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DAILY By H. T. LOVE AND THE LAW. By F. H. LANCASTER. (Copyright, 1991. by Dally Stery Pub Co) OR the twentleth time that F Tom Hamlin snapped and returned {t to his p The door opened and hie typ a woman in gray linen with tmmac ulate collars and cuffs and lean jaws. | moved quietly toward the seat opposite. Tom Hamlin got up tmpatiently degan moving about. when he felt cooler, he glanced y at the thin face bent over the machine. | “I had a pleasant droam Inst 1 he remarked. “Yest" she returned politely “Dreamt we were stand! watching a storm at sea and all that. [t was del were standing together.” | “A strange dream for such a warm night,” the typewriter remarked, evt-| Gently oblivious ef his last words and his ensuing cons’ He got up and mover a blind and resume his x He checked his uneasy walk beside his asslstant’s chair. “Bee here, I can't get that tdea of the een ont of my head. Let's knock off work and make a dash for fresh atr I can have my horse around {n a mo- ment, It’s only ten or fifteen m! ne “Why, It would Kill the horse.” the typewriter ejaculated, struck aghast at the Idea of taking a pampered animal on such an expedition with the ther- mometer at 10) in the shade. “Oh, no.” Hamlin inststed. “It ts getting cooler. We could take tt easy going out, watch the sun set in the water and drive back by twilight Doesn't it sound pleasant?” “Very pleasant.” “Does that mean you will 507" k you. I had better Anish nt.” cur ran’ We this wor! Miss Manhattan—She costs me “Oh, hang the work!" he exclaimed, tmpajlently. “Haven't I devoted myself to work body and soul for the lant thirty years? Am I to have nothing in this world but grind and grime?" Just as whe leaned sideways to reach @ fallen sheet of paper Hamlin stooped to recover the neatly written document. A collision was inevitable, her cheak Druvhed his sleeve. Hamlin thrust his hands into his Pocket and clinched them slowly. “Thad meant to wait," he began ab- ruptly, “to make myself walt until 1 could see you in some proper place— or write, but it ts na use now. We were together, you were leaning against me. If I could realize that dream I would be the happlest”. ‘Oh, wait.’ she pleaded “But I can't." he returned. “Don't you know that love holds a power of attorney over all a man's actions? If you had gone with me I meant to walt, the beach would have been better than this dusty litter of law. I suppose you understeod—you couldn't care’—— He paused gloomily ana for the twenty- second time took out his watch, The woman with the tired eyes moved §mpulaively; for an instant her cheek| * Tested caressingly azainst the !o ‘linen sleeve of his office coat, then she Btaried up and went quickly to the door, “Just one moment," Hamlin pleaded. folding his arms and standing deter- we never talk of. ttand for her. 3-6 + OTN AWAR TN Charley Fatz—What! You bellev How foolish! minedly where she had left “Please—dear. Wil bring the around?" The typewriter turned at door, “Weill,” she agreed hur Hamlin’s heart broke into ‘The eyes he loved OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. N iH) | Tho Evening World's Daily { \ Fashion Hint. ‘yaa {> Or + SY OWARTH, Charley To cut this kimon: twelve years of « terlal m1 : inches wide will be requ 2 7-8 yards for bands, signs and omens. tions, lel ONLY CHAPERON. getting me into some sort of a scrape; and her honesty 1s something But she's dhe only chaperon I've got, 80 1 must ONE SUPERSTITION NAILED. How euperstitious you are! ‘atz—I'll_ prove to you what a contempt I have for I'l sit on this table in deflance of all superst- THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 13, 1901. oe 3-366-4.0-8,4, SMITH. £ | Pubitshed by the Press Publishing Company, 63 to 6 PARK ROW. Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Becond-Class Mall Matter. OUR POLICE FORCE TAKES ITS COLOR FROM ITS COMMANDER. Our police force is a semi-military organization. It is ruled from within. + Rewards, punishments, promotions, rules, all are from within. Obedience, silence, no criticism— these are its guiding principles. Therefore our police force is of necessity a passive instrument in the hands of the man invested by law with the supreme command. If those hands are the hands of a fool, the police force becomes | ‘ -}an instrument of folly. If the hands are the hands of a sane, honest man, the police force becomes an instrument of public service. If the hands are the hands of a dishonest man and tool of dishonest »{men, the police force becomes an instrument of oppression and crime. Obviously it is vital— First—That the man in command be honest and capable. “ Second—That he be easily held responsible for his conduct. Either of these conditions is just as vital as the other. As Gov. Odell and the Legislature organized the police force last winter neither of these conditions is met. The man in com- mand is neither honest nor capable. And he is securely shielded from attack by a figurehead. Could anything be plainer than the remedy? Could there pos- sibly be any other remedy than the passing of a new law to put an honest man in command, and to put him where he can be got at if he is not satisfactory? Yet Gov. Odell hesitates to call a special session of the Legis- lature ! THE CELTIC'S ENCOURAGEMENT TO THE “KICKER.” The more the mighty ocean steamship Celtic is examined the] + greater marvel she becomes. The captain of another ship went over ¢ A SITUATION ry ¢ AND ITS ONLY ¢ 3 REMEDY. 3 | a lot; and she's all the time Dececcccececey her the other day. Familiar as he was with ‘4 SEW STAND- A HAR ROE Fe es the wonders of the modern passenger ship, he () py A SINGLE was overwhelmed with astonishment. EXAMPLE. The most significant remark he made was Orecccccocoee while examining the steerage, or “third class,” as they call it now. As he noted the appointments, as good as the second class of all but the very best ships to-day, better than the first class of the best ships twenty years ago, he shook his head more and more gloomily. “This won't do,” he said at last. “Why, they'll never again be satisfied with what we've been giving them. They’ll compel all the lines and all the ships to treat them this way.” He was mistaken in thinking that the Celtic’s splendid arrange- ments for the mass of immigrants were made for any other reason than a’ business-like recognition of the fact that the masses of the people are now more intelligent, have a higher standard of comfort, demand better treatment. But he was right in thinking that this one ship will compel all ships and all lines to advance. Throughout the world—and nowhere so rapidly as in America —the standards of thinking, of feeling, of living, are rapidly rising. And the best work which any man can do is to aid in this progress. Find out what is best, work for it, demand it, insist upon hav- ing it. And if you go about it intelligently you will get what you | Wish, or at least something very much better than you would have got if you had not thought and worked and insisted. A MEMORY FOR DATES. A young man writes to The Evening World that he knows the dates of most of the great battles, that he can recite lists of Presi- dents, Kings and Emperors in order, and that he can tell when each State was settled and admitted to the Union. He asks: What would you advise me to do to further per fect myself as a student of history? The first thing for this correspondent to learn is that dates aro|< not history, Tf dates are all he is going to have in his head he might as well | ‘ be the trained animal of the “side show” who picks certait numbers out of a lot. The animal does his trick well, but that’s all there is of it. ve it bad luck to sit on a table? g MEMORY g . MAY NOT MEAN ¢ MIND. Qecesececcoce Numbers to the “side show” freak and dates to this young man represent the fruits of an acquired habit of selection. Nothing more. The man who can tell the story of Washington’s matchless career and the reasons why he was probably great in more ways than any other man who ever lived is a student of history, even though he forgets all the dates. 2 DELAYED. Mrs. Palk—I've just got through storing away our winter clothes. Mrs. Falk—Gractous! You're late, aren't you? Mrs. Palk—Yes, you see the papers I had got to wrap them in contained a delightful serial story,—Philadelphia Press, ‘SPECIALLY IN SUMMER. Bet a crock of butter and a box of matches side by side and you will always etick your fingers into the butter Instead of the matches, if you go after them in abe3-8AePBO? | the dark.—Washington (Ia.) Democrat. S8-HO84 AS REVEALED BY 288 BRAT E, PDBDLMEH82O-6.08 FARMER SMALLWEED DOES SOME By R. B. MORRISO js oe = Min MOC fy I GOLF FOR INSTANCE. - TRADING. Farmer Smallweed—Boys, there's a coal train backin’ by here with a lot of hoboes on it P'raps you'd like to fire some green apples at ‘om. <3 DO BOxD 89-9005 PA CLALDADDDE-DTO Farmer Smallweed (when winter comes)—Bring us another % hod, boys. The coal trust ain't worryin’ me. 299884228022 OL80898-0900300085, * RE women good travellers? If one belleves the average man they are *Tnad seated his charg *|hands of responsibility and bedted for »! work quietly to amuse the little ones slot it: she made balls of another hana- some innocent fun in front of his own | >| States. »la heartless flirt. *| corporations, there will be an oppor EN ANGERSOFINNOCENT J OYS|WOMAN THE . TRAVELLER. Sets Man an Example. not, if one belfeves hie own sight they are—far better even than the de- ractors who criticise them with so high and mighty an air. It 1s perfectly true that the average ; | female cannot make out from a time table whether the 2.40 train arrives at her town at 6 A. M. or 7 P. M It ta true, says the Baltimore News, that she reaches the station @ good half hour lbefore she should and spends the in- ( terim trying to find the baggage-room = t and making false etarts through the gate to board trains bound in diametric- ally opposite directions to the one in | which she !s golng—tmpulses which are _ gonerally checked by the uniformed em- | ployee of the road. But once In a coach which she te ns- sured is the proper one the average woman shows her adaptability by met- ting down quietly in her seat and pee- paring to pass the time as pleasardtly us possible. She doesn't tramp up and down the aisle continually; she doesn’t, of course, spend every alternate ten minutes, !n the smoking-room; she, does not complain to the porter of the road- ded, nor to the trainboy of the fevs mag- azines and papers that he sells. ‘A man, his wife and two children en- i ‘ltered a day coach in which the writer sat recently and gave an apt SIMustree tion of the difference in the vray the sexes travel. The man, as soon as he " % the smoking car. The woman eet to and keep them quiet. She whispered & story to them; she pinned a handker chief out of the window and made a fag | , él terrible trip, hasn't it? So hot rm / | kerchief and rabbits, and so kept hose pables quieted and contented for six hours. At the end of that time Back came the husband breathless. “Are you ready to get off?" he ealed. >| “Here we are at Baltimore. It's been @ tired to death.” “I rather enjoyed it," replied the wo- man, “Was it warm? You see, I was too busy to notice. Yes, everything 1s ready. I'm sorry you're tired.” And there wasn't even a trace of sancasm in her toneg. ——{=> LETTERS FROM | THE PEOPLE. | EVERYBODY'S COLUM . Scores the Police. + ¥F¥ To the Editor of The Evecing World: T think fe about time that the aetfor Sof the police were suppressed in som’ >| way. Joe Bulkley was shot dow "| just because he was having a Mth fun In front of his friend's house. It is! coming to a pretty pass when @ person| { cannot walk the streets or standon the| | corner and talk to a few friends or have | house without hearing, “Get out of there or I'll run you in" or feeling the weight of a policeman’s club. D, A. JARVIS. R. DB. Hayes. To the Editor of The Eventog World: 5 1 would like to know who succeeded . §. Grant as Preeident of the United INQUIRER. Mer Ideal Man. . ‘I ro the Editor of The Evening Work: In answer to what sort of man 5 proves most fascinating to a woman, I think *levery young lady with common sense would most certainly be attracted by @ ‘ good-mannered man with a pleasant face and attired In a heat costume not too flashy. My {dea of a man with @ handsome face and wearing a flashy costume ts that he !s fickle minded and BENSONHURST. Plea for Staten Island. "| to the EAitor of The Bening World: Reading of the Wasnington authori tles' movement respecting the housing of the masses, I felt a few words might help the great cause along. We havo on Staten Island, acconting ;|to the health statistics, the healthiest county tn the Stats, taking area, popula- ton (70,000), &c., into consideration. The reason wo are not called upon to supply =, homes for the working people is that "| we are handicapped by the cost of traa- sit. Take into consideration the faot that the Brooklyn Bridge expenses are pald by the city, why should Btaten Island be shut out of all considerction, especially now that it is a part of the Greater New York? If anything can be done to relieve us from the greed of tunity for the wage earners to come to our beautiful shores, where we have every good requirement. WM. RUSSELL. UNDER THE ELMS. “Bay, love, if we be not in Paradise? Yon {8 no leafy roof above our heads, But a cloud-bridge of the great in-: finite; Those myriad, swaying, twinkling lamps were stars If ween from earth by mortals; and these paths Stray endlessly to pleasure, woven THE KEY TO BEAUTY found excepting under | skin once dally, but care.must be taken { the following clroum-| that it does not touch the eye proper. around Through this soul's garden, fairest spot of all; Those that filt by us, laughing soft, in white, HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. be removed by the process known as ab-, and perfume, oll of rosemary, 15 drops each Apply; sorption. It is very Hkely that it can| My advice to you, however, 1s to pur-| to the eyebrows with a tiny toath brush | be removed by electrolysis, but you] chase a dye. It 1s much more sat-j;once a day until the growth Is suficlent- | should get advice properly on this qud-| tsfactory A good one {s uninjurious, | ly stimulated; then less ofte! Wrinkles and Rings Under the E Kini teodlita Naeatlocdlvarmemictanatthere ene nes infeio Jeet. ( and {t {a almost Impossible to make a| This ointment may bo usel for the! $A°° a atten blent | be; HBAIFINGRT NOCHE n Dear sire Arse Ho Wishes s Dark Mustache. | home-made dye satisfactorily. eyelashes alo. In this case {t should | (Without the brazen gates the hope- less cry), From some far sun, list to the an- gols singing! Answer me, love, is not this Para- dise?’ “Love, .wh Paradise. wrinkles, 1 impairsnent of the chemical con-| Kindly publish a formula by which a Jents of the blood, or when the sys-|jarge natural growth can be removed [tem has been drained by any excess—|trom over my left eye. This growth has "8:1 prolonged study, lack of sleep or ill- there for years, but dcesn't. seem be very carefully apptied. It Will Inf_ame % Concerning Eyebrows and Lashes. Sosa youre 2 Srelaers the eyes, as any ofl will, if ft gets into Can you give me a remedy that will | pea ure. aver then make my mustache dark without injury) scindly advise me what to use to make = er have \neme—the external treatment 1s some-|to get any larger. - E,W, [to # and without use of dye? |my eyebrows and eyelashes crow, andl giainea darker or you canpuse the oye, ower wal times effective temporarily, but cannot| 7 AM not willing to give you a formula ~ {a's0 make them dark, and something t0| brow pencil, which you cin procure at ents together. | be so permanently while the cause ] which would remove the growth. Yes can use the walnut stain, oll|increaso the Mesh upcn the shoulders) ing tojter counter in any department ‘Take off the fire and beat until nearly | exists. You should by all means go to « or dye. Here it is? Green walnut |and arms. EB. Cc. cold, adding little by little the benzoin| Local Treatment.—Bathe frequently | nospital and have the operation, 2 shelley 2° ounces; alum, 2-4 ounce: | GIVE you the formula, for tne cye-|"%P: sous ary, phyaiea culture. with and lastly ‘the orange flower water, |with cold water and use friction |N”simete one: gertoreed tyre. cette | taoks groped eorcolibwratia Wea veons |S 7 ure with If you'moan dark rings under the eyea| little turpentine liniment. or week am- | surgeon. : line, 2 oda;) | tinetare’ ar: pexaceioes| Mine (i could, ua s thou art is always they, are usually due to some tonges-| monia, one part of diluted ammonia to| i¢ to| possible that seh a a a eae eee