Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
rena iat aaaiciak The Evening World’s Home By Roy L. McCardell. ro) HE Animal Editor receives scores of letters asking “What is it all about?” We desire to state once and for good and ever that it Is all about animals. Ive eite interesting incidemts about our animal friends yd our friends who are animals. We give advice and pathy. We chronicle anecdotes of the bright sayings parrots and the intelligenwe manifested by our four- sored pets and all domestic animals. We do not assume © functions of the S. P. C. A. But cases of cruelty as Cited by our corresponden WE WERE JUST STARTING HOME AND SAW YOUR NAME ON THE GILL BOARDS Toruquit s will always be held up to oe As heretofore, the Animal Department will be en every other day if we feel like it. Editor Animal Dep : I wish to ¢ your attention to a case of cruelty of which I notified the S. P. C, A., but to which it paid no attenion, At an auction at River- head, L. I. I saw thirty sheep knocked down by a brutal auctioneer! Boat- builders are e*pecially cruel to animals as well, At Port Jefferson I have They alco burn bulls’ eyes, drive | t-heads! ast Setauket, L. TL. heard men boast of cutting dove tails! spikes in rabbits and put hot iron bands on 1. s¥ GIVE ME THE TWO SEATS 1 LAID ASIDE FOR DAVE WAR PATHY Fadltor A Do you believe that a camel tt uf goes eight days without drinking gets Cc. J. HOLTON. Magazine, OH, HOW DO You BO? GLAD TO SEE ~~ YOU AGAIN! Ww ULL TAKE GREAT. PLEASURE | | Cindly give mo a formula for a good insect powder, IMA ROACHE. | Sw Pu h, two parts: borated talcum, two parts; pow-- dered or re two ts. This is a good insect powder. Bad insects should b en no aids for the toilet What the hest mocking bird food? SOUTHERNER. Answer: Any of the prepared bird foods are so adulterated that we should suppose they would be just the thing for mocking birds. | Editor Animal Department | Have our friends who are animals and birds ever noticed that jail- birds often turn into stool-pigeon AMATEUR DETECTIVE. Editor Animal Department: Your Anima! Department is great. But while these land-lubbers ashore fre venting their grievances, I fear you are overlooking us t-water” | fellows, and venture to ask space for “a wail from the deep,” as {t were. ‘Most all sailing vessels lash their heavy anchors to the “cat-head.” “Cat- blocks” are frequently used. “Catspaws” are tied in ropes. The use of “rat- _ lines” is almost too common to mention. “Flemish-horses” are lashed to “‘yardarms, and “‘sheep-shanks” are tied in ropes and cables, Great husky | sailors wearing boots stand in the “crow Still, we do not ask for sympathy, subscriptions or checks. Just send a couple of American “eagies”’ and we boys for’ard will help “put down” the demon rum. JACK TAR. nests. THINK THAT HANDSOME LEADING MAN LOOKS SO MUCH LIKE YOU! Hditor Animal Department: I was late going to work yesterday on account of a cold. The boss saw that I was “hoarse” and he “docked” me. ALEXANDER SALZER, | No. 75 West Ninety-seventh street, a for WOMEN Edited Nixola Greeley Smith A STREET-CAR HEROINE, By Nixola Greecley-Smith. he witn a street-car. A young mother hat Was awry, her hair fall- she was hopelessly drunk. the car began to giggle or s to their point of view—all, that le rose from her seat, pinned up the eature's hair with some of her ned her hat, held the baby for het, and went b: her own station that she might see the baby safely home. | While admiring this young woman's behavior, the writer | of whe letter devotes mos: of his attention to criticising the | other women and the general uncharitableness of the sex toward one another. i MAN writes me with much admiration of an incident way all the women look disguested, Is, ave one. Sh: ! renember coming downtown In a Madison avenue car two yours ago, seated by a very pompous-looking deacon, for whom the word pharisee, if {t didn't exist, would have had to be iavented. F Opposite us was an old, drunken workingman, who after recelving his change of $2 from the conductor spilied It from his shaking hand all over the ear floor By very slow and ludicrous effoi!.s he succeeded in dragging his almost helpless hands over the rubber matting till all but a quarter that lay Just at the deacon's feet had been gathered up. The drunkard d'd not know {t was there. I looked | fat the deacon expectantly, lt he gazed into space. So T leaned forward, ploked up the quarter and offered it to its dazed owner. As I did so I felt a heavy hand Of warning laid on my ar: “My dear young lady," sald the deacon, in unctuous tones, “you should not nave done that. Never assist a drunken man!" I tell thait to show that “unco' guid" men are quite as uncharitable as unco’ guld women. However, I do not envy the young woman who took the drunken tmother home her job. I would not personally have been equal to tt. Here was Qne of the heroic incidents we would rather read about than figure in, ev the star. There ts something so mean, so sodden, #0 hopelessly disgusting about a drunken woman that even the Samaritan who reclatms or assista her {s apt to be more or less spattergd with mire. It 1s, of course, none mari- aan's duty to dd so, : ler aes Biome one tok! me the other day that one of the howling dervishes of the early temperance days sent a whole convention of reformers into indignant hys. fterics by describing an almost Incredible sight she had witnessed, namely, mother, with a baby in her arms, drinking a glass of beer,” Now, beer being admittedly good, indeed distinctly prescribed for mothers with babies in our own time, it Is rather difficult to understand what the fuss spee all about. ies But & drunken mother 1s the most hopeless sight the sun or the stars look ‘upon, and The Evening World reader's heroine {s a heroine indeed, ea “HEALTH AND BEAUTY. : By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. ‘A Freckle Cure. en as “a * © This Log Was Kept by Noah's Third Son, JAPHET, and Is Here Turned Into Versified Vornacular by ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE. * * March 16, 234 B. C. 1M’S wife to-day sei things agog H And gave me “copy” for the Log By planning a big photograph Of all our human working staff. ‘Then apply this cream, the face having | This raised a rumpus in the Zoo; eee es! BETTY'S BALM FOR il R.—Here ts a) soapy condition: Spermaceti (pure), 1-4 e ood treat-|ounce; white wax (pure), 1-4 ounce; ment for ob-j} almond ofl, 1-4 pound; butter of cocoa, tinate freckles 1-4 pound; lanoline, 2 ounces. Melt and HE LOG OF NOAH’S ARK (Copyright by Walt McDougall) , NO. 15.—THE FIRST FAMILY G Though excellent in pbstinate cases, it floes not suit all omplextons equally well. Elder flower rintment, 1 ounce; sulphate’ of zinc, 20/1 j H i She Loves Too Late. chance on getting a pretty cold turn-| ter beaten Taina Suze] Lightening the Hair. Deot Hetty: lowe out te" sul oves’ Sa alt wh ind tub into the af- be well. fected skin at night, ‘nthe morning wash the cerate off and soft water, and afie ‘apply a otion. thus ‘composed nit; citric acid, lon. of Rones, ‘pill Ins, All local discolorations, Dr. mri: Ml disappear under ‘thie treatment, or, if the: freckles do entirely yield, they will at least _ Bp greatly ameliorated, Great for the Face. ‘I am glad vou found the nimole stir in one dram of batsam of Peru. After settling pour off the clear por- tion and add two fluid drams of orange flower water and stir briskty until it concretes. your hair thoroughly and dried it, take a half glassful of peroxide of hydrogen and a half glassful of wator and mop over the hair, Particularly reaching the roots. Be sure you get thls quantity of each. It will stightly | lighten the ‘hair if used in this way | and will not give a reddish tingo. Wants White Hair. ij MOTHPR.—I could not advise any pane with safety that woul 8 Ger T.—After you have hed it walt \'s ' two years ago I kept com- a wint vacauions, As he college jitugent, I cl nee like him: 0 : all, [fast the proposed. to = et BN Ra A AS er ae A gray hair’ perfect | Cy nd ot 4 re: her eh Post-OMice pany witha young man Who re- sided In a different elty. and only 8 came to New York for his summer Dear was a jt often re! u any laces, of ‘amusement, All perplexed young people can ob- I have leamn tain expert advice on their tangled love affairs b ters for BETTY. Evening World, bos set. New York. 4 sed to} !do not care for him, ‘eas iting to A letter will answer your purpose very well. Of course, you will take a] nd put them in a bow! with the but- to @ creem. sugur and flour, and when these ingre- we can thought of Which Should Speak First? Botty: INDLY tell me which one, aft quarrel, should speak first, the bo: or the’ «irl, G quarrel by ‘every one tells me to speak first. | It really makes no difference who They wanted to be “taken,” too. They wouldn't settle down till she Posed the whole “Happy Familee.” Just as she said: “Look pleasant, pleas: ! The Alligator had to sneeze, So the first photograph was Uke An earthquake that had gone on strike. At last, as she had enapped the shutter, The Elephant was heard to mutter: “She'll use this in a book, I'l bet, ‘Wild Animals That I Can Pet’” LOVERS. dients are well r a| tered plates and saying somethin; cake, Apple Cake. LACE a thin on a round Friday Evening: |} OUR ANIMAL DEPARTMENT. |THE ‘JOLLY’ GIRLS—THEY Win! By George McManus Devised and Illustrated ape March 16, 1906. AND DO YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO IVE AWAY PASSES, TOO? WHY CERTAINLY, LADIES WOULD HOW OFTEN THE CARS RUN HERE AFTER MIDNIGHT ?,, GREAT HEAVENS, HOW THOSE GIRLS CA TALK! ROUP ON RECORD. The ntpht beasts who did not atoaken In time to get their pictures taken In mean revenge began to chaff The orttters in the photograph, | And dubbed that worthy work of art | | An “Ark-aio Rogues’ Gallery Chart.” This started up the daily row. Pa's changed the motto on the prow From “What Is Home Without a Mother?’ To “What's @ Scrap Without Another?” (For Further Details See Monday's Rvening World, This Page.) HINTS FOR THE HOME. By Walt PeDougall y| for twenty minutes, We both started the! lemon and powdered sugar, or pile the | ® 4nd) pancakes high on a dish wi oho! Of Preserve Or marm: Inde betw AKE two oggs, two ounces of but- ter, two ounces of sifted vugar, two of flour and half a pint of | 3) milk, Beat the eggs thoroughly Stir in the mixed add the milk. Kiep stirring and beating the mixture for a few minutes, then put it on but- bake in a quick oven Serve with a cut @ layer layer of short pastry balding dish, pinchine vith the fing ore 9 a8 | tins and cooked out into | 9 eroundatie oaks. | Soe ada wall round the gingers: Wien jeu. into dng to preserv: the eorea, thom and arrange’ in a circle around the pastry, one slice overlapping tne other. Sprinkle with ground cinnamon and sugar and bake for three-quarters of in hour in @ steady oven. When cold sift powdered sugar over the top. | Onion Soup. | LICE two large Spantsh optons, four or tive potatoes and a stalk of cel- ery. Boil till tender in a pint and {a half of water. Put the mixiure | through a slove, return to the saucepin with half a pint of milk and a good- | sized niece of butter, Senson with pep-! A per and salt and boil up usin, stirning | constant) | Brandy Snaps. UB q quarter of a poun butter into half a pound of moist sugar and helf a pound of ground gine: Make into a paste with a little mo- Spread the mixture thinly on put the sn: ean i th itl ah Ma AS t | YRLH BBLUEW has been an- K nouncing in Chicago his plans | for next season, which Include a dramatization ef Sir Gilbert Parker's “The Right of Way,” and revivals of | “The Romance of @ Poor Young Man," ;"The Lady of Lyons,” “Charlotte Cor. day’ and, posstbly, other plays. ite ts quoted as saying: | ‘I am convinced that for a star tt |1s much better to have several plays than to confine himself to merely one |role for a long period. It 1s better for him and also for ‘his company, the members of which are very apt to grow le 1£ they are compelled to play one part over and over again for a long period, With a repertory, too, thera is a chance to make experiment, to try | new pleces, and that, I think, Is what | every conscientious actor wants to do | and ought to do. In the repertory I shall present hore next winter I ehall revive several of the plays in which the | public liked me in the past, but I also have the manuscripts of some new es which, L hope to present for the So great Is the competition for good plays that when one finds anything of that kind he Js com- pelled to keep his discovery strictly to himself until he has his contract with the author actually signed, sealed and delivered. For that reason I do not feel that 4t would be safo for me to say anything definite about these new plays Just now. Chicago seems to me to be inauguration of riment I want to make, be ause the public here {s always ready to give a new production a fair hearing |and judge {t entirely upon its merits | without partiality of any kind. Ana | \ that Is what I Want for the pieces I shall present.” And this after New York let “Raffles” xo through its evening elothes! Why, oh why? Om 0 OLLOWING Mrs. Fiske's forthcom- F ing engagement ag the Academy of Music, Wilton Lackaye will appea |there in revivais of “The Pit’ and “Trilby."" Mr. Lackaye's engagement will be for six weeks, the last fortnight of which will be devoted to his own dramatization of “Les Miserables." OD ‘VETTE GUILBERT, who will say Y adieu to New York on Sunday night, announces she will return here next season in a play written for ner by Charles B. Erdlinger—‘‘and then," Im and Ou she adds, “you will hear me speak Eng- lish in the altogether.’ She means, of course—well, you know what she means, Princess, holds the season's rec- ord in the matter of the number of specially arranged theatre parties. While this lively play of undergraduate tife at Cambridge has been on the boards only two weeks, eight parties from different colleges, numbering from fitty to one hundred and fifty each, have attended performances. At future ¢ol- lege nights the song. of the college rep- o 8 BP Princ OF HARVARD,” at tho \resented will be sung by the “Brown of Harvard” quartet in the second act campus scene. |, Mf ATOR" FRANK BELL, who eS forsook burnt cork to origin« ate the role of the Town Qonstable in “‘'Way Down Bast” and sing “All Bound ‘Round with a Woolen String,” (s back In Dilackface at Keith's, delivering one of his disserta- tions on topics of the day. ONY PASTOR will celebrate te ati forty-first amniversary as @ manager on Thursday of next week. Managers come and managers go, but Tony goes on forever. Anni- versarles have grown to be a habit with fim, a ielce' WO young women met in @ Fifth ar avenue art shop yesterday after- noon. Each looked sharply at the other and then fell back {n sur- prise. After apologizing to each other confusedly for staring, the young women turned away with an air of ction to separate interests among uintings amd bric-a-brac of the ‘ll wager those two will think @ good deal about that meeting,” the shopkeeper remarked after both women had gone. “Dame Nature is certainly an erratic old lady, Those two women as vou saw are as alike as two new pennies from the same stamp. One is Fritel Scheff, the other the daugh- ter of one of my cross-street customers. eee aS 73 OU are young, you are rich, Y you are strong,” says De Wolt Hopper to an orange- plumed knight in “Happyland;" “but"§— and he puts ice on his volce—"I dare you to wear that hat on St. Patrick's Day!" CHARLES DARNTON. By Alic “” you ever aigrette Girl from Kansas. “No, I don’t mean lorgnette. I said atgrette, It be-| longed to the wom-' an in front of me, or at the side off: me, df you can lo-f ¢es cate the exact po-fi sition o€ the standeos at the opera, I got i in the eye every time. “The strains of ‘Cazmen’ are delicious; but strained through an algrette 1s too much of a strain for me, thank you, C “And, say, there ign’t anything about too-dancing you can teach me now. I ted to marvel at the wonderful Indies of the ballet who pirouetted around on thelr toes, and, oh, how I used to won- der how on earth they did ft. Pahaw! Don't talk to me about the sustained nervous effort of the toe-dancer. When it comes to standing on your toes through four acts of ‘Carmen,’ then you can talk. “Didn't have to balance myself Well, I'd Ike to know why. Did you ever strike one of those standee sym- postums? I guess our training in the Subway rush hours got us into form, The Girl From Kansas. e Rohe. “Why was I standing up? Well, it certainly wasn't because I refused to share Box A in the horseshoe. “Cecelia Schuman Coon, of Waubun- see, is here. She's the hereditary music teacher of our native heath Cecelia simply had to hear grand opera, and she was just set on ‘Carmen.’ “Cecelia thought sure something had when she saw that line e@tzetched out into the street from the box office, and she nearly passed away Nece for tickets to i i E 5 yeaa he wasn't der he was rattling it was |) though. When I'm pressed for money I'm going in for toe-dancing, BM@SSDS thet chents- liked for the youns- for their eldera, aad {s Alice blue veiling trimmed with velvet ribbon, the bttle chemisette being of tucked taffeta, Dut Mt is m design that can he mate avail able for many ma- terials, Qaeh mere and henrietta saare the honors with veiling for the cool- er weather, while @ fit later washable material can be utilized with perfect success, Again, the chemlsette can be of any contrasting material— tucke muali or all-over lac, or anythh that’ may be hiked. he thrée » quarter always 1 sl os aturactive when be- coming, but long woder portions can be acted, extending them to the wrist if for any reason : they are desirable. Girl's Ci The quantity of material required for 7, 53-4 yards 36 or 43-4 yards 4 inches e chemlsé and 10 yas of banding, Pattern No, 5307 1s ont in sizes for ve Mow * } GON FASHION BUREAU. Obtain 4 ork, Send tea cents in oF These Patierms } ways specity size wanted. Call or send by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAM. IMPORTANT—Write your naine and eddrees plain, end at-| May Manton’s Daily Fashions. jostume—Pattern No. 5307. the modiun size (2 yoars) fs 6 1-4 yards wide, with %8 yard 18 indhes iwide for girls of §, 20, 1% and 14 years mf age, |. No, 21 Weat Twenty-third steest, New, 01n of stamps for each DAtters erderea, Sea tse a