The evening world. Newspaper, August 2, 1901, Page 6

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SHE WANTED HIM 10 BE HAPPY. y By SARA LINDSAY COLEMAN. jeht, 1901, by Dally Rory Pud. Co) HE was 6 tiny creature, It seemed precocious for her to he up the mountain trail. Dreught back to the mountain trail by @ harp blow on her face that dis- lodged her hat. went on in spite of the desperate pull on fig mouth. She felt herself being lifted from the saddle; her eyes stood out, heer face blanched with pain “Absalom, Absalom.” a Inughing voice called, “I am coming.” and doyn the mountain path a man came running at full peed. He threw the mule back and Feleased the gitl from her painful post- tion. i There are people who always sec one | at one's best, but the Professor came | on the acene when Miss Veyton was | least dealrous of spectators, Not two hours before she had plunged trom a rock into the Professor's long arms, and fhe had taughea and said he knew she | would fall just there, ao he had waited to save her a few bruises. “Are you all right?’ The Professor's Saughter had changed to solicitude. i “Yes.” ‘The haughtiness tn her voice was born of humiliation. Miss Peyton was young, pretty. She eounted her lovers by the dozen, and | @he was not accustomed to have her | plans miscarry, The Professor's {I-Iuck | took things Into her own hands. filled her house with guests, ‘The summer had been one round of frolic, which was to terminate with tthe week of camp life. The Professor ‘ Bad joined the party ani had thrown imself into the gay life with an aban- Gon and a boyishness that had deligtted ‘Miss Peyton. The Profesor found her that evening fn the depths of a very flimsy handker- chief. “You've made my summer miserable! with a buret of righteous anger. was sorry because you were lonely, and I thought you needed a wife—every man Goes who reaches your age. I've done feverything to help you out. But you Ro sentiment, no gratitude! I an't make you marry anybody!" | “why do you want me to marry?” (The Professor's face was graver than she had ever seen it. ‘Because I do,’ 1 want you to be happ: “Lord,” the Professor groaned, “what fools. men are! You ted me to marry one of your friends and I want- + she | “Because breathlesaly. _ The Professor's watchful eyes that had not left the girl's face saw a soft olor flush her cheeks. “Dorothy, Dorothy jand closed over hers. themulously eager. Vithout warning, the other members of he party flocked into the quietness and\ sweetness of thelr retreat, then stopped discreetly, but Daphne, the irre- Dresaible cried: Professor 1s {n love with Doro- | The Professor's His voice wan thy! There was an awkward moment. “And 1am in love with the Profes- Dorothy's laughter rang out as @mused and unconscious os 4 child's, It's silvery peal opened the gates of fheaven to a man. twenty years old. Bhe rode slowly | Lost in a mesh of thought, she was | Her steed, & mule, | “rl THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, AUGUST 2, 1901. insulted MR. NEW Mil stiek a com it If she can. what a pretty oo ¥ 10 0-0-4-0-e-en-eno-e WIPE OUT OF TOWN, a F all the tnstdious : 0 Temptations invidious Contrived by the devil for pulling men down, There ts none more delustve, Seductive, abu: Than the snare to a man with his wife out of town. ghtfulness, Ines, ens, Town tt with’ pain, A bachelor rakishiiess, What-will-you-take-Isiness ve can explain His wife may be beautify Tender ant dutiful, } ‘Tia not that her absence would } cause him delight; ; But the curs’ opportuntty, Balefuh Immunity, } Scattere tls scruples as day sca:- } | ters night. i —Cnteago Journal. | rs Sot, sop OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. | 0 The Evening World's Fashion Hint. Daily } To out this Infant's wraper / ef material 27 incnes wide or 1 88 inches wide will be required. 2h 4 yards 2 yarde| MR. NEW you like the odor? try anothe one must hav to do that tri soon as | sme} them. given me a bi MRS. NEWWED—Did they make you sick, ament! Mary them or yED—Ah! have {t| This comb ls my only hope. tooth in hulf a dozen of the ci 1 can stand MRS. NEWWED—Yes, my dear, women generally know very Uttle about cigars, | knew; but these I'm sure are good. Just see label tx on the box. It is so kind of you to smoke where I can see you enjoy them. Ww AD (puffing Vm !)—-What's the matter, dear: larly stuck on it myself Some put rubber-comb teeth in them. My brother used ek, and | knew what was the matter with them as tit, All the others are right; I've looked all through ¢ Press Publishing Company, 63 to 62 PARK KOW, Nv OMice at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. THREE VIOLENT ATTACKS OF A MIDSUMMER MONEY-MANIA. ess which seizes upon What our Mayor? this strange midsummer mi In the summer of 1899 it was called Ramapomania. Only the | prompt action of the courts restrained him Dececneccsseeg [foun mavon is, 0,000,000 assault upon the , from a frenzied pockets of the people. In the sumer of 1900 it was Tectrusto- mania, Again, only the courts prevented him from carrving out a scheme for enriching him- ge dividends coined out of the fever and thirst of the poor. In the present summer the attack has just reappeared in the form of what may be ealled, while the doctots are looking for a better This time there are 1,095,050 queer dollars zoomania. And again the machinery of the courts will have to be set j name, Gari linvelved, Jin motion, It will be observed that in each ease ® has been a money- mania, as it we he faets deserve the attenzion of the alieni-ts. It is not right to give a boy or a girl a pompous or a ridiculous or an undignified name. Plain, simple names are the best in evéry way. And tho places to find them are not biographical dictionaries, {nor vet cheap romantic novels, nor yet the slang dictionaries. THAT “FIERY FURNACE.” Now that « Grand Jury has denounced the officials in control of the Park avenue tunnel, perhaps something will be done. his byntality to hundreds of thousands of people extending over a long term of years is one of the classical Goccccccccccety : NAME BURDENS. : A Ralph Waldo Emerson—no relative of the great Concord $ | philosopher—admits stealing money from the mails. The possession tlof a great name did not save him. It only tends to aggravate the $) punishment of publicity. : Not nearly cnough attention is paid to this matter of naming Tl Geccccecccsces children. Why burden a child with a name 3] 3 4 cu overt? which has already been made distinguished 4) ; ate peal His {Why curse a child with a name which is diffi- : {ny irs samp. $ cult to pronounce or savors of a parental prac- 1 |Oreeseresoroe~O tical joke upon the offspring ? lous acts when sheltered behind a corporate Iname and form. Beyond question, Mr. Vanderbilt or any other of |the men in control of the tunnel would go to any expense, however Narge, to safeguard the humblest servants in their establishments | from such perils and sufferings as they in corporate form inflict upon] 34. ‘the thousands whose patronage gives them their incomes. AMERICAN WORKMEN AND EUROPEAN OBSERVERS. Jules Siegfried, a former French Minister of Financo, has ro- t.. Thinking it all over after his return poco Orin Hei WV cently paid this count o Paris, he writes: Your marvellous ratlroad transportation and your Inventive spirit allow you to produce cheaply despite high wages. i What | have seen (of the workmen) has !ed me to think that if they are tho best paid artisaus tn the world the ‘© among the most clever, For the present the condition of the workingmen tn America {s cer- talnly much better than tn Europe, The wages are twico higher and the cost of Iiving about th MA The American workingman has understood also that revolution Is, after all, no solution, and that the first poiut for him is to increase his wages and shorten his hours of | eoccccceeen ’ ry ’ ’ “. sine, bor The What gave us our “marve Hons railroad transportation 2” inventive spirit ngwin: it all comes baek te that. ,nor iron in the hills wrought the material It was a triumph of brain working Not acres, nor fores triumph of the United States. upon these things. If we would remain supreme we must look well to the school- house and the newspaper. chance to develop, are essential to cheap production in this country. eS A BOSTON CRITIC Bender—Dumleigh begina to think himself a literary sharp. Uppton—Not Dumietgh, surely. Render—Yea, he recently made the discovery that More are lines in Shake. speare's blank verso that don't rhyme.—Boston Transcript, mes ae peo enenens THE SUPTEME TEST. just have been nw pretty tulce man.” ed he wae he muat have been, Why, hts Mfe was insured for $30.00, and yet his ned genuinely sorry to have him die."—Philadelphia Bulletin, TRUE TO PRINCIPLES, now what to do with those Populistic angels that arrived yester- the chief muslelan tn the an Felts {nauired his usslatant thay play anything except co “How's that won on silver harps."--Baltimore LOVERS’ TROU BLES “4,9 HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. Concerning Dear Mrs There a xirl day and whom 1 a month taken and that she has not given it to me yet my picture taken and showeg It to her. pattern (Mo, 3H, one size enly) ‘sent for 10 cents, oney to “Cashier, The World, City, Do you think It w. should not to the yor to give her my picture? HERE is no reason why youl|and who Is merely a passing acquaint- Photugrapha, not to pass thet pictures around whom | not treat rhaud way The giving of one's photograph 1s mmon that tt does not she | suggest more than friendly sentimen: Butt haa] bred girl ix taught not herself with men o give her photograph to the transaction In > me and promised | co! me one, i 10 ould be right for me| gir) ISIDOR H. | whom she hys no tntention of marry present your picture| ance must be r ing lddy in case si But the rule does nol possess one. As ®| the masculine scx. It tan't @ very, tor form for girls! portant matter anyway, ded as bad form. necessarily || and for a man hold good with Take Your Mother's Advice, week, Im that keeping steady company? | Please adviae, GERTY, * you have been reading this column too Dear Mra Ayer Tam a girl of seventeen years, 1 am} ‘going with a young man of twentygtwo nN you know what my views are In re- yours. About « month ago he asked me} > ard to a girl permitting a man he could kiss me, but I refused. He jNhom she does not expect 10 marry the pean me the reavon, 1 told him that) Hberty you have “given this acquaint. mother salt thac men never respect | nce the gieln they kiss, But he told me that| 1 think {t extremely doubtful If a man he does respect me. So fhe next time Ijcan huye serious views concerning a ict him kiss me, and he kisses me every | girl who thinks s0 little of hergelf as to an. t to LH ing ¢ 4 MAN MDPHN } instances of how men of personal kindliness : * a eES 2 q eter will permit and Hee CORPO ST and general good character will pe t 3 NAME, even commit cruel, despicable and unserupu-| The highest paid labor is the cheapest when brain directs the |: task. High pay and short hours, which give the workman’s brain a} time he call ince then. Still he says| allow him to kise her after so brief an he respecta ma, Am I doing right? Ho|acquaintance as you describe. If the has never asked me to keep “steady| man respects you he would not treat, company,” but always says, “When can 1 see you againt’ He calls twice a tm- done a0. > | HE HAD A NARROW ESCAPE. POS2SOLS6L OES UORS DOOD Hungry Hurley heeled boot on. (gasping)—I can't make no time wid dis heavy- One minute more an‘ he kits me. re Hungry Hurley (as the canine makes the false grab)—Bift! struck nomethin’ then, Dat_poot \QUR EARTH AND MARS. | : SIGNALLING ING IMPOSSIBLE. By SIR ROBERT S. BALL. HEN, upon certain ocgasiona, | |A] which do riot recur very frequently, globe ta still about th’ miles, Now, what can a telescope show distance of thirty-five milion miles? It requires a very good telescope to reduce the apparent distance of an object to a thousandth part. ‘That is to say, {tls a very good tele Incope which will show an object as clear= ly aa we could see {t with the unaided eye if it were ata thousandth part of tte &. distance, and 1f we dispensed with the “¢ ’ sbletagice of a telecope, It is therefore imposgible to hope for any signalling to Le AS Murs unless the signaie were on a scale suMelently great to be visible to the un- alded eye oven at a dist 35,000 zn 1 to prove the utter utllity of human en- deavor to make any demonetrations on a ruMctently large scale to be percept. dle to the inhabitants of Mars. The very largest city that thie earth ever knew would be altogether too small to be visible to a being dwelling on the planet Mars, even {f that being were en doavoring to see It with a telescope a powerful as the grenteat and most per- wet Instrument in any observatory on this globe. If the whole extent of Lake Supertor was covered with petroleum, and If theg um Waa seton fire, then I thin we may admit that an inhabitant of Mara who was furnished with a tele- scope as good as that which Mr. Percl- Vabdbowell uses at Flagstaft might be ble to see that something had hap- x Hungry Hurley (as he gathers up the remains)—Dat boot beats dem Seven League Booty fer escapin’. His nobs ty worth a dollar at der glove factory. “MR. WABASH—Come, let's take a ride In the Sedan chair. It will be a novel experionce/ I'm sure, MR. D'ENVER (from Colorado, with a shudder)—Novel? Not much! I had a ride something like that In our State about twenty years ago and I don’t care to recall the experience. D'Enver's experience. OPPO DELESE DDD You ahould haye taken your mother's vernation with him.. Kindly advise me. advice. Mont girlx will find in the end ANXIOUS. they will be happier and have less to Tegret If they will consult with their] ] THINK you are a very mosbid girl mothers about these matters and follow ] and would better, eagage In some the advice of a parent who wertainly}4 occupation that will keep you busy can only be Interested in her child's | all your waking hours. celtate: A girl who admires a man because he atares at her {s not In good mental health, When men are respectful in manner with women they avold expand cables and s1 outa actual) verter bara eng you with dlsreapect, an@he has certataly | admire y}in that planet ; [not as a «reat and striking conflagration, To the EAltor of The Fvening World: ‘on: the west sid good and not To the KAltor of The Evening Wor! suspender bars broken. Such being the cal tl how the he: pened. But we must not auppose that the mighty conflagration would appear to the Martian as a very conspicuous object It would rather be a very small fea- ture, but still 1 think it would not be beyond the reach of a practiced observer And yet, on the other hand, tf an area the size of Lake Superior on Mara was to be flooded with petroleum and that petroleum was to be kindled we should expect to witness the event from bere but as a tny Iittle point of Just dia. cernible Nght. The disk of Mars ts not a large object, and the conflagration would not extend over the three-hundredth part of that disk, It is auMictent to state these facts te show that the pore.bility of signalling te Mara Is entirely beyond the power of human reeborces. eeecelasee LETTERS THE PEOPLE EVERYBODY'S COLUM: f The Steamboat’s Noisy Whistle. To the Editor of The Fvening World: Tam a vialtor every night at a recrea. tlon plier and wish to call attention to! an abominable nuisance which ts com- mitted at such place every night. Just when the musiclana are irying thelr best to play some popular tune the river | Boats that He up at the docks open up | thelr steam pipes to let off steam tn & shrieking whistle, It is the cause of, frightening children almost to death and annoys ¢ F, New York. July 21. To the Fai A reader complains emanate from the st Forty-third stre ighter- As for aft nave notlced that the sick valied fmm Forty-second street to Thirty-fourth street 1 an atmos- phere ds Just the right to bring age in ite wi form. dangerous In own by the hy Uttle enore to Kill the peo- ollictals object to ire smal and ple outrigh’ tenements. becntise: they dingy and Inck good sanity elty population ie tears away crowded tenements An Ironte Complaint, To the Fal It ts Mthy to spi street car, but it use the seat in front for a on the cross-neat open cars. a foot on you do not object, \ merely wishes, to rub the mud off hie shoe on your clothing. sez \ A Long WIL. Living on the east side and working I can ride by trolley ust to the “beautiful” bridge, then I @ to tramp and climb the Jong hii We should have connecting transporta- tion lines betwen Manhattan and the Bronx an tho west side. Just watch the poor people going to and coming trom Work mornings and evenings and wears ing their lives 9) ide and Public works are for the common 0: CHAS: To Improve a ark Aa the question has 0 often been dite cussed how to «ive the poor a good breathing spot, why not Improve Pel+ ham Bhy Park by making {t so that the poor of New York could get free or two-cent transportation, and lay out sald park for playgrounds and othen amusements and games and (for those who could afford a fare by boa! Wo Nave ratbont start, trem he tee meni-house district. and hav Charity Department give freo aseo'te bout to the park MASEL The ridge: penders, ‘To the Editor of The Evening Werld Lace Mr. Probasco proclaimed Brooke lyn Bridge abpolutelyssnfe with twelwp why not cut out a lot permanent (egy three) and leave one along the et structure, and reduce the welght® I would like to have explained to: m@ additional é accepted theories, eh conditigrs octet relieve the bars

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