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also one for ma Bloated hands, the halr, which has always been a eae | tiful bronze shade, return to that color | again, but something uninjurious. Wh causes the veins In the hands to bloat and make the hands look s0 hi I ED hands may be caused by ind! gestion, which produces a disor- dered circulation, or by strictu The blosting possibly suggests Fome- thing wrong with the kidneys or blad @er. I think you should have a phys clan's advice in the matter. Peroxide of hydrogen {s the least Jurious of any of the preparatio: turning the hair from a dark * @ bronze color. Use it diluted with an « éqiial amount of water. The halr must De thoroughly shampooed and bone dry hefore making the application. To: Remove Dandraf. Please give me a remedy for dandruff, which is very thick on my he nd something to prevent my hair from fall- ing out. Mrs. B.D. RY the following—-Egg shampoo: Yolk of one egg. one pint of ho +4 rain water, one ounce of spirit of roBemary; beat the mixture up thor- oughly and use {t warm, rubbing It well fhto the skin of the head. Rinse ther- |* oughly In several waters. This wash ta | Good: for dandruff where the ordinary shampoo fail. ‘Tonio for falling hair: Cologne, eth: ounces; camphor, two ounces; tincture of ides, two ounces. Shampoo your halr once a week with the mixture for which I tmve given you formula and use tho hair tonic every night with maséage. Rub the tonic well mto the Bealp with a rotary movement of the fingers. A Misiaid Formula. Dear Mra. Aver: ‘Last winter you published a dandruff cure. The tonic has been mislald, anc as I wish to have it renewed I shal! thank you very much {f you will kind!s repeat the recipe, or something better. for very obstinate dandruff. At th salicylic acid soap turns the hair gray? M. A. DO_.not know to what tonic you refer. ] Can you give me one or two of the ingredients? There are a number of tonics which might be used in caser @imilar to the one you describe, but 1 any one has been a benefit ts would bx Well to continue it. ‘The soap will not cause gray hair, but J should not use it oftener tha: absolutely necessary. A Very Natural Reeu Dear Mra Ayer: T have used your recipe for black- heads with great success, for which ! thank you. They are all gone,’ but have left my face full of small holes. Kindly publish a recipe to Mill out these holes. y CHARLES H. ARGE pores are naturally the result of the treatment you have been suc- cessfully tuking for the most dls- gusting of all skin blemishes—black- heads. The glands of the skin have been #0 stretched by the accumulations that it will take a long time to restore them to a normal condition, I give you the treatment I consider the most efficacious, but you must not edy results. long time to cure enlarged pores, and the only way I know of Is by the use of the scrubing brush und @ pure hygiente soap. 1 THE EVENING WORLD’ LETTER To Arm Ag: To the Editor of The Now that the gri; can't some wise guy among ¢ find a way to avert this eve: | acourge?, If small-pox swept us every | year we'd soon Mnd means to wipe out. Yet grip is cetting we me Keneral and more dang: : year and no general move is made for its ex terminat{on. SUFFERER. | Woman No Longer Secondary. | To the Edltor ot Toe Eventog Worlt i Miss Rebuke js sorry that ‘called down censure upon herse} remark that the sterner sex nuve learned not to interfere with the fashions and Yagasles of the women folk, but are son- tent to-be allent and adore. She heartily indoses her ceneurer that, In the begin. fe) =~ t ! a dream that WALKED beside the evenit & i ‘The waves that plunged along the HAsOd2e D90808000 nea, And dreamed shore Bald only, DREAMS. could not be; more! “Dreamer, dream no s But still the legions charged the z bench; Loud rang their battle-cry, ike fy But changed was the Imperia! strain; rs ee murmured, “Dreamer, dream % aN again!" Thomeward turned from out the “5 gloom— ®.That found I heard not tn my y room; “But suddenly a round, that stirred my very breast, [ heard. ut like a soa imy breast beat ceane- Some Secrets of Beauty Revealed by an Expert. which have be aged se hey rmal cures effected t 5 t : HE THE QUIRE AND aE THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 27, 1901. b sigan St Publ CROSS-EYED MAN HIS FAUORED NO, 14, 647. the Pi O New York as econd-Class Mail Matter, Entered at > THE BICYCLE pieyele races SEES ONE OF “But they get Ir if they only godt | Say. int the Cross: he'd win, Or which.” | on steam, five stalwa nan would aed car mM, awift ax baman t mt swiiter awit vy) these are lots excltinger than BY ADA MAY KRE om 28 by K Dally Story Pub Co.) flagging strength had fallen a Annabel, daughter, leased the spare rooms ye the Ne which, In her provident orgenization of the future, her ‘father ‘and herself could but scantily occupy. 1 quite TENANTS SPE By T. E. POWERS. Joun DOE-Tit SHAKE THIS BUM DOWN TO KEEP MY HAND IN" I s FROM THE PEOPLE. women were ) that they secondar man, concede that, Lges rol ength and 1 power not gains vale n Miss IMEBU ISIS, For More Interuntional Spor To (he Eaito Why races well as 5 uthlette iting and would ndship of the two In t al hor AD GAME. NaN pul up AN Internation DI one laughed shows Sow mu urs than we ye and heal DUGALD, Jr for eitinaet ie v {0 y y SQUIRE, OUR BLEEDIN’ =) | BEST. HALBERT HEDWARDS ‘| 1 “E'S A BlOMinA BRIGHT BEGGAR Aint 'E THouGn. MLOAME 1j UPAL IPA CA) EVERY THING IN StGmT: 4EYE Saabs ——___———____ HIS HON YES TRAN (aswane Down) y REAR AND SEATES, PADDY! Dick AH-A-AH, WE Wit OAK IT WITH one BRAWSSEY ° BAW JOVE DONT CHER KNOW b “NAIL HIM WITH THE NIBLICK* THE SQUIRE IS MAKING A TEE SHOT AND EXPECTS TO DRIVE THE BALL OUT OF SIGHT. abd 88-8 THE VALUE O ane which helt will kin t F EGGSKIN.| y that merit AN TARONI—T telia you, Ngures never a lie, — HE untucky OLD SAYING DISPROVED, (Suggested hy F. M. WOWARTRH.) ‘TI—Don’t they, though. Ate THE REMEDY. r—What your wife needs ts more UNLUCKY 18. j | ___ A KISSING CHURCH, Nirteen te watched very closely by railroad men.’ exeretae in a colored church of Boston, that iy# a railroad telegraph opere) Mr. Hicks—But she won't go out, doc- rt has as one of iis features the kiss- a rule ters do | tor, What am I to do? | ing of a new convert by the whole con- a number,| Doctor-Give her plenty of money to| gregation, has its strong and its weak mp fr fourtecn." | shop with, —Pitteburg Dlepatch, | points. O texs th zene of p erlmes which they do 1 And wupport in ail £ 0 persons, biding at caften ed citizens of th munities, they are supported Offenses against the law a right. Thetr living depends on the gles 000 other persons who com- mit the offenses. Were these 250,000 sud- denily to become upright citizens and cease to break the laws, not only the 300,000 but four times as many) more who depend upon them would be thrown the ro neve ES Oo Hvellhood depend yd must enti fou telr there is honest aNHOL be 1s Gi rs that the tag a time 1} be malefaciors, ¢ . According to the proy ing honest among them ro longer require supervt was a criminal, In 1870 thieves and other T PERSONS IN THIS Ip 18%0*| mainten but one out of every 3,422 Inhabitants; In addition to these police is a great] thloves and other eyildoefs; reckoning| the malofactor, army of men who are employed In the] at the uvual rate for this country of} denly reform he, would save ¢! evildoers had increased so that onelmachinery of trying and punishing one to a. family of five, is the\support} an. e: ns. ‘The cost to the na- tlon in Wages, court expenses, and sup- port of these men, not counting the clvil courts, 1s not leas than $125,1100,000. mut one guard required for every All this expense Is brought upon the overs In all, On the Ist of June | nation through the desire of many peo- nk after theee evildoers the 1, tls year there were upward of %,0%| ple to break laws, The expense la even malntains a police force etl Prisoners In fails tn thls country. This greater than this, for there are criml- at 78,09 men, costing annually |!* taken as a falr dally average, so that nals In jail to be fed and housed, which, nr 0,000,008) for thelr suy port. | there must have been 8,500 guards car-/ if tho average cost is but Mttle. more icf cities of the |!n& for them, Ghan $100 per criminal, amounts to Hce, whose! ‘Thia army of’ 100.0% men engaged 1n_| $10,000,000. 1 Coste OVEF $13,000,000, catching, trying, guardingand watching! If “Bill Sykes,! as tho English term should therefore sud- every LATE inhabitants served a criminals, The of 509,000 pre 19) ond trial judges. cl nd the propors penitentiary ¢ . so that now to several thourn are pollen magistrates, kx, bailiffs, Sailers, and rds, in all amounting i more. On an aver- one (/SHEEMAN— He's A BUM a 3 ~ © > The Metamorphosis. ; FQEDIIEDDIDEDDNHES+ISDO9404.95.00-064- & CKER. Into the kitchep’ rilttensd half a lugubrious creature came, not bag and | baggar, aig. It was odd E of this last arrival he sh, be universally arked as a subject of interest. Was jhe pletures 2 Not un- less close- ad contempor- ary masculine wear have lost thelr pro- shadowy of . no; his hours jtleked away rurally early and regular. | But romantic ncholy? Yes, very, very melancholy; us light curlositles go, | mysterk name regis- Quint, nela ul Ch is Mr. Quint stepped tac y up the vorsteps without amalgamating with © budgets of talkers or wandered tn, {4s happened one Sunday afternoon, up- on’ a favored cluster in the 6cawing- room. On that occasion he moved across to Annabel's dainty desk wi a query about his gas, and turned away lelsure- ly, fidgeting with his lubberly paper as he passed an armchair meer the door. Smilingly, the man lodged himself among the divan pillows, where he re- posed In uninvaded {solation until all save his hostess had left. Then he sala: “I thank you, Miss Ridley, for this af- ternoon,” and walked away. But the > |drawing-room expedition was not re- peated. It happened that soon Mr. Quint was the theme of the father and daughter’a conversation, “Daughter,” began he, with an ears nestness undaunted by his lively rist= bilities. ‘The man fs worth them all, worth them all. And you shall agve him,” at) Annabel laughed tn rosy peals. That , moment she had silpped a flowering / stem into the tumbler on Mr, Quint’e washstand, “What would you say, then," returned Ridley; “were I to tell you that this morning when calling at Mortimer’s new office In that handsome suit over- looking the water I fell upon Quint tr the adjoining room? Quint sitting Hk ja rajah ata magnificent roller-top des / between two bustling typewriteral “Girl, do you know that a couple a / years back Reginald and Edmun | Quint, brothers, were the plutocracy « Lelghton? Then they failed. The papery had {t all, No fault of theirs—mere! untoward circumstances. And they f, Uke soldiers, went up to the ca: mouth with their debts. Creditors: everything. This Quint of ours has 6 through the deep waters since then. had just been married, and lost his fri girl under the stress, Came on to ti! clty where the good fellows of pali days had nothing for him except Inalg 3 4 PS o 3 3 2 : e o > FRENCH WAR SONG HE treth x, there orce lived at Ts Omar, in the department of the | Pas de Ia, 1 modest old musical director who wrote hymns and anthems, also an oratorio, during his years of Mice, when he had the control of the musle at the cathedral from 1775 to 1787, many years before the revolution, When ho retired—two years before the taking of the Hastile—he drew up an Inventory of all his works and deposited it, with his manuscripts, in the archives of the town. Now, In the introduction to the » | oratorio he had written, says the Fort- nightly Review, that very hymn was lately discovered to which Rouget de Idsle set the words of his war song St. Omar had withdrawn from his office. It need scarcely be setd that, in making use of the church composition in ques- tion, a quickened tempo was introduced for the purpose of martlal effect In a battle song. A quickened tempo, or a slowing one, alters, of course, the character of mu- accordingly. It will not create any rprise, ntter what has been stated o— HE new religion being introduced’ above, that the tune of the “Marsell- laine’ has long ago been claimed in Germany and proved to be originally a German church melody, namely, the tuno of the credo of a mass. Johannes Scherr, the historian, one of the men of 1848, lved in Switzerland after the overthrow of the revoluton, says in his work, “Blucher, Hix Time and His Life") that “the original of the walch wax composed In 1776 inann, the “Kapellmelstre of th or of the Palatinate, discovered Mr, (Hamma in the musica. Worary of the town's church at Meersburg, mass by Holtz ne Bees ‘COUNTRY ARE SUPPORTED IN COMFORT BY CRIME. wu addition to what ho steals and the ‘damage he does. But what a calamity he would plunge it Into, Of the crimi- nals out of Jail probably 20,00 have no other occupation, Add theve to the 85,- @) who would be releaved, and these ; again to the 19.6% honest folk thrown lout ‘of employment, and the - nation ‘would pe left {n some mich plight as it was in-at the close of the rebellion, with 200,000 men oct of employment: to be absorbed Into various lines of trade, and theas same persons with all de- pendent.upon them to be pensioned ang Supported until they could be cared ‘or. The expense of the maloning nd the Pension Pe would probably ual t resent. policing expense CELE ey Se five years after that musical director Of! wedthm siso 4 34 yards of matertal, fOr | be went for 10 cei nificant condolences. The flood was his own to stem. He's been to the pawne shop with things we've never had the money to buy—a $200 watch and lots of costly finery. Down here in our base- ment he orning wondering that it is really he who ltves there, 4 “Since the crash, everything has bees made secondary to his business inters ests, clothes, £004, lodging, society, fog he sald he knew {t would take longer'te. rebuild fallen fortunes than to move into a mansion for high living after he had made the money. Now his prospects are bright.” paint After a silence, unminéful of the weight on the last sentence, rather jeate ingly, Annabel observed: “So I am a better judge of thorough= dreds than even Pater? Don't you know that my articles of faith in Mr. Quins have always begun with the bellef that he in a man of sterling worth? But its queer, Isn't it, that he should unbosomz himself to yo! ‘ “Not from his point of view, swest Annabel. He simply wishes his case te be clear in 1 woman's family before he pays court to her.” OR HOME 2 DRESSMAKERS. The Evening World’s Daily Fashion Hint. To cut this woman's unfon suft ta 37 Inches wide, will be required. Tho pattern (O41, sizes 32 to 42) wilt Send money to “Cashier, The World, Pulitzer Building, New ‘York. cig. f —