The evening world. Newspaper, July 9, 1901, Page 6

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SCENE AT THE PAN-AMERICAN. ~ FOwanras © COMICS. (ores 3 mee Soe 6 ox 2D980844 Oe oo o8 AN NeATeslad A GREAT DEAL OF PUSH O54 C9000 SOME SECRETS OF BEAUTY. Fe Eee eA RI EAEER TR Treatment for Troable. Get Expert darken the hair, when fact the tonic has on pigmentary secretion which {the change tn the color. Dear Mrs. Ayer: Kindly let me know how IT can reduce my nose to Its ral shane, as it t« rel and awollen at the end. M. 8. OUR nose requires special creat ment. I will give you a formula for lotion, but a surgeon will pro! hy be able to redtuce th Ming and re caused Ububarh and Money for the Hatr, fe Mra Ayer: Do know of anything outside of a eae! twill make brown hate a lt. store tho nore t» at Mente 1 not want. to quickly if you get the » | [use peroxide of ing trogen oor any- ful one. thing on that ordi as 1 fear Wash for Ret Nose—Murlate of ame ft is harmful, and . it te ale morta, half dram | Ways foo noticeable, Tha een glycerine, 1 ounc | obliged to wash the hair with chamo- Dissolve the tannic acid and the murtate I Do you think this would be in the giycerine, then add th water, «let me have Wet the face with atworbent cotton with | HARRIET HUBBARD ALE for sieamething mtnater wil the lotion, and bind on the nose atl Tita, 1 oune. PM Ido not mind if night. of the solution In the eye: For Inflamed Eyelids, a day st harmless way to Iighten ta by the uw gen. It thin How to Use Henna, Sra, Ayer Dear Mrs. Ayer: ‘Atout six years ago I had my eye-} oom and | Jashes and eyebrows bur Will you kindly inform me how to that b have vaed nothing but visellne on them, y henna tea to give the Is tnjurtous, It i only so yared and fie whos Mso if T can oo often ant hh full nit hartsy the constitu. hair, Todo not think eam {tte the fault water when Tw 1 oiitile noda tn pr not 1do not know, but} my head, to make the hatr lighter? sare not Wennkcharinleaa? Mra BE He tea Wil Iishten the halr A de oom | OU can use the soda In the water | poctlon of rhulsarb and honey tx sald to | ¥ your ed Tow Y rr tng the hate ite | Try this sim yBUcNtrivery envecdlly® nat campiior wa! will give the hair a reddish lotion: Borax, 1 krain; TO MARRY OR ‘NOT TO MARRY. ONE woman Toro find that true, unselfish and pure love—y household duties, you can n that lhe arly through | make a useful and the darkness of aml sorrow ber ¢ Many high-sou To the Editor of The Evening World I have a proposal of marriage, but have always thought 1 would do bet- ertheless ived mem. women ter to remain single and ft myself Bat some useful career | work: pendence. Which will make oa i) ment of the t 16 Anot Hve alone, Our hearts are without human tenants, and Vestal that keeps the fres ver burn- | nome spot marrying Wh Dle te votre: | questions of lif aan of whom you sp notet a nature compat important ter In the end? OU have given me a hard tlon to answer. In your query have struck the keynote of welghtlest social problem of to-day: marry or not to Ty 5 To marry and Join your fate 1 then you would | {ng in asp out r, that ¢ men w tn youl ing? You will know. tt {with be tt happiness. 1 nity of m Joys we It is the natural law th should shine in home ¢ her ntful sphere, and, much a may prate of freedd " ee are mome ther OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. ; The Evening World’s Daily Fashion Hint. To cut this cassock night cox tn me dium y inches ¥ wh i ub 5 at yards of tnse! ickens does the law say bathers VOL. « RK ROW, New York. Office at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. PIERRE LORILLARD AND JACOB S. ROGERS— TWO RICH MEN WHO WASTED LIFE. Every one is discussing two very rich men, just dead—Pierre Lorillard and Jacob 8. Rogers. Both were eminently successful business men. Both inherited fortunes and, in spite of extravagant modes of living, left more than they received. Both were noted for an un- concealed contempt for public opinion. Both led most unconventional lives. Each mado his whims the supreme law of his life. Lorillard’s ideal was pleasure. "Published by the Pre Entered at the P | LORILLARD ‘ AND ho HAD MANY POINTS IN COMMON, Rogers’s ideal was business su ach pursued his ideal with all tho intensity of a powerful will guiding a clear and acute intellect. Lorillard’s ideal wrecked his health, made the last fifteen years of his life years of physical torture, with brief and not bright inter- vals of relief from severe pain. Rogers’s ideal gave him an old age of loneliness, with his eccontricities turning upon and torment- cess. ing him, making him a crabbed, sour, misanthropic, prematurely old g man, Many of those who knew Lorillard slightly will tell you that ‘ no man ever got more out of life—more of what he thought was]; pleasure—than Pierre Lorillard. And in a sense this is true. But it gave him no pleasure. Before he had reached the full ‘ age of manhood he was a broken creature, incapable of enjoying himself in the ways in which enjoyment seemed to him to lie, full of bitterness, envying every man who had youth and health. ' Many of ¢hose who knew Rogers slightly will tell you that he ‘ was content, filled full each day of the satisfaction of having and |: But those who knew him best will tell |‘ using the power of wealth. you that his days were days of bitterness, that his enormous self- indulgence in the particular kind of pleasure of which he thought best had completely destroyed his capacity for enjoyment. He envied every man who seemed to have a happy family and friends. Both these men were men of the greatest capacity for happy |: and useful lives. Tt lies on the surfaco of the character of each that he was naturally a straightforward, kindly, generous man, with the intelligence and the instincts for promot- ing his own welfare and the welfare of others. Both were destroyed by having in early life unrestrained ability to self-indulgence. to work their way upward through those first steps to self-develop- ment which ar: so painful yet so vitally necessary, if they had got he power of self-control, both would in all probability be alive to-day, would be far more conspicuous members of the human fam- ily than they ever became, and would be highly and justly esteemed '; by their fellow-men. Rogers was indeed right in holding and in asserting in his | splendid will that inherited wealth is more likely to be a curse than| a blessing. THREE UNANSWERABLE IFS. Tere are the threo ifs that make Mr. Clausen’s position daily more impossible: Tf there is room for more seats in the public parks and squares that room should be filled by public seats. If there were plenty of public seats there could be no complaints about “undesirable neighbors” for women and children. If there are two classes of sitters—the payers and the free sitters—then the people to whom poverty for- bids paying for seats will be ashamed to come to the parks and squares, s The World has said again and again, if Clausen does not get rid of Spate and his pay chairs, the city will get rid of Clausen and Spate and the pay chairs. Mr. Clausen is stubborn, born, But these three ifs are more stub- FLOATING COFFINS. A week ago Inst Sunday The World showed that our harbor was full of ferry and excursion boats, ranging in age from fifty to thirty years, unfit to leave their docks, certain to go down if their hulls were slightly pierced. These are very serious, very startling facts. Yet the boats mako many trips each day and most of the excursion boats at least one trip, and all are crowded, Tt is a curious illustration of the lack of imagination on the part of the public. Also it is a curious illustration of the lack of conscience on the part of money-makers. Both boat owners and public cheerfully “take their chances.” NO WOMAN LIKES THAT. y seems to disiike Mr. Phuttinet.’* ml to pay her a compliment. Hoe mado the mistake of telling her he prime of lf Philadelphia Press, “Mins Pass! she was in |THE ROMANCE OF “ MAUDIE. ” “3 2 By A. S. CANFIELD. = 2 by Dally Aeory “Rad Ca atid was used Ider, made the ore frog-like with a bump. Her Knees give under her and, looking o'elock [at her, the man, more than slx feot e passed | Mich and dressed dn a countryman's he found| garb, saw that she had fainted, His cross-| jong, serious face Krew frightened and a xwing| ho looked about helplessly. She wan a good-hearted, simple Ittle thing, for all of her shop-girl ways. er year of tt woul! kil) Sopa and a dow Three e tracks at Hayes amall will be sent for 10 cents,Jand Gartleld streets, and they make a terrible clanging and grinding in the| She felt grateful and she told him po. on three curving -- Sush-houra, but she was iaured to} ie stared down at her pashfully, bis * atx; new wool hat in his hands, she could play ‘Amazin’ Graci “You Must Be a Lover of the Lord," “Eben- ezer” and dozens of others of the simple melodies which he had heard chanted “Don't mention {i “bout tt! ne proteated, “Fit warn't thin’ . I'm Abner Cummins and jon’t say nothin’ Tf they had been born poor and had had}: veoup Humboldt way; In here with a carload of cattle, you see; an’ I'd like to nee you home " She wald prettily that she would be very glad. Abner paid the car fares from a fat wallet. ‘This was the beginning of the end of 4t, which {# plain. In the “best room" of Maudie’s married cousin was a little wheezy “melodeon” which had belonged to “Mawdie's mamma. Cummings, It Appeared, lived @ lonely life on his farm and he was fond of certain classes of mustc—mos'ly himes and sakerd chunes," be said, When he found that and whined since his childhood, his de- Nght was great and nolsy, When she tortured the rheumatic instrument Into @ cheap waltz or two and a couple of the Intest “coon” songs he looked on her IRE IN A BOARDING-HOUSE. POOPEGOVPOORS D444 2) e 2, : bs ® STP THAT Me aN S542 By T. E. POWERS. The janitor of the flue. ment. PIDHRNETIIOFI303-0% the adjoining building, always ready for an emer- “ goncy, heaves a hod of coal down This starts tne fire going afresh, and there !s more excite- OOO3L 6-86 Great excitement at the discovery of fire in the chimney of our boarding-house, but it does not dis : a like those the boarders’ mothers used to make. ~~ a | “Hey! Something doing ov boarder to the firemen, had not been cleaned since the “Something doing over here, too! Wo're busy,” answer back the checkers- playing firemen. It was only the burning of the soot in the chimney, which $ resnseieeaeeeseee SHEPSOSD99O0969-: concert the members of the Geyser No, 2 Fire Company opposite, who keep on coolly playing checkers, while the boarders organize an impromptu water-pitcher brigade. s Tho Star Boarder arrives on the scene and at once takes charge of the volunteer fire brigade. He a> » recta the assault on the fire flend, which {s made with hash grenades, angel cake and biscuits very muck / Ooaee De ss er here!” yells the hall bedroom 2 > Put {t out yourself. year 1. Bome timely remarks on refreshing Deverages for the summer season: nee OEE Oe | TARTARIC ACID CREAM. | pu Leal baie Boll to a syrup two pounds of white sugar and two quarts of water; when cold add two ounces of tartaric actd, on tablespoontul essence of lemon and thi whites of three eggs beaten to a stift froth, Put In bottles and cork tightly. Allow one wineglassful of the above to one ‘ginas of water, adding enough car- donated water to make It effervesce. { ICED COFFEE. § eee oe Allow ane tablespoonful of coffee to each cup—mix thoroughly with white of egg, throwing crushed shell in coffee pot. Pour on the water boiling hot and Jet come to a boll. Throw in a little cold water to drive the grounds to the buttom. In five minutes {t will be clear. Set aside to cool, and serve REFRESHING. BEVERAGES. THESE in glasses filled with chopped ice. An- other way to prepare coffee ts to follow Above recipe, sweeten to taste, and when cold put in an Ice-cream freezer well packed with tce and salt, and freeze until it ts like snow. POEs od : FRUITADE. } 9 ee aN Frultade Js easily made by using any frult Jutces, adding the julco of orange | and lemons, allowing syrup to taste and | adding carbonated water if desired. Blackberry, currant, strawberry and raspberry juices give a delightful color and form the basis of a refreshing drink, + LEMONADE. { Squeeze lemons and remove sceds. Make a syrup of two pounds of white sugar and two quarts of water. Bottle and have ready for’ use, The syrup makes the lemdnade much smoother and richer, Add to the lemon Julce suflictent syrup to taste; fill the glasses with cracked Ice; serve with a couple of fine, ered to be the best brand of rrelo- repre he told him that. “I know binders, mowers and such he wrote, “but when !t comes things, to music I have to stall, hub-deep.” 1d when Possibly she was not he came to town in the fal best room, twirled his hat upon his stared absently at the floor and with awe. Abner stayed in town three days and then tore himself away with effort. From home he wrote her queer, stiff, misspelled letters. She had asked him to direct to her at the store and she be- came o heroine to the other girls. Bhe answered faithfully, saying such things as she could think to say, and they were her to marry him. Anyhow, she sald that she would, and she agreed with him ¢ long engagements were unwist When she had iver consent, he sald soberly: “I s'pose 1 orter tell you that J'll take good keer o' you. I ain't said nothin’ ‘bout hit heretofore, but I'm @ pretty ,slonia! san; mean,” be added, hastily, DAILY LOVE STORV. “I'm pretty well fixed. I've got a good farm and some cattle and some money, and I don't owe nobody nothin’. 1'l1 do my beat by you. Then "Maudie," MAY BE Or PREPARED AT HOME, ripe strawberries, a slice of orange or @ pitted cherry or two on top, ten eee } ICED TEA. } + V—<—<—eee8~c~xrke_efT™s Allow a teaspoonful of tea for each rerson. Pour over the tea bolling water to desired quantity, cover tightly and set valde to draw for not more than tem miputes, Strain and pour over ao large square of ico ina pitcher. Fill the tums blers full of chopped ice, add a slice of lemon and pour in tho ten, ry { FROZEN TEA, + Prepare as for iced ten; sweeten to tnate and when cool add lemon juice and freeze to the consistency of snow. { RASPBERRY VINEGAR. 3 ban ee Put the raspberries into @ stone vee sel and mash them to a pulp. Ada ood yinegar—the genuine cider vine= kur is best—enough to cover tt well. Stand In the sun twelve houra and ald night in some cool place. Stir it well occasionally, Strain and put as many fresh berries In the Jar as you took outs pour the strained vinegar over ,them3 mash and set in the aun all day, Strain ‘a necond time next day, To cach quart, of Julco allew ono pint of water; five pounds of white sugar for eyery three who had dipped into her cheap books and whose little head was well filled with visions of belted earls and mall-clad knights and hand- some pages, went up to him and put her brown hair against his shoulder and anid: “I know you will, Ab." It Is proper to add that In the coun- try air, on a diet of eggs, milk, chickens and so forth, with long hours of sleop and freeston from grinding cares of ipovert Maudie’ blossqmed and dou! and abloomed dike a rose. cheeks and a ap: fees "pink in le is pints of this Maquld, Juice unt water mingled. Place over a gentle fire and. stir until the sugar is dissolved. Hess slowly to boiling, skimming off the soum, and as soon an it bolls take off the atove. While warm bottle and seal! corke tightly with resin. A most ree: freshing.and pleasant drink. —__. The Bible in the Philppines,, The Bible is to be translated inte languages of the Philippine Islands: eeu WOE the ext ten yeara/ Te

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