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Lapses of Mer Gentleman Friend. Dear Mrs, Ayer: My gentleman friend Is very good, but Te lacks etiquette. Sometimes he walks Mhead of me, falls to help ine out of the ar, goes up the stairs ahead of mo and faile™ raise his hat at times, Uke ¢o tell him his faults as I know he Yoves me and J love him, and I do not Mike to hurt his feelings. MAMIE POSSIBLY the man reads The Even- Ing World. If he docs, he may take the Rinta which I shall attempt to give. If Hie tu one of the very rare young persons Wh do not read The I ean you not lead the conversa the question of “Etiquette’ 1 de your views, backing them up if you wis with my opinion, which I here give. Gentlemen permit ladies to precede thoma excepting in emergencies. * in a crowd where the gentieman wishes to make way for the lady: a gentleman leaves the car first, and waits to as: the tady, He permits a lady to precede him up the stairs, unless there ts some a his hat always when he meets a woman, when he leaves her and when he is with “@nother man or woman who happens to OW TO AVOID vw wt BAD BREAKS. POINTS ON ETIQUETTE. By HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. meet ® woman acquaintance wao may de a stranger to the gentleman in ques: tion. No sensible man has his feeling hurt | by being gently Informed of the us of soctety; on the ary, every ! co: tr tomary clvilities, and above all desires not to be conspicuous for jRarding the clvilities and amenities tha obtain among pollte person | ‘The Etiquette of Muatcates, Doar Mre. Ayer: A gentleman friend of a certatn you lady | know has Invited the said jady A musicale which was given by nis The gentleman friend ald not b. all ings nes Ido not) telligent man wishes to observe cus-) ment T desire to know the proper form of waiting a business letter-that In, how and where should the two addresses ap-| pear on the inside of the letter? tho Indy’a house to escort her, but she! BERTHA, went up with a lady friend who had HE : f jbeen fnvited by the same gentleman. | adfesn sould :eppeariin| this having only an {nvttatlon card. You would oblige by stating whether the young lady was right In her conduct ABC F the gentleman merely gave the lady cards to the musicale, he was und no obligations to escort her. !f he feason for Iris going mhead. Ie raises asked her to go as his guest he should | uurse have accompanied her. se points should be understood at [the time the Invitation fs given wise l James Alien Martyn, Broker and Commisston Mercha No. 1) Exchange place, Now York City, Sept. 14, 1991. - | Dear Sir bP A ermination of the letter: - | Yours very truly, Jamen Allen Martyn. John Huxley Brown, Beq., Importer of Woo! Stufta 72 Chambers 8t., N. Y. Character Should Count. Te the Léitor of The Evening Wordd: Although money will purchase a great many things {t will not purchase true love. The girl who wants to get mar fled and have a happy home, will not look for money, but will choose the man Who she thinks will do his best to make her happy. The kintl of a man every wensible girl {8 looking for Is the man with a good character, smart and able to support a wife. When this kind of 0 him without millions. Money will not have as much effect on a true heart as Tove. A sensible gir) will accept a mas ror his character and not for his money. in after yeare placed them tn beautiful mansions. Miss T. BEIL, No, G2 Amsterdam avenue, N. Y. City Forty-six Years of Love. To the Editor cf The Tresing World What fs Jove? It ts something that Qwells in us. Tho soul ts love. The ‘Master's image !s certainly the soul. He is love. We are all love. Then iovo between the sexes ts born of the Master God, for He Is love and wo are Its | image. So It Is when we take our true soul lover to our hearts to keep for life. Money ts not thought of when true love is born to us in our souls, I married years ago; am now sixty: eoven, and still have my love, and if} he lives forty-six years more and I am ving, I shall still have him. 1 took him for better or for worse, my own to have and to hold, as he likewise prom- ised before that Master's own earthly preacher and Bible. Given us to hold fast to each other, I am a grandma now. Ofy husband fs only seventy-two, hale and hearty In looks. He raised 20 bushels of potatoes and cut ten tons of hay-this year, so ho Ja not ao feable. ‘We have seen better days; so far as wealth {s concerned we have lost: we now have no home of our own, but we still make the iighty doller and have man comes forward the girl will accept | OU Will see, har been no fa! Many girls have married poor men who | WILL MONEY EVER DISPLACE LOVE? ® S10 for the beat $ letter on this aabject. letter to “Fou Editor, Evening World, P. 0. Bor 4, New York City.” Send Mion Bride BPO Ondnd enbR ime SoD see us, $f you call on u that our love, re A ¥. PAKLEY, Hrookfeld, Conn nF ttor of The Evening Worlt Love fs an immortal God that reigns rever. within the palace of the soul éthi heart), From earlest infancy tt dem- onstrates its suprem. in some one phase or other, claiming as Its own the object of ita adoration halo ering tende chosen on Tis a part of that does not end with childhood, youth nor yet ob age, but reigns steadily on Into the life beyond, Gold in a metal of unapproachable value and great uneful- neas, but ft ty a thing that rules the head and has no yolce tn the heart. not the young lady of hooses gold to Jove la a matter of ality alone. It lepends solely upon the chooser'a self. “he gift of the multi-militonatre will have no serlous effect, as all sensibly giris know that auoh a elft occurs rarely, perhaps every century IWARRIET M. HARIUS, Newark, J Money WII Not Rule Hearts. To the EAltor of ‘The Evening World; Lay no, Money cannot and will not Tule hearta that true love once swayed, and will never cause any git] who loves a man with true love to be slow In ac- cepting him as her husband. As for mynelf, 1 would much rather be the bride of a poor, steady, upright man (whom T could trust, honor and obey, plenty to eat and to wear, We {ced York State and Connecticut when they call to our hotel, ard belleve when you ABOUT THE | We Ge Editar of The Brening World: Azé womens Detter letter-writers thas men! JANICE. AM tempted ¢o instantly reply, Yes." Bur on thinking over the @ubject I am bound to confess that the greet episwiary efforts cf literature belong to men. ‘Woman has Gone nothing to equal the and elegance of Chesterfield; th en@ playfulness of Lamb, or the | Wirllity and malevolence of Juntu: On the other hand, women has done | Bome great work in the domain of 11 Sie ir) Sai cam i Hannah More's letters exercised « fwidespreaf influence over the pubiiv grind end manners of her day, While and respect In every way) than to pos- sess any amount of riches; for what happiness can be in homes of luxury and wealth If love ts absent? { say in such a home is no happiness, for love fa the only true road to happiness, and T venture to say that the majority of tho divorces that occur every day are caused by the lack of love. My advice je every girl ls to let love surpans all, | Vo SCULTHORPR, | North Long Branch, ve the Only Thing. To the Editor of The Rvening World If 1 knew a man desired to marry me found that he had good morals and Ne earned enough to tive on com- fortably, T would my Jwhich God created woma wirl who th will tnarry doubt very 0 of future happiness money. It tx no have money enough to aatisfy every fire, Dut oftentimes rlehea are the ruination of people, ex- Pectally those who have been roared in a tower clags socts Give me the man whom I love and it makes no difference whether he be rich or pour A WORKING GIRL WI Wea Man she To the bait st for en. : fot The grenicg World Waat effect wil tt have on young giris Who ure looking for hush Nave this effect on me, | con- nue to look unttl | get the man L love. WH tt make them siow tn accepting p men as thelr husband: T guess {fot—not with me anyway, for 1 would sooner Hve humbly and py than + oa Al 3 WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 14, 190). | TO-DAY’S LOVE STORY. *% SPQi; S&y.'NX< | 0 By LOUIS FARAN. | (Copyrlant, 191, by Dally Story Pub. Co.) pmore Ukely to disappear under hi ling over the eyes busy with = = ey WAS very much in love with Lau-|handy than under mine, and I gladly rew @ gentic shadow on her 0. 14,634, rence Preval, an actreas, who in real}consented. moving back to make room ; pin “ Serene ue ena SS life. ag on the stage, was a great] for her. } oF first tiny 1 that my ‘ pe eed S, OAT ROY Pas Sho passed lightiy in front of me and | cousin Yy 5 sat Nom iver See Me eee One day we had a violent discussion, {leaning her slim figure on the table) There was already of the = E and, in spite of the thousand follies 1| began her delicate task. woman about her, but there also re- had committed for her, the pretty come-| ‘The aun which shone {n through my|matned mech of the child and the mix- dienne declared that she would rever| window fel! on her, turning to gold the! ture was deliciou | OUR THIRD MARTYR-PRESIDENT. | see me or hear my name again. little ringlets on ck. i uimed, “WW ti iimnaiig hat” the “young: tan ex: My heart was broken, but I did not per you can do not -| pected to meet the Indy. if he met her at 4 OF - nee wish to show my ag ail firm volce had a_ penetrattn; Jal at the musienteinasinicch an he The mournful news from Buffalo will fall heavily on the hearts 77) erie pe pea ae a Le ee pueden! | ave her the tickets; otherwine he would ; . as “3 anna ine |Composure. In order to almu She was fo pure, so sweet, ft was as cen) Bava Invited iy * eargeided sie cin « sorrowing nation. William MeKinley, twenty-tifth in the line | ore RAE aeierietoeeatiisens Hee earn ttee ioetalaeibaeed Cl ne eached the piace of entertain: ¢ : 3 i A . \ ° “of American Presidents, is dead. The hopes of the nation, but per forias nie: dessert tren from j jay after day passed without bring- er was quite pro ‘or th 1 to Ko! 5 Raney . z aecsmpah ted NE Roa ° yesterday so high and apparently so well justified by the confidence j In moran) ines, =: is | curling ! ery) t vited guests: ee ume "| Ae ‘ Nc yy Laurence sulked wet) ani he ti jer soft throa UREA CET of the physicians, ace thus abruptly aid crueliy crushed. ale n to fear that she was obstinate me Irreststih ait ee H . 2 = = about our falling out. After fifteen days T had a mad desire to kiss her there, | Te Address a Nustness| Letter, For the moment the American people wiil think only of the}1 tost nope. She had not recalled me. n instinctive feeling of respect | rr 7 sed me pnne was de- Dear Mra. Ayer What should I do? aim i Ae |great, gentle-hearted man whose name has been added to those Of] ‘sy srite’'was gone. [| mace up my mind to beg her pardon, although she wae the one In fault. This decisisn made | shut myself up In my room to write to her. What did I say in my letter? Heavens: All that a young and fooltsh head Ike mine could think of! My despair, my love, my regret; excuses, promises, vows! It all flowed I!ke a single stream from my fevered pen, and tt was not until 1 reached the last page that I thought of stopping. With a firm hand I signed my name, when, ob, misery! My pen, agitated by too much emotion, gave a little start and threw a! kreat blot of ink on the white paper. My door partly opened and my cousin's head appeared. Have you an eraser or a knife? Something to take out a spot? “Spot” Yea. on this letter—to a friend. ¢ just made a huge Slot.” “Would you like me to try to remove hit, head! Lauren med very far away, zed Yvon was elghteen rs old; that she would soon fall in rome one would love her; they Lincoln and Garfield on the Republic's roll of martyr-Presidents. | Perhaps the bitterest drop in this cup of national grief is that the assassin has taken from the nation’s highest post of duty a man who, in all the relationships of life, public and private, and no less in his Onis renieceynnitre 9 swiftly now to come to an end! Yvonne was certainly pretty, vory Ipretty. Why hud I never noticed it | derore? I had been treating her as if she was stil] in short dresses. As I looked nt her I was Med with uneasiness that was full of charm. T do not know how long I was plunged In this vague, sweet reverle, but sud- Sden ig brought ime back to myself, J lenued over Yvonne's shoul- der to see how she was getting on. My Ink spot was effaced, no, drowned by a tear, a pearly drop that had fallen from Yvonne's eye: She had read, offcial than in his domestic character, was amiable and generous to: ja fault, kindly to the point of tenderness and cevotedly true in all a things. His blameless and really beautiful home life, the typically As I looked at th dlond curis T w. dered in spite of inyse'f how I co ever have admired Laure: ‘ss hair—dyed hair, the shades of which now seemed | to me so vulgar! | Ywenne had turned her back to me and I covld seo nothing but her delicate silhouette, her little ear lost in a wealth ‘Btlgolden\trcasen’ | ,eShg.naa had understood, and By leaning to the side I could get &! The jetter was never sent. I never Glimpse of her profile. Her long brown! saw Laurence again, vt THE LORE OF THE THUNDERSTORM. “HERE was much contention (tari had ceased. A similar bellef still | strikes twice in the same pl, Cav- among the ancient nations as to the real cause of thunder. Some!Iingers In some remote parts of ferns have been much resorted to In heard tn it the voice of God speaking land, as Cornwall, for instan that Ight- to His chosen people; others belleved it | where the cast-off skin of an adder {+ | far into the to be a strife betwixt the spirits of good | often suspended from the rafters of deep “thunder-grot and evil for mastery over the earth. /oottage or outhouse. In Franc constructed as @ ‘The Greeks declared it to be caused by | the peasantry atill wind a sak resort during a storm, which ta Jupiter moving his household furniture around their headgear when they see| no uncommen occurrence In that land about; while tn Scandinavia it was sald} that a thunderstorm is working up.! er thunde that the same deity (who was known | Coral necklaces havo often been worn] out Europe to be of very Il omen, But there as Thor, the thunderer), was play- |for the same purpose, also tho cagie’s} April thunder Is considered to be very ing at ninepins, supposed be] beneficial. In Devonshire and other American constancy of affection which bound him to his wife and her to him, making exch the first object of the other's solicitude, so that the public rarely saw and never thought vf the President with- out seeing and thinking also of Mrs. McKinley, especially endeared him to the masses of home-loving Americans. tt This side of his character gave him while he lived, and will] 1 had no doubt that the blot wae much keep for him now that he is dead, the same kind of profound popular respect and liking which the other branch of the Anglo-Saxon fam- ily felt and still feels for Queen Vietoria. This is neither the place nor the hour for any extended review never of Mr. MeKinley’s administration or political policies. It is merely stating facts in « brief and comprehensive way to say that the ountry has enjoyed a remarkable period of material prosperity sinee he was fi inaugurated; that his financial policy, which held the country fast to the moorings of a sound and honest currency, the Ightning being | plume, a that bird oye - ry caused by the flashing of the thund quite invulnerable to lightning from its[cider counties of England there ts @ was a fundamental condition of that prosperity. For this alone tho] er's exes. In “The Golden Legend” wa connection with Jupiter. ‘The Romans|saying that “when it thunders in April you must clean up the barrels""—in read- Iness, that !9, for a plentiful crop of appies. +The French consider April thunder to be Indicative of a good yield read of the old German bdevtef that|were also much addicted to wearing bay “God is walking overhead’ during @|/leaves as a prescrvative. The Germans place their fafth In the powers of a nettle. In Sussex, house- nation will ever remember his two elections with gratitude. Be- yond this, as his last speech at Buffalo clearly showed, Mr. McKinley were at one time em- ie sensi foyed to ward off danger from the|leck, or “Jupiter's beard,” {s often] from their vineyards and cornfelda, had an open, receptive, and therefore progressive mind, and, had not lightning flash, which was supposed,| planted on cottage roofs to avert a pina eevee however, to have no power to harm! flash. For thks same reason people| AIDS TO CONVERSATION, the hand of the assassin interposed, was ready to lend his party and) teeta “were asleer. Tho Romanal gladly welcome the nests of atch birds believed in the efficacy of the skins of/as the atork and swallow. It Is con- snakes and «1 elther worn upon their) sidered to be very unlucky to live in a persons or made Into tents, beneath house that has been struck, in rpite of E THE LATEST ABOUT PATTI. T was said by a clever Frenchman ] that an amusing conversation could never begin In @ room where the furniture was symmetrically in order. The momert your guests are gone from Any social assembly etudy the natural Gisorder in whitch they have loft the the country in the inauguration of a broader, freer and sounder commercial policy. To lose such a man at such a tine is indeed a great national mis- be a bird In a gilded cage. And I would Ike to know what is homo without love, Will money rule the hearts that love once swayed? It might with some People, but I do not think tt will ever rule my heart, for [ have my heart set on one young man, and 1 know he ts poor, I have had better opportunities, but T would not accept them because 1 thought I would not be happy !f 1 Aid not marry for love, and I shall walt until I get or marry no one, Mim NELLIE MALISTER, No. 15 West One Hundred and Twenty: | eighth street, New York, ART OF LET the highest rank of epistolary art. ‘The tncomparable letters Bugenie de Guerin ai brimful of simplicity, ender grace and elateriy love, and tho letters of Mine. D'Arblay delight us with thelr humor and graphia descrip- tion. given much thought and much study. ‘To be a good letter-writer 1s to be a Joy to our friende and a comfort and a solace to those we love. ‘To write an interesting letter fs in the eft of everxdody—a great fund of knowledge Je not necessary, Cultivate a atyle that ts at once luctd, natural and simple—euch the most readable. Avotd bombast and high rhetorical effect, and above all things do not write senseless or undig- nified letters, that uo will wish back before the end of six months. Cultivate Obwsrvation and Concentra- ton. Notice the many emall events that heppen daily and eather from them a lesson {n humor, pathos or love, Wien you endeavor to pursue a cer- tain train of thought, keep your mind on %& tntently till you have extracted TER- WRITING. what there is tn ft. Do not let your thoughts fly off on a tangent on a {caterers to the imperial taste are now locked in solitary cells, But dozen things, but think out one clearly and thoroughly. « An:ong epistolary curiosities 1 might | ¢ mention the letters of Talleyrand. ‘They Were sometimes brief to ludicrousnesa, ‘The art of tetter-nsiting should bo/On one occaston the husband of a friend | Qeeeeeeeeeee ed of his dted, and he ve: ing letter of condolenc: ny Mme. La Duchesse: Alas! Faithfull her the foliow- ¥ yours. In due course of time the lady again married, and his congratulations were thus: nnn Mme. La Duchesee: Ueigh-no! TALLEYRAND. De aE eer 1 might also mention of the Quaker who sent a letter to hia friend conmating ot and received tn reply an answer thus: “0. CATHERINE KING, city residence, dreamed that tho lat: ness of the robbery. em wax on the news! Mluminated “they removed curtains and h at Auburn, N. ¥., where she Snien of the candle, Tho curtains bad fougd where the dreame: who had b stely after r had a in at work on tho tio! robbery. Investi; NEW SANDWICH. ‘@eyeral years ench season has on the advent of a new sandwich. [Beaston's favorite seems to be pepper sandwich, which green peppers with 4 the bread ts cut in ob- DREAMS WHICH HAPPEN. LADY spending the summer in the country, some twenty miles from her In her dream she saw two men, » the aot of rummaging some trunks tn the hal por Asking their work with the trunks the men went upstairs to a close : ngings stored for the summer month: Svobserved that they overlooked her most valuable curtai [well back on the upper shelves. Suddenly she seemed ich surmounts the prison edifice. At breakfast the next morning she related her vivid dream to those present, ef whom ete now living and vouch for the fact. the city house had been entered and robbed. ter waa robbed, she herself being a wit- one who Imped, in A candle stuck by means of its eno with a dim Ught. After tiu- from which The dreamer which had been placed be transported to her cepecially noted the bronze figure o! the Subsequently it was found On the nowel post were the all been taken but the best set, which on thom. Suspicion wan directed to 4 use, who wan lame and who disappeared. ation of this man's character showed phe had served a term in the Auburn penttentiary. ObEO’S NEW RIVAb. XIOUS housewives will be glad to Imow that “vegetaline,”” made by ® Marseilles firm by refining, off extracted from the copmi (drtel covoa- and now placed on the English fs not, as it was feared, an Imitation buttor or even substitute for butter {ts domesile uses, says the London Ex the mak- egetaline’ {e almost cLUrer's article. although the kitchen for making pastry, and will be supplied tn retall if there in any demand for tt. But the value of the process by which ‘vi - line Is nade wile It In “cinittod’ “Bein proviing bakers and biscult maoudac- turers with a substitute for butter which fortune. To lose him in such a manner—a sacrifice to the motiveless ERE ts the latest Patt! anecdote: * room, and take this as a hint for future BET iY = Last winter she was ataying for a few days in an {isolated Enstish village | combinations of sofas, chairs and mania for murder of the Anarchists—is the most lamentable feature} at the extreme end of Yorkshire. To kill the monotony of tho place the | tables. A _ S rat raallfere rene ; prima donna went one night to a concert given in aid of a certain village institu-| Many men cannot get on in conversa-: of it all. Yet will he not have died in vain if his death leads to a con-] tion. Not half of the performers turned up. ‘lon without /something|ito touchy anid Appreciating the dimiculty, Mme. Patt! (incognito, of course), offered to oblige the audience with a song or two. Then she sang, in her own glorious way, three of her sweetest ballads. At the close the chairman approached and in solemn tones thanked her. “Well, miss,"" he said, “you've done oncommop well; and, although ‘Arry *Ock, the juggler, who thinks nowt of takin’ ‘old of ‘ot pokers and allorin’ needles, couldn't turn up, yct you've pleased us very considerable, miss a table covered with attractive knick- knacks will give them the occupation which will prove the Inspiration, Any aratty, trifle will do, but on peril of a ull hour do ont leave a clever man without anything to h dle and obiaes, to meet the expectant eyes of his be llstene SOME, TIMELY IDEAS Byy_Clovor Readers. EVENING WORLD'S BIG LETTER CLUB. was presented to the Schoct jo written in the star | Beard Inst spring, signed by over 20 J. W. HANLEY. ‘citizens, taxpayers and the business P. $1 do not tell fortunes for a liv- people of our section, beside the many ing. J.W. IL, [letters addressed to the Mayor, Pres!- Rules sectwecie! dent of the Board of Education and to It pei pealer i eearmex res ne AW artes | Sbeants by Ine iseouna ica Gua einen ot Here are some rules which most every | Boat. modern fool follows: 1. When attending |tD® een ee ween ae Oa etn The a society always make as much nolse an |Dcople S mating veareuateall een | possible. 2. Be sure you nominate every | Were ponaibility, member in the society for some office. | ONY waiting for Now. & tem 3. Do not forget to mako a motion tol 1) 25 aiisteraam avenue ABT. elect every nominee unantmously for the 4 office which {s forced upon him. 4 A A Brain Twister fine of 10 cents will be exacted from any'| Te the Bittor of The Dreaing Worlds member who does not Interrupt the: Will eome reader please solve the President every time he speaks. 6, Any-! lowing problem: A father left his body behaving like 2 gentleman will be! 90 three-eevenths of his ostate, xpelled from the room. 6. Any person! Younger oon four-sevenths of the speaking without making a fool out of, ™alnder and his daughter the regidua Almself shall be deemed incompetent for | She receives $1,72736-8 less than ¢the | longer membership. younger son. What was the value of LOUIS A. KERPEN. | the whole estate. Who Wants a Quai! Gai pus eee Neo, 3, No Te the BAltor of The Evening World: Editor Brentag Worlds 1 wos informed the other day that you pe Can a foreigner vote for a could Inform me of a man that would| deat of the United States without det all kinds of money that no mau living could eat thirty qua!) in thirty days or less; so now if you can inform me of any wuch men that wants to bet let him etate hia terms. for I can find a man that will undertake that Job. L. ROBPRTSON, Dickens, Mo. Not Enough Schools. To the Editor of The ivealng World: Your article, ‘Not Schools Enough— The Responsibility,” that appeared in your tssue of Sept. 29, deserves com- mendation. The Alumni Association of Public School No. 61, of which I am chairman, have been endeavoring since last March to have the School Board of Manhattan and the Bronx appropriate the necessary funds to build the e: tension and improvements of the school, although. the ground has been owned by the city about @ doren years, A PHILPOTTS’S TONGUE. ISHOP PHILPOTTS, of Exete centration of all the resources of civilization in a stern and effective a effort to repress the international Ishmaclites whose hands are against all law-abiding men, and against whom, therefore, the hands of all law-abiding men must be joined. [steel sre NTs NR IN SDE EEESE LM] THE SULTAN AND HIS COOKS. By letter and cable it is proclaimed that the Sultan has been called upon to face a mutiny of his kitchen staff caused by unpaid Of course he took prompt measures, and several offending |lantic, ‘The America’s Cup'—for it 1s | petitios ja Cup—in the Stnrs. f The Evening World ‘On Sept, 29, 189, I wrote to Sir Thoman Lipton predicting that a cup of great value would go from this country to England. Later on tha American peo- ple presented Sir Thomas with a solid gold cup that cost several thousands of aollars. On the day previous to the last race of Lord Dunraven's Valkyrie I sald: “The Valkyrie will race no more on thin aide of the ocean.” The Valkyrie crossed tho line next morning, but Immediately turned about and returned to her moor- ings, racing no more on this side of the Atlantic. Now, let me make another timely prediction. During the coming cup races three accidents will happen, one of a very serious nature, The American yacht will be badly disabled and much time will be lost In giving her a chance to get in trim again, Shamrock will win every race of the series by at least Ave minutes. This year Sir Thom- as Té4pton wins the “Queen's Cup.” or as ft is known on this side of the At- wages. there is little consolation to a suffering palate in distributing penalties to tho bringers of gustatory grief, and it is undoubtedly true that while the mutiny lasted the chief of the un- speakable Turks was a man of unmodified sorrow. The Sultan could not find diversion in classifying his disaster with the servant-girl trouble in Chicago, since his staff is not that kind. Being given more to good living than ‘o good literature, he could discover no comfort in combating Burton's dietum that “eooks are gentlemen” with the more spicy and pointed aftinnation of John Taylor that “God sends meat and the devil sends cooks.” Nor could he end his difficulty, as he might have done had his striking creditors been 2 nation, by giving the troublesome ones an indemni- fying order for « warship and then finding an excuse to roject the i IMPERIAL STOMACTL TROUBLES, Sox Oy OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. The Evening World’s Daily Fashion Hint. hoat. The lord of the harem has surely fallen upon hard lines. TIME FOR COOKING VEGETABLES. CH. depends on the age and condition of the vegetables, and also the man- ner in which they are cooked, fresh young vegetables requiring, of course, much less time, A table can give you only the approximate length of time. Use judgment and common sense, and when the vegetables are tender do not cook them longer. Hake potatoes ® to 45 minutes. Steam potatoes, 0 to 40 minutes. Boll pota- toes (in their #kins) 2% to 30 minutes, Boll potatoes (pared), 23 to 45 minutes. Asparagus (young), 15 to 30 minutes, Beets (young), 4 minutes, Corn (green), 12 to 0 minutes, Cauliflower, 2 to minutes. Cabbage (young), 3 to/60 minutes. Celery, 20 te 30 minutes, Carrots, | to 2 hours, Lima or shell beans, 4 minutes to 11-4 hours, Onions, 3 to 60 minutes. Oyster plant, 45 to # minutes. Peas, 0 to @ minutes. Parsnipa (young), 30 to 43 minutes. Spinach, 20 to 6 minutes. String beans, ® to 6 minutes. Summer squash, % to 6 minutes, Turntps (young), i minutes. Tomatoen (stewed), 5 to ® minutes. When vegotables are served with belled salt meat they must be cooked In To cut this blouse In medium size 35-8 yards of material 21 Inches wide, 31-8 yards 27 Inches wide, 2 yards 2 Inches wide or 2 yarda #4 inches wide will be required, with 3-8 yards of all- Tt passed as tt came, though the charm of song ‘Wooed it to listen and atay; ‘But the eong and the rose to the hour belong, Aa the morrow follows the dan fs not only pure and cheap, but which, for Discvite In particular, ts better than ter, OO many housewives neglect to provide themselves with sleeves which can be quickly silpped over the dress sleeves when un emergency callg them to the kitchen, White cam- brio 1s the best for these, and tho full kind, gathered at the top and buttom over a rubber cord, is generally most satlefactory, ‘The best apron for occa 1 use tn the kitchen {s made of straight. lengths ot gingham sewed together in a plece Wide enough to easily fevnse eon fg: ne Ure) The bottom ant r!t-9 are Yemnied, TO WEAR IN THE KI TCHEN Openings are cut at arms, the two Fides over the shoulder by the top a double traight and ts gnthered into a facing, width required at the foot of the skirt, ‘Three or four buttons and buttonholes Cte the back, The beauty of these made, they protect back an well as at ¢ and pi vent the walst from bel: wa beating eggs, Dattersecreatn and tae gown, as the for tha [teeth show a better disposition and being connected | better dev bias [crowd and overlap, band. The neck, both back and front, | tious and pruden The distance between the openings fot | with well-arched Mds, both upper and the arms shoud bo determined by the | lower, na is that, while they are quickly | ture. re [dications in the apex of the ear, the Mquor from the meat after it has been removed. early earned his ‘reputation’ for Yet Dither was planned against Tt ye epee ere saying sharp things, One of he ‘Woe eared athe ona HOW TO READ CHARACTER. Gxfora sang a sour much out of vane, stand Then Philpotts was called ‘The life, the grace, the awaken- “I haven't @ note in my voice,” sald he. starts away from the head at a well- defined ungle that person has un: even dispoaltion and 1s not to de relied upon, If a girl's thumb Mes flat or drops a itttle marital submission to the master mind Is Indicated. If the thumb has a tendency to stand at righ! gt to the hand, tho damsel owning it Is headstrong. A perron of weak charac- ter has a pendent thumb; the strong character has a strong, ereat thumb, Fingers which bend backward mean powerful determination. If they are round, strength, both physical and men- lover lace for yoke and collar and 6 1-4 tal, ts indicated. Stubby fingers are} yards of cording to trim as {tustrated. grasping fingers, Finger-natia that are! Tho patiern’ (No. 3,925, eines 32 to 40) rounded show cefinement; if long and| will be sént for 10 cents. Father equate at the top, firmness and} send money to “Cashier, The W: Fla, ittersr are dinoted. ee ~é 5 Nork Oita 4 EETI that are long and not nar- Tow, denote large, Mberal view atrong passions and herote virtue: they are long and narrow a weal character {s denoted, Evenly growl: hand? —Pall Mall Gazette. { 8 -0--0-0rtne-e-ore-tnenert~0-tn- ont tagnputegnan > ——— PEBBLES FOR THIRST, N exchange quotes a physician as recommending what {s certainly a unique manner of quenching thirst, and pertinent for summer con- sideration. The physician “Well, If you can’t sing, make o speech or tell the host, “I¢ I am to tell @ story,” sald the futuro bishop, “I think I, should say that I should like to hear — eling that song again!” Much later in life he went to pay a visit in Devonshire. “It’s @ benutiful place, isn't it?" asked guest, ‘ ‘*¥es," sald the Bishop, “but if. tt. were mine I would pull. town the house and oped mind than those that Long noses are cau- short ones Impul- Deep-colored eye: sive and Joyous. how a truthful and affectionate nature. An eyebrow lightly curling at. the outer edge indicates a Jealous n perspiration is diminished by keeping a small round) pebble in the mouth, By this means, s= seserts. he hag gone as many as eight hours tn a broiling sun Tutt cracke: Piaget By at the. aaof tant There 1s a whole wor'd of telltale in- It tt Mea close to the head the owner pos-' sras al refntt natice, tt tit the top? { = fom