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a ia. eM reuk TIMELY CARTOON. The Axe Is Doing B peveverNt tte i NEXT ~~ Laney ___ THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, usiness, ee Pee Cee Roe eed GarDineR FIRED + more TO Fol. ow SSS EGS SSE ROSES 5-S5HSGS55545543555596s55552052220008 f, 4, * : ( Chief Devery Haen't Long to Linger, ; ¥ HOOOSOLESELESLEOEDIELEEEHIEEODEAIH HEHEHE) LEED ENA RE DEE tbr ted tet tb et ca ABARAI@A | ‘ * a aie | GEORGIE'S PA TELLS HIM Ma" Se ON, w Shnatmas ompoattion UR teacher told us to rite nome Chriatmus compositions last week, fm I spoke to paw about It and ast / Him what 1 better rite, “Well,” he says, “you mite way that If Mt wouldn't of Been for Spain Americka miten't of ever wot discovered, and if it wowln't of been for Germunny the man |g that Invented Christmus mite of Got! % divourridged hecos he couldn't And the | ite Kind of Backing. Spain furnish the Capitie for Columbus and Germunny | id put up the feat chimbly for Manta Claus “What a bewtitle thing it ts to Think how the Germans have always made the merry Yuletide merrier yel. It's the greatest day of all The year over There ‘Phaa's wien the German hart ts full of | song There's where the fret man ever fot tripped on the end of bis Hlanket and fei downstairs when he was playing th Hanta Claus, Bo that’s the reason Kris | Krliale and Mania are both German Gloom hanging over this Mambly. with Cvanent.” Ja Joke, Yes, it's a bewtie thot 1 can After he waited awhile and Looked at | almost soem fo noe the ttle German | q maw Kind of sad foro minute he wave: johildren gathered around ‘The Home + “OL gorse they ate no wee in Brainy: | eorckie over there tn the Patherland. | is. » buddy trying to plorce a hole thru the ' bisey stampive Toye and things as tost TWENTIETH CENTURY DINING ns N the new century the fret will wrad:| tury will cat leas ment, Vegetarianiem ually be made clearer to men and) has acquired a etride that no cry of women that It is much more sensible fanaticism from prejudiced meateatert for them to eat to live than to live to . eA possibly The mrow(h of veue eat, With the advent of the educated tarianiom nie the dimappearan " cook and the intelligent housekeeper We | the ignorant Much greater care shall learn more about the right food | must te wiven Co vegetable thin to meat for different persona. ookery = Water-moaked vegetables are | The girls in our cooking-echoote and) not appetizing or mighily The woman Public schools who are taking the (rots) from the ‘Intellimence rt wevally | ble now to learn the right principles of | knows enough to lake a plece of mont cooking will reap their reward, They] even of (he poorer quality, put it on Will be masters of the altuation, mot| + \ force binge and pro a fervante of thelr servants, v, ‘The man of the house when he wants & competent clerk takes infinite pains fairly ft for the table Hut what does she do with vegetables Simpip ruins (hem. She bole them at ] wo wet him, When be finds the right) a gallop, diesolvoe all thetr flavor and man he har no heattation in paying him pours {tt without Minehing down the his price, The woman of the house goes drain, Then she dishow up the woody i to an Intelligence offoe and often, more) Nore left aid sean ly with F from necessity than ctoloe, employe an | salt and ul e Navor {hexpenaive woman for her kitohen who te totally ignorant of every possible Principle belonging to ita management, If the man of the houre only knew it 4 the woman in the kitchen is of far more Badly cooked ve Importance to the health and the han: | devoid of nourkehinen Be piness of himself and bis family than | :y) of indigention. | the man in bts oftce, women of the (wentleth The men and women who are to do pot golng io put up w a the important work of the coming cen- | 1), fac, they cannot of ‘tanty' vegetables and good under auch management, go to top of the house, They are there, and there they stay. if one has draperies Mtoe © abwolutely prime pro h there and tive do #0 7 i TNCK PING of ecarf pins of mu stantial character, with large Nature t® in earnent when she heavy head, find a new fem: ys Woman. Oliver Wendell Holm employment. The popular favhion of wapes rakes Passing narrow belting ribbon twice| What t# civilization’ T answer th AFOURA the waist and croming the ends POWer of good women —Bmerson $n font makes them just the affair eee needed to thrust through the crossed 4 Woman Ande it a mooh e ribbon, to do evil thin a vet sidesisietiaialiciieeens Ptoutun rn | Women amd n sitive to Mine Du THE POOLISH BOY, | | Petar NDER tho spreading apple tres ‘The boy with tre tunda; A hungry \itve lad Nf With soratehes on bis hands, ously Above him is the apple that | ‘The moat beautiful the worl His appetite demands, Jt will be allowed, fe a beaut meas, The apple's young and yma ana }\~ Mol”) eee ereen, | Stiere are three thingy a wike ma A deadiy thing to take: will fot trust—the nahin ‘The naile boy climbs up the tree of an April day and & woman's pllehted And gives the limb a #hake, fal, Bouthey ‘Tho howling that you hear is from + aie WA ehlld with stomech ache A woman, the more curtoue whe , about her faoe, ly commonly the more carelene about her house,fen Jonson Trust not & woman when she weeps, for it Ie her nature to weep when she j Wants her will.-Socrates eee Woman ts @ charming or changes her heart as emslly her gloves-Baheme, re, who whe does | bewin | ‘Mme to Fil the store windows with ba Educated Cook to Hold Sway, | mlucated cook muat come, STICK PINS, BELT PINS. \QPINIONS OF WOMEN.| as they can with stampa that Gay ‘Made in Germunny' ood sending them away to Far off Cimba where peeple are 10 | Dinay kiliing hogs and Bilding yountver- | pittes that they mite Forget all about the Doar old Sentiment If they didn't along about « Munth ahed of (hinge That got made in Germunny the summer before, No wonder the Germans luy Christmas, They need it in their Wanom, The Germuns my ‘We Care hot wiho makes the world’s Locomotives and Steal rally if we Can make ite Christmus toys’ So that's where Ger- munny got the Bulge on Spain.’ In what way?” maw nat "Well, you eee," paw mays, “Spain rinked Columbus, but got aqueered out of the plant he started up over Here. Germunny opened the Art account with fanta Claus and sti Hoe him on the Hooks. That shows it's alwaye ood thing fo mix a little Thrift in wit sentiment if you oan Do Ht without tH Wot Ged bles Germunny, any way pi we had to oor n mr) a a More Vegetables, Less Meat The properly regulated kitehen whieh | see in the near future will have no use for coal The cook who wants to pre pare a dutnty and nourishing table would pabher have hee coal burned a jong le lands from her kitehen and muppliod tw her (rough pipes in the form of gan | MA HOt enoH Of A MECHANIC Lo tlsotn the probable utility of alestrioal stoves but Edo not chink that they wilt ever jrove much of a factor in the ltehen Special cleetrion! applianees to lesen labor tn the kitehen may be more of lows wofil, but Rae Will be the cooking fue! for a very lone Lime to come Th the new century kitchen a ther nometer Will cecupy a conspinueus place on the ehelf An time woes on the dinner table will be made more attractive by pretty lamp shades and daunty flowers and ferns It Wil) appeal to (he eye as well as to the palate. In satiofying their appetites mon will drift more into (he idea of esotert Thu thiam, The coarser forme of food will dimappear, Laws time will be spent in preparing dishes that have no value urisoment. ‘The woman whe Re no vt hourehold economy yond an attractive but Inet reine layer cake will be oliminatet.—@arah Pyson Horer, in Philadelphia Pres, NEW DIRECTOIRE, ~ The materia) of (hie gown be velvet of @ Pompetian red shade; the front, ivory DECEMBER 26, vor, 4 NO, 14,372. Publiahed by the Prem Publi: Company, & to @ PARK ROW, Now York Entered at the Pont-OMice at New York as Second-Ciass Mall Matter, MISS ROCKEFELLER AND KING SOLOMON AGREE ON A VERY IMPORTANT SUBJECT, When Miss Alta Rockefeller was at Vienna an interviewer told her how she was envied for her vast prospective wealth and asked her the old, familiar question: ee es Miss ROCK D. PELE ON WRALTH AND Nioes, a Are you happy? She anawered ; Can happiness be bought with money? Are there not many things which oan make us profoundly | annot avert? Is it not well known that junt || are most sensitive to the needle-pricks of life? unhappy and which mo: thowe pampered by fortun No, Tam not happy Thus again the old question received the old, familiar answer, You may remember the story of the king to whom the philos opher said: “If you wish to be happy, get and wear the shirt of a happy man;” how the messengers of the king, searching high and Jow, long and diligently, came at last upon a man who said: “Tam found happy; how they seized him, tore off his ragged cout and that he had no shirt! Of course Miss Rockefeller is not happy. not happy if you have any responsibilities to meet, any possessions | { You are not here to be happy. Of course you are} to guard, any aspirations to attain, Oyaters and potatoes and the like are here to py useful, to strive, to attain, to press | ‘ » here to he ceteeceeteectnteteed: WH ARE NOT HERE AS : joyme uxppastopres } 8ffering and enjoyment. ‘TO THE OYFTER If happiness had been the objective of the torererererrrr® Human race it would have retained its hairy coat, its taste for raw meat and caye-dwellings, Every once in a J while we see people whose object in life is happiness. Sooner or later they arrive at the bottom, Sometimes they are happy there, But, happy or not, they are not to be envied or imitated, Tho dominant note of the sluns is happiness, Don’t be de- coived by the squalor and rags into thinking that it is misery, The unhappy ones there do not remain, but restlessly and resolutely fight their way out, The happiness of the slums is tho despair of slum-destroyers, on—to alternate between pain and pleasure, Miss Rockefeller’s philosophy of wealth is not to be disputed. But she fell into the error of confusing two distinet facts—happiness and the joy of life, We all want the joy of life, and we can all get it. Tt ought to be our main object, And as we sit waiting for the dawn of the new century we ought to be thinking how to obtain more and more of it, Tho goy of life is the exaltation that comes through a sense of a life lived to the very limit of its possibilities, a life of self-develop- pereneneeeeeny mont, self-expansion, self-devotion to the great vsHrULNEs= f juman task of the emancipation of man. | en yee It does not make the slightest difference berrereeeeeeed Whether you are a sorub-woman or the Presi- dent of the United States, a toiler for 50 cents a day or the careworn slave of the millions of a Rockefeller, this joy of life can and should be yours, Money has nothing to do with it, ale in aiding or in retarding, As Miss Rockefoller suggests, money cannot buy the essential joys —health and love. It cannot avert the essential evils—illness, bereavement, Or, to quote a gentleman of the long ago who thought ‘Jalong the same lines as this young American woman: 1 made me greut works, | builded me houses; 1 planted me vineyants; I made me gardens and orchards, and I planted trees th them of all kinds ve frulte, I made me pools of water, to water therewith the whod that bringeth forth treen; 1 got me servants and matdene, and had servants born in my house; | gathered me also silver and gotd, and the peculiar treasure of kings and of the provinces; 1 gat me mon singers and women singers, and the delights of the eons of men, aa musical instruments, and eee ey SOLOMON AGKHHS WITH THER AMERICAN that of all sorts. HELIN, Then | looked on all the works that my hands Pereeeereemeeerh had wrough!, and on the labor that Thad labored to do: and, behold, atl was vanity and vexation of pleit When King Solomon and Miss Rockefeller thus positively as cure ue that wealth, whether in accumulation or in spending, is not either to happiness or to the joy of life, it is pretty safe to the wa assume that it never was and is not now, As you stand in presence of the new century you are laden with the splendid treasures of the past, including that latest and greatest treasure, freedom—self-ownership. What are you preparing to do with your inheritance? Tt is for you to say, Remember Maeterlinck’s great A GREAT thought: Yt A “ON THE HIGHWAY OF DESTINY A ; Tamumn, {AUN MEETS NOONE BUT WINSELE.” © Lo emeeneeenemneatal Yours the glory if you achieve, Yours the disgrace if you falter and yield, : | TAMING His RASURE, “What Kind of & man te this John HR METHOD. heeks and chin are hid from | When ne shat Smit ann” Wat cape still Pruet’a| "Oh, he's the kind that thinks he oan ot {hod on to bie umbrella by having hie hame engraved on the handle,” Sho works great damage left and right | taal ‘What's the disturbance over the 5OP ALONG, ‘Only couple of half drunk pugill Ht Malian that invewied 16) wn chink they want {0 fight each vt Higtet aiher, ‘They're indulging in hatstorhat | "L betleve It was, bat he is not the: jigs only man that haa invented an excuse for attting up late of ae ne |, Wy eee WEES AND DRORKES, DAAMUTIO DINCH | A smart girl at Byracuse Is going to | vaphey took a straw vote at the theatre IP by Ree ay through college by keeping ba Neti | ‘Bho ought to wet an ‘A. 1.’ degree “They bad to know whieh way » bet pee enough: a“ . Whe Gemtion go {9 the Peay ENTIRELY NON-PARTISAN i ee HARDLY THE THING TO Do, white taffeta. Creton patterns are ea: out and app.iqued to the panel of ivory Aaffeta in front, ‘while te Dire Dette wutined wtih the oman oven? eee eRtunyer rauive motif, chamec MMP mit 70 WUSTNRS, pAS 1 Md Loulse I'd be ashamed,” You are | .] don’t care for him 1 don't think I ought Bayan "ated hepiny iy sae 1900, OW'D YOU LIKE TO BE CHARLIE? By T. E, POWERS, aw = “HY | \ ‘ ‘ ‘ i And dream that tie landiady has died and gone ver landladie und has a bac tee to you ad the boarding | of prunes, and the cake that has done duty at Sunway lea for seven yours—as Uharily did? ST Mad aa cae = TAT Ow 1 How'd you Mke to hang up your stocking Christ. 2 mas Eve in your three-by-#ix Hall (bedroom) of Mame, in the hope that the landlady, who watched you furt! ly all the evening, might creep in during the night and put something tn the stoel ph, ead Obarile did? no | PACE LIKE pails ai] | e 5. And have the landiady steal in during the night and see your stocking hanging there and quietly put something in (t and wteal out again, while you snored in shrill staccato measures—as Charlie did? 4, And bound gladly out of bed at the screech of dawn and look eagerly in your stocking and dnww out an of- ficial document (hat looks like a will or deed and read these words: ‘Unless you come down with the back board you owe wut you go, and I'l) tell Deacon Woot+ ney.” And realize the landlady tad given yuu the ada> mantine cardiac-AS SHE DID CHARLIE? a PrOOOoe tora soo eoeeoors 1a soneensecesoreoooos ERS ee Coes reseoeer SERIOUS CHARGE, | GENERALLY DISLIKED. | “I'm a-goln’ to sue you for defamation of character,” “Wha' for?" “Why, Husky Hank told Dusty Daniels dat he heard Dopey Dan tellin’ Handout Higgins dat you sald ye seen me in 18M a-lookin’ for work!" i SHORET OT, “What a beautiful moontight noene!* exclalined the young woman who wat looking over the collection, “When did you take it? Re “Just two Weeks ago," responded the Nigoe amatour photographer, trying not to look overproud, ‘Why, there was no moon at all then, Mr, Koksex! “Well-er—the sun hadn't quite gone) Hin Mamma—Willie, I don't like that cough of youre et all down." is Willle=1 aln't stuck on It, either, mamma HARRIET HUBBARD HUBBARD AYER, Wise. Counsel for the Lovers; or, a arn a 4 ff fh Ok ek First Atd to Wounded Hearts She Doesn't Love Him, 4 talking to another young man and Dear tre Ayer There is & young man who seams to think a good deal of me, and with whom Tam keeping ateady company, but aa l seemed very cool, but now ia all right He has also told me he joved me, Please advise me what (to do. Tike him, ] went liself to you. If you care for the young man you a prefer his society to that of othe & he has confesaed hie love to ies, y hot confine your attentions to im? Let the Man Do the Courting, Dear Min, Ayer Tam keeps company with a young mon, | think a great deal of him, but he always treats me so coolly, Ho never calls to see me, but I always have to go and see him, Should & keep tie company, oF T ts not proper for a gtrl to make ade vances, You should not go to se enough for you to call upon you, ehould make up your mind to SITOULD think the remedy would am to be, Jatt! him waste his (1 me, a en kindly Inform me IN BROWN AND GOLD, mith ow | HARTI W., of Harlem, iia him? | » Mo. the young man. If he does not ea) could tell him | as Sd a | THINK you are a very aenait airl. As soon ax & woman finds out she Feally does not care for a man she should break her relations with fim. It te poth wicked and cruel to encourage hey that never can be realised, It eee deal more. than pasion tm In many cases breaking —_ h, y tater, cloning the oplande, evends Upon the tir, Dear Mrs. Ayer: Tam a girl of sixteen years, There Is a nice-looking young man whom I am in tove with, one tia A Sas, a deal of mi, me for PRN aS accept pies inform it te bie 18 compan: i T all dopéndes upon the girl, Bome young women of twenty are lem formed in many ways than many ot brown | girls of eixteen. ay se i nite saain in this motter ‘He te Jentous, art ern STYLISH LACE COLLAR, VF feature whieh seems to have () the high approval of Mme, Fayh- fon In Parts ia the wide Jace cole jar in varied widths and eonditions, Some ot the lace collars cover the shoulders entirely and are supplied with a neal band of some other material, but very pretty effects are made with the Vane dyke lace collar narrow enough to form the finish below a gulmpe neck, Still an other pretty effect is made by lining @ lage vollar with yellow chiffon, deepen+ ing the tint of cream, ‘The cape effect i one of the latest phases of taahion, tt alot alwaye of ined him, * No man ever ree wor rune after him. He aa courting hinset and en privilege.