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PDIDDEVDEEEEDREP DE DEG EEE EDD LAURA J JEAN LIBBEY, { Woperight, 1900, by the Press Publishing Com “ pany, New York Worll) LATTOR which eniints my qt osympathy = (h ine It redght from tho truo heart of «| worthy woman) says; | “Dear Mien Lithey: 1 with you would | give my husband some entightonmont 8 10 how he should behave toward » foving, tonder-hearted, good wifo-the| | Mother of his three boys | *K do all my own work and am mayliy and do everything for my huphand« | comfort. My one doop grief tn the way fhe (rents me before his folk Ile ac e001 when they aro about, even Mean, His sisters are an indifferen 46 me a0 they can be, soareeiy nottotng “me in my own home, Hor that reason Arend wooing thom enter the house, |eyinke more of the woman whom. he TE feel sure that they will be the) weds than of hin hon ry | Ghee of parting ie fooner or jut What je a plister to & man compared h £08 they have more influence over Hin |r) what tie wife of hls bowom Is tol than I—his wife—ave, him? Write something in the pape hho wri will show him his duly Piste Any or Will resent the attempt A Land of the Free at Last! POOR bbe bbb nba debd bd ORY’S DAILY CARTOON. His Last Grek, Eb EDLADRDEDAD DED-1900 414090008 OG meooes 70 THE ‘nite rare) SBS -FS- DAS S-F STS SO4sS4-sFO+ + AADAAA PAA DDD Should a Husband's Choice Be His Wife or Hie Relatives? LAURA JBAN LIBBEY, man of principle and manly hon of Nw wisters ) me.” to treat his wife contemptuoustly, With ) The te a pad plaint, which a good, |him the wife's piseas, comfort and true ei should or have caure eelingn whould 4 firet thought, pror uiter, No ah Wid tnarry Unlen viding he Is loyal to her fe trun tht men have thelr anx lation, but the women have ail the 4 of an} Worries, Look at the pole average husband and wi How if ferent Chey aro, Hie 4 y noored by ® dowon loading Mnes—hin \iiow of } heart, and head are deeply marked. | | D 80, perhaps, are those of health, vril > Wnaey and fate, But asa rule that ty Fall, Then glance at the palm of the! ‘wife, You will, in all probability, fod) > tt erles-crossed in avery direction, a net. | Work of horrid litle lines, Indicating |} Worry in every shape and form, | have | + ¥en seen this in the hand of « hurband who was despondont, pesstmintto and 7 , While his wife was brill antly | Why ahoutd | 7 ty of martiod © Me fall to the portion of the woman? ? T remember once, when | was a clitht, | + hearing one of my aunty expatinting on |? 4 certain household where the wife had!” Gerved the breakfast bacon with entire JOHN STRANGE WINTER. hd Eb eed abba herself, ad winner WOMAN HAS ALL THE WORRY: aaa POP Ret pte noe S-S-FES52-S5-5-554555556555550 and that 1s ahe imiaht have taken It y, inated of picktng out th | erg pet put tt best bite for her lord and master, “She's | But 4 y" It fa true (iat the man tr ‘® poor creatur: Md my wut, “WILD | Quewion was the ) | &0 notion how to make a man happy | iy gay Gomfortatie, Surely, if there Wasa sand wow a of bacon not quite po nice as the reat | yy ewe | tet re, and sgn ho wen numb hatures aa well | THE SLEEPY MAN. \ URGE ways the sleepy man Is coming-—let us run, An4 watoh him through the to me ‘This partioular wife was "Pwnll be such glorious fun. country servants wonder what he looks like, For puree haw often told 4 That he’s great-grandpa to Banta ‘ Claus, truaband, but the wife. ‘Then he must be very old they woftly crept to the play- room, sidered work, who are eee ‘Ted and blue-eyed Nan, 7 long and patiently ‘pee the sleépy man. it came their bedtime, looked all around And little Ted, could be found. fought the anerteom, ‘the door, laatingly keep on trying work of hafta work invarlably fall We any husband come forwa: of the fret-born? I often wonder, can nothing be done worries of women? I often fault to stop the May of ecltents diotated a few 1 his name a few Umer, and perhags wttnessed a few ig Dut {t was an easy way of making a living, or so (t memed rather aick- ly woman, mother of five or ix young children, mistress of a couple of cheap T remembered think- Ing, though I dared not then may tt, dat tf anybody ought to have the bewt hit of breakfast tacon & Waa murely not the I nuppowe It ie women's own fault that the worrtes of life ail fall to their hare, It i the women who do ali the uncon. the drudges of the Household; (t ts the wom. en who keep up appearances, and ever- 10 solve the problem of making a shilling do tha rown; it is the women on whoin any extras of management or unpadd hear a good deal of husbands marching about in alry costumes, hush- ing fractious batdes to sleep, but will and (ruth: fully sy Chat he did tt except in case ' | | dafenwe of that mate, | will ¢ The man who shows dimreapect to hie wife by thought, act or deed le nbt worthy the name of man ven the lone of the Jungle teach man [him duty in thin respect; they protect | thoir mates from thelr tater and broth er Kin, though it be to the death, Their lust expiring effort Im put forth in the Bhould man need & more eloquent lemon? No husband should humiliate rtemate before hin relatives Hoither her welfare nor inte when they week to At (he altar he promises to fulfil God's solemn command "to forsake all others and cleave to her, unt! death do them part’ He should make hin relatives understand (hat by aslighting her they wound fim to the hearts core If thie cause them to change thelr tee tos, they should be forbidden wo enter Nis home ‘There should ba no choosing between a wife and 4 man's relatives, The wife comes tn fret. Tt ts her right. No rel- ative of fis should attempt to ueurp tt. 1 hope that | have mado the duty of this husband spparent to him, LAURA BAN TINHEY, h ha heart Strange Winter; 10 Saye It len’t Right, #hould fall moet upon che whaker sex? WIL the freer and more open-air lives led by our girls today keep them from worrying over domeatte detatia toomor- row? Can any one annwer the qu whether the worties of women are In horent to feminine nature or whether they are a more or lew artitolal prod- uct, the outoome of the general law whteh has mado man the wage winner and woman the wage saver? EVENING BLOUSE, has sleeves aml oa as } FROM A GUIDE TO NEW YORK CITY, ‘This lovely new blouse vaunte the bo- lero jacket as proudly as though it Were entirely @ new fashion feature, It oorvalet at the back of black glace silk, embroidered with little spots and ornamented with drawn thread work. The fronts are of aecor- She LP aciorid. NO, 14,351. VOL, Moe Published by the Prem Publishing Company, & to @ PARK ROW, New York, Entered at the Post-OMice at New York bb Resend: Claw ail M PERHAPS A CENTURY OR SO HENCE, Some fine morning many generations hence a party of Cook's |tonrists, armed with Baedecker’s red-backed Guide to New York temeneeremeend (City, will file solemnly into Madison Square, AN PARLY ¢ i rawry ov $ They will take their stand near the Farragut cook's TOUR. Diss IN MADIBON ¢ SQUARE, momuuent, and at a signal from their uni-} formed conductor will open their books at a diagram and picture of the Naval Arch, And after the conductor has pointed ont where the arch and its colonnades stood he will recite a historical sketeh something like this: ‘Tn the latter end of the famous Nineteenth Century the American Republic was the foremost exponent of the idens of free dom, equality and democracy, The island of Cuba was then a dg- pendency of the Spanish monarchy and was treated as all the na- tions of the Old World had always treated colonies, As Cuba lay near to the shores of the great Republic the magic word Freedom was borne to the Cubans in every breeze, ‘They began a long battle for their own freedom. “And as the years passed and the crushing of the spirit of freq: dom beeame more hopeless, the Spaniards resorted to the familiar and abhorrent methods of savage extermination which must ever be practised by those wishing to re-enslave those whom Freedom has released and armed. Then, fire hy the agonized cries of the tortured, the starving, the dying, they areeereeeemens — ‘leclared war, A WAR UNIAKE | history, ANY jovi FOUGHT BEFORE Peenenone “The American people endured for many years, Tt was the strangest war in Up to that time there had been wars for spoliation, wars for shaking off foreign or domestic rule, wars for inereasing the power of kings or nobles, wars for the pleasure of the manhunt, But never before had one people mado war upon another solely for the high purpose of giving freedom to a third people, “Tn all literature there is nothing more inspired and elevated than the utterances of the public men, of the pulpit, the rostrum and the press of the United States in those days, In all history there is no finer spectacle than the generous and enthusiastic self sacrifice that became the dominant spirit of the American people. “The youth and the manhood of the Republic thronged the recruiting stations, ‘The women urged on tho men, and themselves wont to the front. The whole world was thrilled and tho bright banner of freedom was exalted as never before, “This Naval Arch was the artistic oxpression of the spirit of that hour—the spirit of humanity, of devotion to freedom, of sub- Pomemeeeeeomee lino unselfishness that made it seem a matter THE MowE hii MASHATIC OF of course for a man to lay down his life for HUMAN the freedom of his fellow-man, though alien |} MONUamONTS, ; ; Gerereeeeeeong il language, in race, in blood, “This Naval Arch was artistically worthy of the new world- sentiment of human brotherhood which inspired it and which it embodied. As it stood here in this beautiful square, then the very heart of New York's life, it aroused the enthusiasm of millions, “This Naval Arch was the latest and, in conception if not in art, the grandest of that series of majestic monuments that strew the earth from the Euphrates to the Columbia, the marks of the culmination of the historic races, “Then— ui “The people were betrayed by their leaders. The people said: ‘Freedom is glory. Justice is glory, Humanity is glory.’ ‘The feremeeeoooomms loaders, small of soul, feeble of imagination, a vee yy ea sordid in mind, said; ‘War is glory. Con ANTH-OLIMAX, quest is glory, Dominion is glory, ‘The man Poeememeomoeee — lint is glory,’ “Far away on the other side of the earth, where their cries | could not reach the American people, lived a raco like the Cubans, a race that had heard the word ‘freedom’ in some reverberation from that thundor-cry raised on the bloody fields of the American Revolution, “But instead of freeing then when the glorious opportunity came the leaders of the American people betrayed them after mak- ing an alliance with them; bought them at so muoh a head from the tyrants who had never been able to conquer them, aident by 1, How'd you ike to try to drown your sorrow at Miss Tooteey Woot hall, drinking a whole glass of beer and falling in love with & soubrette ees PANGAN DADA Rod THE LANDLORD IN AUTUMN, Upon the beating waves he nd murmured th astonishment, do they keep on beating now With no one here to spend a cent? oe DISQUALIFIED, One-Slater can't come to your whiat party to-morrow, Tother—Why not? volte, P % And break yourself buying a bouquet and pending @ An advance and freene in the two hours or more err : a viene rec a Te | HOW'D YOU LIKE TO BE CHARLIE ? BY G. E. POWERS, 2 And resolve to forget, In Miss Metherhed's smiles, the faithless Tootvey, and plan to take her to supper; and give the usher a burning love letter anking her to meet you at the stage door after the show—ae Charile dia? y's noorn after the automobile ac- plunging into diasipation, going to a music as Charlie did? 4 SMES tata }) 4 Only to have the fascinating Miss Fetherhed ap- pear at last accompanied by a six-foot giant who could Kill Jeffries in one round, and who eyes you aa though he'd like to eat you In one mouthful—A8 H® DID CHARLIE? bedoooe: o 09440000004 ep ‘oc order to Nestor's for supper, and then stant snow In front of the stage door for 48 Charlie did? wy TOOK EVERYTHING ELSE, ' 4 > pe Bullean Bears—ltear your cashier hasNefe you. Draftoan Checks (bank preaident)—That's about all, ma ODIOUS COMPARISON, Tn FUTURD WOMAN. me," said the seeker after] Mamma—Those groceries only came te knowles wasn't {t Shakespeare who} cents, Mr. Sands should have gives sald: ‘Tho evi! that men do lives after! you 10 cents chan them, the good d# oft interred with, Pisie-Yes, ma'am; he aid, thoir bones? | jore in it? “L don't know," replied the man who ima, they were eel had married a widow, “but I'm pure molasses candy, and ® “Tell ing peanut {t was never eald by a man whose wife| seemed auch a Dargain at 10 conte @ Onoe-# ince that last cold gho's lost her]inslste upon comparing him with her] pound I just couldn't help taking @ first husband! pound, cause th JACKET ANE SKIRT. “Then these false leaders of the American people ordered these fighters for freedom to lay down their arms and becomo sub- jects. They said: ‘ You aro not fit to be free, You don’t own your own country or even your own persons, Submit or div,’ “There were excuses, misrepresentations, hypocrisies, sup- pressions, But that was the great central truth, “And month after month the American people saw thoir young mon dying of awful disease in hospital and swamp; saw their dororerewneemm one-time allies fleeing from the American wary fie Aa-Y soldiers; saw them hiding with their women ERATED THE und children in the morasses and jungles; 4 eeert saw them slaughtered by the trey el the tens of thousands; saw tho best blood of both peoples poured out “ And for what? “Nobody could tell, Some said it was ‘duty;’ others that it was a ‘hard dispensation of Providence,’ others that it was ‘ trade;’ others that it was ‘glory.’ But the American people, unable to tell just what it was, knew in their hearts what it was not, “Tt was not for Humanity. It was not for Justice, It was not for Freedom, “ And go it camo to pass that the American people—- “Did not perpetuate the monument to the most splendid out burst of froo and enlightened world-epirit that mankind had eve seon. This sult im of onsign bive cheviot serge. The wkirt | lal aides and back, The has an extravagant flare, made by the graded rows of narrow stitched elroular rumes. Th Jacket Ppt of flat black braid interwoven ‘A little to the left are the monuments to Thomas (0, Platt jpraiting outinea nity | Theodore velvet, Lage HARKIET HUBBARD AYE Succens with the Freckle Remed, 7] AMES W, I advised was so successful with your alster's freckles, Now, as to Your hair, The reason tt falls out la be culation of the skin of the oat be Impaired, y Seekers’ Questions of Remaining Young, jehomleais Increase, causing @ change in the color of the hatr, No external application will have the effect of bringing the halr baok to tte original blondners, excepting a bleach, a stain or a dye. These preparations are frequently called restorers, but as @ matter of fact they do not restore, They are straight stains or dyes, ‘The hair grows lighter if It ts keps free from oll, by whampootng frequently. 1 do not advise avbleach, bul where women Insist upon using one the best iy a chemically pure peroxide of hy- drogen, Diluted with water, it will not turn the hatr yellow, but will brightes | brown hair, | I have been toll that the following shampoo will brighten blond or browm i at least | pnot do an Pee 1 fe made of equal parts o py and rhubarb stalka ies | threé parte of white wine, Let it al twenty-four hours, strain and uae VY) e | shampoo, Ane newers Beaut —The Art 1 am pind the remedy hor These Byes Need Attention, Tf you can take @ course of scalp imit~ ILLIAM M.—When the whites sage it will undoubtedly atop the hairs oJ falling almost at once, You should the oyes etow dixtended vessels and are bloodshot, am shampoo your hair frequently, Try thl¥) soulist’s attention is needed, Do not nage shampoo; ur eyes above all things, Boom Beg Shampoo—Yolk of one eRe. ON?! omixe in any way rather than run ewok pint of rain water, one ounce of aplrit! a rs of rosemary, Beat the mixture up thor oughly and use it warm, rubbing it well into the skin of the bend, Hinse thor- oughly in several waters, ‘This wash {x good for dandruft where Sha ormbe ry shampoo fall ‘To Increase th it 188 H. GI cannot tell you how you can with certainty tneresse the sive of the bust In a few day* or Weeks, The rational method, one which Includes vocal culture, gyinnan~ tom and massage, will take a longer time than that you have stated In your letter to accomplish anything, Why Haty Changes Bte Color, RS. EB. W, 8--T wish IT knew a recipe for keeping hatr its or’ nal color, The change in the color of the hair is due to different pro- gel of the chemicals which fora, ee Protested Notes, Orators are finding out that there fs @ Iimit to the vole, and that when the limit Is pasaed nature enters its protess in the form of cracked notes, { QUERIES ao ANSWERS ot iat Bist Aas mei May 24, 1883, Please let me know the date and year of the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge, L. MEYER, Al to Legislature, How can I have my name hid een) in pintucks at ottom of the skirt fe military braiding color pigment. atitohed “lone. bal hs eater supe o w than dark hatr, ' . | Ms . * ’ ,