The evening world. Newspaper, November 26, 1900, Page 6

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OW’D YOU LIKE TO BE CHARLIE? POWERS. PPPORSDOADEGD LED EDEE REDDOT IEEE ET EEE DEE DOO OOD By POPMDDDODOTIDEL GE Rt eee 1, How would you like to become as Charlie didt (Capriati, 1009, by the Frese Publishing Com: pony, New York World) 667) HBART- BROKEN GIRL." writes me as follows 4 “Tam the wn | all the city, Tmeta him, and, strange to relate, my love has not}. » lessened, even though he doer not love year ago, and, oh! how I ic te My thoughts are constantly with| him, I would not care if he would take) Me to the furthest end of the earth) if he would but love me, Do you think) that love Was meant for me! He told} Mme that he did not love me well enough to marry me, How I prayed that bh might learn soon that my love worth being nocepted. Ax I write t tears come to my eyes, for | imagin in my heart that you will hearken to| that J am forsaken” # my words i 4 My dear, an I read your letter a feel | oq Intended that man should go forth | mirth and munte ing of wrave alarm for you fille my), a yseck the mate He had made for ain | When the Lord sends the right one to] work as her recreation, instead of selecting thumb-twiddling or pe © heart, for you have much need of bOIN) jh. id not intend women to roam in| you, and he has aaked you to be hia} oo.: sha} q vaaailie, 7 empathy and pity MES aHURAly T Pull Galvers, Wife, then ANd then only ahold you | Sitting on the edge of a chair exchanging vacuities with some other a ihe dhl 80 minh ale sin, Man Has get the custom for centuries | allow love to became a part of your] time-waster? in umn, abo ; FIN) back ¢ ng the wootng, and it ie Hot] being ; Gold of (heir heart's affections unasked! | wisn nor beat for women to allem | Mut even thon, to one of your tem: Why, at the age when so many men and women are useless A read and heeded ' tive:|| perament, | would add wa i ‘ ‘ r i { ee tent you had read ond i \" Preroga eee Wikey but nat To cwele my} heaps of brittle bones, loose flesh, wrinkled skin and stale brains, 4 dear child! Hut we will fo pa dear oniid, It ow her aweet, | dog LACKA JBAN LIBBBY. I over the ground again, with the hope] delicate nor matdenly 1 Merl iy Arrangement errr . LAURA JEAN LIBBEY: LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. leloleinlelololotolotototototeolotototointe| T. E, acquainted woel SJ ‘| have hung its head whenever it faced the thought of what she was TONY i feast ' 4 %| doing and why she was doing it, Sho did not linger over late sup: 8. And to call, as per invitation, and find 4, And then, whon the joy was thickest, to > pers or long dinners, destructive mentally and physically, She did everything hunkidory and likewise lovely have old Papa Wootsey surprise yous-AS8 %) not count the hours of work, impatient to “rest” or to play about, as Charlie did? HE DID CHARLIET 2) Sho did not stuff her head with the vapid trash of cheap novelists ODEDIADDIDA-DDP OAH DEDDDD ) 4d OO4-DO-D-O4 69-6966) and ossavists, Not 2, And be invited by the dear creature to with the charming Miss Tootsey Wootsey— call at her house the same evening—as Charlie She Who Loves oh | day ,| imurt \lve without those who have loved THE WORLD NO, 14,342. VoL. a Published by the Pross Publishing Company, Ob to @ PARK ROW, New York Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Becond-Class Mall Matter, “GRANDMA” BERNHARDT— WHY SHE STAYS YOUNG. Tonight Sara Bernhardt will give her first American per- lformance of “The Kaglet.”” She will look the purt of a boy of jtwenty years and will play it with all the fire and passion of youth, And in the few next weeks she will delight thousands of New Yorkers with her realistic and convincing impersonations of young women, ee roy BERNHARDT, we EVER YOUNG, eo Aind those who shall be privileged to see her and talk with her in private will find her still young, still fascinating, still alert, energetic, full of the enthusiasm and abounding vitality of youth, Yet Sara Bernhardt is not far from that “three-score yoars and ten” which was once fixed as the outermost limit of decay of ;jold age, She is a grandmother and is old enough to be a great- grandmother, She has been nervously, furiously, incessantly active '/for nearly half a century in a profession that makes the severest possible demands upon the strength and the vitality, The usual comment upon these facts is: “What a wonderful woman!” That is true, but is not the whole truth, A more correct statement would be: “What a wonderfully sensible woman,” LSA 9 VATE the average health and strength. spared herself where work was concerned, No fatigue was too! great, no application too intense, if profes sional results were at stake, On the other hand, she has very rarely indulged herself where work was not con- cerned, No allurement has ever been strong enough to supplant >! for a moment her love of her art. That has always been first, with other things not of the sHghtest consequence, Her labor, her Tart, was her highest, her keenest enjoyment, She spent not a minute in gadding ebout after “society,” in associating with a lot of people who would waste her time, de »|toriorate her intellect, interfere with her work and give her in re | turn only the gratification of a vanity so petty that her pride would ,, | Benen On0- ttt tment ene + A LONG LIFE or HARD WORK, 7+ ce \ She conducted her physical and mental life upon a rational plan, worthy of a being endowed with faoul- Wisely but Too Well. beet te ae aee te nctetes by ils man your tonder jove, only to nave; 4 HOW sum mast ties capable of development, {t coldly rete he suMoknt rea- sUOCERDED Bo: t never wi i fon, however, th not love you).|$ IN CMBATING Bare I mnhard HBYSP orked at all, in When an admirer does not come boldly rime, the sense in which that word is used by somo forth and make known Mis love for you, never allow your mind to dwell upon! him, For danger lurks in these dellctous | dream which maidens are wont to| indulge In. many 9 time to thelr sorrow. | ‘The time comes in every lite when we | of us, She played-—played hard, played every waking moment. For if assiduous application to one’s highest pleasure is not play, then what is play? Sara Bernhardt is a genius. But in the achievement of her tender love of|sneceas was genius the greatest factor or was it her passion for Renn, Eee aE Pe amusing herself as a grown-up human being should—at some form of useful Inbor t You may not be a genius, But you have naturally just as much capacity for “grown-up play” as Sara Bernhardt, What has been the result of Bernhardt’s wisdom in selecting her us with all the deep, their hearts, to the loan How much more should we exert our willpower to live without those who do not and never will love ust Make up your mind to aee thie genties man tio more, and keep to that resolve, Go Into crowda where there tn gladness, ‘Phe Fanily cory Peper) | she is in the front rank of progressive humanity, clear of mind, Sara Bernhardt started upon her career with perhaps less than | She has never for an instant! bath? STAGE LOVE-MAKING. Fim realism be introduced into Rotors, public genera the Paris Press NOVEMBER 26, 1900, 20902. SEASONABLE SPORT: THE FIGHT Bjonew—Of course the house isn't hot, dear, ‘That furnace to be First Rowund--Bjones gete ip a har my ¢ , t tackled by a man. Poko and succe th breaking fur wrote, but furaae door Bjones'a head, needa Third Round = Furn puffs hard, Evidently the flerce pace ts telling on both combatants, Fourth and Last Round — Fornac fives a few gaxpe and goes completel out a8 Bjones clinches nis Way, litte Bobby reatless in church?” Restless? Ho acted like a pocketful of fiahing worms. PRECISE SPe CH, Rambling Robert—Woll, if there al can only get it loose I can travel APPRECIATION, Londoner wrote in his notebook, "I Geat—Can you give me a room and a night,’ Clork—I oan give you a toom, but I'm too busy to bathe you just now, *Thad had an uncorking good time,” counters o HE LOOSENED IT, “Americans are #o droll!” the visiting) WHERE FUN FLOWS AND LAUGHTER GROWS. — WITH THE FURNACE. 4 Second Rownd strong binat orehing Furnace loada with {gas and gives Djonve w 4 y sled in awards the puree to and senda bill to Byones, n't a butler robe frome down! Now, tt ‘™ atyte. $$. PROBABLY, "see that o Texan named Custard | has been nmenting with an abralip, heard one of them say this morntng|in which he oon expeots to fly twenty that he ‘had a corking good time jast when It was perfectly plain, from his disordered appearance, that he miles,’ “I suppose tf he suddenly drops from the height of a mile or two tt will bea ease of Custard pi, won't itt” @ome mpectators to acts of desperation, A few years later, on the other hand, the same Pendennis watched adorers passionately wootlng tho tdenttoal Miss Costigan, yet his equanimity remained undiaturbed, and the mihet genuine kine in the world might have been enacted on the stage embrace? A French lady pute this delicate question to actresmes, e@pectatora and the through the medium of Tomeo may decide to kiss Jullet tn A Wemedy for Poor Mood. ' stednbetoletatolmtelatetetateteteletalatetelat | 8° HARRIET HUBBARD AYER 4n:wers Questions of Beauty-Seekers. tof the way of children and Ne lactive of body, young through and through in the truest sense of that word, We hear a great deal about “growing old gracefully.” But that is ridiculous, theatrical make-belleve or In real earn- eat; the lady who broaches the subject acknowledges that her views on the matter, from her seat in the stalla, aro quite open to conviction elther way. the stage before his eyes without mak: Ing his heart beat ono pulse the quicker, The fret recorded occasion when an actor kissed an actress In real earnest on the Paris stage was in a plece called J. TE ahold think trom you Te nT xan fro-eneon-ono-onerenoren : Ono might as well talk! iy ine thing ave burna to know, What, "loa Belle Gabrielle” atthe Porte Bt letter a good sarnapariiia iss WAKA Wasi bake) cahaneaeelll 1 AN TO about walking on all fours in a dignified and|ts Romeo'e-and, at the same time, of | Martin, tn which Fechter embraced you require, It ty an ex pant ae 1| {MGROWING ou ‘ ive im 5 a ‘ course, Jullet's-opinion on the quese| moat genuinely pretty Mile, Page, im- blood purifier, ‘ ig sant ol ahaa |} amacmrubLy, impressive manner, Grace” and BLOWING | sont beige ae ane ane tg ‘There are a number of good ‘re af te n 90 “tee Oe ee ew ee id’? irreconcilable. Ty ow is .| Pendennis, for example, tn his early | What te more, without previous warning. | | tary sarmaparitian on the market * AeWe We Fate Ra : old are irreconcilable, To grow old is un aye hated ardently the falr Miss Coa-| Protests wore loud, but history saya 4 Henne for the Hair t ve ing weiter, ‘Take of the| Worthy of human dignity, tigan's stage lovers, Under such clt-|that they came from the audience, not | j t + Fetes yale auding What ts “grow We cumstances realism in the thoatrical| from Mile, Page, and Fechter was oom- Be RA. O.—You can uso tho leaves in tt xa cha lastly | nat Ws growing old} Kina would cortalnly bo a practice en-|pelled by public opinion after that to ] hat: f powdered ‘ ne orn water Tt is not years; it is not white hair; it is not any of the natural | tirely to be deprecated, as tt might lead | a Get an ounce of powdered bs ah it os ’ ’ - “h loaves at the druggists wit ats : SOE fatal massage Have! and normal consequences of a prolonged life, Tt is unnatural de- i fn polling water (perhs water), There is considerable difference in tt strength and coloring qualities of t) Veaves, 60 that ft te diMoult to tell @otly the quantity of water, Apaly to 'f the hair with a loan toothtrush. ‘This |b enna will color Nagi or waite hair Tt will tain the evcalp, but in easily Washed off with warm water and soa Henna is also mixed with sndigo, in a pint Oe hs clearly prove him po. struck before he gave warning; all he knew fold the world, and never tes, ‘entitled to. aaked for favors where help had not before, “ fair way, been freely beat w neok. | comsory fmportance he was not ‘ P tee asked for was his title more. socalled a 10 weeping Lk : Pee be. | hasel, ati was kind iE. | | | night a well you Mehloride of meréury in fhe Youth rin oojoeeefeot Proport of thre f indigo ne part of henna + and enough A PARAGON. [of thle combination te top duce a ND he was one who never Wihoiide AP took w 7 vet Advan’ of his foe, Pliny ty i" Rover deemed a fellow man 4.) y Mica it tll the facts begon = + ritings Thin in the Neok, JAt you health ts not If you are breathing exer ulture and gymnaatics the y of restoring the contour of the Massage also (es & valuable Numerous Demands, B.—Here ace the formulas for freckles and skin food: FRECKLE LOTION, 4 coarse extract of witeh water, 2 ounces, together until thi mercury \s diasolyed. Mop over the face} being worn this season, The nd morning. + Camphorated OM to Red n.| cay—the deterioration of the mind and the body through neglect or fate chk uml irrational attention, It is giving up participation in life, Tt is cfect iy obesity weats| looking with dull eyes and drooping jaw at the past instead of look ing with bright eyes and firm jaw at the present day’s work. Some people are born old, Some women begin to grow old a fow hours after the wedding, their ambition—the trapping of a | husband 1 do wn of Hondes 8 agreed that ful appears snetton, having been accomplished, A NECK FINISH. old as soon as they get a steady job,” | The secret of a long life of old age is to regard work as a bur- den and the useless and the harmful as the Some men begin to grow | Two sole sources of pleasure, The secrot of per IMPORTANT ‘ fi | SROMETS. petual youth is to find something useful that fee e ete interests you, and work at it as some men and women work at chasing the fox, with violent death and broken back as the first and second prizes, NEW CALLING GOWN, Mow to Think Clearly, To the Batter of The Hvening World There {s hope for your correspondent ©. DP. who says that he can't think clearly, Avold tobacco and all in cants, Coffee ts also bad for @ponge the body all over with water and foap once A day, Dry bet with a rough towel. Do not overeat, (o to bed early, The sleep obtained before! midnight does the most good, At your! age you should sleep at least eight hours. a the matter of education, don't at- tompt too much at once. Try to feel | terested in ome ono study, and pe away, alittle ata time, Ul! you are eure that you know some one thing about tt;| then endeavor to know one thing more! about {t, and so forth JAMES #MITH. LESSON IN POLITENESS, Here is the way all feather Finds tt Hard to Save Money, To the Hditor ot Tho Kvening World Readers, how can & woman eave money on $10 per week, with five chii- dren (the eldest not yet six years old), my husband and myself? We must be all clothed, fed and housed on that aum, IT manage the money, but no matier how economical I am ] cannot lay aside any- thing for a rainy day. Perhaps readers would be kind enough to advise. Mra. P. Urges on Work of Retribution, To the Kaitor of The Krening Worlds the series of Catherine Paterson's mill girls and found Less, 1 coin. Should Kissing Be Done ” 2 im Rrealistic Fashion? revert to the ordinary atage kiss, On another occasion, during the tee. hearsals of Dumas pere's “Anthony,” It Wan the author's suggestion that Bocage In the title part, should kiss Adele, played hy Marie Dorval, “pour de bon," but Dumas met with a tundy refusal from the actor, although the actress was willing, Replies to the question have not yet come to hand, but are eagerly looked for from & young actor, M. Paul Franck, and the Spanish star, ‘Ia Helle Otero,” for the reason that it t@ thelr excellent fotlng which really has started the tn- auiry, a8 tho Indy who Is 90 eurtous About stage embraces has explained that her Snterest in tho subsect has been aroured by seoly bs * Franck kien me pny Mm a ardor and naturaine: at the Theatre Marigny.Landon Telegraph o-totntpntetntntneonantetal # LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE, {fo It won't die out, and #o that it may conviet those seoundrels of thelr ertme, ‘They dewerve tho full penalty of the Jaw. HENRY SMITH, Says They Don't Grow, ‘To the Bitttor of The Rrening World A reader asks: ‘Do stones grow?’ Now, 1 think that stones do not grow, bot that they are formed by the oe glomeration of some mineral substances, As rand, metal, &e, comented naturally by oxygen @ ©. 8, Husband §) ld He Foremost, To the Kaltor of The Bening World A correspondent asks, “Whom hou J} honor most, my father or my hus. hand?” Tsay "her husband,” and be. use the Bible tells us in effect are wife must obey her hw JOHN P. MORRIE Point for Keon To the PAltor of The Brening W What political economist veland's many? No ona but let somebody 4, EDBIAA Cloaks That Float A Bwish genius has Invented a pitt cloak weighing about one pound Which will hold up ® fully equipped soldier or the surface of the water, Buccessful ox periments were made recently on the lake of Zurich, Xho cloak 19 provides : te Ii woh Hage obs

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