The evening world. Newspaper, February 21, 1901, Page 8

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The “Red Light’? Casts a Blue DIVE-KEEPE Philbin goin’ int R (disconsoli Say! Dis ix tlerce, see! oM de smashin mm oitin an! hustle back! Say. | wish't dat Diek “ud metarch WII Net Do, i thera amd scarlet feve: Dew ne Ayer uy danger of my You put a remedy tn Viease hair on the face, As 1 wax cornstan made into a pi and when dry w Would come off with der right? very, anya what fect In removing » formula I gay about trying to almost impossiile to back oll either of them, Deve you formu sof comp! Towclone the even To bow the a To feel the Of’ “Peace, be stil! ‘This ty 1 olk ail Some Nrooklyntte To the FAlor fey To Improve Cducntion Fo the FAttor of The fie ning World You will hear a young RY ad by haying shown ~ ,Nation comin’ ter New York an’ nately: for ars ANNIOUS HATRDRESSER “=1IERE certainly te very great sillng customers who ‘iptith hor scarlet fee recently. LO you have | Will not make a lazy mano or woman energotic; it will not make a weak . rash you certainly FORM lintmen! os : Aton Gum| boys will get a formal education in business; if the girls do not go to col- ol and ex-lege for this formal training of the mind and character, they have no euch ve excel- neallintereldveteecelte opportunity as have the boys to repair the omiaaion. t treated whould be} ~ ORY’S TIMELY CARTOON. \wW WY ere rr tas enemy paporenuener: aT. | thls country there was preoisely this same controversy. It is the old, old HARRIET HUBBARD AYER ene in soe: Beauty: Seekers, Asif en contentment that comes from ignorance could possibly be bene- 1s] felal to man or woman! As if knowledge could possibly make a human ttol ‘i RN 1, | being unfit for life! As if the mother of sons and daughters could possibly an an- a dry Kind form me of A good a 1 cam wit Se|for a companion and an intelligent mother for his children. Of course, {t * for both componed ofoom. one ounce| college is the easiest and, on the whole, the sureat way. P This ts And Mkewtse thts: \ ‘ et very umetul in| tury girl, it In ante to aitp-| "Never look at the clock,” ts one rule 6 : Arfestions | tor nuccess, ay Oe: 63 Pati eion Absit teaes : y . , Vor Fatiiow tate. le te na charming xirl with a lot of| But a clock that will strike fe no draw- % And talk of flowers that all Ach | onew clothes | back, 1 gues Bo Make up my Eater hat. ° eat tt ARETE Nabted by Sticking to Hie Peachant. & While I keep still : A READER . P About the bill, > ; tont Lmuven't half enough money to 1a) “Wate become of that boy who had $ : eiktit ouncen: tneture of fans dette lent for machinery? & lew en and spirits] “Well, I'm worse off than that; 1 pate arrested the other day for i tee iwp7olincen every cent En [running @ divorce mit.” EVENING WORLD “LETTER: WRITERS DISCUSS MANY TOPICS. t soften no heat in to Answer f 1 5 ‘ F ‘oor in the one t . asked: (ieiconduator of 1. THOMPHON o Kar Advanced, 6 Women Ad} a child haw been saved from death by & the road of {m-)the faithful watehfulness of the house 1 think there bam been too} dog, and that the canine friend of man nent for their van wel-lras only recently been worshipped can| vig mistake by saying the American and '|WHEN A HIGHWAYMAN IS NOT A : FA Sanibel atten apihent RMAMMAGR AS WHER HMRI | ¢ VOL, 4...eee Published 3 by the Preas Publishing Company. 13 to @ PARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. HIGHWAYMAN; AND OTHER MATTERS. — You have uw pocketbook full of money. Along comes a mano with a orilliant idea this be can take better cary of that money than you can. He Ggrevee-ee-ee-e-e-e-e-ess. thrusts @ revolves into your face and—he gets the pocketbook and (s contents, ‘The next morning you take up your newspaper, and you read thy’ the “scoundrel,” the “thief,” the “desperado” whe “stole” your pocketbook has been; 2 | Jailed and Is on hix way toward ten year+ or s0 in the penitentiary. You own a coal mine or a manuft ‘uring plant. Along comes a man with a brilliant {dea that he can take better care of that mine or factory than you can. He draws out the blackjack of the secret discriminating freight rate and hits you a thwack over the head with it. And—he gets your mine or your factory. ‘The next morning you take up your newspaper and find that the “emi- nont financier” who “annexed” your plant is on ‘his way to being canonized a saint. He is not only great; he ix also good. He endows colleges, he butid# churches, he ts a towerlng bulwark of respectability. He gives in another column advice to the young on how to succeed. | And you rub your sore head at the big bump where the blackjack struck | ° | and vou look at the yawning void in your possessions, and you realize jthat life is he -handed Jest. rrent news falriy laughs aloud with theas jests. Ax a member of the British Parliament said to the London correspond- ent of The World yesterday, “the assistance in the shape of horees, given b-e-ene-e-e-e-e-e-e-e-0-0.5 Wer the aegis of the Weshington authorities, has ‘cue irreparable injury to the cause of Boer inde- | pendence.” But, deplorable though it {s for Mr. DUT WNENNS McKinley and Mr. Hay thus to ald Great Britain’s TIONAL IN- , Tepulsive South African enterprise, that is not the Lb {moat deplorable feature of their “statesmanship.” # tenererenenererenenenone- 6. To give Britain this aswistanée they have in- formed the whole world that In the view of this nation horses and mules, bought by army officers for direct use in a war that is in progress, are not “military supplies If Germany or Russia were to make war upon us to-morrow, they could buy horses and mules In Canada and Mexico and in South America; Great Britain, making war upon us, would be able to draw upon Mexico and South America. And we, thanks to the wise McKinley, could not protest. We will never need to buy horses and mules. Any nation making war upon us would have to buy them, and buy them on this aide of the Atlantic. Yot the sagacious McKinley hns declared in actions that horses and mules are not “military supplies.” -He has done what every other nation on earth has been most careful to avold. And he has done {t to help Britain crush two republics! ‘The Congress should order the undoing of this folly. If there is no other way, a law should be passed at once forbidding the export of horses and mules for military purposes, specificelly declaring them “military sup- plies.” . Here are two opposing views of higher education for women expressed » by two women at the meoting of the Excletic Club The college girl \# restless, dissatisfied, rebellious, longs for the freedom of college days, repudiates duty. WOMENt She has not been taught her place and function in life. re ret aa ‘The higher education fits her better for everything tn life. t ven helps her to wash dishes intelligently. When the habit of sending boys to college was firet becoming general in fight between ignorance and Intelligence. ILLIE ROPER IN “ON THE QUIET. - this, as in all else he does, makers of his di Hopperisms, Sam Bernard with Bernardisms; bu’ In-trade. He hasn't bad time to acquire suc! HE'S THE REAL THING. ce pore ‘Dhere is nothing necessarily new or amusing In the use of salt as en ingredent for in Wille Collier proves himself one of the most sincere and ertistic laugh- jay and generation. Nat Goodwin bubbles with Goodwinjsms, De Wolf Hopper with t Willle Collier hasn't a Collieriam in his whole atook- h a luxury—he's been too busy cultivating bis precious gift of spontaneots humor. ss KATE BARRA RSE! | ——— — —— — gonessnsnss SOE Ras asus in this day do her duty so well without the higher knowledge that can most easily be got through a formal education! Breadth of knowledge will not make a foolish man or woman wise; St man or woman strong, or a corrupt man or woman upright. But {t will make any defective man or woman less defective. And it will strengthen and will give direction and purpose to any mind and character that are naturally sound. ‘The intelligent man of the twentieth century wants an intelligent wife is not necensary to go to college in order to expand one’s intelligence, But e If possible, college is even more important for girls than for boys. The PVRRVAL FE ININE, TIME AND LABOR, imine, but busineas women consider this, didn't know we Americans have taught that, are not compelled tw] chem We have indeed taught them Mving stay at home and help this lesson: “Men are attracted by the Wii + and he told me hel poor mother with her home duties [rower of love, but they cannot be driven td of Health willl CARRLE. | toward the driver.” Ae a native of one con the Moor] eom for Roth Deg and Baby. | of the West ‘Indian colonies, I ask "An {ne Amerte! why won't the Americans practioe that great lesson which he ctatme they caught the Engileh? JAMAICA. A Case for Mr. defect. ‘To the Balitor of The Byening Worl: 1 think Rey. W. J. Puddefoot made a the Editor of The Evening Work "here ts ror for both dog and baby Chris: Each has a diatinot ably fills, Many woman |masily be Weproved by the proverb| fngiwh women cared most for dogs. say “Towonder why there are not mere) stave me; love my dog,” the antiautty'| puddefoot did not see much in Boston spomnis of marriage?’ ‘The answer ies: | of which tn hardly. open ts ‘ques! the employment from men A DOG WORSHSPPER. or New York when he only saw one dow EY “s We 0 ta in family. Why, ‘he must come to fete sy working for lent wages; then ifal Let Us Pass the Lesson Along. tbush, where the will eee nine and k: pie man wants to marry her ake will say,| To the Editor of The Evening World: ren In one family. There ts one family listening. But just now | to ine greaing World: “Ont L can earn as. muoh as he! How] 1 was atruck with a paragraph in al enet has nine dogs and three cate, All toigo'a step further ae ‘An outrage is committed on the people| foolish I would be!’ and at the same| letter over the signature, “An Ameri- Yve im one room. the art of!of Brooklyn concerning the pat in the} time ahe wants to marry. 4 cans''He eald: . ‘What the Knglish A PROPERTY OWNER. |FOR H The Evening World's Daily Fashion Hint. The bodice that! ineludes a walatcoat: effect 1s popula gives the following story of the TRANSLATION been made of igin of woman: a Sanserit: work CAREW. ERR SAIRA BBR Bi BERR SBCA OR RS pone y phan a ni tc te $e tee tattle Dei ey et at eS Ed A HINDOO STORY OF THE ORIGIN OF WOMAN. 'indoo Vulcan) came to the creation of woman he found that he had exhausted which has el In the berinning, when Twashtri (the his materials in the making of man, and OME DRESSMAKERS. and rvedly. ne yoking material faced on the back, but is made sepa- rately at the front. The fronts properg ; REMARMARHAS SAG ARRAN AAAAARAAAAAT HAMA AARAIA RAIA AARAM ASH RA RR RHA MM BRAM AR AAA ARAM A ARIAS MARRS AEA ASR AAR RRMA #3 had no solid elements left. Ip this dilemma, after profound medftation, he 414 an fotiown: “He took the rotundtty of the moon, and the curves of creepers, and the »| clinging, of tendrile, and the trem- Ding of grass, and the slenderness of the reed, and the bloom of the flowers, and the lightness of the leaves, and the miances of the deer, and the joyous gayety of mmbeams, and the weeping of clouds, and the fickleness of the winds, and the timidity of the hare, ana the vanity of the peacock, and the soft- ness of the parrot's basom, and the hardness of adamant, and the sweet- nese of honey, and the cruelty of the Uger, and the warm glow of fire, and the coldness of snow, and the chatter- ing of Jaya—and compounding all these together he made woman and gave her to man.” But after one week man came ¢o Aim and sald: are lafd in three pnd are joined tlons. dium size will The foundation {s a fitted lining. The 18) tucks at each edge, for a woman of me- 12. gored and tucked. require 3% yards of material 21 inches wide, 1% yards Inchea wide, or the narrow vest por-' ‘The skirt ts five- ‘To cut thin walnt Te: 4 1" yards @ {nohes wide, with 1% yards of all-' aver lace 18 inches, velvet, To cut skirt By yards Inches wide or be required. wide and 1 yard of: Inches wide, with %' yards of velvet, will the 44 w ‘The wulst pattern (No. 3,04, wines 32 to, 40) will be sent 10 centy, for ‘The skirt puttern (No, 3,683, wizen 22 20) will be sent 10 cents. Both patterns, cents, money to! for, 20 | “lord, this creature thou haat given me maken life miserable. She chatters incessantly, and takes all my time up, ut nothing, and {9 always fo Twashtrl took her back, and after one week man came again and sald: “Lord, I find my life ta very lonely since I gave you back that creature. I remember how she used to dance and sing 10 me, and look at me out of the corner of her eye, and play with me and cling to me." So Twashtri gave her back, and again man came after three days and sal@: “Lord, I do not know how tt fs, but after all I have come to the conclusion she ix more of a trouble than a pleasure to me, #0 please take her back again.” But Twaahtri sald: “Be off; you muss | manage how you can.” The man sal cannot live with her." Twashtri replied: live eithout her. “Nelther can you —___ TATTOOING DOGS. ‘S order to help the restoration of | stolen dogs, the French Society ‘Ase siatance aux Animaux" has made are |rangements to tattoo a number on the var of every dog or cat presented at the society's establishment. The process, aimed, will be painiess, and) as a register of all pets tattooed will be. \kept, owners always be able, to tablish tdent! a HURRY-UP COUPLET, { Come, Kentle spring, ethereal mildness, come, \ : i

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