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formula for Hent. Oa anemia es | | Try the following shampoo: Y of ‘ one eg. one pint of hot rain water, one “% My face betng rough and small pimp! BUNneRTACAND! { rosemary; Wo instructed. SEN er aoe hee SOME SECRETS OF BEAUTY ® 9A. .Aiettetten ‘eoming out all over it, I think my dl fs out of order, Print a good medicine. G= a bottle of one of | mixture up th anid tise | rubbing ie wot » thoroughly In sever: fils swash the ordinary «good ¢ earsapariiias, read the a carefully and take the me. Shampoo for Falling Intr. Dear Mrs. Ayer T have a goo head of balr ato but every time I comb. or twenty hairs Please let me etop this? A to remov draft and an he at ne musta Have y pooed about once a week and Course of scalp massis' THE EVER- WELCOME SANDWICH. a soap in indruff, put 1 whieh 1 you F only fifteen or t I ' alert ar head ab take ed vhs as reall HOW TO MAKE A FEW OF THEM. O luncheon {s complete without Thin slices of | pw eT ken well eae +o the sandwich. Whether it be an’ eearnned h CHICKEN indoor) luncheon or. a. Pien\s, nalt and SANDWICHES, } sandwich {s the most {mportant Iter sl Borer : many ways Following a wainut tx, ofc and salad dressing make able. sandwiches. Spread niise on the menu. There are making sandwiches. few of the best recipes. and scoop add walt Are a mayon- If possible } ei or iter to spread on thin silces of| aining | mat round le ‘{ BROWN BREAD 1 sSaNDWiciEs. { you make y own bread! a po a loaf or} ate two In round pans, as alt very much nicer-looking sands the bread very thin and # with butter. Take a sm and spread ght } ly with mustard orc! it fine Vhd add the. pres olives, remove the pits pared custard and cloves in chopping bow! with 3 ie the ter of a pound of walnut me Hacer i vr fine and allow enough salad Onan them are goed saan (recipe Riven below) to form the { SANDWICH { ant ociiicken, brovtion sistency of paste, and spr sett cuun ham with let- enema eres uses erie a 1 SANDWICHES. } tuce leaves, or wich g well toget sake UAE kione carefully #9 An | gan gan thin silees 0) be used immedia: wrap a damp| eee etane icles NGtterea Paty table napkin around them, This will Dread Sacieestes seasoned to taste keep them frosh until ready to serve F aif pint or rich +e et, OND a cacene arte one-half { DIESSING FOR 5) with let tues led) i ot SANDWICHES, } thin slices mmitoes and sea- ee ) bread; or tt iNew | PERT PR ONG Cee way: Butter thin 4————~~~~~¢ Alnce bes | atu) | etencun rump of slices a nn white the sige of an eRK: suapeion thin elices, and spr: ch mustard umbers used in| Laaether (coil) te ne I alsa Gr mustard prepared at home on the |the wamo way make deliclnin nand: [lene for any ind vf walnal at cheeae. ted will k ; “SLAVES TO WIVES, SAYS REV. E. J. HARVEY. y much we enn Ket, but ho: ndo without. If Amert down to the she AMERICANS WORSHIP WOMEN Sit in the corridor of any Contt much Ms op ar no happiness, makes men and stand outstde the women. And no mar: n be utter Waa of things there are tn there y that 1 ant!’ they weuld ike 1. 8 home atmo: nflnitely happier Joined that noparatedt, i fC they wr the same ri often moving In opposite directions, yet ana va if he to all the t 2 always puniviing any one who c estowlthin radius of | along there snilten, The ge y of the Am As f is In all wrong, ‘The whole Amert- and his willingness to slave for his wite | SatHtarvey the ‘ irelake, erverted from | Ame ston quickly yospend Intention In two ways they are no men. They too m Phey want (oo much, Amer- prives himself of the clever to make goad wily Joan women wane tl ‘There inno cultured ang clever, and menvere:sneee enw y thelr de self for compantonshtyy with thelr white + rapidly progre he ‘tangle s her of the sw LETTER CLUB. ax well {pleasure sweceret of being happy is NG WORLD'S BIG LETTER | why a rally known by t Mr. lau hat the rh pu tke at and, in fact, tn by Nido not] an bly overe nearly afford, every yours. with a royal with a snblin "Park Pay-Chate Syate ving W na fry Mis matter DAILY ‘TR the Why is Wooiland Beach Midian, Ms Thére ts sple on th have to « garbage be Mt. This doesn't st co “es OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. | Daily | | The Evening World's Fashion Hint. thes yards of materia inches wide wll be required. To cu | | | "SSO Come so KOON? Wt 1D o'clock, at noon new you Find his Yack as we ean trace, love snd Date have been Keown by. common 4 AS mattere of the heart And, note ree [this granted, might w oa step Z tiested nonths aiden oxtst passions? have Just done 1 found have at last to de the professor's nm thes isolating th: germs of love progress of a moxt ¢ nd uns | and be Then ts set forth at longen Mu 1ogerles of winded | the setentin Meneriptions of upon the germ theor In the order tn which the 5 book containing them, governs th sRree of the EEE “I am fasclaated. For some time I| The notes continue: rms, the num! prof which pre riing to the professor, appear in the} {who w TAM d lishman, Fe, £ Publi ed by the Press Publishing Company, 03 to @ PARK ROW, New ¥ ered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mall Mat A REPORTER ASKS THE CHILDREN THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, JULY 6, 1901) r. A VERY SIMPLE QUESTION. O: shrating” Deccccccccceety 4 ewity AND ee same question: fw ane vou GD qe sceLemearives) — brating (” Wocescccoooony answered his question correetly. the hol ten and eleven. ome of them thought that the Pres uy to amuse the people. Others thought it had something in the streets—the boys a He Not a single child in any part of the city “Why and what are you cele- Tndey jeanne Day a reporter went out among the children nd girls of nine, asked everywhere the ident had just arranged to do with a war or a funeral or the invention of electric lights. One little girl said: “Oh! that’s in history. in a higher grade.” A great man died on Jul, of American history. interest the people. histo istinguished from kind, , ever really is filled with the true pa: the firecracker and it und have its imagination fired by it. If it hadn’t been for Plutarch and his wonderful pen, how many people would know or eare very And I don’t learn history until I get y 4—Prof. John Fiske, who devoted his life and his splendid brain chiefly to the study and the writing | His idea was to produce histories that would | He knew that no people ever knows its own | ion of patriotism, as “we-can-lick-all-ereation’ until some one writes its history so that it can understand | much about the heroes of peace and war who lived in those little Grecian cities, the biggest of them less populous than any one of several York? Prof. Fis ¢ was one of America’s Assembly distriets in New greatest great men, because | he was and will continue to be an effective teacher of true patriot- ™m. eeccccccccey ParRion. 6 Qeccceccccceeg ind burnt. fi ing fire-engines, and ru There ne ngers an r was a country like ours on earth. And how necessary such men as Fiske} are was shown in the tour of this reporter] who wanted to know the why of all the noise ds powder-burned faces Wh Ting-fang well deseribed it in his speech at Philadelphia when he said it was founded— | To treat all people alike with fairness and justice, to make American patriotiem synonymous with fair play and love of mankind. Every child ought to be taught about his marvellou will itr did Only in that way splendid. ‘ country. his splen- emain marvellous and Education is very important—edueation in the eense of what the schools and colleges ean ard do teach. more important than this ki But there is something nd of edueation, The Germans are educated, yet they how and serape before srenerate Jesecccccos o ' wrton 4 ¢ ‘ e on earth hay May WAN HOW TO CRINGE. tyecccccccccoet) qeeeeeey manhood, nobles and are the subjeets of at And half-« Emperor. Many of the most servile classes and peoples ren highly educated More important than edueation is char- as this country of ours, alone among all the nations past or present, nds for manhood—for the digni Ameri of voung | Republic. Mr. enor Choate, our Amba become y mie f the A cliss of young men who would not need to work for a Hvelihood, but | “nglish democracy, to become like England in produe’ t and to ing-— the rights, the free opportuni- wis time of ties of the individual man—the easiest way to develop the manhood is to teach him and her the lofty ideals of the sador to England, has been over there uderfully impressed with the beauties eall loudly for America who would devote themselves to the public service without hope of reward except sich good as they could do thelr fellow-men, It is tr and is ruled 1 Me ¥ @m eve. E it tome ww Be x from work berorst 7. pce » Bo S LAMBERT BoyD. | y on Bur let mt y . 9 . Tou Many 1. (¢ GROWING pin ¢ : To the Ealtor of The Eve $oinceue nye. $ cringes be A host ung las ua SelMiseni cities uated every a The ay Geeccccscocoed to desist because the t ie in mind as well as in body, isa typieal En Ne yr. Choate meets the clever, whom M in f the nelish millions who mient for us, Mr. Choate. Wryeks and Ashbridges we have enough of that sort of gentry What we want is to get rid of those we have, We want no rulers ot auy kind, But to administer our public ee amaryl Mrs we want publie servants, selected {re 2 owe war vo oe the toilers at the desk and at the tool. Wel ‘ $ want men who are in sympathy with the toil- 3 Totes % ing people, not men who will try to show off 3 couNTny. $ as great statesmen, Qeecccccccooed One—well, one Choate, is worth a thou- sand Balfours. Mr. Choa and liveried thinky who | re him wherever n, intelligent, demoeratic “gentleman” but th tled by the * fresult that Mr. Choate sees with amused contempt. n't want a “leisure class y just such a elass and that the | rule is most satisfuctory—to the kind of people Mr. Choate mee! at dinners and receptions and levees. ts te look at the powdered aws and serapes and That he goes, wretched creature, mean of soul, a groveller is thinky, representative ntlemen” with the to take care of our Govern- In our Crokers and Quays and Van Des isn Bat Sh te Ditech ae adbeast tsetse atcha AITING FOR THE FIRST MAN. By T. E. POWER HARTA a RAGAN AAAAAAAAATOONAY, RURCCACAAS Ba NARA. # & & z # Fs | MRNA EAA AE ‘on Baldwin—lucky man!—approaches the North Pole uy waiting at his goal. us or Ets p, since this old world began, ck, {ting the first man. A SLIPPERY CUSTOMER. AICOLDIDE AT: rare rarsearern ea rsre Me™ - weareeseBirarse (Gi David Mr. Salmon—T wonder who broke into Mr. Mullet's house iast nigh r. Shad—It must have been Mr, Eel; L understand he's a very smooth le. m FLEAS HAVE A GAME OF BASEBALL. 4 First Fly-What makes you so honrve this morning? a Second F at ixnorant cook shut % up in the refrigerator all night. ——— SS ———¥ SSS 2 FA RAMAN PRAGA MAAR A ARTE Wo OUT oN HAREAARR ARR ARR A ARNG FRG EA BORO AND THE FRAT ot THE LOVE MICROBES GOT MIXED. animal tnoculated with that the antmat xo tn one whose bh the cultur medium, The rm of hate. 1 believe that T have ted of error, but I whall, of Iusions to further “Certainly there seems no doubt of tae effectivenera of either serum as appiied to antinals, for | have experimented suc- cesafully on them, How would tt affect the human beings?" “The last lingering doubt ts removed! Circumstances made {t possible for me have been studying those two strongeut| “Given a culture of the oral of love of Guman passlons—love and hatc—and! in the blood of one animal and another to secure & small quantity of the blood of Miss M., in which 1 made a culture Bc wisn, DAILY bOVE STO ee rum APPARITION. E y G. P, WILSON. X% ‘THE APPARITION. M the microbe of love. With this If “Why should I hositate? 1 might, It] my setence tx at fault ea Rory, 4 4 late and now, impossible }is true, cease to love her, but T could | be a happy. for Rimae voce THeannete res |i lear love came to me and @ as dt would scem to my friends, 1 find |never forget that I had loved. Fa =| pos seat myself. \8 sald: is myself madiy in love with he ean have been nothing elm haw wrong. I enlled | 3 "God gives me tne hour's counteract this by an tnoculati sige lint say irate auinsleneiaaseitty y | upon” Stes aE Locnigatiaraliwagirecel vid tia it, ohpeaite erm, butt fnot| Ur | ca '# blood ice iny purpose; eal ewitn) rather broadly that he exnerte ate To cae upon the earth with self to do It. 5 am very, t Thave made a culture of the microbe | other gues: course, 1 took the lg ey eae Of dislike, white with my own heart's and left. From acrors ‘the street T saw | Mow otall we spend it hest?” “L have mado a horrible discovery. blood Lam preparing the werum of ate (ug ioe poaven, what a under! 1s Misa M. does not—nnd sayx can | fection, Heaven send an early oppor-) have convinced myweif of the eof Why, aw of old; I sald. and so hever—love me! Further, though she/tunity to {inoculate my darling with | It, all. in peepatiig ile sie witht #. We quarrelled an of old, also says that she will never magry.|them both! I have been under a terrt- some manner [ got’ my|# But when I turned to make my 1 am convinced that J. loves her al-/blo mental strain and am physteally | mlex Hi nanteraetaal iy | peace, most as madly os I do! And he has|scarcely able to handle my tubes. “An soon us I have counteracted ahatlonatahact houfiwaet tala” youth, wit, fortune, comeliness—overy| ‘The opportunity has come! ‘I havg eh EAT eae be ted —Stephen Phillipa, attribute that could attract a woman—| applied both of tho-preparations to MY:/ region. Cards pre out for rrlage | pe tle while Wm ee. Idarling iberally—lavishly! Unless al! |of Miss 3. In TON ees § li ssi mai