The evening world. Newspaper, June 9, 1900, Page 6

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Sve HES etiorid. Pebtaed by the Prem Pun iiiieg Company, te @ PANK ROW Mew Yorn. eee hes ot Wee ek wo neta Oh Ee . SATURDAY, lcd 9, 1000, —— VOL. 40...... roll, tn the fret I find ail the heroes Some day, desiring to evoke the story of her sor a To be rows, you say Well, how are you ge ough it we tile now?’ and rallying her trem @ the ta nt v re » * gaye n etrike through the ele you, pretty wel ot unttl the ko a ravor or t foot Into a are opened on the throne of judgment will ever t Large cence of smell, bot a very emall the whole bo@y Into « f fever known what she has suffered Ob ye who are twis cence of propriety. tmatiem, { peuralgia, hero o ng & garland for the v4 put it om that pale pletnt, » he, heroes of - brow! iit vaildiem, heroes a They shall rete I preach this sermon for comfort. Go home to the « nde catch just place wher has put you to play the hero or THE CHARTER AND SCHOOLS. fe"). | be no me @ heroine, Do not envy any man his money or his 'N the course of the!r seek!ng fur expert \nfor- for th applause or his soctal position. Do not envy an ty ge ubjects. tt I also find the heroes of toil, who fo woman her wardrobe or her exquisite appescance mation on various ‘ pant sul) mp \ainingly comparatively Le the hero or the heroine. Wision Commissioners have a . the Charter levis : ent nto battle when you know t yy, ye who are hard beset in the battle of Hfe and Teached the pubilc department wil! applaud the vtet tls com- know not which way to turn! On, you bereft one Z reat ave a ively ¢ t t tek when you know Oh, you eck one, with complainie you have t ' gretions from various sourres mpor at your skit! will be apy ne, com of this subject tamt for them to remember that these aro the !'0Y of fram ie and : atty : Listen to our To him that ti ee the 0 y toe an audience when In vercometh will of the tree points desirarie to be secured, under the law es and the flushed cheeks you know t of life which te in the midet of the Paradise of God the public education ‘The largest possible accommodation for th: @eatest number of chiitren ‘The greater feciiiiies @xeommodations to mee : Boch @ system of sure compensation as will @ecure and keep ithe best teachers. Absolute simplicity ai) a direct rosponaibility te the control of soho! allan. Ag comomy which docs not mean olggardiiness {a echool finances. | Absolute freedow of the wh ole from polities, ‘These aren't masy things to demand They mean overything to the good of the system BAD TEMPER AT OCEAN GROVE.) : HERE is more than a little childishness to! * the threat that if Sunday trains are allowed | the preachers will | 2 fo wway, The “I-| won't-play-in-your-yard” idea la poorly © adapted to the service of the Church In a ration 13 ally Hberal age like this Of course, there would be a botel men and boariing camp-meetings at the Grove were (0 be abasdo But this loss would be temporary. The good | beaches about the Asbury vicinity woul! not long ‘be euffered to go begging for Summer uses. The Most grievous and lasting damage would tw done te the churohly bodies which allowed themselves | * to be eo affected by unbecoming spite and vain + @gpeaitien to the movement of the mes. Inetead of uselessly protesting, the Grove peanshers should welcome Sunday trains as afford fag o means of bringing floaks of poople wlio can get eomventently gather on weekdays. ng building material loas ouse-Keepere if the «+ A SPITE FENCE, MR. BRYAN. (“ NCE more the spite fence looms in the news of the day. It makes an interesting toplo always, because it deals with tho! |’ went emainently and ~-fortunately human tm heat pulee—the \mpmee to retailation \* ag Batithere’s a spite tence possibility which. tt is)... Greatly to be feared, will not bo realized It per tains to dhe matter of « certain great injury once Gene eo men and « cause, and it dears upon the thremtened papetition of that tujury. Mr, Bryem, it is up to you to build « wpite fence | SULARD AND . WI {ITE between yourself and the mischievous issue of | + free eilver, That issue has disappointed you of Your dearest ar‘ition I! menaces you again You owe {t @ ten.fc grudge which a good, high fenee Will pay. Lot's seo you get at the dutlding | m6 notice how quickly the strong hande of 4 ‘Willing Democracy wil! aid you THE IMPATIENT WOODRUFF. |; FIBRE ie justification for the anriety of Woodruff. With Philadelphia scarce ten | Gaye away, there ts no reason in boss poll- ties why the waistooated aspirant to a } seoond place should not receive, tor his | private convenience, at least, a quieting || dictum as to whether he le to be or not to be. Tt te not necessary that all the world should | Know at once. The feelings of “our Tim” might be relieved and nobody else be whisper the | ‘wiser. Please tell him, Mr. Platt. There can be no §004 reason for maintaining the monumental s! Tence upon which not even @ pretense ls made of ‘Pesting 6 emiling patience. No reason, that is, Mr, Unless you are not s0 sure as you hoped to ‘be ef how the olf machine ts going to run. And ‘M that fe true you won't own ft, will yout Gividends on ice stock are |iberal But after ‘Mr. Mayor, there are times when dividends are | that don't pay. than trying to run the mill with water tha t le the endeavor to get rich quick on the horas} run, +0 oes A NEW AND Ariin hi L THE WORLD: | TALMAGE'S SATURDAY SERMON. |HERE’S A CHANCE T 0 SAU AT THE E FUNNY HALF. . EVERY-DAY HEROES AND HEROINES ree ead kine i] to appallune dissipatt ) with the wrecks of ine m of domestic tr : ks There are tens of jay, made by their that te prose nate whe ta REV. T. DP WITT TALMAGE. ye te “ Meree rr entre nin fit thousands of drunkards before you @ ecroll of heroes Wives Tha postr never acknowledge! But the wrong is generally no bugle blast, con- You would not have to g» to thelr chariot life te rpetual mo nity will ad than @ atr of ne whose names etartied the home at midnight « I mean the heroes of commun. every-day have left her ony a wre WEET SING SERRE + sn ther ad of coal is and left there, and another ton t» placed und fo latter lowes about & per cent, of tte heating the former about 7 per cent. Hence it te aj ea. The softer the coal the mor wune che volatile and val forgo a slow combustor white lace make a very pretty IN RU | OPED an antique missal clasped with gold ft yore lamned thereupon--designe minutely ecrolied And on ar more, I marked among Diack-letter lines a se So deeply did it on my heart take hold. To one | showed tt whose bright aureole Of natr had filched the dawn, And over it she brooded lingeringly, Could she but ope the miseal of my soul, And turn each page, That word, and that word only, MOUNTAINS THAT SING. INGING mountain are those which to give out must man 1, which ee te eee ell to those of an Book of |" ts found In the mi red. | Yada Here, in certain stat him with found produced by the sare «weet | Rround te ike angi Ho first mate a reputation as a skiif Hing with a loud stra veraifier in the L AW Bulletin, where poems from | OTR hig pen appeared regularly Mr Waterman's home eves ton Heights, Mase — — HOW COAL of what ene was day when the vows were taken BRIC. ed parchment oover fretted o°@ figures some skilled hand oft-thumbed page did I behoid One word in rubric-Love. in rubric thereugon, 1 sounds whe or when played upon by henomenon ta due to (he presence sand which ts found in many parts vustoal sound 9 belleved to be due t wt militons of grains have » irregularities fret SATURDAY eyes are wr heart filnts, and nih your ehildrer elie! Heres of t " tt tod for the oppos te direction to find a Something bh nd worts, etnea maltreatment wht n that wite whose This, and no soft lights of uld © <linton Seollard. nt he wind jon by This of ® particular They the world the rubbing to. M this perfectly clear f roughness, and mountain te that EVENING, JUNE 9, 1900. PRMININE ENTE PTION ‘ way the t the mterobe family has forbidden MALADY for wee, Dest from ALONE WITH Love te not a contagio Fatr Daphne does not cate! th me ! Poffkins ( )—Ch! my poor face has been giving me Kr vigge-Tee, @ face like that ts enough t) hi at anybody ‘ Hell, near t tof Pyramid take, Nef f the weather, the t the wind on the f se ativer bells. peop Bacterio—Young ladies: one who drinks ne low not 4 veal soa water wilfully potsone herself A sister of John Brown. the abolitionist martyr, te 5 ther which I must As have no ob should not be neyance at the outset of It In regard to walking upon the business streets, you popular bands of narrow black ore cooaeh of nam in oor every-day 88s O» ron gett ole'e Garden of Réen. JOHN BROWN’ S SISTER SAYS | HE DESERVED DEATH THE DECORATIVE SERPENT. | {etl ving, She is Mra Martha [vavis, and her home ia In the village of St John's, M When asked recently if sh rabt that history had done justice fi No, t mt. History h One class of | Istortans has ca t he was far ¢ thousands of other men who worked with him and the same convictions who were just as goot as John, but they have never been mentioned for n the ¢ dar of sain | “Another cians has made him out a fanatic and a fool ng man, with stro we that he could conquer t hat the Harper's Ferry stroke would erouse both | the North and the South and would crystallize sentt- nt Into activity. I never have belleved that John » do with the cholece of his career, The some one who would act, and he wi * instrument tn the hands of some superior! If it had not been John it would have deen, | some one elee at that time and ft was very natural | that the man, whoever he might be, would be pre- pared for such « task In Kansas.” She said Virginia wae right in hanging her brother | ording to the national and State constitutions said “No nation of Btate can | ations of marauding bands of men, ho matter what thetr purpose ts. A band from an Hotning State attempting to overthrow our local institutions would be captured, prosecuted and prob- ably executed as John and his men were. Those who from being one SUNDAY WALKS FOR YOUNG GIRLS. BY LAURA JEAN LIBBEY, HOULD young 6 tof . fing: “Bo many out on @ Bunday after Would you am employed in he opportunity | have And lastly Gf you to y to). ocalitie nite For the H where It does not seem t 4 of a Babbath ts sus ne bandoned even for such an an- City of Churehes co raed 1900, by (he Prese Publ shing Company, SY World) * (ake walks alone on Sunday question which “Adele” asks, men conaremate about the tT really dread going a walk . that secount? vo foolleh a ques. 4 1 walk? On Pulton! ener: to be abolished, my so In your locality you pafere by and tn “vm: as yOu car inattended young women from the annoyance of loafers. * ts something restful tn viewing the green | erase, the budding trees and splashing fountains, the lakes and the flower gardens, oun just now the breath of the newly-born summer blossome, There is something detightfu in the oontaat | of the tired feet with the tender, velvety carpet of young grass Nature In all its varied beauties tn the park te good ‘to behokt Here also one may rest on the benches If eas overtakes one. he busy street one cannot stop long before a Sy out tte architecture without finding cynosure Rut In the park one may linger as long as fancy admiring any object of interest 1 wish more young gitls knew how delightful the perk (9 in ite new apring dress of dainty green (those ne's welt the lace drapertes mantic paths seem on a sunny Sabbath afternoon, It could be called with much truth The Poor Peo- HPPPP ROSAS t to war know (hat they may perish by it.” | of many eyes from behind the | iT ¢ FTEN | APPENS THIS WAY wave the have him stop playing « fage {ttle boy in th xt flat a nt let tn the hall he wert t and came beck with a big tin Norn th n wouldn't it make you feel ilke pe and kicking yourself off into space? perenne ene eee. STERN RESOLUTION, Kimi O} Lady~You say you haven't worked for elghteen years Mave you been Dlacktisted by some of these grinding trusts? Tramp—No, mum; ano been avengin his death ever since This is what the young ladies saw on thelr way from PORPSTGHT, . JUVENILE victurea «What shall | say about It? Mahistick-You can mafely say it ts full vidualtty pew c ones + +--+ - + nnn eee we FREE LUNCH, of indi- The lor Hon His © And h Hetress—Your offer is flattering, Barem, tet I eam yisoe, {t was jest eighteen years} not marry you. that me bradder dled uv over-exertion an’ T'vel Baren—Well, then, at least beceme engaged te me WOO communes tte ee sas PREACHING AS IT WASNT PRACTISED = ~~ ~~ hiattchiaeae And the professor's inconsistency cost him 0 erpent seema to be the favorite symbol In | ration for cardeases, pocketbooks ant tty lttle rettcules so much in use now. | ede and leather purses that fasten with @ Dut- ton and buttonhole have serpents, heads, Jewelled or 1, for buttons, while the reticules have silver rerpents for the top mounting, the heads " 1 to form the clasp. Gray suede embroidered | with steel and rough monkeyskin mounted with rud- dy gold or art nouveau silver are the smartest com- binattons ui t Girls Have the Best of It. In Germany and Holland girls are chosen in prefer- ence to young men tn all employments in which they can be advantageously employed. TO THE FLETTERSevexmns won Children Again wing World er of two children, aged six and seven years. Their father takes great Interest tn bis children. If l reproach them or give them @ crack on the hand he starts to fight me, or even raises a two- pound hammer at me and otherwise abuses me. What ean I do? | am almom heartvroken. | have no chile dren of my own. STEPMOTHER Not So Far Above the “Herd.” To the Bftior of The Breaing World The youth terming himself “above the commen herd” in a letter to your paper, undoubtedly thinks he itopmother, RA NOTED COLORED WOMAN. thee re 5 i b $ t ; 4 3 3 t | | te te FR titers ee OGRE Re be soneereness This is probably the most distinguished colored women in the United States. She ts Mrs, Josephine St. Plerre Ruffin, of Boston, editor of the Woman's Fra and president of the Woman's Era Club. She ts also a member of the New Engiand Woman's Press A vee fon and ts strongly identified with the woman movement. Mra. Ruffin |e a delegate to the manifests extreme intellectual activity when saying #0. I would say: Before you wish to make your name echo and re-echo throughout the ages and ages of eternity, know yourself and know the capabilities you possess and term not eli mankind except yourself Awards Beavty Prise to American Women, admiration than we have right here in New Yor NICK ODEMUB. Leare to Swim. ‘To the Diiter of The Breaing World We shall soon hear the yearly repeated drowning through Inability to ewtm. The easy art of ewimming ts within reach many prectous lives would not be prema: out If people would take the trouble to ming, I am one who lost a brother that year. Ex Better Scenery Further Afielé, To the Pitivor of The Rventng Wartt “Wanderer” states that within one York City the country ts Deautiful as kills of Adirondacks, through the country I wish to eay that wrong tn saying this, The Catakilis are than any place within one hour of New also the Adirondacks. Certain places in Cotorada, too. Let him see the real thing firet, and I he would write far differentiy A Busy pest Plaint. ‘Te the Bitior of The Evening Guanine abd a healthy |itle who are shut up tm stores and offices during the | Sitwaukee concention of the Federation of Women's week), and how refreshing a walk through ite 70! Ciuns and it is over her that that it bey has resolved | (married eleven years and having two itself in @ color line Nght complexion, wit husband, a graduate first colored ond Win readers advise me if it ts the duty of @ . | ,

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