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FOW TO KE x OVE as we encounter ft in actual life ie either love of sex, love of type or Seve of individual. Love of type “eeeme to predominate. Men and women Yove either brunette or blond opposites, either fools, flirts, serious and wise men fF such thet stand midway between good ‘eense end stupidity. . Leve matches, however, were and are so rare that the romancers of old and the newspapers of to-day comment on ~@uoh thet do ocour. And human beings can't feed a woman and children, can't even feed themselves; others havo enough for bread, but not enough for the dumuries that are necessitica nown days @o tt came to pase that fathers, If . @estred to marry off their girl: @ without the customary pr ¥ finality, hed to pay a bonus to get 31 ef them. te euttid each other to obtain candidates for.matrimony. On the continent a Iaw- ‘Cf repatation coats $25,000, a physi- e @lam AON, a romance writer or a poet eth renown $16,000, a journalist 39,000, EP THE FEET WARM. O62 FLELODOLL DLO DDIDY OSE EOD Lave some distance from the scene of your work on a trolley line that breaks down about six morn- fags in the week, but is alwuys in perfect running order on Sundays and holidays when you don't @ PLREL BAGDAD OE a 3 LOVE IS ESSENTIAL. THE .WORLD: TUKSDAY KVENING, JANUARY 8, 1901. By T. E. POWERS. =<} need It. OD Ont G08 ond buon By Dr. Magnus Herschield, the ss wt = st -— Famous European Physician. mere reporter $2.00 and an ordinary |vally in several American States—the merchant from $00 to $1,000, new German code doesn't recognize It. All of which indicates that the instt-| What will be the consequence tn Ger- tute of matrimony ta held to be worth |MA&ny, what ts the consequence In the more to woman than to man. And thin| State of New York, for i in no mere supposition either, At the| Men ant women have to become «moral same time numerous loveless marrkiges | {on before they can hope to extri- turn out happy, provided economic can. |CAt? themselves fron an Intolerable ditions favor auch a atate of things, In| @M tnworthy position, And chink of the course of time man and wife the ag punders he Kot | ured to each other, rub off thelr edges | Meh discontentedness wir parents’ and become comrades. echt Unier there clrevmstances man caleu- Yot in the majority pf cases aly Mnieah ete Chua resanlneeedts baie) Sree than a continuance of | it never be aa happy as ifm marital relations productive 0! iiteihesihanda chache canines ‘ontempt., open or rt bly 14 when tadisso! “acenes" and maltreatmont, vhynieal or wine mental. More's the pity, that in nine out of ten countries one ‘ divorce only at the cost of crime. | There waa onco a legislator who had marrtes. | bachelors, Demoerit Grew Irregularly. Dear Mrs. Ayer: I am a woman twenty-two years old, and when growing grew a little to one alge. My right hip ts a good deal larger than the left. Please advise me. GIRL, THINK you should conault a physi- cian in this matter. It ‘a impo for me to advise you properly. Bathing for Nenuty. Dear Mre. Aver: the neck, bust and arms in cold water, 4 make them plump and white. DORIS, K the halr from : the best depilatory will be o temporary fn tts effect. Sometiines @ pumicestone wil! rub the hi the dimculty of this 1: frequently irritates the sk: arm js not much to t with a slight down. Ido not give formulas for deptlatorie: because they are never Hh censf made by an amateur. There are a number of Gepilatories or ha'r remoy market, and {t {s cheaper and much 1 eatisfactory to get one of thes ——<—<——_* sir Mf, but tit and a red preferred to one roprietary fascinating. Tt pleases her to I’ pleases her to be told that she is be called well Tt eases her to be called sensible. Te pleases he: and pretend the: sb It pleases her to bi {Proves man by her companionship. Ss vuling him, Feasonably, peiway, to lead her and take care of ner, | HARRIET HUBBARD AYE Able T would like to ask you how to remove ¢he fine hair off my arms, and if bathing with a teaspoonful of benzoin in It, will DEPILATORY alone will remove he arms, and even ty, son the WHAT A WOMAN LIKES depend on some man told that ehe tm- - her to be treated courteous- G4 Wand with respect, aud to be talked to , ‘It /pleasen her to be loved and admired by @ man who fs strong enough to rule yeand subdue her, and make tia way her It pléages her to find happiness tn Obelng ruled by an intellect that she can experienced nll the pangs and disap- . 1 iT je potntmonts of unhappy married ite on | {f "woman. a4 he | Sere wantia his own body—Frederick the Great. He was of opinion that the law n fol- low nnture—that the law mip ve attempt to throttle nature, And he yen the adorned the Prussian code by that hu- rainy ake of “gullty mane, sensible and sine paragraph: g itartenetankelte “Incompatibility. of temper is suttelent | fn From. the, Philladet- cause for divorce." The same law pre-e ij) Answers the Questions % vt w& ot of Beauty-Seekers. will It make the arms plump. Massuge will do more fn this direction than any other treatment. Skin Needs Nourish! en recipe for a good kin is dry, and svery- akin food. thing 1 have tried makes emall bilaters on the surface of the skin, and It re- My mains as dry aa before TELLMEE. | GIVE you the formula for skin foot, If this ts proporly made it is very soothing and softening: White wax, 1 ounce; spermacetl, 1 ounce; lanoline, 2 ounces; sweet almond oll, 4 ounces; cocoanut off, 2 ounces; tincture of berxoin, 30 drops; orange Hower water, 2 ounces, Melt the first |ive ingredients together, Take off the fire and beat until nearly old, adding. by Metle! the benzoin, and lastly Nower water. © Virtues of Buttermilk. Ayer: os. weer ee yy mate tf buttermilk Is Rood for |the face, and tf so, how It should be ~ | used. ANXIOUS. n added to the bathing wa ringent, and) many mixture whitena the] naily 1 do hink tt bas very marked bleaching efect, nor Jactlo actd, which has a slightly tng no {t as a lotion, nd sootht: | — | | s talent, Hla love fo raordinary: de Navarro, who following pet “Please Gol, blesw | ‘Tony and make him a xood boy ees AMM and papa; es Hrat and Nanna—and ven—and all my good friends. German wuree rays she members being never re: 0 near the n of the Jection of hotel bills of fare of spec Opeastons. Some collectors have of these pretty sou- their stone. Most of the il season are very expenaly: HE very newest tad !s the col and are careful to estimate required for their tables. I: ual thing when an extra forthe manager to find sphores before. + Collectors After Fancy Menu Cards. | ways of advertising hotel, and to ask for a menu ts one of the bert ways of showing your appre meal or the art that ix ongraving of a menu. Menus var cost from the 14 cents a hundred wort of the everyday cheap ‘noatoiries to they very finest of engraved and embossed special cards, Syme hotels have had menus that have cost at much aa 3S cents euch, ———— Hymn Book in War. t’motels'are giad| A hymn book of one of Cronje’s drivers who with m bultet-hole through it fetched 1 (Saat a sale in Londee on the $d inst. 4 CAUSES OF BAD COLDS AND -8- a é. Entered at the Pest-Office at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. OTHER CURRENT NEWS-COMMENT. Our great annual plague of colds is in full swing. Almost everybody is cither about to have, or has, or is just recovering from Grmee-e--e-e-c-e-c-e-ep a cold. eS ae druggists and the doctors and the undertakers “MAD COLDS.” are reaping a rich harvest. i Recaro There are three main causes of this plague: First—Indigestion from overeating and rapid eating. Second—Too heavy clothing. Third—Overheated houses. A human being who is always shovelling in another meal upon nO-G-B-8-O:5-8-8-4-9-5-8- S$ O-F-DSS91d G46 instance? Letbnitz, Kant were married a dwarf ir ES, buttermilk ts useful for (he | skin. tt contains a certain amount aching effect, and the olla are noure the still undigested preceding meal is always in condition to catch anything that may be going. As the cold is the easiest thing to catch, all these overeaters have zolds, We dress for the house as if we lived outdoors—especially the men. The average man, sitting in his office or at home, with the temperature higher than it would be on a Summer day, has on a thick Winter suit and a thick suit of underwear—enough covering adequately to protect him if he were walking about briskly in the open air on a bitter Winter day. The women are more sensible in this respect, hence their greater freedom from colds. Our houses are heated with an almost poisonous dry heat to a|> point that makes the skin shrivel and crack. Do you notice your furniture, how it dries out and falls to pieces? Yet American furniture is especially seasoned and put together with a particular kind of glue with a OVERHEATED } view to mecting the American conditions’ of HOUSES THAT DESTROY EVEN HARDY FURSITURP. fierce dry hent. Tf the furniture can’t stand this heat, what must be its effect upon the body? s Comanerremetd Living rooms that are chilly are not health- ful. But they are less unhealthful than living rooms that. are filled with hot, dry, stale air. If you wish to avoid colds avoid the causes of colds. What is the most impressive fact about the late Phil Armour? Tt is certainly very impressive to read of his gigantic operations as the greatest butcher that ever lived, a true nineteenth century | Colossus of a butcher, killing animals by the million and feeding -Jinealeulable multitudes of human beings of many races and all con- tinents. It is also impressive to think of the mighty fortune he acecumulated—$35,000,060 or $40,000,000, still to read of his private life, simple, democratic, domestic, help ful—his accessibility, his habit of giving away at least $100 0 day to any comers who could tell a reasonably plausible “hard-luck” story, his love for his children and grandchildren. But most impressive of all is the fact of his hard work. He was not in business to retire, nor yet to get rich, nor yet to get power. He was in business to supply himself with ocen- pation and amusement. He liked work for work’s sake. He was the first to appear at his office in the morning, the Inst to leave it at night. His career was the matter of first import- It is more impressive ® WHAT 18 THE MOST IMPRES- SIVE LESSON OF ARMOUR’S LIFE? Dro ee eee enenenen a8 ance in his mind; not distractions and alleged amusements of various sorts. Phil Armour daily and hourly preached the great gospel of work. His reward was not wealth or power, but the daiiy and hourly pleasure of accomplishment—the very highest pleasure an intelli- gent human being could have. If Phil Armour had known a little more about the laws of health and had obeyed them he would have lived to enjoy this pleas- ure many years longer. Tn this paper,a Bostonian returned from Japan is now giving a series of lessons in how physical skill can overcome physical brute- * .» strength. You will get a great deal of amuse- A TRULY ment and profit out of these lessons if vou fol- Spee low thom closely. They are lessons in an “art DEFENSE." of self-defense” that is as superior to boxing as a college is superior to a “gin-mill Brute-strength never has amounted to very much in the world. Tt has never won victories, whether of peace or of war. Even where it has scemed to rule, as in riots and bloody revolutions, it has in reality been tho slave of some intelligence that reaped the fruits of its striving. Brute-strength will not even lift heavy things T Published by the Press Publishing Company, 8&3 to @ PARK ROW, New York. 4 Cold-cures are selling by the ton. The ‘ religion, only and practtee of our country, Hebrews been HE NEW BUTTON GAME. By FERDINAND G. LON TEE £5560548-5560-9-6-5-5, Boodle! Who gets the gamblers’ boodle?” XDD F49IHVHILGSLOSSOENDOOCOOEOP Mileman—When are you going to pay me for this milk? Mrs. Horder—That's all right; just chalk It up, Milkman—I did. THE UNEXPECTED. “Sic ‘em, pups, sic OUR RELIGIOUS ERICA ts the great home not «o In the United Btates the Guvern- has no authority to interfere with ‘The fu.loat Mberty ts possible where the church and State are, yarate. From the beginning of our or- | vized national Ife this separation ha d been the fundamental Here ¢ had freedom and ynere shown to them. Amertea ng Teply to those who believe that| religion needs the aupport and guidance of the State, about so quickly or so well as will a machine constructed by and used by an intelligence. And now the Japanese are showing us how to deprive hrute- strength of its last claim to superiority—use in personal encounters, To a truly civilized man nothing is more abhorrent than a per- sonal encounter. What could be more ridiculous and contemptible, more degrading to human dignity, than to engage in a pummelling contest, with clothing awry and features swollen and blood spurting from the nose, and fists and feet flying about fantastically? It is rarely that a well-conducted human being gets into a mess where a : personal encounter is all but necessary. This Japanese method shows you how to conduct yoursolf therein in a civilized manner. OUT DEGRADA- You do not need strength, you do not have ‘FIOK. to sacrifice your personal dignity or put in jeop- sooeeeee weer? ordy your personal beauty in order to bring a brute to terms. You have only to exercise a little dexterity. pi ee XX THOUGHTS ON THE XX CENTURY. If centuries were like men they would stil lack 100 years of being old enough to eo ee ‘The mantaho has been fooking for a “tenner? ahould be happy now for: he gets a. “double tenner."’ sine ee now TO COME our oF A FIGHT VICTOR WITH- I¢ X represents an unknown quantity, what will JOC represent? ‘The Gret year of the XXth century is not divisible by eny: numeral. Reverse the figures apd the result is ie pars, < f Encourager of Poets, Prof. Switg. of Chicago, the man who declared that John D. Rockefeller was a greater man than William Shakespeare, now says that there are more good pocts tn the United States than In any other country in the world, PALE GRAY PANNE. ‘This reception gown {# bullt of pale gray panne velvet with a narrow line of Parmo biue running through It. trimmed with Persian: passement: liver and blue. The blouse is of' il te 62 Persian, It is erie in bene Be By John Henry Barrows, # st President of Oberlin mindedness we aro learning to love the virtues and achlevements of other de- The next sreat etep of resemble the political change which came over our country when the colonies having common in- tereets became federated, precedes elther unification or wide and generoun co-operation in many things. take generations before the other people of the globe reach tho height which America hax reachod, but no une doubts thut such a helght, which now looks lonely, tableland on which the nations of the th shall assemble. LIBERTY. When complete religious liberty exist fecation becomes not a legal but a moral condition. ¢ of mind, and the moat remarkable advance has been tn the kinditer feelings en men of various talthe and varl- AUvisionx of the same falth. Pronounced In thelr church pref- ding with more and se for the co-operation treated with a friendliness never | ¢ Men are aceing for example, thya Cheletianity; that Do They ring Good Luck? itor of The Rvening World: one please be so kind to tell re If white mice or white rats are bad luck to keep in a house? Why In It So Called? To the Piitor of The Evening World: In anewer to ‘Constant,’ why a ahip ta called “She,” I give the following: A lady once asked nn old sea captain why a ship wi three reasons, “Firat, a ship wears bonnets: second, a ship looks well in and principal reason {s that the ship's vutfita are worth more than the ship down right upper corner, upright, same corner, crosawine, game cor- your friendship ‘Write at once; " middle, lower edge, Tseek your ac- on pe with surname, “Accept my love; same place, upalde down, “I am engaged; crosswise, same | place, “I long to see you." MARGUERITEL How Many Read Nookst To the EAltor of The Exening World: In order to decide a dispute will your readers Kindly compute what percentage ‘1 States people read books? |No dlis:inction of any particular book ide, called “She.” | ye; but the third How Much Does It Weight ¢ Balter of The Evening World: Can anybody pleare informe me how much 99,40 In single dollar bills would Wants the Longest Word. | To the Baitor of The & World some one namo the longest word Jn the English lauguage? JOHN H. B DON'TS OF ALL SORTS ONT teach your children to fear God after the bogle | of us love whom we f at Constitutes Successt To the Pilltor of The Evening Work’: What go reatera consider 1 successful | man In the brondent and best sense of; the term, I would ike to know as soon as ever an answer could be framed. A. To the KAltor of ‘The Evaning World: In reply to the question of 'T. W “A boy being asked how old he w safd: ‘One-haif of my aze belng squared, will give my age inverted, how old was your dog an hour after ou will grieve him thus he will wonder what it was all Don't grieve over poverty; work it off. Don't expect too much of a man, un- lets you enjoy hero worship and a stiff eighteen; one-half of 18 Is 9; 9 being squared, gives 81; $1 Inverted Ls 15. HARRIET P, » Flirtation Given Again. ‘To the Biltor of The Evenin: Don't fool with fire, water or you! meter unicss you are hunting trouble. Don't go to church In the morning and The followtoyx {s the postage-stamp| bear false witness the same day, flirtation’ for ‘the beneft of your many| Don't be suspicious down In lett hand’ cor- | com: Tegarding. you jon's sincerity, and don’t! ferevar wereld