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ning Worlet*s Mome Mafas? ne, Friday E vening, Jul vy 2oT1905~ fenso that he did it to prove his ove, COUNT STRAIGHT. The Superintendent of the State Census in eflect admits the charges strangely enough, the made by The Evening World over a month ago, that the census af New woman didn't acces* York City was not being properly taken, . Yom can ‘Heat: & There is more involved in this than merely the number of hun. it 0\ thd. BONAINeHEY, ot it dreds of thousands by which New York surpasses Chicago, or wl a fellyfish, you can subject her to every humilla- will require to equal London. The object of the State census is (0 afford tion and outrage, and, if you only bright the data on which to make reapportionment of ithe Senate and the As- enough to tell her you did tt because you loved sembly. Greater New York has increased in population more than the her, she will stand for {t and come up smiling. : Even {f you don't tell her she will probably other paris of the State, and an honest and complete fnumeration will doubtless show that half the population of the State resides in Greater New York. Such a result would entitle New York, Kings and Queens Counties to a substantial, increase in.the numberof their members in the Legislature. The present Senate consists-of fifty members, of wham twenty are infer that it was in a frenzy of jealous passion that you jolted her in the jaw. Why else should you beat her, anyhow? from Greater New York; one from Queens, seven from Brooklyn and I’: no Harvard Dental School is aymany centu: re . a r Pe ry e divrict with colicction of some hundreds of it PAULO! twelve from Manhatian and the Bronx, Richmond is in the district with Jo" TRSERINGURT CHOY PARI ES) [CHATS ENG aN gtanifathers of sunzeon dent Suffolk County. Of the hundred and fifty Assemblymen Manhatt and the Bronx have thirty-five, Kings twenty-one, Queens two and Se ae Te eT Ley TATE ERED o8|| RCA CUIEHISS Richmond one, a total of fifty-nine, or, including the Queens and Nassau modern dentists. The ancient tools are sald to have district, sixty. ha |more suggestive of wood-carving than | in Roman “ ; ry , rth +, g2../0f dental operations, and a person un- \ New York and Kings Counties are prohibited by the constitution inrormea on the s would “handle | worked, how: {pens to New York's enumerated population when~a politically hostilehmentary of the then general condition * supervisor hasycharge of the count, * Dentistry, in other words, was for POISONED FLIES. A proper pride in his profession caused the resignation-of William (Caldwell, head keeper of the New York Zoological Gardens. When a man has spent his life inducing wild animals to live in captivity it is no wonder that his feelings. are hurt when his favorite blue fox, his Angora guinea pig, his brush-tail wallaby, his armadillo and his Australian opos:| Sum were poisoned by eating arsenic-soaked flies. The Zoo veterinarian had begun a crusade on the flies, using poi- soned fly paper soaked in water. It killed the flies, and also killed the animals who ate the flies. Filled with natural grief, to which was added | as political or religious criminale—ubnormal bein HEN we eet ourselves to tnke a c we moment ara being which every thing 18 happ and many inill i n a whole people a far too precip them to impose u or religion, but wate! |fend the feeling of repulsi animals in the -Zoo-are poisoned he will not be there to be grieved by the sight. jon at the new, which is This sad happening provokes the thought that if fly-paper-poisoned Jeurnai. flies will kill animals what is their effect upon food, and in the house-| iiyuey cal Tues Mr holds where poison is used to diminish the nuisance of their presence?) judeed hy the Beach, ¥: There are many other ways of killing flies besides poisoning them, and 28"3._ The Ssiok te com the lesson from the Zoo should be learned ction fore the use of such Poison The hypochondgtas is drive in households: results in human accidents, or wishing class of those demented p fits of anger to kill Jalon to have recourse to “indire: to Jeondemned to death leptles and 4nebriates aby | wild beasts tn fury. y oct with a cruelty and lack THE LINDSAYS, thelr nbsence of sensibility te par, and by the profou! | hich the The Lindsays have kissed and made up. This is one of the cazes| ae 8 a ae : an everyt where the modern Solomons on the police court bench decided wisely. | Ton Gr eke wroveree ee otred, Seal Melongs 10 The Li.dsays had quarrelled and Mrs. Lindsay complained in court|™asistrates. The madness of the adolescent ts shown that her husband stayed away from home and did not give her enough|*°?*!*F™ money to run the house. He retorted that she spent too much time with her mother and would not get his meals, which he had to buy himself s them An Army of Mice. The Longest Lawsuit. AIN boasta probably the longest lawsult |) he world's history. It began in 16 and 4a still sub judice. |The case, which concerns a pension, is between the Marquis de Viana and the ¥ c Artes de Caorera, “and the lated sum in dispute would ve ned fabulous miitions had npt mae uries of attorneys, b and ourt officials takes ures of appropria | bee oming unwi Mt It has been questioned whether a man can smoke cigarettes with his “ears. The average man cannot, but some men have the muscles of their ears well developed and susceptible to further training, Few men can ~eyen move their ears. I read that called Hun pee The son who had his mother arrested is a new specimen. Moral obliquity is a euphonism for colossal grand larceny, last of the te mene- nt the sum ee Second Avenue Rubies 3 OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. , steal a sacred, [iT mer 8 half-mister, i s bak fr * wate, afier a dance. twood takes him t burbs. Fente 1 whbroker vebbe The latter vi he rubles 10 a pa #4 Chinas i rT a Jebba secures ‘Alice meantine wing oWner and Ine etupar, gets him wager aa d New hors, The wagon | ) CHAPTER XI, | 4 Hace to Face! | HE driver mac no reply, He was peering r through the mist at the shadowy ngure of a mun who had risen ahead of the wagon and Was gripping the horses’ bits, “Wihat dv you want?" called the driver at inst “Havens voon a feller and a girl walking along the oad here, have yet” called out a well-known voice that sent 4 chill over Alice Raynor, | his conpanion. and Ol4 Somes tore in, waving Mie hat and) his eyos ieking as he waved it. ' inte employee. J} Hurrah! it's all right! Ho's bere! He's brave and stro: m the pale face ot whom he had last seen looking so! bo sii DE OG 64l) 0 eerig qerwte 1 to see mi ‘Love and a Black Eye. YOU man a mel) in Yorkville Conrt yes te oa having blackened v ed's eyes put in the novel de | also uf the prevenee of ¢ | more than 2,30 years ago. must begin by making many distinctions. erlmes that ere considered as s as been the ease former! produced in fuvor of most men who are nowade fustt 7 i y A y hilanthropy to extremes, victims of the exce: not unjustified wrath, Mr. Caldwell resigned, and if in the future the they push philanthropy to ex yitate d minkes them scmetimes successful. act 1s In favor of the tenants, The Humpty Jackson Gang. To the Editor of The Evening World ‘This must be a very dig gang, as ev few weeks we re: ae, Alice," "I don't know whether you have any reaso sald Dick, @ little sadly, “Y Bok we we deen the wore, Mr, Sutphen, 1 have The satisfaction of yDtatned be mien 1 ANCe, v east stimulating. Therefore, one cannot plead in| and will thereafter receive similar tokens of his beating a woman that one does ft for the sako/regard very Saturday night. But the fact that of art—even the fistie art—for there is oppor- she didn't take the first blow as a matter of course tunity for art possilile, Therefo; it must he | frenzied —that guides the ous lover or the husbar eltagether to his liking. At least euch has been frem the first domestte 8. But alas! pivit of our dream, of the modern love affair, sigh for sigh we cannot, now, stances, give blow for blow, and have therefore | cut that feature entirely 'A Short History of Dentistry. . ws 0ld-Time Tooth-Pulling, © @ little developed oe. | yet thore {s reason to bellevo | different purposes, the first step toward ber of rough an ‘osdy Ists.was much greater than | The famous | ts ler | are records | sin Exypt | How they nteresi- | b ory, are r, is one of Sp yes half oy and he si the old “keys,” as they wore called, and ing teeth, but for removing the rocts mn from having more than one. half of the Senators, and all the cat as guess almost any purpose in the world | ing secrets that remains kept, although | of them: a emall eroup of what would | (icoster of the modern a chatr, th counties of the State are entitled to have one Assemblyman apiece, but for them rather than the real one of Lp ist ey had Jen eens nowadays be called excavators for ex-|Fouchard, the celebrated dental , Aihetanding This Grete N i its-s 5s, trate| Wrenching a tooth out of a human Jaw. | © sg torch and even used gold for ploring a tooth in different directions: operator of the “me in Paris, began notwithstanding this Greater New York and its-suburbs, on an accurate Gne of the most ponderous of them was| thal purpoes, @aya the Providence | and e rough file to sharoen them, In using the frst dental chair in whlch _ count, will be entitled to half the Legislature. made by an American blacksmith, little | Journal. 1 modern dentay | 208 Of these elevators ope recognizes tha ‘practically ‘by-sone operations of rl =e e 5 i i y) }more than fifty years ago, and used| Modern dentistry and modern dental | immediately the so-called “key.” an In-| extracting a tooth, treating it for decay The Federal census of 1890 is an unpleasant reminder of what hap-| by him to extranet teeth—a curious com- Instruments, however, date only from | stritment with which teeth were univers-|And_ thea putting (it back again—an the 16th centu The Instruments used! ally extracted one hundred veara ago,|Cperation, that, however expeditiously of a science that is now so widespread. |in the 16th century resemble modern in-| which lok more Ike @ corkscrew than variably suoceastul, although It 1s still struments only in | that there are sev- The Army of Crime & ensus of the army of crime There are oh only by the law, and | struc off the list by the nesromancy, dlvt- led to the stake, but t concerned. The «amo Iese majeste soon be s regarded tds true, but only because ive altruism that dri Just because th 1 to at of us, w lthem when they do not attuin success, says Cesare Lombroso, in the Providence ile opinion will change in regard tto the crfminal Insane, who cattse serl-| nnd who az of en—far too often—mis= neople has {ts spectfic eriml- or injure hus neighbor, iz the of conselence ex 1 feeling of a Ol everywhere in a tendenc w Letters from the People. » 1 J. A, HAMILTON, another member of the so- y Jackson gang wa ery 1 an account of the Humptys being sent away. But whenever anything happens on the east side it 1s too often Jald at the New York ’ SUG loor | turning faintly to Dai sy wa are hive,” inecurea he. | Sho breught him a seat before the words were “Did the feller a clout around his head, as if fairly out of his mouth bo had been in at asked the driver, : Miss dtaynor, 1 recognize you now," sald "Yes, the very man I am looking for.” Mr, Sutphen, “I did recall y t first." “Well tho time 1 sce him he was headin’ for the Mr. Buiphen brought a boitle of wine, and made @iatlon, You'll have to be Ay sf ye expect to catch here!" | to 4 the young man until Auee him.’ 3 ey § apiot Avs eee eet et him to drink @ glass, Which seemed to “Thanks, my man. aumaa aie eek i re ) and strengthen him at once. Then, through a holo tn the curtain, Alice saw the, I'l] show saul Jost w , young man, | guess you are worth a dozen ootor pat oa a run wile the wagon moved an, | Butphen stepped briskiy forward, when a young men yet)” kat Sutphen #8 he tapped Diek Mr, Benjamin Sutphen was leaning back in Wis chatr apt gears peer tries 7 t ae ‘er hiytiern i M aT rhe nn anh private office, looking moodily into space on’ shoulders HPOGISh OVOP he ea der iiain pallies) Gaskin arene Gnas morning in question, “Dick—Dick Fenton? apt , ended to be a repori, acknowledging ths ‘ M4008 cf the private oftce wae Aung violentiy | chant ae he cerned ae ee ene nee aie nathinge et Sthnewledming that they had lo n change has come over the Reciprocity is the keynote y to she se athletic Impnises ean] by a serap with a small hilo not dangerous, ts at By Nixola Greeley-Smith Of course know that the heroine of tho police court vomance will probably wod the young man who sought to palter his way to her heart, we 1s an encouraging sign of the times. | ove—passionate, exalted,| ‘Che association of undying love with personal punitive fist of the jeal-|chartisement is just a part of the great universal | ad whose supper is not, “eon game that has victimized every woman | since Eve—that is, every woman worth while, But, after all, women have always had a way of i getting back on the oppressor. For there are) very few women who know enough not to uso their love for a man as an excuse for making |him supremely uneomfortable. Nerves, hysterics, scenes, dramatic threats of | sufeide, all are showered upon his long-suffering head, and when he groans under the infliction sho | pays him in hia own coin of “Because I love you £0.” So it is, after all, a draw. the conclusion of woman wrangle until our own and though we can give save in exceptional in- off the bill eral of them respectively adapted to | tors’ power was applied in exactly that fasbion and the tooth was twisted] rather than pulled from the jaw of the euffering patient. And to avold the bad| error of extracting the wrong tooth there was vet another instrument with | which tooth after tooth was prodded until the offerator decided that he ‘had| the multiplicity of delicate and care- | fully ‘sharpened instruments that lic In | & raw on the modern dentist's operat- | ing table. There are only a chisel and mallet, two or three clumsy elevators and a cheerful instrument called the “pelican” for “Ifting’’ a tooth; two or| struck the most sensitive one. three kinds of forceps, not for extract-| These operations, moreover, were not| | performed even in a resemblance to an erformed, could never have been In- & tooth extractor, es Ff The fact that all these unfortunates are not criminal, but unhealthy, sp: from the principle khat their orimes are preceded by epigastric and cephalic symp tas Further, the majority of them have characteristic words, and a no less char- acteristic handwriting. All led @ very different existence before becoming and the change produced in their conduct dates from the time of a wound or f maternity. Finally, they have no accomplices, and they take no precautions to conceal theit crime. On the contrary, they speak of {t without embarrassment und even with pleasure: thay belleve they have kone a meritorious deed cordingly we see cases where they give themselves up as prisoners wh sought fe The nucleus of the ermy of crime Is constituted by the terrible et Is, fow in mumnber, born eriminal. They are the subjects described in asyluins 2 morally insane or ‘larval’ epileptics. The born criminal has many characteristics of physiognomy and mind of the inf/nor races—prognathism, desp and premature wrinkles like wounds, extraor- dinarily heaw aws, retreating forehead, impulsiven . cruelly and tattooing. And In fact, the opera- done in eniergencies. By Cesare Lombroso, s of opportunity, far from repenting after th almost to prove the morpbianess of their villa 7 and for causes more and more slight. We owe this dev to the penitentlary regime, Prisons are the true breeding pi cpportuntty thus become professional, hardened and ine stingulshable from the born erlminai onty by a tess deplorable physt r Birst misdeed wis suffi Some tm This new ima | ‘teat fashi ‘Monkeys Keep on Proving Their Claims to Kinship with De-Sim ianized Man® of tne reais of “wen, ot ost. perfectly a1 to his public perf and takes his r during the meal, + pap pre What Austrailia has dr its fight against crime other pe les will do on th iy nQ?? day. not far off, when M hays learned that a preventive cur The Famous “Coco”? as a Nur sronomi> and humane pr of defending society against the wild fu i" ane crinh al than extvone judiclal or penal rigor, little feared by the gul orstant menaee to the Innocent—the day when all the nations called civilized vill iti re o limit thelr military charges in order to Medicate to tho war upon crime portion of thelr material and moral resources. Flower Oracles. es fi the town of Merriwa, in New South HEN you hold a dat and pay for out of the household money, The Magistrate decided that Wales, a plague of mice Is distur: Are Landlords to Blame? Jot the Humpty Jackson gang. While W hand, and pulling tts petals the Lindsays must kiss each other once a day, that he must bring home a me gine Beanie ze i ly on the 1-39 the alt pd aus iat ie san ee pals Tecite, “the loves loves al aay ico were killed in four nights n? ] read ome a e ood, they "you are not the only bunch of flowers to his wife once a week and take her and the baby to lone store. Upwant of 600 were captured} Tenement-House Department for + mols dangerous as they are made}who does just thie thing Ii the park and Coney Island, and that the mother-in-law must stay away, WHle @ cricket net was betng unrolled. {ing families from a tenement ane Ee iat in the Four. {countries and many climes the ct ae ae ae = * |For five bushel: if in a bag $ th vi ull cordini > the snernd ly) ‘or, Ane. lag! r c This wise decision has worked out well, and ithe Lindsays are living ew sD orregrata Rea ay Tn a ee he gate : ee eee of |tWenty-fve years and never had any Reucse ay etthie ance ‘ In happy harmony. More kisses and flowers and less. mother-in-law are BIN A local well censed to these cases aro the builder-owners and ‘Toub-e with any of tho accented GADES) ‘nis year, another y re Fea) Fe vater and on e&. tion twas the real estate men:. The depa . f no daisies are to be t a good prescription for the ill: hee : . } r “anc Sood prescrip’ the ills of many households, |to contain a solld mass, several notifies the tenants to get ou Isl? mibescn/ (Coney selawass TRI Le Jee Caee eee aoe deep, of dead mice. ‘oud, wnter th might do so were {t not ne, but the charm fs valuclesa qi ae rit bedding are overrun, contaminated andjowner and agents, who, on ) the Exiitor of The Evening World: onsulter turns his h The Department of Agriculture has issued an official reclpe for a ynyurod {OwAbpeonle orai nantings ciner! pometinvea (ells the coney Island ta a grett- place for}the mfystie words are spoken whitewash that will not wash off. It contains salt and a little glue or the territte little visitors night and day, {unnecessary to move. ‘Then when the nent. Wut why ean't there bes .,2! Kee mor wiitias meal aces sizing. There is a gener: in hi H 5, . but at Inst accounts they had mado lit} esectment comes there 1s raised a cry @ dowen Coney Islands scattered &o.. which means tt ig. M general demand in high financial and official circles (1 {mpreseion upon the swarms of ver-} of hardship. The Tenement-Houre Act from Sea Gate to the Bronz? I mean} ting as that littered by her Ital for something of that sort that will stand hard use and wear well, \min, ts tn favor—very muci tn fayor—of the why can't thery ta a nuunber of amnse-fA™STCRP COUN —___ tenants, and enforcement of that | met resorts run on an eugally luvieh Twine by the 1,000 Miles, took fitty large frelzht cars to con- vey 1,000,000 pounds of twine to be used in binding up the wheat crops of Kanms. An {dea of what this v: quantity of twine means may be gath- ered from the following data: The twino will bind over 600,00 acres of grain. and if dn one continuous length would en circle the globe at the equator six times and enough lett to connect New York | City with Cleveland, O. and interesting svate? True, he sea ‘s not 3 t except down at the real Island, but the seu iy the least ting that we go to Conoy for in the evening. If there were moro such resorts seat. r City they wold nd save uptowners a@ long and tedious ride. Who will start the first of theeo? Not n cheap, rar.en place but one Ito modern Convy? WIL AAMBL RINGER, Mystery >< know everything, and tt might prove too much of a strain for Dick, who you can sev Je still very weak end IL,” | Then in the briefest way she put Sutphen in pos- session of the facts, making as little as possible of tho part she had played im getting bim away from the doctor's house. nd if there is any credit of bringing me back into the wond again,” added Venton with a loving look az the girl "% owe it all to this dear live woman here," “Weil, Iam heartily glad that you have come out of this safely," sald Sutphen, “Perhaps you may be of some use to the vollce In furnishing them with | @ description of one or the other of the men who was responsible for this outrage?” “dt was very durk In the street at the time of the | arcident," “And you were not quite conscious at tho time? “1 had a vague dea of what was going on around me." He pressed his hand to his forehead as, if trying to revive lis memory, “ ‘e was ont inan with a Jantom, T vangat a glimpse of him, He was tall and thin and tid a beown mus! He secmcd to be sho Jeader of “And do you think you showd recognize hin a if you saw lim?” anied the @amond mar2sint eagerly. “Quite sure I should, The picture he presented stands ou. very vs‘dy iv my mind, Yes, I tusak 1 should recogni: him) vven dn a crowd,” jut theve inyst nave been more than one?” ‘Phere was; but, tivwgh 1 felt that there was an- otier, T could get no) KUmpse Of his face, and it was Just after that that everything became a blank, and Well, 4 Butphen stopped to blow his nose \1 kasw no more unt I found myself on a cot in a j noisily. "I can't conceal the fact that I am mighty |garret room.” | worried about the fate of those cursed stones, and! ‘\Vel), the tle you learned may be of use to us,” I winh that I hed never taken care of them, Tell said Mr, Sutphen, “Eh, what do you want to say mo all you know, and how they managed it so well, |now?" he asked angrily nw old Somes opened the door brought nothing back but myself,’ “And the rubies?’ "I have never seen them since’ the night of the acoident."’ Urawn from phe.ogra, daughter and Coco, sent to The Evening World SS By Ernest De Lancey Pierson that you should disappear at the same tlme as the | cautlonsly and peeked in, necklace?” “Lat mo tell you," interposed Alco Raynor, "} says he's @ detective and that be has come to ication = aba. “Lt you please, sir, there's a gent out here what) with an exclamation of that Ooe9 enjoyed a office I supposed tude 28 minutes is nota ‘s new affece >on= wiully rmesiness, r of joal- yusy you see how nuch man can learn from t Coco has ® hts Uttle rhe le will go back to America. A. MARCEL, Bremechaven, July 1, or Wwrs, A, Marce., vaay you about that tere ruby business, Shalt I show him in?" His employer was thoughtful for a moment and thon sald; “Yes, 1 fy no reason why you should not ree “plnce are * turningyto the young couple, f Stay whero » or loss interested In the case. you a “Detective Ruggles,’ the door en Wid lean + an who stood by va announced walmiiihne t 1 aa ty hesitathigs 10 ade ‘Well, what have you to say? asked Sutphen @ Little aggressly “Another report of fatlure?” “Not this time, I think,’ and the detective grinned and rubbed his chin. “Come out here and show youre | self in the Hght, and he took Jebbs by the collar and pushed him forward, 'Bver see tnis poison ber fore?’ he asked. Mr. Sutphen eyed the now trembling Jabbs over from head to foot and then shook his head, ‘o, I haven't set eyes on him before. Didn't know but that he might have been an @m- ployee of yours, 1 have reason to belleve that he »nd @ pal what I haven't been able to lay hands on 49 in- terestd in this theft. They had a garret room near the sceno of the accident. On our tire; visit they fooled us.” A low chuckle from the direction of Jebbs caused to turn with a frown, his fiste clinched, ou just wat until I'm through, and then you'll Seo whose turn it is to chuckle,” he sald, angrily, “Well, when we come back to have another look at the place wo found proof that it was there they had met the young man, Fenton.” ‘He is here,’ Mr, Sutphen, pointing to Dick, you can tell me if this pocketbook 1s not said Ruggles, after the first astonishment of seelng before him the very man he had been looking for. } He drew a pocketbook out of tis coat and heltett out. ’ At sight of it, Dick Fenton leaped from his chatr| amazement, - 0