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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY. JUNE 25, 1907. To Bea Model Husband, Just Ask Your Wife, Says Winner of Blue Ribbon Dr. Palmer, of Chicago, the Lucky Man, Lets His Wife Talk Freely of His Many Good Points and Modestly | Admits Them, “Ask your wife, man; ask your wife. “Lat your wife decide—she probably knows best. Jet her do the talking for the family. oS ea eee ces Eig cag nL Mpeg 0s See Ric We ata Ee “Are you undecided about anything? Weill, just ask your wife.” This is the recipe in a nutshell of Dr. Albert E. Palmer, of Chicago, for becoming & excellence, so that other women will un- snimously wife and other married men will invidiously look pon you for your glorious distinction. Who is this Dr. Albert E. Palmer? No. Is he a Nature Fakir? President Roosevelt hasn't yet accused him of being one. Well, why does he hand out the dope—why should he speak q@ith such authority? Because he is the winner of the blue ribbon at the “Husband Show” given at the home of Mrs. James Sydney McCullough, at Chicago. He is the “Blue Ribbon” husband, the best ever. He is a man who embodies theory with He 1s the personification of what he advises in the abstract. He is a shining example of what he says a husband should be, and If he tsn't happy he has been afraid to say so. “How does 't feel to be the best in] the city? he was asked to-day Just Ask My Wife. The question embarrassed He looke vely about, etroked momentary perplex ully replied Give her a chance; It will eave you trouble and please husband par envy your A mollycoddle? example Characteristics of “Blue Ribbon Husband."’} | He 1s always truthful. Ie a Chesterfield for manners. He is a Romeo for devotion. obviousty ity, and then thoug Well, well, I hardly know. You see, 1 am a0 overcome by the surprise er— | He can button @ back-aetion | | @r—the honor of the thing. don’t you | Sirt watet with ease know. t I haven't had a chance yet He can sew on @ button. to ask my wife. Just wait, my good| |) He te Gomestic in his habits, fellow. until I go and talk to her-ask | || He never swears in English her about ft, don't you know He can distinguish point d’esprit from peek-a-boo insertion, and oa! chints by name on sight. He pays the milliner and modiste. Although married twice, his wife] | is the only woman he ever loved. DISCORD ORWES ~ PASTOR KELLER OUT OF PULPT Minister Shot by Barker Will) Retire for Harmony’s Sake, It Is Said. | Enter Mrs. Palmer, better known as| Pauline mer, the artist, who was et work in her studio with palette and| brush. Her poise was perfect, and she smiled encouragingly, though inquiring. dy, at her husband and his interviewer. | “The points in which you are to excel all other husbands,” ventured the ques-| tloner, emboldened by the fact that Dr. Palmer was all there since the advent of his better half, ° tru manners, devotion and gallantry. Now, what are your especial qualifications in hese particulars?’ “Really,” faltered the Doctor, glanc- ing at his wife for inspiration and ap- Probation, “really, don’t you know, I @ughtn’t to say anything about that. Ask her. Mrs. Palmer beamed on her husband, smiled proudly at her husband's deit- oate modesty, and assumed responaibil- ity for the verity of subsequent declara- tions. “What do you regard as the incident ef the Doctor's life most strongly bring- ing out his truthfulness?” ny,” Mrs. Palmer sald in benign @urprise, “he is always truthful, aren't! you, dear?” Modestly Admits It | And Dr. Palmer modestly admitted) Rumor has it that Rey. John Keller at he always tried to be. It was a| Will sever, next Sunday, his connection tnt In his favor that, like same hus-| with Trintty Episcopal hureh, Arling- t p bands in the same position might have ton, > done, he did not assert that he was Fo Jways truthful, but simply that he | aati - | tried to be.” If he had said that he| though the majority s stood actually was always truthful it would| ¥% Hector Keller 1s opposition We created « doubt in the minds of | S0Ush to him, it is sald, to cause him | other but loss impeccable men that he |‘ Téslgn in the interest of harmony Mr. Rey Keller ts the minister who| was four-fushing. always tried to But to say that he| ye Gd not necessarily establish his superiority over other men, although Mrs. Palmer may not have looked at it that way And,” she pursued, “he ls a Chi terfield for manners, and a verita Romeo for devotion, aren't you, dear? Dr. Palmer again smiled and wae will sto take hin w Word for It and let Barker, of Arlington, after Bark wife had told her hustend a- story | which prompted the assault | Barker was convicted in the Hudson | County Court and sentenced to five yeers In Sate Prison, but was par- doned after having served « portion jt wo at the jot his term. Ix was very plain that he was of sur-| ‘Rev. Mr, Keller could not be seen easing gallantry, and if the wom > & cog Bre'voe sudae. had hit Upon the trys | erway: and Bishop Edwin &. Lines, principio of husbandly ority Th, | head of the diocese, ssid pothing nad act, his qualifications ate of sic et been settled in regard mat perpetual, inflexible nature that ft vert ib Lesh eed and that anything that is to be said on the rumored resignation mue: these | come from Reotor Keller. Several members of the church ap nerted the rumor In true, folly to try to find inatanc fone! aistinction none epee In the entry blank, howe ether qualifications are set forth ‘Although twice married, hie wife te the enly woman he ever loved, He can button back-uction shirt walate ci las sepeecesietat with facility and-e That ia, when | they are bis wife's, of course, |KAISER BUTTS INTO A ih hie habit he’ te dintincvely do-| NIS GA mestic EN He can sew on buttons of all. kinds, | T IS GAME AT KIEL. which taves his write @ anata es | trouble, and which Ix a sualtfeation| KIEL, Germany, June 2.—During t would please any weman. | thie few periods of sunshine that qheation and ue often as he has tre, have broken the past six rainy da hance Emperor William stopped on his way | eels, Payee awsare in English. Whether! to the Naval Academy to watch some | noi Uist te not divulged nx tet ‘c He Je a geod Judge of textiles, and can| Ki4 Playing ‘ennis on the academy Gistingulah point d'esprit from ‘peek-s. | SOUrts hoo insertion, and can call chints by| He became Interested and asked If ho | Mix real namé upon aight, | might join in ths. play. His Majesty things. but are not these enough? "| chose @ partner, piared with her againat How many New York husbands could | (we other miris, and was beaten blue Tibbon on a#vch mpecifica-' He laughed thanked went on take tho is partner. and| é ae | wxohange Bank, [south Atrios, Dwellers on New York City’s Skyline Who Enjoy Field Sports and Cool Breezes High Up in Air HIS CUFFS GREEN, HE HAS WEALTH AND EATS IN CAB |Police Would Like to Hear From Man in Mouse- Colored Suit. If the man who wears a inouse-col- ored linen sult cuffe will call at the West Sixty-elghth street station and take away the suit case left there by tie cab-driver last night the police will be obliged.” ‘This ts the advertisement the police are thinking of getting Into print. They want an owner for @ sult case filled with fragmenta of stale bread and ataier chicken left there Inst night by Cabby Joe Hays. He says the erip was left in his haneom by @ man who had been dtiving:-about In his rig all day and taking light meals from the inte- rior of the sult case. Hays ovilected ‘m0. for the distance he bed driven. Known at a Bank. Tt may be @aid here that while the man tn the mouse-colored garments is by no means @ stranger at the Corn Madison avemue and Sixtieth street; at the office of Thomas Cook & ©o., the Wwurtet agents st Ne 60 Madison avenue, or at the Hotel Al- pany, at Broadway and Fortieth street, he ja to the police. He walked into the Corn Exchange Bank @ week ago and announced that he was Henry Sherwood, who owne) a few mines and ‘a couple of gold-bearing mountaine in and he would be much obliged if he could have # million dol- \\are In American money in exobange for the same amount in the cusremy of New Guinea right sway ‘Tne cashier esid he didn't think they had that much on hand at the moment, but asked tho man in the mouse-colored euit to call beck next day. The million-dollar ealler said ft wa: very annoying, but that he would drive down to Cook's office and exchange his money there. You see, I have all I need at pres nt,’ he remarked as he made his exit, throwing « dazaling pile of twenty- dollar gold pieces before the astonished haa people, He gather these up one he repeated the performance, but th tourist people changed « few fve-pound Bank of England notes for bim. His pext visit, so far as It can be traced, wae to the Hotel Albany, where he ordered « (uns-fungle of the best qual- ity, Actonishes Broadway, ‘The bariender coukin't produce @ fuss- fung.o 0, turning, @herwoed wandered am © the stenographer and Glctated BIG EXPLOSION! Late Reports Show That Thousands Have Been lajured. oo There has not been an explosion of dynamite, but the theory that ALL Real Estate investments are the BEST has ‘exploded’ be. 3 yokd any peradventure of doubt, It is admitted that ALL Real Estate makes a good investment if bought_at the RIGHT PRICE, But don’t forget that it's the PRICE that counts—hence this reminder to “look before you leap” in pur- chasing a house, lot, farm or acre tract in order that you may not only get the most desirable property, bet that you may get it at the LEAST POSSIBLE COST. od peer ee n= Hf you invest in Real Estate before glancing through the “Bar- gain” offers made every day in The World’s Want Directory you will be apt to feel the concussion of the “Explosion” referred to above. and green collar and) He said the amount wasn't muck | two letters to Thomas Cook, thanking On the Tops of City’s Have All the Comforts With a Grand View and Room Even for office building! If you don't believe it, fon sky line sometime on “wash day.” | There are onty a very few people noble strife.” dreamed that far above the plungers ment house dwellers can obtain? Park Row Building, and still anothe Building. And if you had been out ea lantic Building. | At Home on Twenty-eighth Floor. Bixty per cent, of the big office buitd= ings have apartments for the euperin- tendent or Janitor on the top floor, and | while the busy downtown world ts surs- \ing through Wall and Nassau streets and lower Broadway, up in the air in these martes of finance little ohildren are playing, and wives are carrying on their domestic cares as oblivious of worry as though they were in Arcadia if F. T. H! Bacon, superintendent of |the Park Row Building, and his wife two small children feel that they are high-toned, they certainly have the right. The Bacon home is at the tep of the towering Park Row structure, on the twenty-fifth floor. When the express elevators whiz up to the offices of the Interborough Ratl- way Company you may see a nume with @ small boy and « baby who ha deen out taking an airing, Those are two babies who live in @ big sky- scraper, and they are healthy and bappy &@ any small children could be. The Bacon apartments are beautifully fitted up with all the modern conve- niences, There is @ small gamien for Nowers, and the fresh air is ae good ae that of @ mountain resort | "There is nothing remarkable about families living te the bigs | bulldings,”” said Mr. Bacon, people don't usually associate home life lowith office work. Our Iife up here ant apartnent house. bage is taken down every day at 6 o'clock and burned, and for the weekly washing we have @ special drying room. | The nurse takes the children out every day, and I can't see how our life dif- | fers in amy way from that in a well | requlated apartment house, except that | we have perfect quiet and privacy.” | Better Than Apartment House Life. | Byven more high-toned than Mr, Bacon and his family are Frank Taylor and his wife, who lead the higher life on top of the twenty-eight-siory bulldigg tim for ing the notes, Ail up and | at No, @ Wall atreet down Broadway the man of mystery |” srier the elevator shoots up to the has jefi a wat of wonder. Rushing into | ee dastcnums, te hae crtered or. | tWenty-aixth floor you climb two more Ngeoohred sacks by the dagen to be! fights of stairs and then you reach sent to the Hotel Majestic, Central | one af the, most refreshing apots in Park Woat, For wuch strange drinks 38) ai Néw York. Down below the af- | Aarts he ime hoon 4 constant caller |-taire of the frengied world go on, and in Main street thiret packers. | elevators hurry scheming business men nenwood lef @ bro nooth mwatt)| beck and forth; but up here, where | Ot wonder pene et at the burner af | the breeses blow in from the harbor dumbas avenue and 4 | you find a ner roof garden op streat. He drove to # IR- | ing from @ nine-room apartment that SAIS LP clans ang’ ous makes summer spaside retreats look Freon in olner places naght every | like nolay, crowded centres ee for nN, oe eee If you were in an @ p you might to, 8 eee eed today thar | see the Taylor "Monday wash". drying |Snything, wae known of the eccentric |on the tx broad roof poreh any Mor ndtyidual | day morning Here. » are garden isa. wma | boxes filled with flowers, while two big SIXTY RUSSIAN OFFICERS — | Anvora cats play around tn the au | shine. | ARRESTED AT ODESSA, | entzone of swell apartment-noures: —_-— with winde opening / upon busy | LoNpoN. June A dispatch to a| streete or narrow courts, you would $ agerey from Odessa ayn it Is a: surprise at the splendid | thortiatively yeporiod that sixty officer rrama \o be seen from the Taylor | of the nouthern milMtary «etrict, xe | Ail a the ‘shins | Se them somncete 2 £e:-| steaming in ‘ tu the Ode nave & 1 pianos Aca 11,626 SCHOOL GRADUATES. | whole vista from Coney visible from this yr Jersey shor of the big | ve. Ww. M MMAWeH, City Superin.| And. furthermore, there ts Jxendent of Saools, said yesterday (hat | to bother the Taylors, fer Mr, Tayi lis WOuld Kraduate from the | Janitor and superintendent t One) and sop 20le or. ‘The total] never did overseer of @ buliding have ia th classes is | nore deugitful home than t roentage vf total taais . Was S605 per the top of Wall street's high ba Think of a happy home on top of the Produce Exchange! And also think once more of an ideal apartment on tap of the towering All goods are de-| one and departed. At Cook's place) tivered by the trades people, the , Tallest Buildings They of Life in the Suburbs, , Flowering Gardens Games of Baseball. By Alice Rohe. A LL the comforts of home on top of a twenty-eight story skyscraper id admirer of condensed domestic life in @ Harlem apartment, just take a bird's-eye view of New York's famous who are really leading the higher life in New York to-day, and they are to be found at the top o? the famous 4ky- scrapers whose skeleton frames tower far above the “madding crowd's ig- Whoever in the wheat pit there is a haven of ; domestic happiness with all the details of real home life that few apart-| ron the top story of the Empire rly yesterday morning you might have | seen a day's wash floating in the breeze from the top of No. 60 Wall street, | while a game of baseball was going on in the “back yard” on top of the At-| | of the financial world are working out, but way up 375 feet above the stre: there is a regular summer-resort domes- tc home, WORK GIRL A HEROINE ON LERSEY LAKE Miss Hollister Saves Two Boys From Drowning When Boat Upsets. jew York and became an exosrt ewimmer at @ public bath on the East River that Mary Hollister ts able to-day to quality an eligible canal © for a Carnegie heroine medal, Mias Hollister ta now a milkmaid, em- ployed on a farm near Budd's Lake, N. J., but M is denied that her tbeing so"much at home tn water had any- thing to do with her securing the job at It was because lived tn 3 “It te better than living in an apart-!ine dairy. However, she quit milking ment-house,” said Mrs. Taylor, as she washed up the luncheon dishes. “The only trouble le that when we give our address as Wall street the trades peo- ple want to overcharge us. We have our jaundry done here and hang it out en the poroh.- As for the garbage, that is burned in the furnace downstairs ! and is carried down every afternoon. Toe te suppited in the buliding, and the milkman and all the other tradesmen come right up to us First Child Born on Produce Ex- change. Over on the top story of the Produce ehange Jehn H. Fedeler and bis wife and small son ive @ life removed | from all the disoomforta of the usual aparument-bouse routine. Acd young Master Fedeler, who came Into the work, aiup the Produce Ex- change only last "November hee the distinction of being the only baby ever | born in such aa exalted position ‘Me. Fedeler, who is superintendent of the ®uilding, ehowed the small roof @ orden, with the family wash just be Ing taken in, with considerable pride. here isn't many & piace with a view like this,” he said, pointing to the bey dotted with ite Liberty Biaiue and vee is puffing into the harbor lielow, far. ‘below, was Fraunces Tavern, wiers youg Blaster Fedeler may one aay took and be inspired for study of ‘ioen histor, \aeeis Vince to live” said Mr. her cows long enough to save two boys from drowning yesterday and ta herald- ed in the nelghborhood to-day as the plucktest girl in the Btate, Clarence Hubbard and James C. Dow of Paterson, were members of @ fishing party which reached Budd’ Lake yesterday. While rowing up the lake toward « lonely epot young Hub- las { band lost one of the oars. Dougias attempted to reach tt and the boat upest. Neither boy could swim, and they clung to the by erying for assistance, Miss H. who was heard thelr shouts, and down rushed to th milking nesr by setting her pall bank Bhe could see them floundering about In the water some distence from shore, and finding another boat moored near bank, jumped in and rowed out, ying encouragement to the boys. Hubbard was -seized and pulled Into her boat by the muscular ¢irl, but Douglas lost his grip and went down. When he failed to reappear, Miss Hollis- ter told Hubbard to keep his seat, and diving Into ¢he deep water she soon re- | ere is HO comparison Tapd, there tite, ‘When We appeared with « tigiit grip on the boy's ¢ Mra, Fedoler was naty: |collar, He tried to seize his rescuer Fally Joneeome, But OOM. ome Jabout the neck, but realising the dan- Fath “Te advantages of living here are | ger of @ drowning clutch, she fought | many. te we t place BO | him off until, after a strugmle, she suo- 1 facely hen we | ceeded tn reaching her boat with him in | be than «Firth a@ilionalr tow. Hubbard aasisted in hauling him 5 auy | cause there a tchmen conmantly| i “and then she rowed them both on the lookout pet nas ore. | Can Play Ball in This Roof Garden. | Across the way, Mf an airship could | have descended upon the roof, the stu-| had to care for them The boys were so exhausted that she until late in the HOODOO OF FOG LD BIG LINER Minnetonka Delayed at Har- bor Entrance for Third Voyage. BROUGHT THE WINNERS. ze Horses and Whole Me- nagerie of Other Animals on the Ship. Pp Capt Layland, of the Atlantic ‘Transport liner Minnetonka, which ar- rived to-day from Lofidon twenty-tour hours Inte, fa of the tmpression that he is under the influence of a hoodoo. For three consecutive trips he has encoun tered dense fog at the entrance of New York harbor and each time has been compelled to come to anchor three miles east of the Sandy Hook Light- ship to await fair weather, The Minnetonka was sighted off Sandy Hook at 10 o'clock yesterday morning. Rather than take chances with the tortuous channel in the pre- vailing thick weather, Capt. Layland determined to wait for the fog to lft and he was not able to get under way until daylight to-day, Three trips ago, at the harbor entrance, in a fog, the Minnetonka narrowly escaped being run down by the White Btar liner Cel- tio and was actually bumped by the Ou- narder Etruria, This time Capt. Lay- land played safe. There was a small passenger Ust on the but she carried a big cargo of valuable animals. On board were the first American horses to re turn from the great London Horse Show. British Prizes Brought Back. Among them were three prize winners owned by Paul Jones, of Louisville Ky., one of which, “Poetry in Motion,” won & blue ribbon in the Ladies’ Sad- dle Horse class, Adam Beck, M. P., of London, Ontario, had nine of his horses returning to Canada from their London triumphs, The star of his consignment was the chestnut gelding Kakabeka, which put {t all over the English saddle horses, ‘That a swan is not a seagoing bird was made plain by a pair called Joe and Jennie, particularly fine specimens, on thelr way to @ menagerie In the West. Both were out of sorts all the way across, the lady swan particularly eo. Her sole amusement was beating her busband, who took ali that was coming to him with almost human meekness. The pet of the ship was a big collie called The Captain, on his way to De- troit alone. ‘Reb’ Armstrong, head Keeper of the Minnetonka, had charge of him during the voyage and took him for a constituUional every day. All the women and children tried to make tt pleasant for The Captain, but he was horoughly seasick and as miserable and downcast a dog as ever carried his tall at balf-maat Captain Not larer. Not until yesterday, when the land breeses from Jersey swept over the ship, }ai ptain perk up. His joy at " wa and Kate “ son, the humoriat. Justice Brown has | been abroad almost a year—ever since | his retirement from the bench 1 have talked to many diplomat various nations in my travels,” he said, | “and all of them showed keen inter | relations between the United | and Japan. d | the minor disagreement at much fon lately ae f the opinion that, soon er oF will have to go to war with the Mikado’s people HEAT PUTS THAW “INTO ICKIG MOOD that he “His 365th Day in the Tombs} Finds Him Railing at His Lawyers. Marry K. Thaw wae in anything but @ pleasant # of mind to-day when e woke in his cell in the Tombs. The ho bweather got on his nerves, He jdent of the higher life might have seen 3 Me ane TERETE line vane’ | another family dating in. the | eriermocm, when she found time from |Srecas on top of the tal] Atlantic Bulld. | her duties to drive them to the neares \! Up here As Serre!) supernh: raliroad station, where they took a@ tendent, and tis wife and iwo sma hoys breathe the rarified New York | Tain for Paterson | Jair in « home far above the streets | ‘The part of the lake where Miss Hol- |° "People don't know what comfort e |ister made her double rescus 1s one of have, because most of them don't Teailge that there are really people | (he deepest, and being fed from aprin Cwciilng down tn the fmancial district cant ieela Ga danaerata. tie jeaid Mr. Berrel!. “My two youngster four and two years old, have as fine | #wimmer 1 as any ruburban reakdens. | —— | 4 playarou Why. We have a roof garden space bie | enough for « game of bell,” No Prying People Here. } upd the corner, at No. @ Broad. kay, superintendent DD y on the twenty | "There | this indeven dent, w York sald | Mr. “Mek ay alr up here is fine | and, we are not annoyed by prying peo o Mr. MeKay ‘ee lyed 42 Broadway for three y« hie wife apartines adit & smal | M ember t | ee tt, {BOSTON GETS 80-CENT GAS, jae Court codinne i No Ke ports by Masters, Either BOSTON, dune B—A_ reduct af five oouls thousand cuble feet 1 the maximum prive of gas was a nounced b Boston Consolidaced Gas Com day. The redu wit make (oe maximus e ele ents @ thousand, Tt le the fourth duction that (he compas * made ia the last two years, making @ total 1- duction of twealy coals & iousand | FORCED BY THREATS TO SELL HER HONOR _— Wile ere pa at act and on Her Charge Hus- band Is Arrested. Alleging that he her threats Harry thirty M / sent for Deputy Warden Hanley imme diately efter breakfast and told him to summon Attorneys O'Reilly and Pea: ty at once W T get him adm en the ers arrived aw ¢ mandeq that ¢ ted to bail wit delay Every one is he comp © 1's been for Bur pe. sined, 885 duye since I landed * told him that ¢ the :reit nourishing food in exislence. Trial Proves ! WITH 000 CARGO) |= —_—_—_—_ SPRAY HOODS. haa Cowa oe acation Footwear Whether your fe et tum toward seashore of moune tains, we Coward Shoe sor e casion. have the right very OC Russet, glazed kid, calf, patent leather and canvas, in styles and sizes for men, women and childre n. astnrr4 Orcenwicn Ses Ye (nan WARREN EYRE.) Mall Orders Pitied. Send tor Catalogua, STYLISH Summer Weight We carry a 1m of the Iai ¥ darker colors and bieck. wartety of styl SATISFACTION GUARANTEED, made to Tour Menaure, SKIRT TAILORING CO., 42 EASY Ur sTiacet, IM WAN. FEW DOOKS AMA. TELEPHONE, 2212-GKAME! n Every Even Until 9 o’clock. We Allow Freight and R. R. Pare. \ Grand Rapids yers. CAMICTU RES. BEDI eRYTHING FOR tt g 375 Worth $7.50 Down $10.00 * $300 $30.00 use tor L, 8 k and mildew p aivanized iron. 4 brass ne Wheels. hb Steer Bt ring Wheels. ee Noys! Marine burn Des Yaw ay Fi Accounts up Ww SLUd00 be speckal SOUVENIRS FREE See Thurs. and Fri. Papere for VAN DYK'S Ad. urniture KOCKERY, LAMPS, pe Army Dueck. 4. bows are Deck fittings aD. up. so quickly es Ps sald ne