman who scorns ¢o tise artificial alds to the complexion, “It T was Itke other women that daubed themselves up with rouge and ‘such things that I know nothing of you would be pleased. “But Tam not so old, Mr. Nagg. I was down street with your cous'n Irene, tha¢ tittle chit who s going to boarding » | school, because she wanted me to help her pick out favors for her party that she is going to give next week when she ig | Seventeen; and as we passed the Fifth Avenue Hotel I hearg a man say, ‘There goer a little peach!’ “He was a rude follow, for when I turned around he grinned. So you can seo that T am not as old and faded ag you would think. Your cousin Irene pretended not to hear It, and 'f she did hear it T suppose the vain child would have thought the remark was Intended for her, "She Is nice looking from ¢he dol! point of view, but she has no figure, and her eves are too big, and she has too many, s fora gir! of her age ly dresemoker telis me that ehe ha * customer whe T am quite slender, but she hardly at all. except here and there. r? Tan never t st vou but what I wonder where it came | | has a firure Ike mine, 0 you om anything T think will inte you dale or fidget! Why iton't you say something? Why don't you tell me T look nice? “Oh, thank you; #0 I look real nice, you sav? Mow kind of you! T wah I could think you meant It! But you don'e care tor me, Mr. Nagg. You would prefer a woman who painted and powdered and fixed herself up until she looked like @ freak! “I newer put anything in my eyes to make them look bright, 4o I? You know I never do; Once or twice T may have used a little belladona, but that's all “So, you see, it {¥ just as T sald! A man has no use for @ woman wh natural In her complexion as well as in hep manners! “Yes, Tam crying, and now I will have to powder my nose again Whistler's ‘ “histor, the artist, was in Pa: nation of King Edward, and at a reception one evening @ ducher ‘to him: ‘I belleve you know King Edwant, Mr. \ “No, madam," replied Whistler. “Why, that's murmured; "I met the King at a dinner party and he sald that he knew you.” “Oh,” sald the pa : at was Just his brag.” A Lawless Village. Ty che \Lilage of Altenburg, on whose borders three coum. tries meet, there are no soldiers, ro police, no taxes, and ite prople are ruled by no monarch. The inhabiiants speak @ queer jargon of French and German combined, and spend heir time cultivating the land or working the valuable Dd, calamine peda els neue pling ad : dies dacs