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The Evening Pudtmed Dally Mxcopt Sunday by the Press Pubtivhing Company, Nos, 68 te 6% Park Row, New York (7 P0SEPA PULATIEN. Pree, 9 Ran 196 Sire, 2, ANGUS BTLAW, Boo-Trens,, $01 Wheat 11TH Mtreet, Dntered at the Post-OMoe at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. @edecription Rates to The Hvening | For England and the Continent an@ World for tho United States All Countries in the International t Postal Unton. ‘and Canada. rm 07% 280 35 One Year One Mont! VOLUME 49 -NO. 17,2381 THE BLUE RUIN PLEA. "= ‘Ap usual when they come to the close of a campaign, the Repub- Ficans are falling back upon the plea that their success is necessary to-the-salvation of industry and the promotion of business. All a@ther issues give place to this-menace of prostration, idleness and distress under Democratic rule. It signalizes the end of argument and reason and the substitution therefor of intimidation and terror. Of course, if it be true that commercial and industrial prosper- Sty8depends-upon the election of Republicans to office, there can never’ dena change of party government in this country without inflicting Bandehip upon millions, and so, while conditions remain as they are, wurelections must be mere walk-overs for the party in power. Under soch-circumstances true party government must cease, and the nature ofthe oligarchy that takes its place will depend to a large extent mpon the-moderation of the victors. By its own incredible folly the-Democratte party has been placed gore than once in a false position-as respects the financial interests | @ the people, but at its best as well as at its worst it has had to meet this accusation. Not once in its history, however, has it had fm its leadership a man more rash than the one who now from the| Presidential office dominates the Republican party. Yent, erratic, belligerent, vain, partial and despotic, Theodore Roose- welt is more than a match for the wildest Democrat that ever lived. If in this campaign the Democrats had made this man and his | misdeeds the issue instead of attempting in a contemptible fashion to profit by;them, the terror at this time would not be tr their own ranks. Tee FOLLY OF A PROHIBITIONIST. f® In one of his New York speeches Mr. Chafin, the Prohibition | wandidate for President, made the chaste remark: “I can tell ao Republican as far as I can see him and a Democrat as far as I can smell him,” whereupon there was great merriment on the part of the | audience. Thronghout'the South and West the Anti-Saloon League, which fas accomplished more for temperance in ten years than Prohibition has achieved in fifty years, is in control of men who resent language of this sort and who win support by appeals to Democrats as well as to Republicans. In fact, the heaviest blows that the liquor interest has ever received in this country have fallen recently in strong Dem- ocratic territory. The explanation is a simple one. The Anti-Saloon League is enforcing a moral idea in a business- like way. It keeps out of politics. It has only one enemy, and that is strong drink. It does not blackguard the people whom it seeks to convert. Perhaps after another fifty years or so the political Prohibitionis: will get sense enough to profit by its example, Lawless, vio-| World Daily Magazine, Saturd ay, | | By Maurice Ketten. } } | The New York Girl—No. 3. The Chorus Girl Flees in Terror for Her From the Walla- Walla Rough-Hous Dopey h 1 8 go pey says that n't wear no clothes, advising others waste of ti drink and you a } by Roy L. McCardell. rou rus G Sow think I hasten to place a bet,” said the ¢ —_—__—_++ NEVER LOSES HIS VOICE. Many public men will speak.in whispers for some time after the close of this campaign. Instances of voice failure are numerous. Most of the popular oratore go about between speeches swathed in bandages and blankets like race horses between heats. ure cures | for laryngitis, bronchitis and other throat troubles have been put to unexampled tests, and in spite of them all the best that the spell- to make a that is far from impressiv This state of affairs vesults from the attempt by amateurs to get! into Mr. Bryan's class } the more he talks much he taxes his In before. binders can do is squeak as a tance campaigner. In his case the easi al cords work. No matter how | are stronger the next day than ever! ions; he never loses his voice, He may lose « —_—_—_++ FOR MR. CHANLER’S INFORMATION, Mr. Chanler commi was carried to success was the S government by| granger movement a generation ago and Democratic votes, The que Could the State, should be told that what he ca ion began in the by tion involved regulation of railroads, which created a © rigtwte and privileges, regulate Nestvest took the affirma- nemorable decision of the Supreme Court corporation, investing it with valu it? In the tive on this at Washington the pri tioned, missioners owes Democrasic in main the Democrats of t and iss ina neiple was established and is no longer ques- Every State having a board of railroad and warehouse com- the t to this movement, which and sc ~ ROLICEMAN VS ROLIGEMAN, s0 many Y V ew Was essentially its ipapirati n ‘ope. form, police m in plain clothes ¢ policemen ir that the some reason w! ally get the wo’ carry them: in vniform x M@ partment out of w > muke detective Letters From the People. Snake Experts, Alc To the} One Bronx Zoc Quite a « threw a sma MR, ye Au Area Query » held on, but.ci the smaller sr boldly thrust age and, wit deadly 6 front ¢ Bret thrown | @epe 20 most cour the x} tell | you think {t' f that tine “” I don't stop long and talk to you, kid, “but don't you belleve it, because nobody nes continue hard hastening to place any bets. Not that I’ve turned ov al t key to District-Attorney Jerome, like Honest John De ne dr & or eat good and the rest have, but because I ain't got no -the-Tar to bet, and you can bet on that “But I'm in terror of my life from the Rough House Soubrette from Walla-Walla, Didn't you hear about her?) She got Mazie Meee put out of ‘The American Idea had an awful fight in the dressi cab, what the-Lush ndidate, © called the dining Larry hat would going to vot “Anyway, ¥ malitecme Trap stage manager said somebody had to be ything to eat on the premises, 1s all mussed up by Mazie, because she, a Native Daughter of \ hi ention, MeKnight Fly squab from Oregon put it all over her. ort he's sure of getting two or three dollars out Life e Soubrette : n We have company Dopey McKnight 1s supposed to sleep in the dining | out of the habit of sleeping and he says {t's such @j:nan when you sleep you don’t eat and you don’t to get plenty of sleep he says they They would want to wear good ing. So that would put the tailors sh Larry, our fi cabman, sald it in his cab. He charges before they get in the so, and 80 he ain't room &f the flat, 1f there ever was Dopey McKnight working he thinks he'll make his of {t. It's an original Say, The very next day the Rougn House Sou etously | idea ody don't wise the files I guess tt will work all right attacked, with gestures, another girl in the same Dope yatent fly trap is made out of a parrot cage. He puts a lump of and gave her a black eye. Then the fistic wonder from Walla-Walla had to walk! sugar in the bottom, beside a lighted candle. There 1s a door up at the top of the plank, because in that show the girls get done up bad enough by the puce ke with a mat in front of it with the word ‘Welcome’ on It, so \that's set, without ladies of the company doing the ‘Both members of this club’ thetr feet when they come in, You know flies carry contagious act. helr fe has given tt @8 one that top of a flight of stairs leading down to the s uight, because when the fly starts you blow out the candle and jerk ck ou know about that? you heard the latest, n't know? that's the point “I've been offered her place and costumes, and the lady puxilist out that she will regard the party that succeeds her in the slow scabs her job; and then— “So that is why I don’t linger long. Not thet I'm afraid ¢ unladylike to fight? “T've been fine educated and swell brung up, and no newc Walla {s going to get newspaper notices that may bring her s wrecking my puffs on Broadway Mamma de Branscombe advises me to stay home herself? The little snare wherein we live {# not a home in Mamina de Brans combe's eyes. It's just a ladies’ waiting room. A place to use a telephone and to sit around till somebody comes up to take you out to dinner. "IT remember once when we was showing Old Man Moneyton the flat and he asked, ‘Where {8 your dining room?’ And Mamma de Branscombe says, ‘Jack's or Churchill's." And she meant it, too. "You want to hive that, kid, if you ever come up to the ho and see nothing put on the table and cut except a deck of cards and where nothing !s ever carved except beer. of her, but don't Har ‘What Why don't she stay home Ah, says the Youth's Companion. ing his good. ecise meaning {n a certificate that When I say generally,” he replied, a 64 SAY BUBB! our Lignt ? i GEE! Did BA SWELL GAR 1 FOUND, WISH 1 HAD A matcn ! nop! LOOKIN FER. Ont mesa t oH AATS | BARE Noe, WHAT'S OF MA. MAN OAAID \ ave men f raven \ His brother-in-law, Dr. of Peterhouse, ano..ier famous English school, wrote to him inqutr. I mean not particularly,” $54000O630O000" SPeLPOPRPOCRE EIT? S the fly gets In the door he's standing on a landing place at the | possible tl Dopey's fly trap can only be | gar. to come down the steps to get at the stairs away and the fly falls fe a needle?’ ape eee aeeeaiarnen His Precise Meaning. retort {8 credited to the late Dr. Haig-Brown, master of Charter- Porter, the a boy's character was ‘generally’ mister, wilt You GIVE ME + A MATCH? HOLLY GEE !L HERE'S A BOK OF MATCHES IN ME pocnet } October 24, n9 08s | ( | rae TEt. | The Police Force Has Been Pretty Much in the Lime light of Crime in Our Fair City Recently Mr. Jerome Oraws the Line Between Forgery as a Crime and as Ore of the Fine Arts. The Biggest Crowds at Tor Day's Cup Race Will Be Found Around the Curves and Dangerous Places, ) | N READING ; to light a cop appointed in 189% who had, about how been up on charges sixty-one times and District-At- | was still"n uniform. On the same day, veteran captain who hadn't @ adil mark against him was fired from the a partment because he is fat. We must f infer from this that it Is more of a 4 crime for a policeman to be fat than It jis for him to stand trinl on charges aix- y-one times in twelve years, In the meantime thieves are working in the elty with the aid of automobiles. It looks to be only a question of time when he meant when he | 4 crook contemplating a hold-up will talked about "Geor- | a avertise it and sell tickets to apeotas gia pine free from ‘| sap." | “That,” explained the man who was getting his package, “was a simile, used by Mr. Jerome to draw the line between forgery as a crime and forgery as one of the fine arts, We learn from Mr. Jerome, who is a Christopher Columbus in landing on new phases of crime, that there may be forgeries which rank with muste, painting, sculpture and a lum- ber yard. | "Mr. Jerome made plain to the Grand Jury, which yearned to indict Mr. Mc Curdy, that when Georgia pine is so! a torney Jerome gen- a tly pried an indiet- off ment from Richard MeCur the life insurance president,” re- marked the laun- dry man, “I have been puzzled to distinguish what LonLID OTROS 0 that the candidates are begins ning to ask questions of each qther,”” as betng without sap the pureh man w no kick coming if he finds his pine as | “that repeate sa f motst as a watermelon, because ‘with- | of a Gen, McPim, # supposed to out sap’ is simply a case term—a term have fought, and died a few times of art, derived from a saw mill. in the Civil War. Occasionally some one “Consequently, a case term in con- | would ask this certain party what Gen nection with a forgery may change it and the eertain party om a forgery into a cross between one of Muritlo's masterpieces and the front a lidn't do, Task you? Wt Rerane g nd analyze the answers rs 4 You 1 y ofthe City Hall, In this particular case | bit Cup race. If you should happen to a fort y was committed in king a nder our that way y eve ‘ urn to the Insurance department—that {On the favor the {t seemed to the Grand Jury that a You w F Seon (y ery had been committed. But Mr g the straight stretch by the grand | Jerome, with the able aid of a te Where’ (hey can see ihe (cara ul of certified accountants, dug out two by at seventy or eighty miles an ords of art,’ the same words being A 8 off-net.? ; It follows that If a forgery ts sufti- ciently artistic {t cannot be a forger However, all district-attorneys are not as artistic as Mr. Je a many « 2, Insp H sh desire to punish a criminal, might be unable to discern the subtle distinction 0 n Jan artistic and an inartistte fc ) IT make myself plain “as plain as bosom of a dress replied the laundry man, “Or at seven tas plain as Mr. Jerome made bim- ‘fale. giant self to the Grand Jury.” al anly “Speaking « ry,” went on the each who was ing. his Ae i } | jevelopment of crime in wee EES Halt a dozer are un- Johnny's Kick. or charges of grafting, one is under in- SATOR LA FOLLETTE dict r murder, a couple have been ‘ | caught keeping saloons, and scarcely a pa by that does not mark the t ful effort of some overworked har- hess bull or elbow to shoot up a saloon innocent bystander, Can it be t the police force is affected the hent? Perhaps they may be In- fluenced by the forest fires? Maybe it ig the long continued drought? “A police trial a few days ago brought jor an Jucked Lanse » Kles OOSE that can be siipped on coats and off without dimeculty are ones that little girls are sure to like, This one, in ki- mono style, 1s graceful on and attractive as well as simple in the mak- ing. As Mlustrated, it is made of serge with | trimming of broadcloth, but chiffon ts liked broadcloth for late sum- mer and between sea- son time pongee iv charming for imme- diate wear, and a little later the same model will be admirable made from slightly heavier ths lined throughout with silk, For the trimming any contrast- ing banding {# app: priate, either material cut Into strips or braid as may be liked, The quantity of ma- | terial required for the medium size (six years) 1s 01-4 yards 27 8 yards 44 or 62 inches wide, with | bait yard any width for | bands, Pattern No. | ut in size Mf four, sh GOD4 ts for girls and eight eare of Child's Kimono Coat—attern No. 6094, | ¢ llow Caller send by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN+ te YON PABHION BUREAU, No. 182 Wast Twenty-third street, New Obtain York Send 10 cents In coin oF stamps for each pattern erdered 13 meese IMPORTANT—Write your name and addresr plaialy, 194 ale |} Patterns, ways specify size wanted. 4