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RANDPOP’S DREAM. fl. HOWARTH. 2 ott ‘ SUGGESTION BY F. 6.8-2:0:0.0. 3.0 [OW TO BECOME _ vw BEAUTIFUL, GUIDE TO GOOD LOOKS, — By HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. 5 : j ‘ How to Use Face Bleach. [of quinine, 8 grains; tmcture of canthar- all but a slight.film of the cream away, | ‘0 great pitblic service marks in New York the obsequies of | Dear atre. aver: ides, 11-2 drams; tincture of rhatanv, Then dust powder over the face an@ | c c a 5 Kindly inform me how often and tor|2 1-2 drams; spirits of lavender, 1 ounce; you have-about the beat preventive for r de >, P Q 4 a co the dead Presidert. The funeral train from Buffalo to Washing-| what iength of time the face bleach|glycerine, 1-2 ounce: alcohol, § ounces. :anand sun burn. After returning from ton, Washington to Canton, leaves New |¥0¥ recommend ts to be used, C. Re Apply night and morning, rubbing well gn outing where one has been exposed from) Washington ™ “ ‘T in impoxalble to say how long the|!nto the scalp, until the new growth Is, to the sun, the face should not be $ York far to the northward. Our mourning bleach should be used, ax individuals | established. washed Immediately, but should be RE 6 Ait Pres ws * Aiffer so much in the effect It pro- Concerning Tan and Su wiped off with cold cream. In the MOURNING. millions have no opportunity to particnpats IM duces. 1 should way use tt until the de- | pear sire. Aver: 5 course of an hour, if desirable, the fa. theecccceccesed any of the ceremonies that attend William |atred effect ts obtained. If the bleach| 1 tan frightfully. In the winter I have |™ay be gently bathed in warm water y Irritates, omit It two or three days until |a clear complexion, and aa soon as the | @"d a bland poap. Published by the Press Publishing Company, 63 to 63 PARK ROW, New York Entered at the Post-Office at New Xork as Becond-Class Mail Matter. THE CITY OF THE TRAILING FLAGS. en Sacred Ne ee ee er § MeKinley to the grave. r tie cuticle geta well, applying an emol-| summer comes 1 get sunburned right She Has “Cow Flop.’? | Little Willie—If grandpop don't wear the most Little Wilhe—1 will just fix his hair this way! , But no one can walk the strects and doubt the sincerity, the ae et away. Now. I would like to know what | pear Mra Ayer: \ al a y FFoue yey = 7 % A Hatr Changing tn Color, 1s good to keep me from tanning so. T have B hort hal: t th ! 1 » and cles y of public sorrow. Upon homes and shops, in the poorest Cd P rT ave quite some short hairs at the expensive shirt fronts! It looks so white and clean unanimity of public sor pe PS) it Dear Mrs. Ayer: Perth Amboy, N, J. H. 8. |ieft side of my forehead which do not quarters even more perhaps than among the homes of the wealthy, it is the city of the trailing flags at half-mast, the city draped in black. : \ Nor it is an empty tribute. Everywhere in the mien of the people, in seraps of chance conversation caught on the street, it is made clear that trailing flags and the sombre trappings mutely speak of universal esteem and honor and love for the man, the friend, the son, the husband, no less than for the nation’s chief. Ican scarcely keep my paint brush off it. make the hair grow thick? My har ‘a burn, and the remedy, or rather the| ms know what I can do to make them _| Setting very thin and is changing from cure, suggests iteelf. If you keep| stow. I wear my hair in near @| black to reddish brown. H. & fout of the sun you will not tan. The | pompadour as I can get it, but have a [ HERE Is something wrong with the} action of the sun on the cuticle Is to | cow flop. Ia there any rémedy for thie? / circulation of the skin of the scalp.| dry up the natural olls upon which the ELLA D. You should take a course of. scalp| skin depends for its elasticity and| A course of massage would stimulate massage. The hair should be at least} amoothness. You can supply from the |the growth of the hair. Brush your hair shampooed once a week. In your case] surface enough ofl to practically cir-|as you wish it to grow. Use the tonto use this shampoo, for which I give|cumvent the destructive work of tho|for which I give you formula every you the formula: Yolk of one exg,| sun. night. Apply to the scalp and rub fp one pint hat rain-water, one ounce| There is no positive way to keep from | with the tips of your fingers. Press the DEVERY A DISGRACE 0 NEW YORK. of spirit of rosemary; beat the mixture| tanning so long aa one exposes one's | fingers well into the skin and make & . up thoroughly and use it warm, rub-|self to the sun and wind, You can par-|half circular movement with them. Take ' bing tt well into the skin of the head. | tlally ward off the unpleasant effects of {at least ten minutes for the process tf = Rinse thoroughly jn several waters.| the sun and wind by applying a cold} you wish effects. Cologne, 8 ouncess This wash ts good for dandruff where| cream to the face before going out in| tincture of cantharides, 2 ounces; came the ordinary shampoo fatis. this way: Dip a bit of old Mnen Into | phor, 2 ounces. Try this tonic for falling halr. It t»| the cold cream and smear {t over your] The “cow Mop." as you call ft, can BO very effective In some canes: Sulphate | face. Take another soft cloth, and wipe | modified by hair-dressing. What preparations can be used to Tee Is very Ike every other sort of | seem to grow any longer. Kindly let Cae ak When Devery drove from the ranks a veteran of forty-two ears’ faithful service with the sneer, “There is too many of these Little Willie—Now, just wait until I get through Grandpop (awakening)—Well, T just had the fun- 3 lo. eset ee eeeg old dubs on the force,” lie insulted in Mona- with this shirt front! niest dream! I rene I was turned into one Ce $ IT Is NEW t han’s person the “good! gray hair” of every those little Brownies YORK THAT = + e Is INSULTED. $ man and woman who hus grown old in hon- Deccccccccooe® ost toil. When Devery coarsely assailed a policeman as a “dirty bum” he insulted in his victim’s person every man who would have had the courage and the honor to do as Marrinan did and testify against corruption. ‘ TODAY'S LOVE STORY. M5 Iritire mency. e BY EDGAR W. COOLEY. (Copyright, 1901, by Dally Story Pub. Co.) ) watched the Jailer untock the door. sooner, only—only"— \ T wns night. A light burned dimly in] He came to meet her, striding dog- Annie?” a miserable hovel. and a sad-faced| gedly from the dim corner in which he baby’s much worse, an’ B woman aat In silence beside the bed} had been sitting. couldn't leave him alone, Mrs. Me- of her fever-stricken babe. * ahe cried, throwing her arma Carthy’s with him now." A livid gash was upon her forehead,| passionately around his neck, “poor, The woman tried to stifle a sob, but where her husband had struck her, the |qear Jack! failed. She bowed her head upon her Devery does more than diseredit and degrade the police fore: elaresct fener waa} to vherseyies, and in| “He rested a hand on her bowed head. /husband’s borom und her tears dropped 5 ve i " ds rs : si er heart was the poison of despair. upon his woollen shirt, he is a conspicuous disgrace £0, New York. The police force MAY) put patiently sie sat beside her child, “There. there, Annie,” he said, “the be powerless to cast him off. The city is greater than Commissioner] fanning it, pushing the ringlets back Kld'll be all right In the morning, an’ or Mayor or Boss. When the city says to Devery go, go he must, | {fom its Muehed forehead, Uatening to you can bring him"— He paused. O99 OF9-4-24890-340-0-55-; 08-58-88 THE FOILED FOOTPAD. ‘The man hung hia head, “I was afeered you'd—but I won'teom- plain, I'm your wife, Jack, an’ I love f A you, I love you same as when I mar- { ried you, an’ BIl stick to you, Jack—I'b } stick to you. If they send you to the/ pen, "I'll remain true to sou, as true a 1am now, Jack. An’ when they let you out, I'll be thar at the gate a-waitin’ an’ a-watchin’ for you, Jack." He pressed her hand, and she kisset him. Then the jailer led her away. { . . . . 8 Ce The inst beame of the setting » pushed through the morning-glory vin! | that Annie had planted by the windo and stooped to kiss the cheek of a bat asleep Ina trundle bed. Sh i No more were the marks of pain wit’ : It is Murphy’s duty to put out Devery; if he does not, it is Van Agaln Wand Wacainianes went eto tne Reine wre thevatictet enlai hell Holes Wyck’s duty to displace Murphy by a real Commissioner, If neither] window and gazed unxtously out into id his wife, raising her face ope: : So form came through the darkness; city itself—of all the people. They can perhaps convict Devery | no footsteps entered the gate. on the new proceedings begun by the District-Attorney. They s “Jone another Into the past. and at lant the east grew gray with the promise of Murphy, Van Wyck and all that they represent. There is no power in the evil ingenuity of corruption that can{ When the sun at Inst was high in c the henvens, a man came down the What is Murphy, what is Van Wyck going to do about it? He_wore the blue of an ofMfcer, and = he turned in at the gate. Loudly he WHY SHOULD THE DOCTORS QUARREL? —[Snzmse nes bert ne i) eyes staring. Central Station,” the dluntly, “and he wants to see you. the American people be bored and scandalized by a medical and sur- z i 3 phon eate res woman, pressing her hand to her breast. gical controversy in which personal feeling is evidently to play the he been doin’ "* in. oMcer, “He held a duffer up, but got ae Mea ° rosa Tt looks very much like another Sampson-Schley conflict. It]ketched. He's a bad ‘un. We'n been 5 oy, | erution.its face, wae aemile thee ‘ * het o [I—T atruck ye.” ox derotanding, 1m, an' he'll sure go over the road. aa formed, either in war or peace, without having} The woman covered her face with her She smiled up into hie face and | ae arate avcas tine hand ft its moans. o, no, Annie, for God's sake don't 4 acts there is the greater power and the wider responsibility of the | ‘hs Disckness. mj sorry you~ you goth (me Monotonously the long hours followed can in any case sweep into the political ash-heap together Devery, the dawning. long compel New York to submit to Devery the Disgrace. miter knocked on the door with his club, and Your man's in the Why should Mr. McKinley’s doctors quarrel? Why should “My man? In the lockup?” gasped the lusding’ part? Nat Resavauta ralcaeerea wee its brow: no more was the fever in ‘ . " f that great peace that passeth all w. . f . . fter li ka, Got ten’ cas in| “Atinie,”” he said, hoarsely, “I'm sorry | % will soon be said that we cannot have any grent public service per-| 1°." nen suee no aver the rox iy brushed back a lock of halr that hung | clasped one pulseless little hand tw hers. ANOTHER on i , Es | over his forehead. “He never knew," she satd, the ring fig Acoma the men Who do it fall foul of each other as to Be HOB. OE een erence tnat, ack dear.” [ot thankfuiners Inher olce—"he never. | +4 SCHLEY which was the biggest man of the occasion, or she sald, “You—you—I hadn't ought to| knew his father was a—a crimincl. Oh, | q ry = 3 Then the officer strode away and the | nave rag Waele God. I thank Thee for thy infinite i cosfisor — §— who was responsible for the blunders. woman threw herself on the floor b¢-| Hoth taped Inte eens awkwardly | mercy!" ‘ THREATENED Peoplo will reesll that Garfield’s doctors] 4° her moaning child and buried her) strofing: her hair, and she clinging to| The twilight deepened into night, anf bc Sareea : ahs A face in her arms. him with all-the strength of a woman's|somowhere, out beyond the shadows, got into a similar snarl and gave all their per-] tt was midafternoon when at inst she |jove. “And then— lovers atraled arm in arm under the stood outside her husband's cell and! Jack," she sald, softly, “I'd a come | happy stars. | |sonal antipathies « public airing. No good came of it, and the con- troversy was felt to be an undignified exhibition of bad temper on W R ° SOME TIMELY IDEAS the part of gentlemen who should have known better. EVE f D S BIG LET T ER CLU 6 “By Clever Readers. { Kv dently there were some mistakes mado at Buffalo. Those Devery’s Office Protects Hin. his fines or resign. -He can use any lan- ($1.7205-8 less than the younger som ~~ bulletins were manifestly more rosy than the facts warranted. The [75 ine raltor ot The Rvening World guage he pleases to them, who are far| What the value of the whole es- Is it possible that we citizens of New | above him in education and respecta- fatere It in evident that the remainder ialy 4 ‘ 4 ‘ York munt toterate such men as Devery? bility. If it were not for the oMce he|of the estate after the deduction of torr ‘ tainly to be cleared up: (1) Where is the} Tr inguit decent, respectable men (fills (so shamefully) many of his men | 3-7 Is 4-7, from which the youngest som $ bullet? (2) Was it poisoned ? s nave the misfortune to hold a pos\-| Would kick him aside asa cur. As you |recelved 4-7, that {s, 16-49 of the whole es- *, 3 3 Beyond that the public has no concern, | ton under him. Fathers earning a Ilv- sre-alnaya for the welfare of the downs tateyy ene he cidcat received 21-4 ana % . nips 3 “Ting h r ubmit to, trodden and exposing some rascals in|the daughter 12-49, Now the difference It being settled that no line of treatment could have saved Mr. M unig) for tel Shares Mineboemeneee, 1 ery Qeececececeoed two mysteries of the missing bullet ought cer- {rwo wySTERIES f oMce, I hope you will give this a small | between the part of the daughter and Kinley’s life, why open a useless and wearisome public discussion space in your paper. the youngest ron |x 4-49, which Is equal f . S04. NINTH WARD. to $1,7255-8. Thus 49 times $1,7235-8 are . % e iM y oon mes $1, MARK. OF DISTINCTION. as to the alleged errors in the treatment ac tually adopted? OR ROME ON Ae PEPER eo ‘equals caval linear te enteteesuisaiy) 1323 = seins We all believe the doctors did their honest, earnest, level best. ESSMAKERS., |". Bio ee eeenine Wort: The eldest non recetved $9,019 7-224, the They should be satisfied to let it rest so. . DRESSM KERS. | rience state when and where Coler | youngest $5,8941-2, while the daughter : ee a “spoke out" against the Ice Truat, | Sot 5.170 Aes es 8. ROUBIN, ‘he Evenin, World's Daily| where its jobs involved his friend, Beef- No. Bast Nineteenth atr SOME VERY QUEER BATHS. [7° "Fasnt a rte me Afeitionse Fashion Hint. Give Csolgoss His Own Medicine. | to the rAltor of The Evening World: ‘To the Piltor of The Evening World Our noble and patriotic President lies dead by the bullet of an assassin. The To cut this maid's or nurse's apron In who was a notable| medium size 41-4 yards of material 3% beau in the early| inches wide will be required when sash everywhere—except one. Put one, oyer the gateway to the Ellis Istand ferry coniderable vogue. The mud,:or HIE mud baths at St. Amand-les- | ¢ 9 John Law, of Mins- | Eaux, says London Titbits, enjoy @ | John Law's | Issippt! scheme fame, ath. “moor,” {» composed of a peaty, DOREY turf, and although the pertod of immer- clghteenth century, | Ia used, 31-8 yards without, with 158/next thing to think oo seal pon andy enfores|{it; andwer willSrunvlens' aion varies from baif an hour to five|was a great betever in the yolk of ant ne ea a of friendship. 1 |T#K of Assadainated Presidents. H hours. can de easily at the end of the| eggs, 100 of which were added to hin 5 tin not an tavécate of mob law, but the “A KNOW-NOTHING.” | bath removed from the skin, The x Q mud-bath treatment !s by no means & ah = novel fad, having been in use in the ie . fourteenth century., datly bath, which was made aromatic by Cas assassin and his clique ar Wants More “L Stations, = 5 certatn shrerulyiprepared Scents andi = why would it fot be a good Idea to ive | To the Editor of The By ‘World: triste ance am debt ae a aA him a tage of his own doctrines and| There are too few “I.” stations. I'm veal - thus anticl- turn him over to the tender mercies of |not talking aboug downtown, whe ating in « way the present whim that raw from 2 cure recommends ghe application of a thin eer cet at ho #0, de- [face ines if you don't want to climb too Wine 5 3 Ie For the wealthy the wine Mixes Zambes!- Why do you object to Mr. Woola- } bath Is recommended. A re- tecting arm of the law that he so de- Mines {f you don't want to climb the Woola? He js certainly enltivated, Bath. fi cont clrauiar ‘seta /forth tts} layer: of voal as a beautifer for the com. spises, and by the time they have done|“1," stairs, but uptown where S ¥ otticucy, and for euch as are | plexton. y » Dp! people Mrs, Z—I don't know about that, He doesn't w agin elk s - : : 3 vith him the object-lesson he would} are depeniient on the "Li" and where Mra, Z.—I know: about M't WAT) run dow: ecommends a twenty | gan Such luxuries hi ; Servant—Hero's a letter for Mr. Nurich. Shall} send} any pt ee ea Betas Loar i eian, these iti as present to his fellow-assassine would be| often stations are from eight to twelve it down to his office? eT te Ra ede ee sence sc | {PtuMmen here coe oireeen : of more avafl in ahowing them the| biocks apart. Thie Is a shame an@ . ~ Nurich—_N “1 ge . comes | o|a hunQred litres of Malvoise, whic » So r. Dietz, of the é Mrs. Nurict ; he'll get it to-night when he comes Bh eenundred times without |@—~~—~~® University, Chicago, a necessity Of law and order than all tho|causes long, tiresome walks. To say” hanging or electric chajrs in the coun-|nothing of the long, tiresome walte : try, Extreme measures should be taken | after one gets to the platform. Mere to prevent a repetition of this horrible] stations and more trains. That js my hardy athlete who has introduced tht snow plunge to the notice of his fellow- students. This, which can only be en- =" fome to dinner. oe re ees it's marked “In haste." OFTE HEARD. losing its invigorating properties. Even Mrs. Nurleh—Oh, well, let him hurry home and get tt, thea the wine need not be wasted, "for, EGG JOKE. “after the one bun- \ saye the circular, ay crime and the remedy which I have sug- | slogan. rf [eoiror cred baths the Malvoire may be te sores Ie aminter con a of divesting , geated would be a step in the right NINETY-SEVENTH STREETER, ” as} tiled, and the result will he found ta/be 4 @ clothing and rolling 5 direction. WILLIAM E. DAVIES, + deliclars brandy about in the nearest snowdrift. The iw (bre daughter the residue. She receives Fe pose. The idea Ald not, however, orig-] cccentricity. Such a one was that en- inate with thie modern sybarite, for|dured by Mile, De St, Aubin—af- we read that the Roman Empress Pop-|terward known as the Comtesse i SAVE YOUR: BOOKS. lows of things we have never poea immersed herself daily in asses’ jenlis—who, to outwardly ex- OOKS last and look new, when found; se milk, and that when she travelled ahe humillty, insisted upon hav carefully treated, but soon be-|:> toping to find In the dim ‘to be swan accompanted by [0 anses to supply |ing a bath in the water that had been come worn and shabby when] 2 races of friends we may never see: milk for her Incteal abluticns, Dresiously employed in laving twenty / neglected. They should never be piled) ® Longing to grasp In the misty night 4 Even atranger| >esware—a repulsive act that might yy’ ‘one on the top of the other, or be al-| ? Proof of a (uture oeyond our sight; @ Marte Anto! fads, however, are} have cost her dear. iy lowed to stand leaning diagonally, or| 3 Seeking to know ere this life ts o'er ette’s Bath, } on record, Marte | ~~ Far different the foot- the binding will, become weakened and! @ Where are the lives that have gone 4 bath indulged tn by the the edges of the book look worn and| { before; French novel Freder- Btriving to learn from the votceless: is A devotee to milk batha| Pest time to take the snow bath ts Just Teen like anc aor : q a eanaawel fore retiring to rest. es : a are eel are peracid ® ‘Then, too, there are The following is a solution to the prob- 2 ee SAVING 1, Sea 9 / {Bath Stor debt at Caen, used| {Im Bemgara’} baths taken without lem: “A father left hi elder son three- “) MING, reaming, / have a certain quantity left at Wash. any reference to hy- fourths of his estate, his younger son|@ rae H/ they dalllevery: morning tor nat pur. fiene—mere freaks of four-sevenths of the remainder and his) @, salad t dream, we: ofa Ml Gg. i V ” “Beeming to see in the dusk around: e EF) Shad Antoinette was Feotbath wont ta bathe in a decoction of wild ery thyme, laurel and marjoram, made more|} °f S°!@ 3 ick soult one oc. them from the shelves and dust each past invigorating by the addition of sea salt, | O~—~—~—~~~~~ casion he received in hel Why 'mid earth's darkness man wa: o book with a soft cloth; clean the ives y n was: while Isabel of Bavaria immersed her of one of his | novels—it ch of edging and ineertion to carefully. and wash with carboltc soap: cast; soiled. When cleaning them remove: q eweed, it, tench waa in her opinion «a0 , 4 Biggie B08 frais ‘ The actarenres 3,390, sizes, large.| Moths, spiders and other inagcts infest! = to find in a world of strife. which was in her opinion a sovereign touts dor. Beside himself wits Joy} eau, and small) will) be sent for. 10| book shelves, but a. thorough cleaning| @ God written, a proof of eternal life." specific for the akin. The honey from 7 sry ands sree ae peerrairs gets rid of them, Do not put the| Edward M. Applegarth in Alnsles’ feet Aor over \ 3 x]. Send money: to "Cashier, The World, | books, back: Until) the) shelves are. thore| 4” Pulitser Bullding, Now York. Citye - oughly, ary. a sy roses, melon juice and the milky ox- tract trom green barley were! likewise ‘an hour, > Oj employed by old-time beautten largest