The evening world. Newspaper, March 1, 1901, Page 10

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LDN'T BUY THE BOW-WOWS. By T. E. POWER ORY’S TIMELY CARTOON. VINDICATED! eink leirieeeiteieiniceir eee ete! Deus wou Published by the Prean Publishing Company. 63 to 6} PARK ROW, New York Entered at the Post-Oflice at New York as Second- Beer ein iieiiieiine ile ence einen tice hie Pree Perit GO TO THE PEOPLE OF THE STAGE When one think: ; the) almost constant travel, the late hours, the ir- of the hard wor regular meals which are the portion of these is amazed that their features are not marked more by the world’s wear and tear. followers of Thespis one And yet there are few old people on the stage. Old in years | some of them feleieiici-i-t be, but not many are old in appearance. Monotony is one of the surest of wrinkle-producers. The actor's life may be hard, precarious, irregular. Tt is never monotonous. No dull routine day after day for him. Tt can never be said of him that “No euch things as events ever | ruffle the calm surface of his millpoud existence.” Ifis life is all events and an ever-changing kaleidoscope of scenes and faces. No getting up three hundred and sixty-five morn- ings in the vear from the same bed to sit at the same breakfast table —and perhaps the same breakfast. No going to the same office to sit at the same desk and talk with the same people on the same old threadbare subjects. No trudging to the same house through the . same strects to the same dinners at the same hours. In short, the word “same” is not to be found in the actor's bright lexicon. ‘To-day he is in New York dining at club or hotel at 7—a civilized dinner hour. To-morrow he |‘ “dines” on a buffet-car, cold beans being the + chief article of diet. To-morrow night he is] ina sinall town making his supper on country | + THE DUCHESS'S OBDURATE PAPA (to Dog Merchant) » Not to-day, 5 sausages and weak tea. Next day he has arrived at another city and |‘¢ Autolycus. We've got all the expensive household pets 1 present. for three days lives like n lord at tho best hostelry available. (ehhh rere ehhh bbb ite Surrey | And so it goes. The enforced sausages and baked beans give H IET HUBB A D A VE ANSWERS THE QUESTIONS #* j him a keen appreciation of the sweetbread and devilled crab. A cy * OF HOUSEWIVES. To-night he sleeps on a superior hair mattress and box spring. Two Fine Recipes. of eatery has been botled; thea ) : does 4 Dear Mra Aver: ey: i To-morrow night he swears the hours away on a bed which appears] “Wit you kindly give me recipe for ee 2 Da — to be filled with cobblestones. Dolled srouets (nats tae enltes delle fae lines HoGeN or UAtIL Che A A . . grouse, to be eaten cold); also Jusged ¥ * te s ‘] The actor is always looking forward. He is always expecting | hare (Eneliah atytey $ jer, Dish the pieces of tates } * a DR felled grouse, clean the bind and wih tour, Add a Js something to happen. He never knows what it means to be sure as cut it up with fhe exception of th t jelly and one of | + A A , chich eh . 5 one minute es | Hcinini-i-t to what is going to oceur next day. He can't even guess what he’s i Pret: which ehould be lettin me Soe er ata ear A = a ae = = SS r “ a A Put the pleces In a st n with the erry, a GIRLS BE GRACEFUL! DON T TO OU ONLY ONE PROPER| £°ing to have for breakfast. He can’t he pesitive he is going to have} iver, heart and gizzard; add two bay inmates 3 leaves, a small bunch of parsley and ho trhan C. 2 ey 9 ° ¢ yw WAY TO WALK.| any breakfast at all. GSS RRNA pra haa ri At with ench’ portion of HAT {s the kangaroo walk? te the; It waa possible for the fashion to de-| passed, The atraight foot Is now de- He has ample opportunity of improving his mind and making] *ater to cover, season to taste with ante question that comes from many |come popular because at that time little} manded nt Weat Point, where the z fs ee and pepper, ani boll the mass until very How Make Fis Persons. Tt te x series of nbmurd Jattention wan paid to the art and] “pletes” have to practise walking on a of himself a walking encyclopaedia if he so choose. THe can read | tender i Ae Mins contortions practised by young ®OMN) solenem of henuty straight tne, and it has long been the A * ior ‘ + 5 | When cooked take It out of the Hquor, i Who are devoid of brnine or common | yee training and neathette phitoe.| Tule in the German army during long journeys by land and sea; he can amuse himself by play-| wut the teat wit the breast. in. tout recipe for fig teing for a } sents: They lean very, ar romper pil calwarsthorlenidisd rs hoheanaiehere SHED ejlesvitn tN ieNes wroperpolees| ini, cards, drawing, composing music, writing plays or conversing |!0"* anes PO i nia ot thd LKB | ewing their arma and take long steps! ane L i we | the ear, the mhoulder and the Mp a % z s : meat Into smali pleces. Tut the do Pr eet oe not unlike the hops made famtiiar to) WAS [tle Individuality In Fach | on a iine, ‘The et held up, and the | with chance acquaintances or his fellow-players. In fact, he can do| back tnto the saucepan with half an] enor te ponents ee od) the public by the antmal that ts exhib. /Meaaon had Its distingutehing style, ANd | dia hragm exp foto ite Mall extent. 4 se S i ounce of gelatine that has firwt been dis. | «to give us a recipe { \ ited by every Well-conducted menagerte[SVery one followed tt. The evolution racy quate the tower mbs almost on a| Very much as he likes and knows no such thing as daily routine. ealtealintataimall ausntliiotiwaterrana | Jelctanectiarn on the 4 of true Idenia han made tt Imposmble | cortical line with the toes and throws . . ite as nly: 1 sminuten|tevice tn nard-botled esas: Ir suggests Itself i “0 ver the new atyle of gait ia Itmited | for artificial and nonsenateal modes to] i the aidomen There is monotony connected with the downiest pillow ever |!!! gently. COE oe aaa [largest silce of tn the cular fondant of 1 que longer. Strain the ilquc 1 a Ee ae to the few foolish matdens who enjoy |be considered good form Having attained the right position, tt] made for the human head to rest on when the same head and tho] bag and pour aulicten: into a deep ple| {he dish. arrange ao rpenkehand seat ase making themselves conspicuous, and tt! The fashions will always be carica- ary to remember that walking - zi : den to heovers ihe torioany Avner tne| slices around #, pour, {nan ‘ tnd mix in i will never become really prevalent. be-| tured ty a certain clans of women, the of falis, and that the upper| i.eeeeeeeeeeees, Samo pillow are daily companions. And the ee dely aa leave t Wats 1TH Burt am coe ie. i cause the women of fashion are nowa- | women whose dress denotes their men-| part of the body should move forwant| {so FRTTERS . ATE egies a in the remainder of the pleces of orrectet days wained to walk sclentfically. wong | HH And moral decaience Lefarohthel teatelrhethodyiahoulabnoe ae prettiest china and daintiest linen, viewed day Sox arrange them tastefully, prot Thirty years ago the Greciun bend | Therm ta only one way to walk, and | away: elther to the right or left In walk- cept se after day, yoar after year, must pall sometimes OR HOME SOS | mainuer carefully over, and pat tn a cold was the horror of all who wdmired) that ts the right way, the way tn which ling It should be held firmly, but all] b q 1 i i : nt ts firm dip tae Sn the human form divine. Women wore @! nature destened men to move. There t8|sttnass aheuld te avoided. upon the best of us. , {tke in war ; C : : MS hump on thelr backs and they bent| nozhing in the world more graceful than| “qn creping the movement should be TI i iS Raa DRESSMAKERS, eee eee a eeen atch is JOIN THE KICK CLUBIE forward and minced along Inn tnanner| the free gait of a child. It te the poctry | prom the hips, und the ball of the foot here are times when wo would gladly perch on a stool at a aaa a napkin, garnish with a few A { that would have amused an ape. The| of motion. should touch the ground altehtly tn! Tunch-countor and tackle a ham sandwich or a doughnut hard enough| THe Evening World's Dally |spriss of parses and serve. ~ SEND IN YOUR K:CK! Grecian bend accompanted many ¢x-| persone who walk progerly have the | jvance of the heel. It fs nonsense to esti Fashion Hint. [PRT HER SUE AEG Seni Dnt Rnd AClenD Ang mums = sm aggerations of dress and colffure, and | dy perfectly balanced. ‘They walk with | ery ty walk by putting down the toen| to do duty on a battle-field if oily by way of change. jeiterees hare, car ane ee Into two a2) yon final absurdity that mado | the straight foot, for the day when “tors | frat, for the movements thus vequtred i ur esl f - | siecen and sever each Joint. Fry a a Soe Nulve for much needed reforms, |out’” waa the proper injunction has|are far from correct. Home is certainly what every actor yearns for. But, delightful 0 cut the Snekeelorithia earnlne onton to a pale brown tn hot dri; RENTS a —— ————__—_—_——_—— aa iti A . popes 4 «i um size 35-8 yards 27! ut in the meat, peppered, #alted us . ND NEIGHBORLY IN LITERARY CHICAGO, {88 it is to sit under one’s own vine and figtres, a great many Inchen wide oF 15-8 yande Winches | Houred, and cook for ten minutes fast, house in Phils HOW TO BE NICE A ie “So this, then fs your husband's new| of those who enjoy this privilege do not escape so many wrinkles as |*!2% *!!! be reaulred. To cut the Ave-| curning often. : Uyown: aes HE WOMAN tn 2016 had just moved) ‘I was just waiting to catch you, Mra. |yprary, Mrs Muchrox? Ab, To see he a bs a ri Put into the bottom of an agate-tron at 2 ‘ I: fn and she was very anxtous t0| Who-ever-you-are.’ hna Dickens and ‘Thackeray stde by alde.| do their peripatetic brothers and sisters. saucepan a layer of chopped fat salt | ¥ arr woe ~; bs ets ‘ . Ais h 5 4 ‘ Sree a struck z know something about her neigh-| “Well, one can't be too careful about | wrtoy de you constler the greater of Another reason why actors—and, of course, one means actresses, pork: Laprinkle) withSonlonanarsiey jaunt, ee aie n wore, glanced pore. The woman tn 218 was curtous | stranger the two? . ‘ > p paprica. Upon this lay the pleces 0 a ring st aD ah about the newcomer, A nt tao? Well, I bet your name | + ny, Dickens! Joshua pata 32.40] also—preserve their youthful appearance is to be found in the fact hare and cover with another layer and burted one ; oclety ook, Your| more for them Dickenses than he had to i chopped pork and onion, A few bits of 1 xt 5 eldence brought them to the the soclety 19 bok. more for them 1 3 s x pe uy fence at the same hour. ear red flannels.” give for ‘Thackerny’a books right at the| that they are able to forget their actual age. fresh tomato would not be amie, Pour , th from his a keg up to her 5 of Sht do y urdomn) ieee same tanuse.’ So long as a man or woman can play young characters, so long in a cupful of cold, weak stock In which | han turned up a ig tub. q @ Woe a long 1 tel | - : ici Aialniegapactivetal ligerents exchanged glare daggem | HE WAS ON. as they can by use of grease paints look the youthful parts they are NTIES cir heads met and there were excla-| Then 3n6 melted | > 5 il i i . Danae ofigullty surp: | “tatdn’t Just mean to hurt your feel. | ieeeeeeeececes Supposed to portray, they are allowed to play SSR ae arent tte errs Tae vv BAL were you es f Pata vou Lit SVELL + these roles. ‘They are not placed on the shelf forcerererecrere the oranges, cut them | tno 8 pan of 7" demanded 2 x | : . Strips and) welsh | botling wa " |. Covel my) yard7;" deman: yvettiretorted || A bit of sense In nelghdora | POTENT. ust because a certain number of years have Candicd tnto strips and welsh | botllng water a ihe SNOW. youve; motes ACEY Oli F de? ; nN them, place in boiling | With a meringue ir two whit os, “Tt you who was doing the ethene: treeeeeemeeeees rolled over their heads. Orange.} ice via cook until |of the sheer cAunbenae my fault and I am going : py aes Cn ne = ze right away.” | ’ hig 7 © 7 . tender, Piace ¢ eve! i i HO gan And when a woman looks young, feels young and is engaged to and put in screen or cool oven un- Cat the oranges ity tt | i “gee 4 ; es ae ¢ « re are all the binme nase: | play young girls on the stage, she comes to believe she is young. Ml dry, To two pounds of fruit take Mie ataitrieee aie HOW IT DEVELOP | Nomaelcouanedhan ie ; young Heese gat anmie and /aiplatiand a yd run a atl Ertanoenn . | She never thinks of her real age. Raleiethen Boll th sar and wa- bet athe aD 1 | i —— clear nnd the peel isan awful cute pt : : eer ‘ : = ter together until there is a good, cle peel, ] To be photoxram te a ar tal eute pigeon house w, in the case of a woman w ho has grown up and crept on syrup, Place the orange strips Ina dish, | 7” » orange and ecg Ty inte hea sae 1's Just woe freak of vohn's saw | toward middle life in one community, do you think she is ever per- pour the syrup over and allow them to | leaving It in powdered Sodabs SEEM ‘and hammer.) Hut: thatiislacfine sitter | | mitted to forget her age? aoak in the ayrup for twenty-four hours, | sugar and dip t batter before Dolly mocked my | you have.” | Wrcane comical Ain ‘Thon atrain the ayrup from the orange | the sugar ha: + to dissolve. The With coquetry muaite nei theae aiodesn iain. | NO|TANS CEPT Not mueh! Every one in the town is strips, boll It until It crnekles and pour | batter ix made of two eggs, one tabl Wed my plates and antes, | ORAS SG vane : it boiling over the orange rinds. Again | spoonful o° oll, cupful of flour, half-cup- AMY : keeping tabs on her. And she k heart many cinders, It would be | Eee: ping tabs on her, And she knows it. let them rtand for twenty-four hours. | ful cold water, saltspoonful salt, table With bamling smiles caprictous. at thing for me. | Fcerenerenerenene-e—e-ere: # “Yes,” her friend will sav, “I know Daisy "Pits procesk may be repeated a third | spoonful sugar. Stir xalt Into the ex Gti! attempting, | eesayes, en you shall have mR any time you soi ftir lv al 5 ae : ae and a fourth time. | yolks, acd slowly the oll, then the sugar. BUll she posed, unheoding 1am going to send you over al Brown looks only about twenty-five. But she was born the day Scald two cupfuls! When well mixed stir in slowly the flour Palvedic katever;verssl nal of my natiies after awhile.” | Aunt Susan died of erysipelas, : was thirty-six year: Bence ee eee eciitar | Meme tiragh? cantar Tl aie ee "Give an gran _ mats, atuliieailualnatalnna aetecer | | Aunt Susan diec of erysipelas, and that was thirty-six years ago the ‘Orange + one-quarter cupful of | Beat tt well and set it aside for two Pee ee aine tear entieny unes ver the fence.” | 10th of last July. in Puddin, i dried bread crumbs, | hours at least. to use, stir eee “You are too kind! But L want to ank | i Now, the player-folk do not have these old neighbors keeping ere, MMIEt | yarde Mt inches wide or | Bed ietting tt stand until| in the whites eX Deaten to To make me melancholy you to come over to-night. John ts! | " eet fter dielak sana 8 S Keeping |s 1-4 yards 27 inches wide. | Kotaamectacateelernet oti In the mean | stiff froth. The batter should be very I cherish one rharp negative |kolng to give selections on Ris phono- {tally or reminding them after the charming manner of long acquaint- ee eee se ev ipheakciet | While bent the yolks of (wo exgs to a | stiff and of a consistency to completely © That I got of Dol ph. |> dirs, Jones (very precise) Ont ances of the fact that they are “growing old like the rest of us.” When (Ne Not alzew St te 30) wilt be [cream with one-half cupful of sugar./coat the article It Is Intended to cover. —From “Olde Love Lavender,” “Pri try, but not unless you promt | You do exnggerite Ive never see They look v r, they feel v liev - eet ety 7 : Mix together the milk and bread) Dip in fat and fry to an amber color, oC z < mG Ty ral cata a hey look young, they feel young, tley are young. sent for 10 cents; both patterns, 3) cents, |} L rs toe i . by Roy L. McCardell. to come aver Sunday. Goodby, nny “NE athens ASA TARA ERT 8: Send money te “Cashter, ‘The World, | crumbs, eras and sugar, a tablespoonful | draining thoroughly on a plece of browm met | rip when the pre 3 re done.” often, carn, of melted butter and the juice of one | paper. ulitzer Building, New York City. THE EVENING WORED’S BIG LETTER CbhUB TAKES UP bIVE TOPICS AND DISCUSSES THEM. | thenrts, Jeummer season at the many side years’ bad luck woult follow. Same vad, longer deacrives the dest type of man. 7,30 o'clock a Bay Ridge train of three, wi t very ve were) those loo ‘or wor ; "Ty the Wslitor of Tm World Te inday in the day hots 1 Peat Hot show up. On contrary, | Now tt He tlbes ue Se Ma hes of the Hrooklyn Snatly. "Transit raeneatins ane ot, thirty nen sect oT Lar RN rest ag | wear, Sa fit tu naveate ‘ © been Very 3 « tatd . ab . PA - . iE. 8, A ‘Phe action noof th the proprietors oe LO teat peta lelaurely around the curve at the CON? the trainmen, we do no such thing. : CGtional Sabbath Alilance tn denouncing of the ng] Worry abou: ot Moctal manners, leaving inorais | Brooklyn slde of the bridge. There were ALL Depends on Pr lire. from one of! the ‘teain’ss crew. a @ Quarantine Doge and Ca 9) Bithe young men’ Sunday calling w Many other places of a leval Lf you: have me Wad luck nt ation. HOOK | passengers cnough for ix cars. The} To the Ediwe of The Hvening tboard or sometimes a pack of cards, | To ine [titer of Wortt: Mei thelr aweethearts” rightly deserves the more deg wuence, It our] an etka Ialand Gelevances, | jamming, pushing, busting and swear-| In reply to “Indignant Parent," who| for which we pay five to 10 cents, Wel During an ¢ ety Feat censure, becau falls to ob-| Young men can spend thelr Sundays| | tothe mtitor of me Honing Wort [Mug of the passengers wan something| wants to know if corporal punishment, pay for what we get and no more. Vos-| eases the Hoard of Ilealthy clteee ee he proverb: “lat wel worthily, don't st Woot. ie ) There are thr wrongs In Staten! terrific, Instead of the question, “Can't| for girly in still allowed in English | slbly, Mr. Beam, frem Pompton, has to} antines the victims. or eine sera When taking into con Why, Wha ntlert Jisland 1 will respectfully call attention| something be done?” 1 would Itke to] boarding-schools, would say that {tall stand up in the citrs every morning. | from their homes to stop the spread of fact that New York ix UUme thes alton sel tha castes . fm a wat nj know WHY something ts not and can-| depends what) kind the principal fa: Well, there are others, and if he's | tne disease, 131 : Rat yitetalich a denunciation in| he Evening W | morals, not be done? vicious, | Papa xent me to boarding-school In the tired, why, let him alt on the floor and; ‘ » Bue the family dog or cat + allowed to ro, j Kerms uf dtsess [ilarase to oth ft Is true that the tk: antelianes are | may to be kteked | toy f town while they are h | old country, and on 1 have been ' at will and carry, chy spreading the fridiculous, It ts all the more su | ' S r families. While the biwe positively know that in cer- than a dozen | fet hie feet han 1 switched for | ¢ ing rules. All schools may not be ning over 1 shoul uy B., Paswate, N. J. Kissing Season, sterize an ape vat , re. ie f “ . t 0 % : Unemployed Go to the Coantry, | Board of Meith ix teytng so ue MB-mectiony the Sabbath in almont HONmaTITNs us ules f (of molera Ken: nd (hue preveat many peopie| To the KAlior of The Evening World: the sume, however, FANNY VatiUnemutor ed) Goikn the 7a] Hoard of Healy ta text ca deat oe MiyRalerccarded, and that in the | tlemen, and a bluff, honest manj from. riding on ley from St] In answer to “An Odd Query” signed | Defends Car 1c Commuter ne | [not pas some ‘attention tothe. family ia us More Mirror ‘Ten nds [must have somewhat coars ners | Gicorge to Gi continue the “Jvatyna,” asking hold old a Uttle gill yy ine ral ne Evening Wofl There are men in New York to-day} dog or eat? 7. i | {to the Elitor of ‘The Hvening Workt Jor he la out UT MO eee a eee ee ere ie mat] should be when she ceases to allow] | would Ike to say n few words In are walking around looking for] —— Sie dlishenie peabatlinaltn ly Biitaratinatiomainwitinrl:.| In reply to letter of J. 0. Rrookiyn,!gan is not a When weighed |for these handleaps, See how the five-| grown men to kles her in a paternal] relation to ok on Pie ened | Grove they ae anes Os t waite all alana Tri VL rewarding i luck following a broken} by the Sampxe but dt ie quite [cent Gere built up Harlem Since a grown man seldom care} playing commuter,” by a Pompton, 3 SIMO MS FeL a SeuUc Amante (hey coun i) ™ _ ) N THE KICK CLUB!; |imrror, 1 eg? to ninte) that 1. wae | vriie Unae dampaon'a gentleman il A CONSTANT READER. |{5 sommonce keaing female children be man, Now. "MMe, the V, Ficam, et} MrUctte K tn she ‘country. here are JOIN THE KICK CLUB! victim of the broken mirror twice within| Hot the best kind of one elther for a ooklyn Sanlly Transit.” fore they are seventeen and good look-| Pompton,’ 1 wish to state that. wel ¢ stevetbnclonienuee tend 2 : vat olflser © 0 chopped ‘there, ‘plenty uf eis lo be |e months, some ton years ago, nd any ra OF tfens/ Indeadert bellaves toe [-vo\ che lhalter/ot | the/frening | World Ing, the kiseing season of thz average] “card-playing commuters" do not, as| cleared and euMelent other work to be|_4 SEND IN YOUR KICK! was informed at the time that seven} word has lost its old meaning and nol On Tuesday evening of thie week at 6004 looking female child should end] you say, “hog halt of the essay’ fm the lino of farming. I hope ropegeyrnyey Tes by é . %

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