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Wee eieitebicitielieee iit eit init t In affairs of this kind the same po OBR iRise eietiniisteeieiter int IES OF LOVERS THE PERPLEXIT A First or Second Choice. Dear Mra. Ayer: Iam a young girl, reventeen years) 8" of age, considered a little firtisn A young man has taken me to * entertainments, Gentleman No. vited me to an entertainment. | with him. Another emertunment went it | were going. No. 1 anked me to Ko vita] him and sald I had no busmess to with No. 2 Did I do wrong by seine! with No. 2? An it seems, No. 1 thinks 80, and he Ia very cool at present. 1/7 never told him I would accept his com- pany, nor aia he ask for mine. Hut he imagines he has a claim on me. He ta going to occur to which both gentlemen I 2 Jealqus. I have not much love for Mmly. sure to make it known su: * @t present and I do love the other one. inter | to enjoy fp suitor No. 2, dearly. VERONICA. | bring myself to belleve that THINK, my dear, foolish little V A Flekle Laas. caprioousness and a wilful disposition ] onica, you are exaggerating he | ner wre Azer: pain are ey 2 of affection, situation in your own mind. A young lady and man ha | ave asked for my, advice, ard f The matter resolves Itself into the! keeping company for eighteen months HO UML H DA nea pune ALY, simple question which you have an- awered In advance. If you love the Ken- tleman whom you are pleaned to call fo, 2° and you do not love the one who 1s tagged "No. 1," your conduct should be clear, Decline to accept any more attentions from “ * and walt pa- tently for “No. 7 Jaro hiya don. It is only fair to say that he does re gard you tenderly or he would not pay You so much attention. It ts 1 10 be able at least to accord to him puliclent Judgment and good taste no | to show offense, which his po Ba let_ matters sh: the gentleman is tn Cocoanut Car mel smoothly over the t te! edome home from i and from lables. not be proper would. be proper en young man ts ten yea tots fons ra of marriage between you ard you asa ¥ think If 1 were cortaln of we wt You may mel Custards. mntil nm both tt until it Into itt Hwith vs; turns astard, you does not warrant then pour in the ¢ No young man has a right to consider }lows: Mix sla eggs with Rimself injured begnuse a girl chooses | sugar, a teaspoonful of v ‘6 accept attentions from another mun | and 11-2 cups of gra unless the young lady under considera- | stand wh ‘von fs his allanced wife. the cunt “No. 1 ts an egotistical young per: I should say, and inclined to be quarrel- some. When it comes to marriage a Girl ehould consult her own heart—not her caprice, mind Your par umtoubtedly are excel- Tent judges of your character and of the temperament of the man with whom you would be happy. \ if” . 2 Is possessed of the attr Dutes that command your Well as of those physical which, unfort alone consider, th You should not show © modest way for his society Nothing to De but Wait. Dear sre. Ayer Tam thirty-nin quainted with a of whom I think weema to think a great have known years, and resp attractions oF over -| OR HOME = =| » DRESSMAKERS. | The Evening World's Fashion Hint. Daily To cut the size, 9 yards of bathing sult in medium | 3,825, alzes 32 to 42) is the first whose crow Gleams this season This tease f That it ahead of t And the head that And “Hey,-Rubel S TIMELY CARTOON. ALWAYS THE VICTIM. MAY SMITH The young man loves her very devr TWO COC sides of the bowls and bake in a mov str covers ah Hla extract | co an am a baking pan. p THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, MAY 22, inbicieieiieleleieicte! SOLVED BY wh same H 14 1 months old) 5. Would] Ks, but ther 1 them, Avene tubborn and eranky ot times j whieh she camits. Advise them, (65 | ioe Dn very much imy Lwhth the toatl ar tady Phe » rnd A str » nertoumy nA {realizes the Importance of the s about te take ot trifle man OANUT DAINTIES. make the ate oven antl! the cu {4 firm to the stl When done turn the custards out from the bowls a uur the caramel ver them and serve hot Maleate Q one pint of nivadl a double Cocoanut roweith 1} of stir Cream. Add grated rind of on julee and one Set away to cont, W one quart of cream and fre usual manner. ‘The pulp of naa may be added with the and cream and mi a delictou bination vats let this 1 Stand NEW YORK TYPES. SS aw terubs will | be rubbered by all, wil that the Straw his t ed HARRIET HUBBARD AYER k woman appears tot! ¢ A H ath 2 Bece lass Mall Matter. | FRANCE HAS HER DREYFUS, BUT— i HAVE NOT WE OUR FITZ JOHN PORTER? oa oe enone taink sugar cup of three onanut | x com. y, 63 to 6 PARK ROW, New York. Before deciding that the French people have acted in the Drey- iviliza- rs them beyond the pale of ¢ Vis ease in a manner that plac oP. mn ineompe The tieree fend between the volunteer and the West truction. f rdice and dis ont failure, acensed Porter of cova obedience ! domme } He was con- nt officers culminated in the perseention of Porter, ce and vame very hea id driven f am the army in diss a traitor. vvears he fought in vain fer vindies ing shot : Partisanship, indifference, sure of other inatters—all combined to delay justice. Not tions he the proof: of his innocence were elear. the pr until 1882 did Gen, Grant apologize WOMEN'S BUSINESS SUCCESS. ecial grow ed taste and phy erofone of New York's most pretentious Aomemi who has utilized by opening a millinery shop her edu unusual opportunities for observation, has put the whole phil of woman's work in these well-chosen words: The best traditions make the best work. Nothing that 2 woman learns —not even the so-called froth of a fashionable education—can unfit her for The real secret of success Hes In the impulse. * trade. The impulse, the energy, the determination—not the choice of any particular werk, for even the most unusual are now open to women. Five years ago a Conneetient girl who had worked as cashier in a meat market opened a shop for herself. She did every thing that was to be done, even to selling meat Now she has bought h-0-0-e-e-e-onenone-eneneeh Ls wit THE nust- Siete caheteneenada a from her own cart. Naturally she prospered. summer hotel, whieh she will manage in connection with her mar- ket. and which will doubtless prove as profitable. The girl who works to earn a little pocket money until she is married does not invite business. success, but something very much she will be happier and certainly not less useful in manag- But the woman whom taste or necessity impels to under reer with singleness of purpose may thrive us readily asa man. ‘The real secret of success lies in the impulse.” MR. BOLDT’S NEW PARTNERS. better: ing her own home. ke a business It might be profitable to many “strugglers” to study the inci- dent of the admission of three of his employees into partnership pene-eee-ese-es-o-04 by the proprictor of the great hyphenated sy DID MI. } hotel enterprise, aS It is safe to assume that Mr. Boldt was nonenst } moved to this course not by love and affection, poeeeeeeeereeet not by an unwillingness to absorb to himself all the profits of his business, but by the absolute necessity of retain- ing those three men. Now, why did he find it absolutely necessary to retain them? While so many men are discussing their wrongs and devising plans for getting out of work and in similar ways showing their dis- satisfaction with existing conditions, there is a small class of men seattered throughout the country who are showing their dissatisfac- tion in the way which so moved upon Employer Boldt. What is that way? SOME OF THE FUN OF THE DAY. THOSE LOVING GIRLS. ALWAYS GOT THE CHEAPEST. Maude—I didn't think you would te] Slopay-—Come and take dinner with me able to recognize me after a three years'| at our doarding-house to-night, will you? absence. Friend—What are you going to have? Clam—You have changed conalderabiy.| Slopay—Walt til! T look at the market but I'd recognize that hat of yours a| report and see what meat Is cheapest hundred years from now, to-day. —————=>__ PATHETIC CASE. Ilix—It's Just as easy to tell the truth] “Dabney stayed away from Mise as {tts to tell a te. Jipp's wedding from grief, didn't he? Dix—Yee, but when a man reatizes that! You know she jilted him he will not only| "He let the impression get out that ‘t but will get seve he is Justified in| Was grief, but he told me it was because he couldn't borrow a dreas sult.” tion, rend the facts in the ease of Fit John} nenenene ened A vsronyor vj who died vesterday, still denounced | SAVAGE INJUp- 6 sus traiter, rien tot 1 Rave ann never had a braver man or a more — RATS" 2 Meo - 3 x : But, alax! for the work of the day when some voracious mouse pyat MAN. OF faithful servant of the Republic than Porter. rushes furlously from his lalr beneath « paving stone and advances OO 0-0— 0 o- non > ee . * ona " of sweepe Tashi his tall and making the street rever- ed the army of his supe Pape 5 sweepers, lashing He I the army of his superior, Pope, from few York 0 berate with his deep-mouthed roars! The fair street-cleaners will te shield himself from deserved condemna- be gladdened by flee so fast that the telegraph poles they rca by will look like the popular ekumer, inthimed by unserupulous or prejudiced public) 4 1m order, too. . E eligible for the department. a marshaling a string of schoolgiris wders, < safely past a bunch of Fifth avenue x O Johnnies In 5 eleinininlninlnlininleleleielelelnininini-t By T. E. POWERS. NgcMeN WHITEWINGS A LA CHICAGO. wt Seieieicieint: SULA IIT 7) % | oleint > teeth in fine comb had indorsed. After twenty-four years public opinion was sutli- x ciently ¢ red to-enable Porter to get a complete official vindi Oy tion, But in the popular mind the suspicion against him has lin- + gered until now. £ Fitz John Porter should have a great monument—not in} £ ape seruel wrong wl H asted is life i ie v . ay apologs the eruel wrong whieh blasted his life, not in memory [+f mimic ob cite comin 6 of hisameny gallant es to the country for whieh he fought well) feast twiee a day; while hot violet water and a scrubbing brush will schools will be engaged as fore- eee ae env ee . parraietsnedie He be used for the purpose of removing each grain of dust from the women, and will use the xame In- in two wars, bur asa warning against national injustice through 6 asphalt. High-heeted slippers and neatly rolled-up trousers will be genulty in keeping thelr mhorts No woman wearing a «noe larger than 11-2 A will be busy as they formerly employed in And when the fair street-cleaners/ have at last accomplished Woe to the brute in human form thelr work the sate of mirrors will dwindle*to nothingness, for each who dares throw a cigar butt on the immaculate pavement. Prompt pavement will shine so that Willle-Off-the-Yacht can adjust his te arrest and a vision of the death y the retlection on his way to the daily session of the Lady Street- chair attend so helnous a ertme. Cleaners’ Five o'Clock Tea Club. L inlet THE EVENING WORLD'S BIG LETTER CLUB. * s e As to Popular Songs. ; the Hand, Here Com Hor." Bat/ Usually when an American yacht races To the Paltor of The Evening World. |in a day that dlen y whiatle |In England she is beaten, The only “Tell Me, Pretty Maiden.” falr international yaoht race, to my It in rather amusing to note New Yorkers’ tastes In music, as evinced by mind, would be one contested in neutral e sudden transit plain t street whistling. One day every mes-|Can prophesy the morre waters. Why not let the next Cup races senger boy wil be whistling “Ill Leave HOMER W be salled in the Mediterranean? This My Happy Home for ¥ Then somo! sil es faked tor aa ales and orning we wake up to find that song | To the Eslite e Evening World neither boat would have the advantage. Ms the Ealtor of Th ne Wor ftheladvantae 8 fled in the night, leaving no tri Every time an English yacht comes hile the same boys whistle “Strike Up| here and tries fo- the Cup she {s beaten. THE FARMER AND HIS LOAD. 2 to Lovesick Boys. To the Faltor of The Evening Work A sixteen-year-old boy has just tried to kill himself because he could not wed a girl he loved. Now, this is the fault of our foolish system that deprives boys of the Engiish school course, wher work, healthful play and athletics com- bine to keep boys’ thoughts away fro: i Let us thank our siily customs for the degeneracy of our youths! E, N. H. day-Closing at Huftalo, To the EAltor of The Evening World 1 would ask !f six days in the week hot enough for business, excite- ment and p! . leaving one day for rest and qulet? we the Pane non Sunday In ore ie to ge to church, insider that her eltizens of worship us a di nsider Ita priv! n rats! tion Ruffalo has shown herse! “a spark of virtue whieh» iberat-minded people would ex- with ssarciam, Ss. M. To Neform Street Sign sof The Gventag Wart tis now In progress to devire tome much-needed means whereby one may readily be able to locate himself In this city, At the diagonaliy-opposite corners of atrect Intersections utilize tho quadrantal stone which forms the core ner of the sidewalk curb for the erection of a fixed, permanent Ilttle structure of east fron or some such material, say about five feet high, so that the names of the Interrecting strects may be palnt- ed on Its two outer faces In large white letters on a red ground, These would be readily visible to pedestrians and car patrons by day and night. They would not be obstructions, as these sidewalk + corners are scarcely ever trodden on. Such stands could be made to be even & source of profit by letting them to News venders and such like, who would ay a small rental and would keep them Bringing his load home. in good order and is ar atilonngcte ourts toe They « this obse young fellow sentir What cant aked x about from Florida ment of Miss millionaire Braxton, he this speck TWO WOMEN AN announcing ya langle: Hay thing to muy about it, Mr yt For just an instant Black felt the latcne, hen he steadied Ereat. effort at ihe telerrar he gist of tt . dnt era shor nara had Tha ‘ Wee ARS TMH Tens dtd not return for some weeks after: ‘ F foranthe fant ne week Black | Ward. When She heard the news her|tale »imply Wy |knew that t wan lesa deep | heart went out to him impulsively. the new than ne had sup) 1: tht hurt,| So when they met iy chance at the wolljuat 2 was sll speaking a mes) pur the young law with critical] home of a ccmmon acquaintance she pe ienien r boy arrived with a telegram stl yeif-anatyata, had 4 to doubt | made It easy for him to ask to call, value. : Black. whether hia, vanity had not suffered| But though he called more than once | forgave, ¢ A newspaper canard, iod,"| more than his heart. The week of| Black found It {mpo: Uta Lampton broke out when they were! olindiag misery taught hin that He was| thelr friendebip atthe point where it] membered, murrend A MAN . & BY WIbbIAM M’'bEOD RAINE. eee tea true, Sne confirms the love with was not Gladys Langley. : \ is telegram What hurt him most was the con: nt he must be some mistake, No) aclousness that the glamour of thi: ain oman she was | beautiful young coquette had cast an vnganed to without jetting him know, | Infatuation aver him that had obscured TAX | it oeantt ‘atand to 2 for the thne his love for Allee Stant- the oo iick\ amiled “we won't|Iand. Now he knew that his folly had re, thar | It Milly, if sou don't care, [undone him, He had turned away from ted her} Ae ay ; ty change her{the only woman In the world for him cial ate rR | to follow the echo of a mocking laugh, wootng | In point of fact tt happened that Alice Staniland had been out of the elty for nome time before the citastrophe and} te amie an oath, the office to pten arawer grim nod Black a it in ible to take up| woman had done him and her she > LIVING POR SBLP. ¢ E thofght he saw, in realms TO-DAY’S LOVE STORY. What Black did not see wab that ayat last, renewal of their friendship of the for-| He answered tmpulsi of blue, mer basis was row Impossible; hence- uffered? Perhaps. But if I had suf- The God supreme—for- forth they had to be elther more or less H ten times us much, | should think giving; Living for self he never knew ‘The lovely grace of living! Ie still blessed, It way alla mistake from first to last. “1 did not love her more than she loved me,” to each other. One evening Black fell into a sudden Irrhation at the situation, ‘The young man broke the ice and be-| The girl's heart stood still a moment. He kept hig narrow fireside fan to tell his story: haitingly. He knew |then teat at a gallop, What mattered It | bright; well enough the story Imped, and that] {it he hud) been enaged to another Rend texts: ‘Love one an- no explanation, could alter the fact ot ae en Ae nee eta ctnen, head other!” hin Gexertion of her. Nor could hej been meant for each other since the ~ But left his brother in the J began, ant to lot his pride or the ome of Kis claxs stand betweea them Would be to prove himself a traitor to; ove. He carried toward her a face radinnt with happinesss, for somehow in the last fow minutes he had discovered she loves he itl rose trom her. sent, halfefrightened but wholly willing, involuntarily gave. back, a. Her eyes met his and. fa sage ok agains: er nlght, Insulting her } Knowing It was hin brother, Imply without that he had wronged her. — He told hiy and ba imputing no harm to the woman who had jilted him, and because she lov him Mies Stant- land accepted it at more than} its face ‘The wrong he ‘had flone her she that which the” other em to. Grave priests swung Incense o'er his head, And muttered psalms forgiv- ing; But dying, he was doubly. dead Who knew not he was living, and iba ti monient they bad: for all ay “You must! uffered,'* jhe ald bave ai t