The evening world. Newspaper, April 2, 1900, Page 6

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ILAURA JEAN LIBBEY. | The Girl Popular With Companions, Prem Pablichtne ompany, 62 to @ PARK KOW, ‘gags New York. a the Pest-O@re at New York a0 feront-Cinas Mall Matter, | MONDAY, APRIL 2, 1900. senses sree coeeNO, 14,104 “NOTHIN' DOIN’. a Ca/ to write some | t, cheerful girl; but who! 4 » of the fretful, irritable the most trivial remark ; LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. + pyrlabt, 2%. by 4 Y New York Wort : ¢ THE MALL t BEoRgom companions, nor by tter, though I do my Will you tell me, if My whole my irl for that using ae 1 can ¢ wrong and what to d lemen either hat dro from one’s lips and Insists Upon having a fl iis over It? Let your temper be sweet aid even, my dear, and be | slow to anger, and only then upon the gravest of | reas so Intimate with your companion that ad e cause to fear her breaking off her tn: timacy with you » unkind remarks concerning others to your | companions. For from that moment you are In her power, and she knows {t | Always ertaln amount of gentle dignity ‘Our closest friends, remembering also | Do you we REAL POLICE OUTRAGES, | 'T has been one of New York's proudest. boasts | that its streets were safe for any respectable woman at any hour. Whenever this boast has been rendered vain as to any portion of |! the city it hax been through the perform- ‘ance, stupid or worse, of some of the very ‘Men who are hired to make it good. ‘The arrests of Miss Buffington by “Detective” Paleoner, and of Mrs. Wilson and Mrs, Rost by “Detectives” Glennon and Barry, are the latest breasts of your com: | panions, for It is plant whieh spreads alarm ingly as il grows, and you can never tell where ite polsonous seeds may be wafted by treacherous breexes He careful not to talk continually of yourself, The subject may be deeply interesting to you, but has little THE ola mB igestenidies is “OUR BOARDING-HOUSE.” BY T. E. 4 hab , Aor errr EVE A ‘i. LE. 0 tor of ming anda it pple, he sald, i ast 4 y case, VE and anjap He would ie i but for Byey ih Eve lived at xe and Tat No, am not sure here the apple lived, but It was ag one of the two, # hung on u high branch over No. 52's garden, but i fattened on the mplhot,Ne. 51, For whyehil pald rete T FO09O4-4¢ ; \ \ i “NOW YOU HAVB:PARADISBrAND THB APPLE." ( fas sts s se ll il y| Beer iif th HH (a Pir. Layton gav@t tb the every! your if my predecesser. “Yow-dnoq: he! ladder to get.tt."t,. , When I came home,¢hag, ere, in all its giory, ‘ = foticed manoeuvres with ore. Finally Y AédHt'« of NAPRIA, wah st call for breakfast. eutrages. Prompt steps should be taken to make @2 etrong an assurance as possible that they shall be the last. Aa excellent beginning would be made by strip-| "Sn, ‘i " Ping the officers in these cases at once of thelr |, isda ica soln » yourself Badges and authority. Then the entire police force | do that @hould be made to understand clearly, for all time,| ¥ or no Interest for your listeners. In fact they are often bored almost beyond the Umit of pati by hearing story after story in which you were the hervtne. BIRTHDAY LUCK For April 3. 3, this ls the mean- Tt ts not well to be Let others | F you were born on Apri will see that It takes tact, kindness of heart | you were born p | ing of t M that guesswork ts not evidence; that the wearing | '' mn Poetic we : 4 iy Coit Is atiract and Roday la aees ter ssl) aitsirs, Susi o tle my dear girl t any one ean do Gf Reattonable clothing is not an offense, and that this it they once make their mind up to obiternte all ¢ Mente and writings, | there is no room in the public service for mea} the faults that | have potnted out here Ii Fisaategee Wen acanbten: vob ant theveoer ad rail who cannot distinguish betwen the prosecution of isliked ry one with whom she . en ‘ae = * | Gain through friends, from supertors and ty pee vice and the brutal persecution of reputanie | riers are ie alee ee ee anes pm manner:| f your own exertions, Considerable ceitvity 10 tae women. eet b O'CRNER Boe: Ueee st vated, and you will increase your worldly Hew assuredly J have just a few more words of counsel to add, my dear girl, and those are: No matter in what soctety you may find yourself above all things be natural in manner and speech Never strive vainly to keep up a flagging conversa- tion, Botter be silent and look pleasant unless you have something sensible and fitting to remark. LAURA JEAN LIBBEY Laura Jean Libbey writes for The Rvening World by permis. won of the Family Story Peper THE BUSY LITTLE HOUSEKEEPER. MONDAY—WASHDAY. over; then run through a wringer Copyrighted by the Sphinx Magazine, affairs. Boston. THE WOMAN AND THE WHEEL. PRIL brings this question to The Evening World, signed “M. A. T. H." Is {t immodest or immoral for a lady to ride @ diamond-frame wheel? Answer: It is immodest or improper &s the woman renders it so by her costume @r behavior. If she wil! she can be as objection- able on a drop-frame wheel or on no wheel at all 8 on a diamond frame. No more than the coat makes the man does the bleycle make the woman—excopt that, by general _ aoknowledgment, the rational use of the wheel as ~ @@ inducement to stir around in the open alr Makes man or woman healthier and therefore —— TOY SOLDIERS POPULAR I ENGLAND, in many caseé@ the supply has given out ments are announced from Germany. careful never to rub with the hands. sun to ary. When nearly dry iron. RESPITE strenuous arguments in his behalf, James Whitcomb Riley was set down the other day by the fair, wise women of the Eclectic Club as “a ragtime poet.” We fear this is the penalty of being a singer Whom almost anybody can understand—even the Man with the hoe—without the aid of a glossary Oee chanced on a recent afternoon to Open a book @f Riley's verses at these lines: It te enough— ime eet to be good! our hearts where they 0 To let the thirst for eal cope ace sa Go unappeased; to smile back in God's face With the glad Nips our mothers used to kiss, Ah! though we miss All else but this ' o To be good ts enough ~ is almost a crying need ef the H ‘eet—If Riley is one! Taree UNKNOWN GREAT MEN: LL over the country they are getting up Nets of the names which should adorn the tablets in the Hall of Fame, soon to arise on our own University Heights. Good lists, most of them. But they and all others ever prepared wil! form but index to American greatness as it Use hard soap in | In boiling white clothes add a tablespoontul of tur |pentine to the water to assist in the whitening process Rolled starch is much {mproved by the addition of salt or a little gum arabic dissolved Another hint in reference to starch ts that che tron Will not stick tn froning tf the starch has been mixed with soapy water. A good wiarch is made by dissolving one ounce of jstareh in cold water, just sufficient to make tt (nto a smooth, thick paste. When tly free from lumps Jad one pint of boiling water, slightly blued, and boll for a full half hour, stirring It all the time to pres jvent {ts burning. Keep it covered when removed from the fire, as otherwise a scum will rise upon it. While [{t Is still bolling add half a teaspoonful of fine salt, Btrain this starch before Ls | Fruit stains may be removed from table pouring boiling water through + articles are washed me-half of a bar of any good laundry shave it very fine, Pour over it a pint of! ne Water and put upon the fire and stir until" it becomes a thick paste. Into this put one tab spoonful of borax and two tabiespoonfuls of am nonta | Ink spots on cotton, silk or woollen fabrics should be Have ready a tub of tepid water, softened with a|treated to turpentine. Saturate the spots with the tablespoonful of borax jspirits of turpentine and let it remain several hours, Stir into this the soap mixture, then put in the|then rub it between the hands. The ink will disap articles you wish cleaned. |pear, ond neither the color nor the texture of the Let them soak an hour, occastonally turning them [article wilt be injured HOW TO HURRY | EADER, do you know how to hurry? ‘This |s a hurrying age, and you ought to know how to keep up with it-tf you think {t worth ths and © spots Old fruit stains yteld FIRST # aip To New Me Loves Avother. A girl shook me for another fellow out of spite. gene might be fAtted for the glory of the Géer brothers who have denied their own to help foster the talents of the younger, Beusbands who, for important duties, have the neers of the thoughtless ang clung beach when ambitlon called to the war. poor who have helped each other. ‘Men im every town whose friendliness to Reed has Jed that other also to some fra | des. Don't hesitate, Begin at once, When you are know if Lam doing right? STATEN ISLAND. agh stop, and begin on the next thing. | particular what part of the Job you! * being equal, do what's under your hand first and the next nearest thing neat acad \ You have no rig! 4 Don't pause between Jobs. yourself while you are capable of such conduct towarg Don't go from one Job to another untt! the first in| the Innocent second girl. You must -know perfectly “Do one thing at a time,” It takes time to/ Well you are not doing right. Re your mind ‘WIM He Come Beck? fi if > your Gerrard wate you're acting. And sal | 1 am engaged to a gentleman since Christmas, His st the work in hi ca . at | parents live In Germany, and he wants to go home 7. 1f you have assistants, wee them. At Gret do only | 2a oo) iss share of amoher that todue him from thale what they can't do, and afterward help them out, | eo nothing twice, This makes It necessary to do| business, so that he can marry, My parents think it right the first time & Don’t lay down one tool except to take up another 10. Beware of looking out the window. That way thi If you are only goin) e the first young mes make and keep a country great. , Gardiner's appeal to the Governor Rg Sevestigation should not be in vain. Nor ‘tavestigation. Will come with the June roses—the that the roses hove still a biush straction les IL. Don’t put things off. Do them when you think of them. If you'll follow these rules and a few more that you make yourself, you will be able to reduce your office hours about one-half; you won't think you're burrying, you won't be bored and worn out by your work, and when it'* over you can go and play golf, or pinochle, or romp with the baby with an approving e it making a few remarks tarsi prises | baw There has been an unprecedented run upon the stocks of tin warriors in the toy shops of Fngland, end Reinforce- After this rinse through clear, tepid water, being Run through the wringer again and hang in the * ‘ Riankets washed by this recipe are as soft as “A RAGTIME POET.” Page ie gyn ata woollen * WOUNDED * HEARTS « All will lack the namee o1— while, Here ate a few suggestions that may help you: Now she js tired of him and Is begging me to take 1. Do nothing that you don't hi » do, Cutout the her back, but at present I am going with another who have sacrificed themselves that poet gee young girl. and this makes her suffer. Please let me ith the other girl in order to uffer you are behaving like a eRpect consideration for “SNAKES” THAT CAME IN VERY HANDY. — tle of her skirts as she A CRUEL MOTHER. Opinions on Woman Who Beats Her Afflicted Child, The eat fag an Bunn, f it under the ghade ¢ Apple, . I rtrolled ou and ats ype the : The Way to Tell. HE way to tajl howrwell'l love you, Dear? Ank any of the gossip winds that blow, ‘The thousand flowers, that burn it where they glow; Ask all the things that Dove's close secret hear; Inquire of sound and silence far and near, Of brooks that sing it or must cease to low— Ail ministers of love abote, below. ‘Their answer, Sweet—of that I have no fear; s For 1 believe all life, below, above, ‘ Is leagued with love es light is with the day, That heaven and earth aye take the lover's part But should all other voices mock my love, You wil] not heed them; you will turn away, Content to have the answer of your heart. ~—John Vance Cheney, in the Atlantic, To the Kaitor of The Evenin In reply to Mra. 8. request concerning her chil of four who cannot speak yet, and whom jshe beats (o make It speak, I will say she Is unfit to have the care of a child. A mother who hits a little one simply because God was pleased to afMict him |must be tgnorant or very hard-hearted. Mrs. Gers- | chalk ought to see some good doctor about him, and |in the mean time say a prayer for him instead of beating the unfortunate little sufferer, LC. “Eve,” I remarked, “was turned out of paradise ealing an apple.” | * She looked up gna smiled. | Then én this ide Has always Eve," she apgetted, pretenditig fo cut the pages of hook. They’ Wéfe ‘cit inireaty, a THF piece for ‘Aam,” I sage Bb} $s “Bhe might ."" I declared, “needed no pity et all.”. Bhe rested her chin on one hand and looked at me iringly with her-@ig eyes, she s¢emarked,) host b idiot ote Patience and Gentleness, | Ta the Réitor of The Evening Wot Tread a letter last evening from a mother who beats her child who cannot’ talk. A woman who beats a child is nothing more or less (had a beast. That the child does not talk is not his fault. Perhaps the her children treat (he child unkindly, and he cannot tell, because he cannot speak. She should not scold jhim for crying, poor ehil Gentleaess Is the mother of all virtues; and perhaps If the mother of this child would be kind to him she would reap her own rewfird, not here on earth alone |but in heaven also, ‘The talk will come with time If he never speaks until he ts seven years of age he will then know how to value speech, and everything Paradise and the “But he had Eve. Bhe sudied her shoes, and I seated ‘myself on top of ithe wall. Bho fooked at me saucily over-her hook. oor Eve was muck to be pitied. She simulated ————i——— Literary Hopes Dashed. Asptrants for fame from literary labor will be terested by the recent statement of a prominent pu! Usher that out-of the 315 manuscripts submitted di ing the past year his firm accepted but twenty Another publisher stated his ratio of acceptances th he Ae a; Veny little bit hee he dots say will be said to advantage. Remember | about four in every 10 manuscrips received. at he ate the apple. this: ‘Better late than too soon.” R. ROACH. — Nagase ¥ ‘ would have ééten "every, sap herself it he Stop Beating Him, NOW IT'S THE GILET. been a modern Bve.” . ‘To the Editor of The Evening Werld BCOOOCOOOCOOOODOCCCT DODO T nT Bhe looked up at the desecrated_Reugh and laughed. The weman who beats her four-year-old child for crying when he cannot yet talk lacks tntelligence. No one Ww ver taught anything by being beaten. See a doctor to learn If the child's speechles#n: lly “backwardness” or some mental or physical de- fect. If the latter, have him treated. If the former, try patiently to teach him. And remember a certain text concerning the fate of those who “offend one of lthene little ones” the next time you are tempted to | ® 4 strike your afflicted child. MOTHER OF FIVE. —=r—— WHAT ONE WOMAN THINKS. DESIGNING woman—the dressmaker, K: A man never throws himself away until he is arthless. »sts much more to avenge @ wrong thap to |» suffer it ‘To be able to read aloud well ts to be regarded as an accomplishment many people can find a chapter tn the Bible without looking at the index? The women with a sour face ought to apply for a position in a pickle factory When a young author puts lots of color in his stories he usually intends them to be read. ‘There is only one man who Ande that it pays to make ® fool of himeelf—the clroeus clown, The atm of the wel:-dressed woman ts not so much to follow the exact line of fashion as to adapt it to her own individuality When a boy begins to be particular about the crease Jn his trousers it is a pretty sure ain of an attack of the frat aymptc ms of love, A stray sunbeow . the dassie, modern Adam,” she stated. ‘Thereupon she dived witter’the’ @hai’ cushion and! F uced tt. | odd ake Hp ‘Now you have Paradise—andste, apple,” she told ! “They are nothing,” T ald, feeltngly, “compared Hpith—Eve.” ‘ p But Eve—my dainty Tittle Bve—ts coming to No. p the Gpring. ft will avd amy further dispute, she bout the appte'—Oweh Oliver, in Madame, ® “Pet on Your Coat.” the BAitor of The'Rremig Wert: |”! We In answer to the iddy who complaine that her fees nd eats in bie! whjrteleeves when to company We) there, I would pay he {é'Ho gentleman, A man shebld,,, ibe as careful incall such minar hs gel Politencals im his wife's predende av when ainitig With Queen yee") torla. Py on your coat, huabiind? + YOUNG WIFR 4 TOC OO UOUUK Enter the gilet! No cause for alarm, however, as. gilet is but Freneh for watstcoat, Tt is @ decent substitute for the ‘false front,” am i] : n “ abomination attached to stock and forever escaping Tee Young aad Toe Foor, ite moorings, “Pte the Raitor of The vening World: The gilet does away with al! this, The one worn with} 1 am twenty-two and’ earn” the black mohair dress pictured ts of white taffetalg, . My father says] am and fastens plainly down the middle of the back, Thel, wife in comfort: and. too r shaped stock and the trimming covering the front arelming about choosing a wife. 1 eetPreaders of white mousseline with ecru lace appliques, the de-|aicate these two pointe, for ; Sign picked out with narrow black vel ri Pvt ‘This stunning black mohair. drops, ita novel and modish littie jacket bodice with stitched taffeta strapping, a whi yoke showing fluffy under. A crushed finishes the back of the mohair skirt. at the wide black taffeta plaiting edges the shaped ekirt. that he wants to go just to escape his promise, al- though he has told them of his full intention regarding the purpose of his trip to Europe, which he says ts fox our mutual interest. His actions toward me are the same as ever and, far as I see, everything is @!! right, but my folks insist on my breaking my en- @agement rather than walt for him té:go and per- haps never come back. They say it capnot turn out right. AN ANXIOUS GIRL. Your parents appear to be willing to intrust your life to @ man whose word they will not take for a period of three months, It seems to me that the young Bentioman has behaved with strict propriety and it entitied to your own and your parents’ confidence, until he has given proof that he does not merit it. If he is not worthy of your effection en@trust, now is the time to find out. Try to bring your parents around to this view of the situation, ; HE; tue i I Pay et 4 Tommy Atkins Buys His Coffin. EN Tommy Atkins arrives th India rupee per month stepped out of his i 2 z 8 i vides him with a should he survive,, back his fifteen oda water. = 7 \

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