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il te tes) > ar Ee) ee es ae oe ss Oe en 8 ee —" jucioaroringennss — DOES DS Se Se eee + © FRIDAY EVENinw, DECEMBER 30, 1904, ‘Beware the Perilous Parrot. Published by the Fress Publishing Company, No, oi to & Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-OMce at New York as Second-¢ Mall Matter, VOLUME 48., see ee eenene vesNO, > - By Nixola Greeley 18,837 mith The Evening World First. | Number of columns of advertising in The Evening World during the first nine months 1904 ........ 20,6521 Number of columns of advertising in The Evening World during the first nine months 1903 ..... 8,285), Increase, . .. 2,367 No other six-day paper, morning ot evening, in New York EVER carried in regular editions m nine consecutive months wueh a volume of display advertising as the Evening World camed dunrg the first nine months | IN THREE YEARS THE EVENING WORLD HAS MOVED 10 THE FIRST PLACE. “LITTLE CONEY" AS IT SEETHES. The Evening World presented the cumulative evidence which Coney Island” is still a New York neighborhood {nviting strict police surveillance. Of the res existing there ,, the Riverside Casino, a dance hall in West One Hundred 4 Qnd Tenth street war Amsterdam avenue, ts of widest) ! bad repute. It was there that a special policeman, John “Btadmuller, was shot a few months ago; It was thence more that a too-merry automobile party started last autumn, to wine up in a fatal smash at the foot of Jerome aves Due; it was there that the young woman was seen who @ few hours later on Christmas morning was found dead “in Riverside Park. The shooting, the auto dash and the 7 Own 5 fate of the girl point tragically a continuous round of i unseemly revelries for which the Casino furnishes by no ‘means the only centre Efforts have been made by the West Side Association * And by individual residents of the vicinity to have West , One Hundred and Tenth street cleared up, No good re- sults have followed. The police are sccused of winking At the disorder which disgraces the street. It should be ™ worth Commissioner McAdoo's while to see what truth esterday a column of vonce < f us “Major to show that “Little eorat ow e nes adults > greater damage simus toys, a general con- I the parrots on earth might Without revealing anythin they we ha the me new resol semble about their t he willing t Wepaper, But owners t pt to lapse and the parrots memory is there ts in this charge. Apt to Hager, the best, the only, thing A peculiarity of the situation {s that the resorts com- ' 40 ts to sell it we can find « plained of meet no local demand whatever, Respectabll- P\VNAver aud Piweble victim {ty surrounds them, Their patrons are drawn from dis- scribe ‘the hit gis of F re a tant quarters, They are an infliction from which the of his wequal 4 third person Riverside district ought to be relies bila bdicg had not met her he replied brletly ainisoeaeneneunieoeae and deseript A W " f woman that fect of life Id be reme saving equipment which ml alm, the advantage, With no fixed target at which to Fo muiden Ufe-lines shot at the ship's conjectured location went far Itt they could have been fred from the vessel In- Most nd with the wind, and toward the land, Yet ha to hit, A mortar with a life-line at tach nuld prove Itself a valuable addition to a ves- Sel's outht in em neles at sea. WASHINGTON - HEIGHTS IN ARMS, i , Once again It has become necessary for citizens seek- p11, {ng redress of grievances from a city railroad to march t to the company’s offices in a body it their case 1 With the persuasion which numbers give , One hundred angry taxpayers living on Washington ,,, Heights are due at Mr. Vreeland’s office to-day to ask is Why the number of cars has been reduced since the Sub- way came, why through cars bave been cut off and what and His fs meant by the company's excuse that the present In- rnp Rhiendets Nid efficient service “is nll that the traffle demands.” The excuse fal's lamentably to tally with the fact complained i of of waits cf twenty minutes for a car. The committee ° will particularly demand that the service on the Third avenue line be restored to its former standard and that shea : the Amsterdam cars be run through ag before to Fort y all means sell the pe ; George. mu 1 preserve vour pea It would seem extraordinary, had it not occurred go ™"™ — : often, that whenever there is an abuse of a city carry- A SMOKE SURPRISE. . ding corporation to be corrected, a reform effected or a . pvdlic right uphelt it shonld necessary to hold a id mMaas-meeting and organize a co: itten of safety to all intents aud purposes in the same wey they an ized i. newly settled communities betore is established w and order It is thus that transfer privileges bave Leen secured, car-ahead imposittons abort nher concessions which should have been had for the asking won by a show of for That vigilance con proceedings of this order ? Gre needed throws an ight or the of ; pablic-servic rorations public to whieh they ; owe their creation. That the moment vigiiance re < tw turn too { lexed there at Sixty-fifth street ntem pt ordinance emph on attl ade of « Unecnitary Street Cars The efforts Wyman and the M the ser not fe on si surviving surfa ath CITY DOGS TO PAY STATE BILLS. } If presont plans for new ler pany the pet and watchdogs of the me Swagzer soon with a new importance—th Assisting, each out of a b Heense fee, ing such of the white man’s burdens in Ne Qs take the form of {srmers’ instit islat nd-new 3, schoo culture and experimental stations for crops ) : Ms the provisions of a general licensing law which shall v b wt “4 H af eover canines of high and low degree alike, the just and it the per the unjust, the Commonwealth over. h ‘ wed There will be a great many owners who will not care ind Ae ts for this law. For such no joy t fo the suggestion of the refr: ‘Tax me, tax my Bot on all bands must be admiration for that man’s | wuity toward man which is ever freshly exhibited hen the designers of new taxes are rustic and the vic- { you have so far been are. to be gt ret For “sriengres in the ficens- |] ful in finding just the Pi in je cl We ova dogs, bat the State will gobble hal bat i ee cee ahi Raines-law division is different. The State : 1883 ‘TO LET’ the city’s liquor money. But on the be the exira cost in human |] Advert'sements were printed lat week in |] THE WORLD. of Love trom Ranoeny | tonly wrath will attach uthful and nto pass them for existe Change Your “Rut” uccess- w THE EVENING ‘Mary Jane and Kickums in the Billiard Roo sail For Fudge-y Reasons He Dodged the Water Wagon. | | eee eee eee ec eee ee ee ery e & # = — They Spoil a Very Interesting Game for Their Dads, but Nave Have Lots of Fun Themselves, ® i dver> I tove AL aan | Jat Se STyeak? OF BILLIARDS) THOSE MAKE ANY SKIDS im (agai {THERE NOW- UL, NOw- DONT BOTHER | ME ANY more! onde ene nese ——_) PLEASE fwarcH DONT You EVER ; Me BING | 17'S | the 1 |ComE INTO THs! fun windeD: } (Reo MAN ROOM AGAIN!!) )Boo-Hoos {im Goin’ w# And \cw Mr. Tom Is fade His Head, Wondering How It All Happened, 12 GIN’ IN THE “ aR WRLDS WATER Ne WAGN| R444 DOH fer aea Resa HAAG 4O4O ORE Women’s Questions andthe Answersto Them *” @ ¥ @ wv @ Fair Readers Seeking Information Should Write to “Women's Questions, Evening World, New York City. ESTES ESCE-SDOGCS { bur ¢ | breathing apparatus, WORLD'S » HOME MAGAZINE oe 8rY MARTIN GREEN. The Lawyer Who Tries Jiu Jitsu Starts on the Statutes SEE," sald the Cigar Store Man, “that there 19 come talk about lawyers being mixed up in this Dodge-Morse thing.” “The only dope we have on It so far,” cau tloned the Man Higher Up, “comes from the District: Attorney's oftice, which is a storage warehouse for exploded gensations. Whenever you get a hunch trom the southeast corner of the roof of the Criminal $6 © Courts Building that a prominent citizen 1s about to be Indicted for a crime {t is your cue to press the odds tf you are playiug the hunch to lose. “However, New York wouldn't be much surprised to see an eminent lawyer get the razoo any minute these days. There was a time when people didn't go near law- yers until after they had fractured the law, Now they go to lawyers for advice as to how to accomplish the | fracture painlessly. “Onco lawyers went to school to become familiar with tha statutes. Now they spend their time trying to qual- ify as jiu Jitsu experts, with the statutes as a sparring partner, The best paid lawyers are not the men who go into court and expound and argue before a judge and jury, The legal lights who get the maguma ait in thelr offices and go through the rules and regulations for the conduct of corporetions like a machine shredding cod- fish. Sure-thing men nowadays frame up their games in the rough and take them to a lawyer for the hard finish. If the lawyer can see a profit in sight he declares him- self in for a percentage. ‘There are some lawyers who would kick a sure-thing man down a flight of stairs, but they wear pagsee plug hats and eat at dairy lunches.” “What percentage of lawyers are honest?” asked the Cigar Store Man, “About 50 per cont,” replied the Man Higher Up, “There are so many lawyers that about half of them can't get anything to do,” Know About Yourself, uw No. 3—Hygiene of the Breathing. By E. F, Ingalls, M. 0, (Condensed from “Personal Hygiene,” by Charles G, Stockton, M.D. Copyright, 1904, by W. B, Saunders & Co.) ITF nos Is In two portions, the outer (or facial), and T the Inner, which Iles within the skull. The Inner nose consists of two alr passages extending back lato the skuli as far as the rear end of the or roof of the mouth. Hére they end In a cavity called urynx, The mucous membrane of the nose cone nerves of sensation besides the special nerves hard palate ns many of ymell e nose’s best-known function Is the sense of smell; has other functions more tmportant to health, The und narrow passages of the nasal surface that parses through them and also molstens ring it for Ingresa foto the lungs, The moist f the nose and the hairs at the ene to the nostrils also catch dust and microbes, pree venting thelr absorption by the lungs, To keep the nose and nose passages healthy the nostrils must be open for the passage of alr, Breathing through the open mouth ls to be avolded. Microbes of grippe, pneumonia, consump tion, diphtheria, &e., easily pass through the open mouth to the lungs, tonsils and throat. To keep the nose In perfect condition avold catching ccld. Cold shower baths are good preventives of a cold. Avold over-heated rooms, too much clothing and tl-vene tated sleeping apartments . The cavity known as the naso-pharynx Is roofed by the base of the skull and ts bounded by the vertebrae of the neck, the posterior ends of the nostrils and the eustachian tribes, These eustachian tubes project into the nasonharynx and supply the ear with alr, Below the nasopharynx and continuous with it !# the oropharynx, a part of the pharynx connecting with the mouth, This cavity Is used in both breathing ard swallowing. The tonsils are just in front of the oropharynx. The thorax or chest cavity ts formed by the attachments of the ribs, thelr cartilages and the breast bone (or sternes um). ‘the lungs are composed of a vast nv nber of tiny alr cells, connecting with the outer alr by means of the bronchial tubes. The lungs are not directly attached to the chest wall, are covered by a membrane called the pleura, The lungs are kept expanded by the suction of tae chest wall, Respiratory exercises, like sparring, running, &c,, ald the cheat development of growing boys, The flat or narrow cheat predisposes to consumption. Next to a well-formed chest the purity of the alr Inhaled is of prime importance to the well-being of the lungs, Open-air life, well-ventl- lated rooms, deep-breathing exercises and @ proper course of gymnastics, all are conductve to strong and healthy Sleepless Reptiles. There are several species of fish, reptiles and Insects which ever sleep during the whole of thetr existence, Among fish it Is positively known that pike, salmon and goldfish never sleep at all; also that there are several others in the fish family that never sleep more than a few minutes a month, There are dozens of species of files which never indulge {A slumber, and from three to five spectes of serpents which also never sleep The “Fudge” Idiotoriai, If you fee! ine!ined Advice to GIVE THINGS to Givers. AWAY, give away ee PH things YOU DO (Copyrot, 1904, Planet Pub. Co.) M NOT WANT! This will leave MORE ROOM in the house, and the recipient will be NO WISER | We follow this rule, We give nothing but ADVIC2 | We do this becius: ws DD NOT want any OUR. », SE.VES. Eesider, it ls MORE BLESSED to give than to Ri Js wity just their es and tet Hubbard of thie paper; ane was at woe ” ad _ Giving Presents, | at Hin itt, Wee mame ant | arc ts f thie papess 48¢ vas Alstasteul to the master and CEIVE, t : , Zoi he be oreeee’ to ion! See na y . } my visiting card or @ note, or sire Or Rr beauty) prop ert | lessons now runnl page cf The Event x Wo ork wi Mil also tell you. nin to Kou Qut. li | write regrets on my card? ‘heist GRACE 8. ri jong as the Invitation did not have R. & V. PL in the corner your card It is not proper for a young woman! ©. to give presents to a young man waters | with regrets writes on it 1s proper, she is engaged Ad pe. To Reduce Weight. Invitations. Te a Battor ot The To te Rater [Tee Brenig w iri pep a two it ro What to Wear. To the Riitor of The Evening Worlt Can I wear « white automobi H or only colo ones? Also, I wear a jacket over @ light dress in the evening or must a long coat he worn? NA} Ncy DILLER. You may use your ore taste ‘wo automobile vells. When we give away a lot of advic: it LEAVES MORE ROOM in our head! This gives our brain a chance to grow! You probatly give away slippers! This practice will make your feet grow! BIG FEET, however, cannot compete in life's nage regard — cont | with a BIG HEAD! Paneth ger