The evening world. Newspaper, August 19, 1901, Page 6

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If emphatically. | D7 The Consul-General raived his eyen », from the wine glass in Angers, and | tals glance ahot plercingiy oss the ; = “He has done both," ho repited, siv- AH Gag the signal to ariw. pW) Later, when most of the guesta had \ once. “ha the year passed it became part of his regime to end af each 3 found thems ‘lov + Her fac By E. J. KEYES. (Coprriht, 1901, by Patty Storr Pun co) | INNER was being served at the | bungalow of the Consel-General , at Banrkok, There was a in “Aptopos of uty of aman tes loves him," sald th , ter, as he turnet! to 4 French Legation on h _ Hke to tell you a at “Years ago.” he bes the number, a young fell Wainwright was n «tid “He met tic swer young woman h- had ever “Back In his native village membered clinging arms, a ‘xlas, a promise of skenew then, too hed never loved her never reach those deep-latd this clever, re‘ined young the world Aad struck {nto harr aictties twas a p with (week at her home. a fect night—at epringtime—a “They were « open window, and Dlew a lock of her he At the moment {: was t t 3 needful to blind him to the pass With | t @ motion that w n ; tion he held out his arms, with a move- | + ment as natural her head (2 upon his breast. ceasary; their love He determined to break with the o womai { For a moment the Hon. Mr, Carter was \ A beautiful woman tn a black gown who sat dropped @he had regained the thread. “In a short time Wainwright's father @led, and the tad left college never to! return, He could not bring himee.t break with the other girl—his first | directly opposite him, had her handkerchief, and ft he again took up when | The gentleman from France smiled contemptuously. | “And so ruined hie own life and the other woman's. The odds were in faver the other way," he remarked | “Porhups," eaid the Consul grimly. | “For he married hee. ed “The years peased, and with them the wife, but the love look was ever on her face, for no action of Wainwright's had Gisabused her mind of the beiter that | she was all to him. Finally, hie stern Rense of duty satisfied, he sought the world again. He niet Isnbel then’— |} ‘The ever-ready Frenchman puree! his | aull loved him?" he ina “That I never knew,” awer. » Once again the Frenchman leane for- ward. : “He should have told her the st He should have asked for her love, the an-| was | _Beusht cooler, more secluil @er the banyans and palms « B@eolitary black-gowned Ngure @olently against a pillar of che “Isabel,” the Consul was Wer softly, “my story awaits ity on laws aned Ine nda Te bas been without | you, my love, red. | Her hand dropped and fell agains: Bis own. “Bo long, my love,” hoed soft was turned Placed his hand upon her ¢ G@rawing her heaj gently b nim. but head, ant ward til ft rested on his shoulder, kissed her | on the lips. A S08 | : Ie OR HOME salad |e DRESSMAKERS, The Evening World's Fashion Hint. Daily To cut this Eton in meiium size, yards of material yards 27 inches w inches wide, 1 1- @r 13-8 yards 6 tn- ya ATE CAREW ABROAD. Will He Wear Gladstone’s Shoes: popularity. . A popular tax is the dream of all tax-leviers, tax-gatherers and The oyes of the nation are turned on Mr HH Asquith, Is he om. he the ialiert Sta criliee rah atraa and not Lord Rosebery to become the lealer of the demoralized Lib- LN: DAY CTS tis why the inheritance tax 1s well worth thinking eral party? Everything seems to point that way. Snatehing a ibout. In its direction may lie the next attempt to alter the inequal- hasty ddlnneriinithe/Carlonrectit-rooinen MroAs- 2) jries in the distribution of wealth and to promote the principles of quith was not too hungry to earnestly sean the evening papers, ¢ i = : Nees + pequality which, acer ir ) ne ville, is ar © demoe- which were acclafming him the salvation of Glatstone's parts ; jeruality which, according to De Tocqueville, is denrer. to demoe 2 5 +} racies than even liberty Thomas two big app Thomas, you have an awful It ain't often | gets a chance les Urowe HANDICAPPED. to have a hollerday an’ BD oad THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, AUGUST 19, 1901: VOL a2 NO. 14,08, = : ne = | Published by the Presa Publishing Company, 63 to & PARK ROW, > | Entered at the Post-OMce at New York as Second-Class Moa!l Matter. 'A TAX WITH THE SEEDS OF A REVOLUTION SPROUTING IN If. A few years ago a tax on inheritances would have been re; garded as anarehism ialism or some other equally dreadful bomb aimed at the destruction of society To-day the United and so do many of the State governments, ineluding New States Government collects inheritance ay The collecting of inheritance taxes is a commonplace of the news each day. These taxes are light as yet—far smaller than those of Eng- land. They are growing in favor. But they have come to stay. They please everybody except heirs about to inherit. The poor like them beeause they help to destroy the handicap which the rich man’s son eecsceces® CLASSES and daughter have or are supposed to have over the poor man’s son and daughter. They please the rich man because they do not eut Deccccceccsoed down his income, but wait until he is gone And even the heirs, where wealth is of no use to him. as soon as they have got possession of what the ‘death tas e they know that this tax will never disturb has left them, grow complacent bee; them again. But sinee the poor and those of moderate means are the most numerous, their reason for liking the tax is the real reason for its The next long step may be a law giving to the State the whole of estates to whieh there are no direet heirs A PREACHER'S DISCOVERY ABOUT DOLLS. Tn th delivering a ser hig temple at Ocean Grove the Rev. E. H. Yatman is llsermons.”” They were prepared for chil- sot dren only. But the children have hard worl to get in, bee: their fathers and mothers tind the dolls so interesting. + Pastor Yatman’s puppets include ten well-dressed dolls—tive pairs, each representing a male and female of the five races. noble Caucasian dolls are white, and sececseseees vaston nd Amerie: dafter the manner of Sitting Bull ? ¢ in the garments jor and his wife, represent the vanishing Indian nd swarthy dolls give point to Mr. Yatman’s re- son the Asiatie r: —the Mongols and the Malays; and a ebony dolls illuminate his observations on the Ethiopians. v. Mr. Yatman has other curiously illustrated sermons a-candle sermon, a bottle sermon, a flag sermon, a eup sermon and a chemical sermon—all seasoned and spiced with puppets, lay | figures and other objects that appeal to the f Europe a four yellow of mamp ‘ eye, g : Maar And the children ean’t get in to hear and siden ES. see these discourses on dolls! + | deeeee eoeed More adults are crowding to Ocean + | Grove'’s big temple doors than ean get in—just to see and hear about 5 r. Yatman’s dolls and candles and thigs. 3 The kindergarten is never outgrown. As Dryden says, “Men fjare but children of a larger growth. na :| Spry oN pee Rt "No. si A IS IT A SIN TO LIk? an ignorant Baltimore er, cenevearal son told a lie Beeause her oe woman burned his tongue with a red-hot pe On the same day when she was properly il, Dr. EB. Benjamin Andrew. din a Chicago leeture thata lie is neta lie if the sent te j ‘ ‘3 Spologioe, ae Vou Were at Pault, as oom s wad heey < k, mira . : ¥ ‘ ie ‘ A ret Bi ms {ye wiw anothe bt " . ie " andow , Aaa Vahtp. What ts the beet wa with 2 yards of stitched bands temas illustrates. St war your own fiult, ¢ f ihe tern (No, 3903, sizes 32 to 49) anly Write «letter to this) s rij nt for 10 cents. ling Aim that you} ily Ulead: taoneyiito "Cashier, The World, | **Fe t you are sorry; that! him. Now, w ene New York City,’ your conduct was unworthy of your | can 1 tel the m TROUBLE nty tor intention is good. Here expressed in action and in word are f Which is right, the woman who cannot read or the col- two very different views of the sinfulness falsehood. fessor? Neither is right. Old-fashioned women used to “cleanse a child’s mouth” after aie by washing it out slowly with soft soap and water, Since Lamarek’s day scientists have told mothers that a child's lite is like the life of the developing human race—that each one of us in turn passes through all the stages from primitive to eiviliz | | [eae | Lying. they say, is natural to the child or the savage; truth a hard-won virtue of the civilized man and the grown-up, A child’s lie is no sign of depravity, no deadly sin to be scour, It is as natural as the love of fairy stories or of | “mak He must be taught to tell the truth. It may be a fwork of years, but it inust be done, or the child never truly grows up, never becomes civilized, In his way Dr. Andrews is as wrong as the Baltimore woman. | 2 If good intention exenses a lie every lie would be excused in the} ‘2 mind of a Har, there would be no sneh thing as truth or trust, and “Makes a good living, eh?" He changes apartments so often that the wolf can't keep up with him, and loses all track of his door.” A GOOD ~. REASON. vhy do ANGER OF SIMPLE JOYS. THE LACKLESS CELESTIAL GIRL. SOME OF HER MISHAPS. | THE binding process for Chiness T women's feet begins at the age of six or seven. The heel is drawn forward, the toes turned under, pro- tru@iny at the outer end of the sele, 98 that the victim walks, at length, upom the great toe and the back of the heel. The feet occasionally mortify and drop [off in the process, says the Chicago | Record-Heraid, and if this does not jappen they become deadened and be numbed, a I!felong source of suffering. Marriage in China 1s wholly probleme atical, being arranged by the omnipres- ent go-between, husband nor wife never |aceing each other until the vel te |ratsed, when the bride alights trom her closed sedan chair and {s conducted te | her chamber !n the bridegroom’s house, “Williams never has any trouble in keeping the wolf from his ‘ou insist on eating in your shirtsleeves? e attached to the shirt and J can’t take them o: Ao pesition Just now to get married about gen tim ANNA, (tn coming to «1 vuowill marry home and walt for him, but yener: WwW he telly me he me I always stay at for him you take my advie F GOOG: i the man you Jove, and you wih foam) disappointed. . 1 have not watt for him. ‘Phe first treated seen him for three weeks. [have writ.) spare hour Pout sever) you badly and wil do rej gain if you ten to him twice and have recetved no Rive him the opportunity, answers, Would tt be proper to. write | lo Re wire In your generation to the man why loves and who, as you may, and stick and ask him if he considers me his ou for yourself friend or not? ANXIOU s good but poor. N° donot think of writing, Can not see, my dear child, that thin Not n Cane of Trne Love, GIS Goo (8 Gane Dear Mrs Ayer with y Tam a young lady: of nineteen, k: ing company with a gentleman of ani Birl tt in not necessary that she should | any way of break off me to marry | ty-four, He tells me he lover me and! write and ask him the question you how | hopes some day to make me his wife. | suggest. Me ts not inj In a year he has On the ed one's society. ua ty Continne Acquamtance, | Ae man | the ted with a young lady. ¢ me how I can do s0? 7 1 would see and talk with thin young When a man ts really tn love with aliqdy each day, bat of late T haven't had elng her. tme I have written two senaible letters only called to see mn] excepting for very unusual reason. She|jady is not financially situated as well aw myself, Do T have not rr home and walt y, Where the ved ng man has any freedom at all, the | couragement? finds it diMfcult to secure a r herself. tain sim of love {x the seeking of the | T tx posalt The most vers) | to become better ac: ) Zan you Formeriy | !¥+ least receive such tance. Money In the mean recelved your jetters. get a friend to ank her, or to take ja third letter for you? p has a right, after he has made ualntahce oa woman properly, !to address her, and a girl ts bound to ay advances courteo! On the contrary, I think your finan. cial superiority one of several for the girl continuing your acquain- in not Mand while I totally disapprove of mar- He does not disappoint her|and falted to recelve a reply. ‘The young| tages mado for money, I think a Udy | fortune @ great advantage, » the young tady Can y to be uu AUppose this fs why a reply or en- Cc. x. not eagons despised, From childhvod she 1s confronted with © possibility of life-long unhappiness a wife should she fall to have a som he Iify ts essentially patriarchal Daughters are expected to leave thelr parents’ house to return only for rare and brief visits. They cease, after mar riage, to belong to thelr parents’ family, not even returning to take part in the funeral ceremonies. Sons bring thetr wives home, but are assigned separate apartments within the common court. Over these hoseholds of daughters-in- law the mother-in-law rules with a rod of tron; the daughters-in-law are prac- tleally her servants; they are not per niltted to sit or talk in her presence and must perform whatever tasks she assigns them, Love between husband and wife as It exists among Christian people ts unknewn in China, and tt ts a subject that It 1s not considered Uecor- cus to discuss. A Chinese Indy once asked an Amert- can she married her husband.” She replied simply: ‘“Because I loved him.~ and the explanatton was fol- lowed’ by dead silence and profound em- barrassment among the Chinese ma- trons present. There are no grounds upon which & woman may divorce her husband, but there are many—too much talking, gad- ding, {Il temper, indolence and count- less others—for which he may send her back to her parents. If, however, they refuse to receive her, he must take her back again. If a woman 1s driven to sulcide by the cruelty of her husband or mother-in-law her family can come in a bedy to the husband's house and Mterally demolish it, and it is the un- written law that no one must interfere n this summary act of vengeance, Sulclde 1s common among women of all classes, and, aside from grief after be- reavement, unhappiness in marriage {8 the most common cause of sueh trage- tes, Hundreds of wives, it ip estimate ed, end their lives every year in Per king alone. 2% LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. EVERYBODY’S COLUMN A Cynical View. To the Editor of the Evening World: Why are all these police shake-ups allowed to occur so far away from eleo= tion time? The only one, so far as I can remember, that came at @ moment to be profitable to the opposing party was the Iexow shake-up that threw Tammany out of power for over a year. E, D. BGLAG A Double-Decked Car. To the FAltor of the Evening World: In other cltles open cars with vente also on the roof are run and are very popular, I suggest these for New York, not only on groun of comfort, but asa solution to the “crowded car abombe CARMEN. Eats in Shirt Sleeves. To the Eiltor of the Evening World: My husband tnsists (when we are alone) on dining in his shirt gleeves. Ho says it is more comfortable. And when I protest he says the house and the food are his. I suppose he ts right; put I was never spoken to that way before by any one at all, and it hurts nation, me. Is he right or wrong, readers? He never did so when we were engaged. YOUNG WIFR Bare Armed Women. @ ‘To the Dittor of The Brening World: I am a stranger here. I notice many women In the downtown streets with bare arms, Who are they? Are they dishwashers employed in the restaurants or aro they washerwomen out for a stroll. One dislikes to make mistakes, As a stranger, I therefore ask, oan ang of your readers tell us? D. M'LAUREN. Yays They Work Better for Vaca- To the Biltor of The Eveatog World: Would say to “Duane Street Employ— er? who complains against giving em- ployees a vacation that he either lacks common sense or is mercenary to & fault. I have always received better and more energetle work when my em= plcyces returned from vacation. There fcre the following year they deserve thelr vacation. And they get It, too, LK MHBH EME MMW ERE HOR i LOVE ONLY YOU. Mg A3f longing for you, aweetheart, I for the volce that makes my ; heaven, 5 I am yenrning for the touch of that hand I love so well, And my heart would bridge the dis. | tance and would bld each bond be riven; E: How tt hungers for your presence there's no tongue can ever tell; Ever longing, tll no other in my sight tinds aught of favor, ever yearning in the xioom till the stars glide Into view, And a-weary with a luve that can- not fail or cannot waver— ‘Tis a woman's way of wanting— longing—aye, loving only you —Margaret E. O'Brien, per HOH RT HH he 2 ge ae ae a ee

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