The evening world. Newspaper, October 29, 1901, Page 8

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THE MOMENT. not? No Dane promenading around i} (Carre as Hamlet? Well, why other habill- in inky cloak and ments of woe could be more melan- pholy, glum and morbid than Is Mr. Gillette at times. He conte: t0 more kinds of vapors than most men ever dreamed of. So the enarac-| ter of Hamlet | ouzht to at him Hke a glove. Asal Lemuel—Say, pa, will I look like you stage lover, smok-| when I get my growth? ing cigars and| Father—Probabiy. pourlng tales of; Lemuel—Den I don't care {f 1 am bat- his refrigerated af: | tered to pleces a-playing football! fectione into his a Jady's ear. he does A One-Minate Novel. not please We! In “Fortune's Darling’ the heroine {8 want to bear Ala scorned lady whose love has been man make love 1] soured. She revenges herself upon her tones than he uses “Pass the butter, deathbed by swallowing a priceless di mond and charging her faithless lover heft! Aw he is suspected of her 80, a pont-mortem examination 1s made to seek for traces of polson, and the autopsy by diacovering the dia- mong exculpates the hero at once from both charges—theft and murder. more impassioned fwhen he says: please.’ Marion Abbot:, of the “Bonny Brier Bush” Company, is a handsome woman. Geis a pity she hasn't a bett Wis eeason, Nothing more delicl @han her performance of the dashing iia nan ema e orton ony tee JUST FOR] ares» A ha eta a 2 oy apna en apeegemintneren se tren THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 29, 1901. VOLUME 42. the Press Publishing Company, No, 83 to 63 PARK ROW, TWO RECORDS. Edward M. Grout, Citizens’ Union, and W. W. Ladd, jr., Tammany, are the rival candidates for Comptroller. The office is highly important. The Comptroller has three votes in the Board of Estimate and Apportionment, the same as the Mayor. In addition to this he has the direct supervision of the city’s finances. The expenditure of $100,000,000 a year, together with all the bond issues, comes under his An able, honest, watehful courageous Comptroller jurisdiction, n kill jobs and check extravagance, as Mr. Coler tas done—and for ee “turned down” by Boss Croker. that reason has been twi Which candidate is the more likely to be a second Coler— Grout or Ladd¢ “A tree is known by its fruit.’ A known by his record and by the company he keeps. Mr. Grout has been a consistent and persistent fighter of jobbery in Brooklyn and in the Greater New York. He has stood with Gaynor and Shepard in their fights against steals and frauds. sisting the Ramapo robbery. man is Ife was as active and determined as Coler himself in re- He is a lifelong Demoerat in na- ¢ of good government first of s, but an honest advocs pal affairs. tional politic all in munic a eee NO. 14,679. orld. Entered at the Post-OMce at New York Becond-Class Mull Matter. Mr. Ladd is known to the public for three things only: He was Croker's assistant Chamberlain, he is Whalen’s assistant Corporation Counsel and Van Wyck’s “personal legal adviser.” This is surely not a record to commend a man to the voters of New York, who want a capable, free, resolute and “fighting hon- est’? man in the Comptroller's office. Did Mr. Ladd advise the Mayor that his dabbling in the stock of an Ice Trust having a contract with the city was unlawful? Did he advise him that taking $500,000 of ihis stock practically as a gift was dishonest? Did he advise him to refuse to testify on the ground that it would incriminate him? Did he “gssist” Mr. Whalen in trying to jam through the Ramapo contract? There is nothing to show that he opposed it. Has he advised the Mayor to remove Devery? Has he once said @ word or done an act in the last four years to indicate that he is anything except a subservient tool of the Boss who nominated him for Comptroller? Ts there any deductions from these contrasting records except that Democrats and all others who want an honest “ (Copyright. 1901, by Datly Story Publishing Co.) OU have all read of Jack's Seven: League Boots and of Cinderella's Little Glass Slippers, but I dare say you have never heard of the Princess Pti's shoes. Yet they were quite derful in their way as those oth you read of fn your story books. went all the way through the air from hundred-gated Thedes. on the Nile. to Memphis, almost 600 miles, and they carried thelr mistress ever so many leagues over the Jotus blossoms and the porphyry courts of her Egyptian home, and yet they are not worn out. One bright morning Pt!, who was a princess, was dressing to go out. Ever and anon she would look at a iltle hand-glass of allver to see the effect. “There, Luxora, that will do,” she aid to her tire-woman. ‘Now, bring me the sandals ornamented with the ‘head of Mother Ist gamien of the villa where Pt! lived, an@ one afternoon the prinosss and her maids walked down the paths to the marble pier. It seemed such a cool, se cluded spot that the maidens were tempted to take a bath. When Pt! came to dress she could net find one of her jowelled allppera and she told the maids that an eagle must have borne it away, Now, among the ancients the cagle was considered a messenger of the gods, and when one saw an eagle it was belleved to be a good omen. When the maids smiled, she only sald: luck for me. I shall marry a ‘ watch dog of the treasury” in the Comptroller's office should vote for Edward M. Grout? Far away down the river lay the royal city of Memphis, Its palaces and temples shadowing the Nile. A new king reigned there who had just come to the throne. The most potent Pharaoh the Nile had seen for years, young, gay and hand- « SIDE LIGHTS ON THE NEWS OF THE Day. ‘The Czar “an innocent, melancholy id{ot,”’ and of it. “What he fails to learn at school about They mean lassitude and weakened vitallt kings and princes generally “irresponsible, irre- | spelling he will learn later on In the practical | a return of the original fat with addith zs as trievable criminal So Europe, too, has its | work of life,” suys Miss Starr. Such a boy | moment they are discontinued. But (one 5 “conspicuously unfit. might be in line for a good job at Police Head- | thin prima donna—a willowy Brunnhilde Be as some, he was yet unhappy; Rameses had no aueen. The king sat one eve in the cool por tico of his palace overlooking the river. Suddenly a dark shadow passed over the palace, and the king saw, with ea- cred awe and wonderment, a huge eagle widow tn “The Moth ant the Flame” fhas ‘been seen for many a day, Miss out. \Abbott fs tall and stately. with a wealth] [its Loving Spouse (who has been talk- wef auburn hair. She takes her 49uY/ing for five minutes without a break)— wponatitutional in the park or on “the | 14 tke to know, now, what you've got pilley.” and looks attractive in the close-| ty say for yourself. When you went @iting tailor-made gowns which she! downtown I told you exactly the kind The girl addressed blushed, hesttated, and at last atammered: “My mistress, I can find but one of the Isis-headed shoes; its mate is gone.” “Thou hast misiaid {t. But no matte: though barefoot do I go to-day, for I ‘erichiaffects. of bath aponge | wanted, and you wrote ; i! = quarters, but his opportunities elsewhere would delicate Elsa! 5* is against all operatic tradi- will wear no other," declared the prin-|deacend toward him with widespread ‘ c. director, with|!¢ down, and now you bring me this etarmmany takes the cake! be Hmited. Always something new out of the | tions. cess, pinions. And as he looked something Bob Roberts, the stage say miserable, pitiful, — good-for-nothing— “Yea, but its cake is dough. — her way home, the princess | bright and glittering fell from its talons Windy City! a crutch under his left arm, is sieht ete i Riis accustomed haunts after a five months’ wrertling match with muscular gheumatism in « St. Louts hospital. Mr. Roberts s rehearsing May Irwin's com- verite Merrington'’s new areata! foals a his prop and rely} Only a woman’s first marriage is made pn his own true fegs in time to tal ajin h ven, «he arranges tne second prominent part in the Merrington piece. herself.—Chicago New! stopped at a cobble shop, near the Sacred Way. Sandals ornamented with the god Osiris were given her for In- spection, but none sulted her. Have you no others?" she asked. “These are all too large." I have a pair, oh, Princess of Egypt. that wore made for the Lady Termu- this, but they did not fit her. She sald they were much too emall for the feet of any woman in the Land of the Seven Rivers, to the tessellated pavement. Rameses stooped and picked up Pu's jewelled slip- per. All the next day and the next royal couriers spread proclamation offering the throne to whoever could produce the mate of the magnificent sandal which the eagle had broughg the king. Pri, in her distant palace, heard the grand tid- Ings, and, beautiful and dainty as w white Illy, came to Memphis in answer to the king’s appeal. She walked up the 4 what are you throwing that sponge up in the air for? Mr. Meeker— thing I can do. “How the orchard trees moan in the breeze!” errant “If you were as full of grzen apples as those seanloki ri wondencwhy7: trees are I guess you'd moan, too." “Probably because most of them are so accus- -————.__ tomed to high Cx. ‘They say in England that we “vulgarize” their actresses and return them from their trans-At- lantic trips “with the bloom knocked off and with harsh voices." That dreadful America, true bogy land of Europe! Yet the actresses Please observe that {t was not the president of a woman's club nor the chairwoman of a feminine congress, but a plain, unpretentious schoolma'm who began that great fight against tax-evading corporations In Chicago and carried {t through with success and eclat. Goggin is not a name to conjure with in a social register, but it Is a name that has won everlasting re- singers are seldom y dear, it'a the only hicago Tribune. Only the First. >— The discovered last year that the main purpose tn life of the mosquito is to inocu- late its victims with malaria, and now Dr. LoMer finds that a little malarial poison may be doctors Eugene Canfeid, ly Man ect for itself. A schoolma'm can always be < Conte ot oe aine Bulllon's going out to luncheon site sisontTartinielligenciaetlonyinra pie or | 2 800d thing for a man to have in his system to | Come back to us, lured by our dollars, and impe- | Pti, the princess, smiled. mighty plllared porticos of the Pharaohs large clear. and pa AUIS oa lan fight for principle. Whether she ts in Iowa | Patish worse diseases, including cancer. Don't | cUnlous peers continue to wed our heiresses, un- reg Thty, may Mt me." she sald. “MY! sith a graceful alr, and stood before antagnel and He will taste a crust and drop It If principle. smile at Loffer! He is doing the best he can | deterred by fear of vulgarization, Money has "tt fe very amall” | | Rameses, fairer than the great Queen saving trains from burning bridges, or in Bos- e sandals were produced. (Amcaee hen he eased entntaee oee With a weary sigh. Twill hungrily devour All that Tecan buy— much to answer for. —-+ -— from rehearsals, is @ familiar figure for the advancement of science, and cancer Is a very, very baffling dirorder. The plan of fight- were indeed dainty things, but they were @ perfect fit for the princess's pearly foot was bare; the other gilttered ton, marshalling her pupils out of a smoky MU hatewelicdectaa aphent , wi e whose mate hand. in Chicago, on West Thirty- schoolroom, or righting public “Yes, M = = Me can't even eat a doughnut in w! 5 es, 3 we raised this honey right here feet. king held in his sour caVatrest aay ‘Orratpincctatt pial wrongs, she Is always ready when it ts “up to plate Leer ner meorene: on the farm. “I will take them,” ehe sald. “Your|, Rameses kept hia word. | When the now, Richards and her.” B Fn hope,) had va: ratle- “Indeed! Then you keep a bee?" price?" the Nile it shone, too, on the ma: Canfield muat feel t Pharaoh and his love- like the Siamese ‘Things are often badly managed snake bite a leper, but no good came of It. Here below the aky; fetes of the gr bride. —_——— “Seventy silver rings.” ——— os ver N 1 twins by this time. Creme Bullion ought to have my stomach, “Like Henry Clay, Ud raiser be right than ed eee = oa : Bourke Cockran and Candidate Shepard con- | TY Tver Nile swept up close to the} ly j -‘There’a no use try- Or, atill better, I Prentdent.” PH tneg ANE me EeMSteaHc lene front their audiences in Prince Albert coats, H ine tose oath ne inna of mer] [Fes on immecaeeozect of yur ing ee while sone of se Pinion endian cine | Mappiet [LETTERS FROM— of this kind has ‘All he wants le toast for luncheon, eel Mme. Nordica will have the sympathy of all | dress sults and others to tweeds. Perhaps it deen a failure. Steak and ontons I How they do coddle the modern schoolboy! | the unduly obese in her struggles against fat. | {8 not too late to make clothes an issue of the Hubbard +~—~T HE PEOPLE iy _They are [ents to —Chicago Record-Herald. Here is an advanced reformer, Miss Starr, of | Dr. Plenter’s pills have so far effected no reduc- | campaign and inject Into it some of the humor " . @roop ani adeyte kept apart. art Chicago, asserting that the spelling-book is one | tion of her too solid flesh, and she has come to | that Mr. Low finds Incking. There was a his- in ee y Got Rich, Ayer. As to the Bridge. m1 Burr McIntosh is of the least useful alds to education and that a | regard anti-fat prescriptions as “injurious hum- | toric national campaign Jn which the question engaged in that If M rok chinist he- ” Giicalt; game otiattempting |to)d0jtW0 15 he was a boom wy the frat Tam. { Pupil is just as well off without a knowledge So say they all that have tried them. | of “cheap coats” figured prominently. ES B incor tere caeatac eclienastaees eee At the. Repu in, “Under Southern | mary boas, To) yearn ago, Wallam! eee ae HE: WOES 2 | cs receives steltoeue are cores Skies,” and to take photographs at hixs| Mooney. was ie ueholatersrs nila £DDTDAMDPDAARRE DODD OID 9:88 B OD POADOOAOOADDG4.99FHODOIID DO 20.220d%8 LOVERS. of paint on the Breoklyn Bridge, ead 1 thins © studio at the same time. Tweed was a chairmaker an john OPO DOB DOD . letste Kelly a stonemason. Nearly every MPETITION 2 2 ze AN AGE OF 2 2 e Imet Marian Cook Place of power In the or on Broadway to- Gay, trotting blithely along the pave, a By an Expert. day ts held by a@ man of plain begin- with the amount of electricity always tn bundle of “three sheets" under tier arm|nings. John F. Carroll was a book- By R. B. MORRISON. Sieh the ameant fle end/a satisfied smile lurking Just aroung | keeper, Martin Engel a chicken ped-| D een— ae a gargs antl abenti al iron reread “1 the corner of her mouth. The three|dler, Timothy D, Sullivan a boot-| 4, = Be True to Yourse! aac ae Ie heee seek ee aheets were devoted to Nordica, who| black, Andrew Freedman an errand 54 Lpatilrh teat feesireatel all exe | 56 —_ fry jaar aa ea th-correstve rwill be wit! Co y ye tore, Mich: I be with us soon. Milas Cook was| boy in a dry-goods store, ae! Rd fo Forks the} taat is fours years) the same | ore pity pobeersh wipe print iy ere pices Dress representative and advance agent | Murphy a compositor; John B. Me- © j Invalator and be adle to repel the terrestris for Harry Clark Jast geason. She {g|Donald, who holds the $26.000,000 aub- ae me Ot; sy ihose there sony ne | magnetiom of the earth. Tt should dry with mow acting in the same capacity for| Way contract, began as @ $45-a-month i om Tf love. tT) am sat proud to ate [herd elastic akin and should not creck, bitetor ¢ Loudon Charieton. the impresario. clerk under a contractor. Now all of im my affection, and even go as fa: | pet on. { oe Pris as pretending that I lke one of the these belong to “the club.” and think of tasting soup until they hi donned thelr Tuxedos.—Boaton Globe. others. That makes him very Jealous, ! G. C, KEITH. Friday. lAY. h 7 Virginia Harned has never drawn a ‘To the Riieer of The Evening World @alary as a member of her husband's I can see, but still he has never said a| Wl you kindly mate what day of the wer, MS company. § otk word to me that could make me i melaa? Uicpateo volte Young Man. Atypon ‘In fenpec to the others i [rare " tion jerned me a0. An ame The rottee Py My position In respect to the others ts ‘ather Gives Testimony. Sothern gave her| Yo muld the haughty young woman such that I have accepted the man| Te the Editor of The Evening Worl who was a Colonial Dame an well as a that I loathe, so as to preserve my| In snawer to “Edna'e™ inquiry whether girls the beautiful house Sixty = elghth of seventeen are ever whipped, I want to way a@ Daughter of the Revolution, “my great- kreat-grandatre Cell at Bunker Hill, “Ice or banana skin?” Inqutred the po- Mte young man from Sfilwaukee.—Cleve- land Plain Dealer, dignity. TI am more heart-broken every day, and as the marriage day ap-, th@ father of two that they are, proaches I feel more and more deaper- | *!teen and seventeen reapective ate. Will you please tell me what 1/ {7 well behaved. [ut sometimes they misbehave, ought to do? K. LJ. | 484 my wife punishes them just as hard as she did when they were younger. As ‘Pine’ is nos on furntehine, lary would te the merest cnleken westeramnaext HPRE Is in my opinion no ex-| of and her father approves the punishment, feed" mired to Obeying Instructions. cuse for a woman marrying @ ean do nothing to prevent her stepmother alt 1 nus | 4 wealthy American who took the man whom she loathes, as you | spanking her excem to behave heree!f properly. n vishedon| waters at Carlabad this summor was profess to do this poor fellow whose de- BELIEVE IN SPANKING. naist on} given minute tnstructtona by hta phyal- votion you are willing to accept and part, when clan, whe dismissed him with this {n- whose Ife you will certainly blast if Se yours When junction Ae for smoking, you must you become his wife, Better far, a eos 8 endowed his} limit yourself! 10 three clears dally— thousand times, live your Ilfe and main- OR HOMB OS mite with all his worldly goods hel three ight cigars, and no more.” After tain your self-reapect as a single woman meantiwnat he sald) NE GORDON. fox gaye tae peu sats me Lanes than consent to so ignoble an act as the DRESSMAKERS. who asked: ‘Well. an how are —_—_—— ai wi ra 2 one you contemplate, you?” “I should be all Hat," renited | > It 1s not easy to say why the man! The Evening World’s Daily DURING MEALS. the patient, “but your orlers about who has attracted you does not return Fashi Be esremikictilmit dine famonnt +| smoking are diMfcult to follow.” “Iam Jour affection. It is, I must add in all ‘ashion Hint. water and fluids which you PRelaostory sels oatemertcaly candor, poasibly the fact that you do during meals, since large quant: | Rucmorea than dines. clears ia .dRy t display the characteristics that uring meals, since 1s as You must Just put up with it.” “But, bes eed To cut this fancy waist in medium evoke confidence. If I were tn your place, I should give up all other occupations and learn to be true to myself, you cannot then be false to others. Let Them Both Ge, Dear Mre. Ayer: I am going, with a young man. He seems to think a great deal of me, but he ts a friend of a young man I do not speak to. This gentleman tries very hard to break the friendship between ants tiles of thes ater, hin- Ger digestion. of water, says ¢! nal, should be taken during each meal, In order to quench the tairst which Is BO apt to clamor for water at meals an eminent authority glass of bot water 1 utes before meals. ‘Th well In the morning, stomach. ———— LOVE AND THE Ivy, doctor, it really je an awful business puldn't two a day do? I feel ill every time I smoke." “Why, man, what in the world do you smoke for at alt if that ts the case?” the doctor roared, ‘Dut doctor, waan't tt yourself who sald ‘three cigars a day and no more? Of course, | thought they were part of the cure and begay upon them, though I never In my life smoked vefore.”—Ar- wonaut, size 31-4 yards 21 inches wide, 37-8 yarde 21 inches wide, 1 3-4 yanis #4 Inches wide, or 1 6-8 yards 60 inches wide, with 11-4 yards of all-over lace for Giuseppe Swypitallo, the Brigand—You cannibals have grown fat on missionaries long enough. It’s our turn to parade the centre of the stage now. So you can go 'way back and sit down. FOR A YOUNG MATRON, |; _ BIBLICAL 2 AN UNEXPLAINED PROBLFM. 2 f COURAGE. fo ar things about me_ that are not eae OFEN COUTsE “T Ike that boy} true, I am very fond of my friend, but OSTUMB designed for a young matron haw the mkirt in three ruffles of brilliant turquolse Ib. erty RIK, partlally covered at the top by a tunte of coarse black stik ret that tn scalloped and embroidered In arabesque | with noaly J ‘The whort tuate jis cnen down the front in verted V The full blouxed part of the bodtce ts he wanted to kiss HOWARTH'S COMICS. of Snigg' “Ian't he a Ittle obstinate? Tho; day 1 called his mother had to threaten to spank? him before hod would recite pleces for the Indles and ® I do not want him to be a friend of this gentleman. Would it be too much to ask my friend to give up this young man's society? I will not continue go- ing with him {f he goes with this young man, VERY ANXIOUS. HE young man should not listen to stories about you, or about any not let him. Tomm—And did he realize that you meant what you sala? Se yeh “to let’! used xiven the appearance of a rute by hav ei he ala other woman. The man who talks by Ing a wide k girdle mounting up|} ae enti gentlemen,” about women, or listens to gossip con- % under ft. Over ft is drawn ao short i isn't ob-® | cerning them la not worthy of respect 93 bolero with long sleeves of net and Je meant. [ gueas he stinacy, That's 44 Itt roundly Jow-necked and talshed |. BEST Beard the moral couragi fidence and estcem of a decent girl. My 7 Washington Star, 1 should let both of these young men go If I were in your place. with a iberty ali bertha, saya the Chi- Record-Thines ing colffuren are exceptionally at tractive, Whether the hair be dreseed high or low one rule holds good, and that ts that it must de loosely puffed and weemingly luxuriant for all, A pretty arrangement Ja to have a band of light-colored surah satin ribbon about : and certainly does not deserve the con- IMPORTANT. % “I didn't know he? wan a writer. *Ho tan't.” 4 “But he told me‘, his business wand bhia Press OCTOBER, Now In the time bright en fall- ARISTOCRATS. : | American aristocrats are the down- trodden farmers who have real cream in their coffee.—Chicago News. PBhEI feel so wate, Wille, when I'm oking Into your eyes! F-And looking into yours I aee only erect future, 5 "ee tie head Just back of the pompadour, |» Bute ¥¢ ce supplying very Im- 3 ———_— So. sue REvonMED nm. The ends of the ribbon are drawn down- [2 MOWED, | thle Porant is, poiltical ® |i (), MEASURED: His, LENGTH. Resident—What did Prodigal] Ward and mingled tn with the knot at sieacrae articles %| “Your friend Jenkins hae an automo- The glories which *. ® a Ab, yest Hee | pie, Iam told.” thi'the big fortune that was left to|the nape of the neck. One or two large, Ran throvgh it in a year, 1 sup-|eoft curls five or slx inches long fall on ay the bare neck from under the loose knot. Hin. wife prevented | When tho hair {s parted in the middie fll autumn’s cup work somehow to looks after the col- onizing of vote and delivers theg goods on election ‘es. He operated it yesterday for the first time.” “That so? How much ground did he|. The pattern (No, 3,962, sizes 23, 34, 34, cover?” $8 and 40 inch bust measure) will be sent “I'm not sure, but I think his height | for oa cents. fesee ona 1s) about five! feet nine.”. * Send*money to “ iq Wort, aust Pulltser, Bullding, Now Yost Cay bolero and sleeve facings will be ree Tsn'| it isn't it strange that a man will be proud of his ‘quired. Taiayeok ice wife and exceedingly pleased when she shows him and puffed out in large waves a cluster |‘), < the bargains she obtained in her purchase of shoes, of flowora'ls pinned just above the lett| « ip aero t dry goods bene Z ‘gix| 47: Sometimes a smal! semi-w ot | & Free Presa. te ae roots la worn dlrectiy in front ee oobeerese0-o0oettoo00000Seed And yet when she purohases a box of cigars with the most beautifully colored label for 97 cents, marked down from $1.25—he almost has a fit, @

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