The evening world. Newspaper, January 25, 1901, Page 10

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ATILD ANIMALS | HAVE KNOWN. With Apologies to Ernest Seton-Thompson. By J. CAMPBELL CORY. PALL TONTEY No. G.-Felis Fiattcus Bossime. es A hybrid animal of which but one perfect nis known to exist at New York, but spends much of its time in the metropolis aud at Washington, LD It has the proud distine Theodore Roosevelt has not kill be aceounted ie mighty hunter lie patr tien of being one ‘of the few wil! aniinals th for by reason of the fact that notwithstanding many covert Gilet of this strange beast Is th and devours with much relish. The Platticus Bossimo is greatly feared by the Hossimo's Hips, State politician, to whom tts bit ° ; your superior intelligence, and see the “district leade: FEW BORES | HAVE MET. © 'S* Comey, 2) .2( amr. tr us es SECOND ARTICLE, | “prominent politicians” become rich and ostentatious where only HERE in the bore who Nobody else ever did anything worth fein ta know anybody who ten't| three brief vears ago they were as seedy as the lean kine of ; } about himeeif all the time, a mentioning , Hreetiy ip wtih 5 t 5 h who never did or said an interest.) Now you may have noticed that people | Waulth or title or fame } Pharaoh's dream. Do you think that they fattened upon air? ing'thing in all his life. jot import have to toot horna | being — He Sap) ne charms, graces or accom- aN eae Bell ey: usuully, get found erearins ied at The widow of Gen. Hancox insists that carriages are not a f He ts devoid of wit or epigram. And] And those whose itves have ws ty of conse ms “luxury ;” not at all, they are a “necessity.” & Be expects you to listen to his prosing | fu) Interesting nearly a have . 5 5 ih Pe s , © and be highly entertained [to be drawn out, ‘Then there ia the bore | te shine with a re t What is a necessity? What is a luxury? ; Another bore of this same order {=| \n Sern they ey CH aE the cemt-euccesatul man who tells you She has pnd all In Just this way wer ms Can any on Ch a lefiniti n of these Row great he is. iw hetr to anda tew | { sncnsserye { two words, a definition that will be general a gets up on the housetops and pro- Oe tw asplendid tus. 0~9-- 0-0 0-0-0-0- =O 0 3s . 4 mains his ability to the world wenito taikinemintors jr of wha aeimealae dul a and not a mere expression of narrow personal He blows oud, shrill biasts through quite happy when she can place © a snob ts HUN! | yrejudice? Bis own trumpet, so that all and sundry ]a@ picture before your mind ae hTEn| may realize what a gonlus ta in thelr] will cause you wquirm visibly and give a enidet. you a vio disinciination for your AN ODD WAIST Ware may de dectared, sovereigns may | next meal, 9 pess away, Mars may communicate with| She ts never betrayed into acknowl: ad @e earth; all this ts of small elgnif-|etitng that she feetn pr well If she han sore chroat tt te dipntneretie; asm pain tt fs rheumatte, anything that disagrees With her internal economy {t {s cancer, Bho roila tho names of disensca under @ance, Your thoughts must be centred fm him, to the exclusion of everything ise under the oun. LEEPER OTETIED L'AMOUR MORT. OVE'B pallid lips, erstwhile eo red, went in for that. Bha ts always on the lookout for new ailments, so as to be sure and catch ‘an first fr] And you must Ysten to these com- Plaints and woes oonmantly, ap thia typo Had deen kissed by Israfel; Brave, blue-eyed Love is deai, An@ a@ shout comes up from belt. of the Kenus bore never lets you reat Cela, stark and white, the boy And she atwuye lives to a ripe old age ‘god Ties ‘Then there ts the “better days" bore Also a woman And oh, the things whe has had (aocant on the " please); and the money she ;{has spent; and the jewels she ‘has i and the society pet she nas ‘With violets tn Bis grasp, ‘While overhead the eombre skies ‘Weep ter the Light that ta past. Slain by the hand of a woman, ‘A woman he thought divine, And the devil, who ts human, Drinks deep to her health In wine. The flowers sigh and droop and he pity of {t now, that she, 4 mreet-cars and Doant. | Ing-houses, eray hairs and a hack » | eeat in the band we | pody han ever lost what ane has| Ale, And lost {s their eweet por- | lost. tume; (B] Then there ts the snobbish her, gen- Dark chaos reigns on earth and erally a woman, who talka eternally | 4 aky abo let ‘ished friends, and who | And all the world ts to gloom. (Ané the devil crowns the woman THE SEA'S RICHES —Clarence E. Moore. ship Vera in a storm, were the eighteen car. Atel i i \s in Parts, ih OTE Le Dey sibbuch| Saaaevetieseos WRITE AN | kd EN Ta} [Are subJect to through being barred from) great wraty, as they cannot get a day) granted. In the midst of this happiness so-called “gentlemen.” Brooklyn ts In pve ine: itor. of The Kreaing Worle: Vay with bieswles, would say off, A FATHER. |a friend calls and makes unpleasant / urgent need of good, Any young man who wants to bi beyvles and Taal Cate teen |*uxwentions as to local matters, thinks apologies for men. A 81. Fied ahould, before taking the fata Mongstde the tins iLL jcertain conditions aa to locality, dc. Fice for Red-Hal aH Jenrn'tho ways of the woman of tr wd take in an apis ne World are detrimental to thelr health, and po jee for Red-Hatred Girls, @he jg never satiefled, selfish, too pr yo without agains the on-l works upon her credulity that ahe| T te Diltor of The Evening Word lown hy horses,| dition of many {horsemen the) Phey have abs ‘produced ny Jaden pause | air may no ayy ‘temperature, thea VMNON) terminals ani They) oytering tie 8 Gosalp and genera: Mirt, Take 22 are: “Man's work {9 from su roman's work ta never done.” Ile wid do more. They make him get up et the wood and coal, Iglit | cook the breakfaat. go tow. pig aE Night sometimen help for the sup (Wash dishes, take care he baby jt rea ot fot more. This ts real Ife js LI Deher of to-day, with a few Pe }¥OU wonder at so That this nause: ning, A Young Mats Query, With abo tag the diy day, but they make) To the Batter of Jing to thele| TE would Like coals for ten he . World ANY | a man work off AUGELAVAPASVORUTEEEBEOOED AA VVEWAARARSERTASAEATAUAEAAATAAS TSENG DADE TSEDETESETEUALEESE ESTAR GOETHE, With a wreath of asphode!, | PPANY of the purchases made ty the The flowers he brought fron f Persia} nf heaven 3 aswell This dark 1 x ~ ark-blue panne velvet ws When from God and right > ade tu him,,went to the bot Honwhite net ani whlen| fell, auplan Bea by tho stn The a nt present. Jy ne heat except that hs of thelr grip A thus lower the are closed at the 1 Upon frst M 1k why some people THE WOR 3 3 i i 3 3 3 3 3 e é 3 3 3 3 3 2 3 3 é 3 3 é 3 3 3 3 “*| not fail to visit the sins of the children upon the parents. NTERESTING LETTER TO THE PEOPLE AND IT Se TET LD: FRIDA' is Y 25, NO, 14,602. ~Pubitahed by the Press Publishing Company, 63 to & ARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mall Matte! [ON THE ‘CURRENT NEWS AT HOME AND ABROAD. cial report of the ‘ote this significant sentenco in the of | Queen's physicians on the cause of her death “The symptoms were mainly of a dys- | Asonecarecerenene-eone-dhy j A LESYSON peptic kind.” favernss pear While we draw the lesson from the Queen’s life let us not overlook the equally uble lesson from her death, Her Majesty ought to have lived to be at leat a hundred. Her life was simple, quiet, free from ang but the ordinary cares of humanity. and free from the most hara’ She was far more vigorous than the Pope and her duties were far less exacting, less provocative of worry. 3ut she would not exercise. She fancied that driving about And she moved her dinner hour to 9 o’clock—rising fron eating to go almost immediately to bed. Only her powerful constitution enabled her so long to withstand the strain of these two ng of them. was exercise, health-preventing habits. The moral of this year of painful illness and this premature death, as of nearly all so-called “natural” deaths, is: human being cannot afford to trifle with his digestion. If he does he will surely pay, pay, pay. It is no longer the “Queen’s English,” but the “King’s Eng- lish.” Hence peculiar importance attaches to Edward VII.’s first speech. It foreshadows radical changes in the structure of the lan- guage. For example: ‘The most painful occasion on which I shall ever be called upon to address sre e-erene-eenenenenene ty I have resolved to be known by the name of Edward. My * tthe, known by the name of Albert the Good. I desire that his name should stand alone. Th hh now devolve upon me and to which, arduous duties wit “Our city,” Mr. Crimmins, “needs a business and not a {politieal administ That is, it needs an honest administration ——the offices filled by honest men, capable to; harge their duties, instead of being filled by’ what are known in certain circles as “in-| 3 -nerene-ererorenenenenesd oun VIVID OUJECT LESSONS in-| side men.” i The “inside man” is the person put into the house by “the! gang” to spy out the location of the valuables and, at the proper! moment, to unlock the outside doors and let in his “pals or pass | out the “swag” te them, Look about your city, New Yorkers, who pride yourselves upon and | Another story of white slavery from the “red-ligat” distriet— a girl entrapped, imprisoned in a den in the most thickly populated part of New York, and held there in a bond- age too horrible for the resources of expres- sion. Have you ever walked through the east side, the teeming and wonderful east side? If not, do so. You will emergo with many new ideas as to your duties as a citizen of New York, a fellow-citizen of the east sider. As we read of the young men at Yale who “burlesqued” the Bosschieter trial, and of the young men at West Point who hazed Gen. MacArthur's son until he went into convulsiony, the question that naturally arises is: , From what kind of homes do these young mien come? It is impossible for parents to shift the responsibility. They have the custody of their children, and the largest part of the character of a human being fs determined by his or her environment. It will he said that these young brutes were only “thought- less.” That is true. But the main difference between barbarism and civilization is the difference between thinking and not thinking. ‘A savage docs not think; he follows his instincts, his appetites. The} ivilized man thinks. And cducation is simply teaching to think. Tf these boys are thous“tless—that is, are voung barbarians— it is because their parents either could not or did not teach them k. ature visits the sins of the parents upon the children. Tet us THE QUESTION THAT REACHES) 1 feel hurt at the remarks made about red-haired girls. I am such. We can't help being red-haired, but the young man who Insults the red-haired girl by calling her bad-tempered ought to be ashamed of himself. If his redshaired alsters were cross, 1 am glad to say that Tam not. FHL Disappointed Fngitah Mother: To the Milter of The Evening World Tam an English lady. To my certain knowledge hundreds of Eaglish mothers actually influences her husband to break up the home-nest and atart out to find im new home where she can indulge in her borrowed fancy, What is to be done with such a woman? VIRGINIA DARE, Brooklyn Men-G@uch as They Are. To the t:titor of The Mwentag World In aunwer to the letter referring to the arcity of men In Brooklyn, I wish to say that Brooklyn has a suMeclency of | HARRIET HUBBARD AYE Fe 1901. ORACE THE By FERDINAND G. LONG. Otic To Prevent Dalineas. Dear Mra. Ayer Kindly let me know what I should use to prevent baldness, 1 am only twenty- one. F. J.D. CALP massage is the most efft- cacioun treatment prevent baldness I know of. To Neduce Thick Lips. Mra. Ayer, Piease tnform me what remedy or treatment there is for thick I!ps. a8 HERE are various treatments for | thick Ips. The surgical treatment fp only advisable in cases where the Up ta really a deformity, An astringent A TENT DRESS ‘This Tent Costume for 3 fancy dress ball would surely appeal to any one In aearch of something original. tt ts made of white moire velour with red stripes down !t, and bands of red velvet to almulate the opening at the wide. Goid cord and wooden pegs give a realistic effect. The cap, nesides acting as a finish for the hair, zives tow tent a com. plete look. The red velvet ts repeated in the revere. HOG. Th No tall building elevator service is complete without him, He anchors himself in the doorway of the oage and stays there from the first to the sixteenth floor. the fact that people want to get into or out of the elevator, and that he is not made of the mist. Never ina rod HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. wash or cream will be of some benefit, but TP think the habit of contracting the lips ts the most ureful. By practice you will discover you can draw lps in and by persisting In exercises that con- tract the Ips they will in time decrease in size, Biting the lps will enlarge them—ponting; al! such grimaces will Increase the thickness. Formula for Astringent Cream.—To ‘one ounce of goo! cold cream add one grain pulverized tannin, 10 grain pul- verized alkanet chips; heat, let stand for five hours; heat and train. ‘To Make the Hair Filaffy, Dear Mra. Ayer: Please give me a recipe for making the halr Muffy, ‘M. E. CONLIN, THINK this ts the formula you tfer ] to: Hiborate of soda, powdered, one- quarter ounce: bicarbonate of also powdered, one-quarter ounce; eau de cologne, one flu!d eunce; pure alconol, two fluld ounces; tincture of cochineal, THREE SMART BOYS. UNDAY School Teacher—Tommy, 4 what must we do to be forgiven? Tommy—We mus: first do some- thing to be forgiven her. Chicago [ Johnny—The temperate zone. Teacher—That’s right. Now, Tommy, you may tell us what zone St. Louls is in, Tommy (promptly)—The intemperate zone, - EACHER—Johnny, what zone {8 OTHER (te small invalid)—Are you feeling better this morning, Wil- le? Willle-I dunno. Jam? M@her—No, dear. It yesterday. WiMle—Then I guess I'm well enough to get up to-day. Is there any more You ate the last of WIkb BE PRINTED ON ‘s bitter disappointment now at jE addied their sons with so ugly a name all in vain. For,the new King {8 not Albert 1, but Edward VIL. Ie that falr? Ia tt reasonabie? Is st pleas- ant for the victims? Mra, ALDERTA MACKLIN, Boston, Maas. Suggests King’s Policy. To the Pittor of The Rvening World: Tet the first grand acts of Edward VII. on ascending the throne of Engiand be: Home ru:e for Ireland, the cessation of war in South Africa and the reatora- tion of the Bher Republics, atatu quo ante belium, leaving the Meld of adven- ture and spollation open and alone to VICTIM, time table and rt oy to} do not have kool common sense and} men, such as they are. As for the | during the past alxty years have named live up to then ) difference, have a mind of their own. I have an| Brooklyn girla being Mirts, t wish to aay | their sons Albert, after the Prince of ; what kind of we vi have to! acquaintance who ty delightfully situated | from experience (not observation) that| Wales. in the hope that these so relative) work Sunt te + to home surroundings, with an th-ja decent girl cannot walk in some parte | might one day bear. the same name Mngland’s King. What must be these our Mberty-loving Hamericans, J, M'CORMACK, Disease-Breeding Stree fo the Kdltor of Tne Evening Worl ’ Undoubtedly one of the chief causes, of the prevalence of stckness in this city Mew in the laxity of the Btreet: Cleaning Department. The dirt blows in clouda in the faces of those on the streets these days, and finds its way into the passing cars and into the houses as well. Naglo must be waiting for the snow to come, so that he can make one job of it. But it ts the dirty atreeta that make snow most unwel- come in New York, and may !t not come awhile the dirt Hes thick! ALBERT BOYD. What Is “Richard: Nature? To the Kattor of The Evening Work T have noticed in the “Letters to the Peopie” that se opinion regarding the name on tho personal characteristics ‘of the person bearing it, I have: ndt, however,. seen the name Richard” mentioned by any of the If you see a new specimen of the Human Pcrker write to ANSWERS THE QUESTIONS »# Pd muddy. al have given thelr Influence of a: correspond- e Evening World about it. = x SF tong for a moment does he worry over OF BEAUTY SEEKER: one-elghth fluid ounce; distilled wate: 16 ounces. It Is apt to give the hair a slightly red! dish tinge. Shin Injured by Poteon Ivy. Dear Stes. Aye adly tell what I can do to !mprove y skin, as I have been polsoned av and it has left the akin rough apd, MARY BE. Mt Port Richmond, 3 L HAVE had great success with hydro- ] zone and glycozone in just euch cases. These preparations are antiseptic an@ are used in all the hospitals, You cam jset them of any first-class druggist. To Dear Mra, Ayer: Could you suggest anything by which red scar may be made less noticeable? VICTORIA ALI . \ *RY this ointment for the ecars Subnitrate of bismuth, 1 dram; | powdered arrowroot, 1 dram: olnte ment of benzoated Mix thorougaly. ishien a Scar. zinc, 1 ounce Apply once or twice w e i See meencenctemeig ee QUERIES »x> ANSWERS “Faithful Achates.”” Acha Was a Friend of the Trojan Aeneas. What ts the definition of the worls “Fidus Achates?” Who was Achates? 8. KINGSTON. Yes, if He Ina ae Is ft proper for a lady to send a gentie- man a valentin LAL “Fall House” Ie Be than Elther Which fm the better hand In poker—a full house or a straight? Also, a full houre or a flush? Cc, M. Underline the Wo: You vi te Italteize. 1 want to transcribe a certain pleco from a printed book and it contains some {tallcizel words. I want to know how to bring out these italictzed words in script. J. B. Physletans Disagree ns to the Cauxe A saya that grape or apple seeds lodz- ing in the vermiform appendix will cause appendicitis, B contends that ft ts not so, anit that ths trouble is caused other- wise, Which is right? JOSEPH A. SMITH, Morristown, N. J. Hoth Played-in Dramatiszations ef the Book. A bets that James O'Neill played the part of d’Artagnan In a dramatization of Di ¥ umaa's "Three Murketeers.”" B be's that It waa not James O'Nelll but E, H. gothern who played it. aR THIS PAGE. ents in this department. Kindly give something more than a dictionary ‘dennition, readers. R. I, CHARD, ! Horses’ Sad Lot in Wint To the Filttor of The Dreaiag Work’ Help the guffering horses! Oh, {f Wine ter yas only over the poor horses | would be a Httle out of thetr misery. When a horse falls down seme drivers think they must beat them or he loan't get up. If you are a driver don't | do tha’ Wee P, JAY. Few Alleged Stradivaril Are Gen- uluc—Take It to an Expert, To the Dittor of The Evening World: ‘A Stradivarius violin, of which the owner did not know the value‘until a violinist saw it and told him, wee given ito hw chiidren to play with. «2 would ; now like to know the real value tf @ome jot your patrons oan jet me know. The ante to this violin to 270 SEXTON. |

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