The evening world. Newspaper, August 4, 1905, Page 8

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ITT: Seen ace * Home Magazine; F a orild’s DHPHHPODDDDOOBOSPLH IY OE HE DHHHSOSH HHS Ps Published by the Press Publishing Company, No, 8 to @ Park Row, New York. Bntered at the Post-OMmice at New York as Second-Ciass Mail Matter. VOLUME 46 NO, 16,05. —— forteelat CENTRAL PARK, The new park entrances and driveways should be completed this) % summer. The constant tinkering with the park’s approaches hinders the} full enjoyment of this great pleasure spot and playground. When there | are necessary changes to be made the work should be planned in advance and done promptly. With the uptown growth of population Central Park Is becoming more accessible to people of the class who need it most, and everything | Should be done to make it available for its proper purposes. KISSES IN COURT. Miss Eleanor J. Omphaline has recovered by judicial process $35 Hamages and costs from the young man who kissed her without her con- sent. The amount for which she sued was $500, but the Judge cut down the realization of her demands over 90 per cent. These cases in court to recover damages for a kiss are becoming & more frequent. Asa matter of public policy it is probably better on the se whole to discourage them. Every day of the year hundreds of thousands » of girls are kissed. The majority of them make more or less protesta- tion. The girl who frankly asks a man to kiss her is a rarity. If every girl who is kissed without her consent having previously been obtained were to bring suit the occurrences of one day would block the calendars of every court for years. Feminine intuition is usually a sufticient defense if the girl is unwill- §ng to be kissed by that particular man. She can discern his meditated intentions long before he acts unless the kiss is one of those spontaneous g _ happenings resulting from her own provocation. There can be no Kissing qwithout an opportunity, and there can be no suitable opportunity without “the proximity of the girl and the man and the absence of obvious spec- fators. When a girl sits in the corner of a deserted hotel piazza with a young man and watches the moonlight on the rippling waves, or when she goes buggy riding in the evening or strolls away in the woods in the afternoon or joins in creating a suitable opportunity, it might be that the Court could | hold that she was more entitled to a verdict if the young man refused to “try to take advantage of his opportunity than if he did the kissing so crudely and clumsily that the girl had a natural resentment. There is another point which the Judge should have considered. Real kissing takes two. If the girl's objections are genuine and she does not with pretty reluctance consent, the kiss is really not a kiss at all. It is a} ¢ pecking with the lips—a mere labial contact. SPOOKS. If there is any place where spooks would find a congenial home it} would naturally be the Morgue, unless a departed spirit preferred a soli- tary place to live alone and appear only to a select audience. It was therefore not surprising that Gustave Hamilton, one of the Morgue keep- | € $AE-PEOO FOODS +33 CoLb- SORE ! By riday "Evening, FC ENT HELE TNT TT EE ETN gust 4, 1908 i ee “His Master’s Voice’’ Campbell Cory. THE RUSSIAN ~ » ~~, 6 “| BLUFFAPHOnE ALL RIGHTS RESERVED —— DHHPSHAHHHOOSAD Said on the Side. “ ‘“c EN are such cowards,’ says M Mrs, Charles Gilpin, of Phila- dolphia, heroine of a burglar- shooting episede, Miss Greenberg, who, after rescuing @ mere male from drowning at Atlant! Clty, sald, “Men are cowards anyhow, Superior courage of the “weaker se: muet bs conceded, from the factilty with which, as related in a single day news, they save lives at fires, rout thieves with rolling-pins and tear up their skirts to bind the wounds of a trolley victim, More becoming in them. in Sentiment echoed by Letters From the People And Answers to Questions An Unpayahle Debt. To the Faltor of The Evening World: My blood got hot reading the Foye ease, and only cooled down when I read In tho evening edition—in which I glory—the decision of Magistrate Crane. Any ¢ however, man, rich or poor, old or young, S| view of thelr acknowledged bravery, to whilte or black, especially white, no © | show a little chfvairie consideration for matter of what religion, should never, & | their less valorous brothers. ag long as he has a breath in his body, $ . |forget lile mother, under any cireum- | Death noted of the “father of Who | stances, conditions, or times, nor for S| cheap wateh" at the age of ftty-six./any beneflt for others. | Sax of him that he “revolutionized a CHARLES §, KUN $ | great industry,” and Incidentally to bo Long Bran fc >| remarked that he made considerable of Industrial Tips Wanted. ‘a revolution in the acceptability of this kind of collateral at “unclés.” see dOO204 o> Concerning pawnshop collateral, the Paris pawnshops, which are “aunts” in- stead of “uncl have millions of pledged artteles in storage, among them more than 100,000 bicycles, One little | has been in pawn for forty-five years. An umbrella, pledged for forty-nine years, had forty-nine tickets hanging to its ribs, 299966006 Henry stroet resident, visited vy bur- glars, consojes lilmself with the refle tion that “the safe {s safe anyhow.” Something in that. in this time of cart- ing safes away in covered vans to bur- glarize at leisure. Speaking rela slept on his job and was found police with the goods on. the profession have been repeatedly warned of the dangers of the sidoboand lunch habit In working hours. ee e Belligerent Governors of Louisiana and Misstestpp! reported to be “cooling About time for the remarks yvernors of the Carolinas made to other. Brooklyn Anti-Rowdy League dead, Rowdy continues to flourish nm the Coney Island cars with no signs of weakness visible, eee tor cycles reat n is reported at 346%, an incmease of 12.702 over last year’s figures. Rela- thy snail] increase here as com- pa with these large figures ind!- | ca t tae United States have yet to experience the real strenuousness of the auto craze ——=— are disturbed at the preponder- Boece men throughout Cana) ance of American coins In trad: ers, regarded it as a matter of course that the clothes hung in the closet ' should come out in the room, that the dead bodies on the slab should move | and that there should be groans and murmurings. One exhibition of this | Russia, Strongand Weak | D RITING from Russia many years | who are undeserving the ons, and {t is pr | would never vi can be had, while most people will insist on finding some material reason \ nan for a motion or a sound or a vision. M oes the Man Go with His Gift ? 5y Ni Y DEAR AMELIA, I am sur It fs not qnite so easy to return a husband if you don't nt, but we are tending merrily in like him as it 1s a pres street Phi! was in Russell's room, where Dr. his nephaw, BY Rosman told him the old man was p and not to wake bir till Dr, Hom. meleter can about 10 o'clock, This respite enabled Phil to go Int the front parlor, which for many years gad been used as an office, and there he found Tekin Meyer, who had heen Russell's etenographer and typewr! for @ ta year. ekla had secured he tal pomrera to fdedly and with a fine CHAPTER V, Bae Phil Dolan’s Love Affair, | «+s P™ ; the sud her great dark 1 Dolan was naturally com) lence with unscrupulous meth WLAN wa em) Ka and NF | The Street had intensified this fe ; eto | and a ed the line between Als eves } usiders thought | S24 We arim set of tle Ips, but wher Qo, © entered Une front par | bE SHES RATS to and extended his b 2 1 though the r VATS ee apa € every day that! Pe VSR t And how ts vke ) % 5 ud bretk him} q ea MT ee c back at the otuer room, when | 4 had takep a seat braide her | 3 ras Going fust » but b : | replied Phil, an ie f ft tee t would be lod ; re him,"" sighed ein | fi ' 1°” repeated ¢ "On, | : \ A i} no. It fen't He k rake b tng > with his gol © Hiver | 1 n hini f und } ttle {i ® 1 1 1 | 4 r nh hu nell aie HH ‘ s ne, and t ty q } 1 hes man " ‘ Hi over 1 ; Abe ' é Us I ‘ , 3 uM i Ko bia order . \ t GF the purcharrs oud waled of the Gay, "Nut a princess; 1 must have a queen be powabful pleeaca ef sy he yo’ could called #amuel #b.ot a Frincess! to talk Kusyell's, he had 1 Must Have a Qu:en for Mine!” wid taken My bro ers, t lenis wonderte ¢, Wal 1 er to ine, were all f H ot to me, sli Would come y) “Ab, no. Of cont is alive, and T . jmann, Now f will toil 1, even withe It would confuse the ve be kept Dr, JLomtmel peration the quision eo iss) ment down dw how long can we keop the head mine eit, Lo me ms mio details, rain aetive?” xola Greeley-Smith, Ww though Ways and means are being sought to exclude American atlver coins as far as {ble from business chan- pels. The Canadian Bankers’ Assocla- ‘ton has proposed to the Canadian Gov circles. the banks for shipment to corr ents throughout the United States. — dundie contains a wedding dress which | Members of | | 8 American Coins Popular. | *|should he save? To the Edjtor of The Evening World: Two yonng men, wishing to seo the country at Mttle expense, are thinking of taking a Southern trip for the coms ing winter, As they wish to work their sway from place to place will readers Kindly suggest any ns of which they knowledge whereby the ex- 1 pocket moncy for such an expedition could be honestly raised en IN FARNEST. Islip, L. L A Millionaire Philanthropy. To the BAltor of The Evening World: It scems me t Rockefeller, or even the ¢ York, were to open great jonly empiey men from thirty sixty years it would be pul money toa far better use tha |they are now doing, A man cannot par Ms rent, or feed his family, by sitting {na Mhrary ceding books. Ti heatnen, education, r without gi .long det ra | ing for from $3 to $6 a week, Just |to keep boly and soul together, whon | they should be holding positions paying from ¥$ to $12 if they only had a It 1 a sname. Open th millionaire philant us “live.” not merely The Gi To the Editor of The Evening Wo O. B. I.. wishes to know whether an electric fan does any good In a hot and | close room, where no fresh air is admit- | ted. As is well known, carbon dioxide, or carbonic acid gas, {s being constantly given off by the lungs. This gas, belng twelve times heavier than air, sinks to the bottom of the room, and gradually | what ts Jeft of air is permeated. If now 13 disturbed by any commotion, has an electric fan, you wo) have ture of alr and carbonte acid ga: ja very dangerous and polsonous sub- stance to health lassure you, Thus one t s:y an electric fan {s almost dane exist’ umping Fan, naming up, therefore, the efficacy a fan In a hot, close room {s nil, here every posstole of while in a room means is given for fresh air to enter, no ago, Richa: C x = 2 s 3 afi ty 7 ho jor kind was enough for him and he resigned. He would not believe that the wt ete ae int ie bd va elt 1 ae tae eae . anaive et ag ors Messi et ate we Aan eed ee Ay Cee een Sr eel sig blosrine a) ey eee commotion was caused by a steamboat bumping the pier head, by unoiled ,9!- Blovla lavainernblocec ice rar Be ore rere ieee ee Peal erate ‘lot the dea. : i BRIE Gai ees wicks a How. Mach ‘f0 Seen: AQ ventilator fans and by something going wrong with the engine, ee by Innd, because no large army Povs accepting a present from a man bind yeu to] Still, men with matrimonial intention an income |emuvatent amount of Canadian sliver.|. 1. tater ot ane renter overiat the audience. Some men prefer a supernatural explanation whenever one |garee vent «! ames!of the\ BALD A ee Bae annex him while the matrimonial madness 1s upon is Heavtiy, in Fasgr ob Sos UMA tSgI" GY he. apend on ‘acallon rae Ho eae IT earn $14 a week. My (two weeks) 1s thus this should I feel ing on a@ good time [ana how much should I put by? I jhope some o: reader who has once en a struggling young fellow Ike wiil c rescue with @ | ugsestion. HENRY B, | What's the Matter with Jerome, Editor of The Evening World: | What seems to be the matter with | William T. Jerome? Finst, we had the explosion in the Subway. Nobody was ever punished for it. Then the New York Central accklent, Nobody pun- ished. Murders happening nearly every day in New York City, He rounded up |the gamblers. All off. He tried Nan Patterson three times, costing the olty He has a big | vacation money 28 How much of justified In spez be: myse | To the {si society circles that, says London force of able men at his command many women would rather, and plenty of money at his digposal, but— NATHAN SAMUELS, Buffalo, N, ¥. The people who think they have seen ghosts cannot be convinced to ™2t Wit? an Agee sone tach, {that direction and {f you like the present so very much A Trio of Odd Facts. the contrary hy any argument. On the other hand and ff they did tt ts quite with such a gentle, old-Ma8)" land the young man’s understanding is that he goes with DTHOUGEE HOA: marriages) tol yA hand there are very few would be taken or dest: ned name should not haye new-|,. 0). in taallive hanell ratierw place in Japan Inet year, {t Is people who believe that a spook has ever appeared to them, and the mae |f%t Wax has proved Snead nGlOne: it, why him and live happily ever after stated that not one bride was jority of manking are inclined to disbelieve anything that has al bee & \lacks effective seamen, Keep the presents. Take the man. It is a peculiar thir out the matrimonial sweep-|cver swenty Ere. Meda de old, some way demonstrated to their physical senses, nie a Don't let anything get by you stakes that whether start with polite indifference or] protably the mort extraordinary jour- 2 SENSES. How the Navies Co Of course, you needn't be in any |2 consuming passion, h is just rbout the na! in the world 1s pubilshed weekly mpare hur ut tulting the man, Get all |and the only time vou can be sure of winning is when |(nAMgns. (Jt 28. mammen egurely in Could the Polar bear alone on an fceherg have had any instinctive 1 Basen Nave the presents you can first, for you |you are left at the post, : een ; Intimation of his fate? The iceberg was slowly melting in the warm) + ships of the Mm rotubly won't get any att It you don't love the giver of the expensive present, | pamree tenths ch the earnings of (a Bult ; . . i You don't state whether yo ere is always a chance that yc 5 thi fration of his sent ome waters of the Gulf stream and it was a question of only a few days when , DUA NDE CRONE PES GhGh there 1s always a chance that you will love him. And | fiijchera thus snve more matey, 1n fail dhe Polar bear. would have'notht k s 'y ie the man or not. However. that, if you are the average that's more than could be said u loved now. than they have ever been able to save a C ‘othing to keep him afloat. b, girl, is matter of detail, and it’s safe to assume| You must have known there was a string to the pres-|°"* °F * —__ - Ths bat that ent, a sis, Only women ever rea HEIGHT OF FASHION. The Tuscarora Indians have received $100 aplece from the United bv itle-shivs Fintan ee once an fdea, y low, that a young give anything unconditional So fashionable 1s appendicitis In Brit>, g:99,000, No conviction. H ivi F =, yoman should not take pr ami 1 > The present is the gaudy fly that makes you swallc Btates. These Indians live near Niagara Falls and are all members of 2 ae aE a ne p Th sie a ‘ ae ae ae ree eine eeu) hig mh Ae ee yon SvaTOW | Opinion, ‘New York's oldest families. Pe ieee a many, | Were willing to take him, too, There 1s probably a sur- the matrimonial hook. You have swallowed it and must | have ft “than a three-quarter length Pas) Fevasiai aes | vival of that prehistoric prejudice in the breast of your take the consequence: photograph in a magazine.” The Detached Brai e rain ... A Wall Street Romance. “ ~« BrNoPsis oF ¥ ING CHAPTERS. | ‘The morning after parting wth Arthur | [= - = Ba: ; t man in Wall xogirand at B, ft! - | Briefly. this was the doctor's scheme. treet, Ie dying. “His body Is ossities, tis | > jecond avenue and Houston 1) Bea ST " head ‘alone 801 tay ha: Pi Within a week or ten days at the vut- Suniel Russell must die, world, 80 far as th? old man was known, was quite prepared to learn of his demise, The authorittes would be duly tn- jformed of the death, an undertaker would be called in, and the body would be shown, duly coffincd and properly burled But there would be a difference. doctor would sever the from the oxsified it by a wax head so artfully prepared ‘and fastened to the corpse as to defy detection by the eyes | "Phe operation must be made at the tight moment, We must keap the death efill below the throat. We must have the case the pumps, the batter. Jes, the radium sulphate and the nutri. tive and vitallzing fluids ready, with extes of everything in cage one uid fall, Do you understand, Mr, Dolan?” asked the doctor in conelu- ston “But wouldn't tt gasped Phil, The doctor laughed, “You can't murder a man who's dead and buried," "And how long can Ife be kept in the brain?” asked Phil, "That I cannot tell, but I hope to keep the mental faculties unimpatred for three months, may be twice as long.” The living head 7m Uke murdert’’ "And can it let us Know what It thinks?" ‘ "Yes; T will arrange a series of simple UN GM | eignala whereby the head can communts ac de [cate through the eyes and facial muse ys Ach, this Is a most wonderful’ he doctor was about to add “case, Dut hia sentence was cut short, and Phit \rtled by hearing the voice of his ryong out frow the oar: Al! Come quick! Some- ing has happened to Arty!” What!" exctulmed Phil as he leaped the door apd caugat May in his “What ia it, Mile glnlf Don't tater fouwarl to one Jead body, replacing | By Arthur Rochefort. be afraid! @peak!" she moaned. “They say he “Dead! My God! Arty deadl"" | May's only response was to cling to her brother and sob. “Water, Uncle Billy! Water!" | #houted Phil as he threw his arms about jhis sister, for @he had fainted and would have fallen at his feet but for his timely sugport. (To Be Continued.) ————__— “A Bargain.” DID not ask thee for a faithful Nor yet for constancy to last all time, I merely said: Until we two must part |] Tend me thy love and I will lend | thee mine, I did not think how hard to part would be, I 4d not know how greet the love would grow; I only saw with eyes that could not see, And did not dream that I should | love thee so, || 1 don’t | are! Nor iong to change one hour of joy we spent; But, now the end has come, I would Forget thee and that time and all the love we tent, rieve with any vague tor Alas, how’ could I tell befall, When #eas and distance lav twixt you und me n 1 strive the love lent to rer eal, My beart and love remain, gift to thee, A. M'LAUGHLIN, this would fa vi my

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