Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE WORLD: WEDN farity, 1s an extremely fine one. Pos VOLUME 42. albly you crossed it unwittingty. I think tf I were in your place I should ask for an opportunity to explain, or apologize, as the case may require. et ¢ ee inerutearsovicareany tel Dh Love Story Entered at the Post-Office at New York as an hour the pressure on each square 'o Becond-Ciass Mail Matter. foot of surface is three and one-half : For To-Day IN THE FOREST. Teentaal By L. T. Weadock (Copyright, 1901, by Dally Story Pub. Co.) HIL PAQUETTE, woodsman, never loved any girl until he saw An- nette, the brown-eyed daughter »€ the bows of the Michigan lumber ‘amp in which he and ¢. hundred others worked all winter, He came upon her tn a clearing one lay where she was spreading a feast f grain before a flock of birds. With her was Hammond, the only man in the world that Paquette had time enough to ate, One day Phil said to Annette’ “Tl want to go to town to-day.’ He wanted to tell him his errand, but refrained, e In his pocket he had the savings of the winter, and he meant to spend {t in books that he, too, might read and be worthy of talking to the bo: But he had never bought books before ind he had often bought whiskey. So ‘© eet courage enough to go into a shop ind ask for a book he spent some of his money for drink. ‘ext he visited a gambling house and in exactly twenty minutes he had only, enough left to buy a very little Published by the Press Publishing Company, 83 to G1 PARK ROW, New York. BCESTREWHEAICY 8-39S-0D 04-9 +$8560-0689$08041650-600H0000 4SOD-2495 999964499909 95004 TENANTS TO THE RACE TRACK. By T. E. POWERS. OF LOVERS. By an Expert. A Disparity in Helght. Dear Mrs. Ayer: Tam a young man of sixteen years. 2 Rave a sweetheart of fifteen. I am tn stature & feet 2 Inches, She ts 5 feet 6 1-2 Inches. Could you give me any advice? I am willing to do what you way to get my hetght equal to hers, be- ause It looks #0 odd when we are walk- fag on the etreet. JOSEPH. OIN a gymnasium and you will prob- ably increase your helgnt. Most boys grow after they ure sixteen, anyway. When you get a Mittle older you will be more manly and wil! have opinions of your own, and will not be bothered dy the gossip of outsiters—at least I hope you will, At present both you and your little girl sweetheart are too young to command serious attention. An Amateur Detective. Deer Mee Aver My first cousin, a girl of my own age, clghteen, declared her love for me. and I to her tn my turn. But not long ago she had a young man call ing at the house. She went out with | him to the theatres and the beache + PDPDP-DIDDOV2-DDH-D3- Tre Squines Horse JN THE Ome Smered DONTCHER Krave! 1" Hp Uy Uf Ir AINT. THe care, I love you anyho JOMPING URDELS er not to go with lim, but she kept VTHWAT URTS THE ft up UM suddenly T lost the trail and} Orses ‘Oors IT5 ‘don't see him calling there any more. | Which quit I don’t know. My cousin works downtown, and there isn't @ day) she doesn’t claim that som low looked at her, She goes Beaches, dances with any one to any one. Don't you think It is best not Tt will break my pt 10 do W. 3. L yourself together, Bring pride to your rescue in thin mat- ter. Your heart will not break 4s lacking In the a and saw the sleighs cut through the snow his mind cleared !tself of the fumes of the drink and his consclence reproached him. “If she knew what an unworthy man 1 am,” he said to himself bitterly, “she would not care if I never bought a book. He purchased a copy in English of Montaigne, that poet of whom he re- membered that his father In France ad often spoken, and all the way to the camp he tried to read by the unsteady kerosene lamp in the smoking car. He looked about for Annette as soon s he reached the camp, but sho had one to town, they told him. Then he looked to see if Hammond was about. Inraopu LEB Pane boe RE FORE LENGO nee WEAVENS* THATS A BUM YORSE you HAVE SQuine, I Court RUN FASTER MYSELF! 47 >, { z 5 4 As he expected, Hammond was in town Mand respect “and conti she | me ‘Manus }]also. He flung the book Into the snow Were to marry you tt is doubtful if she | + TAATS A FINE nd it lay there an hour before he went could be constant, as she seems to be a | bora cvoquette. | Ithink St would not be wise to stop talking her entirely, Treat her with dignity and courtesy and precisely As you would If she were a very formal acquaintance. Do not permit her to resume the Po tlon of sweetheart, which is what she will probably try to do. Meanwhile give Up your self-conatituted offlc sleuth. A decent man should be abov tective work In his own lov Too Jocalar, Perh Dear Mrs. Ayer: Last June the lady T am engaged to went to the mountains and we cor- responded quite frequently, My ters were mostly of a jocular spl: i which gave my sweeth > ment, as she herscif fessed In her ASKS TOO MUCH. answers; but the last letter that 1 wrote| "You sald." asserted the Irate cus- 1 c «, h the] tot a onic would ake hair Srigitna cus vatea'a COU id eae Se ed EA ? - Foon 1s, { seems, far more prevalent] there 1s no one here by that name, lam 7 more to do with me tn the future.” a4," admitted the clerk ie 3 J than 1s generally supposed. There| sure. But you have come too far and Now, don't you think she acted meanly| ‘The customer removed his hat and| ¢ <4 SiS lady of fashion no longer apologizes} you are tired. Take my flask and this Toward me? I am sure that the letter| showed a head as smoot as a billiard | . ae 4 : | to her guests for lighting a cigarette| money and I'll go with you to the rail- contained nothing that would lead her to| ball. ‘ etter:dinner; says'the London) Sail ‘and | road’ station. ENGLISH ACCENT for It. THE SQUIRE HAS. Every nigut after that he read tho ‘ book or asked the men who knew Eng- ~ » lish to help him. Yhen he had saved more money ho started to town for more books. On the way he met a woman.. A woman in ragged clothing and with lips almost , blue reached out her hand to him, then tumbled at his feet. : “Lam looking for Mr. Hammond,” she st said. “They told me in town that he! worked out here, I am his wife. Herola 1s my ring. He left me n year ago andi told me never to follow lim, but T love him and have come to ask if he will not >- come back to live with me.” Then was Paquette confronted with th ae ; O98 opportunity of his life. What if Annette? meal should love Hammond? It would break }t SMOKING BY WOMEN, | her heart to seo this woman clam nim. *] “Hammond,” he sald, as If trying to 2 MOKING among women in France| think, “Hammond. I am sorry, but Peer eart much amuse- vi } wee ted windows of such an action. MA. I've been using that tontc for three k- Bae i even as an accompaniment to 6 o’clock| As he passed the light T ts quite possible that untntention-| months,” he sald. Paes % : toate golden-tipped Egyptian cigarette|the front room oe Grete meee ] ally you sald something to hurt her! “Oh, that’s all right,” answered the : - = cquently inabiees in by fair Par|the way Bore pilea =) mont feelings. or shock her sensibilities. | clerk promptly. “You have no hair to : : ussian ladies, we are told, | facedly. nette flushed cheeks + | who Inhabit the capital are largely re-| was talking to Hammond and her hand ‘The line between what you are pleased | grow. If you had the tonlc would wor! ry 8 | ’ ‘ verpbet rullis . 7 ina ya 258 " : D sponsible for the growing taste for to-| was in hi: \ | to call “jocularity’ and what ‘% young at ri At A hat more can you expect | * bacco!lamong the! grandes’ 4 ‘of| Paquette swore under his ana } &irl might conalder freedom, or famil- | —« go Port 3 aes lames breath 3 eel SS Tee es oo A ‘eth 8 n Paris, It ts Interesting to hear that at/then walked fast to the iver bank. teed on te o ,, = i RN » Ithe leading couturieres boxes of fra-|fung his precious copy of lontaligne cs THE EVENING WORLD'S : > ei grant cigarettes are kept in stock to|out into the black river and then turned LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. help madam to pass the time agreeably k to his cabin, Shyrtz, do cate! while being fitted. ves him,” he sald doggedly. Refor “An Old Man’s Onrling.” ts sure to prove contagious, and WHIM * asked y : that’ golden) butter: n Germany," according to a Berlin T the Editor of The Eventng World Vulme turn the warmest, truest love al 7 wards tte } fy for met Inquirer, “feminine emancipation ts not Girls, those of you with common sense | Woman can give into utter Indifference. | : . \ j 4 samielently advanced to make the prac- WEATHER AND MORALS. will agree with this old gentleman's| Harvey Remsen Golden, jr, ts, 1 am f tice of smoking among ladies very preva- Prof. Dexter, of the University of M- Unols, who has atudied the effects of weather on morals, finds that the*desire to fight rises with the thermometer, but stops at § degrees; wilts after that as lent. In certain circles and the amart restaurants, however, many women may be seen with cigarettes, and even cigars. Among the middle and working classes It 1s safe to say that scarcely a woman Ines. Assault cases are Mould:think of smoking except for fun.| tnlvapere commoner in aumoer thas ft But there ts one class of feminine #0-| winter, Drunkenness, however, lessens clety that greatly affects tho cigarette,| with summer and increases with the and that ts financial ladies engaged in| Coming of cola. Gulcides are at a max- speculation. {mum on bright daye with a high bar Pe ealate tt peer In Belgium, ft seems, among the detter- | ometer and increase as the wind rises. the “World Almanac,’ 7 0 ladies an after-dinner cigarette is teen aid Alinae ( ; | Rot at all tabooed, and among the fem!- letter—"Would you rather be an man's darling or a young man’s s\ having his first 1 It ts often said that many wom dignitiel by that n » grows | themeelves miserable and blight their | Up aid hus met real women who only future Hyves by binding th ves to | Ask to wed in a senate way he old men (who probably have beon left o the axininity of his pres fn thelr earller days). Marry a man yo and. Th (eapectable and one whom you love), and doen't marry for an old man's Gough and de his darling and an or: ment to his house, something ike Dird in a gilded cage.”* ALC. R. sure, very ‘Ju time t Don’t He an Ieebers. nine frequentera of the boulevard cafi Coo) > Where can 1 find the college colors of) . ; t ie frequentera of the bouleva: TM the EAlter of The Evening World x , ‘Harvey ‘Remsen Golden, Jr, writes:|the various colleges in the New Ene-| smoking 1s fairly common, but in other OR HOME ‘Treat a git! coldly and she adores you, | }48dFand Middle Atiant! Stat , = ina eaceas the practice ts forbidden by the DRESSMAKERS. Treat her gervilely and she wipes her CONaT | feet on yo! It evidently has not oc- Likes to Wat And gations the curred to H. RG., Jr,, that there is a| To the Editor of The Evening Worlt alsrorged |! ite TENEMENT BATHS. The Evening World’s Daily happy medium between these two ex-| I want to say tn reply to the letter | ¢ Dassengers, “It used to < Fashion Hint. tremes that would appeal more to the signed ‘Tenant, who compiaina that | ‘fe c my amDdittion, HO that has ministered to the tn- average girl than either iclness or] women stand at windows to watch {HERDOUBTS ‘ said the business, avery, Constant servility pails on w/men tn ‘L" trains, that “Tenant” ts A poor worn-out ¥ o man, “to accumu-: To out this blouse for a woman of woman, it ts true, though she may con- |etther a Jealous old mald or a con-|\? Maine woman, d ek! late a fortune and? | their apparent antipathy to water if he|medium size 3% yards of matestal Si tinue ¢o endure It and the man, but a! frmed old bachelor, who Is Jealous of | fing at sunset, Is ; 5 has entered their homes? asks the Med-| inches wide, 8% yards 02 inches wide, oF steady course of North Pole love-making | the "L'' men, or rather of the salutes | «© reminded by her “ ical News. If the tenement is one of a de will be required, ——————— | they recelve from chetr friends In win- |‘? pastor that, at all ’ lond, higher grade an tron eink {s found in dows elong the road. ‘Wk about the | events, ane will 4 ach apartment; if of the lower class, 2 @ights at the sea-shore, mountains, hills | ~ now enter on her : one 1s placed in each hall for the two or O THE FERRY FOR Or valleys! Give me one hour at any | ‘t Well-earned rent Tye got | four families occupying the floor. And 5 SHADOWTOWN. | thira-sto y window, It gives me mora) (2 * whe res the money, but I: | this ts what ts provided to encourage g WAY to and {ro in the twic B| Pleasure looking at these dear, sweet | 2 plies, “It will be don't dare retire.» | that cleanliness which is said to be next a Hehe’ gray, * than wottld one month | 2 Just my luck to T'vo got to stay? [to godliness, and which goes ao far in 5 ‘This in the ferry for Shadow- ‘Three cheers for our| 2 have the resurrece awake night andd | the prevention of diseane! With a large 8 town: “L" boys! — THIRD LOOR FLIRT. tion come to-mor- “i ; day to keep some-P | family packed in a few small roams it S21ts always: anlle at. the.end of. wae - - —| op rom morning ; body from. Setting’S | {s little wonder that ablutions are con- 5 Ba , ton Transerip it away from me. fined to the face and hands. Venttla- Just as the darkness closes RAISE IN POULTRY. HE Sperea i i z Fee hing cong |tlon the Soe bat ot; tenenisate) can and 3 eae imei ERESU } 5 3 ust provide, but plumbin, 2 down. bom p THE RESULT i ouetRe inetaiterion er ten Le april @ Rest, ittle head. on my shoul- Bas [Mei npaeianewinl ther WORSHIP. § ene: 3 er, #0: ae le veuver copa een Mrs. Muggins—% |{ted moans force thelr occupation of thia 2. A nleopy Kins tn the only fare, Q | tan Just come out, rayne the Milwaukee < C : Her husband ts? | class of dwelling. @ Drifting away from the world Q Sentinel. They had toarden next door to} the laziest man, * we Ko, an old man who took that ever lived, AOREED WITH HER. 3 eran’ Tin the rocking- jug chickens, and he Griggs — That's - and yet sho falr-@ | irs, Tertiedove—Yes, Paul, mother is : | hens looked alike to the and thelr aj aukee bon, | the worst of it, 1 Jy adores him. coming. Now don't scowl; you ought to the toothweme titer ¢ vent oxo much Mre. Buggins—® | think everything of mother. If {t had Bee, where tho firelogs glow and chicken, ry once In a wihlle the, ‘f money that 1° Worships her tdle, 2 | not been for her allowing us to be to- raters Vent of the Shadow~ 23) "12cK 0 hand had diminished a fowl or |} got to work har eh, — Philadolphtag | gether, you know, we might never have naka : e the old gentleman began to be| ser than ever— Record. Z| Degn married. , $I carious. amelie tire ; | Mr, Tertiedove—Yes, dear, that te what jhe raining drops on the win- One day he Md tn a clump of Mae} {2 i dow, hark, © Prean. fer IN COLORS.3 [fonon qrameripe’ “BE “ bushes and was dumfounded to see a Clara —I want ————— Are ripples lapping upon ts chicken Mutter up into the alr and into! ? OUTLOOK, % . aarerasd to) ace WINTER THUNDER. b ., the next houre. Pretty soon another Clnra—These au z fo much paint ong TaNcaaR (eH OUedee DH le thi considered ‘Rock slow, more slow in the chicken Rave a lunge and went equawk-| tumnal days make your face last FEcclencatlwarepestn ibe loti very dueky tight, Ing and fluttering Into the same window, |“? me ead, = night. T never saw? thraweha ati Burope co see Carey, etamheatiy. lower the anch That was too much for the owner, and| 2. Clarence — Oh, anything lke It BRNO down: BSDOF he stormed the house to see what hyp-| cheer um dearly YERKES MUST HAVE HIS WAY. Ti ioyiiife: $ | sidered to be very beneficial. In Devon: e . By} notic intuenco was at work on his poul- voy Well, if% | Stire and other cider countles of Eni Dea sue.eseenser, say “Coos | or cclieotion. S eaadimimees lb ten eurot nalts Mr. Yerkes claims a large share of London's attention these days. There seems to ben deadlock be- $24 "anne lt eg land there Jaa eaying that “when It] with % yards 20 inches wite for ender gy The boys had tled some corn onto a over from Inst} tween him and somebody else as towhich of two rival electric systems the Underground shall boequipped $ to puy a mirror | thunders In April you must cléan up the sleeves. string and hud “fished” for hens with eat with in place of its present, steam-and-sulphur-and-smoke-and-soot power. Mr. Yerkes is determined to $1I'll lend you one. —@ | barre! in readiness, that is, folval The pattern (No. 3,95, 83 to @ will f apples, ‘The Fro‘dh! be sent’ for 10 cents. Breat success unt! the owner caught | 2 F; Chicago News. Phen t erOe oeae e indict Wa | De. 86 3 nt and “landed” them, ‘Then they had to @ UB bi rcra roeicone trek endo ie ne eae JUS OU Th * ota Aout “from thels int Bend money to|\Cashier,; The). Werle, oN amarauda iis tier ily " eachod the harbor of (77 a Building, Mew Tork Cite, oy ah