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. Watered at the Post-OMce at New York as Second-Claso Mail Matter. ~ VOLUME 47. +» NO, 16,608. CRIPPLED CHILDREN. year's work of the State Charitable Institu ‘This—haspital_has_been_in_exist peChildren.— ence only a short fine. parents are unable to pay for proper medica Bpled_and_deformed: or suffering from deforming disease. Treason * Benedict Amold and Major Andre met. ; me from-New York. They are all-little children, ‘many of. them only. ‘ ae jae on: ‘and \only one older than twelve; little boys and girls eks,-club fect, curvature of the spine, hip-joint. di in- Pfahtile- set “These_poor little cripples here receive the best of med- Kal attendance and care and many of them are cured. =~ But it is ‘not the purpose of this article to describe this charity, but hy these children are crippled. 5 there raat geln: the majority of case. ‘are fotuberculosis conditions. Diseases of joints and of the spine are for see part the result of a fuber- Egulosis condition. - Almost all thes: © écases have arisen simply from lack of healthy parents, pure air and nu- tious: food. - anit ‘0 cure these cripptes: Sirgieat a “operations take a minor place to 22 =the benefits gained from fresh air ouldoor_life.‘The children_a “kept in am alt -day-tong” @ the winter, and_in the summer-time they are kept out of doors. _ The windows are opened even in the. coldest days, and the winter’s sun- breathed pure. air night and day, the ase little Sais would not now & ring hospital treatment. a 5 e This hospital should do even more good a warning than as “charity. The parents of New York should send for a copy of the re- port and lear from it how simple are “of -a-heatthfut fife and how best.to avoid the possibility that one of their childrerr may become a ecient of this -hospitat’s-benefits.— THE B. R. ale S PULL. | req 4--McCleilan’s: indorsement adopted +t! ~Donald-Evening- World -interborough—three- cent subway plan, Next this plan was muti- | lated by dropping off the downtown spur. Hip henit-was- shifted fromthe Wi: emsburg and Manhattan Bridges to the Williamsbur; and a oe Bridges, Then’ it was further changed to provide Rt on the-condition-that-the-B-R=T; ‘build fire- ser cars fo lise them. __ Now the city government has reversed itself-again, and ier ne ing addressed by President Winter, of the BROT, who had beer epreviously.- -properly-vouched: for by the Hon:-Pat McCarren, ‘the fire: Sroof cars are omitted andthe B.R, T may run any cars it pl “teluding the ramshackle wooden, fat-wheel atrocities which make up-the = ebulle- of its-present equipment. : So the city is to build a connecting subway and provide terminat ee switching facilities, at-a_cost of some $14,000,000, and turn all this ~to:the:B. RT. “Why. does not the city guarantee dividends on the B..R.-T-stock? Weswould be more straightforward, hardly anymore: expensive,-and-no sunray scanesiens than-the-present-stats of things. Letters from the People ik tenth peed chieftain of wird ore nown. ‘Tiils one State and her Inhubl- Spectr Ot his Nites wiwm he cannoxed »th tants. who had the lon's share of the ByPhilippines and Hawat!, Until that Ume| | Mowe were wate from: any. forcian poner r As.to Expansion, © vi" The frente Werks T think Uncle Sam-did-the fooltshest it hi the: Anictican “ravoluc to commemorate by 0 otal Ind contd e Lara We Haale Ura; dian who Waly Serourborters-and=we+ nowar, first in peace and firat in imecorany| {Piet earls of 1 Wertal foe could Krad-off-our-isanda!—A,K, Johnson find’ we would have to 4:0 to war to get they. are. of no vise! e and compact. Now What) | vy ae back, tho to vs, We were we tre” exteided ved fneccure. Sas atten rete thinks CIVIL WAR VE Yea, ‘thos tye Raltor of The Bvownn World: entleman with ife or Nae his wife (Of) ments made, For nome time 1 “in it proper for! him to z TALS EAS eben 0 tn ie Tea teeemahe a not what my hours were to on the TE ees Ore ea following day. On several occasions I ines had to remain uuti 7 o'clock and! after, Ered SD Sina ta fant anh cabana Ta to finish copying letters, &¢.,,while my qultting hour was supposed to be 5.16, | jie thar Is whot ts termed fatr play, 1| ani ready for the pest house. Not that! To the Eilitor of What.Ja. than Consul YORK? # of the} Oonsul in oR oF acting One Oitice” the Editor of Sesaikine of the om itoyte allow me boy, to say amen to the some of thé com- I am afraid of work, but that I could a not arrange to make ne OF to Attend any poe EX-OFFI plans for either & wor. ew Jersey To the Bs {Pho-battie Fthe ume emblaxon t Nid. Ue ‘Third Avenue #1." nne, to the abuse muffered b: ple who live on'the line of the Third ave- Y | and Wifty-ninth at to the point. eta, was timely and Every word ts the exact "ltruth, Lhave stgod the Sixty-rey- enth street station for twenty minutes me Mornings, and then when atop, Was Ofen fCarsed “ty climb over the Kate on the last car inorder tO get aboard at a. Ivoen at them| JOHN BIMPSON: ‘Trenton An statue of the Fi tn perpetuation of iainjy nothing eould ihe: more ave a pret, a5 thir Stace 1 one of the orig-|; toa. Ahirteen, 5 the other thir-| hy, the Press Publishing Company, No, 88 to @ Park Row, New York the many reports now. at hand of the last tal for the Care of Crippled and Deformed Tt Was Sstabilshed “for the care ang treatment of children whose advikee-and-itis-tesiricied to -children-who The hospital is located on a hill back of ‘Haverstraw, The site is ill, from the fact that on it-is-located the house’ where Being thus located near New York City, the majority of the patients : Aled | : A Wit WHA HE ; DItFERENCE PETWEEN. THE CARDIAC AND THE —PNEUMOGASTRIC UR gays je at a table. “What's the matter?’ * asked Mr, Rangle, moodily. This was a superfluous question, Mr. Jarr only nodded, | eWhat'll you have’ wanted it Winat's the matter, old man?" ‘Oh, patter enough," sald Mr, Rangle. “Sometimes wieh I'd -atayed-a-bachelor,.that's what!" (sa nice way to talk for a man that's got a nice! wife like you Have and a nice home like you have," be, Darr wit nat }—ward-enother-s—trouble: z — Cut tt out! growled My, Rangle; ‘Dog gone tt! OU MKT Ve SUE Te ie Nera gmt it I-cvult gern my Vw house” “Ho, hot wuld -Mr_ tare, : "That's how it stands,” sald Mr, R@ngle, gtoontiy, “Ed Jurr, you eee before; you a man who {4 a most unheppy wretch. I don't lke to complain, Ihave no swish-to-infliet_my_troubies-on-you, but I tell you t¢ my wife don’t let up on_me! Tl be driven to drink."* bib 17 PST He aver tot faust how! Yor are wear, right wy; adjacent Enin-aaked Mr, Jarr. | w® the gant ETN Daily Magazine, By Maurice Ketten. : 2 The Jarr Family’s Daily Jars & % oo * o BY : kK ant tie Awaker brought” hint whet he wanted when— te 7°4F around, 9 fellow could stand it But this ‘silent hearthreak thing! —Gea?* I [with you, and then Tl L bp naninet a Tearly in the yaar?” “Surest thing you Imow," sald “Mr. “The carpets are up, the curtuins are down, jsmell of soap and steaming suds! chose!s; atid with all the furniture 4: sia Mec ste eam a tetra Thursday, Fe bruary Z 1907 ness. ypoveu' KNow, © MHA Ee RD as 00 you EVEN KNOW, XVHAT DIDYou EVER HEAR OF 9 CoccyGiTI5 ¢ \@ “HE WAS A VERY Good WITNESS Roy L. McCardell’ "Nov? asked Mr, Jarr, incredulously, theres cwiere they gor ux maid —Rangle,_benging the table and Gus |. tems of D thinking it @ call, [sreant was not fruitle: sent the walter over again, and Mr, Jarr saw to it that lus / “That's wilere us," continued Mr, Rangle“It they'd only get up and ‘Oh, cheer up," suid Mr, Jarr, who was feeling genial under his Mbattons,! White nis crea grew more-tworoseand--gloomy: ve Mrs, Jarr go over and “Don't come near the house,” sald Mr. Rangle. mess, aid, as for your wi Gly wide with mine. “Cheer-up, I'll go hom ve hor a good talking to.’ You'll only get yourself in Bull think I'm ders eal and poked Mr, Jari mn-the ci maid, i(e ja easing her mind and adding to my misery by epring cleaning!" cross the (dle ‘ntarting her apring steaning thie | MAKING A START IN LIFE. Electrical Engineer * * Chef * * Broker * x Locomotive Engineer Salesman + * (WHAT WOULD = Hiamber Lawyer, * + Teacher Designer WO U * Physictan Detective *. (KE TO BE ?. * Motorman Stenographer * » » Chauffeur * * * Artist * « * Music Teacher By TT. Oo. McGill. THE "DESIGNER. |B Pare who invents and prepares decorative or e tirhitire or trom worth as much $500; GO per Week some are g niay receive Many dostgnore receive as-high-as: ‘oinnverciat: designing is Equipmert—To be a designer does not require any espe ' clal artistic talent,: One should be able to learn the simplo forma of drawing and to know how to ‘blend’ practicability Qnd the combination, of linea-and shade in )the most effecttye form. Age—Any one may be a designer, There arg boys and giris-of fourteen and cluhtean making book covers, At ote of the achools a man forty-five years old has just begun to study designing. i Houre of Labor—A’ designer working on sainry usually works about tent hours a day, Sonie work longer. I Advantages of an education Mian designing | Designing does not require any special qualification besides the avers age faculties except practice and’ hard work. That is Why #0 few persons are high-class designers, There Js an easy reward for designers of mediocre ability, Luck plays a great part tn this career. M was-a geniue_at designing and was making some ver polling prices til Sarah Bernhardt ‘discovered’? him and Kim, Then his fortune-was made ‘z x The field for designing 1s constantly Cm * There i an ever-increasing domend for pretty. designe sonand for Good} for paper-box covering, for patterns In every form of Designers Is Con- soaring appa: ‘s hats, all fabrice, wall paper, stantly Inorezairig.} the special branches of architecture, mural decoration, ¢ patent floor coverings, lace, china, furniture, knives, © hovks nnd spoons, yases and nll forma of bric-a-brao _ Ullng, screens, stained labels, and, HERE ja no profesnion more attractive to those who have not had the broadening, book covers, pipes, articles in fron and steel, advertising, #lass, fences and front doors, carringes a in short, almost every form of material that the human family uses. —-Like every Mne of work that gives monetary return for labor that 1s not manual, this profession Is overcrowded ‘by. persons who seek such a means of tricone without “mich “physical effort. Bat the demand tor destgns. grows. a¢:- fast that thin overcrowding ls not serious. It is estimated that about 1,80 pers nons-from-out-of-town-atiend the varlous New York schools of depign during a winter, and 99 per cent. of these are girls und women, Men are Inclined to look on’ designing.as a feminine pursuit or as something that requires too much special talent, It ts really a governed or fixed principle and rules that make i of tho simplest of the arta when one has mastered tts rudiment ‘There -are nea of Dealg ng MN rew women-can-tottow,—because-such~Hned ——— require, pgaressive initiative that few feminine natures possess—for instance, designs for religious work and for the frescolnk of bik rooms, ‘The-designers inthe big jowelry manufactorica are usvally men. althoust one would naturally expect women to be more apt at this class of wor! ‘The schooly of designing in New York City aro very thorough and well equipped, with’ high-class instructors. One of the most conspicuous of these Ia the New York School of Applied Design for Women at No. 20) Weat Twenty: third streot. Thin institution has as patrons and officers such notablea as Henry B, Wilson, Frank TL “ford, Alexander—C,-Humphreys,—Mra,_C,_P__ Hunting: York Where De- } ton, Mrs Frederick }V. Vanderbilt and Sir Caspar Pur arepe n_ Clarke. This school ranks high and contains tq signing ts Taught) Men cientea tenchera (ot -dealgnlny ine tie pubSTecNooU ya? and in other places of learning. There ts a nominal charge for tuition ranging from $10 to $0, and each year the patrons and patrom sge8 i) TEN MOney to ay-for.the free-tultion of freon -Atty.to.sixty women. ‘The classey in this school are made up aa follows!” ~~ Elementary department, water-color class, elementary conyentlonalization gdvanced department of wall” Paper, aud-eik—urchtrerturs-and-intertor-cecorer: {Ton tituntration:—hieterte—ornament.- -boak_caver,_advanced (ealgn and stained’ glass. This institution has heen appointed by the Society of Beaux Arta thi headquarters for women architects. Cooper Union and the New York free night schools teach designing freq Other achools where fees are chargel ranging from $10 to $0 are the Hobrew echnical School for Girls, at Second avenue and Fifteenth sireet; National Design, —Aimsterdam avenue and One Hundred and Ninth street] Manhuttan Trades Schovl, at No. 20) Past Twenty-third street; Teachers’ Col liege, Amsterdam “avenue and One Hundred and ‘Dwentteth streo Students’ League, at No. 24 Wrat Fifty-seventh street: New York School Art Eightieth street and Brondway, abd the Young Women's Christian Asso ctation, ie : Cr ~$—Schoots in- New Dy - ~seTime NMourself Reading This. % \F =o) aimed the horro--réricken Jerr, “Give us another drink, ae i The house ie thick with the | And Mrs. Rangle la going around rcrubbing | {nthe middle of the. room.and ber béet tied | Range. and at it," sald Mr, Jarr. “Let's have another,” [up ih Whije cla, ko as Ifahe had a perpetual headache. “On rou tae -jt-eaen,t- grumbled Mtangle. “You've got one of thore even-| Mr. Jarr’s horror, aa this awful picture of domestic woe was presented to his tempered wives that never say a word to one.” [inaginaior, wae aut tier be eats nothing except, “Gtve us-another!'! that's s0,"-said Mz Jarr, and as he xata tt he balleved_st too. I haven't,” sald Mr, Rangle, “I don't know what gets Into the woman. 1 io'everything Teaw'to:Keep her satented: whe gete-every:cent f-make—how much do I owe you, Gus?—and I never way a wont.” “Why don't you?’ asked Mr, Jerr BY Gooran, you've Kot-to-be firm! It Mrs. Jarr treated me that way—not that ehe would, you know—but if ahe did, I'd be | frm: “ve been firm.” yald Mr, Rangle, erent ‘and that only made matters Wores- Toucan t beat a woman at ghting. They enjoy it} they-know it makes} aman crezy droves him wild, but they enjoy ih." ‘Ht-elwaya struck me that your wie was a yery quiet woman," afd Mr, Jarr, renertively. ; "Bhe'a-(oo darn. quiol,’” sald Mr. Rangle—""Glyeou mea cigur, to0.—She hasn't spoken’ to me for two da: i met another, Gua, and bring By this me he was valiant. ashamed of horseltt’ ‘They went to Rangle’ shis ‘pins, Mis’ Rangle biirel into tears, [man make 2 sot of you and neglecUing-your home? | prised Rangie and begged tim to be good to her. oMr.-Jarr-hurried home; umie to Ket home, aid hie Waliing dimer "on-yout rhe But Mr. Jarr dil pay = word. hereafter he'd mind jis own affairs, : P, S.—Mrs, Jarr baan't spoken to him for two da} i he said, “Hil tel tee oho OuUE 1S ES ‘Come on home and face the music! arm in arm. At the aight of Mr. Rangle unsteady on | ow can you treat me so, George Kungle! ete exclaimed. “Letting thia Then stie kissed. the wur— “This ta-@-nice crted:~“Don‘t-xpeak-to Mrs: Jarr-mot-him-at-the- door; Don't say a word!" lie said a couple, The gist ot which was that} | Lemons, a Cent Apiece. His HP if Ss ELM ——— DELMAS BITES Rurige> REACH NES EAR! Ju THAW SEES A MAR jw COURT WHO HAG THE JIMS i 7 MINUTES coe CHESTERFIELD ON MANNERS AND MORALS HERE acems to me tess difference both beticcen the crimes “and punta Pe ments (between immoratity end ill-brecdlig) than at first one would (niagine. The Timorat- man,” who tcades another's property, ie frsllp-han pad for tt,-andcthe i-bred man, cho, ill-nanners,, invades 3 ‘and disturbe the quiets and comforts of private life by common consent ae fustly banished-from aocicty, Mutual complaisances, attentions and eaore- fices of tittle concentences are as natural an_tmplied-compact detween otvtt- ized people as ‘protection and- obedience beticeen kings and audjects, Who- ever in either case violates that compact—justly forfeits all advantages aris. ing. “from. it, For-my-oicn_part, I_really think, next to the conactousness doing @ yood action, that of doing-a ciott thing 13° the most Pleasing; ond~ the epithet that I. should covet the most, next to that of Aristides (the Just), scould-be that ‘of. swell bred_ ms i TORT EE 1d