The evening world. Newspaper, January 29, 1900, Page 6

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e A eaiorid. |'dxvs [OVE Story. Are Pre Pe BUSTER) DARE PRESTON’S PRIZE. $8 at thn Pest Ofien ot Now Fork a0 Sovwnt-Chane Wall Matter. MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1900. é PAIR of lovely violet eyes, jooking out of a sun- kissed face; a pair of warm red lips, partedlin a delightful sinite; a slender girlish form, gowned iu an old-fashioned dreaa of faded blue that barely reached her ankles; 4 hat of an older fashion sitll, eet back on the loosely curling golden hair, This was Vera West as she stepped forward to meet Cari Moore. ‘The Summer was drawing to a close, and Carl had met Vera on this day to tell her tha: he was gving back to the fashionable world from which he came, Vera's face turned deathly pale as this news was told to her. She never knew how he left her, but she slowly re- traced her steps to the farmhouse, and there found Dare Preston, her guardian, sitting out under a spread. ling tree, hix head buried tn his hands, evidently in deep thought, He wes tall and rather good-looking, this Dare Pres. well built, with clear, gray eyes, and pleasant smile, loyal, brave and true, whose love was an honor to any woman, As Vera approached him hte face brightened, and if she had not been so grieved at her false lov de- parture she might have seen the passion: ov shone in bis eyes, He drow her to him, and although she told him noth- ing, he knew that Carl Moore was the cause of her sorrow (for Dare had seen Vera's love dream), and he inwardly vowed that if Curl had made Vera suffer he must answer for it to him, o 8 6 6 All the fashionable world was raving over Vera West. Not only as the granddaughter of one of the wealthiest men in New York, but also as one of the fairest women that ever eyes gaged upon, Among her admirers none was so passionately de- voted as Carl Moore, He lived in the very sunlight of her presence. Vera knew this, and had long deter- sree sereveseNO, 14,041 40.. DAILY HINT FROM M'DOUGALL . years later | WIE fhe Be the next picture to be turned te- ward the wall? ——____.-.-__ TO ERASE THE NORTH RIVER. MORNING contemporary has discovered, to its great amazement, that New York is shut off from the continent by the North River. Of course, The World has told about this condition a good many 1 times, and has fought the good fight for “@Peidge up to the point where an interested rall- |) ‘Way corporation on this aide of the river has been to block the scheme for a time. Bow the tunnel idea is abroad. It will be , Cheaper and quicker to dig under that river to throw a span across it. Moreover, trou- Complications over the location of the York terminal! will be averted, New York must and will be well connected with continent. The rehandling of cargoes for the passage to and from the railway terminals New Jersey must stop. The ferry-boats must Be relegated to the past. ‘If there can be some day a fine bridge, with ite G@rives and promenades, combining pleasure with all right. But for immediate, practical, purposes, with great gain et least cost, dig the tunnel. GOD AND THE ENEMY. is instructive to observe bow completely the Anglo-Saxon scheme of salvation excludes the idea that God may be in any way on the side of the weaker nation in the fight. The Church of England's prayers for the @uccess of its soldiers against the Boers > Qesume that the English armios are the armies of | the Lord, and for them He is asked to vouchsafe yr EAA aie HM Go HD IT WAS HIB PICTURE, amined to encourage him, in the bape that he would propose and suffer by ber refusal, as he had made her suffer in the years ago, At last her wish wes granted. His offer of marriage was scornfully refused by Vera, and as she saw him take his departure ahe felt that he was suffering as be deserved, One evening, a fow weeks later, as Dare entered Mr West's drawing-room, he was surprised to see Vera kneeling before a picture whic. was on an easel. And were his eyes deceiving tim? If not, it was his pic- ture. Aa toward her he said, “Vera” — “Dare, oh, Darel’ waa all Vera answered, but it told him volumes. Vera knew that the love which she gave to Carl when she was little more than a child waa only a fancy, while the love she gave to Dare was the one true love of a woman.—Boston Post ae IN JAGGED LINES. “What makes Stubbs's poetry so popular?’ “It looks #0 much like a column of real-estate trans- fers. fet us THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 2, 1980. LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. # # # u + + + « « « Some Unhappy Married Men, | (Copyright, 1900, by the Preas Publitiing Company, New York Wort) GAIN It isa wife who writes me of her woes. ut tn this inatance | fear it is my duty te censure instead of sympathize with her, She says in a burst of petulant indignation: “i have married a brute of a husband, as you will see when you hear how unreasonable he ts. “1 was employed in one of the large department stores und was considered one of the most attractive girls in the place. My husband was and still is a floor-waiker in that department. We fell in love with each other and married two months ago, “He furnished a flat and we went to housekeeping, H® KICKED OVER THE TABLE A though {t was contrary to my wishes, as I knew nothing of housework and preferred boarding “We were both very popular in the store and of an evening all of our friends come to see us. Sometimes there areas many as twenty here, Of course I am in uty bound to set up refreshments, Bometimes it is ice cream and cake, which | send out for, and some- times only lemonade. Lut, do you know, my expenses in this direction are $!, 4 and as high at times as % per week? Now, here ts the trouble: My husband seems to think he ought to have just as good meals as though 1 did not have to take out that amount from the sum laid out to buy the groceries. ast night I had for supper sliced ham, chow chow, crullers, coffee cake, potato chips, cheese and tea. When lie saw what there was to eat he kicked over the table, sprang for lls hat and coat and left the house, swearing 1 do not wish to lecture you me take you MAN once told me, F AND REFORM, A good beefsteak ts the best reform movement on | ¢, earth, says a writer iny the Troy TY und tt certainly ought to do much toward — helping along the right kind of reforms. As & man eats, #0 he ts “that nothing caught his fa ae alee warned the girl in blue TO OFFSET ONIONS |he would expert his wife to A little vinegar kept} dows. Men who hanker af! bolting on the stove while] wifely looking things usual onions or cabbages are! drudges in the end cooking will do much to prevent the overpowering odor going through the house. women, even If It's the mak she threw an eye at the firtatious apron fluffy ruffles and ribbons worn by the hos! He meant the old-fashioned sort of apron, though, & cross-barred musiin or a gingham, probably. “Don't you ever trust a man who boasts he likes to Kee a woman wearing the old-fashioned kind of apron, ° But, as a matter of fact, 1 do believe all men like a touch of domesticity about toward the gausy apron; ‘and if ever you want to bring a man to terms let him find you wearing that sia hand and talk the situation over with you. A man who toils for his daily bread in any walk in life necessarily endures more or less bodily fatigue, ay well as many cares to sap. vital energy and strength, and therefore, you will perceive, a good sub- stantial supper ts @ necewsity to him, By your own admlasion, my dear, everything upon your supper table was purchased from the delicatessen |shop around the corner. There was nothing warm, substantial or satisfying. | It ts @ cruelty to treat friends at the expense of | your husband's stomach, his comfort and welfare. A husband has every right to expect a good hearty supper when he provides you with the money to buy me) ONTS FOR g PIANISTS. THEY HELP THE PLAYER. HE London Musical Hera!d offered a prige and ertificate for the best wet of twelve “Don'ts” for pianists, Many papers * submitted, they presented graphically the vara’ f all sort ND LEFT THE HOU! SWEARING. it, My dear, my dear, skimp on anything rather than that. Buy a little inexpensive cook book and study it, Every wife should know how to cook a good meal, Let me advise you what to get for the next supper he sits down to in your coay Ittle home: A nice little | steak, brotled to a turn, (Cook it just the way you |have heard him say he likes {t.) A dish of hot, steam- ing, mashed potatoes; one good vegetable, boiled caull- flower, spinach, or even onions, whichever you prefer; a lt PI uce, bread and butter and a cup of fragrant tea, and lo! you have a meal fit for « king, enough to tempt the palate of an epicure on a cold, blustery winter night You must study your husband's welfare, my dear. He will not be able to work for you long unless you feed him. That's the true secret of most of the happy homes the world over. Try the experiment and see. ne articles for The Evening World ex- wth the Pamlly Story Paper, Libbey writes elustvely, by arranger A waid the girl in gray ney Htke a girl in an apron uu (ake my word for It, sorub floors and wash win- ter these practical, house- iy turn the wearers into e-believe sort,” with a nod conditions of pupils, veritable musical microcosms. The prize winner, Mise Janet Lawson, sent the fol- lowing: Don't thump. Don't begin to play until you are ready. Don't count to your playing, but play to your count- ing. Don't jerk your hand when you put your thumb under, Don't play one hand after the other. Don't play with your arms. Don't keep the pedal down all the time. Don't gallop over an easy part and then stumble ovgr the fore dificult. Don't neglect posture when practising. Don't nod your head when you play an emphatic note. Don't pass over a diMcult bar until {t {s mastered. Don't be tate for your lesson, —— NON THE BEST OF IT. “The audience wes a trifle severe in its comments on the essay your wife read.” “Yes,” answered. Mr, Meekton, “but the audience hasn't any the best of it. It ‘ud feel pretty small and discouraged if ft only knew what Henrietta says about the people who criticised her.” PRON AS AN AID TO CUPID. thing and seated behind the teakettle.” “| wonder,” pondered the girl In gray, “if your apron theory would extend to the trained-nurne ya- riety? You see, when I was studying to be a nurse I had a lot of stmart-looking aprons, bibbed and strapped ‘ana very professional looking, and after I gave up that ‘ked all my nursing uniform away in the vocation I attic. Now, do you suppose—er “1 certainly do,” responded the girl in blue, “Just you let him find you wome time whisking about the house all done up in & crisply starched apron and wielding a feather duster, or, better still, if he could only catch you tripping along the hall in that apron with a dainty tray in your hands. Oh, there's nothing appeals to a man more than #ick-room coddiing from a woman, Why, those nurse aprons would ensnare the filntiest-hearded bachelor!” His BRAIY DID 7 TAKE THE MESSAGE. @CHOOLMASTER told his pupils that when- ever they moved an arm or leg it was in re- sponse to & message from the brain. brain always sends a message down your arm or leg whenever you wish to move the particular mem- ber,” he explained. At length a boy named Wilkinson aroused his ire by his apparent Inattention to the lesson, “Hold out your hand, Wilkinson,” he sald. Wilkinson did not stir “Why don’t you hold out your hand, air?” cried the master, furtously “Please, str, I'm waiting for the message from my brain,” said Wilkinson, coolly ‘His protection. q ‘The McKinley idea, as evidenced in the “duty | and destiny” speeches of the party orators, is quite tee mame. But to the Anglican ritual more acceptable to @ed than the Boer's hymn tunes or the Filipino Balf-breed petition for grace? A BUSINESS MAN'S BLUNDER. ‘T is the physiognomy of a business man,” gays Oulda, of Joseph Phamberiain's “Oh, he won't tell, SMALL north side miss, aged four, was reproved by her mother, who mid; “Even if | do not see you, Helen, God does. was the little one’s reply ITTLE WILLIE—The Iible says there will be no marrying in heaven. 1 wonder why? Little Emma—t don't know, unlens {t's because there won't be enough men to go round. TLL you give me @ kiss, Johnny,” arked a face. Mr. Chamberlain is admittedly the| ‘¢ ? ise # fret business man of England. He has filed Johns ow hy not? Cause Ss transmuted steel screws into coin of the|!f I did the next thing you would be asking me to ” realm with such success that his present | "fry you,” was the unexpected reply > Biigh place in politics is his reward, iy ie. Ae.a business man he should have made a better | + #teeeeee fiaventory of the Boers. He estimated their num-| + a Bers correctly, but he overlooked their moral cour-|? WHERE SHE TRIUMPHS. . > HE could not go to battle Not since King George counted on bis Hessians | + And lead a brave brigade $e comquer the American patriots has a British | * She couldn't corner markets statesman made 90 disastrous an underestimate of | * Laeallipglesgate ies =f sue . She could not write a poem 4 To movs men unto tears; And England charges off to “profit and loss"| | She couldn't master grammar Bives worth more to her than al! the mines of the | * In twenty thousand years! t Bhe could not run an engine Ps 1 « frosty track, rh . Rut she can buy a bonnet |THE TEST OF THE REVIVAL |: Ant get her money beck NY religious revival that makes people bet- z Bren after she has worn it 4 Unto some awell affair, ter is a good thing. If a revival leads o White! ich is a Worldly triumph thief to stop stealing, or # lar to refrain $ That's excellent and rare! from falsifying, or a profane man to speak | > & F Kiser decently, or any kind of a rascal to put an 3 te his raacality, it is a good thing. it couscs an employer to treat a workman fairy, or a workman to be more faithful to employer, or « grocer to give true weight, or @ shoemaker to éeal with bis customers faith, or a Wall street operator to treat an he himself would like to be treated, or a to be more affectionate to his wife and Of apy man or woman to be more up- ft, Wt to @ good thing. } teat here put forward is a perfectly just ean be applied im any case. There is no . SMART BOY IN GEOGRAPHY, ¥ WIT AND WISDOM FROM BABES’ MOUTHS. ier aged five, was affilcted with earache and sereamed franticatly said his mother, “do: wore. brother behaved when he make half so much fuss a “What d-does that sobbed Edgar. “H-his ea m-mine.” tired out with his naughty you have beer Don't you remember how nice your little baby k-kid know ‘bout ear ‘“ OMMY,"’‘eaid a mother to her small son, “I'm : afraid that when your father comes home all replied the precocious youngste tired that it won't hurt very m HA . Mrs. E.—Skinning your face would not have the flightest effect on the growth of superfluous hair. ‘The only way this halr can be killed is by electrolysis, hut this process is expensive, and is not always effi- cactous, C,H. O-Where the hair falls out as yours does, leaving bald spots, there is something very wrong with the scalp's circulation, I will give you @ good tonic, but what you really require, in my opinion, is scalp massage. Formula for hair tonte Cologne, eight ounces; tincture of cantharides, two i TWO PUPILS IN EACH BYE. with pain. “Hush, dear," | The snableps, or star- n't ery 90; ft only makes it| Azer, and the gyrinus, or whirligig beetle, have had the earache? He didn't bout It as you are mi | each of their eyes divided | , | ito an upper and lower | portion by an opaque hor- | frontal line, ‘This gives them two pupils In each eye, one of which, the up- per, is sulted for seeing in the air, and the other, the lower, for seeing in the water. re ain't h-haif as b-big as days work, and learns how Ai! punish you.” “Well,” "I hope he will be so GEORGIE AND HIS PA, Why Poverty 66 THAW. what's All this in the Papers about Pov- T maw ast. discuvery,” paw mays. Alge of discuveries the world cvery few Days they are some new kind & discuvery, One week they Discuver a Wireless telegraft pole and the next Day sumbuddy Gets up from the Table in @ hurry and says: ‘Excuse me @ few Minutes. I got to go out and Discuver a Limf to keep peepie from Ever Growing old, or else he Dis- cuvers how to freeze air and then thaw tt Bo it'll be ice-water, “Bo Andru Carniggy got to Thinking about it the o Laer/ anys Other day, and he thot he would Do a little Discuver- ing, becoz he had plenty of Time before he Would haft the next Bunch of Coop pons. Trat to Make a Bpeech before Some peeple that haven't Ennything to live for except how to find #um way to Get rid of the Worry a purson has after they he thot and eed Poverty is a Blessing “The unhappy miliyunaires that were Ligeening to Him broke out ia Wild applos and give him three THE UNHAPPY MILLYUNAIRE&S BROKE OUT IN WILD APPLOZ. eet more Than Leven or Fourteen million dollars, #0) Andy's hand. and when they Went away from there Is a Blessing. fear the coachman might get drunk and Let the horses Run away when they are Going bome from the Grand opera, The poor don't Need to Be afrade the ship | mite Sink while they Take three Trips to Yoorup every year, The poor needn't Toss about at nite (thinking mebby one of the Survents mite run Away] [with a Dimund necklace valued at three hundred | Thousan dollers and dimunds going up every day on | Account of the War in Africky. The poor Don't haft | te think their sons mite Get their necks Broke play- ling polo or chasing bags with annus seed in them. | “AM these Things and Lot more I can't think | Just now Come to Andy in a Fiash when he looked | the Sad taces of the Ritch tm frunt of Him, and it's {no Wender Bum of Them almost Broke down when | they thot How they had recked their tives by getting | So they could Own counties here and there with Cas- jsels on Them and have their own ice Cut. #0 when [the meeting was over they all went up and shook every one Had a rew resolve in hie hart.” “What was that “To go on Nobly sacrificin’ themeeives and their Time and happiness to keep wei RRIET HUBBARD AYER. # . . « Secrets of Youth and Beauty. rits of camphor, two ounces. Apply to the roots of the hair every night. G. 0. B.—Bichioride of mercury soap will destroy parasites in the hair if property used. HELANE—Cold cream will not make the halr grow on your face if the pores are kept clean by a dally serub, F. B—Try using a fresh brush with pure soap and plenty of warm water for the goose flesh on the arms, ‘Try this lotton for olly skin: Dried rose leaves, one ounce; white wine vine one-half pint; rosewater, one-half pint. Pour the vine- kar upon the rose 4 let it ttand for one week, then strain and add the rosewaler, throwing the rose leaves away. The lotion may be ised elther pure or diluted by putting about a tablespoonful into a cupful of rain water, Do not keep in a metal vessel r BLOUSES AND WAISTS. Silk blouses and waists will certainly have as large 4 run ax last season, There are materials with a white ground with very large checks worked out in narrow satin atrines in black and orange or yellow, black and crimson or ee vie FIRST AID TO WOUNDED HEARTS. Danced with Another Man. ia 6 young man of age ve, G 0 ‘or mont im deep iy in bre ene her and I call at her hi quite often, The other night there was @ part: sie (oid tie She was not going, so I went re I met her with another young man, ne in. Please let me know wi company with her or not? ‘The girl hae told you a falsehood and you every opportunity to understand thal not care for you. I should have nothing moi with her. Threw }itm Over for Manager. IT have been ing company with a lady ive yeara, When | Avet met her we. ag! ‘Ro with any one except each other, I w every night and takes her to other places of amusement, and to dinners. this to me. I have een her in his company Advise me. Be the girl up, by all means, Her conduct will en- \rely justify you In so doing. t Him to Karn $18 a Week, roung lady, who returns Daly one ‘uyeetion, od my love. Her pare that Me, Sey Sy, erat I 0 Tight te REZ, * arn 4 week, or more. te leas the above amount, and I am sure that it would break both our hearts to part. 1 ask you to kindly answer thie, ack If there is no other objection to you as a husband for the young lady I think these parents are a little hard. Are you sure that this is the only reason? Many young couples have lived very happily oa less than the amount you make. Can't you bring them to MARRIED LIFE women) live longer than single persona. Here, fc countries: se | a more sensible view of the matter? AND LONGEVITY. | example, are the average yearly Geath-rates » 9 YEARLY DEATH-RATE PER 1,000. 01 —_—*). T 19 q well-ascertained fact that married men (and 1,000 for singie and married persons tn four Europes) Single Persons, Married Perser advance of age the advantage on the side of the ried becomes more and more pronounced. —<——a—_— Where doe, o, geetoman walk when he ts one or more ladies? to lift = lad: th wet Pale Lee Se ABS Richmond ‘The gentieman should walk on the left side is escorting one or more ladies. It is not con rood form for a gentieman to “itt a lady by th when crossing the street, or to attempt to asst except when there is obvious danger, or when the ts aged or sickly. Hease Party Dress, proper for a gentleman to be in even: af party? ss If the house party covers the pertod of several ‘a guest should Gress according to the fashion obtatnt present. He should wear proper costume in the motning, the dress prescribed for ternoon wear end should appear at dinner is evening clothes, and wear them until bedtime a grtoman seer gn mgt for any other zB. Should fein ove them when et supper of pose? If the function is » formal one gloves should be during the entire eventing. It ts customary to the right one at supper and ¢o resume it later. Pte Greet her with a kiss when other persons are present? If the other persons referred to are membeie family, relatives or very near friends there + nothing actually improper in such » greeting. rather better taste to reserve demonstrations of tion for such times as you and your betrothed alone. i | | Bome charming waists are composed entirely of cream-colored Venetian point lace insertion, alternating: | with bands of white velvet on which are embroidered | each. will they revolve evenly or will one slide? { pretty, Nght designs in white bugle beads. Though | why? almost tight fighting, they retain somewhat of the Dlouse cut. A MATTER OF TASTE. —a—-—— IN the Bay of Plenty, New Zealand, is one phur mixed with gypsum and a few 900 feet above the sea, floats continually covering fifty wil navigated on the lake, The sulphur pase SS TO THE RN ISLAND THAT ASTONISH | most extraordinary islands in the called White Island, and consists Over the Island, which 1s about three miles in el cumference, and which rises between cloud of vapor, attaining &n elevation of In the centre eres, and surrounded from which steam and sulphurous fumes are with great force and noise. With care, a boat Island ts very pure, but little effort has yet made to procure {t systematically, Wheels im This Prebiem. ‘Diack and green. Others have bright red grounds, | Te the Bétur of The Brening World: | And still others are of bright plaids. If q shaft three inches in diameter has three on it, two being thirty-two inches, one sightéen (in @iameter), rolled on three separate tracks On 04 a Week, To the Béime of The Evening World: Pipe Soraya disap pet Racal Bo

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