The evening world. Newspaper, June 14, 1901, Page 10

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WIFT POLIC By The police may find M useful as a tipster. SOME SECRETS OF BEAUTY Vaseline Dear Mrs. Ayer: Kindly publish a formula to promote | the growth of the eyelashes. Will re: Vaseline rubbed into the scalp promote the growth of the hair? = CLAUDIA. | GIVE you the eyelash formula as fol- lows: Lavender yinegar, 11-4 ounce: cerine, 1% ounces; fluid extract of Jab andi, 1 dram. Mix apply to the eyebrows with a camel's hair pencil Vaseline, as you probably know, Is a torm of petroleum which {s well known Sometimes it ts very beneficial to the hair, It 1s not very | agreeable to use, however. To Remove Red Marka. Dear Ara, Ayér: Advise me what to do In omer to ac- quire clear complexion, I have some Ted. marks left from pimples and find it Yory difficult to Ket rid of them, QUESTION. 2 a Hatr-Grower. | siy- HE red marks you describe are something of the nature of a scar. |} The skin has been Injured, and it|~ will take some time to repair tt the witch hazel cream for them. One ounce cach of wilte spermacet!, one-quarter pint of oll of almonds; melt; pour into an then Try bowl which has been heated rome thme| by -heing immersed in boiling water; gradually add three ounces of rose water | ‘ and one ounce of witch hazel, and con- tinuously stir the mixture until an emul- ion is formed and afterward until the mixture {s nearly cold. To Turn Hair Auburn Dear Mra. Ayer: Kindly advise me what will make the hair auburn, as my hatr js very ¢ almost black. ALM HE halr lotion which tmparts reddish tinge {x as follows: Tb bor- te of soda (pul.), 1-4 ounce; bicar. bonate of oda (pi!.), 1-4 : water, 1 ounce; aloyiiol ture of cochineal, tilled water, 16 ounce: tate until the solution Is complete. Ay ply once a day or oftener if required. The one other tnethi! w ” luted peroxide of should be applied for the purpose, half and half water and hydrog to the roots of the hair, which must previously Pe t$.croughly cleaned. Formuln for Curling Flutd. Dear Mra. Ayer: Tama young girla to ourl my hair in hydroge which J have just begun tt does 0%. Sof OR HOME DRESSMAKERS, he Evening World's Fashion Hint. Daily Te cut this house Jacket in medium etse 4 yards -f miterial 21 Inches wide, wax ahd] | E SERVICE FERDINAND G. LONG: fle-n-Minute Murphy, who has just joined the force, Y 5DDTT50500309990009500000000003, VOL. 41.. 0. 14,642, Published by the Press Publishing Company, 63 to 63 PARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Post-OMice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. DO NOT NEGLECT THIS OBJECT LESSON IN NEW YORK CRIMINAL TRIALS. The closing scenes in the Kennedy trial are not such as to make us feel proud of our ways of administering criminal justice, are they ¢ To begin with, it is not pleasant to think that people have been found willing to perjure themselves for pay in a case where just punishment for a cruel murder on the one side and the imperilled life of the accused dentist i AND on the other would seem to make the deliberate { coysrimacy, bearing of false witness an impossible crime. Gee-ccccceorore® Yot it is charged on both sides that witnesses have so perjured theyselves. On both sides, too, the ugly word “conspiracy” is freely used. Lawyer Moore says there has been a conspiracy to convict Kennedy. Distriet-Attorney Osborne says there has been a conspiracy to manu- facture evidence to free Kennedy. Ons of the witnesses threatened with prosecution has disap- peared. Several others are also threatened, some by the State, others by counsel for the defense, And the impression made by more than one of them upon those who heard or read their testimony and their cross-examination was certainly bad. If they were not | they were surely not try to tell the whole truth and nothing the truth in ht forward way. d Above third trial closes, the question will foree itself—why Why a second trial? Why this re- tring of a ease, nearly three years after ly’ Reynolds was murdered, when mueh of the Stage’s testimony given at that time is st, and a whole cloud of new witnesses who re néver heard of then appear now to prove a defense which at the tirst trial was not even suggested ? In other countries not behind us in civilization it is found pos sible to try men for murder once, and onee only. Tt used to be pos- sible in this country. It is still, of course, possible to do so. But we shall have to reform our whole criminal procedure to do it. EDUCATION AND MONEY-MAKING. aan OF PE ng but a serious and all, a thir ’ @ THIALSS Srwor w ONLYE Doceccccccccooy REVEALED BY AN EXPERT, _ HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. y th alr apd adjust tt loosely Ary it whl comb out tn § to the originator of the (iIntion Good for the Hn, ENTILATION sun. rn Midues in the Pinger Natle. Mrs Can anything grow ttle fone for finger natis ull of ridges? Also, spots, hard, and bilster by wt have HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. irl, Could you MRS. JK. fridges on the finger natls are used through cuticle knife, or when cold tutional treatment, alr with and tat will I give yout 4 the milxtur 1 Nnger his nalls ere them k you should Me—Young Sap on makes on my fore-| ire not worth asking or answering. Sh—Yees he'll always have ead HE DON’T-KNOCK CLUB. By FRANK PARKER. President Seth Low, addressing the graduates of Columbia University, said: It {s a part of the function of the Iberally educated men and women of the country to stand unilinchingly for the doctrine that ‘ta man's life does not consist in the multitude of the things that he % possesses; and I know of no greater service that the Nherally educated people of America can render to our country to-day than to continue to {llustrate, In orewewcceweee city and town and hamlet, those fine Ideals of plain living and high thinking that have been characteristic of the scholar in all ages. This suggestion is worth thinking about. If President Low right half the questions that we hear asked about college education Sueh as: Do college-bred men succeed better in life than men whose cdueation ended with the aced by an Injury | yrammar school ¢ The people who ask that question mean, to put it plainly— tn Internal trouble} does a liberal education help a man to make more money and make 1 of urte/it quicker than an clementary education? The king “big mone e Collis P. Huntington, who was at expre: a square and emp a high authority on speed, answered that question with ” mi ic But Columbia’s president, who is a higher authority on the true object of learning—and of livini-—than the late Huntington, says that it has nothing to do with the amassing of wealth. On the contrary, he says the better educated man’s duty—heeause he is better edu- eated—is to think of duty and service first, and not of personal en- vichment. And so the scholars of all ages have testified by precept and sample. No college-bred man has ever proclaimed on the house- tops that he was “for his own pocket all the time.” THE FULTON AND THE SEA’S MASTERY. Once a Yankee tried to interest Napoleon in an invention. Napoleon was caught napping. “Drive a ship with a teakettle,” said he in effect; “nonsense!” And he turned to his beet sugar, his rouds and bridges, his laws—great things all, but not so great as STEAM. Yet Napoleon had built barges—“walnut TUNITY. shells,” people called them—to ferry an in- Qeeccececceeed vading force to Britain. Robert Fulton could have towed them across the Channel in a calm that held Britain’s frigates helpless. And there the Grand Army might have made sore history. Steam made junk of sail-coaxed navies, in spite of Napoleon; later the armored Merrimae proved wooden walls worthless. Now we dive for the sea’s mastery. Holland’s submarine boat has triumphed slowly. The Fulton, first of a fleet of them for the United States, has been launched. It can swim, noiseless, unseen and terrible, within stinging distance of the biggest warship and send her to the bottom. Twenty years ago a nation might have ruled the sea with diving hoats. Now France, Russia, Germany, even conservative Britain, are building them and no one dreams of the “glory” of sudden conquest. Doecccccccccoy ry $ owen sa f N MISSED 1001 “oe c na th the why Mate he sald. ly ql her a package of accept seript for her Jepartinent By of fate, they 1 had one were thrown vit ther as workers on the aume maga-14 OF Mim preetal each, (Covy + Datty r old tt called aingul ot | Ray- p | 1 aan | tomar . t vitality strange been tm and sthon with w “itut you'd your w zine. At first situation ralzed— called her Miss." anything-—rather than to signal) your pec the was horribl; “You The World, Morte City! the triumph of the man who bhi take her from him by calling her “Mru,+ You don't know how ‘complacent I tineau." She dodged his name with fem-|and my people can be upon occasion," jinine edroitnese; and, when who could nol he expostulated, ie ns s to] wonen are h her to-k} was to hinge upon the love of two men sion tn thel fy, horacters all tol ¢ + to let] gunty, rast Dit t0) tem, “Very good, you shall create the men her—that he was more than half In love uu itnow the craft all say ‘a wom-|with her himself. He had painted one * to be utterly impossible, And |of his heroea a handsome, dare-dovil © away where the| fellow, who carriat all women's hearts |betore him. lained that the $o the story was begun, The Interest hercine w rin time that |the faxcination he had for her was not Vtrue love. ‘This left room for her to Teale her “grand passion” In her love for Ormand Seville, a calm, clean- hearted gentlemen, albeit rather cold in exterior. “1 cannot tet drinking, carousing, wretch you have there,” Mra, Martin- eau protested, with irvid eloquence. “Iva ,quite impossible—de's - unworthy, and Mrs. Martineau let the heroine ac- or reject at the Jast moment, At fipst the story progressed beautl- fhe drew her heroine with w true hand, putting 0 mucn of the charm and magnetism of her own personal:ty into her that Raymond eaid it was the casiest thing In the world for bim to make hiq mea love one woman; Elizabeth love that billiard - playing NO, 12.-THE “PERFESH” TAKES A REST. How I knocked my fellow-actor in my role of fame-detrector! How I swattec But the advent of the summer brings a And the Knock of Thespis’s CENT) » banged and pasted him from foyer to stage door! eace-branch to each mummer}; *t knocking any more. THE EVENING WORLD'S BIG 4 | thrust it into some one's stomacn, It When seated, 0c- the rooms of two, and tment you have re- hrowing every op- vcomer, espe- woin Reform. Wili make you feared. sof Fifteen ta still | cupy, If ts only one flaw in our Gotham reformers. y reform all right, but they then seem to think things will stay reformed with no further effort. A man might Just an| ! well wash his ce and then tak Mt for ranted that those hands will} henceforth 5 n without further | effort on his part. right id To reform and keep up the reform. I. $. BLADE Some Saceaatle of The Evening Wo ke to know from some of grounds the New 1 “the finest." Is Jerome says) dlack- fon exist? That ts about as Tecan see, Both Cine oronte have a superior G. A. To the Eaitor of The Evening Worl Here are some points on t of riding Ina Fifth avenue stag getting In, care neither for knees of the parteng your ) to the top, steadying yours: y the shoulders, chests or even {4 those seated. Seat yourself with pushing against one thrusting your elbow into th other, You will thus get p i If possible, enter with a stick or um- breila, pointed at full length, so that any sudden movement of the stage may mail and protect a ther Sethack, World es still another je shape of one more pleas- attempted lynching party in So much for clvilizatton, raven we live in a protected when law and right triumph over awiess brutality, Our etvillzation is but hypocrisy so long as St Includes suc PICTURE PUZZLE, Father and son are bathing. Where !s the mother? LIZABETH 8y eva wittians watone xt DAILY LOVE STORY. | of her." ‘On the morrow they returned to the onslaught. “WellT'--Raymond began, turning the leaven/of the mertpt, Lit looktng at Mra, Martinezu wit ngeroad somes thing in his ¢ about Hard: enstlo?”, That was the hero she ld noc! laborated, se | upprove of, [ite decidedly t “can't consent for Elizabeth to love) him—even for a Hule w: fit, 1 can't do tt, even to pl The something that had been slum bering !n him leaped to tian: “Do you really care to please ine?”? He was nearer to her now than even the -demati}e of collaboration required, She was startled out of her self-potse, T shouldn't mind pleving re not at the sacrifice of bat 1 couldn't tet Elza. he erted. “Nina, ina, thix col- ! man never tw 2) | whispered With a last dying effort no ep {rom succumbing to the ineg{table. “Save by thelr fons!" he cried rap: {rously, jon Ne, anthored a ty woman an into arms and'looked down Into her oven, thee ‘Fetused 20) tell the Lies eke Bade them, Ore LETTER CLUB. | horrors as brutal lynchin, Where ts the boasted love of fair play and equals ity of man, O hypocrites who boast, oi Prowrenn? AFRO. An Exposition Grieva: To the Ecitor of The Evening World: ‘ Tt ts all very well to have these Ex- positions, but any one who aaye they are distinctly American is off. The centre of American life 1s In and around New York, Boston and Philadelphia, yet since 1876 no Exposition has been held within + of miles of any of these places, can the average man leave busl-, 8, &c., or afford to travel to Buffalo; co? Next time let’é have an somewhere within the lim! on. NATIVE NEW YORKER, | Are We Growing Fatter? |o the E:¥tor of The Evening Warld: Do you notice how many more fat People you meet nowadays than you! used to meet ten years ago? £ believe, {as a race, we are growing fatter, Why? | la it prosperity: is tt the climate, or is itt Just lack of exercise incident on ¢ improved and cheap modes of 1 ton? Who can teil me why It is? OBSERVANT. For Sumer Comfort, To the Editor of The Evening World: <\s hot weather draws on we @urn from fashion to comfort. 80 let me euggest; the return to favor of the cr: the popula and the on torrid days, but we also de better to look upon in so become ing a garb. 8.N. ML asing of “Facial Far.’’ F of The Evening World: A few years ago nearly every grown man wore facial fur in the shape of beard, mustache or side whiskers. Yet y the average man goes absolutely clean shaven. Who can explain this? To some faces it Is an improveme@. but to many it ts not. Where ts the facial tur of auld lang syne?) Even the latest Presidential candidates (and Presidents of yore were nearly all bearded men) were clean shaven, Mra, MARY MAINZ AUP WIEDERSBHEN. FWIEDERSEHEN! My pulses thrill; U I feel thy warm hand quiver; And o'er my heart affection still Pours In a silent river; For love like mine ne'er ebbs nor flows, But strong and silent ever, Sweeps on; tho channel deeper Brows, e And I'll forget thee never. “Auf Wiedersehen!" ‘Twas lightly sald; And oven ere ‘twas spoken, Thy light affections from me fled, and thy love vows were broken: My love ané thine were !%i9 S223 boats Launched deavor— ; One In the Inzy eddy Moats, But one goes on foreve: from a atrong en- So shall It be while love endures, And constancy confiding, Stmys in despair across the moors, Dumb with the grief she's hiding! So shall {t be while carclessly, Love's rudo hands ruthless sever Love's own heart strings! So shall it be “Aut Wiedersehen" forever! —San Francisco Bullets,

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