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RY’S DAILY CARTOON, SPEAKING OF BIG MEN. CC ee ar AW CROMWELL N WHAT WERT THOU To TiS? Value of Prayer. TALMAGE’S SATURDAY SERMON, RAYER ty what some one has callie’ | heavens Neither seraph nor archangel [intercessiony “the slender nerve that moveth the | evor {| wifter or Higher than the} Queen Bileabeth eald to Walter Ra mugclos of omnipotence.’ Prayer | infant’ Itlon at her mothers kn lelah: “Raleigh, when will you stop . fe The healthful reepire of (he rou What an opportugity te prayer wing? Hatewh replied: "When Yo It Is the whisper of bh ' flenor praying for our Majesty loaves off giving! And your the car of help it Ay hold of A, ihe Jo! nyl or other Ime my hearer, jo atop prayer will be Gimightiness, oMNlsesenee wt ominipe \ whal hotter | WME, Woe Dak ty mare parign, Ane nee At one And the same tin would w tor hopes | resaurees Are. exhaunter! Pre mile ull diy ‘ noite nT] wultiplied and | Maveloek «© Value of prayer Pelforcement, Prayer ts vying natiied A | when he at 4 veloc in the morn @ pulley fartened to th thr My roaders, 1 ow ve time! titers of the Bourteenth: Mage Prayer |» the tire: by 4 heweborn |W aft wwe praying ochusette Regiment showed that) they soil, and tt te heart i ‘ any iw w a hw ato t knew the Joy of Worship when they tool earthly Christian ox \ Ira nloned forrows | ntarted, | h aelemete ie tke cht Math tbayine tae Qn inetant it mounts the heh i In who jeed your | plave wers the Questions of Perplexed Lowers. - HARRIET HUBBARD AYER 4% Jn Cupidla Net, ofolololololafe j former home [have no reason to think Dear Mee Ayer al whe does pr ere for me, an we In the sume house with mm J nent every evening. Do you think It hall, lived the | would be proper form to write to the 1 told ter | ' Kentioman th question? T. PB, Puro und simple ty O; do Hot write to the man trom informed that th ir wile a Ovwego, | pray you Tle will only and | of y would hugh at your small knowledge of Neve it. 1 have det t jthe world, ‘Talk it over with the girl girl Ie not only a ' ff frankly, Y an tell by her aetlons many ways, but \ Whether she prefors you to the other And poneroiin heart man If you me keeping com I wrote her ant told her I pany” that you Intend to marry this wee her No more for 1 hot wirl, art that (hin te the understanding Huet JEN: to wiWween you, of course she #hould not cal , | recelve letters from another man, who mth a IMIKNE be a possible wultor, for there |» Always that chance in the relations be tween men and women, but If you are hot engage !, te Rin bas a perfect right to correspond with) whomaoever she ny ak rey t HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. RAINY-DAY SUIT about her awe Adving ine plese F PBHOULD think you could eeity ] matter definitely young lady to marry refuses, there ie nothing for » - but take your medicine ike a man ¥ won't die, belleye me At least You might to her senses by} Won't die of a broken heart, The mir \ ‘ t Jvourly to another} ), fe undoubtedly taking advw iy |e but P don't think BR eoROeDLDIIIIy and her power over you ' ne for that vor f« rom your Jeter |mivchlevoun girls really ake fine [PSP OrO-O1e OP Oroxor9'# 9 0191019 1071 | Women, but they need a manterhand to QUERIES AND ANSWERS {| manage thom 1 not know how mL lelever you would be at h tactivn, oo Soret eeee ngs | ahi i aay ere No Law for Such Canes, Catholics, Mrs Aye teh constitute the larger rel 1 ‘ 1 Ohrivtian ¢ already | in the Uni tates, i \ marriag mel | olicas or the opal Protestant? i man to marry her who 1, ¥. J promiand to marry rilinw to Bis Hight. aw dagement having taken place? ppaye this it is proper when you u rh Hy foea ome with two girls to walk between ma ARGUMENT B gays it (s proper to walk Ky T to ! there ts no de, Which is right? OR ' narry whom} ayed in the “Marry Lyndon. n tbe J Which of Thackeray's books Is » tak ’ runing (ne 9 @ grambler and ewindler who 4 man a gentiom i word fe his uncle? 1 road a reference then niflo# Rentie conduct It HEADER, the young man who promises to if nife Should Me Used with) '!'' 4 girl and destroys her future under thle ymise, and then breake bis Lettner, Jettuce sajiad be cut up with wording WH otiquette, if the knife) HOt sice!? IGNORAMUS 200th, Bronx were laid out in etreet, from New York Cit; a word after already ruining her life, ts | iest of all a brate and jacking in every attribute of the true gentieman. Concerning the Man fr awege, Of gray double-faced eloth, The Russ man blouse jacket has three box plaits \¢ \¢ jement d | jand vour j sponsible inake no pretensions, vou pretend that you are “respectable,” | Hthe windows. « Children were playing on its very }\vas an integral part of the life of the neighborhood, kl self, | dren. One of these girls went into a back room and presently re ‘ eens turned with a baby girl, dressed—but vou ONK OF VORK'S} know how she was dressed, Mr. York! They sonally set the pattern of look and gesture for her to copy! ORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, Soe BE atrorid the Post-onter BERNARD YORK AND THE EAST S.D2 CHILDREN. Stop up into the pillory where the people PARK ROW, New York, nen Mail Matter Published by th Entered a at New cond we, Mr. York! well at you again, Sid let at the pilk oly in the dooy of the Democratic Club, where Cro- { ker’s “vice committee” will try to pass, 4 weoks ago The Evening World in prwocn ari this column pointed ont that you as Presi UNM Toot he Roard of J » Commissioners were di T ecteorenteene eon , ~ gt ab coolly responsible for the conditions in the ten striete of Cis city, Your associates on the Poliee Board superior officer, Mayor Van Wyek, are also responsible, But you, as the chief csecutive officer of the police, are dircetly re Hesides, while Sexton, Hess and Abell and Van Wyek| But are vou’ How do vou make your living ¢ | A short time ago a man, making a study of east side life, went juto a cafe in one of those evowded tenement streets, Boys and | uirls were passing up and down in front of this place, looking in at threshold. It Tn this place were several girls, two ov three of them mere chil- | WAST SIDE: ONUNSERATS, sorteororarororororororore® a line and then a pantomime of brazen flirtation, Who taught that baby the dance and the pantomiine? Why, you, Bernard J, York! You initiated that child into de- pravity before it had learned to talk just as much as if you had per put this baby ona table and she went through But for you, “Barney” York, that eafe would not have been there, that ehild would not have been dancing and gestieulating. Now, Mr. York, if the heads of some of the families with whom you associate over there in Brooklyn wish to learn further of you as you really ave let them take a walk through the east side, anywhere in that distriet, provided that it is a erowded part, where the streets are so full of children that wagons are driven at a slow walk, It will not be long before they will see little boys darting out from doorways and handing cards with addresses on them to the passers-by, Not vouths, but voung boys, Now, Mr. York, who keeps the dives whose addresses are on those cards? Who sends those boys out to solicit the passers-by ¢ Whio introduces those who come in to the girls of fourteen, fifteen and sixteen sitting at the Pee ee wo KrErs THESE DIVE tabloa? WITH THEIR OWILD- AGENTS Why, you, Bernard York, You are an oo ee active partner in every dive in town. But for you not one of these could live, Tn the nows yesterday morning there was a story of how aman stood at a back window of one of these dives holding out money toward the young girls of the tenement families hanging out the washing. said the man, “and you will have diamonds and tine clothes and won't have to work any more,” Who was that man, “Barney Why, In morals and in reason you were to all intents and purposes at that window your: “Come,” your agent, working for vour interests, You know enough law to know the legal maxim: “Who acts through another nets through himself,’ Yos, York, vou are a dive-keeper, a debancher of youth, a tempter of innocence, a depredator of the homes and the happiness Why ¢ ation, not one of these dives and dens could of the very poor Boeanse but for vou, but for your toler: + eetemnentnetn B, VOR ProPRCTON DIVES AND DENS, | seetetntne-tnoneneeantnes# exist, ‘To live they must be “wide open” With a stroke of the pen you could wipe them out of With one afternoon's work in the line of duty vou took oath that you would pe or You permit them to be “wide open,” existence form the last trap would be kicked from the sidewalks of the east side and the last open pit would be closed You read what Croker said, didn't you that the police tolor- ated viee! Yon read what Fitzpatrick sereamed out, didn't you— that the police were the nective agents of viee? Yon read what Tsidor Straus said, didn't you—-his deseriptions of the infamies of the east side under your energetic protection? You read what Dr. Blaustein said abont the children of the east side and the police making it impossible to punish the vilest monsters, and that the Chief of Police-—your subordinate, Devery spiracy ¢” All of that meant YOU, Bernard J, York, you, and none other, because vou are President of the Board of Police Commissioners, No, York, you ean't hide behind divided responsibility, The infamy daubs you, you personally, from head to foot, And you can’t hide behind the ploa that a great city cannot be pure. There eos is a Vast difference between inevitable and Way von even tolerable laxity and vice and eri | apes nama blackest depravity rampant, puiicl cae » ij r doveeneeeoweee’ anil aided. You can’t hide behind the plea that if you did your duty you would lose your “job.” That is no excuse for your taking $100 a week—what a cheap fellow you are? for such dirty, work. Do you sleop well, York, in your “respectable” Brooklyn bed? Or does your imagination fill your eyes and ears with sights and feereetreeeereonornsanerees sonics from your business of trafficking in the was in “the eon- po pei, BPP Y Lodios and souls of women and children? One penvann vyouuce} Would think that a groan or a sob from some goeeneereemaee® sit! just toppled over the brink by one of your agents, or a curse from the rosy lips of a little child to set one of your prosperous dives in a roar of delight would at least ovca- sionally penetrate to you and mt upon your nerves | Crokor’s “vice committee ” trying to issue from the Democratic back and front, which are edged with Pierre ee ear Snare ‘end flares about the foot, what atreet would ) be? Club, finds you ages | if te he aber in the very door, ~ jean’ Os pec pany Bmaed bs sat i yes) , Rovennne 0 Wn |‘ GAY Nonralahtod NEW YORK. By 6. E, POWERS. Coa 0 (o) MBNO0II0OCO! QO C/ y ( AT THE SOCIETY CAKE WALK, THE FAIR ONE—Juat see how beautifilly my Paris costume harmonizes with my ragtime steps, CHORUS or WILLIEBOYS: Kentucky agrees with you, measurement this time is a foot greater than your lam AT THY CHAVSANTHEMEM sitoOWw, “The | manager and the loader had a row.” in ah To inte “What about?’ “The band played, Faded Flower, Tallor—Why, ‘Me but a Little / “Get on to this ehufte, / me,” “The only coon song they can sing at Brooklyn cakewalks {8 ‘I'm Happy When I'm By My Baby's Side.’ “When my negro make-up failed to arrive I was so mad I got black in the face; so 1 didn't need tt after ail.” “T learned this fancy step dodging puddles on the way to the station when 1 was living at Pompton, N, J.” “If 1 win the cake I'll get Dennett to swap it for seven meal tickets and a plate of sinkeys,” “They tried to sell me a cakewalk cane, but I told them all canes looked allke to me,’ A gentionan from Thompson street taught {t to CONNHCT SADE, “Why, how odd!” exclaimed the gitl in the fur jacket, “Your halr ts be- coming prematurely gray “Well, t's Oxtord gray!" flercely ree torted the girl with the yellow buskina, a CLEAR FIELD, Customer-f want a can nef of baking f wilor; got rome? Onl na; Blorokeoporsdorry T can't tet you THis WAlB) ig Bug-Come on, Henry; 1 don't|sve any, ‘There's only one can left and feo any “post no bills sign 1 don't want (0 ran out of It, sili . ——— nECK Li THEI ADVANTAGE, “Hingley seems greatly cut up by the result of the election. He's utterly demoralized. 1 heard him epeak of a 1 vawa yesterday as & vace,” orchestra i the big peopte In town “What did he “T agked Prof, Dubbs tt he knew all “Ho sald he didn't, hut that they all know him." LITER ARY CH AFF, Some New Book Plates, “< “ ‘¢ “Le Gallienne and the Woman. A brunette kitten, pletured in various | seorn of the pi ibaher Tut the maga: | hia ratnbow 8 i ' phases of delirium tremens, percolates fm Lainie 4 ee Ml th the pages of an alteged magagine cailod ee h pectrum exhausted, The Wack Cat.” After a story, for in When the average lomaniac haw) of, ioe the Hawa amen ee nene, stance, of love in sunny Spain, We have amarvod a Hbrary of (hree volume# he pice thar none are lett for the ttle? a tallplece in the Kulee of a cat playing begins to cast about In Nis mind for a 1H ah © gultar in the moonlight, Just a all vok-plaie bearing his name In Old) When Richard fe Galltenne lectured, truthful travellers tell ue Bpanish cate Kngiish seript, together with #ome)in Brooklyn on "Omar Khayyam" hig ner do, After a pepe story of rural’ Latin, French or Volapuk motto which” most earnest listener way a woman who Ite In Pompton, J, we behold a 4 Why buy when you ean bore eatin the front row, At the clone of the feline taliplece re ‘in overaiis and or “To pen is mightler than be jooture she advanced on the poet, with battered straw hat, No self-respectin raga (for Bing AIN® bOOK=| hands hed and the light of @ Pompton cat would go unadorned when ih iroat era ie in hor eyen, such garb becomes It so wonderfully, Ate ne! ake. eaeuid Another specialty of (hs five-cent mag: ty 1 | ever Ry you o . zine Is that It yearly offers prizes ra entitied Ww eknow, tH your from one Other could Yomember the if. for th Ni vive ore must yle ), mar Khayyam and * from Cripple, Creek OF Rigas ere. "ne Y8ON TRRHUNE, Ce or Hampden, Mass yoy In fact, they ih ve an. addrowy nearer. ‘Vil wien. Zeliale and ‘lene ‘ot them) uniques | 10 have your tale retur | the They BtiOuld prove a ooon to the Mall |» meeneree RS iio PEOPLE| | pF FROM en toh ebebetette + betrttetetettae ext | ° vo i }LETTERS ‘Ne! PEOPLE, AUDREY. Foto to 10:0 tots OO beet Keenan” UDREY knoweth naught of Whero pal Anont “Preak Beta’ books, tho title which! To ihe faltor of The Bvening Worlds Naught to captivate the Dodd, Mead & Co, thought y{ wish to eny a word againat there ge wine; overlooked when publishing Lucas | ca (rea bets.” Tf anything coutd But the soul of goodness looks | Malet's iates: book, which now goes by| justify gambling tt would be the hope Through the quiet of her eyes, | the name of "The Gateless Barrier.” | of gain, Ina freak bet no one gains, no Tho hero falls heir to an Mngiish country| one loses, One man Is merely nade * \ epee ete eee reese Bhe can bake and ahe can knit, Cunningly she wielde the broom) All her pleasure is to ait In a neatly order'd room, Toue’ ‘Ted to—jumt a ‘country “Married ere he dreamed of us, Bre he knew what gifts he had~ Strange that Mate should yoke him thus, Amd very, very, very sad!’ Touchstone (let well)-~ tone, shaping a career, Bhines at each exclusive ho: “such a clever man, my dear, them mark When the sockal round ts trod, Bored by dame and demotselle— | proceeds to reinearnate. her, {urns his love and a shadow about to Chances. | To the Raita of The Hy “Aweet Bevent and tang! i Mn, The hero t upon returns to his living wife, ‘Th story gives rine to an Interesting legal point: Gan a wife sue for divorce, nam: Ing A host aw correspondent? And it not, why not? The story ly well welt: ten and possesnes a certain quaint old- harm that for the moment blinds Jer to the book's grotesque abs mouse!’ men, An Bngitehman Heddoe, has proved statistic brunette has ten chances ¢ to a blonde's nine. Mr, HT, Finvk, devotes a ter to this queation In his Love and Personal Beau to explain “Sweet Bevent - What he# become of the color books? We have had a Yellow Aster, a Red Badge of Courage, & Purple emperor, 4 house, In the yellow drawings ridiculous. (ame old yellow drawing-room) he foul of a Khost. He promptly falls in| eee love with her (it's a lady ghost) ‘nl | Mramettes Have Dest Mateia ‘why Cupid favors that men ehould be blond, bur Prof, Maniogasea, of Vlorenee, Italy, who bas written several book on Jove Ta this sane? 1 say no, SANITAG, 1% log World avked whether fatr girly or dark girle are more popular with at ac! An ‘American writer, ie chap. jomantts in which n'* seemo 4} and beauty, thinks that the ideab Ldhad blved. divi, the Keal woman