The evening world. Newspaper, May 15, 1901, Page 10

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ORY’S TIMELY CARTOON. MONTANA TO THE ‘SOME. SECRETS OF BEAUTY we Saampoo and Masance. hether toe change Deir Mra. Ayer: alr or not Z would like advice as to ah HIGH: MINDED my hair. Lately my hair has ED hair ts the fashion It is at fery ollf and 1 know not present conal i for it. Y F you can get @ course sage It will be beter i any other treatment If this Is impossible ure than any her shade it if pends iris hate r otly pales feast once a w . Formula for shame! 1 poo: Melt a cake of pure oliveoil soapy! ne Jn a quart of boiling water. When the} OF ros most of us poAp ts disxolved the result wt ap nh Veta the t moat a jelly Take of t two large tablespoonfuls all uy (atu lump of common washing about | ba Ha wtand the size of a fiber, Wirxt wet the hair] STS Utils i suctvas thoroughly with hot water rat th Me sapere thampoo mixture well Rinse thoroughly in» Then carefully dry. And giv #trface of the head a bri M Aye the finger tips every miley oly Anthaalerene ect next best treatment to Here's a od Mustn rower. Dear Mre. Ayer Some time ago you gave a loiton for making a mustach grow Wil you + you a formula for a Rrower with plowsure It very successful: Red vaseline, ounces; tincture cantharides, ounce; oll of ot of rosemary, fifteen drops Apply to the at night. 1. Jowing mornin: away with a Water, It may t aulred Does Not Like Color of Dear Mra. Ayer Tam a girl Have auburn ha showy teeth. [do 1 my hair, for when I iy People dout red feel embarr, avender, OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. —- The Evening World's Daily Fashion I:int. | To cut thix ¢ 21-2 yards will be required over lace 18 inches Z Inches wide, t Ub ite wad tr Jonot wished to eave he? Had his wif He hy ald \ ' | appy und so must you. Do not let it spoil your Ife, Marcus, but lve it out well. If you do not wish to live It alone, remembor that I wish first for your happiness,” Aut who could replace such @ sweet woul, RESCUE. nieielelmicieieiet sat! iciviciciet VEALED. BY AN EXPERT, HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. could do to darken or blacken my eye- brows and eyelastes, and what to use fo make them grow ‘ kh. 3. an eyebrow penetl, the tollet counter tment shops. 1 iN properly applied reptible, and ord!- it Is absolutely partly, 1 think Tikive sou avers Red va arid. ol ofr Apply te the eyebre bh brush once a ¢ im; line, two ounces ighth ounce path is sufficiently stimulated; then this olntment may be used for the lashes a Th this ease tt should be fully as any applied. oth will, It Me If it Kets into the mr ON Ww YORK TYPES. THE “L" " GUARD. H! This is the Pt guard whose 3 high renown 1s elevated through Gotham Town. I He's the guard who guards the guarding gates And King Eddie's English assassinates, His yell on the “L" helps ' your ears to crack, And almost distracts the poor train from the track, » bove AND A BLOTTER. wt BY €bIZABETH C. WALTZ. went Inte her py ty te dar ¥ room, a desk, I the ttle the very thi 1 had he opened one 1 wn with the Jong tim this ts he thou not WW ep open the package with his pen- A ilttle portfoilo dropped out. Mttle foolleh thing it was Indeed. A foes of one chamots Jeaf and one of thick and dark maroon ght cloth curlously quite with silken stitches. There was a celiulotd cover ted on with It was painted an Improbable bird altting im- possifly upon a spray of dowers. He a now-faded ribbon, and on wil tuthane | het THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, MAY 15, 1901. w York tter. ARK ROW, 1M Publishes by the Press Publishing Company, 53 to 63 Entered at the Post-Oflice at New York an Second-Class M THOSE FORTY- TWO DIVORCE SUITS IN THE NEWPORT COURT. ment that There is something to think about in the announe of the Newport County Court, which o ened its never in the his son its heen so many divoree esterday, have ther May term \ docket. Forty-two suits for the annulment of mari ages are set down for trial at that one centre of American wealth and fashion, The parties to many of these suits are men and women of “high heen married but a few years. Most of them have <¢ ia] position. Nearly all of them were married with a great flourish of social trumpets. There were costly wedding pageants at ultra-fashionable churches; the wedding presents in many cases were worth a large fortune. In short, the “happy couples’ started out together under condi- tions that seemed to leave them nothing to desire. They had money to burn, friends by the scores, and nothing to do but find rational uses for their time and Hreerenene en erene een e i Wity sox fi MAIIUIAG Piererereerereneren ene their money and “live happily ever afterward.” ARE FA for men and women with brains and money—a great combination— to be useful to their fellow-men, the road to happiness was wide open to these spoiled children of fortune. But that was exactly the trouble. They had money, but not If they had only had brains enough to grasp the fact that brains. service to others, usefulness to the community, is the one condition on which very rich people can also be very happy people, they would not now be asking the Newport court, after a few years of pleasures that pall and gayeties that grow wearisome, to liberate them from the slavery of each other's company. THE MYSTERY OF GEN. FRENCH. What has become of Gen, French? On April 16 The World published a London despatch of the same date ing that a private telegram had been received there announcing the capture of Gen. French and 500 men while they were enveloped in a mist on the hills. The next day the British War Office de- nied that it had heard of this capture. then there has been no news of Gen. French except a rumor that he was going to take a long sea voyage. Was he captured? Is he a prisoner of the Boers? released on parole with the agreement that he would fight no more nce Or was he against the republics, and is this the explanation of the rumor of “a long sea voyage?” We have no news of the South African situation from the mili- ‘tary standpoint exeept what Kitehener chooses to send and the British War Office deems fit for public the war is still on and that the conditions of the people throughout | uth Africa are going from bad to worse. The very latest item officially given out by the British is that in the tion, We only know that 34 farm buildings, mills, cottages and havels were burned” from June, 1900, to the end of territories of the two republics January, 1901." Certainly this cannot have been in Lord Salisbury Monday night when, speaking of this war upon the republics, he mind on fear said: “There are circumstances which ean A STRANGE make every lover of his country look back with f iameee | exultation upon the two years just passed. teceeceeeeeeee What single cireumstance, by the way, could possibly excite “exnitation” even in the blindest patriot, not to speak of an intelligent, civilized “lover of his country ¢ SOME OF THE FUN OF THE DAY. H ES OF WOR, UE DESERVED 4 WED Newitt-That'’s Rorroughs, He's quite | Towne—Did you ever hear Rorem tell- an adept in the art of constructing |!ng a story? Isn't he tiresome? short stories. Rrowne—Yer, but he haa one good Ascum—He doesn't look Ike a Mterary | bolnt that ts really remarkable. ie Towne—What's that? teHantentt Browne—He's the only poor story You misunderstood | me. He can tell you he's broke in more | ter I ever knew who, in telling an See ? Virtsh story, would adaut that he couldn't ent ways than any other man t : ' Ara eit wae aN“ |imitate the brosue jever met at LE THE HOSTON WAY, : CPR IC locos ee you introduced ma Towne Live seon Gazley several nIRM 8 ty ts an astonisher! I tried to Joke her 4 1 wonder revently with hia fleld gia: what his guime ts Browne—Oh! he's calling on Mise Kul- about eating beans and she claimed she hadn't seen a baked bean for years.” “I suppose she eata ‘em with her eyes cher, of Bo: sbut and a look of ecatasy on ‘Towne—T What does he carry eld glasses for? | Browne—He doesn't, He merely uses free knew. the case to carry a dictionary In. ani tehelwasithiriy: two: I'm thirty-two and she— How strange!—is only twenty-three, — STRAT “Peckham's wife d much as xhe used to." “No; Peckham cured her, He told her that when her lips w close together they formed a perfect Cupid's bo HEAD FU THEM. ne—Judging from Brags's nection with that great be a regular sinecure. rant chatter nas ays he's the fgure- That sounds big. head of the con owne—Hle's (he Ina world overtlowing with opportunities | Des TO PAT ribet CA Re W. By KATE aS Het ri} Ps St pir minfenf. fells iniei- telecine are a marvel. £ RONS OF KEITH'S. No variety performer is dearer to the patrons of Keith’s than Harry Guilfoll, who, if he were not a mimic, would be a capital actor. pravity and sportiness on which he hangs his imitations of everything noisy, from a ferry-bont to a dog fight, is a fine piece of comedy, and the imitations themselves oe fleece eebistiiciett Cheb ibeictelcielelebeleielefeieletelelcictebrinich oleleleleleietelelefeleleins The study of senile de- Sena To the common, tor of The Evening World When wit our) fad. pluck brains enough to the Albany strike riot. learn that exhibi-| back” Ike that are no| bUrifled more quickly than by all the re- more effective than {s the screaming | formers that and atching of a espaaked chil! Lives are wasted, blood flows, and ; Practica: results are—nothing! J. MICHAEL FARLEE. 4 civilization jtlans of brute force of The ening World In this. city ats cars, The Jerscy Farmer's Example. rouds, omobiles, it is a ludicrous | To the HAlta of The Evening World: yet pidable sight to beh 1 the ancient The Jecsey farmer who was robbed in| horse car still creeping along, even on a Bowery resort. and who ran down nis|so crowded a thoroughfare as Four- natallanta sal had them arrested, de-| teenth street. Surely the horse car has spite the mob, deserves a monument, had Its Cites The cable is here, | rarmer Oatcake's country place SOUP-ERNATURAL. Soup the boarders want for dinner, Says the farmer “I'll be glad” "Tian't very hard to please them, Here's the dream the farmer had. Soon with boarders will be filled; Once the farmer had a conscience, But that small voice now ts tilled. remembered It at once, Vit to htm as ‘ A girl had sent | something between-a_ message come 4 valentine—a girl he had | down to him unread through the years, himself marly tn love with | come down from Ges very epringtime of ys when the heart | his life, | was rlotously young. He belleved he had | He went downstairs to the telephone. | told her so a half-dozen times, but she—|He thrust the blotter Into the pocket jahe was always shy and never seemed of hin house coat. He found the nun to believe him, ber of the girl's sister's telephone ner- Suddenly hia heart beat, A paper Iny | vourly and watted a long time before he In his lap, and on it were some tines in| could get any answer, Martan’s writing, still so familiar; Presently, it seemed an 1 found this once! gentle voice sald: among your college souvenirs, I do not ea—What tn it?" think you ever saw what la hidden be-] "Marcus O'Neale, Miss Eve—or tn it tween the leaves of this blotter. It is] still Miss Eve?" beat that you do not seo It as long as 1| There was a low laugh, lve. No ono ever loved you more than| “It 1s still Misa Eve. I have just ar- do I—no I have kept the secret.” rived—that iv, I came yesterday, And I He took up the blotter with a dizzy wes sorry to hear, some long time after surging of the blood. Two leaves were| It @appened, of your great ines, We laced together to form one. There was as abroad." oternity, a 2 TO-DAY’S LOVE STORY “Wert “Papa and I, 1 am the only one left at home, you kno Marcus was suddenly confounded. He did not know what to say next, ax he had not rend the message, Presently he recovered his wits, uppore I may call while you are j tress of Eve's shining hay as when she was a girl and Wed with a white «lk thread. He took it in one hand and Tt read: so often to say that [loved you, But 1 waited until St. Valentine's Day, when malds may chooso their lovers. You will always have my heart. And ten years hd gone by? H alway had her heart, v7 He haa Tait an hour later the tetes rang again. ‘The housekeeper, “making fn pretense at arrangin, t iT f iistoned and heard: (ve ining: ls Marcus O'Neale 5 somerhings to explain to © Could. you aco me about. fifteen minutes? I'll come over on uptown if you can. I ki “Why, yes-If you care to, Was there any mesnage for slater?” “No—not {f she is tl, T hope she will soon be better, 1 will certainly call, Miss Ev Then he hung up the receiver and| foo} went upstairs, He closed the door and locked It. Slowly he cut the lacings be- | tween the wo chamols leaves. Bome- thing as soft and shiny asa baby's hair Hood out, and a thin paper. Ho pickedct hone bell THE EVENING WORLD'S BIG and seem, for the most parts| The latest outbreak of brute force is to Go Unpunished, If a few more victims A ot at these thieves the elty would be electric | with the other held up the thin paper. 1 “Darling Marcus: You have asked mej] ‘LETTER CLUB. then, In a rushing age and city, Utilize the horse car? It is a blot on progress, and a slow-moving blot at that, En Ve Iviaes Practical Schooling of Tre Evening World: ving In a practical age. not educate in a pracvral the whild a practical educa- an, give him an education {which will be of the most use to Fim tn | the spectal calling he ts to pursue. Foe instance, If a young man desires to be- jean engineer, do not stock his tain ha lot of Latin and Greek, but teach him subjects such as moder. languages, rhich will be of more urs to him than reacting Homer or Cicero. MORRIS FRUEDBERG. Where Are the Other Escalators? To tha FAlter of The Evea.ag Werld: On the uptown station at Twenty- third street and Sixth avenuo weary passengers can be carried upstairs on the escalator, Surely {f one station can save the weary shopper a hard climb others can do the same. Where, then, the other escalators? Why do we Nl have to toll up the weary stairs? Mrs. B. F, HARVIE A Tannel of Three Citles. To the Efitor of Tha Evening Worlt: Now that we are getting a Harlom-to- Battery tunnel, here ts another plan. Why not bore a tunnel from East New York, under Brooklyn, under the East River, under New York, under tho North River to Jersey City, with con- nections at the point of “intersection with the New York tunnel? This would open an underzround line in threo cities and do away with the ferry nuls- ances and lighten the bridge jam. ENGINEER, For Cigarette Girl. To the Editor of The Evening World: A mother asks the best method to pursue in order to prevent a girl of hers frome smoking cigarettes. In the first place, how in the wide world did she ever begin to smoke? Surely the fault must be the mother’s and no one's else. Had the mother guarded her child properly she would mever have resorted ro this terrible amusement. It seems that the mother cries after the pitcher {s broken. LOUIS A. KERPEN, ~ 2 cow It [IS LOVE. ’ 1S love that makes the | world so bright And takes away life’n care; It plants the blooming roses, too, On cheeks to make them fair; And bids tho lustre In the eyo To shine with wondrous light, Ane drives the coldness froin the heart, To warm ft with delight. It clothes the cfiticising tongue With words of mercy swret And Ittlo faults will be unseen When loving hearts shall meet, ‘The whole world brighter seems to grow When love appearing speaks, And loye-warmed hearts fis@ Peace and res For which mankind eer seeks, fe enaned to nal LG ally. sare a geod, Ti “be there, thank y Ut? most reverently. It was e way. —Martha eeepera bride) ~vewoowrs er er

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