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‘LAURA JEAN LIBBEY Why Hearts Wear Out. PREeRed by the Prom Pudiioning Company, 12 (9 @ FANK ROW ‘Mew Tork ee Pe eee ee Gaberes 04 the Powt-0fhce at Nqw Tort 10 Serme4-Ciane Wall Master 3 $ TUESDAY. MAY 8, 1900, It : vesseeeeNO, 14,140 7 $ = ? . Hee MeAREEED | : LONG'S DAILY CARTOON ; ; : OPEN DOOR VO. 41146. $ ‘ ; { , ‘ LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. : eee co ee HY does ihe rose in the angle of the high ecause the life-giving sunshine never reaches Why does the shuttle m. pulsing backward and forward like the throbbing human heart, grind Love ts the sunshine that . and Keepe It in happy working ord “ At Hifeowiving THE ICE TRUST CAN BE KILLED! sunshine must come from another heart which pe ' . EL sponds unto Ite own is no time to fool with this Ice Trust.| The human being who walks through | fe loving tand eure of th ye being returned received There ja but one thing to do with it Throttle it NOW! Justice demands this action’ The law demands it! Public interest, as vested in the public health, direct from heaven the greatest blewing God eouid | bestow Such hearts blossom and beautify and shed the radiance of thelr joy upon those about them until their happy life lores And the world tw the better for Unelr having lived in tt demands it. Tt te the heart that hoe missed the «unshine of love tn Me earth! yilgrimage that wears Itself out with The ¢rust tyrannously enforces an extortionate ee eee eee te iiities at lest. Into the rate for its ice. | Aull, gray gioom of desvate Tt brutally refuses to serve to the city’s poor, Love brings with It content, and the contented heart f the off of happiness lubriesting tt the small pieces for which alone they can afford Na" tee much to ever wear or rust out to pay. The women who realize that they have no heart Tt insolently assumes that the people can do) mate whose days are pent in dreary longing and ‘nothing. whose nights are spent in sighs and tears. are the { fe talk of making the matter one of polt- | ROMeN whore hearts are wearing out slowly, im: pereeptibl rely wearing ou " ties. But meanwhile Summer draws on and the ‘"y), strade. aban the wine Geert tet i] tepement-dwellers suffer What will assurediy eave ite imprera upon tt 4 Any Justice of the Supreme Court with sand and What rust ty te the shuttle, silent grief is to the cow human heart corr ruin whieh in the ent wit te y t. JB 8 sense of immediate duty can act NOW, without "YMA | re Sawer thes Misoed tar HA oun ‘waiting for the slow processes of parties. ‘The want of the sunshine of love P He can attack the trust where \t lives the hearts that wear out, 1 He can destroy its franchise He can cause (t Let eainta and exrton cavil tt at the to melt away Hike its own product. And the trust be ich pe a ee ‘os nae Will have brought this fate upon Kself by ite own Heart wears | ck) sith fanebr and Weel) 6a Drazen deflance of law and common deceacy all-consuming fire which slow t surely burns It Where is the Judge who will act in this emer. the core me hep Sear St te ners OF tee ve ‘ anawe it at ther ’ ig oul ite life « t oan blo. gency? ; 2 fom out into the heauteons, ara flower New York waits to arise in mans and call him, ove i« the only pa 4 for keeping hearte from blessed! woartng out LAURA JEAN LIBBEY —— PLAY-LOTS WANTED UPTOWN, & Ambition. “ j F a census of the vacant lots south of the Har SWLINERSS Is young ambitton’s ladder ‘g ' Jem River had been taken a year ago, and if ['s hereto the climber upward turns bie face, 3 & ROW count were to be made to-day, the But when h e aitiine the upmost round & ] difference would be astounding. Of course he \ y g it would involve a tribute to the strength of a ee ' the building movement now in full swing in New fhatenpeare. 7 ore ere) York. But to the citizen who thinks of more than, * one thing at a time it would do more than that It would suggest the pitiful insufficiency of the Playgrounds provisions thus far made in the etty @ven with the very considerable work which has been done in that direction DISGUISE ee Ih IN RADIATOR errr Sot Pee eee ee cei re enis ss os) | Lr THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 8, 1900. THE LAUGH-LIT REALM OF FUN. TOPER'S ARITHMETIC TWO PHILOSOPHERS, Sick Toper Boe you Jay’ And your ne Yes? All right, the A MYSTHHY Pearl (reading novel) “And breath upon the pane Ruby How did she get a te ne glass of dibiie without its oer a the Nurse says there Ie no pleasure sme Yew 1 know that's true rumbe ee eee ReTORNT CounT Even breakfast in heroine mg wit months old and Mise Elderly—What, your b THE ATTIRE AND THE MAN $.7",,"am yn Meet oe ee WE FELLOUT, MY WIF Vourtet That reconcentrado murt be tn ti See how proudly he «tan the others. That's absurd! Do you think I'm as big a foo Cuban Gulde—Yes, he's been lke Mat ewer since he found that old pair of tien Shafter’s trousers Bhe—1 think that If you aren't you hive a greit Heal to be thankful for ee ee sum PRET ste Your husban a heap to sv mit how tne - - . cuntty sal te ronan! he seaniwe “tam THE) AMERICAN LANGUAGE he takes hisself fur a purty smart man” | reckon he does.” said Mra Corutassel ‘Mut t No. not if he t himself an chop the Downtown ceased to have vacant lots long ago. | i tthe Walpcteevs so rer On Streets were the only playgrounds till there , aha ree sso dy 7 a : " inert Th es e that sort of a crock at your tathe Wwe Came the multiplication of small parks and the ‘ Madam, all te ver hetwe * He good Doccastonally been a bit wooy at banquet, but 1 Advent of the roof commons on modern school f Lenouah tc rn tome my letters and hat Never got full of went dead to the world buildings. ; ‘ But it is a new experience for iar uptown dis * THE MOS1 FASHI MM EE V E tricts to find their open spaces disappearing en- ; Th thion ¢ ONABLE SU ER SL S. tirely. As the Jois fill up with buildings, the * | of te i Nystad paced ; ; children who have piayed in them find no places t| next to the skirts, te the to use for substitutes They are experiencing >| tleeves. They appear in a what are to them the unexpected penalticn of : St Soe ( growing up with a still growing city. S. aething imu bas got to be done for them and the che pest ; it once augment It time to do it is the carliest time + seit an partitulariy com } ris { fortable and appropriate { P ee se for hot-weather wear, The LONGEVITY OF THE GREAT. + cibow sleeves are finished f N a list of eighty-nine names of great soldiers, Tenens Ways, Pee F sages, statesmen, writers. artists. reiigion- on any. Ore state ert ists and musicians, just published, it ts ack vt a nd chins H shown that the average age attained by the bow. or they may be com lot was sixty-four and one-half years petnd with @ cue torend The Generals, including Von Moltke, Welling vi fn, Blucher, Napoleon, Hannibal and others, lived eevera 4 . be aaa eh ft an Average of seventy years. The sages, in of all, ho rs the el eluding Humboldt, eighty-nine, Newton. eiedty how sleeve Anishe with « four; Plato, cighty-two; Galileo, seventy-elet: ae tare or coin, FD and 80 on, present the same average ; ‘ ny ar - el rin ‘ee Titian leads the artists, with ninety-nine years. + inside of the arm, Dut Van Dyck, Correggio and Raphar! died young, * But the iates: faney of Gnd the average for the group ts bul a trifle over PRN E SERRE Ot ere e eben ne aes yoare, The uncompromisingly ugly radiator may be prettily | mere or ji Pinides sd Of the religions founders, Confucins lived sey. | {Ueultd luring the Summer months, says Harper's! met wich opine meee , ath Hamar, from which the ttustragion te taken, by silp- |, oe ere quay-cne years; Luther, sixty-six; Mahomet, | ping over |t a plain pine frame, from whee ower part, ened ond fine iawn aint. 0; Calvin, fifty-four. Thangs a curtain ike that of a bookshelf ine upper pa Linger tucked and Men of letters and the statesmen average!!! May be arranged with shelves for bric-a-orie or | geod ee pier aarrey . ser ul »« te eee. years, the musicians but fifty-three. eeeaery. | Curtain be made of w Fused. and a» soft a gh orp 3 ad rings the covering may be left on in Win |uer’, 4 oft thin ste as we pper sleeve whether tt is cloth or muslin or of any gradation of Appears that while tho pen may be mightier ior as weil iB the sword, the latter wears the longer, bar. os-ape ot ae in Summer, as the hot air can thus he frame may be stained to match the wood. The brush and the soul ot|* rk of the roon @ not Het well as promoters of longevity. | Se ee ee — | CHEESE CRUSTS | ae Wneenesions, writes words backward: HEPSE crusts may Atl be substituted for cheese | the quaint undersiceve tn a narrow innese of thickness between the two, the under- be ¢ Just helow the elbow s back Int sleeve may be worn tpl ‘J . off faced with a co: ting color Tt can be used even with Eton jackets It is eapeet- jatter what the material of your gown + de, ‘ally attractive for the little bolero on dressing gowns. FIRST Alp TO & OUNDED * HEARTS «# oe eRe — Seen etihtte ea EIR RCE A --comenoam — a, fem mn ee epee ane — aga oe Ke) S1PLOKOIT se Okeke Sloies + srererelelereieierersisicieie: PWAG HoKore: ee MUNKACZY'S DISCOVERER. |THE DAY’S w# ww rrr; «=o «3S LOVE STORY. f | AMY ARCHDALE'S FORTUNE. | AR. PERKINS took out a fresh bundle of quilt pens and a quire of jegai ivoiscap, and Degaa ep work in good earnest, when all of @ suddes @ to his office door me in,” said Mr. Perkins, in @ volee that sounded erably more itke “Clear « nd a young lady entered, dressed in currant colored merino, with @ ta ne? 2 ee PEO EG O64 DEEEEED This is W. P. Wilistach, the Philadelphia man who discovered Count Milhaly de Munkaecay, painter of the world-famous “Christ Hefore Pilate.” Wilstach While visiting Dusseldorf became Interested in a poor carpenter named Michael Lieb. He offered the young man a handsome rn rd to paint a pleture, The pleture won the Paris Salon's gold medal It repre- vented “The Last Days of a Condemned Man,” and as a reminiscence of the tragic fate of the painter's er This pleture started the carpenter on the reed » fame, and a few years later Michael Lieb became unt de Munkacry came eee iene JIM THE PLUMBER ON THE MAN WITH A WATERING-POT “Ties abort this man wid the hoe makes “I DON'T WANT TO SUBSCRIBE.” eens co ne meen ones ooo nee n neces me weary,” sald Jim the Plumber thought fully, He was turning a thread on a plece of ron wite to make a “Jintn’ and his language was |ittle plumed hat and a neat looking flat satchel om her fnterrupted spasmodically by his efforts arm. “Why don't they ray somethin’ about the man wid = “1 don't want to subscribe,” hastily remarked Mp, the waterin’-pot? There's a man whose face wouldn't Perkins scare you wid the labor of the centuries. His'n Is a “How do you know whether you do or not?’ tm labor of love, You go down the street bendin’ ui quired the young jady, with some spirit, “until you + lon of plumber's materinis and the boys on the have seen the work at least?” yener hold a bunch Violets under your nose aa" Mr Perking smiled « little She was brusque, but you feel better for the ameltin’ of ‘em, The man wht And, besides, she the waterin’-pot did it. You parses a big show wit- wag decidedly original tow am your heart Jump with the gioryus juram-) «Because there have been at least three of your yumy an’ deltiahe an’ things and your load of plum-| cram before you this morning.” sald he. “Your buste her's materials don't feel heavy any more The man ness ig overcrowded. Why don't you do something wid the waterin’ -pot-— ° went the lathe as I was sayin’, afier the day's work's and you have put your plumber’s materials away you goes home to your ittle home an’ out In the dack ) With the ole woman bossing the Job, and yo he didn’t altogether disitke that ‘What can I dot” “Can you write @ clear and legible henge’ Mr, Per kins asked . ‘The young lady sat boldly down at a Sa by the chimney piece. x r tous water, an’ YOU sty Perking looked over her shoulder as ste wrote, ave on ralsing Owie heads to heaven an’ you—— in a quaint, distinet style, the words: ' es we he lathe My name ts Amy Archdale, and | want to cara my To heaven an’ you and the dey alrth gore! | Hiving.” wluckity-giuck’ a it drinks, an’ the old woman says 8? | q r for a aecona ‘A little more water here, Jim. an’ the old woman says i Foskihe eaiand oeeahintey Bt ay f90' Irth some here. ar o a our. °F ath Seah Pee de AP ed you thinks to your: “st should think you might tench,” sald he , F ago! Consider ot td try tt," sald Misa Archdale, ‘I was gowerm he lilies how they grow. an’ how ‘Solomon in all of glory warn't arrayed like one of ‘em—" it je went the lathe. "Yes, young man, that’s the man whose back ie bent wit his load of love. and all that's beautiful in this airth is due to the man wil the waterin’-pot.” eas in a private family.” “And why did you give it up?” “Hecause my lady employer 414 not lille to have her grown-up eon address me with common poiltenems. Perhaps she thought I was endeavoring te fascinate him, but she was entirely mistaken.” —— “Oh! said Mr. Perking “Please write down your RUN, GIRLS, RUN! | address" ’ knew & young Woman who had any as “Are you really golng to give me some copying @ * asa sprinter.” said a prominent phy- do?’ she asked eagerly sichan, “but tft be made to under. “Tam going to try you stand how conducive r » beauty 1 belteve For the first time the tears came into her eyes. that running races would become the favorite amuse. Itt try my very best: indeed [ will" she faltered, ment of femile seminaries, young women's clubs and “For—I don't mind telling you now—I haven't got @ her organiaations composel of young women, Run- single subsertption, and | was so discouraged.” ning Is the great beautifier of figure and movement e ° Md ¢ Md ¥ i . It gives muscular development, strong heart action “Somebody has sent us wedding cards,” cried the snd free wing play It was running that made the youngest hope of the famity ireek figure and the same exercise would produce in| Mre. Molyneux Martin hastily tore open the ene he twentleth century the same figure that made the *, apd, giving one nee at Its contents, fell ees famous for beauty backward with « hystert q *Elishs ins!” he shrieke! “Girls, It's your uncle. Alas! my poor, disinherited pets For Mre Molyneux Martin had elucated her daugh- ters in the full betief that each and y one of them was to be an heiress in the right of Uncle Elisha Pere kine’s bequest : “But, mamma, who's the dride—whom has he mar+ ried? You don’t tell us the name,” persisted Kathere ine, who was endowed with a goodly splee of Mortee Eve's bequest MODISH AND HANDSOME. 010 a0 “1 don't know! 1 don't care! screamed Mrs. Molt neux Martin, tapping the soles of her slippered feet on the carpet In a way that threatened # yet more vide lent attack of hysterics “Pick up the cards, Kathte, and look,” urged Bait® ) Rosabelle “Amy Archdale!” she read atond “Why, ma, {t's the governess you discharged! It's our Miss Arche | dale!” nemienihienamemnsis | dotetettetoteiiniteineintnleininintatnlatetaintnialeiatointat ToTHe =f | LETTERS evenins WORLD + A Slew Sort of Som, To the RAitor of The Brening Worlt My ton ts 0 man of thirtf, He will not come to oe his mother and myrelf nor recetve us into bls home. | We are able to support ourselves and ask no monap from him, but he is our only boy, and we love hin, land we cannot bear to be apart from him ik: th's, | There has been no quarrel. He just says “old people bore him.” Now, won't sone one advise us what te do to make him love us as he used to of tell us how |we can keep from boring him? Roth of us try to be Interesting as we can when with nim SORROWING FATHER Ce Here's a Pol To the Heaiter of The Rvent I om cngaged to be married to a young man. My mother says | should only allow him to call twhe @ week and must only let aio kiss me twiee during etch call (once when he arrives and once for good-night). Now, 1 like to have him kiss me; so task readers if ft is really wrong for me to let him kiss me oftener than just those two times, MADGE J. B. Worth Diseusing. ort | An Optimist. To the Batter of The Rvening World: T am a man of forty. I have seen much and @@® much. I have no hesitation in saying the good fm human nature exceeds the bad by a hund@redfold; that there is ten times as much joy as sorrow, and that sunshine always may be found ff one ts only whee enough to look for it. L#t us cease bemoaning the evtl of the world and look the matter straight in the face and confess there is far more good than tat, New Brunswick, N. J. FRANK P. EGAN, This modish and handsome gown is of Dive serge, with revers of white silk stitched in black. Bands of dark blue glace » rows of stitching form the trimming. Leags for Limtted Monarchy, ‘To the Ravter of The Brening Worts: i eteenity vesatene 2 a cae mrefeeved. Tile see of rend so] WHAT ONE MAN THINKS, — | “rnere e's areat Goa! of sprend-engte tate about the HEE Prt ears, lo proparing: to write | Ney a cious Sco each phe Io shoe east gianetet | BY HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. © matter how Tamsty © cen l yon con otuare | RS “oscar ts cen, oo tie cna, Ue platform backward with grated cheese dusted with a very Hite paprika He Failed to vail. . ‘an't Go to Th ar the pri pap Beg In the street car |South American republics are ow Seieitecemeennisceees or nne pepoer, ant put ons tin plate ina hot! | Mave been golng with « young man four months, fama young girl seventeen years old, and have been | only knew how ugly it makes them jook, they woulda’: |own sweet Republic scarcely Jest turned up in Deiaware after havirg| Oven for & minute or two to melt the cheese. They | M4 he asked me to be his wife, But | «aid be did no: acquainted with a young man ebout four months. Hel go tt . Ntleal purity and popular contentment. I gay withew? ene Wundred and twenty-four years | are then piled lightly on & folded napkin laid on a| KNOW Me long enough. He promised to take me to the is about nineteen years old. The other day he asked| [t le hard to find a man who thinks he is worme|fear of intelligent contradiction that republics axe M@eccenstul effort on record to plate and sent around hot with the salad course. theatre, but he never did #9 and never wrote me a line | me if | would go to the theatre with him. But Just at | than he really is. failures and that the only perfect form of Do you think be itkes me or not? HEARTBROKEN. | present I have a position where | have to work every! Woman's worst punishment for any transgression |!# a limited monarchy. POLITICAL J certainiy cannot think the young man 's desperately | night. Would It be proper for me to ask him to walt,| comes not from the speech of society, but from the eer > oma ta love with you. It a Just poste iat some accitont or what could J tell im? L. D. B. | volce of her own higher self. A Gun. some misunderstanding caused the (rouble. Certainly, write « nice ittle note to the young man A goed test of housekeeping te the quality of the| Twelve pounds only is weight of the wo Shs | ow plant write hien one note and ask him to explain, him how you ere situated. If he te sensibie| coffee. + matie mochine gen seder eaperiment ‘eine € mnqere you get no anewer I should pay no further at- understand and make arrangements accoré-| You can't ef @ bey'e behavior ty Tt Gres @® shots o minute 7 Pi 2 Ce ee od aero # * Po tant ora & ¢ —- “; bee tr a — +6 - + - Fagus: Ae ee eae a