The evening world. Newspaper, February 14, 1900, Page 6

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THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 14, 1900, DEWEY’S FAMOUS ORDER. FRO V CU. In His Own Handwriting. nf There is no royal road to riches. Money well earned is worth in- wisely. : not your trust in syndi- cates while savings banks are handy. These are a few suggestions drawn from the Franklin (Miller) | Syndicate confession published exclusively in The Evening World yesterday. <Aag . — PIGHONS OF WAN. ‘Twe bundred thousand trainel homing pigeons be- Jong te che German War Department, while France is eerved by 10,000 of these birds PRDEREWSK! AND THE MATINEE GIRL. | F there te anything on earth more than another whigh grouses the sugerd contempt of Paderewsk, & Chileago critic writes it {1s a matinee audience. Ma has abways sat on the stage behind an invisible Playing to himeel!, ebeeriseniy, even when the} of things rippled from his fingers, once throwing a remote glance gt his listeners MOLINEUX'S HOPE. “witnesses were hypno- | pleasure bepaks through the stan: Pe aig | | cause ewskt countamance; he does not intend to be hand in Slove whh his audience, and succeeds in his endeavor. | later In the evening voice husky Mz, Upparten—ani yee; | °°" & I beard they had started fer'erepe the day before, | FEBRU ARY TH Btammering is practi-| to ba the| civilized people. | PRENOW GLOVES. ing“ |, however, is dert owt drun could not with equal fitness be named wie. President. It should be no man’s pgivilege Yoas tp veiue ‘Words with another over this offqs, or Pr go od Ls | @ nomination before it has begn tendered |.lsar Str dnote in ww th Apeganes 6-4 ps eager Groots to al . “| Omtoor, call the next case, ‘be the cirief consideration in the salestion The Vice-Presidency has been a 9 te @ section too long. Lat us bave it a place of power before the whole world. hile tn clroulation | He @ Uitie more time— fle te Above the Avernge.” mer | became acquainted with a young man whose ts tyme, River atace our firet me eetng he haa PLEA FOR PROTECTION, _ | there's Tine fr me tn ne conversion ee me i elevated In thought than the average young man. We ANDREW CARNEGIE'S baginess {5| pave taken shor: thayole tours together, and he has Dis petvate affair, But some of the fig-| frequeatly accompanied me home fron church. Ile ures dipplayed by Mr. Frick in the exit] has cenreered & lenire, however, of becoming ester wivich chat gentiomen bas bewen soquainted with me. While my parents have never ~~ expressed themselves other than picases with him, y Be partuer are of momentous He IM-|.2 gheuld ike to have your opinion as to whether yo terest, | think It wine or unwise for ine to further ke his capital of the Carnegie steel companies {s | Company. EC ‘at $25,000,000. The profits for If the young gentleman {9 agreeable to you ard 981,000,000, while the entimated profits for 1900 }7° knew of no saute why yuu annul uot continue Hie quatntange, 1 see no Teason why you Md n Gre atated at 48,600,000. with paopeiety do so. Ask him to your home, where Gurely there is something wrong when capital) you will be able to decide for yourself and your pa- must wo Gragzing for a pitiful return of less thanjrente wil! ald you in @ just estimate of the young cent. Plainly, Mr. Frick has revealed a| man's character. Generving industry's great need of protection. the Shocked fim by 0 ‘While Congress ig preparing to come to the rescue, | 1 have been introduced to a young la Leaguy Ynily “ Abeent-[Yover, When I first became acqualited with her 5 Se ee re ae, tT thought she was tbe only girl I could ever love, 1 called to ote her. A few calls 1 asked her out fg walk, ané I enjoyed her company very much. Ing on bidding her good-night she surprised much by deliberately ve thought more of her if 5 4 hadn't taken INTERESTING CONVERSATION ing with each phrase. ww MT, x» WOUNDED me Now I/+ mov -| defined Internal trouble. When @ airi ts anaemic—-that fs to say, when her blood 19 weak and tmpoverished—the dark circles pr duced by this condition will disappear as the subject ivea the rest and nourishment that go toward re- patring her vital forces through supplying her blood with the chemical constituents it requires. Overwork, overstudy, dissipation, improper food, Sometimes this ten: | !"h fll went of fresh air will produce a physical condition that the dark circles are the outward signs of. Now it tands to reason that if the black lines are must be changed. If the girl must work—and that 8 that's the end of the dark circles |yo often the case—then she must heroloally devote al! er time outside of her labor to her health. If the circles are caused by inherited debility the| Take care of your bodies~sensitle care—giv blood and nervous system must be fed and bullt wp | room to breathe, alr to breathe, food that will nourish | bedrooms suggest | Frequently the dark circles are caused by some weil- | and sleep that {s refreshing, and you will say good-by Co fonist ele aph baplp debra ” mG Na e Leesa Passage hd “ toga Mesketgd Not tn a day—you will have to that she ts aMicted in thie manner and hopes to re | climb t! iN step by step—but at the end are health | suggest themsel further accessories gna at least by a wonderful outwaré ap- | and beauty. pence dg es = ved from GOT WHAT 1 ASICED FOR. coins by weer acd, The Prisoner—-Your Flonor, 1 trust you will allow Never heave up the shoulders in the act of taking a no perceptible movement of r take In breath of a sudten I ithough the singing of certain | 4 performer to do #0. The ribs False Lice agai AMETHYST MONTH. tended for one of the great offices of the Be-| aally unknown among un-| HE girl who was born in Fobruary should wear an amethyst, which signifies true love, The Years the atone being supposed Beapce makes nearly, to prevent intaxication, The anciente had cups made which may at any time! gy sogo0n pairs of Pow of mmethyst, helleving that they would prevent the chair. , and of these 1h-/| [quor tiey contained from intoxicating. The ame- 000 peire are exporte’.|thyst was also considered & sure charm against REATHING, wrote Sims Reeves in a recer.t num- ber of the London Idler, 1s an exercise th Itself. Incorrect breathing te an acquired habit, induced sametines ly an clavorate means (aken to avoid It. ‘Whenever possible tnhale through the nostrils. This allows the nose to purify and warm the air before resching the throat, which needs to be warm for the production of good tone It te frequently re- marked that such and such an artist's voloe “improved which means that the singer's | throat became warmed as the concert or opera pro- | ceeded, and not that the voice tmproved, though the tone may have done #0, Breathing constantly through the mouth tnclines to @ry the throat and make the The Judge (interrupting him)—All right—eiz months, * HEARTS «a! sow BREATHING—-HOW TO DO IT «® WHAT TO AVOID.|*" "sues By Sims Reeves, England's Greatest Ballad Singer. Flarriet + Hubbard # Ayer. RICHARD CARVEL’S HAND. TIE DAY'S THOSE DREADFUL CIRCLES UNDER THE EYES. Y dear girls, you who write me about the dark | pli and dreadful black lines under your eyes, will you listen to me like good little children, and hen will you mind what | say? The dark lines under the eyes are caused by con- | DY gestion of the velns of the face. dency ‘# inherited, but {t 1s never found without a The Writing of Winston Churchill, 1 should not be truthful if I were to amy that) Ih siynsk RN nr hh LOVE STORY, waht it nite arr the ie Goon Tkle, GIRe em'y | MOLLY AND HER POET. ould remove tho dark cireles that are produced grave Internal cause, or even by improper nour- te | Girls with the dreadful dark rings under your eyes, : Ais semua 40 aay atch. . do first of all be advised, You must have sleep, rest, Wide by £ my pleaded Mrs. Mordaunt. “Mr, Henry, the . N | aw ’ — [66 exercise and fresh alr to look healthy of to be healthy, If you are conscious that your dark circles are caused aS Will be there ands tet of by an fnternal malady go to @ doctor and get the ‘© (a M cause removed. If not, then remember that nine lan, bench houra 19 not too much sleep for the average young bond weet oa os ace & general woman—and make up your mind to get tt. d low Redmond, For exercise, instead of dancing in hot roome after a he Mera MARGARL ee Oooo shed 4 a long day's totl--also in stifiing rooms too often—take 695. entered, and, finding how Ey entreaties to those of their friend. ‘THE SHOT MUNG IX AIR, Thus pressed Molly at last The famews ehot fired in the Jubilee Year of Queen ‘Victoria from a twenty-two-ton gun, to ascertain how dhe.’ Molly Stanmore hesitated. Since her father’s FRIR HOsTESses Puexse TARKe MOTE, UU HE only time” says e man, * things I want in the guest room is when 1 go to stay with a bachelor who is keeping house. seat bab woman housekeeper makes a sort of uni fortebie sttting-room of her guest room, and a systematic course of physical exercise, then pute a bed end bureau in it. What I always Go in for health with a big H and with al! your want in one of these rooms is a foot stool and a might and main. Plenty of oxygen tn your lungs will seraignt-pack chair, and I don't often find elther. 1 am speaking now of the average spare room, n: i | Don't fret about your looks, Nothing saps the vital | poses Pet higd Oy yoelecpeaglighrr) bg tae hs forces and takes the beauty out of women i!ke worry. | prectated convenience absent from most guest them | tp a shaving tidy, These are always to be found 3 i § i i wives thelr necessity in the home guest room. and writing materials are other things that Hy SAFE FROM breathing—such as when a lady's shoulders rise they were about to expand like wings—net only the throat, but makes a disagreeable impression en audience, Breath must never be taken between a head note and a chest note; the transition from the one Volce to the other must be done with very little breath and very softly, Tm a warm, oppressive room it !e necessary te re serve the power of the voice, because forcing the voice under such circumstances allows {t to become easily fatigued and used up. Increase and decrease of tone are produced by t! i fy ! E ! breath alone, A man in 6 raging passion orwell Rope. the muscles of the throat and grow red tn tet =f =. attempting to give utterance to hie anger, rage," because he ie trying to get a terrific vo we we been invented bacodal voice by physical pressure on the throat, and the| for the use of soldiers, can desanee £ could more he swells the veins and muscles the less able! be folded and carried like ee Fe fo he to speak at all, Singers, therefore, should not | « dressing-case, Be ra, eon entnne Uy Srenns the Seana ot [SS roat. mmand of Of breath fo Be only mettet. | FRIENDLY ADVICE. Smith—! deen i. OUR LONG Necks preg reli plbionc some money in stocks, Lal AND HIGH COLLARS. | wee woud you advier enee me to do? ORBIBLY the collar men have been hoping that! Jones — 5 the fashions would change, says the Men's Out: | req) poe aid = oe being here to-night?" she fitter, #0 as to reduce the width of collars and! geith—Yes, “Te it very singular?’ he returned Jessen the consumption of material per dosen, but we! Jones—Then I'd advise} “Bad taste very,” continued the fair don't see much sign of such @ change. Americans| you to put tt in your |!ne herself sure of him, “there are average pretty long between the jaw and the clavicle, | wite’s name. stances which make seclusion from and the rising generations appear te rise further than — Fe ever in that direction. Moreover, tt te more customary “Name ene of them,” said the au than formerty to clothe the entire streteh, and that ‘The “Why, « failure of that kind. I called om ¢he Gtan- requires a great quantity of fabrie. ue oe eee. fae: |nsores yesterday. You've ne iden how Qreadfully ro- DRISTLRE. vest year st uses 20m | eet ite pe. P pounds of phosphorus) ur ung tome ‘Three of us lost our scalps in @ brush with the| turns out 2,800,000,000,000 ‘I understand Mise Stanmore wih seem ber Indiana,” said the olf scout, matches, and, for the) "isce !@ society again,’ he eaid, quietly. “Bort of @ halr-brush,” grinned the chronic buffoon. boxes, 180,000 feet of wood “Indeed! How is that peer ogt i much @ Hberty, I Know she ts a good girl and holds © worthy aken advantage of you, As for her making a goo! jepmate for a poor man, it would be @iMoult for me weily fo say. If she is a good, sensible young woman, you should oe the judge, you might pardon her In- | as. If whe at be detri me for the price bundle of a dozen “As soon as I got them quieted down he #0 dlagraced he was going to bell-pull, and be rang up nine fares on the Tamfa young woman going on nineteen. Last Bum- responstbie posttion, and Is no flirt, Advise me. IN DOUBT, . Most men would not complain of the liberty the lady nak, ugh I agree with you that she would be of respect had ehe not eo deliberately ¢ ground of your own trreststible attrac- he qualities that make a good wife fact that she fel a victim to your charme should al to her in your opinion, “As my wife, madam!" Exchange. LETTERS evenvc won a wy ETIQUETTE | LOVE—DUTY—SELFISHNESS. OVE bides jongest in a woman's heart, And flutters many times before he files, And then doth perch so nearly that « word Tre leey May lure him beck, as swift and giad as light; takes a And Duty lingers even when Lore is gone, otarte Oft looking out in hope of hie réturn; And after Duty hath been driven forth, Te Cure Wife o' Habit. Then Selfishness creeps in last of all, ‘The gentieman shoukt ‘To the Beiter of The Bvesing World: Warming ner lean hands at the lonely hearth, {these cireumstances wae ‘Won't some reader tell hdd brea ser ‘ed habit of érinking whiskey wife fond And crouching o'er the embers, to shut out Whatever paltry warmth and light are left, With avaricious greed, from al! beside. —James Russell Lowell. it, but ft causes me much trouble, Please os: geet patent cures, but Gomestic ones. ah ‘The Nestons Cigarette. ‘To the BAitor of The Rvesing Wostd: THE © TROLREY-CAR © CONDUCTOR. Sioa Extracts from His Diary About the Joys of Ais Job. TIRE are some extracts from the Glary of q Sixth at his bustest. When there's forty fares to be fought fer by main strength, wean has to look tQrough| Whet © bey a ed bundle of twenty transforma, drepe a few on the ese, Ru | tom finds che hasn't ene that will do fer this trip, can’t Amarins | bey oryne, find @ ovat in change, flashes o @ bill oo mo, and trast |eaté be bed © © © (ere the Glary required efiting with on ches. | Sve oy ote two Greats to report me to-day, ene to ee 8 i

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