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O “IDEAS” NEED APPLY. By FRANK PARKER. ott 2 : 2 By EASELS G. LONG. 20085069098000995048OG36S1EGO005:86-460 COmvEN TION OF CHIEFS oF POLICE Vou. 41. 0. 53 to 6 PARK ROW, clase Mall 3 Res Preas Publishing Company, the Post-OMco New York as Secon A MOTHER, A NEW BABY, A NURSE AND A NEEDLE. The names of the persons in this tragedy are withheld, though perhaps it is too merciful for justice to do so: A new baby—the first—came to a young wutifiil house up-town, Of Pococccccccced couple living ing course the new-comer was most welcome, but of a baby is such drudgery, well, taking: POOVOLVILS: , vias hired to do the mother’s duty. Anuisance! Soa nurse v A few days ago this nurse took the baby out for an airing in is they left the house the child hegan to f oon | 3] the “pram.” As ¢ no wiser than most grown people. assumed that the rsity of babies. The nurse, bei fretting was simply an exhibition of the natural perv She gave it a shake and pushed it down deeper among the lace- frilled pillows and <ilk coverlids. But the baby only screamed the louder. She gave it another “shake-down,” and then wheeled the “pram” stolidly along. Soon the baby’s wails sank into moans, and then apparently it decided to “behave itself.” | Another nurse with a “pram” passed. She looked into the first “pram,” then said to the nurse Why its pillow.” DEDISRDE- what's the matter with your baby? There’s blood on SIPPAGHYS-F 7 399099GO9 PDO 9 0 0004 The nurse looked—the pillow was soaked in blood and the lace 53 jand the silk erings were splashed with bright red stains. She $ saw a doctor's sign and pushed for it. ‘The doctor ran down the ° | | steps, took up the child. | eee: “Why! he exelaimed in horror, “the way THE MARYS Ghild is dead!” WAS “BEMAV- : 5 $ He looked at the back of its head and eeceeee then at the pillow. From the pillow he drew a great darning-needle. | ¢ \¢ os. & “Where did this come from?” he asked. “IT was sewing the Ince this morning,” stammered the white faced nurse, “and T must have left the needle in the pillow.” The nurse pushing the child down into the luxurious swathing= had driven its head against the needle, and the needle had pene trated through the thin skull into the brain. We will not follow the nurse home to wateh the mother hold- ing the corpse of ‘‘my angel child” in her arms. * * * —— oy There are likely to be some chiefs of pollee missing in the provinces unless Devery and his coppers are more alert than usunl, The New York burglar won't stop at anything, He may even kidnap the members of the Police Chiefs’ Conven- BP tion if Devery doesn't watcn out 4 yeeeesvoes i a3 There is absolutely no exeuse for a woman with any health at _ THE PE PERPLEXITIES. OF LOVER SOLVED BY NUBRARDSA "AYER. all who gives over her children to the care of strangers. It is some- EG (R GRG RIA EES COT IO Cd thing more than negligence. It is crime. much that I don’t think I could A child does not ask to come into the world. Tt is brought in nother, ALICE. | it A sjally by it React ki a MINK a man attuated aa your lover| 0 HS parents, especially by its mother, without asking any onc’s exclusive atten- [CONSE any one girl, or ask her to They Had a Few Words. a Dear Mrs. Ayer: Tam a young man of twenty-one kept company with a young lady three years. We though world 0} one another, but we had and parted. This was t« ‘The other night 1 wro her to be friends again and » but did not ¢ next ’ Lawyers, school teachers and clergymen of Metuchen and Pompton, N. Jy Are up in arms against Dr. Herron's alleged plan of carrying his “Idea into New Jersey. The above cartoon shows that mosquit not the only foes which await the "* when he crosses the Nor t and without any compulsion. £496909099099029 003024 eomicht cal A child means responsibility—drudgery, annoyance, tedious right for a man to monopo-| ind menial service. But there are compen Uze a young girl's aoclety and to pre- have not seen or heard Now, how can 1 find out why ions, And if a woman ‘ me and said “yes,” bur sald we er from meeting other young men | does not wish to undertake the responsib: she ought not to have ¢ DOS-5-5 2OdOo3 never keep company ai hohe ts not in a positton and has . vine me. eodid, he has been of being able to marry: her. | the child. FPICTENG toe done ntsc by ee eae ingame eirurtinry |W THE KICKERS’ CLUB IN REGULAR _ SESSION. 3 Ba ea aati inten ialnlveurtanects | ane Re EECA could | peneog emu wen meu ences inary: hat can a mother be about that is nobler or more important be rude the privilege of marrying during his {than the nursing and care of her child? How can a mother, with heart all over again clady Doce Not Want to Give tin Up. | me oth Hoth 5 acy eu eRifetime the famed mother-love in her heart, rest content with her helpless on. It was force of habit, It would appear tha Kick Against Corner Lonfera. — girl in loud volces. They are a r of The Evening World }to the community, and should by has recovered from her dream of love Mrs ae were tn your place, 1 should AO ED eel ee eaten : TRAVELLER. Perhaps she remembers vou at the tl 1 ‘ man very common sense to the altuation | chi $ andi 5 : Fry) 7 >Ww » add my Kick to the kicks of /#* SUS = Sontavecreiicdiandr meted slave i nama er yee ; zacominon kere. (othe altstion child out of her sight and in the custody of hired attendants? What ers, ati kick a Mick that Tetcich VcalarthGrownalar Kiet lsh Question, you made upon her at that marry while his mother lives) 1 a, | beman who is 0 pecultarly placed. kind of motherhood is this modern, second-hand, proxy motherhood 2 [here will have come ee | ox uia, Balter otaT peverss fae cue bh ag he a cannot forget. ——— ei dbyebasts tear ee i : Kicked. 1 kick against 1) * who have been many kicks f kicking th If she will permit you even + Qeoocceccce They say “a mother ought not to be alstand on sie corners of Brooklyn f 1 i ‘ou like 5 :; ; would You rece lege of an ordina: qwhy si slave to r children.” shies ? Brooklyn ity cars, and ¥ taht OM Gavablettolreiriee eases to her chil Iren. But why not? eiheeipinees 1 INQUIRER, mation. A sensible m $ AsavEr When she brings into the world a being | halt and make It unc Wieck Agninat Snobocrucy. words with a girl whose ne = i Ne thle young ladles who. pass. [ee \ : to retain, Lovers’ quar Ss °F so wonderful, so capable for greatness or} the ord. y mashers,| fewer kicks at other men and fe low, : : = to know the} which, when {ft cam constantly and incessantly in need of care, of watchfulness, of pa: [latest baseball news, p vr hatr in] watted the next, wht rt i i a Ant 5 the middle strictly in accordance with] ple to on, but those few per tient, enlightened, loving training, why should she not gladly be aline style wet by the Hon, Terry MeGov-[ crushed and runhed as though there slave to it? ern, and viclousiy size up the passt for every one main exit ind stare at cer- tune who make up teave, T have no he favorites ce and Productive of pe This Young Man te Far ‘t Dear Mra. Ayer T have loved a voung man four months. He seemed ver to be a friend of mine, and, wita permission, culled several times meanness, for usefulne: or evil, so susceptible to i ssions;. so | Nrovare nad enousns they cee INPFesslons, $0 | red “aports.” who are sur oO Kade, xious AMBRICAN. This mother-love that is strongest when the child is away and | Dressing. He GibL WITH THE OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. E The Evening World's Daily Fashion Hint. CAMERA’ 4 f weakest when the child is near is no mother-love. It is ay abhorrent pretense. There are many ways in which the mothers of the new gener- ation are better than the mothers of old. But in one way many of the “new” mothers could sit at the feet of the mothers of the past and learn. ious, | | colors Is athe few have had ost atrocious combina- 1, Old rose of an ox- ms to te the rage just men are wearing skirt 1 hata, < cing samples of the while gray, brown have been seen by me hove colors, ADA B, sat by a hearth- side place, ng a book with @ face, t Tila child came up with a cnild- Ish frown And pushed the book, # ying: “Put ie down.” ‘Then the mother, slapping his curly head “Troublesome child, go off dedi A great ¢ must kne ‘To train you up aaa child should 0." ‘And the child went off to bed to cry And denounce religlon—by and bs. Kg SS Oc) The mothers of the past thought it their duty, regarded it their highest honor and hap- piness, to care for their children—to nurse them, to wash and dress them, to amuse them, to wateh over them waking and sleeping. And the woman who does that is the only woman who has the right to be called by that beau- tiful, that inspiring name which sounds like music in the cars of hu- manity—Mother. To cut this kimony dres in medium size | yurds inches wide. 3 yarix f 33-4 yards 32 Inches wite The Chernb’s Rath, f a week down at her mother's." mestck > but her younger sisters admired our baby ao much they nearly washed ———— —- ¢ Sa No Pince Like Home. ‘You scem reaigned to this life of constant travelling,” remarked the clerical nwer, “but .on’t you often realize that there ‘s ‘no place Ike home?" es, | do.” replied the enpecked drumme hat's why I'm resigned to a Mf of travel.” Farmer Jones has bought a goid brick, Find the bunco man, DAILY LOVE STORY. ** By g08N Gaston. We THE. PRECIPICE EDGE. al of Christ's Mfe I and yeu wil Meet many infeiuatin over Turley. Gambling wentynot only were hin savings all gone, but jit required little finesse to accomplish) true to one’s wolf regardless of loss oF | Ming lon freely at her home. his future was mortgaged for years to \this. Taking a cab, he hurried toward} gain. Another woman bent o'er a book ourself} One evening he was talking with Misa) come. the place he had agreed to meet} Within two hours he was hurrying it With a smile of joy and an In- DAY biebeiieieieiieitiieieibicigebinice bb ivicint 5 ly tn the " Graymont, when she sali, with great] About this time Mackay came to him | Mackay. back toward the cattle country aw ivt | ¢ Tent ive, Mian and yous ‘direcin one day and asked a private Interview. | During that brief ride, consclence,|a# steam could carry him; his resis-|% eri a child came up and Jozged i Its saan hen 1 want you to] "Mr. Turley, why d 1 come here| “Your fortune and mine are In sight," |which had been pricking him ever since| nation was In the hands of Slow & ernines t fa porfeetly with me and if you) and play so regularly ‘ou lowe aimont he, "Slow & Co, are making jhe left Miss Grayirent’s apartments,|Co. and Mackay had a note Ine ttleman’, jer, and ¢ jon ie way pn (No, 3,839, sizes smal}, | Hon with the Targe) will be sent for 10 the And sald of the book: “Put tt Vitor that Mf and for | invariably: Jone of the biggest deals ever made on | broke into active rebellion, and memory, | forming him that the deal was off; thit rx | “Ld not care for all this play of the| the board. ‘They control tho market |lone lulled to sleep, opened {te flood | he had left the elty, and that those I. found his new! carda,’ he answered passionately zt Absolutely, You are on the Inside and | Rates, U's, would be Zo0d ax soon as he and easy, He was| me take you away from {t, where we) so thoroughly In thelr confidence that! The enormity of the offense he wan| Kot on his fect. and having ty of can live rational: jyou can find out what the plan fa, ff |about to commit burat upon him; the| He went straight to the girl with the soon began to taxte| ‘That night he loat heavier than ever will le: me know to-morrow T can | Insane folly of his life in Chicago be- and told her the whole the fevered metropol'#. Jand was compelled to borrow. Gerould, round up a million aplece for us, Tf wiil|came clear to him; he saw the dreadful , relentlessly, sparing not a detail, hohe wax hanging; | He told her of his a down—take 1 ‘Then the mother sighed as she stroked his head, Saying softly: "I never shall Hth 13-4 yards plain material = loving to learn Leased inp Mix will, to "Cashier, The World, jin New York City.” vant ne wea leavt oda Chicago but a little | Mackay ac A seemed | furnish all the money and credit neces-| precipice over w ening from tho Tata ine ree TeNtIa ne 5 « when he met Rernics | only too x M 1s Al sary, All you need do ts to give mo the | ll of the struggles and successes, the| nightmare of excitement and dissipa- Andiliatlovesintoh ms She lived in luxurious apart-| broker on the shady side of fifty, but information. You will not be known In| sacrifices and trittmphs of hiv long and | tion, through the memory of her good~ still. to Rab with an eminently respectable) was well preserved. the matter at all-and as a boi That child went to bed with- Australian papers the | him ring aunt, and her home waa a fa- Night after night he got deoper| will tear up those ttle 1. O. U's, of} back to him A vision of girl with} her he had come ret for forgiveness out a sigh, us welarduouw life in the Southwest came] ness and beauty and strength, He told : turning domestic cats] maiden whose brown tvex and brisht|vorite rendezvous for the gay crowd of|in debt to Mackay, who was unfailing | you brown eyes arose, He thought he heard | but for advice, When he had finished, : And will love relizion—by and districts has proved| enule had ao cheered tghtened | young men with whom Turley found]|in his offers of accommodation-taking! Turley found no diMculty the next day|again her words of advice and’ en-|she raid: © by. during the years of his struggles. | himself assoctated ‘This woman at) always, however, his I. O, U. Finally hejin ascertaining the plans of his firm. |couragement, constantly dwelling upon ‘Well, Teddy, I guess we can begin “You are going to a uew Iife, Teddy,” ‘once exercised the strongest sort of an] was compelled to face the cold fact that 'So strong was the confilaence in him that! the advisability and necessity of belng!over again.” 6 oe