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os : The EEActiorid. THE ished by the Press Publishing Company, No. 88 to 6& Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. UME (48..00..... 3c e0eseeeeees NO. 18,077. COUNTRY BOYS IN THE CITY. “Im his speech at the Metropolitan Club dinner given / his honor Mark Twain sald: Lheurd it Iptimated that it is New Engiand that makes York aud butids up this country and makes it great; loking the facts that there's a lot of people here who! % from elsewhere, like John Hay from away out West, | ¢ Wayne MacVeagh from away out in my Staie, ant) % fowells from Ohio, and 1 from Missouri, and we are doing “what we can to hulld up New York a little, to elevate Wg Why, when 1 was living in that village, Hannibal, Mo., fhe banks of the Mississippi, and Hay up in the town / Warsaw, also on the banks of the Mississippl River—well, 1£ was an emotional bit of the Mississipp: River, and if it! f@ low water you have to climb up to the town on a Iadder ‘and when it goes down you have to hunt for #t with a deep: ‘pea lead. It was a simple, simple Ilfe, oneap, but comfort able, and we were good boys and we did not break’ the| Babbath often—not more than once a weet. So we Krow— John Hay and |, and now John Hay Js Sceretary of Sta'e and I am a gentleman. \g Every great city is naturally a magnet for aspiring th in country towns, but this has been true of New| Work more than of ary other American city. Boston's great men of recent times; her Lowells, Holmeses, Emer- “eons, have been native born, and Baltimore's and Phila @elphia's also to a lesser degree. Chicago is hardly o!d enough for comparison. But New York's have largely | _ come from elsewhere, and this domestic immigration | % : thas been the source of much of her greatness. The new) 7 > Plood has given her the stimulus that red blood gives) _ the blue of a royal line. 2 | eed 8 OO4OOO4499900 9 OO8 99304491969 O9346496OOO0480088 oesrecccosececessousoocoooooocooes. PLOSOOOOO OOH SIO4ETI9 00090 DO Funny Things One Sees on the Sketched on the Spot by Artist Kahles. b.”. (On, YOu maKE “aE TIRED: : Many Questions on All Sorts of Subjects An- , Swered for Evening World Readers by Experts. THINGS ARE aoe DE A ‘ ING MY WAY 1 minor STRUCK IT rich) DAY, IN WALL 6T YESTERDAY. TES) (recose Sour Traps Plenty, at Wes rn. Girls. Jack Rabbitt. don't forget ts praise the the EAltor, ‘The ven World: | bricese that carried you over, Don't slur READ thai the y, men of Seattle | Jersey, for the Jersey farmer is wide- [e | and that vicinity looking to the | awak. and lookng out for your food © enst for their savtas 1 wish to say, | before you think about waking up im fy to: 1 SMOKE ue ut of Justice ro the’ Western girls, that | the morning, He Js up at 4 A, M., and ¢ beauty they cannot.be excelled, and | has a day's work done before you New ‘belleve there are enqugh there to| Xork Jack rabbits haye your eyes oper. ea any marital demand: 4 PATRIOT, Butler, N. J. A, SRATTLEITE, Maryland In Heard From, For “Pull De | Tote kulior of The tevening World: g To the Edtior of The Rieaing World: |] HAVB read with a deal of interest 3 Is it proper for a geatieman to wear a | the Ideas of men wio have b @ | black bow tle with full dre R. harping on the beautles of girls, of A white lawn fle is more correct for| various towns, Evidently their knowl edge of beautiful girls is confined to the scant 1 of those towns. | lave “full dress." Jack Hud No Tarkey. a at ag our frienci) ever been In the State of ‘3 Maryland or passed through the olty of Ealtimore? The city is famous for ting salt beef and cab- bage for a Thankszlyine dinner, while| |. “Auietloan besitles: EX-BALTIMOREAN. our ship was in harbor and not fifty | yards from & butcher's shop. Even in Mt In Pronounced “Pell Mell? To the EAlltor of The Evening Wor! Pics ro ae “THAT TRAIN! ¥ THE 1WO MEN WHO INSIST ON TELLING ALL THEIR BUSINESS IN A LOUD TONE OF the Tombs the ctiginais of the worst THE MAN WHO RUSHES UP TO THE sort enjoyed the'r turkey and a ‘aude- © ‘The metropolis attracted J. P. Morgan from Con-| {VOICE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE ENTIRE CAR, . Rsoors One A NICKEL were thew, Ie whew’ pbty pootrexumpie |’ Plelee alve me the proper: pkohunelay ‘nécticut, John D. Rockefeller from Ohio, Jay Gould and B(eaee You xinoty M of the treatment (owarca the dive |ton of “Pall Mall.” J. H. SCUDDER. ‘Ruseell Sage from up the State, Carnegle from Pitts- ()) EXCUSE ME FOR Jackets. C.R.W. | Apply to Heard of Education. Most of the kings of finance for several genera-| 1t Can Be Bought at Any Book Store) To the Raitor of Toe Evening World: To the Editor of The Eveniog World: iow can I get a boy on a schoolship? came from elsewhere. Its noted preachers Where can 1 get a copy of the story | Ht» age is nearly fifteen. rs oO ‘Beecher, a ae reat vniget Potter, eens Hay of “A Gentleman of France?”. A. R. Some Welrd Jersey History, iriventors, Edison and Tesla. painters and sculptors, | j Send “to Supertutendent of the! To the Fattor of The Hvening World Ohase, St, Gaudens, Its editors, from Horace Greely’s | ¢ Menagerie at Brows Wark. | [42702 the two provinces of West Jere sey and East Jersey forming one province, named New Jersey (meaning pigeon-ioed squaws"), which was gov- erned by Queen Anne and her successors unUl the election of 1896, at which time our support of the Republican nominees was fittingly recognized by admitting ts tothe Union, with the express provislo1 that literary inclined residents eho were united, To the Ediior pf The Evening World: which ‘A ymali aliigator, about a foot tong, | wan given to me, but as I have no use) for It I would Ike tv give ft away. How can J give it to the Bronx Zoo? JOHN \C, SCHULTHEIS. | | For Better Ventiintlon. | To the Fdltor of The Evening World: 1 would suggest in the Interest of the | ‘days on. Its lawyers, om Reed, Carlisle, Choate, Evarts, | » hotel-keepers, Parau Stevens, Boldt. Its great mer-| chants ‘of a former generation, Horace Claflin and A. T. i Stewart and Tiffany and those of the present, includin, "the department-store proprietors. Its theatrical man-| / agers and impresarios, the Frohmans, Henry Abbey, Maurace Grau. Its literary men, Howells, Clemens. Its engineers, the Rovblings and McDonald. THE OLO LADY WHO HAS WER! NICKEL TIED UP IN A HANDKER- CHIEF AND HOLDs uP THE i In every line of ‘ ublic health, that: some set rule be | ney Poiiiheitoe, indeed, the éh ‘ public bealth, never infMict the people with tales of the J e z. Di chief names WHOLE INE: FOR AN HOUR @|made for the ventilating of schools. | beauty of its girls, NEWARKER, ied one of adopted sons; save only, perhaps, in High | ® NWNRILE SHE'S UNTYING THE KNOT. © |Nbraries, and other pubjic bulld:ngs, as Wnts to'G Society. In that there may be a Lehr, a Mackay and Sihy féw." persons: tihdersthndlshow to} | jit ints to Grow. _ others of a newer importation, but most owe their posl- ~ 3 jeeoperly venlGiats ai rocete: inthe pubiiey Waar cht ae Berne 4 youn: @ |schools the childr tyres to the | v f Hon to native birth, the accident of descent from some| + @ wary g THE MAN WHO RESTS HIS FEET ON THE opPosite Benen oa aren ar mated” ana {man twenty’ years. of age, and I do not : | look any ‘more qm |, than fifteen, so @mall 4 ‘fortimate purchaser of an uptown truck farm a century What can I do to bulld myself Or-80 ago or a good fur trade in days long gone by. thelr: poor mothers have all the trouble. | THE MAN WHO SPREADS His NEWSPAPER OUT ALL OVER H I think the time has come to take such} SEAT AMD WIPES HIS SHOES ON THE PASSENGERS'CLOTHES * THE CAR AND WHO DOESN'T KNOW THAT THERES ANY ONE ELSE ALIVE q ‘Bat the men who have kept the city in the van of prog- fess and contributed more than others to make it great | eee, came from farms and towpaths and factories in| other parts of the ‘country. _ THE WORLD'S RICHEST WOMAN. The distribution of the immense Krupp fortune will be @ matter of even greater popular interest than its wccumulation, To the amassing of this fortune thres| wenerations of ambitious men—grandfather, son andj «randson-gave thelr united, persistent and Intelligent forts, For seventy-five years they tolled, the grani- peyorrrer s precious id the son melting up his few remaining pieces of plate to pay his workmen, the grandson bring- | ing to the administration of the great business extraor- dinary exccutive ability. Three-quarters of & century ins strenuous endeavor united with talent of a high order, “and tho reoult a magnificent industrial plant valued at $75,000,000 and real afd personal property worth as o a Women are not the only freaks who ride on “L" cars. There himan curios of the male persuasion who are entitled, to have their pecul- iarities described in big type on the bills of the continuous “L” road deville show. There are the Cross-Eyed Man and the Man with Whiskers, for instance, whose loud and lancinating talk makes the rest of the sengers wish that language had never been invented. AS EXPLAINED. "ag The man who man- BOON FOR HUSBANDS, ‘ are ages his feet so as to make them a public nuisance; the chap who holds his newspaper at arm’s length, as'if he were mensuring a pair of trousers, and a few others of the sante kind, set a warm pace for ‘the old lady stalled m the ticket window with her handkerchief tied in a Davenport Brothers’ Knot, and a long line of picturesque swearers behind her, all eager to catch an approaching train. yau- Ths- NO DANGER. AN AWFUL JOLT. POPS HGHOD SEG oe ‘| of the window. action as wil compel these cranks (for they are nothing else); to work by a thermometer, and not by the way they may happen to feel, and to ventilate from the top and not from the bottom : R. H. D. Ramadell, Pastor af the Chureh, Prenched To the Editor of The/Evening World: Who was the minisjer.who. preached | the sermon on ‘Thanksgiving morning ‘in the ‘Pilgrim Church on Madison and, Twelfth street?’ As to Ree ‘ro the Rdlidr of ‘The CORRESPONDENT if girls should drink beer in moderation. 1 would say that they. should not ev. F. induge In the use of such Hquors. The use of Iquots by Ritts of any age, ten- der or advanced, should be frowned | upon by: every pesson who has the wei- fare of America at heart. The occasion may from the to time demand the use Eat wholeaome food, sleep nine hours @ night, get all’ the out-door exercise you can, Join a gymnasium, leave Uquor and: tobacco alope. She Can Marry at Elghteea. To the Ediior of The Kvening World: L Says that a ‘girl can lawfully be married at the age of eighteen without the consen: her parents in New York Siate.-C saya she cannot before she is Who Is right? CONSTANT, In New York State'n girl of eighteen the consent of her tweaty-one. may marry withon parent: 157 East Sixty-seventh Street. To ihe Editor of The Eveniis World: Where can 1 get an application forthe Fore Department?! ¥, SMITH. An Echo of the Dog Agitation, To the Editor of The Evening World: KOPLE who hate dogs are not hu- Dogs are a protection to i rs ich more! A feat of German business success com- | 7 en 4 \oMyer-It must be a horrible tning to $|of, Navors; but mp \advice Js to ure 'P mene nila vho are alo} i parable in magnitude with the political feat of creating . Smith—Did I understand you to say be buried ally @ | Nquors*very sparing: 6 ff possib¢. | women and children i o ss i “the empire, @ that Skinner left Stringtown by rail? nce ssemitni ls coining money with Gyer—Yes; but the chances of that ‘he fools are not all dead yet," sald 4 , “ , ‘AO; Rs | me ane MS rea ethno NS : is ® Jones—You did is latest Invention, sort of thing are very slight in my the angry husband. 3 * Says New York” a Bavaevesne, coat /sunmaker’s, will) his) daughter 2 Smith—But there are no railroads. Miles-€o? What is it? Bada: F Mt alga or lLvduaet (ealnlySrepiied) not eine eaves eae x jaro not as honest as como dos. Tam “Bertha inherits the factory and his widow and younger No; but there are plenty of Giles—Black billiard chalk. Married Myer do you think so inal ather hale etitneroorabination; il | il AeAueterepecadent named Cavan tgraleeslece ie heer thine rae daughter Barbara the remainder of the estate, A girl men tike to it Ike ducks to water, Gyer+I never visit Philadelphi fever did) look’ wellutn’ binok: g Nowaticlibimutteen ene dink sore 1p A LOY FRIED be Hot yet of age thus becomes the wealthiest young 0248668 |New York and educated in New York |Wants to Ne “English in Dress == in the world, her wealth exceeding the combined are (to speak wlihout exaggeration) in a| To the er ot a Breaths ods ah Me cHon, “whic t 0 be En, New York. Friulein Krupp witt have a tarser in-|| Mine, Judice Helps Home Dressmak | kK rew Re ks auoject (9 crttcan. od tall can tet you what low without being subject to criticism.| Any good tallor can tell yo _ ‘some than Helen Gould, Miss May Goelet, Miss Rhine- e-. ud ers. A mar © Mr: Krug, whenever I Indulge in a blast | the present eas myles in dress are, » the Misses Brice, the Misses Butler and all the A 5 of the pipe t use tobaccs, not soft coai. Costume for Theatre, Riucteamiheadea by itwodar tires BANGE ike aikow. Mostly on Topics of the Day. | Bev the dimerence? F! MM, | [re tne Baltor o ng Wesld: - other very rich unmarried women of this city. A) ~ eaaatic fortune, probably the largest estate ever pos- “nessed by a woman jn private life in the world’s history. Is it proper to wear a diamond ud with a Tuxedo sult at an evening per- formance jn the theatre? Is It proper enlarging the sleeves bo Six ¢ the app lof escuria! lace, set In, ‘This will lengthen the upper part and allow you | to push the slik upward, thus reforming \seore Wan 22 to 0 In Harvard's Favor. v binck sik or fur frogs down | May December foliow the “open winter poltey of the past) t will give tt quite an up-to-date | eignt months! Your material Is known as ’ Mme. Judice, who Is connec! with one of the leading dress- rance, | FAnd: what will she do with It? Remain a spinster, {J Making establiahments of thle} the darts. Cut off the superduous goods] silk ptusn—og aenl pinsh sis ae ine atten te | Ta phe acon of te ugsing Werits | for a gentleman who escorts two dadies ‘S Bsn high {deals about the administration of riches for |f Clty, has been ured rd The yeaa Hoses aibathoan olealct my | FOR A BANQUET. pea a aent mortality'rate can no longer rély on the wid of} ) Nee Nae S. 1801> eer to ie) theatres mee cents ion dn F the beneft of humanity, doing through Ife oppressed || Evening World: and Hil OMT) asttia and wash like you would any- | Pitta Mos dudet: a alrngie Sedaha tien uaa he geiher and the gentleman sit at one ) with what Mr. Charles M. Schwab, with one-fth of her || duct. this department. in which | ching cise, in water, only do not wring| and do Boe et te eee oD | 1. remains to be seen how near the payment of Sturgis’s| To the Rdlior of The Hrquiag World: det P. E, RICE. Possessions, calls the ‘disabilities of wealth?” home dressmakers will Be given | ——— | Ve a white silk wales <itverty), 18| “political debt" will come to breaking him. -READ the letter of President Roose- |" 54. riage. if Questions relat: proadcloth or a black sili skirt} SE yelt outlining his ylews on the ap-| 4° wixedq js informal rather than |} helpful advic Ing to dreesmaking will be an- swered by Mme. Judice. Or dens with her? polntment of Southern negjoes to office. ‘The President's views are right. All men,are created equal and all.strould and a diamond A will she consent to have a man share those It shé does the historian of the evening dress, formal prop’ worh with It. eiud Is not Thm the President of | 1. K., Brook.yn, N.Y. Only the man wit silk skirt is quize a soul above the actuallties of life can in a coal Joke whén te thermometer j see anything funny urlous will add one more to bis collection of accidents | Proper worn with your white Mberty | sinks to 22 . gentleman dors not. sit between two MEARE se°= tie ‘acaulaition ofiaifortune\ because of the sil waist at the barajuet. \ ‘ I \peaeete se heed pea ea n ree ea ladies, but usuatly at the side nearest ; possession of some prepossessing personal trait. What | 2" asl sete ne cate tebe TO CLEAN OSTRICH PLUMES. ' ‘The “predigestec” breakgant_ food |which have made our country so Inge | '"° conti “Dr le? Story. { 5 D | s Dear Aime, Juice Wil] soon or late be beaten t i : _Will be the primal moving cause to determine her cholce | eam vollo evening dress for young TAT Howe llicanccleanichiay. By denis pew LiRAtiRR a hiel es geod jand prosperous. WHITE MAN. | 5, ing paltor of Tie Evening World: —a Heidelberg scar acquired in a student duel or a woman of twenty-five and rather | Ostrich Diver also how cay And likewlso is “pre-eaten.”” J. Morgan Waa Bore April 17,! [66 OHN DREW" his chair up and *Hohenzollern title? It may be that the limpulse which |*!'m- Would Ike a lace yoke effect. | a eet RC e : “isnt, ~ placed "Phe Ever slipper" on the . | rookly ALK. B, ti . s fo i : ra tet on boty, 5 3 Am n: "Moved & young officer to curl his mustache upward in | Fete salieiey : mth an (6 ravine tte: | “Lf you Haid $1,000,000 what’ wodid you do? qo" (he Rélior of The Evening World: ra lbalieovay being "The Snark Set | the Kaiser's style will win him this great fortune. Branttibty wingeldkeche'ake ; 1 Sours truly, ispchity idhDest: | “Why. 1 wouldn't need to do anybody then.” what ‘year waa J, Pi moraae Nata, rent As altthy, fCATrote sana bined with pale yellow panne velvet! } vo clean white Ceathars tnmerae then | _ ‘ {"Onlons”. from. “Old Limerick Town," IN PRAISE OF SOUP. Jand rennslaance Ince, ‘The ginged #int fo cholt Uae In heohtae ee beueioes |, te, always neglects to put anything Jn the grnirlouLon Conmos Marty Without Conment | anna Held” presented “The Sword of Fatong with the condemnation of cold food a word may |\s trimaed at the foot with Iinwes {a @ ¥egond dlah of the ga al tate. 4 Until Eightcen, the. King’ to “!thel Barrymore,” but “Contributory negligence, ent’) % ; “pe sald in praise of hot soup. The old Southern mammy joi band of p ana mati jdry in the gpen air, Mud stains can ; pecs i SES: s se of ‘The Brening World: ' | 'The Btu’ Ban of Gbnpinias areas i tell vou'that y {a band of the ta aged bioUtse J Usually be removed: from sUk by rub-! , ; ; Cane girl seventeen years und ninejed telly) in O rom play’ a ‘ * i Bes {s an Inferior article of diet because | any qowin: bishop ye Manuel. It tne stain It's hard for poor, forks to gain flesh months, did mary without the consent of} wit} “A Count which afte joes not stick to the ribs.” ‘The French housew.f, | with a ind fe rub with Manndt “satu! And win a figire round, her parents In New Yor. BPN. J. |[iwand Interrupted "The Night Haske't thovght the: ‘with superior intelligence, makes it the basis of her! the lace wer nol. Since Neri ar market bells just now Party"? Cuisine and enables the French coctologist to point to|Yeivet bands and opening over a guaged H AU twenty cenis n pound) Wein te Ly! fGesénblnny nd had come, but Faversham thovsht it @ x6 of white ¢ 1 | ie To the dltor of the Evening Word: td ’ (bed His nation as the best nurtured in the world. [LO ROrR EON ULES CD OR Rubs ou Ht" pee {mark of “timpruden when ‘ @ lace yoke It can easily be substituted | The pluskia’s left Us for the,year |srHE practice of “tipping” bas Ninety’aha Nine" found'shciter “Unde Phe importance of soup in a French houschold {8 1::~ | Catton 1s considered modein, ‘The | And SUES Mientst wed ra Rucibs | [come an ta:mott intolerable nate | eed no! WILATASK CEE, Gleated by its prominence in the French vocabulary. | suaget or "shir in entire} PeaheeeA ELAR Ran DOT cl aoe For Uncie Sam will tyizy,.we fear, leeaeerntaat er erat ie Saal Quinguagedima Sunday, For ovr sole culinary term used to cover all forms of it, | fOwA !6 part! becom: | L attfpdia: rubber if napntita te at Hisitavoel terran omaraet i Ce Mancumh without the exaction | 72 ibe Ea'tor of Toe Breniax World the invalid's broth, they have q-| [ne to: alone Weak AC rae : ch| 4 peehis | OR what day of what month did Quine _oxcept have numerous desis-| daran nd REAM VOILE ach jor etips” In addition. Formerly quagesima Sunday. fall this year? > amo nful ap five words--soupe, potage, bouillon, congommé, purée, | \ crash belt with long loon (aM have thelr soniee In the pot-au-feu, the habitual slin- {back of the ye low panne velvet ing of which in American kitchens wontd “do more | 79 PRESHEN UP GARMENTS. banish dyspepsia than any other single agency tee © the pot-an-feu go onions, carrots and other vege- | ,oNase ig “ 3 a few herre, water in the quantity needed and| skirt. has @ piece of becf that is its foundation. The flutshed | fut Lt ssems rather'a pity (hag the cow which Christian Beience | hracut has failed to cure was not experknented on in time to let the warning of the fallure eayg “yifew inore human lives, was confined ulmost Wholly to the high-pr.ced hoters and ‘restaur-nits, |bu, Within the poss year or so it has besome: quite ¢9mmon -{n those ‘of the popu.ar’ pried Cam ie great ma-9 jJoviiy of peopis? Wid pa.rua.ze these Ladecs simpy eaaios with tg) Gunate & noker ueu dade to Lie Warner evenly UY 0. LW ee bee be Blopy ue VAC. AM, Karly Cloniyls, Cor Groderten. fo the Kaitor of The kveuing Worja, | { hopercto wee every surquery atore ose TO CIOCK every Migul, ab mune veo. (eridays.and saturdays excepled), Bungay ail aus, 2 Hy Defends Hin ‘sate, ro. the, Eiton atthe ve, c sack, Rabbitt" wrices to aK Mf there| fe a Button, of New ver) Lay the mackintosh t binging the edges a plece of coth as near you have (on the wrong ad place a weight on them unih ement Js hardened, when It wil be LOW CHURCHMAN.. au nquagzerima Sunday was Feb, 0 An to Block nad. Fo ins BAtor of The kevening Worlds A frlend tells me Block Island, R. Ly has no Jail. no eriminels and no pau- pers, Ie it true? FRANK A. R. Block Island has no Jail and on y one policeman, ‘There have been no, gray cflmes committed there in many years, Mhere are anid ty be'no paupers; moat of the fisher Inhabitants being In une ‘utualty good financial circumstances, ‘The Story Not True. To the rota! ot The arene Workout Ts, the: we any trut the | #bory Gar OW. Harris was pardoned by" Governor rhe night before. aie execuil And that the telegram i di In. El yatta ADOLPIL LAND. Flesh, (en'gned tor Ni alr on a coat-hange from tre whl Hang in the | to dry, Keep away [using naphiba, Jox}) As half-inch tucks are so popular Aah | snirtwalsts, why not make your cash-) mendd, “aint te) Mere this way and outline each tuck. CRGANDLE BALL DRESS. And | with French Xnoty in pale blue or bluck.! Dear Mme, dudice: use| Collar, cuffs "and erush girdie of vely | 1 shoud dav gomething su his posmivie ns [t+ 10 mater shade of French knose wilt! ti" “64 Ral wine frum Meoted sane powsliie. a : ise W., dicmpsicad, by 1. i, an ant haven't make avery pretty walat } Your Sample dresden fgured Nel! | A SEAL-PLUSH COAT. | org tie wlth hasrow lace atripe run-} | ting through [t, will make up artistic ly by cutting the stripes in the bias and meeting V-shaped down the front of the cireular skiry and simple _ blouse ; Mtve| fastened. behind, “Whih' handkerchler-| a ort cort th'a| shaped ruffle’ at the bottom of the iS) blush called? WB, Be. Oradell, Ne J jkirt and around the shoulders and edge Bugera tone ch tailoring ae quite In'my | of the elbow sleeved bordered with fut- Une, as Is every other kind of dressmak- Ing. and my advice to you in to have'al Cea tienen and Pes cn bere hers Though on the Hail of Records they've Iaid another brick, | « | The stress of such fierce effort. may tura the builders sick. MeanWhile the work on It remains, throug days of rain and sun, j Ldke the old tale of done.” Dear Mme, how to fr bl or “woman's work.” because it's ‘never ix the bonillon, a most nutritious soup in itself ¢ basis of the various consommes which are the) jon” of souvs. ye of bouillon with bread and butter is « com- wal in itself, In it are the muscle-making pro-; rarbo-hydrates, the needful fats and salts. As ft far surpasses cu equal bulk of sandwiches ‘Napoleon cake. the Southern mammy’s allegation is not (ial man pf science has proved that fluids i#imore so than soup which to this ihe the Dalate ‘by. its wayor, |b" the hook. ‘ stylish atid) pretty very x skirt, age very much, four years ago, well tn the darts; too long, “I dont mj mo} WT tak Walsc Ifow can Ic a Wibatross waist, tueked nd how can I 'make up ang stylish walst three ¥ th” cream white mind work, but want {t pretty, Usually, the old.fashioned’ skirts are wide enough to permit recutting to new styles, Buy @ pattern of this season, rate ot Jacket made of your old. three- quiring as Age material as possible, and! quanter length coat, and uge the part this, Use the bad “Hounces £4. the eyt off fur wide mae storys oollar a “Why does a miller wear aawaito i 1 don't know, But if he wears tt tn thé heighborhood of Phos he's lable to have a stxlped sult added to It." sh coat) guts The Delaware conviet football players have more experience f «fate, jin gaols than In goats, but ns ie could and went) Despite Alderman Goldwater, every. dog will continue to ards of anil eaxhmere? De mad: ef Dome have his day. * A Pr ‘There Te Ga Whom every slight obstac young fellow in ‘Tex, aby 4 5 of th : ae aly aah ~ y. sy Se lcaaas |