Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, MARCH 18, 1906. # LAURA JEAN LIBBEY ON -FLIRTING HUSBANDS. (Copyright, 1908, 7 the Prem Publishing Company, New Tot Werks.) ‘“ WIFE” says: “I have been married seven years and love my husband very much. ‘There is, however, a serious drawback to my happiness. Two young lady cousins of his, whom I never knew the existence of until recently (as they are as far back as second or third cousins), have taken to calling upon us in the evenings, as often as three or four times a week, and are continually firt- ing with him, “They are pretty girls, fascinating and stylish and m ‘ounger than I am; in short, the contrast be- us is #0 great in every way that I feel con- THE DAY'S . OW te Prem Pubiiening compenr, 1 to @ PARK ROW, Pest-Ofice ot Mow Tort os Seren -Ciase Mal! Mester, TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1900. i ~8 Fs iia =] E HE i i Ez t strained and {li at ease whenever they are around. willingly walk rough-shod tender heart. “My husband greets them warmly, even kissing f Many a goed wife calls ald, and her them, and always accompanies them home, saying It (7H) i) le while her very an anguish —— ia impossible to permit them to go home by them- f\ iN to endure than death itself. | selves. I am unhappy over tt. What can Ido? What f Hh} } Hh \" sever iet her husband suspect her of jeal- | A ONOR, ought I to do?” Why w not let her rival know she dreads You certainly have good reason to feel aggrieved at f Hi) \) hh sydney let the world know of the gall pee your husband's conduct, my dear. However innocent } her cup of honeyed wedded bliss erage | By 1. H. Watson, 969 Sixth Avenue, New HIN ) OM Ser g 3 = bis intentions may be, his actions are improper. A married man has no right to pay any attentions to other women which might be construed in the eyes of the world at large as Mirting. HE GREPTS THEM WARMLY, BVEN If the young ladies will not take the hint that you! @ KISSING THEM. will be too pressed for time for some weeks to Come | O94-44-4-4-4-9-4-8-5009906400066066006000 to entertain them you will be Justified in asking them | favor of « married man. They want the Lard to give to defer a future call unt!l you write to them that| them one of their own, and this He never dove if they you have more leisure. You can take as many months | encourage the attentions of other women’s husbands. or years as you like to compose such a note, Kisses between cousins of opposite sex after they Refined, respectable young girls never court the! have grown to manhood and womanhood ‘shoulé be Yerk City, d E 3 balm for euch wound-|$% HAVE A CANDID TALK WITH THE as eel ak YOUNG LADIES. (5 his suit to marry Madge. ‘The war question was discussed, ‘The Bresing World by permission |“would go to war that he might win homer trae tight, my Gear, and 1 feet! Leer NEW YORK AS A PLAY TOWN By Stuart Robson, PIET CRONE AT CLOSE RANGE By Poultney Bigelow, “Some one would take care of them” Jack oalé nothing, but was Ver & \ “1 hall stey just the same, I feel that It te a Fa j js } Dick went to war, Jack remained at home. j Madge thought both had gone, weat over he {i | ) ‘Woulé it nat be fanny if the Third Ave- | Bee Ratlvend acquired a new terminal awey beyend the Nuekloberry District? _ PREACHER-EDITOR SHELDON. wooed a Kochi pag ig Pal ce . A, , CASKS ALTER CIRCUMSTANCES. conduct proclaimed . Chartes \ Maude—Would you marry @ man you didn't love? ML Sheldon, in Topeka, are the points in- Clara—No, indeed! sisted upon in the office of The Evening Mauée—But suppove he had a million. ‘World and of every woll-reguiated newspa- Clara—Oh, then I'd love him. Pare the une “Tee, manne iat ardet wit puter” «TET OVER FROM THE DOG Baterviews are submitted to the men inter- Viewed; no man {s quoted unwillingly. Only “Because the Gog has no mussie oa!” SHOW. Geen oports are wanted; athletic sports and clean Gperting events are covered. Crime is reported of > Seeegsity, not because any reporter gloate over its ” @etalls, and the cause, be it liquor or other influ- ‘ @a00, ts stated whenever ascertainable. No time 1 Wasted on scandale—but occasions arise when hey must be printed. As for political reports, ‘these of to-day are non-partisan even in the most OMB of my friends blamed me for not trying the “Gadfly” on audiences of other cities, but New York audience is easier to plesse than | Gamay lence in almost any other city in the country. “ ho think New York theatre-goers know any theatre-goers of any other city are wrong. ly reasonable when one stops to think that Portion of every audience represents people ho are in New York expressly for the purpose of being entertained. Actors want the approval of New York simply because New York is the great adver- THOSE LOVING Ginss, “That reminds me of @ story | read when I was a ttle girl” — began Mise Antiquate. “What a wonderful memory you must hevel” inter- rupted Mise Cutting, IMPERVIOUS TO ATTACK. NE morning shortly after the Jameson raid, while some fifty of the most respectable eitise of Johannesburg were jocked up in the Pretoria jail, I was taken to call upon Gen, Joubert. He was very, busy at that time handling a large variety of military rifles with a view to adopting some one as the standard weapon of the new Tranevaal army. Joubert handled the guns as a woman handles things on a bargain counter—in a mood to buy something but with no very definite idea of what she needs. Aa I left the room my friend remarked; “Don't waste your time with that old woman. If you want to see @ real Boer look at that man there, That's Piet Cronje." is New York its success is heard of throughout the| You will be lonely now, so I came te sce if country. In this way advertising that could under no| be of any use to you. Please feel that I should clreumstances be purchased {s received free, An|do all I can for you both." actor doesn’t take a play into New York for the pur-| Mra, Montague spoke, tears in her i ~ Bivery right-minded person will wish Mr. Shel- S) \@em well. His expertment is most interesting. He » deserves to be upheld in his good work. After all, while there is a good deal of sin in the ‘world there is a good deal of good also, And for every bad man and every bad woman there are tem thousand good men and ten thousand good ‘women whose hopes, aims, ambitions and ideals fare of the loftiest and the purest. : GAMBLERS “UNDER COVER.” a HB gamblers whose places have been closed a by the police represent themselves as at Krugersdorp, and his name Is emong the taken by Lord Roberts on Majube Day. from Potchefstroom, and so far as my concerned | would trust him aa readily as any man I know. “Cronje,' sali he, “is the best Joubert ts a mere stuffed figure—a Kruger is afraid of Joubert because of his possibilities, and so he keepe him contented salary as chief of the War Department. But fighting is to be done we Boers look to Cronje.” fo 1 looked, and I seemed to see a Roer Reberte— acousing Lee and Stonewall Jackson of barbactem. ‘All these charges blew away into vapor when the} Physician—I'm afraid you smoke tec much. facts came to be known, and I am sure we shall have} Patient—Well, I do smoke almost centinvoesty frem the same experience with Cronje's biography when morning till night. the witnesses shall have been cross-examined. Physictan—Why do you do that? It should be enough for us to know that his fellor farmers, humane and kindly people by A CRUEL WAR IN CHICAGO. MAT land te not at peace even with itself in which in a single community 50,000 men, with the women and children in their various families, cry vainly for daily ful influence of the great Trek, and has had no oppor- tunity of learning anything about England save what fe calculated to confirm his prejudices, His crime ts ignorance, and now that he ts the guest of England I venture to think that he will profit by the Itberal poe Be education he ts about to receive, and will return to] 1 so dented to the editor of the pol his hogar Leal * ee. understanding regariing D ter parmaiiiia, \ leas posta Brod British aime a 5 dana reprod b Like Lord Roberta, Cronje te omall, spare and n | dtabeteieiottcteintetetetenttetetstttetettbete” Cece cea canoes. Treainnes cas the sixties—a matter of two or three years only sepa- nly Arcerga cressing rates them. BY HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. HB® iatest caprice of fashinn demands that the hair should be curled before the oolffure ts “exe. “@mployers and employed in the building trades. ‘The ouffering and starvation involved in this in- Gustrial strife cast 2 great blot on pages otherwise ‘With the tales of national prosperity. Chtfcago or has Illinois no galaxy of well- Balanced minds to deal with the problems of this / etree? Ie it possible that nowhere in the struggie ‘ee the points upon which to apply, in humanity's ‘emma, the blessed principles of arbitration? PICNICS AT PUBLIC EXPENSE |” caly to & degree were the proceedings i @f thet Pittsburg official who bas bees ® g j IF THE HEART BE TRUE. 1 we wen LL things can never go badly wrong If the heart be true and the love be strong; For the mist if it comes, and the weeping. | ij gs ; I | | Fs In New York « kindred idea hes besa je eviistionlly worked, but has been, happily people, interrepted at a promising mo- Bere tn Manhattan most of the picaics aad bave ascom- iil . tl iil bi fila ae Ent E te f § ef j li i i : i Hi iif it EgkE st ek | FF. i. *E subject her to such mortification | has fallen into—of filrting. At least this is my eer . Dick and Jack were only sons ef eged parenta, any other woman under any | nest hope. LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. |. ,,, entirely dependent on “thetr boys” for euppest, ——s Dick te Madge's feet. Father and mother will be all sight, =a I! . i q)) ow) | : “More fvol you! They will forget that enerifiee of men ; yours when I return covered with honor.” 3 “1 AM VERY, VERY HAPPY, JACE® LOVE STORY. (CK and Jack Montague were brothern, Thay both loved Madge Fisher. Both wished to go to war, win honor, return, the fortunate ene right.” to oe Using centre of the country If a plece succeeds in| thelr parents, to help them if she could, amé antl: oven, pose of artistic criticism, because artistic criticism Is “Jack Is at home, God bless him. Hoe dida’t lave “ander cover.” Tuey do not know how], short man, thick set, with beady little eyes, « was confident he would win her. Jong they will remain so, If the Grand| mouth like that of Gen. Grant and an expression down at once, was glad te see Dick Jury Goss all its duty the period will be| that invited no familiarity—the very opposite of Juu- and talked es usual; was interested tm Dicks recital reasonably brief The offenders will then | Det: Cronje had been the leading man of the western {a spoken of during your next year of itfe, Dick was pleased and asked her ¢2 be his a end of the Transvaal for more than twenty years, but and there will] be many disappointments in _ be dragged out from cover and made to realize) ni, intuence had been always that of the soldier, not evidence. Be guardet in writings, agree- Jove another.” ‘What for once the cards have gone terrifically | that of the politician. - fete ments, promises and chamges.—Copyrighted My one object im gutag t (Cgainst them. He may be cruel, but I doubt It He may be “ tal by the Sphinz Magasine, Boston. my retura—te leg may henews < (slimy, sly), or whatever that archale word may carry very sorry that the critics abuse your new iad ee ar ene, bad reety with It to-day of derogatory significance, but the} book eo.” hes =a Be madling ve been only partially | wvigence on this subject te faulty, "Oh, that doven't trouble me a particle! There ° i There are guilty men “higher up.” Let's wasn't an i40— of mine in the whole book!” ache x ‘then all. ry : ft eM ecelescantad : ' jack's heart was heavy. We wont to so him ¥, breed. him aa 4 neighbor and fiend, and are amaned 1 lpabkeawneituatieipseesensepsnnsacaariee wie eet ee eae rent rer n Cane, where | Bein raga shalt salen “at otemwne NEW CURBS AND WAVES EXPBAINED. |FUNNY SAYINGS OF LITTL acted ns vats © os e 4 fo net always guinea at Go