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Son ete Ree ORY'S TIMELY CARTOON. = \o \g/ She ATTENTION, MR. CARNEGIE! [- vn PEORCAAAAAA AAR ARE ARAAAAARAA AAA AMEE REA A LEAR cae EEL dA DALAAA AAAS RACAAAEAAA ORO ORES eae ee Pul ed by the Press Publishing C red at the Most-OM 8 THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, MARCH 20, 1901. BERLIN WiLL SET THE FASHIONS. By T. E.. POWERS. 6 ROPOnReseeeeeses srasenseaesee sees Aseeeesessseeeehs SESESESES VOL mpany, 63 to 63 PARK ROW, New York. ass BMall Matter. hd WZ 3/A CONSIDERATION OF THE QUESTION ww ee « ——COO FA WIFE'S: ALLOWANCE. teplying to a correspondent who asked, “Why do husbands so © their wives x regular allowance?” Marion Harland n all my life known persona!!y but one wife who did reluctantly g 2 “DT have not mind asking her hu shand for mone She died young.” n husband, whose proverbial saying {+ that “a man of etraw is worth more than a womun of gold,” and the Am- erican, who has placed his wife on the highest pedestal ever occupied ly woman, there is all the difference between a state of savagery and the best cul:ure of the most enlightened nation in the world’s history. To put a wife in the role of a mendicant by making her ask for a share of the profits that are hers by right of partnership is an un- just exercise of domestic authority—a momentary Russianization of the home, a temporary lapse into barbarism. This course on the husband’s part is not infrequently due to one of the most persistent of masculine errors with respect to wom- an—the belief that she is by nature extravagant. Asa imatter of fact, few errors about the sex have less substan- tial foundation. Woman is not by nature extravagant. In appreciation of the purchasing power of small sums of money, the sums with which she most regularly deals, she is more sagacious than her husband. In driving a bargain for household supplies, in the little economies that make so formidable a showing in the end, she is far eleverer than man. The five-dollar bill that melts away in a husband's pocket on luneheon with a friend, a couple of good cigars, a couple more later on, a cocktail or two at the end of the day and perhaps an incidental and wholly unnecessary purchase on the way home, means to her less prodigal eye the substantial basis of many comforts. | The liushand, regarding himself, not improperly, as the stay of the establishment, because he is the source of supply, comes tacitly to B belittle the wife’ een the Rus Ga iy OvER SIXTY LIBRARIES to BE Bultt AT © FCTSISTSISSTVSSISSSGSTSGSS GITISFHTFSTSFISFSSS FETS: oo: FSGSs: O06 694644464644066466 6646646444440 0440 CORPSES Ere HeeeooenorerereerfesesereecereeR PVIFISSSTSIGS s share in the ¢ pstic i hareuntle)domestic/partnorshin: German women are planning to strike off the shackles that have bound them slaves to Paris fash- 3 fons. Here is the style of costume whose rivalry France expects. 1 themselves and insignificant on a cursory view, when | $69090e9d 99660409966009999 996 95594190999999 900995999995 99I9S 3599999999G999S9 FEIIIFITIITITIF5STIISSISSHTSI 5TIFS TISIISSITIFTIFTTS SITTTIITITIVSSTIFS SSSOPTTIITIISIITIG ‘The exactions of iceman and milkman, buteher and grocer and | all, small ORACARSOSAESER ESE SEER OERER ORE GERS CORERRRERREROREE CORSE RSS ELES SESE FEES eRe SEO RO HERE D> r) added to the greater cares of children and servants furnish frequent Advice for the Home, opportunity for the exercise of qualities of diplomacy and finesse A FEW HINTS TO HOUSEWIV e By Harriet Hubbard Ayer. F i whieh the self absorbed head of the house does not sufficiently ap- ‘To Clean Percale Walstcoa seeseseoooosss: » SAUNTERING SEYMOUR —Now, I calls dat a rank waste ot money! Sixty free brewerles wit! s| freo lunch an’ free terbacker “ud a done a heap more good . C9ITIIES999GIS99S VESSELS IIId TH ve OTEUIVES OTL O TIT TIFIIOT SPVIISRITIDS FIFIIIIGS | escape of Ras from gasoline which ts 8 very inflammable. ‘To Get Rid of Red Ants. f ream shis partner the credit that is rightly hers for her| pear sta see stnooth condnet of att CO-EDUCATION AND LOVE, 7 e 'S6 tives srvay sunner| Sno ane inte mesenat Resin reat ea 3 Ae s SO THINKS M'VAY SUMNER, She is the junior member of a contract partnership, and in ( home, using 4 small con nut! rs. K Dear Mra. Ayer, My house 1s Infested with amall K ants. iy give a remedy, HOUSEKEEPER. scrubbing brush with plenty of soap | ROF, GRAI t afle fi p\Woman's Goal? rf ntiments| equity, apart siderati : 5 i Reece nus nau neeenaet : thorities Me ee euatrnaaTane testi matnelies apart from all considerations of courtesy or gallantry, she is} jnq ‘water and a email amount of OR rd ants the following {s exoe! nta, thinks tha ae a ae te CHtitled to her share of the profits, and it ought not to be necessars | javetin water to ald in disintesrating lent: Grease a plate with lard an: tion fs a fallure tn producing th ox he tn the mo. Yo omaternity the set where the ants run. They wi As best results amo for herto ask for it. the Airt—or you can une gasoline. Porte sexes of marrlageable y abroad andstor the belles of | If alte wid Dr. Har. Moth in Fornitare. tipgil lf Inqtutlonsl ta marriegel wich tess Un ete olen ee is teliet, would reeult tn tke um.| DEFENSE OF AMERICAN WOMEN. | "‘inuy ict'me know wnat t can do to leave all else for the lard, of which thoy: mre very fond. Ocoastonally tum the} plate over a hot fire and they will think Ife no longer desirable. stitted mootal ro Rea bet See pos ncn sy ifece domn | event ane A ae errand An Editorial by a Woman for Women. rere Rt ete Cd Powdered borax {8 also a good remedy by amusements that form part of the ina ate, he ways According to reports, Mra. May Wright Sewnll in an address to the wires HERE ts nothing that will so per- pean I ae est) sna ee life of the place; that young women i for wome! of legislators at Indianapolis has been giving us no end of bad characters, manently remove ore the Ta fueey passe educated in co-educational institutl: anid oe tureSaalhednaphtlia shana There ce ate DIG Ra ela nN ATE Minar tomer Eris I say us, because tt js fot a type, but the American collectively who| , Sines where inrge vate may 00| ARRYET HUBBARD AYER. Kraduated from fnstitutions exclusively tol mothert advocates, that. ta juat} Comes In for Mrs, Sewall’s sweeping criticism. found for the {mmerston of chairs. | OR HOME Som for them, and that the facts will show y the f. Mra. Sewall among other things {s reported as saying that the men of] lounges or other articles, The mere oh Cen that/ithe 7 Eastern :colloges from) which America constitute the real working class and tint tho women forma leisure | vo7a!na {x not effectual, for uniean | nenhtna ie Aber Oe courmens aol ae DRESSMAKERS. omen are tnrzed bos " Ley a tn class, ‘That there {s no home life in America, because the women spend all| CV*ry ventlge of the germ life of Whe) ae AN tise tt where there Peauencnn eclices gher wen ay their time in society and amusement. Also that women have a contempt for | fatiure. 1 «hould seral the furniture to {ts a fire or artifietal light. The Evening World’s Daily In considering ¢ much-mooted Huet tt} PSU GL Es t Ol © training household work; that they not only dislike It, but they say with their Ips] regular cleaner, A strong solution of common washing 4 ty Hint subject one must rene as essential | | i bret OA r Inkee thie mvilewes womiirity tint they do not Hike it Newall ein Using: Naphtha, (#72 Will clean the most obdurate case ‘ashion int. s firnnly ade! be of soll or grime on willow chairs. : ja point which Prof. II fee a Tam bound in all humility to admit that my acquaintance with Indiana] Dear Mri Ayer 5 A lean’ 'To Remove Stains. . Rit (eat {s brief. I have only passed through the State on my way somewhere alae, | Kinitly tet me know a process of clean Ts CUT this fancy watst tn me- 1 ‘young people whether or ‘out of my shat hat Sa ys. attut | Ing satin brocatelle furniture which has] Petr Mre Aver: um size 6 1-4 yards of matertal 21 p.School ye Nog nenalblon persone routes : w that the old-fasi BOL eM ray sew all epitomizing her native constituents only, my 1B-| yerome stained and dull through being | T have a white slik waist which haa ches wide, 5 yards 27 inches wide, [Sire to isolate the youth of the country | be ; better wives than Morance of what may be an entirely new variety of femininity disqualifies | careleasty used, Also a recipe for clean-| been stained navy blue In two places by Js 22 Inches wide, or 2 1-3 yards 44 Cape Ee tle RoKE ee | me for argument Inga willow rocker, and also a prepara-| the lining of my Jacket. Could you teil inches wid will be required, with #4 and formative years : Rorenulte | |. aUeeidhiliianetant elovedithelpreil eetene inal tlen to clean gold picture frames, mo of aomething which will take out the }wend thelr sons und 3 . : 3 pris llewes. © Indiana women IT may ‘A. w. | stain and yet not injure the silk watst? tutions where there | : axes gtrons lons.| claim to know my American sister fairly well hee elie) i eancnca tay RGM! Somotimens this ofa Uine sia fears $ “ defective T know her—thousands of her—as the hardest working member of the Arat dusting well’and then wash: RY gasoline for the spots in your ried stojexceneycerd chenille SMT SEM SS y family tng with one ounce of soda beaten mk waist. In the use of this avotd — ~ - TV ienow her—six millions of her to-day—as the honest waxe-earner in|up with thio cane, Paria of the frames] \ lighted jamps or arancal Nett ot THE HIGHEST TYP OF GIRL AS DESCRIBED BY this great country that have become worn off may be| any kind whatmever, a % xs touched up with gold palat. — a Samia 9 JULIA WARD HOWE.| = Anat witl vonen for hor as the troloss, patient, sweet, uncomplaining | “ror ciesning antin brocatelie tumniture| GERMAN WOMEN KICK. BOUNDE Se are the Rreatest | <ibie th 1 inure 9 tte, and fy a minor drudge In two-thirds of every hundred households, from a census List taken | = ~ = ERMANY has of late years been the aclraeN : i r owill co farlat random, always outside of Indiana! : dalepeanie mometimes su! e . t tr . nt eats : : bd hei WA SED TO IT. stronghold of mascullalty. leat men 'make r te sch ; Wivectolaceort: Where you flnd an American man who works from morning tll night, HE SUSE German women have been held up as paragors of all domestic virtues and stordfastly opposed to new womnanood. But even,in Germany the throne of man s shaking. Berlin now has an Association of Mar- ried Women for the Control of Hus | bands. ‘The constitution and by-laws haven't been made public and the meet- Ings are private, but the name alone opens broad vistas of speculation as to the functions of the asnociation, t regrets of my you will usually find « wife who also works from morning until night, and hot been more ef! then keeps on working, with brief intervals for such repose as she can catch, eres til the next morning again. Nave needed | The American workingman unquestionably labors too many hours each | day and has too little diversion HF Reece But the wife of this man has longer hours, less rest and no diversion inWO MICU enEee peel Atal fe in ner enpabiltty 1] A woman who Is conscientious—and, thank God, she is in the majority vonatderably moro of a] in this country —If she belongs to the laboring class, is never off dyty. yn ladys wn ‘The vain, frivolous, pleasure-seeking woman {s not of any na@on. ‘The best elements of soct served tn wom } women ari depends upo: ‘ moral an fawish nore girls wy fact. Bat more are happy to say, than In my time I hr vance In moral fibre thought. Thetr release f —{=>——_ STRATEGY. ryante nyerty | out tracition as + t . c a 1 character has broadened eater Ww tke to he is not a national, but an internstionsl cbaresiin ; | rat ginceresiravilimbrezanal you creased their asmtyt : at Ye dn a relic oc ie ts no more American than she is Greek or Spanish | were in the parlor a long timo last Meets t y1€ ever, seen A Swedish lady with twenty-three club pins on her bodice told me not night, but [ don't suppose you used planus of Intellectual ; eave Ne much gas. the | = a i jlong ago that she belonged to so inany improvement societies sho never had ; : Younger Siater—The reason you dtdn’t time to xee her own family They are going up and m up with then. One sex en be i Here panies Ninks IC beneath her any burning, Emily, was because SRT NC RII taller stint gt wt eawliotars n | Yet 1do not asaime that there are not faithful wives and devoted moth- | ee cclosaiy, Kung! his’ batvonythe Y The eexes are an irspiration and over houschod with| prs among her country we | door knob. ti ynstderation gives ummistnk:| ave the greatest eat for Mrs, Se and profound admiratt pollos to each other. Rai As | have the greatest respe Mrs, and p miration ————_—_— Liam wied that/ tlie) eists of to-day seseanty and lack | o.. nor brilliant and tmpressive personality, I prefer to believe she has been LIMIT OF LINGUISTS | pee Re tectitenntes ‘ mazes iW misquoted in her alleged biting criticism of the typical American woman, Mother—Wiille, you really must go to ee leer ie apeaale) No great {of ®. Yard tn any width for plastron and those near and dear to th 1 " Atth mo time, as the views accredited to hor have been freely printed | the dentist's and have two or three paomsity Mn Valeograatfantankadthots stock collar. REE rse fismveeneury, ‘To all cirle, {would n ts 1 aman in many papers, and are so iar as {am aware, uncontradioted, 1 feel bound | Tet my and 1 s'pore when|'The ablilty to learn languages dors not Inch bust) will be nent for 10 cents, tury. To all ic 1 ‘ ort ; 3 an ‘ Aes : a: .— And ° f I be tleth century. To all iris. two y alae ay protest against the injustice of auch undeserved criticism. Wiles through with ‘em Til have to[seem to co-exist with talent In ether] “Send money to “Caahler, The World Mn Pulitzer Building, ercise In the op HARRIBT HUBBARD AYER. | use ‘em HERE ARE LETTERS BY READERS WHO THINK, AND WHO PUT THEIR THOUGHTS ON PAPER. yaat the, ours unfortun, ately there is no standard the public every night, besides the priv-) bridge. Thousands crowd nightly in) The question ts. Which one had most success? UIS A. KERNEN, A Game im the Ihilippines. Hietneaeel llexe of hanging on the straps of his|three cars. Patrons who wish to take low. But in denouncing alang, wh To the Diltor of The Evening Work i SOCUUES LORE ACI he “L't have to monopolize three cars Let Them Stay in Town. 4 . ng information \ , " se the Hoey we} Mths and rly {uminated cars. If} the “L" hav mn se a 7 I noticed a letter neking informatior Tigcmenintlvescwitt Te ae uetctor ed the |e wants any iinprovement, let him run | where they could get to the firat car and | To tne filtor of Ths Prening World: Bepeceice ne eae . AAs Seine ghost of Dr. Samuel Johnson. would| ths tains ua they were run before he/avold half the crowding. And whale! some briny woman under the name Bame: "chicken, chickens, «sane ; i sa) 4 Tisvume a ghastier white f it heand of | fk chark > We Be | the aay open'on the New York side? (Of “A Second Mrs. Natlon” writes: Lig orow,"* &e, 1 tin ast retut om it H r such a dase use of English. z Code Here and In France. stairway open on the vemush at thac| ‘Why don't’ men out of work go Into G2 three-year stay tn the Pht san f t ra ANDREW GARDNER. | 1, ing manor of The Exening Worl: place, “Let Mr. Rossiter open that #tair-| the country? There ts no eartlily rev. i thero played a game somewhat « Bto the one described woove formed, all sitting on tie footed, and rlowly and solemn ing/an Incantatlon I!ke that Rewriggling his toc and re: verse tho longest wins the pr fame Old Vorcus Hamanus, ‘The code in the South provided, prim | WY: ron why every mrapping ‘bum’ cannot FAtior of The Evening World: arily, that the challenged could not ac- Whiok Speech Was Beat? pet all the work he can do." Now, ‘h pleasure have I noticed that your| cept unless he considered the challenger | to the Eattor of The Evening World: what in the name of common senas An outrage. emed paper makes an effort to abate|q gentleman. The code of the South| No doubt every President of the United | does tho farmer want with a gang ot dteal rignt,| the bridge nuisance. Only this week al does not hold in France in. the casun| States has made some grand Inaugura-| “bums” hanging around him? Jen't he mpounded of {human porker, in his mad scramble to|duelll between Anna Gould's husband | tion speech. No doubt they have all} worthy of sober, likely hired help na Nt Prev aGER, [seta scat. was pushing me up the bridge | em@ De Rodays. MISSOURIAN, |icen greatly applauded. But which} much ae any city establishment? The ’ 2 oy | wtatra (the only fight of stairs in use), A Point for Mr. Rosatter. President has made the most lasting as|city breeds the “bums,” and let the it Want to Change White Hoare | cret ruciety that} i . Rodd yiou king jand) poms Slang and yitasDrevalence: where the thousanos are driven up lke|To the Eétur of The Evening World: well as the most eloquent apeech of all?) city be thelr homes. tand a t. Fut we fort jeer way a well, Tall men cer-| to the Editor of The Evening World cattle, and on my remonstrating I was| Mr, Rossiter claims that he {s willing|I know that Ideas differ pretty widely| 1 thank this lady for all of her wise ts dona ‘ here in oup| tiny do receive more favor among! Mark Witmark {nn lester bemoans the | threatened with a punch In the eye.| for anybody to suggest a plan that may|in this respect, and yet I would iike, suggestions, but advise that she go oul How many men who with | ¥0U88 women, FIVE-EIGHT. | prevalence of slang. The introduction| The officer, who I intended to call on,| convenience the public on the Bridge. | some reader to give me his unprejudiced | Into the country and get a@ little freah huf a chance might be second Napo- Law Versus Grip. of slang in conversation is unquestion-| was busy superintending the two over-| My suggestion would be to remove that| opinion. Every President at his inaugu- | alr and porhess she wil! think differ leons or Washingtons are forocd by our] To the Editor of The Evening Werld: ably a modern disease, and much to be choppers, These are ehe| animal inclosure (or prieon pen, as I} ratton tries to make an impression upon jently. re r jand every « nt until be tnnos Menee the de- what t not k Are Win ork { women con- fi r than Lsee we hay they do, but Snya ntl Me AGRICOLA, to ptay shackled te a deal The now Custom-House Fegulations, [lamented In this cosmopolitan ety ew! meaeres) may call 12) on the Brookiyn side of thi Geliow-citlsena, Sut net ald weoeees.. serena Jemearille, mT eee