The evening world. Newspaper, October 7, 1901, Page 8

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THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, OCTUBER 7, 1901. By an Expert. Nothing to Worry Abont. dear Mra. Ayer: fears my nenior, Please advise me, IRC. W. [ THINK you are too easily worrled. "The difference of two years ts really fage of men to women older than them- elves has become an every-day affair. tad the prospects of happiness do not feem to be in the least degree affected vy the fact that the wife happena to + lave come into the world a Iktle In ad- tance of her companion. ‘ The Girl Was Wrong. | Dear Mra. Azer: 4 T’m a young man twenty-three years teen keeping company with a young ady for over three years. Aa I know hat sho Is not satisfled to be eparated kom me, I revealed the secret to her ‘folks and told them my intentions. T taye since heard trom my young lady hat she felt very much disappointed a my telling her folks, as she wanted t to remain a secret for a year longer. Tor my part I would have been more nleased that way, but I acted for her nterest, as I love her dearly. Kindly tive me your opinion, = EDWARD. ‘'T would have been wiser to have asked the young Iady’s permission to write her people. It was an honorable thing to wish to do. A marriage en- iagement, I think, should always be nade public, at least to the extent of icnuainting the families of the man and oman. In this case, as you seem to tave offended the young lady, I suppose ‘ou must apologize, That 1s the easlest md safest way of repairing matters. I am seventeen. A young man and nyself were sitting alone not long ago @d he led up to a subject which he aust have been dying to talk of. With vonest talkirg he told me that I wae he only one he ever loved, und he al- Aost swore that he meant it. Now, hould I ask him what his intentions we? Jr. AM not at afl surprised, and very Ikely you are the one girl this ‘ young man, up to this time, has a ender affection for—but, my dear child, ‘t me beg of you not to ank him what 4s intentions are. If there 1s one uestion I think the girl of to-day hould avoid, it in that sinister queny. fou are very young, and should not jow to Avotd Hal b the Bultor of The Freaive W The beat time to co bureheaded out a the sunshine is while exercising (auch # riding a bicycle, walking, &.). While the blood Is circulating briskly here ts no fear of catching cold. The un and alr, combined with good elr- ulation of blood, revitalize the hair ‘fn top of the head and make ft grow an hick as on the back of the head. The a Mittle in Mined to be curly, B We Win, owner has » {cup hell ne'er ltt, for in ga Our Colu of the ocean, REPAll Her Met to Letter-Weriters, Nvening World iter column has been discipline for my ehildr Uppowe every parent who has w lurg+ mily knows that as young girls bad womanhood t are Mile uncles of th Importance. wo cldest girls were impertinent ant sroposed to do ax they ¢! pasing ed to thelr parents, and when I real OR HOME so DRESSMAKERS. I hion Hint. To cut this dress for a child wars of ago, i yards of mater nohes wide, 3% yards 27 Inches wide, % yards 32 inches wide, or 2 yards 4 Gemaie ag OF LOVERS. Tam tn love with a dear ittle irl md hare been calling on her for some me; but there !s one thine which wor-| « 48 me and that ts that she is two Insignificant. Of Inte years the mar- 4, a travelling salesman, and have CHE EVENING WORLD LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. iyatayed away 1 Che Evening World's Daily rekes wide will be required, with %4| think of marriage for years. If this young man really cares for you he will ask you to marry him. Just be patient and modestly watt for the all important question. VOLUME 42. Publistied by the Prese Publishing Company, No. 83 to 62 PARK NOW, New York. NO. 14,687. Entered at the Post-Ofice at Ad! Second-Class Mall Matter, British medica thority insist ti ficially produced at reasonable expens to purify the alr in tunnel: other places. jew York as ARTIFICIAL AIR. vais: Love Story a aC( Towne Where Bouant Me SrOWs, ae] in DDG o> EQUAL TO THE OCCASION. Miss Jones—Professor, do you dare to look me in the face and then say that I originally sprang from a monkey? Profensor (a little taken back, but equal to the occaaton)—Well, really, It must have been @ very charming mon- key.—London Tit-Bits, ————_!__-- MUSICAL GENIUS. Joshua Straw—Our boy Silas ts goin’ be a musishun, er I miss my guess. Mrs, Straw—Dew tell! Joshua Straw—Yes sir-eel You jes’ ort t' see him prick up his ears when he hears you blow th’ dinner horn.—Ohlo tate Journal. Ss ‘The Evening World letters on puntsn- ment I decided to try that remedy. 1 the letters, It was Just what they need- ed. Lf grown girls behave Ike children they should be punished Mke children, I winh I had tried tt long before. The vlder the culprit te more thorough the puntshment, wae " Veraus ches.! of The Eveaing World ¥ 1 keep company with took mporarily out of my life %. 1 grew tired of th hervelt eral . 80 ve when she did this 1 took myself temporarily out of her ilfe, too; and [that time whe wrote suggesting that jeemie back and saying she war willing to let bygones be bygones, Since then she hax been an Ideal steady company. [There Is all the difference between her, |then and now, as there Is between, | plekles and hea, LC write thin for the Urneflt of others whose best qirin mis treat them, ‘Treat 4 girl coldly and she'll adore you, ‘Treat her servilely and she'll wipe her feet on you HARVEY REMSEN GOLDEN, Jr. 22-2 D2L0OPOPDDDDD-9-904-4-090- 1-0-9900] 91-909-0-46-4-5-5-5-2-0-0-0-4-5-00 Suen ee 20 5 PEACE IN PROSPECT----BUT THAT’S ALL. 2. Checks—The Hazus court may See here, don’t push tween France and Tur. Keep your legs at home! KATE CAREW ABROAD. DR. PARKHURST IN PARIS. Czar talks of ten years’ peace. who're you stop Boer war. told my children so and showed them| Mother — Would! Ike to join: the boys’ cholr and Jays. At the end of | HOW SAD Glies—Old _ 8kin- ner Is awfully ab- ‘The Dusty ¢ Pe the Falter ot Toe be Tam sure 1 thousands tn ¢ ful conditions w complaint of erring to the disgrace Ist at the "Ctr- and make It eto breathe there, not tnjury done to clothing, damage to business in Ix there no cone be compelled to sprinkle and thus allay thin tn the alr but { the street every- paint ment apply ww thoof Eighth avenue, in gree, from BY th street the wake © electric cars, DISGUSTED. | Woald You Be an Old Man's Dar- ting t Bvecing World vn old man's J. man'a slave. May t jr souns oy binding tarmaely haracter ty worth. patation Is worn attenetions hese men, and then take the fatal plunge, Rather marry an old man and live happy ever after LOUIS A. KERPEN. They Are, of The Eveniog Wo! A man immigrated to this country and, not declaring his Inten(ons of becoming an American citizen, he married and reared a family. Are his children Amort- ean citizens? JERSEY CITY RP, ENGLISH WALNUTS NGLISH walnuts grow very enslly in this country. We saw a young tree that had grown from the nut, and {t was six or eight feet tull and had been growing only two or three years. We saw a very large troe once in South Carolina, says the Elberton ‘Tribune, that was as large ax the com- mon walnut tree that J Indigenous to our soll, and that bore bushels of these delicious nuts. 80 we think the English Walnut can be grown as successfully Miles—Realty, Snever notleed tt. Pitty-ninth | Pell into the ® Ives miserable, blight ) Finds the harder SKYWARD. Reneath the preading chestnut @ blacksmith mule the best way hat he could, Preading chestnut ‘There 1s something uncompiomising about Dr. Parkhurst. and with as Iittle trouble as the com mon walnut. Try It Wi you get the fresh nuts this fai! planysome of then, more American, | PECVD HGS ER VEVEereeTyrevernereeewereyerrerreyem Pier IOrETeePerIre eT ErED He doesn’t melt {:.to his environment. He {s always Dr. Parkhurst. One could not fail to recognize him a block away as he came whisking along the Rue de Rivoll, averting his severe eyes from tt:e imitation Jewelry in the shop windows, IN ALL ENGLAND. : Za Ine SQUIRE, q SUCCESSOR nme etl ree ag PTA MORE ACRES HAVE JUST BEEN ADDED TO THE SQUIRONIAL ESTATE AT WANTAGE IN BERKS. AND PROBABLY BEFORE THE SQUIRE GETS THROUGH WITH NEW YORK POLITICS HE WILL OWN THE WHOLE BLOOMING BRITISH DOUGHMINIONS. E came into the office a stranger to all the boys, spoken ,man, FPdTIDTDTODD qvainted with Cooley's partner. afternoon Cooley, while case, suddenly dropped Is tick, o-4d00%- ran and turned him over. It was not a bad hemorrhage. rg aos him work any more that day. 3 among the flowers. “Oh, what's the matter, PhilT’ gasped. 'm—I'm all right, May, $09 It seems, alarmed. SOPDO “Come!” a young fellow sidled in. DRAM tas when he saw him. “Hullo: roi him." One morning Jake came tn with a lookin’ ‘round the town,” he said. q a ta “Feller I uster know," sald Jake. worked for him back in St. Lous.” Oboe be- 4. Checks—Legs nothin’! I'll show 3 sy. Wow! yon! (Whir-r, bift! to Jim May, Cooley's sub. “As mean a cuss as ever lived,” re- y, as young May complied with Will's request. “He tells me he's been married since I worked for him. Marrted one of these ‘ere pretty, Iittle, delicate women--how is it these big brutes catch that kind?" WEET kisses are a treas- ure, When taken not for pleasure, But for the love you feel; A love that seems divinely given, Shed by lustrous rays from heaven, KISSES. plied Jake cheerful! queried Jake, thoughtfully. “Well, rimicieini And taste the wondrous bil To come tn contact with her lip ‘Twill thrill you to the finger sf] Dow thinks he a Intely, and he's after ‘em hot, Bweara Lat 3 I puncture the fellow if ever be meets If love be In your kiss, i nae aaah 80 be you elther maid or man, f] ‘There was a nerve-wracking crash. Do all the kissing that you can, The Lae of type in Jim's hands had If truly good and pure; fallen to the floor. It's both enduring and sublime, Juke burst forth with a perfect food ; And makes you richer for a but WIL dared) around | time, hoy had dropped with | And often makes you poor, the galley. —George McKenzle. He lald his burden down upon the , o feor, tore off the boy's tle, and opened : . Heiss | the neck of hin shirt: HOW TO COOK TRIPE. | lon and turned Te prepared in thia fashion |s| UP to me as [ brought the wi The New Lodger—? What's the matter, | that when I was Let me show SPIG29H3-4--- es fe from her earlleat years ts conse-J even ber crated. Hence the true reason of foot-| low Iife th grasp the rail so, and then you begin H out the “ the knot of hair they wear on the side of the head and the locks on either cheek. When a lady becomes engaged | le under the gul: these are pinned up by the “hairpin of women,” as a Chine: ‘The method Chinese ladies have of doing the back hair 1s often very elaborate, as will be noticed In the colffure of */ band in all things, but her Foochow or a Hinghua woman. law as well. Even his sii In China marriages are made at the martinge agent's. ‘The celestial Adonis, ——_ when he would go woo:ng, Is, above all ALASKA'S FARMS. ‘There are only twelve farms in Alaska, amazed at the suggestion that ne) ee ee eae em combined ar should waste Jong hours breathing soft { accelerating” — Johnny—I forgot, | things, businessllk Smart, dat de rea. xon I couldn't slide down was dat mod aoe oae to paste me wit" 4 SEQUENCE. do wish you would up smoking, Growells—I'll_ do, smoke as long as I Yes, and after that biase,—C hicago PODHGOSOLYTP OSS FSSHEHLG-045406-08-04-090969 9S 29999-0466 COMPANY. Tommy — Mom, gimme another bis. Mamma (sternly) comp'ny don't: want to hog ‘em all, — Philadelphia WSSOF70899TT 06 8Oe: r. “My God, Jeff, it's a woman! oe wh lee served at a well-known New York es. The tripe, about half a pound] eo. that night, salt and) will saw that the dead man wi ‘This may also be prepared in al rest of the Banner’ MARRIAGE IN CHINA. sphere in iife for women than] thought of, For it ‘s the strictest eti- marriage, #0 to this end a girl's] quette that she must not talk to men— relatives, Of course, t@ rule cannot be altogether nd} carried out, but in the “upper circles” is the native explanation of the} of the Mowery land xeclusion after be- custom. No sacrifice {s considered too| trothal is Great to secure the all-Important hue-| “Woma: band, In China you can generally pick | “Is subje T= Chinese recognize no other) master, but thin must not be even ow ‘No footee bind, no hus! rictly enforced. nappropriated blessing: nice of her son! before her. She drudge. He would be BOD-OG5-4-8-94-9-3FSSSLSOSEOOSELDOLDDDEHDELIBDODDDPOOOOM, THIS LETTER WINS $10. ———t HE EVENING WORLD offered a prize of $10 for the beat answer to the question, will the $4,000,000 gift made to his bride by a millionaire have any effect upon the girls seeking husbands? or, in other words, “Will Money Ever Displace Love?” The winning reply has been sent by Miss S. I. De Vine, stenog- rapher, typewriter and notary public, No. 26 Mann Building, Utica, N. Y. Following {s her letter: “Four million dollars for a bride! Is Cupid growing mercenary? Is money displacing dear old love? No! The $4,000,000 gift es- tablishes no precedent! Since the world began neither that eum nor many times the amount of such a gift could stand in Cupid's — scales against the true, honest, love of man for woman or woman for man. Cupid loves only those who love! He takes no cognizance of those who love for gain and ridicules the pretensions of those whose imperfections are so monstrous as to necessitate the gift of such a sum to hide or gild them. The gift will have no effect on girls looking for husbands whose hearts the little God of the bow ‘and arrow best Inves to pain. Love ever shall outweigh all, and the: use of Inoney in such cause Is but a bribe, a device to govern those whom love cannot control by honest means.’ : (Copyright, 1901, by Dally Story Pub. Ca) Cooley was a quiet, civil- But the time came when we got ao- | anding at hie Kered a step or two toward the win- dow and then, before we could reach . him, fell prone upon the floor. Jake | There was a dark stain on the boards. We had him up in a few moments; but Will, my partner, would not let When they led poor Cooley up to his house the partner was grubbing around s2!4 Cool- (The partner's name ts Jim May. ; * Will interjected.) “Don't be — There came a timid knock at our door next morning, and at Will's sharp wasn't much more than a boy and an utter stranger to me; but Will got up | "he sald. “How's Cooley?* “This is—er—Mr. May, Alf Cooley'a partner. Mr. Cooley wants to keep his sit, and has sent me over to sub, for of news, ‘There's another printer “Yes? Who ts he?” asked Will coolly. “What sort of a fellow Is he?” asked WII, carelessly. ‘Prove up that gal- ley you've set, will you, Jim? turning married her an' he admitted to me last night he treated her pretty mean, an’ if Mark Dow would admit as much as And bound by God's great seal. | jhat you can lay your money on it that he made Ife a hell on earth for A most delictous, dainty treat, that gir}, whoever she was, Well, tho Tf you will some fair creature girl got enough and eloped with a Gath young fellow who was Dow's foreman. ‘They came West here somewhere and picked up thelr trail Then he uttered a startling exclama- white, pitying faca | he eald. club a one of the most popular) stark Dow found the man he looked but he was beyond the for a dozen oysters, ix wel washed,| regch of vengeance, simmered for three-quarters of an hour in slightly salted water and then re- moved. To the broth add a tablespoon-| peace on Cooley's face. ful of butter rolled in flou pepper, with more fou thicken If necessary. Ret add the dozen of oy aerve. chafing dinh. sub.” fs only # memory. ‘The hate of the man whom he had wronged could not disturb the smile of added to/ decently buried and settled the bills n the tripe,} that were incurred, Perhaps he knows, ers, simmer and| too, what became of the girl; but to the force “Cooley's ‘2 the Chinese adage to three conditions In Ife— by at her father's house she ts subject to her parents, on marriage she submite to her husband, and in widowhood sho Con- uently when the wedding guests have writer call It. | departed the little-footed, lemon-hued bride begins to realize that she {s not‘ only expected to obey her pig-tailed hus- Doubtl only 159 acres, but the profit from thelr nothings into rapturous ears, Doubtless | cujtivation in 1900 was $8.08. This was ‘the girl would be pleased to make the | due, of course, to the hil prices preva- ‘acquaintance of her future lori arid! tent in the local markets.

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