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PC ORY'S WORKING HOuAG PRom 11 ver am — SATUROAY THE TIMELY CARTOON. ANOTHER GLANCE AHEAD. PORE DEERE EEE DED ENE tt tht et ERA AMEE PER AE EIDE EE Ebb tet Re DEED I) ‘ ny + OMY TE }|the United States” John Bach McMaster has compiled with caution | The Canconiat’s Prophetic Vision of Himself in the Twentieth Century. PADED EDA EE END EADE EME PESAL ED HED EDEL ED ADI AAD LEDS WOMEN SHOULD WALK. [ desire to be well and strong considered They May Read Here How, 44 fF marketing and go shopping in the morn. ‘perms to be ing and attend three or four teas in the if afternoon, By the Ume night comes I ie clase, Women who have] am thoroughly worn out!" of the physical ills of this world) Th 8 nO Need to doubt her asser- afe accustomed to worrying jo thin drawn look about the ao beet they may, Finally tired| mouth and the tired eyes proclaim a febels, nervous prostration re-| body that ts never rested, and the victim ascribes her tll. always two ways of doing to any but the right cause, right and @ wrong way, \ ft one, of God'n beat gifte to) Think of the phyatoal endurance tt takes abi, and the Means to ite attainment! (o mpend & morning golng from store to me within the reach of every one,| store, one hand élutching « heavy loth Y food (It need not necensartly | kirt and the other filled with bundles, Gmpensive), plenty of sleep and rem: Add three teas to this, and the strain . ‘exercise are three potent factors. jon the sysiem ‘would require the great stumbling Glock with most/sirongth of @ powertul man, could one fo the regular exerciae. ‘The lat-| bo [duced to undertake It. fe Connected with tho idea of some-| Now, ag.to the right way of walking, ‘which is both expensive and hard] Choose, by preference, the early part On the contrary, the very] of the day, but not (oo acon after break- form of physioal exertion and| fart. Dress yourrelt in Hght but warm which t@ the most common is] clothing, and see het (here te nothing It may be indulged in by rich impede free elroulation, A wkirt of (poor alike, without « cent of pay math, ahoew with heavy eolea talk to me about walking,” Matt In welght-felt ts very ‘the busy housekeeper, “Why, I ain the costume. may foot all day long. LDNESS THAT GAN BE CURED, phold fever, This torm of baldness, like all baldnese due to conatitutional die eases, Usually rapidly disappears when health 9 restored. The form of batdnem due ervous train te @ rather common vartety, It la frequently seen tn overwrought, ner 0 frequently tn men, of recovery th this form ie good, but by no means #o certain as In baldness due to acute disease. Bald- nese le at times produced by overwork, long-continued mental strain, severe shock or other triala on the nervour ay tem, but the grateful theory that bald neas Is commonly produced by overwork, reat Intellectual activity and excess of bray mattog is not bullt upon wolid facts; It belonga rather to that large group of opinions of whieh the wish ts father to the thoupht. Of the local conditions that produce baidnews (he one that is of great pract! oal importance la dandruff, Next to heredity and perhaps before heredity dandruff 1s the great cause of bald Giaturbances are ail at times re-| Dandruff in Ite severalgogrees le di for tailing of the hails. A fa-Jease known technically as @eborrhoele example of baldness due to acule}ectema; It Is pretty ge ily accepted te the baldness that follows (y-}that the disease is due to a micro-organ- focal diseases of the scalp. tenilo ke wrinkles and gray hetr, | @n expresston of the normal ebenges in tho skin that are produced by tare years, Premature baldness a vavaliy hereditary, and is simply e- ST lle baldness ooourring (00 soon, ‘The ‘of the moalp tn this form of te Mention! with that in gen- Pane baldness. 7” and premature baldness ‘entirely beyond the range relief, Promature baldness 66 indication of sentio changes in ber timsuee than the akin. 14 does not jack of vigor, or furnisn any ga to the constitution or life of the individual OF complete baldness ts aewo- with disorder of the «ener of various kinds; acute fevers, Gisorders, many sorts of nutri to Do It; rd a 4 Also What to Wear for the bixevcine, possible, or if you live in the olty and (hat la not practicable, board @ car and start your walk from the outebi Anything @o a9 to get away from the brick pavements, the amoke and noise of & large city, Take long swinging strides and let your anne hang naturally and move with the body, In that way every muscle is exercised, Under no clroumsances fail to take @ cold sponge, followed by a brisk ruby bing and an entire change of the eloth ing which bas been next to the ein. All the good effect of the walk ta lowt by oltting down in garments whteh have been soaked by perspiration, and @ cold {o more than Hikely to be the result, ‘Tho above practice, syatematteally fol: lowed, cannot fail to produce a great change for the better in one's general condition. It has restored health to many Invalides who were only able to walk a distance of two blocks when the: by rt ‘The distance was Increa h day, until in one case ten miles wae gone over with ease Would it not be a good plan to sup: Iie Selon aed a an hour for ite ‘Shout? . ” Pusey, of the University of Illinois, Tells Which It Is of Four Kinds, lam, and ite tmportance as & cause of baldness ts widely recognised among ex- Derte, The baldness that resulte from dandruft to gimilar to that from pentie and after once complete ta be- yond repair, berhaps, be ween from the fore- foing that the prospect of recovery trom baldness depends upon the kind of bald. nese, The individual who rapidly lores his helr from acute disease or from dia order of the general health may feel fairly eure that under the care of his phy ‘an his hatr will return, ‘The man OF Woman whose locke are thinning may ill have hopes of retaining some of them, The head that has gotten ehiny and smooth from gradually developing baldness ts ehiny and emooth for good, and (he possessor of it may just as well make Up his mind to aevept it Philo sophically, Try to believe that tt Is an Intellectuality, and that the headed man te the forerunner of that advanced stage of civilisation wh will be bald. Thete is provably betty in elther of these propositions, but there! is no Feamen Why one should not get as! Hk A lal out of the situation “ STITCHED BLACK SILK| unalone lovers’ war; are we, ‘united, our decree, for ayndtcates, we must monopolies are just, hor anoh Will declare Jove ts fair, i hore plan to every men, hanged the ratio ‘falling af the anow. door and open grate, oT Da, We advocate; ‘doctrine? Yes, we moan, should not intervene. Vous without delay, QUERIES ano ANSWERS No Difference, A bets there ie maven minutes differ. once between New York and Brooklyn time, B bets there ts not. Olemont 0, Moore, Who was the author of the well-known child's poem, “The Night Before Chriat- maa? IR. Ne. Can @ eltizen not born in the United States be its Vice-President? av M Outetde, Which ts prover when a young man {s walking with two women, should he walk on the guieide or in the contra? MB 1 B te Right. A soye that the Governor cannot re- move the Mayor from offices, B says that he can, Who fs right? MORTIMER ISAA08, 20th Century Begine Jam. 1, 1801, In thin the twentieth or the nineteenth oentury? PRANK ANDERSON. ‘Thirty-cight, How old t9 Chauncey Oloott, the actor? i 21-2 Miles of Glande, " WORLD: MONDAY EVENING; DECEMBER 31, 1900, Hé NEEDS Published by the Frese Publishing Company, @ to @ PARK Row, Now York. Ratered at the Post-Office at New York as Gooond-Cinas Mall Matter. = AEE ee YOU DO NOT -REALIZE HOW WE HAVE PROGRESSED. We are thinking and talking a great deal about the significance | of the ourrent revelations of inhumanity and brutality, And they are significant. They help us to measure the depth of our veneer of civilizw tion, They help us to note at what distance below the surface lie the internal fires of bar- barism, and how hot and how extensive those fires are, They remind us how much there is to be done before even the most highly civilized country can justly claim title to real civiliza- tion. But there is one more significant phase of these revelations of the brute in man, these demonstrations of the unfitness of any man, whether educated West Poiuter or ignorant Bellovue or Randall's Island nurse, to have arbitrary power over his fellow-man. Bar barism is significant, But universal, deep, sincere horror of bar-|' barism is more significant far, In the first chapter of his remarkable “History of the People of} and care the facts that enable us to compare the beginning of the | 4 nineteenth century with its end in this vital | § matter of humanity, Humanity is the test of civilization, For humanity means the sense of human brother- hood, Let us seo what the people of the Repub- lie thought was humane and decent troatment for their fellow-citizens at the birth of this dying century. Listen to this: One hundred years ago the laborer who fell from a scaffold or lay wlek of a fover was sure to be seized by the Bieri the moment he recovered and carried to Jali for the bill of @ few dollars that had been run up during his {liness, Every poor man spent part of his life in jail, And not only was imprisonment for debt everywhere common, but also scores of offenses which we now regard as of no consequence, or punish with light fines, were then punished with ferocious savagery, Read this paragraph: Into such pite and dungeons all classes of offenderm were indiscriminately thrust. Men confined as witnesses were compelled to mingle with the criminal ‘ besmeared with the filth of the pillory, streaming with the blood of the whipping-poat, while here and there among the throng were culprits whose ears had juat been cropped, or whose arma, fresh from the branding-(ron, emitted the atench of scorched flesh, A COMPARINON OF OURSELVES WITH OUR GREAT GRAND- PARENTS AS TO HUMANITY. And hore we have a picture of the sights and sounds familiar to and approved by our great-grandparents: ‘The treadmill was alwaye going. The pillory and the stocks wert never ernpty. The shears, the branding-iron and the lash were never idle for a day, In Delaware twenty crimes were punished with loss of life, In Massachusetts ten crimes were declared by the General Court to be punishable with death, In Rhode Island @ perpetual mark of shame was for many offenses judged to be a most fitting punishment. Keepers knew no other mode of alloncing the ravings of » mad- man than tying him mp by the thumbs and flogging him till he was too exhausted to utter a groan. Add to this picture human slavery, with the power to punish lodged in private hands and exercised with the utmost license of caprice, What a picture of inhumanity! What a hideous con- tempt for the dignity of a human being! And now let us look inside these prisons, still with McMaster as our guide: A CYCLONE CELLAR. By T. E. POWERS. <4 Dodging Dick Finds it Time to go Below. “Can you ¢ell me where your father Is, young man?" “He |e down th il You can tell him: with the pias. he one with the In Connectiout there was an underground prison'tn an old worked-out copper | hat on!"'—Pollchinel mine in the hille near Granby, The only entrance to t was by means of a ladder down @ shaft to the caverns underground, There, in Pete tree tne ed, A PIOTURS OF little pens of wood, from thirty to one hundred culprite | A PRISON ‘THR YRAR 1800, the roof and oosed from the sides of the caverns; masses of earth were per- petually falling off McMaster says thelr necks chained to beams In the roof, The dark- in the darkness was “perhaps” the worst in the country, But he / Oyater goes on to give facts to prove that “in every county there were jails|| such as would now be thought unfit for the vilest and most loath- some of beasts,” ‘ eI HIS CONCEPTION OF THEM. Cholly-Ole Chapple, why don't you have ‘ of these rubber i it were Immured, their feet made fast to iron bare and ht et Cyseer bras EOYs Fweddy—Baw Jove, it would be too hese was Intense; vermin abounded, water trickled from | 4oosid much trouble to keep them in- fated, deah boy. that this foul den where human beings rotted THREE “G00D RECIPES, One pint of colery, one quart of oyaters, ones third of a cupful of may onnaise dressing, three tablespuonfuls of vine~ ar, one of oll, half & weaspoonfil of nalt, one-dighth of a teanpoonfus of pepper, And what of the lives of the thronging inmates, the most of| one tablespoontul of lemon juice. iat e them not offenders at all? Nquor, the vgaters come to a boll in their own Akin well and drain, Beason No attendance was provided for the sick, No clothes were distributed to the| them with the oll, salt, popper, vinegar naked, @uch a thing as a bed was rarely seen. Many of the inmates passed years without washing themecives. Their hair grew long. Their clothing rotted) 14 from them and exposed bodies tormented with all manner of skin diseases. and Jemon juice, When cold, put in the jee-cheat for at least two hours. @crape sh the whitest and tonderest part of the celery, and with a sharp knife Just as the condition of our prisons and asylums to-day and the oat elteas ae strong publés sentiment against inhumanity there aro sure tests of humane and ever more humane conditions among the masses of the people, so the toleration, the approval of these horrors of a hundred years ago by even the most enlightened people are proofs positive of a low state of humanity and therefore of civilisstion. Emerge now from these awful scenes ofa hundred years ago into the fresh air and sparkling sunshine of today. And as you look about you, you get a new view of the meaning of that mighty word PROGRESS, Much remains to be done, and done Dry and Wiry Hair, Dear Mre, Ayal Pleane advise me what to do for gray hair that t@ very dry and wiry, Am troubled with dandruff, It comes right on again after shampooing, Ie there any help for wrinkles around the eyes? What i@ the formula for Uquid vor Ji. P. Ww, J BRHAPS you are ing the wrong shampoo, quickly—so much that there is litte time to look backward. But | thon glance backward now and then is inspiring, How wo are going forward with our seven-league boots of Modern Progress! AN UNBXPROTED RESULT. “Mot mych, He had to pay the funeral “You know how superstitious Biox- ean, tat" “Ten He plebed wo 0 tn to the street dhe other day wih the polat cummed Atreatly coward htm." = HER PREROGATIVE, fhe was a woman and denied The right to murmur what thought; But she could sit there dreamy-eyed And utter sighs that told a lot. en MI6 ANNUAL SOUR, “My wife asserts that she life at least once every year,” “How's that?” “Bhe won't let me go hunting,” the ves my OO-+ PEOEEDE44' 1900000 O00O000O4S yy HOW HB 1O0KeED. “How O14 I look after the football game?’ “You looked as if you hed been chasing a calf in @ blackberry patch,” ——— CONTAGION OF MOOD, When you're feeling bive, please hide tte @queloh ti, If you can; ‘Tis & germ which—woe betide it! Skips from man to man, Aunt Sophy~Why, Thomas, you selfish child; you've ceden all that cherry pla when I told you to save some for your brother. Thomas—I did 4 = &§ & Oysters, loe-cheat until serving time, When ready to serve drain the celery and mix with the oystera and half of the dréssing Arrange in a palad bowl, pour the re mainder of the dressing over it and wernish with watercress, Shredded Baas. minuies and drop thom In cold water for five minutes; then remove the shell and out them into thin slices; put in frying-pan three level tablespoonfuls of butter and when hot add one medium-sised onion, thinly sliced; let cook slowly for five minutes blewpoonfuls of flour and stir; then Appetizing Ways to Prepare Roll four eggs twenty | R Answers to Seekers of Beauty. a a $ # ~~ Plain Words in Aid of Plain Women, IT paved him the cherry stones to make a bean-bag, — a fF tt Eggs and Clams for the Table, two cuptuls of milk and stir until boll ing; 14d one level teaspoonful of walt, a little pepper and the sliced eggs; serve on a platter and eprinkle chopped Pare. ley over the top, “ { Drain & clams in a | colander; cut off the | tough part and chop the lender part very fine, Beat one em, add to it one-half cup of milk, Boll one-half cup of clam liquor; remove the scum as it Ete ry eon Clan Pritters, t th ; them Nieanse quarters” Or & all Abe diluted bichiorius of mefeury ang alcohol, Bottle, aud #hane olvays before weing. Apply the liquid with A mally woft velvet sponge, Lotion for Shiny Nose, Dear Mre Ayer: What can I use for @ shiny and nese? w. RY this lotion for oily nose; Wash for Olly Nose—Sulphata of . potamtum, 1 gram; tincture of , Derwoln, 1 gram; rose water, # grame, Rathe the nose several times @ day with thie mixture, Wes pen)