The evening world. Newspaper, June 22, 1901, Page 6

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———————E 17 ATE CAREW ABROAD. No. 5.—The Girl from Over There. ae ot Published by the Press Publishing Company, 83 to 63 PARK ROW, New York. ntered at the Post-Oflce at New York as Second-Class Mat! Matter. MULTI- MILLIONAIRE PEARSONS’ RULES FOR GROWING HUMAN CENTURY PLANTS. There is aman out at Chicago named D. K. Pearsons who has a double distinction. First, he is one of that eminent group of very wealthy Ameri- | Gocccccccccce: }A MAN Wito0 BX. ‘ > ee people in college endowments. { Joo yEans. § His second distinction is that he hopes, | Feccccccecceert expects and is systematically striving to live to he one hundred-years old. He is now eighty-one. With this objoct in view D. K. Pearsons is living by a set of rules which he thinks is calenlated to bring him centenarian hon- ors. As they are by:no means hackneyed rules they are interesting. Here they are in briefest form: 1, Rise at 6 A. M., cat three light meals a day, sleep after dinner for one and a half hours, and go to bed at 8 P. M., giving In all eleven and a half out of every twenty-four hours to sleep. 2. Keep the mind occupied for four ‘hours in the forenoon of each day with the agreeable yot serious business of judiciously giving money to colleges and supervising the investment thereof. 3. Eat no meat, no ples, no cakes, no swects. Live on vegetables and fruits. Make your home on top of a high hill and keep your bedroom win- dows open. Now, this philanthropic Midas of the West may not live a cen- tury by following these rules, but in the main they indicate the | habits which are most conducive to long life. The famous human century plants have thriven by abstemious eating and drinking and, after the four-score line is passed, by culti- vating serenity by day and sound sleep by night. D. KX. Pearsons, varying Ben Franklin, says: ‘Most men dig THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, JUNE 22, iia) cans who have redeemed the multi-millionaire from the reproach of | selfishness by giving their millions back to the| HUNTING IN NEW YORK. By FERDINAND G. LONG. oe ut (RM E- their graves with their teeth.” “Some men,” Franklin said. “Old ao age,” continues Pearsons, “doffends upon , OUR TRET! : ” Seer aramaver $ heredity, common sense and a good stomach. $ oiccens. = $ He might well have added, “and using it well.” Doccceeceocces) Isaac Pitman, inventor of stenography, lived into the nineties, precisely on Pearsons’s dict of fruit, vege- tables and fresh air. Peter Cooper, who ran about as nimbly as a youth when well past ninety, was a light eater, a good sleeper and mentally alert to the last. Gladstone, like Pearsons, laid great stress on sufficient sleep. It was his boast that no debate, however fierce, kept him awake five minutes if he determined to sleep. Grant declared that he was never at his best unless he got nine hours’ sleep ada ‘The best improvement in modern edueation, alike in the col- leges and the schools, is the large amount of attention given to hygiene, health and physical culture—the science of living welléand ‘therefore living long. No longer can our college graduates, nor even our grammar school graduates, say as that great scholar and pioneer of education, Qeececceceecess Horace Mann, said in his infirm old age: “In f HOR ACTEM ANES college I was taught all about the motions of LONDON, June 12.—Miss Edna May's placid charms continue to appeal powerfully to the heart of the $ onsouere, § the planets, as carefully as if they might get British Willleboy, whose Mecca is the e door of the Duke of York’: heatre. When toward evening becceccccceced off the track if I could not trace thoir orbits; but about my own organization, and tho conditions of my own bodily health, T was left in profound ignorance.” THE WOMAN’S HOTEL she drives in the Park it needs but asm amd interpose a convent grating between her sad in their subdued light. stretch of the Imagination to clothe her in the garb of a nun aud the gay young men who love to bask ous eyes 2 109000900600000000609 THE PERPLEXITIES OF LOVERS 5°1¥£2, 2 utero << Aa HUBBARD AYER. é 5 Banas ‘i Love and Foraet-Me-Not? Without your differences it woitt | tn er eeu pauiiaert ai tir iee Between Twentieth and Thietieth streets there will soon he a Signature. “ ah they had noe been re ! iy Tua our if sie does? T erected an experiment which may revolutionize the future of the Dear Mrs. Ayer | ~ - ¥ is i i "4 T ‘About two months ago I broke with o Walking Torether, zap) pty i han cian 3 ae world. This exponent will be twelve stories the gentleman to whom a engaged ' oan Sly Oe ae aaoat $ in height and will look to the superficial glance The reason: He was offer at my Mr Nrda cemerscui very 0 } - : . a sel args goog with my brother (one why he ‘ h , ‘ Ae the et the’ all oo rnow MAN'S : like an ordinary hotel. But in reality it will if .. knows 1s opposed pm him) had to do as my brother wished kind letter which I sent hitn he a that he could not forget so soon, 3 then curtly told him n further, Since Tha’ him until to-day, JCONTAMINATE he twelve stories of women, without a man in sight or hearing. For this is to be a hotel slusively feminine. Blindly imagination gropes toward what will happen in these twelve stories. It sees dimly the hundreds of } women, at peace at last from their arch-enemy, man, becoming swiftly and lovingly aequainted. The snobbishness of man being absent, there are no cliques or sets, but all live on an equal level of mutual affection, Man’s scandal-mongering being a thing of the |p the happy women exert their ingenuity in secing which can invent the pleasantest fictions concerning each other. Since fear of DAILY PICTURE PUZZLE. ed | and Forget- ture. Now, should [ aci thank him for it? 1G F you wish to resume yo! | with the young gentleman writy and say that thank him for the card and you w ke Again. If you have no Aloe 5 — | attracting the brutal admiration of men is now removed, women i OR HOME | begin to take pains in their dress, each striving to deck out some t friend in the sartorial beauties ereated by her aesthetic fancy, DRESSMAKERS. The Fivening World's Fashion Hint. And so on. Imagination faints for joy as the dazzling pros- peets widen. a Houns EVEN wiTn monns. Dobbs—1 wan very muci surprised to-day. Yesterday Miss Paraf™ine told me ‘in't care for me, and yet she stopped mo this morning and gave me a Daily To cut this tucked shirt waist for a miss fourteen yoars of a yarda of material 21 inches wi yards 7 inches wide, 21-2 yards 32 tnehes wide bs—Nothing pecullar about thet. joboa—t think so, Bobbs—I donMt; this ts Decoration Day and you're a ‘dead one''—1 dianapoils Bun. +42 —___ SOCTAL PROBLEM UPSET. “L have heard," remarked the student of social problems, “that in marriage It Goean't cost any more for two to lve than for one.” “Say,” sald the married man, with a worried look, “were you ever the father of twins?—Philadelphia Record, EVE RY- DAY AFFAIR. believed her and sald, with mis- that he was glad to/ A boy where? AN this trunk. Prof I sald and he was tn presto! was BY KENNETA fF. HARRIS. She sent this to her lover by iF brother Bert, and within an | nad recelved the following reply: Don't trubble yourself for eny resans ut some one—| and don't expec’ me tomorrer night or ‘ares more for you|eny more. I kno. Yours rispecttuly, than Jim does and ts in a better post JAMES 1, WILSON. tion. He can surround you with'— So Clara went to work the next morn- Just thon Clara’s little brother came] ing wih her pretty eyes reddened and in and Parker said that he would epeak|her nose swollen, She hurried to to her about that later on and left her| Parker and begged hi to find Jim and In a tumult of varied emotion. explain, Then she thougm of Jim and her‘en-| “Well, It's up to me," he said, “Now wagement and she wrote a note to thelto steer Jim beck tnto the path of Fectitude and sobriety. er young | our ee | and | girl, ding warmth, by Da t with rage, way to the house and} It that hi hear that. the next/ ‘I have always felt a iittle afrald to ly bes} speak," he continued Ading | you can guess who—-c nade Clara. habs nett kirl said ‘The naw him and he of delay. * sald Clarag"'T vhat, Jim, 9 ine to-morr T thought 1’ © to work, Barton enys sie can spare me.” ‘Sure It was Mra, Barton? “I met Jim just now, and he seemed mad about something." “Oh, Jim doesn't count, i tomsing her head coquettishly, where- upon Parker, who was inexperienced, and who had in his mind a: picture of his young bookkeeper who had been sighing in hopeless love for this same ay from him and tapped Jently with her foot, “Oh, ne awful tired," she said, “Mr, Parkef never sald one word out of i AMR, see 12, 14 and che commog to m It was upfortunate chat Jim, as he forta, |\eft the hofise, should have run right : Marker. Tho lover the floor imp 44 laches wide will be re-| you make T can't be with you to- morrow night only for a minute after I come home. I will cell you the reason | the when Ieee you. Your loving CLARA. eo. ten o'clock et Steintois's Garden one the fup fowe Deginning, | @: epece is ‘THE KICKERS’ CLUB IN REGULAR SESSION. A HEINOUS LAW BREAKER. Our vigilant police always see their duty when a crime is committed by a tiny law-breaker, but they never sec where they come !n when a traction corporation runs {ts cars through the streets at express sperd, endangering and taking the lives of innocent children. ¢ Kick Against “No Smoking.” wishes the car to stop. ‘This sort of, the man In covery sort of case and j}v» =; ople does not accm to think the con: | damage money kothe woman; no ma her ge. itor {ot Tne} Revealing sWorld Miele fe human, but tsa peraon whose how palpable a ie she has told. , T could kick for a day at the preju-|'main object 4m to snatch nickels: © HOWAND ICELTY, diced way that folks nail up the legend CaNDUCTOR. Kick Against Proud Mammas. To the Editor of The 1 kiek because haut their infantile prodigy children In- 'o Smoking.” Gao the ferries and in the bridge cars as well, that sign on our notice they're poking. They'd think Kick Agatnat Chiv ot The Evening M Irie Jurors. atng World: jen whom I call on rial (about the old-time ten- it no Joki r " Ke. Pee aH Cth Ae aL Oe dew cae In favor ot room and make them apeak pie # And It's Suet etrikl: Ly me,that thin slgn rr how alight Viquasian ane E08 he cup Qumht to bo the Neat of strenuaus aT laktnsviirats wack wa prefaced eayings of thelr HF Klok Againat + ah F mruck on tha: subject of | Kick Againat Siumbrows THekete To the Edltor of The Evening World esi ene Tent ae Seller, I wish to register a kick against the} ie ne “an tok | 72 tw Dn of Toe Evening World: person who whistles or “slsnes at ay ine the oc: I kick against a ticket selier on one condyetor when he wishes a transfer] xii) lends the av the downtown wtations of the Third the conductor that he’ geod idiots and true Hio's the aleeplest, laziest, nt cuss that ever happened. y train mornings. He ts chalr, apparently he reaches for my ¢ gives me oa ticket, slumbrourly he wafts out my change, te he train 13 nearly as foe if loesn’t wake nd him out @ good switt swat e mornings that'll wake him 1UR PAYNE BELSTONEL k Aguinat Push Carte. ue Kdltor of The ing Worldt Is there a law to exclude the Italiane with thelr push carts from Fifth ave nue? It would seem that this fs the case, as they all scatter at aight of a policeman, and when he disappears around the corner they Immediately fall back ‘ax were,” Why not hang up a push cd@t man or two on a lamp post ay these frequented polnts In order to scare the others off? ‘Thera is wurely kick coming. . C. Kick Agninst Man Who Shoves. To the tatitar ef The Mvening Werld: Tho man who ahoves his way past you ina crowd deserves a nice, gilt: edged Kick nll to himself. He Brite: “Yaaike to isk hin titerally. as weil as literarily. FIVE-FERT-EIGHT. Kick Against “Xo standing! Ordle nance. To the Ejlitor of The ing World, So we can't atand up In open cars any more, eh? Well, I kick. For tt won't mean a big increase in the number of or to notify NEW YORK TYPES. WILLIE OFF THE YACHT. This yachtsman cruises up and_ down Snailic Transit cars run. It will merely rs mean that we'll have to watt on the The waterless streets of Gotham corner for a century or so listening to £ the growing of our, beards a ting, > Town. for a car to pass that doesn't happen The Broadway rounder who, easily spots men, Quickly sizes him up as a yacht- less yachtsman. ‘3 His sailorlike ways no sailor likes, And he treads on each starboard tack he strikes. DAILY LOVE STORY. “We'll sherenade 'er," hp sald, At tho conclusion of the melody Jim stumbled and fell in the gutter and laid there very quietly. All at once there is a rush to the cor- ner of the room and a crash, as of an overturned table and breaking ‘slasses. Evidently Jim ia hard to persuade into the path, for ho Is frantically attempting to bruise the countenance of his would- be persuader, Parker, who {x contenting himsel¢ with parrying the blows aimed at him until Jim lands, Then Parker breaks from the shirt-sleeved man who ts largely responsible and in a minute or two Jim is on the Moor, It- was nearly midnight when Clara left, the workrooms. At the corner of cher! home street ahe stopped, for is front @ man was sig-sagging alo! the policeman brought him to the scence he was surprised, for he had known Clara from ‘the time she had first come to the ward—a bit of a girleen, Ho “had niver Ixpicted to see the likes of her settin’ an.th' coorb, houldin’ a drunk im her arrms an’ tell! to him that eho foved him an' beggin’ him to openk to her wance. Women," ald Policeman Sullivan, square creatures: an’ harrd to. singe. fo'be oa full ar if it were twice as Tall, Btanding Is better than walting, ANTI-WAIT. nhiritislebieiebeicteiel-fel LOVE IS NOT BLIND, OVE Is not blind, but sees through all disguise, And that fg why we hear from day to day Of oda engagements causing much surprise, And weddings passing strange in every “What can sho sec in him!" the critics say; Love is not blind, but sees through all disguise; “Tis those who cannot use~his Roentgen ray At: whom Love laughs and leaves them to surmise I find in you what all true lovers prize; You find In me all T was meant to be; Love is not blind, ou: through all dleguise, - And finds the charm—com- patibility. And-so; when comes the Jay sae wo ara wed, We'll smile at those who think ° themselves more wise. —Pailedelphia Spahr eertinie Frat eons

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