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Ce ae Te ee Ry ee ne eee Re ee DAILY LOVE STORY. A SLIGHT MISTAKE By WA. NcLEOD RAINE. t, 1901, by Datly Pub. Story Co.) ‘ARRISON examined ¢ greph long and earnestly as ethics of the situatl: comed, G Tp Piney apace renatheppatencet eereritn: <9eer er’ Rass rash . tebbieieiciintelenelel-i-i-! i f + fecbiddicieininieieeieielseel Published by the Press Publishing Company, 83 to 4 PARK ROW, Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Cluss Mall Matter. M. Marcel Prevost, a eleven Frenchman, took recent occ to foresee the passing of the kiss. He looked to the time when Jean | labial caresses of Marie; when the kis become an invisible medal of honor, a tribute | SHES BEAUTY ¢ } VANQUISHED ¢ $ ony Brus. } would no longer be permitted to enjoy the) would | OME ADVANTAGES. | 4 By F. M. HOWARTH. Cs x eT ORIGIN - OF LIFE ‘ AND ITS DECAY. eos | cal, | IAL ANY theories have been advanced to explain the mysteries of the origin, development and“lecay of iife, but none has apparently ht ue mu nearer to the solution Of thoee interesting and dithcult prob- It was found that the same meehani- physical and chemical principles Rovern alike the growth and develop- . “ Qocccccccccces ee as pretty as peaches and as to great deeds. ment of the animal and the plant, and Mke as two peas. I congratulate you if Now M. Prevost has a new dream. He beholds the decay of pp aaht TS I ie rae y old man.” . . coer ts forma 5 jo secret of life Ca a ey ike her looks. T mean the power of woman’s beauty. As published in Paris, his words | ard of t's various changes and manifes- i] her sister for you.” ‘Thanks, awfully. By the way, which to the sister? To me they. look as muc @ilke as the two Drom Blake flushed. “The that I don’t know Glad. They re twins, you know @ne summer in the Adi war (wo years 4&0, became engaged ! T met Gh. jacks, although mt meen her) we ha RRRRRREEFERRRICCEE bear this translation: What nowadays !s demanded 1s brains. The women whom the world Teveres to-day are famous for thelr works, not for their looks, such as the Countess Tolsto!, Mrs. Gladstone and Mrs. Kruger. It is a small world which we live in, a smaller one that M. Pre. vost looks at. But it is a big one over which beauty still reigns, for it is the world of all men’s imagination. Bs ' | MRS. LONG tin to see Mr. Short ou: the with hackground)—It always makes me laugh is wife. tations remained a sealed book. Tho first ray ef light came from the cruck bles of chemistry. The ingenious gas theory of Clausius was the tiest Important step. According y that theory the molecules composing The molecules of ere are moving, at a tem- pergture ) degrees Celstus, with an est!- mated veloctty of 4% metres a second. In the course of their rapid movement ry did you see the other one r A Be ti Andi when jdidiyou) seeithe otnst: If the world has more respect for woman's brains to-day it is the molecules vollide with one another Yast? What's her name, Nell?” asked | 4 > ‘ and every comoact causes a sympathet Garrison. i+ because it has more respect for all brains—and more brains to Ribpsties aca he Patoent pte nie “T never have seen her. ‘They wi] t at roleculm are compared. Both reach town to-morrow.” | respect. etording 816% ClAiia ast thel moleodien: Unfortunately Blake was of a nervous <\nd absolutely brainless beauty is not the kind which really posveas an innate tendency toward ar- Gsposition, and he began to conceive 2 5‘ I (ae PP lntaachiatmanherinn the dreadful results of making a mis- Rececccccccces reigns or lus rcigned. Some of the women Will cause the most perfect equilibrium take. \¢ucr pRaxiess . ro bee! m1 in his of energy. ‘The mon ant faster He did not find the eftuation any more it ae whose charms have been recorded in history | fen ae pant Cae fe or tolersble next day at the depot, where | 3 SVER may have been shallow and vain, but they hud | he had gone to welcome the two sisters | i a Gacieltor towrl Sob (Garrison! wan-on | { anrosen. at least an acuteness and subtlety more than |¥ mauorpatiirnl selection .of) the tok tawiliiush Menreleonktetann survive the fittest and of heredity Ben fa eae = = equal to the minds upon which they worked. apply to the elementary cells they must out of tt He) geemed to take It for granted that Blak: was going to make a mistake, and by the time the train drew in Jim had 2- lowed himself to be badgered Into a con- It is false doctrine that the power of beauty is dead or waning. | Woman should still be taught to cherish beauty, to the end tliat | allied with brain, its reign may be one of blessing. Necessarily * complex or- Darwin has at latter conclusion by a dif- ferent method of reasoning. One of the strongest arguments tn favor of the any gaseous substance are tn a state of © ition nkwhten she isoute hardly iheve ZL} theory of a mechanical busts of Ite to Tecognize own father. the remarkable regularity and symme- y Rlake saw a vision of loveliness de- W try in tructure of animal as well as Pee eee toe, oe wich Ne esses HY NOT EXPLORE AMERICA? BSUS he ptnictice od annel| ae] welies nized at once as Gladys Jim had always erstood that tt was not the proper thing to mute a young woman tn a public place, but for this one occasion he made an excep- Mon. He was going to rhow Bob Gar- ison that lie was not so slow after alll A moment later he looked up to see a wecond Gladys atanding beside him with @ curious amile on her lips. For just a gecond doubt crossed his mind, but then Be smiled complacently. Out went his Band to her tn frank brotherly greet by which he had made wre of hi fdentity was stil! in evidence when th et Ambassador arriving in the Assyrian basement of the British Mu- feum to preside at a lecture on King Alfred. It is the lecture that The discovery of a buried city of great size in the Navajo In- dian reservation is reported. One of its fentures is suid to be a palace THE NEW ol? containing a thousand separate apartments and ae big $ a stone castle of a hundred rooms, the furni- WORLD. i ture whereof is of tho finest woods. Such underground remains must be those Tf we are treading over buried cities, with palaces of a thousand apartments, it might pay us to bring them to light and study the arts, MR. the shade. LONG (mopping his brow)—Yes, but he has advantages over me when the sun comes out. Just ricieininicieieteinfeini-i-t look at him walking in eRe ons ‘This regularity and symmetry of form speaks for the supposition that the herediyary tendency of the molecules to arrange themwelves in such regular forms as are the most Ikely to insure their permanency tn @ Uke manner ex- ists in the higher and complex organ- isms which wo call animals or plants, LETTERS Homes, Not Libraries. ree ate cts DOG Moe of a civilization as old as that of Phuraoh’s Egypt. They suggest Q FROM Blakeldeyoledinimeclf/to. Mise Gleave that perhaps our curiosity for prehistoric finds would be rewarded t ae with a lover-like ardor which left noth ae HE PEOPLE ing to be desired. At the house the| 3 as well or better by digging under the surface of our own continent + . Rei Mal rac rota tp a a ae tas by groping in the dust of the Pyramids or probing subterranean + Utes while they deyetrsed for their x MPA CHORCAT Rene Vonk his oblindeetivamllee toracknow! the t as by groping s 3 $ or p i to make a change of tollet. Luckily for | Ae 7 nage ° Ninev ishaifateuilatUrel Oladyal haulwornvend plaudite of the English, Here in a glimpse of our sooompliahed secrets of old Nineveh. t EVERYBODY’S COLUMN + returned, so that he was sure of his there. . Mr. Harrison delivered in Ameriea during his recent visit. Mr. * < G 2 KAltoy of The Brysiag Worl’: betrothed, otherwise, even he was fora appliances and devices doubtless buried with them. forcediito'contean,/iherw (wisi ndl alin Ohoate proendos it with 4 14 Hituly address in which he epmaks ED as ‘ ; : OO Gi EG Gar a tC at ind to choos between th Ot Alfred having latd the foundation: " x Why not an American as well. as an Egyptian Exploration wealth, I would suggest to Mr. Carnegt eghenaenciosueean ae Alfred having laid the foundations not only of the British Em- 4 . EYP i Thatiie/bulld/sad rendow) homes fort the cHiieny Bike wade Monee pire, but also of that great cmpire-rupublic across the Atlantic, : Fund, for the recovery of the secrets of the perished civilizations aged and tnfirm, Labrasies are of no seed 3 . - R ws Gag W ak mlaulsvatcaeeote nletaeest: Which—te., &e, ad I!h.—with skilful allusions to the ties that bind ‘| of this very old New World? lune ito) old § people:v@: God) showers, heart in thy hail before he left, bur to and hands across tho soa. t uy blessings on such benefactors tn text his surprise he found that young woman at sen eee core WE, womewhat coy. The reason for it = ehhh > Least on. CHEN en ees Cie oO THE DEADLY TUNNEL PROBLEM. For Crosatoven “Li? they were going down the steps her sister called him tack and handed nim A note with a swe -Iike smile. ‘What the note said was this: Jim: Do you re ber once telling me that a woman had no sense of humor, that she could not understand a HERR “Worso thin the Black Hole of C Galena? opinion of the sanitary conditions of the cars as they pass New Yo 9 Porsonovs ASR, ¢ Chaermadates i k Central tunnel, ¢ is Dr. Cyrus Edson’s through the gas-poisoned air of the /4 thiciei-inieieirieieeicicieeieinintelel ieieielee eee eine To she Piltor of The Eventag World: At Thitty-fourth street there te @ crosstown eleyated road running from Third avenue through Thirty-fourth street to the Long Island ferry. It thus connects the Second with the Third ave- nue elevated. This ta very convenient. Y Joke and would not recognize one If she! MBAT, MUCH - wolleee= , . At Forty-second street there 1s also an same le maining conn ee atre : Tmade DISCOMFORT, Going into details, Dr. Edson says that elevated railroad, running from the 4 en to play a Jol nm you Ploccccccccccet) . A = a Grand Centraj Depot to Third avenue, sof chat Sieal stow tell clea tor taunting? | 3 during athey fours minutes ak See Ed that {f people on the Third avenue wish You have been making love all aes breathing the tunnel’s deadly atmosphere, heavily charged with Annie 1 wonder bow I would look tn dat hat? to take the New York Central, all they ,/ at Cay a ase stiaie Pearl—Oi, ey, what's de use of wishin’, you'll never git no chance | have to do is to leave at Forty-second celaenierion you ue paverjseee bes | “oarbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, sulphur dioxido and other dele-}:% to see! Come on! atreet apd take cars direct to the depot. ” e times you have kissed her : x ratest to my certain knowledge—poor me, who terious gases,” the temperature rises 8 degrees and the humidity in- But) tall croast owen a8) dots net [ote i +e . ne A bs: blotters pau a one, measre || } cronses 11 per cent. He testifies that on one personal trip through inconvenience. One should not be better 3 frtenta with my alster, but I think you the tunnel he noted a temperature of 111 degrees, together with a CI eos: eae ili at 4 we gone a little further to-night than, ° 24: . : : . A Shop Reform. ; the conventions demanded. The ininta- very high degree of humidity. Carbon monoxide is so poisonous, fos Hi lab et a CIE Cone Seer i ey Seabee: 48 ee says Dr. Edson, that five-tenths of one per cent. of it will destroy Spitting should not be allowed tn shops : e will appreciate 4 é i Employers are not care- the foint of this litte Joke. 1 ain quite :} animal life very rapidly. ful enough, and employees still lesa, Te Ca eA CU saa With such testimony from many experts before the Grand Jury, pala} Lar Keearerr os uaaae eyeeana ‘ a ‘ =e . x : x ry street Ww! Ou! eing arres' |, Dui * do not make any mistakes in Iden that body will hardly be in doubt as to whether the tunnel is or is shop no excuse {s allowable. A shop is Goot night, dear old atupid Jim! Your é A small, and one sweep of the eye takes In unkissed sweetheart, x Xj not a danger to health. All that remains to be settled is whether every detail, If every employee caught BLES) ESTATE ¢ there is a practicable way of relieving this condition of things. ee RT yee cl i u “ at once y Sok + “We are not yet ready,” says President Newman, “to make any DISGUSTED. 43) 2 , mye 8 * ‘ 4 OR HOME eas t pars items A s :| changes, but hope to be presently.” This is a question for en- A Snowy December Frophesied. + um—Mr Chayfeur nae at our house last eveng and he Aepyeih ; | iat iro hthas Beiter {of The] Evasion] Weries . DRESSMAKERS, % cortnenty en 8 the sublect of autor | | Sineering experts, the weight of whose opinion seoms to be that tun- ‘Before the big drought the prediction / * UANScearenoUaulcanarnrelt nels as long or longer, with traffic as heavy or heavier, are operated rani mode: thats) an( Jonker an Satur B 5 were tn conjunction, in a rising aign, no The Evening World’s Daily CHOLLI LY HAD A GREAT HEAD. without the use of coal or steam. cain would appear before July, In Fashion Hint. Supt. Langdon, of tho Midland Railway (England), recently a bleed Sea eoEtTotraaTlns | ci dia era ear aey lalla! demonstrated in an address to tho Institute of Electrical Engincers December, 1901, great snowstorms will j medlum size 4 yarda of materia! 21 inenes that the fifty-mile section of that road, with a traffic fully as heavy crea eeirsee tek ee ease " wide, 33-8 yards 27 tnches wi : . 1 x : le tan) aH TI A as that which goes out of our Grand Central Station, could abandon as cb LLb eS $l fernewnewnneety steam power and substitute electricity at a Eee siscenpeeiioaseoecns 4 wiy sor 3 “ i ‘To the Editor ef The Evening World a $ permanent annual saving of $1,250,000. Annfe (standing in front of window)—All right if I don't. Now, how I protest against the profane rioters $ exexcenrorry: $ | What is practicable in England is presumably Son Book? mene Aarti Sretaat few tied vere. . . woe o Ms een Ing on cable cars every day GecceccccccreO practicablo also in the United States. tuened. Not le x Hd as ore of drivers of wagons have been sworn at each morning. If a man attempte to resent auch language the air is blue fer a block or so. It is really shocking. A lady whom {t seemed to distress ex- ceedingly called the attention of the Of course, the first cost of changing from steam to electric power will be considerable, but railroads must not swell their profits by sacrificing the health of the travelling public. ~~ OUT OF THE MOUTHS OF BABES. CHER—What 1s the mean'ng | of the word “excavate?” Small Pupli—It means to hollow wan looking at an book's no good. out. “Why, dear," asked her mother, d STURT Ta J GOING THE WHOLE FIGURE, Teasher—Correct. Now form a aen-| “what seems to be wrong with it?" conductor.“) “What; thej/——1 canst; 6e. ae ¢ ‘ 1 wanted the seat, that’s all.” “Harry, are you going to wear that shirt waist to church? tence in which the word {a properly] ‘It tells afl about the ordinary moon | about it?" waa the answer received. a Here Are “L thought I would,” used. and {t# various quarters,” replied the | Upon which she quietly left the car. Mt Jacy, "but it doesn't say a word FIRST KICK about the holeymoon."* 3 tick a pin in a boy and “Well, let's be thoroughly comfortable; I'll wear a dressing sacque and take a pitcher of iced lemonade and two eofa pillows along.’’—Chicago Times-Herald. 1 Pupli: will excay, teleieleiet ieteieteintetet LOVERS’ TROUBLES “9 HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. A Man Shoald Attend to This. }RED, WHITE AND BLUB. Brides must on thelr wedding day }tton, and tf this boy sends answera my | au: ft would prevent your happiness. 1% Have for luck, the old folks amin love with ab e, and they will not be so unreason. y home, but he docsn't seem to compre: | Dear Mee Ayer parents will recelve them and think me | able'as to blame you when you are the pend Mle uF 9 5 ei h decide duestion; Something old and something new, Tama young girt fourteen years old. |to blame, I don't want to tell my pa- | ‘Aecent party. pend it. Please give your opinion. otlitwenty-iwornt rate oven) rica [sir anunt decide this auedtion; 10 fete ae ot rrowed, something There ts a boy one year my junlor who| rents now, because they will punish me A Drowsy Young Verson. HH young man's behavior is|want to know If | nave any right! if there is no deatnens In your fambty | blue. ya talking about’ me to my | for not telling them at first. Deas dew, Ayer certainly not flattering. Your wo-|to marry her. nouRN {0 | ens te Ie not nt. all likely that you| ¢ 8% When fair Marguerite was led f and to strangers, He says, ANXIOUS B. P. Wil you kindly advise me on the fol: [ clety apeara to have the effect of | mupport hex mod week. | would entail thin infratty upen your) § Down the nose-atrewn alste to wed am his sweet 1 don't + ELL your father about this mat-|lowing: Iam a young girl sixteen years!a dose of paregorte, 1 think you are. : tf chiitren. She had followed to the end oazony whieh : bee a 1 ale ter and he will know a way of put-jof age, and am going with a young man| very fgoligh to stand auch nonne pre Fanta creat juck jebould) her at \ Somebody writes NE A stop to tt. ‘or abo e fair| 1 would suggest, were 1 In your. pl end. love-letters to him signaltiy, name || Youritather ean easily welte-@.tetter | coacation, buy ane ast stcarabanegs ahetethes young) gentlemen shoula sakes EAVNESS Is sometimey nereat-| FOR WOULD-BE ACTRESS. orrowed blushes on her face, and address to them, 89 thls boy sends|to the boy and tell him that he wishes|the rules of acciety, Whenever I go out| Sri belonwe, Aad spate you his soporihe tary, 1 think you are rigat my Will the young mirl who recently wrote | { That the hue of love should grace. the answers to me by mati, I hive to| him to cease annoying you. You may|with him, elther {n the car or on the|compary. your view of the situation, but) me of her ambition to become Bridal trousaeau very new, so downstairs for the mail so my pa-| be very sure that the trouble will stop | boat, or even at home, he always wants A Self-Sacrificing Lover. the young lady should decide. If sho| treas, send me her namo end,addret The groom was cli end she was rents won't see the letcers. I'am going |!n short order. If you tell your parents|to go to sleep. I have told him {f he| Dear Mre Ayer: truly loves you I do rot think your HARRIET HUBBARD AYER, blue, Baltimore World. to the country this week on my vacq-] the truth they will believe you, I amicannot keep awake he would better stay| I am a young man of twenty-four, and} desfn¢e3 would be @ barrier or that EZvenine Werld.