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6 Bxeoutive, Boots and Saddles return’ “Deo President say he cannot see y Juan Hill, and dey don't wish to be d THE DAY'S ~~ @ “ At the Cl s after a hasty tollet, no brenk- feat, a short car ride and a breath Tees walk, Lowis Van Kirk prosent of bimsait at the home of Mine Arabella {t wns only to find that she had fone to churoh without him, W fool he had beon to promise to pany her in the morning! Ite late Bun day nap had become second nature Arabella wan exacting, There would be Penance of some Vind to do, Would meet her at the church ste) walk home with her, Moan: ‘Would conmole himeelf with breakfast At 18 o'clvok Lewts was ot hie post A @irvam of worshippers poured through the open doors, When Arabella apprared, tall and beautiful, ahe eclipsed all others Av Tenet so thought Lewis as he pressed forward to miot ler, Bhe was not alone A good-looking stranger who carried her prayer-boo'\ was ltvtening eagerly to what she was paying Mngrossed in her subject the girl dit Not bee Lawls, although he wae ne enough to her to hear her whisper ea neatly, “You know | love you, Paul” Paul smiled complacently, — Lewis shrank back aod jowt (hem In the crowd He, Arabelia's lover and aManced hus band, had heard hor declare her affeo ton for another man At firet he was etunned: then he doubted the evidence of hie care Mut nO; It Was Unmintakake, Brooding over Ht made It wore, Me tuned and walked Im the opposite direction from Arabella’s and an Well, he} FOR A FALL WEDDING IF TEDDY ROOSEVELT WERE PRESIDENT. ee Beene, 10,30 Monday—-Mark Hanna in the corridor walting to see the 8: ‘ou to-day, because he and his Secretary of Bata, Alcohol The, of do Rough Riders, am rehearsing de battle of San isturbed. He ay you may come round ome day next month and send your questions in on paper.” | LOVE STORY, | amen nurch Door “ fe) home. " (i) not think of asking for an explanal te iuawed his ertof and avoidet the author of tt for a whole week. Arabelia Train was a sensible gir! Ae the days wer and Laws iat ome to see her nor write to her she was worried, At fret she though! (hat he waa tll, but on Saturday morning |whe saw him go by her window without even glancing up. She put her pride in et pocket and sent him a note sume | moning him to her #ide He came, injured and moody Hut) Arabella played the injured lover better, than he, for she spoke where he was allent Why didn't you come to take me to shurch last Sunday?’ whe dermmndod. And where have you been all (he week 1) jooke aa if you didn't lev any more. Lowa wrath burt forth. “Are you (he one to ecouset’ he orted yon, whom | myself heard tal) another | uniday aatontahy Arabella jooked at him tn ment, Had he lowt his senaes? ‘When?’ she gamed, “What do you meant" ‘That blond fellow—Paul Last Gun “on the ohureh etepa.’” nk look disappeared from Ara co, She jaughed morrily goose! ‘That wae my ooueln, Sewerton, from Kentucky He te 1 was giving him advice fo Fie wouldn't take it Pau married. his own good any | ‘The long, trained ekirt (a made of blue me) While etriped satin, with fan-shaped plaiting of plain blue @atin jet in at (he of embomed blue velvet tt Ke do. Over this ts a long princess overtress Atied teht tn he baok, open In front and caumht to ether at the bust with a jewelled clap over a full front of yellow mouaseling de plaatron w deep frill of thin sleeves, which are ene over a gathered Hine de lace A elbow of the embowsed vel in turn oj t whi ith a standing collar of wht 0 loved Kim—no lonmer BHO) whieh hang withered on |e |roay wreathe of affect Rito thorn, Piand wise plan ia THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER nN HOW TO TALK WELL The Beauty of Taot. JEARMS of a good talker are oft underrated ty those who wish to Attract, and therefore they spend ltoo much time before the mirror ant too ite wihh thetr books r talk well it im absolutely necessary that ono should have something to tale about and this can only be obtained by cult | vating a mind Acourtorn yourself to tall of what you |voe and what you read Don't think It too much troubie to talk to members of Jyour own family olrole, for many @ one) ‘har become tactturn and unpisasing from Uinking worth while Ww be entertaining to the home part Cultivate the habit of sory telling; you canny’ nok auditors as jong a& there are children among your acquaint ance, and trying to tell a story in the way (hat will [nterest them | be ex ralulne conversing there are certain rules which should be arefully ob served. Sponk del!bernte nd distinet ly and pot fly, mpid and notey apeeel wearying Pind ont whether the perm J are entertaining preters to taille or to listen, and govern yours { acoonding y As far ne possible avoll all mention of unpleasant topos, and tr find mvt whal te interesting to your compan Home aympath toll ‘ ) ave a mentu paying the right thing, | and it pertainly a fa wn Never talk of yourself and your pri vate affairs, exoept to Intimate frente ‘ ¥) form and generd aren people Avold, algo, all unkind and o@n Pn emarks ab here, even though they may ve and never, f you can help tt perronal te mark len’ ey are something Im the nature of a. delicat npliment. If} others a hew im Uning, try to cover thely error It waa thie sort of bindness much as her Want intellect, whieh mate Mine ae 1t in re de seating himself between 4 the lovely Mme ft | 4: Tam now seated) amie hatwoer tuteliect and beauty!" He molten that even pretty women do not ike to be thought lacking \ power Nut Mme, de Staci, wt ay wit joe oAMe to the reacy saytog: OT firat time I have or bee uliful —— . ALA PLA PLA LAURA JEAN LIBBEY, Disenchanted Lovers, (Coprrtaht, 1900, by the Prem Puldiehing Company New York World RB. BAYS "TT heave met @ i man whom 1 love fearty. Ia © seemed to @ me at frat, but how appears Ar What oan 1 do to remain his} My dear, |! passes my comprehension io fully understand why a young #irt should strive to rekindle a love which this died out (na man'e heart, Aa to |waktng (the flame into new Mfe one might aa well expect last year's roars, afrewh bloom One great author this very subject 1 “Women hope that dead love may i vive, Int men know that af all dead thingn none are so past f neon [dead panwton Ahere is no AHN) another author tella ua T can imagine none but the mort oferate natisfaection in oontinuing to lle that whieh has po ember we love within it Let the atmosphere of love change Into Mo great coldness and the |rassion hecomen a wreck ‘Those quatt jos of the heart which begot love are thenceforth loxhausted, and will nef + | germinate through all of your lifetime” senalbie The Tatane * a very proverh which tells i “love and not be boved ty time Lore no time over @ lover to whom (he mo have turned aalling ehatns, and weary lirkeome Indeed \o bear, | Halt of the heartaches of (he world je endeavoring bo upon a man who These are plain worda, ones id to yOu your best 6 live and earn to are eased ‘ farce thelr after ol want It dee bor the Ir a lover erows are trie . forget T ices not leve you DAUR You might as well attempt to chain ho win as the heart of a inan who A JEAN LIDDRY ate A High-Priced Hist Queen Victoria @ smaninertyt Ad which gives a viiie and the neighborhood —— inbelotolntoistototototolototolotaeintotetute APPLE SAUCE SOR justeright apple sauce [’ peel, core and quarter the frult, pour over it the water (hot water should be course), and add very litte ry 1 for 1% hree hundred years vt Windsor ne par wer history of he llr, Beas 0 with nulines and cinnamon and on to lawie, Finally (he fruit thrwugh @ colander, pane DEPN \ately, thinking paw good Deal tad us the other Mite, after he god one Laie over LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE, "cath sone or we, —--—— ¢e How Many Kiesest . Pe Ge Heitor of The Hrening World Tam keeping company with — Mineteon. 1 three times 2 Ne Phe lets me Kies her only twice cack , rade her) hiv to let me kiss her no oftengr| than moe ‘evening, and says her mother that. We often quarrel over th of these kisses and have at | fo leave the question to youl be allowed to kiss each evening fe the limit? GRORGH LONOY, Pompton, N. J An Optimiat, tf The Rrening World ‘Nhe Bvening World Honce I ask, how often ahould| T S% Miter o The Revntng 1,090,000 copies. Now 1 books scarcely the most wloked ye-twen ft) teth of that number of How, then, oan it be sald that people prefer bad # to mood? We wiiould look on a hummantty is better | © suppone e| ALY, Which Are the More Tr World 4 w York magiwirate some months ng untruthful His remark caused much comment at the time, The following mibjoot artecs to my mind: "Are men more truthful than women; and if ao, way?’ Now, ir jeclared women were relig-| thie is a gubject that will bear disous- ut Be Se Oe" |e, 08d vou enjoy hearing every- opinion on tt, Will readers dis- ‘ye |Decos 1 notuat lately she gotw kind of jsoared of paw wien he's Keon Thinken much. After sho waited awhile for him to teil We about It phe ast "What made you Jo it, paw?’ says, “Here's some young (ello Down st New York with ninety-three million Joltars, That wante to 1a Dimnelens lide, and get his name mentioned by the papers in nearly as big print as they write up the girl that got cut to phecon and Threw tn @ milipond, where they Found her corset and pocket Book wth & lucky sone in it. Poor bey, it almamt Makes my heart bieed for him, 0 Into the pantry when he comes home, all Hungry, tn the afternoon, and eut a wedge out of & nepple ple and then JACOB RB, PERRY, jotand there gutting & Little enjoyment A ba jhad ever broken the black darkness of your mind, if no [ using their fine thoughts to flustrate her ordinary con- . arnavement, | io not the case of Helen Keller worthy of your attention, |@ AW TELLS GEORGIE WHAT teeleebebteotobeeeloottotleotabeteoteebbee tt | a | "AML this talk about righ ayen,’ he | “What can a rich man do? Can ime] the newt block. TO RESCUE THE POOR Reclaim Land for Homes, To the Billtor of The Mrentag World ‘Two things the General Government of the United States oan do and should Miret, interest tteelf In providing good | ronda Second, reclaim the arid lands of the Wort by trrigation. These two probleme are too vast for private companies or individuals to un-| TO YOUNG MEN AND YOUNG WOMEN WHO CLAMOR FOR “A CHANCE." is sri wive che word of command and there There aren billion and @ half of us embarked for the | things will be done. voy. , 8 ‘That ta to way, if we all take hold we voyage among the stars on the good ehip Mother Earth f eats CVE (tk ARIS OSE, PR, hs all these myriads how many are so interesting as Helen simply means increased value to every Keller, twenty years old, and just entered o# a freshman farm, And wo can cause @ tract of at Hadeliffe College? Published by the Press Pubtishing Company, 88 to PARK ROW, New York. Bntered at the Post-Oftice at New York as Second-Clans Mall Matte ne aac land now waste, to blossom like a gar- den, amd bring about euch a condition oe to eternal silence and| tas hie garien will give homes and) Nature doomed Helen Keller be MAN & BACETER o& aD | eternal darkness The two senses upon which the] a people, Good roads make the country as a Place of residence desireble, Bhow the ocooped-up slaves who live and die I!ke files in olty tenements that the country te beautiful and that there are homes In Amertoa for all who will work and very much of the poverty, view and Infamy thet exiet in all elties can be abollahed, Would you rather provide mood ronda And homes for homelew: people than to fend soldiers eorom wide oeeans to carry out, at beet, a very dublous ex poriment ? In other words, to whom do we owe the fret duly qs Obrietian men aud women—to the brother across the street And around the oorner, or to brown men 6,00) milea away whoge wants we very (perfectly understand? ELBPRT WUBBARD, BAltor of the FOtItetine, i lchatndie elated tatiana BEAUTIES WE DON’T SEE, Ce ot oe i 0 -ortmee | A Mint to New Yorkers, ‘Te the Balior of The Bening World When one stops to think how many Objects of Interest there are in New York City he ts eurprined at the num: ber of them he has not seen, Although vinitora take advantage of doing all these places, they are almost unknown ta the average New Yorker Ask @ New Yorker where the art male leries are, and he'll confe know. Aak him where the mind {se wholly dependent are sight and hearing, If you could not see, if you never had seen, if you could not hear, if you never had heart, |f no pay of light A DOM ns A sound had ever wakened an echo there, think what it would have meant, Helen Keller sfte in a black silence, has sat in that blaok silence for twenty years, When ehe wns seven years old they began to try to com- munioate with her, You can imagine what a task ft was, Yet finally, with infinite patience and infinite ingenuity, They used the only avenue that wee or is or ever will be open-the sense of touch, The m g% penetrated those impene- trable walls, It entered the dark and al- lent chamber where the little girl sat in Infinite loneliness, And hinck came an an+ awer-n formless, groping, soundiess cry of joy and appe: Never on this earth was there such a relief expedition as that, For thirteen years the imprisoned girl, atimulated by her frends beyond those prison walls, has been studying, learning, growing. To-day she walks freely about, reads, talks, writes on the typewriter, And marvel of marvels, although she is only twenty, although mt seven she had less mind, less knowledge than a baby three days old, ahe they succeeded THE Mo#T WONDBHFUL OF Tr EXPEDITIONS, ne doem't Water Color is talsing the same courses of study as the young men of her | S>"!*ty ! and he'll most iikely contoms he never heard of {t Such was my ex. own age who, after an elaborate datly and hourly training carried on with the aid of all their senses, are entered as freshmen at Harvard! Does not this make you ashamed for the little you have fecomplished, whoever you are? Think of the handicap which nature put upon this girl, Think of what it would mean ff you were even now deprived of thome two ubiquitous and tireless and intelligent agents, sight and hearing, that bring you practically all the materials with which you work, Then think of how little use you have made of your advantages, Helen Keller Is nota alokly, feeble, overworked student. She ie ne strong in body as she tein mind, The point is that while other boys and girls have spent at least nine-tenths of thelr time in folly disguised as necessary relaxation, Helen Keller has worked as a human being should work, developing herself instead of frittering herself nwny, apply- Ing herself steadily in the really rational) way to making herself wiser, stronger, better, happier, It is the old story of the hare and the For in comparison with this girl, the} dullest child that ever lived was well equipped, And now listen to these words from an essay by this girl, written as part of her preparation to enter Radcliffe. The title of the easy is “A Noble Man: What do T mean by ® noble man? I certainly do not mean a man of | high rank, power or woalth, aa the Romans did, but, to my mind, a noble perlence We read every day of additions of works of art being made to our mu smume, to me which, perhaps, if we were tich enough and it waa the fash. fon, we would take a trip to Italy or some other country But attok them under our very noses and tell us genius made them—and we love them, yea, but we wak for some one to drag us to them and talk to ue for half a day about them before we realize whore the beauty in them really Nea. DENTON MURPHY, ee i SOME WISE DON'Ts, } ts: "how!." “roar’’ or “explode.” MOK IT NOT “ To laugh heartily to better, Don't pose, Affeotation is @ bar to reapeot, let alone confidence, Don't wee superlatives, Few things re- quire them, and they weaken descrip. ten. Don't Hoag, The flifterate and the solf-conactous are thus made manifest, Don't confound hauteur with dignity, or response with atuptdity, Don't groan over the wickedness of the world, but mend your own, Don't preaoh unlews you have prao- tied, Deeds are tremendously convino- ing. Don't think @ foreigner can compre- hend you any better ff you shout into| his ear, Don't forget that politeness ia the for ter-sister of diplomacy, and an essential tortoise far outdone another's man de he who strives to attain that which {9 beautiful and impenishatle—| Valuation, Crition are not censors abav- Jove, Lave Is the foundation upon which all nobility must rest. Ifa man|* Thea ” has love in hiv hoart (¢ will find (ts expression fn many beautiful qualities, poo Ppl alli ll Genes guch as patience, courage and charity, A noble man ts patriotic, honest and firm; he labors, not for promotion, tut for the sake of the good which his work will bring to those arownd him, He ds @ true friend whom all can | Least | Thie te the ideal which that beautiful mind has painted! upon the binek walls of that dungeon | Greek and Latin, French and German, literature, algebra and goometry—Helen| Keller hae studied them all and studied them thoroughly, Not only has she a vast and mi- ‘That lov nute knowledge, but also she knows how to use it, how tol} The wor She has read history, She has read the great poets! ® sweet sieve eed happy day land dramatists and novelists, She quotes trom them all,|® ee A Bad Closing A oyeliat In Cheshire, Kigiand, found a» church the other day wirich had above the door the inseription) "This in the ate of heaven, and just below, This door wit} ba closed during the ‘Wintor | months,’* i DHDOOOOAG ANG BDO OOOOH VG H BLESSED TWO. A RAKE |) Peeeoun PROM |]A RAS PLOWEN has HEN two souls walk together ® eh other's ways, ® an 4 reason j Amd the road to never lonely, And joy |e never done, Sho loves liberty and justice. {deals of her country, she hates despot- fem and injustice, The idea of wap, of human beings going forth to murder one another, fille her with horror and | versnation She adores the WIDE AND DER KNOWLEDOD WELL USeD, jyoung chance | man and young woman, who clamor for “a RICH a MEN CAN'T DO, in life by scooping up the entry juice you're fioh you can't out of the pan and Hoken 6 offan hie| Goan te side your horves, Bocos he's sg Aa ng ag get gel fingers? No! You eee they have a but: | tide up with the Prints of Wales, That's the mines or the rattroads or factories ler that ust to Dutthe for the Bnglieh| allmest enuf to make a buddy With! wees iy income ia 1 a minute? nobility, and pretty soon he @eta to| eighty milyuns tose faith in the here schdievcd th § ened dreaming wt nite that he made Bome| after, I don't wender at them tor say- | Thee Would be thelr ead eyes Staring jturtable Brake like ipping up hie plate | ing Wemt ean a rich man dor Hasidic a ber wearin tet acts to ge the lat spoontul of gravy or “Ot course, efter be got sixty OF! by the gentle breese ho would think it Uning bad grammar Before the butler, | ninety millyuns he mite qu getting the sob of some Starved H #0 his hole life ¢ @ horrabull nitemare|enny more, if he wanted to try Sum- habe ding dha b tind ane with a butler behind every door, thing nobutdy elee ever thot of betore, Pn Pepe RE? Fams “PRO 0e| “The rich man can't get up tn the | but There's where the trouble Comes in = | morning 1 bid the fre tn the furnace |again, ‘There's where he hast to obey) “But tf he would sive wp the works, And take out the amhes, etther, bacos | the Diok ‘Taste of May sae, Women 5 Seareverny Ouie be the patlus is het by Steam, and they |God gave him Willing: te come along one Pus Wem oF hire wumbuddy (o sty all mite and|no whether Opts We scree ommars: at he perme bind, Watch & @o there's he gate thin leven | the mon wouldn't need to get out of rolbed ¢f esoreion end. gritty toon tha | bake @@ not 0 or dispepey begins to Break out all over) man hte munny. Paw looked at maw kind of sollum berm, and life 4 Dull gray waste Pull|of them told us tor adout a second, Then he sed; of menla that make bim sigh at the! ‘Hera, take theme,’ "Thore'’s jum the trouble. Mobby stammick if he even smells them from | bales of Checks, when God gave bim bie munny He and do wheeever banded him a Kat of other people he “But one of the worst ‘Things about | them.’ mustn't let get rloh, too, bein’ ctoh is yet to come, I dou't sep) “Wo ther, you blame a rich man Betore you fad they can bare & sometimes Hon-| end cant get ail the Pate.” 1 dca, Wo efi Dan Cink lot the paletnoed wifes 8. M, Mieer, in Chivage WHERE THE BANDIT FELL DOWN, pend wahootln’ yo all up. Lonesome Larrg—Hand out yer valuables, folks T ain't got no time to Vorter—'Xeuse me aah, but gent: sumpin' to de porter, sah, ‘The chtll October days have come, The Summer's journeyed hence We Mant ¢ jaa at 6 o'clook And cuss at the expense, We stroll no more upon the beach, Nor hoar the billows roar; ‘Te time to clean the furnace And remove the wire-acreen door, ‘We feel ite toy shook) For al) we have's « linen auit-- Our ulster te in hook, 8 never leave de car without givin’ He—Mave you done as I ested, Elles, and saved some money thie month! Bhe-Oh, yes; | spoke to the grocer amd asked him not to eend in hte bill ull noxt month.—I"legende Mactter, ere oe ANGRLIO, Mobhe-When he was « little boy he was obwayr elnging “1 Want to Re an Anuel,"’ Blobhe— And he died young, 1 suppose, Blobbe-—-No, but he had bis with grati- Nod He's backing Darnstormer'e Colompal Aggremation of International Btarn, SOCIOLOGICAL DISCUSBION, Wunn-But, tf you insist that the man who works for the public good without hope of gaining graticude te « crank, what do you call the man that expecta wratitude? Tuther—ITim? Oh, hes fuet a plain foo), oe ee ony MAN WITH THE LOAB, T know a worthy Quaker, He wa friend, indeed, Lékewlne he ta a baker, And thu a friend in knead, nro ee ce i ad OUTCLASSED, Father (trying to impress the leason)= And now, do you know, my gon, why & have whipped you? Bon-—Yeo; because you're bigger them Tam! Answers Questions ————-+000: Tor Warts. Dear Mire Ayers Could you give me some remedy for ‘warts upon the handa? Mrs, T. B OU ean have the wart removed by clevtriatty or by acid, nitrate or ace- the anid. The wart should be taolated, fo that the acid will not burn the akin near ft, Collodton will anawer for this purpose. Touch the wart lightly with the mold once @ day ae jong as required, It ls always safer to have this done by An expert Rensotn for the Siin, Dear Mra. Ayer ' Wil) a mixture of benaoin and rose water, applied to the face night and morning, prove beneficial to the skin? BRATRHICE, NE ounce of bengoln to about five or pix of rose water makes an ox- cellent astringent wash, If it ‘ourne or irritates add more rose water, Deer Mra, Ayer: ie best for superfiuous hatr on ANXIOUR, OTVENG but electricity will abso-Juse hydrosone and glyoomone. The “¥"! Nedwanmpa eae + _Lanmannnmemmensaaeeenmnn onan fl HARRIET HUBBARD AYER of Beauty Seekers, An Itching Soalg, Dear re Ayers Kindly give a recipe tor falling hele And ttehing soalp. Mre. H. T= thin formula for the itching. fealp, whieh should be cured before you atiempt to do anything with the hale: Cocoa butter, twenty erameg spermacettt, (en grams; salicyito acid, two grams, Mix, and apply to the af> fected part at night, Remove with warm water and « bland soap In the morning, Cure for Ingrowing Natle. Dear stra Ayer! 1 am troubled with Ingrowing naile onused by my wearing Ught shoes, I will be very much obliged if you will Kindly publish some remedy for this, PLORENCE M'CORMACK, EAR loomr shoes. They shoul be any acrose the toes, Cut the toenall with a “V"' jn the contre, Tho widest part of the “'V" should be on the olge of the nail, If they teater'® lnmmediate}y cause the nails