The evening world. Newspaper, June 26, 1901, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

i ain ipa ‘paso i THE W iii ia antl INTS TO MAYORALTY CANDIDATES. wt «© (HAIRS IN PARKS FIVE CENTS.” By CAMPBELL CORY. No. 1. - By FERDINAND G. LONG. 3 aeresesessesesse DesTRT;ERIENETT IT FAvIR00% Perttiiay CR i eee Anke ROW, Naw Yoru |g09S9°8OPESCRCCES BI9STCTSGIISESITE 999CSSOIIBI IONS OF 190977 SIIC=8TS BEsBOSaN te. nd-Class Mall Matter. tered at the Post-Oflice at New Yo: |MORE SEATS IN THE CENTRAL PARK— , BUT NOT FOR CLAUSEN'S CONTRACTOR. AAAEORPASLOSEDDA RIDE ESS 'PODHOE COPSHESO POR ESE SE SOPOOEREOSESRES SE: ZS WAMMOCKS Z \Ocents Ye DAY Mr. Clausen has a right idea. He thinks there-are not enough seats in the Centtal Park, But the remedy sulous—and wor: OLDING He does not propose to put more seats there. Not at all. That esau Deocececcceceess would be too simple. That would be a further ry . 5 5 ros GUTH) S: concession to the notion that the parks belong ° b alte A HIDICU. ¢ {iovs nemepy. $ to the people. [coat te No, he has permitted a private person to put the necessary seats in the park and make the public pay for them. In many European cities there are pay seats in the parks and streets. Burin all of them that are honestly ronducted the city owns the seats, collects the money and uses it for public improvement. That is one way of getting money for public purposes, but @| it is not the democratic, the American, the New York way. M4 Mr. Clausen’s scheme is not for the benefit of the people or the city, but for the benctit of some private contractor who sees a chance to make a good living by getting the right to do for a | consideration something which it is the public duty of Mr. Cl: | to do for nothing. Let us have more seats in Central Park-—seats for the people, not for Mr. Clausen’s contra UNIVERSAL COLLEGE EDUCATION. OFISS FSCS IISSSIHVITSSISITIVSSSGS: sen PU FTSISTSSS TTS FHSS FHSS ISHSISTIFLGIS VSSTISTIIISISSISGT GF ag » » ® a | ° i > ° » e 2 . » > . > iy 9 How widely held is the opinion recently expressed by President Schwab, of the Steel Trust, that a college course is wasted time and energy for the young man who contem-|¥ PRESIDENT SCHWAB OVINKC plates a business career? How much wisdom | is there in it? Sehwab hims not a col- elf, of course, lege graduate. Yon never hear a man who has had the advanta of higher education say that elementary education is just as good. It is always the man \= MORE CONCESSIONS AHEAD? \¢ In olden days when roaming in the park’s:broad woodlands sweet We found rest only on a casual bench for weary feet. But now we'll rent good folding-beds ana hammocks, too, perhaps, A Z, a * ie And poor sufferers from “L''-itis may cling, for rest, to straps. arguing from his own experience. He says in effect to the boys of Deceenenenebecees eseancensoesenens caaseoeeneeeonse “Look at me! My salary is a million dollars a year—and Sri a Ser Ar [Ges mie itn dyn tae senate Wht THE EVENING WORLD'S BIG LETTER CLUB, then, are college training and college degree ymaine Peril. New York. they would understand i neste the great! Why does he not be- nobly he behaved. He js anything but |stow some of his milllons to the induc- ee ne eteniy ing of rallroad officials to build large, a comands ane neuens ‘ rare ae aes aly, open and healthful cars? Confound What Is the good of riding, anyway, nd fle of the Seventy-first New who never was inside a college who thinks colleges are not of much necount, FSSESTSSTSSCSTSSS FHSTTSSSFOITIIIIS GSE: Schwab’s philosophy of education is easy and simple. Te is} io a SEV Ay z: eer ee ‘The Many self-made men are prone to think along those lines.) 5) ae pastor of ‘The Evening Wor Decrccceccoccy They can't help worshipping their creators,| Naw that ice-cream, clams, & . See}: A - vogue and are eaten by :he quant Schwab is just “stuck on himself. you must be suffocated in a vacuum SEDSesessteetOte COSSSEEOSESSEELES EEESESELESSESOSELSESESOSESEESSSENS HOD SESEDEEAALEA ES SELEOEEESASESESEROOLSSESEE ESE SSS: » * ¢ nt educa- To An anti-whistling plank in your platform would incrense your popularity. ~ Jeet. * an APPAADRODOR® : 41. Many a good man has died from] pouir Col, Downe toa PASSENGER. . . Ry ‘ 5 effects of ptomaine poisoning. Be < W. BELMON: Qeececccceeeed of weglth agreeing with Schwab. Carnegie shes effects fote momalne nope ns, K and Rockefeller and Pearsons, to name three examples, by shower- ity of what you eat. Look out for the Wants n Vote Taken. eines Bilge Ci Tas eveoinel sesdzy . * lpn . 7 oy he Ev ‘a oul it be asking too much of some on colleges show that they ure not silly enough to |Biemene. TC sick be carecul of you The & a Ww re 5 think that they owe their vast fortunes to the fact that they were | scarce w ris! fa life. yIntoon system in| that a person can be convicted of mur= only half-educated. On the contrary, they are practically express- Shoe iri| Uerding the} firatadesrec) on) clroumatan, S ‘Tax for Dianster Victimea. ms, pollcy-shops and dives of the - iS bs 4 no mre than Justice to take the vote worst Kind and official blackmallers seers tion, not bees of it—which, of course, is truc Why not tev ps Tt is quite true that in the early days of the Republic there | itzens the results to be used by the ~ For Open 4b Carn, proof? l ‘ os 5 Republic there tating | To the Editor of The Evening World Hot-Weather Food, ; ‘ le of a college. | or penmioning the h tion was a costly luxury in those davs—the rare | such disasters ae that ton, Ash-; The weather Is hot. We are roasting. (tp these red-hot days let me suggest a Good Freckle Wash. fs that the peroxide lege of the few. ADEs) magnates are colning money. Why | way of keeping falrly cool, Leave stews, uw 3 us to look out for the pt t . ( « Volunteers with me, We love and] before you reach home? But you don’t find all the self-made men! ; moderate In eating. Bo aure of the qual- 1 of Company F. A Sarcastio Query. ° ing their mon rae SRR POTYaUCeULentrClarmatte mmisaloner Murphy (be-|brililant reader to explain how It 13 s st s = 5 4 1 evidence when proprietors of poal- ing their belief that they succeeded in spite of their defic er LID is x ean | Z : oAeee - a regular tax on the ‘ A PATROUMAN. often cannot be convicted on. positive ——- = — eaten = —- A.C. R # y . A ve rir | 0 P REVEALED BY AN EXPERT, were many great Americans who never saw the in: Qeveenmentiin aiesoene Aa ¢ i “ . : victims of {x open cars on the “L."" | to the Estttos of T ning World: ‘ HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. | A college educa i tabula and West Virg Muld ounces; pure alcoho, y proves dr youn Dear Mre. Ayert ritating to the skint Jtneture of coohineal, Huld ounce; i Seen sites rs) ers Praises Col Downs. don't they give us some comforts f0F | jaytry, greasy or fried foods alone. Eat Wil you let me know a good in-|tho hair. Use tt pure oliistiiled water, 16 our ‘This imparts Be n Franklin, our great Revolutionary philosopher, statesman |r. we waiter ot Te Krenee Worl! jour nickels? T say “down with the | cold meat (not much sof it, though), expensive remedy for freckles? you desire. Wash the -}to the har an auburn tint and diplomat, had nothing more as a boy than a limited conmon| 1 have read + of Col, Wallace Host EUS Aa aE LAR te ad reciaey L. MT, [tle borax and water you also Instructions for ap- A. Downn's t at the Mount} mace!” If we w al why | id jeave alcoholic drinks alone. You'll ne Mg ton, and would take a ves far better | Hoast henna an ou at the dru d. | Maps ha school education. Alexander Hami Scho edu ation. \lexander Hamilton, our Hone’ Cameiery foremost Revolutionary finane’ gan a col-|ike to say that te lege course, but he left it to join the COSTING Selita eI aT ‘i : : ‘onized. He did his dur and never had a liberal education. Se eines e ‘ and lis lerable difference in the strength 5 man all through the ‘until the mercury !s dissolved. Mop over the coloring qualities of the leaves, sol 4 EDUCATION, Andrew Jackson had no systematic edu-!know that he and b the freckles night and morning. BM | ponte W At It In impossible to tell the exact] Geeeeeeeseeroe® cution at all, cither at college or anywhere }™ chloride ts a dangerous polson and, al- SPEARS EE CATES ONT ; mors AG duagtty of wate pply to the hatr A . A 6 4 though perfectly proper to use as sug. | Vr Me AI |r pester Pent else: and when Harvard College made him an LL. D. it brought hign| Downs’s perronal care before we left | wr ays ia Le ind better developed mind than those fieule. Henry Clay never saw the inside of a college till he m4 OCCA Ae dr a gested, ehould be kept out of the reach f : pa re rn 2 SG) eet at given sone wer It ow!) distgure the skin a tittle, but! only peerreerreree| [taitante TentSEh Sime ome famous as a political leader. DAILY PICTU RE PUZZLE. eutioee ian een dent; short ones, HB formula I give you makes an ex-/ the peroxide with a ¢ cellent wash for freckles: Hichlo- | lepaar the appl ride of mercury in a coarse powder, | tho dediral resi 32 grains; extract of witch hazel, 2] the skin becomes very mu ounces; rose water, 2 ounces. Agitate|then you may apply cond ves? | tind the change delightful. Care| Ec. R RS, Jr. of powdered henna leaves ist's and steep them In per- ‘pint of bolling water. ‘There FORTUNE TObD BY EEATURES. are long and not nar- | Weekly. If they are long and narrow, © knew how many Mberal views, |a weak character Is denoted. Evenly 1 their s « herole virtues, | Krawing teeth show a better disposition ot ignorant pergonsjor onlldren’ yo the hair a slight reddish tint? [care must be taken to avoid gettin the! pid [ Saran ee hair from the face. I think you men- tioned alcohol and peroxide once. I Plead Not Gullty, how tow na lea te eoloring matter the skin, However, rayne . q . . ae pry Ty ee eee tiled hnewniseakann (sca pianadwncenkwtt William Henry Harrison wa fighting Indinns on the far bee Pea velar tear eR Please publish a remedy for removing nove ‘This will color light or white | western frontier, then somewhere in the neighborhood of the city { lower, show a truthful and affectionate THINK you re | gives a rediliss formula for you. 1 Rt Powdeaat bh OU are mistaken in supposing I]y 4 yur Y have recommended alcohol and per-|soaa, 1-4 oxide for the removal of sypertiu- our batr, Peroxide wit! bleach the hal and if {t 1s applied often enough ft wi destroy the constitution of the h will not Kill the growth, The trouble na is also mixed with tr row slightly curling at nature, Ane indicates a Jdgtous nar the outer ed ture. ‘There fs a whole world of tell-tale In- dications In the apex of the ear. If it Hes close to the head the owner pose estes a refined nature. But if the top starts away from the head at a well- fined angle that person has an uneven disposition and Is not to be relied upon, a girl's thumb Hes fat, or droops a , marital submission to the master mind {s Indicated, If the thumb has a ndency to stand at right angles to the hand, the damsel owning it is head- strong. ‘A person of weak character has a pens dent thum); the strong character has a strong erect thumb, Fingers which bend backward mean powerful determination. If they are round, strength, both physl- cal and mental, is Indicated. Stuboy fingers are grasping fingers. Finger nails that are rounded show refinement; If long and rather square at the top, firme aeene an aeiga te one parep Of Cincinnati, at nincteen years of age, and of course was not a bona and enough water to form a] college graduate, Old “Rough and Ready” (Zachary Taylor) went pet piste ‘The effect of this ts te produee a) ty school in a log school-house and was most liberally unedueated. : ee ais Millard Fillmore picked up some odds and ends of knowledge, in the common sehools of Cayuga County, N. Y., and was at work in a mill before he was fifteen, Abraham Lincoln’s lack of carly schooling is a familiar story. The author of the immortal speech at Gettysburg—the most famous of all the ‘literary productions of American Presidents—had_ per- haps the smallest educational advantages of them all. He got an edneation, however, and a good one, by digging for it painfully but patiently till he got it." His speeches show that he was a well-read man, familiar with books that are not even to-day commonly read. But everything is relative. ‘The actual cost of a college edu- cation to-day is much smaller than it was e€en twenty years ago. Heneo in these graduation days the colleges whieh dot the coun- try all over, almost as thickly as grammar schools did in the days Reweccoeeeece a WHEN the great men just named were boys, $a DIPLOMA IN ho} we as OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. The Evening World's Daily Fashion Hint. To cut this tucked wh medium size, 4 yards of 3 2 ‘aches wide, 33-8 yurds [7 inches wide, (ye $ are pouring cut liberally educated men by the ness and energy are denoted, ry ¢ thousand, sex . rr. . oOs 2 OBDDOOD ecctoc cc cee eet Tt used to be said of Napoleon’s soldiers ap ecin = that every one of them had a marshal’s baton in his knapsack. And som REIS LIGHT. ¢ it will soon be said of this country that there is a college diploma in - 9) bh ee ripest Re every young American’s pocket. 5 ‘The preatidigitator makes thé duck disappear. Can you find It? Bravely, toward a far-off Murphy goes out callin ght, A GHOST OF THE PAST, svacomeweune DAILY LOVE STORY. #) form Left my soul In gloomy night. i Nance, had told her the first) d out a small drawer tn the top of; her, But one night at the lakeside we) “Oh, how I hage this place. If tt was) thnt she had promised to bear for life. ad attended the Yale law | the desk. Taking out ome letters and | quarrelled, In a momentary madness [| not for my mother 1 woald leave this| Already the final preparations were be- ® Now, Itke Percivale, I wander she at® last. came| pushed her into the water. Her body| spot forever. On moonlight nights I| ing made for the wedding. With Saying, “Not for me this DOGS OOSHHHOGHNHS OGIO HO: | itiful young Jady, Ue | newspaper clippings, ¢ side, was found one | to a large bundle of manuscript ted | was recovered next day, No ono aus-|row my skiff under the shadow of the| blanched cheeks sife stared at the ter- | quest," Tr of the luke, her) with a faded ribbon, One of the pages] pected me. bank"*— rible thing before her. At the bottom of | 3, Wondering tf I ever saw more Gake! dress closely clinging to| was turned back, showing several lines wee ueen®, The lght grew dim. ‘The writing on| the page something was written In a Than a false marah-fire at best. her face shrouded | of the handwriting. Flora held tt closer| My mother Mnally consented to my| the yellow pages fyded from vjews neat, round hand. She brought the page | 4 A wi . sof her chestnut to the light. [t was Evan's careless tun-) going north to a law school. Kind soul, | strong hands seemed to clasp her throat, | Nearer her cye: me Yet, because L missed the hand | ning scrawl that covered the yellow| she never once suspected the cause of | Flora fell Imp to the floor. ‘My Dear Mr, Bentley: We thank you brightness > a bunch of oak leaves. | baper before hers i my moodiness and thought a change! When ‘the girl recovered consctoua- | for the pleasure of reading your’ story | ¢ Shall | claim tt ts not there? 53 out upon the sur-| She cautloucly looked about the room, | of scenery would cause me to forget | ness the sunbenma were poyring and regret-that it ta unavallabie tn ita Does a blind man's lle mocking > blushed and the led. No one would | my love for Bessie. In two months the! through tho windows, bathing the’ fur- | jours, pseciail cry fee Prove that lowers are not fair? 2 1 k shadow of the ever kno ihe would have a publle forgot all about the pretty: Ite | nishings of the room in goided radLince, | Flora sprang from her eat with a > rt TT shadowmething HgAt tu read Evan's papers to-morrow. | gitl that committed suicide and’ ceased | Fora placed her hands to her throbbing FY, cf delight. Then whe began tw cry 14, Esowhere, past there heavy % millar In the even stroke o/ | She untied the ribbon and, unroliing | to pity me for loving one so unworthy | temples. Was It all a cream? No, the script, she crammed it viciously into storm-clouds ® oars and Flora thought of the day | Manuacript, spread it out on the desk | of my affection. yellow manugcript Iny on the writing the: drawer, which she closed with a. < _ God Is giving men His day. e1 lover's strong arm had helped | before her, oi ete. Vaenk. The lamp was still burning. The | PAnE Loring, dear.’ called Aunt Let ‘me think that some have ; 5 wi ory for the Yale eens, “Can I ever forget?” The first day at| wretched girl tried to scream, but some-| Exther as she entered the room. “Up found tt V pattern (No, 2,862, rlzes 32 to 49)] A short crew Yot 1 will-yes, I must—tell it all.| Yale I me: her on the street. 1 gave! thing secmed to risc up and choke her. ao soon to Well y's u perfect day. Are Though 1 be a castaway. be ee She moved over to the secretary and,| Why I ever quarrelled with Besste I| a startled exclamation when I frat saw | The manuscrip: seemed to fascinate hers CHndeed: | am, aunty, responuea | > —Mary Worthington. eent for 19 cents, mansion, Ux ; “Cashier, Tag World, | ir the etill w i taking 8 ‘sii notebook from her| cannot explain, We had been playmates! her. ‘The fellows thought 1 had gonejagain her eyes were riveted to the lost| wiora, with a becoming ‘blush as she 3.0-46$6-9-60440000060000060 New York Clty." . the story Lcuom, began searching for @ peu. She’ from childhood. She knew that I loved! mad. They say Ivhave a past. page. At the and won) weitten a name turned) to arrapge ber hair, Suddenly she of : ‘ ie

Other pages from this issue: