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THE ACTOR'S RETURN. | By T. E. POWER © Dress Publish Atshed byt Entered A MARVEL OF DEATH AND LIFE. Company, 53 to N K as Se John Shaeffer, a Brooklyn Loy, was taken with eramps while} switnming and sank, found him by div fter repeated attempts his compani: cr. His heart was <i, body limp, lungs full of A physician gronounced him dead. nately he told ty owas i water, her father, an . ( ayn ae hea Pagal And the physician was right. Dead, but ‘ = [OrsersorosrorS with the poteney of life in him; with un- Hwounded organs ready to work again if set at work. mypre than a . to SiBtronUiaane Or cull suspended animation;” its a quibble, What is Oren hay, : + important is that the doctor wouldn't let the boy stay dead. ealculatio: @ ; - . i Sates and the: Ot heed After two minutes less than am hour of constant work signs appeared of returning life, and soon the reviving boy was sent to the ‘true Oriental : a\merica, 5 wet “ % , He sat by ei : al it hospital. Tle was under water twenty-five minutes, an unprece- night and com H 5 Wa ily nan ji “What ts it all ¢ Wf 3 dented time. the warm alr abou w t : Remember at all times that drowning is not necessarily fatal. long years of str 1 oendh ' ROW Ze m1 a - % Aue rs antass? Every man right A {iil 2 rules for resuscitation of the Volunteer Life-Saving Corps ELT OSCE aa tar hil | B ed and studied wherever boating or swimming is edy that? T! Real tlh it A Uncover the neck and chest, lay the body on {ts stomach over aan tanastrain Soma : \ 5 0a barrel or spar or your knee, open the mouth, draw the tongue forward get one and ft tow to! ( Dl with a handkerchief to let the water out, roll the body several times from elders Pacnea nts CONGR TUTE Ss chet lay it on its back, head low; fold the arms and slowly raise Mla entia Greece i ehtralt : Saino ther the head, bring them back to the stomach and press upon ft year-old gic! baby cement ‘gins to flutter on the bree + | to expel the repeat sixteen times a minute; keep up this motion con- ‘This was hist as he sat aga yocurb invites him and lis pose is meant to ple Dostantly; meanwhile remove clothing, dry the skin, rub Imbs upward; on da trent ac ast aaa Ae ‘ 2 | signs of fe wrap in warm bla carefully Bive a little stimilant. teen bes G * ees a 4 pound and % i | : But get the rules in full. And remember that the last one of teen—Just ripening into wom. We ffallis ies unportant— shall hai As @ Se aT tO : should know : ‘| KEEP AT WORK taught her that she ul Y : samust the life-saver he if after fifty-eight hopeless me and that in due tin ‘ 2 g fe an heebsrealTH wife. Every te of aut tnd rath : ient begins te “come tot tude shall bind her to me | 3 seebSvesne ene eet Fifteen years later hut a . etn : OUGHT BACHELORS TO BE OSTRACIZED? And the hair : etl abundant ‘i aeeees seuretet a A Ai Amelia Barr comes out strongly against bachelors, She de repose. One could # A % zyicliires that old maids are tolerable, beeau snerally of some use in fn the darkly : ; : i alow rise ai it {A b{ the world, but that lackelors are a bad lot and ought to be dis- Hemphill wae 14 i | - coldly, much as r Mann eer ela = erry its tifnloaxtiredithel leas ; ‘ bales of lle were 1 Nn eo) Bint) Lo onee niore sve licoml way snl Neng Uro LAE LL os If Amelia Barr could have her way bachelors, after they Ur tilateour { the boarded with looms up with Ta <i a Me aaa t}eease to be young men, would be denied membership in any club lhteen y something ore F take you for this that f his ofonarried men and compelled to socially isolate themselves. She eecceeee. Would go further and mark all bachelors over nus rons f vty irs of age for the general sesrn by centre of the ACHES Tet . sp Livtnegste OVINE obliging them to wear a special uniform to aly to w F A 5 eeeeees distinenizh them from husbands and fathers. we a ape Se Pia) WE" Sie ak his idea thar all men omeht te aarry is very persistent. Ut trhel strom ihe Intore GHZ WH POURS Fo wsas generaly dominant among the tirst men and wemen of wher H was a} INC cil 5 Just before the noon of night she| SS yy Ey] we have Kknewdler Many of them ade mar > compulsory, found herself in the conservatory with +} The red Indians who preeeded us on this continent would tolerate | Donald Dunstan, a strapping younge :| 7 eee a‘ se | of twenty~n of a local phys HT The young buck who failed to take a wife unto him i Co Gh GE a aa Os Ha : ed-as a woman and set tedoing the domestic work 0 ong and positive. 6 a Bie ¥ “L knew,” he was sa, ct} hart S —— ef} the tent. There was ne warpath for him. Tle was a ‘squiaw-man, ear att aiacseiars The Miaito oft will echo now with beat of actors’ feet Q In modern times many States Ih encouraged marine by felt at alt a As they chase the ram engagement, for the actor-rman inst cat crants in aid of it, and discouraged bachelorhood by special taxes — |Orceecseseeees And the general opinion, no doubt, is that the se) ui eran for an EL 5 | DIVORCE Billhe ae SE 3 nowhe marries and decently rears a family ; ep tow oF & ; I dloes his duty to the State and is, on the whole, ideas BANK- :{. amore ideal ei Vthan the man who does not, protest or in scif= R sn Ane: RUPTCY 8 But all the same it may be attirmed that bachelors are not ment after was gathe F an i with no wife or bairns of his own + fowitheut thei The une red, throwing -ter| “Come!” he whiny cae about si chen draw: | Ll Qecscccccceees is oftentimes a special providence to his ing her to him. "C Will leave]? +) ¢ BACHELORS 6 re aR fi sae sett “Whale that Incarnate mam: 24 siecavnnuny ¢ nephews and nieces, And there is a whole lot shippers.” Bi Us , goof work in the world—perilous und heart- PO ATER he 4 3 ( aeee eeceed breaking work—that is better done by single y through the « : . h SOS HENS ie slinen, with no wives to weep and no children ¢@ suffer when they went a letter to He F >] fall at their posts. said i Be Bees |: 8 Moreover, is it not punishment enough for bachelors that, as Knows that. women fi : tT] Darwin pointed out long age, and as the vital statisties of all coun reaFand ee | f] tries show, marricd men live much longer on an average—and have | ae Se ate aa onli t}a better time ¢ it . |. 5 Of jistien « their doors, of course, 7 al Fevers ah é 7 HB so bankrupt and the actr get divoree, % “ ” 4 (fie al :-|THE LAZIEST MAN AND THE “PUSHFUL. 4 poe : Sie PAE eer i : Gaia aie eien ty CHERRY JELLY. = = 5 > Ts f : ej e ss | THE LIGHTEST FINGERED PEOPLE. Choe laziest man has just stepped in front of a locomotive, in | pero aeay I A car 5 Conneetiont, to end his life with the least exertion. a HE best J set be BuRAT. V the sugar pr One of the most “pushful” men has been relegated to the tail- aisanahwhen : end of a procession awaiting customs attention on a New York pier with it some coli ising because he tried to crowd in first, where he didn’t belong. \ ueeze three or { ‘ Tr ; 5 5 - erect thrcceh ce Vhe lnziest man had a fame, at first local, now national, uc- 1 dozen strong atrain throu, aration. Ni het: dn, . : Lie Teanga, quired through his refusals to saw wood, draw water, put on a put It tn toe, Dihey RESTRIC DUES: ws. being sti and ex- z . . these Jellies ‘ ipa f rela shade, are used ne} collar, cook his charity meals or perform any other reasonable } Se | Rd asad . F ice of labor. 0%: ies pe The “pushful’? man has been a suecessful wine agent and af cot ' awnibent } J suicce agent and a OR HOME a i ——_—_— satisfactory entertainer of a society sometimes sorely at a loss for DRESSMAKERS, | TO PREVENT BALDNESS.| amusement. Besides, he has “married rich.” ayeaniy HSI tin Both men serve at this juncture as useful examples—the lazy | and th) urs am, tad sbelthe Duity| Sane PO ACOs REN 1, the other for his pointing « one in ways net necessary to exp! aitie motto: . BET DON'T CROWD, \t some stretching of patienee we can accommodate a few y people on this earth, They are usually good-natured, and sometimes they spur the rest of us along. But, outside of some kinds of polities, we don't gamble inueh nor waste ceremony on the man who elbows The World's flint, Evening Fashion the | Geececsecroeens | THE LAZY sown DEAD Loss, yeeees, ° ° . o jor } with cx UNCLE AUSTID for solid comfort. “I'M have the maker of that c! dynamite.” N EXPLODED JOKE. By F. M. HOWARTH. de> rES-29 LITTLE SANFORD—Here I've a whole handful of paper caps and don’t know how [ can have some fun with them. hair arrested for stuffing it with WO sides of a face are never alike. The eyes are ot of Ine In two cases out of five, and one eye Ia stronger than tho other in seven per- rons out of ten. The right car Is also, asa rule, higher than tho left. Only one person in fifteen has perfeot eyes, the large percentage of defective- ness provailing among fair hatred people, Short sight !s more common In town than among country folk, and of ell peuple the Germans have a larger proportion of short-sighted persons, ‘The creyiailine lens of the eye Is the portion of the human body which ontnues to Increase in size throughout ‘fe, and does not cease with the attain- ment of maturity. ‘The smallest interval of round can be better distingulwied with one ear than both. The nails of two fingers never grow with the same rapidity, that of the miidle finger growing the fastent, while that of the thumb rons slowest, In fifty-four cases out of a hundred the left leg is stronger than the right. The bones of an average human male skeleton weigh twenty pounds, thone of FACTS ABOUT THE HUMAN BODY. A woman are six pounds lghter. That unruly member, the tongue of woman, !s also smaller than that of a man, givén a man and a woman equal size and welght, true, that Jaw exert a force of over 50 pounds. The symmetry which ts the sole intel- i@lble ground for our !den of beauty, the proportion between the upper and lower half of the human body, exists nearly all males, but Is never found in Amerizin Nmbs are more than those of any other ‘The rocking chatr, according to an English acientist, is responatble for the beauty The yush which the toes give to keep the chalr in motion, repeated and repeated, mukes the instep and It keops misshapening flesh off the ankle, making the ankle delicate and slender, the female, symmetrical people. the exercise which Increas: of the lower limbs. high, the calf round and full, ———————— ONE IS ENOUGH. ‘There are forty-eight kinds of the house fly. fora place cut of his turn, Mix thors tim wer tt my began te fall out ' KATIE. ke. There ts rement fot tneture of nux vomica, 7% grams; t ture red cinchona, 2 grams; un: of ecantharides, 2 grams; cologne, rams; sweet almond oll, ® grams. to the roots of the halr with a 1 got SOU need « Massa nothin: this t 4 ailing hate re | nS) A eat tt ; with | get a course of sentp!#ponge once or twice a day, Th sur town, use this tonic. | ton fs eapectally good for very dry hy hs combination will not 4 pep tea : # mee ne scalp with the tips of Treatment for Yellow Neck. ; a day, Let the frie: | pear Mrs. Ayer: Kindly tet me know | Hon be brink and tke At (ese ten min-/of a bleach for a yellow neck; alto a | utes for each rubbing, | good facial cream. FRIEDA. Tae object In to IGvsen the skin of the HIS {s an excellent facial crea [scalp and to gets circulation into a Boric acid, 90 grains; glycerine, T was | normal cond’ 2 ounces} distilled’ water, 216 Halr Nénic—paenic acid, 2 grams;! ounces; lanoline, 1 ounce; white paral- bur the only tates the rkin of the fMngers twie RY this jotton for dark mark. T ake fresh strained cucumber Juice, boil tt for five minutes and {dome subjects lot it cool, and to every Nive ounors of \, Falling lair trom Fever, julce add pulverized borax, 176 graine;| Dear Mra, Ayer: Will you kindly pub- neetate of soda, % grains; tincture of |iishin remedy for failing hair, quillaja, Sig ounces; tincture of bengoln, 'duwn sick with high fever, As soon as jyaris.%2 inches wide or yards 44 wi Wide) will be required. pattern! (No. 2:81, sizes “for 10 conta, {to “Cashier, The World, to 23) stand for an hour or until the actd Le A.M the perfu fine, j oll of rose, 6 drops; off of Bergamot, 6 drops. Heat the’ glycer- ine, water and boric uctd together; let entirely dixwotved. Melt the paraMne and lanoline together, and add to the first mixture by rapld, conatant beating. + last of all. Standing. Sears of Long Dear Mra. Ayer: Kindly let me know what is good to wear a scar away? “it is on my left| the movement In a contrary direction Just such a movemont you would employ in getting the oheek right below the eye. I had five! atltches sewed In it, and sometimes it Is very red while at other times It {s faint. Y — asrveacosy- HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. It's been on my face eleven years, ALC. RR. smiled THINK it will be diMeult to obliter- Through al] thelr lives to- J ate the scar of such long standing. gether; . I You might try the loduretted olf.|g Jt didn't come from luck or fate, Jodine, crushed small, 1-8 drum; From ¢lear or cloudy weather, olive oll, lukewarm, 2 ounces, Agitute|§ The reason lay within their them together In ampottle until the no- hearts, lution ts complete, 4 And colored all outalde; Hub into the scar once a day, makin3|@ One chose to hope and one to from the scar, crease out of a.plece of all. It may be ap- palling to reflect, but {t l# nevertheless the muscies of the human AND Which Is Really One-Sided, N the festive fly, mistake, says a weiter in the Philadel- THE FLY. i —_—_ i OW fs on, In its full excitement, the The merriment is all on the alde of the Needless to say that. The house- ia Pres; she should keep on fighting, he fly reigns, but doce not govern, Tho A Merry War On Between Them merry war of the housewife with Wife In first to give up; but that la @ ‘rst step Is proper and complete screen- ce the expense of having screens nade to order Is enough to alye the or- inary householder pause, it 1s better to buy the cheap, homely, efficacious mos- quito netting. It ts troublesome to put ents the outside cleaning of windows, sun and rain brown it most hideously, but—choose between it and the fy and ever after hold your peace, Als), ilttle odd, easily forgetable open tnis be forgotten, There Is a in an insect-ridden local- yy Where they screened even the rep! unt cellar windows. [ am not certain that they did not glug the ki >. But there were no sor moxqiltoes In that house, Tf w ay representatly his kind ap- red he created as much consternation © famed “man undef the bed," and was much more eastly dealt with, Transoms, yrilles, Ventilators and so- eened if you ne ty -tight. paper ds useful Is among housekeepers, however, no two opinions as whether it {s expenslye. A clever ‘s has hit on the expedient tting one sheet into two or three smaller pieces, One of these catches ail the files which death {x Itkely to claim in one day, and saves one-third of the usual expenditure for thts ttem, Many people object to fly paper on *}aesthetic grounds. If there ts a shelf or other high place in the room where It can be Inconspicuously bestowed It will yJattract the ty ws well and the eye as Uttle as the heart could wisn. During meal times the cream pitcher, bow! and ether points of atime- can bo covered with a dainty little y, at once prettler and more pro- the inverted saucer so lestion ear bedrooms files are lees of a matter than anywhere elae. ‘ole means must be resorted to {f they all numerous. A bunch of pennyroyal hung up at the foot, of the bed is an old-fahloned preven- tive which at all events does no harm. Another is to sprinkle pillow, hands and face with a drop of off of lavender —not the costly perfume, but what is called the “garden" preparation, of which 10 or 15 cents’ worth can be pur- chased. It ix sticky and smells like varnish, but the flles do not care for tt either, and it Is merely a question of the relative sensittveness of your cute cle. FRUIT FOR HEARTH. In the laughing Here hi eating of apples is tho best thing tn the world for « sluggish ver. Three or four at night just re going to bed will produce the effect. Apples should be eaten ble. best without peeling, as the skin ts valus A ripe peach In the morning will give an appetite for breakfast and make one feei better all day, Strawberries, raspberries, cherries and «®|currants are all cooling to the system and beneficial in their effect on the blood, Blackberries, when ripe, and not over ripe, furnish an excellent tonic from na- ture's laboratory. Figs are a bulm to the stomach, never produce acidity and are always easily 3 | digested. | The “rape cure” Is fully recognized Zl by Continental doctors. Grapes freely ten cleat the blood of tmpuritles and are of service In a large number of dis- a A recent typhold fever medical discovery is that patients thrive on the banana when their stomachs are not able to retain anything else, The ren- son ts that the ulceration of the stomach and intestines In such cares has made xolld food rou. The banana con- tains % vont. of nutritive matter, with nothing that can irritate the sore mucous membrane of tha fever patient, ————={_ FOUR LINES TO AN. G. Of all weep words of tongue Or type-machine, The weeplest words of all are “He's a has-been.” of TWO TYPES OP GIRLS. To was a girl who always aid . Her fate was very hard; From the one thing she wanted most She always was debarred, ‘There always wan a cloudy Somewhere within her sky; ‘Nothing was ever quite just in 8 pot right, She ured to say and sigh. And yet her sister, strange to vay, Whose lot was quite the same, Found something pleasant for herself ‘ In every day that came. Of course, things tangled up sometimes y For just a little while; But nothing ever stayed all wrong, + She used to any, and smile. ghed and one girl, So one girl mope, ‘And s0 they amiled and sighed. —Priscilia Leonard, ;