The evening world. Newspaper, January 31, 1900, Page 6

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et ONE THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 31, 1900. = A : ar Soe Slorld. #LOVE STORY the Prem Pudi! Company, 1 to @ PARE ROW, * “ 9, ° peamunes br ning Company, . ererrerrseeeee TQ Beginners: Be Nat: and kk tr eteresseeseese (et Che Peet-Of820 at New Tork as Becont-Chase Mall Metter, , , Onmng 2 natural tn your pose. jand keep that stare up throughout the whole song. ) done this before, then try it at once and sep hew you HRee ANGLED BARTS . ‘ole Du ta t attitude while singing | music, or, If you have none, we 4 jon't st as if you were ne r m a WEDNESDAY, JANU. 31, 1 Foret Af YOU ae ten ned and your nerves | panist, and then at your audience, all tn @ natural your shoulders drawn high and your hands twisted | (/)T Rae been @ mistake,” said Nathan Tauseis, “It oF if you keep your muscles strained and y SSS | ' way, as If you were talking, together and your arms behind your back, pe, Pag a pif a P: omy see how i C call relegation must come, and| Don't get excited over your high notes and the runs,) Don't throw your head so far back that tt gives a Us ove made it. But the sooner we i VOR AD ye a wea en sector iy tecl very fatigued. Whereas | because if you do you will not do them half eo well| strained look to your throat, Poti af Ay tape pperetore eg erste as Madly . ——-— - = — | : 7 | —— -_—— Don't swell the muscles up in the neck and over the . +A Givorce te not necessary. T shal! ; iC roe ed bane an: y0u wall Gr stand you would have Pst o’| have\no further*tse for matrimony, and, as for you . DAILY HINT FROM M'DOUGALL eet pean ties coat Now ee qmMELD When te: sauslbe nN It la Impossible for the concert singer to take’any|! know your scruples much too well to think that y ig ile (oles are Caw GARE Ad heat does not % other attitude than the conventional one, 1 suppose, | WOuld eqeribe the wife of another man during sive out Its best s when you have squared your holding the music with one hand and looking out ag|'!fetime, “Now, I have @ proposition to make. houlders too far back. ; the audience. But the singer tn a private house or in} “lt ome of us take the child and the other the MTeeah yourselt how to let ge on@eur wusetee. | the family clrale, 1f sho feels she cannot stand quietly | home. You are to choose. If yor take Claribel, then , 4 i f and yet naturally, may take some attitude which will| !@tve me the books and pletuges and the other things You don’t know what an excellent help it wili always ve be to t y in ole but in everything else. give her an easy pose. | we have cared for. ‘ou choose the home I will take 9 to you, not only tn alnging, but in everything our daughter and go a Mary Taussig looked about her at the familiar, beautiful room. Her face grew white i til take the child,” whe sald. “I choose Clart- PO ee ky we) Ten years later Mary Taussig and her daughter en- | tered the Auditorium one Friday afternoon for the pleasure of to a concert by the Chicago orchestra. With the frank disregard of beauty, which the young can afford to assume, the giri ha costumed herself 1n Diack plumes face; her little chin was hidden tn her sombre furs, and the delicate hand with which je pressed down her theatre chair was gloved tn black. This slender hand caught the casual giance of the gentleman occupying the next seat, and he followed ~ 2 . it with his eyes till it Tested on the owner's Jap. ‘4 i > Tt was not till after the music had begun that he chose to lift his eyes. When he beheld the face of the ° 7% young girl next him a strange and comprehending Might stole into his face, and his fixed regard caused THIS, TOO, 18 WRONG. the girl to return his look. For a momei perplexity Smile, be pleasant, laugh if you can and use your For instance, she may put her arm on the back of a ‘The skirt ts made with a tucked flare at the bottom, chair or lay her arm across the piano and lean @ little which {s attached to the bottom of the skirt. The 4 You are not going to kill any one You are not imtent againet it These things will help her to keep an easy | of the skirt {s tucked at the top and flares a¢ the upon some dreadful deed, and yet, I assure you, many position. tom. The trimming on the skirt is made of narrow ® } = | young indies look that way as soon as they begin to If you find that you cannot sing even one song | folds of silk muslin, The skirt fastens on the side of . sing. through without getting @ Iittle nee the throat the back. It is made over a foundation skirt of silk. certain dificult cadensas that need a cer wetting tired, then you have not learned to place your The corsage !s made of the cloth, tucked in clusters. Aguinalée—Can't you lend me three or four of | There are voice rightly tain and verment of the head, that even @ ‘The cape is made of lace and folds of silk. Tt te fe (hese hepics, Com! . eee e « will have te give, but ome will Go to a teaoher and see to it that the tones are prop- shed on the bottom with a band made of folds of the Som Fast-Secey, nog Ahead pone thae idk make the expression on her face natural and mot as erty placed ‘afore you stay much. Thera is something muslin. ‘Tho vest is made of muslin and trimmed with y Gt working, They are ng @ long-vel + | if she were running at you to frighten you. wrong If you get hoarse. A properly placed volce, u velvet ribbon. The collar is made of lace and velvet 4 es ee 7° % No singer needs to make u face at all. to sing, and they will-not enjoy st as much, poser A baie Reet ville the vente ssa of fatigue eae ee eee ee i TY.| 4 must open her mouth very wide, and eften| Behind your plano have a mirror, and whenover you | hard singin hout vho' r e. es KENTUCKY S SHAME AND DUTY. tein tna tlle at the corners, but she can learn to do| practise look at yourself in the mirror. It will not take you very long to learn from a good —-_——,— GOEBEL took the worst possible | this without a bad effect, and you who know the mus!-| You will not like your looks when singing, and so, | teacher how to place the tones, and then you will be step. when he insisted on being | al part of singing should learn this phfsteal part at) little by little, you will learn to smile and to nod} on the right track and can go on slowly by yourself, if This merry joke anent the war y ones your head and to give a meaning to your words. If| you are not going to st@dy for a long time. Makes policemen laugh until they drop= Y Geclared Governor of Kentucky in spite)" oo. ag your eyes with a stare on nothing you have been singing a long time and have never JOHANNA GADSKI “Why t# a roundaman ike a Boer?’ . _ospeeaie? mei permis: See — ———__—__— ee NS ge Because his forte is ‘Spy on cop.’ ” Wallet Goebel’s body yesterday went | iis pte tetebetetet 8 hd eae amappepolonp ney HOW TO WIN A LOVER. » sae os By all bistory and by all men of even mind ae-|t FIRST AID TO bi wodeee - @hesination is classed as one of murders most ve i 2 HE ) dmpicadle forms. It is the resort of the fanatic WOUNDED HEARTS. aeeeeetee By Laura Jean Libbey. To 7! ‘ @F the coward. It never settles a principle. In (Copyright, 1990, by The Preas Pubilahiog Oompany, New York World ) EVENING WORLD: ‘Week's case as that in Kentucky it unsetties every- © not Jet the subject "Man" be your whole study by night and by day, my dear girls. If you are tne 04-006-064-46-64-6640000000000000000000 thing that the State should hold dear. Saye It Every Time. troduced to a bentsome young man who ils exactly your idan of Weal ze wouls His! tees i aianeeaa’ 1 way of @ hustend, do not let him know ft by Jook, word or act; a jorieal Conundrem. 4 ee” pene law and an honest public! Sie ettghiont attempt to attract him, To the Kéitor of the Evening World _ Gaatiment. dance by these forces, coupled ‘To win n lover you must not let him see thet you want him. You must be your natural, own, sweet Here js a conundrum I made up: Who fs the great ‘with. pationce, would bave sett, and not affected. figurehead of mediaeval history? Answer: GRarie- magne (or Charles the Great). A. G. RAYHARS, eae - a “BUT YOU MUST COMB, TOO, MARY." Question Worthy of Oyrane, —$——$— $$ | Fo the itior of the Byening Wortt: fhe is certainly inconsidernte of your feelings. Almost had its way with her. ‘Then an expresston of awe |_ Wet medical reader be inform by {$ these és any, Fi in fany girl would realize that the Jeam agreeable sud- Almost frightappeared in her eyes. Then, quietly | “#Y to teduee the alee of ones mumet | ~The same spirit of violence which led to the) sect ame could Sud tw talk dbout would be her affes- and naturally, the two knew themselves for father ? ’ . _ ‘shooting of Goebel fed avo to the recent public one man ta her co with hie rival, and daughter meeting after ten years. ; ff T were In your plliee T should not break ‘The music had changed. The orchestra was giving pemutnte pe " as Abbreviation, bout this girl, but should look for a young | to the people the most reverent thoughts of a master ning World: at leam concentrate her mind upor | True and sweet and comforting was the serene major fgg gyal bedhee en arise I wae paying her a call harmony, In the trembiing young girl in the sable | MAU J. ni te heasieent-as poy eerie Lame garments St awoke @ world of tenderness, ‘The long- | Sf THOMAS R. MILAM neg nage eivéme gti wie det, Love tank comcrees form ia her outed imagtoation, at 1 took coi form in her ela ation rare bigeds or iim, It was her father that sho wante—her father’s ove, | || Twa reese teens ‘Wantea. other young man in Ne | her father’s guidance, his authority! She slipped the | To tke Bitter of Tee Brenig Workt: 1 es oe 8 ges, | Feconstructed the prevalent {dea of “honor” and] pur (he aside ap a giddy girls letter alate | glove from her warm end quivering fingers and laid woe bat, Would ie et and reader kindly euggest put wut for good the toreh of the lynchers by fire. t love me. have! them softly—softly as a kiss—within the hand of the too dresses, something to be made at home, not @x- Not seen him for mont man beside her. ive, different from the usual “peasant gtrt” 4 see fear Lathe aa eee eee The concert ended in thme. The three arose. They |Pensive,, CUerens, ot TR ble so I can hardly write 1 will wateh faced each other. The crowd passed along the aisles, POLITICS VS. THE CHILDREN. jfaver hoping to wet sore ‘ndvice ALK Seabee Tenens,” seid His Wile, “Se WMA 795 Safety phone. : If‘matters are as bad as this I think I should hunt and needs you. Take her home with you for « time.” @ ! are lynx-eyed City Magistrates who of the Evening World: iy up this young man. You have not given me any ink- “But you must come, too, Mary. Come, life is going | Te the Batter “a9 \ i] are able to vee politics in The Bvening ling as > pay former relations with him. 1 cannot | 7 75} ike sale ot eure fast. Let us be at peace, What were the old feu@s?! Having read of the io seiiaent ot ee ee World's demand for « separate police court | very well advise you how best to regain him if neither Do nut do your utmost (o Keep up a ceuverdation for the sake of entertain: T have forgotten what they were all about. I only re- | of @ soda-water steol siphon I w for child offenders. you nor I has a ghost of an iden where he is ing him. Let him do his share of the talking. member. how fonely Yam.” which would prevent such accidents in the future. Remember, a constant buss of sinall talk ts Wearying. Let there be mo- Who am I,” sald Mary Taussig, with those divine |The Board of Hesith has power to aypoint inspectere The extra court, It is declared, will call “Ti rena ments of restful silence In which you can look bright and smiling and no doubt smatetlan Of the master still ringing in her soul, “that |to have these. ¢oda-water firms test their steel siphons for two more Magistrates. These appoint- SHE Is DOING WELL. be a thousand times more attractive than when you are talking I should refuse to walk the path appointed for my |to withstand from %0 to 0 pounds of hydraulic pres- eas might not be of “our party. It iy not every girl who {s @n entertaining conversationalist, and few men teat” sure once every three months, I am sure if this was . expect them to be, to tell the plain truth fo they went ‘out together—those three—onto the|done never would there be an accident of such her- The girl who has a constant stile wreathing her lips is quite as bad as the street, and so home—Chicago Tribune. ribie nature. The poor drivers are in constant feas q girt who talks incessant! —— = —_—_ of their lives. an walaries the Magistrates are undivided by senti- meat of politics. - OUR GREAT NEED OF PEACE T is the delight of the unquaijing orators to de- scribe the growing glories of our country at the opening of this new century. It is our opinion that their finest descrip- tions fal! short of the reality and that their poldest predictions will pretty surely ing behind the actual experiences. ‘We would remind all the unquaiiing orators, Yowever, of atbing that many of them seem to /@erget. This is, that the maintenance of --.ce ‘Wit all the world is of essential importance to our “My pudding hasn't turned out well to-day, ma ever mind, Katie, iii teii my husband that it" ‘ery well, madam; he'll think you are improving in cooking!"—Fliegende Binetter. , _ We do not want a belligerent republic or a ram- gant or gory republic. We do not want our young ‘mee to be slain in battle or to slaughter any other 4 Do just as you would at home, before your own brothers end sisters. eTalk unassuraingly, as you would talk to them. Laugh !f you; do not do so If It does not. ‘There |s quite another important tagater to remember, too, my dear giris, and that ts to dress unobtrusively. Of course you long to be as stylish as your girl friend who ts with you, but the Kenerallty of young men—the kind worth winning for a husband—see more style and beauty tn piainness than in furbelows. If you see that the young man is more Attentive to the girl friend who ts with you, be sweet, Indylike and agreeable'tmstend of showing resentment, for really, my dear, you must remember that he has a perfect right to admire the him the best. one who ple: He tay as much If you ye aid. many prettier girls cross his path. man who they consider would make @ good partner. Let the man always be the pursuer In love's chase, Our drummers no more torid tales are reciting, And nom save their breath for the task of Trust-fighting, ly, her fnte, and not yours, #0 do not feel alarmed at your apparent fatlure to attract him weet, molest, agreeable, natural, and not forward, when your Mr. Right comes along you will find what a sight effort It will be-if any—to attract him and bold him by your side, no matter how ‘The failure of girls nowadays ts that they make too much of a business of endeavoring to attract a anything really amu poeple. We do not want our citisend to be bur- : with the taxes of war. need all the available American energy for up and enriching our great country, for prosperity and for enlarging | Weifare which, in the long run, is) Writing from Dawson, In the Klondike, to an old friend tn Canada, the Rev. Father Gen- @reau, O. M1, says: “On the feat of the Holy Rosary I cel. ebrated the thirty-eeventh an- niversary of my priesthood. On that occasion | was presented by our Cathoile citizens with « Wea ie Reoeteat ent’ bh rage og a0 Sol ‘bay ‘This question now the world of sportsmen vexes. A $500 ROSARY OF GOLD NUGGETS. with nuggets of pure gold taf thelr rough form as extracted from the ground. The rosary, which 1 have biessed and used onthe last day of the month of the Rosary, is worth adout ~ $0). 1 intend to send i to the RN A MAN OF LETTERS. When the first quick-trancit trimway Reaches Jersey in a minute, ‘The much-despised commuter Most distinctly will be in it. oo “DISCOURAGED JACK.” Will the young man who wrote a letter Bvening World with the abov- caption please the editorial rooms at his earliest convenience? g° ef W took me and the pupp and Little albert out shaten in the park the other Day, When he came home in the afternoon and Teld us what on his mind maw sed: “It seems to me kind @ Foolish that a man ef your 0 go Out abd get Chilled thru and mebby or catch the New moanyeb be gained by it, and you have a fambly te support.” “Maw,” paw saya, “It te One of the graitest draw backs cf my life thet you always keep thinking I am 8 & i i eg it q7F iby GEORGIE’S PA ON SKATES. offin a piece of sticky paper that I ever witnessed, an@ the pupp went out on the ice to help along the exelte- ment, and I got mixed up with paw’s feat, About the

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