The evening world. Newspaper, March 23, 1901, Page 8

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| AeY EP PPL ae OIE wt SAME OLD BLUFF. (oRYs TIMELY CARTOON. AELSSESSE SEL OSS SS SEhE tm SUST A THINWIN' ! 5 “ERE NOW . |Y¥— CAWNT PLAY ORSE lWiTH ME JUST BECAUSE Hive A GAME LEG: DONT YE Touch THAT , \ BONE OR HI'Lt Bioormy WFLL wHoP YES! EFLOPSOLOOHESA LES SASEAEERESEB ESSER OES ESESSERSALEEAE BERS OREREEROR SEES SEE i r ° i » . * ~ > = s C400. —_> by THE SITUATION IN THE EAST. be VIPIPISP ISD FOOT OSS COweS FVVPVIOIOIIIIGIISS 99999599) POWER AND INFLU- lands OF NESE LERS| 6 Volum F8SOISITIIIVS Si didhdidhdhd TALMAGE’S SATURDAY SERMON: HE thick ink on th rollers ts different from the ae 5 which the writer dips Jils pe we are parted from ston up people as the and {s composed of Hinseed ol! and tam nperst dlack and made t! by dotling upon burning, Ru: 1 and reportortal eHnante Caaie pens are re: for that wht are as the story printer's Ink roller tmpresses upo: ‘ewmioinazorehnn a WI men read nt flying she: ere one man Took, 5,000 change of ing press st day when Addison wrote concern Yesterday has more to than something oceur- y previous, The engineers guido tho rail trains, the sea | mand tie ships not but be vorry tha Nowitdenlgnmtho machine {s crested among them.” ant he batons that now contro! when, under the relga of Charles IL, wea eT MAE CLOUT only on wspaper, the | the laws, the generaln who now zette, wan allowed to ev Aion hea ta that only on M Not until the forces whith nay shall be compared and be known tho power newspaper. V telegraphic annexe: tn review orld with © have m what ts J which ts a weak @olution of that ink you cannot and i there, ¢ ne edt inkstande fs an 1 1 the souls of the pass- tere of Light or waah out and desperadoes. the coilist: covertes, noble achieveme: corrected ns. and resol WITT TALMAG DE | ~ |! THE “PRAYING KNE OR HOME = -e2 sre Ling leptin Us disease af the DRESSMAKERS. h ARRAY eee te The Evening World's Daily ' at Fashion lint. y r nit Elbe Vert Tia necuitarale v tin medtum uinknewn the att Goon FAITH, johed by sent mes aald M quick oven, Asc Bplk each one, quarters with a hot 1 serve once. | oo MENTAL GEOGRAPHY The most populous « the po yor mig ta O ts mer ndulging first name. ‘The deepe The region wt habitation ts ca The most HOME-MADE Stuy K “A ind life seams raimanal | SAAAAA AAR AMAR eRe AMER ESRAER AARRESAAA SEAR EES FPVISCOSEIOSSTSIT DI SSSSTSS IO SSSSTE OVI TOFINS 11,459. — Gioplne ress Publishing Company, § to 6 PARK ROW, New York. t-Ollve at New York as Second-Clasa Mail Matter. : A BISHOP'S INTERESTING NEW PROCESS OF SAVING SOULS. The methods of the new Bishop of London are Pubtis Entered at the Be causing some concern In England. The new Bishop is trying to get down to the point of view of k the humblest of his floc! mun, Me has disearded ecclesiastical pomp and episcopal dignity. He dispenses with his coach whenever he ean, and he is making it known that he regards a costermonger’s soul as quite as worthy of lace if salvation as his own. Ife would even like to rent out his pi the law permitted and give the proce sto the poor, Ifa man ts overworked and underpaid In he free to give his soul to spiritual teaching? To turn a wheel week Jo: If aman or make some part of a boat the whole rial epirit. room with » evening? ry. lives to Ko to the ealoon | Keepers; make them 1 A bishop whe wife aml five children, Don't waste your breath fs he not I nly abusing sialoon- in this point of view, whose pulpit environ- ment docs not blind him toa sight of things as they are in the lower strata of society, is bound to accomplish the greatest of good works. “Preaching, teaching, distriet-visiting, mixing with the people | & in their homes, sharing their sorrows and jeys’—this is the Bishop's programme. And the result? “The people follow him like sheep,’ said a dent of Oxford House to a London Chronicle reporter. THE MESSAGE OF THE TOOTHRRUSH. An Editorial Written by a Woman for Women. Tr his inspiring and most touching antobie 'Slave moral ‘influence of the toothbrush whieh, to my mind, is an addec aphy, “Up from: “Mr. Booker Washington pays a tribute to the far-reac R enn Lees proof that Mr. Washington is not only fitted to be a leader of his|€ Dut a lig nd ane own people, hit uple to every philanthropic sect jand would-be reformer in this blessed land of promise. That the toothbrush has a message for the civilized world to respectfully consider is a new and forcible way of ‘degradation of dirt. For dirt dealing with the ever associa ed with depravity, if depravity, on the jother hand, be not always accompanied by physical filth. To be clean morally—to live with on heights of moral purity—is the ideal lite s eyes fixed on the starry dream of. | But you cannot grow a beautiful thought in the soul of a dirty human being. In the philanthropic work which so many honest: men and! women have found discouraging I believe the tide could be stemmed, even turned, by a new gospel— The GOSPEL OF THE TOOTHBRUSH. All hail to the‘advent of the toothbrush as a missionary in the field of universal civilization and universal brotherhood! HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. HOW THE JAPANESE WOMEN KEEP HOUSE. VEN the hizhest class Japanese places for each little bowl and dish. women have th Nouaeholl rico bowl ts on the left, the soup | Kuo tes to perform, and, no matter ‘I in the middle. One'w appetite is ' { y, Japanese girls are Sured according to the number of} cook and had bowls of rice one eats. A matd is at hand with a large box of rice to re- Wenish che bowls, [fa few grains are left in the bottom of the bowl, she is sware that those eating have had sum- one empty his bow! Moors ‘The ntock and, Ifans wr yre Al At, uking. The greengrocer, a ’ nd artistle taste are Jer and nowad ined in the preparation of the dinner. to thetr more Foods are served tn the daintlest (ash- Dinner ts servet ae ar a tntte by fon, and Mf guests are present the meat the around No amatl Into an affair of ceremon: fo square and ed te designs are used by Pe eet n Instance, an xerving MS Ners newmelete insthel et of a chrysans tray. with space for] ihemum, Mah shredded to iook Ike snow s. nach’ four! or and chicken fashioned tn aj sorta of odd shapes. OT USE THEM? nininininininimintetet: ‘The porch-cUmber could Oo be Utilized In the Ken= art of house patnting without a ladder. hicbieiteici-bier. Whtle the hold-up man would a boon many househo! prove an BNE Kes Heroism sett Elites of The ttre ther gal Bees tos the dey AM exlets in slats, estrany 2/5 Mo tuce What the thin CAMPHI oo ered now ¥ civilization. a i+ For Three-c the FAitor of The Evening Wor How is it that ini A of New York !5 ent, Just tyini! Phitade! phia to Wife and the thy Actress, ment neart | prtuntty ) the bat without utterly « sayed t# our pre when the norm al boy Lee ch he strives for his social and finan: eh fal standing will always be the same. ings In study this po rds | Of course, ability {s essential, but with- sustain Jaded nature with drags an opportunity to display: hts abll-} In love! pity of it Stap elvile| ity the laborer's chances sa are bilijan ny tirn your at gone. Therefore, 1 clatm ortunity on rown bh the most important in man's [yo NeIS J © It supersedes in Impor- Opportuntty Versus tunes. Before abiitty can an oppertunity. must. be JAGHM. 9 the HAltor of The Kvynire Worll remonstrate againat the | afford wertion that close atten: | 8 diligent work. | 7, ability, Iv results uccess”” pac the Back Roo Filtor of The Evening World very few weeks comes a new trag- ed oF originated tn the back epeated 5 to busi Vowita Vedy enac the acquisition of wealth and m oof « saloon. And we shriek: . cmt (AA ara pes : : tng Works From a workingman's stand-)"Clore the saloons!" full weil ey cin Routes btieaior as avn f HI ke boy has shot two| point, T claim this statement iw erron-/it cannot be done. ‘lose the Se ane res at is Often the cause of the first) men because he toved an actreas and be-| ous, A workingman’s only hope of auic-|back roum of the saloon!” That can row) end have to ride to} quarrel after the aoneymoon? Money.| cause drugs had crazed him, Now,| cess is in opportunity. He may work! jand should be done, and done at once if peeeeaNynat they. could! What leads to more disputes, ,anwer, | what pitiful Idiocy! And it shows how from sunrise to sunset as a skilled me-'we wish to preserve our moral tone. A * to put himself on their plane as man to | Here are a few illustrative extracts from the Bishop's sermons: | to | overworked a a Bl a i i Ul et ia tay aie = WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 23, L9U1. NAVIGATOR OF THE HIGH C'S. BY KATE CAREW. SPRERERRARDA ORR DA SRO RERRAREREEEAAA REL ESAER EASE EEE OS seesensone eeeegneneenecee eusseeecseeseess$ aaeenn | © ¢ = 1s le \* s ie eenneeneennsnaece “SINGEST OF SUMMER IN FULL-THROATED EASE.” D —Keats. Tt gives one a deep respect for the human voice to hear Mme. Melba sing the mad s¢eue rrom “Lucia d{ Lammermoor.” If you are a hardened haunter of the Metropolitan Opera-flouse you lose your head and yell “Bravo!” and other encomiums in what some philosopher has called a “forrun tung.” If you are merely an occasional visitor you burst the seams of your gloves and marvel that the throat of woman can produce such ravishing song-bird effects. Puccini's exquisitely merry and sad opera, ‘La Boheme," with Mme. Melba as Mimi, followed by the mad scene from “Lucia,” has proved one of Mr. Grau's most popular bills this season. 99999900009960909 90500000080000008 s5ssssseses SSSSSIGSSIISIGSSS: 2o9sveeeeess HI HOW IT MAY BE SMOOTHED. THE COURSE OF TRUE LOV BY HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. Unt to Have a Daughter. ne frequently stopped in a saloon Dear Mra Ayer drink while we walked on, At What do you think of a 1 father beating e #0 drunk he had to be a young girl of two friends of his that 8999689999599509959955099999999899 8598905599998999959999999559995959 599999 09959989999 55958G 989S9TT9ITITITINS B5b4TT9d50085053 tak lowing a yor to accompany her }we met. 1 met this man since, but T from churc! young man ts most myself insulted and retuned thoroughly respectable, Do you think te «tv him. Please let me know If that father did right when the girl was Ihave done right undeserving of It? In a young girl of MARGARET LANGTON, I should say to cone F yourself insulted was an exe ely mild view of the situation, Wo oshoull have insisted on paving party when the man stopped get the tirst eoonly thing you decline abso- ty newledge the ace 1 aye xeventeen yld cnough to keep company? in abrute! ‘There {ano reason tn the M.D. | THINK a father who beats his child world why a respectable ng man snouMl not be permitted to walk home MDD EeB ELITES SONG, OVE took my life and thrill'd tt Through all tts strings, Play’ round my mind and nur'd te With sound of wings But to my heart he never came To touch it with his golden flame, Aes __HABRIET HUBBAED AYER. »{trom church with the girl whose ac- ;{quaintance he has made properly; but {even tf there were there can be no ex- cuse for the brutality of a parent, and} a man who beats a creature payasically jinferior to him ts beneath eyen con- tempt. It is a pity, in my opinion, that there was not somo big man on the premises to wive your father a taste of his own medicine. I belleve in the obedience of children Therefore it ts that singing I do rejoice, ‘ Nor heed the slow years bringing @ A harsher voice, 4 Because the songs which he has @ eune: and I have the highest regard for tiLal Bull ise) the untouched singer duty, but when a parent forgets his own 3, | Obdligations, and when this parent is a man and beats a young girl, I think a man of his own sige and the law should Interfere. Fortunately, there are very few fathers in the world who are eo unworthy to have daughters. Reventeen is very young for a gir! to Feceive attentions trom men, but age has nothing to do w.th the question here in- voived, An Unpardonable Insult. Dear Mrs. Ayer: The other night I took a walk with} two young men I knew. While out with | But whom tn fulier fashion For him, swift wing’d with pas- sion, Fleet the brief days. Betimes the enforced accents come, And leave him ever after dumb. —Lewis Morris. The Pollcesaan—The charge is cruelty to animals, I caught him beating the monkey. Magistrate (who believes in the ‘ent of man from monkey)—Thisty, ays for disrespect to an ancesto! Base NG | EDITORIAL bETTERS, LATIN BY ChEVER EVENING ee ea ree law could be framed with ease to cover upon tt, the frlend who has grown stout, me, this point and could be rigidly enforced. TERENCE V, MATTLAGE. | An to Obesity. To te EAtor of Thy Evening Worit: This 1s about the time of the year] ‘hen we degin to notice that our friends grown very stout In tne ile winter | months when they can take no exer- se. 1 think a few words on the sub- meals a day for the hardworke Ww Wit a large family, for nie eseiiien tion = a7 and the of freedom! USTITIO, arity for the Westerner, To the or of The Evening World: Another man from ihe far West has To Lengthen the pny. tor of The Byeniaz World: commuters come dally on swift trains, The Ma Dre It Ttow, Let us ve charitable to ner—the man with a gun is a wonder some of us have not to Jersey Ctt Vyect would not be amiss. In the first t ten minutes for a slow-c | ions wotere tone it vine. 1 lived in Place It {8 poor policy’ to pring the fact ‘The man who devises a} the artying ‘ean vumt Perey fe home to them, for they will like you River bridge (say at Cortlandt | igainst some people in New York the jeas for It, It oftentimes Is not their rect) er Hand dad TERAXICUM own fault, They may have caugat cold|¢oqumuter's business Gay and earn a] The Sweater at the Theatre. muat dress mote warmly, which | public bless! 5 To the Editor of Ths Evenine World gives a faise impreseion of size, Again, VAN RoOY, Pompton, N. J. |" 4 poston man has sued a theatrical’ A Suticlc Comparison, To the Editor of Tae Evening Worl they may have been having more res and are normal, and not run down to 3 a skin-and-bones condition, which some] foup, meat, bread, coffee, dersert. consider an {deal one, it would seem| tobacco for the Ilfe privoner who mur- from their remarks on obesity. pet ders @ man and goes to Sing Sing! Twola Tux manager because the latter would not. permit him to wear a sweater in the theatre. The manager. repenly, thought the man got in wearin, reeeat wold around some'r nll wesrice e

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