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Lirrce ‘ovo NEWYORK FLATS: EASY, ACCESS TBURGLAR ALARMS MIND GETTING. AORBED TWICE A GRY The burglar doesn’t get much swag in Flatbush; In Manhattan, though, with vans he does his work; An he’s busy day and night, swiping ev'rything in sight. Still we think we are protected in our “Little Old New York!" BOLOS0-3-G:518 4 -6-4-0-4. REV. NEWELL DWIGHT HILLIS. DUCATION and the Increasing worth of the individual through the multiplied instruments of culture and: refinement represent the enorm gains for the people. What Newton's trained eye was to the stars, what Hugh ‘Miller’s trained reason was to the etmta ‘of rocks, that man's trained cye Is to God's mountains, Inndecapes, forests. Education ts the power to behold all and enjoy al Enowledge \ now has become con- tagion. Intelligence is so diffused that in'a genag every man !s his own teach- 5-20- t GOD LEADS THE WAY FOR HUMAN PROGRESS. Tan been. called \ beautiful etviliza- tion.” Setting forth fron hlohem, It has Journeyed across the continents, ite breath Summer, {ts presence warmth, {tn footprints harvesta, To-day Chrin- Hanity does not stand upon the corners of a street blowing a trumpet before It At im stealing softly into the human heart, arveneas and vice, and sorrow and xin, That gentle One whose soft touch oni fell upon the foreheads of little children, opened wide His arma to shelter publt- <an and prodigal, doth now enfold in THE ARLIN ‘TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 5, 1901. a: ORACE THE HOG. e seveees NO. 14,413, Published by the Press Publishing Company, 63 to 68 PARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Cla Mall Matter. unsupported a 3 -0-e-0-0-0-0-0-a-0-0-0-0 2) A WOMAN'S The husband say with me.” pathy of the commun @ -p-ene-enenenenenenonenes é AS TO his conduet. ATHY FOR 1 AND. the el ought to have rz responsibi it. must be a careful investi; and calm and unprejudie various inv terical women, Whate condition obvious trorenenenenenenerenenene: WHY WERE p @, doctor, lawxer, minister. The very Hi wide aympathy a civilization and a of rodern Ife ts making world, With a heart full of Kindness {Mteracy, impossible. Ignorance can and syinpathy Christ has entered the fhangle\aihoe. Ignorance can pick corn earthly and Is tears falling from a husk apd cotton from a pod. upan man's vices are slowly dissolving But locomotives that travel sixty niles them. Laws are Lecoming Just, rulers an hour ask the engineer to go up be- | humane, music 1< becoming weeter, q@ide Watt and master his inventive! and books wiser: wt are happler, skill. Looms that enable one man in und the indi rt becoming at year to spin cloth enough to clothe once Muailana oaereteeitio’ 30000 men, ask for informed fingers 2L DWIGHT HILLS, D. D. Presses that print 100,000 papers in a} ginglo night, demand widely cultured in- intellects. ‘To-day we have common GRAY AND SABLE: Oo GO, WINTER. (Ge Winter! Go thy ways! We REV. NEWELL DWIGHT HILLIs. workmen who 4 of two hundre Our public rehoo! proach the wise men ATS ARO. have ereated an ‘The twitter of the bluebird yeation that In pa- and tho wren, xclaimed But my Leaves over greener growing, and the shine Of Summer's sun—not thine, Thy sun, which mocks need of warmth and love And all the heartening ferven- not be lgnorant!” 2 shall : ne underst ax they remain Linc will opp will Indust our mth 1 them of at despot Ho thetr wil spot th heat enow io warm our thin | Pathetic yearnings tn. | % ach around tts wrist | Bo get thee from us! We are . | ven as thou art. We remin- AGRE Ne iiesinre Bato cali Netopocia te irist. Asn fore, the people fee! areas r at the wecret ¢ perore ix the mecret fhe we hailed thy com- Jesus ton Christianity ing. ‘That was, oh! sepsis Too long—too long ugo! OR OPEN A WINDOW. Get from us utterly! Ho Summer then Shall spread her grassex where thy snows have boen, And thy last icy foctprint melt and mould ‘In her first marigol! James Whiter ROOM that has become stuffy elther from too much use or from too much tobacco smoke, may easily be | A sweet and habitable once more ounce of * rite of This sable trimmed, gray clot ustrates an orlginar and effective way of treating these two fashionable colors. Riley. feleteiniefele! & and distal ing the sm with a delicate p ———— YOUR LETTER IS PRINTED HERE, vide sho F thus spanking her, one {1,018,576 children, a great grandspare: | Le passed forthwith and Of course Unis doesnt nappy Ie ft Nikola Tesln !s alw in the newe-| St fn whien Mra, Ni did, seventy young couples could have mpers promising to do wond man ke her thr populated the entire ited States if aN sEW they Last th electricity. ‘The latest had oe @omesfrom him ts wireless Mahting. Wil nomebody please To the Kalltor « it. Tein lias ever done in the way| Aud this to your collection of curiour ated thelr wedding in he conditions and tak- ay—kranting that ruption of the mathe. ietical electricity? What became] people. L know a boy of ff le—wouldn't the young: kt elghteen-mile spark with which] who has never eaten meat. He not{#ter have tha blood of 1,048,576 persons Siwas going to sink battle-ships and] oniy haw never eaten tt, but he cannot.| coursing In his velnx, atte a mixture ipesout all the navies in the world?! if he eats the sllghtest bit of meat by |of Bore toe! in 60) years, tan't 10? Gehe wake up before the inve mistake his nose bleeds. How do you STATISTICIAN, account for It? Blood of Millions ina Child's Veins, To the Eilltor of The Evening World My thirteen-yenr-old son recently norry to sec Mrs, Eiiza-| [ have read somewhere that a married| asked me where the water waa before ton approving of Misa|couple would in twenty generations, if] the deluge. “Of course, I know tt came Yaaloon-smashing meth-| there were no deaths or fatlures to|from the clouds," said he, “but where ite, opinton {s that Mre,| marry on the part of thelr progeny, and| was it heforo it gathered In ‘the sky? ; Didn't it have to come from the carth?’ VERPLEXED, oee . {aig apleted Where Did the Delug: To the Islitor of The Evening World: Frome bicly spanked. If| the family wimply doubled in numbers existence to pro-| every generation, be the steenthy-stenth earth. army and navy members of royal famil British people. frippery predominated. upon the gun-earring fall in love AND YOUNG MEN. a ere eee enone What is the teachi the uxoriousness of her husband? changes? These are interesting, important qu Shakespeare says: The very next morning the | story without question, shoots’ down the man she aceused. She.sympathy of the community will be Whether this is or is not true, certain it iv that the sym- iy ought not to be with him. 3 There is not the shadow of an excuse for nif he had established the truth of the aceusation, had sifted the faets to 1 the last doubt which GTON TRAGEDY AND OTHER NEWS COMMENT. ported denial of the man. standing, in record, in all the elements that entreaty, a story whieh is all but ineredible. the records show, almost never committed by men of intelljgence, the bottom, had remo racter of his friend and the nervous condition of his wife sed, still there would be no exeuse for him. r the cause of Mrs. Barker t Did you notice the pbsence of the Bri official part in the funeral of their Queen ? In the tragedy at Arlington, N. J., there is on the one hand the]; sation of the woman, on the other hand the unsup- In character, it yo to make up credibility, there is, so fur as is now known, no advantage on either side. Which, then, is the more likely—that the woman falsely ac- cused the man or that the man committed such a crime? About eighteen months ago the woman began to show symp- 3 toms of an acutely, morbidly nervous condition, centring about this man who was her and her husband’s friend and her pastor. After many hints, and when her nervous condition had reached an alarming stage, she tells her husband, at his earnest and persistent Such crimes are, as education and refinement, whatever their moral character. band, accepting the wife's a civilized inan, living all his life in civilization, and aware of the ies which civilized socicty lays upon every member of And further, how erude, how feeble, how stupid was his melo- dramatic little vengeance as compared with the abyss of disgrace and shame and misery into whieh society would hurl the accused man if the acensation were established ! Before the status of the acensation ean be determined, there tion of the Rev. Keller's life and a full d hearing of his side of the story. There must also he—and this is highly important—a careful, scientific in- stigation of Mrs. Barker's mental and nervons condition, of the svinptoms she has developed from time to time. And this tigation cannot be intrusted to any rural practitioner un- familiar with the temperamental peculiarities of nervous and hys- condition, was not that ly one in which she could hardly give testimony sufficiently conclusive to convict a reputable man of an appalling] brutal and wholly unprovoked crime ? ish people from any They were burying 2 woman whose peculiarity was that she “ruled over the hearts” of mil ions, seattered in the four quarters of the ns upon mill- In the funeral processions and cere- monies at Osborne, on the Solent, at Ports- mouth, at London, at Windsor, at Frogmore, there were soldiers and sailors, officers of urt functionaries, kings, princes and princelings, There were no members of the Com- mons, no representatives of Bench and Bar, no delegates from the great municipal and trade corporations, no oftic no representatives of literature, art, science, industry—in fact, not a single person who stood for the brain and brawn of the great Brute foree was represented; antiquated’ mediaeval folly and Britain’s real might and glory were per- mitted humbly to stand by the roadside and bow. What a travesty upon the life and character and real signifi- cance of the good little peace-loving, war-loathing woman who lay When Andrew Carnegie says to young men “Tf you must , do so with a woman twenty or thirty years ohler than ieeeeeeeeeeens Yourself,” he in offect advises them against marriage, does ‘he not? ‘Don’t marry,” he says; “but, if you must, avoid love’s young dream.” ¢ of common sense about marriage? «Ts it wise for a young man to marry? If he does marry, are his chances of happiness and advancement better with a wife of about his own age or with a woman who has attained full development, has good sense, expects little, gives much, inspires the ambition rather than Is romantic love a help or a hindranee? Does a loving young wife lay greater stress upon her husband’s carcer or upon his de- votion to her? Is a marriage based upon so-called romantic love likely to “steady” a young man, to keep him from wasting too much time in the pursuit of the “well-beloved?” Or does it tend to load him down with responsibilities, with alluremonts from and obstacles to a carcer—to make him a coward about taking risks and making ons. “A young man married fs a man that’s marred.” And Rudyard Kipling puts it this way: “Down to Geherua or up to the throne, He travels the fastest who travels alone,” He is als from the colonies, 1 er or tater. EYE!" By FERDINAND G. LONG. $4,995 oe He shotild wear a sign on his back reading: If you see a new specimen of. the Human P:rker write to The Eveching World about it. 888330 Dark Rings Under the Eyes. Dear Mre. Ayer: I would like a recipe for curing ds rings around the eyes. GRATEFUL my opinion there ts always some ] Internal cause for the black rings. The tendency is sometimes heredi- tary, but dark Ines are usually due some congestion of the velns of face, and ure rarely, If ever, found cepting under one or more of the fol- lowing circumstances: When the subject Is aenemic, and there ts some Impairment of the chem- feal constitution of the blood, or when the syatem is being drained, as 1° would be in prolonged study, lack of sleep oF dissipation of any description. A phy- aictan knowing your medical history Is alone capable of advising you prope External treatment ‘s sometimes ef- feetlve temporarily, but cannot be #0 permanently while the cause exts's. Local Treatment,—Bathe — frequently. FINE BLACK CLOTH. UBBARD es HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. with cold water, and use friction, A very Httle turpentine lniment, or weak mmonia, one part diluted ammonia to six parts of water may be rubbed into the skin daily, but care must be taken that tt does not touch the eye prope &! I do not accept compensation for my} services to readers of The Evening World, Thank you very much for your kind offer to pa Steaming WIM Not Dear Mra, Ayer WEI steaming reduce the size of the face? If steaming will not be beneficial can you advise of some simple remedy that will answer the purpose? How mucn would massage ccs Reduce Size, A SUFFERER. FS, the face may be reduced in sine by peraistence and skilAul massage. Steam will have no ef- feat upon it eo far as the contour Is This exquisite skirt and bolero of Mine black cloth haw little tabs of the cloth crossing over trimmed vith gold filigree buttons. The collar, r¢hich fin- Ishes ahe bolero, Is of tucked Latiate and Ince. To Close Rear Ro Tu the Faltor of The Evening World: “Ex-Suloonkeeper” advises closing the rear rooms of saloons and forbidding ‘women to enter saloons, Enforce mich a law and ft pvill bring the blessing of thousands of heartbroken wives and mothers. ‘The rear rooms of saloons are full of drunken men and women. Fortune tellers and card readers go there, and ter midnight the rear rooms are use otan for gambling. EXPPRIPNCE. A Downright Stingy Bea ‘To the FAltor of The Evening World: 1 should like the opinion of others about my John Henry—at least, he wns once, I have given him up now, Dur- ing the holidays the stores keep open until 11 o'clock, and as I am employed in one/of them, my John Henry prom: ised to see me tome and invited me concerned, “ANSWERS THE QUESTIONS vw OF BEAUTY-SEEKERS. ‘The best massage operators command from $3 to $5 a treatment. An unskil ful operator can «to Irreparable mischief. It in much better to go without than to employ an operator not thoroughly, competent. Would Dear Stra, Ayer. Please give mo formula for taking off the skin. My face ts covered with freck] Is the operation of removing the #kin very painful and 1s here any danger of catching ci in the face after applying the lotion, and about how many applications would be neces- sary before freckles are entirely ree moved? THANKFUL, BLBACH sufficiently strong to take the akin off would have to contain more dichloride of mercury or some other acii equally as irritating than 1 am willing to advixe. I gyve you a formula which Is safe; tf you wish to add more mercury it can be! made strong enough to take off the skin, If you do so it must be at your owa risk, Freckle Lotion.—Bichloride of mercury, in a coarse powder, 12 grains; extract of witch hazel, 2 ounces; rosewater, 9! ounces, Agitate untll the mercury ta Alaol ved Mop over the face night and nin orkle of meroury Is, aa you know, Kerous poison, and while perfectly. fuxkested, should be ‘ay of ignorant persons re is no danger of taking con, but amercury {sa very active mineral polsoa, and should be handled with care. ke to Take Of Skin. Seasoning Wood. Same kinds of wood require elght years for effective seasoning. x «6DR. SALT CURES MANY ILLS. 4 household that many of us do not sufficiently appreciate Its high medicinal value. Many and various are the remedial uses to which it may be S ‘te is such a common article in the ut. pas a dentifrice; common salt may be relled on. By Its judicious use the teeth are kept white, the gums hard and the breath sweet. When the gums are ppongy, the mouth, should be washed out twice a day with salt and water, Warm salt and water held in the mouth will sometimes banish toothache, and, at least, mako the aMiction lighter, while it ts both safe and easy to try. Again, equal parts of alum and salt, or even galt alone, placed on a plece of cotton wool, and Inserted In the hol- tow of an aching tooth, will often give relief when other means have failed, ‘To allay neuralgic pains in the head and face take a rmall bag of flannel, fll with salt, heat thoroughly, and apply OR YOUR bETTER MAY BE HERE. ‘of the same, I, after standing on my feet nll day, ate a very light sandwich at the store at 6 o'clock, and when John Henry called to take me home, he pro- posed a walk, Although the night was bitterly cold, I cheerfully complied, thinking we were on our way to a res- taurant, After walking all the way to the elevated station, he proposed a glass of cold soda, I did not accept, and I think I was more charitable than he awhen I wished him to go to where it was ot least warm. t JOHN HENRY'S EX-GIRL. Selfishness vs. Happiness. To the Rdltor of The Evening World: Your correspondent ‘Lovelace’ gives his opinion that the opmist {8 the hap- ploat of human beings. Can a selfish person be happy? Are all optimist: ‘unselfish? I think «hat those who to the affected part, A bag of salt’ placed hot to the feet or any portion of the body 1s better for giving and keeping warmth than le the conventional brick or hot-water bottle, Salt placed on the gum when a tooth has been extracted will prevent profuse bleeding at such a time. An excellent gargle for the throat is simple salt and water, Many serious cases of throat affection might be cured by the use of this alone, if only taken in time, gargling every hour or every halg hour, as the need warrants. A flannel cloth, wrung out of salt water, In also an excellent remedy for simple sore throat, Salt in tepid water is a handy emetic; as an anthlote for the polson, ailver nitrate or ir caustic, give salt and water freely, For poisoning by alcohol, an emetic of warm salt and water should be gives and repeated often, ‘ on and destiny cannot help but be happy. Despair is a word known, only to she self-centred, It Is matnly lack of nergy that causes failure, and repeated heart Is full of love for humanity has no time to consider sorrow; is too far above troubles to see them; misfortune cannot relty Is a condition: which is not applicable to him, because he radiates: hi of The Evening Worl A young lady of my acquaintance has. ' asked me a very serious question which. 1 know can be answered by your read- ers. This past Summer she became en- gaged to a young man, out that ashe could not