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

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- LAURA JEAN LIBBE i (Copyrighs, 1900, by The Press Putdtehiog Company i 4 New York Worl) gi STBRTRUDE " pays i “May I ask your advice re | marding the following q i “Learn my own living, and was en-|4 i BAged fo be married to a Young month | Man whom I knew only a month le Jnsieted Upon my hoooming hie wife | Once, 1 mm an orphan, and Chougme tt]! 4H oavellent chance wrty, for 1t4 toved him. i] “Wen the tne came Helephoned to Nie folks, telling then| thelr won was about (o te y| objected, and came and took Mint away 4 me, He Is depeadent upon hia] folks to a great extent, bur Rérng a [ie $090 kalary q + “Please to) me, Minx 1 BHY powaible menny of Boek? Ho loves me, | him away, Tam he yatta 4 "Mt & young man ia of ase i INE sufficient money ty mix ¥ Wife | think it te a geome Wie Felatives to atop in bet woen PAN Art he loves and intends to Me the gird be respectatic 4 ‘wdebll should be no bar between | the intnister ¥. In thera | howe who truly Ip Worke (han w F her daily br MAFTY,) hos found out In UT though iherets no beauty, there fe wranite, as one might may the face of thoxe old colns. O1 of hemethat Mipped from hand band £00 yeare ago, thor was dr {to a bemwar's palm, or offeres priests ih the temple, or lohed from Phe precious pouch of a murdered slave t ad oped! | 4 OF tossed to a dancing «irl waiver ) «= he embalmers for thelr honest bre OF Althy just, or Kormeous ar pn fie velvet pheif in the lritivn Mus Bem, for us folks of thin age of bt eycles and trolley cars, and » Pecturera and jaw and onde m look at, and Wonter about ureelyes why art, in view of [heae ines worn down, and down inty ( copper, insists upon reprerentiog Ulv patra Aww beautiful woman? WH would i poem that It must be beowuse of » tal quality which either giver tea of beauty, of, What ts more Werfi!, makes is unconsoiour ¥ @baence. Cloopatra jad (hai vag _e tremendous ge called q FOO eH Oe q HEDEDEDE DED ODO RED THE DAY WE Live eharm Dat ft what ndependent Wat pot Om r may not have Ne 4 Ete mee HIB past is but aimemory, ¢ wae The future w drean; 4 Behind vs are the shadows 4) Te “Kris Kr nan name ray, } | Santa Claus MG. F Attend, the rainvow's gleatm i NH Wine, gia in the day we're living * ihree fe and two Jakes Bc had fo Whplosome to the sieht, air wots he same le poker WAdone the happy wunshine foods 4) w M. F A vital world with ten: : ‘ | “The Hespertdes.” Prenoh, We Hower th the shadows. Kindly tell me the meaning of the tol Where all ts pensive pain; wing phrase, “Les Hesperides" and {n We yearn for Hope's tar rain- oh prine steel the yearning vain; if the sit wnd blind ly of our way- glory of the oun but tn to-day! oR, D, Saunders, Jwhat language a Apply to ORY’S DAILY CARTOON. GET RIGHT fre TO WORK! tebietelileloleiolototobtotololololottolotel, LAURA JEAN LIBBEY Felelobetetoteletelebetelotel-telelettel-tot | MARGARET DELAND ID Peers te Broa dal sential t } QUERIES AND ANSWERS, ! What i» the best way (o have a per: Son's name changed? Veople's Chorus at Cooper Union, Writes of Parents Who Separate Lovers. A month's acquaintance Is really too soon for a young man (o actually make tip his mind whether i is fancy, dn fatuation or actual love which |e to vst a iifetine which silra hin heart Ci) The rivk (hat girlie run in marrying spon short acqupintance ie that the an they have wedded will fall out of sve vm quiekly an he fell into It When a man is old enough to be his wi taster and truly loves he wilt let thing on eart nthe way of i yedding (he loved, Heat aw ted of that, my dear LEA man's rele ives have the power to influence hin (0 the extent of keeping him away from oi, hin love for you in not of very rep root A man whom ag strives to win back after bis antent affection haa evi jen vooled toward he * hot worth he winning A man sould be the y in all affairs of love, not ' A man might do wh ve ed a itl “ae my the ¢ thing ae A you to | LAUIUA, SWAN ‘ine [ial houw), alas, there can be vm! harm lay aw attainment, there naatery peat aclen- And good, ur ese (n iiving and thig; human OKs, he dee rime MK © tl more (ha ad om KNOW « the me from t 4 appli Hanar GOWN, H from God | Catton may ie Harper crepe HOUSE id be hart to way] ortalnly 1L tendernees may accompanied it; cruel: | quite as much an arm without ee Fm ee meee wee e er a it OHARLIS JAMS. Lemtslature, Ae, |aved on; rosette and belt of velvet 4 | lightened and progressive millions who are proud to be able to call B| themselves New Yorkors, sits a man named Robert A, Van Wyck, On April 14, 1899, the Mazet committee and the newspaper] # press of New York City exposed the fact that a corporation called| & the American Ico Company had entered into} § a direct conspiracy with the Dock Department § of the city.of New York, the Police Depart-|§ ment and the Department of Buildings eo-op- ‘ ‘This hovse gown Is of figured crepe, | to take the conceit out of a man," In there any organiation where T oan] made with lace chemisette and deep coi- 1 iaodh dle Apsara: orl PA Red Te ia who had been bored to death, ROBERT A. VAN WYCK DISGRACE AND MENACE.|§ In the Mayor's chair, as the official representative of the en- . /f OUR Mayou |} NHARS oF AN INHUMAN |[ Conspinacy, rte ttntttetetnente erating. The object of the couspiracy was to | give to the American Ice Company a complete monopoly of the ice market of New York City, jean Toe Company was to fix the prices, collect and distribute among the conspirators the dividends made out of fever and thirst and a | rising death-rate, conspiracy, is it? There was just one person in New York who could effectively deal with this conspiracy, That person was the Mayor, this Van Wyek, When, on the morning of April 15, Van Wyek read of what his subordinates were doing, what did he do? Did he summon them Did he denounce them for thus planning to enrich themselves out of human misery? Not at all, oath that on April 19, 1899—four days after the conspiracy was exposed-—he was in a private offiee of the Gartield National Bank ee re ee HE HASTENS TO “GWT IN ON THE b rion, dete eeeeewn eT before him, examine them and dismiss them? He himself confessed on the witnes-stand under privately negotiating with the President of the American Tee Company, C, W> Morse, for “at rock-bottom And on April 20, a share in the conspiracy, prices,” to use his plirase, show, and as he confessed, he became owner of $500,000 worth of This Van Wyck heard of what was going on, heard of the acheme to rob the people, to oppress the poor and to assail the publie health, Instead of doing his duty as a humane man, instead of obeying the command of the law (Greater New York Charter, the conspiracy, hastened to have himself let in “on the ground floor!” Did he pay anything for this 500,000 of stock t He said on the witness-stand that his payments amounted to $57,000 in cash, But, although to prove payment, if payment had been made, would have been easy, and although he was urged semerrereeeeny 10 present the proofs, he never did produce {" oe PAI OB | any proof, real or alleged, that he had paid a warn Ler is Faeer ro os single cent for that stock, which produced him dividends of about $25,000 a vear, The Mazet committee was sitting in that Summer of 1899, So the Looe Trust conspiracy did not begin to operate until the Spring of 1900, Ten it more than doubled the price of ice and eut off the poor from the five-eent pieces, Tt began to coin money, The ery of the poor, the distress of all New Yorkers of mod- erate moans, caused such a tumult that finally the facts came out. Public sentiment foreed the conspirators to suspend action—not to dissolve, mind you, but simply to “let up.” Van Wyek was cornered, was put upon the witness-stand, He confessed only when and only because he no longer dared to deny Ho confessed on June 9, 1900—five months ago, And ho is still Mayor of New York City! His pockets are stuffed with div- idends made out of the fever and thirst of his fellow-citizens and with profits from sales of his share of the stock, Yet this disgrace and menace, this monument of exposed public corruption, still holds office, still holds power, and will hold it for a year longor unlesa the " us Governor does his duty, disregards the Platt: eee eee tedt ‘ 1 : t , Croker deal and dismisses him, Van Wyck is despised by his fellow-citizens, ee We WAS HIB Ts AND " His name is a hissing and a byword throughout the nation, Yet he is still the official representative of New York! How do you like it, men and women of New Tort HE CAN'T GET A MOVE ON, Frogs (the haidaiedtowdl Bnail, ye are nds stillest went 1 ever had! THE ONE ORAWPACK, "You," concluded the returned tour- jit, “ET had @ pretty tough time of it, 1 tell you there's nothing like travelling HORRM, MBEAN WAN! Wife-Oh, pshaw! Bow stupid of me to formet thatt Bene ‘What's the matter, dear? . something I saw to-day I ge yoy Dal ot Ba! oes eon mat Bailes Sake: ‘—_ The city departments were to crush the competition, the Amer-|q It is hardly necessary to use any adjectives to doseribe such a} § 1899, as the stock hooks of the ice company |g HE ADVENTURES OF AUNT MATILDA. ik Ferdinand G. hema Pat—The afther gettin’ counthry, Mike—Paith thot foree, oo TWO VETERANS, "Yea, it's true,” boasted Col. and yet T never lost my head.” my heart,” —— an imperialiat, Hen Peok--No, eho was a Beroggive~ but It amounts to the Jane Boromalne: same thing, .o say thot O'Hoolihan ta to be & great clubman singe he got his money from th’ ould an’ Ol'm gind to hear It's been many a year thot he's boen afther troyin' to get on th’ police Braga, ‘T've beon in innumerable engagements, “And I've been In hundreds of them,” replied the Summer girl, ‘and never low AUTOCRAT OF THE HOUSRHOLD, Billson—1 understood your wife was “1 wae mim! “What did hi “Told me (o toking P yr making a fool of mynelt.”’ HARRIET HUBBARD AYER Answers Questions Loved Below His Matton, Deer Mre, Ayer! T met a young girl iast January—« Never- Bhe tried in every AN laat 1 got angry and wrote her a note telling her I did irl below my station of tite, theless I liked her, way (o ollght me, hot want to go with her any more, ieee ee en eee THE HALL OF FAME. Brie? Men Whose Nemes Are First Chosen § 23 HENRY WARD BEECHER nus Chypi in eT, until hia death, Editor of the Independent, 19- | t Biographien of the 1881, Went (o Burope, 160, where hie lectures againet slavery help- ed heresy 4 in turning British public opinion im favor of the Union cause. Died in Brooklyn, March 6, 1887, Brilliant orator, talented writer, earnest advocate of temperance, woman's rights and anti-alavery, arephical sketoh of James Ment will be printed with portzalt, Spirited In these ‘rh tw the , although penny in her pocket and her social pos Won be of the humbles tired of m who feo, themeelves aoquaintanoes, The girl Cie ee = Vhave not seen her for a tong time and |Fom what I hear ah Fe What shall I do? i] T doeun't do for a man to be too high: ’ doen It wound very well for a youns | jy ing letters from young men of Perplexed Lowers, week, He used to call seven times @ week, but T stupped It He does not work, but he gambles and plays the facen Sontinuallys J foal emis mind te bent on marrying me. have repeatedly asked him not to call tn ae Tt do not ike ppearanoe. i ane pro) Bisse! Kt ictione from hi advise me of tin.” ONE a Yer’ must be pecullarly placed if You are obliged to see a young man whom you do not wish to receive in your home. ¥f you have a father, ask him to tell the young man whose “ears project in all direetiona’ that it will be unsafo for him to project them into your home. 1 think this will be efflea- chou, LETTERS "if PEOPLE| {LETTERS "ie PEOPLE. Cor eos ‘Unetal’ Contests, To dhe BAltor of The Kvening World: We have contests in athietion, auch as boxing, football, rowing and running, and we have horse racing, yachting, &e, All these are amusing, but useless, Why not have contesta in inventing some | useful article, ip writing pone pti thnk ole wants to make an Ww, matters, Neither ook, in Br roel philant | Man to talk about being in @ higher #ta- ¢, fa jatar {08 it | Hon than a good, Lonest girl occupies. A uf it soot at rth as os Roi et et fies in A Plat, To the Wiltor of The Prening Worlt; ‘There ts a young man tn our flat whe I don't object to nie equal of any man may have not @ 1 get very \ superior to thelr sidered yourself above her and acted very naturally In the clroumetances, If] fh) “4 0 feaume your acquaintance with this gift I sugges 0 Hi been her an apologetic, m: the blame where It whioh I think is on y Toemorrow @ short blo Tlie mare Har Him from Court, Dene Mire, Ayer: Tam 6 single girl tant when his pi L ger ive, (th ly ie mue! Au HR et ie finish, Has a Pare aie Sparrow, ‘To the Rattor of The Rvening World) Can ornithologists (ell me if there i any value in having a pure white spare ht it you write ly note, placing Probably belongs, ourself, young

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