The evening world. Newspaper, March 24, 1903, Page 13

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THE RACING SEASON IS _ WIDE OPEN. of the evening papers,” remarked The Cigar Store Man. “They're off at Bennings,” agreed The Man Higher Up, “and fn a few weeks we'll all be off our dips. From what I can see the racing fever has got a clutch on New York this season that an earthquake couldn't loosen. The bookmakers who started for Washington Saturday night hed ‘water running out of their mouths. Every time they shut their eyes they gaw a golden sky clouded with yellow bills that dropped to their bankrolle with e gentle, crispy swish. “Conversation has switched from the Burdick murder mystery, the Qaseball situation, the sozzly weather and the high price of Imitation gas to the gee-gees. The newspaper dope ranks higher than the editorials or the dig news stories. The sure thing men, who hand out alleged information, fre engaging advertising space by the yard. New York's sporting blood is running like a flood in the Mississippi! River. e “This is the greatest horse-race town in the world. There is more money bet and lost here than anywhere else. Nothing in the United States compares to it, although out West they used to run tracks all winter long on Guttenburg lines. That is the reason you see so Many wise men wearing @iamonds, When a man gets race-track wise he can't help wearing die- monds. “The horsemen run for their own money, the bookmakers pay all the other expenses, and what comes in at the gate is clear velvet. The added Money put up by the tracks don't make a grease epot on the balance sheet at the end of the season, and the big stakes that are famous all over the By as evasibe tapera” ramariet'tis Oise te * world are made big by the horsemen themselvs. “Can you beat it for easy money? Is it any wonder that stock in the Metropolitan race tracks is not for sale? Of course nobody balks on the Proposition that the racing interests around New York are in the hands of men of unimpeachable integrity. Also these interests in the hands of men of unestimated wealth, It is a great thing to be a sporteman and have @ string of the best horses that money can buy, and be able to keep up your @table on the profits that come from what you own in the race tracks, “"isic ie the game he public goes up against. The race-track owners ean't lose, because they don’t risk anything. The horsemen don't dare to Jose, because they have to risk everything. The bookmakers have got their ‘work so systematized that when one of them has a losing day he spends the rest of the season trying to figure out who robbed him. And the eucker ‘who puts up his two or three bones for a badge at the gate keeps them all moving. “Nevertheless you wouldn't like to see the racing game stopped, and Geither would L It puts new life into any man. to get out on the track, put is number on a bookmaker’s sheet for a small bet, stand up in the grand @tand or on the lawn, root for his skate |ike a Siwash Indian in a medicine @ance and see the skate finish with the also rans. If he has got good sense the lets it go at that and don't try to break the books.” “Have you got anything good?” asked The Cigar Store Man. “Well,” replied The Man Higher Up, ‘“‘there’s something in the third race (Wednesday that looks pretty sweet to me.” RLD'S 1HE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, MARCH 24, 190. ie HOME MAGAZI Evcercises for Restoring Beauty .—=— By Harriet Hubbard Ayer. LESSON IV.—A Home Course of Light Gymnastics. Brave Away’ The Blies”’ Caused By Ind/gestion- OlLanding With Tense. Vizied 4 é sen Bore Fi Z ik, gag ie Sh ORS, Ar ih 4 eels es Te MO. as 7EA7? ThrowgD. re i / cig ze See RoE Cros. ‘ARAH FULLDR'S story ef how she recovered health and beauty con- | tinues us follows: Ss Somebody wrote last week to Mrs. Ayer and sald: “Sarah Fuller might exercise away her insomnia, but I don’t be- Ueve she could exercise away a case of indigestion like mine if she tried a thousand years.” But that is just what Garah Fuller did do, and as I happen to be the ¢irl in question, Mrs. Ayer wishes me to tell you something about it to-day. For, as she says, ‘a woman will never be a beauty while she hangs on to 8 disordered stomach.” I euffered from indigestion {n such a severe form that the doctors called it ‘nervous dyspepsia” and prescribed all sorts of remedies for it. None of them eeemed to do muc so, following Mrs. Ayer's advice, ; = iMetmnecoetuneons After finishing the fret movément I would next try vibrating trom the| gard'to the ondinery at arm cel sad 2 oe en Sar I practised these regularly every morning before breakfast. It was not shoulders. edd ware, alone, together with a! ‘made dishes,’ but I partook freely ef long until I had a healthy, hungry appetite for that meal. And with the Standing perfectly erect, with clinched fists and tense muscles, I would] ‘°*), roast beof or mutton and of chicken and chops when I could get them. ‘ ft extend my arms in horizontal lines from my shoulders and press my|1 ate fish a and marrowfat peas were nbout the only vegetables I avoldei, coming of that sort of appetite, as everybody knows, dyspepsia, or any form ate fish and oysters frequently. Ples and puddings I did not care for, ap” nutrition will do equally good work in substituting sound, firm flesh in the pled of unhealthy and ungainly fatty tissue. By working on this principle I reduasd my obesity without allowing my ‘ifalling off” in fleah to have any result be the benefla!al one of a generally better development. My diet for obesity and for dyspepsia and indigestion were not very materially unlike, Eaca morning on arising I pvould rinse my mouth with clear cold waite: and then drink, im alps, a large cup of hot water—as hot as my throat ate: would lend itself to, For breakfast during several weeks I ate nothing but frult and two allces day of buttered tonet. Occasionally for the toast I substituted Gelicate atioee as crisp, fresh zwicback, At luncheon I ate @ bow! of nourishing soup (contrary to the usual thet soup fattens) and I was “fashionable” enough to deny myself butter the roll or ellee of gluten bread I took with it. I ndded a lettuce saled of Gish of some green vegetable, but drank no liquid and ate no dessert —— orange or an apple. is THE CASTAWAYS. BY H. S. C ANFIELDNoe indigestion, hangs out the first flag of truce. clinched ists tlett down on my chest, ‘Then J would again set up the con-| lett thecn oft willngty, ay evening cup of coffee I dd cane for, and 1 ala And How Love Found Them After the Wreck. Copyright, 1903, by Dally Story Pub. Co.) | they estgblish an intimacy whigh would HE man who had been first mate of| require years under other conditions. the stout and fast brig Nancy| She told tim of her husband, a copra Bowles shoved his wet hair back| merchant, an elderly man, who had mar- from his forehead, looked at the woman| tied her three years before in Hawail; @nd smiled. Around them was a wide! they bad no children. Bhe spoke of tim ea of waves, raised by a quarter gale,{ With respect, not affection. Held sald which blew steadily out of the north-| nothing of Kanaka wife. He felt east after the squall which had wrecked| that it was something she woul! not them. More than a mile astern the bot-| care to her At dark the breeze sprang tom of the Nancy Bowles glisten up again, still from the same quarter, the eun, for she had “turned tyrtle” all] and they bowled along. fn @ moment, thrown on her beam-ends| The morning of the third day found with ai] sails set, and every other man|the man weak and the woman almost on her, from Elijah Hawkins, the cap-| beyond speech. He mede her a pillow tain, to Black Billy, the cook, was a{of his jacket and drenched her clothing worpse floating still in unmoving dark| With salt water. She lay for the most ‘water, fathoms deep. It was one of the| part with ber eyes closed and her golden (ragedies of the South Pacific which|halr unconfined and streaming. She ome dnd go like the shadow of the] looked alngularly small and childlike wild duck’s wing on a pool and leave|lying/so, and the sailor felt @ great ten- @s little trace. In some way—strange way-—God's way—the man and woman had been{ !onship, but ae yet she paae ot him thrown clear of the ves: flush deck, Only as a strong, brave man, her pro- @s she turned, Frank Heid belleved| tector and ¢riend, her sellow- sufferer. ‘hat he had leaped. The woman re-| ‘fhe sun was sinking ast and the membered nothing. Probably the great|"@¥8 from it were almost level winn a ys truit; my dinner soups were clear soup; T but I found a cup of hot milk very soothing at ded, onths I had no further need of dieting. i I shall try to describe the exercises I took, for {t would give me much |8clous vibrations, sending regular waves of warm, invigorating life to stir ROmtneeTBb haar ce mite pleasure to know that other girls were benefiting by what so greatly bene- | Up stagnant blood and torpid liver and everything else inactive, time, After three or four m: fited me. Next I would move my arms with a shuttle-like motion, to and fro be- I shall be glad to answer any letters of iaquiry concerning the — The illustrations can only snow the mere attitudes, They can give|tween shoulder and elbow. Always I kept them as tense as possible, always deseribed fn these lessons, et Uttle idea of the delightful sensations of returning health and vigor which |! breathed as deeply and slowly as I could, always I vibrated or tried to], his f hile I tising them. vibrate to the best of my knowledge and ability. ji % limi creates Heep ta Ae ick aiaraning step I would literally charge The whole secret of these vibratory exercises lies in this: they set the) In to-morrow’s lesson Mrs. Ayer will explain how persons. who have lost flesh may avoid wrinkles. upon the foe and dare dyspepsia to do its worst. Its worst was very feeble|mechanism of the physical system to working actively and orderly. after ’ low all over.| At any rate, that 1s what I tried to Jo through the vibratory exercises I $00 spin ing oC vigorous experlen hed wut toe )a\e DARRTG AL learned from Mrs. Ayer. I soon found thot to whatever part af my body J dl- And “the blues,” which nearly always follow in the train of indigestion,) 124 these vibrations that part quickly responded in e more perfect develop- seemed never able to withstand the energetic motions I used to shake them | ment or a healthier manner of working. Amusements, Amusements. ny Some of Mrs, Ayer's correspondents have been asking her whether I dicted as dealt eA 1, Res: $8: | MADISON SQUARE CARTER wind had caught {n her full skirts and hurled her out into the water. So it Dbappened, too, that one of the boats had been riven from its fastenings on ie submerged deck and had floatea| Sd urface. It came up within five ran { Held, who swam to it and wlambered in, though jt was filled with water. Then he saw the golden hair of the woman streaming upon a weve, leaped after her and brought her to bis watery ark. He was a brave man, young and strong, #0 there they were, without compass, matches or £008, afloat in an open boat,| habitation, He took her in his arms ‘tne two of them apart in thet wind-! and climbed out stiMy, Further on an flown solitude. She knew that he had been mate of the lost vessel; ‘that she lulu for the Friendly Isiand: fiterally all that they knew of each ether, She hed a husband in Kaulos| (uly and answered: ‘All dead and un- whom she had started to rejoin; he hed|derground—the plague." a dusky wite there whom he had not] ‘What, all?” seen in three years. “Ot this village oniy I and @ ef of He leaned tack upon the tiller and|tweive are left. We buried the last in ‘was silent. The boat, headed straight/the sand yesterday. We eried to mexe into the southwest, leaped from hum-| them mounds, but the sen winds levelled ®@ook to hummock under the stroke of| them.” the keen breeze, “If the wind holds,"| Food was brought, and the woman ri fhe said later, ‘we'll make the isiands|vived. @he did not fear her husband’ fm less than three da; We have no/ fate until the next dey. A treding-ehip hobe that it will hold," pray God that dt will." it, perforce, geining strength rapidly. On ithe second day they suffered gome-| On the day before it came Held stoo” ite thme efter that booming of the ort, and, with her where @ long, white ribbon of . In the afternoon @ dead calm Kell, and a sun of fire shone on a sea! of glass. They lost some time fl fidiy, (He took an old envelope from his Docket and threw st over to note thelr strange stories of the) Dark ged ehowed through the bro ovean, adventures among the islands,| ‘his cheek as he took her hand bones for coral, peari-fishing, , }etrong and vigorous. The two designs given are admirable and show costumes Some of my movements I called vibratory exercises, I would place my| Wel! as exercised while trying to bring back my lost good Jooks, 1 aid dlet, but 1 TARE IN PROCTOR R's Bve,—Full Orch, "| Arternoon at 2 and Evening at § o'clock. me a good standing base. I ate good food; I ate enough of St; I ate {t at regular hours. And I con- Parana ss city Loula simon, | erles, Warshtpa, Freaks, Prodigies, ote, deeply, I would vibrate my arms till the thrill and the tingle conimunicated’ “#™! ; oh NW. fe aes one Ot SPRING SVITS FOR. BOYS. a 021 ool Sif WITH COS. HART & CARRIE DE MAR, Etophaines” 2° tittae imette Demon saat Bia e ‘The Success of Bein Winter | ge MOumat | THE UNFORESEEN, did not make the mistake of half starving myself or getting my stomach out of hands firmly on my hips and stand with my feet far enough apart to give patience with me hy all sorts of foolish experimenting with foods, me iN} (ee VAUDEVILLE. Ned | open an hour earlier for a view of the Grace Gardner @ Co., Joe, Myra fe ‘Then pressing both hands in firmly, and inhaling very slowly and very| verted this food dnto pure blood and sound body by exercise, ¢resh alr and eun- Buster Keaton, Sydney’ Grant. RI ¥: ‘hen pi ry Is ly, iB very ly ; a BA NUM & BAILE # I fearned that food which really buflds up will at the same time pull dow: vi themselves to my whole body, what is worthless, Mor instance, a proper nourishing diet for emaciation or ne bas sere Se AnOA GREATEST SHOW 0 ON. ne FOXY GRANDPA | ,2.:\"gtcompinies, 2 Menage Prelude, LON HEARTY 5th SL} i au UE eee, NID HOWARD Descente ca eee aati aut THE OLD RELIABLE | A (ANGH ALC Weex. AG"aiecr revortion” Veudorie | Setprves,Aciah woadury: rato Piccolo Midgets, EMPIRE ree wt Broadway & 400 ot gv he RAYMOND & CAVERL| y . oR | GARRICK THEATRE, 2:4 01, net Bway, aig "RUSSELL in MICE and MEN, Ee, | ‘Bt. & B'way. NEW. fhyey Y TOOATES at tA 4 14TH ST. THEATRE ,nr.6th ay. ‘THE ON with CLARA ee Soran Te te Gt ie Gn so BLdopaoon itera. | TS Criging! saa reg @ Bi way. BROADWAY fet Eitais 5. daca CRITERION THEATRE, | Bizay 6. 4th 8 Niue’ Font Novel Bute Bpectal Prices someon) sae me fy 60, 6 Evgs., 8.15. Mate. Wed. & Bat. ac pat MATINEE TO-MORI 4 WI a a ee A KONRY We SAVAGE presenta’ JAMES T. POWERS "i Sorc" | CArneaie pea ™ fii i: BIBLE > Me 30—Cons 3 yt io ) A Menage trom | Mar. ayant FROM f MADISON 8Q. THEATRE, 2th at,,or. Dw By y Rev. J, iiiaete neteeut Te Mee p cous Pinas By Finley & Ladera, ssthor of KING DODO." | yg, /sh hints atmgay nad Gaturany, 2.16 | Thwradey, Bareh 28, April & April 4 ag VICTORIA or! “itis | ELSIE de WOLFE in CYNTHIA. Teas emer POWDER Nanos ae WV ALSHT | axgoey earn pn auc Lh. ee Absolutely Pure |, ie Ce ee THERE 13 NO SUBSTITUTE ‘RESURRECTION” | ooyiniten® os nanny, |ERASCO THEATRE 2 my enn/BIG Next Monday, the Morality Play—SVBRYM BLANCHE BATES [= OF THE, 4 x | - 4 GARD: We Lid eh BIG, THEATRE. ATLANTIC 9222 Sena mae NTH, +8, 8, Loraine & Marshall, at ete “Kagel Amusements. WILLIAMS & WALKER 41? ©; ot, emer S 408 ACA Wane marin HIN DAHOMEY," LAST 2 werksi? “MY. Lith Be 4 ire ving Pl. - _ rTPA Tye (ASD RAMATIL TRIUNPAtL "s at 34 Ave, Haber Metbokamate Tee” (PASTOR'S, — “suisigie UAWIA @ BYAN. QBMORO'8 THEOL h ri an TASCOTT, KINE @ GOTTHOLD. ~ e yu u HpNDRIX-& PRESCOTT, DAN & DOLLY MANN Peor, 20 HORS Prices2 rit Hi “Fics. wedta sae 2 By. 8.15, N Lex, Ave. ESTAR ‘McFadden's # Flats. METROPOLIS evga kits sth Mad oan AT THE OLD CROSSROADS. WEST END—The Christian. gran f TheBILLIONAIRE, ‘aivitdiwe ike WIZARD OF OZ °: A Mant ears, tora Tae Jews ot asi | a neateonmRy a atone, $l “THE | MATINEE TODAY, WALLACK’S TH MONTH. Brooklyn Amusements. LOVERS DEWEY Geo, aden Wiity Mas ‘The small boy to the lef Is dressed in a simple box-p aited frock that tg made! Weber & Fields’ “vs dugiain of RUIN BROS BURLESQUERS, |». 4,205.0 , MONTAUK. es * sop HALL. Tel. 623418" "Koeipp Cure." “Great Novelties.” | Wed. & Bat.. 216 in one piece and ts simply belted in to the Agure, The original 1s made of natural | one yusicar TWIRLY-WHIRLY + - shank a ee DODO, K bas, colored linen simply stitched, but chambray, percale and all the lst of washable] apsuRDITY ° AMERICAN “G4 Bt. and Bin Ave m Broadway & S30 St. Dye a NY, materials are appropriate, as are serges and the ike. & pew buries ‘THE BIO LITTLE PRINCESS Lost in the Desert, anh a so hate Wedse bi E16 Phe quantity of material required for the medium size (4 years) Is 41-4 yaris | Dee Ward in Wax, NEW OROUPS, Next week pantyen | THE EARL of PAWTUCKET, {nchea wide "No. 4236, J4 cut in| ODEN NEMATO SEATS FOUR WEEKS IN ADVANCE. alled for 10 conte. “MUSHE, IDeKoita the Wirerd.To-nigutst 9 rasa AE CAHILL, 7 ) Beer silow IN TOWN, R 9 neviot, and the design sults Amartar, £3 INANGY BROWN,” for the'medium alxe (8 years) is 9.12 yards Pe j Stuart Robson “SEcroret® 60 Mate. W KEITH'S if sa! Paaees ies i. “Se ni iY a wide. g Wain pauery SRGLK| wi B06 Sunday World wise in sizes for boys of 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 years of age, | Pi Tam, ae GhAND A T TOY’ i ies niet mediates tor; toate : eis at et i cust tncon) D SAN N 0 ' Boys' clothing, from the moment they leave babyhood and put off dresses, is designed to give ai) the freedom possible and to allow the young bodies to grow suited both to the little fellow and his lusty big brother,

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