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a eeELe IN ERGHTH AVENUE. By KATE CAREW. Eighth avenue dorsn’t take {ta “C. very seriou munches peanut eandy-—you can buy {t in the lobby of the American T) during t guys Armand and 4 comfort ably during the death Minato AT LAN inten buxom young woman ¢ hectic heroine with much earnestness, mit handing ont anythin ible fn “Cabilie” (perhaps he has a ¢ thrill, Mr. Ralph Stuart, the Armand (henna eiciefeicinteteiateintt SOME SECRETS OF BEAUTY Re Her Halr Em Dear Mra. Ayer: EALED BY AN EXPERT, HARRIET HUBBARD. AYER = Sparks. EE a en ONT a ee | ae es a pe Re et een T had a very heavy head of hair, but | used tt 8 4 last November it commenced to 1 GA ! : out, and now T have less than helt |)stis : When I comp tt nds out stradcht : 7 and if 1 comb dark roon t } emita sparks just | HERE are 59 falling hair “hat ody © ure of for me to say ied CREE a in your case. na the wk Scalp massuze is the tr t \ ‘ need. There is alw with the cf : scalp when 5 ; : describe, und I think there ts no qutcker 3 way to restore the ctroulation ¢ \ THiS DIFFERENCE, HARR{ET HULBARD AYER. properly ad tering maasage ‘The sparks you refer to are cau electricity in th or a disordered THINK 1: would bea ¥ plan for you to # cleanes. OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. mean et tune ft and ie stra The Evening World's Fashion Hint. THIS OWT LOL Pry BOTTRPR bought f ‘ vy mhe dows Borte A plumber and post show Mfferent types ‘t| Of man tn pocuttar ways, White = the poet fa siping tris lays. THE WORLD: + Se OS Ns SO Dt a hd | } (ktim—reseiving. | ments,” ie | sylvan: oil regi verge of civil war, until a very recent period, he has been one of the |? [7 plumber you often find laying nis | ma: law-defier, a profiter by the corruption of Legislatures, Judge: i Vas his charmer. —————ey Vou a... Published by the Press Publishing Company, & to 6 PARK ROW, New York. Exntered.at the Post-Ofice at Now York as Becond-Class Mall Matter. WHY A BIBLE CLASS HEARD = OF GIVING BUT NOT OF GETTING. Inchis talk to his son’s Bible class John D. Rockefeller said: I believo that what wo aro aél tn the world for ig to recvlve and to gfve for the benefit of others— receiving information, property or whatever we may receive and epprupriate, and giving it for the beneftt of: other people. He-went-on to speuk to half his text—giving. But he neg- the half about wétich the public most wishes to hear from “Whatever we may receive and oppropriate.” Mr. Rockefoller begamhis career es a recetver, an approprintor, im 1862. He has given away a few million dollars—less than twenty. He hes received or nppropriated an amount of property which one of the very great financiers of America, now travelling im Europe, recently estimated es of the value of more than half a -biltion dollars. How did ho got it? How did he start this great snowball to rolling.and swelling ¢ By carrying on a business which was of such a nature that, os ho himself testified before a Congressional committeo in 1889, it eaneteesnnencn noes nnssemmccescnes INO, 16,609. Mn. NOCKEFEL. LER DISCUSSES ONLY HAUP ims sUBJEOr. oe: + amoney comes in.” mitteo of the New York Legislature in the same year that there “no hooks,” “no memorandum;” that tho business of the central committee, of which Rockefeller was the head, was conducted by “reporta, either wav RHoORDs. | verbal or on-pieces of paper,” which were “un- towceeeeerereet — doubtedly destroyed.” It dealtin miltions—hundreds of millions. keep books or records. 4 ‘This business was not really the oil business. It was the business of making secret and unlawful contracts for discriminating secret and unlawful “deals,” “arrange- Tt was the business of con- avere A BUSINESS THAT RED NoT But it did not dare freight rates, of making “aereements,” conspiracies. guns and lying in wait for and shooting down compe- - tition. John D. Rockefeller's fortune was founded upon and built up | law-breaking. years azo, when the lawless and brutal operations of himself and his From his appearance in the commercial world thirty ead ruin and many suicides in the Penn- lit the State of Pennsylvania to the ms and brow most conspicuously bad citizens of the Republic—a law breaker, a At orneys-General, public officials of all grades. An able man he is Buta sood man in any proper sense And the example he has set to the men of his gen- eration has done inealeulable harm. And to stor to gloze it over is to ageravate of very great business intellget. of the word he has not been, ANDOA nap BEYAM deny that fa his power for evil. precedent to creditable giving. That And, with this in mind, do not his There iz a condition precedent is creditable getting, few millions expended for indulgence seem a very lame apology, a very feeble reparation ? us down John D. Rockefeller’s oily It is the voice of his past. There isa voige thar s talks to Bible classes.’ LOVE IN TOO MANY PAGES. sympathy to he felt for the New York woocr Phere is little heen locked up in New Jersey for besieging. his innmorata at her own home with a fifty-page love-letter. The passion that most moves wonnin’s heart to responsiveness and men to good wishes ind the If thin over wasteful expanses of notepaper. ‘The foolish suitor at Trenton turned his ease, indeed, from a true heart's romance to the lightest of spring fiction by his who hi o spread itse is not ofa trick of protesting too much. Victor Hugo wrote novels at voluminous length even after he had become aman. But while ho was still a boy he turned out pretty love-letters as ever maid could wish to read within the limit of five hundred words. Bis- marck, too, while he knew the value of great armies in the field and even of long diplomatic despatches, conducted bis campaign of courting ina fow well chosen words. It ia doubtless true that The Innatic, the lover and the poet Are of imagination all compact. deere erer eee eee FIPTY-PAGD Lov VERS ant that lover, at least, is wisest who in the midst of his own | visions yet bethinks him to leave something to the imagination of He cannot do that in fifty pages. SOME OF THE FUN OF THE DAY. SHORTER rrocnss. Mr, Chugwater—The oata dian't really Chugwator—Josiah, the paper| change hands. The cash changed pock- $200,000 worth of oats changed| eta. A woman oughtn't to try to under | hunds tn a few mmutes. How could they| stand these things. Thoy'ro away be- bao all that in so short a met yond her, M DAILY LOVE STORY by + of the ring Roverte | ¢ no given her. It wa although ‘1 arvh to muppose ft was, pala'a second courin RD? you mean to #ay you think your moti any, Penrl wae atolen?' decanded tho young | sons: Wd " \- Mini Brinker tn much exelterent. | eively wi ee ae pe Gish came forward into that Her mest young voice reached Jas-| wns fast. It" glancing chuiengiie! Lancet eel mine Mah, and errested hor steps al-/at the young teasher, “certainly looks | most on the threshold of the bedron: | —1uces She was a dark-haired, slamter gtt,| Jam! with a face patrictan of feature and) room, @entle of expression. the taught the! Roderto Morrill entered. {Brinker twins, who, being considered) ‘Whats wrong?’ he cried, tempestuens mndo no reply, Geiscate, were receiving choir education! “guches 2 TO-DAY’S AUTHOR Miva Brinker," salt Jasmine | ¢ any one in this S setting ee my good fortune! but left the], loudly, coun KATE M. CLEA A mine! The-the what? The pearl?! “‘Anti—Mins Marsh?" ou aurely are not troubling your head | “She never ves anywhere,” Theodonta that! I'll get you another as per- | interposed quickly. and larger. I've Just been telling | Before Theo could interfere Dot was |oour mother I can affom to be wildly | fying up the stairs, Bho came back travagant. An apparently Smpoasible | ructul and depressed, theory of mine haw just murvived the | ‘Janmine won't go. She saya to thank eructal test of actual experiment. The | you ever no mut for thinking of her— ‘a Are generous fn the matter of | but she won't go." I know you all would be glad) “I am very sorry,” sald Merrill in a low voice. He looked hurt and dfznp- Dot heard the newa rapturously. | pointed. In a short time he took his "Rod," she cried, “we've got to cele-| leave. When be drove up thst evening dratet hw noticed a black-clad form leaving “Surely!” laughed Merrill. He and@|the Brinker residence. Something fa- Dot were groxt chums, “I'm going to|millar about f& drew his attention. take you all to the theatre to-night.”’ "Wasn't that Jasmine Marsh?" he “Of course we will: goi’’ replied Dot.| esked ‘Dot. “Catch us refusingl’ e Si aha a bah aA, had “no system of bookkeeping” beyond “a record to know what} And one of his associntes testified before a com- | * ‘Within tfteen mi: THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 2, 1901) ef ae t £ ke Mrs, Pus: FUN WITH PEN AND PENCIL. felelcfebeininieintnieieieieleleicteieteiet y (sternly)-Sir, I’ve found you out. Fa right, my dear. inininietet tee tH! You’ve been tn'king in your sleep. I wasonly quoting from the ‘‘Love & njelelelefelateletsteiebnieieleteinielet-ielelei-t-lelettebelefolebt fate ONE EFFECT OF LOVE-LETTER LITERATURE. rlebeleeiclebeleblebeictelelel-fetetetele betel £ x + + THE KICKERS CLUB IN REGULAR "SESSION To Reclaim Jeracy M To the Biitor of The Mrening T have a pian fo the overcrowded c there He hundrec aeres of sult me: ELMEI Klek Again more th puntshod the carporation, th ment that tikes Is & Noa chance Hes so at arcordingly jo and yet keep roof the law? What] sment therefor? Y. QUERIST. 6 show Kick Against Theatre Nulaunce, | don't return thin; Tawill « benefit of som | Klek Agal | 4 Tn the Palitor T want to spose eatng World) " ke) often eno: am 1 to kick him ax sits Ime in the theatre. Ile beats + the music With his fee inger. He if j s companton, His | 5 ide me, and whenever an{ comething that arouses a} Lins ks me, ** twas Umit? I/ af didn't caten ttc | iter UI PAYNE BEISTONE. | , Awainnt Sinng. neaaiirie fC homes to th Awuinat B ein your | pay my initine y registering a strong kick iva vou a t people (male Mas fe- lof whom you will t are In the bablt of saying| ne on you.” Jen Je Sun | Kick Agninat Stinginess, hor of The Beentng Wi Towle) to register my Kiek agunst the ra vr woman w when they lose un | rand 5 complain wh Poet- ‘Tramp—Say, gim'me ao quarter, 3. @ A PEREGRINATING PEARL. month extra and send her away at, in the back of the tox. He paused as Ease Ne once, Theo serms to think Jasmine] he was about to hand her her property, AP Ue muat need money badly enough to| “What—what's Uils? | i Teil taal!" A round object, white and gilstentng, | Soh nonetheroiaitimercnourh ts me at's that, Dot?" Rod erled, sharn-| had caught his eye. I rolled from A 1d you say—stea \the toe to the heel of the alipper, | ROSE eeR Yat flashed uprtalre and fnto Theo | “oh, i's your t ‘erted Dot. “Theo Kegarenee is dosia'a room. Hrinker—aren't you ashamed to think Ne porta oe eat ON take: i's dalliance—shrewde ‘tlurry up!" she cried. Are you going to mcrew your feot tng. into those slippors? You'll {t tn a month of Sundaya! sizes too small haste!’ ‘The tight slipper was slipped off when they entered the bo: play Theo was about to put st on when I wish something that rhymes with “camp” would st ee me. HAT wo 8 people during 2 very attractive ones and our populit and tf we egrow to thetr lowest Heve that the of the medical fuer One would much } witt of foresteht WS | our descend: 5 oy ee Perhaps, ho ft to obesity where wo tiona are t ex set fagyyees <> bride, T blu: nd, ce i" I road, “Tod ts walt- you mide mamma send Jasmine ty never do Thoy're two for you-do mako Are left he until any’ proved a success I was proved i Lave comer you how nave ed you—will always “A ‘ould be x. At the ond of the|love you, Is there any hope RTT mnbbe, could not meet tho love-aplendor Bayi. because why ther much charity. BY at th proud. is {s the rewnm I have got ‘o named articles. I want 2 mgst people ind. Next finds for the W. Ss. led people who t1- Saloon nall towns, cir houses, A. NON-HYPOCRITE. tillty of Kicking. y of recruits ANTI-RICK. m ountr: add ercises, ked if T would be his ughtn ; e my shoulfer back I oried: now—there's time enough!" When Love stopped mo upon the, Where ssirihoo! meets a matden art, I trembled, yet -thore's time enought" Now girland mald and w manhood and if LIMIT, Love looked tn Kiek Neninet Chronic Kickers. ARE WE BECOMING | AN. OBESE PEOPLE? ethods of to greates besinning: ¥ that we should yoon a tennis:and our par n of there healthy increased amed he tia Kk, to jeer, to Hs exes. He hold out hi oN —tha tn bis eves held out his ene Wien Not now—that time ts paste” Strong and sielte ering clasp. conten Of rent) chet - wt! IES EET TE TN TT eT