The evening world. Newspaper, August 23, 1905, Page 11

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The Evening World's Home Magazine, Wednvsday Eventng, Published by the Press Publishing Company, No, 63 to @ Park Row, New York Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. VOLUME 46......... BEGIN AT HOME, seeesecsesesceedsessicccserssNO. 16,078, turn from London and Paris that he would quit Washington for his former seat in the State Senate. While his promise to represent his dis- find the Washington political atmosphere congenial. If he had only followed Webster’s example and displayed his orator- {cal talents in the halls of Congress he might have done better, for Dry Dollar Sullivan's speeches, though as opposite to Daniel Webster's as their respective constituencies, are forcible, brief and couched in a vocabulary that would hold the attention of any audience. In surrendering a seat in Congress to return to the State Senate Mr. Sullivan has historical precedents of distinction. For many years the State Senate of New York contained a much more distinguished, notable and powerful body of men than the delegation from New York to the Federal House of Representatives. In New York’s first Senate sat Lewis Morris, Pierre Van Cortlandt, William Floyd, Isaac Roosevelt, William Duer, Jellis Fonda, Alexander Webster, Levi Pawling and others of equal standing. The delegation in the House of Representatives did not compare with these men. So lightly did even the United States Senators from New York hold that office that of the first fourteen United States Senators from New York only four Served out their terms, the others resigning or withdrawing. In the early days after the Revolution few men of political prominence would accept a Federal in preference to a State legislative office. The affairs of their homes concerned them more than Federal affairs. The welfare of their neighbors was nearer their hearts than the interests of the people of other States. The further away they got from their firesides the less concerned were they over public happenings. In recent years the pendulum of political careers has swung too far in the other cirection. The problems of the Bowery are not the tariff, foreign affairs, free rural delivery and the number of battle-ships in the} navy, but the excise laws and the tenement, health and police regulations; not the irrigation of the West, but the poli , of the District-Attorney and the Police Department toward the Bowery’s aridity. Are there no other districts besides the Bowery where the leading men August 23, 1905. A Trial Balloon--That’s All ! By J. Campbell Cory. Dry Dollar Sullivan, the Bowery Congressman, announced on his re- trict “better than Daniel Webster could” has been carried out he did not| could accomplish most by concentrating their energies at hore? The| government of the city of New York costs its citizens four times their, share of the Federal Government's cost. The welfare of themselves i dearer to them than anything that goes on in the Philippines. More i portant things than charity should begin at home, and one of these is goo: government. # Letters from the People. « ™ Care of Factory Girls. Evening Wo: which I took r 1s city by doddering old creatures who ye beca as furgotten to come for them a voys in knickerbockera be done to extermina 28 es. Mrs, M. Red-Hatred Girla in Pink, ‘To the Editor of The Evening Wort Why do red-headed women wear pink? They all do {t, and to the aes. thetle eye there could not be a mor trying combination. A red-haired wom- an should wear black or white or gold en browns. But of course she has to s was provided. Tuer also an infirmary attached and a lunchroom where a delicious hot lunch was served for three cents, What would « factory girls think of such @ paradise? G. Men in Elevators. of The Evening Wrrld: CaNsleNalentcat Nemesis ane fw men think Nueate sien pels ate wen h to sell her elther of riding in downtown elevators? If they} Kies only knew how much women think of the few gentlemen who do, they «ald! all hasten to perform that simple act of courtesy. A gentleman should be & gentleman everywhere, not turn into @ rowdy the minute he gets below ‘Twenty-third street. Mrs, DE Forts-elght Counts Ne Wo the Editor of The How many Reg quired to enter a H. A. W.—Bronx fm Mondays and ‘Thursdays, The New York Masher. To the Editor of The Evening World Asa Western woman wi elled extensively in the 1 and Europe, let me say masher {5 the worst in the we Bave been ogled and even spoken to in parent To the Editor of The E: Your editorial wr! Bables’ Check Room’? does not require] any great discussion, for the momen baby {shorn his destiny {s all arranged A mistake was made by taking another baby from the neck room for her | Suppost mean that r own was destined for a bri n {ts own parents c he was the means of Th gh Would the bab real or fuster- simply grow up as It wa regardless of good or bad par How ab Jesse James's NORMAN FRINK (TRANSLATED FROM THi BY HERMAN BER (Copyrighted) | RUSSIAN | w ZN.) | os CHAPTER III. “Tor My Sake.’’ August 3 Jeared up, Is weld Pn thy day bel that he did no 4 His carly depyrture, Hur tien, he op oo lille to me ie 1 anc hot geen hin tory, THe fhe has an atiack nit, All 1 Qearned from Katya, who had paid Lud 1s Bila Vewilyevna a viet Ar wit Ie botter the y 1s 80 handsome, #0) doy, Hut 1 ace clever i ds 1 4 | your foarug to meet her; not knoy would fall in love 1 him, even as }of ter exbiteuce, it ts hardly pro’ You fell tn love with Andrushs. An- | thar you would recognlas her." By Dr, Fritz Skowronnek. I pwned spoke so clear- ould understand all that ther she would first - ly to my fa ongs to many dogs. term our emotional life are to be observed tn s was missing. Were a whined, howled and sing his feelings I wo nfulness all too igh e Chicago nvse, n ran rapidly to the d AS we did not heed his sile expectant eyes ; dropped his head, | ward like with } e dogs without the The th ) resemble human art are so signifi- Int ate Subst cified occasions Up-to ute fo nkee Indus PHILADELPHIA 4 aining lumps for togevher, an op ¢ dough for bor The Story of a 9 Young Girl’s Heart. MY LOVE AFFAIR ow —s Bread-and-Butter Wives, By Nixola Greeley-Smith. ment made revently in another department of The Evening World that a girl of sixteen !s too young to marry. He cites in refuiation his own experl- ence of marriage at twenty-three to a girl of sixteen, who has since become the mother of five children and looks scarcely a day older than when he married her, Now, « girl of sixteen is really not as much too young to marry as js the usual young man of twenty four, And It fs entirely in the girl's interest that they must both be considered too young to assume the re- sponsihilities and cares of matrimony. Before twenty-five or thirty a young man is not apt to know his own mind, matrimonially, He admires pretty nearly all women indiscriminately, Apropos of this a man told me a very amusing thing the other day. “A young fellow of twenty,” he said, “who was always raving over one girl or another devoted twenty minutes to telling me of the rare beauty of his latest discovery. When he got all through his ravings I said: “By the way, Bill, is she black or white?’ The very young man is fickle, unstable. He marries without due re- flection or experience, and generally makes up the deficit afterward. The girl of sixteen is equally undiscriminating. She {s not apt to receive any very brilliant proposals, for men of judgment do not usually seiect bread-and-butter wives. She accepts the first proposal that she receives and often spends a lifetime regretting it. The aforementioned Evening World reader has had an experience equally fortunate and unusual. It is the wife of sixteen who has cause for repining, not the husband For she has ‘ho youth. To have the care of one or two children before she is twenty means for her absolute slavery, which the very domestic woman may find altogether sweet and satisfying, but which to the woman with a wider horizon is insupportable. It would be reasonable enough for the rich to marry young. But they are precisely the class addicted to late marriages. Marriage at sixteen makes a woman old and settled at thirty {n her feelings if not in her looks. For her a husband merely serves to bridge the chasm between her last doll and her first baby, and then becomes simply a purveyor of shoes for it and the subsequent arrivals, Her youth is a woman's rarest and best gift, and she who marries too early deliberately sacrifices that brilliant, iridescent bubble of romance for the pot-roast and cabbage of matrimony. Very often she doesn’t realize her loss, but if she does she will ask sadly and in vain: “Whither {s fled the visionary gleam? Where {s it now, the glory and the dream A YOUNG married man takes excvption to a state. oe Said w on « the e Side. oration not Imagine how it occurred. Som achelor| times happens so, though there are | never any blanks among the cartridges. to bulld a home for Its employees will be follownd with In @ manner the scheme {s an | ng British o 1 ve tn,” occupy ing quarters on the store premisss. If} the example were to be imitated by | er corporations which are large em~ Ps of @ large cigar © Polar expedition planned from the Yukon. Hot summer there also? Ometal surgeon engaged by the Oak Park Automobile Club of Chicago. | Time probably approaching when every ers the change brought @™"r 1) automobile club-house here will have gf conditions would be ® marked/ iy) ota attachment and ambulance one. 4 bod | surgeon. Hippodrome elephant to have a as caved molar filied witn gold. Size of | aed molar flict The appwrraicsecs| A Weird Plaything. a gold brick for the filling UT tn South Providence the boys eis) ie CE inve anew instrument of tor- Bronx Zoo elephant, not to be out-| ture and pleasure says the Provi- done, is learning to play the harmonica. | dence Journal, Trumpet would appear to be a more| They take the cover from a large tin fitting instrument. | pail, the larger the better, and bore a oe | hole tn the centre of the cover. Through “Five hurt; chauffeur crazy." Nov-/ this hole ther pass a string, and mak elty of the madness betng that tt hap- the string longer or shorter, as they pened after and not before the acci-| choose to have the Instrument when fn BSR, ac‘bon closer or more distant from them, | eo) ©) | Then, taking “he end of the string in Clothes make the man. Well-to-d0) their hand, they run down the street. Connecticut youth who put on hobo The over s:ipis rolling, and {a soon | garb as an experiment and was treated clattering \ts way over the pavement op- as one made no new discovery. pesite them, rolling along on one side ‘ see of Its edge and making more or less “An actor can't afford to grow fat.” noise, acconling the pavement over says a matinee favorite. “One can’t which it roils. Careful handling of one d playing heroes with a walst) of © instruments is arranged to ment of sixty inches.” Ualess.| give a boy the calm and pleasing coun- of course, he has the stuff in him of © of @ bolied lobster In thie mer weather and to make the neig! which Coquelins are bors wish they could move to some co9 8 biessed piace where small boys are not. Newport women desirlous of getting peepecnlen box cover will answer the taking massage treatment. Easler way would seem to be to stand on @ street crossing and dodge autos, | ko secured. ‘ p, because hoop rolling js a 's amusement, and this ts work for half a dozen of thes & together, will make cake to the woods for thi ural life, Woman who shot rival says the shoot- | 's man Ing {a “all a blank” to her and she can-| rest of his n/ HE By SOPHIE WITTE, risstan peace Envoy fle cigurette when Leonov eppeared in @ " with me?” ind only, new dark-blue costume end » round “With vou alone.” of the ‘Alte Wiese?!” ing with you I fear nothing ex- 1 almost blurted ou but 1 bit my To be bored in the company of another ts probably not so tedious,"" perfectly right,” he agreed “When you feel bored In the other you have atleast one to impart your impressions it least some one to whom. repeated, looking at n ought to be ashair ) makes but even then she could not frighten bat she would say reached our house without notle- “Being with you I am not afrall 4 elther,” 1 sald, but stop the exagger ited, 1 understood the “dhut when will we make our a to ‘Heayen-on-Barth? " Leonoy asked | holding my hand, tended to hin. bidding him "Good-duy. anxious to go the: nobody'4 opinion except low bow of Leonoy. meaning of his sarcastic bow, 80 I has- clusive, but the ore independent “Are you very dead * * © or are your princess whea | was class of tae gymnasium, jdloue with me beyond the boundaries you afraid to be ne to be bored when you are alone or in the company of ha Cannot murry you, and Leonov| He spoke in the condescending tone lin ihe sti Raa Deas ican ne ee hitb I hesitated, In the mean time he kept | black hat, He caught me redhanded, in naisting: morrow morning. Are you satls- fear* “But you are going away to-day,” I reminded lim. He knitted his brows, Dut said festingly: “I am ready to postpone my depart- ur “Wor the sake of ‘Heaven’ or for my sake?" “1, a neither the one nor the other. 1 simply want to tease our mutual ac- quaintance the Princess Murle Alekee- yevna."” yn the end Leonoy attained his alm—T to «o with him. in” he repeated after bidding me ‘“mood-by."” We are to meet in the forest, by the chapel. It isn't’ far from here, Now that the appointment is made I must find « | way tg sneak out of ‘tHe house eo that | Katya should not suapect anything, 1 don't want to tell her the truth. Bureka * * * I've invented #ome- on thing—I'll tell her that I am going to hi my pictures taken. And then I can say that the photographs were not successful. Bravo, Marla Sergeyevna, Well, then, to-morrow, August & The day 4s done, our trip is ov ‘The “trip cannot be called a trip at all, Not only did we not climb to Heaven- |on-Harth,” but we did not even attempt to get anywhere near it, We met at that chapel, and at the ting ry for about an hour, no more, but during this hour @ great deal was spoken and x wan said, It lasted less than v Thad to watt quite a while fore Leonoy came, I managed to # lect a comfortable little bench under @ | jau, spreading oak, I had ample time to ex- amine from afar the roofs of the Carls. the very art of smoking, for he came not from the side which I had expected him to come. Unadvisedly T rumpled the cigarette in my fist, burning my palm as I did so, and dropping a few sparks, together with ashes, on my new white dress. Leonov, frightened, hastily extin- gulehed the fire with his hand and sata in a tone of stern reproach: “You ought to be ashamed of your welt!" I did feel somewhat ashamed of my- self, but I did not confess It to him, I boldly said, with forced sprightliness, “Bhould one really be ashamed of smoking?" “It is not the smoking that you ehould be ashamed of, but the tact thet you tried to hide that you were smoking: “T did not even think of hiding it'—Z lied, ns it seemed to me, out of self Feapect, “In that ease why did you extinguwh your cigarette with such appication to risk scorching your fingers and - ing your dress?” “Because L did not want to emoke in your presence,” "Do ‘smoke in the presence of others” HKWhY do T deserve such an excep. “Because you sald some time ago what’ T stopped whort. 1 was about to q that I lett off smoking because he not bear the smoke, Dut reoalll promise to tell nathing but the truth, Ayuiled myself of my privilege to i silent. Indeed. how could T confess him’ that I will not want to smoke his presence because he had announ to fatya that ft would be repulsive to kiss a woman (whose Ips smelt of tes "0. emolce. t did I say?—When?—Iet me bee" — He passed his hand over his forenead several times, trying to recall some ching; then he suddenly burst Into lod he ap id. hter—he reovled what he T Was ready to ery because of leughicr, bile 1 mastered Se attas tnd precoul (to Be Goatht é *

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