The evening world. Newspaper, July 23, 1901, Page 6

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THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, JULY 23, 1901. 3 OMIC DEFINITIONS. EAUTY’S By F. M. HOWARTH. SECRETS. By HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. "ARRY'S PLACE, SIZZLING BEACH. By T. E. POWERS. . NO. U,651. ed by the Press Publishing Company, £3 to Gt PATUK ROW, New York. red ut the Post-OMce at New York as Second-Class Mail M Hollow in the Forchead. Dear Mea. Ayer: Kindly inform me how I can get id of a hollow in the forehead. It is right between the eyebrows. I do not ting it comes from frowning. READER. DO not exactly understand what you mean by a “hollow” in your fore head. If you mean a furrow you certainly have formed it by some mus- cular contraction, You might try the court-plaster remedy, which !s entirely harmicss and sometimes will break a ad habit of this sort. Cut some white silk court-plaster into narrow strips. Separate the furrow, making the akin smooth and attach the court-plaster criscross so that it holds the skin in a smooth state. You can put this court- | plaster on at night. This ts an old way of treating wrinkles of this sort Ido ¢ not think It effective wnere the wrinkles aro those of age, but where young pee- | ple have acquired bad habits this rem- > y\edy will at least, and to @ certain om tent, agaist in breaking the practica . Again the Freckle Wash. Dear Mrw, Ayer: Kindly let me know @ good remedy for treckies. Mise F. P. 8. T HIS ts an excellent wash for freckles: "A LOTTERY WITH 137,000 BLANKS. Ont in Oklahoma there is a wild rush for homesteads. There a to persons who have reg re 13,000 claims and they are to be awarded by lottery ered before July 26. Over 126,000 have already registered, and it is expeeted that 150,000 will be reeorded on the lottery books before they are closed. It thus appears that for every one of the 13,000 homestead lots to be assigned by Government there will be over eleven cager And they are all th little or no applicants on the ground. reported as poor people, money.” Groat suffering is anticipated smong the 137,000 who draw blanks in the lottery. These are undoubtedly prosperous times—so prosperous that we are apt to think that if any able-bodied man now is out of work or short of money it must be his own fault. But here are 150,000 persons clamorous for a chance in a lottery of unimproved lands in the Far West, 137,000 of them bound to be disappointed and not knowing where to turn for a living. It is a big country and, let the sun of prosperity ride never Waiting for the waite: Bi Pur UP THE AXE ANT! \ ‘ Peorie tocut / THEIR FEET? 7-—— Ws | Bichloride of mercury, in a coarse 4 powder, 12 grains; extract of witch "| hazel, 2 ounces; rose water, 2 ounces. Asitate until the mercury dissolves. y % 5 : : : ee y Mh Mop over the freckles night and morm- high, there will always be a certain number of people in it who Y, ine! : F ' WY, Bichloride of mercury 1a, as perbes: will somehow miss the sunshine. YW) pe ine iat denpareast fotos Aer ty, VA while perfectly proper to use as ocug- YY gested, should be kept out of the way HOW LOVE CROSSED A RIVER. In the Evening World’s series of lessons on love nothing meets exactly the circumstances which confronted Miss Leila Pat- terson, a seventeen-year-old girl, late of Elkton, V: Miss Patterson fell in love without a lesson. Despite her father's opposition sho set out late at night to go to her own wed- ding. She rode a saddleless, bridleless horse of ignorant persons and children, Treatment for Dry Hain Dear Sire. Ayer: Please insert @ good formuta fer @ dry scalp. ANNE. Fut of all you need a good shampoo and treatment for your hair, I give you a formula for the shampoo, and ¢ you possibly can I would sugwest scalp massage. If you cannot get a, good scalp manseuse apply the lotion for { which I give you a formula. Rub tt into the scalp thoroughly with the tips $ with a rope halter fora rein. Arriving at the of the fingers at least once a day for ten| « rLoop rue § sWollen Shenandoah she urged her horse into er onsen Pee ae : 'Orace gets tired waiting and gocs and oroils the steak himself. The coox ts umemayt. $ > the water. The faithful brute swam to the better. aod : nh Gt j j mee Formula for Hair Grower.—Bay rum, ee ee 7 ounces: distilled extract witch hazel, 9 ounces; common tadle mlt, 1 dram © hydrochloric acid (5 per cent), 1 drop: magnesia, sufictent. Mix the bay rum and extract of wito; hazel together and shake in a little ma; nesia. Filter through a filtering pepe f and dissolve the salt in the filtrate, | which one drop of hydrochloric acid 3|to be added. The magnesia causes th! mixture to become eifghtly yellow, bul the one drop of acid entirely remove! this color. Apply to the roots of thy hair at night. Exs Shampoo—Try the following shampoo: Yolk of one egg, one pint of hot rain water, one ounce of epirit of rosemary; deat the mixture up thor~ . oughly and use {t warm, rubbing it well @ into the skin of the head. Rinse ¢hor- %| oughly in several waters. other shore and the wedding took place in G Maryland. It’s a good thing to have a horse that one can trust. But the $ most important thing of all is that this husband shall prove as trusty |‘ s the horse. Such a girl as this Virginia heroine is not won every day. She] % is worth winning and cherishing carefully for always. ANOTHER LOVE STORY; AND A SAD ONE. T have loved Ida Depuy for six months. © * ©* Wecould not live to- gether, so we were determined to dio together. That is a quotation from a news story of the day. Here is a|: passage from a very old story told in a very familiar book: 2 good for dandruff where A Ss E 2 ty shampoo fails, And Jacob served seven years for Rachel; and they seemed to him but |“ PREP Se eee ey a few days, for the love he had for her. THE VOIGEIN THE CHOIR There they are. A love of six months that meant death. A UJ P tn the mvusic loft I heard love of seven years that could still wait for life. ‘A volce of wondrous tone, . C Like warbling of a happy | Seven years would have made Herman Treetz a young man of |‘ That joyed o'er winter flown. twenty-four, Ida Depuy a young woman of twenty-two. But at ‘As singer I was never plann’d; ° So I could not aspire To rise to such a height as stand Beside her tn the chotr. Gecsccccecccey fifteen the maid is dead and at seventeen the qA TUR MARCTO ' youth is wounded and hopeless, while two : * homes are east in gloom and a whole eom-|¢ I loved her, and I thank my wits Iieirclaarcnenateerseary J note comn ‘Another plan I knew. munity stands mutely shocked. A boy's will is the wind's will, And the thoughts of youth are long. long thoughts. L tried it, and—well, cow she sits Beside me in the pew. Her voice stngs, and my heart re pites, Rejotcing in love's crown: She “raised a mortal to the skies,” I “drew an angel down.” _—G. Birdseye in Town and Country “Perr EE rere LACE STOCKINOS. W E have decided that lace stoves are “TAKING STEPS FOR HIS RESCUE.” Moreover, the will of a frail girl—what is it when the lover is | masterful, as is the handsome lad of seventeen who has once run away to sea and come home to boast of his adventures ? Poor Tda Depuy, with the blue eyes that could see only the | way a despairing young love pointed! 3ut the “long, long thoughts” of the boy. They are not a! es-9 mind's real looks ahead. They are impatient | ’ $ frettings—like those of the child denied im- $ mediate possession of a fancied toy. < At seventeen and fifteen love is a tov, s chances go, and yet—there is the opportunity for a world of} tactful guiding on the part of parents. | Poor Herman Treetz—though foolish and criminal! Who, not intolerable, and we are now td have lace stockings—not lsed fronts, Dut hose that are entirely made of lace. No doubt they are becoming t¢ the skin, but, what seems more tmpors tant, they are decidedly expensive; the >| only part that is substantial is under | ehe feet. Bilk mousseline stockings have >| nino been brought in, handsomely eam » | broidered. Ta Powane But when down the rebel! de time comes for the tip there are enough watters about to put nin the Philippines 6 0032-4 THE GENESIS AND GLORY RE you wp on the Tr poe = = had tried in the right way to teach him patience; to show him that | , F ASPARAGUS. at seventeen the world is not even at its beginning ? | 2 1 ; OR HOME OS DRESSMAKERS. The Evening World's Daily Fashion Hint. * tothe green is the sort sam! ahe is at once transiated, (There ts a| Nearer Arge number of va reserved ‘ ‘3 {TIS TNUE, 'TIS PITY. waiting in the Mourne. for graceful| “You have the reputation of being ready to help deserving young men.” re- eaters of arparagun wller, “and | havea or toask of you. WHl you be so kind as to oHik efile { your name temporarily? sparisus WON'T Phere are the following ordera for| “Want ty tan tt to a cheek?" arked the man of prominence Otristlan- To cut this fancy blouse in medfum , arena and Wf you let the) aparasne the young man, “I want to sien It to a story. To have a} a sedi Geli) Gs es the press e <1) throws your fingers you S {amount to much with my name alened to ft, but if 1 7 ” ) . 2% yards 44 inches wide Bim nibble a hunch * seyairanantd Gune AaB i rab it up. quick. Inches jwide| ori zig) yards after which there plumber's machine ja your | “ hieago Pont inthe “D. 1." Foared for more while t in yarles and as: | NOY ON A VACATION, paragus: Aare : “Our office boy hasn't returned from his fresh-alr vacation." The 4 “Haven't you heard from him?" ’ ee Grechan isp #. hewe . “Oh, yea! He wrote that he didn't lke the country very much, but If we'd let the cultured brand, and it ts from the his pay Ko on he'd lay (Wo weeks longer,” — Chicago Record-Herald. Istex of Gr . + wae corrled up Tiga UDA a in cose SWART GINL, FOC . Some people eat asparagua hot, some] "You sald that 1 was the first girl you ever courted." i tr it cad, a never latter make people to travel Pou b. When dai! buttered a, ened reothe earth de or 8643536 D94-OF8O29OTE NEST E GG OF $100,000 _®van«s DAILY LOVE STORY. cht Wt Dally tory Publiwning Coy fant Ht A stroiiing arm in arm in the ;drous dimples, that Jared had noticed; Among the friends Jared made In the} adapted this young fellow's story to his Gran'ther's face was convulaed with dared Peters went Went to dusk, ook to tks After two or/=Just barely noticed, you know—| West was one who had been born un- {own user. He told it ax his own, and | delight. Tears of joy rolled unheeded country grow up, Kose three days of misery mental and 1 it well. He waa a clever actor, and| down his wrinkled rekn a8, glaring: ne thought her heart wax sand apent an entire | marks about female perfidy. He wrote |and shrewd; but everything he totiched | fully realized the dramatic poselbilitles | at the discomfted Harold, he ralsed his) “phere are two kinds of aspatugue—\OTUK! Hut sie wan soon consoled by nditing a letter which | Rore a biting letter—and tore it up; for! turned to ash Where others reaped | of th uution. staf an Brought ltidown with a force White commen the (fie Sisite of Harold Winteraat, a lek! struck con ation to Jared's soul, | a subtler revenge had occurred to him. | golden harvests he reaped misfortune, | He sat oppoaite his false swoetheart | that spilt It in twain |, 2 : manufacturer's son, too was varue la manner and matter, (Me divined that Rose preferred him to his affaira became sertously in-+and Harold, and behind him the oldj "“Sho'a a Peters, every Ine! ie ‘an'ther Peters had always liked |but he gathered from tt nome inkling of |Marold—If he succeeded in making|Volved. He was too young to know that | man, white-faced but firm-lpped, glared | he roared. ‘“Loastways, she soon wil Maparagus contiine Jold. This Ix called a tothe man who tw next ty So ycAwparagine is weut -japring $t on him) 4 Btince belonging to the ibuminates. 1 ts a car nd ix a whort ste; he made the customary — re-| der an unlucky wtar, He wan Intelligent | te TRANSIT, c Rone ! } o vi be, 2 and of all the girls In the country |the truth; and immediately wrote—not | money; and he plotted accordingly. while there is Iife there Is hope, and) over his boy's bead like a wounded Hon, * Hey Mee ha a ey Aae lst round he would have chosen her for|to Itoxe, but to one of her girl friemds.| From thls dato his correspondence| one nlxht Jared, who roomed with him, | Rose crossed the pinaza, and, laying! Tose was Healer Cable Rett will be required, with % yard of all-eves rs are KIN! sarod, By return mail he received a spicy and | (ook on a dismal hue. went héme to find his friond stretched | her hand on Jared's shoulder, resolutely |@he learned ual serge meen Base ty | Ince. tame OOo ON Ing reflections on the de-| | When a tattling neighbor brought the | perhaps not unexaggerated account of | goon followed a rumor that Jared had|on the floor with a bullet through his|faced her frowning parents and the | assume tly | ‘The pattern (Nc. 388% 0 " hy} will be sent for 10 n? news of Rose's double-dealing, the old | Rowe's “carryings on." come home unexpectedly, looking very| head, and the pmpty revolver in his he collapsing. boo! chagtined Harold, encaped) froma itne rs Dt ee nts. Rm, Of F1L0,CU0; ‘but it T snis|man flatly refured to belleve it; but | There are pretty girls in Kansas; and| seedy, and it was eurmleed, "dead | stiffening right hand. “I shall stand by Jered,”’ 14, in} ghe vecame reconciled tothe situation | Send money to Breast al sere when, with his own eyes, be saw Rose | there was one in pacticular, with won-|broke.” | | With the ‘callousness of youth, Jered tonne. ta; ime 5 -rorntomey BPulltacs, Building, New Tess Gygi” ——

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