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Defines Adulterations in Spe- cific and Emphatic Language, CALL FOR A MEETING —— ‘Plan of Co-Operation Is Mapped ‘\ Out In Circular Sent to i Farmers Generally. SMALL RETAILER. ——— ‘nD TO Bupplies, it le Hoped, Will Re- ,, delved Daily and Placed In Hands ; of Consumers at Once. 4 (Bpecial to The Evening World.) ALBANY, Feb, yGowan, of elaware County, introduced fe bill W-day raising the standard for) ‘pure milk, Tho measure hits the trus ag it will compel milk etations to raise the percentage of fat in milk handled ‘by them from 3 to 3.3 per cent. . | ‘The bill umends the State Agricultural Jaw as follows: “The terms butter and cheese, when used in this article, mean the products of the dairy usually known by these terms which are manufuc- tured exclusively from pure, unadul- terated milk or cream or both, with or without salt or rennet and with ‘or without coloring matter or sage, The terms oleomargarine, butterine, Imitation butter or imitation cheese, shall be construed | mean any ar- ticle or substance in the semblance of butter or chees not the usual pro- duct of the dairy and not made ex- clusively of pure and unadulterat- ed miik or cream, or any such ar- ticle or substance Into which any oll, Inrd or fat not produced from milk or cream enters as a compo- font part or Into which melted but- ter or butter in any condition or Ftate, or any oll thereof has been introduced to take the place of cream, “The term adulterated milk, when 80 ‘used means: 1—"Milk containing more than yelghty-eight percentum of water or fluids, . 2—"Milk containing less than twelve percentum of milk solids, 3—"Milk containing less than 8.3 percentum of fats. 4.—"Milk drawn from cows within Fifteen days before and five days after parturition, 5.—!Milk drawn from animals fed on distillery waste or any substance In a state of fermentation or putre:| faction or on any unhealthy fodd, 6.—'Milk drawn from cows kept in @ crowded or unhealthy condition., T—"N1k from which any part of the cream has been removed, 8.—'Milk which has been diluted | with water or any other fluid or to which has been added or into which has beer introduced any foreign sub-| @tance whatever, All adulterated milk shall be deemed unclean, uns nealthy, impure and unwholesome, “perms ‘pure milk’ or ‘unadulterated Mik,’ when used singly or together means sweet milk not adult tho terms pure cream or unadulterated eroam, when used singly or together, mean cream taken from pure and une aduitedated milk,! ‘he trast, IU is expected, will fight the measure, Assemblymea Cowan pre- penis a district that sells large quant. Ves of milk to the trust, ‘here Is hope for the tens of thouss Ands of children in the tenement-houses, Encouraged by The Evening World's | Articles on the milk situation, the farm- ers are olng to make an effort to sup- | « ply their milk directly to the small oalers of the east side, By’ the co- operation of the farmers and th Anvil dealers the poor children can se- | eure a supply of pure milk shipped daily direct from the farms and the faimers expect to get an adequate price for thelr milk by cutting out the middle. then's profits, ‘pfis movement 1s not In opposition to the smull retailer, but in his favor, Mt is his only chance to continue In Dusiness, At present the only way he can get milk in the small quantities which he sells is to buy what the large wholesale dealers who make up tie Milk Trust have left over from thelr elght-cent customors, Teady W Tt has al- how this left-over milk) goes Piroweh a series of middiomen's hands | to be embalmed and sold In the poorer Neighborhoods, To Find Direct Outlet, The objevt of this farmers’ movement fs to find a direct wholesale outlet for thelr milk, They cannot soll retall bes cause they havo not the delivery wagons Trance Mediums Cannot resurrect a spirit brok- en down by business failures, There Is a Medium, however, that promptly read- justs many financial misfor- tunes, brings to some and increases bank ac- counts of the rich, A “Reading” for Ic, by consulting the popular me- dium, “Busin Opportuni- ties,” in the MORNING WORLD, 586 “Prosperity” Offers Last Week, prosperity ILL IN LEGISLAT STANDARD FOR PURITY OF MILK. MILK PRODUCE@E WHO WILL MEET IN NEW YORK, 16, — Assemblyman | ‘ated, and| been explained in The Evening} WGOHUNT & Were to start such routes in the better neighborhoods a difference {neti Drive would not have the same attraction for the customers as in the poorer neigh: borhoods, Anyhow the farmers do not want to go Into the retail business, All they want {8 a falr price for their milk, They can sell milk wholesale at 4 cents | quart and then be a great deal bet- ter off than they are n Acting “in co-operation with The Evening World, the American Agricul- turlst and the Rural New oYrker are arranging for a meeting of the milk- producing farmers to confer with the east aide milk dealers with the view to jestablishing a wholesale milk station | on the eagt side, which shall recelye its supplies dally direct from the farms and shall sell wholesale direct to the small] dealers without the milk going through an embalming establishment and without any mliddlemen's commls- jong, Ww, Plan of Co-Operation, ‘The circular letter sent by the Ameri- | 7PBAKEN BWV: RANGER 9 TRA L: WB SNeEL and tho retail routes to supply, If they can Agriculturist to the Five-State Milk retail dealers are the lo the Co-opera-|{s by an alllanse and co-operation with | graft, twenty-two years old, had been | Freauceey ppeociation, thve Creameries Association @ ongunlgations of milk producers sass” “If you will communicate ai once with the other officers and fix a definite late some time next week for a meet ing here fn New York, we can arrange for a mass-meeting at th’s end, whicn, for the first time in our history, will bring the consumer and producer face to face, and the grievances of both sides can be publicly discussed and brought to the direct attention of neople in gen- eral through the press, I believe the time Is orgortune for a rousing mass- meeting along these tines, and nroducers should take hold of this at once,” In speaking of this movement, W. G, Johnson, managing editor of the American Agriculturist sald: “For a long time the farmers have | been vitally Interested in this milk probe }lem, but they have recelved no assist- | ance at the other end, We are all deep- ly grateful to The Evening World for | presenting the facts to the milk con- | 8umers, The consumers and the small CUPID PLAYS } Schoolmarms Are Rings, and Fol | How one small boy can play havoc jwith the school-teaching force Is kcep- Ing Interest very high at present ip | Bnglewood, N. J, Whether it ts four- teen teachers or seventeen out of the {town's entire complement of forty-eight on which confidential citizen you ask about him, His name {s Dan, Incidentally Dan is sald to have given | people trotible in other towns besides Englewood, He {s particularly eccen- tric In the matter’ of clothes. Or rather Jiack, This eccentricity and his marks- |manship at archery have resulted In his being transferred from one after Janother of Englewood's four schools. Clothed in a Smile, He appeared at schoo! in the coldost sr with nothing on but an arrow rand a pleasant smile, and when were made to make him wear a rit was found Impossible, owing to the fact that he had a couple of Iit- tle wings on his shoulders, Dan—his last name is Cupld—spent his time bothering the teachors, Ot around the rooms and ing arrow ‘throwing stones—clear, srhall, flashing stones that tho’ teachers preserved and wore singly in gold rings, When so many of tne teachers (they are young and pretty In Englewood) commenced wearing these stones, the | | ment rings’ while his mone cautious but she did not deny the report, under the firemen's coats, He saw The World deposited on the |f “It's Wageous, attempting to refer hough thelr Wreads were very pain-| door sill by a newsboy A few min- | MCN ean ais Hath ful. the two men went back toWzht the] utes later he heard tue milkman com- | to eachers in bunches like a %>t of | flames after they had been attaided by ing upstairs and glued his eyes to the =) sald Miss Bennett. “Some | 4" ambulance surgeon, crack of the door, Vae milkman WE . OIORY. hers may be engaged, but Dai TN tera -ce-—aprete a bottle of milk at the door across the pupils, who hadn't had minerology | FERAL Ave: BoAlna Tdlaenan a (Cl oI iy hall, then softly stepped to Mr, Ber- among t Is, commence) telling | becouse several A wearing Siemens DAN” M’CARTHY, MaMa oooer ERALGIeGT UbT the, ewes | each other, “Mlaé So-and-So's got al rings is no sign, suppose people think 4 y “ paper and started ups’ i WaWTainORA HBT? teachers ton poor to buy thelr own rings | CARTOONIST, DEAD,| "x: Berna! took oft | and in ‘Wes ahi lo. dle emai) |Onivs ones taacher. att ae HOlldas' Vay gayi se, He was almost on top o! boys, but the small girls learn early} cation to be married, And th ert! Daniel H, McCarthy, who in his prime| wis pursued, He dropped milk the country over and they explained {| will bring a flood of applicants | Was the most noted caricaturist In the | bottles, but held onto his paper, ellmb- her's engaged!" | the places right Here, at the time when! United States, expired yesterday at| 28, toward hve, foot In great leaps, And eventually it was learned by the | teachers want to be re-employed. We! his home, No Weat Ono Hundred | cineaey himacif, and was mopping on parents that little Din, the orphan) don't like it, The announcement that 1 and. Sisteonth et | the fleeting man’s heels as he got out hoy, was wrealing havor with the way engaged was made without my | way ttached to the eee aon, | on, the Wh weaseceume:otitag anctn teachers to an ilarming extent, authority, 1 will neither deny nor aMrm | for man Hin work as & oats | poorsiop arowid the ohimitya tend Over yun toonist Was Vigorous and striking and | copings phat alarmed those underne An Alarming Announcement. . ' | attracted wide attention, He organized | tora atate ot panic, but Hernant Atilis ,.| A teachers’ meeting was held at the Pec ORLORTIGNRUEe whin ‘ 4 : Editor Joe Tillotson came out this A school of caricature which met with | got his man and placed him under ar- vamtent vthat | 2NSl¢ street school yesterday afternoon, | @reat success reat. Week with the announcement that ee cis were: aired concerning |, Lately, Mr. MoCarthy had been sut-| "tater. Blum was aruigned tn the Jet- ‘seventeen of our handsome and tal-| Oe ee sorines who nad published fering from heart trouble, A few | fereon Market Court before Magistrate onte are w " Ss wee! lammatory rheumatiam . He pleaded guilty and was ented teachers are wearing engage-| 415 report, and if some editorial we developed pete dace Pee Tatooine " eooased. | until the end = Oe ENGLEWOOD TEACHERS Fourteen, or Maybe Seventeen, Fair Young HAVOC WITH ~—— - Sporting Diamond ks Are Talking. , | contemporary next door, after looking | \t the bulletin, got out an extra mak-| ing his estimate fourteen, | They both tried to be real compll-| mentary about it, but the teachers say that they are hateful for tipping it off) now, when the time is near to re-ngag’e "MARKHAM 6 ‘C'LATIM ER: Le farmers’ friends, It {them that the situation may ‘be rem- edied. There 1s no hope of accomplish- jing anything by appeals to the Milk |Trust, Their interests are not identical | with those of the farmers and the con- |sumers, The middlemen stand between the two, and while the consumers fet | polled milk for the price of pure milk, | the farmers are unable to get a living | price for thelr production.” | Advises the Farmer. Mr. H. W. Collingwood, the veteran editor of the Rural New Yorker, has been studying the milk conditions for bwehty years, He gaye thatthe farmers would be better off to go out of the milk businéss entlrely and to sell thelr cows than to continue to work free for the Milk Trust, He adds that If the farmers continue their present policy of cutuing }down the number of cows they keep on accoun: of high feed bills, and jf they continue to cease raising calvos to keep up their milk herds, there will presently be such a shortage of mi'lt thit the {Milk Trust can charge the consumer anything It pleases and the fumur will get no higher price, heeauss 1 1 broselng, sonia a oust, either, aq~ cept the Exchange price or pour | his milk on the ground. Lal SCARLET FEVER DUE TO IMPURE MILK. Mount Vernon Health Authorities Trace Epidemic and Adopt S: tary Regulations, (Sprolal to The Evening World. MOUNT VERNON, N, Y,, Feb, 16.— Because it 1s alleged scarlet fever hus been Infected by ch#dren drinking milk from a certain dairy company here, the Board of Heutin today passed a resolu. thon that all bottles used by every AS A SOLOMON Brooklyn Police Official Exudes Words of Wisdom to Husband Who Wanted Divorce. and Wife Who Likes Fun, “THINK OF WHEN YOU WERE LOVERS,” HE SAYS. Then Tells Them to Go Home and Be Good—They Go and Clerk Jacob Eilprin Eagerly Awaits Results. — oo Complaint Clerk Jacob Hilpritt, of the Adams Street Court, Brooklyn, played the role of Solomon in @ queer matri- monlal muddle to-day and és wonder- ing if his words of wisdom fell on fertile soll, A When .he entered his office he found & comely young woman and a handsome young, man, both well dfessed, altting near his desk. Both seamed entirely compored and when he give them his attention the young man began: “I don't want to take the law Into my own hands and get Into trouble, but slaing up the situation, I think the beat thing for us to do Js to get a di- vorce, I don't love her any more, for she wants to mo out all the time with fellows who take her to theatres, par- tles and suppers, She Doesn't Love, Either, “That le right,’ interposed the girl, quietly, /'and I don't love him any more, Ife's too quiet, too elow. He don’t like to take me out. He'd rather alt home and vegetate,.’” Then the wife drew from the folds of her dress a marriage certificate and LP Thompson # OF Baw dey | solemnly handed it to the complaint clerk, : Hilprin read’ on {t that Margaret Led- married to William Lambertson, twen- ty-seven years old, on Sept. 18, 1904, by the Rey, Cortland Myers, rector of the Baptist Temple. After the clerk had absorbed this the husband cleared his throat and continued: “I have thought of shooting this man who takes my wife out, but I don't!” want to get her into trouble and have bloow on my hands, I have talked with her pareits, but they suggest no rem- edy,"” Parente No Help, "No," sighed the girl, “they can’t do any good, TI ilke company. I just have to go out and have a good time. I en- joy golng t» Consy Island, to balls and parties, I never do unything wrong, and no one can call me sinful or wicked. It's just this, I like to go out and Willie likes to stay In.’” Ellprin pulled himself together and advised the young man that if he couldn't persuade his wife to change her ways he might have her committed to the House of Good Shepherd. The bride of six months shrugged her oe tend to °K i Q "I inten cep on going out,"’ she lisped, "' and 1 won't be aagued Into pea home,” Pens Mrs, Hatfledd, the probationary otticer, added her soft argument to the advice af the complaint clerk, but the young wife only pouted, The husband cut in again; Husband Makes Good Money. "T make $5 a day and give mostiot It to my wife, After a hard di I like to sit home and rest, It's kind of ham work ‘when I have to cook my own supper while she {s gallivanting around Coney Island with some dude, I met hherxtown there once and anade v0 COURT CLERK ths youngster has disturbed, depends} teachers, and when hopeless spinsters! dary company doing business in this my mind ‘to shoot the fellow. Thinking it over, however, I decided it would be can take advantage of the report to/ butt In and force out all the girls re- ported engaged. For this reason most of the teach- ers are retice about affirming or denying the reports in spite of the fact that the solitaire diamond business has been booming theerfully in Englewood, Even Clock Is Happy. ‘The townsfolks all smile knowingly when they hear that "the teachers might | Nave purchased tho rings themselves,’ | and a benign smile may even be seen on the face of the Citizens’ Bank clock | at Pallsade avenue and Engle street, | Miss Elizabeth Bennett, whose name was published as one of the engaged | teachers, was very indignant about 1! when seen at the Engle street school, ; Started on the second floor and spread seotion must be steniMzed and disin- Health officer Banning to-day report- ed that there Is sixty-nine cases of puet fever In| Mount Vernon, tha’ thinty-eigint out of forty (ence, vere ‘ed vy one dainy, Not alone are vidren” il with disease, but adults lave alo been striken, Scarlet fever hes alao anoered In’ sevat other towns {n Westchester county, ————_—— TWO CHILDREN SAVED FROM FIRE Firemen Lahey and MoNally Carried Little Girls Down an Extension Ladder, but Were Injured Themselves. Two children were barely rescued from death thls afternoon In a fire that gutted No, 9 Third avenue, Brooklyn, 4 three-story brick building, The fire rapidly, All of the four familles got out but the six and eight year old daughters of John Murphy on the top oor, Wien Firemen Edward Lahey and Edward MeNally, of Engine Company No. 138, went througt the house the found the children overcome by smoke. The firemen carrihd ‘the little git's down an extension ladder, and just as they were pero off to the street the cornice of the roof came down on them, outing them and brulsing them about the face. The children were protected did not burn they wer came last, over, paper tor a uumber of mornings and de- clded to Investigate, better to met a. divorce," | fected before being used. For each}, ftubbing the perspration from his WeQutlon a fine of $50 will be imposea, |AtPPinE row. Ellprin thought hard and "You two go home and think thi all Think how you felt toward each other before you got married and maybe your love for eacn other will rush back to your bosoms,” “f think ‘tha was a protty good speech,” said Eilprin later; ‘it seemed to fetoh them, for they got up without a word and left the office,” HE PAID $5 FOR MORNING WORLD Policeman Caught Man Filching His Paper from Doorsill and Chased Him Over Rooftops— Court Fined Prisoner. It cost Frederick Blum, a milkman, employed in a combination bakery and dairy, at Seventh avenue and Nine- teenth street, $5 to read the headlines in the morning edition of The World to-day, He might have bought the paper for one cent, but elected to tako it from under the. nose of George B Bernard, a special policeman, living at the Chesteriield apartments, No, 474 West Nineteenth street. It just happened that Bernard was ‘amping on the trail of the person wh» had accustomed almself to iicnang his morning paper, He had missed the so he got up be- fore daylight and watched, leaving the door of his flat ajar, 4 4 HELPED WIFE T0 WRITE T0 “DAN” Daniel A. Hawkins In Applica. tion for Divorce Files a Letter Which He Says Was Forward- ed to Him. There were some interesting develop- ments Jn the Supreme Court, Brooklyn, before Justice Gaynor to-day when the divorce sult Brought hy Daniel A. Haw- King against Jennie 1, Hawkins came Up on an application of the defendant for an allowance, of $250 counsel fees, Mr, Hawkins js tho manager of the Merchants’ Rubber Company, at No, 139 Duane street, and, according to his wite, enjoys an income of $10,000 a year. In his affidavit Hawkins alleges undue {ntimacy between Mra, Hawkins and Theodore Cole, proprietor of the Pine Hill Hotel, Piné Hill, N, ¥,, and de- clares he caught the two together in a om at tha hotel on Nov, 6, 1904 At- hed to the affidavit is @ copy of the following letter alleged to have been written by Mra, Hawkins to her hus- band: My Dear Dan—Well, here we are at Kingston and Armond's walt- ing for one little mupper to be aerved and I have just had a gin und seltzer, I only wish you were here to have one with* us, blit we will" certainly haye @ good time when you come up. . “Our little party: te Ara, Abble, Blanche, Cora and Thed, Ed, Gale and myself, We will certainly drink to you.when the next is served. Well, I am going to let the crowd write a ln y 2, "We all wish you were here, '“BIRD.' “HAN full, BLANCHE,’ “The bunch is on the bum, “ABBIB,' “'T have not, been bothering with the stuff, RA.’ "'T don't give a -——- for any man that couldn't be with us to-night, THEO, COLE.’ “We just had a drink to your health, Hurrah for Teddy, With best wishes from the bunch and with usual love from, your own ak “JENNIB," The affidavit further declares that Hawkins went to the hotel at 3 o'clock in the morning and found his wife and Cole in a room together. A number of affidavits signed by friends who went with him were also presented, A_ second letter accompanied the af- davit, in which Mrs, Hawkins begs for- |glveness, One paragraph reads: “When a woman is down it Js pretty hard for her ta get up, Dan, please don't push nel Mrs, Hawkins caused a surprise by fillng papers in a cross sult, alleging that Hawking had been too friendl with women at Lakewood, Asbury Park and at a house in West Sixtleth street, Manhattan. Justice Gaynor allowed the counsel fees asked for, —<—=— Something New in Fa Free with next Sunday's World, a special supplement in colors, giving twelve of the very latest Parisian de- signs adapted to American use most skilled pattern designers, i convenience of readers who st, wish patterns of the fashton designs in this supplement a means of procuring them will be offered, it’s Pure, That's Sars, Served and Sold Brerywhere wee) NEW YORK AND lal KENTUCKY CO., | New Yona psa hu Sole Proprietor, NEW YORK BRANCH, ‘232 Filth Avenue, cor. 27th New: York, LION, BRA Condensed Milk and Evaporated Cream © NOT A CHEAP milk Cream, but always safe. reliable for babies, | BEST FOR FAMILY Guaranteed Absolutely” Always the Sam: Send for Booklet SAVE THE LAE Try a Can 91 Hudson St., N.Y. ties, because the Investm and Economy. 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FINE BOX COATS, Venetian lined, Worsted lined; some Satin. lined. ments of/the highes POOLE and BELL COATS—Both | some STORM COATS, The majority are of the higher prices. bearing tags showing size and former price, ANNOUNCES olor . & WS ents are both safe and assure a great Ratio of Pr particularly Wool and Worsteds are very much space on the Main Floor—from the Broadway eet east on Chambers Stree-—comprising Eleven The Suits. FINE FANCY FABRICS—Made up Single and Double Breasted, Bright Cheviots and Tweeds, PURE WORSTEDS and CASSI- MERES, of most select designs. Also | solid Black Thibets and Vicunas, SILK-LINED PRINCE ALBERT COATS AND -VESTS—Oxford and Black Vicunas, ‘Also some ENGLISH WALKING SUITS. 5, $48, $20, $22.60 and $26 '—Gar- t type, service- ns; wet proof, = Most perfect fit- every line, Also Bre TAYLOR PRICES, FESS WINDOW DISPLAYS arments now marked “Ten Dollars,” each garment vent