The evening world. Newspaper, April 9, 1908, Page 16

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The Evening World Daily Magazine’ Thursday, April 9; 1908: LSD aotorld | 4“The New Thought.” ar Tai By Ma urice Ketten. Petiened Dally Except Sunday by the Press Pudiishing Company, Noo. 58 to @ y Park Row, New York oe | DDDDPODGDIODOHGFODODGHDHGODHOODAGODOOGHOIGTOODHSCGHOODOSS |, Nixola Greeley-Smith ON TOPICS OF THE DAY. | POMEEM PULITIER, Pree, 1 Past 14 Sireet, J. ANGUS SITAW, See.-Treas,, 201 Feet 119th Streets PAINT YouR. “Entered at the Post-Omice at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. SOUL To MATCH 0 : Bubscrintion Katee to, The Evening For, Eneland and wy ay Pierce! Losing the World—and Love. orld for the 3 . PEN) — “ a pe nil Can ee ah) ea yy Y) aM MONICA PIA has been sur One Month. 1} One Mor Cn By) Myre rly Crown Princess of Saxony, - ease ICI (( ( closes the last chap- WOMUME AS, cil ieee sssesecissuessese NO: 12/0 G7 (G 4 daughter who rises c IG ped with a , and Ww Irth of the litte separated from and ultt! ely married the A STREET-CAR CURFEW. BROOKLYN Hl an editorial app women to k y to the world-old query, em- ler or not the world bodied in a py fs well lost f To this qu © by losing the of those upon He thinks Dlished that {t 1s possible to gain 1c world. But it is the general misfo whom the c etween lov t they los both by electing to tors n world. eof m woman Princess Louise, ess, there was man beneath her in And about any dere ts a similar at the wos ts cars during rust men should g, matinees anc that Brookly s particularly true tn t ces a thr 1a hon A prestige that from the s! protected by a home ur that she f for love, ise, shorn of h a few months ried. She, too, To BE Beauty Fut ee eshy HOME bar x eISSN FoR A HAPPY HOME GETA PIN =COLORS DIAPHRAGM Ts GETAPINIC DIAPHRAGM MAURY HARMONIZE _// EAT ONIONS AND SOUR NIL ey oN p ( Tum-Tum-Tum tum To BEBEAuTIFUL DE-DE-DE-De SLEEP WELL 0 DA— DA—pDA Ha-u! To SLEEP weELL HAVE MUSICAL, DREAMS (ry TOBE gearing KEEP YOUNG o'clock time or after 7 o'clock at n ing rush hours. not du The this ay hope that Brooklyn women may heed th Brooklyn men may thereby be made more Brooklyn is a city of homes. It has fe\ population. It is a most respectable place. loin resorts it depends upon M. only an occasional brief, sporadic ex Many if not the majority of Brooklyn hoi man going six d kK to New York to 1 wages or salary to Brook]; common for the Brooklyn m: rank, Mved with the tutor for whom she had ed and tn | na year is not the the world for mand that the daily No {T wouLd “TAWWE OFF THE Rouge ON MY LIPS, what may rails, disas- y of the woman Te BE BEAUTIFUL seven or eight women, his wif OF pony SUN TALKS TO GI RLS ON 3 @cook and chambermaid, was! iy pee ie e P Ono = ° 9 most of the spending. These women, by arranging the household di Noons to themsely. While dairy lunch, are working at their jobs, ers-in-law, et cetera, come over to New York. of the audiences at matinees. They are chr By Gertrude Barnum Sora) ears ail j Z re } ONEW No. 6—The Authoress. lectures, luncheons and clubs. ~ 2 pee THOUGHT Since the opening of the tea rooms \ ¢ “tx, ey ny i FOR MEN - Say dorf and further up Fifth avenue at the P To BE Beautiruy THE OLD matinee or ypping do not return t * THOUGHT cup of tea, like men in the old days, when wives STi THE men had time to spare, would drop in at a hotel, cafe or ¢ Seer, o'clock cock Te BE BEAUTIFUL Nf DON'T _EAT_ SMELL FLOWE: WD 2 : THEIR, PAR FUME CURTAINS SUCHE FOOD You NEED er Ser Ker a th < J 1% rest r aired e the public mind and y acquit ‘ed, in Mr. Jarr Goes to Gus’s Place for a Little Springtime Philosophy; Still, He Doesn’t See Just Why a German Must Be Blue to Be Happy Lutheran hyimns 4s chased off to play “An, that's @ superctit 4, 80 comical everybody laughs, and tis aids look how you are dominated 5 o'clock, or on to s 6 o'clock. Many of them are plump. Some of them, if carefully laced, might be called fat. The aver as much room on a stree bench a Brooklyn man. This is not right. It is enough for a m women of hi: their feminine relatives without having to hang on a car they occupy the seats during the rush hours. It is a tempt lyn husbands not to come home promptly when th to dissipate themselves even to the extent of a cock dinner and staying out until 10 o'clock at n By Roy L. McCardell, H eM ais the good we “4 coma to dropped into s are growing longer . for rases and the help of » study of ‘asked Mr. Jarr, for the yg, they cut yo grew Indignant at ¢ tat the hands of the 1 to support es pu ere ain't a mard times shington pe@ on by t get clutbed by the pollce or t Germany," he added. changed the subject. "So Germany !s nice tn springtime?” their horses | Jarr hastily c ked rmany Is nice all the sald Gus, “and I was telling you how about tat the beer gardens, Towards 9 o'clock, when it's getting time to go home ly, they all sing Oh, there's been plenty of hard times in ¢ Mr. J r work nad s done, but land a table d’hote American A modern curfew law is desired by this verlogsen, verlossen, bin {ch!? ate antique: husband, who would like to have = en, forsaken am I!!! And then they'll sing all Brooklyn women compelled to Pee een 2 be home by 5 o'clock in the af- ts ‘don't know what it means that I am so unhappy;' oh, all them \merican hic c: so eo 5 md she could ternoon, in which case also they ing happy?" asked Mr. Jarr. Why?" Deatiaeauanaye: Wd not be so likely to pro- e first warm ways the way with a Dut bey ina N h ! ; nN i By the time t wide a skimpy dinner on the ground ng and nat you are fecling ‘blue you are really it realize ; one's dreams ’ ie ‘ ver ap And before the little 1 F ane that they themselves had a big » Gr ach. trekualnavoral arian sematcey sour enabt rill hone senior eee A en aul * 1 sia basket) Ww that's ha y Germany, and I'll w you what a Kood time is!" : i “take up" th: stn." Yuncheon and an elaborate tea and maniitey iret bat PARE Vode alae Gietenileakeal MG me [dificult to “take up" than “iterature and Jo sn" substantial. ae PRTG DIET HI FT ERE) EEE ERR TERI ee cA Kon The Leap Year Tradition Is a Jest. Here fs a question wh S —_—— en ——— — - By Helen Oldfield of vital interest to more people D ll D D H D d : Brae = at all things were lawful for him, by than whether the Socials should be allowe olly Doo Does Her Da 2 & « ByM.F. Neale Ss fl ees ere tent or om, ta the Union Square band stand, for trod husbands of this = : ———— Zk OTOH CY GUNG may not ask any map iood outnurr é@ Socialists ten to one, : AR ai) ) Now TAKE YOUR CoAT) " 1s no law against ft .n any written code, Her own selfe paneer : eS au it pers BETTER THAN Oe Ca elites is \ a ought to sufter, if tt does t act y seneraily ty regarded as oO It ANYONE ELSE f THE THINGS, a ' rage to all the conventions of sc almost without excep. Letters from the People Ce) sua Cee Taine Bee PR cer Pre char nua elite . Ue ‘ C r HAIR THE Anthropologists tell us that the primitive methed of courtship practised by y ane or S| WAY IT the cave man was to run with all his might r the woman who ran away In The World Alm hould need have ite fastest from im; day unto tins all save tho newest of new women alate ua: l man's charact '9 hard to win, CR e first pl si s self-coneelt and teach him that eu senDl which is so useful In the conduct that pride has been known cn S aecond place, {t teaches Ili to endeavor to please another instead of hg (OUT Ag ay deference to him It ts to be dented that many : wome ers, sisters, swe ris and wives, who i cd . $s ot toy ® them instead # upon reetprocity a nIple t rn about ts fatr 4 It ts human mascull se ally, since women so often a = == must take what they can Ket, to § in exact proportion to the degree June 16, Z ‘ MV (OH Good= OH PAPA! YOU LOOK uity with which It ts obtained ever much tt may tlekle a man's r t SAE 7 Newt ep} RY \| > JUST PERFECTLY o helleve that a woman Is in love with iim, he thinks the less of her i \ ! "i aon Nh AA . / v . ity NT LOVELY love too plain! Hil less can he tolerate that she shall make 1 7 p : ‘ p - the advances whica he has been taught to believe are his own espectal preroga- for Editorial ee is i Moreover, every woman who knows anything ought to be aware that the : : tradition of leap year Is mercly a Jest, and In no way wha: the actual sg F betwee urding love and It originated when : o ve an “old matd, when girl children sere vi fi y well 1f you can, but at all events marry; an her he age wh ay to the gallows might be saved from death yp meiros i any woman who would take lim to husband.—Chicago ‘Tribune. places there a ) 1 teede by the ein Beine a position to not ¢ | i Meith all kinds of peo ; | The Strongest Timber Known. lowes! 1 sine y natured | Btve pes a ; HE yate tree of Wostern Australla, growing to a height of 100 feet and @ ay Bdculd notice pecubarit RAG bower pal Na uth {AAS Shee I diameter of two and one-half to three feet, yields the strongest-timber , Bee roman who @ & noat fash: | cjalsm with poz F ri known, Late tests showed an average tensile strength of 24,000 pound@ }) fm and conduct wemseites as ladies»! PAULLY BERMAN, to the aquare inch, yn Sea: War irndy bath AR REP ts

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