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ni rays THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, APRIL 18, (901. woe 4 10 = . J | ” (ORY’S TIMELY CARTOON. pore “PROTECTION. k GET TOGETHER! 4 | Alor. sed By FERDINAND G. LONG. = BERS teleieieie! 5 Site sna soa atraie GhSSe % POnesy MISTER Uw TERRIBLE SORRY +t —N z = : £ L ) \ CANT DO \W ONO GHEAVER ! Caen WAY MILITARISM AND “MOLLY-CODDLING;” : BECONGSuira un Micnnreh ese WHAT THEY ARE DOING FOR ENGLAND. : 3 AINT ALLOWED TER Cur PRic : AN we = x 5 ESe! England has spent upward of $500,000,000 in her war upon the . a South African republics and is spending about $7,000,000 5 x 7 deceeceeeeeeeeee This lavish expenditure for the benetit of thee zr E aaa owners of the gold mines of the Witwa is + { ABROAD, rand suggests that England has more money £ te goeeeeroreererereee than it ean usefully employ. £ Burt read these statements by Thomas Burke, forme x = man of the Liverpool Workhouse Committee, as to Eugland’s army x $ of destitute: : q First—In England and Wales, with a population of 32,000,000, there are -- | 714,000 panpers—one in every 45 % + q Second —That two out of every five persons over sixty-five years of age | 4 be ; j living in England and Wales are paupers ° + : Phird—That upward of 100,000 deaths annually occur among the work- Bs ¢ ing people of England and Wales from preventible causes, chtedy from the E + an | unsanitary conditions of their dwelling-houses x + + + | Fourth—That in Liverpool, the second city of England, where 12,000 + £ < F | persons tive in cellars below the street level, the death-rate in the wards <p + ps + | inhabited by the working classes rises to 60 per 1,000 as against a general + < ¢ death-rate of 23 per 1,000 for the whole city. + ¢ Millions upen millions for a wieked and wanton and worth- + x ¢ Tess war. A standing army of a iillion paupers in the three king- + + ¢ t doms. : + + a, $ + FE] There is ne country on earth where the oes 0. | x $ [amueh for the masses as in Britain. [tis always £ 3 t weee arrunging cight-hour days and minimum £ i t Ne wi and outdeer relief and bigger poor : { + honses and model tenements. And the condi y 9 tions grow relatively worse, in spite of a vast a 5 industrial prosperity. a Fi, 7 C inswer is—Taxes, For wars, for helping the defective} ae ea invalid Commissioner stands between the police captains and their - . : classes, for “molly-eoddling” the toiling masses, more and more | i aaa : Ss : tIxes. Sete i s 4 3 And in the end the toiling masses have to pay the most of these | ANSWERED BY a a3 A SUGGESTION FOR THE RENEFIT OF THE KIDNAPPING INDUSTRY. taxes, So the British Government to win “glory” abroad and to HARRIET HUBBARD AYE‘ Re mettre earns: “uplift the masses at heme’ rebs the toiler for the benetit of the stay and what would bo the proper tt vielsieieielvinins aint o or me to do, as I am not acquals Wlcieleinieleietenteinieleieinieieteieicieteieivieteiei- THE NEW WOMAN NEEDS A NEW VOCABULARY. nr mgt sine pp selfrespecting, progressive, self-supporting: men ane HE necessity of i for the new w | was very ap with either party? VIOLE’ \1 Ro to this recaption Ove time a vut a half hour, + 2 o'clock and ren xratulate the gentienan on | good fort and wish the young 1 ja long ite of great happiness. tore ineompetents all the tine and proportionately fewer 1 women. OR eo ey {iC Micra tia FALLING FROM ONE’S OWN WINDOW. SRS te SORA I a lution at Washington, ‘Tie lar i t xpe ‘ SS | Mra Ayer } BS raphers doubtless did (he 1 me vt | What 1 how shall I serve ¢ Dest of thelr ability, Mrs. Mary Knute, of Sheriff street, fell from a second-story Nght, but c | cupper for a woolen wedding? ord UT t indew of her house, broke nothing and refused te ride in the am- F.C) ; ated new exigen The is 1 ty toa aR : i Kane | ERVE the supper on Wy assumed by th so 1 eae The new veoabue | buhiner 1 fell from omy own wind she said in effeet, “and rs, and from wooden 4 evolved a fresh ve which the old re quite nade Man, by nat: the stern reallties the same dieu! emotions, in moments will find also favors 1 many ornaments fo nto gis own vard. Tf TP need a doctor PI eall one.” add maternity Her one correct application of the oft-abused principle | of personal liberty, ‘The lady of the house tumbled strietly within |S” #& OFEWTOS table. decorate wette of Ayer HARRIET HUSBARD AYER. Milas Mary Brown to Mr. Chari el ould Ket w long should we in wood. e articles usu: n by the same o 4 She in her own rights. She disturbed nobody's peace in the a howhtch the q nim. The tan a we is o'cloe! atrike out from the Hf iene truded on 1 “5 privileges | . i anti ielniene ie ruded ont ly privileges. He | .: i UU SOclockjorsiatersphow 7 lone should) ve, URE ye wnewen expletives. r ‘ am Tt is uot quite the same when a man maintains that a course of | ’ 78 her to hottle earl mi riotous living, being condueted on his own resources, is strictly his | fa f ia pressed to vel! h aning in the m pues (athe uae Men ty ore a own busine It is not the same when the Kick Against Immigration, befure he gets xteady work, If he does | bined, paying a $ drug license and selle | guarded terms. noes 1 ; TaN Fon rua CMA Minocent words , s " Pe Retr nites ceo erate tea ent wera not report every day he mms the risk ing more whiskey than his neighbors £ ing e histury where wom 2 K ¥ eine w falreex man of hoggish demeanor in street ear or the: | yy Jou think the result will be [0f losing his job. I think the D. 3, C.| the saloon-keeper; also xiving whiskey a restive type have bee " : bari ido : mt allow him at least four di way to customers tc take the trade ‘ Fe atre replies to one remonstrating with him that |to thte ¢atr country ten years (or less) a mat least four days m erneel ei pla mbeoc | he isin the seat whieh he bought and paid for. |eorcin lands continues as quoted re- [Monk LIVE AND LET LIVE. | ALN ere T rE ucen Bess wr Mike a ‘oo wn count : vad tatrly . : i Y; | jok nat Overstudy. - 4 trooper on occaston ae i] ayia hea 1 ai The drunkard and the spendthrift waste their own money, itferaty: tn a OL folione: “5 sore Leni NO SN ctor ya Nee Ne ee | ares ni aptine A 101 . a . x ‘ : tle, from Liverpool, brought 0 the Faltor of The ity ro he Kveniny ta a ote Marlboro. ‘ 4 is true, but they intrnde ebnoxious examples upon as sntitled from Antwerp, I deatre to register a kick against} The Iren in an uptown grammar M Duke in plat yor a i Se . an from > ° M0. and Frank aval group at pect | School in the frat class have a lady Yer was up. Dut the n bee wi Wonk iation with temperance, deeeney and rational ¢ t. They Se ee nieeaph tea aH Te bexin ; ner Who kivea them lessons every probably hesitate to avall herself of this fuses “mame 1 Lord's t . Atte : a REA as Ra 1 ele to do at heme In such abundance ‘ ow q } ‘ wr OW 3 » ’ . iW" ere de neom and Mo vietory culated WW 4 last ‘prerogative, Profanity is abjection=| Words of t ¥ and the human hog may fall out of their own winds but unlike a AY dase jetli aerenion ine mutetineton Rea NT for them to learn 1 ee _|and fami z 1) first word P Mrs. Knute they fall inte other people's yards. eon kb y thin a tate my own . I ‘ | - C | noon as she OR HOME Fog} : i | They are social trespasser Khel Aucntnat lateness, | t | t - aes To the Raltor of The 4 ri wn quently 'FOR THE SAKE OF “AULD LANG SYNE." ote frynemenings ae em Kick Agal DRESSMAKERS, [esse vee toc 7 ' in eieeyaerarnreaaieliiseuriue Mt Nareananasarenetiackines skis a wallaintqutla scat talons ninaitnenNrh ET peat? To the Elite ning World: By torld'a Daily | vera { TiARURAA ELT tenet Aen Bate nee 4 A Jeivtl Services examinations, Kets a Job | to the Eaitor of The Beentue Wor Topave a. Kicka tol make regarding: the The Evening World rd Paar : : : ; bE New York is particularly glad to see those eighty rosy, brown, las extra sweeper, works from one to] Tldek axzatast the man who keepa al throwing of frult xking and bite of frult Freneh training-ship |W22ee 22"* * Fashion Hint. has to watt long |xuburban grocery and drug store com-ion the — +! nehman aboard Everywhere you | promenade on the east side you will ale |ways find banana, orange and other skins on the walk. Now many people |promenade to and fro and plenty of jthem sllp and fall on this fruit. I don’t |sen why the fruit eaters don't throw jthe skins in the gutter and not on tho walk. This would prevent many ac- jeldents and numberless broken heads happy-looking young Fr Duguay-Tronin, now Iying at anchor at the foot of West Thirty- fourth street. and open to visitors every afternoon. The appearanee of young Frenehmen in our waters always re- minds us of that day in 1777 when the young Marquis de la F landed to help us fight for liberty. He was f and Jaws MAX G. ! a mere boy. He had read the Declaration of Kick Againat Lack of Open Cars. 4 Independence, Disinissing his traditions of ronnie eet Tha} ventas ,Werleh Geeenereenenanenenenene mild weather to bourd an open Broad> way car and ride in It to business, smpk- ff ing an I went, But this spring where £@ are the open Broadway cars? I saw | one in Maron (on a bittor cold, rainy . of course), but see none of late. I watch for them, too, every time I walle down Broedway. I thought one car out of @ certain number wus supposed to be a “smoker,” but I fall to. find it. easte, leaving the young woman whom he had | he set sail, and was soon with the ragged army of | It always has been one of my joys th / just marr Washington. America has net forgotten De la F: vette, nor Franee and its services to the cause of liberty, Soe, while we are glad to see any All foreigners who come as friends, we are especially glad to and in these balmy days, why not he regular open cars?_ This i PAUL 8T, CLAIR. ‘renehmen, If vou have become infeeted with “foreign devilism™ toward France through reading English accounts of Frenchmen as half erazy weaklings and degenerates, go and see these sturdy young TAKE CARE. Ls 1s a gambler; middies and get eured, : Watch him with care. e The rotstering rambler A CITY THAT HAS NO WAGONS. See Tne Cabby. Will anything dare. £ S ‘ 4 HINK of a etty without a wagon distance, Cas eee, oth He'll play with a beggar, $ or any wheeled vehicle tn it. Thet The name Catorce Is Spanish for four. Whose cry of “Keb, He'll sport with a king: i. fs auch a clty, and there are sev-|teen, and in this connection there ta an Sint nol nolde A fortune he'll wager— ¥ To cut this walst hy ohigh or low M smile or trown = eral thousand people living there. It | interesting explanation of why the town ‘ Tar eanvarawn Gold—fame—any thing. neck, long or elbow sleeves, In niedium akes or mars acto s{ ts the mining town of Caturce, located | Wan so called. Look, i ; i His ma TE ot Wat ci sour wize 41-2 yards of material 1s or %1| fj in Gotham Town high up tn the mountains of Northern [ts sald, a band of grees eee a em : Bo fuches wide, or 1 3-4 yards 44 {nchos wid. At the matinee idle Mexico. It is because t tear aged the plalna (One yard of velvet or silk for girdle, hours she spends, > Steap that wagons are not used. The! slaying and burning Mey TO eut the five-wored okirt 19 yards To the joy of the mati heareat point to Catorce that a ralirond|Iast the people are material 21 inches wide, 91-2 yards nee idol's friends. touches t# several miles distant, and| fought: them = in rthern Mexico, aod pillaging. At e against them, emt battles and Which was once marked down by brave Mark Twain. Soon his horse no ff i: He's false—you'll believe When I tell you he's hiding The hearts up his sleeve! —Tom Hall. s]Abches wide, ¢ yards 44 inches wide, or There's away whcre'er |4-4)yards 60 tnohes wide. there's a will, folks waist pattern (No. 3712, sizes 32 to gent for 10 cents. The skirt bi S47, ‘gines 22\t0 say; And hers, on Saturday, is Broadway. from the station the visitor must make his way up @ mountain trail on horse- back or by means of tho sure-footed “puro” that {s used almom exclusively in the region. This trail often leads around the faces of proolpices.or fre- quently brings che traveller out upen stand views where sight is lost im the roms drove them far into the fastnesses of the mountains, Thero the fourteen rob- ders vere besieged until Mnally they decided that robbery was not profitable any longer, settled down and laid tle foundations of the town, which has ever aince been known as "Fourteen" from tho men who built ! longer the lash will feel, elendet Se FINANCE AND SPORTS. Tommy—Pa, what {s meant t7.°S speculator for a fallt’) » - Pa—Perhape (t refers to a srestion