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Reve § Gece 945t4ac ree Peo Ot etOP EE OPOEGPEHiO HO > HOI 3 “e ange and Lotion. Dear Mre. Ayer: Kindly publish a remedy for falling ‘out of the hair. Hu mCRY this formula with massage “ot the scalp. Une the lotion every A onight. Rub thoroughly into the roots GT the hair with the finger tins: Phente Geld, 2 grams; tincture of nux vomica, 1-2 «rams; tincture of red cinchona, ® crams; tincture of cantharides, 2 @rams; cologne, 180 grams; sweet al- mond oll, 6 grams. Apply: to the roots ‘of the hair with a soft sponge once or twice a day. This lotion Is espectally geod for very dry halr. How to Get Thin. ‘Dear Mra. Ayer: lam very stout. Is there anything to wetuce my weizht? ALB. C. RY these rules and also read in- l tructions to Mary Dale: Avold all tarchy and sweetened food, all vegetables contalning sugar or Starch, such as peas, beans, corn, pota- toes,. &c. Have your bread toasted: eprinkle tt with salt Instead of butter. Milk, I regret to say, If it be pure and Good, Is fattening. Hot water Ja an ex- eollent aubstitute for other Hqulds, Add f@ little of the juice of Imex or lemons to It, If you choose, Limit your sleeping hours to seven at the outside, No naps. You must take exercise, If you cannot falk at least five miles ‘@ day, and do not wheel, go to one of the Insiltutions where mechanical mas- gage Is given, Several of my corre- spondents report excellent results from this method of getting the vigorous ¢x- ercise they require. The system tn t oughly wholesome and not expensive In reducing flesh the one fact to rece Ject {s that fat Is carbon—oxygen de- ‘oye of burna out carbon. You muat nsume the carbon by the oxygen fo, through your lures. The more ex- se the more oxygen and consequent @estruction of fat by the one healthful etnoa of curing obesity. cereals, [The more starch and sugar you eat the imore carbon to burn away. Nelther Blond Nor Brune Deer stra, ayer: Iam a young girl with very dark hair, nearly black; also very heavy eye- brows and lashes, while my skin ts very white. I also have deep-blue eyes. Would you or not call me a decided brunette? If not, what then? J. E. 8. | ( ~OU are neither a blond nor a bru- nette, but are of a mixed type. A brunette has very dark eyes, as well as dark hair. Dark hair and blue are considered a very rare and beautiful combination. To Reduce Big Hips. Dear Mrs. Azer: I am thirty-five years of age and weigh about 145 pounds, but I notice that within the past three years I am getting very large about the hips, a! Smost out of proportion to other parte of my body. My walst {s small, as I am wearing a 2>+inch corset and % alze shirt waist. I am not tall, neither whort—about medium height. I cannot understand why I have much big hips. Some one told me to walk a great deal, eo I did, but I think sometimes it has made me stouter, I am not a hearty eater at all. MARY DALE. ECHANICAL massage will reduce the Btps. I think ft ts the best and speediem treatment. You might try special exercises, which will be given you at any of the gymnasiums. Some Secrets of Beauty ¢ POR GA DD DOr aled by an Expert. » reduciis 1 exercises s whieh weing che There fon about any part of the yy threu There are Swedish m are specially intended for re hips. You could take there y Rood Swedish operator could give them ty voo-until you have learned how to take them yourself. < COAT or arms fuse em UP AGAIN “THE EVENING WORLD'S LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. | & “Common-Sense Problem." (fo the Balter of The Bvecing World: Hore 1s a common-sense problem that requires no knowledge beyond sense and the simplest grammar-school arithmetic. (Zet I'll bet that few readers can solve ft. One snushiny morning I chanced to pass a flagpole. It occurred to me I'd Uke to see just how high !t was. I had | only a three-foot tape measure and a/ cane with me. The pole was very high. I could not climb tt and had no Indder. ‘Wet I measured it correctly. How did I o it? This fs no joke or catch, but a fact. ARTHUR PAYNE BELSTONE. Try Cooper Union, Wo the Editor of The Drecizg World: Is there any place where I can study seereereeey, at night? MA. R The Notsy Lodger. Fo the Léitor of The Brening World: I can bear sure testimony, the same cate and dogs instead of wate neighbors. much happter. flirts all around. YO8 f The Evening W Can a Catholle become Pres! the United States? WM. WILSON, | raced for by the Columbia the same ching her She will find ahe will be Where I live there are | But tt does not annoy | me, for I never watch them. | Yee, No. To the Bitter of The Evening Wo (@) Is the cup which has t | just which was won by the Amerten tn S17) (2) Has the above cup ever been v by any other nation of the world » the time the America brought in 18517 GEO, MARTIN. No. To the WMiltor af The Evening World Will you kindly tell me whi er or not as ‘Neighbor,’ as to the bad language | the late President McKinley's motier !» used by many lodging-house Inmates; | st1) alive? bod also as to thelr fighting, &c. Cannot “Motorage.” | something de done to abate the nul- ance? It certainly exists at present. | Y delieve the police are doing the best they can under the circumstances, A RESIDENT, |®& Good Advice to Anti-Flirt. ‘To the Editor of The Evening World: In answer to “Tenant,” who is an- moyed by the sight of women In win- dows filrting with the “L' trainmen, I ‘wht tell her how to avoid being annoyed by them, If she {s married, let her take €are of her house and family. If she 1a PF old maid, let her take care of her $BSOOPOOIONLLOHSROSHISOIOY ® CRY OP THE WANDBRER. OM®) back to me across the yeara and be my own again, clear away the doubts, the fears, that I have learned of yCome back, my Faith of long ago— the Faith she gave to me = Whose hand was laid upon my head as I knelt at her knee. ) me, for I have wandered far from where sweet certainty ‘and glad'contentment ai aloud for-knowlcdge, but I Te the Editor of The Evening Worl! | I notice a paragraph regarding the AiMculty of welecting a correst word for “private collection of automobiles’ | equivalent to “stab What fs the matter with “motorage?” I think this is quite an appropriate word. GEORGE REID. | Mats on, ‘To the FAltor of Th Evening World It Iman old but true saying. that a woman's crowning glory is her hatr Women have always been In the habit) of going hatleas, more or less, and w | they do puton a hat it ts genera “ loose contrivance that does not shut out! the alr or much of the muniight. Hut} men's hats! I saw a discarded o'd derby | lying on the graas while out walking the other day, I kicked it. Under tt tl grass was all dead and decaying, while all around was bright, green, healthy grass, So St is with hair. ANTI-HAT, An Unmanagenble Hoy. ‘To the mAltor of The Evening World I have a boy who ts very bad. He won't go to school and !s out of my. control, I would ike to know what to do. Ho fs fifteen. I don't want to put #1] ©: tain t him in the truant home, Drei a HORSE POWER. NE_ horse-power, as established 0 among engine-makers, is the ca- pacity to raise 33,000 pounds one foot a minute. As this estimate was based upon the ability of the huge draught horaes of London, It is about twice cho average power of a horse, VOLUME 42. Published by _No, 68 to 1 PARK ROW, the Press Publishing Company, New Tork: no knowing to woman will go. te auty, judging who bs ame of tho! s face Isher fort Bits. From Informatt HV sewn that artitielal received tt w tlon of Hy prevatent Wf soclety, then ent to part w the tain he tyre Is to cultl or which varl- rted to, Bis- xion muth, a dangerous motal, popular for the purpo fe chewing, wi mingly on the tne To coat the face with « ue {f more ard task, tbe: dante. rerillariy becuuty, abandoned, first “Apolte ntlonikth whic! are regulate skin. Th r of the face so Ui ly prinful te wear, the back of the and ts f MISSION. | ART’S ‘M48 NOR NNN VaQ4 Ny ‘aah Irving FitzHamme — ¢ iMe old friend Othello + What dost thou in this disguise + Othello | MeRoar—It's all TF ity m earning one-sevi elevating the stage PROVERBS, He—Do you know a tong with a @ refrain? She—Ye cs, 2 Ho—Then refral, pleam. 920000080000 By T. UR PHY, KATE CARE YVETTE IS A Yvette Guflbert is changed, ts extremely ei alt for ad by moans t. despite the In many women don au pon retiring of + venfence en mask stie bands, wed night ry nthe ed, Moulds for the into which t roand sq repotitt “8 causes: the memoer ted dimensions, Ing the er Che mouth, the lips there whie F n iret appearan tl feet may he fo: strument that resembles a relic of t Inquisition more than anything else, Entered at the Po! hands several metho:ls purpose Ups a box ix worn Rives J into shape by an tn- NO. 14,660. Office at New York as Second-Claas Mail Matter, si 3 3 3 5 z 5 3 2 3 z n] dangerous thing to do, t to sire for beauty fear them. adonna ix ventually not only: serie ht but often brings total blindness, But, above all, tt ls hard to undentan ion itis t to] found who a operation that totally, the ¢ Te im, ped tn, partially, If no the nervoux action ¢ sole purp by yellds, he ¥ eubsequy a he blind from the completely are not so great that women with a de- whic’ sly Impairs the omen can be submit to an obtain: | ut A WYOMING SCHOOLMARM. arisen - By ES. BRADLEY. ht id} 1901 nt} «Copyrient, by Dally Story Pub. Cod [below which gleamed the long stage Mt] 66 Y Bill, why do you call this|shaped single spur of the cowboy. — & » Diamond? Grace Loveland suddenly paused in the The “shock-head" — extended | burst of gayety with which she greeted itself Into a tall, broad-shouldered young | the appearance of the “shock-head’® Sliman of twenty-th dressed in the|around the corner of the dilapidated usual looxe woollen shirt, corduroy {log hut used ax a station by the Chege trousers © enne and > red with leather leggings, rthern road. . POWERS. ! genonse € CHEE S( FVE KNIFE LOWOR SH, DEVERYy. gam Tare! J CAN SER “HE WouLo JP THE WORST FINISH [My g 9) PARKE A Bum COMES To THE Wi CHIEP oF WORST DEVERY, Tra Poume) ue Give. you An ICE WAGON! W ABROAD. MATRON NOW. The weir, willowy effect of other days thas vanished, and when the songstress leaves her lovely suburban homo for a day’s shopping in Par is one has to look closely at her to distinguish wherein she differs from the average French matron. DISCOVERY OF COMPASS. A committee is being formed at Amal, Italy, to arrange for the cele- bration of the fourth centenary of the Invention of the compass, The Duke of the Abruzzi has agreed ¢o act’ as Prealdent of tho committee, and Sig. Morin, Minister of Marine, {a the Vico-Presivent. Tho celebra- tion will take Bee next year. BOOK MART IDEA. Why should there not be a market buflding for second-hand booksellers? asks a London newspaper, The prac- teal iMculties may be many, but who can doubt that a specially de- algned, centrally situated mart for old books In which hook-lovers could wander at ease would be a boon and @ success? Fok SUPREME COURT JuDue (4 -sucaesrion } ie TMINKL SEE HIS FINISH f SHEPARD PUZZLES THEM AND THEY FEAR HE MAY SLIGHT THEM WHEN HE COMES TO THE BAT. THE SQUIRONIAL CHOIR SINGS A DOUGHLFUL DIRGE, WEEPS BEHIND THE DOOR. THE TENANTS s URTIVELY SHARPEN THEIR KNIVES. {HE TOOK THE CAKE, Smithson—See here, my wife says she just gave you a good meal and® now you wont get out o' that chair! Tattered Tompkins—I can't get up, mister, cuz I ate.n chunk o' her cake an’ me feeble limbs ain't; strong enough t' carry It. Hiram—Did you find Chicago as? wide-open a town as ye expected? Tige—Yaas, two blocks from the station I felt down a coal hole. HIS PLAN, OEOLESSELSESELDE9 980+: Visitor—What ateps would you take !f a fire broke out in yours school? $ Pupil—Long steps, sir,” Re Mo 300-84 command of the situation. ‘a'l, rough. I s'pose it's ‘cos It's eet in the replied the man. As he spoke the train arrived. boarded {t, asx did Grace and her come - panions. An Indefinable Impression that ey race +ODO2-2 He by a frightful crashing sound, caused each tu grasp at the nearest support. At the samé instant a slight female form was seen flying out over the trestle spanning the canyon they were cross- ing, and Jennie, one of the group of girls, shrieked: "Grace has fallen Into the canyon.” A coupling had broken, the two parts of the train had come together with such momentum as to force Grace to release her grasp on the platform rall- Ing, and ghe was now lying where the slightest movement on return to con- sclousness would precipitate her to the bottom of the canyon, two hundred feet below. Instantly the stranger hed grasped Rep danger, and with the agility of a trained athlete had clambered over the side of the trestle, allowed himself to slide down the steel pports to the first ginter, across which he sprang to the rescue of the silent form, which might be that of Ilfe or death. Now as she lay panting, broken, help- less, senseless In his arms, a strange yearning to which he,had never before yielded took possesion of him and he cried despairingly: “Grace, Grac let you dle. Liv Fortunately the ledge rose to the top of the canyon, and a few moments’ sua- pense resulted in Gmce being restored to her friends, unharmed, except from the light cut at the side of the head and a slight nervousness from fright. At Wheatland, the next station, the stranger took his departure from thi train, He bowed over Grace's hand an@ » | murmured so she alone could hear: “We , | Shall meet again.” Two months passed, when one day, sitting in her school room at Lusk, the scholars just dismissed, Grace was dreamily recalling the incidents of that day near Chugwater, Suddenly a stal- wurt form passed across the line of her viston from the open door, and glancing up !n momentary alarm et the onex- pected intrusion, ahe looked tnto the eres of her rescuer. He eaid, almost in whisper, but every word penetrating her Ting SULLIVAN A HARDWARE DEPARTMENT I met your glance that day at Diamond 1 knew I had met the one in whem the happiness or the despair of my life would lle. My fate fs in your hands.” “But.” she quickly and roguishly ex- “I do not even know your name.’ “Call me Frank for the present/’ he sald. “Frank, what will my name bef® “Lady Grace Caverletgh.” Grace had gained an Dngttet titty Frank was one of the proprietors of what {s probably the largest ranch in. Eastern Wyoming, and had bees on one aRaweh? PLAIN TRUTH. An old lady who was a great bore pata visit to a neighdor. She prolonged her stay, and finally sald to one of the ohih dren: "I'm going away directly, Johnnie, and T want you to go part of the way with me. “I can't,” said Johnnie, “for we're go ing to have dinner as soon as you leave/* —The King. ‘ os TWO SINGERS. ‘ Racon—When that girl begins to sing I know I'm golng to be bored. Egbert—I can say the very same thing about a mosquito.—Yonkers Statesman. OR HOME Soy DRESSMAKERS. Tho Evening World’s Daily Fashion Hint. THE bAST RROREAUG! LD and infirm, among the last of hin race, the blg buffalo of Lost Park has gone crazy, says the Nashville American. His cunning, that for years had enabled him to defy un- us hunters, has deserted him, now that all his companions have fallen [vtctime to the Nimrods’ deadly Now In his mad folly he boldly walks {alton the public highways, apparently seeking death, He 1s of monstrous stze and ts be- Heved to be twenty-flve years old. As he walks along the highway hie beard drags on the ground and hin hide is scarred with bullet marks from dozens of wounds received in the days when he wna the leader of the last herd. 1t {s almost ten years that he has roamed the mountains In solitude, fight- ‘ing hia battles with hundreds of wolves and hiding from the men who have made hundreds of dollars by illegally slaughtering the game of that region, Indians who have hunted him credit him with an instinct that is simply wonder- ful, Men who went to that region twenty yenrs ago remember hearing the savages tell abeut a monster buffalo, the head of a large herd, they had tried in vain to kill, Now that he Is crazy in his old age and rceking death as a rellef from his companionless existence, there seems to be no one who has the heart to Kil! him, Game Warden Harris will offer to make a city park a present of the old buffalo, 1¢ the management will defray the expenses of capturing him and prin, ing him to Denver, He js bigger than any buffalo ever seen In captivity, and if he were not so near the limit of old age, he would be worth many thousands of dollars, AN ODD HIVE. F any one wants a curiosity ‘n the ] line of honey manufacture the op- portunity Is offered to him on BK, Gill's farm, cast of Montavila, says the Oregonian, Bees have made a com! in the buck brush, This brueh has a thick growth and the Mmbs and} branches are so closely crossed as to bs almost matted. In one place the, bees found the branches so close as tv form the walls of a comb, and they immediately proceeded to fll the space with honey. It 1s common for the little busy bee to store his sweets in the hol- low parts of trees, but this ts the ilrst case known where a comb has been made in the open. Whosoever goes in guest of the curiosity should bear in mind that the bees area just now {n To cut this skirt for a miss of foure teen years of nage, S& yards 2 inches wide, § yards 27 inches wide, 5% yards 44 Inches wide, or 4% yards { inches wide will be required when both flounces are used; (i yards 2 Inches wide, #4 yarde 71 Inches wide, 4% yards 44 Inches, 9% yards © Inches wide when one. omitted, The pattern (No, 3,943, sizes 12, 14 and” 16) will be sent for 10 cents, Send money.to “Cashier, The Wert Pulitzer Building, New York City,