The evening world. Newspaper, May 17, 1901, Page 10

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6 THE WORLD: FRIDA ike 10 ORTUNE’S LATEST FAVORITE PARKER. H S See : Published by the Press Publisting Company, 53 to 6 PARIS ROW, New York. | { Entered at the Port-Oilice at New York as Second-Ciusa Mall Matter. A GLIMPSE OF THE PRIVATE LIFE OF OUR FIRST CITIZEN. SS eae a This is from the now famous interview with Mrs. McKinley} } had by The World correspondent at New Orleans: iam not speaking now of Major McKinley as the President. I am speaking of him as my husband. If any one could know what {ft Js to have a wife, sick, complaining, ‘lways an invalld for twenty-five years, seldom a day well—and yet never a word of unkindness has ever ' 1his lips. He is Just the same tender, thought- ful, kind gentleman [ knew when first he came and sought iny hand. : These simple words came straight from a woman's heart and go| straight to the heart of every one who reads them. 2 The relations of husband and wife are so intimate, so closely | veiled, that no outsiders, not even other members of the family, can . fully know what each owes to the other. But in this ease we may at least know a part of the man’s debt to his wife. Through her ill- a troiiay car feints for your Jaw and then fea uppercut trolley wire with a pair of sheers, sending the cure Dout. But be sure to wen neulated boxing sult <> In the good old days we uaed to Ww pay 19 cents for books that told us plext to stand in this atutude wh | ness, her sufferi ier days and weeks and years of pain, demanding ren a | _ S . : tacked. But as times chan) when gotng inte a finish tight of thle nature 3 jat every instant the soothing hand and the solacing voice of love, following ameniments to the old- 3 . . shioned “Art oO Self-Defense j this woman has enabled this man to develop the greatest of human foam Me Ae Set : > erifice. | virtues, self. Not in ease, not in content, not in gratification are the vir-|% tues that make a private life, the life of a human being in its per-| 4 ie 2 sonal aspects, self-elevating and an inspiration ONE GRRAT to others. Tt is care and sorrow, burdens and | ‘ | responsibilities, reverses and adversities that] ¢ eall out manhood and womanhood, that create f eerereeereeer*® the men and women whose lives make us THAT WIFE. LPIDAAEEADALASADEDNG:| | proud of human nature. | Interviewed in the Evening World on the local outeropping of | ‘ | the divorce mania, Judge MeAdam said: | Some people are failures at everything. Divorces will probably not cease while the causes that lend to them continue. Society is probably : getting along as well as it ever has. x People are franker and freer nowadays in admitting matri-| + monial failure—and there is perhaps a sufficient explanation of the ; present divorce pheno But tl 1 vr a! ce phenomena, But the example ewan MORE DIVORCES of the First Citizen and his wife, peculiarly | ¥ When entering into a friendly bout with an automobile wear one of the famous Fitzsharkbett rubber ball DO NOT MEAN = C sults, Waen the automobile, after a little preliminary sparring, rushes you againgt the ropes do not clinch or sides She has run the gamut often, has this winsome chorus gir MORE UNHAPPY representative as they are of the great mass of step. Simply go down and take the full count, trusting to the Impetus of the assatlanc te eend you bounding The Millionaire, the Sport, the Dude, and efen the belted Earl 4 WARRIAGES. the Ameriean people, reminds us that the merrily on your way. If it hits you when you are down claim a foul. But the grandest bit of nlbround luck that clothes this maiden sweet Lb | Gee enere eee eee o> bricht sid TERT i . ( Comes when Wall street's risky market Inys its millions at her feet. right side of the domestic picture is as bright Se ee a a a re-| 2 babe aneraes Bip Gus BG od sd ety 5 cine Gos ud: as ever, that unhappiness parades the highways, while happine ——— -— - — ae = —————— ] mains privately and quietly at home. THE PERPLEXITIES OF LOVERS °(iireeer nusparo “A = ae HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. aes te feu, and if not, you) auch a soune man nineteen ymare ott! THE SURVIVAL OF PAGAN IDEAS, ends Oo Lowi after WP. 3 pefcre we return ever.) heme. My parents object amt tay T wlll i ‘ broken! not be ins Saleprenieheceduntesnlthey W hen we speak of Paganism it is always as of something “dead |: ome, please, Katie. [and gone.” Yet how many Pagan ideas come back from their graves, THINK you ents are quite right Hy ’, . eos ° AY bs | ] in this matter, No girl of your age| ke Hamlet's father’s ghost, to “revisit the glimpses of the moon” Her Love Hae Grown Cold. Dear Mre. Ayer bay Tam a young man of twenty, am|Vour past keeping company with a young Indy | for you to whom I dearly love, and about 9 month ago we had a little Ment that 41d not amount to anything Now 1 ask her if ne loves me and she saya] the happine mduet. Tt ts I ze that having [nv 4 pos add to fous women ¢ fons No." She haw a nister who ix keep Parents, as Vaunt, Are Mahe. should be permitted to attend social! —and sometimes even to stalk in the broad daylight. company with a Kentleman and t jest funetions escorted only by @ young » . p my lady friend tha Tun scourge gin net quite ateteen|man In some of our States laws have been enacted, and in several friend who would years old nish T look oli I wax| You are too young to go Into aoctety se A z i ‘ You will resent theae words of mine | ¢-e-e-e-e-e-e-s-e-0-0-0-0-4 they are heing advocated, to prevent marriages and go out with ner How gradusted from school and 1 out {f she cares for me or not? arate a but ten yeure later you will agree OUR sTATHS betwee: 0 — s tai O. W.B. Newark, No J. loping at house A eT a TS ASDA ACY bel Er ay ARE PASSING { eens Oe phy ne ly unfit—persons tainted T seems to me vou have round out and | distance fro Fowish to gol in Thunrsing them, Pacax Laws. {With inherited insanity or other maladies vare = wecexacenererscereacace . a ] rently * that are transmitted from one generation to matter, and tha Btralght questic NEW YORK TYPES. [et The old Grecks were heauty-worshippers. They particularly worshipped bodily heanty, physieal perfection. To this end several | of their republics—notably Sparta—passed severe laws to prevent a gentleman « She Would Like to Male Up. Dear Mre A About F ¢ Peli alent Pat weer eeditarat ve marriage of the physically unfit. They went further, and destroyed 4 unde: th- human deformities as soon as born. ‘ When about to frequent a French ball or any other place infested by The only opponent againat whom & 1 broke ott s i 5 i ‘ Inspector Thor try a-nice assortment of knob kerries, shillalehs, all rules of self-defense, old or new, 3 now tha: I ‘+ ©, When our State Legislatures begin to pass laws to restrict Java war whips, when he leads clubs trump his trick {nthe are powe is the bundle-laden 2 end would tk: Can you ndyire him? I know never ree nim, ther girl | “resin wr she lands on you & No ono will call the @ 3 shion. Do not use an axe, It la unsportsmantike, shopper. W simply quit. fisht a fake. morriage to those who are sound in body and mind, and‘ are free| a *%°%* from hereditary taint, rhe plagiarising a Ps a are simply harking back 3,000 years and | ¢ n idea, 04. THE EVENING WORLD’S BIG LETTER CLUB. Shoves. jdo, try te convince the brokers wh») Other propositions. I wish Wall street to use thelr money | arn more on the subject. H ne sit A READER, LOUIS A, KERPE Literally, “Money to Barn.’ | Another Freak Chicken, Tobe piening Worlds To the Edltor of The Evening World: ne Incineration of Carnegie securities ” . 4 vhere he thinks he will not be no suse. 3 te ed enough to marry” and bring | u potaie.| Seeing an account of a freak chicken | representing $17,000,00 proves what has ldvarnemeronteris i Tete BB ato. the | 1¢ cheeked in his OTA Mon hore. | Ast week [would say that tna brood of] #0 often been said, namely, that the da ne pet consumptives. In short, the doctor’s idea was ES ai he Lin fe thus atoned | Chickens Just hitched out In my incu- Ubrary founder Itorally has “money te } : “ : cre Is one Ww a q NVIDEO. to hasten the ¢ pvery ., 5 * ‘ nt| bator there Is one with only one eye and te death of every consumptive as| for. 1 think te dogs have a rignt| Pn place for the other one, and the bills| “The Only City Large Enough?” ‘Tell him t and assure you have been so easily oul! for you he w For another instanee, turn to the American Congress on Con- sumption now in session in this city. Before that body Dr. C. F. Ulrich, of Wheeling, W. Va., strongly advocated that where a con- sumptive was incurable he should be made 1 The Man W comfortable as pos-| qo m &. ; was thereby hastened. If, instead, his days pices is a man (and his name Is Le . -a oT a i “ "| gion) wh skill, he would, said Dr. Ulrich, “almost | feet. pu trom of sible, though his ¢ OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. | | The Evening World's Daily) Fashion Hint. scale any were prolonged by medi surely be foolish and w we To cut this botero base In medium the best way of stamping out the disease, Staal Ue re ME a bim | are wrorsed (the upper one Being crossed | To ee Eater of The Evening Wert: @ize 2 7-8 yards of material inches ° 7 i : sah date SNOWLS, | 00 the under one). Otherwiso it ts Ju Mr. Croker has decided to sall for wide, 2 yards 32 inclies wide, 1 5-8 yardn| And that is Paganism, pure and simple. EDWARD KNOWTS. | ihe same as the rest of the chicks, ‘There | New York this month, Mr. Fe Saat hes @ Inches wide, or 1 1-2 yards @ inches here is no trace of Christianity 1 i Our RNemias City. were alsa two chicks hatched from one} decided rot to, It ts possible that wide will be required with 3-4 yard for = anity or humani- esia cri eterenian wera? cus. JONUN LEAREY. Hendoa 1s the only city large enough ah ey ptt . Ther 0 the Faltor of The B orld: a @heminstte, 1-2 yard of all-over lace 18) tarian sentiment in it. There are 60,000 con-| A weary correspondent asks “Where Auent Snlishury's Speech. etal Dow enn earneltine eee eee E. G. TRAIN, sumptives in this single State. are all he cher ovcatalarsZaqssyine Te he Eto of Me penne Watt ane T i ili id i have onesatsche eA In reading Lord sbury's 1 The Pagyns will live so long as such ideas tind champions, street * Thin ix a foolish auery-lat the Nonconformist Unionist Asso- RIGHT VERDICT. é = z sit i She may ay well ak “where are all ciation manquct the question came. to NEVE the other school-houser, the Mbrartes, | me whether tt hax ever occurred to the EVER SUPFICIEST, | recreation rks, untveralies, | {o-eatted “Anglo-Saxon mend. Usat other Seni gas inc ha teen ore paich Inj races and other nations might not pos- Houa party of the United States. | wns be competent to develop a ays- Where are ? Every one of them rr ‘S ta dally handled, thrown about from) tem of government and a eiiteation clone yarson to another in compresred | Pecullar to themscives and adapted to farm: How Ia :hat posalble? Why, the| thelr own wants, From an American form in which they are handied 1x| standpoint 1t seems to me that thin s ‘cause 'm sure rilmoneys Money, the Almighty. Do you| speech, if correctly repurted, 1s about tor, dear render? If you! the Imit in respect to this and several | Tu 2 ONE EXC NOUG Towne-Ne' Aunt Ellen-So you ke to go to your {grandmother's to dinner, ch? Tommy--You bet! there's) Aunt Ellen—Of course that's deca Gaohtangues he has ne’ ested in| you're sure you'll get enough to mastering there, Browne—What's that? Ch fowne—No, his wifes : wt) TODAY’S LOVE STORV. BY W. H. HINRICHSGE nd ‘Tom was the son of Col) “Quick,” nat he to Darling, f the great Tr huod, and Sy nt an es WON ON THE FIEbD. by Datty § nd she tu young men dr alyou,” and he helped him into the saddle. | ‘Tom drew his revolver and took atm | herd, dividing at this point, passed by on Then seizing Sylvia, he Nfted her up be- Jat his rival, but did not tire. After an her side. hind her es Ride for the ranch,” |inatant's hesitation he returned his] "Say, Tom," sald Sylvia, “how did was ne one like 1 » Darling the sald, “Vt spare the horse. weapon to his belt and sald to Sylvia, ;you come to give up your horse to Mr. | red You'll) who had ran up to him: Darling? If you had just taken me on joyed | “But you, amed Syivia, | “Keep coot and we'll come clear. behind you we could have escaped ‘ reply, and, | eed Tom In| easily." said Mr. Dare g he horge a cut with bia whip, | Sylvia's ear, as he took his stand fac-| "He would have been killed," antd fiation In whlch jhe started the animal with his double the the slough and the approaching |'Tom. “1 thought you loved him and hin burden bounding across the prairie, Only | herd. She obeyed him, death would have broken your heart." jfor a short distance, however, for Syl-! The first Hue of animals reshed into ye thit dude! What can you take Dp with yacross the prairie ke mad, Fee steers In front of them, The Wo you de. ‘Tem. Won't uked ax he via and Da alte a walk | thi be buck suon, 1! st King upon a [the reply H Sylvia.” sald the elder lady. Mh reat i n Puwgles coming acvany the prairie chown dil they got ave the th refotned hey ee Mrs, Martin cal to the maddie mor wide for undersieaven, and 314 why tam Dam tte awell Cawatd the | Sylvia. , a, reaching und her companion, |the slough. Of there but tew succeeded You are worth a million of ink Gime hang ‘and Hut what is the «tl And em, a mile or seized the reins and bringing the horse in crossing. The firat aninial succeeded | of tong horns {almost io a standstill, slipped to thelin getting across almost ppoalte Tom} “Sylvin,’ mild ‘T “what made youl A muccular Turk of Stambeul nN {Tried to pull out the tall of a mew \ datier them: "Don't{ and his herve was aready fying across] atretching tn each direction almost to | ground, ‘and Sylvia, Tom's pistol cracked and] jump off tha horse? go too far, you ais pattie. | the hortzen. “I'll not leave Tom,” she cried. he animal rolled aver, dead, Another! “Because,” sald Sylvia, “1 preferred to} But the Jury remarked as hal been ugly lately, Sylvie the daughter of Major Mar.| Tom reined tn his horse and flung bim-] Mr, Darling hesitated for an Inatant,/and another ¢ill the pix barrels of his/dle with you rather than live with any| They sat on his carcass; "Good eveniug, Mrs. Martin,” said a] tin, proprietor of the great Martin |self from the saddle, RI then, loosening the reins, the horee tore | revolver had piled up « Larricade of sixjone cise’ ‘ =. We tring ta oar ventiet—Ouangie™ » ‘30 cents. rto\ Cashier, The World, x Yous yationn (No, 3813, sizes 52 to 40) reuut for ynow the cattle ha fet Persian bands to trim as: | SEU high TAt OP Vee

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