The evening world. Newspaper, March 14, 1901, Page 10

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S TIMELY CARTOON. AN OPEN QUESTION. 64-46-32 (es 0$4060008-400.0844:0% ——~e es 7 = ENGLANQ DECLINES To ACCEPT THE AMENDED CANA. TREATY CANAL A STANO--STILL > 9O992-52S000-08- ch 4 SGO0S: Clan ren Ruiwse PR an NOTARIES DOWNEG (na — Uncle Sam—You may be Auth 1 Dut you're bum diplomat a golnationed fine or, John, y n very PERFECT FEMALE FORMS SCARCE, "i sc"4zz anim BERG, AN ARTIST. UR present deal ts not the beautl- {natural and normal condition the body] RACOLUENLTREA Mein TR 0 ful form of the normal feininine | of the woman forma a har sountt euptt {humanity back to the body, but an artificial and inar-| Phe real ontee th airy wet a a a Hette form produced by the wearing of {make the boty more slender, tat tar [our Manlite itera tite hia corsets, Even among the educated few botject in not gained ties Chat bartan m are familar with the normal form of | fash 2 the human body. : r f the watst causes A CHICAGO COOKING SCHOOL The instruction given in the schools | accumulations of fat in ie regen Rehearses a St. Patrick’s Day Lunch- fs incomplete and defective; the artistic! the hipx and a on senso of the young men and women If] abnormal develop:nent of the br con. fot awakened and thelr form=nemory | «: ers above and of the hips below king School was inatruct- fs not exercised. Few persons have | the watst in hy ation of clear {dea of the human form, of the | -pne injurt the corse: eon, says structure of the body and of the Acton inate upon t the Previously to of the Joints and muactes. nck tea was The sculptora of ancient Greece and ke assisting Mine. Romo idealized the beauty of the human ake assisting Min root being a warm form, but even in their most perfert ibalnm ents nie tie creations they preserved the xeneral y pour, After all outline and character of the normal Tunland ANAS. body. Hasht-Hrown ‘The rw-called normal form of the fr- is the following E1 would soot mies male body of our times ts abnormal and unnatural, and we consider it beautiful | bo disco jst uu ‘only because our eyes have gradually | Corsets a auned | ce larney Bike. become accustomed to that form the i tetertoration horny Picea 1 course of several centuries. feminine form tn the ely ait err RRC ‘The corset wnist line cuts the female [Amt artists 1 4 1 Mu nowith Green fmto two distinct parts, while tn its |" its ite ala Heaths The Green above the Red . ambers Micks’ PMekles, REINCARNATED. Oyster Madiles mrock Salad DEAD LEVEL or GHstes. Pur ‘ ice \ Perhaps we lovers were in days 3, f i of yore, TUSSSRUeR HanOn Ca uiliecgRny irphies wu Grattan, . fr owas intended . Vistiche Cream. Or Menthe And, though we know no other Ufo but this, We may have lived upon some distant shore And bound our hearts toge with a kisa, Ko Padding. Fr Debris, Mish! Wirere we IN me fr i MONI y or And then, with Love's sweet nectar on our lips, Ere we had tasted p hap pine: Death added one more victlin to his Vet And on Love's hooks there was one lover less ‘Those years anguish felt by one alone Whose sweetheart had been borne beyond the skies Are not remembered—tut our love had grown And found {ta blossoming Paradise, When first we met and your eyes looked In mine We felt a thrill no power could contro}; Each felt for each a love that was divine— The soul of love had met the lover's soul! Irene Lennon. thar were money in hogs: EVERY bETTER AN EDITORIAL. The John Does Increase, The play ed by the Preas Publishing ered at the Post-Omce at > A FEW WORDS IN CONSIDERATION npany, 3 to 6 PARK ROM y York jans Mail Matter. wt OF THE AMERICAN MATINEE GIRL my Ss oe Certain prominent members of the theatrical profession in n to protest against Dr, Ri Philadelphia have taken oces ard Dewey's condemnation of the matinee habit Tt will be recalled that $-0-0-a-9-e-o- e-em enenenen dmenge Voung gy Dr dy “The nervons strain that a young girl r. Dewey Vous sys nes undergoes while witnessing the average dra- | matie performance is exceedingly severe, and if often repeated is likely to They great injury.” liseussed this relation of the theatre to the emotions cen- turi ago in Greece, and Aristotle said that a harrowing play was a good thing med the tension that causes more harm than the rel: ion—as witnessed in feminine tears. To get angry at a stage villain, in the old philosopher's opinion, was better than not getting angry at all, and >| vastly more profitable than venting anger on a fellow-man, with the disastrous consequences following so personal an application of pas- sion, And so, gard to jealousy, . along the philosopher's line of thought with re- love and fear, Certainly in the emotion of love, and particularly that surging tide of romantic love that seeks expression in young girls budding | inte womanhood, we must think that Aristotle was right. | than on some less worthy recipient at home the coachman, | Tt i on that a girl at this time of life should indulge in romantic and idealized attachments. The object may be a poet or a novelist—think of Henr innumerable adorers say, nature's prov James’s the or, as most frequently happen This particular expression of girlish passion, if it becomes known ut home, excites the live- f-e-o-e-0-0-0-0-9-0- oreo THE ACTOR AS THE MATINER : ; liest apprehension in the maternal breast, Penner rererenrs 9 mamina forgetting her own experiences and Iv. Gomis mon, taking her daughter's love affair ser Asa matter of faet, this long-distanee adoration of an actor and ma gives it an objective K subjective presenc erous denouement than t re ina dim parlor of the youth who wooes with full parental consent. The footlights furnish an insuperable barrier to the progress of the passion beyond the line of safety. If it goes further, the feminine idol, not unusually married and And not wholly above reproach. unremantically domestic, is not unlikely to be bored by it. this is true even when his private life The objects of feminine adulation are rarely “mashers nowa- The stage masher as a prevalent type passed out along with certain other masculine types whieh our im- mediate ancestors endured without approving. The boisterous and not overly clean bo- hemian was one of these; the detached jour- nalist, with the itehing palm, another. semen eee} There were others of this fraternity, whose upper circles re- Pat's, and in the lime-light of contemporary romance Tt was chiefly, however, an allurement of dis- volved around seemed alluring. viation. are getting nowadays a new point of view of the theatre, tance, speedily dispelled hy the eontaet of close : W The ministers some time age made the qualify ing admission that ail influence. Less conservative observers are becoming convineed that an adrama of amoral nature might exert a bene problems once referred to only in’ privacy— really morality $-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-on enon preach a powerful sermon in 4 Tt is difficult to see, for instance, how a may young girl on the brink of an error could re- main indifferent to the moral of “Mrs. Dane’s Defense,” even with I her Sunday-school training outgrown and forgotten, Perhaps many of the individual cases of matinee girl “nerves” are due to over-indulgence in coffee or caramels, In thinking of the matinee girl it must be remembered that and what a desirable member of society her mother was like her that mother has grown to be! And perhaps the essence of the maiter is that the harm to the nervous system is not so vital as the benefit to the charactor. COMPLIMENTS, No. said Miss Cayeane, “I don't care ur note may ir peaple who continually pay comptt: | y sald the blueja nie 1 maken me feel gloomy. “Mut it shows an amiable disposition.” | "4 pird of your callbre,"* retorted the ‘Perhaps. But to me the habit re-| crow, ER TON o seem munical to but {t always nally heeanse it purged the emotions and relieved Tt is obviously preferable that it should he parcelled out and | | distributed promiscuously, if lavishly, on the heroes of the drama| ss it much less likely of a dan-| sometimes resulting from the very | actually immoral play—one dealing frankly with complicated sex | THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, MARCH 14, 1901. Pe Sarre i? | A BOILED-DOWN “OTHELLO” AN: 6 don't Ko to the epera because they a are first time this will heart and the down “Othello,” ve it) many duets, 1 hope times more. Th strafght ie Salignae’s ¢ music and GRAND OPERA IMPRESSION. BY KATE CAREW. As for the acting— > OVTTDG9STD9 9999 Rg ak a POTTS S-3G DOES PFD 990954 6005090090908: 'D IAGO. = rent musical, and they're too If | were called in to attend such cases I should prescribe “I'Pag- bet marble nt deity of the Metropolitan Opern-Heuse, has just given it for the | husband and Scotti’s Ingo are ee © story goes straight to your” « “well, the little opera is a boiled- BORED HAODIED HARRIET HUBBARD AYER 48S the Try to WV Dear Mrs. Ayer: other girls wt oblled to work every until nity If you persons you sl mother HARRIET HUBBARD C823 outings, but nnot affont nd it da ming man La pro} ughter she is usually nim the priveless Is always quite THAT SPECIES OF CROW. ieleteiciebeiteisieiets Es eiericiicieiiet not capable of tracing an ef- minds me that some people are willl fect to im proper caws, you blooming to pay only what costa them nothing |Ja and what they don't really owe.’ Whereupon the mockinghtrd mocked, Corea eee fennen ro nanel ; Mt husliane In ft of, them, ‘To-day, though they have sinceywho tv In the woods ought to conalder ‘The John Does will mon have to vel or any other sort! fought with far more courage (stnce| himself in luck ONE OF ‘EM, (reuse eatin extortion fon : in private houses | they knew thelr cause to be hopeless) alGuel wince semeay wards of Ingla’ aurice F. Molahan| THe? Ate The clergyman {¢{ we scarce pay them the pasaing Ube] T, 1A) ator of The Kiventng World: was John Doe 1 and he To the Faltor ’ ‘ iit? Be peatkening (of a yawn, Is there anything on cart) 4 United states Judge in Philadelphia Peter F. Mey: Tohn Dow No, Steen-| Without tie Knew we thing | that can hold the public longer than|ios wecied that a man cannot snemes MSsaNIN; UAVs. used to, wean rdcescig | about. the felt G. SAUNDERS, [one hour? If so TI give a bat to learniiis fathers life in his own interest. pants, but | euppose the ekin 4 Rnatierns | What ithe. CHARLES, [246 tumurance decisions are curious nd the pants disappeared. ‘Ther t | LAURE ST, CHARLES. | creations, as a rule. ‘The only sure ‘Canpnaneee| way to beat a Ife Insuran K f experts te wrestle with th low vat's what the public haw been PTE ECT all © years, ‘They have not ty Veraus Profanity. 1 Resale te wrestled with ft, but they: have the Xditor of The Evening World No Privacy 1, ah dragged and kleked, all have a suggestion to make: People }.1y ise eatior of Tae Evenin Bh LAME PUCK, Hg in yain to break the mang nity habits. Let each man who juses slang, every time ne (30 conts to charity, ) be greatly enriched will cease. It 1s people of the ailk-stocking str A Nev. Dr, Huntingtsn, of ‘The venting World: Church, who whine and snort about! Mun is a fickle animal, A year ago newspapers Intruding upon sicred pri-| we were xplltting our throats in. pro- vacy, who out-yellow even “yellow Jour- | Boer or anti-Bocr arguments and scan- als’ in offendes of this when they ning the papers for every, line anent the Public. ompany ia to dle, SON WITH NO FATHER, ‘The Energetic Woman, To the Edttor of Evening World Your paper tells of “the only’ woman truant officer in this State” and says she enforces the law rigidly. Of course she does. Women always do, Let a woman have a position of any sort and she attacks its duties with all the ardor of a novice; whereas man, who for sixty conturies bas held office, grows lax from custom. Let us have more women of- Fo the Extitor of The I rad in ‘The Evening World to-day that a New York man died suddenly in a Chicago hotel. 1 wouldn't expect a New York man to live anywhere in Chi- cago. A CHICAGO MAN, A Scamper for the Nrash To the Ecttor of The Eventog World: With Bishop Potter making a crusade against vice in the sluma and the Rev. Dr. Huntington breaking In on the} ~eames of the sr’ mene /3 ieleinieleleleieleieleleleieieleleiniel those crows carry on, rion crows. feinieiebeinielebelofleinteleivieteteinictefelaletetel Mrs, Monkey—My goodness, Just see Mr. Monkey (a kidder)—Yes. They are c: flcera and we will have laws better) no longer be unrewarded, for thelr ser- enforced, ISAAC DEAUP, | views. AMBROS: FIESMAN. For an American Nobility. orn, ri miMisre * inaretent. “ To the fatltor of The Kvening Worl To tie peher i ee eens Na Commissloner Murphy 18 trying. to King of Engtand apy } fool the public in the same old Way that J. d. Van Alen an honorary knight. | 1). ast Bhakecape ot eapiaine don't Van Alen ia an American, but be must) moin anyching any more thin shutting 6 to another land for honors, So tt is] jokes Murphy sald he eo be a ‘ehead, bi Men perform grand achleve fame in the fleld or with pen or brush tn Europe and are rewarded with baronotey, knighthood or peerage. Here they do the e talng and not even a Legton of Honor medal falls to thelr share. We offer no reward for mer{t, What would be thought of a schoo: tke ate Let us form either an honorary not or a medal system and we will find if with every public werv or 2a right, and the fige HE WATCH, Mow tu Reach the North Pole, To the KAltor of The Evening ‘World: A new Polar expedition tw talked of, It will fall, The only Way io reach tne North Pole is by rpending at last %,- 6,00 and placing stations the route so if a breakdown expedition can fall back on the nearest the greatest impetus to progress. Men! station and then gv on, redttes, favs like Dewey, Edizon, Tosta, Longfellow, | could the Polo be reached in two, years, Pos, Grant. then they, wo! ‘would de rid of @ tot of and: Beter, Cooper ze then} And ERS THE QUESTIONS s 4s Ss OF PERPLEXED LOVERS. acter Is above reproach to be permitted the privelege of escorting a young «iri to a place of amusement occasionally. A Terrible Dilemma. Ayer: ‘ Dear Mew How can I, or can you, tell tf a girt's halr ts bleashed? ‘The girl I speak of is my company, and 1 am in doubt tf her hair tw bleached or not. She ta ate t and good looking, her eye Jark brown, her akin ts very her hair ts very Mght. Some rly tell me she ts bleached. ©. 2. 4. F YOU want me to be very frank with | you, as T assume you do, I do not think you deserve even the constde ration of what you are pleased to caly bleached" girl The man who per: mits others to discuss the woman t whom he Is paying attentions, or speak of her In a eritical way to others, Isn't) much of any girl, bleached! or unbleached. It ts quite possible that this girl has) the awfal erime of attempt- make her hair lighter than na-| 4 with a bad elimat 4 improper hatr tonics ha 7 have been some juat examples of iy brows ar clear a in the way © of, bleaching hate the first 1 do not ming, and In the second a ceaseless amount of {tin order and at the appre not In no «reater s tnined In a secret bottle of hair bleach, she comes pretty near being angelle. Suppose for a moment, we drop the young lady and consider your own con- dition, Can you took upon a past which wouhl not be benefited by a more bleach? Can you regard your persone ality your own character, as one in which no flaw has yet been discovered? Until you are in this happy frame of mind, -I think, if I were in your place, IT would tako this girl for what she ap- pears to be and Mterally. I would cease to discuss what may be called @ ques tlon of “splitting hairs." THE EVENING WORED’S LETTER ChUB COMMENTS ON THE News. sulcldal fools, for when once the pole fp found, there whl be no more mat at tenis wo 50 there, Suet is human ne. ture that when once a | Of nompre Interest. PHILOSOPHER. | A Remedy Suagmen' | To the Editor of The Rventax Worl ‘The Bar Association is seeking meth- «xls whereby to correct the divorce evil, Well, UM tell the honorable association iin one sentence the only thing thas will correct it. Forbid all divorced persona (for whateve reason walt cane O marty ui nd divorces wi cease to-more Pow AMATEUR LAWYER, ‘two Menaces to M To the Editor of The Evening Worl Between the common-wite law of New York and the adopted-chtid law of Con- necticut n dead millionalre’s millions are Huble to bd mixed up rome pan Buttercup's twins, What fool » but what better can be oa pected when fools and tools are sel to make the laws! (ok ae

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