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— a , THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING FEBRUARY @, 1900,” THE DAYS time | LAURA FEAN LIBBEY | ™ bul e StoRY take sides with the one or the other. When a father endeavors to induce a child to Heaven pardon the parent who 1s responsible| take sides against the mother who faced death SHE WAS ANOTHER’S WIFE. (6p BEABTLY state of affairs, and ne way out of for such a state of affairs! A child sitting in| to give him life, stood with brave feet on the brink Judgment on the acts of one whom he should look] of eternity’s dark, rolling river, looking anzious- up to {n reverence and love! ly, mutely into God's face, who stood on the op- ft that I can see.” Richard Kasten rend fer Tt ts cruel for a father to point out to a child) posite shore, to ese if He signalled her to to the third time the letter in hie head, that the mother whom God intended that be| Him or stay om earth yet a little all “t almost wish that 1 had never agreed ¢0.Aumame * saould revere next to the angela has even one| for that child's sake, through the husban¢—I re-| mother bas been called home to heaven. er arta wea So L| (omnes, 190, 07 eo eg Sopa Conmay, New Yeh! biemish in her disposition—one flaw in her fudg-| peat that the husband who would turn that ehfld's| Ob, prize your wives while you have them, good| ;, needed me, and he HENBEVER I eee a lad rade to his mother | ment. loyalty and love from that mother is worthy of| husbands! ughter, I wonder if she {s the same haremeenrum the sad thought invariably comes to my| Honor your wifo in the presence of the children. | the just anger of Almighty God. her, though yon make thousands. ory | ew senile abe Wee 6 ey re ee sat 1 he red: miné: “Doss her husband love her? Has She may not flatter you and strive to please your| *" Tere es enic “aent perpeatiy he eet the right example of reverence before the vanity; she may tell you solid truths and warn| weil, et any rate he had three days of grees che boy?” you of dangers, and keep to herself bow dearly aid not arrive until the 10h, If not, the grave fauit tee at is door. The at- sue loved yoo—even though the first blush of mosphere of a household has everything to do faded; aye, and maturity has settled with the development of {ts inmates, and one need which is the beginning of olf age: not expeet to find true, loyal and loving children one this side of heaven who has brought up under the influence of irascible or bick- ering parents. Disputes should be carefully avoided in the presence of children, lest the evi] crop of seeds sown in moments of unreason should take root in the child-heart, bringing forth in after years a harvest of noxious fruttage that {s ttoo strong and deep-rooted to be eradicated. No matter how deep the resentment, aflence is worth {te weight In gold in many crises, When the passions are stirred with bitter anger many HRVER PORGHT TBAT TAM OMA 38 TANMR Ore sae ae & hasty word {s uttered that time will never en-| Kemember the performing of this gracious duty the children be brought up from their tn- tirely wipe out from memory‘s page without leav-/ will deeply influence the life and character of the| fancy to love their mother next to God, and bet- ing a blot, no matter how sincere the after-regret| child. You must respect and revere the chtld's| ter than the angels, It reste with the father to may be, mother if you expect that child to revere you In| teach them this by his noble example and precept. Calmness in eritical situations should be culti-| the after years. What child would have the temerity to be rude vated, for it will prove in the end a shield not to} When children are grown to manhood and wom-| or unkind to a mother !n the face of such an ex- be despised. anhood, think you they will have respect and filial | ample? Never forget that the child ts looking om curt-| love for the father who abused the dear mother! ‘The sons and @aughters of the man who re- ously to note which one conquers in the wordy| who bore them? No! A thousand times no! Every | spects his wife—aye, honors and loves her—rarely, war, fuch act committed stands out bold and dark | if ever, go wrong. EPA caorio. Ig Me, Pog Retiiing Conoey. @ we © PARK ROW, the Pest-O@ice at New York os Second-Ctage Mat! Satter, Honor your wife tm the presence of e children, Remember the perform- ime of this gracious duty will deeply im@nence the life and character of the ehila. i E ag FE ea ao y i harsh the world used them; no matter how many ups and downs they had in life. Thotr memory of her is the bright, sunny spot in their tempest-tossed lives, They are kind and chivalrous to all women for her sake, and when iney marry they are sure to treat their wives kindly and considerately, re- membering the example of a noble father who did not err tn thf respect in the performance of his loving duty, : Living, aye, and in ¢ying, there will rise before 1m the memory of that beautiful, hcly vision he ‘v Ho may have no say in the matter, but quite as| against the father as a fit reason why he is nbt; ‘There {8 always a mother’s noble tnfuence Palremarernt soon as he is able to comprehend he 1s sure to| entitled to thelr courtesy or love. | is and guiding them, even after that ' THE GIRL I LOVE. si HEE ¢frt T bore te young ant tain “I HAVE BEEN MARRIED SIX Moore? = © on his @esk. And Easton gased tn spesdhiess curpries at the Indy who entered. Gone were the abundant trewn freckies, ené gene the flaming red hair. ston flushed guiltily as he studied the ewest taen, xeuse me," he sald, forcedly. “I 4i@ net expest $3] you nad changed eo much. “Am I so different?’ she smiled. Time passed rapidly through the ment tine's arrival in New York, and Easton grew turbed by the fact that he missed not call often at his office, He did was in love—men of his type were | things. And yet the fact that she ithe chaps to pay her attention gave him of comfort. Standing fn the ballroom of the betel Be eagerly for hc.. Crowds of pretty, gayly-gowned mer girls passed before him, but until e hearty BN. WaUCcHoPe’s GRAVE Chapin,” he eald, as the AT MACERSFONTEIN. EAKING OF WOMAN'S TEARS.|BUTTERFLIES ARE i, THIS MAN CAN PROLONG LIFE. EADERS who followed The Evening World's Teports of Mr. Weeks’s late speech in KePT RS Pets. the Molineux trial were powerfully moved, beyond doubt, by the lawyer's masterly periods and word pictures. But they must have been even moro strongly affected as they read of the tears shed by the young wife of the prisoner, Mrs. Molineux wept for the man she jloves—the man whose life is in the balance, In j@@e heart of one witnessing or reading of her | \wifely grief the hope inevitably sprang that thie | young prisoner, accused of dreadful crime, yet the evident object of a woman's whole affection, might at least for her cake be found worthy of freedom. 4 woman's tears! like the rain, they fall for D) (he just and the unjust! What Roland Molineux May not owe to them in the end of things, who | ‘eam tell? 7% . @ince the oun first began to shine by day and the stars by night there has been no purer, better, mightler form of baptism than that administered by woman with her tears. Through this sacred ite all the ages have had braver soldiers, sweoter- ginging poets, truer lovers, moro carnest workers. ‘The human nature that does not experience a fine sense of dedication when an earnest woman| “Uutterfiies as pets? Tes: tt sounds strange, does tt not?’ said a lover of insects recently, “but I know of ‘weeps over its trials or perils is scarcely WOrth| severn! pereons who have kept them for weeks. One j nl ih if i : | it —<= “In love with whom?” “Why, Christine, of course,” ené he@ Baste Gem looking at Chapin instead of at the black earth & @ultivation. a woman of my acquaintance fed her delicate-winged lower jar, “ pet on sugar and water and the effect was disastrous; 4o, not to have told you before, but Christine wastes Of course, when you left home, in your YOUNKCT | the poor little butterfly became Intoxicated.” | | tt kept a secret until I had fintehed my lest year Gaya, and started to carve out for yourself a sitce coistmnatsthifsbercaememns Harvard.” of the world’s great living, you said to yourself | MILAAONS OF MEIN UNDER ARMS, | | Baston started at Chapin as if trying @ un@ep é that the fond, foollsh no er who Kissed you| A French statistician states that the total number ‘ of men permanently under arme is 4,250,000. If unt- good-tiy was silly with ber tears, evertheless, | © war bree eek: te wuld te 44,250,000 mon | TDM !@ @ picture of Prof. Metchntkoff, You felt a swelling of your hear and a moisture . a nen | savant, in his laboratory. He claims to ot which ended in a manly detormina-| came’ {ake UP arma at once, Placed in one line the | ereq che maret of longevity and to have Invented « ch ended in a manly deter a your eve de soltiers of the world coulfl cover the equator right | scum which will enable men and women te live be- Pasteur Institute, Paris. Metchnikoff looks Uke Prot, Charies de Medici, of this city, philanthropist and mathematician, who has succeeded in equaring the ctrete. 4 | on always to be worthy of a good woman's weep-| around the earth. | fag. Whether you havo stayed worthy or not {9 ——— ro COMPARET® ROTWS, Magers Rot to the point. A mother’s tears are still effec- JOHN RUSKIN’S LETTERS TO A GIRL Mra, Jones—My husband ts the light ef eny Ife, Later hte body was transferred to « private p tive with the beys who Jeave home, and will be * Mra, @mith—#o fe mine, One ef the kind that the London Graphic. smokes and goee cat nights, — em PSO while there aro homes to leave. AY BATEMAN in Black and White prints severaly © © © “Pm pending you a bit of Iaeca marble, the A - Perhaps you have quit your house in uneasy an- letters received by her from Jotin Ruskin when | pest for building in the world, broken by myself on tts eee ewer) poss pry rape ea ate i | ger of & morning when you have experienced a she was a child. Pxiracts from these are | mountains; and two little bits of quarts that ft badly A Faw Lem. Peart" = AR Eee eee ghower of what der the ing | Five, 88 well as @ fac-simile of part of one of them ne ———_____—- ‘Te the Balter of you consider UNFeASONINE | Teton in IL to show the t hete’s hand- Téa—Gometimes a few Mnes will canse a women no In answer to on end of worry. ot musele could chop up @ beefsteak, but a man of = tears of the wife to whom has como some small | writing. These extracts are from four different let- io Genial, Heaven knows thero is n frequent waste | ters: “ ene tan a ath. Pw) of tears in the domestic emergency! But yon may! “Darling Geraldine: Your letters lovely, and I em herd fray UPA > a B. ey | eo very glad you are reading Scott. Read very slowly, as well confess nt one time as at another a notice every word, and stop steadily at a given time! f7,¢0 (, A paar ro Mey | ed, is May—Yeo; especially !f they tappen te be tm her| brains could solve where the beefsteak was to come| had any of the smartness bie destroy his boy's books, wher _ which he can learn and become HARRIET HUBBARD AYER|=== Astringent Washes and Creams Are Injurious. HE women who dellev) that « powerful astrin-| tringent, applied before venturing into the street, may gent wash, or what at present fs ¢ermed a skin Lightener, will take he creases out of their faces, f iid thone tears have trickled between your mind and dont ried & word tore, herve as muon] © the day's business, until, in pure self-defense, YoU) peroism in atopping property in a novel as {n bearing of Bave been forced to pian a form of graceful com-| pain.” * * * | f 7 | . . . - bs mut favorite bits ts really Sule be in ah (i general it promise and conciliation ten ° > ty or “Cartelan oc tned folv ht forward and car ai *. Coon * ° “That quest Power that fs theirs for the weeping. Thus Sam- T'S favorite Peaime and fav apters, [maa 6 Z hound @on's wife wept before him when she would and jearn verses out of them rather than others, but paged top an ein Wheedle from him the answer to his riddle, whicli|1 always read the Bible straight througn, and as far|- ut Ge om hrs. Kinsey, the multitede sought. They have used their power 1 possible other books also-or else give them up al- G d, : rvR for artificial ends, as Clara Morris frst made her- | tomether. Sy on ore. yee tre or ee pL suis Ay one Weverley rou may y e need not | Weif a noted actress by shedding real tears on the| Yate em you are eighteen. And I should eave money | __ 7AC-SEMILW OF RUSKIN LETTER. wage. if I were you to buy the very nicest edition with the | (some broken away), but will pay for looking eare- ‘Uhey have made their tears illogical, tyrannical / greenest of backa I am greatly pleased by finding | fully at, and love to you all, and I'm rightfully beay | an aggravating. They have laid themselves lable; %* John Labbock’s Ubrary here os gay as © painted | and don't know what te do; Ge te the tribute exacted by certain humorous writers| "17" With beeuttful bindings.” tm SWB wet a lot of rather exclusive fun out of gush-| + + © -what a lovely letter, but I've got to lecture be _, Wag sisters, teasing wives, sentimental mothers and! to-Aay and can't anewer — word, only don't you mine Qaeertive mothers-in-law. But, with all its mis-|thore biesert diamond mines of your wits too deep, “ {ts sometime intrusiveness and obtrusiveness, and, please observe, 1 should Ifke you to be a little 5 "| more like a cherry, and you'd be better kissing, and pie tear feminine has retained its strength to in-| cnerries only grow red in fresh air! Mind you get out the lives and acts of men. He who thinks|as much as ever you can.” ° * * 3 eoatrary can stir up practical evidence to|—— aa ~ Be contrary in dis own household, at almost any ‘Moment, with a degree of effort proportionate to ‘the cose tn hand. el e e e ly you remember the poet's song of the Who lay dying in Algiers. First to the i's mind in the wretched state of the wounded ‘Were the “lack of woman's nursing” and “the pth of woman's tears.” And to all men every- a tame Gearth and the same lacking will come with the same depressing force, It ‘& battle-fleld to demonstrate this fact. Woman gets to the point where she has ‘Women have abused, and will and do abuse the! * ** ! ml i i iy a | ¥ 5 fil s iH il il i