Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
a American. HARRIET HUBBARD AYER IS THE FORE- MOST WRIT®P.SPECIALIST ON WOMAN'S HEALTH AN# BEAUTY.—Philadelphia North HARRIET HUBBARD AYER WRITES OF WINTER BEAUTY. » Cold Winds Play Havoc with @omplexions, but Here Fre tarmless Remedies Cheeks, and Practical for Chapped Lips and and Seasonable Suge $estions for Caring for the Skin. NAR MRS. AYR: I auffer fright- dD fully ut this season of the year froin chapped skin. Is there any way in the world to prevent chapped Up#-and the burning sensation of the whole face, which maken life really a misery to so many persons every win- ter? Please give a treatment for your thin-skinned followers i shall be one ofthe TRULY GRATEFUL. «The effect of the cold wind upon the face fe not unlike that of the scorch- ing rays of a summer sun, ‘The skin deperda upon the flow of Perspiration and ofls through the pores for its elnaticity and smoothness and @utiny appearance. A cold, Liling wind will produce al- fost the identical effect upon the euticle as exposure to a scorching sun. That {s to say, it will dry up or exhaust the natural flow of persptra- tion and oily matter, which provide ourishment for the skin and keeps tt fresh and moist. So a chapped skin in winter 19 In prac- tloally the same condition as a sun- burned face in July or August. "As the skin chaps because {t has been deprived of nourishment, !t naturaily fol- Jows that the way to keep It smooth ‘s to furnish a substitute for the ofls upon which {t feeda and which the wind ‘burns away. Before you venture into the cold try * the ounce-of-prevention cure. Give your skin a cold-cream bath. Wrap a bit of soft linen about your “fingers and dlp Uberally into the cold- cream. Smear carefully all over the face. The skin will only absorb a certain sthount, and In a few moments the ‘tuperfiuous cream should be carefully wiped. off with a soft cloth. Now dust \ @ little harmless face-powder over the]. face and you may venture out without fedr of returning with a wind-burned countenance. But you must take precautions alto \Wben you get home. Most women experience a frantic de- “tire for a xvod scrub after home com: ing from an outing, There never was @ greater enthusiast in the soap and water direction than 1 am and have ‘been for years. But it won't do to scrub the delicate | face immediately after exposure to cold ‘weather, Another cream bath is required. You can remove the dust and powder | with a Lberal application of @ colt ream and an hour later you may batho with a bland without fear of the consequences, Recotlect that face chapping means a Starved skin crying for nourishment, and that the hungry cuticle can be quickly fed from the surface by un- 4 guents. Chapped lps require the same t the face. A rose tinted cream Is best for the Ups 9 it does not show. Bvery face should Tecelve a thorough cleansing with hot water and soap at least once In twenty- | four hours. The beat time for this !m- portant ceremony ts at night jut before | retiring, * No facp can be beautiful unless it ts kept scrupulously clean, Boap and water applied by any of the! ‘) “eamel's hair face brushes In the form of | ‘a lather and afterward thoroughly Tinsed off with clear water is the only Teal way of ri@ding the skin of dust from the streets as wok as of the resi- @ual solld matter of the persptratory | glands and the sebaceous matter from the off ducts which, if not kept free Open become congested and produce lackheade and pimples. I know from a long experience as well “&s from the testimony of thousands of “oonverts to the acrubbing brush, the use “ot which ag a complexion beautifier I originated a doaen years ago, that the mentle friction it creates not only thor- @ughly cleanses the skin, but through exciting the cutaneous circulation the brush invigorates and refreshes ‘whole system as well as the skin, A face scrub is really exhilirating and fnnumeradle. women have written me they (eel like beginning a new day after @ hot face scrub, _ After the night scrub dpply a tollet ‘ream, not of necessity what ts com- “fionly known as cold oream. but an e@molient of a kindred naiure. ‘Phe cucumber creams are excellent, ‘Witoh hazel cream acts ike a charm fm many cases where the skin chaps . ‘® 1 give formulas for creams that aro made without diMeulty over a chafing @ish flame or Kas stove. { Pollow the formula carefully and be Bate you get the exact ingredients call- “ed. for: ‘Orange Wiower Cold Cream.—Oll of @weet almonds, 4 ounces; white wax, 6 dreams; spermaceti, 6 drams; borax, 2 +2 ounces; orange 53 2 ounces; of] of nero, 15 @ropa; oll of bigarade (orange skin), 15 + ofl of petit grain, 15 drops, Melt the threo first ingredients, add ‘the glycerine to the orange flower water 04 dissolve the borax in the mixture; _ shen pour it slowly into the blended fats, atirring continuously. Witch Hazel Cream.—I ounce of white wax and epermaceti, 1-4 of ofl of almond : Dour into @ mortar, which has! been heated by being immersed some me in bolling water. Very gradually add three ounces of rose ounce of witch hazel, and stir the mixture until an emulsion is/ formed, and afterward until the mixture is nearly cold. Cucumber Cream.—Vaseline, 10 ounces; lanoline anhydrous, 6 ounces; tincture of benzoin, 1 ounce; cucumber fuloe, freshly expressed and strained through absorb- ent cotton, 10 ounces. Mix the vaseline and lanoline, incor- porate the tincture and lastly the juice. Out the cucumbers into smajl pleces and heat them in @ gteamer till they are pulpy when they are ready to atraln, Do not peel them. Red Lip Salve.—Spermaceti, ounces; white wax, 1 ounce; almond of, 4 ounces; alkanet root, 3 dramas. Melt all in a water bath. Let it near- ly cool and add belsam of Peru, 4 drame; ofl of cloves, 20 drops; essence of ambergris, 3 drops. Harmless Face Powder.—Finest corn starch, 1 ounce; pure oxide of zine (best quality), 3 ounces. Mix thorough- ly and sift through very fine bolting silk; reject all that remains in the bolt- ing asllk; s(ft the second tle through ¬her bit of bolting silk; perfume with three drops of oll of rose, 1 14 S ——— The Tiny Ten-Millionaire} Guarded by a Small Army of Physicians, Nurses Walets and Friends in a Palace — The Tenement Youngster Suffering in Destitufion. OHN NICHOLAS BROWN, aged three years, helr to $10,000,000, and living at the Waldorf-Astoria Ho- tel at an expense of not less than $5 a day, and George Freeman, aged three years, heir to nothing at all, and living at No. 008 Watera ntreet, at an ex- pense of probably lesa than five cents a each | day, are both lal up with colds. pint | The $10,000,000 boy is being cared for and sealously guarded in a citadel of luxury and plenty: the penniless boy ie quffering amidst misery and want— scarcely a crust between him and star- water and one, vation. assiduously} It in no fault or credit of etther of them that he is where he is; the comfort of the one and the wretohednoss of the other are due to circumstances which they were helpless to shape and are now helpless to alter, Tt in simply John Nicholas Brown's luck to be a sprig of wealth, and George Freeman's misfortune to be a ward of Poverty, Still it Is Interesting to con- trast the widely different treatments fate hes provided for those two young- sters and to philosophi as to their futures. The philosophising is left to the reader, however, who may see in the poor lad a future President of the United States, and in the $10,090,000 boy a worth- less product of money-throned society, The faets are all The Evening World gives here. John Nicholas Brown fs the richest baby in the world, made so by his in- heritance of the colossal fortunes of his father, John Nicholas Brown, and his childless uncle, Harold Brown. He is a blue-eyed, blond-hatred child a little over three years od. From his birth he has been the object of the tenderest cai and solicitude. He {s surrounded by a corps of se he Nicholas Browrs. vants whose mission in life {s merely to do his bidding. His personal attendants are three—two nurses and a valet, who, under the per- sonal supenvision of his devoted mother, minfster to his slightest want, When John Nicholas Brown goes out for a drive these two nurses and a footman accompany him. He {8 a healthy child ordinary, though at birth he was Inclined to be fragile and it required the constant care of two physicians to keep him in @ physical condition which, notwith- standing their skill, was greatly In- ferior to that of the normal baby whose mother goes out to wash and whose Mttle sister bestows upon him the desul- tory, untrained attention of a willing but ignorant child. Shortly after John Nicholas Brown was christenea he was vaccinated. He caught cold following this and his two for a week. When he grew better the dostors; recommended a sea voyage, and with his mother and his retinue of servants) he sailed away for a summer outing. It required ele trunks to convey the little millionatre's belongings to the other side. With him went hia mother, Mrs. John Nicholas Brown, his aunt, Mrs. Harold Brown, two trained nurses, a skilled physician and a valet. In October of 190l he returned from his Buropean trip greatly benefited in health, and until the development fast weok of the coki with which he is now suffering had not given his fond rola- tives anxiety. He Mes in a darkened room in the Waldorf-Astoria surrounded by every luxury that wealth can furnish or the tender care of a mother can devine. By his bedside two white-capped nu-ses can, the embroidered coverlet In hand, they ‘and watches) > keep minutely guard on A $10,000,000 BOY AND A TENEMENT BOY WITH HOW THE RICHEST LAD IN AMERICA AND THE POOREST FARE a ittle vest, and ings cover his thin Uttie lege. Two small rooms constitute the liv! hs baby ov apartment of the Freeman fam Two phy hover constratly about | which consists of a consumptive fat? >. his bedstde—never leaving {t—and|the mother, three-year-old Georg: 911 wileper reasvuringly to his tall, grace-|Naby Stella, aged tweaty months 2 ful mother, who was cne of the four | family has not @ penny in the worl’, beauulful Dresser sisters. corridors of the Dig hotel bellb: messengers bring measnges and cards| hy freo din ry. When he ort. of sympathy from the friends and rela- hat comfort a mlcer tives of the Httle alling cht and mother can bestow This is the condition in wh Evening World reporter found George Freman, heir to nothing @ bright three-year-old, whose able home is at No. © Water st In a@ squalid room in the rear poorly ventilated building, the lit valid whiles away the time ay Tae Freeman home Is co! Through the orge coughs he ho ts giv c a n and|dore of medicine procured from a 1 ch an Httle| ‘The room tn which George spends his at time Ie not aa warm an a barefooted miser- |invalid would desire. Coal Is high and met. | the only fire the Freemans haye in me vt a|from scrape of wood plored up by the tte Ine 5 down on the docks. best he ' is cold he hes to rub 1, worm and SHE LOVED HIM. A By Charles Garvice. soap and warm water | precautionary and after treatment es ; the} SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING OHAPTERS, Lord Clyde Layton has secretly married Teese Harewood, Through the machinations of Lady who loves him, oma Bessts docora~ © Duchess of Swarthmore. fe sent there to aid. In arranging the tlons and comes face to face with ethel, fcciarepees from Charles Garvice's novet Loved Him.” by permission of (au Munro's Sons, (Copyrighted, 1906. by George Munro's fers) ! CHAPTER IX. | — Beuste’s Victory. HE Duchess stared up at the pale T face. which hed grown paler, whiter, “Who {ts who?" sne responded sharply. “What on earth is the matter with you? Do you mean this young lady? Bre as come ahout the flowers. Have you taken leave of your senses, Bthel?” Lady Ethel stretched ont her hand, ojacuiating: No, no! fend her away! Send her away | The Duchens stared at her. “Rand hee ewayl nopeatet Lady | Dthet. “She has no business here; sho |-she—han come to make migchlef! I-I iknow her! She—she !# not fit to be here —not fit for you or me to speak to her!" {aho panted “What” gaid the Duchess, staring from one to the other. But her gaze rested longest on the sweet face with its blush of indignation, and she must have been more tmpressed by It than by Lady Bthel's wild words, for she turned to the latter brusqueiy. | “That's @ cruel thing to say it-it tt {18 not true, Dthel," she said, “What do you know about her?’ "I know all about her!" panted Lady hel, with her hand at her throat again. “She has played a trick, You see for yourself that she Is not dead.” The Duchess stared at her in epeech- less amazement for a moment. ‘ot dead the exclaimed. “Of course I see she is not dead! Pthel, you have taken leave of your senses! If you haven't, explain—expiain ¢his in- stan and ehe stamped her foot. “‘I-I_ will explain,” said Lady Ethel, painfull, “after—after she has gone, For God's sake, send her away before— before he sees her. It ts all a trick, She has planned it to—to come between us. She bas chosen her time’— “Whether you speak or not this young jady willl remain,” said the Duchess, sternly, “I ask you again, Ethel, to ex- Plain the meaning of your words. You know her it eeems; you know something mgainst her, and you want her to leave the house before Clyde—was it Clyde?— wees hor! Why?" ‘Ask her,’ sald Lady Bthel. “No, ahe will not tell you. But I must, She ip here to create @ disturbance, She— she has a hold upon Clyde und has come to take advantage of it." The Duchess's face grew sterner as turned It upon B ‘ls that 607" sho demanded. Bessie stood for a moment as If speech were imppssible, Within. her heart burned, like a consuming fire, the temp- tation to cry: “I am his wite! his wifet’, bat she beat it down, “I will go,” be sald faintly, almost ineudibly, As whe spoke a cerriago drove up to the door amd the Bari and field got out and en- “And what Lady Paulett says ts true The door opened and the Harl and —that you have come here to create @| Countess of Northfield entered and stood disturbance?" “No, m0; oh, no!" sald Bessie, Stock-still, staring like the rest. Bessie opened her eyes and, with a Bessto moved toward the door lke} convulsive shudder, clung to him for a one in @ dream, and hed almost reached | it, when it opened and Clyde entered. moment, then shrunk back as far as his arms would let her. A STIRRING ROMANCE OF ONE WOMAN’S HEART. Frith @ Iteme of malignant triumph burn- ing in her dark Mh paw the marn age certificate the day you and I went to Lendale, my lady,” she oid, with mock respoo! Lady Bthel's face Slanched, and she shrunk back a step; then she recovered herself instantly. “heave, the room!" she said. haughty, | “You here, Duchess?" he sald. ‘My| ‘Bessie! Open the window!" he cried.| ‘giay!" sald the Duchess people have arrived and"—— ‘Then he| "Bessie, my darling! Lock up; it is 1] beon keenly nowing the various phanes of REUNITED. WITH A CONVULSIVE SHUDDEA CLUNG TO HI LM. Harry—your husband!" To the Kattor ef The Byeciag. Word J think Mr © Brown ix oy mistaken 11 remarks conc the name Kate, and saying ri that name are ill-tempered. ©: contrary, I think anybody blessed by the name of Kate !s for There Are Law To the wilter To the MAtto- of )A reals To the Eiior wear suminor 8 year Gli sb contented | readers. oes LETTERS, QUESTIONS, . | ANSWE New Jersey Divorces. To the Miltor of The Evening We Can an abnolute divorc for utter desertion in the ob Jersey? Wilful desertion for a years or more forms gro) voree In Now Jersoy. Namen and Letters. thing (that's good, as the lett stands for kindness, A for truthfulness and EB for eco 3. Rooks at L cory. Evening Works: brary where Ad “Reolproctts!? Worte L The a tree | Oks? Hn for y gives yo ut te owe change la ten roclty Mt Trentment, And she A certain vo sod ner £0. be aby s aur fronen. Sae ft would ke advice THE OLB RELIABLE rue of tw fo ability you buy, pparel this time of the iP CASTORIA Gt Infants and Children, Tha Kind You Haye Always Bought |< ears the Cithet. gedtars ee . RS. tained New R, ° ar ue PSRYHEOT . Foath Powder tr or ths of the AN BLEGANT TOILET LUXURY, at is very. Used by poople of refinement ar is for over a quattor of & centtry. a ne creer ae en no Amusome ents. H. .enox WINTER’S VICTIMS. joat and he’ troure 8} , Sees Not take a dally constitutio \ be had in ail craw] tntq the family ped where mother and children sleep. 07 1) Sia George has no toys to amiss Eimeettrnll with, but he found the stub bi oll pencil the other day, and now ish efforts to draw help hin me. For amusement he camiioo! a dingy window onto a «i dirty court, or he ean play om! with a hatchet and any — kindling wood, ¥ The dlot of this chita of the elums ts not etipervised with the attention n sary ir the building up of @ young body. No foods especially to chil@hood fall to his hungry tomach, George eats when ha can what he can, Moat frequently bay net eat at all. Yesterday some breakfast given the mother, who bad been? Oy iooking for work, but they equid. ‘« for they had no milk. or wugar. When tho Freemins can ao gether a few cents they buy #01 tnea end Geonse partakes Of them, '» bot fea at stated Intervals. lice caratully nurtured baby, ‘Tt th anything In the’ house hungry I give'lt to fle |myid the mothor. “If there'ain |hos to cry himself to sleep,’ George's hours are not particular regularity. He crawls out Of he family ted any time he % ta ; (ho morning and be goos tox (he mate rules, Sometimes when, ovid In the mirerable reomt p Ul) the viol facher goes to bed, Oth (ines he crawla uzder the thin b curly in the ovening, George, with his goor little. bare must spend his thne In the h to keep warm by the stove, when @ 3 fuel to heat It, “The llttle i but ne teat oy wana are regardeg tle George Freeman, tur Brown ayaa su wand not wonder! 5 and Warm like his rth ers. Itue child doesn't know any ot ee cl upan bs legacy malting home | by > cai. Special Bargains og kinds of up-to- CALL, AND BE CO) -GUUAGHY FUR OL, SRA. Yor, erese “YISIT PROCTOR mata oll ie. Dall Sh ~ Pall 8 r0-Da! ‘TO. bate (Cenlnnetn Seuserl the I Carrot, Ki ints de ae 7 Minale Sallen an. Great_Vauderiite, | june vie Teen, Cah ty Hae Bip eine Yip Resch Va 1 can AY La Noten # Pato n ard Irolde f aad oa a Wel a someday, 5 eee i cs "8 Vadis Stimraunna 45 bt LDID 16 Pr ie is trom. | end ne | | | | srttrine _Mattones, Chetstman and | Acabiw J. SOF LY me. chAUNCEY | ' OLcoTT Lou Lima “Bante jhe THUS, HLLAT ec! FISKE ee Ayrrg) teed se Sorry 4 gab nw d kc. sf sack Vin ge uBiC. Sarva weiadtane ‘THE NINET NTSLO2 SATS Wee, PASTOR'S Ne uttered a loud ory and stagrered bank, Only for an inatant did his eyes res: In wild terror and doubt on the face en- graved upon his hoart; the next he had sprung forward and had got her—rhost or human, quick or dead—in hig arms “Bessie! Bessie!’ he cried, ali his heart and soul tn hie votce, all the sor- row and yearning of the long months of bereavement expressed In that cry upon her name. “Bessie! Is it you? You, you! Am I mad or dreaming? Speak! Is * you, alive? Oh, my darl- ing! My darlin For @ moment these two were alone in the world, though Lady Ethel wa: leaning against ihe wall with her hand pressed bo her heart, thouch the Duchess stood stock still, turned to stone, and speechleas by the terrible scone. “"Beeste—she's fainted! ya fy water ome one! Water! Bessie! Bring My with only halt she srove to nd feebly trlod All saw the Even at that moment, her senaes at command, carry out her snerifice, ah hersel{ from him. e. eried, as if In her fm to restore her it seamed all that He!’ Clyde nana there lay a ch to him jessie!" ary fe could way. Th Tide was tho first to recover io! he turned to her desperate Tie is my wife flee pred ee GC gor with got entanglea, and who, exercises an extraordinary over him." A groan came from Lady Northfinid. iA music nall singer! she exclaimed. "Yes," snid Lady Ethel, “Her name— of her namos—is St, Clalre. used to perform at a low t End, where doubtles w he ‘At iny. earneat. solialtation 4 consented to release lim from his sbametut bondage.’ Clyde, bending over Besse, heard, but he un: enough “nim to ery, ' Lady Ethel !aughed 1s of Very little interest put the truth had beter be told, and when did you marry her, fascinat roarcely to "Elyae halt stopped, removed his eves eunie's face, and stared at Lady men eantemptuous one. “Where?” she stammered, * and All Angels’, Is jon, monotonous voles Thia is my! 5 thie, exetting scene. “Wn vy? You went to--where antag Lendale, whore Lady Leyton was lodging G * demanded th replied Agat and with her dare ‘Ethel'a white face. been by that calm! Axed on Ludy y mistress had . Dorchester Lady Layton— emphaajs. nd ady Levi ton had Pee Lad Agatha Rode looked at Bilently for A.Moman®, then he took a wold penell- turned {n tho direotion of the eaker; nnd Lady Wthel, as she saw face je, her @ slight move- meat tomate ‘know? How dare your’ looked at her steadily case from her “T found thie. i et bomen ‘a bed- ee on that eat ah id, Poaiety, will Rican Siete ee 2 Sook tt it and oe a Absolutely Puro THERE [S$ NO SUBSTITUTE Amusements hese AN Ra, Me vie 1 A.M, me a rn 4 COHANS. oo SER, Hil, = oa GOODWIN — ELLIOTT. nth ALTAR OF FRIENG. GARDEN N THEATRE. a at ings, 8. MAL ce) Faturday, Ta E.. S. WILLARD cane $—DAYID Canta dia bisos 0. THEATRE, 21th st, A dich -MANSHIELD 2.3 We Baer. gi StF last Mat, 9.15 Ga Nd CH TA wet eat AGREE ie Stee BROAD THE SILVER SLIPPE MASELLE GIL? , B MOCK bY inane VHS. Mire! o rr ot Bre “ie BR an Bi Laan} EDEN "Sikebttbomtshes “Din F i, OLR E AE ats by oye AMERICAN Rvae. B15. 23 ic., Ge AT. DAILY 1 * mM 2 le Swi Cam Waa! a oat NEWYORK LARLY THE atveican, ar RLY2 WE ane Derivones HUMMING Bi MATINEE TOM rid Lee! But eh Worl mat THBATRE, DB" Sarbent Stork Co.