The evening world. Newspaper, September 19, 1901, Page 6

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B9SS-0089046-050906- cite Mr. Easyone—I think IN those cane imitation umbretlas, great! e ad of my FISH STORY. RATHER DISCOURAGING. + ar deacou in our church, OME COMIC VIEWS OF LIFE. WHERE TELEPHONE JOKES DON’T GO. PO ae 1 \¢ MRS. HRESCI. | Qeccescccccs 3 19, 1901. guilty connection with them. Buffalo assassin. eeccccccccesy ‘THE INNOCENT 4 SUFFER FOR THE GUILTY. §¢ tion of his deed. he heard of the crime said Leon ought to out of the house they live i of ill-will are likely to await them elsewhere. Ifumbert’s assassin, has be mand . HARD, 3 2 reniars, ox } and move on to some other town. Anarchist and has exp) ian ruler. their unoffending relatives. But how can it be avoided? Society as in the fruits of cach other's right, wise and fortunate doings. o man liveth unto himself. Mo. her ‘Tommy the other half of the moon, VEGETABLE WIT. Mrs. Pomme de Terre—Yes, Mr. Onion told me such) there is a side to the art that may gels aro compelled to} @ 68d story that when ho finished my eyes were full of tears, What are you thinking about Me n his um- te when it wens my son? I was Just wondering {f some angel bit out DD 92O990000060600 06000008060 ' proximate’ measurements in both cases ciated with his career. closely And if it seems hard when an infamous act like that of Czol- gosz directs upon his relatives a part of the public resentment, the other side of the shield must not be overlooked. Qocecccccoecey t eon ee ; It was not less inevitable, nor less bitterly cruel, { Tun smenp. ¢ that so many other hearts should have been Qroveceeverees pierced and tortured by the bullet that was Czolgosz, the father, may be an MeKinley? And what of all aimed only at Mr. MeKinley. innocent sufferer, but what of Mr: the other people to whom Mr. MeKinley was personally dear? It is a part of the mystery that sits at the heart of all human life and experience that every momentous deed done, whether it be right or wrong, has consequences that radiate from it in ever- widening circles and touch large numbers of people who had no ving.” hand in the doing of it. And always “consequences are unpit BATHING AS A COURSE OF STUDY. The shower-bath has been added to the curriculum at the Henry sent the new course extends only to the bo: n that one of these intends to shirk its benefits. ‘To any person experienced in the delightful thrill and exhilarating after-effeet of the properly applied shower there will street school. At pr There is no indi pupils. seem to be ever the quicker return of hi Only the one s chance at the spraying. the frequent tenement. A lot of good things have been written about the blessedness of keeping clean. “feel so good” of the bather. ness is next to godliness.” proc and good heaith. More baths and better citizens! 8 THE STORM—AND AFTER. DEADLY lightning flash from out clear skies— A thunder sound to split the ear of earth— A moment's pause, Death's presence over all, * And then the gushing torrents of the rain! ‘ The lightning flash, Assassination’s dart— é The thunder sound, the Anarch’s hollow roar; ri The prize of death, tho peopto’s chosen Head; . The rain that fell, a nation’s flood of tears. When storms are past the bent flowers lift thcir heads, And grains are newly strong that felt the rain. So may our hearts, In after-bloom of peace, Show forth the cleansing nourishment of gricf! E. W. 0. PERCHIEE-OE DANCING AS GYMNASTICS. game of golf. Tt fe o waltz, kept up, ‘They also nay} that unleas those who think of attend-| ing the coronation social festivities take | lessons from them they will fail to} stine very brightly In this respect. | ‘This, besides {ts assumption of British | cheek. merely bears on the Importance dancing may assume at times as an ac- complishment. But entirely apart from ft as an exhibition of graceful skill, be gone over. demand extensive locomotion. only @ dozen di commend it to more general attention, and that is {ts usefulness in the line of gymnastics. Those who have taken ap- ful exercize, The Czolgosz family, for example, claims to be, and, so far as yet appears, it is, free from any responsibility for the act of the His father and his brothers are all quoted as sharing the general detesta- The father, who as soon as hanged, has nevertheless had his job taken away from him and has i been ordered by tho landlord to take himself and all his family . And of course similar manifestations Over in Cliffside Park, N. J., Mra. Bresci, widow of King notified by the Mayor, speaking for the general public of that place, that it would be well for her to close up her boarding-house And Mrs. esci, too, has insisted that she is not an d sorrow that her husband slew the Ttal- Assuming these disclaimers of the Czolgosz family and the Widow Bresci to be honest—in the case of the lutter there is room for doubt—every reasonable and just person will regret that the deeds done by two desperate criminals should recoil on the heads of is a closely woven web of interlacing interests. Hus- bands and wives, parents and children ‘must needs share in the results of each other's mistakes, misfortunes and misdeeds, as well The glory or the shame of tho individual is bound to reflect itself, however much he may wish it otherwise, upon the parents who reared him, on the wife and the children who bear his name, and upon all the people and institutions reason why the boys should yearn, every one, for hool mentioned has the bath equipment now. The introduction of the shower there is regarded as experimental. It should not be long to the establishment of the course in cleanli- ness in all those districts of the city where bath-rooms do not adorn But the best things cannot be written; they can only be experienced. The strongest argument for the bath is the sensation that follows—the It is one thing to preach that “cleanli- Letter and more to the point is it to demonstrate to the growing-up children of few luxuries that the ss of cleaning is not next to but identical with glowing comfort & PISDHOHL GH ELIF DSH OHHH IDS EH 3 dancing masters of London, assert that more ground may be got o that American girls do noe| Ver at a lively party or ball than in a know how to dance. that in many a ain; 1s some of them are, for a long while, as much as a mile may ‘An ordinary square dance from a quarter to half a mile of moving about. white other requii ments of the order of the danco also Buppor Ing, then, by mile and half-mile sums, nees are indulged Ii social function, and this number is aot) excessive, it Is easy to calculate how much a ided thus fot Rot too violent and picsumaly health To Remove an Ugly Wart. ar Mra. Ay “4 ‘Dei It is one of the hardest of moral laws that the punishment of} 1 nave an ugly wart avout the «izo of all crimes falls inevitably to a large extent upon those who have no a pea on my chin. Please tell me of eral times a day for a month or so upon the wart will certainly remove it. This ix such a simple remedy that It 18 really worth trying. If it ts not effec. tive let me know. Her Hatr Is Red and Falls Out. iar tis ATSs. I have red hair and it Is always fall- Ing out. I do not wash {t very often, ag it makes It lighter. It Is very short and Is full of dandruff. Please give ms something to make {t grow; alsu io make {t stop falling out and something for the dandruff and to make It darker. R J. Wy OU cannot possibiy keep your hair in a healthful state unless you wash {t frequently. It is Just as lessential to keep the scalp clean as any other part of the body, and clean! will prevent the accumulation of dan- druff. I would rather in your case have aclean head of hair even though it was a lighter shade, Red hair t# just now Very fashtonable, and many women Tesort to all sorts of stati In order to have light you cannot realize how pretty it is cons aldered or you would not wish te be It. But ff you really wish to make your hair darker use the tea tonic: One ounce of best black tea, steeped for twenty minutes in a pint of Td water. Let {ft stand until cold, strain something to remove It. A.C. Re 4 VERY well-known physichin has declared that castor ofl rubbed rev-! OW TO BECOME # & BEAUTIFULS GUIDE TO GOOD LOOKS. By HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. and add four ounces of Jamaica rum. Une the following for a shampoo Yolk of one egg, one pint of hot rain- water, one ounce of spirits of rosemary; beat the mixture up thoroughly and use At warm, rubving {t well Into the skin of the head. eral waters, This wash !s good for dan- druff where the ordinary shampoo falls, Not an Injurions Cosmetic. Deer Mra. Aver Kindly tell me tf this preparation ts injurious to the skin If used right along: Flake white, 4 ounces; sulphate zinc, 10 grains; extract white rose, 2 drams; rosewater, 14 ounce Miss MARY. O, there ts nothing Injurious in the i preparation. Of course, !t ts to be used externally. The cosmetic should be thoroughly washed out of the skin at night. To T Deer Mra. Are: My hair fs a dark brown. Will you kindly publish a formula to turn it red. Brooklyn, N. Y. ALC. ROXIDE of hydrogen will turn dark hair red on the second or third application usually, Some- times It will effect a reddish tint on the first appilcation. Used more frequently, tt will turn the hair yellow, To use it proceed as follows: Get a bottle of chemically pure peroxide of hydrogen. Before making the appiication the hair should be thorougtly washed and dried. Pour a little of the peroxide Into a saucer, apply to the roots of the hair with a clean tooth brush. You must regulate the color by your own observa- the H Rinse thoroughly In sev-| tion. One application will produce most noticeable change. Never use ammonia in connection with peroxide of hydrogen. Halr-dressers have a fashion of “preparing" the hatr, as they term It, by bleaching. and in |i to hasten the bleavzr.es process they use ammonia. Perox'to of hydrogen will not {njure the hair if carefully used, but In con- Junction with ammonta it will, in the course of time, destroy the constitution of the hair, Dear sire. Aye: Kindly let me know if there ts any thing, and how to apply same, that ean be done to the finger-nails to strengthen them. Mine are very brittle and break very easily. Mrs. H. A, RY this formula for your brittle Is: Ointment for nourishing the nalle—White vaseline, 1 ounce; pul- verized white castile soap, 60 ‘grains; oll of rose, sufficient to perfume. This te lemployed for nourishing and softening {the nalis, curing hang-nails, &o. | Dimplted Chins and Thin Lips. Dear Mra, Ayer: | Kindly state what a dimple in a man’ chin denotes. Also what thin lps on « Woman denote. SAM. DIMPLE !n a man’s chin signifies love of approbation, love of the : other scx, Inclination to incon- ; Staney and weakness in the affairs of the heart. Thin lps in a woman denote a certain amount of acerbity and sever- ity. A thin-Hpped woman {s not usually ( Lepuie ye: aad frequently {s bitter and (Copyrightes, 1901, Dally Story Publishing Co.) WO young women sat upon the | Plazza of the Rurning Spring Hotel emall boy ran out with letter. for thom. Toute Collins elute envelope tlehuly. fy ‘him’ is to be in the mountains next week. ‘TuesJay, probably, He ts to be at the Ridce House while we are there. We leave here on Monday when our rooms there are empty.” Dovgias Craik tossed her letter into the air gayty. “Then you will see my ‘him,'" ahs laughed, deliciously, “for he will be here for the Saturday night hop." The eyes of the brown-hatred girl sought the hand of the one who tossed up the letter so deftly. “No engagement yet. It ts really a new acquaintance, you sce. Now tell me about your sweetheart.” The color deepencsl on Loulse’s cheek. “He 19 an of lover.” she said, “at feast T have always known him. He Is everything that {x good and spienaid, but my brother Eustace did not wish me tu promiee anythin for a year.” “What If your one true lover was snatched away from you?’ Misa Cralk asked. Tt was an {dle question, asked fool- ishly, recklessly, but the answer burned into the Istener’s brain. The brown-halrea girl shook her tus- trous halr back. Her eyes were full of @ solemn light, her lips trembled. “Snatched away from me? That is a terrible thought. Why, I haye always had him, it seems. He has grown into my heart like Gol every day, That 1s why I cannot be Mght and tatkatly about it, Douglas. He Ls my hope, my whole future,” “L met the man who comes here to- morrow night, by accident,” Mire Cratk explained. “We simply gravitated to- ward cach other. 1 believe there was another entanglen vohis part, He admitted it, and 1 at once retreated to aive him time to decide between your humble tervant and the fair unknown, He has evidently dect a Iarge walle Cupid Greater than Mammon, T) the Ealtor of The © World The grand wedding that took place where the bridegroom guve rw money to his bride does not Interest any sensible girl. Why should it?) For she knows It fa only for the love of Mammon that such marriages are. Let them wed; keep the money for them- sely All they can do with it le to buy diamonds and tne clothes*er go to Eu- rope or Newport and lead a ilfe idie- Little Cupid, with his bow and is King yet. Mammon and hin small body of cohorts have not the pow- er to dethrone him; he is gaining sub- Jecis all the time. The girls who belleve in him and who refuse no good offer and marry for love or happiness are the best off In the end. The followers no . E08 OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. The Evening World's Fashion Hint. PICT TES YERIVS To cut these Urawere 1-2 yard of ma- terial 26 inches wide will be required. To cut the plain bib 3-8 yard of any width will be required, and for the at two inches wide for frills. will be sent for 20 cents, Pulitzer Building, New York City. WILL MONEY EVER DIS Daily The pattern (No. 3,928, one size only) Send meney to “Cashier, The World, TO-DAVW’S LOVE STORY. me. Eureka." Loulse stood erect In the moonlight pwith the comb arrested in her long tresses. nd the other girl or woman. I won- r how she fects. ‘L will never know, He Is not the sort at would ever hint her name.” Loulke shivered, The next night the hotel people all went to the little station at the foot of the mountain, The express trains brought the husbands and fathers, the brothers and sweethearts. | Loulse and her brothers expected thet: | mother on a train from the Enst, due a few moments before the arrival of | the Weatern train, It was for the Western train that Douglas Cralk waited, expectant of her lover, Loulse never looked better, She was | already dressed for the evening hop in ft white, with delleate laces and a cing bit of silken drapery about LOVE’S TRAITOR. By ELIZABETH C. WALTZ. Douglas herself, standing In the twil- Mght, looked tke a glowing rose in ber pink gown. The eastern train pulled tn. trained hi from t over her. There was Marsden Gaward, hané- some us ever, his cyes scanning the crowd. She heard three exclamations, Surely that was Louise's voice with the delighted bass of her brother's as accompaniment. “Oh, Marsden She saw him fairly pulled down among them, Loulse clinging to his arm He looked a ttle frightened. His eyes went this way and that furtively, but his hand sought that of Louise with no uncertain or reluctant grasp. Dougias Craik comprehended in one brief instant. He had stopped to tell her of hie {n- tention to go to his old love on Monday; that was all. Anyhow, she would be- eye that, Did any one think she would take him from Loulse? How little she had known herself until now. She turned to flee, but Louise caught sight of her. “Oh, there is Douglas! Why 4id not your friend come, dear? I am so sorry. you sure?" © gir) shook back her fluffy lecks and looked bravely at the group. No," she said clearly, ‘he did not come, Loulse. I guess,he was making game of me, as the children say.” ‘Oh, no,"* broke In Eustace Collins, “surely no one could be so heartless. low me, to Introduce Mr, Marsden award, our very dear friend. And now, since you have no knight at hand, sup- | pose I help you up the mountain, Mise Doug As they went forward Douglas stum- | ited a litte. Sustace caught her arm. He was as- |tontshed to ece a drop of water fail from somewhere to his hand, Aw there was not a cloud {a the aky, he wan-puzzled. but finally decided that Douglas eyes to seo those alighting Pullman. A hot wave surged t agination, Douglas, in high SP was ‘ure he had dreamed i when he told her. > F2G89-92 92-36O8-590% The Evening World offers WO for the beat 150-word letter on this subject. Send letter to “Four-Mi}lon ide |S Editor, Ew. = World, P. 0. © Box 1.354, New York City.” Beene, & dow when reverses come, They know % | what love means and Ife ts no: @ bur den, How often are women bought ‘Y id CIDER EES DEDS of Mammon marry for money; love and happiness are etrangers tu then. ESTHER LORBECK, No, 621 East 1ith strect. Money Has Ci ja Going. To the Eattor of The Evening World: ! Tne $4,000,000 wedding present will hayes the same effect on girls who are looking for husbands as a good turkey dinner would have on a poor starved tramp, It seems that money sways the ; heart nowadays, but where In the fault? The mothers, in’a great many cases—not all, but some of them—are so afrald that Mrs, So and So's daughter | will do better than hers that she wili let her marry any old man aa Jong as he has the money, as! love and she will be strangers, The true foundation of so many unhappy homes, so many divorce leases and separations is loveless mar- tiages. Money can never buy or give to the soul the true happiness that love, ‘\handkerchief bib, one handkerchief, 3-8, *Neet, pure love can give. Mrs, E. H. HOPPER, No, §6 Dwight street, Jersey City. What Is Home Without Lovet To the Biltor of The Evening World: ‘This Is called the progressive age, and | we hear of tho new woman, but we have | WORSETHAN CIGARETTES of ganjah\ smoking among many who work on the banana and bhang, which w: many cases of “running amuck.' with the most homiciial tendencies. DEMAND (1 being made in Jamaica for the suppression of the practice 00 thousands af Fast Indian coolles ugar plantations throughout the colony. Gan- Jah is a varlant of Indian hemp, or ampioyed fo arouse the flerce passions of the rebel Sepoys yard of cambric and 23-4 yards of lace'during the Indian mutiny, jto-day is responsible in the East for The coolie who smokes this most pernicious weed freely becomes an {ncarnate fend | PLACE LOWE? , Stl the good old-fashioned ones that have the true hearts that money cannot buy—women who make good wives and mothers, good soldiers who find a way ‘to keep love from flying out the win- and later In life they find that money cannot buy love or happiness, and hat is a home without love? The papers teach good lessons day after day, We read of sad tales of woe, and why? Be- caure love ts left out and marriage te just a business. 1 hope the letters writ- en in answer to this question will make some wake up and cause them to take heart and sing an of old: », there's nothing half so sweet tn love's young dream.”* ANNIE M. BIRD, Forty-elghth atrect, Brooklyn. 3 IDL -Ene FODLDTOOOD $ MOULD AND VASE. (Greek Pottery of Arezzo.) ERE In the jealous hollow of the mould, Faint, light-eluding, sempled in the droast Of some rore-vaulted lotus, see the best The artist had—the vision that unrolled Its flying sequence till comple- uon's held Caught the wild round and bade the dancers rcat— The mortal lip on the immortal pressed Ono instant, ero the blindness and the cold, ®) 2 2 @ i} And there the vase; immobile, exiled, tame, The captives of fulfilnent lnk thelr round, Foot-heavy on the inelastio ground, How different, yet how enviovaly the same! Dishonoring the kinship ¢hat they claim, As here the written word the inner sound, Edith Wharton, lantic, PSOSSELHTO G4 in the Ag

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