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ar oT Evening World's Hom hy Saturda: ‘The Tin Side of Women’s Hearts. VER in Brooklyn a little) t0 profit by hor proneness the sox, as one woman, on h heat is the sudden dimmed cyes sits be- walling thi woman to her he is Mra, Thaddeus Williams, jr. who, anxious to amass $500 to enable her attorneys to secure the annulment of her mar- riage, sought the sympathy and financial aid of her sex by advertising a clipping bee, at © Magazine, Evening, 15, 1905. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Chauncey M. Depew Still Holds So tong a8 a woman in distrome wears the gur| That Optimism Always Wins. ~ |}: of Woo and the aspect of penitence we recognize her as a aister, erring and deserving of sympathy, cast-off clothing and perhaps, as an occastonal r niinder of the joys she has forfeited, the stale quarter of a watermelon that has been in the ice- box for three days, But the barometer of our! sympathy rises Inversely as her spirits, and when she appoars in a made-over reputation but brand- new French clothes we break the vials of our wrath upon them. “Women should be tried by women,” various reformers urge from time to time with the ins! July Published by the Press Mubtish: Entered at the Poot-ofnice VOLUME 46 ERS PUT HIGGINS TO SHAME. A controversy over official etiquette is a poor excuse for District- Attorney Jerome to delay prosecuting the Equitable thieves. He is t limited to the testimony taken by Supt. Hendricks. 2 District-Attor- Rey's powers have no such restrictions as those manifested in the Super- intendent of Insurz Cor ut New ny, York a | aes Witn femin: Patterson comnlete withdrawal of famous Miss s of thy from t When Na arcely animate flesh thi fierce railing as an elephant might to a gentle pin prick, feminine New York grew hysterical over her wrongs. Rut when she emerged from the un- becoming shadow of death, and the lurid sad ru- deavent glare which is her element showed fta ef- fects in her dress and bearing, our sympathy fell from her with the demure grays and blacks of her ne syn » lately A Vitascopic-Stenographic Interview with the Pro- fessor Emeritus of the Old Jokes’ Home, United States Senator,Giver of Free Advice on Salary, Income Increaser and Chestnut Vendor, on How to Be Happy on a Large Income. By Roy L. McCardell. YOUR name? inhumanity of nl s nce’s office. | A, Chauncey Mitchell Depew ceed in any Magistrate's court in New York or before a Grand Jury. court has the advantage that the proceedings there could be public. Every witness would have to attend there and be sworn, Mr. Harriman and Mr. Ryan should also be called, and it would be valuable to call Supt. Hendricks and hear his testimony explaining his false certificate ot Equitable assets, A fraction of the energy displayed in prosecuting Mr. Hummel or the man accused of society blackmail or other offenders who are neither millionaires nor powerful politicians would at least procure the first steps toward starting some politicians and high financiers to Sing Sing. If Gov. Higgins refuses full publicity let Mr. Jerome furnish it, and put Higgins and Hendricks to shame. . Mr. Jerome's official energy is too ephemeral and evanescent. He exhausts himself in pyrotechnics. Here is a great opportunity for him Teally to do something worth while. Will he take it? RAILROAD PIES. ~~ ‘An engineer and fireman blocked traffic on the Santa Fe road with two railroad lunch-counter pies. The pies were not put on the track or in the locomotive fire-box, but caused the trouble through their transfer to the midsts of the engineer and the fireman. Shortly after eating his pie the engineer lay down on the floor of the engine and writhed. The fireman stopped the engine and then lay down and writhed too. The Santa Fe road at this point is a one-track line. No one would take the responsibility of running the engine, and the train stood there for several hours, blocking all traffic on the road until an investigation showed the cause and a substitute pieless engineer ‘was provided. It has never been supposed by the public that railroad pies were eaten by railroad employees. The nature of the railroad pie is too well known. Its object is not to furnish sustenance, but to increase the de- mand for dyspepsia remedies. It is another example of the retributive justice that the railroad itself should suffer for its share in this continued attack on the digestive apparatus of the travelling public. 1 Mr. Cleveland and Judge O’Brien have joined Mr. Westinghouse In certifying to Jacob H. Schiff's “honesty of purpose.” Mr. Schiff says his conscience has awakened and that “I am. endeavoring to lead a tighteous life.” Confession, contrition and retribution would be a better proof that Mr. Schiff’s conscience is in good working order than a cord of certificates from Mr. Ryan’s dummy trustees, ‘Wicked Nebraska railroads kidnapped Gov. Mickey so that he could not hear Lawson’s speech. Is Lawson so fearful as that? Or maybe this is a press agent’s story. Seven-year-old' Annie Eihorn, of No. 65 Sheriff street, lost her life trying to save her doll Henrietta from falling off the fire-sscape, These stories of modern Bluebeards sound like the tales of the old folklore books, The stork has visited Marshall P. Wilder and left a baby girl. # Letters from the People, # Prayer for Wayward So Fo the Editor of The Evening Wort “Broken-Hearted Mother’ asks other mothers what she shall do with an in- corrigible boy of sixteen, Broken-heart- e@ mother, I fee) for you as I too am @ mother, but I must say t you are rather late in trying to get control of your son. If you do not have control before the age of sixteen, I am afraid be is a goner. But if you will spend @ome time alone in prayer perhaps you ean begin over with your boy. Then when you have prayed earnestly let him pray with you and I am sure he wih be impressed by your Interest, which I am afraid has not always been intense. An example is all that counts with children, Try it. Mra, 1G, his back on the bag the water In the tube will rise, Cause the elephant to be removed and substitute gold enough to make the water rise as far as when the elephant was on, H, A.D. Slot-Machine Losses, To the Editor of ‘The Evening World: I wish to enter a protest against the | lows of money of the patrons of the ferry, “"L,” and Subway by the «um- selling slot-machines. I have often no- ‘ced men, women and children lose the |eent they dropped into these machines, jand Uhought it very wrong that the pub- | lic must stand for it | I dropped a cent In a machine, The | ce: dropped out of sight. The ma- chine did not work. I recetved no gum, y At another station I dropped a cent In a Hlephant’s Weight in Gold, machine, lost my cent and did not yet Be the Editor of The Evening World any gum. Js there no way to put a stop ‘A.M. J. asks how an elephant could| to this? Must we Now Yorkers be done be weighed in a land where there are| by every one on every thing? J. K. Bo scales and how the elenhant’s weight -— fn gold can be determined. Have a bag! C. R—Records of marriages, births made and fill with alr; under the bag|and deeshs are kept at the Bureau of @ large button connected to a tube with| Vital Statistics, Pifty-ffth street and water. By having the elephant He on| Sixth avenue A Little Game of Patterns. a | Woes of the! own kind was once more exemplified. Women, to be sure, sympathize with the woman who {s down on one condition. She must stay} down, The moment she attempts to rise from or/ turn. Baseball as a Business VER $2,677,000 Is paid out in salaries to the professional base, ball players of the United Btatos each year, Over $2,590,000 | in paid In other salartes and in expenses of malataining the grounds of the professional clubs, about #80,00C In rattroed fares, about $100,00 In sleeping car fares, ubout $125,000 In training expenses. ind perhaps $50,000 in addicfonal expenses. ‘And this is only oounting the expenses of the organized pasobail leagues of thc United States, registered and re- corded under the national agreement. * The total expense of operatinis baseball In the United States as an organtred sport, therefore, Is in the neighborhood of $7,00),00, ac- cording to the estimates of those best posted, walch means that anprost 25,000,000 paid admissions must be received before the team owners can bre even on their investments, not counting interest. The fact remains that nearly one-half of the baseball club owners of the United States loge money every year, writes H. 3. Fullerton in the Chicaxo ‘Tribune. ‘As a business investment baseball ranks with wheat speculation—or oven more risky than that—and few except the rich can afford to go into the game. A few men—Itke John T. Brush—-who owns tho New Yor& club—or rather, holds it in his name for A. Freedman and others—and Col, John Rogers, of Philade!- phia, have made money in bascball as an investment. Comiskey, too, by his shrewdness and foresight, has made a lot of money, and the owners of tho Chi- | cago National League clyp (all except Anson) have made money—but what has been made has been put into Improvements of the plant. ut even in those big organizations, Ike the National and American leagues, there are times when it is herd to make the league o money maker. | ood Instances of little things | strength of it. ORE Dog makes personal application for a] M with large consequences—"Ple | licence, paying the fee himself, Deceased | {iroad,” first tying up| Pug in East Nineteenth strest buried bog iba in @ handsome plot at Hartsdale. Phil-| fe tnnaran of the engineer and, fies | 8 a ee a eee eas ne Jeracy. Central by |f8¥OFIte dog, which had the distinction oe | teas feed pipe in the boiler of) the locomotive. ‘Corn cut with a razor may cause death.” Well, in connection with the last case, for the boy on vace- tion to take care of smail cuts and bruises and take no chance of blood | votson, ae. Court decision that milllonaire must pay for his wifes furs seems @ trifle | unsessonable, at ienst. eo. peeple get foolish thing else. . Riding academy employee weds widow with #000000, Tendency of the groom to become a bridegroom will make the family coachman look to his laurels. . . Sald that generosity breeds generosity. As Lawson put the roll of bills in the Salvation Army girl'a tambourine he no doubt recalled the gold pleces in the Rockefeller pastor's potatoes, oe platce but it is no plaice for fokes in cumfortable and that is why nu yoark for the privvilidge of going to a sum! Growth of the commuting habit evi-! denced by crowded suburban trains on all railroads, Policeman who does a round trip of sixty miles daily between Far Rockawey and his post on Staten Island understands ite advantages. The Mystery of Unio a a a a a SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. a [Rbene in through a narrow DY. ine tor £1) ial aid to the Union green OUeMRY EINE, GRAIN HS yt Dole triacs ote Uh Fiat and finds ne nae joel has been just the saime all the time, seezen is a loathing for hoame and sensibble, none ‘ of Jin’ Dawking, | elbow, hrvugh the hel ‘a titel, ain Petdrick, @ famous detestive, ls put cal finances, | Btalla Featherstone, shows eas MPLS goue of Richard's death and is pointed “out £3 | George by the Janitor, Un uare house as ihe who called on Seliea the nignt of the AMkD murder. “Geveral clues point (0 Mella’e eouneotion with the mur | Pendrick, as Allanby cast lying on the floor, much, but I had to quier “Has he gone? Je that Aliaaby te Berne George that oe t fen @ hold over ber | re gave Seiten Sa letters He | 1 hin army, and, seeing iited her CHAPTER XII. Retribution, T was a Mttle after 10 when Samuel Pendrick and) with extended arms, George Allanby came in sight of Burger's Hotel. Mr. Dawkins had kindly furnished George with | a ‘explicit inatructions, and turning to the right as no| “No, be Ly sill hore," Jong sgh of content. silence about the piace that affected him, so thst he | paused on the landing until he heard the sound of a cautious step in the hall below, and Knew this the dvtective was following him | “Aare ‘As he paused before Dwwkina's door and was about) 0000) Ji, Mae yt i to rap on the panels, a noise within caused him to fr' iNet Cone ee pause It was the pound of a@ struggle BONE OM ie hive reouperat | withn, A souffing molec, such as two men MMM i ore as produced who were wrestling together. Aais ise dataallvon ariouy, A touch on the arm caused him to start, for We) iO ad oo nat any | thought he was alone. It waa Pendvick, whom ho had) ,.° 0 18) 0) 008 me not heard approach, | ‘Well, why don't you go in?” asked the Nttle man! his pre "Bo!" aw he inclined his ear to the key-| and his | took a flask out of his po the contents to trickle do in a whisper. ea those of hole and Hstoned. ‘Mr, Dawkins evidently has a “What, you 0, Visitor, Well, we must walt until the person goes.| sent you a note. Say, you to be entertaining him in rather a strenus! ji uffitag noise within increased. | Allanby drew had seercely delivered himself of this speech) ti when a cry, @ cry deep with anguish, was heard | the floor, from within }osition and elutehed bis companion by the arm, “Desperate doings bere!” he muttered in un under: tone, “We must see what it means, We must break in, Help me.’ And wetting his shoulder weainet| me 44 squared all right,’ ¢ | the do | tt open end t | Hold hin soen He srer to perhaps dangerously, and to utter @ harsh word, ey atumbled Into the room Hold bint” cried a strident yo | Alkmby was conscious of o dark figure nig sere js the feller that {twelf puet him, and then Pendriek closed in en it. | got enough atrenth left in | here was a seuffiing sound and the fail of a heavy) pendrick, He rolled over on his a! ant on the floor, body on the Moor, | and turned the man at his feet over #0 that the face! ple, but whe shall say that being brought face to i Cut out the basket, barrels, pail and fan and join them, afier removing the| AU ibis had happened in such @ short time that 8) was exposed to the light, face with one of the tragedies of Ite bas not bean pop se ‘They witl form @ pretty disk, and if you wish you oan give it various | could hardly realidg what happened, for “Why, it'# Cleveden,” he muttered, beneficial to them both? ‘4 web ereyon, Pi Foom wes dark except for the faim moonlight “Jom, Ab, ¥9 dida's think of tie 414 ye, Ofr, Pens trict-Attorney ought to order a new trial on tho} And if I hadn’t realized the ab- surdity 1 might have thrilled indignantly in re-| own sex she had better not seek {t. For she will Said 42 on & the & Side Little Willie’s Guide to New York. Gotham’s Silly Season. HIS is nu yoark’s silly seezen it is the time of yeer when’ eeven the man who used to talk abbowt the weather refranes frum introducing sutch a diss-) agreealle and blasfemmus toppick. to the beeches and rufe gardens in the silly seezen to) get away from thare hoames and not to get anny speshly brilyent entertainment, and no one who sees moast of the rufe garden and beech shows can dowt)S!ls In house work will be watched that the mannidgement is on to that. hoame is a fine *Yth interest. Little Bright-Eyes in the perspyring just as well and much cheeper at hoame and cood salve the vacayshun munny to send to the heethen or to play the raicas with and land, sidestep tifold feever and mallayria and sunstroke. | ber comes the silly seezen stops all of a sudden and nu yoarkers get SAD0| fees with tainted money. again and say graitfully How good it js to get hoame onee moar. hoame oe @ that is why ! love the silly seezn. light appeared, and he saw the detective standing by @ table, a tin lamp which he dad just Ut at bis| "Nevey mind about him for the present,'' saiq| “I don’t believe I have burt him | Peudrick stepped forward to meet him, took him helped him ever to a ragged sofa by the window and Allanby had recogidzed the young rogue, and he pointed to the figure that lay on the floor Dawkins lay back on the ragged sofa and breathed | “Well, don’t lose sight of him, entored the hotel he caine to a narrow hall, whore @/1 don't know’ ye, 1 guess ye'r friends, and lm tunk. dim light gliimmered, and mounted the greasy stalrs | in’ he's about done for me," clenching his hands to- to tho second floor. There existed o certain #inlster) gether as if to suppress a or The detective, seeing that the man was in agony, | you sure he's safe? murmured the other. what he's succeeded," holding his hand hard against He looked up after a spasm of pain, would you? wut down close by, Lis eyes Nxed on the man on | The detective rose from his stooping) aianvy aaw that the young man was wounded, “Well, I guess I'm done for, with Mctle aid from Allanby, he wrenched| jw 1 kin do ye good turn.” who had been listening, willing to sit in the corner and snuff ashes for tho | vest of her life as the price of the sympathy of her | Perish in their inevitable reaction if she does. we ot ot et)—soBy 'H. S. Fullerton It {8 a queer business. In the league elght club owners form @ partnership and practically agrso to divide the profits of the year. That Is, the visiting team gets nearly half the entire receipts. no matter where it plays, receiving 12% cents out of each 2-cent admission, 2 cents out of cach b0-cent, T-cent and 31 admission, As neurly 9 per cent. af the total admissions are & cents or un- der, the visitors get nearly one-half, the home team having the advantage only on gtand stand and box seat sales. After forming this partnership the team owners go In for themselves. The first effort Is to beat the other seven partners out of the best ball players and form a winning club, Each one of the eight struggles and fights to get the play- ers and the winning team, and then these partners, dividing profits equally, try to beat each other out of every ball game. To lose xnmea means to lose money, for the team whipped even twice in succession, feols the falling off at the box oMce. There are in this country perhaps not more than twenty-five really first-class hall players, and of these perhaps seventeen are in the American league and eight in the Natlonal. This, of course, ts exclusive of pitchers, The American League comes near averaging two really great ball players to the club, whils the Natfonal rungs about one to the cltb, This {s the result of raids made by the American upon the National during the war between them. The National, losing ita famous stars, was forced to go ont and find new players to develop into wonders. In three years, perhaps, tho National will have the stars and the ‘American stars will be going back rapidly—and most of them gone. A ball player lke Lajote, Wagner, or Keeler cannot be bought with money. In fact, whenever a really great ball player is sold—one good in every depart- ment of the game, batting, base running, flelding and throwing—there tg back of that sale something, perhaps of a personal nature, which forces a club to sell him. sa ‘Ne bia, and large attendance at Harvard, Yale and at all universities maintaining summer schools. Old {dea of making the long vacation a mere loafing spell has been greatly improved upon. Num- ber of college students who seek definite cccupation of some kind between com- mencement and the opening of the fall term grows larger every year. eo ee Speaking of colleges, remark of the Vassar professor that the college gir] is ‘a normal being’ will be indorsed No fear nowadays that a higher edu- cation ts going to spoll her for ordini \fe or make her too good for human nature's daily food. oc 8 Wisconsin's plan of employing Indian of wearing a gold crown on a front tooth, Canine pets continue to monop- olize a large part of the day's news. More than 1,00 students registered for the summer course of study at Colum- becauwse it is too hot to be anny- nu yoarkers gO the silly seezin for it is too cool and Kitchen of the paleface far from the ers chaise arround the hot streats and ‘epee Js an evolution of which Cooper hot cars to keap cool, but the wildest mannyfestayshun of the silly seezen| "¢Ver conceived. is the vacayshun habit and the way nu yoarkers blow six munths’ salvings| es 8 @ mer reezort when thay cood do thare| Warning to summer student waiters by Mayor James P. Baxter, of Port- not to accept tips because they and then when septem-! lead to graft. Never do to pay tuition » but one of the simtoms of the silly | evverything that is comfortable and good oald silly seezen. Number of Smiths in Brooklyn #bown py. ype new city directory to be 2,200, mith family at least never AP. TERHUN®. ser remarka on race guide n Square ¥ 2 By Ernest De Lancey Pierson window Suddenly a faint) drick. I seen ye before, but me peepers Is kind o' dim and I disremambered ye et first. Yes, it was bim that done it. This gent,"’ pointing to Allanby, ‘widn't | Dave nuthin’ to do with i, You search Cleveden's rooms, I guess you'll gtt evidence enough, As fer| me, I'm gain’ ter live, Goin’ ter lve long enough to hang him, anyway,’ al shaking his fist at the prostrate a fearful look at a figure hin, der of Sulton, Has he gone?” called out a volca,| Cleveden was showing signs of reviving, Pendrick ro 1 he murdered |, . eA atte ween Pad adheres to, 808 C4 pe apart of | “S4y, did you let him go?” and out of a far corner| W®# Feady, and in an astoniehingly short time naa Bie ot ptalla’s dreanes, & man made hy stumbling way, (bound the man hand and foot with m cord he hed taken trom his pocket, ‘The former man of fashion, who now wore a rough the man was far spent, overcoat and was humbly clad, lay there silent, glar- tries to con: vit eeas eMte himacit and. n ea re guilty. © Son | forced him to lle down tag nt ihe wouaded man on the couch, En ie That MAUR oaeld mck teaver MRSC MAUR | nie ne get Auaye tua a A way I ike to see him," continued Daw- detective and Allan fn "soareh of Dawkins, e Ket away? he wet away? muttered | jing, and the pel tH Dawkins, for in that brief moment of his appearance | 1D* “T only hope he'll never get loose. He done it, and I guess if he had the screws put on he wouldn't say no,” He paused, and his hand went to ‘When he removed it it was red, a shan opa, “T guess I on'y got what was comin’ ter me," mur- mured Dawkins, eleepily. ‘I cafkerlated to run @ Acuble team an’ frighten you (to Allanby) out of payin' me for kespin' me moyth shut, and him," pointing to Cleveden, ‘He got tired of it, and hei to-night Well,” speaking with di Moulty, “he thought he'd put an end to things, an'—an' I guess he's come mighty near doin’ #."" With his last speech Dawkins, whom Allanby at Jeast could not help pitying, for he seomed to be suf- fering greatly, rotled back on the couch and closed his eyes, . said Pendrick soothingly, nts. For though of pain, neket and allowed sume uf wn the other's throat, Are ye sure he won't as he cast another look ‘The draught he had taken d him amazingly, long as I wish him to, o 8 © © © © © But he did not die, and was able to stv riling avidence against Cleyeden when the case was brought up In eourt, An investigation of the latter's rooms brought to Mght the fact that he had owed Selten large same of money, and had given not which he had re- turned to the dead man's rooms to purioin the nigat that Allanby wetehed him, He was an old lover of Mrs. Renshaw, which sccounted for his visit to the Densmores’ house, Pendrick had aeoumulated such @ mass of evidence against him that despite the efforte of his clever lawyers Cloveden was convicted, Dawking, out of consideration of the evidence he hed given; was allowed to go free, and, broken down as he was through his experience, it # doubtful it he will be ale soon to return to his former profes- sion, which ts a dlatinct gain to society, © Perhaps the most welcome yisitor lo ..e Dens: mores’ house on the morning after the scene in Banger’s Hotel was Goorge Allanby, And the news he brought was well caleulated to perform a miracle In the health of a young lady who “Kor ¢, and I don't know but Allanby, yes; now T remember. 1 wouldn't be sorry if I was the couch, ane the detec: | did not feel tt in his heart Your busingss with ontinued Dawkins, “mebbe ty and pointed to the man killed Selten, an 1 kuess 1 of Directors. Why? A. Well, you see I am in my seventy-second year, and I want to res: up a bit. When I was a boy in Peekskill I would not have minded how many salaries I received, but as the Equitable intends to cut off the salary T have decided that it doesn’t pay simply to be a director. I miss the old crowd, when we used to meet and crack a few jokes and raise each others incomes. Q. How about the loan of $250,000 to the Depew Land and Improvement Company? A. All we need to make that a paying proposition is to get a lot of people to put more money in it. Q. Won’t Mr. Ryan do that for you? Well, you see, the State In- gurance Department says {t's only worth $150,000, and except when it comes to paying money to himself Mr. Ryan {s what you might call a tight wad. Q. Have you anything to say about the dis res regarding the waste of money while you were a director in the Equitable Not a thing more than what I have always said, that “Optimism al Na Q. How so? A. Well, so long as we were one happy family at the Fqul- table, raising each other's salaries, buying stock from ourselves at our owa “All those pleasant days are ove lending money to our business and social friends, look how happy we were! What was because we were optimistic. “it is a good thing,” we said, let us push it along” Then Hyde and Alexander fell out. I tried te soothe them. The State Insurance Nepartment used to look at the books through concrete spectacles. There was no worry, no trouble, All was har mony and get rich real quick. Then, as I said, Hyde and Alexander fell out. That was pessimism. What was the result? All those pleasant days are over. Harriman and Hyde have quarrelled, I lose $20,000 a year, and Thomas F. Ryan has gobbled up the Equitable. Ryan will get everything. Paul Morton {s cutting down salaries, the insurance business {s at a stand- still, That's what pessimism does for us! Q. What would you recommend? A. The good old ways of the good eld days. Optimism on all sides, The policy-holders thinking they would get something some day, all our happy ttle Equitable family getting some- thing every day. Everybody friendly. Laughter from the Board of Diree~ tors’ room as all salaries were raised and a pleasant report consisting of rows of fat figures given out to the policy-holders. And now see what pessimism {is doing. Mr. Harriman saying “Wow! Wow!” young Mr, Hyde not giving any more dinners and balls, policy-holders raising a row, papers saying unpleasant things. Q. Why do you not try to restore optimism? Why do you resign your $20,000-a-year retainer? A. Because they won't let me retain her. And—~ Q. And what? A. And because I am seventy-two and have become pessimiatic myself. Q How so? A. My dear boy, they forget how well I could attend everybody’s business but my own. I put in that resignation as a fire escape, prices, All for One Cent. Society’s Queer Pets. LONDON soclety woman has a} FAPAN ts to some ex least, A small white beribboned plg sit- still an Eastern country {nfluenced ting beside her when she rides by Western thought. ‘This state: inent 18 corroborated many of which by {ts theatres, are still conducted on out In her automobile. Another woman automobilist 1s rarely seen on her cer without her pet penguin, Aristides,} strictly Orlental lines—that x to say, which she frequently takes with her) they are from 9 In the morning tll into shops, the Intelligent creature car-}7 or § In th nd the play i# rying her handbag in his bill. Another{!n_ progre The price of delights in horned toads as tonneau pets. admission vs one he day. i y ae a cen! tlon of staying all May Manton’s Daily Fashions. Bishop etylew make notable feae tures of tho aenson and have extended into the realm of even the tiniest of bables, Tilustratea 1s a most attractive Uttle dress, which js made of Persian lawn and Js finished only with frills of the material, but which appropriately can be made from any material in uso for infants’ dresses. The simplicity of the model makes its essential charm and also renders It exe ceedingly valuable to busy mothers, While it involves the very least pos- sible labor, it 1s al» ther charming and attractive in ef+ fect. The quantity of material requid ts 21-4 yards of Inches Ade, SONS te cut in one size only, Infant's hop Drcse—Pattern No, 5095. How to Ohtain These Patterns, Call or Send by Mail to the Evening World May Manton Fashion me ter prove it." stooped down fe not indifferent to him, Bureau, 21 West 23d St,, New York. fend 10 Cents tn Coln or amps for Each Pattern Ordered, IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, and always Coed If Mr. Jerome is desirous of reading the Hendricks testimony he} which only three curtosity! prison garments. | euice/St a patentcinbateine ad) @ You received $20,000 a year from tho Equitabte, could have found it several days ago in the columns of The World.) seckers without funds showed One woman who had shed tears during the trial rut if they were, and an acquitted prisoner What services did you render for that money? A, I There is enough there to secure the indictment of several Equitable) up. Two thousand tickets at 25 cents each had over Nan’s possibly impending doom, and saw her) ghowed the least sign of exuberance within ten gave advice freely. ofticials, Ss been issued, dat, alas! not sold, and the eternal in- afterward in a giddy bite Ousas shirt waist, men- years after leaving the court-room the jury would Q. Free? A. No, not free; freely. Better yet, Mr. Jerome could take his own testimony. He can pro- difference of the supposedly gentler sex to tho tioned the fact indignantly to me, as If the Dis- wae oy Bearer ee prortune ob any Hindle Q. You have resigned from the Equitable’s Board 4