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

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GALT LSI DAR RE Sores | (ATE CAREW ABROAD. > “BID ME GOOD-BY, + 22-93% PAOLO TOSTI Paolo Tosti, the Anglicised Itallan, whose ballads are familiar in| Ame to be strummed. During the London season he haunts the opera, but the el p RGSS IIAIGD-S2-9-9-00299-990-9-090-0- Mr. Hamackter (at) country boarding-house)—Afy dear Miss Reuben, how would you like to appesr before the footlights? Farmer Reuben Ats? “Bhe (ut luncheon, while shopping)—duat a plate of wwaltor, with plenty of bread and a glass of water She (next day hungry, but UN ot pany that’s all at present, 6 st time cket bound for Cala’ I saw him PARIS, Aug, 31.—One of the most picturesque of Londoners and distinguished of Bohemians ‘a wherever there is a plano he wv i} AND GO.” ute is is And how would you like to appear with Harold) —Really, I'm not at all a light lunch just (o keep you com- Some bouillon with red snapper, walter--and a portion of cold roast beef, chicken croquettes, half a dozen blue points on the shell, mashed potatoes, stewed tomatoes, green peas, lemon tee, a cup of chocolate and— PELE EEEEDE LEE OES HEI EEC HORRORS EEEE DR HEGES | tunel ! | Published by the Pre: Company, & to 8 PARK ROW, New York Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mat! Matter. OUR PRESIDENTS MUST BE PROTECTED. The assassin Czolgosz, could not have fired the shot which plunged the land into sorrow if President McKinley had been prop- erly protected. » Kill him at the railway station upon his Dlarrival in Buffalo on Wednesday, but could not get near enough, He measured the chance of a fatal shot while Mr. MeKinley was delivering his great speech y, but the guards’ vigilance balked riday morning he was pushed away Crolgosz planned ° . 7 Ww EV Tne Est wast $ SABE AN . $ way Soeteslaa ates on Thurs On F from the President's carriage while once more him. seeking an opportunity to slay. | Tt was only when that afternoon the Chief Magistrate was en- |during for the hundredth time tne #ngeless, obsolete and dangerous custom of a general handshaking that the pervert’s bullet found its mark. A President of the United States must appoint high officials, command the army and navy, outline policies, recommend legis to Congress; he must make treaties and execute the laws. His is a que, the most untiring intellect. than folly to expect besiles that he shall stand for hours while thousands of people unknown to him file past ang press his aching fingers. . There should be ready access to the President for etery man prop vouched for who has business of real importance. : Our Presidents must be protected from the slayers of strength and the killers of time, as well as from Anarchists and other danger- ous « If this be done no Czolgosz will in future get such an opportunity to do mischief. LONGER LIFE FOR EVERYBODY. : In spite of strenuous modern ways the average of human life is longer, the average of human health higher, than ever before. 4 British insurance actuaries have been for years revising the tigures which express the “expectation of life |task to try the strongest ph It is wi ra at any given age. ty companies it ap- sinee 1863 the length of life considerably increased, , | Qeeccccececeeo From the cases cited by +) $0 WHAT mire a } INSURANCE ACTUATIES SAY.) ’ ¢ pears that even | joceccencccees It is the man of middle age whose chance 1. Below thirty and above eighty the new tables om the old, though always in the direction of longer But between thirty and seventy-five a modern man’s prospect ing has improved decidedly, the maximum of inerease being at ty-tive, 6 : has most impro p [differ slightly f lit tter sanitary measures, greater regard for pure air, more ex- re producing this gratifving result. abandoning the theory that diseases are necess sumption especially is no longer so considered. A high American authority has said that he would as willingly iasure a thousand per- sons taken haphazard on Broadway as a thousand who had passed a medieul examination with its careful queries about the health of one's parents and grandparents. The rule of living long to live rightly. And never was the art better understood than now. THE BARREL AT NIAGARA. While the nation waited on Saturday afternoon for news of its stricken President a woman caused herself to be shut in a barrel and launched upon the Whirlpool Rapids at Niagara. Then the river had its will. Tt was in merry mood. It tossed the barrel, twirled it, bumped it against driftwood, bade it turn in Deccccccccceey slow ediies endlessly, as it seemed to the a $ SEEKERS oF ¢ NOTORIETY on 3 SUICIDE. Qe ccccccece ious watchers on shore, sick with apprehension. The early darkness came upon them there and blotted the tossing thing out of sight. fore the barrel at last came ashore. out, but it was too late. Its occupant was promptly taken She was dying. No act is nobler than his who risks his life for something worth while. ‘The soldier serves his country. o The brave fireman risks his run grave risks, but they are men of science, and if they succeed puowine x0. But what could Miss Willard see or note, shut in her dark cell with the noise of many waters in her ears and the terror of death upon her? Such foolhardy feats serve no purpose, prove nothing, add nothing to human welfare. They merely bid for noto- riety or suicide. ‘They should be prohibited. ~ BRIDAL SUPERSTITIONS. AATIVE, merits of the various “Monday for wealth, ths with regard to matrimony Tuesday for health, set forth in the old rhyme Wednesday the best day of all, ‘Thursday for crosses, Friday for loss Saturday no luck at all." If we are to bdelleve superstition, are “Marry when the year ta new, ving. kind and true, en February birds do mate you may wed, nor dread your fate, If you wed when March winds dlow, Joy and sorrow both you'll know Marry in April when you can, Joy for maiden and for m Marry in (he month of Ma You will surely rue the day; Marry when June roses dlow, Over land and sea you'll go. They who tn July do wed, Must labor always for their bre Whoever wed ty August be, Many a change are wure to see, Marry in September's shine, Your living will be rien and fine, If in Octoder you do marry, Love will come, but riches tarry; If you wed tn bleak November, Only Joy will come, remember; When December's snows fall fant Marry, and true love will Inst. Of the Gays In the week Wednesday la the best and Saturday the worst on which to get married The old load what she wears. something new, by brides, According to an old rhyme: ‘Married in white, You have chosen all right. Married in gray, You will go far away, Married in black, You will wish yourself back. Marrleg !n red, You had better be dead. Married In green, Ashamed to de seen. Married tn dlue, You'll always be true, Married in pearl, You'll live in a whirl. Marrled in yellow, Ashamed of the fellow, Married in byawn, You'll live out of town, Married in pink, Your. apirita will sink." Modern science is v hereditary. Con- x: What could they do but wait? It was six hours from the start be- own life to save another’s. The balloonist and the Arctic explorer they bring back facts, observations, collections, which in the eyes of learned men requite their peril by adding to the common stock of a bride's happiness depends not a little on “Bomething old and jomething borrowed and something blue,” {s invariably regarded ot How to Get Thin, Dear Mrs, Ayer Tam a young girt earn old and f welgh over 139 pounds, 1 want to Krow if vou wiil please tell mae | how to reduce my weight. I have oftea| [noted your answers to questions very | {much Ike my own, but have not pall special attention when reading them. Pleare do not publish my name, FLORENCE. F you follow ths Instructions here j wiven you will certainly succeed, But} 19) pounds ta not too much for you to welgh if you are in fair health, un- jless vou are very xhbrt. Avold all starchy and sweetened food, all cereals, Vezetables containing sugar or atarci such as pes. beans, corn, potatoss, &c. Have your bread toasted; sprinkle it with salt instead of butter, Milk, I re- @ret to say, If It be pure and good, tn fattening. Hot water is an excellent substitute for other lquids. Add al Uttle of the Juice of limes or lemons to} ft, 1f you choose. Limit your sleeping hours to reven at the outside, No naps. | You must take exercise. If you cannot walk at least five miles | and do not wheel, o to one of; tutions where mechantea! ma sage is given. Several of iy corre-I OW TO BECOME GUIDE TO GOOD LOOKS. | witch hazel, j bottle and shake well or until the mer- wt BEAUTIFUL.” XrA By HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. spondents report excellent resis trem] skin. This b one of the best hots thin method of getting the vigorous ex-] known, If it causes inflammation sus- ercle they require, The eystem ts thor-| pend Its use for three or four days and oughly wholesome and j Apply cold cream. Of course, you know dichloride of mercury 1s a dangerous polson, and while perfectly proper to use as here 1, should be kept out of reach 1 and Ignorant persons Remedy for Offenatve Breath, Mes. Ayer In reducing flesh the lect fm that fat isc stroys or burns out car! consume the carbon by the take through your lungs. T! ercise the more oxygen and destruction of fat by the one must ma method oticuringyoresity; sly give me a remedy for bad ‘The more starch and sugar you eat! yroath, whieh 1 Caiieas (rowe(he the more carbon (o burn away. Smacks MAMIE B. Another Victim to Free! RY the very simple remeay of Dear Mra. Ayer: | pho eof soda for correcting Kindly inform me what I can use for the stomach trouble. I also give freckles. I have them on my face sinc 1 was a child, Also explain how [ can use the formula and ff {t should all b mixed up in one, or not. Mrs. K. you a formula for a mouth wash which Is antiseptic and will temporarily re- Neve the trouble, but If I were in your place 1 should take the soda persist- © RY this bleach for the freckles. jently, The dose Is a teaspoonful of Ts in indorsed by a well-known | phosphate of soda in a glass of water phyalcian, Bichioride of mercury | half an hour before breakfast and the In a coarse powder, 12 grains; extract of | name’ dose at night before going to bed. 2 ounces; rose water, 2/ Nothing {s more offensive to others than Mix the three ingredients In a/the presence of a man or woman af- Micted with a bad breath cury i dissolved. Apply to the freckles | Wash for Bad Breath.—Distilled water, with a small, clean sponge or a bit of /5%) grams; thymol, @ centigrams; borax, absorbent cotton. Use three times a|1 gram. Rinse the mouth thoroughly day If It does not prove Irritating to the | with the wash as often as required. ounces. TO-DAY’S LOVE STORY. (Copyright, 1901, by Daliy Stery Pub. Cod) E were sitting at table over our: Wor and clears when Bob Tre-! mont asked, “What ever became of Theodore Fletcher?” | “Toll the story, Henry," sald Charlle Yates, turning to me. “As you already know,” I began, “Theodore Fletcher came to town to} nettle up the Mercantile Bank affair. | He was soon the most popular man in town. “Well, some one took Theodore to call! on Eleanor Metcalf one evening. He fell head over heels In love with her and she with him. Of course all the other fellows pullat out of the race, and we watched the society column: each morning to see the arnouncement of Eleanor’s engagement to Fletcher, “About this time Elward Metcalf, the «nly son, and in whom old Metoalf's hopes were centred, was expelled from Yale, and coming home was placed in the bank under the sugervision of Fletcher. Strange to aay, he never liked Fletcher and was more than once heard to ray at the club things that were In- sinuating and derogatory to Fletcher's character, Young Metcalf was not p»p- Ie habits were none of the best, “The night of the hop, Eleane: came In with Fletcher rather late. 1 think 1 never saw her so beautiful and 99 regal. About 12 o'clock, Just ay wo were dancing the last dance before going to supper, I saw a tall, dark stranger standing In the door looking about the room. Finally his eve caught Fletcher's and I remember how Fletcher led his partner to a seat and, walking up to the stranger, spoke to him in low tones. “After a few moments’ conversation Fletcher continued the dance. When ft was over he walked up leanor, who was @urrounded by a ilttie court of admirers. We did not knew ar the time what he said to her, bu:gwe saw war himself; he was rather weak and |. THE FLETCHER AFFAIR, st By Edna S. Brainerd. the sweet Hght in her eyes as she an-{pened, and daring to ride home with swered him and presently, hooded and| her with an officer on the cab." cloaked, she left the dance with ner was sentenced to two Fletcher. years’ hard labor. “The tall, dark stranger sat on the Edward Metcalf remained in town, box with the cabby. When they aggering and threatening what reached the Metcalf home Fletcher nll do to Fletcher on his release, and rents, “One day last spring I had occasis to visit the pealtenttary a Kewans While there I thought Theos Fleteher, shown Into his cell, I found him rea ing ‘Les Miserables’ in’ the origi He did not once speak aor, I left him, and as 1 we! 1 the marrow corridor that led entrance { met a woman coml) swiftly down the hall toward me. Sl turned? her face from me as I pai her, but I saw that it wag Eleanor| Metcalf—Eleanor Metcalf, whom every. one believed to be ia Europe; Eleano Metcalf, the cold, the proud, the pure, “It seems strarge that this toplo should have come up to-day, for the morning paper tells of the suicide of young Edward Metcalt. “Three months ago Theodore Fletcher was releaxed from prison; two weeks afterward Eleanor Metcalf mai and they went West to live fellows deduct a logical conclusion from what I have told you? “You knew the Metcalf pride, of which Eleanor possessed more than 1s usual— I mean pride tn her family, love for her parents and her high {deals of a child's duty. You all krew, too, Ed Metcalf, his weakness, his perfidy—and you all lward Metcalf was brought on the | knew Fleteher,"* atand at the trial, and testified against} I paused long enough in my narrative Fisteher. At the club he ea{d, ‘I told} to notice the iittle flutter of excitement you so," and his most svathing remarks | anu understanding from each of my were directed toward Fletcher's action | friends at the table. at the dance, lie Yates held up his gtass. “Just to think, he sald bitterly, ‘of| “Here's to Fletcher, boy a thlef having the nerve to take my| And no toast was ever more heartily sister home aa if nothing had hap-! Riven. handed her a great bunch of roses and ranor Went abroad with her 3a- bade her good-night “The next day the papers were filled of doasking to see him fw. the defalcation the receiver of the | with the story of of Theodore Fletcher, Mercantile Bank. WILL MON ‘The Only Questions to Anawer. To the Pilltor of The Eventog World: 1 cannot concelve how conditions rela- {lve to matrimonial ventures will be altered by reason of the fact that a certain muiti-milfonatre presented $4,000,000 to his better half at the time of his marriage. It seems to me that the major portion of the feminine sex who are ubout to venture on the sea of mat- rimony should and will ask themselves these questions, provided they have a soft spot in their hearts for a certain individual: 1. In the young man a gentleman of moderate habits? 2. Has he a gental disposition? 3. Is his character beyond reproach? 4. Can he support a wife in the man- = 1 OR Home °° DRESSMAKERS. The Evening World's Dally Faahion Hint. To cut this apron for a girl of years of age, 21-4 yards of material'3S Inches wide will be required, with 21-3 yards of edging, 23-3 yards of Inser- tlon, and &8 yard of additional mater- fal for sash end The apron rn (No, 3024, sizes 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 ) will be sent for 10 cents. Sond money to “Cashier The World. Pulitser Building, New York City," WZ] humantty: The proposition of “a bird EVER DISPLACE LOWE? aeaal's show. Men like to be seen with stylisi women and have a good time, but when it comes to marrying, these stylish wom- nm will Inquire into your finances and if they are satisfied grab you; but you have the misfortune to y a $,000-a-year income you M. §. WARDELL, Columbia Helghts, Brooklym Money WII Buy Anything. To the Biltor of The Evening World: Four million dollars given by a bride groom to uw bride will foster a spirit of discontent among our girls who in- tend to marry some day, Our Amértean girl In general ts averse to hard work and small circumstances, and will gindly sell herself if she can get a pricd to suit her, The consequence {s that money will buy love, as it already buys about everything else. Girls will reject young men of small means, thinking they will have a better chance by walting and catching a man made of dough. But money men are scarce, and when a girl's beauty and attractiveness to man bee gin to fade she is ke on drowning— ready to clutch to anything that spella male and can give her a home or the resemblance of one. Is this not thi truth? Study the girls of to-day ana 3e0 @ The Evening World offers $10 for the beat 150-word letter on thin subject. Send Z letter to “Four-Million Bride $ Ealtor, Evening World, BP. 0. 4 x A354, New York City, should to she has been accustomed ner that live? If all these proposition can be an- awered in the affirmative, the intelll- gent young lady of to-day will look no further. Even among the most depraved women love will exist, and no condition of at- fairs can stamp out the love which na- ture instilled In the minds and hearts of in a gilded cage" will not be appre- clated by women of Intelligence. SAMUEL W. PHILLIPS, No. 135 Broadway, City, Moneybags Not So Popular. To the Editor of The Evening World: ‘The American girl—she that Is to be the mother of our best citizens—is not looking for a brainless moneybag for “| be convinced. nropetor day Xs Wfe partner, but for a real man, one Ae ee Peres whom she ean love and respect, Money | ee ae wworlas "i as can never command love or esteem, Marrying ¢or money avercaatben bundantly proved by the eee natinct matrimonial bankriipteies | teen beasing and stealing. The man Or woman who Wuuld embrace this hye slam i Gee a union of | prid is the exception. Love is too al- yense. As the stock of millionaires 1s vinely implanted in the human heart— fortunately limited, there are not | Particularly in the woman heart—for enough to go around, and therefore our | money to oust It, Love is beyond all girls will continue to love and be loved | money, being priceless. Girls, when 1t as in the past, and the manly young | comes to the matter of the affections, man whose capital Is tls head and|are more controlled by thelr feelings hands, will be Just as acceptable as ever.| than men, and are, with rare excep- ERNEST C. STEWARD. tions, too sensible and possessed of too No. 1 South Terrace avenue, Mount Ver-| much Intuitive foresight to sacrifice non, N. Y, Love, which {s the essence of thelr exe = istence, for Mammon. The poor young Real Wo Prefer Love. man. need never fear golng wifeless To the Exitoc of The Krening World: simply because he !s poor. BE. He It is a hard question, Money has so many Influences, and there will always) t.t.ttsteteteiateieteistoioiiiriittt be some women in the world who pre- TURNED DOWN. fer It to love, Sut the majority of high-minded, pure girls will never let When Pannile’s lover calls at &— the question of money Interfere where Soe ete hteat: South tai towne love 1s concerned, Every man has the Bhe doesn't pause to ruminate, privilege of asking the girl he dealres But turns the gas jet down. to be his wife, but it mainly depends on the man what kind of a wife he money he can choose is" who ait in the parlor If a man ts that foollsh, ‘When Impecuntous wooers seek ‘The charming Widow Brown, She doesn’t have to think g week, Before sho turns Lhem down, dressed up. alt'well and good; he must be satisne: But a man in every sense of the word Bo very soon the summers pass, So soon does winter frown, 'The knowledge comes to all, alas, ‘That Time will turn us down! —8t, Louls Post-Dispatch. ts one who,\ when he intends to settle, akes @ . young, unsophlaticat girl to hie heart, one that will live within hia: means and gave a little be~ aides, a tender, sympathetic girl who ‘cares little for ostentation and outward we

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