The evening world. Newspaper, January 11, 1901, Page 12

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wnaDaAY BVGINING, JaindARi i, TO KEEP THE FEET WARM. deoe a 2998085 9-0-5604-0600-200 9 50S80ES 08 When your little suburban home, !n spite of its highly !mproved modern heating appliances, gets 80 cold that you can feel frostbite nibbling at your toes, get out on the lawn and run around in a circle for an hour or two. Don't mind what the neighbors think; they'll think that way anyhow. B-B-6:9-298-9-3: By T. E. POWERS. bd-brd sdb Bd 4 » | e-enee-e-e-enenenenenene- THE PLEASURE OF DECEITFULNESS. OW deceitful one has to be in order fare not decettfit you are rude, and a/you are not more or leas deceltfal every to Hve comfortably in this world! You don't belleve it, eh? Weil, Lit la perfectly true. Some permona fatter —.themacives that they are deligntfully {ree from deoslt, and fo about bragging of thelr frankness ami calling them- selves “plain spokea" with an air of dDejng above the common hord. Well, I can tell you one thing: If you nulsance. Don't confound decett with double dealing. You may te deceitful and not be two-facel. And if you are te- cettful, ail I can say ts you are int disagreeable, Your claim to tie ttt gentleman of gentle woman a based onl ation show for t And if] of be | on the con you | feelings of others -HARRIET HUBBARD AYER BESVERS THE QUERIES For Rubber Cement. Dear Mra. Ayer: Please give a preparation to make « water-proof glue or cement for mending rubber articles. CONSTANT. EMENT for Mending Rubb Bixteen pai of gutta-p 4 parts India rubber, 2 pa jon caulker’s pitch, 1 part lin ‘The ingredients are melted gether and ured hot. It will unite leather or rubber that has not been vulcanized. Shaving Soap. ‘Dear Mre. Ayer: Will you kindly tell me now to make shaving soap and a disinfectant SAVERIO PIERRI HAVING COMPOUND — Halt a pound of plain, white soap, dla- eolved in @ smail quantity of icohol, as little as can be used; add a emall tablespoonful of common washing soda. Shave the soap and put it In a email tin basin of cup, placa on the fire in a dlah of bolling water, when melted add the alcohol and remove from the fire, atir in oll of bergamot sufficient to give pleasant odor. OOD DISINFECTANTS-Chloride of G Ume, In solution, placed in saucers _ SS gbout the floor in kitchens, bath- rooms, sinks, &c., will prove an excellent Alsinfectant. A pleasant pastile which may be used also where there are dis- agreeable odora, ts fresh ground coffee Dlaced in a saucer, with a «mali piece of gum camphor set in the middle of ‘the coffee. Touch a lighted match to this and as the cum burns allow KISSIN ‘HE kissed the baby-- Bo aia I— It was her sister's, By the by— Bhe kissed the baby, Crying: “Ob, ‘You cunning thing, I Love you sof’ Bhe kissed the baby, I saw where, And touched its cheek with My lps there! > SSDS )3: Bhe kissed the baby, 1 414, tool Bhe spied, and sala: Told me you Detested dadtest Now I know You told a story! Bay ‘tis 30! It was e itza you Btole from her MUSCULAR RHEUMATISM, S IR JAMES GRANT, F phyalcian, attributes a Tusculer rheumatism to Noeielectricity stored in the tissues. that for some years he cases of this kind by ins jel needles Into the muscles, Melectelelty being drawn os almost natant: ——— COMIC OPERA. poy 5 a G THE BABY. sh ime forms of| Fescace | er @ hundred years way, has always HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. Perfume ts pleasant ‘To Make Cement. Dear Mrs Ayer WH you Kindly and tnexp suMctent coffee to consume with tt, Thel ® By Jane Gordon, = First Article. you Mve you are hi the pelemly a tracked ratl breeding. Our friends make us dewitfu), and we make our friends ditto, We don't them nse) us: we wish them coln te Fhe w from main of * ead If this is will try agatn OF HOUSEWIVES. t the one referred to we Necipe for Peanut Drittle. Dear sre Ayer 1 vou Kindly publish a good formu! nut brittle? E. 8 BRITTLE — Diseo: fo sugar and malt of cream of tartar two gills of coll water. then over a moderate fire and cook tH beltth n about on two. tring a ater nin Newhurs, ease give recipe for lobster RM. 1 WUT. Bick shells of two » ‘|have guarded her, shielded her. season with a pi \ naltapoonti medium reprint formuta urpent OBO VeRsel ant dyssolve ay heat of hot water, ement sho be gently heated before being used "You kiased the baby, ushing! T felt her purr On my brea “We kissed But not then! | VEGETABLE ra CORRESPONDENT pre: don Globe the follow fefinition of f, “raddiah’ vue treat. ‘aructoke.’ Always minds bis and Qs. Can gheo moat people © eee {s altogether hard to “beet,” a SHEEP'S FLEECE, ‘The aver $e fvejard « halfpounds, welght of a sheep fleece +. reduce y five minutes hree eRe tot se rr adding a hot ture Pe Maners -- —. | HOW A DRESS GROWS ‘Tits dlagram shows the proper lengih litle girls’ dresses at varloux ages. — | Harpers’ Baza —— WHITE HOUSE VISITORS. \oout $0 pemons a day on an average the White House the year around. iv number rises sometimes te 1,0) to and the hours for visitors not ¥. belng trom 10 A, M. tod P. M. Publishing Company, St to © PARK ROW, New, York. “Ines Mall Matt GEORGE W. HOWARD'S CASE AS AN EXAMPLE OF OVERCONFIDENCE . |: y that inquiry into the life of George W. Howard, indicted |: for bigamy, has begun, the relatives of the unhappy Brooklyn zirl tind out all about him, nowanp find out that they conld have got the facts |< of his life with perfect ease by asking a few questions. is raises the point: Why did not the girl’s relatives make these inquiries before tring her to marry ? ‘Vhey did not know where the man came from, how he had » bronght up, how he had spent his life. hat the man’s situation was, or how much salary he got. knew practically nothing about him except what he told them about himself. Here is no isolated instance of overconfidence. It is typical of what is happening everywhere in this country all the time. And ¢ the only reason that more harm does not come of it is the exceed- ‘ ingly high average of good character among Americans. But a great deal of harm does come of it, especially in this #) matter of marriage. A young fellow comes along. He is fair-spoken. He dresses é well. He conducts himself with decency in the presence of women. And he is accepted by everybody without question. He begins calling on a certain girl. Her parents welcome him, take him at e-e-eneenenenen meena: B INVITING THE ATTENTIONS OF RASCALS AND UEPROBATES, him, to be married to him. Yet for all they know he may be utter; unfit. A slight inquiry might reveal all sorts rtof appalling disqualifications. ‘These parents have brought their daughter up carefully. They And now at the most important crisis of her life they hand her over without question to a stranger. It is an error to think that human nature is full of surprises. You do not know a human beiyg because you have talked with him or her a few time: tinner, You simply know what kind of easual dinner-aequaintance he or she is. You do not nec rily know a human being’ because vou have heen in partnership with him in business for several years. You simply know what kind of a business man he is. You do net knew a human being because you have been en- gaged to him or her. You simply know what kind of a lovemaker he or she is in the storm and stress of a newborn passion that may or may not be long lived No, human nature is not full of surprises. | Bat human beings are full of vanity, espe- cially as to their ability at “reading character” from faces and phrases. Any, every, human being is THE SUM OF ALL HIS OR HER PAST. Don't ever lose sight of that fact, either in your own character- Inilding or in the study of the character of others. Human nature is not only not full of surprises, it is not even fullofconeealments, But it is full of logical, inevitable, inexorable mseauer Here is a good safe rule for intercourse with your fellow-beings: our knowledge of a human being should be directiy proportionate to the of contidence you are about to place in him If you are about to buy what looks like a really gold brick from him, it is not enough to know that he wears patent leather boots, spats and ar astrakhan collar on his overeoat. If you are about to appoint him note- teller where he can steal three-quarters of a million, it is not enough to know that he weighs nearly 300 pounds and can do sums in simple arithmetic. If you are about to marry him, it is not enough to know that he can write letters that swash about in the envelope. If you are about to engage yourself to a girl it is not enough wow that when she looks at you you have to hold on to the edges ‘chair to keep from floating about the room. Accumulate all the information you can about him or her that inent to the business in hand. andidate for any sort of position from a place a broom or a shovel to a place as husband and bread-winner in- If he jvesn't, don’t give him the place. Show at least as much prudence in important transactions— for instance—as you would show in selecting a gown or sincere ¢ es inspeetion, FASHION NOTE, “A coming-out costume.” MEMELY A HABIT OF SPE M or—Old Lushley's daughter has tn ' bad habits. bookkeeper’s wit You tton't | ter?” mon ? “I'm ecared,” replied John. “I didn't i no, not an had as that. | feel very well at the office, but 1 must young Goodman, her fance, | be much more ser'ously {1 than I feel, to her she sald, “Don't care | for when I! told’ the hese how bedly I ‘ telt he admitted that 1 looked alot.’ / CAUSE FOR ALARM. “You're home toon, Joh aid the “What's the mat- But + Propose. if I do, They did not know |? In fact, |’ his own valuation, permit their daughter to fall in love with him, to become engaged to | ‘ Fey (\H,, HOW HE MUST SUFFER! 1436-864 8803900860-05-0-35 OMece Hoy (reading)—As Red Face drew his trusty revolver he braced him- self firmly on the edge of the cliff, and, gathering all hiv strength, xave one mighty bound—— Vote Within—Willinm! ——___ WALKS IN LIFE. “T suppose your Ittle boy hay decided what he will be when he grows up?" “He jan't quite sure yet whether he would rather be a preacher or a prize- fighter." HAD PAID FOR IT. “There goes a man with n very in- teresting history,” sald the clerk in the book store. ‘on don't say?" inquired the cus- tomer. “How do you know?" “1 just_sold It to him.” By B. CORY KILVERT. - Angic—Now, Bertie, this new sofa has a secret spring. Father doesn't know a thing about tt. And It In real cosy, tan't 1t? Hist! and back Father (next day)—Now, I'll tke a rest. Hullo, what's that No more trick sofas in my house! There comes father, I pre: T press tt 8o— the button. we Ro again! Mttle “Ouch! Wo! knob under my And now Bertle and Angie HOUSE GOWN. This blue dotted silk zowa h ming of lace inser:ion id pected white chiffon, .The belt Is of breen panne vel’ — * Profitable Fortune-Telling. * More than 2,000 people earn a living In 0 ing, their totai estimated at HUSTLING GIRLS OF KANSAS. MATTIE RUSH, “of Ness harnesses and works prsex, ploughs and drills harvest. the crops on the ranch, waters and feeds 150 head of cattle end, with her elder sister, milks forty cows twice a day. Miss Elizabeth Goodman, who lives five miles west of Galena, is twenty-four years of age. With the assistance of her younger sister she operntes and manages a farm of sixty acres and te setting rich, Misa Rose Packard, of Pleasanton, called the “wheat king” of Rush County She ralsed 4,000 bushels of wheat ‘ast ear, 3 "Miles Bearle Watts, of -Havensville, who made the run tnto Oklahoma and pre-empted a claim, raised seventy-five Mins County, during the pi 1,400 bushels of corn, 200 bushels of Kafr corn and 400 bushels of oats as feld crops. i Miss Lillian E. Hall, of Winfteld, ans r of Cowley County. Grace Kennedy, of Atchison, ighs only elghty-seven pounds, and a rd and a quarter, of goods will make her a waust. Three yards of binding will go round her skirt and two and a quar. ter yards of goods will make her i rkirt, Mina Esther Searle, of Cawker City, ta a bincksmith, Miss Olive Jones, the ninetecn-year-old daughter of ‘Ruffalo’ Jones, of has gold a story, to Harper's for $150, It tells of the capture‘of two mountain Heb was recent- ted to.fnd by the alan Inetitutio: Cor authorities of Hon. | 1 been appointed by Gov. Btanley to us| acrosn the table when Rertic ere arene. f QUERIES 4x0 ANSWERS Crenerereneee-ent-o0- o-0-0-0 No, Wost* yon kindly question fa ve Did Eryan have i. Inst year than tn 1896 By 20 @ning you would oblige A CONSTANT READER. Detied the Church tm ‘Thin Matter, As the Romain Church does not re nize divorce, how ts Napoleon marrings o: ned? There Crna Frestdent of the United States be nominatel for more thay two terms in ruccession? MIBB HATTIE. COHEN, Statiaties. the follow> evening paper? popular votes In Napoleon Apply to Hurean of V! nj _ How can f find out the da: Twas born? T waa’born In | City, 49 Bowery, Lou! Lenox Library. At what library may I consult law. books without charge? FREUND, Should the young man'a folks vialt the girl ne ts engaged to ‘first, or the re | verse? HENRY COHEN, Be ! A SCHOOL FOR WAITERS. HERE {a a well-attended schoot for walters in Vienna. Tho puptis are first instructed in the general principals of the art of sorving and when thoy have mastered the Intra- ductory course they are allawed to pra ~,« tlre on two ladies and two gentlemenin dress who dine at’ one

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