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JEAN LIBBEY eG ranrorio,| UR by the Prem Publle York. oh the Post-0 Mice ot New York ab Wisont-ccx0s Mall Metter. | Girls to Marry? TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1900. = (Copyright, 1908, by thee Bree 1)’ wyrking gi jee 1 {heart and th “hes wears t F [So riage with » good, strong “ured ‘OLD MACHINE STILL GOOD. yee } fut the alrl who bas tolled 7 | her indust has been able to . able to comman consideration ‘The little savings of & inducement for lay his pans to w If he hasn't the mo suggests that she furnish J wages, marriage hy grea ¢ whieh « Ifetime, ie more tine rome shrewd fellow feilberat Ip housekeeping he will pay he | Nod Bull 1 think the pective husband Tt is an easy thin aw one# #| dank, and it can be whorily frittere j would take another lifetime ¢ t | wether again. my dear « ]} In such a case I fully believe the m Sas much money tatd by as girl hae These thrifty giris nine times worst bargains in the matrimonial marke Their im And fecene shit the thrift Bhe ney is soon gone i gir tear hi whi pretty often. For why should he take a vac from work now and then, so Zz as hie |the pot bottling, he thinks Of course they talk ry fair m Sl they are shrewd enough to And out the girl's b poe | her Ikew and « oe _ — — Hee Seueeres ni a differer . a . , age and 7 THE STRIKE AT THE DAM. {inet site sum inthe vann of which the nes no, foo goes without saying that the strike now |! t ahd conpdingly boasted In @ burst of enthu im progress at the Croton dam {s of the sort most dangerous to the public peace. ‘This, because the body of strikers js made up of men passionate, not schooled to thougbhta of consequences and but ttle ae- | jive wisely, deliberate prudently, Quainted or concerned with our language and Iawe. | com the frying-pan into the fire m ‘The assassination of Sergt. Douglass, occurring! of writing “Mrs.” before your naze. ast evening, is a demonstration of the treacherous | LAURA JEAN LIBBEY | Sad violent instinct existing among these men. | pte titan Tt te demanded that the uprising at the dam|**" “ '™ age! AN ehac @hall be promptly and effectually suppressed, Yet | “the #:7pression must be in the Interests of peace Gnd order and with as little bloodshed as may be— ‘without bloodshed if possible, Not the spirit of | _ tatolerance nor of revenge must move the powers © Of the tiate. A force sufficient to overawe the riotously {n- Glined strikers and convince them of the futility | - @f violent manifestations will be the beat instru- | i Ment of peace. | If the Seventh Rogimont isn’t large enough to | Mill the vill, let more regiments be sent. “penses of this affair will be far better public dollars than in human lives. tel ory likes, and cater fh will be quite they » her notions, keep t!. For sickness and many other hardships wi }come, and If the husband has no money to meet (he | diMculties the wife feels in duty bound to do so. THE TRUSTS’ By JOH [= exeregations of capital are made necertary to a great extent, by the use of machinery, and one OF choir principa! purpones is the adoption of mont effective machinery Abothy obviate the w of compet! 8 well as in other respects, so that in many cages of combinations one man will be found The €X- | adie to take'the place of two. paid in| It must be admitted therefore that in the use machinery, and also In other w more e tive and require a less number of em accomplish a given result, It follows that temporarily displaced, and the hasty con WANTED: A VICE-PRESIDENT. "sires mpraiy Scan a NN the last soventy-two years of this Republic | sioyment of fewer laborers no Vice-President has been re-elected. The; The general result {s quite the reverse Inst Vice-President to be elected President! When steam looms and spinning jennies began to was Martin Van Buren, who first succeeded, > Sdopted tn Epgiand * the-number of m to the highest office on the aut i alma ners and Weavers in England was less than 5.00. in years later 350.0% persons were employed in these tn- f and was then, in 1886, elected on his own | gugiries, and to-day they furnish labor, directly or in account. . | directly, to over two millions of the people of Eng Tt is perhaps because of these facts and because, | 14nd in the one laindred and elven years of our na-| | The railway system Ke Phen chessrrea et ela le existence, only four out of twenty-four V.ce- | "Te" egies A alle se gee oye raliways of this country give employment directly to Presidents have been promoted through (he death | over a million people, and indirectly to many millions of the Chief Executive, that the second place in | more the national adminisiration has come to be re-| ce ate t chinery tT of combination and the ulllization of m been particularly evidenced in the cotton infjuatry, One man will now do the _@arded with so little of the proper notion of, its | | work which required several men seventy years ago. Yot the ntimber of laborers tn this Industry hag tn- ‘The men who provided for a Vice-President of creased from 02.140 in 18M to 220,000 In 1890, | She United States intended that each candidate ||! '* further cla pote aac ag a Ac ale same desire for cconomies causes the i | for the office should be as carefully considered as, ages as well as the number of laborers. me: Fee ) We Bis ability and character as if he were to run trary, the trusts doing the most successful business | » the purpose ar round. A large | Gor the Presidency itself. Indeed, at the beginning ray the best wages, and what Is more “et affairs, the man who got the second largest vote | NY PAY thelr wakes (he whole | for President was declared elected Vice-President. | there were found in the cuair which Rough | Rooseveit now affects to disdain a John Adams and a Thomas Jefforson—men who after- | Ward commanded the highest preferment on their (OF account. eer Pee eer ee ere ey y ‘the late Mr. Hobart died, it was all at ence that the coumiry had lost a Vice- President who had retused to be a nonentiiy. He! _ Bau kept & hana on the helm of national legisia- thom. He had made the Senators understand that hee teal mallard real per- aaa shadowy Presidential possibility. | * Yet st was pure!y by good fortune that the elec- ‘Gon of 1896 brought a man of the Hobart qualifi- to preside over the Senate. The nomina- fell to the gentleman from Patetson almost. Qo & matter of parcy expeaiency. Alan Arthur wes named for Vice-Presi- om the grounds of politics and popularity. were plenty of men, even of his own Repub. party, who shook their heads gravely when, | the killing of Garfield, the highest mantie fell upon the shoulders of New York's But Arthur arose to the emergency, im commanding yet in manly fashion. He ep auin | o~ “fa ‘The old-fashioned necktie clasp is milady’s Intest caprice, and her present fad for fastening her flowing end ecart or ribbon tle, The picture shows it used with a ribbon, and the effect is pretty much the same when a scarf is worn. # BEAUTY. & To Remove Tattoo Marks, J. K.—There are neveral methods of removing tattoo marks, | do not think you should at- this operation yourself, The best known follows: Wash the part (horoughiy with common @ilute of acetic acid. Half an hour later use & mixture compored of four grains of caustic potarh and one ounte of distilled water. Afier the lapse of mother half hour use the following mixture: Dit . ® pleasant to write even of the unexpected of men in office. It would be not less however, to realize that the course of AIDS TO We process {s of the fathers ts considered enough for general usage, so their | the picking out of Vice-Presidential ‘also be found wortay of honor and vomeany, ove ranx now. Is It Ever a Mis ake for Working As the years go by there fs continual drain on | 2 that litle bank account, even if ahe ix permitted to | + hut do not fump| ‘ely for the sake | . Laure Jean Libber writes for The Rvening World by permte |‘ of *, trusts make iabor | NECKTIE CLASP IN VOGUE, | THY WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 17, EASTER AT OUR BOARD BY T. E. POWERS. | 1S EASTER TRouBLES ‘YO THE BUTCHER x ‘Tha STAR BOARDER BRINGS A FRIEND TO SINNER, TWH OTHER POARDERS PRES BY THE PARLOR DOOM TO TAKE ALOOK aT THE NEW aRalv | | | STARS >RIENO ‘Quite ARAIN LaMLAY (ALITTLE JeaLous) ” WET T DONT WanT MY NEW 5: ‘Yous pace eo° SIDE OF N D. ARCHBOLD, Standard Oil Director. ! Yet more men are employed in England and America, | and wages are from three to four times higher, than @|!n the land where labor Is independent. There ts no | @rcaping the fact that the most economical and suc- ; [poset ure of capital in carrying on industry is the @ | best for the laborer, 4! it is not alone the rate and certainty of wages | which improves the condition of the laborer. He is # also the consumer. The lower the price of products ® the beiter for the laborer, and the greater his con- sumption, The greater his consumption the better for the employer. The prosperity of the one means the prosperity of the other, }t is claimed that the laborer has no hope of be- coming \nterested in the business. That also is not There Iways room at the top, and nearly a! »| Stlecessful managers and superintendents began ordinary laborers. Further, in trusts or corporations, even the ordinary laborer may become Interested in | the business by investing savings in the stock of the |concern, and hundreds of them do in this way become profit sharers. | Although much that I have said may seem to be | mere theory, I know that it is all true of the business | with which Tam connected. It hax reduced the price | of ite nroduets, tt hi the dest wages to Its em- ploy and payment has been constant and certain. increased the number of employed, and @ mor faithful and betier contented army of employees never existe! | A great number of small concerns could never have loreated the cost!y machinery nis, constructed the pipe lines, bullt the tanks, sels, opened the markets of the world and bullt up the present ol! business. ‘That required combination and ! rr err eC oe eee ee ey 4 . St Phe Peep ESOS ERE ES Lee CRP ORES, JOHN D. ARCHBOLD. eo er re a 040 THE DAY’S LOVE STORY. A CASE OF JEALOUSY. BE PRANKLYN, a dillttante artist—son of * very mau—was ty iront of Pler No. 16 while « big ocean greyhound was making G@nal preparations to leave ber deck. 1+ was putting up his sketch book and in the @ct of turning away, when two Ddelated women came ong in such @ hurry one collided with the artist. jh, sir,” she cried, “pardun me, But, see! we're ING-HOUSE. to) TASTER CAROL By THE WARMONT HOME QuARTETLE ¥ iat As she spoke her eyes Mashed into his pleadingly. ini: wininieteteteiete: reiedatnet: = ie rinindetete ‘O WIPE OFF THE SPRAY." . deep, luminous. velvety, And such k, rippling halr, and white teeth, and gracious ex- He war simply struck dumb. He was in . and as the fair apologist flew on board with her maid the heart of George Franklyn followed after, “May [be hanged!" he exclaimed, and he sald it |aloud—"‘may I be hanged {f I don't go, toot” ‘The leviathan was three days out, and yet George | Franklyn had not set eyes on the beauty of the wharf a Sa oe or her maid. Fortune favors the brave, however, ‘and op tye fourth day, as he leared against the bul- warks on (he lee wide of the steamer, a gypsy hat, winimininininimininins mi cy d by the breeze, came rolling and hopping his / and he picked it up. dh, sir, I'm ever so much”— The owner of ihe hat sald no more, but she had sald enough. As for George, though his heart beat fast, he preserved a laudable composure, \ “1 am," id—“allow me to wipe off the epray~ ng ptan—ah, here Is your hat—who was rude to brush against you last Thursday morning on 0." “Why.” sold the lady, laughing and biashing viv- diy, as she took her hat from his hand, “it was I who transgressed. Thank you for my hat—but how—howe ever. did you--— There, | am rude once more." “Tho truth is,* sald George, “that I fell in love with you on sight, and then and there I resolved to £0 to Europe on that steamer or swim ac When George and Miss Ceettia Went ashore at Southampton three daya later they | ed known each ether for a century and had been > jengaged more than half an hour. . . . . int | 4 sisiminimint=t: THE OLO GoesiP or mat mouse - JUST INTROOMED! 3 Mee cer AGEN POINTS VOR THE Lanosagy A CROWN OF SATIN RIBBON. ' | | . . . ° over square and pre- George called at a imenied his card. “WHI you kindly give that to Miss Irving?" he sald to the servant who opened the door. But the wext moment he saw Cecilia Teving, in jsireet costume, @ paper which looked Hke a check In ‘her Joft hand and he? right arm (thrown caressingiy round the neck of one of the handsomest and most | distingulshed-looking young men George Frankiya # had ever geen. George, turning away, sought his hotel with the idea of starting the next morning for New York. As % he was entering the vestibule he met a friend—an £ | Englishman—a dilletante like himself and a good fel- lo hh ed POStHESS-992080. ore “Delighted to see you, old man. Why haven't you called at the club? Oh, say, you must come with me at once to the Academy of Art and see our mutual friend's picture? You know, Ned Hammersiey,’* ‘The picture was a marine painting and George could not help admiring it. “It is really fine, Marsh,” he said. “T congratulate Hammersley. Tell him sp from me, will you?” “Oh, hang it, man, tell him yourself, But see- | onder {sa still more beautiful pleture.” | George looked In the direction of his friend's gtance + and saw Cecilia Irving and Use cavailer he had beheld Tena eebtbdtbiedbed [it fuch sweet relations to her a few hours before, wr i “Oh, papa,” cried ita, her beautiful eyes fell ‘suddenly on the pale face of her betrothed; “papa, here is Mr. Franklyn. George, let me introduce you to my papa. But why did you leave so suddenly this tere | i j | Reed Harper's Bazar showed the original of this miliinery creation, The crown of Satin ribbon, thed In a bow of mauve and blue, Inconspicuous as it mi seam rorespents the very latest and most sought morning? color comblhation of the most exclusively dressed | On the day of the wed: and as George and his neern cannot afford to shut down any yp n of the| capital without which there would not be to-day 35,000 ar and keep Ite em: tate » drawing $100.00 per day in wages, thousands | One ma Koglaind and America: accomplishes | of persons of moderate means Interested in the bust- | rough the w machinery ax much as forty men| mess and cheaper light in the palaces and huts of | Would accompiith in some other countries Heer continent. —The Independent. H OLD BY JOE Jd STORIES T J played “Rip Van Winkle” ty one of | “How about ‘Romee and Juliet? ked, i rn citles L received a jetier fr man! T tod him that “Romeo and Jullet” made a doubie! » sald my production had afforied him so much ‘ure that he wauted to give m thing to show me how much he had enjoyed my actne. 1G ' jam too m t to repeat all the complimentary things i The man's name was Duncan, and he had invented! 5 | A spring be: known as Duncan's spring bed. The) . | letter concluded something om this order; "I am dis. | | interested, but | admire your art. T will cen i you oae of my patent spring beds If when you wake in t third act of ‘Rip Van Winkle’ you will always say, 1 wouldn't have f » bad if I had used one of Dune can's spring beds’ When T was playing in a Western clty a man with |(@ ne Most ferocious pair of eyegiasses | ever wn the middle alc'e of the theatre and Jefferson, | think this starring nictour | told him that I once thought the samé way, somehow or other a change had come over me. 1: "When i was & stock actor | loeked upon a stat as a conspirator, but now | look upon a ck actors |i conspirators starring system come into @ vorue about three hi years ago. U was invented by one Willlam Shakespeare. it “Why. sald 1, “Thespis was aster, He must havel neon, for he was the only one in the company,” went on to tell my friénd that tn all of Shakespeare's | star that shines with @ single ray, plays there Is a central ght around which the others feebly shine. ' Ti I once went by request to Catskill, N, Y., the scene’ tinned hanes hte aval deisel met acids within the reach of ignorant persons aud chile | dren. Needs Scalp Massage. ‘ RS. A., Little Falls! think this formuin better | Bridal Costume. han the one You ask about, but you really re-;. Is it proper for a bride to have strings on her hat quire scalp massage: Pormuta for Hair Tonle @nd also carty a henge the Just | One, eight ounces; miharides, (wo) Of the above things, carry ! ounces: spirits of camphor. / —— Walking Shoes. necessary that the bridesmaid should Because high French heels are once more fashionable | smbié in these nmail detalis. Flowers ate ‘embarrassed over something and said: women, The brim, which gives almost the effect of a | bride were about to start for Italy, Mr. Irring whis- flora! crown, Is of pansies in purple and yellow. pered in the bridegroom's ear: ip “Confess, now; weren't you a little jealous of me?” “Well, hang it! a man of forty should not look EFFERSON twenty-five or twenty-six, Jealous! Of course I was of the story of “Rip Van Winkle,” to produce the play. Some people in that vicinity believe that —not a little, but wful lot.” _— eC TO THE ory of “Rip Van Winkle” ts true, Before the per- wrmance aud while | was eating my supper al the LETTERS evenins WORLD : mercial traveller sitting r by about Ri Hi id weet Se fe mene ins sitting near by about Rip. He said: Yee Gan ae Yer, aah; Rip elept for twenty > a seg hi : ‘0 friends formulated ti He slept so long dat dere is a hole in de rock pe ig eg Brcncth Nottie ¢e tae his head rested, sah." ancient and praiseworthy custom. During the fracture “How do you know that story is true?” process, the “bone of contention” flew, just in half, drummer, from both prongs, Wht does this wignify? Could it Bid waiter pointed mt me and sald, “Dat's Rip ;}mean that both wishes were ident Whee reader Nene’ : tell? WELL-WISHER. But I couldn't remember of ever having worn a hole in the stone. After the perf given in my honor introducing me asked the “Walsteeat” or “Veatt” To the Raitor of The Evening World: 1. wh some readers of intelligence would decide whicheis the preferable term, “watsicvat" or “vest.” says “waistcoat” is correct, and that the ‘ " ts es vulgar as the word “pants.” We hed many disputes and now ask revters’ opine Man ance I was invited to a reception the Rip Ven Winkle Club, In jent of the club was greatly Pr a “Ladies and Gentiemen: 1-!—l—with t-te Guge to you Mr.—Mr.—Mr. Washington Lrviig}* When Garrick and Barry were playing’ Romeo in London the city was divided as to which one was Q best Romeo, Each actor had a widely different con- ception of the part. Finally the question wasiieft {an actress who had played Juliet to both Garrick Barry's Romeo, She answered by balcony toene Garrick shows so mi *o earnest that | am always afraid he Into the batcony after me. Barry, Wie is ictonhdlemntbesstier gh tag) xitbesedD Ne. } ; If @ young lady attends g dance is It proper fot her, upon belt avked to dagce, to refer her partner to her escort