The evening world. Newspaper, September 15, 1900, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1900, sat transas NO, 14,970 VOL, 41. A SOLOMON OF THE FOOLISH: Solomon Solowitz, of the Hast Sidé, committed suicide because his mustache had been pulled out, ‘It was all my honor,” cried he, He was a foolish Solomon, He lived for a mustache--and he died for it, A very silly thing, indeed, Yet how many of us live for anything more important? Do you? What is your aim in life? Do you strive forany- thing or nothing? Is anything more worth while to you than a mustache? If not, how long before you will try to find something to live for, so that you will have just a little more to die forthana mustache ? It is well to reflect on these when you consider the passing of Solomon Solo: witz, the foolish, ABORIGINAL TYPE AS WE 'T A BR Gu MORNING! Do your cheek bones protrude! , aboriginal feeling in the hair? Do you crave fire water? an4 8 rth If you have any of these symptoms don't be alarmed. jin ong fs It le thoroughly natural and selentife. Lo, you ere) You are r becoming a poor Indian thropology in the University of Chi the American people are rapidly rn » waye (hal to feel yo ting to BE x: | THE EVENING WORLD'S » DAILY FORUM! WANT to show you to-day the ploture of Gigned Editorials on Leeding Topios of the Day gold ladder you want to know shall brir " Pointe Gleaned from an Interview with TRE GEL Hoint Wie lnager| ANG a 4 ELIZABETH B, GRANNIS. eachos. And {t was right come all } that Btephen, within a few arch for MBNIOAN women are lauded to the sides fn this country for thelr beauty and acoomplish ments, but seen at the Paris Wxpoaltion they fell short, In many respects, of atandards or learning set by Frenoh and Maas My eed pene nt palinen Gorman women, In Ue witting-room and works of in aye ri At was a lamentable thing that #0 many of OUF) hg house, but he hae the chief plotures in the art i women were unable to speak Fronch, And If there|gaiiery, and there hour afier hour you walk with ‘War ever need of that accomplishment it was at gis gt polly sagd yo fii gta admiration, ering plans for the advancement of Woman's CALNE) jy jin palace. throughout the world. “In this lower room where we stop there are many Our women rivalled all in show and elegance, | sdornments; tesnelinted Moor of amethynt, Dut they were surpassed in courtesy by the French, dm learning by the Germans and In organising power by the Knglich ladies, Tndod, 1 think the example set to all these re- gords will exert a lasting influence on American women. ‘The number of school teachers at the Mxpoattion| wee enormous, They had saved thelr oarnings fe 4 Jong time, taken advantage of cheap rates, and) ineluded in & month's vavation not only a cursory nements of heaven, should he masing into M javalanche "We would all do well/!s the Ma (0 be found in the same turns ot posture, There is enough nh heaven to keep eouing, A man of tan wealth may have ptatuary them in, the Kinaed the! we stand Laura Jean (O¥pyright, 1900, by the Pree Publishing Company.) perlens to LETTOR beartng ‘To add words four ation We and headed by the inhuman ‘Krom Indignant | early resp reude ae fol-e| Tho man Fesented. Such women as Mre, May Wright) Bewall gave us cause to bo proud of American | Womanhood, Mrv, Sewall delivered a long tin promptu address in French before a large mixed @udience and surprived wven tho natives by Uy oberectness of her accent and the fluency of ber} ~ dietion. lowtng should be resoried sockets. & to In the rearing of chit:{praction w dren? No doubi "Wor a alight offense al yet to car father-a flesh-and-blood) world hey fathor - thos leather] were they thong about the wrists of of stra: Nie boy and girl and fastens It to a big nall In the door, | meretful | y # that thelr foet Just touch the for, and while they | mo ere Moat of our women have acquired a superfeial] iro iy Unis helplows condition he proceeds to fay them) If the tr Knowledgo of travelling French, Callan and Ger-]with o rope doubled veveral s, until the woaker!to @ litile MAN And they |magine that with It they can carry OB & Connected conversation Tt was noticeable, however, that foreign women | Ma aurprising number of caves had good command Of Wogileh. Dear Mra. Aver Many y ‘The cruelty of the tiger, ‘The heat of the fire, * The chili of snow, } The cack!ing of the parrot, + "The cooing of the turtle dove, . All these Ne mixed together and formed ¢ Then he presented her to the man. q Soe rthosIeddooonegys | Sa aaaantnateenmenmenmeee ee a 1 A COZY BBD POR Poiiia. { Ti cosspeetancnenaietenanmeemenencs tote a PRETTY dot) bed can be berket. Remove the band and replace | third of the way from the end. Line the basket With alkaline or cheese cloth, and wind the With & Mtetp Of the Aame, and again with ni jw ribben, ending tn a bow at each end of the ‘a yotlie, edged with narrow lace, around Oatelde of tho basket, Inclose the short end by &@ canopy of the materin! used to handia the basket, Fasten lace-edged curtains to the handle, drewing to either h wh ‘de tled with ribbon. Cover a plece of paste, f esd bottom of me Rod the bed pillow,” f# Ane enough all the dolls, de from ag ‘9! pasar” @netently woar @ hat." Go look for a Job at the nearest cigar stand Prof, Vrederick Atarr, of the Department of An) No wonder Aator left the country the Tnjum by the caprice of climate Rev. T, De Witt Talmage | Winding cloud stairs are elretched out canvases on which commingle to the sount voloed acclamation of angelic dominion to weloome honor and glory into It “Do you wonder that mood people often stand, Mephen, looking Into heaven? “There te not & man to-day no lsolated In life but there ts some one in heaven with whom he onee shook hands, As a man gets older the number of hin colential acquaintances very rapidly multiplies have not had one glimpse of them since the night we “Ae when some of our friends go across the sea, Libbey : of the two at least fainte. “De you think that constantly wearing & hat has @ tendency to make @ man “Ne; but when a man ts baa I've noticed that it hae @ tendency te make him {ee poreoeten ct ene Teapreene Sree Pare) ae v eR = THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 15, 1900. RF WH Py) OOKLYN REVERTED TYPE type. |mweto In Its degenerating Influence ig in your nose, a bunch of cigars chutched| ‘Take the clima it and a tomahawk rampant in the other, | works overtim unhing toward the type in an wutomobile. | for hiv reaidenc of Brooklyn, for instance. in the man who choos Me reverts um fast It's hard lines | tingutshable from the aboriginal type of Bi vokiynite, by eany stages (ow big buck| The perambulator | conditions urself r We seem acteristics of the species—at once begin to grow out @ and purple and saffron and) them, and after awhile the hull of the pears, and then th i p Stephen mr) by Recognized Authorities, heaven et as Hut heaven is the allppy in which the chief giortes| Sky, and soon that is go [en « 1 leap you want to know até galvorod, There aro the brightest robes, There] Maht, and yet we stand looking In the same direction where you ere going to are the richest crowns, ‘Phere are the highest ex |* when our friends go wway from up into the future THE AMERICAN WOMAN AT PARIS, and, Hetore you climh a. bilarations, John saya of fi; “Tie Kings of the earch | World we Keep looking Gown through tho narrows i thelr honor and glory Into tt! jand gasing and gaging, as (hough We expected that fee the procession forming, and in the line} Mey Would come out and stand on some cloud and empires, and the stare apring up Into an|@l¥@ Us one glimpse of thelr blissful and transfgured the Hoste to mareh under, ‘The hosts keep | faces of earthquake and the pitch of from the inountaine, and (he flog they bear me of a consuming world, and with harps and (rumpets and myriad “While you lon, all heaven and bereavement keeps stand etill, ike Stephen, "You wonder if thoy them |ai face now, #0 changed has tt been with trouble, wonder if, amid the myriad delights they have, they care much for you ae they used to. awing at your vitals, you gaging Into heaven and so the Kings of the earth bring (heir ithe Wo have many friends in the eveningtide, when the house ts all quiet, you wonder *f you should call them by thelr firet name We mt, and when ho one wut you distinetly cal) their ing into heaven simplicity peculiar to the mn by, and they went away waning at heaven bot etn names and listen, and elt @ “With a pathos and bed that mote of chastivement, Five minutes of that to the pity of ft, the children are mother: experience would do more toward convincing him should be wind ti father rent the answer onre would be nopreetated.” N who could or would treat hie offapring tn | you give, An mistake than all the eloquent sermons you could preach to him or all the threats you might utter, The children tn the mean time should do thetr ut gurvey of the Fair, but a trip to the lakes of Swits: lowa A® shocking A manner ax you describe in indeed a most toward rding efully against offending land, ‘ “WH vou, Mins Libbey, | most Inhuman parent Mim, thus eseaping the cruel torture which would (7 hey wore visible wverywhore, and when seen air your views on (hia| Sternin ee ty (he rearing of one's children Is highly jorherwise be meted out to them, i] subject? rommendable, but barbarte cruelty never At one-and-twenty a boy ts legally of age and a Were unmistakable, At the same time there wer: "Do you think meas:| All such modes of excruciating tortura asthe thumb. (girl at elhteen, After that hour arrives he has no Many of our mort exclusive soclal elements rep iree ae cruel aw the fol |serew, the pulling of the arms from their tender femal right to lash them into submission to Me he Maying with ropes, Me, went out of jtyrannteal will th the dark oges, thank God! | 1 belteve that children should love, honor and obey t the children of this man are unable as|thetr parents, but a polnt can be reached whore © for themmelves, to go out into the great jendurance te no longer @ virtue, On& to earn thetr dally bread Yet even) My heart goes out in the deepest pity to the lad or foreed to do so they would find the handa lassle whose mother lies tn her lowly «rave and cera & thousand times Kinder and more jcannot wipe thelr tears away when the loved ones Nan those of the parent who soourges them whom she would give her heart's blood to shield are |In gore distress and need her love and sympathy ‘tenant nelehbors were to treat this man | If that mother could open her dead ips she would { his own medicine he would learn past way to her darlin a ery 00d, aWeet women use peroxide of Mack halr acquires a mahogany tinge after the POPE DLE PADD EE Epa RBG. Ast Want to hive my hydrogen, and from an innocent deatre to have fret application of peroxide; the second bisaching hele and thought of uelot golden hatr make themeelves conapiouous and have will turn | Titan red, the third a reddish gold, HOW WOMAN WAS MADE peroxide of hydrogen will to puffer the mortification that fs mure to be a part the fourth a etraw color, in most case, ; you kindly let me know of the prien ome hate shows more resistance and doce not COORDING to a Hindoo legend, thie te through your column If Unfortvnmtely men do not discriminate very nicely, bleach ao readily ee eae OF roman: Teraahies The fvening = World nor cam they tn such matters But one thing you must bear tn mind: All the feniete Vulran of the Mindoo mythol whether (he peroxide In The professional woman afone, in my opinion, has peroxide ever manufactured wit! not affect the color hag {elle RL Md tree the hair, and how a right to defy conventions, and if she Anda It to of the hatr that “grows in,” ae we pay, Menelng to create woman he discovered that flen to apply it to Keep her advaniage to have golden buir whe ie fustited The new hate will grow in at the roote of the old with Man he had eehourted all hie creative the halr of the leheteat in pecuring tr original color, and by contrast with the bleached eyes) anid that not one soild clement pow shade? =A % | Aw to the prevatiing auburn tinge that hi ends will look even darker Wad bowen felt, Thie, of course, greatly pe LBACHBD hair ta mddenty gilded the tresnes of the ladies of the When the peroxidian reaches that awful stage tn RT St caused him to fall inte { (igtinotly noi what Hundred, that ls another siory bleaching history where the roots and the frst half ech: NTR ip Arcee: beets we call fal Hromteing, Nowover, (hat 1 etrongly dimapprove of inch of her halr are black or brown, the middle be provended a follows: He took Joking’ exoopt on the Amateur tinit bleaching, 1 will give the information part red and the ends a light corn color she begins Bee Feundness of the moon, head of a woman back of My correspondent denires to realise that the management of artiftctatly tlond The undulating curves of the serpent the footlight The aafest way of acquiting halr of the I eal 1) undertaking. The graceful twist of the creeping plant, ‘The mevaliie look, which powmible shade is through the wae of peroxide of In the processes of an expert hatr-colorer the roots The Wht wtiv f the erase blade and le the result of the pers hydrogen dhe qehaeee (he Gani’ Gh GA Feet AA TRD. Dale. (COs he wlendervess willow, @luistont use of a hiethly oxygenated water, makes a | The effect of peroatde depends very much upon require touching up, these troublesome roots, but Tho velvety softness of the flowers, Tiwoman inmantly che appears a target for remarks |the natural color and texture of (he hale to which @ skilful operutor manages to keep his blond eub- eens, re eater i tary char 1 1» appl Jecta with hatr fairly of one shade Tho gentle gaxe of the doe, , {The frolicsomeness of the dancing sunbeam, * 30000000000000000000000000000000000 fhe tears of the cloud b SaREIREEEEEee The inconstancy of the wind, »| PaeneT eran The timidwevs of the hare +4 The vanity of the peacock, , PROPSR GAUCAS POR MBATS. | ‘The hardness of the diamond, ‘ a +] ‘The sweetness of honey P With the proper sauce. Below te a list of these wavory seoompaniments prepared by an au- thortty: Hoast beet-Grated horseradish, Roast mutton—Currant Jelly, Botled mutton~Caper sauce, | Roast pork—Apple sauce. Roast lamb-—Mint sauce, Venison or wild duck—Black currant Selly. Ronat goose—Apple sauce Roast turkey—Oyster aauce, Roast chicken—-Bread sauce, Compote of pigeon#—Mushroom sauce, Brolled frovh mackere|-Bauce of sewed pooseberries, Broiled biuefiah—White cream sauce, Brotled shad—Rice. Fresh salmon-Green peas with cream sauce. ——e oe The Van Buren Hat, The hat worn by President Van Buren uring hie inauguration bas been presented to MWlnole College. Tt ls a great beaver Of the style eines eseovtated with | MOwadays. President Harrison, | een ACCORDING TO eats and fish are more palatable when served es Baby Snikes Can Bite. Young anakes are born with fangs and polson glands a. He lays the responsibility upon the to be up aguinet it for fair if thie physico-elimatic luxuriously all over him, Ie your tose beaky? Mave you got that wiry [Influence of physical and cilmatic conditions, Don't worry if you wake up in the morning and | ‘There |e hardly any doubt that it does influence we! this country will in, the trolley face-all the char+| prospect le a sad one In son Writes of Looking we stand on the dock or on the steam tug and watch Seriptures, the Bible says of Stephon: tose) disap: anicep,’ # only @ patch of sail on the describe hie departure, to Join thetr compantonship, and the years and the days go with such ted um that they break your heart, and the viper of pain and sorrow ave changed since you saw You wonder If they would recognise your You ‘You wonder if they look any older; and sometimer and perhaps sometimes Then they are sent supe all doubting and epecdily the excruciating torture of have the eyes of this that corporal punishment of that kind was n terrible Swordfish (to @ friend)—You ain't in it, old man, we're all weartng seabbands "I notice by the reports of divorce that husbands are not always! ing shavings, igaay of them, i aren EN WE°LL ALL BE INJUNS. Os MAN | Prof, Stare te dead right, and if we live long enough be one big Indianapoltse, with tee | Tammany Hall will look like thirty cents, The respects und joyful in It will be » sorrow thine for the Rainy Into othera. Heaven. ‘He fell that symbol of slumber to weet was It, fo contented The text taki and they are ali out of was It, so peaceful was ft, | "I have seen the sea driven with (he hurricane unt tangled foam ot in the rigging, and wave rising | above wave seemed as if about to atorin the heavens, and then I have seen the tempest drop, and the waver crouch, and everything become smooth and burnished as though a camping place for the glorica of heaven, 50 I have seen a man, whose life has been tonsed and driven, coming down ast to an infinite calm, In which there was the hush of heaven's !u.laby, "T have mot the faculty to tell (he weather, 1 can never tell by the setting sun whether there will be a drought or not. I cannot tell by the blowing of the wind whether It will be fair weather or foul on the morrow, But I can prophesy, and | will prophesy what weather {t will be when you, the Christian come to dle. “There may be no hand to close your eyes, and no candie to tft the night, but the odors of God's ha ing garden will rewale your soul, and at your bedside the flesh, and the ting peace, WITT TALMAGE.” Parents Shoutd Spare the Rod, i's, inate “Oh, my little ones, my prectous tender onen, 1 be» seech you, for your own sakes, to/do nothing to anger the man with whom I left you-aye, the father whom I had belleved loved you and would be kind to you. Gain knowledge, study, At yourse'f for future emergencies, and if the time comes when you can support your sister ag well as yourself, my boy, take her out into the world with you and guard her, and I will wateh over your failures and your trlumphe an only a loving, anxious mother can, from on high. "The years cannot linger, They must pass. Be patient, calm and obedient.” I sincerely hope that this of the father for whom it ts intended. much T ask of him Let me take the scourging you would deal out to these motherless ehildren for trifing offenses when 4 word of firm, kind admonition would anawer the purpose a thousand tl better tn thelr cane, Yor thetr dead mother's sake he Kind to them. That your behavior toward them may cause the angels up in Heaven to rejoice instead of weeping for them {ts the earnest prayer of LAURA JEAN LIBBEY, ritele may reach the eye If no, this Harriet Hubbard Ayer Has This to Say of Hair-Bleaching. | Dark hair in all canes must be bleached before It is dyed or stained the shade decided upon if that shade be lighter than the natural color, Tam glad way that used properly, by which paradoxical ement | mean often enough to at cure a lighter color, but not more frequently, perox- ide will prove harmiess, When poroxide |» used in connection with ammonia the combination works er Brough peroxide to give dark hatr a reddish tint, or even to produce a Tittin shade, will not usually destroy the integrity of the halr, but enough to locks @ ght canary color wil! seriously vitality of the hair if tt does not utterly destroy Mt Before applying the peroxide the tir should be thoroughly shampooed and carefully rinsed and dried. ‘To make the application pour a little of the peroxide into @ eaucer, ‘Then wee a clean toothbrush for the application, Moleten the brush with the peroxide and apply evenly all over the head to the roots only of the hair, It not possible to make the application satte- factorily o olf, AFTER THE WARSHIP WENT DOWN. LAW, RIDDLE SOLVED, Firet City Boy-Oh, wee the cows eat- breast on which to rest your dying head, and no | will halt the chariots of the King, No more rents to| pay, no more agony because flour has gone up, no more struggle with the world, devil; but peace—long, deep, « “T, DE > ) WOMANS RighTs Lent Daisios and other women's rights organizations, They ‘will get their rights, lefts and jabs when they have {finally reached the equaw stage, ‘Then we poor, hardy It pees spread over the land, plug hate de rigeur and! working men can calmly and restfully sprawl out om that lous, war dances the chief diversion of the tribe at News the turf and hit the pipe while our squaws look after ian shoots port, ine the chutes, and in a few daye he ie hardly lp> | KA yi! Ugh, heap big Injun! j the Inager and take up the red noan's burden, , The barber shops will have to close up. No man wilt Want to risk losing hie scalp to some swiftly degenere @ting tonsorial virtuoso, Nol on your wampum, Pre Day's CAMPBBIA,, sitting out on the front door steps on @ hot August evening, settiod herself comfortably back on the cushions that she had brought from her room and laally watehed the vhantom-like passeraby, A solitmry man came slowly up the street, He stopped at the foot of the steps and then sat dowa jnot far from Margaret, “Do you mind my smoking? he asked, barely turn Ing around, ‘ Mins Campbell started; the volee seemed curiously familmr, "Not at all," sho replied o little atifMiy, "it will keep away the monquitoss,” Then she felt jhorself blushing at the foolishness of the remark, for there were no mosquitoes to be kept away, Ten years ago, one happy, neversto-be-forgotten Summer, {sho had been often asked that question, and had much more appropriately, breken ast by the though cone conversation, ‘-anawered Margate, still more pumsied tp the volee, This was not one of Mrs, Lee's boarders, Bhe muct hear him speak again, Tt was not right thas & stranger should make her trembie so. ere you ever at Long Branch?” abruptly, The man turned toward her and she could feel that he tried to penetrate the darkness and see who \t Was that wae speaking, Murgaret was not the only one who had been agitated by a voice, Her heart boat almost audibly, “Margaret, is lt you?’ he crted, "Yes, John,” she answered, with strange self-pao- tession, "How came you here?’ “Toame up the wrong steps," John answered slowly, “Lam glad, since they have brought me to you," in © ave been bewtldering—this untooked for opp of the mun who had gone out of her Hfe ' if Ago. never to return, Yer Margaret took {t aa @ matter of course. “It you ore glad, why didn't you come before? & have wunted you #0." "YT didn't know where you were, "Then the other was a mista “All a mistake, dear, and | have come back to you,” He had risen, but now he mat down at hor side and reached out to take her hand, Margaret let him have che asked faltered John, tt diy, and they sat together and talked, as tney n talk, It was as though they had never been parted . ’ . . . . * There was a merry burat of Mughter, a confused sound of voles if a dozen people around her were talking at) at once. “Why, here's Mise Campbell," cried a lively girl, overflowing with good spirits, ‘Miss Campbell, who never sits on doormteps. Margwret stood up, dazed. The young people bad Appeared suddenty, ‘Yor, the heat drove me out, und Jam glad that it did, Mr, Young, for an old friend found mo quite by accident, Allow me to Ine troduce him, John''=— She lioked around but Joho was not there, "You were all alone, Migs Campbell,” volunteered Mr, Young, “Past asleep and dreaming, I declare,” Mio Campbell pulled herself together nobly, ‘so 1 ww e sald. "Good-night, everybody,” and she turned around and wont Into the hous “Poor Miss pdell,"’ whispered the girl, with keen intuition, "I think she was dreaming of her lover.” “Nonsense, Jennie; that's all your fancy, Miss Campbell is ." “Bho in pretty,” ust have had lovers. And she one now?” "Oh, yea," anawered Tom Young, “she is pretty and mee enough But, Jennie, don't 1 about other Did you mean what you said In the park? whispered Jennie, (aw 0 Labors the Bpanish sea; fo favored Bidorado opes Her magic mines for ma; Mut when upon my lady's breast Pnraptured I reeling, ‘Then all the werlth of all the West In poverty to mine, ‘t old~why shouldn't she have MY WEALTH. walleon fraught with golden hopes ‘The purest gold the Bast can hide, The rarest gems of Ind, Are drow and lustreless beside The troapures of her mind, When tn my lady's matchless eyes Her eweet, clear soul 1 see, Kings, tt hore bidding empirey rise, Are beggars unto me, Pall Ma}} Gazette, ——— ae Tip That Won’t Burn. ‘ with an incombuatibie tip has team the math portion of the whale now in usq, : natal

Other pages from this issue: