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eee | OST IN THE BLIZZARD By T. E. POWERS. Hele tetdeieieteteteldeietei- et teteicieteeteteieietet tteete Q a a A ZOE one f - POLICE COMMISSIONER MURPHY (who 1s snowed under by reports con- cerning the gambling houses existing !n New York)—There Is no gambling going on here—at least, none that I can find 4 oO De et a sO SOME THINGS A WOMAN WON'T FORGIVE. ing that, and yet be loved, but he must be ap- prectative; he rmust know some thingn by Intuidon. [t ia possible for a woman to forgive a man for Kissing her when she does not want to be kinsed. But) out being told, and above all things he where {» the woman who ondd forgive| ahould know enough to know nothing a man who fatied to kiss her when she| fy the man with a ore of untimely) wanted to be kissed? knowledge ts periaps the worst boor of! ‘The man who can't toll an aMrmative | all no from a negative no deserves his fate. A woman despleas an ineffectual mar He ts the man who muat lve without! ong who ts aiways trying and falling, | love. one who is alwaye grasping after this, ‘The intuttve man te the ideal lover./ that and the other. and always falling isband. Heaven preserve us/ just a jittie short of hin desire. from the:man who wants everything #x- Plained, when your jokes, your con- victtona end even your philosophy of Mfe mst bear the test of being put mto words. glance, promises made, and where {5 the record? V upon the heart whet all records of vaiue are kept. Aman whould know some things with- BOPLP are fond of there {s nothing that a wom won't forgive. It ta kind of people to that, but I don’t think tt 1 true. A man need not be good looking. he/ need not be smart and he need not be| food, and yet some charming woman | will love him. Men have been loved after committing all tho crimes on the calendar. Ol4 men been ten@erly loved by fair young rirls, Poverty to a true woman ts almost a charm Ln a lover, however tnconventent ft may be in a husband. And beautl- ful women seem to be proud of the ugit- neas of their husbands. I know one wo- man who ia as beautiful as a dream, her husband {s litde, ugly and none too emart. She adores him, calle him her A woman Jaspises a weak man, the man who ts always calling upon un for ayimpathy, the man who is always canting hia Durdens upon hie wife, It ts for a woman ugly duckling, her ¢ariing bear and| Worle are Gangereus things and) cxpecis ner husband of lover to bear her ether names equally complimentary.| should not be fmduigea In too freely. lens for her, If he oda to her bur hem from her Inatead of lifting shoulders and bearing them own he tna failure i ow much more expramfve ts a glance than a atring of words, and how much eafer, Volnmes can be expressed in a shen she calls him ugly he beams upon ber and seems to fen) compimented. ‘A man may be learned and unkempt THIS IS THE WAY TO TAKE REST. HE art of resting 1» more dim-| The apirit with which rest ta taken | cult than most people suppose It {influences ite value ‘“T've got to lie to de, for there are se many ways|down, but I hate reating,” ts a apeech | of spoiling the result, too often made, | Upon the principle that life ts mae| A willingness to rest Is sure to nase up of little things, adopt the bdellef |tireinam, mhather of baty or of mint: that little tirednesses should not be al- |@ determined putting aside of meian lowed to multiply. | choty and of effort ‘There are symptoms that Indicate rhe) Unless we admire enervation of char need of rest. There ‘s the “overaromd- | acter, with ‘tn fretfulnens, sunpiclour ea feeling in the head, when our ness, Jealousy, ennut and lack of sym upon his WP? Love's Loaic. =| HE. HEN we were boy ant girl we played es, and to their niclinicicieinici- eit Nearest mais punting other thoughts retuee to flow; there te the |Pathy, we must admit that to take sum SHE, t heaviness of hands, the aching of (lent rest ts one of the creature's obit Toufattinl hreihecacipne neon wrists, the pecullar etiftnem in the |fAtions ami that tt ts no moan know parades cities a OE TEA back of the neck; the unnecessary |O#K® 10 Unterstand the art of resting Aarne + hopelessness, the bunien of depreaston, | ~~ —— : i of A precedent estabitshed ao + the distaste for society. Who has not IN THE STYLE. %% Downe not w oholl-for you wuffered from one or another of forms of tiredness? To rest from mental fatigue we must exercise the body in some healthful oc- these have grown, HE | \ Dear one, the words you say are feupation. Some will derive moat benefit | true ‘from a bicycle spin, others from «| Tort 1 have grown Pil not deny “grind” at some mechanical diMcutty in Which evens things be ay two- labor in the ganien, a feat of pedes- triantem, @ canter acrors country, a row against the ourrent or a game of tenn!s or golf. Though phyetca! toll ts a remedy for A tired head, mental work ts not bene- ficial to a ured body. In some casen oF over-exertion, when the limbs are ach- ing, the intellect {s abnormally active and capable of work superior to that Mor you have crown as well aa It may not wand anaivais, Rue them, you see, they were she let him have the ) Olde Love and Laven- whieh it usually performs, but {f ne fer by Roy L. MeCantell take advantage exottability we eas Weiner Sannay sr shall have to pay for tt eee Peer: plaessabeiiever septic | — —— | avr: EB ren, ailrratearltons at ntl etme Ba Ly JOIN THE KICK CLUB!}/ THE EVENING WORLD’S BIG bkETT ‘To Abate a Nulannce, Re would see where his mistake comes) lady whom he took to hear Jean de To the Editor of The Krenine M Our growing yo men seem 1) | Reszke sing, and paid ty after he AS the Board of Health han decided have more manhood m than had promise, to pay 35 that expectorating on the floors of carn. majority of ve Mild not afford ta do. more ig a pubsic nu detrimental to) maloons having our hiivine Unimiiioegontol hervadd ithe public he _ Protect a suffering com eothia vulrar practive as y Other reasons above {tho car companies to obe: ‘place !m all cars the no not unt please from | Tomust way t shown Ny how things were A PRE the nl on Use More Diacrett from wo there wo staying tired to are he Board, and alxo compe! the coa- \ helping hand to ple are stand. SW. | Pr opour par When Mre dy get up and arvawt wal om ieltasinied Isiand she will ha Utne : [fo make her first stop at much place ° Serpette ct Tee Evening World , | Aw are frequented by ‘Theo. Do TL and YE WHO KNOWS. In reply to “Theo. D. H., Staten I~ | i compant parry wish to ray that rarely, if ev Work bE men stand on the corner) eM Mer At of The Koning Inland and inault those passing | Tw the nator of The Evening World nut the un- would take into consideration | In ans to the Rentleman of twenty | E Mo our big the)corners are monopo-| three, who wishes to know how tojc Why don't the men out of work ‘They can all find oe Lamectyse ern cme | Dr. Frederic Peterson, whose three vol-! umes of admirable Ivries may not be as popu-| Ti larly known as thes should be, has been the laureate of his profes-| ston in New York | But it has vemined for Dr. William Tod Helmuth, who} dropped inte verse before the Homoeopathic Medical College, to call | upon lis mise jaround medic ia vou a NO. 10.490. d by the Press Publishing Company, 83 to & PARK ROW, red at the Post-Office at New York as Second: PASSING OF THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN AND RISE OF THE MEDICAL SPECIALIST. A predilection for writing poetry is one of the recognized traits of the physieian. . : taut | ter verse is not dissimilar to the mathematician’s fondness for music, and he is prone to indulge itin his hours of leisure. ya threne loet Ile sang a dirge there over the pass- ul dirge in its outward its ingot the family a rather che vin, but one nevertheless inspir mournful feelings in auditors Dr. Helmuth laments the dec in usefulness of the all- Tinan, the gener titioner. The sy with tubes of bs: eitlist has ousted hi and replaced his medicine case tterin and bottles of deadly germs, portentous in| their capacity for damage if set free. he interloper has raised the standard of his services and the | ALIst tigures of his fees correspondingly. The very distinction of his name holds his patients aloof and blights that personal in- tereourse that made one’s relations with his ‘tor something betrer than friendship. In many respe he is an inadequate substitute. | But perhaps the worst feature of the new dispensation in medi- cal science as exemplitied in the specialist is the limitless possibili- ties it has disclosed for the discovery of new phases of disease and new sources of contagion. | The lurking germ has become an ever-present menace, and the specialist is scrupulously faithful to his training in tracking it to its | j lair and holding it up to the apprehensive contemplation of the} public | Thus, in conscientiously utilizing his abundant opportunities | for warning, he has become an extraordinary alarmist. His appetite for sensation grows by what it feeds on until his periodical announcement of new perils has become characteristic. | Yet, girt about as he is by these malign foes, man continues | to fill the length ef vears allotted to his fathers. fre eeeeeeneneeneeh In fact, the actuaries find that the “e: { DESP AED WAN'S LIFE. ety peetation” of his life has increased by five t. years during the last half century. Is it possible that in shuddering at the doctor's fearsome revelations, as a child at a nurse's ghost story, we are not taking his warnings seriously? LASTS LONG He WOULD BE NEEDED. Or ee | hauting @ © DOO ood ORACE THE HOG. By FERDINAND G. LONG. Picea eicieieietetetet eletelelelelelelelelnicfeleleleletetet-ictetetetetet ot 7, aA If vou see 1 new specimen.of the Human The Evening World about it. SSS HEM Porker write to ete betetetetetedetetetedatetatetetetettetetebattatetatetelefeteteteteletettetefetefetetettettedefetottettatetetctetetetefeettetetetetatetatetattet ‘- eae HARRIET HUBBARD AYE Tried Rome Dear Mre Ayer Tam a young lady, twenty-one, and have been troubled with pimples and blackheads for about eight year have tried several face washes lotions and have consulted a phyal and never received any relief, eo will be Without Suecese. advise me. YOUNG LADY, Elmira, N. YT. OU do not tell me what remedi Y you have tried, but I suggest the follawing lotion: Precipitate of sul- Phur, one dram; tincture of camphor, one dram, glycerine, one dram; orange flower water, four ounces. Mla and 1p- ply at night after thoroughly washing the face with a bland soap, which must be as carefully ringed out. Camphorated O11 Will Not Reduce. Dear sre Ayer If you use camphorated off, wil] that reduce the flesh? Mrs. J. 0, 1 do not think camphorated ofl will have the effect of reducing the flesh. You will have to try the obesity treatment, for which I give you the rul Avold all starchy and sweetened all cereals, vegetables containing sugar rostarch, such as pens, beans, co poe s. &c, Have your bread toasted, sprinkle It with salt Instead of butter, Milk, f cegret to way, ff It be pure and good, 1s fattening. Hot water is an ex- celient substitute for other liquids, Add Uttle of the Juice ef Iimes or lemons to It If vou choose, Limit your sleeping 4 en on { QUERIES «x» ANSWERS | @ee-o-o-e-0-0-0- 0-0-0 2 -0-0-0 Yes. Was there ever a woman by the name of Mrs Place executed In this Stas A Wom Is Johretone Bennett, of theatrical fame, a man or a woman? ALEX. H. WEISS. Martha What is the correct name of George Washington's wife before she married him? Many htstorier have “Marthe Cur. while others have ‘Martha Cus- LOUIS RIFKIN. No Relation. Fhense let me know tf Brutus was the stepson of Caewar? If not, how re- lated? 3. Gc. A Ts Ris A claims there are more people dead since the creation of the wortd than are now living. H says the opposite (thar re more people living than dead). te right? C. HARRIS. Two Different Men. Are the author of “Quo Vadis" Sien- Kiewiez) and the author of “Resurrec- tion’ (Count Leo Toleto!) the same man under two different names, or are they different persons? It joorge, may T write and accept Mrs. Brown's Invitation for 4 SEND IN YOUR KICK! Fs Ae ara ttered, Hedges—Howly, Hult, | taken more. courage nd her boy a birthiiny party [| whatcher think o° me new Raglan over- [to tell her that font love her, after and while vou are writing you had better write Dr. Sure Mf. | pr year BINH ey at? [having ones told her that sou dide? | Qutek to call the day after the party. long hours oy month y, ing and pushing bustness would not be Fnait so bad. I have noticed that when | Yranatt cars pulle in good Nh y work, of Rood yiair and go a arin of Rapid the New York end of the Brookiyn e the peopie make a rush for tt is plenty ving tr various ighing and | like wid beasts, Now, If the people! spring work will soon be ready, and | would only take it more slowly every- | reason why every! thing would be going on in good shape. | nnot get all the R. PARKER. 0, many are too | es lazy and don't want work, but take The Shop at) tem care 19 KO out of the way of getting | TO the FAlitor of The Evening World fh These “bums woult sooner “pane, Cannot something be done to com: | hand in Ni York t Ive tn tho| Pel the merchant tatlors of New York cauntts: A SECOND MRE NATION. | {0 keep shop for thelr employees instead jof having them take the work home The Unmannerty Passenger. | and making a “shop” of their so-called To the Editor of The Eventes Worlt homes? They are not too well paid, 1 would lke to say something of the| considering thelr hours of labor, which Brooklyn Rapid Transit, as 1 have] are generally from about 7 in the mom- noticed no many different complaints n{ing until nearly midnight, It would your paper. Now, If people would only | benefit the wealthy class, as well as the have a littie more manners this rush-! tailor who sells the clothes, if the mer- {tagion spreads aa It does? A DAILY READER. chant tailor wan compelled to have work- rooms for ali his men, They can well afford to do {t and not put the expanse on the worker, who generally has a large family to support, and whose children may be {ll with diphtheria, scarlet fever or other contagious diseases which are Mable to Infect the clothing. Is it therefore to be wondered at that cons 0. A. A Disseminator of Microhes. To the Biltor of The Rvening Worl!: They make us at the Bureau in the Supreme Court kit Ridle at the end of the usual ‘That's all right. oath. Although the Bible ta very holy to me, nevertheless we muat take care that no contagion Come to us by kiesing that took “and touching it with our lips, I think that the power and the holiness of the oata would not, be Infericr ig they put a clean paper! very grateful to you If you wil! kindly | hours to seven at the You must take ex. If you cannot waik at ~ ANSWERS THE QUESTIONS ss HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. s vw OF BEAUTY-SEEKERS: ercine they require. The system ts thor- xhiy wholesome and not expensive, In reducing flesh the one fast to recol- at fat is carbon—oxygen de- burns out carbon, You must bon by the oxygen you ugh your lings. ‘The more ex. e more oxygen and consequent t by the one healthful Kk obenity. arch and sugar you eat the to burn away. © for Quinine Hatr Tonic. liv print a recipe for a heir tento somed of rum and quinine. Mra. W. 8 RY this tonic: Sulphur of quinine, 2 grain Unsure of canthartdes, l 2 dram, Jamaica rum, § drams; . Leunce, bay rum, 6 oune water ugh to make @ a day, and do not wheel, go to one of A Good Shampoo, the institutions where mechanical mass | Dear Mrs Aye sage in given. Seceral orre- | Lain a South of sixteen and my head spondents report exceller thla method of getting the OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. eee alzes 32 10 42) will be ment for 10 cents. The petticoat pattern (No. to 30) will be aent for 10 cents. terns 3 cents. jend money upon the book at every kiss, and, after it was kissed, burned that FAL, B, BCHWARZ, Men or Shortt Ta World's Hint. 8 to “Cashler. Th Pulitzer Building. New York \ paper. ‘To the FAltor of The Evening World Do girls prefer tall men to men of medium height (5 feet 11 inches), and few girls seem: to care for me, wherean they are all making g00-g00 eyes at my younger brother, who ‘# 6 feet 3 Inches. because he tw tall, or only becaure he {s attractive otherwite? Girls, speak up! All other things being equal, does a tail man find more favor in your eyes than medium height? I am hia less elongated brother? To th flior of The Rv Tam alck of all this foolish, idiotic talk ‘of Socialism! Stop shouting for equal imprae- ot FRED J. CUSTIS, Brooklyn. allenge, @ivision of weekth, you weirdly from | Is fa Daily 3,610, aizes 22 Both pat- ia. World. City." Ie this of dandr ire if. Kindly publish che t H.W. formule to HAMTCO your hair at least once a week, using the shampoo for which I give you formula: Yelk af ore pint of hot rain water, one spirit of rosemary; beat the ) thoroughly and use tt warm, rubbing 4 well into che skin of the head. Minse thoroughly in several waters, This wash is good for dandruff when tho ordinary ehampoo fails. SPOOLS EAT UP FORESTS, ‘T the present rate of the manufac: rote of spooin and other articles the Immense white birch forests of | Maine cannot last many years, Al: Ithough the birah forests are extensive the fact that seventeen spool mills and A large number of so-called novelty mills are eating up the timber at the rate of from 25,000,000 to 40,000,000 feet’ annually excites the apprehension of foresters and manufacturers. The apoct miils use about 92,000 cords, or 16,001,000 feet, of birch annually, turn- ing out £9,000,000 spools, each spool large enough to carry 30 yards of thread. The amount of thread that could be wound upon these 800,000,000 spools would reach 3,600 times around the world at the equator end leave @ Mette for mending. ‘About as much epoot wood ts sent to Europe every year as is manufactured ito spools In Maine, ———_ A CYNICAL COMDFENT. There has been a@ cut in rubber-goods, but this doesn't affect the price of the traditional boarding-house beefsteak. bran elecitimatlratiliBactnt mel | JOIN THE KICK cLusit 4] SEND IN YOUR KICK! See ER CbUB TAKES UP bIVE TOPICS AND DISCUSSES THEM. tleal Socialists. Here! Suppose every bit of wealth, capital, land, &c., were to-day to be equally divided among all, Innabitants of the earth. In less, than ten years everything would once more be as It was In the old times. In other. words there would again be just as many rich folks and just aa many pau- pers. I defy any one to deny thie, PETER CLAIVERES, Wyckoff, N. 3. Aa to Parental Authority. To the Editor of The Svening Worlds In regard to parents choosing a bus- band for thelr daughter, or a wife for their son, what right have they to do the chogsing? Who ought to dictate to son or daughter in a matter eo sacred? A man's wife is the soul ‘of his @eul, jit best part of his life. Burely, &¢ of free to choose a wetweho to call his own, ono ts choose a wit the greater SoS ae &, ;