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w THE # d AZINE vw ast Published by the Press Pudlishing Company, No. 8 wo @ Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter, VOLUME 48.ccccccccccseesessessNO, 18,807 | ByNixola Greeley-Smith. TA iP ai loved and lost Number of columns of advertising in than to have The Evening World during the loved aed Se fist nine months 1904 ,.....,. 10,6523 oharaphrased seman lor,w rejections by women he had courted testi. fled to his ex- perience, th other day. The ca Wald ocak fim nine months 1903... 285% morning ot evening, in New York editions in nine consecutive months celebrated na charming the su | fortune of him whose Indy fair has preferred | |another, and who therefore, twenty | yenrs after, “in dreams may behold her still fair und kind and young.” But notwithstanding the bachelor's A FINANCIAL GENIUS, If half that is told of the exploits of Mrs. Carrie Chad- {, impossible to convince the avernae » Wiek in practival mortal that true luck in love | luring cash from the strong boxes of bankers is conslate {> pot oblsining one's heart's! true, America has given birth to a greater than Mme. desire. To be aure, we often know far better Humbert, 1 feuminino prestidigitateur of finance whose <hans''tha Telenda: Who teil eof it that deeds pale the lustre of recognized Napoleons, what we want is not good for us, But - 9 does the small boy who, even while Mrs. Chadwick seems ouly to have needed tu ask for | remembering former mishans, clamors Toan of any size to receive it with a cheerful alacrity on|at Thankagiving and Christmas for y the part of hard-lieuded businexa men which 18 attributed |more (rult cake and plum pudding (han ” ” | the laws of schoo! y health allow nd to the exercise of “some strange influence” over them. | continues to clamor tor them Just so » Was this “influence” of a hypnotlc nature? Deputy | tong as these delectable viands preserve Sheriff Porter says It must have been, because In his own | for him thelr rich and forbidden flavor ease every iime the eyes which were open sesame to safo deposit vaults met his he “grew dizzy” and some “strange power” mare it impossible for him to avert his look from the fascinating gaze. But on the other hand, according to the counsel for Mr, Newton, who is suing to recover on loans aggregating $190,000, “there was no hypnotism and no persuasion.” Mrs, Chadwick “operated solely along legitimate lines” We eee ibe a isin seco Bae “ ‘omen, howev: and her dealings were “cold business transactions.” It) phtios»phieat ‘There ts no phenomenon ‘was in that light that her propositions appeared to Presi-| of social lite more amaging than the Gent Beckwith, whose bank {s reported to be hopelessly *# with which « bose puree a iove with one man marries another an aor h becomes rapidly reconciled to her fate the hypnotic theory eliminated {t {s clear that! ‘phere ts roally quite a large number the heroine of these large loans possessed great personal of women who would be more or less) magnetisin along with exceptional gifts of persuasion of — peottip ba becbates MY Age the kind which makes the successful promoter, Tn ee inet enna an are Varger fleld and with fuller opportunities, what stock companies with millions in them might she not have growth,’ we hear from infancy, and | the small boy's taste for what Is not good for him grows with his growth. | not getting what he most desires, And the man is not a bit quicker in learalng temperamentally incapable of exercising any pronounced matrimonial chotce. launched? If proof is presented of her identity with | "ome !9 the world. But there are ise RE h lath ij Laura Digely her career will appear to have been one of pred ee ee | he the most extraordipary in American social history, From the fact that ideals usually | Ry: change for the better and the persons | £ TRANSFERS IN LOCAL TRANSIT, —_| he fepresent them for the wore, it} ‘4 may often happen that those who do| * ‘The transfer system of the New York City Rall ed | bie y Way| not realise them may be esteemed most . Company !s an institution of deep, if intermittent| blessed among their kind. It Is the | mt unfortunate and unjust habit of men faterest. It rambles, 0 to speak, fearfully and wonder fully. ‘To no outsider ts It permitted accurately to know ay ‘where it works and where it does not. and women to blame the hapless crea- ture whom they fitted thelr ddeala) upon whether they will or not, if by In upper Broadway, as ‘The Evening World remarked | Sano Wrigels and squirm under the mieft yoke and finally thrust it from the other day, a transfer slip guod on one car Is rejecte4| them. Now, as @ matter of fact, we on another going the same way. The distinction between| have no more right to expect others to) cars {s farcical, but it ylelds probably enough nickels In| lve up to our ideals of them than we) extra fares to pay for a good many trip elips. And this! have to exact of ourselves that we live up to our own, And nothing could be fs by no means the worst of the transfer iniquities ea} more elastic than human leniency in metropolitan surface routes, ] “ia comment, mt Perh: Women have more sense on the eub-| ‘ J aps if the controlling corporation would get itself fect of ideale than men, for they bulld 2 together, make its transfer rules general and hang on Its | them much too large and subsequently cars signs which really tell destinations and routes, it Cut them down to fit, as the makers of | Would begin to get on the trail of its missing dividends, | '*#4Y-made clothing are obliged to do, | meee on the contrary, grumble !f they 4 ave to make the ailghtest change in ie THE EVIDENCE OF FINGER TIPS, the wonderful raiment wrought of love oa ‘The part which a trifle may play in convicting a pris- !magination with which they seek ty . Oner is one of the commonplaces of criminal prosecution, Mien Use cane pes | by Tn tho search for the murderer of Carrie Reinbaltz,| be who, having failed iP et Pujol = killed at Wayne, Pa., on Thanksgiving Day, a torn letter | "ess, would want to make the subject | { which has been patched together furnishes the chiet clue °V*" Instead of rubbing out the unsuc- | »€0 far obtained. A bloody thumb mark on a ORG | Wilding eee ae tla room table is counted on to convict the murderer of Mra, ever fall to reali a feet of clay, In-| Margaret Keeler, who was found done to death in her flat fo'wort teen Bit thece ie yg a fn East One Hundred and Fifteenth street. In the Mus- | Sesrable gods’ nevertheless,” ™*| well Hill tragedy in England the discovery that two knives had been used to cut up the tablecloth with which LETTERS, the victim was bound hand and foot brought the guilt home to each of the two prisoners charged with sa QUESTIONS, crime. + Of particuler value as a means of identification ts the ANSWERS ee uy ‘ evidence of finger prints, a method now reduced to a *‘aelence and recently accountable for the conviction of one of the cleverest house-breakers in London, In enter- ing a house through a window tho thief cut his hand and left on the broken bit of glass red finger prints which abowed seventeen points of resemblance with those of the suspect arrested for the decd. According to Inspector Collins, Scotland Yard now possesses a classfled collection of more than 7,000 fin-| ger prints of criminals. It 1s a rogues’ gallery more He the Be trustworthy than the evidence of photographs. The ex- Credit shows te dives to the party tent to which this French system of ddentification has! of automobiliste who ran down an aged | scarcely | “ “Man aud Squirrel” Problem. of The Evening World: if he Is on one aldo of « tree| 4nd & squirrel on the other, both mov- ing at the same time, same direotion and same speed, that when he has com- pleted his oircle he has circled the soulrre), B claims he does not. Will} readers @teouss this? G. T., Hackensack, N. J. Satirtc Praise for Chauffeur, ‘er the accident, returned and made man as comfortable as possible with sides placing him where no quarters in all large cities 1s one of the romances of the detection of crime. THE RIGHT WORK FOR GIRLS, Mire, Florence Kelly put a great deal of hard truth into| a Palace eying man sould @ peace with his Maker) ; + ston . — Girls, Monday, before a portion! gracefully retired while the old farmer ‘ Bociety tor Ethical Culture, Like all reform speak-' prayed that his lite might be saved. tm, she stated her case perhaps @ little broadly, It is f Rot inevitably true that girls who go to work in StOFES | the automobilists in withholding ‘hate tr factories “are headed the wrong way for housekeep-| names that the public do not give them! ta.” Somo of them have home training which end: ee Tr akeocae el ; rf ich endures. One-Quarter, } ¢ Bat ft ts undoubtedly true that a great many girls are ry ihe piiior of The Ev r te ening Wor! t polled for housekeeping and a great many homes made How much Is one-half of { ‘Malmerebls through the foolish preference which places Lah Werk at & machine or a counter above that In kitchen a jad Staing-room. Day legal holidays? Ta the store a girl learns her stock; in the shop tha | her machine. When she marries she may forget things of the counter and the factory. She has yet to " ‘Maleas she has been mother-trained, the things tha: Volume of Water. the making of a home. j Te the Biitor of The Evening World Will clever readers work on this ex: | ° ‘of the girl who goes out to housework, as Of ample? A well is 6 feet in diameter and| “My wife worrtes me. he knows I | feet deep, How many gallons of| won $100 of to stiopwork, that she is carning wages bee very things which best prepare her for | ®ater will 1t contain? re V h tat, Iindness and good Boats Stratant, bye 1s 2 ot The is higher, @ or we EVENING .¢ WORLD'S & HOME w MAG grumbling and the poet's moonshine, it « “Mon are but children of a larger 3 Never tn the world, tll his digestion |» has gone back on him altogether, does § the boy realize that the best luck {sin @ These aro perhaps the most contented | } been developed and practically applied at Police Head-| farmer and who, instead of passing on| » jother chauffeur could (if sober) run | { | over him; and then (probably thinking! » ERO GEE EGE EGE YL ELDD ED ADE DOD OEREOE RODE DOD LOOT UE D E4146 EHEOOE FTE E4EDE EHUOO 1 VEO LD HL OODDELOD FOOD DEDELEIA Don’t Get Mad « Takea Temper Powder!’ (By 1. E. Powers, ) : u SPOObS-> Will a Snowball Attack om . Port Arthur Be the Next ream? : SEE," said the Cigar Store Man, “in a despatell? % ras from London, that the Japanese are forcing ? thelr way into Port Arthur at the point af the sword,” i “it's tlme they were forcing their way in a@ the point of something,’ replied the Mat Higher Up, ‘but information comes from Port Arthur by way o@ Chefoo, Constantinople, Cairo, Skibbereen and Stocks holm that the sword attack is in wrong. There was some hope in the truth of it from the fact that the leader of the sword play is Gen. Namakura, which is close enougts to McNamara for a hunch that the Japs have some oute | siders in their army, ‘ “That eminent Roman daily newspaper, called the ® | Chestanutta de Chiant, publishes a special despatch from ® (its correspoudent in Mulberry Bend stating that @ @ picked squad of Japanese warriors has been detailed as Hf an advance guard to etorm the inner forts with snows //) %\ alls, The Japanese are great jugglers, Many a time ® | have you seen a Jap performer Iie on his back and keag, three chairs, a table, an fron safe and one of his coun- | trymen revolving luxuriously in the air with the ald of his feet. “This Japanese talent for Juggling 1s about to be ‘utilized, With their arms full of snowballs the troops + jin the first line of the Japanese advance will approach | the defenses. When close enough to discern the indie | vidual hairs in che whiskers of the brave defenders the Japs will begin to juggle. In a4 minute the air will be thick with snowballs, whirling and swinging with Ine leredible raptdity, The Russians will look on- with ‘amazement, and while they are paralyzed at the speo- tacle half the Japanese army will swim out to sea, circle around and take the port from the rear.” | “That's a fvolish line of stuff,” asserted the Cigar Store Man. “Sure, Mike,” agroed the Man Higher “but the | only difference between {it and the bulk of the news we * MN tlle Ouchy Bogs. So: WHERE HAVE You BeEw: SITTING UP WITH A SICK FRIEND, EH? Le For ThEGr Now Test AMOMENT, Thy one ) Th TAWE OWE OF ese Ti Fike THE FIRST MAN THAT COMES IN NU Late ° 4 AWFERGITIT! HAVE A POWDER have been getting from Port Arthur lately is that.n@ cable toll was paid on it.” For The Too exacting wife By Roy L. McCa (KKK x2 Hw = Powe R$ i i i por HS HOSE EF Sever 3) She Advocates The Simple Life. HAT is all thin talk of the Simple Life, Mr, Nagg® . ¢ “VW Vhe newspapers are full of it. I don’t understand a {t myself, but Mrs, Stryver Is getting some new Mary Jane Getsa Present of aPair of Skates, wt uti Sosienry insite Roemer when the gowns were finished Mrs, Stryver intended reading r a She and Kickums Put Them On and Do a Little Figure-Eighting on the Carpets and Furniture. ® you na 3 ina An Eminent European Sclentlet Has Discovered, 80 He Says, that by the Administration of Certain Powders He Can Change Bad Tempers. Into the Sweetest Dispositions in the World. e 4 ® & series of papers on The Simple Life, - Bimple Life consists of being contented with Whas , you say? Ab, tha ll very well for people whe , mty, If you could see the expensive trimming om | {those gowns Mrs, Stryver Is having made and If you could |see the quality of the cloth, some of it # a yard, you woul@ say that a woman who could afford clothes like that would |be contented with the Simple Life, | “I would be contented with it, too, ¢f we only had @ bets ler house than this one and if f had all the money I wanted |to spend and if I had a husband who took any Interest im getting Ihto society. “Mr, Btryver takes an Interest in his wife's getting into socle' i] he spends money ext jantly on her. It is no wonder she reads papers on The Simple Life, I would do it, too, but I haven’; a decent hat to wear and my sealskiy | Needs making over, And I don't know what's going to become , of us {f the prices of things keep going up. “If you knew what things for children cost you would get discouraged, I can't got a coat for baby that I would permit the cbild to wear for less than $25, I see women whose huse bands do net make half what youl do, dressing their childrem | and themselvea a great deal better than I can afford, * “Just when I think I am getting along nicely there ts always some expensive fad like this Simpie Life thing be- comes the rage, and I need a whole lot of new dresses, If Mra, Stryver envites me to her affalr when she ts fo read her lestay on The Simple Life, how can I go unless I have some new dressest I can't wear the brown dress, I wore that at her Inst affvir, Ob, you don't care, Mr. Nags, you don't Care for The Simple life. All you think of Is to make yourself comfurtablo and go pottering around In your old Bhabby clothes, but I have something at stake. I can't afford being | made a show of. 1 suppose you would like me to sit home biting my thumb while other women get Into soolety, rhaps you would Ike to have a wife like Mra, Thoyype ron, who used to run out to the #tore with a shawl over hw head and quarrel with the grocer because two of the ema, he sent her were bad. She had an aunt that fell from the lgecond story to the pavement while she was cleaning the = , | windows anit broke her collar bone, and the shrieks of Mra, Thompson were terrible to hear, and when the ambulahce samo the doctor had to give hér something to quiet her nerves and ever since that she has a nérvotie Affection of the eyes that make them wink so that people mistake her motives 4 she creates scenes because gentlemen follow her, and you remember how her husband came over here and come | plained because Brother Willle In his boyish way used ¢o call oul after her everytime he saw her, “Tip us a wink, old gale Not that he meant any harm, tt was just hts fm. > “But thet is the kind of a wife you would prefer, Whas jnre you walking up ant down for? Can't T have a few words with you about The Slinple Life hut what you must act as if I were driving you mad? i “Oh, well, never mind. You will walt a long time before 3 / ever say another word te you!’ | | pial aie EDEN | | The “Fudge” Idiotorial,. The people have LooK WHAT PAPA ' GAVE ME: > 3 : 3 & o e ; 4 ® 4 : | ° 9 o 4 ; : ¢ ee ee er re ers 2 The Subway PAID FOR theSub- Slot Machine way! WHY’ should they KEEP. ON \ \ Steals! PAYING for ft || Copyrot, 1904; by the Planet Pub. Co. The Subway ts | run by THE MEM | BER of The Belmont Pamily The Editor of The Fudge P DOES NOT LIKE, It is lese majeste for him to be ALIVE} Yesterday The Editor of The Pudge placed his WEEK'S SALARY in a penny-in-the-slot-machine at the bridge a caramel for BREAKFAST, : He pushed the button, but NO CARAMEL came out? His week’s salary was STOLEN by this maching, THIS ROBBERY of the people has got to STOP, SOOO OL S952 9FSESHS0S9-5-99-96-20885908G8 392% 1 StCeos oe (at EXPERIENCED, = ge are building @ new house?’ much is tt going to cost?” D S22OD DEVAL OL8GOO-0040 00004 WIFELY SOLICITUDE. “Your husband will an election bet and she | ™ ,"" the surgeons hann’t asked me for a cent of Bs pa bene ees te en ce hh i "pleaded the “Never mind; you'll hear from her working ' TIME YET, THE JOLLIER, il through, Lady (in jewelry store)—1 the ail. na ver back @ ty Cleve rh 2 Now don't later, Sha’s probably silently =a rola out the beat to . naan gy 11 TE