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F to 63 Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-OMce at New ¥ as Second-Class Matl Matter. VOLUME 46... —___ +NO, 16,086, POLICE GRAFT. Police graft is ramifying. The regular payments from saloon- keepers, street women, peddlers, push-cart men, shopkeepers who use the sidewalks and other cl in the community have been recognized for some time. If the story told by Charles Mangold is to be believed police graft will keep on extending until no one can conduct any business <The Emotional Flop. [ is at once oqually foolieh ple egainst falling in love, But at least it is eafe to ask ring on the brink of fonal whirlpool must all touch Lotte soon or late, to take as thejr motto this paraphrase of ancient wisdom: “Be sure you are, ahead.” So many of us are apt to where we Then go without paying tribute to the police. | make mistakes, to diagnose a summer evening’ Mangold is a dealer in second-hand material in East One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street. He accuses the wardmen of the East One Hun- dred and Thirty-eighth street station of attempting to put him on their regular collection list, and on his refusal of arresting him and forcing him_to pay blackmail. Stolen brass and told him they would keep on getting him in trouble unless he paid them regularly. A remarkable part of this story is the treatment that Mangold’s specific charges received at Police Headquarters. Without protection higher up police corruption is no more possible than would be life in- Surance corruption with an honest and efficient State Insurance Depart- ment. BEAUTY FACTORIES. appealing to the general feminine desire for increased beauty a certain:class of doctors have been receiving large incomes. In the pro- ceedings against one of them facts are cited to show the extent of suffer- ing and expense to which a woman will submit in order to improve her looks. One woman who had a few wrinkles paid $200 to have them re- moved, and uncomplainingly submitted io being bumed with acids in hope that after the burns were healed the wrinkles would be gone. Others momentary attraction as a lifelong passion and to prescribe marriage on the strength of the diug- nosis, Now, marriage {s admittedly a cure for the | grandest passion ever felt or Inspired, but {t is "5 i heart: ed efe: 1 He charges that the police had a thief sell him} a very extreme measure to be classed wilh the the particular flop that leads them into matn-/@ltar flame in our hearts we. need ¢fear nothing. yning cases, There 1s use of oxygen in pneumonia or 4 or the injection of salt into the veins. Home °° eo _ Hints. Housewife’s Cyclopaedia. Washington Cake. UT up in warm milk a spoonfu. CG of tutter: when cool stir in 018 pound and ore-fourch ot fted fllur, two eggs weil beaten, a little salt and aMarge spoonful of gord ye Mix these well together; pur {t into a buttered un to rise; when risen, batte three-fourths of an hour. Arrah, Chauncey, yer name ts the talk av the town, Ochone, Chauncey Depew! Tho’ they say that ‘tls “Shaughnessy” sandpapered down, The Eveninf#R Woriars Mome Magazine, Monday Evening. July 17, a. J no use in resorting to it for mild attacks. And it) and futile to advise peo- | behooves us to discover in time whether we do love is concerned are in an acutely re hot prefer our sentimental malady to its cure, Some people fall in love as ofien as a vaby tumbles taking Its first walk away voi its moth- € skirt, They are like the parson who chal- lenged a phrenologist to tell him by his bumps to What denomination he belonged. The phrenolo- gist felt his head very varefully and finally hez- | a2 ted that he was a Baptist, “No,” said the cler-| german, tr’umphantly, “you're wrong. I used to be a Baptist, but I'm not now.” « the rhrenologist replied, “I was a little dubious about Judged by your head, you're Hable to Sop! apy tire.” | | Sow there are a great many sentimentansts, | particularly men, who are also lavle to Nop aay! time. And it is entirely a matter of accident it i | mony proves more serious or lasting than prc- i vious emotional apostacies, Ochone, Chauncey Depew! By Eugene Geary. Pie Air: “Widow Machree.” Ochone, Chauncey Depew! ‘Twas fine while {t lasted, bat now ‘tis al Ochone, Chauncey Depew! Ochone, Chauncey Depew! Ohare DEPEW, ‘t!s no wondher yer sore, Since the people awoke, an’ some av ‘em spoke, ‘Tis no Joo Miller joke what they're sayin’ about you, Freighted down fore an’ aft wid yer big load avy graft, By Nixola Greeley-Smith. | We mect so many men that so far as faling In ptive Perhaps even we flirt with them for ad. or two before our lives diverge. And afterwar when we herr of their great romance or com> or tragedy, we know that had we chosen might have been the leading Jady of it if our own! apathy or absorption elsewhere had not ied us! away froin tt. We may feei this entirely without vanity, For to allura persons subject to the emotional dop,) there 1s but one essential requisite, that Is to be on the ground when the flop occura, Men are far more subject to the emotional flop} than women. And when I see one ot them poy-| | ing the penalty of his vacillation in a lifetime af boredom I can't help being glad of it. | Death is the penalty of him or her who trifles with the sacred fire. If it burns a perpetual) state, we But if we use it to heat curling tongs or to ight} cigarettes with we must pay the penaity of our trivialty, . Beauty °: Hints. By.Margaret Hubbard Ayer Face Too Fat. Cc. R.—Try vibrassage. Facial A massage is also very efficient, but slower and more expensive. | To Remove Warts. A WXIOUS.—The best way to have | o'er, Warts remove {s by electrieity. You ean have them removed also paid large sums of money to have moved or their faces rounded out. ment to have her ears moved. their noses st®aightened or scars re- One woman took a course of treat- Queen Cake. REAM one pound of sugir and a ( , half a pocnd of bucter, then #tt In five eggs weil beaten one wine Ochone, Chauncey Depew! Oratorical bouts at directors’ layouts, Yez were champeen ay touts for insurance, ‘tis thrue; Alexandher an’ Hyde had it all cut an’ dhried, Ochone, Chauncey Depow! The credulity of the victims had no end. One woman who received a complexion ointment and was taking a mail course of treatment to remove freckles wrote that her face had come out in blotches and that her skin was becoming dark, which made her naturally blond hair look out of place, but still she was hopeful, and if the doctor would send her a larger jar of ointment she would keep on with the treatment. Still these same women might be daily suspecting the grocer and the butcher of giving short weight and in the ordinary affairs of life would be lacking in undue credulity. Few homely women understand why it is that they are not beau- tiful, ; BLACKMAIL, Several cases of blackmail have receptly come to light. For one case that becomes known there must be a hundred which remain hidden, for blackmail is one of the most secret of all crimes. Its concealment is desired by both the blackmailer and the victim. Neither has any- thing to gain by exposure. There are few men who have not at some time or other done something or written something or been involved in something the publicity of which is not desirable. So profitable has it become to prey upon the fears of such men that certain law firms—one at least of con- siderable prominence—are understood to pay for evidence which might at some future time be valuable to enforce the settlement of litigation or the collection of some shadowy claim. Such information is a pow- erful lever to force payment in a distinct matter to which it may have no legal relevancy. . If Depew is a peach may not Harriman be a plum, or was Hyde the plum tree and Ryan the plum tree shaker? : The caretaker who .ook all the plumbing, fixtures and door knobs from-an unoccupied house took care to overlook nothing, Chicago's latest form of graft is the sale of high school diplomas. “Letters from the People, ance the end of the elephant to the To the Editor of The Evening World ground, take off elephant and fill plat The Chineso as a ciass are not saloon | form with gold till It balances the op- foums. Therefore, Hquor trusts and | Posite weight, MRC whiskey legislators don't want China- Bad Tenement Condfttons, men in America, The Chinaman can't |, the guitor of The Evenne Ww. Vote and doesn't drink whiskey, but ho | “with so many eMclene ener ok th could Dulld the cami across the {sth-|nead of the Tenement-House Depart, mus if called on, and do well and] mant tt is sather aurprising tolread als cheap, 5. H. | most dally that some one or other meets with a horrible death by reason of some fire-trap unnoticed before the fire. The officers of the Tenement-House Depart- | ment are charged with the duty of look- ing after and guarding against tire-traps before and not afier fires. ‘There are a Weighing Without Seales, To the Aittor of The nee Wor A.M. J. propounds a problem how to ascertain the w: an elephant when no scales ar Chop down a tree three feet in th handy ness as a balance. Muke a pla great many violetions overlooked and % feet in Jength, and of sumeient | ¢ ed by tho owners of tenemeat- strength to hold the weight of the | 29 and, as tt seams, inany af these | Slephant, and a weight to balance him. | yiclatlons are unnoticed by the Depart: Hal . pel r | mes wre Inapectors are ni to Ba ee hath tatneeeee in g nad dessrvings our cob—p phant | guard hopelems and deserving, our On One €nd and proceed to fl up the other end with rocks or earth until {t will balance exactly You can weigh the elephant to a hair, Now over bal- 1 afford und should allow the The sdministratiqn should onsider tts budget when a matter this nature iy concerned PAULINE HATK: A Six-Picture Puzzle. ACH of these six pictures represent# th t part of a tworsyflable word, ‘The six Initials will spell the Haine of somethitty suggested by the picture ry commonly {n the September murkeis, says the Chicago Inter Blaze of brandy and wine mixed, a ttle powdered cinnamon and gratea nutmeg, five spoonfuls of cream, an# sift in three-fourths of a pind of flour, Stir thts all together, pour into your little this and bake. Graham Bread. NE and one-half cups of bread O flour, sifted; one and one-half cups graham flour, not sifted, Put into these a pinch ef salt; then add two-thirds of a cup of molasses and one and one-half cups of sour milk in which one teaspoonful of soda has been dis- solved. Bake one and one-half hours tn slow oven. Dried Beef with Eggs. UT into thin slices and put Into a saucepan with water enovgh to cover, set over the fire ten min- utes, drain off the water gnd cut the meat fine with a knife and fork. Re- to the hot pan with a tablespoon- ful of butter and a little pepper. Stir? r well-beaten eggs into the pan with the} Mrs, fine meat and cook two minutes. Send} Mr to table in a hot round dish. Och Mr. rd s s CHAPTER I. The Gems of a Prince. LO the white neck of a woman they must look like drops of blood," said Sutphen, t nior member of the firm of Sutpnen « Inglis, goldsmiths and diamond merchants, He sat before his desk in a bare room, whose wal! were fltied with doors of steel. It adjoined the treas ure room of the establishment, where some of the most valuable jewels in the ity were stored and pro- tected Benjamin Sutphen with glistening eyes was examin- Ing A ruby necklace, curiously sec in enamelied sily which he held in his hand, As he held the jewels up Neurer to the Imeandescent ignt, Mg partner utere an eaclamation of admiration, “Now 1 wonder how they came by these stones,”’ he murinured, und ben turned and glanced at tne note which lay open on the desk at his elbow. “Johu ¥ such a presomt to his wife, and, 4f rumor 1s to be be- Neved, she has squandered her own fortune in specu- lation. My! what fire and what @ marvelous cosor. the market. "You see," continued Sutphen, addressing his part- Mrs. Reyburn received these stones in an oat fashion. Her uncle, an old merchant in the Chinese trade, got them ‘rom a native Prince during tho Loxer retgliion as payment for helping the Prince fier the country ‘The Prince, it seems, had looted the necklace from a very holy shrine known as the Blue hut he learned tn a roundabout fasion that Chinese had learned the etones were In ‘his possession and that they hed sent emiasaries here to wrest the sncred rubles from him. So in panic he presents the necklare to his niece, Mrs. Reyfourn. Bhe, it seems, @ccording to ‘ber confidential note to me, has been annoyed again y thet scoundrel helf-brother of hers, Gilbert Chatwood, who ts just back from Australia She's afvant he may have a try for the Jewels, so shy Bends the ecastons. “Oh, I see.” answered Inglis. “That's what you Wunt young Fenton for. Well, I rely on Your Juag- ment of the lad. I'll leave you to settle the matter with him.” Sutphen watched his partner feave the room; then he rang hig electric bell and pleked up the case of 4 Is 1 hate to tet tiem go out of my sight,” he mur: mured as lie looked toward the door, "Can Divk Fenton be trusted? Well, I must trust geome one, And then he looks honest and has done well oy us, For tus favver's sake Vil give him a chance,"* A timid ray on the door, then it opened and a young man entered. Benjamin Sutphen logked him over akg a mental inventory of the net carefully as if It was a slender, almost boyish figure that stood the head of the house. His frank, dark eyes out from a tangle of black curls that strayed yer ble smooth forehead “Well, Mr, Sutphen, 1 with baif a smile. "Yes, my boy. Sit down,” d the other and motioned for him t be seated, “Now, then, Dick," and he drew his chair closer, ‘the other day you asked me {f there was not some- thing you could do in this establishment that would make a ittle more money 1 eould watthe time, and Ttald you so. Sines nity hae arisen—that 4, if you think think you called me?’ he enable “You have done well since you came into th’s of- To ald further in filling the blanks the detinition of ¢ ‘omplete word wition FY o plete 1, —d-—-, an arti cop vensation shane oe, bhree years ago, or w it four? Wo are well satiafied with you."’ ‘The young man bowed. “I don't think I need have any fear of telling you, Arrah, Chauncey, ‘tis you were the oroth ay a b'y, ne, Chaunzey Depew! At hiistin’ the salaries {ver so high, Ochone, Chauncey Depew! Tho’ ali roads lndv 10 Rome, there's 2 thrack rearer home; Where ft goes, ax Jerome—he's fixin’ it new; At that roud’s end, be eripes! min are all wearin’ sthripes, Ochone, Chaunmey Depew! THE NEWEST REASON, Crimsonbesk—There’s on for calling a ship ‘ Crimemberk—W Crimsonbeak—Berause ships are so often spoken.—Yonkers Statesman. yburn is not the kind of a man to make | Pagoda. The old captain brought them to New York; | the | 1 to Us to keep for her except on special | a8 he pushed a chatr | A sate in the Sinate was proper in’ nice, Ochone, Chauncey Depew! The Grand Cinthral’s President, too, cut some Ochone, Chauncey Depew! Greasin’ capital’ Ochone, Chaune another The Second Avenue Rubies es # as Mr. Sutphen. | almost to a whisper, “I am thinking of getting mar- | ried.” be Sutphen for once forgot fis dignity and shook the clerk's hand with uncommon fervor. “Good!” he exclalmed. “I am very glad ¢o hear ft By nan maired,’ rather he 1s a young man made. A Wity ucts as a safety brake when the husband starts to! proper The young man muttered his thanks. “and now to business," continued Sutphen, ‘You eee this,” and he took up the necklace and held !t under the light, a wavering ting of crimson fire. Fine, ts lt not? Never saw the like in the years I have been in business, If lost {t could hardly be| replaced. You know Reyburn, the lawyer? “John Reybura? Yes, I think I have heard of | him." “Well, this belongs to his wife. She 1s naturally | anxious for Mts safety. I am going to make you the custodian of this necklace! Oh," as a look of sur Prise came over Fenton's face, “J mean only on the They couldn't be matched again if we were to scour |°ccasions that she wishes to wear the Jewels, Sho °4 19 to notify me when and where she fa to wear the | gems, you are to take them there, remain if you choose unt] the entertainment or whatever it (s ts over and bring them back here to’ be deposited tn our vaults, Or, Sf you choose, you can leave them jin her chasge and return for them at the hour ane nny choose to epecify. Do you think you can do It!" Fenton's face had become serious and thoughtful while the head of ¢he house hdd been talking. | "I don't want you to think I do not estimate the importance of the duty you ask me te discharge. I, lenink I can keep my eyes open.’ | Mr. Sutphen looked at him again in hts keen and ‘searching way. | Geed, I hope you will, for tt would be a very |Sertour thing for us if the jewels wore lost. We leurantee to protect them or pay $50,000 1f they are | tost.'* Tifty thousand?” gasped Fenton. xactly. You are nat thinking of backing out, are you?” 7 0; certainly not.” | ‘ou will probably be engaged only two or at the most thier wighta in the Week, and we will for the | service give you $50 more a month, Not a great, sum, bac with the other hundred you will have am- | ple to set up housekeeping in a. very modest way in a flat. Of course, 1f you ¢all—f’— “But Iam not going to fall," said Fenton eagerly, as) the vision of the future the diamond merchant had conjured up rose before him. “I ‘have too much at} !etuke, When do you nish me to begin?” | Mr, Sutyhen consulted the note at his elbow. “At 10 o'clock to-morrow night you will come to this) | office, Mr. Bomes, who guards the inner vaults at} right, will give you tke ease containing the necklace, A carriage will be waiting, Jevvins, whom you have already anet, will be on the vox, You will be driven, to Mrs. Reyburn's, for the owner gives the tall. You j wit be expected and will be shown to a room on the | second floor, where you will meet Mrs, Reyburp and hand her the Jowels, Be in evening dress, of course. ‘Then you are free to go away, provided you return punciually at the hour appointed, when you will bring | back the Jewels and give them to Somes to be restored fo the vaults, Now you understand wh | of you, do yout” "I apprevtate the responsibility and accept 11," sald Fenton In a tinn votce, | “Of equrse, 4f matters run smoothly ané we are isfled, you can look for a raise again in a few B w 4a, I: will not come dn unbandy after you are married.” | Fenton left the room holding his head very bigh, j whth the afr of @ man who {se exalted by great | thoughts and projects. “Won't Alice be delighted!” he murmured, ‘The chance las come so much sooner than I had an: hopes of expecting, And dtris money made ao easily, — is expected ' Misther Harriman’s deals—some are callin’ ‘em GOOD OLD MEMORIES! Do you recall the days of old, Sweet memories fondly twine, ‘The water pipes were frozen cold, The snow was three feet nine? —Pittsburs Gazette. The fact is," and here his yolce sank | tco."" slide down hill. That ta, of course, if she ts the | no: going to be a soldier's wife.” by the use of an acid or by using this mixture: Chrysorobin, 20 grains; coll dion, 11-2 drams. Apply with a came! hair pencil every day or two to the wart. For Thick Lips. F.—Try the folowing: Melt an ounce of any of the coll creams, ‘* add one gram each of pulverized tannin and alkanet chips: let macerate | for five hours, theo strain through | Qheese-cloth. Apply to the Mps when necessary. Would Have Lighter Hair. C. R.—Perhaps vou tave refer: | A enze to the rhubarb concoction for lightening the hatr. Hers it is: Five ounces of rhirbanbd stalk botled In a pint of white wine, and the whole dolled down to half the quantity. Filter and apply to the hair as a tonic. Let! tt dry on, | To Get Rid of Freckles. ice, “ateals— move frockles: Bichloride of mercury in coarse powder, 8 grains; with hazel, 2 ounces; rose wate, 2 ounces. Agitate untibe solution ts ob- tained. Mop over the affected parts Keep out of the way of ignorant per- }sons find children. & ae Ernest De Lancey Pierson He brushed aside all thoughts of any dangers that might beset his path, attributing them to an old man’s fears. “And those things are worth $60,00, If not mor Fifty thousand! . . . . . . “What a consolation tt must be to you that you are Diok Fenton leaned over in the dim light and kissed the sweet, anxious face that was lifted to his, They sat together on a shabby haircioth sofa in the parlor of a furnishedl- room house, Dick looking strangely out of place in | such dingy surroundings, dressed as he was. Alico Raynor smiled up at her lover, thinking that she had never seen him look so brawe and handsome, and all the more worried in consequence, for this wi the night when he was to perform his delicate mis- sion for the diamond merchants. “Why, you mid little angel, one might {magine that I was about to sot ont to do battle for & lost hope, in stead of being piloted about the city in a luxurious riage." ‘m sure I don't want to frighten you, but just think of all that {t would mean to us if by any chanee those jewels were to go astray. After all, is It worth rluking 60 much when we have so little to gain?” “Well, 1 shail gain you, if that Js the little you re- fer to," “But Mr, Sutphen told you that you must not think that dt was to ve such child's play as you imagined,” she sald, “that Jt wouldn't be a picnic.” “I realize thot, But he exaggerated the danger in hopes of {mpressing me."’ “Well, I am sure of one thing,” continued Alice. shan't sleep a wink until T have seen you again.” “Well, {t Is flattering to be thought so much of. Never knew I was #0 procious an article before. T'ii| tell you what I will do, since you are so anxious £0 #e@ mo aguin to-night, 1M appear in front of this house after I have done my work, way 1 o'clock in the morning, and you shail have a good sight of ine in- tact and whole, Do you think it is worth while to stay up for tha “I know [ should be much more comfortable 1 mind ere sure you were safe.” hen ace me you shall, 4¢ you will take the trouble to keep your eye on the street." He laughed as he mude his way with rapid strides tn the direction of the bullding occupied by the diamond merchants, It was only when he was making a short cut through a narrow, dark street and heard a acep behind him that the warnings he received occurred to him again, He turned suddenly and looked back just Jn ume to sce a dark figure slink into the snadnwe, Fenton walked on, amused at his own fears, yot con- scious of an uncasy feeling, He found Bomes #tand- Ing in the Coorway of the bullding and close to the curb a handsome coupe and a par of gray horses, He kad no dificulty in recognizing the rig as belonging to the head of the house. "Ye'll be travellin’ In style the night," sald Somes, “It's a great thing to be born rich,” Jerking his thumb in the direction of the vehicle, “| hayo not a punute to lose, Somes," man, “You do your part and I'll do mins "Bide you here and I'll bring it out to you," said the old fellow, He disappcared through the stect gates that led to he vault, and then returned bearing @ black mo1ocea cuse, which he placed, not without some reluctance, % the young man's hand, “You'll Le heve again between 1 and 2, 1 war told.” Fenton placed the case !n his inner coat pocket and without another word went out, He felt strangely ner- vous, now that the Jewels were in his possesion, and thinking over what Mr, Sutphen had said, the fears if fd the young | Why, a man and his wife could Nve | ‘don’t believe that ‘@ young man married 18 @ ¥O4N5 \in comfort for the rest of tyelr days on such a sum.” . What Scotty Is Up Against in Gay Little Old New York. - —_— obo By Martin Green. Sh, said the Cigar Store Man, “that a cowboy mino owner has come ont of ihe Weert to give Now Yorke t few Hnee of infe ition on how to blow coin.” “We live to learn,” plied the Man Higher Up “Dut if he can give the average New Yorker any point ers on how to spend the masuma he Is entitled tot Medal os big as a straw bat. With very few exception New Yorkers have to spend ail they make to live They don't have to be shown. What we here is somebody to wise uw how to have a little tough to fondle after we got through with the land lcd, the gas man, ihe butcher, the baker, the grocer, the {ce man, thr elothier, the hatter, the shoe dealer, the huberdasher, the milliner, @ department store, the milkman, the fruit dealer, the barker, the druggist the doctor, the dentist, the newsdealer, the tobacconiat, the restauran keeper, the theatre owner, the telephons company, the street car Ines ant Klondike Tim, tho bairy bartender, Some of us can count in the book maker on the side. “This Western miner could spend all he had in New York and not mak aripple. There have been rolls burned up here under cover that woul! make him look like the assets of a small boy starting on an outing of th Fresh-Air Fund. The man from California seems to have his long gree treated with a sticky preparation, and even if he didn't he could hav all the fun of the kind he likes he wanted for a few hundred bones. “It {sn't the guy who stands {n front of a hotel bar and howls fa bubble water for the crowd that spends money. He is like the member o @ secret society who marches behind a brass band in regalia one day & the year and polishes his own shoes in the bathroom of his flat on th other 364. The real ..ew Yorker blowing himself always works with th soft pedal on and Scotty, the Western miner, would have to live here | few years before he could get help.” ‘Maybe this Scotty has something up his sleeve,” suggested the Ciga Store Man. “Well,” remarked the Man Higher Up, “if you went to him and of fered to buy a few shares of Death Valley mining stock it would be sat to bet your cigar store against an {ice-cream sandwich that he wouldn' He'd draw the stock.” Little Willie’s Guide to New York. Ghirty--fourth Street. HIRTY-FORTH STREAT was once a part of nu yoar till one day the metterpolitan cumpny saw it an mister ryan and mister vreeland exklamed in a low and extattick voice This for ours! and it was thare they own {t oaverhead and on the grownd and unde the grownd and nu yoark aut to be graitful to thoas grate and good men for leaving thirty-forth stret whare it {s instead of carrying it away to jerzey 1 deckoraite the lawn of thare kountry plaice. thirty forth streat used to run eest and west until the me! terpollitan tied it down so that it coodent run at all. it starts out happil and inosently at the eest rivver ferry and passes unskaithed throo tk temtations of brodway and 6th avnoo and then halts in amaizment at si{ of mister murfy’s pensilvania exkavvashun and at last winds up {nfan musly in the helzkitchen districkt. thirty-forth streat used to be a thu: draw his gun. | rofare of rezzidenses but someone sowed the seads of tracktion thare an ; Bow it blossoms foarth*as a walking advertyzement of the metterpollita: AUDE-—Try the following to re-| {f it wuzgent for thirty-forth streat no one wood evver have diskovver¢ long {lend sitty and pa says that is why fokes have sutch a grudge aggain: ‘ERHU: thirty-forth streat. good oald thirty-forth streat. A. P. T) ‘Said « on «the w« Side LLEGATION of a@ Boston woman) fice of the chauffeur as logically as ¢ A suffragist who 1s suing a singer|the fire truck driver who dashes tnt for breach of promise that he| €levated pillars to avoid running dow | children in however, ympathy, the street. Not exactly with the same amount | “sang his proposal’ Verdict for plain- tiff will necessitate a revision of love song methods. If it Is to be held that when the handsome tenor looks soul- fully into her eyes as he sings es 2 Remarked by Cynicus regarding th question of a husband's right to mone Live for None but Thee’ 9 Pron eaved b; vife: n | Me." he really meana it with matrimo- | Saves DY hie wife: First find the mone | nial intent, he will run a serious risk ee te When he sings the olf songs of Im-) “Cigarette philosophy." ‘They can sa j Perilling his Mberty. | sententious things in Kansas, too. Further evidence of the benefits of | 4, Snare jathletic training for women. Woman | eqn just ia RO eee eae burglar operating in Yonkers “swings tho town in “Litde Agree el herself across alrshatt to enter aparte [00 (08D In Talk a A ment and returns the same way.” PDEONOD SUE CA78D) mietiron. . . . | e: Tainted money all right, according to APartment - houso elevator, whia the Methodist ministers at Berwick, i¢| MUCK at the roof in an attempt €0 g used for better purposes thin sinners | MSher, may merely have sought to eme Would’ tise Gt Bectna io. ke repens | late the thermometer Mteelf into a question of homoeopathic Sore treatment—use of tainted money to re-| Yale professor masquerades in femal move a greater taint. J@ttire out West and Eastern club ma te put on women’s clothes to play tennt Evident that Monther Nature makes a occasional mistake in apportioning th | sexes, . Another case of “chauffeur wrecking auto to avert fatality." Putic hos come to expect this kind of self-sa May Manton’s Daily Fashions The — absohutel simple ittle frog 4s the best Mked ¢ ail models for pl ime wear and eminently charmti and attracuw Gero ts one ma¢ in bishop style that is, with un sleeves folned 4 the frock and th two gathered 4 wether at the neo —which Is adapte to all washable ma terials and whioh | quite pretty enoug for white laws while it 1s wel adapted to ging ham, percale ani the Ike. In th model it 1s made 0 checked gingham with collar an cuffs of white em brotdery, The quantity a material requfret for the medium ein (four years) 16 31+ yada 21, 21-4 yarg #2 or 2 yards 4 inches wide, wit{ one yam of ey broldery tor wand ing. Pevtern 5075 | it in sizes fo en of on, four and si two, Child's Bishop Dress—Pattern No, 6075, years, How to Obtain These Patterna, Call or Send by Mail to the a } Evening World May Manton Fashion Bureau, 21 West 23d St., New York. fend 10 Cents in Coln or &s for Bach Pattern Ordered, expressed by Alice drugimed ia hie eare with painful, 4 a_i