The evening world. Newspaper, August 1, 1901, Page 6

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THE GIRL OF LAMY. | By H. A CALLAHAN. (Oopyright, 1901, >7 Datly Rory Punliesing Co.) UST a handful of wooden houses in Lamy. No one distinctly remembera just when or how the Girl became an insti-| tution at Lamy, However, they do re member that one September mornin, fome years back there was a new face| behind the counter In the eating-house. | The boys who made their home in th Uttle clapboard affair uséd to cat Mollie. If on a Saturday night the sounds of @ brawl would flaunt down on the still air the Girl would walk over to German Joe's in a dusinens-lke way and scatter the drunkest of them with a quiet word and an admonitory jerk of the sleeve that sent them sneaking out like coy- otes, ‘This was all before Dan Beard hap- pened in. Dan was an engineer from the Colorado hills and no angel. He opent his mornings against the dar in German Joe's place, cursing out the road, from the President down Then about ten minutes before hls run began he would shuMe over to his ma chine and get his orders. When (hese were duly scanned Dan would open up No. 20 gently and sneak out of Lamy Bake a make, but before the whintling post was passed he had her galloping ever the rails lke a frightened thing and bellowing Ike a bull. He became Rotorious as the most reckleze devil on the road. But gradually Dan dropped away ¢ the whiskey and bade fair to quit It together. Some sald !t was “Molle.” Bome sai the division superintendent. Nobody ever really knew. Tt was a morning tn early June that the great event occurred. A despatch had come over the wires saying that 4 qpecial was coming from the East and that a double-header would te neeled to carry It over the grades, Dan Beard’s No. 20 could climb a tree, and the dig. fellow got his orders to make the run It was getting close to starting time and Johnny Coleman, Dan's fireboy, was @rowing anxtous. Dan had not shown wp all morning. i The despatcher was Just on the point of putting another man on No, 2, when something white caught his eye on the hill-path that runs above the cut As It came nearer he saw It was Moilie, and right behind was Dan, clumally picking his way over the etones. At thi tton Dan called out: “All ready," the despatcher, looking rather heepish and strangely nappy. | That night the special from the east It crept into Lamy with one ine and that « waa not No. 20 Where's Dan?" asked a little woman with @ face very white. Johnny Coleman, the fireman, did not answer, but looked uneasily away. They were lIfting something very gently from tie baggage car to lay tt on the \ platform. Johnny told as briefly as} possible the details. Q Making up time, we left the track at |; the culvert." he wala. “I Jumped clear, |? Dut Dan didn’t get out in thine. When | we got him from beneath he was pretty | bad. And"— (Some one was crying |? Very softly over where Dan lay.) John: | ny continued: “I guess we could ha’ | om \ pulled ‘im through at that. Hut he wouldn't take the whiskey we gave fim. “Ain't drinking, Johnny: not another | Grop,’ was ali he said, and then he eort | © turned over like a tired little kid and —I ‘spore that's when he died.” ‘That night was a lonely vigil in Lamy and ajong in the early dawn they buried Dan Beard. If you are ever down that way. fn on the Girl at the enting-house. Not very stylish, and f gueas per her talk isa dit Western, but somehow or other they seem to think pretty well of her In Lamy, And, by the way, thoy don’t call her “Mollte” any moro. It's Juet Dan Beard’s girl—the Girl at Lamy. drop ——__ A STUDY IN GREEN AND YELLOW, Jones—Some of the summer hats 1 Uke! strawberry Bmith—My dau fs the Itving tn barb ple.—Chica, OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. The Evening World's Daily Fashion Hint. To cut this Eton jum size, 3 1-2 inches wide, 2 1-4 at 31-8 yards 2 tnches wite or inchea wide wil 3 cou $ shortcomings and sets to work to repair them, c fi 7 FinsT—@E DIs- {his employer rarely is able to refuse to remove i: il ® CONTENTE: aan , U + ie Sse At 3 |} WITH YOURSELF the second factor in discontent. once. ‘And in conclusion, brethren, look not upon modern } (a se VE \ SS 12 iis Mamma le batsctelehinking about 4 Tt is very important that employers|% tnventione with favor In thinc eyes. Verily, they are concelved by bk ~ hie ie \ + His Papa--What to ery about next should be compelled to become just. But is it not also important|s the evil one. I refer particularly to the motor vehicle. i Fs fii N [esiines BO MOTO CL seb bb-5 4.3-2-- 2 OMGEK4d-80-2-p | that employees should become more worthy of justice? BROGHSE2SEEEELEPOEEWIEGE a ie: as ; = = - SOREN ——-- ee / | ry, PSA e] PAN ee «a NaN | AS REVEALED BY ; Vaan AU ys pe AIAN A Oe aoe ° ce Lh Ea | a fir \e fe Wy lVexed Superfivous Hair Question. the eyebrows and eyelashes heavier. be very carefully applied. It will tn-| you know, te a dangerous poison, ani Te Reduce the Bust. [The compress must be covered with oll es eS Any | Dear Mra. Ayer ANNIE, | flame the eyes, as any oll will, if tt gets| while perfectly proper to use as sug | Dear Mra. Ayer: i allk and left on over night. ‘This treat- iio) “ Ai! | am a little girl, eleven years old, AKE several bottles of first-class| into them. gested, should be kept ont of the way of} Will you Kindly repeat the formula | ment iw to be continued for several gt fe! oy \ and am troubled with superfiuous hair ralset tor: ; ignorant persons and children. which you gave for reducing the bust? | months. re. LA ¢ onYarnielande accede Ploaseistateratway enaparillac ii) wives you is A Bleach for a Dark skin. : ETHEL. | Dr, Baucatre ta excellont authority, \ i : 2B, , pay eriae ee inser tlesael tater te muta for making eyebrows 804 | a0, re, ayers Bleotric Needle the Only Remedy. |g PEME ts the formula to which you and ho declares that this process will vy HORE jij untortunatelysinorway |i, Sea ta one sh Grower—nea!_ indiy tell _me of a bleach that !81 pegs sire, aver: ; refer: S lcertalnly reduca too fleshy breasts, fax 48 of removing superftuoun hair “for | vaselt inten tincture cantharides, | E204 for dark skin, M.B. |) “Gould you advise a remedy for the Dr. Baucatre's Aatringent Treat. ‘A Cobe for a Sui % ’ ” x Ree ouncesiitincturesca: *.\eF——RY this lotion for your dark! removal or checking 1 way of the|™ment for Too Fleshy Bust.—-Aristol, 2] pear sre. a 4 Rood." as you say, excepting byt, ounce; oll of lavender, oll of. ros removal or ing in any way of the ¥ aera ward of all-over lace and yards of] ye ectrlc | % ounce; of: Javander, oll of - rose: / skin. growth of superfluous hair? Grama; white vaseline, 30 grams; cesence | Aindly it me know If there is any a ue to trim as !Nustrated. sh pes abled 18 drops each. Apply to the eye- Face Bleach.—Bichloride of mer- MINNIE L. [Of peppermint. 10 drops, Rub the breasts | remedy for a pug Ho JANE. Pattern, No. 258, 1p cut tn sizes Take a Good Saranparitia. brows with w tiny tooth bruah once | cury in a coarse powder, 12 grains; exe bb HAVE never aselated at a surgical gent for 10 cents. peg Be New York city.” SERN ons y,04) 8, $8 and 40 inch bust mean. | Deer Mrs. Are: to! “Cashter, The WWorld,| ‘ine for poor blood, I am always pale. Also please give me a recipe for making | eyelashes also, In this case it should CITY JAY’S VACATION. By T. E. POWERS. POLL ARPDIOEH HAD 106-5405 964 Breakfast in the country boarding-house. Lots of wild on the table; nothing but excelsior and condensed milk to eat. All he catches {s—— He gces fishing. { 5 fi : A fine case of sunburn which {t takes a country doctor and several bottles of Iiniment to relieve him of. The geese know he is from the city and have fun with h er the old apple tree. 10a Cocca et 456. i PAPA WAS WISE. 2.5 8.08899 2DPDHODPBE THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, AUGUST 1, 1901. ; No. 2. Published by th Entered at MR. COAL TRUST MORGAN IN AN ORCHARD STREET CELLAR. In a cellar in Orchard street there is a shop just like all of the | ; scores of cellar-shops of the east side where ice, coal and kindling |; Preas Publishing Company, 83 to 63 PARK ROW, New York. je Vost-Oillce at New ¥ Mall Matter. are sold at retail to the very poor. Porcceccoccceg Si Dr reaitenn steps of this shop came yesterday a stoop- TU 4 . eo $ re voon, $ shouldered, thin-haired woman of the tene- + . 4 Qeecceccceseed ments. Tn one hand she carried an vld wooden bucket. The other hand clutched a ten-cent piece. “A bucket of coul,” she said. i The dealer, who lives in the rear of his shop with a large fam- lily, measured out a very scant bucket. “You're aid the woman angrily. You're ouly giving me a niekel’s worth.” “That's all you get for a dime,” replied the dealer. ‘Coals gone up.” “You ought to be ashamed of yourself,” said the woman, tears in her eyes and anger in her voice. ‘Coal can’t be so high in hot weather. You've been getting worse and worse for two years. I’ve tried all of you dealers and you're all alike. God will punish you for what you do.” “Fill the bucket. sheatin flowers And so the altercation went on. But the woman got no more é-!coal. She had to pay at the rate of $12 a ton. Why? Mr. Morgan and the coal barons decided that the coal roads | were not making money enough. Their earnings did not suffice to ties with which each road is loaded down, So by “intluencing” Legislatures in New York, New Jersey & and Pennsylvania, the “Coal Trust” was put upon a working basis. 3,| All the means of getting coul from the mines to the markets except the means controlled by the “Coal Trust” were closed up. And the price of coal was and is being arbitrarily raised. Coal ought to be at most $2.50 at wholesale. i Coal is more than $4 a ton at wholesale. The retailer to the poor cannot change the price of a bucket or basket of coal. He can save himself only by giving short measure. Ife gets almost none of the money squeezed from the people by the “morganeering” process. It all goes to pay the huge, unjust dividends and interest charges. Whose hand was in that poor woman’s pocket? Whose pistol was at her temple? “NO MORE BABY TALK.” \ woman, pouring a flood of “baby talk” into her luckless in-| + fant’s ear and open mouth, dislocated her jaw. “No more baby talk for me,” she now says. >| stick to plain United States.” “T’'m going to 4 é& @ £ S - No doubt her baby would be effusively {WHY TALK ro} grateful if it could speak. , ‘ ae pret : Was there ever a baby that liked “baby! 2 $ ommeciner ¢ talk?’ Did you ever notice the expression of Geecreoeeee cell a baby’s face when a grown person was talking “baby talk” to it or was otherwise making u fool of himself or } herself? The baby—if it has any possibilities of sense in it—stares gravely at the exhibition of silliness and, if the annoyance is kept |: up too long, it bursts into a furious howl] of outraged dignity. It is hard enough to learn to speak a language well without first having to learn it in a garbled fashion. It is hard enough for | % the human being to get sensible ideas without first passing through a period when it hears nothing but jabbering idiocy. ‘DISCONTENT. These strikes—to consider only one phase of them—are an | indication of discontent. The workingman is striving to improve his condition. It is well to strike to improve one’s condition. Intelligent] + ¢ffort to improve conditions is the real secret of our present great- Qececccoccecety ness as A people. And if that effort is ever SE aitD 3 suspended we shall begin to decline. |g DISCONTENT. } But— ) | Geovcccccoooett The offort must he intelligent. , Your condition depends upon two factors: | First—What you are doing for yourself. Second—What others are doing for you. Tntelligent discontent therefore involves two factors: First—Discontent with yourself because you are not more skilful, more diligent, more capable. Second—Discontent with your employer because he does not properly appreciate your efforts to be more valuable to him. Usually—not always, but usually—an intelligent discontent When a man has found out his own angue-e 4 im. Har Snipes stops with the first factor. day until the growth |e Kindly give me a recipe of come modi. | stimulated; then less often. This ointment may be used for the sufficiently HE growth can be kept In abey- : ance by a depilatory, but the only way of killing the root is by the rio needle, tract of witch hazel, 2 ounces; rose wa- ter, 3 ounces. Agitate until the mercury is diesolved. Mop over the face night and morning, Dichloride of mercury, as ——!Rev, O. Shaw Fiddie, D. D., Tests a Motor Down the |? pay interest and dividends on the enormous mass of watered securi- |‘ breasts with a compress wet with this lotion; Alum, 3 grains; acetate of lead, 30 grams; distilled water, 400° grams. | I know no other remedy, NOT A ONE-HOSS SHAY. Vehic'e zs an Aid in Church Work. 82D ODD IG-GE-5-D9B-HHGT7-3HO0-H Ah. ae — = EN MEN WH DREAMS. EIGHTEENTH CENTURY DANDIES. N the glorious da: f King George IT. men wore si!k or velvet coats of all colors of the rainbow. They tripped | mincingly alonz upon thelr toes, sup- "porting upon thelr heads a wheelbar- .|rowful of peruke covered with a bushel of powder, thelr “Steinkerke” was sprin- kled with snuff, their sword knots allied almost on the «round and thelr dangled from the ffth butto red silk stockings and red- completing thelr costumes, r 1798 there arose on the of fishion, or rather there jazed in ite full meriden, that wonder- ful pheno: n of elegance, George meno} Bry. i, Be mn in 1777, the son lof an under secretary of Lord North, “In these days of progress {t is meet that I keep abreast of the times. Mayhap the automobile will be a powerful factor for good. It will expedite the paying of calls In our community and In visiting the halt and maimed In our midst.” rs “Land sakes! The vehicle hath a sudden manner. manipulate the lever which arrests this mad plunge.” T must | é| “Now {t hastens vi Woe is me! The longevity of the veneravic Methuselah would not new amaze us had his vocation «@ been that of chauffeur.” 4 very night with this pomade, After applying this ointment cover the | operation for reconstructing a pug nose. I am informed, however, by very excellent authority it can be done. » retained ODO24. rey other the left foot. gaged to dress his halr, | plain nor ugly, lable and am |come of a morning to the Beau's house }THEN THE BOAT § and educated at Eton, he enjoyed the eredit of being the best scholar, the best rsman and the best oricketer of the day. Until Brummel! came upon the acene the Prince Reg though not remarie able for his taste, nad, thanks to hie been cons:ituted the “master of celexa: or leader of the dan- dies; but he was at once dethroned by © superior xentus of Brummel, who the sovereignty tll the year Ing this period he became the of all men who wished to dress and when he had atruck out a new le at its gradual prog m the highest to tho the last of his stay in England he ccatinued to wear powder, rather prid- ing Himeelf upon preterving this rem- nant of the vielle cour. His clothes A perfect study. The coat was nrrally of blue cloth, and {ts collar fed against tho tack of the head Wie the hood of a monk--a style famil- far to us dn pictures and miniatures of the porled—the buckrkin or aankeen breeches were so intredibiy tight that ey could only be cot on with immense jabor,and could only be taken off in the |same mannor as an eel 1a divested of its skin. Then came a waistcoat about four nches jong, open on the cheat, display- {ng a stiff! white musitn cravat, Hes- stan boots completed the costume, and to these the Beau pald particular atten- lon. They were commonly reported as being blackened “au vin de cham- pegney" at any rate, two shoemakers supposed to insure the perfwtness heir fit, one made the right and the He had three glovers for his gloves, of whom was exclusively charge@ out of his thumbs, Three hairdressers were Mkewise en- “wan rather long, his features neither his forehead unusually igh, hair Nght brown, whiskers in- ined to be sandy, eyes gray and full of oddity.” His conversation. without having the wit and humor of Lord Alvaniey, ai other of the dandies, was highly agree- Ing; indeed, Brumme! has never been surpassed or equalled since, The Prince of Wales would frequently in Chesterfleld street to witness his toilet and to acquire the art of tying his own neckerchief “a la mode." For many years, notwithatanding the great dis- parity of rank, Brummel continued the Prince's intimate friend. At last, how- ever, a coolness sprang up between em and the “mirror of fashion” was rbidden the royal presence. menenens THE CRCOMSMAN TC HiS MISTZESs. VERY wedding, saya the proverb, Makes another, soon or late; vor yet was any marriage Entered in tha book of fate But the names were also written Of the pattent pair that walt. Three there were that stood be- aide her; One dnrk and one was fair; But nor falr nor dark the othe: Save her Arab eyes and hatr; Netther dark nor falr I call h Yet she was the fatrest the: Whose will be the next occasion For the Nowern, the feast, the wine? Thine, perchance, my dearent lady; Or, who knows? {t may be mine. Waat if ‘twere, forgive the fancy— What {f ‘twere—both mine and thine? —Paraons. ANK, ‘The girl stood on the burning Goals On a certain warm ccension, It_was the 0th day of May, @o che made a deck ovation

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