The evening world. Newspaper, September 23, 1901, Page 8

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A Nude Man. Dear Mra. Aye! 1am golng with a young man two years, Three months ago his father died. Ie called at my house and begged my sister and me to attend the funeral ser- vie, which took place the lodge- rooms that evening. We went to please him. After the service he asked a friend of his to escort us to his house, He did not introduce us to his relatives, and when I asked him If he was going over home with sister and me he sald he had to see a young woman to Jers: ~as his former sweetheart if he did band; she ~a Now what 1 .ant to know _ right by leaving my sister and myse!: to his friends? Lo T« gentleman treated you with ex- treme rudeness. Men and women in great bereavement frequently do things which would wot occur In norma! citcumstances. If this man had forgot- ten your existence, and had thought of Ro one else outside of his family, !t would be quite easy to understand his behavior, but th» fact that he forgot to be courteous to you, and paid his tentions to a former sweetheart, wo suggest anything but an abstra dition. You will be entirely Justified tn closing your relations with the gentle- man finally. Should He Returned to Mamma, young man In the nelghbor- hood eighteen years of age, and |: seems to me as though he were in love with a - girl about one or two years younger. ‘The other evening they had a few words ap§iwhen the young Kir! took me yome he came to mect her, but she did’ not epeak to him. When we reached our door we stood aside and he sat Jown and started to cry. Please tell me what you think of a boy who cries because the girl he cares for will not speak to him. C.D. THINK the young man has escaped -| too early from the nursery and he should be returned with care to his mother. Batton, Hutton, Don't Wear Thi ‘Dear Mra. Ayer: Tam a young man and am in love with a peautiful blond young lady. 1 ‘come up to seo her In front of her door bout three times a week; and about two weeks ago we proposed to one an- other. The other day I had one of her Dutton-pictures, and, for the firat time, “phe invited me down to the house and Introduced me to her father, but told ni to please take the button-picture off, as she wid not want her father to see it. Flease let mo know whether the young lady loves me or not. J.D. BW. AM not familiar with the language of I the button-picture, but my trnpreztion le that the young Indy han a very wholesome regard for her father's opt fon and that you will do well to giv Tier .vlawa serious consideration. Wait vril you have gone further than the front door three times a week befo: you try the button portrait of a young girl on a stern pupa. If the girl said City, where she was to meet her hus-j SUPPLIES BALM FOR ACHING HEARTS. when proposed ene another I should the button episode cannot be regarded as ev 6f a change of aentine vhiy her? ‘That would hovel, way of the loved you you ‘The Sort Dear Mra Ayer Tama y old and t git! for ¢ very eranky her many timex about { the ure of my coming to s 4, 1f you don’t care for m hen I'm about to got WII you ° tw me again, or will [ write to you?" T told her its nou me nk 10 see her, the way she Tt seems to me if 1 don't what I'm going to do, tt. ‘Then 1 giy be over again want ine, why does she wr ver? T hate give her up under ee circumstances IHG NOER. GIVE It up. It seems to me the best thing to do in regard to cranks {1 to put as much distance between them and yourself an possible. She t break her heart! .You may take word for It. It Is possible you will bring this girl to her senses by suspend- Ing your attentions. When she finds you take her at her word It ts possible she may amend her manners, If she doesn’t you are better off away from her, I cannot understand why you hate to give her up “under these circum- stances." I cannot. imagine clrcum- stances better calculated to induce a lengthy term of glve-her-up inclination than the very exasperating ones she exhibits in her relations mith you. However, it's a free country. If you can benr with her you have my dest wishes for the future. Silent Contempt Ad Dear Mrs, Ayer A few years ago T went with a young man for several months, We soon be- came very much attached to one an- other, This went on, for a fow weeks and at the end he asked mo to marry him directly, ‘This 1 refused on account of ow ages—he wan elghteen and I was three years his Junior, He went among hie friends spreading ecandalous les about me. Since then we have often met, never recognizing each other, Some time ago I sent him a letter mand an apology. ‘This letter ho never received, but sald he would apolo- size If I would rewrite it. Please help me, for although I poagess more than ordinary good looks, It Is of my name only Lam VERY PRouD. = REBAT the incident with the con- i tempt it merits. If you are really proud of your name, try to realize that at fifteen a girl is only a child, and it Ix far too early for her to receive attentions from men, Do not be dis tressed about the Hes that are told con- cerning you. ‘They will never do you know Fask me wo my sed. any harm, but will reflect discredit only on the fabricator. I should hold no further communication with the young man, whose behavior has placed him beneath the notice of self-respecting persons, A good-sized bow! in the first essential of salad - making. With this well cool- ul the salad leaves fresh, crisp and dry, >and perfectly clean, the mixing presents Very little all 1s re- th but little difficulty. quired. for a plain salad. I should be poured first upon the salad leaves, and there lightly tossed until they are with oll. The other ingredients being added and the salad again Ightly tossed, the product will be a dish evenly sea- Boned, with no undressed leaves on top. while the othera are soaking in a strong dressing below. For salad sand- — salted vinegar before using, shaken dry &nd placed between thin slices of bread and butter, a Soft, mild cheese is used in making a Welsh sandwich, which ts an app Stizing accompant- ment to a green salad. Two parts of ‘eheese are rubbed together with one part of butter, the former having been first flavored with mustard and a herb vine- gar. The mixture 1s spread between thin ces of bread. ——~? For a Fish Dressing. A Welsh Sandwich, Green peas mash- ed very soft are ex- cellent to give color and consistency to a fish dressing. The ‘oe of spinach or other salad herbs will (9 a delicate shade of green to a may- use. The pounded coral of the lob- mixed smooth with a little ofl and ** i to a mayonnalse will give a good Be SUNSET AT ATHENS. OW many aneve, on gunder peak at rest, We watched the sumptuous splendors of the sky- The fading hosts In plume ani panoply on the cloudy ramparts of Hfuge Titans, hurling towers from creat Of toppling mountains of ver- millon dye ‘And phantom galleons, slowly (Mid amber se: the blest. ‘Talands of desolate auguat Totter!ng upon > searlet deeps; Vast promontories | with Jasper. fan jaw. crumbling into wastes PU ruby dust; A Bo And. planging. shad'wy down "i =the crimsoned steeps, 1 Horses of the Sun, er ag yHanea, ; aya. Mittin “in, Everybody's to havens of gold; she verge crowned of with SOME SALAD HINTS. without blemish | eo naise tartare. jateg {Chopped onlons or ther extract, jcapers added to a plain dressing trans- | form it into the tartare, | Th Senn french dressing of {Juice of half a lemon, two teaspoontuls wlehes pepper grass, Salail and water cress Sandwiches. $ should de dipped tn red color to a fish dressing, and cooked beet Juice or deeply colored fruit Juices will color an ordinary mayon- nalse, s Chopped herbs of a any kind of which Mayonnaise 3 ine navor is desire Tartare.$ make the mayon- hopped olives, chives, cucumbers, pickles and Sour cream make: an excellent dress- ing, and the most fastidious objector a bt cream would nev. recognize It If not let into the sec © cream must not be too old. ines | Sour Cream Dressing. ne of vinegar, a good pinch of cayenne pep per, a teaspoonful of salt and a tea- spoonful of sugar are added to a uptul of thick, sour cream and beaten her thoroughly, It Is an excellent Ureasing for tomatoes and cold vegeta: bles, and can be used with a celery and pple ealad, ae Dressing For Fruits. hem—or other vari almonds, Here ts a dressing for ripe fruits, peaches, bananas, pears, fresh tgs— € one can get les of fruit, Take and bitter, and to every the former add four of the lat- hen, remove the skins and put to oak (n cold water for two hours, Pound in a porcelain or marble mortar with a Httle salt, @ bit of cayenne pepper and a little femon J When the mixture {s ground fine {t must de thinned to the con- swe sistency of a cream with sherry, Fresh cream can be added, sired, Just be- fore the salnd {5 served, well stirred in, WHAT OZONE I5, NY people talk about : ithout so much as knowing What omone tx, ‘There ts 4 preva. Idea thar tt tw something you get s sea . nd that it {s good for $ that something is, » few people have sutcient ¢ Jy what chemtsty call foxygen—that is col Hin a highly active and ‘ 4 conditiow, In ordinary pure alr ozone exists, but only tn what smi H atger amounts are 1 mountat Itt ppears when br tn contact with d ng sipating itself, as tt were, oxidizing (hat matter, Ozone In known to occur more plenti- fully during thunderstorms, and we have, of course, the analogy of its belng artiticlally produced from oxygen py electrical Mecharges In the laboratory, ‘On the body oxone Is velleved to act a a stimulant, hence the popular notion of Its beneficial effects as experlenced by the sea, but In any greater amount than mere traces St Is @ violent Irritant, One authority goes the length of assert- ing that it Is doubtful whether It ix ‘beneficial to animal Ufe at all. VOLUME 42, Publistidd hy the Presé Publishing» Company, 6Glovid Entored at the Post-Oflee at\ New York as 53 to 6 PARK ROW, > v York. oe Second-Class Mail Mattér, JAC B A RUS Recalls Pleasant Memories ° of His Great Friend, FRIEND into my etic, Inst been “ptneed’ ast 1 Nave |minds and horest wills, If they have] from the station in Greenport when the lnughing. ‘ Aome o 1 « tt julfferent ways of d ning. Public rel 1 children came swarming t heard t 1 came back to tal 1 wish some Cleveland would come|down te Teddy." He leaned out TADTINANTR EPG eal T@AUAUATLOTSTRRS RAR ih was that Dhue | long again soon and give me another} from the rear platform, gracping as he saw me paw e ‘ what went vote the tcket which Tam-|many of the Ittle hands as he could, tm tak the capita aper, and part y obetructs with itx impudent claim {shite the train hands did their best to oS steed on th p walsh P was sat it Is the Democratic party. Keep the track clear. n he hearty bellever from the firat, © °° 1 zovelt, few were nearer to] Way back In the Jontiing, cheering fe referred to my old-ont havit)| adel lends thats winter within De: I fancy, than I, even at Mbany. ;¢rowd J made out the stim figure of u of ratsing the hat In salutation mt Wood, wh 6 came all to » doubc he made hie mistakes Ike pale, freckled Hite girl ina wern ware of merely nodding or touch! ndl_-admire ward ax General row of is, and when he did thege were |ent, strugeling eagerly but hopelessly No doubt he ¢ ¢ nor: Wood. 2 fine fellOW T yot wanting critics to make the most of i He was paysleian. 1). P wig they hud been half as ready ger children pushed her fur- t tt i Fenuous ours O-fay tent him a aand. We might have und her mournful face was ronnie roanttha he last in the throng when ; ‘ the war, Tc saw Aow faltheatis w her f ‘extrenie nk N KR As umpire wiih down the yas th Avnarirat eae publeumer Kar to hein acaNaathe started, he made « qulel da me nw hia friend a " A matter Jaw aga. no opath through the surging n brought me captes of poor elr Wt TT know early and king her ning “ with eh in Ceveland’s chair in Al- rr the siVake of all, ‘A wish to be remer Dany. people nied for the departing car and le Into my ow Ido not think he ¢ rntasan added 1 want etter than that When Roosevelt Ghd gone to Wash-| dignity, butt did fo told him xo} and txt shail want a long time | 7 nport Wax the ington to heip fit out the navy for t wWhereat he used to ime TaS But) befor: ae good, | me cht the and war with Spain 7 ta part of the [there was nothing te laugh at. They A) Chat day's trip through ve all winter there with him, and Mulberry |men of the same stamp, not evinty any will’bever2 abldes’on omy |? ne Muk- street took It for granted that Thad at reat of us, but men wit wan about DAS NTS wre tha “Now, what's hi jolding it?" the rope." 5. “I'll get that blasted thing ot something's going to"—— © Attendant—Here you are, sir. “That's right. “Now leggo! (4) Quick! She's moving out! Swing right off!” That's it, There you are. It’s all right! BY THE RUNNING YARD. Modern Continued-Story Writer—It must be near lunch time. ‘The spaceomcter registers nearly one mile, Vr OS Y to pull I catch Bertic—Oh, Cholly, your you mustn't use tobacco! Cholly — But he atdn't about cigs rettes! minute, portion of -his 4 ; “You'll call again?" she asks him, Ah! well, he doubtless might Had he the luck to hold again The hand he held to-night, “NAUTICAL.” Fs 3 > $ e : $ i cy = $ $ © ~ o physician mid? say anythi @ A LOVE FALE THE WI TER, why on earth did you tn- Ite that Nestor woman to your house party? You know she has made a degd set at Thurston. is a dear boy, but all men are fools when you tlekle thelr vanity. The wom- an {xan unconsclonabte idiot, but 1s pret~ ty In a doll-fashion. And she is abeurd- ly and brazenly infatuated. Do you think -it—wise—to bring her here to be under the same roof with Thurston for thrée dayst Mrs, Thurston looked at the other vith a Uttie smile In her e; “Wise Yes, Lovise, That Is Just why 1 invited: her, “Are re, people—always. chy re begining to talk nt vith the uneny Tauletly. | bridy |THE EVENING WORLD'S Louise,’ she sald, slowly, “I love ! I love him too much to endure doait, 1 love him too much for—hall measures. If the: as been a change that I have been too’ denge to notice! he can 1 to Qnotiter woman—he may doo, But IT must take the initiative. He may not love me ax In the old days, he shall—respect me. My dear," she went. on, coming to-lay. You may watch the comedy out. Mrs. Nestor shall have clear field and all favor. If her prettl- ners win, I shall retire gracefully and As I have eaid, my lord and 1 have never been dincourteous to each other in our ilves. If you had a guest who wearled of your hospitality, would you detain him by force? Why, in mar- rlage, should such social laws be dead letters?” The house party rounded Itself out, and each Jack found his Jill, and the hostess presided, with the gracious un- obtrusiveness of one who knows wien absence, like silenc>, is golden. Mrs. Nestor Muttered in [ike a dainty- colored butterfly, and dignified Bob Thurston smiled upon her with un- feigned Interest. ‘The butterfly smiled and dimpled and flashed her brilliant fasclnations around upon her hoat'with quite obvious intent, and her hostess looked graciously dense, and the guests, well trained in soclal ethics, took the cue and saw nothing beyond thelr respective noses. The second day of the gathering © ccuching party was’arranged. In drags and dogearts und landaus they drove to a backwoods inn famous for its butter and simple cookery and peaches. The hostess looked tranquil and falr, and had an air of supreme distinction ina plain xown of linen with studs and buttons of dead gold. Mra. Nestor looked a picture in sheer muslin and Val lace and rose ribbons. e shricked delightedly over the infant generation In chicken yard and duck pond, and clung to Mr. Thurston's arm in horrible fright when a matronly cow waddled townrd them with an expectant air that suggested apples and carrot! On the return trip Mrs. Nestor oc- cupled te box-seat or the drag with her host, with Mrs. Thurston and the aged ex-Benator Hunt jvet behind them. No one knew Just how it all happened, but Thurston was. stooping to tuck the dust robe around Mrs. Nestor’s muslins when one of the leaders took fright at something and bolted. ‘The others followed sult with alacrity, and the drag keeled airily it swung down to a picturesque but shaky rural “they are SDOM OF THE SERPENT. By ETHELYN LESLIE HUSTON. Comyrighted 1901, by the Daily Short Bob! taiet FOR TO-DAY. ry Dubs Co, Nestor, with: + a serles Of plereinx s shrieks, Mung her- self bodily Into the Jarms of her host and ciung to him with Thurston, blinded with blond hate and turquoise plumes, was not of mifeh value as a whiv and could only “gasp chokingly as the tron-shod hoofs thi ed a merry. breakdown over the ers of Meadow Brox en a breath’ of sindalwood mingled the frangisannt of the blond and he felt) a Unen-clad arm ra his cheek and a steady, pressure inst his brow! sGoulder for a fong pmentof #ickening suspense the ne swayed vreaked beneath, Then the wheels shaved the bark ioff the last two posts of tho bridge neatly as the Hnen-clad arms threw thetr fll strength on the ribbons and the drag was Just saved from kindling wood. That night when they were dressing for dinger Mr, Thurston went Into his wife's dressing-room, looking apoplec- tic over an elusive stud, and regarded her In silence as she deftly brought #€ to order. “Je vous remercie, madame,” he mute mured a little absently, then held her by the short shoulders that rose snowily ness ofateel, th tresses, bri Oo from the lace gown, and looked @gwa at her with a judicial eye. Res Then he bent his own blg shoulders, and Kissed her lingeringly ou the throat and ear and mouth. “What awful fools some women are. And what an exceptionally lucky og I am,” he remarked reflectively. Mrs. Thurston's eyes laughed up 1 his at this moet lucid speec; but shi seemed not to understand him. ‘The big arms drew her to him, and hi rubbed his freshly shaved cheek softly against her: a He turned the fair face and ki her again. “What an all-around brick you Hester," he added. “There is the dinner bell,” answered ‘Mrs. Thurston, pushing him toward his dressing room. And,she smiled as she turned toward the mirror and settled her laces. LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. | A Woman Denounces Devery. To the E.itor of The Ei ing World: How Is it that the people of a city lke New York can bear with the daily $l exhibition of ineMctency and vulgarity | presented by so-called “Chief Devery? How {a it that our worthy (:) Commis- > [stoner Murphy can tolerate auch an un- ‘speakable blackguard? His manners, his language, his decisions are an out- rage on decency and common senae. Why do we put uo with it? Why do you men put up with such a public dis- grace? Oh, | am ashamed of you, every one! You are no good at all, A WOSAS A Little Boy's Bright Reply. To the Falter of The Krening World: My little elster, Hazel, asked my five~ year-old brother why mother wave us the soup before the fish. He replied: Be- cause the fish wants to swim in It. AD ten years, No. 5(2 Grand street, Brooklyn. An Island for Anareh! To the Editor of The Evening World: Since this country and many others are suffering from Anarchy's outrageous outbreaks and achemes they should unite and agree on a certain Island or territory and send every avowed Anarchist to that place to support then selves, and then let “them practise their wild achemes among themselves—with- out laws or government or God and everything which they scem to despise In civilized countries. 8. H.C. ly Discovers It of The Evening World: A bets that the ion finding the first tooth In a young baby's mouth muat make the baby. a present. B bets that the present must be made to the mother of the baby ahd aot to the baby, Which Is correct? MF, B, ‘The Entate Divided Again. To the EAltor of The Evening World: In your Issuo of Sept. 17'S. Roubin gives what he calls q solution of a roblem. From his answer he {s a Reuben.’ son ‘three-quarters of his estate, his younger son four-sevenths of the re- mainder and daughter three-sevenths, She received § 6-8 lesn than the The father left the eldest La pew oe Weeyros DGeo ad: PS8454dOG860 THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MEN AND MOF UNIVERSITY. OF Ly fe = OF UNIVERSITY OF LYONS, HIE tima ta ao more when Des-/ same motive conceptions, in brief, &/ conceptions, which themselves are com-)wbich Hen between the most Intelligent res refitzet to recognize reason-{tmental Ilfe obeying the same laws. plex, of the beasts (rom the lords of creation, powers in the animals. | Igven Letbnitz said that we are empir-| [1 this way that mysterious word “in-) who exercise reasoning faculties, lve Im the days of Michelet. |jcat, tentative, or experimental during| "let" which hovers to darkly above! Some one in « suggestive table has eloquently for our “lower! thw largest part_of our eaistence, an¢|2imal existence, becomes a phenome-|worked out a detafled scale of come we put tho monkeys and the | cpap we are related to the animals who] 12" e4sler and caster of explanation. | parison of the respective mental capact- | dogn the same class with oureelyes wa: mpl and waose con-] an Almself te not totally deprived of/ ties of the vatlous grades of animal. when we wish to study psychology, 404) secutive Ideas are the shadows of ours /nstlnctive activity, ‘The celenteria; says this authority, cor- find them and all the other animals | own reasoning power. This is a convincing argument andjrespond to the new born Jafant of the lower in the animal hierarchy much ar own days tt haw been per-| PPoef of the fact that Instinct Is per-|human race, the mollusks correspond to cater tovexperlment: upon) than man,|for 1 that animale are creatures of| cH i accord and congental with & baby of seven weeks In age, the rep- whose favestigation along certain Ines |yapit, that they obey its dictates: with-| Oiher psychic phenomena and activittes,| tiles) and cephalopods tally: in. their mural considerations place Invincible od+ | aur tating cognizance of them as such.| THe Instincts of the animals merely are ieee Herein we distinguish man from them,| More differentiated, appearing and dis-| months, ‘the carniwrous, antmals in It has usually been regarded as essen] (op jo deliberat employs abstract| 2PPearing naturally in thelr usual)/general can measure thelr iftellectualf enna, Fi tially and characteritl wtly: ura to| concepts, considers hublte In themsetven, | CUFFe- ont : porsese the reflective power whlch per-} put there is not u ierson among us}, AN examination of the sensibili-{ while the anthropold apes, the drainteat| w: init» ua to reason, de selentific, exert} wh odares to deny to the. brui Pouce and Intelligence of tho anl-|9f the Urutes, are not excelled In intels ka the will, and to act morat But tt {8} ception, Imagination, memory, assor Is convinces us that there ts a when he has attained the age of “One cued all the Ia’ no longer Ko. We are obliged to see in| tion of ideas, a certain degrac of gen-| psychological parenthood of ‘brute and] year: and? a quarter, men and antmals representattons of the|eraliaing power, emotivity, desire and| Mankind, It furthes enablea us the] ate (hiretore., remalne superior to same nature, the same sentiments, (hedge complex mental activity respecting! better to comprehend just the distance carcer, « Aad younger fon. ‘Three-fourths from 4-4 SHE PRIZED THE LABELS PHILADELPHIA woman recently sent her trunt (o an establishnent for-a new hinge. An overzealous workman spent two hours in scraping mental power with an Infant aged four! ahd waehimg off the Inbels, remliders of vialts to. Parts, London, Hamburg, V!- me, Cairu and other places, strength with jtho ten-morthe-old chijd,| When the trunk wan delivered there ene. The result wag that’ tho workman wont to the scrap-basket, rex- le possible, and, artin- tically replacing them, mucceeded wome-yeriit be sent for ten. cents. what In restoring madam’a composure. =Philgdeiphia Times . leaves 1-4; 4-7 of 1-4 {s 1-7, younger sont 25-28; 23-28—25-28=3-28, daughter; B-284+S725-8=4-8; — FLTT5-B=1-33, TE $1,723 6-8=1-28, $5,170 7-8=3-23, daughter; $6,894 1-2=4-28, or 1-7, younger 3 B---, -28, or 3-4, eldest son. Total entate, $48,261.50. 8, J. HUGHES, © York street and West Broadway... 98,000 a Ye To the Biltor of The Cvening World: What is the present annual salary of the Vice-President of the United States? A. H. WOLFF, 1631 Madison avenue. Both ‘Correct—but a Difference. To the Editor of Tae Evening World: Which {1s correct—“two ‘tablespoons full” or “two tablespoonfuls?” INQUIRER, Brooklyn, N. ¥. He Draws a President's Salary. To the EAlter of The Evening World: Will Mr. Roosevelt be entitled now to a President's salary, or does he only get a Vice-President’s salary? G. M. CAMPBELL, Parkvillé, Mich. OR HOME =O DRESSMAKERS. The Evening World's Daily , Fashion Hint. : , To cut this shirt watst in, medium size 35-8 yarde 21 inches wide, 31-2 yards. 3 Inches wide, 8 yards % inches wide er | 21-8 yards 44 inches wide will bole The pattera (No. 2,932, slzes 22 to 4) Rs Send mancy to “Caehler, The World, Pullteer, Wuliding, New. York Ciy.®

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