The evening world. Newspaper, March 22, 1901, Page 10

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ORY’S TIMELY CARTOON. PUZZLE—FIND THI BOSS. A RAAAASA SEAL ASARARE ESE AO RE SR: Ww SS A aaPaasasessesen { f 3 2 * s * Py s 1 ey <= » = = * = * * = i owereerercerressee dep: FPISIITITTIGIITIT TOs Ves vETISTE9I09 ae All answers to this puzzle should be mailed to Thomns C. Platt, Fifth Avenue Hotel, New York City. FDIPISSSIDSSS DOPFGIISIVIVIDSFOVSEISVIISS DIVEGOSIISFIOT OTS DED THIN MEN MUST OUT-EAT FAT MEN. 3 Sx.t27.% Dr. James J. Walsh. norerererprrerese eepeererererrerre creerererscensensts Sevsssses HE question of individual appe-|te the colder Heat tn given off to tite ds always tn Hiv] Long ago nature in her wondertullthe amount of surf often a matter of surprise to find |economy made use of this method off ‘The muse for that thin men have a larger appet! want by wrapping such m=] the manuf eat. If they are SL ketually consume more food th the Kidneys In fat.[ present in disproportionate amount: in men of about the same slze body with aiayer! the human frame, too much heat is ean must eat more than his stor manufactured. and in order to keep the lg accomplish the same amount of work ody at tte normal temperature some of Daud keep up the bodily equilibrium that Ir munt be allowed to escape, ‘This al P&G the Index of good healt Ways means waste Meal human no need of ected from, roof fay Ina word, the most + ede the + vigin the stour man im _tovered with a good layer of fat is a bad conductor of heat. Hence atin the large internal organs is pire Jaines, thay waste heat jsuperfluous heat. fuel must be consumed, (The math part of the fuel wr the human valve pomed o ected from dissipation Into the sur fora im engine. hea nothere Ina founding air. [the body chan this to carbone acts. ind, and {Im the thin man the tnternal organs He| whitch ts «i Mf from the f titerferns with the aette: Vast below the skin. ‘Thetr heat ta ab-lman. In the engine the carbonle aehl vrais, Dut Just about the utracted readily surrounding alr, passes off cirengh thes! | Mother N ire N-| Hosides this, there In | dnen and wom Pt I, nechetthecihinwinan t inte prosate but ln temperature. For, than the atow yer mature handi- and you Booms Almont | economically. Tf, knows he un- rsen tous she ear ° trtnag pind! anid br various eonatatenctes with a ¢ aviisites tn departing dab rays sh, patel Tnke When it vustards or ft move will whey ke crun k few sliced ale | GRAND OLD MEN FEW. “My mus ghtfully Doan tof conte Sir b Well t trons and» © Tals man from the empire State “Pips the scales at Just feht He has long tnd Of crowving th But can find no ti ou t up to his wate. bas same he expounc fad, a to prevent his f bres atehed £ nauseous, the If they haven making when the wak the ¢ mi} Kick! Kick! K Kick him in Ii tec. tll he and his fool h wreck! P | They me Kiet Against Skirt Swinging, time te rw Hick Awainat Getting Wet (5, oe pace of Te pe Balter of Tee Evening World | 1 am sending baye a little kick that I wonder in| tha: som { often drought to notice by| the matter Twill give an iilustration of ft.) hecd in the future, it'morning when the rain was| coming down the steep statra that in/torrents and I had, by| from th a we Nf, caught a car) lberately 4 To up her skirts and swish! with hin Cather, who would speak of therefore without) them around, and in doing eo she hit al young lady stenographer and typewrite: Aone, let MICHAE Nu tng in) me take vu Where Tot will ° i some v4 Svening World dors kindly express t hing 1 tcnew, +4 » 2 » > . > ° ° . > ° » . . * stances are tn contact, one warmer th exposes mone surf eae the other, there {8 a tendenc, - Se turatenatnee ase PUDDINGS FROM LEFT-OVERS. hou a ono + or other nuts oft with | RICK! KICK! THE GROW THICKER. DOWN WITH THE WRONG THAT JARS THE KICKER! > Kick A dnat yan with . iH ; piste rt 1 Hl fin Ber heavy sktrte thar he wanting in good rs (or, tf notycant lots of our community, Ball play-, bustest. If I snub him, he ts hurt. If Ty nuthorities, They have shattered many) A tired man wanta to sleep, but Ete hate and kt i rauees ia amis ractian them) | ers are urally Ured. Who ever know let him talk on, my work ts hurt. Ala poor man‘a health. They should be | que y io Into society!" A sen- nan se nal morning’ }a ball player to work? — JOHN G,, — | atrenuous kick In the face seems the | kicked into oblivion by the law. This ts | sib to wear comfortabl of a youns man, in partnerahiy @ man behind der on the knees with such! in brutal terms? This young man te #0| ARNEGIE’S LATEST ANNOUNCEMENT. BY B. C. KILVERT. RPORPR ODE SOLOLE SS BESLEAA OS ALSOBASIBDSASEGSS BALSA DES SEEDS < NO, 14,458, ed by the Press Publishing Compan: 53 to PARK ROW, Put < a | Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. 3 $ | z 2 ee Hy Wi VMWAVE JUST 8 + “ b { |THE CONSCIENCE OF THE = & i 1 e ' HOME-COMING TOURIST.|¢$ a + iis SES 2 | . . . : - . ¢ in Jinks.” a comedy wherein New York manners of |¥ sted, there is a glimpse of the stern and|% : A 4 f = cs inbribable customs official ransacking a prima donna’s trunks and | % 4 throwing her lingerie about to an aceompaniment of feminine tears ¢ & un * Phe epithets now applied to this obnoxious official seem to] ¢ show that he remains as inexorable and unbribable as ef yore. ¥ 7B ; : ; rele e@ « Perhaps his excuse would be that he is dealing with appropriate | g harshness with a form of moral obliquity that makes the tourist | ¢ 4 regard sminggling as at worst an agreeable incident of a European | § trip. : In a word, he notes nptoms of fatty degeneration in the|¥ tourist’s conscience, It has become morally hypertrophied. It is]$ & no longer sensitive to the excitants of minor dishonesty. € g 5 = ne fe on < Like the Spartan’s, it disturbs the possessor only when the : offense has been discovered. : ‘ This physiological deterioration indicates a grave disturbance |% { of the moral system. It is a form of moral eorpuleney whieh mani-|¥ ry fests a disinelination to the exertion of being strictly honest. b-4 ; You may discern symptoms of it in your doctor, who offers you : { a box of choice Havanas “brought in by my friend the purser;” in 2 | your wife’s chum with her Parisian gloves, in your maiden aunt|® | with her sare bit of old Valenciennes, ¢ \ [tis a sign of a relaxed moral tone in the individual comparable |$ with that in the nation whieh persons of Puritan ancestry find so bd alarming. Carnegie (to his Brother Millionaires)—I'm just gotting into the stride, but I'm already several lps coe ahead of you chaps. Unless you get a move on it’s a ten-to-one shot that you'll all “die disgraced.” 3 THE WOMAN WHO Is “DIFFERENT ” FPSSGSSSS FEFSSSSISGIGG 990 V FIEISSGISSSSSSSESS SUIGSFSSG PIISD VIFSFFSISTIIBIIVS An Editorial Written by a Woman for Women. SOME QUESTIONS OF ETI UETT Points on Good Behavior eS ¢ by Harriet Hubbard Ayer. ; * Tea He Asked Her to Write. your guests (nto the dining-reom you Most women believe they are not like other women. This is] pear str. ayer: Will have to aet the table, which require, one of the things that prove most women alike. While away last Summer I made the a little more thought, and fs also an ad‘ . acquainta of a young man, and on ditional expens : ww, a few women are really “different. A few women are] my leaving him to go home he asked Party Dress for a Girl of Seventee more loyal, more forgiving, more relinble and less eager to tell | Siw't snout dee tehkaee ten ene Dear Mrs. Aye } what they think than other women. But the women who are differ-| fot me to write frst? L. 8 | pies # HE young gentleman should have . lent in these ways never pride themselves upon it, Also, the women axked permission to write you. He af Part een acre singe differe Slip vara should not have asked you to wrt who do pride them elve upon hei ie diffe rent are Seldom different ors re incstesvanteruetloain tee kiente in these ways, ‘These invariably feel their innate superiority to] tke the initiative, G parties, lie inthis: Onteich Feathers Are Not Mo Any pretty Hight gown, such yee : nee would be worn at a dancing sch hat they are capable of living on “a higher and nobler plane.” | peas stes. aver: ee priate. A winter 4 Why. i is Na A renee . 3] WHI you please let me know if a ee | hy, if there is oue spot in the universe unknown geographi-| ,,\.) Saistoh toa heck beatcand beewor Tt should be ths best dress in ! cally and constitutionally to the women who talk most cant about | whea one is in ¢ HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. | “01% * “ardrobe, and the Igntes | e it, it is this higher and nobler plane. When people find it out BTRICH feathers are not regarded | aie Te Pee they stop talking about it, and live on it, silently. an deep mourning. ‘They may be ster Hotta tatet size for the be- > | . : say) i worn properiy with second mourn. | S#nlng of the corres he Bt Many times—not always—the woman who believes she is not] ing. How to Serve Wefreshmenta, [Dear Mra Ave! z nate f eas eps =i ais ota 3 | Dear tes, Aver Tam a wic nd at present T am en- \ like other women is‘simply tired of doing the housework other MS eee eneth of Engamement Hintonditoltinvel a antherinntatingtew!| saKGH S(O TAu Sonn Pisheesiottime } y it ar Mrs. Aye: ent would y which [know iff #xould discontiaue \ women have: to do. Would you. kindly advise ‘what. you cleadeten would a eto know chien : Srila 1 discontl ue ED eae ey Many times—not always—what she means by a higher plane eoneder Hh eneaners ebb Liat ta ke and te ein the parlor or tn OU should discontinue wearing ane 2 arate: to be, or is alx mo in che Giaine st been EDNA. : Tawi t a is simply a more diverting plane. rules of propriety? ANXIOUS D. PHER would be proper, 1 should ei ae Pecan eh t my own convenience in the | you. si utter. If it will be less trouble | chow to pass refreshments around, 1 should |. serve them In the parlor, If you invite now If you But the army of earnest women who r case dosnot wear it better in their lives wil! aever find it by ma different uniform. Beeause it’s lonely marching off the tra ally want thing alone mething nd ina N engagement of six months tx re garded as a very proper and sens: ble one, so far as time is von- cerned. White Always Appropriate. Dear Mra. Ayer Kindly inform me what color of dress would be appropriate for graduation, BRUD OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. . and the uniform probably will not fit. ZONA GAL A YOUNG IMPERIALIST. the saucer and I hive been WHITE dress St eS abo are prettsafoniamauation | tuushe yon, after stir- Saanie The World's Daily | ins » to saucer and Proper Size for Note Paper. Hint. hus at ike to have Dear Mrs. Ayer 13 t. MR vays be 1e= Please tell the proper-slzed note paper and placed To cut this shirt-vaist In medium size | orient & gentleman should use in correspond-|. 10 Clea, op esterlal gt Inches wide | Ing with a young Iady, Are rough and |) {4 Vor eet bia a 1 the saucer. I cannot under smooth paper both correct? i in . ee hs \* h way one could have veen Finches wii yard of all- irehes wide or 1 3-t yards will be required, w WILLIAM W. SE note paper. The smooth paper U at present is in favor, and pearl Krays and army blues are good form. No lnes, of course. The cus- tomary size of note paper {s about six Incheq in length and four in width. * the spoon should be spoon, ing and far from ¢ A ROSE IN A BOOK. HOUSEHOLD yEATIH a song of love it Iles, LORE. Left there long ago = =itene setae Ny yy By the hand of one o'er whom insdimnbeg srahoult a i Casnne should be caret Yi) Roses, mayhap, may grow, seved for polishing mirrors and ‘ vs Yellowed o'er with years the page, windows, Wh iy i Dimmed the vermetl dyes, Scraps « aate trimmed 4, AY ii Yet to me seems a nad sweet ei fex may be sprin- Jui Li isnceth Kled with se und male tngo H//} /, ‘Thro’ the rose still sighs. cheore stra we [ NTA | i lain boiled ree, served hot, with / ait . fh Bloomed tt f bridal hower? strained honey, makey an appreciated — Sesatll Dropped it o'er a bier? addition to the Junch tuble, or is excele None can tell; but near the tfower, lent for a simple home dessert. Lo, where fell a tear! A slaw cutter that does away wth cutting fingers and a nutmeg grater ‘Neath the song where thro’ with the sume consideration are now Hope's note 4 upon the market for the enterprising Changelcas, Jilting goes, 1-2 yard of silk for revers, 1] housekeeper. 2 Love's low mournful minor now yard of Ince edging and 5-8 yard of in-| To make tough steak tender mix to- Rises from the ros gorltonitolirentaslllidetrated’ gother two tablespoonfuls of vinegar and Mack Rastux—Say now! you ain't Kot no right to sell papahs on mah terry- ~—Mary Norton ‘The waist pattern (No, 3,784, alzen 22 to| Ollve oll, pour It over the steak, molste Bradford, in the ‘ tory. u Boston Globe. 1 42) will be sont for 10 cents. ening both aides, and Jet it stand all Jiminie—Giwan, now! Ts'peot from yer color yer a Fillerpeener an’ ain't Rt E ©] Send money to “Cashler, The World,| night. Broil tt quickly and see the re- no rights wot an American eltizen ts bount to re saver o-9-6-2-6-4-6-4| puiitzer Bullding, New York Clty.” sult. a ne nie rire: West New Brighton, 8. I. only really kind solution, the earnest kick of a chronic kicket ard. Euquette say h ates on to eve: he meets Hiek Sun « on out ry reply. bu a e Lis ae Kick Agatinat Crowded Stre ARTHUR PAYNE BELSTONE, LU ‘bores, Dret bore ix thin man who uur lorirnelnveniaer worl ime very simi am | ; ‘talks eae SuChin eartalee Gin dtcannuinaeaie Se eee In question, and must work | Te Th Balter of The Bvening World Kick Against Fire Ropes, Kick Awatnat Glv' joney. EMO ee aes a siya talearnat ica ay Finy lving, [am always looking for] How long are we to put up with the | 7 The Htitor of The Evening World: To the Kdltor of The Evening Worl ETIQUETTIQUARIAN, fhe, givex me no « » talk about “ ae sien change of posttion, ax 1 feet that if|Jammed condition of Nassau atreet thar] The Hotel Windsor fire and other fires} Mr. Curnegie kicks against giving} Kiek Againkt Paper Grabbers, . have had eh he tat a8 well elgcumstanced thane|forces many pedestrians to walk in the {Save shown the IneMctoncy of the fire [money to Denver. Mr. Curnegic 18] To the walltor of The Evening Wert! ‘ qualified for the Kickers’ ub, Let him come in. CHARTER MEMBER, Kick Agelnat Pushearts, To the Editor of The Evening World: ‘The people in the vicinity of Madiyon Baquare should join The Evening World Kicker Club if they want the peanut Pusheart men to move, GENT OF TH t] While paying my car fare yesterday 1, Jaid my paper on the seat next toa, As I was about to pitk my paper up suainnl say the! cond or aforing it ohind an udvertising elgn which re Read while you travel. id HARRY TIOSSAN, Kick Agninet Un-ella Nulsanc, rope in hotel rooms, and the blood of the dead éalls out. for better fre facill- ties, Yet, still, In‘most hotel rooms, you find that ineffictent, perhaps rotten, rope. In this wafe? In ft fair? Is tt not crim. inal? MARY P, CAHN, ' Kiek Against Medicinen, ‘To the Kdltor of The Evening World: 1 wish to make a strenuous kick Klek Agninat Etiquette. againat "fake" patent medicines, The’ To the Editor of The Eyening World: manufacturers of these fake “sure| A hungry man wants to eat heartily. cures’ should be looked after, by ¢he| But Etiquette says: ‘Rat delicately! is he in tam his better by far| middle of the sloppy, slimy street? egards courtesy and kindness and) Can't people walk on Broadway or Wills don't care to stay with his firm any | tam Street instead of thronging that Jonger than necessary TENO. |one Ittle gorge-like thoroughfare? Kick Against Hall Playing. KRONNIK ICHOR. To the Editor of Tae Kvening World | Kick Against the Give up such pleasure as baseball.) To The or of The Evening World Baseball 1s an tdle sport. When a young| Here do 1 kick full sore againat the man becomes a fair player he gets ajman in the same office with me (his “large head and tmaginen he's fitted| name {# legion), who has a spare ten for fast company, They give up their| minutes and blows across to my deak to steady postions and linger in the va-!ewap lies with me just when I am a oe t aA How about the man who come mtreet-car on u rainy day with a ! ping umbrella, holding the wame' et ioa ” to let the drips run‘into your: a r

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