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4 THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 6, 1901. ‘ORY’S TIMELY CARTOON. THE CUBAN SITUATION. Published by the Press Pubili ed at the Iost-OMmce amswer to the crucial question in or innocence promi eeene-e-e-e-ererenenene: 3) TY AND MYSTERIES ng pr are due solely to the journa’ The truth ase Pittsfield rej eos in a {imagines that with his dim see further and understand more Publicit If it were not for smal lage Vidoeg, raseality would not t friends? act repealed. ntneneentneeeeenenenee \ BAD nLow IBNDS OF > i making itsel to criminals law. of Topeka, asking the “darlings” window: more sign of the rapid gt At home, in the Philinpin Ther THE BED w, my dear, dear friend, all you've got to do 1s to establish a govern- ment of your own. Don't you see the point? CUBA (disconsolately)—Yasser, 1 done see de point all right, but how's | gwine ‘stablish a gov'- ment wid mah han’s 'n’ feet tled? THE BENEVOLENT ONE--Why, my dear ficiently enlightened to undertake it. owing the wind. is high or community or nation if it rew ane mistak dew friend, that 15 the point. 1 fear you are not suf? ] pose of the moment: if it make | ne —__.—_. ] virtues: if it deny the righ BY JANE GORDON. = | of law: if it declare all ‘ ; SECOND ARTICLE, | and Ivnehing toy y =<] DON'T mind one Jay for the privilere of laying hands of w! Morris rand ; when I meet th but it & hunchback. Even Joseph Jefferson, | which proved a failure 2 trying to have them hurled at you in| great artist that he Is, fs not above sue | one t ri . knowing | freture ? ’ ‘whole battalions. To be in the ety |perstition, Teace heard a manager say] the hobby. artfully placed three nails ee of'some persons sto be made we that if during one of his rehearealy a car }on the floor where shew ftaelf. Everything you say or do i|orossed the stage Jefferson woull« ta discover them, Do vou know that we are now fe signal for “Oh, don't do that!" or “For| don that parttea! for tine | company als ; merey’s sake, ist kind of luck ¢ nd substitute another As every a- stii@n af the y expect?” unt!l you scarcely dare hasdiin feline attache, are ix taken | tke same t} R The key to that war is hor unless you are facing due nor never Mr. Jeffecson v 1 hots able © of the * i as ‘crow Mes. If you phice yo: enain nthe} 1 climate. Wi Sehelf. to keep them clean, If you throw ae hia | neve See Your umbrella on the bed, if you co.back Jengagement therein. ‘1 SAK intl simply could to your room for something forgotten, |lins ny tdea of tos! + te , There is just one sonve 4£ you spill the salt or traction ax “tip Van Winki« : . ehoe firs—you are flyin Ia" on aceon sob phan Republic, of Providence. Yet y ay cat is . @ sensible reason why most e} Clara Morris used ty indtulse ; Kugland things should not be done. As u rule, it} untaue vi 4 i Thee dind a alSatter’ not\ to norsieunanelvent lincinest es tf . parts of her own ¢ re, They died i Bhoes are not ornam A On the rebenteal of terrible land. But the horses and mules from the chairs ostables, Umbr: Miss Morris would pleb t A <swet ones, are not lik: heanllectiiyinia var lived. Adi teae coe an ay Eayglaned hing hind wd now has member what we wish t halle 3 lait of ¢ United Sta She when we ga ou save wat noshe ow Sy iar ; needless trout dashing Gack. And | falure jOF OUR TORS if we cannot mani get througt wl An interes ; fn meal Without knocking over bie nes | tlw/conneation. Odin VOU I and spilling things on che xt earsa Povin de streebear Bs serve dad luck f ” - . . People of the «tage are ve 1 | from the Indian eainps——all going from this lind ¢ tous, An actor woull wa Lb pase j dome teanake Britain's war in Seath At a coal g BOOM INORICE: 1 De Wer is pursued only by ti 4 eee i } mL NAD An 3 BRIGH | THE MAN WETIT ON TOK, wend be undisturbed but for United i Hy Markham O™ ven are songs, Gad w ch he words. SEQUE oe : ai ., . em tom ‘ 8 THE WOMAN WETH y Vivited States horses. ‘The Bri Hie LATCH And the sous 0 ) Ky Mra Carrie Na pergoree eon SenscocoosscesuNON oo ot measure. {sv Speak gent! mane ‘ peak rently, isu tittle t rod ted ron kt ql Drinetd leche hes BIRTH CUSTO IN GER ther belligerent toany ki i The goo, ure joy that it mu MA State as an " shalt tet] miners j porcauty anal cet ore violating the neut } Patience: why ‘tis Ofiall! the virtues ‘tle jure Does it net ineke vou proud to heaven. un tage. elorious th ‘fin South Att Deb eoare , utr : 1 MR. CARNEGIE'S ) There's wn Din To the FAlwor (si ATA Is a Hane Wow @uat and bein, them botn mentally Bur ne man, after 00k r the average him fall in he meets. It he keeps his " W. RELWAL sone mu vende wil be un Carnegiosae Seloothas. will do hl org {woot with had run into Marthace wh : fl | head on shoulders during the opera: Bur if the « WHO INOWS \ ” Nret school! don of flies Inan tout 1M, By ‘ Himes my | : y Mithen no Wisiahe, oma tt Mphe Good Womin Advised Difter= work inter fuent was as] i for her. 1 In. udviow than Worlt as reached ma- tke Mr | Which wan ne: lurtty 1@ the best guide and counsellor ening Worl! m for a young Man, especially if he loves Mf the young men of + Det net how t her. ‘TRe woman fo have in mind and paidvice of Mr, ¢ “ sities cout Me Cannot Love Vou Many, whom T knew, advised marriage t cou Aisor ot Thetityenti nw Fonergou, saying th 4 Carnegie advice te young men to phi lady when [was stil a young Wa. @ T. by marry ris tn cove WEN Wonten Gwenty or tht Ampression on their! self would not sow the + ofa happy elves by Very soe « younmemad fallk In love] tte. for the temperaments of age are was Women Come Too High, Wey ie Chunces ure| youth are vasuy different. This i st 1s to be unable Rveaing World: ’ it xolf would make life mizcrable, ayia mselvew andineed some] Mr. Carnegie is sight. Young men’ g Company, $3 to @ PARK ROW, New York. New York ax Second- COMMENT ON CURRENT EVENTS AT HOME AND ABROAD. A few more days and in all proba results thus far.obtained and the respect of the revelation of what seemed at the outset ism of publicity shure case ittle eves and feeble little brain he can and mighty brain of that great champion of truth and justice, aninded persons of the type of this vil- Does truth suffer more from it goes, saving expense to the State, insuring | speedicr trials and juster verdicts—in fact unscrupulous attorneys who sell themselves | nd loopholes which they themselves have put into the criminal And now Mrs. Nation appeals to the pages of undying fame” by proceeding “t grab up a roe! of these hell-holes.” on rioting, praetic hatehets and resolutions of sympathy from associations shiclt| think themselves moral and civilizing. ionism” and the encouragement it is getting are ous wth of the spirit of lawlessness. . in Porto Ri he who sows the wind shall reap the whirlwind. thout the consequences toi sof others, the sanctity of plec iminal conduet, from private venge ind devastation and wholesale butehery, justi- tiable because approved by a morality and a deity of its own manu- v fighting England's war in South using in South Atriea no less than She has bought and is now shipping only by United Stites horses, Steyn is put to flight only | Iway but for United States horses and mules, Tinules are military supplies, And under article eland’s mainstay in destroying the republ NO. UA | ass Mull Muster, | | y there will be a detinite the Arlington tragedy—the guilt of the Rey. Keller, in undeterminable truth i nes out more slowly, Why 4 chief of police who ignorantly clearly than the all-piereing cyes hrive a3 now, | its enemies or from its The swift jury-getting in the Kennedy ease is a timely eheck |; upon the criminal lawyers so slyly lobbying to get the Special Jurors | That law fs excellent so far as} f inost obnoxi to erafty and and thrive through the laxities ‘precious little children” to “enroll your names upon the koand shatter th ass doors and | And she goes! Ilyv unrebuked. and. pts | authority for the statement that te the moral code to suit the pur | ving. cheating, stealing, murder, sand! rsand anules that can stand the thout horses and mules England} not carry on the war. t supply —this tried horses and mules from all ents travelling throu: s horses from the ranches, a stecess ful | United State hor horses. Botha’ is tish army would starve or perish with Great Britain we are fort I We still; dependent cepublie, Mr, ality laws. : Ww these facts ¢ nd of military supplies. to ku Is it not) | should fail In love with than themaeives. The y. day have no good comm 4 3oung man along, For taem too many theatres, too mar lothes and hails that ate eyo! salaries pald the young men ¢ An ler woman is and ia suttsfled with lb IDEAS OF bOVE AND MARRIAGE DISCUSSED BY READERS. a geod who can provide a good home. &5 w. Not New with To the KAitor of The Rveaing W Mr. Carnegie’s advice for to marry women a quarter their seniors ts by no means now, Kip-} u in his advice to a young Brith soldier, advocates the same thing. 80, I am told, did Dro Benjamin Franklin ant several still older authorities, Men who wed thus ‘are, saved in Cuba we are; ivicdal | | the curve of Jeal:| perhaps,» ise" .wives, und’ can’ love teays {¢ HE LITTLE OLD NEW YORKER. - By T. E. POWERS. é oe : PA 4 pe bs “TAM LEAVING YEZ \ Sy FoR GEtTiNG THIS MINUTE oun € YOUR BREAKFAST oul can G6t ¢ On Time TusT Sours 7 BRANT, 3 fs GIVE ME LITTLE! Sx OL 0 NEW YURK EVERY TIME 5 el “1 To Ny ) Boe Sree ergo The cook! The cook! Is the queen of all birds! She's a corker right from Cork! he cook-cooing face haunts no other place New York."’ But? it does “Little Old RD AY ER eee TOF PERPLEXED LOVERS. HARRIET HUBBA A Serious Faalt in a saver. | Was doing. Now I know she loves me Dear Mrs, Ayer | and Todo her, ro 1 ask your advice ny for the} whether I should go live with her oc many women have been mar- ever possessing an en- ‘ : ring. [think myseif « pretty pledge should be given ‘y Iman to the woman he is to lsensivle lovers understand - HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. that te a girl the ring imeane a Rzeat deal. But very ood inen are sometimes thougntiess, If your flance 1s In com- fortadie circumstances, such aa will per- aim to marry, he certainly does not © you the little clvKitles that a girl has a right to expect: nor does he do much fgr your entertiinment. You are the person who must decide this matter. If you are not happy as awcetneart of a man of your lover's isposition you will’ certainly be reiched an his wife. If 4 man jain’ poor circumatances, so that ne cannot spend money freoly, any excuses may be made for him, but where he hae money and {s not generous with the girl hedoves, there fa a bad outlook for the fature. Shall He Fors Dear sire. Ayer 1 was married to # young lady about a year ago, and two weeks after we Were ried she went out. with another ig inan, A xhort time after that she went out with a friend of mine (a young man) to a ball, where T had asked her to go with me, She also continued to go. down t Coney Isiand to the concert hatla when I had asked her not to go. Now since her mother ts ead she has noted altogether differently, She has anked me to forgive her. and promised er todo It again, as she says she was widdy thea and dtd not realize what she Not in Bible. A hundred years was too short a period for the age of the Old Teata- ment saints, and too long a pariod few Testa- Ints, hence the word century 1s not found In the Bible. engagement canto! | F you ean reaily forgive your wife T Let the matter be talked over between You must not treat her with suaplelon sincerely revolved to do what ts rig! His Parents Object. sweetheart. I'm in love with her {dr Could you please advise me how to wil A. F.G. again, JON. G. advise you to do so with all my heart. Don't forgive her half way. you once—Kiss and make up, and never Again refer to after you have become reconciled, trust with all my heart your wife has und that you may never again have « misunderstanding. Dear Mrs. Aver: Tam seventeen years old and have @ two years. Now my parents tell me that I must atop keeping her company her that [ must leave her, 0 a8 not to make her feel down-hearted afterward? ‘OU really began early with your love affairs. You are only an in- fant legally, and will remain a child until you are twenty-one, when there will be time enough for you to think se- rlously of matters of the heart; mean- while, however, if the girl ia a. nice, self-reapectink young pet TI think your parents make a mistake in their Views in the matter. A boy of seventeen is far better off in the company of good girls than in any other society. You should not have spoken of love. No man has any right to do that until he ts preparet to offer to marry a girl. Why! do you not have a vod, aquars talk with your mothor, and ank’ permis slon to ace the young lady on cond that you are not to make love to her NaUI At teat you are not a baby legally ? There {s nothing to do in regard to ¢ I the atratght truth, Mert PROM LOVE'S PORT- RESS. 1 * darts from Tattice shot be- ware, Lovers, as by the streets you 50; More like are they to plerce you through Than ever bolt or arrows were. Nor right nor jeft as on you fare Look up, but keep your eyes full low, ‘And darts from Lattice shot be- ware, By A. BS + 11. And :f no Leech of skill be there, Boon as you have received the . to the pricat Death holds you, repair; Of darts from Lattice shot bee °A’ La New- : cream lace and mous- burg. | Ware. : onl By ¢ ts nlao a lavish une of X Florida papers | —Weitten by Duke Cranes SiO dernment in the way of embrotdery and pal report that the /@ leans, a ple pune Bet lettes, lobster {s disap- after the battle of Agincourt, Minielnini pebble kebibidbb bree pearing. -+-t written: young iris: Sandmother?: Ina may not marry ‘Man ‘The els, ‘t doesn’t devervo di Chartle should try withered I'd ure 1 would never marry x woman less than seventy. .He fe auil at large. Women (2 my mind are I:ke bread—when past: thelr pelme, they are stale—as. wives, T mean, As mothers they are always good ay } wives In a sensible fashion a not with che mtily effusiveness Incum: bent on the husbands of giddy young girls, PAUL E. HERRIOTT. dea In full of wi @ second though to shake me for any tonthicas, damsel of sixty brief susm Papa's political pull to have shri in the funny houre. She In Si; Me 1; Hoth Mapny. | R To the tsitar of The Hvening World: jThe Law That Carnegie Forgets. ie wpewk* from experience when [ say} Ta the Etltor of The Evering World: Mr. | Mr. Larner Js aM right tn hie ides on} There Is & laws known ay the lew of a he o matrimony. am thirty-two years and} natural selection, which ir. arnexi9 negle Is advanced in years now end eo one oe Aiea mane alan inen from the standpoint of an old} {Quy Mmoushe my Husbands eenlor: being L wonder If he thought the eamo|ine mangled. love ho would otherwise! he was young, May many. more |ituve for wife und mother. 1 was) mothe Young hearts have but a single thought [8 ¥1d0W, h 0 3 und beat ax one, FINNETTA, Gi an O11 Manta Advice, » Miditor of Tho’ Evening Workt . are enough guo0l sweet young} its world waiting for ac jurry Kood, sehwlble young men. falis to reckon on when he adviees men to wed women old enough to be ther Ake necks Mke, Youtn ce ves a marry. Mt in an An To the Eilitor of The If w young num has antiquarian tastes|-7o the: Kditor of the Kveairg World: iz ts. Don't make :hem alllier, Mir C. prey See Pere ee ere beautiful ematicn, bon he will love old age, even {3h | woman, |) What) on earth t the man’ talking {t by making such hideous, unnat- A certain editor In New) York) about? Marry..an/ old’ crone when’: thle}) 1 aeheg us Sour nro Age. Mi ———— cA