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GRtared bh the Post-CiMce at New York an Second-cions Malt Matter TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1900. —- freee OTIS WILL SOON BE’ OVER”: : ° 3 * 2 ” ° Ps ° am - * ° « = * « * ° ° y had only given me a years more | believe | could Pocerees MRS, DEWEY’S “ AMBITIONS.” T is perfectly right and proper that Mrs f Dewey should wish to see her hero husband ‘ President of the United States, Many men with less claim have occupied that exalted station, There iy no woman in the land ‘ who would not be glad if her own husband had accomplished the feat that made Dewey's name imperishable. And there is ‘no woman tn the land who would not be justified in doing all that is in her power to help her husband secure the highest office that is in the gift of the people Some newspaper editors are criticising Mre. Dewey for what they term her ‘ambitions.’ Well, why shouldn't she be ambitions? What sort of a wife is it who would not ald her husband to go up higher? So far as Admiral Dewey's domestic affairs are concerned they seem to be all right. But even an ambitious wife cannot make a President out of a great hero, Mrs. Dewey, ambitious as she is and ambition has the right to be, will have no volee in the Kan- sas City convention. So it will be just.as well for the editors of the country to let Mrs. Dewey alone and consider instead Admiral Dewey as a Presi- dential candidate, And what Dewey needs now more than anything else is a political party that will galvanize his boomlet into Iife. When this party has been found it will be time enough to study rome a phases of the Dewey campaign. LIMITS AND A PRESIDE SPOT Oem coer eee ee nseseseepesss ones N making his debut an a polities! lecturer so Atl misters will be Nett Alone on Me's ri mM the Princeton students yesterday, Mr. Cleve- gy tering jove and devotion Jand chose to speak of “The Independence of) 0. wisters of little Walter, turn over a new page the Executive. He referred to the fears of the colonists, when they were creating the office of Presi- Gent, lest they unwittingly bestow powers which might be abused as George III. had abused his ‘This feeling, modified by wisdom, led, In the Con- stitutional Convention, to “the creation of an executive department, limited against any poa- sible danger of usurpation or tyranny, but, at the @ame time, strong and independent within its Umitations.” Mr. Cleveland is reported as speaking “without apy evidence of studied expression.” But a ' slever marksman can hit a target without seem- ing to take careful sim, and oriticiem may be sharply pointed without evidence of studied in- tent. The lecture at Princeton can be earnestly commended to the attention at Warhington of one to whom the “limitations” of the presidential Mice appear to be far-away thoughts; who, by indulgence of the Hours, is permitted to forget that it is the part of Congress alone to declare War and “to exercise all legisiative powers” unde the Constitution GAYETY WITH GAMBLING. RESH material is never lacking, even under apparently discouraging circumstances, to promote the gayety of nations and in- dividuals, This is demonstrated by the latest proceedings in New York City, apent the gambling-house of one Canfielil. We have @ large and well-paid and well-or- | ganized police force. A part of its duties is to Geld. Yet when the existence of this piace is re- Yealed it ‘s not through police efforts. It is through the action of the proprietor himself, in Suing to obtain $35,000 lost by two victims of his Toulette wheel. Hearing of the suit, the Poltee Board holds up united Gands in boly horror and resolves that Chief must “investigate” Mr. Canfield. bere is not a sufficient hinge for a municipal plot it ts because we have no Ameri- Gilbert to spread the gift of satire in rattling at new wizard with his 6.0% degrees of heat is But the crying demand |s for a fellow with temperature, to best out the Ice Trust. —_—_—— ew thirty-tom stee! jacket that sixteen- Watervitet arsenal easily icads in the YOL. 40s. 000s cereee ees sesereeeNO, 14,112 torment rules OOOO OU OOOO OOOO OOOr OOK Where GIS 4 o's 00 0. jo @reVere ere. © S'serewrer bitter « too late to nirdo the miechief. I imps Strangers, perhapa as flercely patented, as toned m the rear, and fs claimed to be easter for put- ting on and wearing. LITTLE WILLIE AND SISTER GRACE, HEY cut pa’s tromsere down for me; f font get nothin’ new, T have to wear his old coats out, hie cid Fuspenders His bale and they will some ¢ And then they"lh come to me instead of belt n't At me, but I spose Hrown awny My sister Grace [x twenty-two, and che ca sing ane pla Atd what she wears js always newenot sc that's thrown away! style, {tell you what! She dresses t of sigh and she’s got a beau « things to wear, I'm just ore, Ving’ good enough to doctor ng that ve got on one day wit fine things 8 BE. Kiser —— LAURA JEAN LIBBEY, Love and Peace at Home. ah 1200. Wy the Presa Publishing Company, New York World) HAVE a letter, thie tine from a litte fad, « ite | oited page, which brings a (ear fo my eye, ert while J cannot repress mile that comes to el patiently wade throuen tte dey silee sade x na doy of fou years af age and have ah kreal trouble. My two eietere at home tease mo ¢ sat 1 bate ta_come home from echool, My parnts | 4 Ink it's fun to hear me guyed #0, Can vou write wbout It In The E ving World and give them At» wat Ht read your pleces, If [t ten't stopped tm going to rin away from # all there tand then perdays the be sorry. No boy ever Jawltus to aut me. Please put [Cin tosmorrow'® paver. WALTER The boyish epiatie tell is own story; a home where iC seme nnd unsuppremeed: crucity is a ing the delight and poisoning the memory of t rave is the fault of the parent who permit «ch hed euch mean sisters, You can't ative ‘em too much i JO OOOO » sad state of affairs. There should be nothing bu ove, kindness ont forbearance between brother ord “ They will not be together long at the fam! soard, dear parents, The great world will sever (her atl too soon The parenis who permit thelr children to tease cart neuleate tn t irit that they will have » reer he after years, when it is e curse numeravle householda that + family tease the sisters and gaffer the parents are no more t p young bron a must try to tence and love in your Intereourse with tha se Me may have many fnulte. If ve them with lindness EROS SS 5-1-25-06-6 o~9e cs 20500040 Never by nagging bim about ? He will not be a boy long, more® the pity, A tittle while longer and you will not bear his bounding ning in from play or his loud, cheery, boyish voice shouting In the halle; you will miss bie cap and Jacket from thelr accustomed peg on tie wall, his hail and marbles from the shelf, Oh, sisters, love hia tenderly and well while be i yet a little Ind among you. Draw him into the home fold kindly tab. never drive hig from it out nto tae cold, bitter, unfeeling world battle with you LAURA JEAN LIBBEY Give ov» a new bath tub and na Few more things I AN 1 : down the rent a Let love and peace always reign at home. laure Libbey tor The Bening World by perm’. ’ : Nitthe won of (h ‘om 5 Paper - oo i THIS SHOE OPENS BEHIND. |! first ways bi PFED 0556 66-5 6-966 6245544446 . : 4 : ¢ ‘ i ‘ 4 t iM - 4 4 . . . ; 4 > Toe REE RE Coe eee ee es hown above, in which the shoe ts but- BABYS EASTER GIFT. eth eo aa ‘THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 10, 1900, OUR BOARDING-HOUSE. BY T. E. POWERS. Tue STAR MARES & PLAY Fon THE NEW Arlelnpeinteleleletetelnieletelaieteinleinieteie-ietebinfetebteletsfefetleininletaletete if w Arrival Creates Some Commotion Among Mrs. Tubbs’s Boarders. ous to know whether she is viress from Terre They are & typewriter from Muffal PAW LOOKS UP we landlord ihe bart tflure house that OF what we need Bo he went Him we mite = This is a Good time to get several inore things.” Jand Lord two weeks ago and told Hd Bild a new frunt poreh Pere ee eee a) > sereeeoreeee LISTEN TOs $69 9003- 920544000007 BR eet iid ® le with #eee bees and put hard Woed fh om Up stares and BNA a bay winto tn the Dining room and paper Down at. means to be ahed of the Crowd Start after a Good thing. That's my motto in Life. | |Just think what a grate thing it'll be to Have a b |yard. | can gét Outside exersize then by reisen pota- ant think The next day they put up tn Our frunt and maw Tride to beat i Get the paper so they Paw got thare After while he st Bundy morning paw Fach LOO OREO Ee eee Prada em Oe RE Could ser aly and commenet to Read the List mart maw More's th Flores, Mantel, graita, Leven r open plammen, strictly moddern. Goodness Sakes.” maw Say* Us sutnthing Like a house ft! would of Been bit for us The spice clover’! ay the proserves and Thin, “thats what we haven't got pantry yg Shave his « | Then bh jat the Pupp, but it ¢ Globe off our Best lamp. “After we Got the peaces picked up maw Says dnt herdly of sooted Better ome in Mandy to Here “We haven't got Ennything Here noutrage the en Kooms I can have a Den. and not have my thots all upset Iv be worth 9 Lot for me to Have a place to Think | Glared a while and got alt swelted up around the fa Mike if he was trying to hold in, Then he says: paw Saye “It's on jMebby tt wasn't a Good day for Blaffing when you * to Get By miself| went thare before.” That's what f need, | grate (hots 1 don’t no. A noveliy in shoe construction has recently been | “Never mind. HOW TO DIVID Is breckfust nearly ready? 1h go and see.” “gems | better not ) the blewsin?’ GEORGIE, in Chicago Times-Heraid, E THAT $14 A WEEK. Answers to an Inquiring Reader of The Evening World. HROUGH The Evening World last Wednesdey correspondent asked how he should divide $14 4, amusements and saving. can bitteln Ty the Retlvor of The Rvening World: These answers have been received jm Only “Kstet” om 814, b4 . a To the Ration of The ven ‘One can of course live on $4 a week, or M4 for that ‘To do #9 one should allow $5 ror board, $2 for clothes, §1 for laundry and carfare, #2 for amusements and W for the bank. Fag better to matter, but not In comfort wn case | enjoyed 8.500 per year for many years in same line of business that paid all | earned with per week Brace up, young man, brace up! Lives Well on 681 a Week, the Eater of The Brewing World: am @ lady stenographer and carn but “Bil a I tive in comfort, | pay $8 to my ‘andiady, $ ne NAPA oominy roe wenn feline 5 Haute, Ind. The star boarder ts the first to greet [her ay she enters the dining-room A NEW HOUSE. Rposen 1 go and look at it rite away, and get the re Fewale so rumbuddy Else won't rent tt first and Then | afterwards you can go and Look around and we Can | Ine the Leise.” | “IT don't beleave we need to Hurry that way,” maw | ned, “No. of Corse you Don't.” paw told her. “You never Belevve we haft to hurry for Ennrthing, That's {the trubble with Wimmen. They Dont no what It PDN AID Bb te eb deh ae BUT IT DIDN'T GO STRAIGHT, ; i PEOEPEDEEEEOED DDO2 DMD DOeRmnORED | | It's never too Erly to} nd we can almost at way thru the cumbers and thin, fa munth's rent Jsummer. Whare’s my hat? After he got His overcote on and was all Reddy to “Whare is this place and what's the price?’ aw 100k the paper Cut of his pockut and looked, Why didn’ 1 think of ‘That before?’ he ast. “I never saw Ennybuddy that couldn't think of Things tt afterwards the way you can't. The blame fool | Don't tell whare ft Is nor the price, but Wants you to Box Ate Hundred and tharty. 1 wouldn't j place now If he Would give It to me.” took off HY n't Go strait, and nocked the “Well, thar goes the proffuts from our potatoes and en if the bugs let them alone. Dot better give the land Lord another bluff’ By that (ime we were Sitting at the table and paw “Darn it, Albert, why don't you go Ahed and ast 4 te Basy. ¢ writer married on 8 per werk, and two years CRISPIANUS. How to Spend the Neney Well. Ve the Editor of The Evening World: It ts very cary Se Gare 1 have the proper thing to pass remarks It is considered | plates, wb fuse perspiration j water, and afterward rub them until th f an otnce of powdered alum to a ie water will be useful, he the feet with « solution of eighty | Sralns of permanganate of potarh mixed in one pint. read something. Before putting on your socks powder the| * specially between the (o made ax follows: are thor- Also at lea 44+-b OG | with a mixture Powder for Excessive F lime, one ounce ounce; starch in powder, one ounce. spiration—| newrpaper trembled. prepared chalk, one worth, of the Eighieenth Hussars, to Miss Elea Chol. Mix and sift well. | mondeley.” ” For Weak Byes. * an internal rea- “Time we were gol Indigestion | steadily. “Il want to among them | Waterloo.” ‘Try this formula for the pro- | “1 may as well get back to my hotel, I suppose,” if dram; dis-| said M: son for the condition you deacrit will create all sorts of symptom hose that vou mention. fuse peraplration: tiled witch hazel, four ou Beta-naphthol, one. Borax, | prietor downstairs as a few) “Post them lettors, Frits, ution Into the eye with an eye drop-| her cockney voice. “before you go and forget ‘em.”* per several times a day hor water, on Vaseline for TA.—Vareline sometimes 1 do not think, however, place of proper sealp mi ——————__—_ SMART GOLF COSTUME. grees with the scalp. “Fancy that! Here is a golf costume wit inter kept house with two children on 81 per week, so |Ccoat of hunter's green cheviot, tri: | Tewards $11 per week for one easy—viz,, Room, table board, #4; lunches, $1 D; amusements, $1; carfares, T cent cents. Investment of 8 per week in good building and loan association would realize $209 in twelve Sears, Persistency in managing own affairs well re- ‘ve well and epend $12 for board, 81 for amusements, | suits in ore oe cas waren a poo net te in promotion to manage affairs of others, In my | dentals. living lite a lord on $3 per Week and saving | what remains of one's income. Life on 04 bare extstence. | of white cloth and black velvet. jundry, 8 cents; clothing, | double-faced cloth, cut with incidentals, 7%| and finished at the foot wit vL | THE DAYS # w i wt LOVE STORY, PROPOSING TO EBSA. FTER the choice dinner the three men cut thetr clgars with great particularity, Mayne hummed a few bars of a cheerful alr, and taking a andle from the branch on the table lighted his cigar J passed the candle to the others, They set thelr chairs back and each found a rest for one foot. | Mayne broke the silence by asking the two men |when Jumbies was coming home from the Soudan. j Walmer, at the head of the table, fuahed a little (for © obvious reason) and sald not yet; old Jumbles d be out there for some time. 1 Uked Jumbles,” said Mayne, thoughtfully; “he had such a charming young sister.” The nutcrackers fell Upsily off the table. a THE THREK MEN GLANCED AT BACH OTHER NERVOUSLY. eB ERAGE LTA TREE EE PEEOCAAARREEO | «py the by," asked Walmer at the fireplace, “what Cholmondeley's name?’ said Gascoigne and Mayne together. “Daresay that the little woman's lonely now thet her brother {s away,” remarked Walmer, sympathetically, “It would be almost a charity if some one would pro pose to her.” “I remember,” remarked Mayne, “that she bad a very pleasant, low voice and a charming emile, Ben- | sible, too, she was." “Devilish good little figure," said Gasesigne, thoughtfully, “Walmer, what are you thinking fics “Only about the case that I have in hand just new,” of replied the man of law at the fireplace. “I think, if you don't taind, I'd |ike to write a note while I think: jor it” while passing “I want to scribble a note, too.” eald Gascoigne | awkwardly —~| “Bince it appears to be the correct thing to do,” [ae BEAUTY. | said Mayne, “I may also as well write one.” Presently each had finished his task, and, having stamped the envelope, stood with a shy alr. 2) “PH post them for you" said Walmer, |The other two men thanked him, but declined t ASBIAS.—I do not think you can be in perfect {themselves of his offer. “Then,” said Walmer, with Deaith while you are troubled with such pro- | authority, Wash your feet dally in cold we'll let Fritz do it’ And that excellent an was summoned, ‘They took thelr second cigars, 0 Mayne snatched up the special and glanced down the columns. “Thunder!” he cried, starting up violently, He still held the paper and, being now nearer to the light, re‘ ane, comporediy. A read Mayne The the 10th inst., Lieut. Bos- sald Gar olnon The three men gianced at each other nervously, and Mayne dropped the journal on the floor. remarked Gascoigne, un- toh a fairly early train from . despondently of the men © a private word to the prow hin share of the bill, called Mra, Proprietor tn) Ea | “My dear,” feit te ver’ ext stroy my leddei nd do not bost it. sald Mrs. Proprietor, glancing ever it wil take the | his shoulder. “And jest look, dear, they're all ad-{ | dressed to the same Iady."—Chicago News. { FLETTERS events won. Dewey and Shakespeare. To the Editor of The Even! Shakespeare wrote that “some men bora great, vome achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them." In the destruction of Montejo’s fleet Admiral Dewey achieved greatness, When he returned home he barely escaped having greatness! thrus: upon him. Iie his Presidential aspirations he/| shows that he war noc born great, for his reputation | | for wisdom is bound to recetve a tremendous Jar, It is a pity that the people's idol should so soon show ambition, Better be a hero than a President. JAMES L. CARHART, Saye We Are a Fickle Nation. fo the Rdltor of The Evening Word 1 know of no nation except ours which makes an@ unmakes its heroes with such startling rapidity. Hobson, Dewey, Rooseveli, Schley were crowned with laurels one day, A kins, a house, tax dodging and a controversy wilied the laurels of all four almest at once, We call the French a volatile nation and we praise our own sturdy Anglo-Saxon traits, I say we are the mort volatile, fickle nation on earth. HERO WORSHIPPER Te Beautify Pinssa. To the Réiter of The Brewing World: I would advise the unfortunate who asks advice as to beautifying his house to plant some mock orange seed, also some morning glory seed, to shade his piazza. Be sure to plant lots of sunflower see@-around | the house, The Rose of Sharon is very fine for a: fome Breokt) alte Mast Knew. To the Balter of The Evening Wor Can anybody tel! me how to keep rubber plants healthy and the leaves from turning yellow? What Je the proper and necessary treatment? =. A. Don't Beard; Keep Boase. ‘To the Raitor of The t