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eR. som COMIC VIEWS OF LIFE. AND STILL UP GOES THE PRICE OF COAL. 369O964.20003800600-06060-006 8-43-6686 DOROOOO> OFPOSITS SHALL BE MADE THUS. BOSOIIOTOIONGTE PPLE PESIESEOSOOESESSD. 3 t e4 rs s $ & CBOTERS PESTO EEE IOI 5 FS Pa Awakened Householder—For heaven's sake, don’t shoot! You will tind!my pocketbook and all the Jewelry on the dresser. Help yourself and go! + Fall of 1901 Burglar (hoarsely)—It isn’t your jewelry I want. It's the coal! y 640404 6@ rae ord ba WHAT WORRIED THE BOY. 4-064 PHEDHSEESOG GOOD REASON. iS ‘A a “Dey say de ilquid Yr company Is tn hard luck.” “Yes: I t'ink too much of de stock escaped as ‘hot air.’ ”* “Say, pa, when a Ifon eats a man does he spit out the buttons?” THE LONG ARM OF JUSTICE! Park Policeman—ill, the Qllow stilts in the park. Yall Mon—I'm not on stilts, I'm the (Biff, bang!) “Why don't you keep on climbing over if you're imdn clothexpole. bo mart?” NOT AS BAD AS HE IS PAINTED. ane on this bench for 2 moment. cell. °)} published by the Presa Publishing Company, &2 to 6! PARK ROW, New York. _ op tis Bey ‘ f \ . How TO BECOME \tl ww «2 BEAUTIFUL. GUIDE TO GOOD LOOKS. By HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. sult an Ocallat. | OF a sulpbydrate of one of the alkalles. Dear Sos, Ayer: |1 give you formulas of some of the well- Would you please tell me what to do| known depilatories. They are best made for my eyes? They always look red and {by a chemist, and I think it is cheaper the eye lashes are very thin and short.|to buy one than to attempt to make it MAMIE MARKS. |at home. A | THINK you should have your ¢: One of the oldest depilatories manu- Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. HOW. REACH THE ABUSES THAT MENACE OUR FREEDOM ? In his address at the memorial service on Morningside Heights Bishop Potter said: We remember that three Presidents of this nation have been aseassi- lowk: Sulphide of strontium, twe draras; oxide of sinc, three drams; powd&red starch, three drams. Mix thorogshly and keep dry in well corked dottless until waned for use. Take enougtr, to make a paste and add warm water th st until che proper consteteacy examined by an ocullst, I¢ you can-|factured and which has a very larg¢|is secund. Spread-over the hatty eur- nated in less than forty years. What ts the cause? Would i not seem that|® not afford to sonra oo why, do you sale Tee, as follows: Bulpnyarate) of | face and, ailow to remain from one tq y ; not go to a hospi T give you a|sotia, 100 grains; chalk, 900 grains. Mak€/nye minutes, accord! to the nature * there Is something wrong in the heritage which h8s/rormyta for a atmple eye wash, which |into a thin paste with water and apply| of the gaa wth and prise lee tes on come down to us through history? One of these is} will give relief, but the fact that the/to the hairy part, and let it remain @/ the gkin. It should be removed, as in nd BISHOP POTTER | that these conditions have been created by ignorance. ;| WE SHOULD REMEMBER THAT WE CANNOT HAVE THE FREEDOM ;| PUBLIC. We niust have a great system of free education, a system that | will reach and enfighten the perverted minds of all persons, of whatever q . eye red indicates the necesalty for | few moments and then scrape it off with with ; SUMS UP THE {free speech. skilled attention. a paper knife, The effect of this depita-| burning se sation tapomree ye = fee SPW ATION SS, ., But can there be any such vaing as absolutely} Eye Wash—Borax, 1 grain; camphor |tory Js to destroy the hair, which comes! rtquid acgullatories so far as I have ¢ ELOQUENTLY. 3 water (not spirits), 1 ounce. Pour a |off when scraped. experimented! with them are unsatisfac- free speech? If It were so would we then siretcli| row drops of the solution In the ese] Another good depliatory is made as| tory, Greqmintly they eee all rate | out our hand to stay him who would enter our | several times a das. is ne avery fe Co cahaey cane when purchawed, but after standing for homes and poison the minds of our half-grown sons and daughters? There} Treatment for Superfuous Hair. oe eraing i ‘]a time they .depoait crystals. I have Dp Deas Aree: Mme water, 4 fluid dra: Apply a® the | rover seen a B'Quid depliatory that was should be no freedom of speech in any such unlicensed sense any more than there should be freedom to handle gunpowder as any Irresponsible person my seo fit. There are Inws to govern the latter, and if it be our right and duty to make laws to guard against this danger {t is equally our right and our duty to erect safeguards against the license of speech. But we are not prepared to expel the false prophets nor to muzzle free “peech, nor to burn Incendiary books. Treatment of this kind, even were we prepared for it, would be essentially superficial. We must delve deeper, to the cause, in order to finda remedy. Then we will in all probability fmd i rfuous hair ng. ry remain ‘ool on therface endioeake “wil you kindly | Barlum sulphide {s alro used ae a er eey ote @o0d Aenatoey is tell mo a remedy—not dy electrolysis—|Daste for depffatories. The standard | trom 31.69 to $2. and about how much will it cont ts seems ts Ps eter bab aeand Too long contact with the akin shoul® will have to use a depllatory. | water. ‘The barium sulphide must be tale bes'be areaves the dennded is T think your best plan will be to absolutely dry to be effective when it Is face should be gently washed with buy one of the good, proprietary |mixed with the chalk. Enough water| yoo water and is cold cream or adland depilatories. should be afterward added to make a) |, applied to avoll! irritation. Nearly all of the depilatories are prac-| thin caste. This {s intended, for al correspon: tically on the eame basis. The most] Sulphide vf strontium makes also 29 | ents who have recantly written me ask- active ingretiient is usually a sulphide, ! efficient depilatory. It Is made as fol- ing for home-made deplfatorfes. TO-DAY'S LOVE STORY + "*"” 27 Nomex cHance (Copyright, 1901, by Dally Story Pub. Co.) gwam It of bis? turn politely inaolent ,and unconcerned. {= WAUCHOPE came briskly | He might have known that it was just] Yet he would have given anything for MEN AND BRETHREN, tN THIS SOLBMN AND AUGUST MOMENT OF A REPUBLIC WITHOUT THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF A RE- out of the Faculty Room, wearing | his luck to come to grief over the affair. another chance, thougt) his pride would He had known from the first that his} not let him ask for !t- cane was hopeless. Hin misdeeds had! jrow could he face his father after been up for consideration too many'| having dragged their 4ommon name in mes before for him to expect any|the dust—that name of which they were merey now, both 86 proud? ‘The moment he had entered the Facul-} And his mother—ah, ha dare not think of her. He might break down if he did. A wisp of paper Goat! down :o him from the gallery abows. Wauchope looked up tn time to nate the swish of a disappearing okirt. - note wr pencilled on the scrap of gaper: on his face the boyish, Hefant emile that wae meant to express su- preme unconcern. Wauchope thought of ali he would miss, how the strong bonds of fellow- age, so as to give them true comprehension of the principles underlying our government. nd tata . * rmed on the bail grou These statements of opinion and fact are worth reading again]? Te nel ectatiae tnd at clase seet- and again. {ngs would be snapped when he went A y vi H » aw anti not a soul among them Many men are saying, as Bishop Potter says, that free speech] youta care anything about ie atise has been carried too far. It is one of the inevitable results of vio-| the, frst feeling of reare i 1 oH . ‘klezs, lawless classmate had been ex- en lence that liberty should suffer. Let one man in a startling manner Saued Sh a ie xiettell.be fn SE Oe Scal be traitor to the code of freedom and all men begin to look about] Me could imagine en yaTiNe.60 eee ; Wiha ‘ cislea: se) Avon? distrustfully and say: Is the human race developed sufficiently to ter “What? Hatry are tater: Harry flushed when he gesd f. a - 7 ‘Wel, it had to come sooner of gi then he groaned, be fit for freedom? His restless fingers, unsonsclousiz ik a// i Ho knew chat it meant 0! But is not the sober second thought that these assassins are Sorblng:jciulebed ies pl ot are » depraved degenerates, not. products of our liberty but perverts from|"{, was a programme of the last class 3 i bore dele etre col at? : : A ; ‘ f It gave a wrench > - OU spl brs { it? Is it not unjust to generalize about such crimes as these—such | hop. and the sight Cet ty Moti T shall let you sacrifice yourself for acrime as that of this viperous Czolgosz, cringing up toa man under pene een a dlsaracea) man? I may be [al swore the pretense of shaking hands with him and then shooting him down? Scamp. buts I'm: not’ eueb i a) beand Is it just to hold our, civilization, whose freedom has put us | 5 Sean teeylitulys wees readton \ ny that,” he cried to himself, and set his, rene she had appeared In that fetching ¢ teeth bitterly at thought of Ede futility) of a too-late repentance. ' in a single century in the foremost file of the nations, responsible] tight gray dress of hers, how ahe had f ‘The decor of the Wacatty. Room epened =es 7 in the least degree for the vicious, the incom- seemed ao} rabehiece reserved and more \ and a professor stepped out. Si poue none *$ potent, the insane, the degenerate,” the An-|"Tt"had swept acrosa’ hla mind at the N “Mr. Wauchope, can we seu you @ EXTREME To i archistic ? time that possibly the thing he wanted \ at ned desi Sd the ted, and | most In all the world might some day followed him proudly into the jedement | THE OTHER. 3 Are we better or worse off than Italy, | ni nis reach, and he bad resolved prsacetis tocccecccecees than Germany, than Austria, than Russia?|that be would make such a man of ; | My f himself as would be worthy of her. Five zuinutes later the oor opened again to Iet out a young man with the Than England, whose late Queen was the object of no less than a seven attempts at assassination? : Mea ete ore merialtioe eager light ot Béppinete sbising, from As well chafge honesty with responsibility for theft, truth with | way ho had ¢ound aimselt bent on high | ty Room he ha@'seen that he stood no} his exes responsibility bate bs as charge f; 4 d_ enlighten ith|echlovement, He knew his work in the|chance. If they had been severe he] He mad strata a ie ‘ns grand ome = . iy; tOF o vharge freedom and enlightenment with|Crassroom bad steadily tmproved. would have felt 1t a hopeful sign, but] way which to the barbarism, ferocity and degeneracy. But why the deuce was it that he{this cold, dusiness {ike ate shor 4 gaty Anouk Cc toy tad obec Yo the a be . . 7 a heart kept But all this does not affect the great truth in what Bishop Pot one talaa beset se jostiotie pescbere! Saeed 3 singing ter says about unlicensed speech and about laws against it. ‘Tomlinson wanted to kidnap the presi-| They had galled him Inexpressibly by pemnngthen tance Alice, git Re There has been open advocacy of murder, open encouragement! dent of the junior dees what business! their coldness, and he had been in. re- TT to assassination by saying that it would be excusable. There has LACE LOVE? : e Gest (of [the / Sunilor{ciuss) what} buminees ° fhe So veeeee been much and public and almost unrebuked tempting of weak WILL MONEY EVER DISP 9900600000 1 ts sation . ence between the comfort of the many in civilization and the misory dedin ether canes vr wn or A Fi My opinion ts dhat money will dis- It is one thing to propose repairs and additions to the structure “Ideal Love” Is Disappearing. minds to assail the very foundations of civilized life by destroying Leveless Marriages Unhappy. fled in either case. of all in barbarism. FRED WEBER, psa A rae eretbard $10 for the best 150-word of civilization. It is a vastly different thing to propose to put dyna- tera love that {s unselfish and true, letter te “rour-Milltgn Bride 2] To the Editor of The Brentag World: security —security of life and property, which makes all the differ- ‘To the Editor of The Brening World: No. $M Gates avenue, Brooklyn. the woman is 4 selfish love; If it letter on this subjept. mito under the structure and blow it up. The first is progress. The love that God wants us all to have, Baltor, Evening Wovlld, FP. 0. ‘When one Is thoroughly: and pense second is Anarchy. it 19 worth qore than $4,000,000. It is Box 1,854, New York Wity.” In love, none will doubt the strenath + ‘ . : f 7 Joften sald that when poverig comes to that love over many millions. ase And any man who writes or speaks violence is a public ENEMY] the door lwve files out the window. 6 3-680 |srowins so cynical, however, that i takes a great deal to Sindy as % cases, but not so if true] just for the sake of the mondy, with- {the old days, that “there is 01 one ba tn tneees If 1. thought I was] out one speck of love in the‘r hearts. [the world for us,’ &c., and the feeling’ Some people think this ‘s true. It may —as much a disturber of the public peace as jf Se Gee he appeared on the streets with a torch and MANDS AN END called on the mob to follow him to the burn- OF LICENSE. ing of the city. Geececcreseeed Agaiust such treason to the social com- pact freedom itself leads in the demand for restraints. PROFITS AND PLEASURES OF A PUGILIST. In his examination in supplementary proceedings, the lawyer asked “Jim” Corbett how he had invested $24,000 which was paid oes weeny to him, and this was his reply: IN A FEW Way, I didn’t exactly invest it. It takes a good yeans. $ bunch of monsy to keep me guing. I live Uke a Lioccccccccccex king, gamble some, play the races, and {t doesn't take long for $24,000 to slip through my fingers. Why, I've spent ten times thut sum in a few years. I've spent $100,000 in a year. This verifies tho old saying about money, “Easy comes, casy goes.” It disposes, too, of all the nonsense that ever was said or To cut this costume for a gitl ten years of age 5 yards 37 -tnohes ‘wido, 37-8 yards,44 inches widp or 35-8 yards 6 Incheg wide will'be required. going to hayp @ man that was untrue |I think this does ae very wanappy i teromies) 80 rete girls eee for = i Saatpreter The aioneee? No. a8 Kosciusko street, Broadsn. Four miliion iw a great temptation to every ‘time. I belleve there are men Lavo a Gift from Heavens ran ae cd American ters ere —EEEE—eeEOeeéwes—' romenich soeameneriowe lea love f Ride existing’ and they do not consider they are selling parte Jove 18 8 dee oyna ere is. ne] themeelves dy marrying a multl-miliog- OR HOME SOD] Money in it. Fxchanging of money isgaife. Monoy marriages do not always a circulating transaction between men: Patties ota suereclari NG 2 DRESSMAKERS. henee there is_no love in it. Thera-| they Bute unions mcoaat eee —— " Irore love cannot: be bought for money | Mon sense. Ey fom mints wl ou: The E World's Daily| "2, B200Y cannot make love. Jy [seed wives that it 1» harg!* advisable to ra shri money end love: can run 1h unit” lrceommend them. None should warty, Fashion Hint. equally on both sides, there may spammed nem, happiness. But where money {s alone ey + witronidotteres alone, without the love, money will displace it marriages arene G rat 3 ‘grand pas- petaty Rodan) at ed pt) bebe nate the character, ere often ‘very. ‘ill never replace love, While love ia| DaP¥Y once. IDA M. CABLE, a gift from heaves, the Oe of money is only prevalling of eart s VIRGINIA.’ Perth Amboy, N. J. All Depends Upon the Girl. written about the culture of the fist as a means of developing a finer " ‘To the waiter of Tye Eveaing World: manhood. Corbett is considered to be about as “gentlemanly” a i pee ae potiapeaitloaydld Kettle aed bah le Rd man as ever made a business of the bruiser’s “noble art,” but even ‘ for pastime, she simply goes with the|@ Wnauted ner kiss mo? ho can think of no higher use to which to put his “big money” than f Se mans: because be's eet Arnal ig ‘An. yqu might! to “live like a king,” gamble and play the races. * : - 7 in vcr paper where two gins were at ‘Just one kins to fast me er if i ‘ Newsort. One of them sald “I wouldn't ‘AM my life. <f FORTUNES MADE IN COAL DUST. | minding is fo and tho, ater |S} yas ime Kos co telp me | IGKENS'S “Golden Dustman” is] hes brought the attention, of others to \ fais phabadl pics @ifference in girls. All ined " outdone by the iiamond Dust-|the subject, and now in many places . a yraont ieweenr yh man, the man who makes a! thero are so-called washeries and mill- a showed, s fortune out of the heaps of coal dust | lons of tons are annually marketed. f ‘ WRESTLING IN JAPAN. foalper straight before me, or culm which are found about the coal| It may surprise the reader to know Japanese wrestler belongs to ‘The long read. = mines Jn Pennsylvania. that at some very extensive collieries in ‘ $ s I f A few years ago an ingenious young ‘the Lehigh district the amount of coal not +I muat travel lonely, ‘Wittiout you. iY man who was left without occupation, [larger than chestnut sent to market Should’ T diame you? What else Could you writes F. E. Saward in Lesile's Weekly, | forms only 4 per cent. of the total ship- thought out the problem of utilising | ments, chestnut 22 per cent., while pea those banks, bought up one or two, and/coal forme 13 per cent., “buckwheat” putting dis wits at work tried to sep- and “rice” 3 per ceat. Jt has been arate thoir contents into sizes or me er of recent years where the ghip- chantable fuel. Much time, labor and|ment of coal leas than chestnut expense were incurred. Failure €co- | amounted to much, for pea coal did not homically to separate the useful com-|cut any considerable figure in stipments ponents from the dross was the result, !until about fifteen years ago, “buck- until by adapting the hydraulic syste: * within the fast ten yearns and such as $s used in Western mining, | “rice” within the last five. It fs not : 4a ‘ ‘Must itive on economy of handling resulted, and th G, therefore, that the domestic eae servedl tho purpose of expeditiously z Live, with hopeless ¢uture, flushing the contents of the bank to}neia at what snem to be high prices, past. the separator far better than any other | «Rarjey” ts the Lekatane pretense size people, Then why not have kissed me {% i known method, such as conveyors The | of anthracite coal,and the uee of It ir nina : "At the test? _ wasy There's. Smith—Wow, I’m’ out of breatk ° Officer Jones—Ab, here you are,| result bag. poe hat anpesre thou- | gaining ground among steam-users every v wight (or Grace. Goodale, in. August ¢ g sands of tonsa o been E , on ; : ‘ A him chasing that fellow. I'll just sit down jailbird! Come along back to your bold from these apparently, worthless day) for it do bein commen. not only y will ‘ f Sorlbner's. a mixture piles. to the great fortune of the opary Siveral pinces’ ator ghercof, The success attained here {fer tls particular