The evening world. Newspaper, April 30, 1901, Page 10

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ORY’S TIMELY CARTOON ANOTHER OF THE UNKISSED. feicieticis eiciniieieieeic bie eee + =e) | STATEMENT | BEEN KISSED ss OF PRof CROOK NEITHER ! SOW Ftp tetetete SOME SECRETS GF BEAUTY The Reasun : Pelle ele iielteieteietafelelet REVEALED BY AN EXPERT, HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. frnd coloring qualities of the leaves, so Jtvet in te diteult ty tell Just the exaet | fowater, Let stand ti cold Nair Changes Color.) pale? t @ blonde, a ROY Is there anytaing To could dy from getting dark? What wi wavy? HERE Is nothing ts vent the (alr from tu The change Is due t ment, and no «> Teach the pigment. Diluted peroxide of hydr talf with wat but of course th! eothe te At will aie rowtth aclean tooth the skin a little taken to avoid hatter on the skin + harmless and « | brass volor Hight or wnite Henna te not ay jot injurtous wt J would wive drat hate a | You could fave so nt dye ly ousel dt fish tinge Tein @ dleach. It is [esi Ream ast ‘nce in three or f [catia eer eu Nothing but i Lea yaumake the | HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. | pependa on the Nature of the Sp these mixtures, ax you Rede rel | will only stiffen the ‘see al = tRaA ln s will retain the weve your hate 1 | should 1 nut na Will have to \ Wave St artificially ih M T give mula, This ts ain ‘ Laura H. | Curling Flitd-sium a SPrCe NM MANism NN aninnleuen Ath to the consist. aN | ounce; glycerine, raw Wi a ; eal OR Home = - 802 | DRESSMAKERS. | | iy | A SPRING SO morning aad a pure Wash Dyed won, way The Evening World's Fashion Hint. Daily. NG WITH SADNESS IN IT. To cut the kimono tn + yards 27 inches wile inches wide will i The pattern Td leave my happy home for yout > Pabiening name in the « have be A that { ange! irenth tinfore. a bes |'seett surgi woul he a whole mite lant thne f saw you T wan seven. I'm) n years Ive tons of me the contents w twas my ot for me, nd address name i Mr. John smith, care | raph ew York, N.Y. yeu ike your firm—we've! this waa ordered things crom Bros. Give ntty, and [our love te Aunt Mary and the xtrls you write, With I nt. It waa) Wishes from beta of us. Your ec phi a! CONSTANCE CARTER.” 1 best 3 the first thing that fell oy elope tald me that 1 wan ri graph—a jirt's face arch amd tender, full of inte life and good-will to men, A letter accompanied {t, and after jooking long at the pletured face T read home, a noft, dry wnow that pat every the lette dreamy, romantic snow danced the “Waltham, Penn., Nov, 18, 1898. | figura of the “impossible she" and I ear Cousin John: named her "Constance, And ot tt parents were persons of A DAILY LOVE STORY. | A lieht anow was falling as 1 walked | body, even the policeman, in u aa (answers the letter, humor—ail the way before me in that that) my handwriting, the painstaxing ver- When your letter eae wouldn't’ night I dreamed of the same appari- «ical handwriting 1 never usc—and said NOMA. any, 2 to 6 PARK ROW, New York. ork an § W-Class Mall Matter, VANITY AND OTHER HUMAN QUALITIES AS ILLUSTRATED IN THE NEWS. Published by the Press Publishing Com: Entered at the Post-Ottlcr at There is excuse fora te or emperor surrounding his public He is appearances with pomp and cireumstanee, He the tinsel and gilt Not so the President of the Republie— or at least it ought not to be go, The First Citizen of the Republic represents, or ought to repre- sent, personal, individual dignity, character, intellect. Simplicity absence of ostentation, freedom from pomp and pretense—these are or ought to be the characteristies of his public appearances. It takes a very big man to realize the vanity of the trappings, the dignity of the real man. It takes a very big man to despise pre- droceeeeeeeeeee OF nothing, stands for useless show, for { ostentation, tense, to see things in their proper proportions. Also it takes a very big man to be able to make an impression of greatness without the aid of the devices for arousing the awe of the vulgar and the unthinking, the devices which mere kings and | emperors must employ to hide their own insigniticance. Mr. MeKinley is “putting up a very grand front” indeed in his travels. The people must not fail to gape. If they should he would not enjoy himself. Helen Hay, after writing two hooks of clever poems, is now publishing a poetieal love tragedy whieh the eri is very good of the kind and of a very Aaa kind. drerenenenenenenenenen eno LT AN INTE But whether it is good or not, the point to be made here remains unchanged. YOUNG WoxRaN, Pierenerenenenenenenene-e Miss Hay did not need to do anything. Ver father and mother had done for her all that the ordinary girl thinks is necessary. She has money, social position, admirers, all the facilities for making of her life a very ble, comfortable round of idle and semi-idle pleasures. But she put aside all these things and set herself to the toil of And only those who have tried to write ean realize what toil hers must What a rebuke He NH the idle young women and young men who sit simpering about, f: literary achievement. been. len Way is tog eving that beeause their er the fore they themselves are entitled to consideration! her trappings! HESE THINGS DON’T EXIST. Se Seascnas By FERDINAND G. LONG. . 4 ese os eivicicieieleicfei-t-i- Isic ies Ee =m) to Police Commissioner Murphy says there are no pool-rooms in New York and itis simply rank ingratitude on the part of these nonentities to be kicking up such delt : muprehensible sum. a meuntainous burden upon the backs of civilized peopl at their vitality. The nati alone of civilization are now about 00+ OOO 002 an in a terrible drain eomenena-antnenensnenenen RONBING PETER {fro way pau. fp Pree eames enene If Lowe adebt ‘tis heeause T have needed money for my own uses of personal And when [pay If “the publi r business or family betterment. T pay with the products} cht, it is usually for some of my own labors. folly rolls of public | Owes i fwar, some folly of militarism, some Hy of *s Iv of expanding the alism.” And when tes, some ate soc jthe public” comes to pay this debt, it not only has nothing or al- most nothing of value to show for its borrowings, but also must pay hack by levying upon the mas-es of the reople. And vet we go gayly on piling up public debts, national, State, if we did not have to pay, as if the money were to be sit Was spent. Six fect and four inches of stature have just got their pos- sessorat good job, Soamueh the news item tells us ata glance, ‘The hia was a policeman in New Jersey. His height canght the eve of a New York bank oficial. wohe is a betrer pay than before, of OUTCOUNTS 1 Quantrry. private watehman, at less strenuous life and of ne less imposing appearance, This is aease where a physieal dimension may or may not have made aoman. Uamally it dees neither, In human nature, as in nest things, quality onteounts quantity Funston is five feet tive inches tall The latest all-around strong American colleges is the same height. Aguinaldo is an Alexander Hl. Stevens was a wee bit of a man. | Robespierre was a dwartish imp. and Alexander man of the inch shorter, Napoieor was truly “the little the Great was really Alexander the small. greatest: Presidents, Washington and Lineoln, Near poral,” America’s two Long heads made them so, have been her tallest. Not long bodies | alone. | Man ean add no eubit te his physical stature by taking thought. | But he ean bnild mental height as he will. Nevertheless, if six feet four gets him a better iol vod far hig inches. SOME OF THE FUN OF THE f DAY. HER STRENCOUS Way, | AN UNPLEASANT PROSPECT, ue didn’: seem to getion with that) prof ‘Thompson saya that. electrio R girl” Voarn will travel at the rate of 100 milen she sation the etae of her chatr anh Lent ready to run and took up my pronuns | “Hy gum, It's hard enough to get ‘em lation {nthe dictionary? to stop for a fellow now!" £ a noisy rumpus with the race-track gamblers. But of course the police do not > know anything about this. x os iminieln'- Rint ithicb i ricteicinninieieinteinint sfecfocfenfenfonfonte Sriviet richict Sibi Kick Againat Cronde: who are struggling to earn a living. T{donbie showing how Ty the Falter of The Rven ra World Kick. Give every one an equal chance | goot for the When it rains you will often find a[and this will be a y than ‘They for- hundred working men and women siand- |{t has deen In some t AL F, humble, MARY SMITE. Kick Against Brooklyn Tannel. of Tas Evening World ty protest against the pro- Hrookiyn tunnel, chon present plan ts to be a series and downs—a thousand or #0, nan cleval ks long, thea a tunnel road, nether tunnel ain to the ‘ant an want it in Ing on the corners of Spring street and! Kick Against New Coats, Broadway and Prince tree: and Broad-| to the Editor of The Evening World way walting Impaciently for acar, and| 1 kick about the new styie of ov when 't finally reaches the corner in a[coat. It looks lke a bag half ml Re-as-you-please In ta taxed to na] with an tdlot, CHAR utmost capacity with passengers. It is | Kick Againat Small Profits. Aftecn minutes between care and they're | T. whe Filter of The Evening World | Raya Jammed, Why can't the Metro-; Tam going to Kick againat expecting | au Street Railway Company run] tobacconists to give a box of matches | * Ars on these crosstown Iknes be- | with tobacco. It in giving a half ce tween the hours of 6 and 8 in che morn- | our small proflt to the custer ing and from § to 7 In the evening? I/ who seem to think we get the matches | f Am quite sure that the company will not | for rething. 1 would Mke to hear from | + be the loner by it and it will greatly | some of the hundreds w add to the comfort of the working peo-| @Way matches under protest the enst «bte. DAVID M Kick Againat Dullying Policemen, | To the EAltor of The Evening Werid T kick aga’nst the cop who thinks h owna the street. Instead of catching thleves and kidnappers and protecting citizens from thugs and highwaymen they chase the poor pushenecvendars|| venders NEW YORK. TYPES. THE POLICEMAN. ‘This, tn the copper of wh of ups miles under ¢ w hundre and so contin Kround road, and we Bat we dh to be made a sposed vt want Atlantle ave- as the ni ughing stock, steeplechase would from ¢ th the aid ntributed, Wiek Against Kick Against Expo | To the Editor of The Evening Weelt I wish to enter my protest against the practice of reformers of relating in pub- lie the dreadful condition sazed to hav been seen and heard tn the homes of the | poor. It Is often concocted for the re bowl ged." cked trem Brooklyn to LOUISE. anks ple who everything that they a in, De Ix not Invere w +5 nnpers the cop- pers i shay nti ough wh Tsavagery on the ut hot hee mar energy 4 has many. rounds with rounds an grim: And the heart ma: han na, ‘nin with him 1 hes hard \CURE FOR | WOUNDED LOVERS. OME BODY hes dug eit ef an obt S Jook oof the thine Queen Ellzn- th following advice to a ver: righte over a pondent a rope nd of at the other er the beame let a bucket be the lovier mest manfullle UMBRELLAS. in Landen no fewer as found their way, sty of the ‘bus and }trame nd cabdrivers, into the lost-property office ut Se tland Yard, half of the tetal number of ar- jeft behin® py forgetful Londoners umbrellas, lost purnes being a bad FORGOTTEN Noa recent. year ] AST ureter throvga the h ar conductors Vare TO-DAY’ s “AUTHOR, ENFIELD JOINER. [1 hoped she Mked tt ton. The nest day inquired for the John | In a week-lt seened like a year— Smith to whont the letter had been | 1 recetved a reply | written and failed to find him. ‘Three| Many, many nights } smoked solitary days afterward it occurred to me that | cigare and looked at her picture. The Je mieht be employed at the Ttrooklya re came and went, and she whore | branch and accordingly 1 sent the} face had been a fulfiiment of my photograph and letter to Brooklyn, | dream became a part of my everyday’! They ne back with the Information | life. | that a genticman named John Smith| 1: was on a Tuesday In March that had teen employed there a month of! a fetter came saying—Great vena! two ago, but had gone elsewhere tol] She wax coming to New York! Would Accept a better position, And then—then IT ylelded to strongest temptation of my life T call on her Thursday evening In East Seventeenth street? On Thursday I called. steps and rang. “Cousin Joh I turned giddy. I had meant to bow and say “Miss Carter; I took both her hands and sald “Constance!” “I thougkt you'd be tat—you used to, the ant T ran up the 1 wrote as If I was indeed her cous'n and I taki but one direct falsehood—I asked !f, she observed the change in wo Niall ld a ail lla b.. nd at B20, oA NEW DIVINE COMEDY. = HONEST MAN'S CONFESSION. i] HY may 1 not confess And bravely cease to sham? Why not admit that [ Give thanks to God on high smile be very happy,’ she said, with H fons. | hat connigned me to the lowest I took the en relope ani Fei T thought you had blue “and Mrs. Howard M11 the honor of your presenre at the marriage of thelr daughter, the char on ahook v, hen with a ghastly smile In dental of xe, 2 Aunt Mary? queried Con- T didn't know, but I sald something. A on as Tam? | mag ice a Bont aan na 614s Cine | wet nda enh ane wen There! were} reata, tas: forsinatance If pat acho 3 Why flaunt a modesty when I made a casual remark about m: father (a dear old gentieman up Maine), only to diacover that he'd bee! Mend and buried (in Virginia) these nf- teen years, but oh, the long delight, the Pplecogel Before the world, and then, When none may hear or see, Praise God for making me ‘The most sublime of men? Hrooklya, and we went to 1 ‘told her all; tin. her cousins Well, the church to se The voice of the rector broke In on my. miserable thoughts, surging joy! In August I spent two weeks with her and her aunt at Spring Lake leach, pad Who tx there here below That I would be, to-day, With all is fallings?—Hot Let all the nations know A sham fs flung away, 8. E. Kiser. “Wilt thou love her, comfort her, honor and keep her in alckness and In health: and. forsaking all others, keep shall iver! to her, so long as ye bot! shall live?" down and whispered: “Con- fiance will you let m And the answer ‘nat came, while ery, low, was very sweet. in September she came 4a New. ‘on her way home from a visit to Albany, 1 went Immediately to call at Esat Bev- enteenth street. ‘onatance greeted me with a larce envelope In her hand. which I saw at a lance) had been forwarded from: Wal- ‘P songratulate you! I hope you will SN Seats |

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