Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘Everting World and the American Agriculturist, and who have united to “'™" 1A dog is great company if‘one likes dogs. He is a friend, a com- .forter and a sympathizing partisan. He neither talks back nor contra- tricks, i aN ») M, W.—The word "moon" tn neuter tn{ aprly to Bureau The Evening World’s @ubliened by the Press Publishing Company, No. 58 to 63 Park Row, New York Entered at the Post-Citice at New York as Sccond-Class Mall Matter, — un VOLUME 4B. ..ccccereeeeeeeeeee — zi A MILK VICTORY, rion, of the Board of He. opening of thi mer s mn New York's milk supply condition than ever before. The milk arrives in bett at the ship- ping stations from the farms, and the railroad supervis er the ship- ments, which is in vogue for the first time, is producing excellent results. |; The milk reaches the consumer in shorter time and is, accordingly, fresher | < and more wholesome, 5 To these better conditions all the parties concerned unite in giving credit to The Evening World’s agitation in the early spring of the necessity for purifying New York’s milk supply before the summer months came | % with their large infant mortality, due to the use of bad milk, The infant) ¢ mortality has materially lessened, and with a continuance of present milk conditions this summer's death rate will be lower than ever before, For carrying out these effective reforms credit is due to the Depart: | 3 ment of Health and the State Department of Agriculture which have been working in accord, to the railroads which have realized the great value to them of their milk shipments, and to the great body of farmers and milk | sellers, who were brought together in conference for the first time by The .NO. 16,993. reports that at the is in better » President Darlin; secure better conditions and to drive out of business the few middlemen whose adulterated.and skimmed milk created unfair competition. Mrs. Anna Suchy, of No. 1448 First avenue, who fought and van- quished two burglars, is entitled to one of the medals of valor. TRACE THE LOOT, Equitable stealing has beeh going on for years. Public officials and others must have known it. How much of the loot went for blackmail and a lobby fund? Expose the accessories, Trace the widows’ and orphans’ money into the political pockets. A full and honest public investigation will do ft, Subway air is bad, Ventilators should be promptly installed. Public service corporations have not as yet secured control of New York's air supply. DOGS HAVE A DAY. dicts. Here are the dog happenings in one day’s newspapers: A policeman of thirty-five years’ service was caught by Commis- sloner McAdoo playing with a St. Bernard and a hairless Chinese poodle. He was on a detail where he has had plenty of time to teach his two dogs Commissioner MeAdoo expressed his surprise at such signs of demoralization in the Police Department. A brindle bulldog, the property of C. S. Moody, of Seattle, disap- peared at Coney Island while visiting the Igorrotes, It is suspected that the Igorrotes have him in their midst, Lerch Pritchett, a seven-year-old boy, of No. 411 West One Hundred and Fifty-fourth street, has lost his water spaniel Phillle, The police are asked to look for Phillie. The boy owner is more interested in Phillie than in the Japanese war or Equitable corruption. Harry Eisenhart took his brown setter walking near the Pennsyl- vania Railroad tracks near Frankford Junction, The dog sniffed and 4 S for mature, tune how desceit af mosqu on Staten Tsland opening the OMETHING a little tront a few hours before annual against them, Statement of two ni ago that last year's war of ex’ ton against them thad siderable svccess apparen One of the myst the insects awaiting the summons ot u Wome Madazine, Wednesday Evening, june ‘ 7, 1905. e ‘Ain't It Easy, B’Gosh! By J. Campbell Cory. PAE York City. 4. od plainta of "delay that the K inated lon) 2 aupern t wous Regardin n in the near | supertuous ers, theg ture, and + a sixteen-hour | cne ‘Intern’ as appiiet to the Rus "| train, May some ¢ be making the | sian ships In Manila Bay, trip on comm ot. Ket rf | Ne correctly | man whofe t strokes to ventilate | faflure his whined until he induced his master to follow him, and they found the body of a woman who had been shot. A cocker spaniel was struck by the cow-catcher on a Lackawanna engine at East Orange. The dog ran under the cow-catcher and escaped without injury. It was either wise or lucky, possibly both, Miss Lutu Kelly, who is going abroad, had her Pomeranten dog Ywesil certified at the Custom-House so she may bring it back free of duty. Fire destroyed the dog kennels of Howard Willetts at White Plains. Porty dogs, valued at $8,000, were saved. The kennels cost $3,000, They were the residence of Heatherbloom, the champion high jumper | + of the world, Bronx boys fed dynamite to a frog and then exploded the frog. This is not a dog story, but more a piece of plagiarism on Mark Twain. Don't kick the dog, ‘ Kang Yu Wei, the leading reformer of China, is making a short visit to Chinatown. The Chinese Empire Reform Association will be his host. It is a pity that the absence abroad of the Rey. Dr, Parkhurst will prevent a suitable international conference, KINDRED SOULS. “Jimmy” Hope, the last representative of the old school of bank | $ burglars, was attended to his grave by a distinguished cortege, There | ° were thirty-three carriages, two of them filled with flowers. The mourn-| ¢ ers were many and a large crowd of spectators filled the street. “Pat” Sheedy, “Shang” Draper, Congressman “Dry Dollar” Sulti- yan, William Pinkerton and other distinguished men were present, The absence of other prominent men was noted. None of the Equitable or the Merchants’ Trust or the Consolidated Gas or Standard Oil directors| % and no representative of the insurance or banking departments attended | °: to pay their last respects to the dead, There are many kinds of burglars, and, as “Pat” Sheedy sald, “there are lots of worse men than ‘Jimmy’ Hope.” 1 1 Nan Patterson quits the-stage. The public taste is not as low-as her.) : managers thought, The People’s Corner. Letters from Evening World Readers Kings Park Abuses, j texte fabr fo the Fditor.of The Evening World ind of Wiil pome one please inform the citt-| ! wens of Jamaica whether Kings Pa Delongs to tho rufMans or the vltize fone by what right have attendants to @aault and wiloae the children 4 al tlow thom to play under the | Mra, ROAUSCH, | No. 106 Wiliott street, Jamaten, 1. 1, | {ah maker the warm- | ¢ o Four times three months, the rab- fur, It in removed by The skin, bein ie Ag: fe rubl he fur very ¢n hot hurt the rabbit dn ithe | GP r t Ast. ILAND New Canara, C M, C.-For dupleate birth certifi of Vital Statistics, and Sixth avenue. ish but feminine in moat languagos, | Pitty-ffth st Are Pluoked. Waiter of Tie Evening World: trict in France ts W, A-—Three years’ dosertion ts suf- Pah ficient ground for divorce in Cennecti- ig ath “Bohura" {s pronounced “Shirts.”’ ly .—"Bohley"’ fe pronpunced eer POPBSROR HOM DOOSL GOOG ‘The Call of tTS A HABIT ~ THE DOCTORS WIFE DOESNT HAVE TO ~ CARRIAGE WAITING THE DOOR, VER EY! APPREN USTEN To KNOW WHAT’ THE TROUBLE tf ar “the Verimifo T KNow- nae HIS SWINGING ES= HARNESS I pierris! [FoR creaL WY i ‘ne reradiem sf V4 “Pain in the stomacl the telephone.”’—D Earthquake Expert. Enginnd the employ of thi 1,000 ats IHN for twent MIL panese Gov ernment, snd during this period estab-| slowing Uhat these cablu lished an earthquake survey with near. +The cable companins | lle then located the break nit the exact to him when thelr Zines | apot Q , of chloroform fame. ne 2OBDDLHYDO-9O-99FOO09OO4 4000909 9940S 06 094OG Dandelion Game. the flower. N° matter how many flowora come later, nor how beautiful they are, itis doubtful if any give the fait’ uae it delight that” the golden dandelions da, |Gariands oe ie name dandelion comes from the ors to ei m that two ken on De- hat is very unlikely,” eald » “but T have a selamaphone may hii broken at 11.80 A. M. on December 2,'" ooourred of Yy MORE SKYGING 1 HARNESS - 2 Bi" ok ce Iy Tae Bas $a P-TER THE OPERATION- Y oz m IDES wig APPENDIX vi rials) 3 REMOVE am Few. mon se mom Rad yack ai nM i BY t ‘ i nowadays is always appendicitis and is recognized by the doctor’s wife over POOP DOGHOHOOSOOHOOT DOD 9 deeply-notohed leaves of The use of the dandolion is very old, wna derived one of its man names trom of the Germai who Ting to nee Odell to Settle Inequitable War. ‘ A Vitascopic-Stenographic Interview with the Uneasy. Boss in Europe—He Thinks It Is ‘AU Tom Platt’s Fault and Vonches for Harriman and Hyde, By Roy L. McCardell. YOUR NAME? A. Benjamin B, Odell, jr. ‘i Q. Your occupation? A, Leading man in the New York State Political Vaudevilles, Q. You are coming back to settle the trouble in the Tnequitable Life Insurance Company? A. I am, I come from a family of Old Settlers, Q, You are a friend of Harriman? A. Yes, n Q. Do you know why Mr, Harriman answered Mr, Hyce's charges by saying “Wow! wow! wow?" A. Yes. That's his dogged ar verance speaking, He was also showing that the Tnequitable was going ° ow-wows, Q. Will Senator Depew work harmoniously with you in keeping the Legislature from investigating the scandal? A, Well he should. When (ings looked Black I withdrew my opposition to Depew und he was ree lected to the United States Senate. Q. Why 18 Senator Depew called “The Peach?" A. Because he tries to | Keep the indignant polley-holders from playing old gooseberry with the inequitable plum tree, Q Why should you take such a great interest in the matter that you ALEXANOER TARBELL saan it your vy ation short to return? A, Well, my friends in the Inequitable ood by me when [ got stuck with the Shipbuilding bonds. Q, Have you any other reasons? A, Well, Platt is with the Alexandew \ction and Lam with Harriman, Q, You are against Platt? A. Yes, vever forgive him for it. Q, What {s behind all this fight and scandal in the Inequitable? A. I® sa little black man, Q. H6w do you account for any little black man tn the matter? erything was going along fine. The polley-holders were satisfied, Me.” jo was satisfied, Mr. Harriman was satisfled; and now look how things: all upset! Q. Tan't It best that an end be made to these abuses? A, Yea; Mw Hyde should stop abusing Mr. Harriman. They were such friends, and now see how mad they are at each other! Of course tt was the little black mam who did {t all Q. What should be done to offset the pernicious activity of the littte Jack man In the Inequitable affairs? A. Give everybody and everything connected with the Inequitable a good coating of whitewash. Q, After everything and overybody, Including the little back man, tay whitewashed, what should be done with the Inequitable’s $80,000,000 suns plus? Divide {t among the polley-holders? A. Not at all. The polley-holde rs are rank outsiders, T will submit a better plan by which the surpfom in be quietly absorbedy Q, What fa {t? A. Invest the surpins in grocery stores in Newburg; but: ome of tt shonld be laid out in whitewash, Whitewash wil cover up thes dirt and deodorize everything, especially that naughty little black man. thas, aused all the trouble. He did me a lot of favors and I wil} +e-——_____ The Man Higher Up? By Martin Green, SHR," said the Cigar Store Man, “that the directors of the Haute. table Life are beating tt to the chutes with great rapidity,” “Sure,” replied the Man Higher Up. “There's nothing left. What's the use of being a director in a life insurance companyr if there is nothing to direct but the business? The eminent 1 Street philanthropists who went Into the Equitable because young, . Hyde wasn't wise to the ways of finance stuck to him like a case of’ baldness as long as he allowed himself to be steered, But when he found that they were trying to make him tho Patsy Hollyar and erabbed thei sunie they wrote '28' on the wall with thetr fingers and jumped overboard, "Tt is better to be worn with a genius for making money than to be born rich. Mr. Hyde didn't have any genius for making money until the road was pointed out to him by financiers who started in years ago on @, shoestring and have thelr hands in so many mayvuma puddles to-day tha if they had one hand for each puddle they would be equipped Ike am octopus, “Some of the men who have left young Mr. Hyde to balance ined 46 support on the slack wire between the Equitable surplus and the indige nation of the policy-holdens have been noted in the past as givers of ad yice to young men, They have been in demand as lecturers to graduating classes and as salve spreaders in reform movements, The chorus of thaln advice has always been etrict honesty and loyalty. “The loyalty thing came out all smudged on a show-~lown on the Frick * report, Nobody remained loyal to young Mr. Hyde but the people who de+ pended on him to help them out of a hole, The others whom he put into the directorate as n matter of friendship took a full Nelson on him and at- tempted to push him through the ropes, Instead of standing by each other ind volunteering to be the fall guys for the young man who put them in ther way of cleaning up millions they tried to throw the harpoon into him and hollored ‘Wow, wow, wow.’" : “What does that ‘Wow, wow, wow' mean?” asked the Cigar Store Man, “That's a new term in high finance,” answered the Man Higher Up, ‘ “signifying financial rectitude on the part of the ‘Wow, wow, wow-er.’"’ +t Little Willie's Guide to New York. | The Bathing Season. HIS {s the time when the man who oanly tatkes @ bath on Satterdy I nite for 8 munths {n the yeer begins to kik if he eant get away frum werk in time to go sea-baithing evvyry afternoon, when our muthers want to giv us boys a bath in winter thay hav to klauriform us ferst but now we hav to use a feerfle lot bf injenuity to explane why our sherta are on rong side out and our kloathes tide In knots and our hare all wet whem we get hoame ut nite, the man that sed klenliness {8 next to goddlinesm) must have noatised how goddiy all nu yoarkers become when the swim: seezen sets in, if pairents reelly want thare boys to batthe evvry day { yeer thay aut to bild a dock at one end of the bathtub and hire @ oop to try, to chaise the kids away from it. then we boys wood all be di ly cleeny, all the time und life wood looze its charm, 1 went once to one of tha beeches and { doant seo whare the fun comes dn in that eoart of baithing | for the gurls all hang onto the lifeline and skwawk evvry time a waive; tutches them and do ruberneck stunts with thare heds to keap 3: from coming out of kerl and the men Spend moss time ruberin : Oa a