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Life, 1897-06-24 · page 14 of 21

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534 THE HUMOROUS LION, ‘LIFE: EARLY HABITS. “T HOPE Pickler and his wife won't OWA Le Cae D visit us again very soon. I never saw a woman who required so much waiting on as she does.” “Well, you know before they were mar- trained and real estate to. mort- gage. Bathing is permitted in cash any costume and none, popular and ex- citing. Saints from Asbury always attend the session in large numbers; and is SOME TIMELY WORDS. ~ Te al the new graduates, be they men or women, of all the colleges, Lire presents its compliments and {elicitations. For you, gentlemen, there is lots of hard work ahead, but that is fortunate, for nothing is so wholesome, so re- munerative, or, on the whole, so satisfactory as hard work, Make up your minds that you will have to earn what you get, and proceed accordingly. Be temperate, be upright, be diligent. Make character, for that counts most in the long run. Have fun when it offers, but don’t run after pleasure, for really pleasure is not so filling at the price as duty. If only you have sense, and keep to the track, and keep moving, time will do wonders for itis different from theirs, not in the quality of the bathers and costumes, water, but in the It is the only time they see a ballet and understand the poster craze and they begin to you. The men who have the best jobs to-day are men over forty years old. In the course of the next thirty years nearly all those jobs will change hands. Each of you will be likely to get, in time, as good a job as he is qualified to tackle, and the present business of each realize how easy it is for a good man to fall, and how pleasant a season the fall is, and how different from the Asbury season of prayer. Long Branch is popular with men of you is, by working faithfully and steadily at something, to qualify for a job worth having. <<» And you, dear girls! If a qualified man offers, please marry him. That is the best service you can render the world. Meanwhile, look around and see what there is to be done, and try to do your share whose wives have gone to Bar Har- bor and who are compelled to remain at home to attend to busin It is within casy reach of the metropolis, and it is not infested much by reformers. People leave New York and other places with tickets for Asbury Park, but they stop at Long Branch or Atlantic City. This is one of the principal uses of Asbury Park, outside of supporting Bradley. Soseph Smith, INSULT TO MARK TWAIN. R. SAMUEL L, CLEMENS should—and doubt- less will—administer !| a stinging rebuke to 1 Mr. James Gordon Bennett for the latter's impudent proposition to raise a charity fund S. for the humor- AN ist’s benefit. Mr. Clemens is a self- respecting Ameri- can, and Mr. Ben- nett's Herald has no more right to declare him a pauper than to publish him as a thief. No one familiar with Mr. Bennett's treatment of his own employees credits him with a vast amount of sympathy for writers, and the Herald might with far greater propriety open a sub- scription fund for its own editors and reporters. we