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Se TERETE : b i anor eres OCI) THE The Gardening Season ft won't work, Mrockle ¢ peclaly: vexs eufler an ex; Freckles are stain, ant may be §nation fre skin, and writing. mail fehes of tar OR HOME Soy DRESSMAKERS. Evening World's Fashion Hint. The Daily : 8 Sets OF SPRI PLANTS FROM THEIR WINTER GUARTERS heen diwarded th NG. By 7. E. foot HUBBY TICKLES THE SOM FOR MAMMA. HAY HAL ss HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. thatt 1 wugh the fac foots nem emteal ent reveals no tron tn tts 60% are hundreds of freckle war Lemiat think the elmpleat plan fort In to begin with a ve a oand tf dt ts: eft If. fate try one actve simple and act Freckle Sater ons to Remove Mtosoday 3 gra rose ENE ty indy of hake theo raw rr With te fats / ‘fllusteated. 1-2 Inch wide and | 11-2 yards 21-2 Inches wile, to make as | “The pattern (No. 3,648, sizes 32 to 40 fneh bust) will be rent for 10 cents. money to “Cashler, The World, F Mtzer Buliding, New York City.” i ———__ ss chincur Has Begun. analysis ve stick KAISER WILHELM'S PET FISH < for fai xakud ax prepared for rite with His Majesss \ few amall ines? dumpiln IS TOLD WHAT TO DOs os BY HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. ter. 'y ounce. $ new lemon Juice .odram pulverized borax, ty dram pul- pfosugar Mix, let stand twenty~ vars and apply etlower $i, balan, ty a mun. 1 pint, four of tis fal Shake well and apply to the 1 spots Potash Freckle Cure Chlorate of Pot glycerine, Me oune Mix w Pw Ugcalns, care a May. Oude f zine, veneath, G dram yoerine, 2 drama , rink wash the face, rin Ho Apply the mixture; tet tt Phish! in the morning re With a Htte almond oil Inte whles vet ply borax Nas been he nd oe success with the any other 1 have on 1 ride uf mercury witch haze oun le ve wit ery ise ive arefally: ke f ignorant. per SALAD. ihe tmpertal tattle: it re batted, mavited are miced an ed to cood small str and ent up sand emit, whtel fe then tered and white sina tyment ¢ Hb lcicieteeieie W YORK TYPES. f tne vrety this Typ ot Getham Town Is a type that’s right worthy of all renown. E’en though she write wrong no employer will stight her, For he usually thinks less cf type thanof writer. And her shortnand, so handy to write what she's told, i Isahand many men would VOR. 0 68 PARK ROW, Becond-Class Mail Matter. Published by the Press Publishing Company. Entered at the Post-Omce at New York A MAN WHO HAS NOT WON : THE LOVE OF THE CRIMINAL CLASSES. $ -rerereneenemermene : . the courts ure trying to oppress him. | But this feeling ought not to exist and ought not to be eneour-| aged in the United States. Here the Government agents are the | agents of the people and not of a power imposing itself autocratically | upon the people. ‘To sympathize with the criminal classes, to de- | Jnous and faithful prosecuting officer, is unjust and nounce an as unwise. Take this State and city, for example. The agents of the crimi- nal classes, the eviminal lawyers, have so amended the penal law is most diftienlt to punish a criminal with any cleverness in plotting crime or with money enough to retain a good Iuwver. Suppose that Mr. Osborne, for example, should go upon the | assumption that the criminals whom the people order him to prose le. Suppose that cute are innocent and ought to be cleared if pos: he were to make no effort to collect the legal proofs against criminals of whose guilt any man examining the facts |é must become morally certain. Suppose that he | let the attorneys for the eriminals do all the work instead of and intelligently giving them battle. Would it be well or ill for the community ? By collecting the evidence which convicted the poisoner Moli-} nenx Mr. Osborne struck a tremendous blow at the most dangerons form of deliberate murder—the anonymous poison package. He demonstrated that not even that stealthiest kind of murderer is im- mune, even when he has a good mind to plot and wealth and a “pull” { LAWYERS Do siduously and energetically ban. THE Wort, Bi eeremenenenene ee to protect. 5 And in the Rice murder case Mr. Osborne is again performing a great public service. There is not the slightest danger that an innocent man will he eonvieted. The only danger is that Mr. Osb me and justice will be thwarted by the machinations of an adroit scoun- drel and his lawyers, aided by unthinking sentimentality. It is a pity that New York has not more agents of justice with p and strong sense of duty. Mr. Osborne's energy and pe COUNTING THE COST. We talk glibly of the $300,000,000 spent in conquering the Philippines; but who can think three hundred ? The United States army numbers 100,000 | men. Think of a regiment of 1,000 men marching by in the street, then think of ninety-nine other regiments following it, and you have a mental picture of the army of 100,000. | f that long: procession of 100 regiments, each 1,000] fb ssecermereremenenen ee UNTIINK- 3 ANLENiss milli coming up in single file to a turnstile, and every man drop-j into a contribution box as he passes. There would be $100,- 000 in the hes when the last man had passed, | That army of 100,000 men would have to repeat that mareh Jay for the 800 working past, every man dropping a dollar ever days of the vear (barring Sundays and holidays), for ten years, be-| 10,000,000 spent in the Philippine war would be} fore the total collected, Anothe ers in the United States, N0O,000 wage-earn- There are about 2 That ineludes every man, woman and Irv to think of them, each one with one of the Broc illustration! child ato work in the country, 1 dollar in his or her hand, passing thror | Bridge terminals and dropping it in the box, Every one of that vast | host of 24,000,000 would have to pass through twelve times and each drop a one-dollar bill at each passing before that $800,000,000 would be collected to pay the Philippine war bill. AS TO IMMORTALITY. Dr. Parkhurst uttered a very wise truth in his Easter Sunday sermon: We none of us believe in immortality much, Tho words we use express a great deal more than our grasp Is equal to. We can no more comprehend it than a little child can comprehend the ocean when he wades cautiously about where the water slides upon the be: Nothing is more wasteful of time and thought than vain speen- lations and purposeless peerings into the darkness of futurity. But an all comprehend—a thought expressed here is a thought which we by Socrates: in this world or in that whieh is to come,” THE STUDENTS AND THE CZAR. ENING, APRIL 9, 1901. ae AN Tn Russia the people naturally have a prejudice agains! and al feeling of hostility toward all the Government's agents. And this 3 fecling is naturally st against the agents of the criminal 3 courts, because the criminal courts are the G & 9 -0-0-0- 00-00-08 enone : ®) A ernment’s usual and direet instruments for the] % wes oppression of the people. 3 COURTS AND Tf a man is arrested for a crime in Russia} ® i OUR TONS: } the people cannot refrain from suspecting "1" “For T believe that no harm ean eome to any good man, either i WYCK’S HAMMER READY. 3 The Mayor will probably send the revised charter back to the Legislature @ | little disfigured, but still in the ring. BOOTR BONECHLSTOSC TISOOOOLSOOS THE EVENING WORLD’S BIG LETTER CLUI stairs or throw them overboard, &c.} sons are missing, of whom no { Being a young fellow myself, 1 do not! knows. It is the Iifting of one cot mind the hoys' nolse and do not ave why | of the vell that Aides so many my:{ the polloemen should. horrible secrets and shows how our ¢} THOMAS E. PARKER, | illzation’s happy. peaceful condit!o Port Richmond, 3. 1. [all on the surface. AGNEW ROOME: ‘The Liat of Mis: | ‘To Perfect Our Rapid Transit, | To the Editor of the Evening World Lot's perfect loca! tranalt before kick) t Brooklyn's, Let us have cross * ronda as weil ns North anc have bridges across the at Cortlandt and Grane us have our tunnel t POOQOQOGISSGOE! 0 OTEOCOCOEY | per Where Honor Is Due.” Ta the Balter of The Evening Wor'd Too much has been satd by captious curs against the way Aguinaldo was caught. Tsay it was heroic and worthy of a’Artagnan himself. Honor where honor te due! All praise to Funsto: P. N. GREI The Ferry-Boat Talkers. ' To me Edtow of The Rvening World | found In the East River. Now 5 Why tm {t that the pollcermet’ on aome|the atrange part of this: Sc: of the ferry-boats annoy the passen-| people go to the Morgue to try to 4 gers? On an early boat every morning | Ufy it. And rach of those per: wort there are three or four boys who talk| some dear one missing. wit» A soe and laugh, but not loudly enough to dis-| may not prove to be tals girl. Do yous faster, AN in all, let us have a} turh the pe In a little while you| realize t for every misting bady /ftbld transit that does not require 4 | nee a policeman com!ng around to] there are hundreds of inquirers? ‘And | Saail for a pacemaker. heal them he will throw. them down-! this shows how m hundreds of per, MARLE: Ss ee ea ee ——- —- Says It In a Science. ing Wortd strology @ science, f wish tos ato ts a melence, and not A reader aak: or Is Mt fortune t SOME OF THE NEW COLORS. . .: ‘ua many tgnorant mor- “Glnclee’), 1 to bs, and anybody who Is thi ny-blue offthe hue of | hows su- 4 a ear auin is “alpine.” matter. “Stam! nity: and Is after the apricot order, with “Clemat auses humanity to supersti- ee p and doub:, ani ty ase more ight. a daah of red in it. | uceyto dare Uy attack or prevent astroiugy. RS. Ve P Kiyn Prize Fight the Kilitor of The Eyening World: ve had a real prize tight over kiyn unknown to the palte e among the mauves. Ia uw little darker, “Frambo 1a a new turquotse. We Is another new pink, the exact plannc”’ They have indeed accomplisaed a mar- tint of a ripe ranpberry. | the moat vivid yellow-green. vel Towent to such a “Kecret” Baht “Reine” “Violon” once, J the man beside me was the Is a pink which has a magenta Ix a@ lovely color, showing red- sari me neat ee pre see ee ee tnt In it, | dish and golden Signe. Just Ke ee eee epocrlay! 3 ees nnineon ise MONTAGUE STREET, ‘ Jacaueminot” Ina pinky no explanation, “nota de ros moval, Wortt In a very rk brown, with a ne si sh of ye it, really | ful ight blue with @& Chapman has been ordered 19 CISA ARR RH he luxury of the Tenderloin for rosewood color. touch of wreen In it the wildness and lonescmeness of t Highbridge siatton, 1 musges: th mags eS a - a ever again he finds hlmaelf ‘net i tion he witl keep a padlock on his eo EX- BASEBALLER 5 WOES ‘Talk tn eald to have reat him from elvis © |izatior, Too much talk haa rulned moro men than too much drink, Keep fF mouth shu:. Then people you're, wise, Talk, and the: you're not. ¥ WIL “Steno” Please Send Namen To the Editor of The Evening Worl!: If you have tke name and address ot the young lady who wrote the "kick ye agains: a brutal employer, kindiy Je: o Dy sw Uri bite He? me nave them, as we want an Inte‘i! gent stenographer in the publishing where I am employed, and sho ht_make application for the posl- * The salary ts $10 per week, | i & : . itll i en me | Noor; To bid her cross my threshold o'er Almost Iam afraid. Chorus—Come on. dad; you tell us you were the boss slider for base! We'll Rive you a trial; it'll be like real Almost I think I know her eyes; I stand, a grudging host, And walt and wonder and sur- ot cries. A cold and homeless ghost, Wearing for Jewels in her hair Rain and (he desert sands, My dead youth that was once ao far, Stands in my doorway, knocking there With cold, beseeching hands. mise, While Life outside my window Instead of plotting ta blow up the Czar with dynamite, why don’t the Ruast give fortunes to hold. i aaerenrvaancids SLi students Just frighten him {nto a white shiver with their college yells and the: turn a hose on him? < D THAGHRRAG AAAAE | | —{=___ NOT THE REAL ARTICLE, “Mise Whiff encourages your atten. itlons, doesn't she?" “Yes, but I'm only e side linet Md