The evening world. Newspaper, March 31, 1900, Page 4

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% Pabtiehtag © ny, OB to Puatianes Wy the Prow Fs! ittot, Cemoe Qatesed 08 the Pest-OBice ot New Vord 0 Bocond-Cians Mall Matter, | =—S———— ese tor tu = | SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1900, seeeNO, 14,102 eee ee Se Ik yo out THE GRAND JURY'S FAILURE. care of him thruet a lamb | eeeeeeee lamb, take dren leak. The helm will not work It never was seaworthy: Down she goes wit mend their morals and of the Christian -home ts the place THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING: MARCH 31; 1 KNOW there are persons wno seem to have no welfare of thelr “My boy must take the risks | special interest In ty The father says ok In life e turas out well, all right: If he ite sister, Well, let that go, and all his life he will rns out Hh will have to bear the consequences. want the best part everything, and he will be le has th e chance that | had. He must take’ grinding and grasping » day of his death. ware of yourself.’ First nny is not u men aworthy wt It is too late 2) passengers to a watery grave What was the time to fix thi the ume to prepare It for the storm? Ah, my friends, do not walt until your dren get out Into the world, beyond the Narrows 4 late then ton the great voyage of life! thetr ins w, correct the evil now. Watch the Children and Educate Them ‘The vessel springs a | What fe the matt Itt ner you save yourself a great deal o: trouble, oh, parent, if you can early wateh the chi and educate them for God and heavent first five years of my life made me an infidel,” Int is too * The dr} Correct 1 DR. TALMAGE’S SATURDAY EVENING SERMON. alidren, A shepherd might just as well into a den of lions, and say: “Little! rr a HNaaee. S06009 94-00 44048-040400444-000400 “The j puts out to sea, and after it has been five « vessel? What was | y-dock he sin ald | te God and Heaven. Greece, all the seenes of outrage wherever he went are an echo of that bad mother’s heart and that bad 9RE44G4AGS + 64-04-0-6:4-4-6-F0d4O44 aaeeag | bring upon him, You He takes nine-tenths ives one-tenth of it to style of discipline ye seo how he divides Mf it for himself, ag ht and People hurl th rxcorn At the life of Lord Byron. | half so much to blame as his! TP Se Re ee Eee ene ene 2 ee whe Beet es ee eee. mother's life Do not think your cause they make a racket. All healthy children make a racket. But do not laugh at your child's sin be- cauno it Is emart. If you do, yOu qill cry after a while because It {» malicious. ember, It is what you do, more than what you at Is going to affect your children, Lead, if you would have them follow. Have a fam- fly altar, Do not with long prayers wear out your lchildren's knees. Do not have the prayer a repulsion, lIf you have a plano, or an organ, of a melodion in the house, have it open while you are having prayers, If you say, “I cannot constrict @ prayer; 1 am slow | of specch and never could construct @ prayer,” then ‘ REV. T. DE WITT TALMAGE. take Mat Henry's prayers, or take the Eplscopa! OPP PEOor Peer er re | Church prayer-book. ‘There ia nothing better than | that. Put tt down on the chair, gather your children mother ‘The historian tells us that when her child |@bout you, and commend them to God. was limping acroxe the floor with his unsound foot,| You say ft will not amount to anything. Tt wil, March Grand Jury has set forth a sweep- | Just look at the character of your children now and nateat ng like any other mother, she said: |long after you are under the soll. bis son wil ta ing presentment against the men controll- get an intimation of what they are going to be. You tet my way. sou'l brat! Do not de-| member father and mother at morning and evening fng the Police Department of this |iry vevciity te aed ca ee aries ihe apple wha {Lond Ioron half-a much aa you denounce his | prayers, and it will bea mighty help to him. hod ul his proclivity Is and what his sin will be, and what| mother. Ail the acenes in Venice, all the scenes In T. DE WITT TALMAGE. It finds that the police “from rounds- The Hungry Half Hour. | : 00 Longevity of Brain- Workers. men up to the Commissioners, are guilty HE hungry half hou: at se often comes be- | Statistics have been published to show that brain- ee een etd crete! etme”) | mec cian tires cacetr| gE TRE BUCK iscsi rer oe at ee 3 c ortekers ‘ake any the popular ik aS and wo o 4 io ie to exieting genbling Laney yt GIV88. | suncheoh crackers on the market—end thelr name is their duration of life gives an averagy of sixty-eight ‘This blindness is due not “to lack of intelligence | |. gion and tpread with a llltie butter and. sprinkle For March 31. years and elght months, or knowledge, but to some direct interest in the , ligntly with grated Parmesan eh Place ona dieh w March 31 this ts the — maintenance of the ” in the oven long enough to brown m slightly. They % chive Bnoen ple each come i Flowing Skirts Are Coming In. Purther, the Grand Jury declares as to the Dis- | \'° 6904 when (us prepared If Kent for several days day. Your anniversary Polls’ Gb. SORF WAreetone manners, esatlenek: triet-Attorney, that he not only failed to give will- ing and capable assistance toward the investiga- tion of this evil, but that he really blocked the ‘way when the inquiry pointed “higher up." This output by the Grand Jury is one of the moet inieresting contributions to the mass of matter going to make up the history of present | conditions in New York. But it is @ literary con- | tribution only—all words, | Having the evidence upon which to found so} broad a presentment (the honorable body speaks Ateelf of its “adequate evidence” as to the city's wide-openness to evil), it had the basis for many and important indictments. Yet the true bills) whieh {t found are comparatively few, and not one | Of them |s against a subject “higner up.” \9 Can we frankly and truly declare that the sins | Of dereliction and of neglecting to press an op- portunity are confined to the District-Attorney? | The Grand Jury turned Mr. Gardiner from its @amber one day. It had power to ignore him | @ompletely, and to carry its inquiries to a bitter @aish on its own account. It was sure of public gympathy and ald. By its own confession it had! the necessary foundation FACTS for evidence. Why did this Grand Jury stop with WORDS, When the way to ACTS was clear, and when ACTB were the demand of the hour? Why, with a field ranging “from roundsmen up te the Commissioners,” was Capt. Thomas the | @ele victim of the hunt? | Why did the big gamesters and dive-keepers | @@eape and only the smal! ones cuffer, out of a Wedy sufficiently in size and evidence to be) Plainly accused of corrupting an entire Depart- Ment of Police? It is no answer to these questions to plead that the District-Aitorney would not lend «18 ald, One reluctant man cannot close a broad road +”? @e twenty-three determined men ‘ If the Grand Jury bad the FACTS It says it had, \4 | fet Joy APRIL 1 AND THE FOOLS. {LL FOOLS’ DAY does a little fooling of its . own this year by falling on a Sunday, Ay which is to-morrow damper on some of the ordinary trick- ters of April 1, But there will be no| widespread gloom on that account. April 1 bas better claims on our notice than its All Fools’ record. Other claims also than those 7, | gpieing from its ushering in of the April shower veauty-m 7 —— which gives poetic assurance of plentiful "'* i cireasticn of the blood, Van Wyck is ectly wiiling to raise the office-holders, while he can't even see the Beboo! teacher. of indictments ought to include vev- ; Fhird semnue Railway piracy affair, WS Werk ts the whvie thing In baseball,” says | But it alto takes « whole team. that muntcipal ownership should | Bt to an adequate city building. | i sprouts to-morrow, buds in a_ 9 in another seven days. | ee the block” when it's on the siete anvases of diffe over It while deflated, ft clearly failed in its DUTY to the waole people. © ording to the This will put a expansion of the |i TO BE BEAUTIFUL EAT CRECY SOUP, ot Troy history - batter is dropped in, Harvey, who revealed for us the mystery of «a. broth pe ecee Rat-Exterminating The Limit in Rationalism. A Rationa organized {n Copenhagen. tory for the rate it kills 8 has built a A NEW DRESS FORM days ed have give your ing yourm m. In using t erfe the measureme wn Ix to be made, t# p rm is then | ape of the ing of the rubber ibber mact ne at INCE {t has been discovered v and Prin n, and a quantity of yok are added, and the the wel Her opinion “ the wat by the been crema: anding whie a gown ts being bove ls a practical scheme fit while you are er the rt st that Helen orphans whereupon placed a sovereign in the ce ee eee and expressed the| Pretty little toys and candies for for joy are now being shown. that he was col for “am encoiiont n inflatable ru a series of eh is pat} ing, made his « is poured ajesty’s the anvas ¢ dinner for rrots and whole simmers until om April 1, 1815, Bismarck first saw the | cAfets are soft. The mixture Is then bruised and | |A DOG THAT MET THE QUEEN. Among the thousand and one interesting incidents of the Queen's visit to London Was the one tn which Tim. nown dog at dington Station, which lects for the widows of ratiway ployees, figured prominent- Tim, whose por give, was patriot decked with red, white and Dive ribbon and was brought Queen's desire to saloon, Queen which prevents undue} Creey ay the into a some ‘ad em- it we be- for you on the whole al should Inet > be favora affairs in ge financial outlay is * not Women are going to take the reefs out of their skirts, and when flowing draperies are substituted for “‘eel- skig’ garments, two men will have to come to their feet to glve one woman a seat. = TABLE MADE OF CLOTHESPINS Corer Pees Cee h de tppear to be a le ofa favorable noture are spoken of, For April 1. I" fs moderately 00 Your anniversary i yet wware of law and d on. Changes ated, but such should be avoided. You MH be evidence you. ideal, and many amxieties will be in yet, wihal, some favors are shown For April 2. T {a not important, | The ming Guard well ut postpone important ear will be a troublesome 1) your affairs. family as are spoken are will be ne your healt Some di i « ‘This table ie made of clothespins joined ee by rigid wire. The clothespins are gilded, and bows made golden rope help to give the whole of it an artistic finish. Hot Mines. mines in the world are the Com- lower levels the heat is so great annot work over ten of fifteen min- y known means of mitigating the a time, haw be 1 in vain, lee melts before it of the shafts = —— omaMaaeEDNa1 COCOOOOODOBEL Age and Youth, « forward, Age looks back, n the selfeame track. nd in hand, woh a plea it land; with memory side. Walks where silent shadows glide. Whieh is best—ah, who can tell! MM Q evening bell! —-———— QUERIES s% ANSWERS tHe EVENING WORLD READERS, 4 Weary way, of day 1 true, ey through. : i a & Apply to Bellevee Heopital. Are there any braces made to straighten the lege? Ail they cost? Where can 1 get them? What w tet 4 Truth; C1OLS 10 YS 01S1@) @1S1@KOISISVO"SISSISIOISNE) »mpanion. B le Correct. A says thet this Is the twentieth century, and B claims that the twentieth century will not begin until Jan, 1, 1901 Which wins? JAMES F. KENNEDY, Toms River, N. J. Cooper Union, Where can a boy learn ptenography for — pressed through a sieve, and w more broth ts added and en the soup t* hot a bit of and it is served with cubes of and ts found to be very palatable. | ins er way of improving your complexton by eating ts is to cook them thoroughly and add them to sugar to taste. toasted brea be Thureday and Friday. On what days did July 28, 1880, Pe June 3, 1878, CTaL. SDE. marhe} potatoes for dinner, pounding the two! fall? t ‘The Southern women have long known the | paet of the Ceremony of Inotelling the Doge of value of the radiant carrot as a beauty food, but Venice. have kept the knowledge from thelr Northern sisters, fearing incredulity What was the “Marriage of the Adriatic?” FLORENCE DORSETT, Aebory Park, N. J. ——— “ An Empire Without Colonies. The Cleverest Horses. Austria is the only Empire tn the world which the cleverest. In the | has never had colonies, or even trans-marine posses- * with broad foreheads learn their drill|sions, in any quarter of the ¢@arth. Her ambition more quickly (han the others hee hitherte been parely Continental, ied hortes a “| - PRETTY NOVELTIES FOR EASTER REMEMBRANCES. Clustration pictures one of @aberate ence. It ts cab dal Raster dat will make the childeen whe a npr fret whele of Bror Rati‘ -amtiy, the maby two tle deca, art FUN FOR EVERYBODY. GOOD AT FIGURES, WHY SHOULD HE WORRY? Matinee Victim—I say, my dear young indy, with your hat in front, it's impossible for me to—er—er— Lady U marine—All right, ole hors; I'll tell you when to applaud! Se RREnaEaaeteeeeeee WHY TUIL OBSCURELY? He tolled for years with all his might To win the bubble fame— Week in, week out, and day and night— But only failure came! One day he took some pills and then He highly praised the same; He'!! never be obscure again— The whole world knows his name, “Look, Freddy, look at that poor, dear little doggie that's only got three |i P, “That's nothing. I've only got two!” DID THIS EVER OCCUR To rout Little Willie—Say, pa, what's an egotist? Pa—An egotist, my son, {s a man who tells you these ‘things about himeelf which you intended to tell him about yourself. A BOWLING TRIUMPH. and although he fails to extri- cate his promptly— AT OUR BOARDING-HOUSE. he nevertheless succeeds tn ag thumb from the bali fcomplishing his elm. Mr, Spare, the bowling novice, starting out to make a ‘strike’ — Ghe—And mo doubt many young fevows will get married to aveld bemg sent to the front. He—Grest many more will go to the front--to aveié being married! A FRIENDLY TIP. Miles—I want to purchase a thoroughbred cow, but "Of all the melts I ever smelt I never emelt af! deat Know how to look up the amelt that smelt as that smelt smelt.” Giles—Why don't you look tn a # THE DAY’S LOVE STORY. # and children, and the maingpring. tn the shape of Deborah Dene, the woman he loved, had fatied him. In his clinched band he held the letter she him, abruptly announcing wished te off thelr engagement. There was a revolver which had thrice hed tts his forehead, but three times the man's purpess failed him at the moment. Bo he had invented ang made cattle-log? HIS LAST INVENTION. Rs GARDON strode moodlly up and down his Ea é i workshop, which was littered with the odds end ends of machinery which represented the ruine of a hundred castles in the alr. He gased around him on the gaunt skeleton In wood and brass of past hopes ‘and clinched his hands fiercely, “A failure! Everything in my life te @ miserable failure!" he cried aloud, as he paced the floor. It was not the breakdown of an ordinary invention, however, that wrung the bitter words from him, He had grown accustomed to waking in the morning with an idea worth millions in his head, and golng to bed at night with the knowledge that It was not worth @ million match-sticks, and had become quite philo- eho om the inventor's barrel pointed reetes| i A ? Hi i ; i ii : i er i E g he he figure of @ woman approaching him. & moonlight one, and in the middle she was walking it was as clear as noonday. ond glance told him it was Deborah Dene aiong the road. In the complete surprise of sesing her tn spot at such an hour, the thought of his tn went clear wut of his head. urried forward. he said, “what are you Going here?” it teil 2 $ i i i Hi FOR ANSWER THE GIRL FLUNG HER ARMS AROUND HIS NECK AND BURST INTO TEARS. PPOOTTEVETEOEE sophical over the failure of his pans for money- making. But this time it was a different arrenge- ment that had broken down—an arrangement by which the inventor hgped to make himself a home sooee.5 na

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