The evening world. Newspaper, September 26, 1901, Page 10

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TERIA IN For Attitade Toward Men. 5 Dear Mrs. Ayer: Tam 'a young girl of eighteen years ‘ani: became acquainted with a centle msn of whom I think a great deal. Ile asked me to go out with him one after- noon, and:I said I would; that same day Tilnvited him to spend the evening w: me, which he did. He expects to lea the city, 20.1 asked him to let me from him while he ts away, and he sai@ he would. But whether he will or no: is another thing. How can 1 find out & , he cares for me or not? Is there any way of my winning him?) ELEANOR. (AIT patiently, and you will be abic W to judge for yourself. It would have been more discreet not to ask the man to spend the evening < ybu on the day you accepted his in- vitation. Clever women let men take S the-filtiative and do the courting. 82282 66 = valued any possession for which he had 3 not to’ make some struggle. = Do not’ write this young man or ap- to be'too much interested In him. ‘A,iwoman who {s worth winning, ac- oes tea man's estimate, is the foman not easily won. Cultivate the © stivibutes that all’: men admire in women - tohwithstand just such temptations as " fre now encountering. The) modesty that prevents a young git] from the appearance of meeting a a uch leas making a nuine syrapathy with humanity that make some one woman thé, most adorable of companions and thd winning of her love the goal of Veyéty honest man's hopes, should be “posebsed by every girl. Another Girl 4a: ‘Trouble. Deer Mrs. Aver: Thave'been keeping company with a youtig lady for two years and we always agreed until.a young lady got in be- tween \us-and told things to her which Tinover.said. Kindly advise me what to'do, for I really do love the girl. y P.Z. ‘HE remedy {9 in your own hands, Msle upon knowing what has been ft is | Diab Mra ayer: be teen keeping company with a young lady a few years and I am just - ab-wiich'in the dark to-day aa I was {we first ret. She keeps me quess- ing all the time. What I want to find out! ts does this young Indy love ma TOR Mot She never wants to co out with lone: only with other young ladies. a ving out, and Ilost her address and it took mo “some time before I founl her. Now * ahé receives. me kindly at time: @t Others, Waat would you a _ to db: Give her up or try harder? 1 am a sincere young man of good character, 5, Vety, determined in winning a girl as 1 = hope 18) gone it fs silly and renselens to go further. TIRESOM : Eltzabeth, N. ] {s gone It ta silly and senseleas to, keep up the pursuit. It 1s not enough » that you should love tho girl, althougn ~/T-admit in ordinary cases it isn good Goal, but you must make yourself +0 fer your noclety to ar It seems to me, however, that a young. Iddy :as capricious ay you describe ix Rot Possessed of characteriatics that Here Is Healing Balm ‘ I néver saw a man in my life whol‘? ‘=the moral fibre that gives her strength | 7 cold | « }) em in other things, but, of course, when « QUITE agree with you. When nopo: ‘ NO. 14,646, Entered at the Post-OfMfice at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. VOLUME 42. Publislied by the Press Publishing Company, No, 53 to 6} PARK ROW, Now York, ~ THE CROSS-EYED MAN DISCUSSES THE YACHT RACES. (i * obmerved the Cross-Eyed) sce fnir play.” take In the yacht races myself, If only with the Whiskers, ‘The yachts fan, ag he and the Man with the | runted with the| they weren't on the water. The sea {couldn't make as much speed as on thé Whiskers boarded the “Lh! train “how can ‘air Vay?) always makes me seasick At least,” | water.” Ever see | he corrected himself, “it always makes you met {t/ me seasick when I go on it. It doesn’t | could hold the races on dry land road on a dark) at other times.” |!€ they wanted to. There's no law able to swear! ore would if you tried to eat it,” urged |“salnst ft. But, thea, I suppose, the: re that tottered past Cross-Eyed Man, “It's quite salt,| Wouldn't be Ikely to."* ra bird OF 4! you know. In spite of the fresh breezes | “No. Such a race would be foolish.” If you met tt on the! that etreumnavity ft." “Manifestly absurd!" chimed in the a 2 Crons-Eyed Man, But not as salt as 1f"— “But not as manifestly absurd as if “As you were saying,” Interrupted the « Ovice as mani | Crosa-Eyed Man, “It would be nice !f rtlandt street!" squealed the guard, the races could be salled’on dry land. tearing: up his tieket ¢o the yacht aces. | Rut, of course,"" he added patronizingly, | ‘The Cross-Byed Man and) the Man Man with the{ “they couldn't.” with the Whiskers left tha car, 1 think I'd) “Of course not,” They could not take it with them. . VASAT. It look till,” protested the Cross-Eyed Man, 1 A COINCIDENCE. | g rs 2 By J. P. COUGHLIN. F 9959900944 HI4-2H559.80295 294 DIGIC BOOSIDDSS® (Copyright, 1901, by tory Pub. C4.) That tis should’be so =3 daly nat= AUL WESTOVER had every rea-[| UM Mr. Westover was ridiculouly zon to congratulate himself upon |%0URs to know anything, of the tme the success of his new book. penctrable feminine. and yet-he had But: the: critica pointed out the un-| !ared to make '"Gértrude Warner” ‘the realistic Improbabilities of the main in- atbry of a woman's Iife, a story af cldents tr. which Mr. Westover's hero- | ny strange phases. ine waa centred. Westover was almost on the point of accépting the critics’: dictum. The ree viewers must be right. Gertrude Ware ner was falsely drawn. But there was at least one person wo did not think withthe reviewers. The newly fledged author received in his mail from his publishers a long letter that was truly startling to his eelf-possesston, Its fu length may not be given dere, bnt its gist Is contained in a couplé of eraphi ou are evidertly very intimately acquaintzd with the story of the darkest passage In my life, but. surely It was urnecessary tLat the details should be nade public so faithfully and so cal- lougly. 1 world Ike to think that your tery was purely a coincidence snd evolved entirely from your own fm- agination, but the details, up to the dcrouement, in every particular are s0 carefully true to fact that I have no other course than to beileve that some unworthy recipient of my confidence has in an {dle moment betrayed my unhappy history, “Doudtiess you will admit that I have at least the right of asking an explang> ticn, the more especially seeing that you have even given to your novel a tit so like the name borne by her who ass It. A week later Paul Westover had up ’ | encounter that caused him considerable embarratsnent. - 4 “Mr, Westover, our youngest novellaty Miss Warren.” = rock raves. n len aes nt medietne? track r you met {t on the race track," © Whiskers, pet- | interjected a dejected-looking passenger | a horseshoe pin and frayed check wi ved atioge | Not as reflningly wife a deairn tte A gir lover “ithe Man with messing’ in jown (9 the reaponsibi! esitly not rere trousers, “you could safely bet ten to one It wasn't Fair Play! as elevating.y | "Yes,"* J ifony to Whisk: assented the Mi n > DOELELADDO9-029O56%9HH9HD DES OF-04 DEDOTOSDE-8L4-3O9-30909OS90000000404 604. IN THE DEMOCRATIC CLUB? By T. FE. POWERS. ase ——— sii ROneRs > x COAT OF ARM! in y rh RENEARSING THE PICADILL Y WALK Caw “BAH JOVE! S80 LOIKE DEAR HOLD The serenity and self-containedness of the frail, pretty girl before him bad 3 striking cont! thor. . Westover found himself in a ql corner “of the drawing-room, antic ing a.quarter of an hour's stern cro) lexamination at the hands of Miss W;| 2 | ren. Bomehow the ordeal did not see to be 90 terrible as tt would‘have seers, two days previously... : During the two years that foll Paul Westover's literary output serv) to increase considerably his growt reputation. He returned to New ¥. and'propired to settle down comfortably to meet the demands made upon him) by his publishers. The novel. to prepare! which he left New York, was a pro- nounced: success, and Paul himself was) consclaus of a certain resemblance tn ltype between his new heroine and his; old, that {s to say Miss Germyn War rast to the blushing BLooMIN’ | Sweut WHERE Is JOHN WOE?’ BORON OO WON D! His ec ‘TED GRANGE, MOAT? gain in his career, Mr. Paul Westov: had:an encounter which caused him td become as discomposed and nervous he had been at his first meeting wi When we met lost I tried to kiss her, hb ~ < Buti she aid ehe does not allow any man — } the colneldental,héroine of his first béok. Sto:kite ner. Taleo wrote her a letter, | ‘> Aun) jp \ It was at a Iiterary reception. : \ i rivet not snamed us Bae PReraitt me. Biba Wateee: to inereduca \ epeaks ly of ma to her friends ani f ty you ir. Paul festover—you ve no < théy told me she felt very blue when | Encey —AR ARRY, doubt read-hia clever books.” { ( ¥ett-home for a few months, but when \ ‘Ow ARE THINGS “Yes, everything Mr. Westover has | Tcame back I heard she w: written,” said Germyn Warren, she extended her hand to Patil, who stood | bowing and bluehidy ihe a schoolboy, He noticed the same clear, blue and wondered at how closely he had re> membered them all this\tfme. He found Hirself on terms of old acquaintances ship with this magnetic Ittle girl, fom she wes only a gitl. That night. in the seclusion of his chambers, over his cigar, he came not unwillingly to the conclusion that after all: “What Is to be is to be, and It seems to me that the fatcs have ordained that 1 should create ‘a heroine for myself Bither I am in love or am drifting fe> lentlessty toward that happy state of mind, Of course, marriage Is the to-be- expected outceme of love, and for a young,man sttgeling for fame and for- tune a sympathetfs wife Is a | AT THE SHOP? 00 THEY USE HICE IN LUNNON? F3GOO9SO944-2- 6-99-4-9546-6-4-060- es ~ CLBAY. is said to be tbe color of talent; and shrewdness. Great thinkers! ave gray eyes. te a better head ¢! ay exes, However, * -rietits.” There are the splteral | the| ~ many va- the the cold, ie the meditattig and the in- telleettal; put the fact remains that the sharp, gray rebrésents the head “There le cre variety of gray eye of | whith» the lover should beware,” nays} j.eniexptrt in eycology. “It is the soft) eye with a large pupil that contracts » and dilates with a word, a thought or 1 MaBh of feeling. An that laughs, | that! sighw almost; that has tte sun- wbine, its twilight. Its mnoonbeams ant iti storms. A wonderful cye that wins| 30u, whether you will or n: a holds wu after it has cast you off, whether the Mce be fair or not.” A haget-eyed woman, Hing to these samp experts, you can generally rely on: Bhe never descends to pcan- AN AUTURN sonc. ¢ GAIN the old heraldic pomp } Of autumn on the hille: A scarlet pageant in tne swamp; Low lyrica trom the rills; And rich’ attar in the alr That Orient morn disttiis, Again tapestry of haze Ot amethystine dyc Entincturing the horizon ways; And jfrom the middle sky S Tho'terant. reverberant call (OF wie geese winging by. Death the viois of wind x N68 Lo one soft theme—- every burden left behind, i t rd in’ Woman's or. ylown, and is, no mut: | «. OF THE EYES. dals, never talks prefers her hu on the whole, tual, agreeable, lovable creature. Of green eves tt fx said they be- token courage, pride and enersy Black eyea are aymbolical of fire, rm- ness and heroism. Sometimes thy have trace of dtabolism in thetr rays that have a potent attraction over men’s! | hearts, Men have ight eres women, but In the interm of color between ight a percentage of the two though not quite, In thin Intermediate category haze! eyes, neither : much oF too little nda comfort an {ntellec to her oftener than ate grade dark Is very | x the are brow ight nor} rame genuine blac A prom fu nmand of language, al (Uservatton. Row live mun ess. at Lawrence—Gee! Here's fun! I'll stand the cat on tse fly-paper, Sister—You cruel boy, how dare you do that t- Tabby! yi her and see that you are punished, i butt T DPLESHS HITE HOPES OOO: f NS can man ever | ve nuk om HE MAGICIA OF SCIENC i things that we feel, taste, ame, cress Gud | See or hear make certain Impressions | upon our nerves, probably, necessarily | faulty; these impressions are combined ) of nature to can: ae fi tive” peloceeded, to ndape Mim V tr) TEIN OSU corners] A. simple remedy for. the prevention dows Is to apply a thin coat of pure weicometo Jt. glycerine. This will prevent moisture jcome to .! + Beets are fattening on account of the) cough ‘collects to ak tha neindayt elo ‘s Me tothe mabe. thelr presence known {cloud 7 they aré doing to 2 cal ae passing a hot'iron slowly back and forth } over the -spots infested and the sur- DRESSMAKERS. ome Housekeepers deem it wise to —_— ferstphr entire: édge of, the carpet this} The ~ Evening ‘World’s Daily A almpte-And: old-time any of remov- - sett ailldéwi from’ white ‘cotton Is to ib! To cut this le-breasted basque 9 yards of mater! article {n'thé sunshine: Inches wide, 1 5-8 yards 44 ‘Inches, wide In atranging flowers never mix large, . j \ Father and Mot'-r—We are sur- Neighbor—I can’t see the cause erea,' small blossoms ‘There is an art in Tabby off and— % : pee ( Conserved by followifigz nature as cluve- saad PORLALPLARIDLOSARPSIDOIOIIETD SOHTEDOOOSFDETITODOOTOD: ly aw ponsible: AN ELUSIVE WONDE things only which emit certain particles the ear there are ten octaves, paltry senses, notably that of. touch. It goes cipcéption of the, universe, Our only Our: j with the eye. “t large ts unseen by the human organs |ptéservation of Ite perfect harmony. Our olfactory nerves are far lens keen) The eye. as all understand, 1s con- of vision. We have no abaoltite criterion by which’ PODONE'2-D20DO491G-2 78° altered state of his clreumn: | Farktan inees? with a romeo thelr | of; feoaUtroreaingson) the inaide, ot) wise L iiking. and-make-thelr boy friends, condensation, and. will last until dust sugar they ¢onteln. petson"a' Moor they Ymay be ktlled by ‘OR HOME rounding, part: In rooms not much treatment once a year. . Fashion Hint. doub! the'stain with lem6n juice and place the medium size 35-8 hedvy blosgoms ‘with’ only frail, fine I'll release prised at you both! We vill taxe of the trouble, but I'll’call the po- 5 the xrouping of towers which Is best ME DEDOONDNID BIDGY -. — ee — D THE MANY EVER OF NATURE.) a e into the alr which affect the olfactory enough, but even this is better than: withou! ying, however, that nature| means of its accuracy ts in the jthan those of many of the animals, structed someghat on the same prin- Now, it is out of the.reports conveyed | we may, meadute.the truth or the falsity but al the progress is tive, and the unspeakad | by Our, brains tO} forma and ideas | which must have a vastly more Intimate ciples as ts the vat: tt depends for its by these faulty implements of sense | of any-Men. » 4 problems and « which conealiute’ F knowledge of na acquaintance with certain aspects of na- Infermaticn upon the waves of Mght. that we bulld our systems of knowledge| Rarely, although occasionally, some must e rema - | lure, olla tout ‘ ture than we. This g6es to show that, Very good, Comparing the sight: differ- in the brain, the:brain using its own | man sees sometilny hitherto undiscover- re ows ee eon CO ee eee the there are a great many more ences with the sound differences, where- methods of. combination in order to re- | 6d, andcxn. drive home his argumenta conviction. And why : orm al of Fenes: 0 unlerstane the Ba to smell than we can smell, Because as the ear disiinguishes ten octaves) tne, produce natu so far as fi feeble | for its #uyport with uch force that the Because men are the slaves of their r shortcomings. e all know that) of ine defects of our nosea we are cut{eye has but one, indeed, not one entire; means. will permit entire edifice. muyst\ be razed to> the they are defective because all of UR! of trom that brinch of kn at some tlme or another have been the) Victims of some petty delusions, but there are more deeply seated ditmeulties ground and reconatructed so as, to, re- atdro the harmony,\ao,that there will be a new niche for,the new stone to enter, Then we haveja;new epoch In-knowl- ede, 5 eee a A): : AIL our ,knowledmo: is -variable and ow’ edn ithe! otherwise when po 5. Onk. a foundation? and be+ totally, senses and nervous sys caure these are Imperfect, tnadequate as Instruments wherewith to \aporoach, far less examine and interpret, tha phenomena of the universe, We have ears, eyes, tongues and the sense of touch, that ip to say wo can © some things, we can hear some things, we can scent some thin, we can taste some things, we can ms things—in every case just these things which are capable of impressing the particular organs with which they have as, octave. The discovery of the ultta-]° Thére are many variations and many viol rays in the spectroscope has so| kinds of mental operations employed in Increased the range of vision that the arriving at a conclusion, and all: are octave has recently ben completed, | limited by’ the capacity of the sen With the assistarce of the Roentgyn|We are inclined to think that In tho ‘ays much further progress may be| region of mind at least we go untram- anticipated, melled, “Notisense, We think nothing So far, however, the only justification | that has nt been perceived by our, for considering the eye as the most|senses, All freah knowledge Ja fret put valual of our members in acquiring|to the proof by: the'sense before it is @ knowledge of nature must rest upon | accepted, . Ay Fee the fact that whatever we can see we} ‘ We bdulld up a great/harmonious whole. cam also submit tothe. teste-of other |as tho: fabric-of-our-knowledge, a0. ous, * : wled gs With our eura, the most nearly per fect of our sense orgnis and a delicate ‘and compiex ‘instrument, the case ts {than may at first be apparent to the Kdentical, We hear those things which ming oan be transmitted by the a waves The noxe tx perhaps the simplest. toltm our cars. Detalls are needless; but begin with, We all realize that there | the slowest beat that Is audible to are n limited number of objects which | human car is repeated sixteen times in we can know better through the a®-| the second, the fastest im repeated 30,000 eistance of our nostrils, We smell only | times in that perlod. These are merely those things which can be smelt, this; fiotsam and jetsam in the ocean of in the last analysis “meaning those sound; In the sounds characterised by Sar

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