The evening world. Newspaper, January 27, 1903, Page 10

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THE WORLD: TUEZSPAY EVENING, JANUARY 27, 1903. . es yy WR = CRM YD by the Press Publishing Company, No, 68 to 63 Row, Now York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Seoond-Class Mali Matter. EB 43. NO. 18,134. BDDOGGVG-6-954O4496-8D-9.O64-9944 94644040104 OOO40-6 DDOD-D® DOAED94DLD584O94-4-0999OO099589450O8O940ODODFO9O994 $4560.56505004O 6.64.0050600-04 5949-94909OH0O00O994.4H9.HOG0OH9OOOOOOOH 4 DOBLIN'S NEW LIGHT. ; THE LITTLE BIG HAT SISTERS BREAK AN ENGAGEMENT WITH WISE WILLIE. are minds so evenly balanced in their dis- 2 ition of right and wrong that a breath of contrary | h can sway them. 3 4s Doblin's, for instance. Saturday Doblin's moral perceptions led him to what he regarded as a grave attempt to cor-| > ® Congressman by bribery. Duty and the consid- ons of friendship and perhaps some other consid-| ¢ Jed him to disclose the attempt. On Monday Dobdlin perceived his error of mental on. What he saw was not an attempt at bribery; far ft. (And as an honorable man and a just one and } indisposed to cast doubt undeservedly on an un- hed reputation he publicly acknowledged his error corrected the wrong impression he had made, ‘Tho-act.of an-honorable man. But what breath blew wi on him.to change his mind? What stronger Mom. influenced his? What other consideration was 4 Which caused the change? |. Minds such as Doblin's are interesting both to phys!- u and to criminologists and an analysis of their -always-results in important revelations, MY 0a 18 KiLLAo SUAF. 1 Wonr ao ow ANYWAY, g BEGINNING AT THE IT 5 WISE LLIE—Ta-ta, girls! I'll meet you here at 2 LOU AND LENA—Yes, Freddy, of course we would LOU AND LENA—Oh, my! WISE WILLIE—Finish him, Bruno! was a time when a rich iE nO red ¢ OSes eat geil go to the matinee, rather go with you. But how shall we shake Willie? FOXY FREDDIE—He'll finish him! LOU AND LENA—Now we can't go to the matinee at ‘qwhere hi 2 bt Poe LOU AND LENA—As you say, Willle. FOXY FREDDIE—I'll manage that all right. Watch WISE WILLIE—I see it all. I'll bring Bruno and kill all. Poor Wise Willle! Pee re rather lett off. Now the proper thing 181 Foxy FREDDIE (in background)—We'll see about my little dog finish him, his little dog. jfor him to begin at the bottom and work his way up.|2 that! At Radford, Tenn., Henry K. McHlarg, jr., son of the 92G99OOOO4000O8.O6250-004+ lonaire President of the Virginia Iron, Coal and Coke} pany, has begun work in the mines. He ts classea| IN-AND-OUT ESSAYS, the company’s pay-rol] as a day laborer. And in the To a Woman Who Says WHY NOT BIRCH NEW YORK SHOPLIFTERS. ‘man beginning at the bottom two interesting cases have man starting in equally humbly and rising to independ- ‘ence, W, H. Hines, of Wilbesbarre, who has just be- + ‘ome the owner of coa! lands valued at $200,000, used to ; }be ® breaker boy. While he picked coal in the old Sugar Notch Breaker he studled law and became State ‘Benator. And a youth who ten yeare ago was an appren- ‘Hee in the Hve printing press factory preached the other ning at the Broome Street Tabernacle. He is tho been recently reported in the news of the poor young) ROY L. M'CARDELL, Tae the time that the trouble be- «ins; when it's all going out and nothing coming in, Somo men's only orcupation tn Iife Appears to be looking for work, but they seem to be suffering from dofective eye- sight. They never can see it. Many men walk the street ail day jlooking for work, neyer getting home RGUNsts Of the Great Northern Rallvay a nou of tho cane NO. 11. That’s the Way Kleptomaniacs Are Treated in London. She Has Found Her Affinity f }Presifent James J. Hill, was until recently employed a: ‘ Dh slerk at $6 2, wee. moved as) OUT OF WORK. ana IRCA a Harriet Hubbard Ayer. _ By contrast with these instances of the rich young By F EAR MRS. AYER: I write to you in great distress, D and hope you will give me your honest opinion of my duty. £ have been married twelve years and have three children. My husband is a good man, but lately we have not been In sympathy, for, to tet] the truth, I love an- other. It came about {n this way. Three years ago we took ® young gentleman friend as a boarder, and without any ine tention of doing wrong I found myself growing more an@ more attracted to him. He possesses the tralts of mind that IT am in sympathy, with, and though he js much younger than T am our love t# mutual, and I feel that we are true affinities. Now what L wish to ask you ts, Am I not justified in seeking happiness in the only way I can ever attain It, by securing a divorce Charles Stelzle, pastor of Markham Chapel in St.|¢xcept for thelr meals, oul 7 To this class the conviction that em- ployment will come along and introduce In the contemplation of these cases of self-advance- itself to them as they alt In the park ‘Ment the rich men’s sons lose their interest for us, Cer-|in fine weather, or etand around the Aalnly the rise of tho treaker boy is an admirable ex-| stock ticker in a cafo in winter, tr al- Ample of what self-help will do for a youth. It lessons | V&¥* "trons. and marrying the young man, who would be es glad ae D would to have done with this life of hypocrisy? Tt certainly cannot be right for me to live with my husband when I 4@ not love him. Please advise, A HEART-BROKEN WIFB, T™ utter Inconsequence with which so many persona Yo gssiiied Vygis Yves t work in these days of easy divorce regard the marriage bitterness of the memory of Andrew Chipple, that anaes eee aepoti Reanig 10 ZZ SS - vow !s well exemplified In the foregoing tetter. When other breaker boy whose b6ss ‘twas always telling him| ‘These poor fellows finally are successful. APPLICANTS for a real reason the union of a man and woman becomes | to move on,” and, as he alleged, expediting his progress a & lump of con! thrown at him. e ONE OF NINETEEN. “A Brooklyn wite of forty in very humble clreum- stances who has just given birth to her nineteenth child 3 “I bless God for the babies, God gave thom to us T guess we can take care of them somehow.” ,A noble sentiment and one doing credit to the mother Who voices tt, as fond of her nineteenth child as of her iit But would it not be better for society if she were voluble of such ennobling sentiments and lees pro- of children? Eleven of her little ones are by a mer- Providence dead; she has only eight to reckon with swio clothe and feed and educate and instruct morally After they secure a place people, to whom they have previously appited, send for them and offer them something else, and aro mighty Indignant If tt Is refused. It seems to be one of the litte trontes of life that when you have a Job others ure offered you, but when you are unem- ployed there ts nothing doing In th way of getting something to do. ‘Tho man out of work 1s gloomy over the hard times, He believes that a crash 1s coming. ‘he trusts are over- capitalized, in his opinion, and a panlo ‘a9 on the way. He compares himself with John D. Rockefeller, who has everything in the world except an appetite, while he—he has nothing 1n the worla but what we'Ll CURE YER HLEPTOMANIA intolerable because of the brutality, viclousness, dsloyaliy, of one or the other I certainly do beliove in releasing-e@ quickly as possible the victim @f such a mischance. When two persons discover that ‘they are temperamentally) 80 oppoxed they cannot live in peace and harmony, try aw they may, I believe in a separation. But this is a ‘totally; different situation, When a woman with a kind husband and three children begins to talk affinitles it 1s time to: call) her attention to the meaning of a less ‘nigh-sounding wordy @ plain, everyday word known as duty. Terribie wrongs are perpetrated in the name of!love. ‘ Self-Indulgence, caprice, morbid sentimencallty would @e« fino the ill-used word often more accurately. I think-{t would in this case, There is such a thing as self-sacrifice, and.e: mother who teuly loves ‘her children never hesitates when the time comem for ner to do her duty at the expense of desire, or love, oe whatever she may call the temptation she ¢s battling with, | Aman who is 90 cowardly as to be willing to eee a family Gisrupted for his own selfish pleasure {s a man who would not be your affinity long. ¥ But you are ‘the more at fault. You are olden You hud a + happy home and Iittle children. You must have known your; Rockefeller lacks, {ABB prepare for the duties of lite, A great task, but how ‘He qhinks (Carhesieunakes|eonistake ‘thyieh greater a one ff the children had all lived! {n starting a0 many libraries. Food for ~What guarantee can such parents give that their off- |thought 1s unsatisfying to the hungry $3993249900500. oe will not bs : ° He can toll you what Carnegie ought © | danger long ago, and you should have called all your woman- * pe Pesome Publis ehergeaz’ lecnot axchiia|) He one (a) 19 money. Ho thinks It | (00d to your aid then and have withstood your peril, To pirsially Bandicapped who is forced to begin life nalenoua ye ahared with deserving. ten BIRCHED -47 | you was intrusted the honor of your husband's name, the of soemany and all so poor? What ts he to know |out of employment, THE STAKE @ | tuture happiness of your chiliren. Have you quite forgotten of @ normal childhood, with its games and toys andj He thinks of “going into some other hearty meals and long night's sleep? What is he to| business.” He tells his friends that f Imow such is his intention, of leading his class at school or playing football! sis anawers alluring advertisements in with his fellows or starting in business well prepared| which employment as "manager" is ‘by @ good schooling? proffered. The man who cannot man. age his own affairs always’ feels sure! _ The chances are rather a childhood of pinching selt- Fee cpuld. eeataeetoition saohiee: tite ‘@pplal, of scanty meals, of shabby clothes, of work at an} finds thut he is expected to, invent when a boy should not know {ts name. That may | #0,00 in “the business." He says !f ;Rot davmt him and he may live to be governor, but the| 2° had that much money he wouldn't * Want to wort bstacles to be overcome before he gets even.a falr start] jie believes the country Is going to @re well nigh insuperable. the dogs, He borrows a book on aoclal- 1" There are many forms of cruelty to children besides|'sm. He advocates single tax. It Is a @ involvin, i np| comfort to him to think that most of \ thos: ig the actual infliction of pain and some of the world's great men dled poor. But, thie worst, as in this case, are endured by them at home © | your sacred obligation? @| You think you would be happy away with-this other man, ®| Separated from your little ones. But you wouldn't. Have} © | you not learned vnat the wages of sin are never withheld?) The mother who deserts ‘her itttle ones is the mother wha @ | goes her lonely way childless to her grave. 3 Love ts not love when !t breaks the heart of an-honest, $ man and makes motherless his innocent chilaren, »| Love that ds real does not dety duty. Rather it suffers to, @| the bitter end, racrificing self and saving the innocent at the | expense of every personal desire. 2 Do not decetve yourself with ‘high-flown arguments cond $ | cerning aminities. ® Do not be tempted to commit an irreparable wrong. Sendj the man who tempts you away from you and refuse to see him, ‘ | You are really suffering from a sort of hallucination, an@® $ GY ee on reflection, he decides that he does the woman who gives way to temptation in such case HR mistaken kindness, . care to be a great man usually tras very soon of the object of her sentiment, and BS ——— He grows bitter. He wonders how in a few years discovers he {8 again mtstaken and finds » new affinity and later another and so on, mever faithful to, any one. ‘Take the medicine you know you requtre, I admit tt te bitter draught, for you have been undoubtedly lured from: @ | What seomed to you a prosaic Ife and have been caught 5 THE WIDOW'S RISK. {t {s that so many doffers can hold! A re all thelr Hyves. He wonders : lawyer of experience in the settlement of estates) what they would do if they were Polated out in The Evening World recently the risk| placed in hie position of not having $ mia by wid eae i y widows of losing the fortunes bequeathed them| “"¥ Work, and he was placed tn theirs 4 - Pen ? , s of having !t and the steady salary _ NO FEAR O. HE ©) the glamor of sentiment and passion, And we women are,, ‘to use and dispose of as they please without restriction haste mn. ne eles yas yam > - B/RCH WHEN A SUIT SOME oF THE mMosr | every one of us, alike susceptible, each one touched wt He showed how rich women are liable to become the g would help him can't, and those that i OF ARMOR /S WORN BENEATH THE THE EFFECTIVE CURES FOR thought of arousing a man's romantic interest, yvictims of unscrupulous advisers in the investment of| could won't. STREET CLOTHES BY KLEPTOMANIAGS MEN KLEPTOMAN/AC S WLEPTOMINIG 3| But you are dreaming, Love that te worthy the wort their money and to find themselves penniless at the end| Stories about how other men grew i” ‘i Aur fin = ieee Truth tells of a delightful method of dealing summarily with ton specially selected for her biceps, The birch is a formidable one, > 4 onda UES ne gondtaiam: 2 ee asunder (96 ® tow years’ personal handiing of their estatee. Ie Baa Nerelatche net on ete eat by pfemale Kleptomaniacs of gentle birth, which 1s followed in certain West “In one shop alone,” says Truth, “twenty women have accepted the ®| sugmacizes the future of innocent dhildren, 2 cited numerous cases in point, aavine sixty cents a day for twe ty | @ Bnd shops, osmdeal of birching, in addition to two young girls of a foreign national: j You cannot justify yourself in seeking a divorce, 7 &) This victimization of widows is undouttedly more| sears in this manner built a. foctare | Every woman detected tn the ‘act of shoplifting {8 given her option | tty, who, 1n consideration for thelr tender years, were treated to m SEAL SAS DAA QUT tol format peuneslsienn tad tae ) Several than the public believes. Both by nature and| buildin erm Faye of fate on the mo} Of being prosecuted in court or being birched by the manageress, a per- milder form of chastisement.”—Special cablegram trom London, Your own selfish desires, Try forwet a : st him, - by lack of expertence « widow is ordinarily incompetent ine H 5 peeibendie her funds, Sho ts wise who has recourse to| ncn “ytrunie wrortice sbout what he oe ,& trust company or incorporated loav agency of ac-|fevine : | Four of the t | owledged character for advice, Finally he gets a position, He ap-! eS But much of her incapacity is due to the ignorance| é7lates !". works hard and prosperity | Bich Her husband keeps her of bis business affairs,|{° sees, tf can look back then Jokes of the Day. d that is a fault susceptible of remedy. A Successful | distress him. But there te something ———, man is not given to talking business at home. |athetlc In the laugh " f PROOF POSITIVE. Period of early struggles when such confidences| #44 Muck ts the best thing that Sa, | He thought the mothers of the day| An experiment of surprising eftect, HOOODOOSG @ | what és right for those others whose lives are tn your keep. tPLOLDD O09 L9OFDOPODID LOD 99D9OD999G29909900090090990-0000000 | Ing, wione destinies you are to mould. Bo only, I honestly, —— — — believe, can you experience the greatest earthly which comes from the duty well and unselfishly performed, HARRIET HUBBARD AY@R, PPM IODIPPOHORIODI ON od wi T . 1}HOWMANY WORDS DO WE KNOW}. THE DISK AND NAPKIN RING. | ITH AID OF ELECTRICITY. i On a dry day rub with a brush, or with De after it's o the hand, a thin plece of r; You will all be surprised to learn how few words ave need ‘ako a flat dish, place a napkin-ring tn The rest cure ts all right for the rich, dren | adhere to your hand, your face or your! learn to speak? How can he ever learn enough worde to gay ; * A ' i 7 the centre of it, take hold of the dish | coat, 7 Ft We @ serious mistake and one ieaving her wholly|%2% cam afford nervous Prowtration. | "Hive," he sald, ‘had no nurse girl” |in tae Molton OF rane hands and thon Se ADEE SS has: gin 0th 8 Tak RIAA Gi ssc. unedune ted peonle arith pencect nena an at on outside advice at the husband's death, It Labor ay Be she rae of Adam, put i. "And aln Went wrong.” ehe repiled tc inio the alr with a sharp turning mo- able to get rid of it, usually found te use oNy about 800 different words in fmol enough in an indulgent husband to provide his . oe mally Chicago Post ton, The dish can easily be caught Bleotrity, {n the sane manner, @ thick| everyday conversation, white at the very most 3,000 wot With all the luxuries she may ask for, ‘The furthe | EVERY LITTLE HELPS when coming down, The surprising Piece of paper, @ postal card, for ex-| are all the ordinary educated person uses, So a bright id for, The further | She (musingly)—How can Chinamen! feature ta that the napkin-ring will not ample, and you will see that ith | child has only about’ Afteen words to learn every day in Obligat! rests on him of furnishing her with oc- THE LETTER. bear to eat rats? : be moved from its position even if the rh J ys - nf 0 tN | a chooh ecuree in créer to aaaulte 8,08 words in all. : Aetatls of his business, no that she will not be/f Lite is a letter that Fate has He (absently)—1t helps All the Chinks, dish should happen to turn over as sealing wax, glass, sulphur or rosin, this People of very good education use about 6,00 words, hg helpless in the emergency of hia death, faaniadl Heryard Lampoon, shown in the tllustration, If mother card can attrect Meht bodies (omall! boot milton used about 7,600 different words in writ —-—— — And dropped In the iitle box we THE NEXT STEP, will not trust you with a dish, take a poetry, while Shakespeare used something like 15,000 words, AAteratare.Siedman was for many know Lady Customer~1 ordered ngs Blece of pasteboard the size of a plate Have you any idea how many words there are in our language? Well, no One absolutely knows. The Century | pleces of cork, &c,), Balance a cane on | the back of @ chair and wager any one be main link between Hterature and Wall streot @ Weveral, There ts President Bayne, of the By the name of Chance, as it J sent to my house bef and proceed in the same manner. in the audience that you will make it stands revealed, Balesiady—Havenit you rec o ——— é dictionary contains 225,000 words and the Standard tae $00,000 surtout with = new book, “On an} Where the winds of woe and of | Iady Customer_On yea t ust iy MENAGERIE GAME, | fall without Louching it, blowing on ity! words, but very ikely there are more yet. following be “Pith of Aatrono: Sladneas blow; for my change,—Minneapolis Times, ie watate ara ponies la @ tog anal 1 Ail gorltased Gite ko nm Aisa onre are peas A saat George bye Mildrlége, bathor of Ife is @ letter that Fate has |! A CHARMED LIFE. 13 besing, "I am a bird, red and gi \ efore the fire, rub it vigorously with TRAINS BUILT FOR. SAFETY; tathe work of Clay Bese When a married man'looks at a bach-,and can do what no other bird oan, | | SMX | Your sleeve and put It close to one trains on the Central London ; ore eit elor who's dodged matrimony for Atty| have a hooked bill,” @. The first one » of the cane which will follow it as iron] All the new on ‘ fon Tal) ; vote Head Company, The | follows @ magnet, until, having jout ste] of Areproat construction, . ant h gate Be s0e's Rel millevieg ‘eee 4 Bs - the will the y reenusions for the 8, AP ~

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