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THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 26, 1902. DOUBLE PAGE. BRede eee o4-8 o Let SWZ TES INT IUINT Gr SOY OlrSIL JD)" =) |S TE VENSON ; © he J anny J ide of Li e 3| A New Portrait of Him. Published by the Press Publishing Company, No. & to © | e 2] Park Row, New York. red at the Post-Office ‘ ‘| at New York as Saas Mail Matter c| Von «8 os JOKESOF OUROWN) 9 SAMMY SUBURB HAD A BLIZZY OLD TIME, uti8ORROWED Jones. Tey c : TOO LATS. { HE w AS THE ONE. i UNCLE SAM AS A HOST. Hee cate eis Pury } rei atcha lopleemnne The London Standard, commenting on the e ate | + ie rf $ youtlnt: . official hospitality with which the nation hae we is ‘ puldn ovis i you said two,’ replied the 5 Prince Henry, says “the ceremonies show that z Benet . MeL d coolly for one coppers publican simplicity of America ts pe ly co: : } wouldn't bo sufficient Philade . with a close imitation of the forms and cere: : ENTAL IONOR. —— : the Old World.” PP jog unt TOO SWEET. . When Uncle Sam sets out to act the | Gro heat . Fair Visttor—Wha: is this poor man. 4 een . Ye Ever s rince in prison for? . he believes in putting a finishing touch : s : 5 ae eae’ TaliGec Fae ddurdetibe, chip) wifes! on his courtesy. Your Uncle has grown pro: ° ma‘am. ‘ with his increase of prosperity he has acquired t! ti lie 1 Fair Visitor—Oh, what a pity Mut + ners and graces of good society. Most the awkward: | + un t he aeest though! ie ness and angularity of his youth {s gone. He is surer| 2 TWO TITUAL (at es swee : of himself in the drawing-room, his parlor deportment | 7 A\* - . is greatly improved, as befits one who now associates | + The eosiern of my tam DEDUCTION. 3 with trusts and syndicates and to whom the material) «+ ot ‘ er—l belleve in love at p advantages of wealth have an importance denied them | } : ypp—-You must have teen ¢ in an earlier era of republican simplicity. IgreSSMAL | f ONE EXCEPTION « time.—Detroit Free P: : Wheeler and other rude citizens may call it “Munkey: | + K ism” if they please, but {t is a very good grade of high-| ! $ toned hospitality and !t ts to his credit. 1g R oa kd i oo — ba on this tim . . Albe . Our Gastronomic Progress.—Prince Ho shaving «| Molineux w : surfeit of terrapin and canvas-back duck, two articles of |! tr {Sir Thomas will bed diet that were missing from the elaborate « | A Shamrock XX.--Chi News | the Prince of Wales here in 156). The menu o ® “Max edt a : sion was as bountiful as an old-time erenhty 3 was re aid ted dm something fo EF. ? at an American-plan hotel. It an abundance o| rejected him omer: ah eee a ant’ Youll . Including turkey and entrees, but the nearest approach : Button up your coat, ma es the food which nowadays represents gastronom! rf 3 TAKEN FOR GRANTED, don't get excited; I won't take ¢ _ _ Uon Was gTuuse. : Siilctis peated me ae BOAO Indianapolis : $ wpa ies Ses ne NENT STEP. H MISS ROOSEVELT'S MARKSMANSHIP. Washington gossips say that Miss Alice Roosevelt, | ! AMG Chall to lessen the chances of making a fluke in christening} | A LIGHT REPL the Meteor, spent much time in preliminary target | * as ached akin an practice with empty bottles in the White House back | ¢ er . er Wworls, your ‘burda The story is credible of a girl who has inherited al | disposition to do things well. The apparently simple) + COULDN'T SAY. feat of smashing a heavy champagne bottle on a boat’s| { b) al we rare nose at the exact psychological moment when : eel toa eee “She starts, she woves, she seems to feel « The thrill of life along ber keel,” SSE has proved too much for the nerves of some falr spon a Ne RAGAN CE: sora at launchings. Except for a masculine hand ready | >... 0e*t,0"! P° to redeem the blunder of a weak blow, one ofthe big . sort of thing goes on, the stockholders wives at th warships launched at Newport News last year would have slipped into the ocean unchristened and thus have become an object of lasting suspicion to the jack tars who now man it. solitatres and ene is NEW VE Mr. Van Soaqu ahtle atnce he alaned the p ideas An Untimely Measare.Just at a time whe: is justly alarmed over the danger to | all New York oy fire in hotels | + 1 suppose he rides exclusively water-wagon nowadays | to remove one of na. a satety the theatres. Now w duce a bili to 4 mit firetrap hc FLORENCE BURNS AND HER FRIENDS, Each day's developments fn the Brooks case exhibit @ new phase of the easy-going unc entionality of social intercourse among the set of boys and girls to] HERGER DR A. of Fr which Florence Burns belonged. There are stories of su e reptitious trolley trips in which the boys found it con . Ma i of an alias, little to “Handsome Harries hotel parlors; an venient to make Coney Island to meet juvenile mashers in sence from home all night and a secret girl's chum or “pal,” and many ent highly dangerous to use Journeys and other ab- have refused occasional soverelans share other eviden girls freedom of moven of seventeen or nineteen. young ME V 1 MerisvUn eel gareaitiatilt theraropelot newrepe ver: pitel russes 5 Brooklyn society the rey 4 would Am ‘ m | all, or a least to those mothers who bave allows pe i Tate rite daughters this unmaidenly Ii What the cause | cet: 1 documents of this laxity of parental restraint makes th tate an hist of affairs possible? ” ¢ host ire inthe Wie Roe . = sim { Ver ht hav " ‘ | equelet describa r . politan is under THEATRE “ ANAGERS The theatre manage tory over the ticket spe Scott, of the Supreme sustains the im bought of spect tre-goers will be chasing tickets from t I walk bk vm Just why tho LPHELD, ta 1 municipal authority to ply 1 1 front of the theatre is (one of + ‘ hat ‘ as gone t low can find out.” It cannot b oan necessary or M, m is en the jopk of annoying t a x withdrawal of tt ar * 1 sidewalk ticket " { 2 ment of & Uime-b 1 nuisa me =r ; . New UNREPRE Ele NE YORK. The oft-repeated ¢ a ( y we York is really reproser by the treatment of the his bill, providing for Jar building, has passed the S« Committee proposes to attach it f million-dollar appropriation for publ New York stand or and let fall with the roughs of t country. Greater New York is suppo to be rep: Maa ‘ome ht, v at Washington by fifteen members and a frac-| Mid the gloom of the 5 med atr, y wweetheart’s beauteous face, eath the shade of her dusky har; And her Jove, with an infinite grace, Like a Jewel of value untold Is wet in her heart's pure gold, Frances A. Sohnelder, in the Mil- ee Sentin ot a sixteenth. They are all drawing their pay , What else are they doing? Why do they not} our interests? | | im it that no New York Congressman ever ex- of } member from Browusvilie or ra will be wearing on the ‘ 1 tatoes are rising In 2 ? g foot atruck somett Tn the distance floating ats wind shifted * domicile Much crett 5 them over tom After pla Storai her float t © carnage To the Editor o town tn 1781, Jerseys? Also, army when it returned troy Medora? 1 bave even aa 61 THE TALE TOLD BY HIMSELF. Pink-Te and swung 1 clutehe d ake REFORMED. A Chanfleur's Views, the Dat r World as an expert a ear of steam * a smng to allow any 4 rae fom)\ine machine without a irene 4 m90 steam carriage and aman seem A to optrate mux 8 would avert many seotdents wou What Distorian can settle these pointe: When Washington marched from the Hudsoa to York whieh way 41@ he go through the what became of Rochambes: Yorktows to the military map used ~ fea in the drug store, then felt Ke hand over hand along the girders untt! Th with my neleht« atr eTrolley through the blizzard? the ar he Ath ing of the trofley-pole and a volt somewhere on the other side, tt niley car to the an er He smokes! I used tot’ —Phit May, tn Pur Pees In my pocket to see HAMMY SUBURE, F Well, 111 tell you 1 put on a if my Ife insurance policy Ung directly over my car. T dropped electriclty ran up my arm; but I plunged tnto a lake and lost itself @ areund in my rubber boots A og and swimming for some time my Ah, it was my woodmhed, which had broken loose from its moorings! 1 seo my little seven rooms and a bath, with open plumbing, anchored to a row of other on snow dunes whose bases were washel by the angry wave and I {off a point. With the a. * of a little paddling 1 managed to board my ad ht watohman’s forethought in keeping my neighbors t er, as T had in- ine toa ailing-out par: “ 1 finger bowls ay to eateh the drippings from the ro Norab—Sure, these are the Atringlest string beans 1 ever rh ng Tean—Aw, quit ing Plain Citizen—1 suppose your Jokes come easy, Mr. Glgglemacher? Humoriat—< yes! But * 1) Job trying to make ‘em go! * > wayy on, | Whippany | ate exttown and Prince field TACK. SIMONBON, To Melt Snow Cheaply. » the Maittor of The Eventng World What 0 the (fe of those anow-malting binea? ta tt to save the ofty money, or to same It? @topping gt one of these melting ma- hines, tt seemed to me tt was very toolisn, fo: hey dif the mame work over twies, by carting clvine and thea shovel (t tnte the machine again, Why not use the machines they have for melting the asphalt streets tnstead of thow in use now? |by means of wireless talegraphy from shipboard, + DL B LAROMER, JR, ‘Past would save the 6 the work. These machines, The Jonly needs tw | work ot halt machine 1 spoke « n to push it and benaine to BASIL. : | INTERESTING LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. roade| maobines in use now have an engineer and about La One Drawback. Hitherto when |work they cosld days, be shut off completely trom | ~ nd their tired brains could rest, with jeation from the rest of the world. The Mar. the snow from one place to dump It by the ma-|coni disovery puts a stop to this, since busy | 18 proserved in the convent at Vatao- who only stop business because they have to the ocean, will be enabled to conduct business | Province of Salonica by two monks in| destroy her with his powerful beak. Buy Peachblossom gave of The Evening World m out by over: amer and the ov sd aes world, com> THE WINTYRE FLAT. pudd—Wha 4 you do stock In that arevhy nico Bay enret The Landlord Gets Generous. Bach tenar anitress peculations te . who forth- alr greyho co Tri : Ameristar mn mae WON AT LAST. . c floor was held dow 1 ies) RanGastea lente his { ny = er fam * theft. N ! ey ever men- Jeavo: si 1 this t r 1 vouse. . proposed toe | It X F and cold that dozen times bef] radiators, ilad 4 “ ant and itwolmirroee) ‘ore she nave him." —Philadel- « 1 t hall it w , ss house at all, phia Bulle : t . " eat wads, The clergye * | man on the fo 1 tod the Molntyres of purtoine ] ing two quires via pint of red ink from + | the dumbwa opel wholbad’ spent : and ets rink caNioanraty 2] blamed the rithe 3 ieee abe D] Quetier, whi 1 ada the Klepto- + | mantac lads fourth 11 f retytss Haves when they met o Another «rave first floor w: len Lady on the each ascend- sompl ore thar . «x dumbwa . 1 to note what every tenant had t w ze ally bellevel when ew n bow fawn to « Mel . et UNDERRTA ENN DAL | tne intcor'haa ductor dimmer twice tn ona wee Twas nm tr a as follows Wh rt take my Lady, interruptives = }ut soup ‘The secretary and Metropolitan Oper wintor, and dhe) fats and a ye anit all their . | h : | nen the hand organ, : m Be . | the herry 1 other hare F | ibees cts Crest s.e0 ingens of sprin rn ke, the landlord called +l brown hair Mise § Hin last ¥ wit M res. In tana éak bore: $ | Spanteh and Ita a hauquet of white ‘ ker which he don: S]and Engen | Mra. Metnt wit he presented) Mr $ | Morton Selten, w An bribe #6 J ey-Shannon compar ‘ : w < § $ | member of u F Some of usu t 5 i Sothern would do ppen to Morny. like ati Ms f hear or coming into moi pabecn) : w : aie Se 4] WEY ha e that. Rut new Mr Se Hut new M i aan IES Gtntore icon © fed the sues t lent otK tise the room fo) int A. P. TERHL nandez ix playing Mra, Hloot Amelia Bingham’s + Mins F MODERN FABLES. Fs on the stage since she waa a mere : ‘Alallaane dkuehier setts: The Man and the Instalments, jez, the dram nt. An| | ‘ Miss Fornanitex had th pie’ to" xO) with a pair yesande@ ei} play in “Lady Margar: is natur Las rigige , Age and wi accepted, ¢ | to suppose that ahe ix nd He prepared ain for his dove and furnished it om wful on awcount of the cha the stalment atthe Bijou 7 ‘The dove was sei with the nest, and the young man EMe Shannon has come back again, | b¢kin Kiving a the proprietor as sweet and youthful and winsome as] Of the Instalmer » av anded over his v | of yore That Miss Shann ented | ttle $135 and the w the back of the $ | we have never doubted discov. | leaee folding-bed, th he chiffonter and +] ered her Mantell’s com, years | ‘ | ago, before that gentleman took to ving man Ald not. Year after year + | doteing York and alimony. We and Was happy and content. pronounced her then “a gem of purest thar bill paid?” his wife was wont to we never had] ask f sf the bables distracted her mind and she to think that " airtes was moulting « feather at the the Gt Krew had a pair of eyes much” fi sre r mothers had been, a mouth that was even prettier, 2 Ss and a young man fell in with her, While the courtship : was wing her f to : weekly in paymen » $14) bill he had contracted when > he himself was in - ited lke an automaton. When he started : Furopean ny he went mechanically te the store where he had bought the « mechanically drew the necessary a ti es gual from hin: poskot. harmed tethrough| thewindawhheare the girl draw! Thanks,” and went on home. coventry. England, the centre of the] Then the daughter « \ her lover and preparations efor the welding. The brid: t house to select th about the t ind her mother went furniture for a four. ms Ish yele Industry, of business: reports a ores | Insta to the room flat arrang work of restoring the Ara ¢ Church at Rome the famous mural fres Imagine thelr grath when they found that the ves of Pinturicchto have been com-| money the husband and tathor tad been paying had more than settled the original ill and t nearly large enough to make t at there was a credit first payment on the daugh- , meveral large ven into them ment of claams for in-| ter'a outfit demnity made by those Italian subjects] Moral: Force wore expelled from the T 1] man drink British Government has paid which will be divided among 12) nals hay $3 e of habit can do other tht Ww set ‘hen make a ROB HOLLAND, Indlviduala. sn, echoolboys are to to (ORIGIN, OF RICE. THROWINO, prosecuted at Mowrazlaw for lese ma-| The Chine urlous legend ax to haw the custom of throwing rice at weddings origi named Chao became Jeatous of the power of another sorcerer, headmaster ordered cheers to be given|a woman, and, concelying a plan to destroy her, he persuaded for Emperor William. her parents to bestow her upon his supposed son. The crafty The girdle of the Blessed Virgin, which| Chao chose ¢he most unlucky day for the wedding, the day when the "Golden Pheasant” was in the ascendant, ao that pedi, 1s now being carried about the| when the bride entered the red chair the spirit bird would jeste. ‘They remained seated and silent ut A famous sorcerer viz [At a school prize distribution when the order to combat the diseases which arn| directions to have ice thrown out at the door, and shegagsed prevalent, mse especially sumll-pox. out unharmed while the spirit bird was devouring it, ki tell tabla silabadigappainas celestial cl lie sc sa il ul Dil el a