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GAROG.5.3-0.8-2-4.4.00046.0-04 To Wevelop the Neck. \ exercise or mmssage that will devel my neck around the collar bone, My chest and bust are quite plump, but the bere on the side of my neck show very distinctly. Also let mo know If there is anything that will make the akin on my arms smooth and white. Mrs. H, IGHT gymnastics such as are ordered for etoop-shouldered persons, wath mansage, will develop the neck if you are In fair health, You cannot ex- pect immediate results. For the rough skin take a warm acruly Bath every night, using a Mesh brush end a good soap all over the body. Rinee well. Take the bath regulariy every night. The chicken flesh will dis- eppear in the course of a few werks. OR Home = DRESSMAKERS. The Evening World’ Fashion Hint. ‘This is a stmple, tasteful morning gown. The material from which the original is made !s white Inwn with figures of old blue, and the trimming sutched bands of plain blue on white; but wastmble cotton materials, ae well as simple light-weight wools, are ap- propriate. ‘The back has a b ng fulness be- low the deep round yoke. The fronts are simply gathered and arranged over the lining, or seamed to the yoke when | | , this lest Is omittel. The \ktshop style and comfe ‘fashionable, for a woman o! Medium size, 81-4 yards of material Apches wide or 53-4 yards 44 Inches la will be requi The pattern, 3,515, ty cut in sizes for a sleeves are an we Johnny Reiff is not the baby that he used opel into a spidery lad whose poise inspire thing confidingly infantile about his comely of the feminine portion of the grand stund turning his face in their direction with a passes by on the preliminary canter, 8. 2:8-6-0-90-8.046.8-3-45 olive ot hoa kth etate tt would would be low if apr To Rest J(ATE CAREW ABROAD. “SIZING UP” THE GRAND STAND Beek to look or nfidenc e, and has de SOME SECRETS OF BEAUTY * what you any Hen ider, but make the skin ye ts tnare ve i ore Premature Gray Hate. Dive Mra Ayer ye remedy ABOR. 4 our | our for prematu m please hon publts ANDI TONI spondents, rsonally, My own {tn has come A stain w again, For yt or mains that are excellent harmlexs. Here ta the formula for the Jaborand tonic: Sulphate of quin tineture of nux vomte. ture of capsicum, 1 dr: of jaborand!, 4 drams; mary, 1 ounce: water, § 0 Hothered with Red Face. Tam bo tists hin and Liste with Inc! 94,36, 38, 40 and 42 Inch Wust measure, World readera can secure « pattern of wrapper by. sending 10 cents to ihe World, Pullizer Bulldiog, Packard's bra! was in with a woman At ninctecn he had married Bessle Crowell. was a waltress tn the railroad restaurant and alone mm the world. With vse uncompromisingly ac Daily | very sir. ayer thered with red and olly skin an little sir of self-conscious pride as he Fito abanty At tt jhatr, NEWMARKET, July 8. 1 a horse, He has devel- But there is still some- the unfailing partisanship sped in him the habit of A4< EALED BY AN EXPERT, HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. is very red anid wdvise me. JENNUE Astringent lotion: Rose Ninces; elder flower water, 864-8 face thia Getting Nald at Twenty. ar Mra, Ayer Please give mea good cure for falling Tam twenty and T am getting Are alcohol and castor oll good Ming hair?) WILLIE LEWIs. COMOL is a atimulant and castor, times supply a neces- uunguent a dry scalp, 1 formula I give you better for fuiry cases, You need massage, t if you cannot get a course of scalp man- ® rub the tonle into your head with ips of your fingers; press fairly rd upon the senlp and rub at least {nutes The scalp should be loose r y, Where tha . tho scalp ts found to be . and as soon aw ft Is loos- ened by friction, the etreulation In re- stored and the hair stops falling out ‘Try this tonte: cologne, § ounces; Unc- ture of canthurlles, 2 ounces; spirits of ON THE JU It's sha ny THE WORLD: | Bronx. This end could be better served by a Doccceccccceed PRT ; DATA SERINE Tk THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 1 Published by the Press Publishing Company, 53 to 63 PARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Post-OMce at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. HERE IS A STEAL TO STOP! Union Railway Company, or “Huckleberry” road, has The been revealed by The World in the contemplated stealing of the} % new iron bridge, at the old Macomb’s Dam site, and of a portion of the One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street vinduct, leading down to It is proposed to run the overhead trolley over both structures. The Municipal Assembly pushed the steal along in June so quietly that nobody took notice. But unfortunately for the schemers there has to be a public hearing, and now the plot is out. Nobody with a right to say a word in opposition to this grab should forget that the hearing takes place at the City Hall on Thursday next, July 25. It was the “Huckleberry” road which stole a way through West One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street to Eighth avenue, a few years the bridge. EFINITIONS BY HOWARTH. ‘190L DENTAL TERM—A TEMPORARY FILLING. BD OO-90 9420644809 4-4600-9:006-6 ago, in defiance of the taxpayers. The newly planned theft is bolder and worse than the earlier one. It involves the disfigurement and feccecceerere£ practical ruin, so far as original purposes and largest usefulness go, of a bridgo and viaduct which cost New York $2,000,000 and which are models in public works. The purpose of the grab is to connect the west side roads of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company with the lines from the special railway bridge ucross the Harlem to the flats above the threatened viaduct. There will be no compensation for the sacrifice if the plotted grab is al- lowed to go through. Deccerccccoeety OLD WANDS + ay ¢ WHAT IS ENOUGH MONEY FOR ANY MAN TO MAKE? Charles A. Spring, of Chicago, has just died, leaving a small fortune of $250,000. He has refused again and again to embrace opportunities that came in his way to make millions more. But when he had made his $250,000 Mr. Spring retired from business, saying “That is enough.” Yet, though it is always a wise man who knows when he has had enough, the question whether $250,000 for any man remains an open and interesting one. The income of $250,000 a year at 5 per cent. is $12,500 a And to thousands of heads of families who read this article, nd are rearing families on incomes ranging from $1,000 to $3,000! Spring’s belief that $12,500 is an abundance will seem A MAN WO REFUSED i year, a year, M yery reasonable indeed. But as men’s incomes grow their ideas of what is enough are An additional thousand or 5 sonscious or studied ex- apt to grow too. a year is soon ex- pended, without any simple tincture of ben- IDEAS GROW ¢ . : zoln, 3 tannic actd, 10 grainn } wirn rvcowes.$ travagance. A larger home, with better furni- CUA CHS Geeccccccceeed ture, will quickly absorb it. Sending half a dozen boys and girls to college four years apiece will easily use up a few more thousands. A pair of horses and carriages will dispose of some more. A family trip to Europe, stopping even at the fairly good hotels and making a six months’ round of the Continent, would wipe out several more thousands. And still we have not exhausted the list of reasonable human desires—desires that can- not be classed as either extravagant, wasteful or wrong, if the man has honestly gotten the money to gratify them with. * Who, then, shall lay down a hard-and-fast rule and say just what is enough money for any man to accumulate ? Andrew Carnegie acquired over $300,000,000 before he felt he had enough. What did he want it for? Most of it just to give away. Of course it was not necessary that he should pile up all that moncy just for the snake of scattering it again in gifts to libraries, colleges and other public purposes. But that was Carnegie’s ambition and desire; first to accumu- late those $300,000,000 and then to redistribute them again for the benefit of his fellow-men. And the fact that eecccc ets : pera 3 The World has received scores of letters from ¢ To GIVE Away. $ poor men telling how many good things they Boeeececccoret would like to do with Carnegie’s millions, and wishing they had them for those purposes, proves that Mr. Spring’s aversion to the making of more than $250,000 is by no means general. For the sake of yourself and your own family an income of $12,500 a year, even considerably less, is assuredly enough. But | many, perhaps the majority of men, have ambitions, sympathies and desires that reach far beyond themselves and their own families. Would it be good policy to discourage and restrict such men in their wealth getting, even if it were possible? A PROPHECY. Some morn we may wake from our slumber And find, in this wonderful age, Taat the automobdile’s a back number And that flying machines are the rage. —Washington Star. omer hen A a A LAKE—IN SUMMER. “Pa, what tsa lake, anyway?" “A lake, Jimmte, Is a large body of water surrounded hy men, children in bathing eults.""—Chicago Record-Heraid. women and ned « Introap owiedge of the mature man hej jer A’ she undoubtedly was] the lapse of twenty years, She fat and wore broad, flat shoes with buttons off. As this picture grew, | correspondingly faded the {dea watch | Just man had attacked him, that! } done wrong in running away It was with a sort of pride th all these years he had to send regular remit. back to hee and the ehild. For} » had been one, but tt had not ap-| pealed to his restless youth and still | ions of fatherhood, | ran away he had changed his| name from Abbott to Packard and she! had never traced him, though his tn-! able legal man had once careless eyed to him the impression that a vindictive and spasmodte pearch for her|If !t was the poison he had swallowed strangely missing husband was now and|he waa a dead man inside an hour, then made by his client's beneftctary,| ‘The man groaned. It had come on him Mra, Abbott 40 suddenly, ne had awakened to the ‘The day was warm and Packard was| everyday world so abruptiy he had not thirsty, He drank every drop of a glass| had time to get his balance. Stubbornly o€ water before hin before he emerged| his thoughts returned to Bessle Abbott, from his mental wanderings and stood| but not with contemplative lelsure th blinking as one whose sleeping cyes| time. She loomed a solemn fact In the have opened suddenly on a glare of|life he had suddenly become separated ght, ‘Then he atumbled, sat down from and the {deal of a full expiation and stared stupidly at the empty glass. seized him and was insistent. With the Two fect away from: where It had stood! odd notion growing he rose and wavered Wa» another glass stinfiar in shape,|toward his desk in the next room and tiled with a colorless !tquid. One of; wrote hurriedly, With livid face he those glasses had held water, the other! glanced over the unblotted letter. had been Mled with a solution he had; “You could never have found me liv- big enough fortune | ¢ made of a pecullar, colorless, tasteless * tt ran, “but tt Is my whim you polson. And he had drunk one of them, | should profit by my death. Come to the There was a dampness ap his forencad.! address at the top of this sheet and take S a My, Ayn DHSS IDVGGD F9S9-99-09-9-66-90-003-0-00-50-0-0+ o> OSC-2-: oo ¢ CAAA RRAA THE EVENING What Are the Lucky Months To the Eslitor of The Evening World: WIL some reader kindly inform me what are the lucky months in which to get married? WM. M jolorous Staten teland. To the EAitor of The Evening World I went to Midland Beach, 3 I., and back, by trolley, last night. To-day I have elghty-seven mosquito bites and am {Il In bed. Staten Island, besides its huge swarma of mosquitoes, is the most ovil-smelling place { ever visited. We had a “land breeze which bore to our nostrils every known odor on the list, from decaying fish, malarial marsh supors and oll or bone factories, down | to what seemed to be mburger cheese; | besides a number of smells that were entizely new ones to me. Moreover, the! dank fog hung over the marshes, apell- | ing malaria, Where are the counterbal- DELICIOUS FRUI ; e——_———__——_ cy Choose large {Ine raspberrics, dip in quid gelatine and place against the side of the mould. Put the mould tn a cold place or'on ice, und the jelly will Immediately harden. [Fill the centre with whipped cream or blanc mange. Raspberry Cream. i Raspberry Jelly. it PPL LDEDL-9DDO-20O.96> od EEA. : E43 88869 6-03-99205- DE-DE DISODD é < 3 o a ached ARTHUR PAYNE RBELSTONE. Plea for Evening Bathing. To the EAitor of The Eveatng World In this torrid weather we who down to the seashore after dinner for a swim. But most of the bathing places are closed at Now, why not have evening bathing? I think {t wauld pay, And {t would surely be a boon t ware slaves. P, LEROY GRAEME. JR. A Gruesome D: To the EAltor of The Eveniog World Won't somebody interpret this dream for me? Monday night I dreamed 1 was crossing a green tield. I was standing beside an open grave, are| cloth forced to slave all day would like to run| Then I woke up. US) Stutes or working people? | All at once | as at p ust shaped Ike a coffin, with a black | D’S BIG LETTER CLUB ancing Joys of citizenship that any sane | mortal should abide in such a spot? cloth thrown over It. Some one called me to look out or [ would fill in. © Id, ‘No, 1 wont’ 1 went to step Tors the coMn and stepped right into he grave. I fell on my alde and there Was an old man dead underneath the I got our ali right and ran away. PUZZLED. Which Are More Nameroust To the Editor of The Evening World: Who will anawez me whether there Are more business people In the United DT. Evening World: he companies seem unable to streetcars in rush hours, why can't they run care that are twlea as long twice as many seats s re is the splution of the rush-hour problem, CABLE PATRON, T PREPARATIONS. "x2 Weiser ring to prevent burning, and pour over the frult while warm, not hot. Let them stand an hour; put all In a pre: serving kettle and heat slowly; boll five minutes, take out the frult with a per- rated skimmer and boll the syru: wenty minutes. Add a pint of brandy for every five pounds of fruit: pour over the frult hot and seal. | Frozen Raspberries. Crush the berries to a pulp, sweeten to taste, add a little flavoring, either orange or lemon juice. To a pint of this mixture add one ounce of gelatine which has soaked an hour in one-half a cup of cold water and then been dissolved in one-half a cupful of hot water. Stir ‘until it begins to harden and then turn into @ mould. Cherries, peaches, apri- cots, plums, pineapples or oranges can be used in the same way. This makes a very delightful dessert with little trou- ble. Serve with whipped or plain cream. i Spiced Currants. a | Five pounds ripe, firm currants, three t white sugar, one tablespoon- pounds o! fu) each of cloves, nutmeg, allspice and cinnamon. Boll currants one hour, then add sugar, spices and one-half a pint of vinegar, and doll for one-half bour longer. Brandied Cherries o> Berries. i Make a syrup of a pound of sugar and a half gill of water for every two pounds of fruit. Heat to boiling, etir- ds_of tru 2 le Fruits. tablespoonfuls of olive oll, pinch of salt, on {4 cupful of flour or enough to make almost a drop batter. When ready to use add the white of the egg beaten very stiff. This batter will® keep for several days. Dip the peaches in the batter, using care to have them complet conted. Fry a delicate brown and dry on paper tn open oven until ail are fried. Roll them in sugar and serve on a folded napkin. Two quarta of raspberries and one | | Preserved Raspher-ies quart of sweet cream. Add enough | ee Tea SS es TTT sugar to make quite sweet. Put in a To one pound of fruit allow. three- freezer with plenty of ice and salt | quarters of a pound of sugar. Put the around it. This makes enough for twelve persons, @. Cherry Salad. | Selest firm, large, white cherries, carefully remove pit and insert a hazel nut. Leave the stem on, serve on let- tuce leaves, with the foliowing dressing. Yolks of four eggs. one tablespoonful of | sugar Into a preserving kettle with just enough water to vent its sticking to the bottom of the kettle. Boll the sugar. slowly to a thick syrup, Skim off the acum an It rises to the top. When the syrup Is thick and clear drop Into It as many raspberries as will cover the top of the syrup without crowding them. Let them boll twenty minutes. Skim the berries out carefully, 60 ax not to break them, and put them into glass jars. nuustard, three heaping tablespoontuis! Repeat this process till all the berries of sugar, salt and celery salt to taste, one cup of milk and one cup of vinegar, added aiternately, to prevent curdlt one tadlespoontul of oll or lump of butter the size of an egg; cook in dou- ble boiler until it t@ the consistency of rich cream. Peach Fritters. Cut the fruit in half, sprinkle with sugar and set aside. Fritter batter— Yolk of one egg, well beaten, add one quarter of a cupful‘of milk or water, possession. Everything {8 yours. I must confess I rarely remembered you till to- day, when, strangely cnough, you have been much in my thoughts, In half an hour I ahall be dead. Good-by.” The brutality of tne few words secmed, to revive him and stop the dull prick- Ing that was stealing over his body. Methodically he sealed, addressed and stamped the envelope, walked out and handed it to the postman who at that moment was unlocking the mall-box, Hours later those warking over Dr. Packard, who had been found on the floor of hin Iaboratory, were rewarded by the flicker of his eyellas, and present- ly he spoke, It was the uaual inane question of those coming out of the depths. “You ase in your ows room," briskly FATE. « Svmetecnans + DAILY LOVE STORY. answered the physician at his right a Personal friend. Dr. Packard was try- ing to think as the waves which had submerged him receded. "I was pol- scred," he breathed In a puzsled way. His’ friend's face broke into the nu- ButsthoyRtharl inutbel matics moring smile given remark: the} 4 7 feevle and Incompetent..." he! place we meet, sald, sootningly, “youve the i extensive and all-pervading faint ‘ou Weren't poisoned, Idea into your head? And t do you mean by keeling over.Jn such a repre- hensible way? You were working too long: withaut food and rest, that's what ut Alled yo some minutes inter, that Dr, He laughed once, before he tui wall, But the train Jumped, Bhe had ne’ a Jaugh in all her ex; wever wanted to hear Fee, heard perience. And it again. 1 TOE quite such she > are cooked, Then let the syrup boll half an hour and pour It over the berries througb a very fine strainer, W blest but love and do, And has no skill speech nor trick of art is he that can Oo ne a Wherewith to tell what faith approveth true, And show for fame the trease ures of his heart! When, wisely weak, upon the path of duty Divine accord has made his footing sure, With humble deeds he byllds his Ife to beauty, Strong to achieve, and patiest to endure, Each with his trumpet and his nolry faction, Are leaky vessels, pouring on the street ‘The truth they know ere ig has known Jts ‘action, And which, think ye, In His bee nign regard, Or words or deeds, shall merit the reward? —Peter McArthur in the Atiantiey 3 4 stance | ' |