The evening world. Newspaper, January 3, 1901, Page 10

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S TO A SINGLE-HEADED POLICE. ARTIST LONG ASKS | | VOlar ltastererees se NOL 1,380. | ae How DARE You TALK re company, 63 io GIP ANK ROW, New v1 Second-Ciass Mall Matter, MAY IRWIN’S ATTACK UPON INCOMPETENT HUSBAND-SEEKERS. Mats Irwin eb dinnting oe sat powerful hit for extreme unpopuleeity with sand naninists having marriageable daughters. mererenene-e-e-eneee She annenuers at Twentieth Century sheloi . + Ascii . . i my . fovrmven ceos 2 Apartment-House in whieh for the first time WAI bachelor will have all the couforts and lixuries Saad: Tsu ie theme, withont responsibilines and an! Aneta the model tenement has eoupelled imitation and: im ‘+3 roof Matri provement all along the dine, so this iiodel Diseourag tueny will eauce vast improvements in all the arrangements for the ry life of “single hlessedness, ieee tiene nd n spoke evil that he had refore could not man ts ortginul Me Powers has diseove The tine was when the bael ras fi Iv drawn inte t mony by the iipossibility of loading an endurable ex istence without | awomiun about” Miss Lewin proclaims the end of that era. | Attire glance Miss Lewin seems te bean enemy of her sex 3, the moth- city of 1 Ing wanertal blew at its vital interest. But in re f ity she is a bene ‘ress. ain elevator or clevatress, She purposes to raise the stand WENTIETH CENTURY MYTHS. The Mother-in-Law of Fact. DLLSL9G0O54-O995-4-0999-950O$-9206.005, abn OO2 900 Pot ferme equipment. Tn the new ert the femate will have to And that means progress. ANotaun is ea ‘fully, ever more carefully, educated: for his in life, He spends many years in close study of his profession Nndatter he finally seriously eng: es init the process of If he does not improve, if he does not become ut, he is beaten back and down, A 6 Eyer axles Soa eeeeev ener wary eeFeateretess equipment of general education which i dueation in the three great spe- = SE < particular busigess coe TS ma essive himan being must have nowads aw wom re- ustitute: I or profession, n TIC IBUSINESS: These f IN LIFES seen eeeeeee More Complete nule specialties are personal ap-]_ 1: Boys—Listen! Uncle George tn goln i z 0 joke on us. Don't let's hed f pearance, housekeeping and the care of a family, jao a thing to abn! hev" yput them another way: kids! Thought burglar game, did Will Affect the Whole Muscular System, Making a Stronger and Better Race. JHYBICAL culture of the new cen-| their bodies « The practioal valus tury school will make the human] ing hard, musenlar rigid WI be iy body work out Its own salvation will be dev ite ity. A therough | useful to man by Keeping the whole muscular system |co-ordnation between the brala and aeknowt @t work, instead of developing a few | th will he V aimed at tore fo fem @usctes through artificial means. In-) Men and women will tte | Knees @eeednt universal muscular action will value of the yhysteal on they | found on the sane person You seldom Be studied Kainst the development forced te expend in the routine of | find without. theott Of special sets of muscles. TI ir daily life, and will awake to the) ‘Tp of th Will be trained in tty entirety tthata RY $s of the same sort | the body Jy wed will w general good health, rather than fo that they ere [ite own payaleal regener 5S to dccastonal spurts fyr particular fe his | than any other means. In the new-be Tt will not do to say, “Oh, the men get as good as they deserve. ‘Training of the futtire will give methods of perfecting the 4p 7 attention to the position of the a trolling the structure, the mind will be admit and {ts general carriage and breathing. | the body, and 4 ey equal plane mith muscle, and brains lappearamee, or such sordidness as household cares and economies, or Qhan to developing bleeps and triceps. | will benent nm far more than al the | will be as important a factor as brawn}, 5 i H Mnstead, of practising to lift heavy jexercising machines, dumb-bells or calla- | in the treat fin learning how to be a mother when instinet teaches every woman! “weights: men will learn how to hold |thentes Known to man the Philadel how to be a zuod mother It will not do to say, “Oh, Lean dress! seen se = ut 23 { {fHAT fabric to use teen quickly loses its body and the “QUGHT TO HAVE MADE HIM PUT IT BACK. How to cateh and hold a husband, Tow to be a wife. How to be a mothe nd sound Tings are alw Hof these three is at once a seience and an art. Each is of the attention of the most intellectual woman. Tis necessary to stecess as a woman. lined in an intelli or Why should a woman waste her time in such vanities as personal | twin Cheekley, 1 for morning wear = inca) : . hes tavenotscnabricteeithuemaltec A woman who feels that way has nothing to offer in exchange ored designs, just auch as yod buy for] for love and a husband and a home. Summer gownr. background is heavy linen and silk Is expenalve. ‘Anne Rittenhouse tn the Philadel- | Tho choice of one girl may be a gutd= phia Press. ing Mght to others, | ik 2 ‘Taffeta for petticoats Is worn and t#| Sho Kot Ane seersucker in blue and cand the trimming Je of lace There is a purely sentimental side to marriage. But there is a/ fashionable, out somehow It doesn't seern | white, pink and white wad dud gray | Taey are made by a ga | & i a aan to, fill the need as much as we thought | colors. She made these up by a good] fitted to a hip yoke and finis! urger practical side that can be permeated with and beautitied by it would a fow years ago skirt pattern on a hip yoke, Atted them) shaped and atralgnt ruftes: Sdntinent bit 2 = Nepean Many well-dressed women do not own | well In the back, £ 1 them with | anyotz the .seutiment, but that ean ‘Not, must not be ignored. | he woshtul, excepting 5 t A wife is something more than a woman! whe mi mt with ed witli silk petticoat this season. It may be | drawing strin in use allk foundations are now se] wide facing, ent th ate from skirts, except at the belt, in al- / and at the foot, put most everything except me walking | thtee Inches wide, Gown. They serve as silk petticoats Uny palnt of Tambur White mustin and cambric ix the firat | aner then a white pettl| choice of everybody to-day, and y Jare much leet expen ow seo a woman with six white petti- is something about coats where whe had two three years that ts fur how must be = the family calls, spends the day in are charming. tod wear and gadding and gossiping and drags a weary hus Dband toa wearifnl social funetion in the evening. aroless: A mother is something more than an ens of incompetent muarse g rm | But there are col days when a woman s where dust reigns and prefers something warmer than a imus- \Un petticoat, and for this emergency | with ¢ ‘moreen, sateen and a weave of Neavy Binen and silk are chosen. But the Feen gets satdrated with dust; the sa- A home is somethin Inore than ay Riservints waste and tradesmen cheat and rob, Ore may be use has Just thatshed a halt tienieariie Hest petseouts (meg ns How inany girl of your aequaintanee are being carefully trained in the artot dressing themselves with economy and taste? 6-YEAR-OLD'S LETTER TO GRANDMA,| How inauy ave being trained in the science and art of clean, orderly, economical housekeeping £ How many are being trained in the HE following {x a copy of « Christ- mas letter written by a six-year-old girl in Illinojs to her grandma, Mrs science and art of motherhood ¢ Indian subse Yet all but a very few of the girls expect to have husbands to} | uty Al Surprising Vncle George. “Ho, ho! Says he ain't Uncle Georse Hollerin’ for mercy, too! Ob, no, won't hurt him! “What's he got all the guns s for? Say, Uncle ( @ smyoth one, you are!” 5. “Hullo! Why, there's Uncle George in the hall. Then who's this? Why, » been and captured a real lve burs JAR DIET, lower isn't able to be Whats the matte "Some person mixed a few canopeners with his knives and daggers last night’? -—§———_ FROM THE BEG iG. “A woman writer says that fool women bring ridicule on woman's work." “I suppose Mother Eve started that I ngs are orname (for Christmas and a pair of s ; ‘a pin tri A game and a dive bow for my hair and a palr of ribbons for my hair a pease (watch) and e2me impry Dery. ‘This fs all. ors and | a eereeoene-e-e-ee-e52nd a family, precisely so is it the duty of the| rely tucked, with Inserted medallions Se | : m9 : of black chiffon, with hand-embroldery DIRECTOIRE GOWN , HUSMANDS AND T Wife constantly to strive to hold her husband's | or qlwera im white. The waist opens Tho skirt of this original gown ts of] f WIVES IN THE Wants Stamp Flirtation. Good-by. MasnGinbuscellsalad eecnlaren twestricen } affections, carefully to spend her share of their) To the Editor of The Evening Werld. P.M eundatonvetiwlae Tae fel c . i le conseleniionalyctcnbe Would some kind reader write out the 3 , foundation of black taffeta, It ts fine common earnings and conscientiously to be a 3 PURte Mantel feel aes @re all well your loving grand } ished at the bottom with a deep founce, | t-e-e-0-e-e-0-0-0-0-e-e-e-g) ‘Stamp Filrtation” for me? JOE JOHNSON, A Quarrel to Be Adjusted. To the Editor of The Evening World What peacemaker 1 advise me as to this? A, Band C are fast friends, All three are young girls. A calls on C one evening for a visit. In the mean- time HB calls at the house of A and finds she has gone to the house of C, and immediately sends after her, A and © send word back for her to come ¢ Daughter Dorothy, $ mother to their children, A big’ Doll Vf % h. ge’ ; ny js fs = ie A dis’ Doll and # book and a little dish. G-YEAR-OLD LETTER WRITER. The Twentieth Century man does uot want a plaything or a He wants : =a companion, a comrade, a fellow-laborer, | rn ie ei iene cere Ta $43O9-3S OLD FRIENDS. | QUERIES 419, ANSWERS | | Of all good things that we ver phy ate know are best rk in * Twentieth Century woman jelrudge ora slave as a wif Few men like the girl wl = obstreperously a man-hunter, obstreperously a good housekeeper, or obstreperously maternal in Star panty t jher instinets. Would a woman like a man who was always siring ‘They never forsake ua ax others ne | his proficiency in his business or pro ai Bb refuses, A leaves C and goes to B. do, Wt Yenr, i i Mes Moi A ought to And never disturb our inwant rE in| Bar the proticieney must be there. And if it is not there the} ianye done in this c reat; srg sael i ‘ S 5 ‘ | Sginlnce tone hom jere i truth in a world of Iles, Cooper Uoten. | Jimi or wenn who marries in spite of the fact is making a melan-| wan U's’ place to x0 h And all.tha: in mun is great and Prey HPA TTS \eholy exhibition of bad judgment. | at ee World, wultlvater | To take aman into purtnershiy tell m ell me in an enterprise solely because he wasa friend of yours and without inquiring into his capabilities would vot that bea ridiculous performance, all but certain to end in What, then, ought to be said of y minal enterpri -the most complicated of ‘To the HNor of The Kveatng World PrP tise: i finding 7 c ilities, wi . read the note of appeal by 315 clerk, all emterprises-—without finding out what capabilities, what GQWips |/oreclatveatlortwultelmuuasclinardc no pene MaTEnACallatysomplosel fat tment your prospective partner hits, and solely on the ground that he| tucked and tuixhed with Uns Jet beads. | ig oMce squeezes his hand and that he The revers are of lemon tat WIth) fears ao object, lest he be discharged. 1 Tne the} taney black stitching. ‘The colar ana] your advise that If are nothing ving calf” expression.in your eves ¢ belt, and cuffs on the double se for this yount lady and have not en- mii Ser uetne ates are trimmed to correspond with {oncouraged her uqueezing y men and women, ‘friend, That sre dust, though dear in . our Joy and pain, BeiAre’ the books thelr cunning i) hands have penned, For they depart, bu: the books No. Did timp ever win the er cap? SIL GREENWOOD, Michael, Who won the bloycle nr rel in Madison 3a > day night, Dee, 5, 1a jand stl Long Branch, N. Ate Right. A says that © the 9th century; ve four of them In my garret. CONROY, Newabk, N. J. disaster wif you enter into a yisen Coy Clerks, contract ina mat rough these they speak to us 2 what wan bert ‘Th the loving heart and the 5) noble mind; nakes your heart beat a little faster and tends to y stmas, 100). was in B saya Christmas. 190), was in the Dth ¢ W : Sie igcanee a peeeD Phe girls are showing great energy and in-| 8! Bh ee sou tel nae io neh her corr so SD. itiative in clevating the standard of suevessful Connecticut Deer. Jalng’so, as you feel that fi wit The decollete bolero ts of black vel- i yet. with a fichu of white tulle, the] f GURLS Is THE { Is, lt proper to have "Mr." placed in|ends of which ure carried around ay HUTUNITY, front.of a man's name on a visiting cant} a border to the bolero, and caught with or Juat the plain Christlany/and! sur-'a rorette in the middle of the back and 3. ¥. H, fron 7 STR ag . er, You say she Ix heaa ave . “y : 4 a lie wilaicoeieretine not proper, You says candidacy for husbandship, They ought to take Nig ager antes ite Tank ta all parte | Countent and) you only. a. clerk, and Hiss Irwin's hint and anticipate the movement} ally, found: feeding, with domestic ante} she might have you disharged, Don't Par errs A i 6 f ¢ Jet: that worry you, for Iam sure that for raising the qualifications for wivem = - ice Busts tang 07 tlie for 0 genta Jig bus:neaw tap with guod sound judg: tt % ‘ ro Pana Uribe aeanl 408 eas f Ls inf 5 ‘ easing In all parts © te a o Sil Jeand the pt ai te i theory."" Amy iGrialey Ayer) iniNewsvork | uaniivalseors {auard, homes to adininister, children to train, E WENSDAY 2 10 leotenmiatenich f : ; _|— — Dear Granma I got a box of perfume erencentaYan'| Just as itis the husband's duty to be worthy of and try to retain | MODEL WAIST. peer Ee ee cane’ *4 1 the love of his wife and to provide the means for maintaining a home|, preityl walat isi off bieck a cnitton | 2 LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. ae] ment would dispense with the services of any clerk whom he found to be com- petent, Still she might invent some In- famous Iie and might place you in @ Position where no one would take your word, unless on oath. But, as I sald before, If you do not squeeze her hand in return and do not care for her, = would suggest that you have a talk wita her and try to reach aq definite under standing. ONE SORRY FOR YOU. Answers Century Query. | To the Faltor of The Evening World: | One of your correspondents asks, on jexamining a two-foot rule, to decide w | ltwe | that ‘her the second foot begins at ¢ or thirteen Inches. I would say t the beginning of the thirteenth 4 | Inch the foot contains only twelve inches 1 not thirteen, and so at the beginning year the first century was twelve yeans fold and not thirteen, A man born Jan. 1 jof the frat year would be one year old idan, 1 of the year two and ninety-nine yeurs old the thst January of the year 19, L. ¥. How Longe To the FAlltor of The Evening World. Wao will solve this? How. long. will apital invested at 3, 34-2, 4, 41-3 er cont. to double itrelf pound Interest? “BROOKLYN,” Wants Wedding Recit To the E:lltor of the Evening W Will some Kind render help me out by, muggeatings some good, brief recitation appropriate for a wedding reception? A 15-YEAR-OLD READER. Here's a Nive Little Problem, To the Kalitor of the Evening % A boy being asked how old he. was said: ‘One-half of my age,.. being squareit.. will give my age’ faverted, “dow old was he, readerst” We a PSL 9929005004 t come a y d a ~ Nema ne iene bee See iT No i i » \

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