The evening world. Newspaper, May 6, 1907, Page 12

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)

The Evening World's SS AWW7> eH ecrla ing Company, No, 3 to @ Park Itow, N Rentered at the t New York as Second-Ciass Mall Matte VOLUME 47 we NU. 18,69 FLIRTIN If the plan pgs of a Separate squad for ! ere still in vo mm the Police Department a valuable 5 i th from Cleveland. The Chief of Pi A soore of the best-looking .youn, mer Kohler to detect girls and wémen wh and made man : Flirting in is more ‘comm: s than in New York. In most mtry villages) | eat the station when the trains} s ing. drummers, «In place the size df Cleveland the station, habit is not so pop lar, but Saturday evenings and Sunday afternoons | the /fashionable streets and the ‘parks ha omen 1 s with avérse to making acquaintar out the formality of an introductidn, Almost always flirting is innocent in its purpose A } It-is natural for a young girl to. seek admiration, + homely woman or a girl poorly dressed and un in appearance does not flirt. A general sprucing up, a new hat, a pre’ dress and a blithesome demeanor are preliminaries to a fl A certain amouut of flirting is a recognized feminine Is approved by the United States Government i ing out Flirtation Walk at West Point, where every cadet is expected to accumulate valuable experience So’ long as he is fearful of the glances from a pretty girl's eyes he is not fit to face t and musketry. Holding hands should not be confused with flirting Hand-holding prior en Ht permits familiarity and impairs respect, It is also unwise. A girl is more likely to become engaged if she holds herself a little aloof. The higher she values herself the more other people will value her, Men are like a flock of sheep in many ways, and in none more than following a lead given them. Every woman learns this in time. irtation stroll prerogative. lay- } ne flashes of cannon to gem ehensibie. A vans looks or, voice is what first attracts a man’s interest, bu. , ft takes more than looks to hold attention and to command regard Wavy hair, peachy cheeks, and rosebud lips are nov the only or the most essential requirements to suc cessful matrimony. Girls who ha&tually flirt seldom get good hus bands. The men who enjoy flirting with them de not marry them, and other men are driven away Making acquaintances through flirting does not brin the kind of men friends whom a self-respecting gir should desire. A man can usually find some way t secure a legitimate introduction if he is honestly at tracted-by a girl, and her encouragement of him ha better be postponed until he has proved the sincerit king some preliminary trouble an flirt, all the police of his interest by Still, if_a_gi vent it. Letters from the People. ist A Lu n world cannot Our Dirty Sire fare, Juriches vacatto ense: ioe the Sitar of The Fvening W 7 det a Dileep an It seems, to me “ ty the! ing theatre tickets, Wwe tit mt the city wh! rpend huge sUM* started @ bank accour beg ply. of money for carved columns and hewr m4 curbstones and arches for the ex Sleep Reyutred, aion of Riverside I annot ( 1) the DAttor of The Evening World not) keep clean and air the ‘ In repby to 8. P. Hasett'e { P town streets where the poor are Pir tel cke died together. ¢ avanue the Pmit the odor ts often ond © accumulated tithes da garbage in the gutters, Is it t " ast t of the people ‘ things shouig | "OUT f pig. LAJOHO be? I hesitate not to say "No le No Harmless Method WALTER GROTH : pinta Better Service on the Subway edy tor make 1 To the Editor of The Eve n I think ttm department com subway ser T that stirr wonder of w by between 6.90 aid Fe 1 went the bride to ) fifteen np checking growth ac night ast exer ubway exe ‘ou Feventy-#econd utes ne a compliments made height start M | Tenement No. 14 exce HA Roard of & f The ¥ apply the E woatt ng ie in s dangerous for er a1 To the Bi Where @n the eohool ship Derides “Fashionable” the Bai e myriad; s a bad « Te dress. How to “Distribute” the Day season shades very pre fous, m tons ange t where.) Why wear Swlary and Expenses To the Kt I should dividing »» . an in ot ¥ and pay #1 per an allows table and & money f ines, &e food, but take adv canned 6 Ik ‘ house dre nd fancy pays rent, as, insurance, car sen and # eye wed Ou had sum. reat BAUKICE MOSCOVITE Daily Magazine, WANT BREARFA st eRent A {Your FRIEND. JOHN 15 AT THE \ PHOWE HE Said [IF you WERE ASLEEP NOT T DISTURB You \ WHAT SHALL TELL un (r To fc Himsece! I” ASLEece up things they see people want? The Day of Rest. By Maurice Kett dah isidddddadddéddddller GeT uP! Get ur} OL0 Boy DON'T SLEEP Yoursevr ‘To DEATH / GoTo ,) BLazes! en. NOW WILL You GET uP? Monday, ! FoR Heaven) SARE! WHAT S) MATTER? To KNOW WHAT TYVe THE Lat onraeain? The Jarr Family’s Daily Jars *& *« * *« % BY ea tee away, little one?’ asked Mr. add whee Xo. I alan t* dacitred Mr. Jarr if you buy any ofthat rickety old junk| 7 ra. Jarr rmed him she was goin; jowntown ring it In this house oak it . with him, psaleend i Laie You just dare!’ said Mrs. Jarr. | By Nixola Greeley-Smith. ‘I'm to meet Mrs. Kittingly and do some shopping,” sald "v you just buy it a Mr. Jarr. | ST. LOUIS woman obtained @ divorce from her ny Mrs. Jarr, “and then we are going to an auction sale” “It's your money as well as mine,” » Mrs. Jarr f i want to show | band last week on the plea that he was not ‘Oh, you are, are you?’ asked Mr. Jarr. ‘Well, don’t you | off and destroy it you may ’ tlemaniy.”” A New York man presented as one of tink that we have about all the things we need? And if we Well, 1 will if you-buy snorted Mr. Jarr es in a similar suit that his wife changed id need anything what's the use of getting robbed at an Vd like to see try it!!" ald Mra, Jarr stoutly m 60 buy some tskey kept on the ‘amily sideboard to tion? | There's a lovely old sideboatd and dtning-roc _" cate ha) helor of whom he became Jealous. I do need @ lot of things,” said Mra. J ‘and if I see iD wet Shem A tnenaan No doubt these seem very sufficient excuses for what I want I'l) get ft. But when I go to auetion every r alte Bmad <a) S on the téon in the eyes of the complainants, and the law has ing I do want ts bid up on me. | ° ew, Mrs. held St, Louis lady's view ty granting her « Of course it is! said Mr. Jarr. “When will you | have my money wasted on th a4 Mr. Jarr. “You But she testified that while she could not recall thas omen get wine to the fact that is how they-do at auctio | I'll make kindl 0d huetend had ever sworn et her, he had repeatedly Calamity Jane \ DON'T BELIEVE THOSE HoLLyY HOCK SEEDS ARE ANY Goaoo! GET OFF FLOWER _ my sep! THERE! | GUESS THAT LE KEE Lif | THE NAIL OFF | i uy KNEW SOME THING WAS THE MATTER WITH THOSE SFB Oe! May 6, Roy L. McCardell. By W. J. Steinigans h an Interbiew Tells “‘What Business # et Means to Me’’ NDREW CARNEGIR®, In A issue of “System,” gives following views on bustnegs, chances, etc, under the general ing of “What Business Means to “ "When you ask me really means, what I would begin by that the Crot of business must be service to the community, business man is one who furnt some commodity that the comm needs “Dollar-making is not n business. The. man who stands ty broker's ofMfce, for instance, watches the tape, is not @ business n but © gambler. What ts speculati anyway, but a parasite fastened uy the labor of all reg! business men? is the counterfett of true bustness. “Some people make @ great mista! when they decry the acquisition wealth. A man must get money defo} he can give it—ten't that self- " He must be egoistic before he agp trulatte ‘ The lack of money tn a communif, meana squalor—ignorance—disease. Look, for exam that are now being wrought In some of the al the wonderful chan, ern States, through the grow! sf business, Until recently they had no fal basis, There was no cap ] and no development of natural resou new railways and fi | ructures and homes are being bullt in States. Life has been ral | er level. Better schools and larger libraries are being established. aq # been the cause of this transformation? It waa not politics, It ne of the tles years: have the Se rarest qua “be an excell know how to bring the t of organization—another ide promptly and wisely from the-strongholds of Ei hanged. In old days er He must ability must be able "The trade ax Kon! ld prejudl { trade the smallest retail scale. beaides, ed or manufa and small & had to be Secu ed for himself. ews and execut nen every man road y ai) ite branches tp conducted upon so gigantie lers domain. The large «5 bor sometimes has 1 en in his industrial army than the petj pad an confidently Tecommend to’ you the Business career as one in whi there ts abundant room ye exercise of man's highest. power, and of evi quality tn human na 1t ¢ the career of the great merchant, banker. or to be favorable to the development of the pow f the mind, a ng of the Judgment upon a wide range of gener subjects; to udice and the keeping of an open mind. ‘There may be room for a foolish man in every profession—fooliah as a ch ' and yet successful in n successful but If he ts without sound; al eyond the range of hits particula business m specialty ent, he must fall Sune man does not find romance in his business, it 1a not the fault, the business, but the fault of the young man, Consider the wonders, the mj the recent developments in that most spiritual of all ager with’ it unknown, and, perhaps, even unguessed powers. He m 4 prosaic young man, who, being connected with electric! in any of its form is not lifted from humdrum business to the region of mysterious. Business is not all dollars. These are but the shell—the kernel | | within, and Is to"be enjoyed later, as the higher faculties of the business man, onstantly called into play, develop and mature. Business to me has been a means (o an end ———e The Limit of Man’s Enduran¢ terles, connected with electricity Jindeed be a dull in her presence, and thia offense constituted her mais But he was eo mad a t he determined to go to the sale himae They don't make anything on me by doing {t,"" sald Mrs, |.) UU he was se a 2 fy) ‘eh reine tp ig pr Pesinalloregiasiong for separation larr, “I let them have it." ay gaat Beate pig ata phar ely ali prabyi e rpg orlando bans I cannot help thinking the New York man's This a crusher for Mr. Jarr, but finally he remarked: “What's the use| : NASING ANE RO Det bee from ithe sale te resolved to-day is the larger one, A wife may change her husband's Psy: “ a thane the furniture when {t was put up. There wae spirited bidding, but Mr. Jarr wae going to auction sales, then pedi supep mtd Piaf Bleep laste. brag din ligion may convert a quiet person addicted to the wearing of @uil ¢ of them are run fair enough," said Mrs. Jarr. Carmen ha gat harealin career te maldi ft eat aac as 4 and sergee into a sporty devotee of plaids and red ties; she may win hie Om, go ahead and buy what you want,” sald Mr. Jarr. “I don't care what] | When he got home to supper he said: “I went to that sale, and because you! vi rooms, woo him from cigarettes, but she may not, legttimately, 1 buy at auctions so long as ft pleases you. e Bis dian Sgr Ws the greatest fraud one human deing oan practice upon another by changing, wm Well, I'm not gotr > buy anything to-day,” said Mrs. Jarr, “but Mra, Kit: “Ov, aid your’ sald Mrs, Jury. “So it was you? One of the friends of Mrs |x nown to him, the brand of his drink. If adding to this trYamy she delieerstely gly is wild " #—anything tn old mah ny, especially Kittingly who was there offered to buy it in for me when it was put Up, 98 Wel suhstitutes the favorite brand of another there is none so conservative @@ te emg So I noticed when we were at Mra. Kittingly’s the other evening,” said Mr, | Wanted to go to « matines. He Juat telephoned me that he could have bought the! ine meekest h nd should endure k s ad to follow the stout poople present with a ca quid glue and{ whole set for but some jay ¢ In who appeared to t it wo bad the A man wil) marry a little brunette and see her change before his eyes spindly old chatrs and sovas as fast as they were broken. She was|dealers ran them up to five times thetr value on him juat for @ joke a red-headed June weighing 18 pounds, without a murmur, If she likes whiskers too." ‘When the truckman brings them to this house I'll meet teem at the doorl)., will grow them. Mf she dfetikes them he will macrifice the luxuriant erop and broke, a chair yourself, id Mra. Jarr, “and you didn't laugh | with an axe’ declared Mr. Jarr b twenty years’ cultivation to her distaste, He may even give up all tresds n. Did you do tt on purpor But he didn't, He tells people are helriooms. Nery uid at her behest, But the limit of husbandly endurance is reached " So ocean ta - Casa _— ¢ imposes the drink of another upon him tn the guise ef his preferred Strange what a difference the accident of sex makes in the grievance and oe ee ee ee ee int of view woman on earth would conside »rand of whiskey or anything else except perfumes or face lotions or herself agerie was changed, Bhe wouldn't know {t. Or {f ahe dtd, and made ft the ground \ plex Yor separation, #he would meet with much laughter and no sympathy, on the other hand, @ man ought a divorce because his wife was 1e would be considered the softest of mollycoddies. Things being as they owever, and the difference in the feminine and masculine point of view: ‘or, the St. Louts wife has obtained her divorce and the New York man hae mpathy of the community. — Mark Twain as a Bicycle Rider. Twain's Autobiography in the North American Review.) 2, 1885, the eve of my Aftieth Birthday, It seeme @ I must have been rather young for my age then, for I trying to tame an old-fashioned bicycle nine feet high. It ls to me believable, at my present stage of life, ‘thet there have really beam willing to trust themeelves upon «@ disay and unstable altitude like that, one of them. Twichell and I took lessons every day. Fle er of the art of riding that wild vehicle but I had me tlon and was never able to stay on mine long enough to get » that din stisfactory View ofthe planet Every Ume T tried to steal a look at @ pretty girl, or any other kind the single moment of inattention gave the bicycle the chance #& ‘or, and I went over the front of It and struck the ground em k before I had Ume to realise that something was or my b didn't always go over the front way; I had other ways, and preetiond ll; but no matter which way was chosen for me there was always ene yous result-the bleycle skinned my leg end leeped up into the aly = own on top of me. Ko ctimes Ite wires were ap sprung by this violent pertormence thas. look of an umbrella that had had « misunde paed lone. After each day's practice I arrived at home with my skin | \pbons from my knees down. | plastered the ribbons on where @hey. 4 bound them there with handkerchiefs steeped in Pond's Extract, ady for more adventures next day. It was always & surprise to me much skin, and (hat It held out so well, There wae always plentg, | n came to understand that the supply was geting to remain sufficlest y needs It turned out that I had nine skins, In layers, ome on top of the | the leaves of a book, and some of the doctors said It was quite | “y was full of enthusiaam over this insane amusement. My teacher ne German from the bleyele factory, a gentle, kindly, gatient crestuge, grave face. He never smiled; he never made & remark; @@ tenderly up when T plunged off, and helped me on agate fd. he had been teaching me twice new gymnastionone that he had never iment was wrung from him, @ thing whien I had been risking my life achieve. He gathered ine up and said mournfully ‘Mr, Clemens, you can fal) off & bicycle in more Morons were person I ever saw before.”

Other pages from this issue: