The evening world. Newspaper, February 16, 1900, Page 6

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| ‘by the Press Company, 68 to @ ARK ROW, | 20 the Poet-Ofive at New Tork as Becend-Cteos Mat! Matter, | MO ccccersesvercerss : BORD ONETD DEED J The way to prevent immor- @ ality on the stage—let the ™ public stay away from thea- ¢| Autres that give immoral shows. ence eneee «NO. 14,089 "BANISH THE TEACHER'S ROD. { D teacher in a New York City echoo! has the Fight te raise a hand in violence against eng pupil. This ts the law of the bor oughs. It to also « law of humanity and of @ommen regard for the welfare of the tye bore end girs, panishment, always of doubtful utility eeheolroom, is now éistinetiy out of Mae. A teacher whose firmness Sere not equal to the maintenance ‘without the rod is not up to the end- ry requirements. dagger & cure of « consumes cf perental| The vhirt-waiet gir! will wear, during the coming | bot! Spring and Summer, many stripes, a large proportion | dis of which will be a mixture of heliotrope, with white or, wh iat: Bade ‘ iieren wast stop and that old penalties any other color. ‘This watst is pereale and has {ts front | LOuners inaiat unom doing Uke the rest. hut whi with) The perceptible. p atirely tucked. fm hie éectevation that the whipping of tor tonshere who violate the rule. PICTURES IN DEMAND. e90 Gxing mere than earn great these years. They are learn- were tasteful houses and place in them fast. They are coming to an agpre- of Reskin's observation that one good pic- Detter than a great many bad ones. the highest price went for a Meimsonéer, the real gift of his calling and ebali and not bis commercialiom into his MEN PAY AS THEY PRAY. Y day takes us further and further from that point at which the womap suffrage movement was most seriously treated by campaign humoriste and funny paragraph- ‘The hair tn Bummer. |THe rij-pe-siecue SUMMER GIR — —o— GROWTH OF THE HAIR. stews considerably faster in Winter than THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING; FEBRUARY 16, 1900; Fa tee ‘ ! conrs Or manne |THE DAY'S | | ARRIET 2 UBBARD 2 YER. | COMING IN VoGUe AGAIN. LOVE STORY e | BOWLEGGED BABIES AND SOME GROWN-UPS, | OON again {t will be time fo hunt up bicycle; ‘The girt with the bowed lege? 4 | costumes, and every Summer girl will wateh| 1 feel as though I should ask her pardon for men-| THE FORGING OF ! carefully the hang of one or more short skirts | tioning her infirmit; ‘ in which sho expecte to spend many happy| For if there's a girl or child I'm sorry for {t's the hours of the out-of-door season, one with crooked legs that might just es well have THE DAISY CHAIN. For your pretty girl knows well emough the added | been shapely and straight. R. TRAVERS, pretending to rinse plates in the foharm her golf skirt gives her lithe young figure | If there were nothing to be Gone about i, omen river Thames, looked perpetually toward Mise ‘when it is precisely the right length, revealing the|1 should keep silent except for a mete of warning Daley Middleton, industriously engaged ia | Udy, sensible boote and a bit of the trim, wetl-turned | occ: which I feel bound te utter to the mothers dishes. . ‘ankle, The common-sense dress prescribed ny fashion | of fat babies, who are cultivating bowed legs by letting “Den't you think I might tate you out tn that cance?” “Brat cances are so unsafe. Perhaps if Mise Matty would come with us it would be steadier.” Mr. Tapvers saw Nght in the unkindness and wilh ‘ingly enerificed o victim. “Without in any wey wishing to deny the merits of Miles Maltby,” he said, ‘she would add more than @ feather weight. Besides, in adopting an invention {ike cances from the Choctaws, one must conform to thetr custom.” “Which is?" esked Miss Middleton. ‘ “Based on the tribal motto, ‘Two's company.’ The canoes were constructed accordingly and only held two.” “Then there would not be room for Mr, Congrevef” she esked. . “I fancied he was making daisy chains," sald Mr, is appropriate and modest, and fascinating withal, /the child stand before the bones are strong enough to ‘Travers. for that very’ reason. bear its weight without curving them. | saya -odpionccgeg had bey Loin pcb id 80 Js there are (not many, thank Heaven!)| But (praised be Allah!) bowed legs in adults may be age thi remark would have . Travers “te ans cary one insta is ae skirt ¢ Aoea| Often straightened—not always, but a fair porcontaie| solitary. But she was not. She suffered herseif to not reach the floor, and who loathe their own refiec-4 Of them, and that ts the kerne! of good news in this be constenined—not too nee eas lon, ahort-skirted, In a looking-glane little chat. ‘A girl I knew,” said Mr. ers, thoughtfully, You probably know one or two such. Tuey do not| TH? Process is one of press ‘aged to tell me that she was quite nervous uati] eho | You prot oO Fuel ey do re Pi i an cance, in the end thought them cycle. They do not go in for sea bathing, They never| coun int De oe ine wah acid ‘eat| pvabalir Mageidies) to Pango ster sr} foe golf or tennis; in fact, they are martyrs to the mia-| \? . ‘eanes.' ae 6 #7 . pt proceed rapidly, but the pressure being constant, . - Cpa ere di ea crag Mad oy Et h mceumed|*# the new cells are formed they yield gradually, and, Bi 1e ehiy ter wish?" asked Miss Midéleten A jae much asf ible, they fall into the line of ast Q eo for anything that exacts n short akirt Mik Wamaet Guo kaa , “T should ike to know your opizion of @ beat a6 & j ress is much quicker in the popping piace,” he persisted. what awful consctousne: their defects! Owing to the cleverness of a Sheffield, Eng., manu-| “Suppose,” he said, “the man wanted to ge dewn | latter part of the treatment, and once the bone is een standing | straightened it remains #9, us of her de-! The appliances used for straightening bowed legs are formity, while she watche! «a chance to mount un-| certainly not agreeable, but do not Interfere with the observed? | ordinary vocations of life, facturer the ancient custom of wearing chain and mail Is likely to be revived. This manufacturer has produced a shirt of mall that weighs than twelve pounds than can readily be worn beneath the coat, which is impervious to every attack except that of ¢ Do you not recall the girl you have | her wheel trying not to look con Sasccie AURA # JEAN » LIBBEY. #22 fee = THE MAN WHO SITS ABOUT THE HOUSE ALL DAY LONG. Ghat af the late sale of the Hilton | meprrigm, 1H by Ue Prem Publishing Company Works) “ HERE'S pac luck about the house, ‘There's nae luck at a’; ‘There's jit in he house ‘This te what Robert Burns tells the words sprang from a well-meaning heart Rut surely he could not have mean Bew sohoo! of buyers ts not paying for) men who stay at home all day jong, sit around the demands that an Inness aball be | hearthstone, content to be one of the world's drones in the busy beehive of this work-a-day world Men who bang around the house a!l day long sro New Yors}even if if and I feel sure/ the class «f composition bullet. His product is having « large ss! It fs composed of small steel rings linked together THe BPiTAPH OF RUSKIN'’S MOTHER. CORRESPONDENT writes to the editor of the London Standard, as follows; es solied bliin of the power to Iaaur, tor Feven so short a wh trong expression” you say, ‘no other words truly express the A man needs t out in the world and cub shoul | de, and lay bare the truth I shudder at the Injustice which you have : ders wi ther men and keep pace with 2 in toe y out among ‘he world's workers gives a man an | gone, alike (o mother and son, in asserting that “there mighty struggle for ence, and (if be appreciation of home Iife when he we is no inscription to the memory of Mrs. Ruskin" om her | be more competent in the race) to them, the close of day t tomb at Shirley. I pity moat profoundly the wife of the Individual | him gtadly, joyously, and the little ebildren run to the] 1¢ there had been such an omission tt would heve who will not work if there Is any avenue of eseape door to welcome him, crying out eagerly represented inexpresslble sorrow, but dutiful devotion from |t, if he can find any one who will furnish him) = “Father has come! Father has come!” was equal even to this demand, and the pen of John sustenance without It ‘Dhey wit down to the evening meal; and oh, how they | Ruskin never acquitted {iself more worthily than ia For I know that to her life is one long, struggiing enjoy it, from the father to the toddling babe. the following tribute inscribed at the upper end of the Aisappolniment, one continuous night, with no star) The woman who sees her husband's face before het | sitar tomb: of hope Hluminating the darkness. “at home sll day long has no such pleasures to look YUNOY, WHAT 13 THAT. OMS \ BorTLe of BENZOINE ADOIN UP THART” Nor was dearer earth Ever returnel to earth, Nor purer Iife ere, Miss Stean B. Anthony and her sis- iu ‘ters in the cause have steadfastly refused TO THE laughed down. They are very much in and very deeply of intention to make EVENING WORLD. & force to be reckoned with. | whether they ever get the voting privilege | y men ci To the Kiitor of The Evening World: ; OF not, these persistent wo ertainly have 1 am a young wife. My husband and I are happy. the representatives of the other sex many) bur have two subjects of disagreement. The il is to think about, For instance, within an the question; "Which of us should answer the (orl «guPPOBE A MAN WANTED TO GO DOWN ON HIS at this week's convention at Washington, j bell in the evening?” The second is: “Whose duty KNEES?” . os ‘was pledged for the work of the suffragists | ft to bulld the fire these early, dark, Winer mcrn- Dera te ‘ Women delegates. It isn't a tremendous sum. Tee ie aneliat happineae wil fade cry (02. his kneee—Just to emphasize his wishes—that would ‘ ' : t It roll begin with.” Money wouldn't buy a Senate seat in MON-| ure co ve Adety, grumpy, quarulous, interfering; in] The man who will not work In MMe young days Is) forward to and be no more Mra. N. J. rads: Weaveie an aint. te eutettee that eunber @f pay for the Republican National Conven-! snort, altogether disagresab!s and objectionable. pretty sure to Know what sorry want is io his old To the women who are single and are tooking for- ait! fm Philadelphia. But it is a striking guaran. | interferes sadly with the rout'ne of duties of @ well age when thore who cared for him so resignedly are ward to matrimony | would say to you earnestly: Diceussten for Fal bntarines, hee a othe girl ela “No?” . of good falth in the quarter from which it| ulated household. In short, he is the worst kind ef ng more to continue the thankless task Do not take a man who ts afrald of work, though | Te te Biles of ba gg satin: cad tevine dade l tke panes preferred not to suppose anything ume d faith backed up, it must be admitted, by * ™ance The man who sits ai home al! day will in time wear, hie have the beauty of an Apollo and ever so winninga| | 9 to chure y ey BOF Fe | pleasant q im + DY! Men are wise in getting away from home for a few ou: the patience of even those who love him beet. Af tongue. }ao, 1 believe 1 have dischirged my religious duty for put “ff she id," said Miss Middleton, “the man } eth as well as hopeful words hours each day fection melts fnte apt! “For if you do you may find « life companion who| ‘he day. My parents Insist I shall go to Sabbath ict: Hi Ly tha von. wall tame and Waal i a eae aoae | ust have occupation or be miserable, to step In to Anish work | will be pretty api to keep you company by the reside | *chool and evening service ws well. To thie I object. | MO Ate, -- } with either mind A man who ts sick cannot fulfl the mission God put at day tong.” Who will tell me if I am right or wrong? peyaggg sd itive that man would be ~ A VOICE FOR MOLINEUX. |—can never enjoy rest. For rest means a Work—no matter how SABBATARIAN, ie wee ne - P | from labor. y a . 10° [Be Die Bator of The Evening World: Bvery man who is a man in the true sense of the| bodied fellow who will not work from inetin Then, again, if the girl didn't say ‘No" she woul LAs you are always in favor of the oppressed, I write) word loves to work He would be restless indeed jiving curse to those about him. To the Mittor ot The Reening Wor probably expect” — that you start a fund to t Gen, Moli-; ——— _ - -— - = __—____ Tam a stranger tn your city, Iave been here five| “What? asked Mr. Travers. Rees in securing a new trial for his son, olan! B. | pppetetetalaeejaletele teinisiat-ieteintetelebteetettelei | weeks. Take this opportunity to denounce New York-| Mise Middleton had unfortunately forgotten the ¥ im. Tam sure you would find many to respond. g ey AN EXPLANATION Jere ax 0 set of stuck-up, ultra-conservative, concerted | sequence of her sentence. 4 Public sentiment is certainly in his favor COMPUTATION. snobe. You are all vain of Iving here, and think New| “But | must know, Daisy,” he rald earnestiy, Te yi R. M. CLARK, Orange, N. J. LOOK about me in dismay; York (he greatest city on earth and yourselves the fine | ceased to paddle and the canoe began to roll. “Would true ” , l reed the prints with feeling sore; est people. In reallty you are [il-bred, ill-dressed and | she axpect’ — - ieee The Myenlag) Worle ts a friead | Sue lols . iM-looking. Your city is ugly, circumseribed, squaila| Continuous was the roiling of the cance, me the on. But while it sympathies 1 feel thelr f ‘and rendered still more hideous by your atrocious sky-| “We shall be over, I'm sure,” sald Miss Middleton— @eeply with that grand old father, Gen. 3 we scrapers. DiwGUSTED BOSTONIAN, » in his sorrow, and would be the; w comforting In my distress —--—-- . ‘t come to his aid with an individual When mercers’ reckonings fall due “in This Gambling?” and the roving continued. ° ption, case And bailiffs on my pathway presa, To the Kaito: of The Evening World When same time later the cance returned te the Incase of necessty, It does aot ” We play progressive euchre in our club o meadow from which it had started the voyagers were it call for such action. 1 may not eat, 1 may not drink, month for prizes which are purchased by the mem- | grieved to perceive the tea was already almost fia Molineux case goes to the Court of Appeals Nor amoke in quest of mild content bers, Fach one who plays pays 3 cents. Ie thie | ished. / Except of sordid pelf 1 Uhink gambling, readers? Please decide. L. BIRNIE. “You shouldn't have been making daisy chalna, Of taxes to the bbs Pe apa mnred Congreve,” said Mr. Travers irreievantly. Of profita to some lucky wight Mr. Congreve appealed to Whe to a better fate was born, | opportunity to maintain his innocence | 4 While I must ponder day and night ‘ee anvured. i Lest 1 be tattered and forlorn hee Priscilla, sweet, I turn to you— mat Go Castellane salle’ away breathing a And stil] another grief is mine, x Rater de Rodays. Eel ete My heart with sadness thrills anew c When he reaches the other side {t wil! apine. | be more Gould dollars. | Tell me, professor, 4 that éown my back? 5 , you really marry your wife my } Ri Kprolly- er 9g which hold sway, | ¢rom love Sas Wailter—Nothink es'l! stain, mum. Howly a hice!— b ‘or even Priscilla, sweet, pe re ine. it's @leregard of the close a ‘Are growing dearer every day. | “No. from absent-mindedness!"—IFidele Biaetter. Moonsh| deeply | Fish and Game Commisrioners would ai-! | ———— ee as baleen me mies ene ee can | RIPERERIOR. S00 OVERHEARD IN FRANCE. | A DRAMA IN THREE ACTS. Ayer—Don't you know that the use of tobacco short. \ety | ACT YT ACT If, ACT Mt. ene your days? . i) 3 | Country lane, Country lane, Country court, Gyer—Yes, I'm sure it does. | Birds sing Birds and cows; Letters found; Myer—Then why do you use it? friend Lover's vows, Lover quarrels, Verdict, plaintiff Gyer—For that very reason. I once tried to quit it, x. | Engagement ring. Broken vows. £100, Judy. ‘and the days were about @ week long. You had ne right te ge te your with |= a = the intention of taking her caller Too ' ros | SOME EVERYDAY MISTAKES IN ENGLISH. p= Sl hyd tne | & young worman home when she accor ET a watch om your lips, and if you are sccus) “Right away” for “immediately.” tomed to making these “slips” try te substl- tute the correct expression. But don't be con-| femt with that alone, | Learn why the preferred expression ts correct, and this of iteelf will eo fix it in your mind that you will t f i i | i" f i | i i ! : i i : i | good for “realty” good. “Some” or “any” in an e@verblal sense; for em- ample: “I have studied some” for “somewhat;” “T ave not studied any” for “et all ten days for “about” ten da: " 1 know.

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