The evening world. Newspaper, November 6, 1900, Page 4

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ORY’S DAILY CARTOON. UNCLE SAMS VOTE. LAURA JEAN LIBBEY "3! THE WORLD: TUESDAY’ EVENING, NOVEMBER 6, 1900,” a Young Man A =Not to Mar His Life, ly (Ooprright, 1900, by the Frees Publishing C0) | Jufsopofohofutafofefnfelnlololelolelotetetetot t the Indy tn question must HIB tine It ie a perplexel you lt Jivile her affection among Who writes ma for counsel, ant] 4 three, Her Ire would urobab he te certainly in need of advice come in for thelr share fir nd you his ditermma. He ways ,} Would have to be content with the rem- “lam a young man of twenty-two nt left over end have a girl who dearly lover Iving husband also seems @ formtd- Bhe is twenty-eight years old any able drawback to stich two children. Her husabnd ts till ly would always hay Ing. Do you advise me to marry this! f] tint you were usurping his plac girl or now? My dear young friend, you have aaked | me for my opinion, and I will give tit You candidly. After long ant perio. thought on the subject, looking from every standpoint, 1 come to Conclusion that auch a marriage would of hardly bring you the happy future tha you, looking wi ihe world with the young eyes of twoandtwenty, may (4 have anticipated 1] Many a man has married a woman older than he, and the make 1 awk you e orm yea wodsle marrlages ha LAURA JEAN LIBBEY been peaceful, And, a puch «Don't mating has 4 no en ete! oletebeetebtetealote r. Hen, NOt to way inisery, In a hie leauace A eR A young gir! of eighteen would make!a won " and eapectally | chy orte HARRIET HUBBARD AYER An Errant Husband, Dear Mra, Ayer) T have been married now Years, and have a little boy four years old, My husband has been away from me as great di He good workman, but never cares to keep ® porttion any longer than #ix monthe At the mort. He often goes to olminfefeteletebetelmintellebetetolefetel for five ther ofties and jea ‘ i to beat way I ow ri her 0 my mother’s or his and stay until he gels ready to tend for me He never . fends me any money while he ls away What would you do? we RF ‘'T 18 very difoult to advine tn auch a West Elxhth ] nse, 1 think you mhould Insist on your husband remaining with you and y @hild or take you both with him If tt IMPO 1s & possible thing, try to make an ay peal co his better nature. Bpeak to of the child's future, whicn wil be Jured by his conduct; for no ehtid ca be #0 well reared so) his | way father as with him, unless the parent in YOU Men on totally unworthy oaxed eYou have a right to demand and to 7 "°e I at vid ha spect & home of your own and, of 0%) hl ee are oH Course, your husband should support lus and Pp i A hin prosent secure a ne PAD eA bb GOOD NEWS FOR ak THE SMALL BOY. } HE Government experts find that a quart of pea- ¢ Rute contains as much MBscle-raiving stuft as a pound p Of rump weak, ough conting F only one-third the price, ‘The t fe the cheapest of ail Felatively to the amount ment it contains, baving cent. of fat end @ per of “protein,” h he mus make him w of course, alw aves a cha tor him in case he repenta | Wants Wite to Dee Mew My hu makes my lif r able as he can. He does not work and Wants me to support him, 1 hoped that when my children Krew up 1 would find comfort In them, but all that was a dream. My daughter grew up and was married without even inviting me to the} brim, ort Him, riage te worne t + take Hine Lo cot whieh would certat if your future who had « right wife and his children, what fate held them asunder. ry is arnostly to take not lee © to make up your mind mich & marriage. ° T wr th to the ne kind mar your dite, young ma LAURA JEAN LIBBEY Answers Questions A Of Vnhappy Wives, n poor ANd Could not gt nforts the rioher git lalme ft did not tre My husband beat me. ve D# inh Kind of @ mar. the tortures 0! ve Is mt ! this, and stiNed in supporting i have e man crating {rw be to ive Uni w York City. RTED MODEL. long enough. sow much you ® two a man ot Violet, with low felt crown and saucer Weather, panne and chiffon; ie) Resort to ‘and does not even write me' whole « study in violet. * OTL ON THK TROUBLED WATERS, jof proportion and the sense of humor have been lost, : justice! t N GAY NE Pullishing Company, & to @ PARK ROW, New Entered at the Post-OMce at New York as Hecond-Class Mall Matter. TO BE READ WHILE YOU WAIT. While you are waiting for the result read and reflect upon these words of sound common sense uttered by Cardinal Gibbons in his pulpit on Sunday morning last: “Do not Imag! ry will ge to perdition tf your | FOO O08 orem eny, notion that we shall w ton, | have an ab an unbounded confide loam people, They love the Coneti and olvic imatieut| 4 patriotiam of the A They ohertsh o by the ald of Divine through all time amid he Heyl bnolution ta of amarchy and soctaliom.' The politicians have been working you up to a fine frenzy, You in turn have wrought upon your women and your children, | : | The result is that the real point at issue has beon lost sight of in a | wild oxaggeration of hopes and fears, For the moment the sense Is it not ridiculous to hear the average man or woman talk pol: ities! What a garbled rehash of the lying speeches of political pmororecierneeeneone-p buunco-steerors! No WONDER WOMEN HATE TO HAR MEN TALK “POLITICA. Athan orontraonertet What a fantastic repetition of the cheap nonsense ground out by partisan |@ editorial writers, who grin as they construct hideous scarecrows and nicely caleulate the effect of this distortion and that hair-raising caricature of the truth! What silly denunciations, what crazy pre: dictions, what an utter disregard of common sense and common|& No matter who is elected there will remain these 76,000,000 people to be fod, olothed and sheltered-—theso aspiring and ener gotio millions with strong arms and busy brains, What nonsense |§ to suppose that any single citizen, any Bryan of Nobraska, any wobbly little MeKinley of Canton, can divert that host from its AT five and I'll take tt, destiny or can greatly aid or retard it, In view of tho hystoria is it strange that Mr, MeKinley’s brain has been somewhat turned and that he has begun to talk of }% oa .a~ himself in official documents as “wo” and “this : oF 1s IT Government,” just like a monarch! Of course, WILLIEROYB: big at id he isn’t, But when he hears so many sup-|% M’KINLEYS posedly sano men talking of him as the “au-1% ah avelien thor of prosperity,” the “guardian of soci "HADSt order,” the “bulwark of property,” &e., wouldn't he be more than human if he did not lose his point of view? In the circumstances a larger man than McKinley, from a larger place than Canton, O., might forget that he was only a mere temporary administrator of certain well-defined publio affairs of « people which has no government in the true sense of that word, but is sel! voverning; that he is subject to their will, not they to his? And when Mr, Bryan hears his partisans shouting that he will bring in the millennium, nears his opponents screaming that ho will take away overybody’s property and destroy it and fill the streote with mobs, is it surprising that he forgets for the moment that he is not running for the office of vice-regont of Providence, with plenary powers, but is a candidate for an office in which power is extremely limited and jealously guarded t There are questions at issue in this election, They will never bo settled until they are sottled right, whether this election settles thom or not, But the fate of this Republic does not turn upon Me- Kinley and Bryan, It is true there is a right side and a wrong side to every ques- tion, But it is not true that any party or any man is right in all — becauso it or he is right in one respect. The VOR Raber 16 eight millions of your fellow-electors who will disagree with you to-day are just as good cit- Tender Foot-Me deah fellah, you ought to see our family tree, don'tcher know, Cow Boy—Paumily treet Well, thunder, there's our family tree, Father and my grandad were both hung on It, AND WRONG, + ivons, just as patriotic, just as sensible as are the eight millions who will agree with you today, And in all the great fundamental essentials the sixteen millions are agreed, Whichever crowd of politicians wins to-day will win only in 80 far as it has right on its side, Wherever it is wrong it is heaton, and the people will soon show it that this is true if it has not sense enough to realize the truth and act accordingly, Don’t listen to cheap demagoguery, whether from McKinley's supporters or Bryan's, Don’t act like a say: age during an eclipse, Don't get into a stew and swoat over mumbo-jumboes of your own manufacture, Bo sane! Bo temperate! Believe in yourself, your fellow-countrymen ND now even kissing t# being re- duced to a selence! Once upon & time when people wanted to kids they just Kiesed and that was all the is changed, woman who tn to bo absolutely “correct tn ki she te In the selection of her h according to rule. ‘It te no longer good form,” assured by one of these new-tlodg a os KEP YOUR TEMPER AND YOUR S8NGE OF MOMOn, + ‘T are we set on earth for? Say, to toll; Nor seek to leave thy tend- ing of the vines, For all the heat o' the day, till it declines, And drath's mild curfew shall from work assoll. od did anoint thee with His odorous oll, ‘To wreatie, not to reign; and He and your country, = aren ses. Srpecmas: MISS BRADDON, NOVELIST, HORE {9 nothing about Miss Braddon which suggests the popu- lar idea of the literary woman, She {0, indeed, sald by those who \know her to be a model of domes. |thelty, and whe finds her relaxation in |wantening, a9 well as in music and jit. erature, In epite of the feot that she was sixty-three on Oot. 4 and that she | has, of course, made « fortune by her work, ohe |p ae industrious as she used jto be when she began writing forty years ago, when her firet novel, “The ‘Trall of the Serpent,” was published, THE LARK'S SONG, WRITER on “The Wonders of the Spring’ saye that ¢ ‘olume of sound produced by the ekylark 16 mowt wonderful, “The lark ascends intl) {t @ppeare no larger than a midge and can with diMoulty be seen by the inaided eye, and yet every note of its song will be clearly audible to persons who are Cully half a mle from the newt over which the bird utters Ite gong, “Moreover, tt never ceases to sing tor 4 moment—« feat whivh seems wonder ful to us human beings, Who find thet a song of #lx or seven minutes tn length, though interapersed with eats and ascigne AM thy (oars over, like oryatal- lines, For younger fellow-workers of the soft To wear for amulets, Bo others ball Take patience, labor, t their Bhe has published at least one novel every year, with two exceptions, and to make uo for that there was s double output In the following year, “Lady Audley'’s Beoret” was produced when the author was only twenty-five, paumes, i more than trying; yet this bird will powr out & continuous gong of nearly twenty minutes in length, and all the time has (o support itself tn the alr by the constant use of its wings." heart and hand, reject Iite's way: bevause found ‘One hole me to my task, and one . ‘Phat hes the esana Dn chi towart “4 ee ay THD FAIR ONE—You say this costs three dollars and a quarter. by HOW, WHOM, WHEN TO fuse there was about it, Now all thie) the kins gowns, stockings or petticoats, must Kins .jeelve the kiss, Then, If the older w W YORK. By G. E. POWE THE BARGAIN COUNTER. Mark {t down to three twenty+ “Yor're the kind of woman Russell Sage likr “Make her yell ‘Cash!’ again, It eounds fine: "Tell her to put two bottles and four glasses on the counter and itl be a dead ringer for the Hoffman House bar," “Bee how she's loaded ws up with bundles! She must think we're commuters from Pompton, N, J,” , i “Aak her the price of Camel’s-wool shawls." 7 “Lat her send the things home C, 0, D. about dinner timo, Then the old geezer will have to pay.” “If you struck @ bargain would the bargain counter?” “The spellbinders ought to hire that salesgirl to mark down election returns,” “It Hanna falls from power will it be a case of Mark down?" “Do they hang up that eign, ‘Steel Corsets,’ to encourage shopliftt RIGHT IN HIS LINE, “te ‘s -*4 — cB Tramp—l'm an artist's model, Kind Lady-What would an artlat use you for? Tramp-Por a study tn till life, Kl Osculation . as a Science, Authorities on polite oreulation, “to kiss | cheek. ‘The proper way te give « Kies é even your dearest friend on the lips, | is to press your lips lightly, but firmly, oe That Kite is sacred to lovers and to| against the cheek and let them rest husbands and wives, In polite society, there for an instant. There must mot Jpon each cheek Is now the) be anything suggestive of @ ‘smack,’ * accepted form of greeting between riends and relatives, When women a bout the same age either one may offer aress, but between a young woman older woman the younger must fer her lips and the ol efully turn her cheek to THE HALL OF FAME, Brief Biographies of the Men Whose Names Are Firet Chosen. 20—ELI WHITNEY, , ORN a @ Masa.,Deo, % j wal gr desires to be exceedingly gractout may in turn kiss the younger, but th ie no discourtesy if she turns the other cheek and becomes the reciplent of the) second Kiss. “Under no olroumstances must the) 3 younger woman turn her cheek for the @ fire: kiss, This is a pretty Mttle ast |g of deference on her part, but to foree| her nenior to mlive her the kise ts dis: | % tinct rudeness. The wellbred woman ts |g always dial, but never effustve in| i her caresses. she alvo obary of! & them, Promivouons ing te in bad) g taste, Of course, t Kies even one's) X hoaremt relative in the street ts permissible, A woman who a the pos sensor of nelf-respect and dignity will) take care that her kises are not mean Ingless. “There are several reasons why ¢ kiss upon the lips has become obsolete, the principal one being that It ts un+ hygienic, Especially is It bad for ehit- dren to be kissed upon the Npa by their elders, Mothers who study health never kise their own children in this way, and vented eotton @in and began manufacture ture voted him $50,000 for his inven. thon, @ Turned to manufacture and {j provement of firearms, ontering % nto @ contract to supply the Unigeg States Government, 1796, i HB Accumulated fortune. Whitney. g D ville, Conn, was named for him. @ = Died at Now Haven, Conn,, Jan, ¥ 4, 1a, Tomorrow @ short bie- ketch of 1 8G ‘will be printed with

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