The evening world. Newspaper, March 14, 1900, Page 6

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Sea. gia ian ia a a 2? ; ve ea fel Shia BN 3 ied Nile Saami natis a8 ay He aad THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, MARCH 16 10 va SIENKIEWICZ KNOWS. THE SOUL OF THE NOVEL---/7 7S LOVE. /T HER DAY'S Soe lee een. | | LOVE STORY. Grsaved at the Pest-Olve oh Now Tort ov Deroat-Cinss Mal! Matter, Sas The great Polish nevelist’s story, a 10 manee that ia written around Now York City and is entitled, * In the New Promised Land,’ will be begun in The Buening World Saturday, Mareh 17. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1900, oS VOL. 40.,.serceerones sees oe A DAILY HINT FROM M'DOUCALL, love as thie there is often infatuation, but there (Copyrighted, 10, 1s Never redpect. Jealousy sometimes becomes mad- 4 toe ( i | nese, but falth can never beeome confidence, unless | RYK SIENKIEWIC : ot q : Me sogatiygry , by the Prem Publishing end of such love relations, is emptiness, disgust and ere either to his fantast ‘ ; ical romances or his deep boom 8 P ‘pan-human short stories, or to hie 19 Fill Wis ‘tier how pas- CYPRESS AND ORANGE BLOSSOMS. '¢ id it may be, and | Pi thi sete RN pt wish to emphasize » certain | @ a ; F nd passionate It Is eharacteristic o! nkiewlea’s works that hag been i F } common and some | anker- Anas ; 80 much discussed Aesety in English papers, via, the } 5 gaan figtiog By B. McGill. way he understands jove, the mainepring and soul of . 5 any novel. 4 i | noble and moré poetic, at least in the beginning. A Stonklewiea does not fil his novels with china angels ; < m | man's whole life aad character very frequently depend and Arcadian ahepherds. ie represents his her : B | urcn whether hie frst love was of the frst, the better P40! Ot he see eal Naan It ne ae tne aaloarable with all thelr vitlilly. He knows man's propensities, | kind, or of the latter, the lower nature. Equally And these he paiits boldly and frankly, but at the wame time he Goes not take pleasure in displaying to ‘ his readers viclour or scandalous «ltuations, for his | kind of love be pre-eminent, the novel le éebased moral nature 1s honest, his nature as an artist ts ; ‘ | nd corrupted, it becomes “cadavereuse ot infeste,” Aesthetic, and both these natures possess this amount _ D/ 49 Alfred de Musset said. of g0od sense—they cannot endure low or vulgar situ. x ations, Bometimes he speaks about the “love ‘of the flesh.” but he lays no mit. He rapidly turns 5 le} page of hia book and gots on further. file Heroes f of Sjenktewies's novels lies in his conception of 19 Drevity and adstinence has this reau!t—sienk | and this is one of the many reasons for hie marvel wie! ovels will not soll any imagination, will r lous success and popularity all over the wertd, make any consolence crooked, will not excite curios- ity, They stake the heart, excite the fancy « awaken thought, but they will not arouse the human |§ B} and Aim of the novel: es p” senses. A m| ‘To-day the suffocating need pure air, dating Some persons understand love as the happiness|@ Bones hope, those tormented by uneasiness quistude} and plies of life. In that case it cannot bel@ yi. | therefore they do well to turn where hope and separated from mutual respect, mutua! faith and|i iy | flow, to turn where they are blest and where It fe call bites of If. In that case it cannot be separated from |g mutual faithfulness. A man cannot love if he does not Feapect; hO CANAL reRpect if he doer not trust; he ean neither feel nor understand suoh love unless he can of the beloved woman fh els; to hia qual World-famous “Que Vadis.” i a y ¢ i ba al mj cleewhere, tivat, Represents w ‘ ed fiir different people love in different ways, the Hes of : love is always high, noble and pure. The ovel must ¢, not enfeed! must ennoble it, t must bring good news, not bad.” true, perfect and complete from the first moment of | @Q 00000000 DOOGOOOG HOHOGOODIOOGUIOGOOOOOOHOGD , NOBOORS From this point of view were written “By {ts emletence, wishes to bo the tfuth and to end tm ° . , “Pan Micheel,” “Without Dogma, “if and con-| ever honest and pure. And ft is only such a tove | some egotiam on both aides, but at the same time| “Children of the Boll,” “Quo Vadis" loved. In| that ts complete, for It embraces man entirely with there is absolute equality —equality of agreement, | stories. And, im truth, these books ha “PROTECTION ” MUST EN D. sodh leve pome suffering, some unhap; * may oc-| all that 19 tn him, for he does not think about the con- equality of promise, equality of giving, each giving eur, oF even some breach of trust and some down-| quest for himeelf alone, but reciprocally he gives him- one's self for the other. T ie an easy step from doing a gogd thing to} fats, for man te not perfec}, but Its nature remains] self entirely. Notwithstanding this, there may be But there t# another ktnd of love that ts very often overdoing It. The police took this atep last) ~~ aS = wenn 7 = = = | Might when they stopped the muslo 1p an THE WORLD'S LA GRIPPE CURE. 5 FUN AT A GLANCE. ut Orderly uptown restaurant. Pheancetine ... 7... 15 grains 4 THE MASKED BALL, OOM PAUL SCARES 'EM. “BIRTHDAY LUCK For March 14 ——— F you were born on March 14 thie te the ret 4 The present crusade is not agkinet the rights and liberties of the people of New! . 16 erate Wark. And it must be remembered that prosecu- | I + 1-8 grain hft i i ! ton of official rascals te one thing, and the perse- sasaning of the @ay for you: (he Seven a of the people quite another, were ae Tt ta an excellent, day for all pg ole Fell dll od ‘ aim of the hour is to abolish official pro- two oF three gs here's & caller's wite, whe . of erime—to bring to justice those who ¢ heartache to ma YY for'that protection and those who ACCEPT / ‘THE PAY. , This infamous link between criminals and pud- © We eervants can and must be broken, let official Z er eee wilt MAN-MADE DIVORCE LAWS | THE NEWS MUST BE PRINTED. By. tiibobete(Caey Stanton, P from Topeka show that the Rev. | 4. ‘Mr, Sheldon bas failed in a measare in his experiment with a dally paper con- On lines assumed to be those of And this Because he has not Printed the news. The policy of suppression in a newspaper office fe bad in every way. It detracts from the interest iy gt i i i ; zE ! | 85 fi 53 F whe the crows off, all ot the paper. Secrecy is the best ald to crime. right; but I'm hanged if yew ain't a-frightened’ the . yt @ = _Bril shuns Publicity and would suppress all nows- barley and 'twon't come up!—Ally Sloper. , éelightfully true! Oh, you fertunete pest, can you be- papers it it could. sistas , once an ideal 9 not to be chattered, bat Bs). Tf all the newspapers of the land were con- evening when acted as Mr. Sheldon proposes life and property HAD HER SYMPATHY. votee—the Devostens voice, 1 ma 5 4 be unsafe. Crime and criminals would rule. | own dear possession ita wa aeity in the United States would be ut to live f His Rosom—¥ 0 itched olf eresture! menths soothed 5 $a. Crime is kept down and checked by Publicity ‘taht Coane haracer sues” pear jetty - ’ @lowe. No rascal can stand tho searchlight. a But despite his failure Mr. Sheldon has pro- HER POINT OF VIEW, i i 7 St Mise Flypp~I learn from the papers that dress goods 4 oad easy apa geet era v ‘will be much higher this year than they were last. APANESE spaniels are regarded as the finest of nary Saned (os ee ote Rewspa ‘ Miss Primm—Woll, I'm glad of tt. I mower did ap- Be YY 5 all the toy species. Agents in Japen are com that the people have power to mould the form of ELISABETH CADY STANTON. Stnrove of those decoliete contumes tantly on the lookout for them. Mather oe ee we thetr'own newspaper; that as the demand Is so 1s|® g good specimen brings in Japan aboat 9%, on _ tho supply, and that both demand and supply HE tendency of Judges and bishops, who are THE N if ° p average; but, once antely domesticated of bred in Fepresent the most reputable and advanced ele- peeve comrertouen wee ve Colton ine HE NASTY THING — America, they are valued anywhere from $100 the laws In the free States 1 restrictive than * R ding to fineness of their potnte. SBewte Of society. The real newspaper makes for|iney are now, and thus render nd is a measure of progress in every community | wives to escape from unhappy 1 he lens Have\t0 of these Bttio Jape the ble they are, those weighing two and a Ey lis Chaat tt reaches. which have liberal divorce laws a omen what sah a pete 7 As Heine said: “Light! More light!” Canada was to the slaves before emancipation. In weer awed hop od mn . ged Sie ae gates making any contract, the parties are supposed to pounds have an equal knowledge of the sit » and an credited. NO END OF LAWS. equal voice in the agreement. This has never been a jthe case with the cantract of miarringe, Women FS Ls Relebed ails menting gl ald Jere, and always have been, totally ignorant of the % pte lll Rata lcd fh ge yh WHICH WAS THE HEROINE? Pee over the recodification of New York State | have made and administered, and then, to tmpress 3 weinan bravely wont ofae > Jews, and the end of their labors is not In | weman’s religious nature with the sacredness of thts - ha sight. Judges of the Supreme Court have °M¢-sided contract, ihey claim that all these hete Drummer-Mr. Smith te on his wedding trip, you rogeneous relations called marriage are made by God say? Ah, that is too bed! jousehooper—That' Deon compelled to cry for s halt in the | oooaiing to the passage of Scripture, “What God ‘a what I say-the poor young Gtatute-tinkering. Lawyers look with apprehen- | jixtn joined together jet no man put asunder."—North elon to the outcome of the Commission's work. American Review. ‘Whee we compere all this complexity and trou- aa eee We with the simplicity and scope of the Ten Com- Mandments (2 complete penal and civil code) we | ¥ ere driven to wonder if law-making has kept any | 20942-20605 29200-00808 00508. A PUZZLED BOY. ] WONDER why it is that girls are always Kind of pace with general civilization. told that they Ghould ¢0 jist like their mammas do ip every single way’ It’s offul easy for a girl to git along, becus ‘They praise her up fer actin’ jist the way her mamma dur, LUNCH FOR LITTLE PUPILS. OLLOWING closely upon the discussion ee| the subject in The Evening World ty Mr. Hubbell, fermer President of the Board of Education, the Mothers’ Club has taken up| the matter of school children's lunches, ‘There was a unanimous decision against p, pickles and coffes as clements of noontime it for little pupils. Also, there was it of Mr. Hubbell’s project for a ra- Iumch, to be furnished under a State ap- a Satter phase of the subject is still open to Greadfu) wrong Regarding the simplification of fare, how-|? yer poys to do things that thetr pas keep doin’ be 2 7 § a H HH rt) Mins Jenay—Oh, how Y wish I was a man and able I wonéer why {t ls that boys can't go and do 4 fight for my country! the way a cy ‘Their pas do, and etill not git licked or lec- tured every day? ‘Thetr pas they nearly always smoke, and many of them chew, Andé wunst my pa he got s¢ med I heard him ” ? ¢ : ewearrtn’ too! & ? et “And you Gare tell me you love anether to marry him?" said the angry youth forgotten that only two ehort months ago you your father if ! |? i i il ; H it g 1 whstt somebody’4 tell me why It's always ti 44 a4 i i : } Un aH dl | i * ee SUNeseies oP east pyests ond |S right along; there cannot be two opinions. Z 1 wisht I knew why giria can act jist ike thetr and he posttively refused to ” mamtnas do * [nothing more” Ané, what is more, git loved « lot and praised z up fer tt, toot } i u | « « . ¢ ? | i i i iit and 2 full of electricity that whoever of them receives an electric shock. It has ® wingwlar effect upon a magnetic needle, and at a distance of even seventy feet. strength of the tree varies according to t #2 iti He

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