The evening world. Newspaper, July 10, 1905, Page 8

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‘twenty-eight languages and scores of dialects. “thow am I to find out Home Magazine, Monday Evening, July Che Published by the F Entered at VOLUME 4 ‘oes 1 Boat-Omice 16,029, THREE-CENT FARES, | From the Battery to the Bronx for five cents IS a further step in New York's transportation. ‘The solution of the transportation question in Greater New York been slow. It should be hastened. If it is possible for the Subway to carry a passenger thirteen miles for five cents it should be profitable to-carry a passenger four or five miles for' three cents. If a five-cent fare pays for the trip from South | Ferry to West Farms it should not costs cents from Yorkville to Coney | Island, A penny and not a nickel 8 the bastc coin in New York. Prices of all the necessities of life in snzali quantities are in pennies. The majority of the population has to count its pennies. To the majority of the boys and girls who work, car fare is over 10 per cent of their pay. All future franchises in the kly populated boroughs should be granted only on the condition of three-cent fares in the borough and a | five-cent fare to any part of Greater New York. Such a saving in fares | willbe of much greater value to the people than any compensation in the way of fixed annual payments or a small percentage of the gross or net 4 Teceipts. »NO, POOL-ROOMS., Notwithstanding the Western Union Telegraph’s frequent protesta- tions it did not need the successful work of the City Club to convince the | eneral public that the telegraph and the telephone companies’ co-opera- | tion is necessary to operate a pool-room, and without the virtual partner- corperations no pool-room can do business. iy ef the spectacular raids on pool-rooms is as obvious as the dutrageous ilegali To station uniformed policemen in cigar stores, Testauranis and hallways, to smash doors and destroy furniture, to ma More arrests than the patrol wagons can carry and the other like pyro-! technical manifestations of police activity would not in a year accomplish | as much in doing away with the pool-rooms as a one-day cessation of the | telephone and telegraph service, To prosecute the officers of these corporations is the way to bres: up the pool-rooms. The present system accomplishes its purpose if its | real object is for revenue only. | NEW YORK’S CHANGES: Big Tom Foley is going to retire, not from politics, but from th Tiquor business on South street. He hassold his saloon to his employees and will spend his time in looking after the Tammany organization in th: Second Assembly District. When Foley began selling liquor over thirty years ago this neighbor- hood, extending from Paradise Park to James slip and north of the old| Brooklyn Bridge, was eettled in its upper end by the immigrants who came to New York in the years succeeding the Irish famine, and along the, water front it was the headquarters for the sailors of the sailing vessels, which in those days made up the greater part of New York’s trade. Water and South streets were then the sailors’ paradise, and Cherry street was a lively all-night resort, Mr. Foley has seen the Irish crowded out by the Italians, the Chinese | Pushing the Italians away from Chatham Square, the Greeks and Japanese occupying part of the sailors’ neighborhood, the old Irish tenements on| Mulberry street torn down to make a park, Five Points changed into a factory and business neighborhood, and the old Mulberry and Bayard school, where only E: was spoken, changed to a polyglot place, with | + These are the changes of less than thirty years. Mr. Foley is still in| fhe prime of life, with a pros changes will he and the citi More lawyers are on their way to jail, Anything to relieve the over- crowding of the legal pre i Could Brox k ly n live up to a monument 4,200 feet high? Rr) Letters from the People. # fans, tached to the front either driven by elec from the axles of the could be 1 Do Men Li © Athletic Girls? TOLLAND) Problem. | warded ¢ offering se? I leave it decide wh eral, thanked wi the elephant weighs? yet been invented.” Gnd out,” answered the king, = L. 8. it}and us ts pronounced rabbit."’ “wel wally spelled A Wild Animal Puzzle, Join ittle Tommy Twiddlebits in a real wild animal hunt. There are seven epimals to nd, big ones and Mttle ones, How many can you find? | skirt-hanger did not attract the attention of hun- ent There is a shorter to ion for beaut tude. Advertise! | poient and necessary | : No, thjs 13 not a usurpatlo city to eta uf of a business office preora- feminine uty is such he ae tive. It is merely an injune= good con | | gaeZn cass es tion to every woman with as- to be co @ the lov aSSah pirations in the direction of without fear beauty to take unto herself a) leaps ftself, And, press agent, For— Did you ever know a woman enough, the complexion et. £0 ugly that if she were put to turning batter-cakes as in a restaurant window or demonstrating a patent priced cor: padour and a stick of If Jerome's Trust Song. * said the Cigar Store Man, “that District-Attorney me told them out in Kansas that everything a trust has touched in this country has Improved and’ raised in price.” “Mr. Jerome has his nerve to spiel like that in .” remarked the Man Higher Up. “Out there} in the Whiskers Relt the trusts don't stand deuce high. The people of Kansas know something about how the trusts have improved things and raised prices. “Within a few years the Kansas farmer has begun to blow himself. Crops have been good and he has copped the coin. He has stacked up against all the trusts, and he Js wise that the trust ts organized primarily king purposes. Attorney for mone} “The District knows a lot about the trusts, but he don't ie # . . IThe Shortest Road to Beauty w ww 2 By Nixola Greeley-Smith O you want to be beaut} all of whom stopped to gape, and | diligent advertising, be reintroduced to the New 1D) ful? Then don't ? | Yor public as a possible rivel to Lillian Russ: i any time or motiey on id you ev ow a wor £0 pretty ns ta bo} ‘There ts no limit to man's erogulity in this re- : . Without some self-efvertising trick of scess! spect. Artisis even are subject to it, And the very yes, heauty 1ovoOns and >. siannerism, to focus general masculine atten-| whose brush or chisel recalls the ancient the cther pe er ©f | tion upon he ? goddesses from extle marrics some big, blow mado-to-ord lovelli ) In nothin ) much as in the establishment of a/tallowy creature and persuades himself that} is the force of adv: © gulled on the subject of) have perished in a better cause. exion and a press agent might aspire | beautiful. of the vaulting ambition which over- have some one | if the press agent were fine {t till the whole world echoes him, as it will if he It Carrie Nation could be lured into a high- set and endowed with a mahogany pom- J tising so) Paris would have been more qynply rewarded if he had stolen his wife Instead of Helen, and Tr Women waste a good deal of time In trying to be They don't need to te. It ts much easier and much more effective to] And keep on saying that any woman with a eliest betug of her time say you are. would be a superfluous |Siys It often enough Brass, not beauty, makes the best bid for the casyal masculine eye, and building batter-cakes In taurant window.is the shortest cut to its, p rouge she might, with | acquisition. 2 Re) By Martin Green. | lives too close to Wall street to feel the right sort of hostility toward the trusts. He might talk to them until he was black in the face and not persuade anybody who earns his living and buys for cash thatthe trists of to-day are not the biggest load the people of the United States have to carry, “Mr. Jerome admits that the trusts are gradually debauching the national spirit. They own Judges, Congressmen, Senators, Kasemblymen, | Aldermen and every other grade of public servant. They are reaching out | for more all the time. Their ultimate intention ts to get control of the Government absolutely—although they have it pretty well organized just at present at that) When a Federal Grand Jury hands in indictments against the leading members of the Beef Trust for criminal practices Mr. Jerome's bugle blast for the trusts sounds hollow. The Beef Trust charges more for dressei meat and pays less for live cattle than ever before—and yet it is a beneficent trust.” “Maybe,” said the Cigar Store Man, are all right in their place.” “The trouble is,” replied the Man Higher Up, Mr. Jerome meant that the trusts “they aré in too many | Batthery Dan: AIR= are vinthe an’ 1 Dan has the dt slaint 24 Be eer O’RIynn.”’ By Eugene ne Geary. UDGEE we've got in Nov ted to ly he Baithery Dan Handlin’ ig the aowl av euavity cases ay total depra own wondherful way wid him lars an’ sneaks find {t hard to get gay wid him; Tall the lMttle wang like for to play wid um in Batthery Park Gher around for a lark; Curbin' rascality Wia prodigal! Ratthery Dan ts the be York an‘ nity sane hacks to Finn ain! vioinity: unity the wall a purist as wn is the flow'r ay em allt Dan ts the yewel av Gotha rdiclary, All the poor prisoners’ honest well-wish Faix, it's not tellin’ tales out ay t That he's a big Wan In Tamman re at the pow-wows he's wall to the for, k in political lore, 1 An’ Och, Batthery te €x,oundin’ areymints soundin'— Dan fs the pride av ‘em allt wid him at the sea wall, Large !s the number ay panhandlin’ notes he gets, ATA av throats he wets, ic av the votes he gets. in the fall, ed Uke a dbrum, him they come, Allah, . ‘hese furriners yalla— That Batthery Dan {s the pride av vhin the Firs Even Armaynians, sh Chvekle wid ty; know much abc the people of Kansas or the people of the country in general {f he thinks they will stand for his assertion that the trust is not a had propo m. They will be thinking that William Travers Jerome wi of the Gent How to Make a Speech oD The Little Man with the Bade Mt 10 "Ah | Fair Considerable jean eitizen does YNOPSIS OF a caps and by the cot the plain not play favor-| e conviction of thought 1 © not forget that public speal a therefore, toll at them, but to them. 1 to s ont on your of the platform Ny a ao CHAPTER t vee m! to.stopped her work a We don't ad ag she ‘Let us aoe ry, dragged ndow 1 ticle eritioally. tought I phould find something verth vite 4n a | / e conselousness the firer aprons 1) ts good conversatio! over the heads of When practicable, a $004 5 Rogers, hearers, as I Sl A on A the & Side hree young women di! sweep, and wipe the girl posses: Obviously d by Latest form of monoply places and in too many ways.” $200 who will have him. for any with astle bane . ble for rest- dence in New. York. a ; i “Wooed tn a bathing sult, pretty gtrt/| 'Yeo.'"" At Atlantic City. where! an old clo’ men's trust. Prospect of a depression | “WS ‘Tee. ick- o: prices below the present low level Pe"? ave been several simila- cases . will be viewed with alarm in every |{0 "Ne Mews. Escape of the cs a new fiutd | household. Juice: tom ie lsedu ¢ sulphur and df Is, Odor sug- of Subway air dashing stenogra, but will tssue a surance policy wi chew, ‘make smoke | the fire Ff A good practice ts t rent tones, pitch and vocal powers, as observed ¢ beginning at tn m fleft to right, back of the last | ‘The most air agree as a more natural tone. ; combined with! , for it is the | speeches short. lation. To thrill) orator ought avoid this in vocal exer- | quite well informed. The Mystery of Union Square og 1as he ran oa s fingers ov ripton. should iresses, for dere 1s great yall dresses? Much s tor the street,” re- asperity. ‘That's n, so take ‘em or leave ‘em,"* "bat I tought your missus : of her fancy clothes. Of clothe the tem » a bid for the lot, for I've Re work, and can’t stand here ttle man rubbed hts chin thoughtfuny, 1 en" he asked. 4 ce Was Tadiane with 1 me *t dat enough? 0, des holding up his hands as if invoking, you haf the Hite i a small plece of blue embrol- devel silk out of his pocket and held $t toward her, Now | vould pay a big price for eqpet'ing ke dot. | me > nefer satiefigl.”” @ answered hurrledly, be Say, old Christmas on the name of paying the best in tho y wish 1'd scen you before." vsured me (f you hat," remarked wa roll of bills out of nis couple of $5 bills, pasted them a sigh, "’m much sorry dat she remarked as he stufte.| 4 in the vag at hig feet in as end, peeling to the girl no ball d b You're not a bit more sorry than I am," she ro i sho took the money, “You drop around old man, in a week or two, and I'll see do for you," undt on me. It ts a pleasure to 14 pretty yong laty., If I could e 1 vould pay vell for it, Somet'ing 210 Hee your movey frat," veplied the gia), € you'll bellove yer own eyes when L show mare delighted, and he Jatd a $5 bill on “There Mt 4s for you to vin, but I don't sil, Vater? We'll seo about that," retorted the mald with a igh. “Walt here!" ne whisk mt, her cay out of the room, to return tn a mo- s loaded down with a sparkling costume i Dive sls which she flung down on the table. Vell, have 1 picked a winner, gran’pat’ she asked pewutitul house like this,"' he exclaimed, aodding his | «riumphantly, Senator's son marries his n schools of typewriting and @ well known Chicago la’ of all oratory is the campaign polit Public speaking fs a profession. to have a good sleep just before his appearance to speak. No one res so that both) except a political candidate {s obliged to shake hands and accept hospitality; © orator was a disseminator of knowledge, but now the public itself ts By Ernest De Lancey Pierson which | ae ne waits hy But vats de use! I) aifrerent in tone and expression from the Weber &| ity over and don't fint yy Dere vos, | Folds dialect chat he had employed during his nego- n piece tmpurted tations. i. my ms 8 Hw iio ‘dress, then," said the| “yes, it's him what's keepin’ company with Miss he had examined the fragment, | Featherstone, the missus’ sister,” explajned the girl i T tink you moost be chokin, rub- | giibly, eS “4 ive mistooken, T tink," eyeing go! murmured the Mttle man, rubbin ul don't gamble as 4 rule, but T bet | pose thoughifully, "So!" he repeated, 5 you don't vas got de mateh of dat alli,’ |tay, my tear, In a week you look for me again, ing nymphs ail the move mir . | “vivacious, me probably | leg to servants In Included $95,000 to four maids, $35,0% to four coachmen, to a housekeeper, $12,000 to Oks and $10.00 to a nurse, Recent cash bave marriage in- Would | for Pittsburg m to pay to stick to ons place. | 5 | ut By Elmer E. Rogers. he repeating of the alphabet and its various sounds In force, Constant practice clears and strength in newsboys, train callers and auctioneers, says E! yer, in the Chicago Tribune. : al speech, and he on y by preparation put as @ first class ‘‘spellbinder’’ m on any topte. Outdoor speaking ts perplex speaker !s lable to pitch his voice If conventent speak toward the noise or ‘The less a speaker knows the longer {t takes him to say {t: therefore, cut your | wattermellons es in the attempt to reach all hearers the too high, which then does not carry so weil Animal food promotes eloquence, and the . reader, thinker, and writer; in oMen 2 Ww The German said not! he had brought He also seen g, but with the strip of silk pared two fabrics. a part of the waist he picked up the money, and hands, Tako it! Take it! I vhas ruined!" he moaned. “I shyuppose, now, you could get me a chance to buy dot peauuful dress for my custofher?” “I gan try, and I think I'll succeed.” "Do 60, aud here,” fshing a silver dollar out of his pocket, “ls a Nttle to bind de bargain.” He picked up his bag, ae if to place {t on his back | again, and then lald it down again on the floor, “I don't suppose dere are udder ladies in the house| dat I could do busigess wit?’ he inqulred, | “No, indeed," she returned quickly, resolved to | keep all such profitable business In her own hands, “Dn ‘6 tao proud to come down to such business. You leave it ail to me, and if there's anything worth | Bextee TM try and get tt for you." “Hum! he grumbled, “You ‘ey Ing 1f you do, yong vooman."* “Well, you'd better go now. Come ‘round in | weak, and 1 guess I'll have some news for you." “I hope #0, for you'll fint {t to your profit," as he slung the bag over his shoulder and moved toward the door. "I suppose dere is more dan one lattes in de house besides de missus dat you could draw on?’ “O, there's Mrs, Densmore's sister and the com- Panton, but they don't count, Wear dresses longer than I would. You just leave everything to me, old |™mgn, and I'll treat you fair," as she followed him out of the basement door to resume her work at the windows. As they came out Jnto the sunlight the girl looked up and down the street idly, and then uttered an exclasation, “Why, af that ain't young Mister Allanpy, an’ run- nin'’s'if the house was afire,” nodding her head in the direction of a man who was coming toward the house. | The German started and stared tn the direation tn- cated, “The deuce!’ he exclaimed tn a voice that was very vill not lone any- | Vat?" and hunching the with bowed head he | me to collide with G | proaching the steps. “I believe he recognized me," Pendrick muttered to himself, at he glanced at the young man and shuf- fld away, "Well, what of it! ‘Me point has been reached in this game of mystery when there must be a laying down of cards, and I guess of Sum will bag up on his shoulders, t out dpa whe street Just in » Allanhy, O who was ap-! Watch how he thrtes to on airs Makin’ the sint Maybe yea t aware av the fa Dhrop in some day whin the cow Och, stoh gintiltt: ‘Tact an’ ability Batthery Dan ts the boss av ‘e Het an’ elainthe an’ € Eloquent J ea {ver fo £m} ay gravity 1. com ts packed— m alll a health to yo, Magtsthrate Finnt luinthe again! jurist, Raynowned as a purist— Dan {a Little Willie’s Gu Gotham’s likewize thay do ed by water, so ten or twelve mil thay fi it thay to a melon rinds and puttatc grand iin seezen and a}! purfeckt oapen and gasping lips of swim then when thay go to shallo water to ful purson ha 2 the beech with « and suer-oapenings. But thare {sa fin ma to go fe swim she sald Thanks hungry. ca Lonesomehurst and other beeches they are so jennerus they cast br nd cats on the side—good oald cats. U YOARK fokes as ! once said befour have a ki baithe in the deap tloo sea abbowt this time of yeer thay find Interestin ch as cats who have been arayed in the majest deth for weex and fishes in the same pleezing cond t your bread upon the watters says the scripture, but down at the flow'r ay "em alll ‘ ide to New York. Beaches. ving to {t nu yoark is kompleetly surround. nu yoarkers oanly have to travvel les to find a baithing beech and when’ usually find a fine lot of other things’ ng annattommical spessimmens of shun @ of vedgittible diet in the shaipe of and cabbij leeves and other dellickasstes of the e and this tempting food floats co} ers or fe into the phy and } aute toons itself abbout thar ip the feest thay find some th nd skrap fron and tettanus je e line of food aflote and when pa a but 1 just had‘a peece of pie so 1 with A. P, TERH “Scrap” Collection. DDS and ends, and as queer a collection as one could hope to sea, are found among the offer- tory contributions of the natives Bugotu, in the British Solomon Isli It 1s no rare thing there for the j4ster to draw from the collection box a string of red beads, which, providing It measures the length of the arms out- stretched, is coin of the realm equallir a florin. Other articles among the col- Jection on the last Bible Sunday tn con- nectiog with the Melanesian Mission Church were white armlets, pleces of tortotse shell, a bamboo box such as ls used to carry Ime for betel-chewing, @ fine string bax, and a plece of the nm cloth in which the Bugotu women wrap thelr babies to protect them from the Melanesian insects. ‘The whole collec- tion on that particular Sunday was sold for $16. May Manton’s {} How to Obtain Call of Send show the winning hand, How lucky that I took the trouble to find out the name and address of the girl he 1s engaged to!” ipecily size we | MISSES’ CORSET COVER—PATTERN NO. 50a8, Evening World May Manton Fashion gureau, 25 West 23d St, New York: Bend 10 Cents in Cota or Stamps for Kuch Pattern Ordered, IMPORTANT —Wrlte your name nted. Natural Free Lunch, ‘ DWELLER ty the tropics saym ‘ “For a delicious early morning! ‘ drink I recommend-you to try) f t from the green cocoanut Cub off the top of the nut with a sh knife, pour the contents into a glaee-an you have a drink fit fora king. cocoanut must, be old. When in pore I was a bit seedy and consul & doctor. Part of bis prescription wali copoanut milk first ¢hing in the moi ing. I took to it most kindly end ofteny wish now that I had @ obauce.of papi peating thet portion of the : Where the cabbege palm grows nad & Good vegetuble at hand—the of the head of the trees In removt this the palm ts killed. This growth fy not bad eating raw, as I found whea! nut hunting onee. We fed on thm) palm and wild honey.” Daily Fashions. The simpler the corsep: cover the more easily tt! can be made and the! more easily {t can be laundered. This one ts | cut in shirtwatst etyte | and provides just the | fulness at the front that {s needed for wear he ) neath the fashionable | blouses, while it is plain across the shoule | dera at the back, so be- comigs thoroughly well adapted to girlish fige ures. In the (ilustration the material is Sea Igland nainsook, — with trimming of Valenciens hes lage, but lawn, batiste and long cloth all are appropriate, while the trimming cam be either luce oF me broldery, ‘The quantity of mae terial required for the nicdium size (4 years) ty 11-4 yards 85 inches wide, with 83-4 yards of lace and 87-5 yards of beading, Pattern BOSS is cut jn sivas for misses of 1A, Mand 16 years, These Patterns, by Mail to the and address plainly, and always}

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