The evening world. Newspaper, March 19, 1904, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ied aes oki aah a 4 Two Beaux toThisGirts |} The Great and Only Mr. Peewee. Published by the Press Publishing Company, No. 58 to @ Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-omice | | String. $ THE MOST IMPORTANT LITTLE MAN ON EARTH. ; ar at New York as Seeond-Class Mall Matter. : Design Copyrighted, 1903, by The Ewening World. Biceecemce cece ssreicate NOu TO BSt: By ¢ Mr. Peewee Gives Miss Tootsie Sixfoot a Lesson in Manicuring. ‘ i e : g 4 “OOTS! Goim may You 7) fouc! OBSERVE How GkACE>} The Evening World First. 1 Paaelay Sreeley<Sritt |: Tala! fave uber £2. > Qe lech Fuuey DP cup THe | Crown Is in LITTLE 00 PEOPLE os Number of columns of advertising in The | Dear ater Greeies-simttn Basa To) Al the Discard. ' Evening World for 12 months, ending EMS SASS ALOU Xt) CONSTANT PRACTICE February 29, 1904..........c00005 01251814 || etneod: b iiuecatanding exiate ON MY OWN WELL a crimp in Dan Sully, the Cotton King.” “Surest thing you know," replied the Man Higher Up. “They took the king’s crown and put it in the discard. It took them just five weeks to tin-oan Sulfy out of his bankroll, You remember that we talked about this young man Sullly last summer and I ex- ‘ pressed the fear that he wouldn't know when to lay down his band. My fear came out. * “That Is the troublé with all the corner manipulators. ‘They have heated feet. When they are coming in care riages to the ordinary man he generally gets a chill in his pedal extremities at the psychological moment end 667 SHE.” sata the Cigar Store Man, “that they put ROOMED FINGERS; I ie otber itors is a gent of the lady fi “1 to her. When he calls he never ves before 11.% and 32. The other ning Scheel Mie wero both there, by 1 asked why aan going, be arked, out INCRBASE........ A, ZO 1% locus at, Wenger iat tne, com: ——_ ture, she woll inform me when the other party jntended calling, I would remain a SS This record of growth was not equalled by any way. My action has called forth of protest. If TI was | Newspaper. morning or evening, in tho United States. || 8.) "Willing to make amendan Gey E HIS letter ts Interesting be- cause ft typl- d2@ Number of columns of advertising in The Evening World for 12 months, ending February 28, 1903.....0sseeceeee++ 257% [le LORS: FOR INDUSTRY, WITH GOOD CHEER. RUSSELL i Vv 2 whic f hi w York SAC, me is hen oa ie iad old Welsh verse which, ot uy att Dit, Ete Partrh drrhaeh rd SACE et cotet ee pe Dislearatr promoters work with overshoes 4s it is translated, reads thus: ; Of ‘view which) al: GIVE 1 5 ‘Three are the ornaments of a hamlet Faveabhia (oy cone - “Look at Sully at the beginning of the year! He had A book, {] sider hin calling on a bundle of microbe cages that would choke the Paname A teacher versed in song, A smith in-his smithy. That is, Education, Good Cheer and Industry. At the bottom of the list Industry, not because if is last, but because it is the foundation. In the disturbance of eae Industry there is the end of Good Cheer and the “ost ghavtees al: toppling ‘of Education. though he aske for it, and ee e iaxe In New York, as in every great centre, Industry Salipeiias & Tsnave brapenvits the ornam f i matter he will, by all means, make = be ay = en pee necessity cb living and amends by apolugizing to the young A young woman tn the Mght of a com pliment to her in- stead of a pleasure which she allows im, Probably It. 8 Canal, he had just blown himself for a $800,000 house snd he calied all the Waldorf-Astoria millionaires by thetr first names. He had unloaded his dotton und the* whole world was open to him for mazuma exercising purposes, * “But he couldn’t quit. He thought he had the layout hypnotized. ‘What license,’ he said ue himself, ‘has » | John D. Rockefeller got to have more cush than I? Io less than a year I have made all the Wall street star performers look Ike dachshunds In a coursing match TO CusTOmERS i é DD3HDTSIDES O300006O 900000008 ae RESET HOW DARE ‘You of peace. In certain of its great branches, the allied | womun, : " 1 aay eras There is a lot more cash down here, and I need it all’: building trades, it has been gravely threatened of Iate,| No man has the right to dictate In a & DAUGHT! “Whenever they think they need it all, Mike, the; of this kind untoss he ia er 2 2) MANICURE: Naturalists tent Cu > ! ee, But yesterday The Evening World was able to give| cages to the girl. ven then Alctation a B® | NosicuRE_ CUCKOO! CUCKOO! — lus ait birds bulla °"~s.] | are steering themselves to the road for the bankrutey assurance that settlement was probably near at hand, | should be unnecessnry, aa he ouedt. 10 f ‘e \ Cyr) | For ours! Cuckoos, It’s Time for You @ nests, rear thelr; Proceedings. Young Joe Leiter needed it all when he ran his big corner in Chicago, and they are picking up pieces 8 of him yet. Rockefeller ran up a’corner in oll, but he ,| Spent a great many years at {t and it cost him his appetite and his hair. You can count the successful speculative corners on your ears.” “Do you think Sully will win out again?” asked the Cigar Store Man. youngand migrate. ‘ They are MIS-, ( ' The Evening World news was good. It should be] to tis nances ay to render the saciety affirnted promptly by events. “Only common sense is} of snother man without cherm or tn terest to her. R. 3. 1s not engaged to necessary,” with fairness and moderation on each hand. | the young woman he completing of, and | © Let us have Industry complete, with Peace and | Just because see pare to receive 6 man personally objectionable to hi Good Cheer. on the same evening as himself, he | takes his departure in high dudgeon.! to Up and Organize! Comyret, 1904, by the Planet Pub.ce. fl TAKEN, The CUCKOO io the house clock does none of these things, WHY? Because A CRUEL man-made machine keeps him j ( from OWNING HIS OWN HOME, from feeding dollar [THE_RED INK THAT WILL Come OFF ing both of them x compliment tn per- E AN AID TO THE POLICE. after threatening hee mest loss of; Strawberries to his young, from gathering trading | Sure,” answered the Man Higher Up. “He ts hep 5 Emerging from a folkling-bed, two detectives arrestod | his society uniees sho saente her sare THE EVENING FUDGE Y . stamps, It FORBIDS HilM to organize lest he cuckoos to the cotton business and will always manage to ac: Be @ man on the charge of bribery. They afllrm’that while Pe an ee i iaretueveties | Faas ye for the walking delegate. { cumulate cigarette money, but he never will forget thos: : a in their unique retreat they had-observed him pass] nan hax quits 9 much claim on hee | IS THIS RIGHT? H thfee million frogskins he had in his bank roll at the money to patrolmen, the bills presumably recking with) t!me and society as he has, and that! Gc some day the GOVERNMENT will own the | beginning of the year.” the microbes of corruption. the other would have as much right to . ; The episode tends to give a new status to a despised CAM AaR Al gaa Leslie T EI cr peas wade through RED INK (0 get there, but ws | i: , &nd derided article. Long has the folding-bed been a| As a matter of fact, neither has the i Mrs Nagg and r portrayed as doubling up maliciously with people inside, miltting them to call on her. or eas undoubling to the discomfiture of people outside,| possibly they do not realize this. The but no good has been epoken of it, New York man ts not apt to realize It Thjs aspect, however, is trivinl. The important| Nor !s the New York girl given to tm- feature is the lesson to the police. When they suspect a Deteatitrenten R. 8S. wants to man of Intent to commit crime they have only to lure! signalixe hie displeasure by leaving 2 him Into the presence of a folding-bed stocked with de-|iri's home, it would be more pointed for him to take his departure at 9 , tae 46 5 A b : tectives. There he must be induced to consummate his|‘0F him to take ha departure ot &) © To.Day’s Frise “Evening Fudge’’ Jototorial Was Written by Marion Rock alnister purpose. The bed opens, and appear, terrible) coing anyway. T. 8. considers leaving |? = PRIZE PEEWEE HEADLINES (or To-day: No. 1-ISADOR KAPLAN, 46 East 98th St., New York City and triumphant, the representatives of the law. atl early, Hin deadly rival stays untii| & No, 2—F. G. TALIAFERRU, 256 West 4 Oth St., New York City; No. 3-ARTHUR H. ZIEGLER, 675 East: Perhaps the police, in dealing with the criminal ele-| 11 or 2 Poor > 154th St.. New York City. 4 ‘There 1s nothing on earth more ex- Jest. Evil habits have been ascribed to it. It has been| least claim on the girl, and ehe is pay-| Fil DINNER \WHILE BOY SHOOTS By Roy L. McCardell, ATS = DE CRACKES Every Other Man Would Be Glad to Buy a Hat for Such a Patient Wife. But Him, Oh, You Know How HeIs! And the Example He Sets Poor Little Brother Willie! 79 W HY shouldn't mother and my little brother Willie come along? “You didn't obfect to their coming, you say? i is unusually interesting his welcome Doubtless Magistrate Flammer, of Harlem, spoke in} may inst until 1, But after that, the haste when he sald the Children’s Court : 5 mor, Don’t you hear mother talking to you? She 2 4 et All_Else Failing the Russos Won by Throwing,a Little Viadivos-talk Into the Japs. $|!f you are not ashamed of the awful life you lead, eal OU uriamen sc tunen Sima ‘ ks you ment, have been handicapped by an insuMclency Of/ asperating than a man who dorm't wonday’s Prize “Fudge’’ Idiotorial Gook, ‘Why Not THINK—and Save COAL?” Well. have you sald a word for four blocks? And here folding-beds. know when to go. Up to 10 o'clock a - Nee meter Gane eve been talking to you and trying to be {rl 1s glad to entertain almost any ° ° tlen strain that a saint wouldn't bear. COURTS FOR CHILDREN. iia men of herseranarce ere]? Phe Russovitskys and the Japahashis at War, 8 8 3) Pwnatlstran, So"tast! iy, sour bla, tooming bee a nterferes with | only way In which he can make himself . w lea ¢ mat ‘ Shae se Ueda one quiet family party has no i a | covecabiole by taking pinnae hy ay <a Cl ty ‘ ms for you. You should never have married, Mr, Negg. the proper disposition of justice.” It happened that his Let B.S. renlize that, as well an the Nh Ube! es ce _ $ | Your inclinations are all rough and brutal. I saw bei Own convenience had been interfered with by the ab-| oof sige he cannot monopolize a girl's wey Ps > scowl at the parrot this morning, just because, in the inno- sence of two witnesses who were at the moment fn the) atrention until thelr engagement has = a $ ance of his heart, he was making a little noise. ‘ Children’s Court. However important the conyentence, siven him the right to, and that vat - ws ew ye, cs & peut au Soule not Pare yourself heard, you say? “ then any one of half a dozen men has WACTSKIVITEH f MELOVITON, Y, ne mph! o wants to hear what you have to ? i deinen ahr hrcster eaaane Biesutinn exactly the same chance that he haa. STAND STILSKY ENTE ey KS After « while you will be ordering mamma and me ad oman . +l In this case the girl's choice seemed to } “ AND TALK THEM counnnensronts Zeyh §\2DK0DAL ie brother Willie around like dogs, expecting us ‘The celerity of official routine in his office is secondary. | bo limited to two men. One of them ts] 5, ‘TO OEATHOWSK! } W Vice z Coins Rn < $ cringe at your feet. re oi Perhaps on reflection he would so concede. evidently superfluous, | Which one? & : We Wry ee 7 aoe S| “Don't twiddle your thumbs! Sit up straight! why Often the infliction of penalty is an expression of bi fad Pp te > iL 30% (ogee Sea Nigar vacraCtin collar? You couldn't find one? Oh, o 7 . d y' al we are out in a street car, fustice, although much more can be done for society by CONSOLATION. > public conveyance, and start a dreadful quarrel Seat . prevention of crime than by sending to prison the law-| ghe had worked her leap-year pre- | collar. Your collar isn't hardly soiled a bit. Dreaker who has become dangerous and possibly beyond} rogative and he had batked at the > > "You never hear me making a row about such trifies. meborea hurdle. 3} S| But, of course, anything will do you to quarrel about, and | Cour! “Ah,” she sighed, “this ts indeed a ‘ts for juvenile offenders in all of the several) yg unexpected blow!" cities where these tribunals exist have been proved) “rr jt will make it any practical and beneficent. They succeed, naturally with| you.” sald the marbie-h: Individual exceptions, in their purpose, which is that of/™an. 1m, will arresting the course of wayward youth. Many a boy or| ~ ¢ already you are repenting your promise to buy me an Easter » | hat and are starting a dreadful quarrel and are abusing me 53 in a street car in the presence of my poor, patient mother fand my ittle brother Willte. \ ©| “Little brother Willie is only going on twenty-six. such 3 shocking@cenes are not for a child. Besides, you see what easter for ted young to admit that I —Chicago News, pest SI ee i @ nefvous condition he is in, You know he is just out of girl, apparently set toward a viclous career and a bad HER ULTIMATUM. j $ the Keeley cure. mding, has been saved by them to usefulness. The Cop—By Jove! The folks here | 3 “You want to give the poor boy false ideas of life, te t they? If this “interferes with the disposition of justice” in| lve pretty high, doi The Cook—Oh, ye make him dissipated, to lead him astray, simply because Ayrac 3 you know he was raised a pet. SVTAC _}J&| “Ah, if my poor papa was allve tt would break his heart ia $9O9690005094 | to sce how I am treated. He was so pleased when I mare‘ -——-~ | ried and left home, because he thought I would be happy. And to think I left such a home, where ail was peace and Joy, to live a eut-and-dog life with you. “And to think of how glad I was to go with you, because poor papa’s temper was so violent, and I think he hated the very slght of me, ana as for poor little brother Wille, he . used to beat him dreadfully and always said he was a gal- qr] 10WS bird, and then he'd chase us out of the house and cn ft," ree} sure!’ returns the defeated Major, “It ; congrat mms, You all know e: » Mr, ! uu sit there seo me again; and that, too, at a time} rusties out of the room and into the;/than les. My sister and Mr. Craven | how feel toward you.” scowl, just because you see me happy and resets I gave them to y'd have to, if they Klyn Life, Police courts, it Is through reduction of the volume of} ‘ business there. 2 PACOM GIO HIY © 3 3 AN END TO SULLY AND HIS CORNER. The career of Daniel J. Sully, “cotton king,” has car's ot gr omnes come’ A Maiden All Forlorn, « # # By “The Duchess.” It seems hardly necessary to point the moral. Mr. Sully claimed to be actuated py the highest) (By permiasion of George Munro’ i 4 George Munro's Sone), last wa met vou scorned my advances.|ly with Duk , motives in his attempt to construct a “corner” In cotton. | ‘SUNROOMS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. | and told me that you hoped never to! With this, and a Ittle laugh, she! turns Ronnie, He was working for the growers, who were not getting her an é falls in’ lor 4 when 1 was consumed with a desire to/next by a folding door, which divides| have quite made up their minds and © siniles grimly as he says thi It thought’ would be so\pleasant: for usiallits of Praneeney abauld \be/wetting fon thelr crops. It)willbs wen, Invanout to prune OMe | tell you how I loved you-that every|the two rooma from each other. ‘Thero| are engaged to cach other.” Vets we gil know that" rejoins Br-|T thought lt would be so pleasant for cs all oleae kaltee : z remembered that Mr. “Joo” Le'ter talked in this sama} £ gated rivers tamtty ve: | {OUEHt of my heart was yours.” abe lnde) tis Major. a don’t believe it!" erles the Major, : says the Major, Pulling) us, and poor little brother Willie ts not strong enough to rou POP ee A ie feline tent vera family bel “An, {€ you could only understand,” ten he has gone through the ordi-| rising to his feet. this w q ows very Inte. SAV oul knowl helecrained his! fnaetipiat Pppatcen susmolnss € comers in Nneae Growers Veen merely flirting | she murmurs desperately, nary questions about her own and her| At thir instant the folding doors are| Shall miss the up-train if T don't make |,work. Yo wer playing football two of the great cereal suggested a monument for Mr. Letter. But the shaft has not yet arisen. What we may read plainiy In the downfall of the “corner” builder Is that no real interest of crops or, Craven. * srowers cap be served by artificial and fever!sh processes “Understand what?"—eagerly, ‘“Cecll,| mother's and al: flung open, and Craven, appearing on| "Ae, ,FO0G DY; ROOD LS | court erstand what?"'—eagerly, . | mo a = Op dl Craver’ appe a | Oe fab ceo Rs . | wee h | speak to me; tell mo what you mean?” | somewhat jerkil the scene most unexpectedly, enters, | night,” says Craven, hospitably, 1¢ & Aedtlah Veseeael aeeas Poe llatey air ler Magn Jervis eAe sou were meine fa) meee our {reais Graven leisy’ leading Cell by the hand. He draws) JN) thank: you-no, I am bound tol undermine his constitution and Interfere with bis t be married. your cousin, Lady Maud,""| "Yes; to-day. But he ts not so in-[her «ently forward, until they both) pe In 1owh to-night Hauie thteetng ue hamusclobemearetlnlrteinare says Ceil, Ina stifled tone, | teresting, I th as he used to be.’ | stand before the discomfited Major. prejudiced against him. You know you ha Don't ks ago. ere health, he sa ton | gern am ‘ aoe “The old scoundrel,’ he qutters,| “Ha! How ts that?’ asks the Major| ‘Major Jervis won't believe you are) het, Pavens cuncuny, Aiea enone ae rae In the market. Prosperity is a plant of natural growth, | SHEER. cows hy you behaved to cruelly |in a delighted tone. goliig to be married,” says Ronnte,| tho! Majon Acoperately; after which ty bara ae ieee CRS RES y Uttle brother shall It cannot be endurjngly cultivated by the hothouse proc-| ayea Sava at length etched afternoon?” he| ‘Well, he is engaged, you see,"" an«| With @ little laugh, eee inte age tor manyea day: | “He's welcome, you say? Ob Mr. Nagw, don't be a ees of turning the question of crops and prices into a has brought you here?" his wrath has|swered Ronule, as If reluctantly, “andy “Ob, yes, I am! Am I not, Cecil?’ por Major!” save Cecil, “How d'8-| hypocrite. Don't grin and try to look pleasant. Now, what pure gamble. | vt know; I wanted to ed, young men engaged are young mon] asks Duke, glancing down lovingly t| concarte know he de-| (oP vou scowling for? Oh, was there ever such man? Noone — Sho focln a iittie| “Xee"—shyls. Jost, yo far as their pelng entertaining | his betrothed, who laughs a Ittle, too, | rerved an: ‘dfere is the bonnet shop, Call Willie beck: the boy ts “And—and now ~ou know the wholt| goes, You know, you gave us a hint} and blushes decply throat, and Hie {x unworthy of your pity," an-| actually going into a saloon! Ob, Mr, Nagg, this is your THE WIFE'S WILL AND THE COURT'S. eed truth—do you love me, Cecil?” about his being bent on getting mar- You will come to their wedding,| qwers Craven, drawing her away. {ror} | example Recently, {n Coshocton, a wife was enjoined trom re- a't mean to come back so soon,"'| “I do'—stlll more shyly ae witbate, bal apcaecar neta Seka Dstt Major?" asks Ronnte, mis-} tho othera Inte she deep embreneariy| ‘Why can't you be kind to the boy? If he tifestens * Craven, who has never once re-| “My dearest heart!" murmurs Craven;|down. We have y ch . tuke you from me? ck you, it was only his playful way. fusing to make her husband's bed or to prepare his three ed his eves from hor face. while} and then somehow she finds hersei¢ in| surmise Is carreet, Tho Major, though overpowered dy] “NV cutd that have been auch terrible | ° Kick YON, ot Man ORY PTY Rt on purpose, meala per day. Feminine Coshocton went promptly into! she, on tne contrary, has not had the| his arms with her head against his| “Eh—eh?" hi , fidgeting anxiqusly | numbers, still lets his/evil humor have] thing?” she asks with an upward glan iu Mi and a very pardonabdle touch of oc to disgrace us! And brother Willie ds so sensitive and txpressed contempt of court. jcourage to lift hers to his. breast and knows that she Js utterty|in his chatr, “But I Nahai a full ‘away, ., ee, quetry. fined. Now the news comes trom Chicago that a Judge hag), "T thought vou meant never tw come| and entirely RANNY, T ailuged to pualionns (had RNG AVLEDE piensa essen TA | aac ‘What a question!” he returns) “There! Willie is Ina fight with a negro! Oh, Mfr. refused to issue an order that a certain wife sh: [each ake Snawers in: a low, husicy| then Wey wend: thelr’ wey slowly//PUb ene . Rar at eA eprint reprouchfully. out it wrongly,” saya| it is all your fault! Police! Help! Run to brother W: . all Bet) tone, homeward, ltnat. May I ask whom Rumor has|sorry I can't come to yours too, Miss cine Ok NEEL HR yea psT 8 sore aid. He may hurt himedlt. Look bow leasly ( Her husband's dinner. The Court in the Windy City is} “so 1 did—but’—vitt ly—"vou' see 1] Whilst they are in the very midst of | given him to now?" Ronnie. Sou ecnmninnes ‘Rot taking long chances on contempt. uld not help my you ought to!their double congratulations, one of the) ‘Well, to Cecil, I believe! returns Don't be sorry another instant, Ma-|” «Would that have been such # terri- men, ; rok ." saya Lord Errington, pleasantly; he asks in his turn, with a of the bench are here shown at proud of that, ought you not servants, coming into the little morn-| Bonnie, with provoking unconcern, Jor," says a y te . Re extrerase h, do not speak to me in thatjing room where they have seated them-| This is a death-blow. The Major|he has cdme up to them unnoticel by Urge eo ‘cnow. Would it?” she ques- will split the difference. They will do as| tne!’ she entreats, at last letting her|selves, tells them that Major Jorvia| turns pale, and blows his nose violently Jervis. “Ronnie and I will be only too song sremuloy ssa hal Ginisa bon ven, with Turning to b jumping on that negro ruffan’s face!" oy Catching Cold. et oyes meet his, and he can see the heavy|is in the drawing room, to cover his chagrin, glad if you will promise to dance at a tears lurking in thelr soft depths. “Cl qo to him,” saya Ronnie, rising:| “Ah, Rumor 1s a worthless jade!" he| our wedding alvo. It will be quite! death) ny” “How would you have me speak to|'you are too nervous to-day, marama, | says, with @ miserable attempt at‘dis-| flmple. you know, poragp $l fe o yout" he asks, reproachfully, but not/and Cecil's eyes are pink—she has evi-| belict her 7s “As @ rule, shel same rouse. * lista! #0" coldly’ aaa moment singe. ““Whea ‘gently been enjoying hereslt excessive talla more Wea thi truth "Very charming

Other pages from this issue: