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Harvard vs. ‘Yale. TALE RAPID VRANSIT * By Maurice Ketten. sett PRIM ER. By Hwelivhed by the Pregq Publishing Company, No ft to @ Park Now New York n Entered at the Post-vtice at New York ne Sscond-Ciass Mall Matter Sant, Sa eee ee ee DEXIER W MASA The Evening World's Daily Magazine, Thursday, June 1902.. sisi we ssseos NO. 16,748. SCOTT nin MT Ssiabe Vleck sadese 0° [ape neers P No. 10—Berlin’s “'L” Structure. BACK-YARD LUXURIES. Ub add = ae | oe few under the elevated road th Berlin ; Wy Back yard where the ne ARED APPLE Se ut who wana to walk under-an slevated road with an open Roor with of NY back yard where the sun shines mar VALE ~ Fah Migeaeaiaa step gl laoel ge eae am can grow big strawberrieS—the kind wi fi t ‘ NS. ) ae | that sell for fifty cents a Portion at aews rem) ) ° | the Waldort or the St. Regis—king- } | berries bigger than two thumbs, lasiaild ‘ oe with the stems on, that should be) * it etalnea ey dipped in a little powdered sugar) pe pied and eaten with the fingers, tor tt. for the Ger und oa fur une for nolsy ele In the metropolitan radius there! are hundreds of thousands of back yards. Only a small fraction of them could not raise vegetables more luscious and fresher than Delmonico’s or Sherry’s can possibly serve their patrons. And as for the vegetables that come by train, that) hhave been carted to the railroad stations, handled on the docks, trucked | to the commission merchants, cistributed to the stores and appear on the table seyeral days old, ¢ is no comparison between their taste nder It The cab drivers walt there It ts ehelter from : | BT pay and the sensation that comes from eating the products of one’s own | raln and snow and gun, There are grass and trees each aide, and the middle “ walk Is now biving a mosale prvemont laid Now is the season for their enjoyment. It was lese than $0.08 a mile the ‘completed line, must tay American road would cost, with all ite defects and without Flowers are pretty things to have around the place, but.a cucumber vine, climbing up a porch pillar, produces as pretty blossoms as a honey suckle, and, besides, the cucumbers are good. to eat and excellent for the health. Sweet peas grow pretty flowers, but no prettier than the edible peas, where pods full of little green ‘pellets follow the dropping of the pea blossoms. A potato plant produces a beautiful dark green foliage and while and purple flowers wich a mild fragrance... Tomatoes were | grown as flowers for their rare beauty long before their fruit appeared property, whic Boston as ® per cent. of thervnl on on t xomet 0 make American elevated roads quie Much can be & moderate expense but no road has the pith make « beg The public must make the demand and eee thet it is carried even tf a city has to rnin¢ money to do It. The notse of our elevated rafl- inexcusable. It te a on the vitality of thore who have to live lines, We are twenty-five yecrs behind Germany now. Must it be thirty, or fifty years? oght not our present elevated structures to be torn down? certainly ought to, but it may take a long time to get It done. The on the table. They were called love apples. sonpearnd hy fall cisetbaite trate Ape NAL Deke tg hogan nicl) ian asted while traine are running? y been done elsewhere. The present tes p. A sold floor of concrete slipped in on the and then baast filed in about the How much wouid-mch # finor desdén the nolee from the tra where the thing wos tried, the total noise was reduced about 00 Except by raising these things one’s self it is Impossible te get their full fragrance and flavor. Wilted vegetables belong in the same class with stale eggs and ancient meat. They prevent starvation, but they are never relished by any one whose back yard has been put to its Proper use. Rut Gan the present sold floor darken a narrow street too much? ow tirt kept an reet mirht be Merht ed timbers and s' oe Kreat? above. the w seture could be tian under the present open | Perdaps on of the existing structure | Would the prese S stand the added weight of a eo! Engineers say[ tt would, because ‘the reduction in vtbrat | over rail Joints would compensate for t Increase In weight Ghe| Story of The Streets of New York. By J. Alexander Patten, Every back yard at this season should be producing every day in- An Old New Yorker expensive famiJy meals better than 2 five-dollar bill could buy at the | No. 12—Old-Time Merchant Princes. best hotels and restaurants. The lettuce would come to the table with ey a RCHANT princes built ali the fine houses wlong Fourtecuth street. It the moming’s dew not yet dried up~and the sparkling green unfaded M hasta a bl ateeet Rib the laying out of Union The radishes would appear with their red covering unwrinkled, The | — ees [to lower itch mest, spinach would be soft. The onions would still be dripping with natural fine trees, it was a leautiful und aristocratic street from Ninth avenue to Seo- SS ,’ ’ e [ond avenue. Wiliam I. Huverseyer, three times Mayor of New Y . . . A ° ‘ork, Dalit tears from their separation from the moist soil. A Mother S Part in Her Daughter S Love Affairs. By Helen Oldfield. handsome manston on Fourteenil street near Ninth avewsa. About Second ave: pe inte har thd ace AF ue, then fashtonable, particularly for the vld Knickertys ver fainilice, were t One of the greatest lacks of the New Yorker is a vegetable garden "T te woarcely too much to say that practically every Un-yseifish motiye in her interference, and therefore te ready to take whatever the|Gunthers, William M. Evarta, the lawyer, and the Canda family, whose ae Of the five boroughs Manhattan, from Harlem south, is the only one married woman Is 1.0 less dependent upon eome) match marrer may truth. Should the object of bis admiration have goog | ter was thrown from « carrixge coming from a ball and ts buried under @ grand % ER e o if tae} . nee 1 o her m Ttallan monument in Green 4c which need rdenless, Washingto! other woman for her chance of matrimony, All humsi-|taste in dross, the m: f maker calls attention co her taste, but at the san ‘ n ireonwood Cemetery ich go gard less. rs ashington Heights, the Bronx, Queens ity is interdependent, and women more #o than men. Tue time deplores her cxtravagance. If tne girl is pretty and bright her oud loo. On Wall. street, too, you would also meet a gentiemanty jooking man, with County, Brooklyn in all its single-house wards and Staten Island should day has not yet dawned which shall see every girl her own) and vivactty are praised, but it is fitimated Unet she Is disposed to flirt, and ner | sray hair and « most amiable face. This wae the merchant, Henry Grinnell, alee at this time be independent of the market gardener and the express com- sufficient chaperon, and until then she must be forced to incipient « rer in led to believe that he has narrowly cmcaped the wiles of ap/ of the firm of Grinnell, Minturn & Co,, who sent out an Arctic exppdition te : rely upon!the kind offices of mother and alnts, married errant coquetie search for Sir John Franklin, immortalized Dr. Kane and has his own name pany. sisters and friends, with whom she will be wive to keep on, © Far fromm 5 an eager’ matchmaker, the young married woman of the pres | inscrited on Grinnell Land. Many back yards could have £004 terins. ent day, !f ai! that Js suid of her be true, ls much more ii to hinder than ts In the sugar and coffes brokers’ offices of Fyancis BkidJy, down near Front chick. . Gome few fortunate girls are powsease! of mothers ho help the marriages of the young men who are her husband's friends and aeso-| street, is KR. L. Stuart, looking at the samples through his gold mpectacles. There ens, too. aro past mistresses in the art of matchnaking. Taty e clates, The ter is thal such friends have w delightful way of returning her|#re crawde of wholesale grocers whe live in the big houses up on Fourteenth Not roosters, but only hens and lelwure, money and tact; thelr daughters never meet any)own and her husband's how: rte of pleasant attentions, theatre] #treet. These men were ali prominent and wealthy, and next to the bankers and Pullets. Roosters do the crowing but the réght men, and consequently never make impruc se flowers, candies, and al! wble courtesies, would cease if tho sr pre, nee pesado to 40 with t early development of railroads 4 or 1) advised marriages. They 4o not er form inispiaced| GonoTs were | arry ning prop jes. iw Jay Gould was (he daughter of a wealthy Front st and make themselves obnoxious to attachments, for they are too oarefulty looked after to meet) 80 It y is to be expected that she shall exert herself and find suc: | erocer ¥ ¢ ore the neighbors. Hens living apart any on) whom they ought not to know But these are exceptional! cases; the) friend a wile unless © fe be some volte fur thon she ts ling to make | No man was more infiluentia) than. Jonathan Sturgie, whe ved on Yourteenth from masculine influence and -4eal- ousy get along in peace, laying their eggs In modest rivalry. Instead of throwing the ‘kitchen scraps away feed them to the hens. ‘American mother rarely has the time or the talent necessary to engineer or to|® sacrifice. Thus it happens that girls are by far more likely to-find friemts who| streat, and his firm, Sturgis. Bennett @ Co, wae one of the largest. ‘He won « & Instead of letting the back yard ng : ton to what married women suy of girls than to whes handkerchief or anything sirailar dipped into hot salt |" P2*er In the Dusiness world. ne ts Abtel A. Low, ofthe great \ea importing son beceme a menrber at his majority, The son married the beautiful daughter *) Bleccker street. Near enue and Washington Square, and having many Munteh, has devised what he believes to be « preserip- ent soasickness, He says thot a bandage made by fold- irretrievably injure and »: on pay much more o arrange her Gaugtter’s love aff and the gtr! of the periad Insists upon choos- oh ‘worth while,” as the phrase goes, among the older married women, who] Quiet and reflective man. looking after the office part uf the bésiness: He went ~ for herself. It nly tn her parents’ home that a girl ften are ready to do thelr best to furtrer m match between two people in whom| to bed early and got up early, and accunsulated ¢ fortune of honest dollars, with members of the opposite eex. More frequently is it at the houses of her|ti@y take @ friendly interest Chicago Tribune. Before there was any Produce Exchange or the many other busifiess ex- friends that she makes new acquaintances. and the more popular she is mith Sree grTnes A *« eemeneeneane chai the merchants inet every weekday at 2 o'clock at the Mervhanty Ex- , people who entertain the more chanoes she has af finding admire “ ‘l ” s change, later the Custom-Houre. Thp building wan erected-fur their use end As sorely abe Wes motes oF & videee MAFHAE free can contrive. teat al Water Cure” for Seasickness. owned by them, ‘They stood about in the grat rotunda, and numerous commer- grow up in weeds or-an ash heap, plant it in vegetables and fertilize it h other, A Clever, designing married woinan eastiy may de i . ai teats itanharen than f A. A. Low & Brother, neat in his attire, serious and dignified: the sec- 7 with the cleanings from the hen house. courage # man in the first stages of his admiration for an experienced girl. To|preper circulation of the blood, relieves the abdomen from pressure and checks |°"4 {# Horace B. Ciaftin, famous in the dry-goots trade, spare. active and intell- , 3 begin with, however vain he may be, he never imagines thal there can be e|ite corctesl anaemia. The patient should tie flat enchle buch sent, wearing @ soft hatg and the Uhird Is Frederiuk Gebhard, « Jmadseme, Teach the children to work in the garden. It is more fun than play- 3 —- - pac . x ‘ . ss fashionably dressed young man, but as far-seeing and successful ks the two Ing in the streets. Bs e older gnen. Old Frederick Gebhard came from Amsterdam, lived and did business | B H Methfessel in Rector street, and then purchased ot property for his etere at No. Then keep an account of the vegetables and eges. Buy them from| ] S é (@) ar em , Nessay street { ‘ : J ° irl shall meet the right men, #0 also can an offended matron ea. friend etal transactions took place there ruled by the strictest integrity. la girl's beet chances. Tt has been said wisely th Coming along the street are three men very different in appearance, but each quitable Assurance Bociety for a your wife and let her put the money in the savings bank great sum. He founded the firm which became Schuchardi & Gebhard when his YOUVE coT TO GET ME TO iw aie THE OFFICE IN TEN MINUTES) \ OR Vu BE oe of Thomas E. Davies, and their son is the present Frederick Gebhard. Both | and Claf in lived In Brooklyn. Low’s celebrated clipper, the Great Republie, rcked before his window on the East River. In the ered? pauios the nerve of aflin always did much for the dry-goods trade, ; : e was the grent factor in the stock market. He lived tn a big ' Union Square, and when be came_gown to Wall street with his bold was liable to make « fortune or be ruined before night, He was e ® sport tn the market and took with calmness whatever fortune came ) the victims of the market, who often oureed the name of “Juke” Fw the Biitor of The Py ‘On the street At one time an open “boerl of brokers was held Jn the rotundm of the Mer hants’ Exchange. A place was railed off and hung with red curtains, and {t was arly visited by people to watch the franmactions, that were then email, It 4 @ morchunt’s credit to be known aa e speoulator in stocks, | as nena 7 Fighting a Sea Serpent. YOUNG Scotmman named McNaughton claime to have bad an encounter A with sea serpent when he took @ boat out off Clevedon, Bomerast, Rag- nd. “L was conscious,” be says, “of a spimah and a sort of gurmte at the ar of the boat. I turned suddenly and uttered « cry of horror. Scarcely twenty yards away | saw-but, really, | don't Uke to desertbe it, It looked more like @ | huge mummy * you see in the British Museum. From what I saw ef the ereature it red about Len or twelve feet long. It bad large, sunken 2 of divense Kerms is tated by dirt BANITATHC ting, If not entirely’ o BROOKLYN GROCER san _ , A Be ieee - { j * eyes, enveloped tn a sort of hairy dap-I can't describe tt better. At Gret I felt ; » Bled, out petitions (0 ai es at moo HURRY! \\ THAT PASSED ; AN | YoU MAKE a kind of prtrifed sensation en bene “ rom the avenye T as 5 enna taht te im Late! JUST NOW MINUTES ‘ / ‘TOT ‘L was transfixed with terror emed so unreal, Then the snake ame ve itjone ve 6 aa 0 the her! ma s sulons be tan genmian oc LATE. BY | MR. HUSTLE? lke creature dived and disappesred. 1 was beginning to think it was @ officials, ¢ guid to have promised dees dhanah Gtk fee \_ YOVE WPanwar of my maginalion, & pure hallucination, when the water around ¢he beat seemed as to Grant the request. Rut wp to dete We see noUiing of the matter Hae this been dropped reader? STOREKEEPER | 7 the Bay \ bis parents re Mr Mw Hel» for Mek Ch a \ i to bulge and heave The same black mage fosted to the surface; the boat Segan A qoob to tone and whirl Puz2ut Au What happened afier I can only dimly recollect. ‘The fabh a ef 1 can only , y monater seemed Pips HT BUT to lea; f i | Prening World | Derby. Be meeting Lee . © Water ax stralgbt as an arrow for me. 1 hamtly know whet I Hot Air” wad Creaic PA Pay A el pee ST. IVE ONL did. 1 think I must haye ducked and creshed the oar Into the ereature, AS amy T gm tn the grover 4 ino {atreet, 1 think thet the child suiterine ~~ AY IT When 1 rogaine eT managed to clamber tute the beat. Mby ter email way, bai dave eum aider- | from consumption, « nally rible ny was nowhere in sight. In w dazed condition, scarcely knowing whas pile loos, whieh I could H) afford, by | inty looked afte | wae doing, | succeeded in reaching Portishead, ome wo Bw 4 pst i A ain claws ie tp A while 1 ! ——+*¢ women wil ame “ te ‘ 1 we wi i usinied wiih the x “ps at } Duels and Return tickets, Butengr to handing f eof Ny E at ue WO duelists y Whing the early train for Fonteinebleau, their het air concerning the ow Jolm whe ~ 4 “L piece of # e A ret Aeip, 1 the Qiet ductet to the teat Abele husbends are, supposed to have. PAUL agen me," seid the second man quietly, “Aba.” tiustere® Mite morne that aren 9rd0r Will | woreiery of Cone 3 other, “you are afraid you wan't come back, are you? As forme f aware ee given “On try.” Now. 4 man of oT ut Chatliy Ongesian ake & return “T never do," said the agcond man. "I alwayw take iny FOtUam ball from Uke dead man's pocket.” thes s| o> sieewn enn gets trea r = meen cen aftord Wo Rite Wen Booty