The evening world. Newspaper, October 12, 1901, Page 6

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LTA EEA THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 12, 1901. VOLUME 42. Published by the Press Publishing Company, No, 83 to @ PARK ROW, ww York, ‘AN ILLUSION-WRECKING EVENING “BEHIND THE SCENES.” “I didn't win a bet." sald Fritz Will- (her. | fitted through the wings and a moment, “T bought a farm to-fay,"" she went later were whirling. in the maze of th on, “up in Westchester. Oh, such @ | opening chorus. love of @ syot!” | In the dressing room of Lou Fields NO. 14,662, Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as ° Becond-Class Mail Matter. se all w | Just behind the —Retrain of an Ol Sone. words of the rong that was twenty years or so ago | fams, who was acrubbing his face vig- as near broke Here Is Healing Balm CV EDD belted eed ¢ LOVE IN THE BACKWOODS. : pub leat evening aa a{ {cna once when my negro dresser] chorits derisive exclamationa|and Joe Wober—the organizers of this / For Aching Hearts sn nt et eapertence| had fo tama watch to get my [arereelon of fin and beastythe ero ; , : tn fl clothes preased."* soldia hatehing ehickena! |Wtara were making up. and as we en: o nen’ In Weber & Flelds's ota etn, “iy | tere y 1 - res: PAE sean) | Muste Hall A little further along the hall wasfaald Mayme Gehtue, turning her back [tered Mr. Weber was surrounding him- | By GEORGE BINGHAM, COSSPESOOSE LES OF CEDODY: BOOdOOD303 OFOOOSOSO 2? the romantic {deals of youtht|@nother curtaln, 1 which |and Kicking a fly off a plece of ecenery /felf with tho stomach pad which, 98 /4°3.¢.6.¢.3.2.9.3.49.3.9.660:66 Good Cause for Low Spirits, | Kindly tell mo what you would do the races to-tay. Sam|C@Mo a labble In feminine volces Ike | In a ilinbering-up process. Fields tells him on the stage, makes Dear ira Azer: Under ithe sclrewmst as the visitor en. | the Central Park songhird cages atfect-| “I bought it for mother," continued | Tm “look lke a bureau with the middle} (Coprrignt, 1901, by Datiy Storr Pud. Co, I'am engaged to a young man who =! A CONSTANT RDADER 8 puttying on the last fine| {oR time. toa whit disturbed, Ber ER eH Se vo PONY LOYD lived by himself in a I was afrafi you'd esk me, Tony. I Revesime veiy muchrand-who would do|] UNDERSTAND how you feel in the ouches of the pugnactous Dutch| Up a eteep, natrow fight of statrs is live there, too. Ever he wings Fay Templeton was the dilapidated two-atory log house In| love you and hate to say ‘No, but I k morniag Tm golng to take a long walk] Central figure, ready to go on as “Mo. a clump of walnut trees at the| can’t marry a man who drinks and car- matter, but It hose he uses In the bank scene with Joe! a little triangular mace no larger than anything I ask of him. Laat week we Butterfly. Tg maids were holding back of an old fleld. He was a quiet, 4 practise with the medicine bag, tles on lke you do. If you'll promise had a quarrel] about a young man whom an exaggerated view o Weber and Lou Fields. John T. Kelly! a good-sized hall bedroom, from which}? si Iconsider my friend, hut who {s a.ways | stances. No modest girl sat hefora another mirror swearing| ail the stage entrances and exits are| lke lilllan Russell’ — up the train of that wondrous gown, in easy-going fellow when sober, but when! not to drink any more I'll marry you. trying to hurt the feelings of my flance. | disposed of ough she were one! (of chia King : iitherelisiorien “\ho is taking my name in vaing’ | Which she looks like a big, fluffy, pink he took on too much of ‘Dink's De-| Won't you promise?” + Now my flance has asked me to break | ticle of commerce, und no gir sed to stick. let room" for Iipee dulcet. voles, as a gold. | Cherry blossom. light,"—a brand of whiskey made on| “No, Lucy, I won't promise, for F@ de thrust at a man. as undount you bet on?” heland galaxy o: appeared at the top| By¥ the tlme the stranger left his ® small scale not far away—he became| hate to tell the woman I love a lle." Olas fied «Mes eis taba iat © my friendship for this man because he has injured my fiance's business, and I stoutly refused, and after some argu- ments finally succeeded in getting my fiance to try and make a friend of this enemy of his, which he has promised hilariously disposed and relished trouble. A small circular bearing these delight. ful tidings was tacked on gateposts wager you girls | mind's ¢: yas filled with photographs re pickbag me to pleces.’ It was the | Of Mfty different types of beauty, xeen air Lillian herself, in the corgeous rea |! seven different changes of cos!umes, gold gown that is the despair of | but not a single “chappie” had appeared and barn doors one day: altators. in the offing, the nearest approach to ‘There Will Be |the traditional scene of champagne, A GRAND BARBECUE AND BARN feel you were T think your friends were In and altogether too enterprising, At samo time {t ts not just that you should make the young man suffer for their > time you refer On evening during tho close of Octe- ber heavy clouds settled over this sece tion and a freshet set in along the river. Along toward midnight, above the Toar of the murky creek, came the cry! One. rep! ex have sald you rin sam in the most ed Kelly, just n in New York on the stage;| alas! for the absinth our youth—as mode in how to do for my sake. But 7 notice stnce|Dehavior. He was no more to biame| With «reat difficulty Bernard gon-| “Girls, what do you think!” Sho Kissed them all around, that my flance acts very depressed, al-) [han you were In the matter, and if he|vinced Kelly that Netther One was|ed Goldin Mohr, the “girl who ts never! “All ready, Indies!" sald Stage Man-| drunk from slippers being a bottle of! DANCE “Come and Ret ‘ though he nover alludes to this gentle-|/ really an attmotive young man and|the namé of a horse that ran second| still.” Sho stopped plrouetting for anager Mitchell at this juncture, and as|apollinaris sent up to Miss Templeton’a N— Tony Loy, who lay awake, heard the jman frien@ of mine. Do you think 1] you are of congenial tastes why not|to Leonora Loring in the second race.| instant as the others crowded around |quictly as if entering a dining-room they | dressing-room. PILFER CREEK, SATURDAY, cry, and was soon standing with his ‘have done right tn aiding with my triend| follow up tha acquaintance? It seems | ——— — — nn — SEPT. 29. lantern on a hill waiting for the second This September day at last broke, | ory, which soon came. Tate Olive's fam- EPPDIDG ROSEERORIRPEIO DESI OD IDOE EDEDIS TOG 20ES995-.4000004 Ss LITERALLY. 4 ‘and making my sweetheart think as I|to me hard ilnes to pun'sh an tnnoce G0 about my friend? ANXIOUS. | man with wuoh severity; don't you [sc more me that you care a g00d/ 07 TREE KATE CAREW ABROAD. AD95 EBA On DAODEDR-DY HELD UP! and, according to old man Odum, “Everybody an’ his dawg was there. The two fiddlers marched to the fid- dlers’ stand by the sawdust arena with genuine !mportance. When Les Tilley came tnto the ring | With Lucy Holloway onlookers glanced fround and wondered tf Tony Loyd was ily In the bottom near the creek had been Griven to the loft of thelr house. Tony paddled the family ashore in his skiff, and then went down the strip of water and around a bend, Dink Joiner went to Tony’s house the next day to see about some fence rails, but the house was deserted. That even- =} deat more about the young man you “* consider “your friend" than you @o about your Mance’s happiness. T can- ‘mot think you have done right: on the contrary, you have sacrificed your lover's Kies and Make Up. Dear Stra. Ayer: Thad a girl.friend and have known her for nearly alght or nine years. Two Ta ago We became very happiness without good causa Why 40| thought that nothing could part us, until j Se ee eee tengnhia of | eenge teat nothing could part‘, until present. If he was on the ground they| ing he inquired around the neighbor the man who ts your future husband's | over a simple matter. During our friend. , | feared trouble. [Everybody was having| hocd, but Tony had not been seen sinco enemy? I am not murprised that your| wip I gave her one of my photographs, a good time. when a plstol shot and] he rescued Olive's family on the night fiance seems to be depreesed. You have} which she placed on her mantel. Since savage accompanied by Tony| before. Days passed and he was not Loyd, came out of the woods, He| heard from, and parties went away for low we are not friends she has taken It away, and, of course, I suppose she has ‘22 more use for It. Would It be proper to write or ask a friend to get !t and say I wished to have the picture returned? MINERVA given him very good cau! aptrits. down the creek in search of his bod: Lucy was not the same girl now. She went to none of the social setticment gatherings, and often stood on the back porch looking sadly at the old house and out toward the creek. <| stopped his horse a few yards from the | crowd and caked for Les Tilley. some on, Les Tilley! Come on and Jest shoot a Ittle! You can ve the first shot. Come on down here’ All eyes searched for Les, but he had “Sle took a walk with his beloved.’ Do as Mother Says. Dear Mra. Ayer I am a young giri nearty sighteen THEATRICAL pearejotiage sand eve peored RITE a formal letter and poilte- 5 scare old: Hie used to call and ly ask for the return of the plio- ® | suddenly left the grounds, oe 8 © 2 «© 8 Cee eee aang: bal tay TOUiae tograph, unless you are senaibie % fei ele eqns imeetiel ae Two years and more have gone since aoelcat think Ssttoretat Tendiy af. {CROUh to make up your differences, B] Tony was coming from work at al the above story was written. The church Vise how many times a week tt ts proper| "hich would re msene better. TA2 loving | nelghbor'a sorghum mill one evening, | women in a small Arkansas village are for him to call. CETL | Mipraensie Ss Ce Ly ECL | when he met Lucy tn the road. He took] bustling around decorating the village re | Ot be broken for a trifle, and should .&| the flat-tron she carried and walked/ church and preparing a reception for. not be sacrificed to childish caprices. “p | back with her. their pastor. who will return from an- $ other State with a bride on the evening you are a young woman of lelsure and your mother has no objections. I think you might receive the young gentleman's calla several times a week, Certainly a young man cannot be bet- ter occupled than tn the aoctety of a nice, self-respecting girl. Your mother is the proper person to decide as to how often your “steady company” ahall all, and you cannot do better than to ablde by her decision. Friends Too Enterprising. Dear Mra Ayer: ‘A fow weeks ago an outing wan got- ten up mainly for our friends and ac- ances. Among them was & z nan whom L had never met be- “Lucy, do you love me? Will you marry me? Now, hold on. 1 know I've been acting wrong. but you partly | caused it. I couldn't help It; I loved you TABLE ETIQUETTE FOR CHILDREN. IVE the child a seat that shall be; and how he did bieed.” as T once heard G ‘strictly his own. a little boy remark at dinner. ‘Teach him to take his seat quietly.| Teach the child to keep his plate in To use his napkin properly. To walt patiently to be served. order. Not to handle the bread or to drop ‘To answer promptly. food on the cloth and floor. ‘To way “thank you.” If asked to leave the table for a for- To always say “Excuse me, pleas when leaving the table before the rest gotten article or for any purpose, to do So at once. Let This Nude Young Man Go, Dear Mra, Ayer I wish to ask your advice about a young man Iam ecolng with. [ do not keep steady company, as he lives at na at but he comes to sea mo every few weeks. ‘Ma lant time 1 aaw him he told mo he did not love mo enough to marry me, although he has o wal, “I wish we were married.” His only ox- se Was that we aro of a different ro- Umion. After he had told me this he apologized for what he had sald, UBARTEROKHN FLOBSIE, OU certainly do not wish to Y marry @ man who does not love you. Let this individual go, He [’ all depends upon ciroumstances. train. The pastor, I will add, is Rev. Tony Loyd, who came into that village a year or two ago. Lucy ts his bride audeville stars. NO SALE. Pome vPro, JAVRORE. LE CZAR Gehlier. of the party. To fold his napkin and put back his chair or push {t close to the table de- fore. He waa Introduced to me and Wap very. ‘attentive) the)irest of the [con {OWS that be oan be) very, cruel, Never to Interrupt and never to con- Mimaki bull beforeleesl went\ home I! made and @ man who {s willing to give so sears tradict. fore leaving. the discovery that he was brought there | Much pain to @ irl before marriage Never to make remarks about the| And after leaving the table not to return. wouhkl be pretty sure to make her suf food, such as “I saw that turkey killed, in many ways afterward. ‘There are very many young men in this world that are better worthy your -While than this one you write about. Religious differences are rious ob- atacle, but this man's treatment of you Proves that he {s selfish and cruel, a for me to make hia acquaintance. 1 know that others had settled the whole affair for me, and after that I could not look at him any more. Now my folks aro very angry at me, aa I don't care to see him when he calls. They‘ think it would be a very good match, as he earns an excellent salary and 2 TIMELY HINTS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE lustreless and fIl-looking, ts to first wash jt very clean with a suf brueh and ammonia soap suds, rinsy well, dry, by heat if possible, then oi! plentitully with sweet ol! and dust thickly with > O clean brasses quickly and econom!- ili cally, rub them well with vinegar and salt or oxalic acid. Wash im- mediately after the rubbing and polish with tripol! and sweet ofl. * pare to Siig pith ime] poleexs Smeaton much more productive of Unless th ina hed off, the | powdered quicklime, ving. might bave ‘him, but I] unhappiness tha: f Unless tho acki Is was! off, Dalways was against match-making. | views. ice a you want to buy a [thing will tarnish so quickly {ty last | Let the lime etay on two days, then , [estate will be worse than {ts first. ¢ brush it off with a clean, very stift »|per kettles and saucepans, brans and- | brush. Polish with a softer brush, and rub with cloths until the lustre comes THE EVENING WORLD'S g a trons, fenders, candlesticks and. tra: i LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE Seo ea tt eae a‘ |S." ete eos ron a ; i Cooking vessels in conatant use, says |ateel may de kept from rust almost in- Calls Halt en 014 Fiays. Yet I would y I he St. Louls Star, need only to be well | definitely. "i not marry an he * Bo Cee Diiter of The Drening World: only for bla money, even if he eens washed afterward, Things for show—| Before wetting any sort of bric-a-brac, f millionaire, unless I liked even pots and pans—need the oll polleh- | and especially bronzes, remove all the =~ { and respect- f 5 ‘ i ed him. Jug. w ho gives a deep. rich yellow | dust possible. The less dust water fads ! I really believe old men make bet- lustre, good for slx months. About fine Ines and crannies the less it { ter and kinder husbands than do tt Oxalle acd and salt Is the thing for|can leave there. younger men. earthy Trurniture—it tt touches the wood around | After dusting, wash well in atrong f Weartes of His 5 : lit only improves the tone. Wipe the| White eoapsuds and ammonia, rinse | eve heartily stock and tired of them. Let| ry us, es ectiynrases: brasses well with a wet cloth, and pol- | clean, polish with just a suspicion of ofl F them be given honorable retirement, crmerier st The) Btonles Word tah thoroughly with off and tripoll. and rotten stone and rub off afterward The young man I keep company wit Sometimes powdered rotten stone doce |every trace of the oll. Nover let acid orl NO CHESTNUTS. | bores mo constantly by the nly. by) eaking when he better than tripoll, Rub after using,| touch a bronze surface, unless to eat i as sted mia pee Se een gAttil popular’ teiday my When > Jelther with a dry cloth or leather, until! and pit it for antique effects, bears read that noticaon oie ¥ tes Renee ine Sivhye/seyai) Don't ao ;|there ts no trace of ofl, No matter ———=___ 7 pi brren ahead ada fea hacad orton bata i eLe EMILE ZOLA. what sort of brass is to be cleaned It] GANJAH SMOKINO. aust be freed completely from greare, Belstone tn which he asks how a man| he says, “Hello!” about ekght times an hour, Is all this uffectation or natural, Zola's appearances in Paris are very rare, and one does not hear much now of the man who created DEMAND Is being made in Jamaica e had written the words and aked dirt and grime. Wash with mumy measure a high pole with a yard for the suppression of the prac- pe measure and acans. It is simple, | °F does he do tt to be cunning and such a stir by his exposure of the Dreyfus conspiracy, An opera, of which Dog Merchant ~ 2 |2trong ammonta suda and rinse dry be- thus: He too the rceneress AR Raa FenAerAy And how can I cure M. Bruneau the music, was pro:luced a few months ago, since which Zola has done nothing of particular ‘Sikee {tfour‘an’ a fore beginning with the acid and salt. thee of maaley emnoking, acneny, tne {pstralant on’ the sronni ej the; fag: res roto .death importance. It was interesting, however, to see him buy a paper at a klosk and pass on among the crowd oy The best treatment for wrought steel, |thousinds of Enst Indian ccolles who pole; then measured both the shadow Miss JACK." se e ne him buy: al pang E Ee ta ae dare” Slwhich has a knack of growing gray, | werk on the banana and sugar planta. y Ganja! quite unrecognized. tlons throughout the colony. of the cane and the oane itself, and found one ratio of the proportion; then took the measure of the shadow of the flagpole, an he then had three terms ef the proportion, pmius the unknown ex- tveme, which can easily be found. The waknown extreme {a the height of the pole, i. M RIGHT. Would Wed an 014 Man, { To the Diltor of The Breaing World: T quite agree with the gentleman who says: “It's better to be an old man's Gerling than a young man’a slave," I have several giri frienda who mer- ried young men for love alone, and now they advise me not to do as they aid. For when poverty comes tn at the door love fies out of the window. S8-bs- a PUT TO THE TEST. is a variant of Indian hemp or bhang, says the Nashville American, which was employed to arouse the flerce passions of the rebel Sepoys during the Indian rutiny, and which to-day {s responsible in the wt for many cases of “running: amuck. The coolle who emokes this pernicious weed freely becomes an in- carrate flend, with the strongest homl- eldal tendencies. OR HOME Soe DRESSMAKERS. Tho Evening World's Daily Fashion Hint. $ AT THE B ‘To cut this waist for a miss of four- teen years of age 3 1-2 yards of material BOG. Mother Earth again, And thank thee for thy friend- ship. We aro men -~@ Who pride ourselves that we are very wise; 4 We throw our glances upward to Dear dead companion! Would that thou could'st know How humanilke we felt thy love 2 to bet 9 much to us thou wast, in ‘and! woe! Sorreltop—Why, I » know ‘twas raining. ferry, curious, willing 1!t- Y 3 Passer-By—My boy, does your y father know you are about to Smoke that cigar? Ta ae, shud say not! e'd want to sm uf . joke it in his defense, and-—- 3, Mamma—\When I think of my darling pet I could face raging Ions mamma in a minute. Mamma—Help! 4, Luchis—Goo, goo! Fire! Murder! Help, help! Bthel—Why is It that Mr. Nock: 8-3-99999096259 DDS DIAGNOSIS, q Ostrich—I swallowed only nr tew? hatchets. ® Doctor—Exactly; and now yous have a hacking cough. ¥ ® inches wide, 3 14 yards 27 inches @ MALL friend, 3 3 Rear ead teaid Se meee: gers so few Invitations this? |oiac, 2 2-6 yarda 33 inches wide er 3 fe Kive thea to our j ’ 1 2. Horace—Oh, ain't he gay! canes te ifeuct neal formns ae yards 44 inches wide will be required, with 3-8 yard of velvet ribbon to trim as illustrated. Tho pattern (No, 3,99, sizes 12, 16 and 16 years) will be sent for 10 cents, Send money to “Cashier, The World, Pulltser Building, Now York City.” > es the skies, ‘Yet cannot tell what death fn. Eyen when Thy lttle spark of life escapes ‘ our ken, $ We're lett to grope in sad and ~

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