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ere’ a4 THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, AUGUST 4, 1900, R. LONELY OF LOVEYDOVEYVILLE-ON-THE-SOUND OR, THE JOYS AND WOES OF A COMMUTER.—By T. E. POWERS. NO. 14,22 7 A ROYAL ANARCHIST. William, Emperor of Germany, says, “Kill off the Chinese in revenge for the + wrong they have done us." The Anarch- 4 ists say, “Kill off all Emperors and Kings in revenge for our wrongs"—or fancied wrongs. While Royal Anarchists like William rule, what wonder that raving Anarchists like Bresci shoot? dhfeleleleleiebeleivinininteleinbteinietetrinieeieteteieistnieie THE EVENING WORLD'S y . TY’ 2 DAILY FORUM. > Signed Editorials on Leading Topics of the Day by Recognized Authorities. * J WOMEN REALLY IN POLITICS. B CORNELIA § ROBINSON, President West End Woman's Republican Asse ation. oooooce] OCe> SoCs 8 Retes a 8 y un t * 4 a T 18 commonly suppored that There is no Loveydoveyville home, however watched and tended, but has an occasional mosquite, An early dash for the train, Every commuter knows what that ta. Notice by the pleture the perfect discipline of the {2 a ee The Lonelys’ first expertence tn 1g the midnight sulphur candle is disconcerting But it is to be Lonely housebold, and the complete understanding of what {s needed. It s diMcult to see how Mr. Lonely, #0 happily assisted, st re the right of sulrage remembered that when you are kept awake all night there is no danger of bad dreams. Such is Nature's will be able to miss anything—bis train least of all. Observe the humble cat, how he takes time by the forepaw 3 ere for th reason without recompense influence {n polltics 9 True, as a known quantity — : 0 10000000 CC 0000 2000 20 to those who reckon the re ; ee male Wwhoah male srnbere of do howe - KISS # 2 iT ~~ SVE A GOOD bkAUGH OOK HERE DD j bold very per ly do 90), and to the women ee Mie thomeelves their efforts on that account may not prove quite satisfactory | ‘The most potent influence, however, is not} ‘ always the most djrect, and the women in the | By MRS, FRANK LESLIE. A POPULAR PHRASE. Sc aitantas casas OF, ¢ HE DESERVES SNUBBING, “How do you dis ih aristocracy of wealth from aristocracy of birth?” “Aristocracy of wealth brags on the money tt | as in Bthics and In Sctegce. 2-0-0-0-5-0-5- 0-0-2 o- Fast, particularly those organized in political aa- 1K>: NG ts one of the matte: familiar to our aristocracy of birth brags on the money it has no sociations, have re to feel encouragement. | ¢ thoughts that bait fom fit Of course wot every one ‘Thetr experience in the Gubernatorial campaign |, n.d peneath the weight of unw and election of Lev! P Morton; In the mnandetipal ang most of us, expectally the boys, hay campaign and the election of William 1. Strong, thie condition into one of ac and again in the I vntial campaign of 1896, |! (he fat and jovial friend 4 we ercaped from the room. DIDN'T KNOW. “And he called you a prevartoat the counsel of the defendant. “He a4, str.” , aid he?” asked wherein * family seized upon or if the TOLETTE was married. [t had been « p convinced Lhe { the effleacy of thelr inetruction “And you struck him because he called you @ lart " ea te Guinet anes, Won't you “No, sir, T etruck him because I didn’t know what larly grand ceremony in & fashionobie and that the! me. my pet? Aly repited, “No, 1 w bo was trying to call me!” End church. The opportuntt ty be Kinned such courteous phra sain sane sutomeae® ished by ¢ Thon comet @ time, ot Ho mny with bupe from ‘That Was what one guest sald to her neie> mittee | te ceveatesss whan lessee are PEDESTRIAN NOTE: tt shows what a pretty face will do nity and ma from five to fifteen as nentallty “Ah, yes; ahe ls pretty! Rathe poupee prettiness, bu’ Yet Viole Countess Chariton, did not seem alto er happy, not even during the reception. fh» wished so much tle while to be quite alone, She wanted « ore, for the Inst tim too much of the matters Under the lealerehip of Mra. Clarence Barns and Mist Helen Varick Boswell, the West Bnd bilcan Association engaged in ac-| Rut Time. unrenis through this little e dive campaign work. Districts were assigned them where, with their corps of workers, house-to- |. b+} sbie$@@-b8OO¢66 44 FOE EE PDD REED pol verdure out upon th back at some’ wt . fast a house convasees were made, men were inetmcted © atk -s aml the interest of ¢he women aroused, This was , and which 1 as g for eve @n arduous task, tut not unpleasant, for they he was her husbant; but what of Foy, whom she had loved? She was disturbed tn her refections by o tap at e door. “Come in,” ghe eald. Annette, her maid. “There wi it, my lady, came this morning. I put tt on the table, Did you see itt” “hk letter? No.” “It ts here.” It wos a letter with a foreign stamp and postmark, and as she glanced at the handwriting a cry escaped '‘ were graciously received by the men and many | 7 times thanked for elucidating points hitherto ob- | * cure. : The women of the working classes, accustomed | @s they are to handling the money, were keener than would generally be supposed in realizing the | « importance of the “money question” and grasping | | the aign!ficance of a depreciated dollar 13 Had provision been made for permanently con- * tinuing the Instruction, without doutt « larger | ” gumber of converts !n the coming election could | ; ‘be put to the credit of the women. About this| - there fs no question. ; Uterature, when distrituted, was acoompanied by explanations, snd tnnumerable questions wore enewered. The number of persons visited mounted inte the thousands. As the result of these labors is the increasing interest of women In political work and the augmented ¢trength of the West Band Assocation. | Laat, but not least, fe the fact thet candidates for office within the districts covered by assod-| - Med work do not fail to solleit the efforts of the | | . ‘women im ther behalf, chus proving their poten- | ; “Struck by the Deauty of the place.” toe eee ee REWARD OF AMNITTON. Of fools we are told ‘That their names, like (heir faces, Are mire to be seen In al! public places. Bo high on t That border tas walks Write your name for future Generations of gawka. Boubrette—I'll never speak to Cho! I tive. Ingenue—Why not? NOT VERY ENCOURAGING, Soubrette—He asked me if I was going to dine any- First Summer Girl--Do they have musto at your? where to-night, and when I told him I wasn't the mean hotel? thi ‘How hungry you'll be by to-morrow morn- Second Gummer Giri—No; but they have two bands, ping!” | A NEGLECTED LODGER. ily again as long as it come, 414 you say?” and h a catch tn her voice. “This morning, my lady, Just as you were going te church; and I thought that you would not like me ‘to trouble you with tt then, so I pet tt on the table ‘that you might see tt on your return.” “Oh! Before—before | went. You should have gives then, but It doesn’t matter.” « letter from him, « ead, sorrowful letter, « letter which for the moment caueed her to forget the present, the irrevocable step which she had taken, the fact that It was now too late, He wrote from the Cape, and his letter explained all. He hed been wounded and a prisoner, cut off from all chance of communicating with friends at home. AS read {t, tears rushed to her eyes. ‘They had said that he had forgotten her, and she ‘Thad credited such a monstrous thing! She had beea mi forced, deapite her own better understanding— to put that memory on one side, and now—sow A short tramp after breakfast, ion ) am: the flowers—it returned! | Oh, if she had but known! Oh, (f she had but ; known! A@ her mother approached her she went, and, in a sudden revulsion of feelin of duty came to her. She had vowed to duty, and Who was a soldier, would she sald brok ; took her tn her arms, the this letter from Val W and you wil tell him to be t I wish him he fh ood-by to him for me--forever “My dearest! my dearest! What shall T say? “You wil! say, mother, that I shall pray that all may be well. And now— Iam realy. Comet rome! We, too, can be brave me . HEMLOSS FACTO wn, Pa, hae! > MRS. FRANK pastorate over +4 P9244 DA ADIRED OE OE Reo reaches regu Youn THE BUSIEST PREACHER Rev. J. A. Bachman, of Sehnefters Gosed the twenty-secont | | four Reformet congre eri plain and the emiling rors gardens + larly ta three extra churches tr the toot of those weary pi pro # pa OD PAOD O44 PH Pb Oe Re eee eog | [De Delete © The permitted realms of the Kiss are nar And, as “Three days ago |! ean that chimney ed the landiasy and as she has failed to do tt I will do it myselt— h is the moat som at the top of the Impameabie former ts berter than atte that amall faculties actively used are of more value than great faculties unemployed. nm you ete {some man with limited capacity vastly useful! Me takes that which God has given bim “My mental endowment te not large and the world would not rate me high for my intelligence, and my Yooabulary is \imited and my education was defective, but here goes what I have for Ged and salvation and the making ef the world good and happy.’ He pute in a word here and @ word there, encourages « faint-hearted man, gives a Beripture pas- in cone mn to come bereft woman, picks up & child fallen in the street, and helps him brush t * dust pute @ five-cent piece in his hand, telling him mot to cry, eo that the boy is singing before he gets round the corner; waite on everybody that had a letter to carry or a message to de- iver; comes inte a rati train or stage coach or Gepot or shop with a amiling face that sete everybody © to thinking: “If that man can, with what appeare small equipment in ffs, be happy, why cannot I, possessing far more than he bas, be equally happy?” One day of that kind of doing (hings may not amount to much, but forty years of that—me one but 2 God Himself can appreciate ite tmmenatty % That man will never have his name in the newspapers but onee, and that will be the announcement it hie death, if some one will pay for the insertion, so much « line for the few lines. But he wit! come up glortourly on the other otf, and the God who hes watched him all through < will give him « Meher seat and a Detter mansion and a grander eternity than mary a man who had > on earth before his name the werd honorable and after hie name Li. D. or F. RS. see) Tod dames ts oh. eae, ving QOO9COONEOADDBOSOEODODECENNOSS 000 9080000000000000000 | ee CENSUS CHIEF'S DAUGHTER, . Ow Es TALMAGE'S SATURDAY SERMON. BRANDY AND CORDIAL. 5 00 Moneta tn chert tae Bers THE CHEERFUL MAN, | We: cel OMe ESS, Gen WHEN: weed by 6 What does the Bible mean when it pute @ living dog and a dead jion side by side, and says the Q| Te the Bitter of The Brening World: | * Aleembotted spirt: ae @ means of making itself visible ~ Kindly publish @ recipe of how to make blackberry ets But the Bar visible to exper brandy or blackberry cordial. AM ‘The recipes which follow I have tested. They are excellent. BLACKBERRY WINE.—To every gallon of bruised S| berries add half @ gallon of soft cold water; let stand twenty-four hours, then strain. To every gal- Blin of juice add three pounds of sugar; fill the cask ‘and let (t remain without moving or shaking until | has fermented, which it will have done in six weeks. | aravely anverts a kiss te owing to t the fifth pair of nerves are so many Kinds of Kisses that agein the t of what te permiesible becomes involved in wurable snes risation of odie a the Kise of loving friendwhtp between w men, Kise of recarctiletton, the kiss of simp: | Areeting. the kiss upon both cheeks so common be- tween men tn Latin countries, the respectful ktes offered to age, the kise of mere custom, happlly gotng out of fashion And then there are Judas kisses, when a man or woman dares to offer the hiphest token of love to! ney, treaehery and medicated treaaon— of | Put over the mouth of the cask @ thin piece of mus- lin. When fermentation has ceased. draw off the R' wine and bottle without shaking the cask. Cork and | seal. BLACKBERRY CORDIAL.—Put a half bushel of | Riblackberries in a preserving kettle and cook until Discaided through well; strain and press out all the | juice; put fuice in kettle and with the following spices ut into a bag. One-quarter pound es of cinnamon bark, ounces of cloves and two nutmegs; add loaf-sugar, about Petrie ianpabs [Conceal tneons erat kind travel by team, and |'e hore Mn Inet why this ¢ 4 of the Liss prowl oo ood = bd ye ray fi nage | one pound to every quart of juice, or more if pre- on | inive y o shall say Perhape or all, ferred. and cook slowly ten ate minutes, re <eulirmet 1M | Seren Reichentach has bit the truth, and. we sect LIGHT IS SWIFT FOOTED. | DEBRIS OF THE SEA. ooo tes Sen, iat pel. © Wheto and ate gael bho i“! , growth of our own. (Mrs) FRANK LESLIE — ee "t Be a Cuttlefish. Oxteten votm backward. ROSE ee g of time From the sun light comes te the earth of old amebors and chains, ie annually rescued|pinte of juice. A emailer quantity may be made,| the Census Merriem. She ty di» BB icy A tm eight minutes. From seme of the Axed stare from the ea, During one period of tweivelusing the same proportions. This is an excellent te in Washington society ‘Also toe of the twelth magnitude it takes 4609 years for the ry) 7) se atgeat variety of golf and riding gaits ' ght ¢9 vongh aa, . the cast csnct of Sagiand @07 Gal at the Capital Cy, Py ‘ ’ Ceremonies |ogie force, polarized, upon other lips to complete "|e veolootty of light is 18000 miles in @ second 'N enormous .quaniity of of tron, in the shape) brandy in the proportion of one pint to every three) This young woman ts the da “