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ee Rit Raat Ae eee eee THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, MAY 4, 1901. % . - EET TRE By ett EER PEER EERE RRP rib eheettii: “ Si-i-t Zz pis fog c Remedy for Scamt Eyebrows. Dear Mra Ayer: Can you give me a.good home remedy tu strengthen weak cyebrows and also to make them very thick and black without using a dye? BLLAA L growth of the eyebrows. You aannot chacge tho color o your eyebrows except through the use of a staln:or dye, unless you use an eyebrow pencil, which you can obtain at any! of tho tollot counters tn our-targe de- partment shops. Red vasqline, twoounces;tinsture can- tharides, one-elgtth ounce; ol] of laven- | 4ér, oll of rosemary, fitteen Grope each. Agply to\the eystwows with « ting tooth. brush a day undl the srowth i : Ugyt fe in He | fi i i i anf if you have read this emrefuRy you have perhaps eeen cf ul wash immeiiately ater macmge ooocoa butter would be as inef- ja | as Cooaa butter makes tle ekin yellow, If used at all, it should in my opinion be confined to cases of t emactation, where {t is usaf) because it Is absorbed, and {3 certainly nour: The Evening World's Daily Fashion Hint. Yowaist tn atze ¢ years) will bo sent for 10 cents, ney to “Cashier, The World, Bullding, New, York City." Oo any TPHE ANGLO-AMERICAN TELEPHONE. FERDINAND G. ot When Prof. Pupin's long-distance telephone at Inst connects England with Yew York our noble armyof Johnnies will not only keep abreast of the fashions, t will know to a fraction of a second Just when it is “raining in London.” Hh bhiviebiciee eine errr bi SOME SECRETS OF BEAUTY ®” EALED BY AN EXPERT, HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. Inner receptacle of a custard boiler. Warn tle heat until ¢i ee LO Eos Aga tisbelthres If you can get possession of the road to the market and not permit your VE you a formula which hae been | ] very successful in {noreasing the | apoonful of tmoture of bensoin. mixture must stirred ateadily, ‘An eaa beater ta} Other important factor in their business. They have simply used the rose! the ideas, good and bad, furnished tothem. The most of their reap- very f st hed beaten {f prete: excellent for this it ci Hist Wes pt tn_amall opsnemi |Jars, each wit oo A Typographical Error. Dear Mra Ayer. a B ' * partys Mcloset pleare find recipe for making | rebates on freight from the Baltimore and Ohio, the New York Cen- hair fuffy. Im there not « mistake, as {t mys Dicarbonate af soda twice? PA i Pewtered bioartenate ef oot bumrtorase of | twwoen Oct. 17, 1877, and March 31, 1879. eats, ale> powéerel, \ vszce each; onagne 1 2 fumM ounces; ombineal, 4 falf ounce; — HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. — Foc beauty purposes the formula I give you Ls Detter, It 1s cantly abeorded very great at- vantage of not making tha texture of kin appear any darker: Take of almond oll, four ounce Uneture of Mwatitled water, 16 31 atet cheke until estution ta com- ITB second Ingredient should have pow- ounce, Put theag three ingredients in the “NEW YORK. TYPES. THE JOHNNIE, Gotham Town, London-built rai Is the alm in lite of this 3 i And his soul's sole idea of STORY. $ TPA ASES® ¢ A GERMAN COURTSHIP. stepped ugly temper, train Gand 1-4 yard of bias panne for trim- ing. he pattern (No. 3313, slzes 12, 14 and € visiting hiy parents and his boyhood GGlorld. NOU A HUGE THISTLE FROM WHICH IS EXPECTED A CROP OF FIGS. A few evenings age one of the great New York bankers said to a friend: “Tf vou live twenty rs and Jehn D. Rockefeller lives tive twenty: known, cars, you will sce the first billionaire the world has ever ked the friend. « almost, if not fully, three- “How near is he to the billion mark now ?” “Well,” replied the bank “he is quarters of the wi Standard Oil millionaires. He has been getting for more than a quarter of a century the largest individual share of profits so great that the company was able to pay $48,000,000 in dividends alone last year, And the dividends represent only « part of the profits. So rich are Rockefeller and his associates that they employ a man at a huge salary, more than $100,000 a year, to be the head of an “investment staff,” a body of agents constantly travelling into all parts of the world locking for and reporting upon investments for these ever up-piling surplus iillions on millions. The bulk of the vast capital now being used to obtain control— that is, predominant ownership-—in coal, in iron, in railways and in oeean transportation is Standard Oil eapital, the surplus outpourings and accumulations and multiplications of the astounding protits of the oil monopoly. It is only part of the truth to say that the Standard Oil Com- pany is the model of these new combinations. The Standard Oil Company is the parent; the new combinations—that is, the very great ones—are the children. The same blood tlows through them all—Standard Oil blood. Morgan supplies the brains; Rockefeller and his associates sup- ply the capital and other machinery. Put a few dollars out at interest in the ordinary way and the results after a term of years will surprise you. Think of these millions on millions always out at interest in ways of extraordinary profit, and you begin to realize what the word Rockefeller means. The millions pour ‘n upon RockefsJer end his asscciates. They must invest them. Year by year the problem.grew more dif- ficult. At last the point was reached where these Rockefeller con- solidations, combinaticns, colossi became inevitable. The Rocke- feller crowd is straightening up its huge household. What are the Rockefeller methods of doing businass? The answer to that question is important, because the methods pursued ir. the past, the nethods by which this vast river of wealth was set a-flowing. will be the methods by which the flood wiil be made to swell and surge on. The Standard Oil Company was based upon this idea: competitor to use it, you kill your competitor and you monopolize the Remove from the stove and turn into! market. an earthen bowl. Adi @owly four ‘eeite rat *, . . punees War romiv water Wana vonen tame: This idea was not original with Rockefeller and his associxtes. The| They did not discover it any more than they have discovered any or ing has heen done where others have sown. In pursuance of the basic principles above mentioned, Rocke- feller and his associates made contracts with all the oil-region rail- ways, under which the Standard Oil Company received enormous tral, the Erie and the Ponnsylvanin—for example, $10,151,218 be- These rebates were, of course, unlawful—criminally unlawful. By means of them tho owners of oil wells und refineries were shot in the back, killed or enfeebled to helplessness. John D. Rockefeller denied before a committee of the New| York Senate in 1888 that any such assault on competition had been ar investigation, i . inquiry 30 | the made. In another investigation, in answer to an inquiry as to these | We No! ranean iatiGansoRihatiktenra | ex rebates, he said, on oath: “I do not recall anything of the kind.” But the actual contracts and the transcripts of the books of the railways were published. Year by year the industrial and political power founded upon, and for several years chietly promoted by, this simple and sate = tem of industrial assassination has grown and swollen, Rockefeller and h moro to audacity, most of ull to unlawful and monopolistic methods. ‘The price of oil has gone down under the competition of other kinds of lighting. But wherever no such competition exists the price of oil is as high to-day as it was thirty years ago. It is everywhere “as high as the market will bear.” Its price differs in two adjoining towns. It is at times lower thousands of miles away from the oil tields than a few miles away. One of the Standard Oil magnates once said on the witness stand: “Tam aclamorer for dividends.” That describes them all. Morality, law, conscience, expe:l’ency even—none petite, . These magnates do not interfere with unctuous profe their agents for detail ions of honesty and piety. If these magnates are questioned they “don’t know” or “don't remember.” If dividends fall away they change their agents without inquiry as to causes. Tf legal complications arise they turn the matter over All that they themselves per- that might mit themselves to know is —dividend: Sneh, then, is the controlling foree in our industries to-day, No wonder vast combinations are formi No wonder the prices of coal, iron and transportatic One of the peeuliariti grow upon thistle of human society is that in it figs do Figs may grow upon this huge thistle. But iris well notte forget that itis a thistle and nota tig tree, eirieleleiel-i-lelelelefeleiel-tt=I=! Rockefeller is the richest of the large group of enormously rich } OME OLD FRIENDS SAY GOOD-BY. » By B. C. KILVERT. sociates owe something to business skill, | of these stills that elamorous voice, that clamorous ap-} come Into the room that she eleieieicieicieiviciriet: etree ieieieieie fein eicieenicteieieieefetet -ei-i-tt: Father Knickerbocker—Good-by and good luek! You've made the winter pass pleasantly. I only hope your successors will do as well. ibrl Serieiiieheeeirer SEs wiized that if the mit nium doesn't come prett (bet Mammon will own us body anj in one * ntle trust.” and thd Hed t 1 have teome & ss that nothts THE ‘KICKERS’ CLUB IN REGULAR Kick Againdt Blue Laws, the body is still in the lot, To-day the} latest “trust ery To the Baltor of The Evening World: boys bullt. a fire over The recent movement of reformera|to burn It. I think we have a against iquor saicons and the new en-| kick coming 2 Tt forcement of the blue laws tend to show! Kick Awa: alchtly Wash, how slow {ts the pace of civillzation. | 1) i. psior ot The Evening World Indeed. we are rather going back t0/ “rhere must be a number of house- darkness and superstition, Itisthe rigid] viv. in this community who are not legislation that makes the salcons what SETHI Hey Gee a in corrs they are. The high rate of license and Nematic tu ati A) an oreeee HEOSEACK the Raines jaw froze out the old liquor |P°rall’ i helk ub at the Landtord. saloon and created the modern one with] ta ning 1 Its stds door. It ts also a blot upon the | adde t claim of our advancement that at this |depr yy eannot t day our State legislators should eq {and put in wager until th ather pers measures to enforce blue laws, prohibit- Uist GRITS bats ese d Pts Uk nous kc is so particula| & his rer phe 1 would Hke to man. lag. W ; tis so unmindful of the « ; ot hy ing {salosof{ mention, Sundaye.attrisithe | Ser lca tun lus Meni. s Dark and dirty hallways anal victory of superstition and darkness} To the 1 eta fath CeyEe over civilization and leht. jot was my B, APPLDRAUM. Kick Againat the Mutterer. tor of The Evening Wortt: n room [could put in a kick on the man who talks to himself in a crowded oar; which kick would redit the census count and add to the happ ness of at least Kick Againat Rrooklyn Neglect. To the Ealtor of The Evening Work! 1 want to kick against the way the police and Board of Health run things in South Brooklyn. Three weeks ago! On sixth near Fourteenta! year's las: Saturday I told the poiiceman on| street. a hunsry-looking man may) be | Kicked our block about a dead dog that was! xcen frequently carrying a very un-| left In the vacant lot next to our house, y sign an hia shoulder, ‘The aucn | The gentlemen downstalre in our house vs Scriptural adjurations, In th ‘ino notified the police and telephoned| mtdat of sacha hustling throng | Board of Health, About a week] seemed sacrilegious and a mockery or passen y Ish noon. r there with a carload rly every pis was wks of ve vo to put up! . professes to pte apartment |g roeis are Ina diaple the and oni Heing subject to : Klek Against Unjust Comptaing. ening World every wet spring. It ts a d% une , yet no one is a, blessing, Top tt THAYER, Jr. Kick Agninat Horace, To the Editor of Th Ing In evening bon: fing “1, vet ey portunity of meet-] was with on, #0 hr ry wide could be called around to look at the dog, He promised to send for the sult dog, but Pee Ute cite] nristics bad to show out in him. EDITH @ FASHIONABbE \ NEW STATIONERY, | HERE tn noticeable an Increaned] use of amall sizes of writing papess Milady's note ts now a very tt delicate affair, pcesibly a way ehe iam! of excusing herself for writing brief let- ters. “My paper Is all used," she serlb | bles, and signs herself “Yours devote ly." with a thankful atgh there ts ror to write no more, Pure white Is the favorite oo though we see no end of all manner hues In stationery. But white le vogue in the beat circles, and thoul fads tn stationery come and go, this ways has a sure following, Linen le and cambrie are also atl!l the popular! gq | papers. | In the matter of engraving the Berlin / biock still seems to lead, There ts eome- thing so distingue about It, and as there 1s too difficult handiwork about It for it ever to become cheapened It ts Itkely to Temain long in fashion'a favor. A point * noticed nbout the season's cards is the centring of the address under the name, and also tho placing of the reception days in the centro, Instead of the lower "S corner, as formerly, Shaded Old English divides honers with the Berlin block. This style of en= kraving Is a great favorite, for it has a certam Individuallty that appeale to ‘The Mouse—Dear me, how fond of exerets man must he, 1 never ‘sn’t commence climbing around on chairs and tables and things. The t nist invited world an anneun {t wold he dificult to place Hannah, Anton looked over the company and notloed several ma We owWe aid re phim and VAS net tne of one Setultz wax not erty thin and satiow, Ht her expreesion indte On the voyage sie hid developed an Anton she was clytl heweomers | Hannah st. but this | eying nem. Hannah sat he, “Ix the matter? Why don't some of you take this girl?” at first. Finally Fred nberger replled: ta not strong and has a bad but that was all, He enw that all the other gtr aired off with su table partners “That {s nonsense,” shouted Anton. "She !3 strong enough and is a good worker. She can milk cows, make but- ne of the; Hannah sat alone. ter and checae, make the garden and !s settle-| Now Anton felt it his duty to sce thar ’ to meet them, and ajevery gict should find a husband. He fall that before I brought her.” cheer went up as they appeared, a good hand with the sickle. I learned had promised that, but he could see that’ Fred Holmenborger atepped up to her, jta becom: many. For misses’ cards the black Old English ts used, and tho card is much smaller, about two Inches equare. “Ti take her,” sald he, ' “Now, sail Anton, ratsing the pipe- ald Hannah, "1 doa’) stem agaln, it p marry you,” wax her reply, by his ste, Hin intention ingsters how to hand the com- 6 f PEAGE. 18 not in seeking, ‘Tis not In endless striving Thy quest is found; Be xclll and lnten; ‘ Be atill and drink the quiet Of all around, others expressed a willingnesn her husband, but were promptly repulued, P Anton looked at them contemptuously. | hu “Is that the way to get a wife?" hoje ny manded, “I'll show you how to pro- c do Hannah ti he hn elf of her worth, beside: of his victory over her, er the company, with his, Jonvthe wall, he extracted it# tang ate, | beer. i looked around the room and, spy ye nnld; P S Not for thy crying, Ing the minister's Sunday pipe hanglng| “That fixes everything, Send for more Not for thy loud besceching Wil peace draw near; Rest with palms folded; e Rest with thine eyellds faltes— Lo! peace ts there, —Féward Rowland gab und, walking up to Hannah, selzed her] ‘There were twelve weddings in Hejdel- by her taxen hair and struck her sey-| berg the next week and twelve co¢ples eral blown acroas the face, ved happily, were prosperous and She attempted resistance at first, but|ratsed large femilles of sturdy boys and he was too xtrong for her, and she was|hright-faced girls, Anton never regret- compelled to submit, ted his marriage, though whether he A number of old ‘heads were nodded] found it necessary to use the pipestem fa approval, ") -* again or not ie not written in Rory. sat xtle for fear it would tt muased. The car was very crowded an he would not move to make room fr any one. Next time Horace goes out b bad better get a carriage. He was p litely asked to move, but the hog chi