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gerne ny eee ope 4 x ATE CAREW ABROAD. . 3—Paderewski as a Composer. DRESDEN, May 30.—Many debut as a composer of grand opera. hailed. They fairly let themselve thirty-four calls that the composer first and ten after the second act. ader Brown stronger upon him since the death his little son. bowed his acknowledgment: with the gravity of one w! {s passionate and beautiful, well fitted to the gypsy trage predict a lasting stccess for the opera, SOME SECRETS OF BEAUTY ®” acclamations with which ponstble for at least seventeen Their voices dominated the ind I'm sure they were r nid of the jp re coived at th ski t ‘There was no elation pose heart is eleewhere, y round which the libretto is woven, take, or will it make the fac K [with water and a pure hygiente s resser who understands THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNE 19, 1901. an admirers of Paderewski flocked to Dresden to witness his *Manru” was of the ormance—not counting elght after the ok these honors with the sad, mystical alr which has in his manner, The music of Manrn” Musictans He EALED BY AN EXPERT, HARRIET HUBBARD AYER, Formala for Fosaut! Cream. jin ointment boxes. Apply a very little (water, Let ft stand untilecold, strain Deer Mrs. Ayer the off to each pimple. Make the ap: ! and add 4 ounces of Jamatea rum, Kindly publish the Fonsat! cream re-/ plication at night and let the cream res) If you are soing to dye your hatr 1 clipe. 1x sulphur and molasse Jto/imain on until morning, Wash | i! feck the rervices of a applying a " out? DOK. | Sulphur and motasses will not make | y VE y Mossatl ttims face break out | a 3 Diack ‘Te 7 take for women to attempt ton Be: Lanoline, & grams; sweet alm maf saith lecbarneraee ernie lpr ae ke women to attempt to make ofl, 6 grams; sulphur, it h pe ret pd i : eal fants Iyem, @ o-attempt to apply any grams; oxide of'zinc, 21-2 plete wendy Riveting, ality Fening |dye tersonally 5 extract, 1-2 gram. Place the nur | | Flin Darkening Lotion.-Rust a: and the zine first in the mortar, then pot ye dram; ht a ne pint: oll & add the almond oil, a iit NSTAN Wary drops 1 Jarken the formu tt: you the v for va wish and OR HOME i DRESSMAKERS. | | The Evening World's Daily| Fashion Hint. To cut this apron for a of age, 3 yards 1 wide will be re Warsaw ryin’ t Adame m yer Rrudder Var the « will darken. to lone yer leg? 1 er load ov buckshot NO. 14,547. Published by the Preas Publishing Company, 53 to @ PARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Post-OMice at New York as Second-Class Mail Matt THE ACCUSED MAN WHO FAILS TO TESTIFY IN HIS OWN BEHALF. Tt used to be the law that an accused person could not take the witness stand in his own behalf. ‘This was obviously in the interest of injustice. Tt was a part of the old ¢ al procedure which was based upon the theory that ned to fix imi any one upon whom the State haz Liececcccccceess A PENDULOW $0 suspicions eyes was guilty and ought to be pre THAT SWINGS 8 outed from eseaping if possible y 3 se f if possible. Too Fant 3 4 5 ¢ OTHER WAY. ¢ In the reaction from the old oppressive Deccccecccooess of administering so-called justice, in the effort to prevent the State from tyrannizing through the courts, this rule of procedure was abolished, cent man is the best possible witness for himself. any accused person now has the right to testify in his own cause. But it was felt that there might be cireumstances in which an innocent man might not wish to avail himself of this right. So, in an extreme of tenderness, it was made law Mat the fact that an ac- cused person did not take the stand in his own behalf could not be used against him. Instead of this sweeping rule, as conducive to injustice in the direction of license to crime as the old rule was to injustice in the direction of oppression, there ought to have been, there ought to be, a rule nearer to common eense. The silence of the accused ought to be taken into consideration in some just, sensible way. When an accused person sits in court day after day, in good health, in full possession of all his faculties, yet does not go upon the witness stand, what does common sense euy ? Tt was recognized that an inno- And therefore THE LAW : SHOULD KE DROUGHT INTO LINE wir 3 COMMON SENSE. + Gecccccccccced to testify—other than his guilt—do not his lawyers always produce that reason and lay the greatest stress upon it? MAN, “THE CIVILIZER.” British explorers, returning from Uganda, in Africa, report a great tract of country in which tho animals ure as tame as the deer in English parks. Zebras and antelopes approached fearlessly to within ten yards of the explorers’ caravan. Lions pursued the { WHERE THE business of earning their own living and paid 3 MeN alae 3 no attention to the visiting bipeds. The beasts ! DEGUN. $ in general wero so fearless and half friendly Qeececccccccet that it would have been butchery rather than sport to shoot them. ; What has led to these conditions? Merely the prolonged absence of Man, “the Civilizer.” What is needed to change things to the normal state? An in- vasion by Man with his impulse to kill. THE GENTLER SEX. Yesterday's paper tells how a little court-room was packed with u crowding mass of women. Tt tells how a man entered that court-room who, whether inno- cent or not, was charged with the greatest wrong whieh a man can doa woman: how a woman entered that court- cece: ¢ Wry po THE ¢ yoom who, whether truthfully or not, swears : womens H that she is the vietim of this wron avant ri $ that she is th 8 g. Swern KE 3 Tt tells how the crowding women cast Qeecccccccccey tearful glances of sympathy and compassion on the man, while they eved the woman with cold hostility. An interesting study in the mentality of the gentler sex. The three historic miles from Athens to the Piraeus, its sea- port, between the protecting Long Walls, were the Old World’s most famous lane of glory. The pomp of great processions passed there from sea to citadel; children shricked ag they ran the news of Salamis; veiled women for pride in their conquering race half for- got to keen their dead. What other sights and sounds the old lane will know when trolley cars made in New Jersey go plunging through its powdery If there is a valid reason for his failure || THE TRAVELS OF THE TROLLEY CAR.| «sCITTING IN By FERDINAND G. LONG LNTROSPECTION SIL: NCE.” Miss Maida Craigen has suggested to members of the Professional Woman's League a sure cure for woe-welghted souls. Ne Ww fo Go Dack to the Coun- try. To the Biiltor of The Gvening World: ‘Twenty-five years ago I left a country village and came to this city. Now I am alone, save fop my boy; have enough means to afford a gmail Income, ani wish to Ko back to the land, the woods and the water, where I spent the hap- Piest hours of my life. Can some one of your readers let me know of a local- {ty a few hours from New York where there in fiehing and hunting and enough Rood #011 to raise eome food? RUSTICUS, jah Juatice. Seite Bri To the Editor of The Evening World A man killed a girl on Yarmouth Beach, Ragland, last September, und before March 1 hls body was disintegrating in quicklime under the cellars of Norwich Jal. Another man in England killed a air! on a train in November and was executed by hanging in February. three months after the perpetratt Nis crime, Justice moves quick and sure in Bneland, but ts very slow in New Yerk. BLIND JUSTICE, “Scores New York To the FAltor of The Eventi In answer to" en's” letter In which he says tre of American civiltzation ta at Ro: ton, Philadelphia ew York. beg to ask him Where do all our ama: men come from? Nearer to being a any in the Unit find Just ax much s white dust, beating out with wheels and gongs the song of the victory of the electric age! Trolley ears have odd experiences in the van of that victory. Arm in arm with Bedouin camels and Boston bieyeles and little gray they dodge the blind beggars and the water-sellers out from Cairo toward the Pyramids. With two rear seats curtained off for women, and marked “Harem” by good American’ stencils, they round the,Golden Horn in Constantinople. Shem, Ham and Japhet ride in them in the world’s odd corners. The Parthenon and the Pyramids compare notes about them. Tho Yankee trolley car is helping to annex the oldest parts of the Old World to the twentieth century. Qeccccecccesen ROTHIC yetaht, 1901, by Dat LAUDE Story Pah Bin ANGUS HPMING RWay reper Me fr A matriment bargain must tde: oratorio work and sweetne Bhe xdore! W ear ! 4 * s ideals; his) would | be mine have made a inost excellent wife for) his way, but Vow Hemingway ff thetr warring tastes could | was all off, B and 13-4 yarde of narrow insertion| have been reconciles, but that seemed | Hemingway trim ‘as illustrated, imposnible. A friend once said to the|ly raging, leaving Mary hse | man: doors and fuming. pattern (No. 3,555, alzes 6, 8, 10) ‘for 10 cents, “This disagreement ix the best thing | continued right away. A married couple which | end save in the di é ‘3 for a year or two. to/Caghter, The World| that could happen to you. Marry her| seemed to be no Ikellhood that It would ty cause of wrangle te ey ed this to his sweet: | 1 that it takes two to| they went to Pegulg-on-Upper-Skawmp | figures for the people dancing on the for- She maid: ngree with Is must be and dislikes: must Neethoven was well enough Inj ue and too sleepy to do aught save re- ifteen minutes later] lasted until the lights of Boston were rhed the street, jnward-| fn raght, Then they awoke with Eurydice tn- This fugue of love There th of one oF both of] pipe? Its nete, I should easy, is B major, | virt sate two octaves below the middle B." She sald: “I have been rapt in the fy calling the the parties, In middle June he asked her to eail with him to Nantasket Beach, Then|tones of the man who | | for a light refection of lobster and tea, | Ward deck. He has a voice best suited | The result of this was that when) to the tenor role of ‘Lohengrin.’ | they poarded the boat for thelr zeturn| Iemingway klieked out one leg vio- fuat at dusk they were too tired to ar-|lentis. “Those Wagnenan roles," he re- cline in steamer chair and dream. THIS! marked, “are teaponsible for the ruin of many good voices and the explolta- tion of many hideous ones.’ “And,” she riposted, “If men or ‘women devote themselves to the frane hummings and dronings of Beethoven their lack of musical ear i9 rather a ue," Prey start, A little chilled, and began to talk. He sald: “How bright are the stars! Do you catch the deep monotone of that steam- a } There boys have broken a window. A FUGUE OF LOVE. # ave cannes & DAILY LOVE STORY. “Misa Barket “Mr. Homingway. “Your asperity Is unwomanl:; “Your remark is both brutal and im- puttent Ne rose; she rose: both,glared; her bosom heaved quickly; he was white and the fingers-of his left hand clinched frantically in his long halr, A small, round, dark, fat man inter- rupted them, "Pardon! I am Etalian, I haf 20 my leeving. I over- hear-a you, Ze signor lof Beethov’; ze sigfhorina lof Vognare. Leesen-a to me; Beethov’ ees, German-a bore; Vognare js German cras-fool Leesen: 1 lof-a, 4] shirt waists, I heartily approve of the have ween | aper in n long time, Tread tt notimes, and have idted It a ference, It shoul! be reprinted ry paper in ; Nev, ax on Fifth avenue, 1 am 4 Now Yorker, also, but read and have travelled, RV. A Plea for the Shirt Walat. | To the Falitor of The Evening World As to the question of m wearing comfortable garment, and [ know that fter a short trial of same by men the women, whom we should pleas wilh adinire them, as we so sincerely ad- mire theirs. Lot us popularize waist for men by wt approval. ‘Tats can b those which are neat ROG IRE: Praine for To the Eaitoy Your “To-Y he Inpa. {The Evening World orlal with extracts from the ‘at of Toklo was the best thing [ athing has such a It consists of sltting an hour or so each day in silence and wading through one's deep thoughts. But where is the woman this side of ninet THE EVENING WORLD’S BIG LETTER CLU ‘ental tb der that |Ortent? hren so well?” Is there was trou! y SECORMACK. t-0ices, | ‘ seals: Early-Cloeing Pe To the baie | Why shouta yP st-olllces. hour?) They of Tue Evening Workt post-ottices, all brant anearly) | are supported dy a richy——-+ ernment that could well afford a) » staft “and rat the! 40 op on for twenty-four hours Then why not? It would Ix the Govern the peop! nyenience NSHAW. the ¢ of Weard, To the fditer 0 ening World What hax become of aletinguished looking goatee? Whi ous looking side wh » ts xiving place ropped up> thin rate, is obgole necktle of our the parsing at years, ought to feel I imagine that those Orientals Knew their plous (re SOME CHANGES |! bb UGuT” 2 Fe "fe of A course Voit is Hise otfensive to paresis, night) te corr 1 1 has DAILY PICTURE PUZZLE. came to stay, and all the pt world, reinforced by the t + In the shane girl | 2. ‘Aan you find the angry old lady. me, Verd!, Donizettl, Maxengni—o'vy wich he end In Hemingway swiped at him savagely wkh a music roll, which never forxook him. Miss Barker caromed upon him with a brown parasol, ‘The Italian fled to the crowded saloon, much insulted, ‘As the man andthe woman walked ¢ lipon the wharf she was | she looked up at him shy! Argument ta vain, and ridiguious thinga even in music, don't you think 2” ‘or answer hs mid: roth Bellini, Rossini, sweet-a Etallan name ‘Beethoven was almost di- ne! ‘The Italian’ went to bed and in the tonic of the “Tower Bong." with. out knowing the good he had done, N THE LANGU there are nome | ; “Vogner was| cannot vent | yposite are confusing, but pubs cCemania the two uses of seo ts the nitial “4 worn off, eo dtd it lttie estlly AL tower net custom and ¢ It ima ead fet perhaps tha fete are not very Influential of speech or of the wr ndsthe same thing win where they h tional v trouble with 50 Ken as * and tt niust f the language ts not retention of the initial of pronunciatlo nibbed {t—from the a | pher, The battle of ally lost, The ald phone girly wax summoned too annot be recovered. eu case that This FRIENDS, TAKE my friends Av gifts God sends 1 them ever dea: We part Stil in my heart Their memorten I revere. l We never lose The friends we choose Tho’ death may claim Its own; For dear friends here Will all meet there— In the eternal home, Friendship and love Come from above, And ancred should be kept; For love Chriat died, For friends He sighed, For Lazarus He wept. O proud should we, o Lord, ever be ‘When prayera to Heaven ascend, To raire our eyes $ ® Up to the skles : $ And call Christ our friend, f JULIA A. SPRATT, 7 ‘ $40!