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THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, JUNE 10, 1901 TH SUMMER WAS MADE FOR LOVERS | AND FOR A FEW OTHERS. Shee E DON’T-KNOCK CLUB. By FRANK PARKER. , ishing Compa ost-Oilce at New ¥ hed by red at the SOME REMARKS ABOUT MARRIAGE BY AN ENGLISHMAN IN NEW YORK. rk as Hecond-C! day World Lavinia Hart had a very amusing 5 In vesterday’s Su Pl report of her conversation with the Rev. E. J. Hardy, the English- man who won fume by writing “How to Be Happy Though Mar- +lried.” Here are some of the Rev. Hardy’: remarks: g Get married; marry early If possible, often If Qecccceseeesed necessary; but keep married. ‘ $A PEW MAXIMS? very one who marries {s disillusioned; and the ° ABOUT $ omannuace. Qecccccccccceg It is better to have a fortune In your wife than . $ sooner the better. with her. a bad marriage may be better than celibacy. It's a great pity that American women are not all men. They are too vlever to make good wives. Your whole American life {s against the {deal marriage. You live too quickly. You spend too much. You want too much. American women want i arth, The secret of being happy Hes not in how much we can get, but in how “an do without. much we The generosity of the American man and ‘his willingness to slave for his wife are perverted from their original good intention in two ways; first, he deprives himself of the time to become cultured and clever, and so unfits himself for compantonship with his wife, while she is rapidly progressing; second, he deprives her of the sweetest pleasare In Hfe—self-sacrifice. In these ¢ ner and r the picture of the Rev. Hardy—long white whiskers and the patriarchal type of feature The Rey. Hi lar in this land, with its ality, for freedom, with its resentfuln responsibilities, ties, bonds, stability. srvations vou recog at once the forei are fully prepared fe rdy's views will not be popu- Joceccccccceen ion for individu- of THE WAnDY In ne country in the world is marriage in 2 | deccccccccceeo pees \ A such a preearions state as in this. And in no 2 ]eountry in the world is happiness—whieb always means repose | } p)rarely an ideal. A nervous, restless, impatient people we ar \ ; t [blindly devoted to “getting on in the world,” almost insolently | 0 3 P]eontemptuous of traditions and institutions. We want something = NO. 8—-THE THRE E-PLATOON SYSTE IS ALL RIGHT, 3 Juew and we want it quick, and we will have it at any cost. Y & How I knoe! the poor i n, th lomy duty ws to piense men, iood! Bad¢ [tis not necessary or profitable to try to decide. i 3 eS Bere eae veal ze are : H ia i ee Bs : ies It is sufficient that we are so and that nothing will change us. | ies For the Knock that copped the eoppers isn’t Knocking any more ; “ = | on Sketch.) £ es we NSE SO PAN ELIE NUS Sed Reha thes RCE Se a ar ree a ee IF THIS GRAY COACH HAD EYES >? Here Are Two Points of View of Blissful Moments in a Sylvan Shade. : SOME : SECRETS OF BE AUTY REVEALED BY AN EXPERT, day George Washington's chariot of state—the great gray |p SR Ty = P : u a HARRIET HUBBARD AYER, [coach in which he eramped his long legs while on journeys of core- THE EVENING WORLD S BIG LET | ER CLUB. al} yim Mada dee. wn Inent of & 7 ale it wht ‘ owinar dau © ay ° * . o een ele Tnsitionirer une lap TE tel PAR HSE A ea NR vate} mony—starts from New York to return home to Mount Vernon, © Less Dust. an battery in his window, and] century, but has no more place in this | ' Head tis Kevecal shay If it had eyes, what changes it would see }7 2% Baur ot Te ringing was heard through the/one than a mailed Visigoth would have atid ‘i rke there anything that will keopl @eece eset cited : “i i For the benetit e building. E. J. | in a village prayer meeting. Lilees 1 je) erie? FANNY. fy ne aenestty along the way! paying high r Wants More Benches. ARTHUR A. VARDER. eintion 11 is very ee tand why tie | SHOW THE CONCH E es . @ ‘ parhy Por Ea ee : | > from my hea SPER CeTA KS eau | ror eCAME AND Hows When Washington came to New York tothe etsy te ae en FRNA CeTR TNE oU a ten ‘The Moving Habit. 3 u i 1 y ’ Fi ‘ Savon 0 of 5 e = Yought to ro on fgeleffectiye temporar it cant " rived yer So ¢ be inaugurated he rode north day after day athe summer weather, what Is the matter meres reat aaa eene no longer t where with a few more benches (not only Gut of the pe 1 Deecccccccccs 2 bags 8 I wit anit past tiny villages, where now are cities, as far piic, The se sduwlth' | Mrsearwomen (ana iiehildreni cia bute for aut the Bastia flags are tanealta the H rae t 1. MC frequent n abundance . Y ” . Ways tying River- Saints okie nEEBie partlament of man—the eration o: U on) tor! y« ker shat iti attueefts South Amboy, ‘There the coach was loaded on a “flat,” while the ing) nlageting NowsVorks| testacmey cette Woe Hs Bridge] th. wortd—then methinks felbe will { tor whould ’ toe al dilated am wate at i Lr nactige passenger took a barge with rowers that landed him at the Battery. pt ome tdressest EDESTRIAN. seats) tale moving arene be ite lis remedy for your nervousie arr ay 1 er the 4 ty. 2 perc oT hwith fresh cand it ts v4 fs of the most ancteat ez. 4 The raitat Mil hed tadmtad aeumtane | ruaibeT ‘ Malleiiucrenaea| Coach and President came through the “ills,” but they saw jing to become dirty on account Why Do toast can't atlr from your house without run- yalksl! night lela, arei MAN ee shot ‘ ‘ rok RR rh fow imaged Ty the Hiitor of The Evening World: ning headlong into a huge moving van. BME cues knowing: a ae Q vou | ( \ externa) {Of Fersey City only a village clustered around a sloop ferry. Brook-|waten is Si Pact in Risores Why do the theatres clone {n summer? | In every block are these wagons, ob- Forbibamaquliesincomporentlisndvise Sy Aare aia : ut ‘ UALS even wil Ten day huddled away below its present City Tall. | New York was Ac ples by th nd stay in town all) structing the thoroughfares by thelr , you. ee is Vent we cator, 1 ity approve ot | ¢ Nees i ‘i 1 an le enormous proportions, True, moving Aearran lbene lol en tewen liben ect 1 nan is fall within fifteen minutes’ walk of the landing stage. Creare a at such times men must carn a living, just the samo To Maintain aw Sweet Breath 1 Nea nets e : ‘ a er worl ee AO WILLTRER: whiiean'ti| wav aus tetleri orca tiven huttetient ey, Cet at Aye ‘ t Neate Of date the coach has been staying on the Bronx. When it Hest a] ens ut pale cu vhy must they herd in vi ite |are employed unnecessarily the thing Fee Areal OU a ED y method | went thither with Washington (whe spelled it‘ B-r-n-n-k-s") it 2 is perteetly Justin the | becomes a nulrance, Why don't people ae : 1. for {ze good Hearn to remain In tholr present quarters sive breath, as! there tx w can be maintain: a: HE wou 7, decayed teeth, 3 arth. Yo: cause and tre I give you a t wash, This will prove tem r fective, but | Js often di8-) theatres: In summ nd 1 know hun- {as jong as they possinle can? toby burgiar-lands moce who would, Lea. LOUIS A. KERPEN. A Rrutat Naree, To the Eatltor of The Evening Worl@: Walle sitting In Mount: Morris Parts one afternoon 1 observed a nurse girl treat a child so ernelly it brought the ars to my “, Not knowing whose threaded miles of forest. [t returns through continuons city streets, It crosses the Hudson on a ferry-boat driven by steam to 3} stops for repairs within mers that ¢ ina week; will resume ra marvellous fire-driven ¢ few hours over the read on which it}, great city that in its youth did not e supplant 1s with electric ade ywothat hot weath wil have to keep the! and it whl be eultom an st hailing distance of sin to re net do away with windows « neon as a passenger this time, its journe, cure wht! | ce that will whisk it in inement was last’ month by fnuisnnee and utterly ish the plod- Tithingwaet ti puciehtel in (your value Distilled w toiled and ereaked and groaned as many days. of my tenants to whom Thad rented | ding r from New York?) Th ( hoping the mother may see bil ett part of im horse all right in the pastl i: phe child, a girl | suppose, was in sement, This p a ol, TH cen ? Bale i What a trip for the old coach! ae oxtd design and was about fa go-cart Borax, 1 gram — = —< = = | ee lcame rAE TE SAC: Picture Puzzle. Heiven or elghteen months old, ‘The eo. ‘SOME OF THE FUN OF THE DAV. 3 nee if girl enough to injure r THE WAY THEY LOOK AT rT. Mr. Brown—If I should think one thing and another man should think just the opposite, and he should give me &@ because IU turned out my opinion was betior |than his, you wouldn't mind, would you, dear? OF : why should 17 Mr. Brown t's Jus what I thought, dear; but it happened the other way. | gave Smith a fifty becaure hia opinion appeared to be the beat. Mrs, Hrown—You wretoh! You've been gambling again!—Boston Transcript. A DISHOF'S HUMOR, p Dear Mrs. Ayer Kindly give me some eff for removing }ine: fe under the eyes. night for the sleep dnd irre; 4 caused these defacements, C. B.D. | lite, Mothers should keep an eye oa their nursegiris, A MOTHER. THREE RECIPES Abb IN SEASON. Shred cabbage as for cok slaw. os OU have given the cause ¢ a black circlgs. The sometimes hereditary Pe Mnes are usually due to some congestia Boar iarvettorcrine anal coreacsly A person, for the sake, no doubt, of argument, once drew attention to the fact } Hot Dearie ine bou= ¥ Mf ever found, excepting unter one or | that some men calling themaclves atnelsts seemed to Irad moral lives, and Phil- Slaw. SU ery waived Vormige, ay more of the following cir lips Brooks promptly disposed of it. ana mecook’ ‘until When the subject ts ie evi nave)tori said he. ‘They have no God to forgive them if they don’ | sence. eae A SS | i over 't a sauce made with two level tea- { core a NO SUGAN IN HIS, “LAfe in growing more and more bitter,” sald the melancholy youth. suppose you are right,” answered the amiable friend. “I notice that no- hody says ‘You bet your aweet life’ the way thay used to when I was a boy..- Washington Star. * Is of butler, one-half teaspoonful of salt, three-fourths of a cupful of vin- egar and a little white and cayenne pep- per. Lot the hot slaw stand on the back of the range for five minutes before sorving. OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. | —__ The Evening World's Daily Fashion Hint. t. 0 Boll the sen { Baked ach and ad : fine, Add the $ Spinach. beaten yolks of vere two exes, a ta- blespoonful of melted butter, pepper and silt to taste, Set this mixture away to cool, mn cold, beat into Ita halt a gle of ercam and the frothed whites of tareo - eggs. Turn Into a buttered pudding dish, ‘The boys are playing tall, but where {s the umpire? fad bake quickly ina hot oven to a ght erve as soon as it Is, removed ' Antiquity Dealer—Madame, this Spanish coin is old—more than 100 years old. Madame—H'm; it ts stamped 1870, Antiquity Dealer—Is that ao? Well, that of course ts a misprint.—Chicago Record Herald, To out these collars for a woman of Medium size 7-3 of a yard of mater! Inches wide, or 3. wide, will be req $70, SS o | wide, with 3-8 yard of mousseline, for tho draped chemisette and collar, with “My wife docan't believe in marrlage. “I regret to hear tha So, In the courting days she belleved everything I told her, but now she Mevex nothings! say,’—Phtladelphta Timea. OVE ON THE STO CK MARKET. = BWW HINRCHSEN =. DAILY LOVE STORY.) oy ce Bi a large table- eae Bc Oe: 4 spoonful of bread ack in hin chatr crumbe with’ sa lady, Lam | tarpoontul of chopped parsley, half ie ‘and how pretty, ;(uaniity of Anely minced onion, and @ ely after the opening of the that cheek. Here {a my address," and | some way. 1 know where I can find) “And here te the other,” sald Lottie, | the other check and can substitute one] producing the forgery, nd GA. ft. was advancing. | she laid a ptece of paper before him. * ner and higher it went and at the | Lottle had, whtle waiting to present| for the other in a minute, Fortinand leaned ¢ Ferdinand estimated that he was|her memorandum, witnessed the for-| ‘But if I fall?” ur looked at her. “TN eat the other check," and her| sure," he thought, ruementatonn hundred thousand to the good. He | gery of the Lesile check and the av- ah 4 saairatsane u Ushet to see his broke: stractton of the money package. This| lips came firmly together. sweet and loyal sho Is, Lottie," ho |favlespoonul of chicken and | tongsye td ratse $5. : WwW you advise?” he asked, she told Ferdinand quietly and “Would you do that for me?" asked, “do you think you could learn to} (m!xec) which has been passea dhrough woult lone att h “Hold by all means, You are | pathetically and then ahe adde: Of course 1 would." love me?" a mincing machine; season with pepper Twely lock came and he move Mt ood a half million. By the way., ‘Mr. Leslie asked to have his book: Ferdinand looked at her admiringly. She blushed and replied, “I am afraid | ind salt, and meiaten the ingredients ot. yeivet sfoton or 2 1-2 yard into she, pay ian tel ean cae inal ty c k was Jammed on to the Mlelhere $9 that $5,000. It was not entered | baianced to-day and he will call for it} “‘You ary a thoroughbred. Ihave little ¢o learn in that direction." | With some well-beaten egg. Cut same Sear ete ares | sentleman went ( ©) package thrust into his|and 1 did not need It. Better take tt." | to-morrow. He will discover tao falso| She smiled sadly and sald, “Don't stop} “Will you be my wife?" ‘hin allces of bacon, smooth them evenly Tiles im as iiius-| Piles of bills on th porket Ferdinand took it check ang I thought I had better tell/to pay compliments, See Mr, Leslie at Ask me again in 2 month.” with a layer of the forcemeat; then roll A ey desks. One pa Id notes ats] Next day he too the $5,00 to his] “1 wiah you would call on me this | you.” once. I'll walt till you get back. Take No, you must marry me right away,|them up and tle with fine white string b CMO, 3,642, elzea small, me-| tracted was not a | broker. evening, Mr. Gallatin,” sald Lottle| Ferdinand walked the Moor nervously.|a carriage. for I/know now that I have loved you | and fry until the bicon {s cooked; @srye All be sent for 10 cents, | large packago, but {t was marked $5,9%.) An anxious man was Ferdinand for|Gray, a lady bookkeoper at his bank,| Finally Lottie exclaimed, “I have it.| In an hour Ferdinand was back in the| for a long time.’ on pieces of fried toast, which sheuld be He picxed up a pen and filled out a t hour, Then the ticker told the|in a low voice as she leaned over his| You go to Mr, Lesite’s hotel to-night,| little boarding-house parlor with tho| “If that ta true,” eald Lottie, “I mus: | Just a little larger than the galls of Dlank check for the amount of ihe The bears had been driven out !desk @ few hours later. ‘It ta about | got @ check from him for 9,000 Jal check. gay yes," 4 bacon, te or