The evening world. Newspaper, January 23, 1900, Page 6

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Ege eto. (he Preas Publishing Company, tf to @ PARK ROW, New York jew York ap Seennt-Ciase Mat! Matter. oe). a, tg the Pesto GING AT TEDDY’S HEART. [ne y Ja pm pl bh fh th A Prediction: “Lou” Payn WILL Go! THE BUSINESS WOMAN O. K. ’ looka as though Mr. Yerkes, the Chicago millionaire, was born before the flood. He certainly does not know much about the ‘women of Chicago or any other part of our ‘country, as they flourish at tho end of the th century. He is quoted in The World nee of women In regard to business affairs j fm fact, it is stupendous, As @ clase they Ret seem to have the most remote idea of what - means. Wow, Mr. Yerkes, thero are hundreds of thou- Of American women in business. ‘There are’ of them in your own city of Chicago than Gould count in a week, if you counted from ‘Worning til! night, every day of the week, includ- ) ing Bunday. There are a far larger numbce tn the! f More popnlons city of New York. b ‘A large proportion of them are successfal ‘elr afzirz, whether they manage business ‘a business. We could tell Mr. Yerkes of ef women here who make money tn busi- and we have no doubt that there are plenty © HB CBiicago, also, What is the use of a piece of ‘Bomsense like the following? * Pew women know, except by name, what a bank ia, or, if they do. they would not know how to GEAw one in case of necesrity We have no doubt that there are thousands of ‘Women in Chicago, as there are many thousands Wew York, who keep bank accounts, draw depoait them and pay thelr bills with them. epuld name at least three banks in this city make especial efforts to obtain the banking Dasiness of women, and they obtsin it, too, mill- fons of ita year. If Mr. Yerkes will call in at any One of these banks between the hours of 10 and 3 he will not ogain say that few women know what beak check is. It would be a safe guess that a ‘Million of the women of New York know. * If ever Mr. Yerkes writes again about women $B business or banking he had better get a New > York pugilist to revise his manuscript. ‘The Riverside Drive extension will make us Detter carriage neighbors to them that dwell in Yonkers. And who knows? Votes for another 90d bit of annexation may come of the boulevard ‘aqueduct. As the days lengthen baseball talc begins to ‘ strengthen. Small favors in the way of strength _ Will aleo be gratefully received by tho New York Ged management. > ~ ‘With nine days still to run, the opentag month 1900 bas to overcome a rather formidable ac- joe of January aw, ©) “Mill the Trums! cays Mr. Br. an. “Agreed!” the people. But it will take more than a 1 tufted club. 5 ‘WHA rapid transit underground and the “L” ‘peed under modern conditions, what a New York ‘we aball have! Fe. The parting of Roosevelt and Platt will not give Peys. Yenst Mr. Bryan's tongue bes not lost its free * PerricOny 1 BuACK AND WdiTe. black-and-white petticoat ts made of silk with black lace ruffles. Thip skirt @ foundation of white silk for the one wide, one edged with a narrow EE f clined Now, why ! ft, do you suppose? esk the puzzled, | |anxious mothers. social affairs, expensively dressed. The white alip- pers and fluffy frock call for @ coach. meot, he is frightened off before his intentions become sertoi eterna! holiday to her and her one ohief alm was Gare not propose marriage to such @ girl, no matter can he suppose these aimless, giddy, butterfly giris would dream of undertaking such occupations with by @ little, he looks about for a wife. fact th: an honest, loyal heart, expends more money on her totlete for one season than the entire amount of his annual Income. dare not encumber fashion that are to be encountered nowadays enjoy Mirting and dancing with merry girls, who are decked out in the gorgeousness of fashion. But they want something more tn a partner for life. dence, girls who are capable of making brave seif- denials, |f need be, for love's sake, when wedded. that ing them fo fiany of the moat failed In Mife night after a long da; various foreign substances more than in the morning after the quiet hours of the night passed in a well- ventilated room. pores are clogged by dust to marry. ‘Thore te a reason for it, my dears weet, young daughters to theatres, alls and little If he ts young man of wealth, of course he dose jot mind this very trifling expense; but If he fe a) ‘oung man who has to make his way !n the world, nd count his dollare carwfully to make both ends , before his admiration drifts tnto love ‘The girl herself puta « huge stumbling block in the ath by ber frivolous small talk—ae if Ufe was o leasure. ‘Who can wonder that a man of moderate tncome ow he may admire her? He knows that the girl whom he marries may have » make @ pudding, darn socks or trim # lamp. How eartfelt delight? Nowadays if @ young man has a good position, where je earne enough to pay his modest expenses and put He \e confronted by the stubborn, yet undeniadie the gir! to whom he would offer the love of ‘There are hundreds of men who want wives, but themselves with the dolls of Men} ‘They want girls who have common sense and pru- LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. 004440440990001-544-04/ 4554-2444 4400 94404-4016666940040000000000008 © Why Young Men Don’t Marry. TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1900, fran, mA ty ae Prem Pei Coma, ow York) 4 -. Wort) " hii eee UR girls were never more beautiful, more lovable | in hi BO ..0005. sssecessNO. 14,088 0 or more fascinating than now . But still our young men do not seem to be in- You send your| Unt! young girls dress as becomes thetr age, there A sensible man knows that the best portion a bride i mal dt 1s possible You cannot can bring him ts the prudence and careful management | men fight shy of proposing marriage, and try to very utmost of his earnings, mak. | remedy !t as I have directed and earnestly advised, corre! rich young husbands, my dears. ,,.Mi “WHY I HAVE FAILED,” Tell It in 300 Words and Get a Prize from The Evening World, UCCEASFUL men often write about themselves and {ell others how to succeed tn life, but the real cause of their success ts not known to successful men. If some of the men and women who thiak they have The Evening World, ¢ fore, offere four prises for the most ir(eresting, Intelligent letters on: “WHY | HAVE FAILED.” First prize—A gold eagle, $10 Second, third and ourth prizes, % each ‘The letters should be shor'—not over 30 words nd frank. Should tell actual humsn experiences and Tt fe foolishness to cay that they are stupendous- prosti be accompanied by the real names of vit gBorant of business, and do not know what {t/ writere—though the names will not be printed in The . Evening World. The Evening World will try 10 make these “Auto- btographies of Failure” useful to the writers and of thelr own or assist in managing other! readers. As for the prizes, they will turn fativre tnto profit, Address all letters, Failure Competition, Evening World, P. 0. Box 2964. an DIFFERENT POINTS OF VIEW. Wife-I'm so sorry you don't admire my new gown. Bverybody else says {t's just too lovely for any- thing. Hushand—Oh, {t's easy for others to pay compll- mente, but T have to pay the bill THE RIGHT HIE bent time to use a complexton cream which is Intended to feed and nourish the cuticle ts at night. Women who understand how to care for the complexion never neglect the night tollet lace needs a thorough scrubbing at encounter with dust and Certainly the Bo, at night before you apply & cream which ts to help fill out the creases in your dear faces, my good Evening World readers, be sure those same faces are clean from the combined effect of soap, water and friction. If you apply an unguent to your skin while the or nebaceous matter, or VERY SMALL TALK. having your cars pierced?” “So; I'm only having them bored.""—Punch. AN EXPLANATION, thirst? Mra. qpoush will to want to marry? wensibly and high, gay spirits as becomes the heydey of youth and is @ part of tt When young girls fix the standard of their ambitions at worth of character and principle instead of wealth there will be more marriages and more satis- one ter two and twenty ought not to expect tn the Iatest fashion and are more suttable to older, more factory Girla THE Drese sensibly, young girl, Talk sensibly and act “| THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 9, 1908, erent i MRS. ‘VERY woman te Gtted for of us hag @ @uty to here The Influence refinement ts nes@ed in evel women needed im the needed just as badly needed in the chureb and the érawing-room and also at overy one of these different provided. ye wouldn't be & child begins to talk until he ts tolligent, cultivated mother he has learned fore his edhooling commences which will through all his schooling and all his career. ignorant mother’s principles instilled into his little brain ft will take all the years of early teachings. ‘There can be no Goubt that we need for our home life, and no doubt chat we need them for cour publie life also, I do not mean that you shall not have your laughter But make a study for yourselves as to why young Abbey writes these articles for The Rvening World ex by arrangement with the Famity Story Paper. (Prom “Animal Jokes,” by Permission of R. M. Rugell, Publ! © smash you, you impudent little beast. The Cochin—I've a good mi: IN BARNYARD SPORTING CIRCLES. every woman should? Is there any reason why they should not holé office? Have you not known women who were intellectuaily superior to eomne men, just as Is there any reason why women ehowd not find their proper sphere in life and fill #, just the same as men? If she be born with great governing power, why should she not govern? Or with good judging power, why erated is lost? LELAND STANFORD. | f LED OL TTOE E1149 O00600000-0-000-10000.1-6.0.5-6 Home and the Polls. ° there are men intellectusiiy superior to some women? | __ aT should she not judge? why not follow the law? ‘There are women totally unfitted to be home-makers ar even home-sherers. They have no taste for ple or pudding recipes, no patience with a nursing bottle. Bhould such women be chatmed down In a aph they are wholly unhappy and unsuccessful, Or with good arguing power, under conditions that make them a failure, while the place they might have graced and glorified \s left Vacant and the influence thelr lives might have gen- I trcaers ETIQUETTE. Evening Dress. What may be worn for an evening dress or oo casion not expensive; also color and Pri be coming @ tall, thin, light-complexioned person For an evening dress to be worn on any occasion I would suggest black. There {s no color more becom- Ing, and a black dreas does not so soon grow familiar. You can greatly change the effect of this costume by different colored ribbons, A slender blond woman never looks more attractive than in a black gown. Yes. Ie it proper to write an invitation to a lad with whom you are not very i acquainted and 4 dress !t “Dear Miss,” whatever her name may be? J. FAULTER. If you write tn the first person you must address the lady as desr Mise Brown, or whatever her name may be ABOUT The Open Door, Is {t proper for a Indy to open the door for a doctor or friends (gentlemen) when they are leaving? A READER. Let the gentlemen open the doors themselves, Obligatory, Is {t optional with a lady whether she removes her bonnet or not.at an opera matinee, and must wraps be left at the dressing-room? RUSTIC. ‘The removal of bonnets and hats ts now considered obligatory by courtesy. Wraps need not be checked, Two Years. How jong should a widow go in mourning for her husband, and should she put a child five years old in mourning? IGNORANCE. ‘A widow is supposed to wear mourning for at least two years. Conventional people consider It necessary The Bantam—Aw, go on! Go and get a reputation before you come that kind of talk on me. See? WAY TO USE COMPLEXION to dress children in mourning for at least a year. Black frocks are worn during the cold weather, and white dresses with black ribbons in summer, By HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. coametics you deliberately plan the destruction of your skin. If you wish to Invite blackheads, pimples, »plotahes and @ general mutiny of the skin pores, rub an un- Kuent tn with dust and cosmetics, ‘The scrub thst should precede the application of the ¢ream or skin food ts the all-over tub, and then you should use the camel's-hair face-scrubbing brush for the face and a regular flesh brush for the body. After the brush scrub apply the emollient, ‘The skin food for which the formula has go often been repeated in thts column {s excellent and superior to the ordinary cold cream Camphor cream ts beneficial when the face feels really sore. Make it as follows Olive oll, six ounces; white wax, two and one-half ‘T was Mr. Speces’s birthday. He felt ap though it was up to him to de something quite out of the ordinary to entertain Mra. Spacer, and incidentally have @ good time himself. It was while on his way home thet he decided that the place for a lark for ‘Mra. Spacer was to take her to ese the moving pictures of the Jeffrice-Gharkey fight. So Mra Gpacer disguised herself with a vell, and, by taking @ roundabout route, trusted that she would | meet no one whom she knew. They arrived at the theatre {n Ume for the third round. “Oh, oh, oh!" Mra, Spacer cried, burying her face “Eas-rings are all the ge now, aren't they? Are you! Mra Wagge—Dots your husband wuffer from chronic Jage—Oh, dear, no! He doesn't watt long ttle bantam Sharkey, Jeffries. Good for Rim. ‘Dear, wi reteree? fight it out? That tan't fair. Detween them just as it ip _ MRS. SPACER DOUBTS THE REFEREE. ounces; camphor (gum), one-quarter ounce; lanoline, two ounces. Melt the first three ingredients together in @ custard boiler, ‘Take it off the fire and beat until cold, adding the lanoline during the process. Some skins are more favorably affected by a slightly olly emulsion than by ® cerate or cream. Nothing can be more estisfactory tm this line than the pistache emulsion. ‘This 1s easily made at home tf you happen te have a mortar and pestle. If mot, get the drugsist to macerate the nute for you. Formula for pistache emulstea! Pistache nuts, fifty grammes; confectioners’ sugar, fifty grammes; distilled water, one thousand grammes. lin her banda, “This te awful, But sust took at that | they? 1 mean he can't esl! on bis crowd, or anything Now he ts giving it to that) Icke that.” | Mr. Spacer ignored the question. Ho managed to te that man in his shirtsleeves? The! keep Mra. Spacer quiet until the twenty-fifth round. ‘Well, why in goodness doesn’t he let them)| By that time Mra. ‘The nuts should be perfectly clean. Remove the outer skin. Put them into a small mortar and add about one-third of the sugar and a very little of the distilled water. Pound with the pestle until you have a smooth paste. Add the remainder of the water a little at @ time, constantly stirring. Strain with pressure through a bag of fine bolting cloth, Ad4 the remainder of the sugar. Leave the skin emollient on all night. The cuticle ‘will absorb all tt requires. In the morning you will find the texture of the dry face of the night before wonderfully improved and you will have set the wrinkles back. For wrinkles | do not form on a well-nourishat face during the hours [of repose, HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. - CHARITY AT HOME. Musbané—It te © perfect disgrace bow ragged our children bok! Wite—1 have no time to bother about their clothes. 1 have to go to a meeting of the Gociety for Clothing Children. Poor Husbanéd—Very goog. You might call the attention —Filegende Biaetter. The Day's Lobe St ‘the sunbeams on the lawn. the water somewhere." IN AUTUMN. * EN wil you take my plot tf I bring it, and work it up?” “If you will help mea’ “And I may bring it seon?* “T wish you would.” | “Good-by till then.” “Good-by,” and she looked merrily after him “ tober aun. “T am glad you've come," she said, and her Bind \ was firm and cool. “I wanted to come before, but I was afraid,” and the gray eyes looked into hers, “Afraid? She had seated herself again, and was watching the figures which the wind was making with “I thought perhaps to find you @ great euther, end filled with scorn for inere ordinary mortals.” “That is just the trouble, I have ‘every one’ Tt $ ‘every one’ who thinks me cold, because 1 am pleasant to all, You think me cold, don't yout Well, Msteni* fhe hesitated @ moment, clasping and unclaspixg her Singers, her eyes bent on the yellow fender. had travelled and of the people to me histories and stories, and I liked by and by—I liked him. Just a jo at knew it—but after awhile—I id know better—a great deal—and then he went away Her hands were quiet now; her voice before her. “That was all. Others have come and ve liked them all, only,” she “YOU THINK ME COLD, DOWT Your breath, “It could not be that again, and so people eal] me cold. I grow very tired of it sometimes, but,” her voice changed, “I think I should like to hear the plot of your story now.” She smiled up at him His face ptartied her. ‘Then in an instant {t all flashed over her, He bel read to her; he had gone away end now he bad come back and he had thought she meant— “Margaret!"' He had seized her hands and was ¢rewing her to him. A mist rose before her. It was anether faca, am other form that was bending over her; enother velco that whispering to her: “And I loved you always, alway Bhe caught her breath, Should she tell him? she cause him to suffer as she had suffered? put out her hand to steady herself. No! She coul@ not tell him. No! A thousand times, no! Did she dare thus wilfully to break @ human heart? Within her a votce erie’, no. Her inmost soul answered, no! And, the girl whom the world thought cold was silent. Aad the silence was her a Only as the yellow. ded and the crimson coals burned low, as he rose to leave she maid, emiling faintly: “But the plot for the story; am I not to have tT” “Dear.” he whispered, ‘4s there need of a new story? Is not the old one best?” ; He ecarcety caught the answer: “Yea, the old, old story.""—Condensed from the Club Fellow. PEDLSSEDELOCOD | QUERIES .% ANSWERS ‘38 EVENING WORLD READERS, On what day of the week did Jan, 2, 1885, fall? JANE E. BURG ne Six Places of rialnment, Has Madison Square Garden one or two halls? ANXIOUB, i li Mi l. + Saye Bayonne Giris "Heading the letter ‘about Bayonne i i i g i i A 2 i j 3 Je li +o I i oe i rt _ i if

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