The evening world. Newspaper, March 28, 1900, Page 6

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THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, ‘MARCH 98, 1900. ig i Ld a |.) aa |THE MAN UNDER THIRTY-FIVE UNDER THE LASH. FUN AT DON’T BE IN A RUSH. BY LILLIAN BELL. my suffering Is lingering, Sometimes he really Bnows & great deal—has the making of a man in bim, only {t lies fallow for want of treining-—and then my suffering fs acute. When success—business, or social, or ath- letic, or Iilerary, or artistio—comes to the untrained man under thirty-five it comes pitifully near being his ruin.” Cimon ty oho Prk Patisning <smany 1 to PARK ROW, (ho Pet-Ofre ot Now Vert os feron!-<cee Mall Matter, ‘Far be it from me to say that the untrained man under thirty-five, at his worst, is of no use In t td. ide te excelent for ‘ontop, T have used @ number of them very successfully in this way.’ untrained men under thirty-five 14 aside from the part they I erimipating young women. seven marry these men. Lovely girls, toa, Clever «iris who know a hundred times more than thetr finer grained. I wonder fled with them, if tam snd are ten times ove them, If they are sat e soul is not a bitter thing to bear fering why gitls marry them. ned man under thirty. . with the untra aie bh p him, whether you tsten s ently th siker never cares an you do not tnt own away “ y te in thi or thirty-five trie Impatient American Tourlst—You to always left here at 10, and I've walted Banty=O0, ay, that's ticht. But run Ul June, 1 1.30, worll to be made to make you Mine Le Amd her choice ts Aa Miss Welt has be age and onder, her t happy happy.” SERVED HIM Rien, He talked the old man dumb and blind, five are never taken off himeel!, Ti ways turned In. * © * The co ° 1 always liked Percival, but a woman never likes a , = Rekavatend’Aistndigisie wy. sme quant in % | 4 Teely Wenoradt~has no beans at all—and Wen hineell on her mers? [I the Philippines. \ 51 (0) 9/0100 019 0101090 | perereroertenrwitiaervorvarenis ‘ } G WAIST. THE WORLD'S LA GRIPPE CURE, + | HINT FOR THE CITIZENS’ RALLY. | Crise ewig + 3-8 grain HE City Vigilance League will have what | it 1s pleased to call a “citizems’ rally” this | evening, when “prize-fighting, the protec- a tion of vice, the looting of the city treas- * wry” and a score of other equally interest: | G ing topice will be under discussion. Ex- | Mager Strong 1s to preside. And this means that ) the meeting will be of more than usual interest. | Tm all stacerity The Evening World begs to offer ® suggestion ¢o the organizers and movers of the mesting. Agd that !s, Be specific as to FACTS. Dojmot talk in the air. Do not aay things that cannot be proven, Do not make wild statements i Divide thie quantity into ats powders i and take ome every hour for foar hours: tnke gne every two or three , hours, This dove ts alot wv Visitor r own fort New Stockings, Mr. Henpeck—No, 1 LL. the beautiful plaids of last veason have disap. go” peared, Stripes, dots and wevy lines are all thar?” What are you or not! remain, Open work, embroidery and fancy ~ stiucBing, too, appear. There tsa faney for the upper J RETORT COURTEOUS. “You are Fy eolld, substantial FACT that can be taken before Grand Jury to prove that the city is being looted, that the Police Department 1s corrupt and that Criminals are paying for police protection is worth ll the fine phrases that could be coined in a week. If e@-Mayor Strong and his associates have this 5 one substantial FACT and can place the responsi- | Bility for corruption where {t belongs they will | | Rave rendered a great service to this community. “" One nugget of truth that will be able to endure |} Smvestigation by the Grand Jury is worth more thaa all the jingling jargon that the most expert phrasemakers can coin. LABOR’S GOOD LOOK AHEAD. HE day laborer'’s view of good times ahead in New York ie not to be limited by the three years of rapid-transit construction. ‘There is more than that in sight. Practically a new country is to be @pemed beyond the Bronx. There will be new Gireets to grade, new surface railway tracks to lay, mew dwellings to build by thousands (with the et the jewel.” A COLD-WEATHER BIRD, above a low slipper. Openwork silk stockings come in very heavy quality. In the hand they do not show how open they are, but when worn they stretch and show more or jess elaborate design. oe PEACOCK FEATHER VEST. Pe Do Sor eer rr os BSD HOBSON HIS evening waist is equally useful for after- hoon or dem t purposes, for by omitting the lining of yoke and sleeves the guipure will, of course, be transparent for the latter occasions, if de- sired, The elongated shoulder seams will welcome to many, the sireves being Jotned to the yoke beneath the upper bands, which are composed of ribbon velve ‘The bodice itself is of thickly plalted chiffon or with rows of narrow trimming. A hides the Join of the yoke, and walst In the centre front. | | | i | ‘7 4 i ‘ t + | “Well, John, we are having cold weather.” 3 ; i When the skin of boiled potatoes breaks pour off the water and let them finish cooking tn thelr own i j the masons, the carpenters, the Guiths, the painters, the paperhangers, thé! \isem ‘ Unseifishness, Plumbere—all are to share in the rapid-transit| keep fish a short time there ts@ better way than |” WEL. deep! The little things that chafe prosperity. the tce-box, even in very hot weather, Put a little ane tat i | Hore 'e consolation for the thousands of men | ‘!0¢6ar on the ‘ish inside and out and the fish wil | © wante not the golden hours te give who rushed for firet-dny jobs and didn't get them, | ***? Perfectly well Rae as | i A never be weed without first thor- q The slight, the thoughtless wrong, do thou 4 Here is hope for the thousands of women and chil- dten dependent on the wielders of pick and shovel. * Weieall a golden outlook for metropolitan Labor. PURE CITY FOR A PURE VOTE. T te te Rev. Dr. J. C, Codéington who says to Mew York: “he leas an the politicians are corrapt WS. enact expect them te enforce laws levelled af vice.” it has a spongy sur- face which easily absorbs germs. Let the lemons lie in cold water for a little while, then rub them dry with a clean rough crash towel So Trade and the Flag, Talking about trade following the flag, a Cinctnnati firm ts working on an order received from London for 0,0 British flags forget; Be se!f-forgot In serving others’ need. ; } ; Se eee he ee ee 2 M'oaael Spellane, of Shawmont, Pa, wears a peacock feataur vest which came to him through an uncle, —a" Dewey Playing Cards. A pack of playing cards has been patented in ¢! who received It as a gift from a Bpanish don. It con- sists throughou: of peacock feathers, some 60 of which were used in putting it together. PUBLIC MAKES THE STAGE BAD. | cers, The queens are Columbias. audience or doesn't he? If the little Irish woman at the corner of the street ‘ JD} who keeps a fruit stand finds that the small boys !# living In Paris | It isn't obligatory on us to see the nasty play any fe a rather tekilsh |more than we are compelled to drink five hundred cussion oF discourse. In all climes, | g! ages (here have Deer undertakings and matters calling for expendi- ture, With close attention to these matlers the year should show a balance in your favor at the close —Copyrightel by the Sphing Magazine, Boston. , subject for \ in all countries and on a to any that has yet found its way! exploited more or lees decen: & trial shipment would, in my opinion, |Penda alioether on the point of vie Wer for o reguiar trede in the future. real vital question |s, Does the playwright fo Met ult trast a's ent ice'ss| THREE CHOICE RECI the nasty play merely because it ness, And that's the public's affair and it ten't the actor's. ‘Then why blame the actor for it? PES FOR LOVERS OF GOOD THINGS TO EAT. " home consumers? 1 cencill Pf ican dial litian 5 ou | Mia one-fourth cup of rolled oat, | A @eliclous Dreakfast dish may be - 7 Melt two ounces of butter e Scotch _ one-tourin cup of four, one tadice- Salmon | made by heating « eupto: of thin | Curried saucepan, dien@ mith Me table- spoonful of sugar and one-fourth to spoonful of four and itn || Waters, | eecpoontat of ait, With tne tpn | POM Gretercapoon Oysters, Pome com. of the Work in two table- of salt. Btir into thie @ cup ef sal- from » j . oe a eee of butter, add water to form a stiff men which has been picked up fine, ané and i hoswal . Soaest tard, Baoe ho, ante ot ecey as rn thie femnen julce and e ~ r the boat itll nae begin tae tececewccoce erpein to her husband that #It needs a compelling, not a persuasive power to > Then, to his grief, aevere things she hae writian edowt men e Macuanlehc tana mas like (ibe a th young mankud Poilowlng are ec + NODERT Woe tENae me HAR td Cee: The o!4 man seid —'twas most unkind-= katy ine iad Jing her thumb and forefinger, aw if holding a butter- “Oh, Tim noe deat! * : en . jfty, "ean have me. ‘The one wh take me Lhe ae | HE eyes of the untrained.man under thirty is, clinching her hand, “will get m at ie iW | AN INTERESTING QUESTION, ig? Trying to tell your 7 am just trying to find out er my wife will allow me to go.te the lodge to- rt of the stocking of open work for “boot: 4 Jewel” sald a lady to a gentleman who sleaply that their echo may win applause, One % closer weave below. In buying be careful that had given up his seat to her double heel and toe are not deep enough to show] “Oh, no." he repiled, “1 am a Jeweller; I have just — = Cellars to be dug firet), new schoolhouses and pub- Household Hints. “Yes, inies; I see in tls ‘ere paper we are catching anteen ‘Are Me Wulldings to erect—work enough for an army NLESS you wish J erust of any kind do not the tail end of the buzzard 0 able to # for ten years to come. U matt the lard or butter into the flour. | | LEPPARD RRC OES | 4 | | | Deb eieicbithininieinteleiniettsielebiciieletebtete | West In which the faces on the face cards are por- traits of Dewey, Miles and other navy and army off- MRS. GEORGE LAW’S RUBY-CLAD DOG. a Dr. Geédington and to every interested New By Nat C, Goodwin. If you see a small poodle answering to the name of Yertar: peed s4-4aqug | Of morality that is In accord with the view held by his|Romeo and studded with gold-set rubles you may rake ia. big reward by returning him to Mrs. George Law, the eccentric American millionaires, Mre. Law She had a poodle yclept Romeo on THE DAY’S LOVE STORY. ' ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL, O Rob Miller te married! Well, he will find f have not broken my heart over his fickleness. 1 shall accept Mr. Long’s of of marriage.” And Polly put down on her desk the letter she had received that morning xnd proceeded to answer it as follows: Dear M o-morror “There! A GLANCE. A THREAT WITH CONDITIONS “4 have fest seeived ywar letter. You may enld ng for your anewer, MARGANET D. STEWART, That {s done," and, sealing it, Polly de Masked Girl—If you dare to kiss me I shall slap i your face Bold Admirer—All right; » Masked Girl, hur + you Itket neve klased met ft A SCORCHER. apie COULD ROH bY BUT TAKE UER IN HIS AR. *patched the neat mald-of-all-work to the nearest lete ¢ vox with the missive. Polly was proud, avd tt hurt her very much to have folks hinting that «he had been jlited by Rob Miller, " * year and a half ago, he er, and their friends ear of theie entagement. But tn June sent by the firm which eme ployed him to look after its une In Michigan, Before he left ob had said “t shall be yack {n 4 ear, dear—a year from toeday—ani then I shall want an answer to a question I will ask you. Polly, will it be a favoraple And Polly had murmured, copper » hors one? “Twill walt for you, and shall miss you very much, and be glad when you ome back.” And Kob had Just time to crush her aand in strong one before their friends bore own upon them. And so they parted. Polly sat before the fire so engrossed tn thought iat whe did not hear the bell ring nor was she aware f the presence of any one until she heard her own ume. Jumping up, she was confronted by a tall oung man, who held out his hands to her eagerly. “Rob,” she sat! joyously; and then she thought of iis wife and her manner changed. She ignored his vutstretehed hands and said, coldly, “How do you do, Vr. Miller?” ‘Why, Polly, what does this meant’ sald Rob; but y kept silent. “Polly, are you not gind to see me?’ No answer. Polly, Polly, then it is true what I heard since my eturn to-night--that you are to marry Long, the vanker? I suppose that is why you did not answer my letter.” “What letter?” anid Polly, sharply, , “The letter which I sent you last June, when I was in the hospital In Michigan. When I went away dia I not say I would be home tn a year to ask you—well, xever mind. 1 am too late, Long got abead of me Since 1 too ill to come, I wrote, thinking that vou at least would answer my letter, But you are sot glad to see me, so I will go, Good-by, Polly.” “Rob, where is your wife?’ “Wife!” he repeated. pussied. nd she Is promised to another.” Polly began to cry softly, This was too mueh. What could Rob do but take her in his arms and oothe her, while she told him that she thought he vad forgotten her, she didn't love Mr. Long, and here phe hid her face on his coat—that she did love yim? And then, when she looked up, what could Reb do but kies the lips so near his own? By and by, when everything had been explained, Polly said, “Well, what about Mr. Long?” “Hang Long,” promptly replied Rob. But Polly crossed to her desk and wrote a kind little nete.te Mr, Leng telling of her engagement to “Mr. Robert Miller.” And the next month, when the pretty marriage teok place in the little church, one of the bandsemest presents bore the card of James Long. ——— LETTERSeveninc wa NING WORLD : What te the difference between the lady and thr pues The lady wears Moomers and the dog pants woes HUSIVESS TRANSACTIONS, “Whe do you sel) watered milk?’ asked the 4dr) ole dealer. Why do you sell watered silk?” osked the nm lkma AN OPPORTUNITY. “I came for her, but “But you mustn't kill me; I'm an English Duke.” “Me velly glad to heat i¢ Dere's a discussion in de biemen Brainy” Now wa shall jest ihe presence of men, end yet are breve when alone? That talkers? That women think it “cute and smart to talk “baby” taik to men, when atl men loathe such bab- Ming? That women who are born in the purple never lose thelr aristocratic bearing, while a parvenu never reaches the standard of an aristocrat? ——— eo Kansas Indians. /Thete are % Sace and Foxes, % Chippewas, 28 Kickapoos, 2% lowas and 664 Pottawatomies now on the Pottawatomie reservation in Kansas. Tone women pretend to be such cowards In u women are usually such fluent, voluble he *t RF i I POLOLEOSLLE6006000 0000000000000 of the nelahborhood like apples better than pears she Whom she lavished great chunks of affection. She tall men are coualiy eo} | as kei» double the stock of apples and cuts down Went further and bought Romeo # g@id collar, set women; while enormeusty For (her frult. Of course, ahe could go about {: With four rows of rubies, Bracelets of similar design some insignificant inthe + in the other way and lay in twice a» many pears « efigured each of the luckless beart's \-gs. The ru- be some reason for this * lapples, and when the frult rotted because she couldn’: Me" used Were not of the “property” orter, but were can offer @ sensible explana- ; 1 it, and she couldn't pay her rent because she Sawiess gems, worth a king's ransom, Some days ago, RLF + jdidn’t have the money, people would say, “It's no- While Mra. Law was at the denth an unknown + vody's fautt but hers, Why didn’t she keep what | @iscreant—probably a Jewel connoisseur—taid violent A Demectic Dideresce, INT TO THE COAL MEN } | people wanted?” hands on Romeo and painlessly extracted him. His %o the Btiteriet Yee Broving Weetd: BCAUSE there is nf +| Now, your playwright ts the old apple woman. If he |‘istracted owner has employed detectives and Is ad- ‘My husband always insists on eating in his ohirt ; &@ shortage of coal for the | > + me nice, clean pears, and he finds that a tari |Vertising the loss in every paper, offering a fabulous sleeves when he and I are stone at home. He pave fartories in Bohersia and Saxony New Par is twice aa fast, he ts going in for apples. jreware for the return of the ruby-clad Romeo, he always did so (as did his father and brother) ta York dealers will have to endure a delay * ving the pec © What they want * ers betes oe he ie Posed a. come to these good, dear people. The: al rR tare et habits 5 home never ayy Toe heavy orders for china, Slaan the seny ‘nmeae a Sennabane bce that sort of thing and it Jars on me unsceakably. ‘ d and toys. So it ts not of them do—elee they would not crowd the the BIRTHDAY LUCK Yet I don't wish to seem over-exacting. Bo I ask far ety from the mine to the Fifth avenue |atres when they know the nasty play has com readers if it le customary and also (if it 1s net) how , Fou wee, |to tows, All of us, more dr less, like @ shock. We For March 28 1 can break him © doing so. YOUNG WIFE fs aleo a scarcity of fuel throughout Aus- ee Li ec Rod he spaecagel a in bie and herd ¥ 014 ané Cant thing that takes us out of It seems to give a certain Peer Years Talk. ‘whieh is part of & general European coal ; amount of pleasure, If the shock comes to our morals ©, vou ved Pde eig eey said diesd To the Beiter of The Bresing World: % Jali the worse for the morals, but why In the mischief are tile fevers diy te nie I Rave « eon four years of age who is not yet adte 3 » Marne the shock 1 can't quite make out. It's not Look well to your coming year in a‘! fi i to talk, and you can't picture the nuisance & | Mrennenry Be a5 t6 al We Gen’ geet & matter vold speculative ventures, new ts from norning to night. No words, but an - selling. He constantly fights with the rest of the the greatest agony. 1 hit and continues this crying habit. 1 know the matter is, so I would like ¢e him, Mrs. §. GERSCHAUCK. 3 g i z Flapping of an Inseot’s Wings. HE slow Aapping of » butterfiy’s ing to Tohn Lubbock, produces no ‘when the sicvements are te imeseezes in i i i i i : tf i f int i g e i & 3 i fi iF §° ik i ! ; HAE Ht i Ee i ~ ij I

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