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‘A Cold Cream Recipe. M: out of tangle? Gently through, ‘Hubbard Ayer Mina Ayer} Fey C. S.—Here {8 the recipe for orange flower cold cream; Ol] Sas ot mar almonds, 4 ounces; _ wax, dra: spermnbeti, 6 Grams: borax, 2 Blycerine, 1 1-2 ‘@unces; orange flower water, 2 ounce: ell of neroll, 16 drops; oll of bigarade orange skin), 16 “drops; of! of petit % drops, Melt the three first ts, add the glycerine to the ‘ af Lind ia dissolve the e mixtur hen pour it Slowly into the bonded fats, stirring Mndously, To. Remove Tangle, line Ayer: 'Y¥ hair has become very:much en- tangled and I can't comb it through without large quantities it halt falling out, How oowld f get it ANXIOUS, Before washing your hair take the Soarae teeth of your comb and grease slightly with some good animal oll, then @ather @ wisp of hair and pass comb You will find this rocess will loosen the snarls and en- able you to return to the shampoo, To Darken Red Hair. Dear Misa Ayer: let me know how to Garken red halr to brown, BN, ‘The stain I have found effective 1s ven, but so much depends on tho texture and constitution of the hatr that It 18 seldom wise to dye one's own looks. And why do you wish to change go attractive a color? Be careful to have the halr clean and dry before ap- plying, the dye: Rust of tron, 1 dram; 014 ale (strong), unsweotened, 1 pint; oll of fosomary, 12 drops. Put the mix- ture Into a. tle, cork it very loosely, eit daily for ten or twelve daya, atter repoee decant the clear pors: lon for use. A. K.—Here {8 @ recipe for devel- oping the bust: Liquid extract of 1® galega (oaterue), 10 grams; lacto te of fennel 10 grams; simpli he done is (wo. 4 water before edch e is of malt extract aur i yn—What's Pind quichoort 3 te 1d eee Soe (tor 'B, R. )—Walk, Permission of George Munro's Bons,) pyrizht, 1803, by George Munro's. Bons.) #YNOPSIS OF PRECKDING CHS Pan & seventeen-yoar-old. gl Frank « Ponsonby, who ih Moved te} rine Nugent, Sir G Youn nobleman, and Alye ‘are | Jove with Alys, onsonby's disgust elt k out inte the ore the latter pretends e iftreteds owe Ha fetal thelr ‘fortun by pioking a daley to promised Ponsonby that if ever she tp, care, for him ae will rend bim a Marquerdte beating, the avmbo! “Loves him W'Katherine Nueent tries to poten Ws mind geqinst Ponsonby, CHAPTER 111. A Girl’s Revenge, “A RE you sure,” repeated Kather- ine, tremblingly, "that Frank Ponsonby did not say I cared for him?" “You will see how sure, when I tell you that Frank believes you positively dislike him, He told me so last night, Now’ —laughing—"I think he was right. How angry your eyes have grown’ at the bare mention of his name!” Alys re- plied in surprise. "Ah!" says Miss Nugent, It ts a sigh of rellef that escapes her, She leans back in her chair, and a great wave of olor aweops over her white face, She unfurls her huge black fan with a little crashing noise. "You haven't told me how you en- foyed last night's fancy dross ball," she fald quickly, as a means of covering her confusion, “Bo muoh!'' ‘says the young girl, smil- ing, and throwing some animation into her air, “I saw you dancing rather frequently with Sir George Grande toward the close of the evening.” “Twice I danced with him, I think, Do you know, 1 quite like him, though Brank doesn't. ‘/said the Pessimist, dryly./ “I don't see ,|into thinking they are, the originators By Alice Roh — bc THAT'S a very popylar soung woman I was just (alking to,” said the Amateur PHilapuer, “She was a very talky yonng yemen,’ how you make out her popularity from that,” “Well, she has a terriblo timo, tor she simply can't haye a gentleman acquaintance without ho falls in love with her.” “Btop! stop!" snapped the Pesstmist. “Don't repeat that ecream to ma, f know the breed too well. One of the ‘worst borés on earth Is the woman who ‘thinks ever'y man she meets is In love with her, You And her tn every strata of poclety, and intellect doesn't bar a lot of otherwise clever women-ag far as clever women go-from making {diots of themselves in handing out this ‘they all love me! dope,’ ‘Well, what's the object?” asked the Philosopher, “What generally is & woman's ob- ect?" returned the Pessimist, The exploitation of her vanity, of course, “There are gome women you know who aro w yuinglorious and so much {nm love with thethsclyes that they can’t think of any other explanation: fora man's casial glanca in thelr direction than that he ts consumed with an un- dying pession, “A woman of this kind 1s worse than @ village pest, She ls an office ntl- Gunes, a fireside horror, a social bore and an all-around candidate’ for the human garbage collector, “Oh, it's granl'to have ons of there conversational, self-adulation bomb- throwers turned loose on you. If you can stand hearing for thirty minutes how everybody in the office, from the bows down to the office boy, ts in love with her you are a dandy, “Bhe doesn’t seem to have any sense of humor at all and never gets next to the faot that she's making a fool of horself, She ste»up and does a gur- Bling fave about she doesn't understand how It is, but everybody is crazy about her, She insists on telling you the de tails of every man's method of casting the affectionate gaze at her and wearles your life owt pestering you ide bev amatory confidences." “But what advantage ts it to heer asked the Amateur Phflosopher, “Oh, she thinks it makes her polld with the other men, You know, com- petition helps along any game, and there ts always an increase in demand when the supply is short. The female love-bragger is on to this game and she imagines that {f she glorifies hor- self in the eyew of overy'man she meets he will think she is the original happy thought and will proceed to annex hi self to the candy buyers’ and vi givers’ guild.” al "But is she as popular as she thinks she 1s?” asked ‘the Philosopher. “Well, I never noticed any bargain- counter rush trying to break in her front door for engagements,” sald the Pessimist. It's mostly imagination and) talk. Some women hypnotize themselves) of every poet's dream and artist's fancy, and when they get thelr conversational hooks into you you had better feign a state of coma,” “Voll, I'm surprised,” sald the Phil- osopher. “I mever knew wonen would exaggerate like that,” "You've a lot of things yet to learn about women, my boy,” sald the Pessl- milat, ‘and the beat leason you can take)’ as a primer instruction Is to sidestep the whole bunch,” “Men Mke Frank, who have been through @ good deal, are always in- clined to be jealous, Wxperlence has taught them how transent a love affalr may be," “You moan'"—emotionally—"‘that Prank has loved so often that’ “Y mean nothing, There is really no} occasion for any excitement, But of | course you will understand that a man | cannot grow to Frank's age without) having played with fire, There 1s | nothing to render you uneasy in any- thing 1 have said,” “L am not uneasy’—flushing warmly, “No? But of oourse not, There is really nothing In tt." “I know that,” says the girl loyally, yet even as she says tt her heart grows heavier within her, ‘There. 1s really | nothing in it; but why had he told her nhe was his finst and only love? Par- haps men always sald “that to the ob- ject of their latest fancy, “Onoe last night, when you were Prank," she says, turn- Fe eager and recovering her selt-possession by an effort, #'l looked at you, and both you and he were lool | ing at me, Was he talking of me then?” “Does he ever talk of anything else? A man freshly in love ds the most self- ish thing gn earth, Later on eel grow more considerate, and oan affor to forget the beloved angel now and | then ‘an they? wistfully, will Bronk 4 learn to forget her at times? What were we saying just You asked me if he was talking Yes, entirely, Ile was tolling something you had said—1 fi wet what now—and he was tgs hin | Fle called you ‘such a ella el it. was some. silly perusing becuse of its Wal He af very devoted so you.’ ‘Again the sting Js in her tongue, It makes the girl's lbs quiver and brings the light of rebellion to her beautiful | eyes, “At seventeen one Is 1 es, then of you? me of re ttle ty. tr a chiki, You .Nursery Rhymes The ted Of a nurse Is always well filled If there are plenty of babies to “mind.” To-day You may Through World Help Wants Jocate » “Work” offers it will pay you tc find, 52 _ NURSES WANTED jelp Want Advertisers last week in the MORNING WORLD, ke of me as a} make met! i laything,'” | doll, a hid “Oh, atrl. vo ‘are you he ia quite ten ye Phe, advantage there | vy. sul Be need nel! Wduite kor A think stiolild he ten, years 0 who tn Pon- him, T ih he Tt 1s easier to cllek and pre! extreme youth, inpid and form,’ She closes hor fan with anothor drops it Janguldly Ino her lay, ami faintly. Ay mold'!" The girl's. tone | srown strangely cold and calm, ‘I } to he educated po his will, you med 1, that was what he sald!—— un | “My dear child, T can't remember tho exact words, but he toid me laat night he had galned a treasure-one of those rare beings to whom the world Is un- nown. dreaded no rival, le Saad, HOR UR ly forget the ‘because, “lis really concealed another clgarette— t | not visible,.of course, to the audience, | room jently haw | g | How to Be a Parior Ma w Ww The Great.Herrmann Explains Lui z ician, od Tricks for Amateurs. ee Gnomes Made from Give each person a sheet of good writ- @ stecl pen with a broad | 4; point, and access to an inkstand, ‘Bach | ing paper, playor then foi middle, and, having opened the fold, \ must turn the runs crosswise, Now give each player a word of sev- eral letters, having some two spade let- tera ag well Qs one opace in ite con- Atruction, as oat, instead of gany or should, play, drink, The word must then he written along the top of tho fold, {nalde the paper and olowe to the fold, | ind tho paper must at onoe be ratolded, oetore the ink he Then open the paper again, and a ‘veer ereature will show, Each ployer’ ghome — the nai thing that i \ having reproduced the word on the op- posite side of the fold, This rewult te simply remarkable, as one experiment |in i) move the rind. wh eyrup. over, one: “ that have i ‘ds his paper down the paper eo, that the in a pat, add the blend them, add one tab) war, one orton | ene ounces of chopped bacon, fA plece of celery and eartot Aenspodndul meat: extract, 6 mde, @ clove of girlic, a pepper and kitchen bow and a halt pinta of watet Holl, then cook gontly wirain and pour over the’ fa Silver Cleaner, \ Dissolve one ounce of. Hig ‘a pint of boiling old, pour It on four pede tated chalks, and heat or (thirty drops of pra jas had tne to dry, will be: seen, the ink then writes beat his me of the eae it Apel reer, and 5 Pleven: af Pu lett. My player nt ee writes un- der it the name of the thi thinks it resembles; and the, thi round 9 ie tat any iy plage hoe writin | name that an; 6 ‘tinea th te yan and {f the ti nD Claret Punch. * Use the | ing that he AF ae a Taal ng Wes hs He4 tha {t te absolutely OMI vory simple tricks in magic can | S’ be extremely mystifying. " Prof.! Herrmann, the famous magician, says that spveral of the simplest tricks) that he performs are as pusaling to his} audience‘as the most complicated and intricate feats of magic that he shows, The Professor reveass to readers of The Hvening World how two of his! very simplest tricks are performed, and | has posed for the pictures showing just how to do them, Both tricks are extremely simple and yet with them you may mystify a group of friends and furnish an interesting Mttle diversion these long winter even- ngs. One of the tricks shows how you can make two whole cigarettes of one. Fig- ure A shows how the cigarette is held as you show it to the audfence, Figure B shows how in the palm of the hand In performing the trick you tell how embarrase:d you are at finding you have only one cigarette to offer your friends, and you exhibit the cigarette, as in Fig- ure A, Suddenly you recall @ magic word taught you by an Bast Indian} fakir, pronouncing which enablea you| to double anything you desire, Quickly raising the hand in the air yOu say some unin word, at the same time forcing out betweon the fingers tho, hidden cigarette by pressure of the palm. The audience now plainly sees, two olgarettes where there was formerly but one, This is a trick that alwdys makes a hit. Yet nothing really could be simpler, ‘The handkerchief and coin trick tx ‘not quite so simple, but any child of aix fame the one-nearort| | Bllob the’ yellow In the comer of a handkerchief sew & quarter of a doliar—ucked In the hem, A smaller coin does just as well, ‘This is, of course, done previous to your Performance of the trick before your friends, Figure C shows the handker- ohlef with the coin sewed in the cor- ner of the hem, You tell your audlenee that you in- tend placing a quarter of a dollar in the centre of one of the handkerchiefs, and, twisting the handkerchief around It, that you will do the same with the half-dotlar and another handkerchief, that you will then, plainly hokling the handkerchiets up before the audience, cause dne of the coins to leave the handkerchief In which It was ee and pass into the other handkerchief, where the two coins will be found together, while one handkerghief will be empty, You proceed to’ perform the triok: in plain sight of the spectators, You hold up to view a halt dollar, behind which is a quarter. These you place in ® | handkerehlef—see figure D—being caré~ | ful that the audience seca only the half | dollar, which you, of course, place up- permost. Then you twist)the handker- chief around the two coins, which the audience belleves to be a single cain. You ask a spectator Jo hold it for you in plain view of every one, while you place a quarter similarly in the other handkerchief. What you really do with the other handkerchief is this: You place the | can perform it. To the uninitiated ir fs as pussiing a trick as is shown, but it was something to the effect that 48 you had not dreamed of lovers unti he came on the scene, they were not necessary to you, and all that, 1 told im not to be too certain,'—laughing= | “but he quite scoffed at the thought | th you could prefer any one to his After all, I doydt ff it too Uhghness. 8a wise thing to let a man feel sure of one.’ “Is that how he talks of me to you?” Alys, with @ glance of cold disdain 1 her heavily fringed eyes, To really | joW any one Mout; and to hd One's deurest fri in a different 11 Is to regard nlm as a stranger, |!" 0 have been prosing a gvod dbal, have we not? Tam afraid | have mado the day even duller for you (han it really 18,” “Perhaps it is my fault, saya Mise Nigent politely, mipossibie! You have tried your best to enliven me, and if you have falled It is my fault, Tt Jr the heat, L suppose. Who could have believed In 80 hot @ sun in Heptember?” Migs Nugent, as though scenting sar- canm In this specoh, glinces at her sharply; but the givl has msen and has ay her face, and, after a languid attempt at further conversation, quits the room, When the men come In from shoot+ ing, however, she reappears {in a charming, pale-pink tea-gown, and as flr George flings himself upon tho lounge close beside her she turns to hiv with a new graciousness, und lets her lovely eyes smile into his, and draws uway her skirts that he may heatle even nearer to her, "she is rehearsing her new role,” jsayes Katharine Nugent, tatcny all this from afar, with a curl of Hen ipe, and a shrug of her handsome shoulders, Janda most unlovely smile of devilish gratification. * 4 At the end of the third day Sir George Grande as much in love with Miss Disns as his nature will permit, At the end of the week, and when the night is come that is to see the return of Mr, Vonsonby, he has overstepped that limit, and fs making an open fool of himeel! about the youthful beauty, not without encouragement, Mor the Uttle debutunte during theoe seven days has develoned Into a subdued but dan= Rerous Coquette, Ponsonby, who arrived barely In time to change his clothes for dihnor, but who has heen navertheless bitterly dis- appointed that no gracious childish form has met him on hie arrival to bid hhm oming into the drawing: five minutes past seven, ken aback by the tab- welcome, twent js somewhat tor | lean that ‘there presents Itself to him, Upon lace cur from put couch, half shrouded by the i 1 window near It sits his as a dream, promised In In laces, Sir’ George latter Is stoop. Ing forward, ntly Into her eyes, Upon every ine of his good-look- the face hopeless infatuation 1s Write ten, Ponsonby walk in advancing s'owly as on his sloep, knocks Inadver ast splder-logged chair, st » ground with some nolae. fisé Disney starts, looks round, a seeing who it Is coming toward th colors deeply. It ts only a momentary howeyer. and, conquering ti, swiftly, but with Inherent from her seat, and goes to mvet “Her self-possesaion Is complete, on in Hy "You and slr him Pinang. her ploie. eh evening, ho says quietly, George weom to be quite good friénds,” corner that containg the quarter Into Moonshine and Marguerite 3 By “The Duchess.” “T tke him very much,’ she says, sey? enough, but with a grain of de- Ane ia her tone which he is not slow ta, Pils at I can see for m e says with a rather forced sm ‘What an ig out of eternity {a a bare week! yet"— “You found It short, thent!’—glancing at him with a half f | “Never mind me,” ‘ly, "What of you? | “Why should T submit to an examina; |tlon from which you shrink?” reiwite eha with sone preateus. throwh | dainty head and meking 4 Lady Newport, who ls Muted ng directly apposite, an exoute for leaving ‘him, What a heavenly Mabe bid Mine Nugent suddenly, as, drawing back the ourtains she iets a rush of glorious moonlieht flood the “And the alreehow soft and warm! Why not come into the gardens and enjoy it as we. have done every night for tihe past You amd ‘sit George, Alys, used be the ta Us ete) Mt, Now" ltbe ot sély throw the reaponsl- billt my shoulders.’ ‘ar bo it from us," says Sir Gores “Class us not among the baok- ders, There is something about Mizs piney, the that always suggests to me 4 jana, the mom goddess; 1 Pe ie area therefore, would T feel convinced, dream of casting a “slight upon her Mustrious relative, You will come and Fey, your eco: timed court to her, will you not, Disney?!" For « moment she hesitates; almost a refusal is on her lips, when her eyes chance to fall on Ponsonby's, In his there Is open though unconscious re- buke, and it turns the scale in Sir George’s favor, "Come," she says, holding out her hand to him with a sweet smile pret- tily tMnged with coquetry, and vogether tep lightly from the drawing- 0 the balcony, and from thence mardens—Iit by the “wandering to a trananarent brillianoy—that eath wrapt in sleep, The others! { yaelty be hi al Di follow, Ponsonby. \) py some. tron demon, moves in their rain. Ait last he really loses sight of her. as though compelled there- Erg or three people coming up to Katherine engross her in some merry argument and will not let her go, Glad | at heart at this chance of being once more alone, Ponsonby moves away from | the group, stepping out from It silently, Seeing this, Katherine says Bently but hastily, “Go and see the eastern end of the gardens, Frank; it will reward you; it ls lovely In this light, You know it?—that little bit apart, where | the old statute of Apollo stands halt) shrouded in ivy?’ Does he know it? How well he remem. bers how he stood tl¥ere with her a week ago and had a sweet but lying tale told him by a marguerite! No, ne | will not go there again! And yet some fascination drawe him, throtgh the scented dows and glitthring beams to ot where, se days ago, he had st been happy thought that he was without a+ nd now. Now! He had reached Apalio's shrine with downeast eyes; but the sound of voloes near him compels him to lift hia | head, As he does @o, he starts, and turns deadly pale, There, in her cling: ing white gown, scarcely ‘less fair than the moonveams that Plot round her, stands the girl he loves, a freshly plucked marvierite in her hand, and beds her Sir George Grande, (fo Be Continued) the centre of the ' nandkerchiet and then twist the handkerohlef arqund, 60, that {t appears as if @ loose qaarter was actually in it, Then you take tho two handkerchiefe and hold them up te view, as in figure ©. “Here ts the quarter in handkerohtet,| hold! No, 1,” you say, “and the halt-dollar in handkerchief No; 2. At a magic word the Quarter will leave {ta covering and Nid of the ion remarkable bridges O tn existence crosses the Miaulssipp! River at Hastings, Minn. " proach to the span fiom one wide of the river is a wide winding roadway on the atylo of a spiral staircase, This road. }fend way is supported by high metal tresies and pillars somewhat Wke those holg. A Remarkable Bridge. bo found with the half-dollar, You say the ‘“‘maglo word'’ and at the same time shake out the i eH that apparently held tho quartor, No coin ta vielble in it, Then yen want the other Arbus ees) jet and lo and be- i hey the two coing doxether: || The trick Is maple grata wh baal) (You know yet Uy ladon in. the ki ar} ‘aren P pusaling and interesting, Ing up the New York "L" tracks, A fence.on elther side prevents acoldents and the incline upward Js so gradual and of Buch uniform angle that what wou othem ‘ed comparativel: ‘el any sor even a Hoey vende, Viewed from above, as ‘oad looks not unlike @ “oop. the loop" apparatus, Balance Your Looks. PPARBNTLY the room was com A fortable, but 1t had one insur mouncable drawback, "Phare ‘8 only one place to keep the bureun,'’ sald the top-floor girl, accord ing to the Clnclinatl Commercial Trib- une, “therefore I can't Ive hero, 3 must have a room large enough to per- inft! hauling the bureat around, Here {t will have to stand always so the lght from the window will strike my left sido while T'dross, That would be detri: mental to the small share of good looks how posdesned by my right side, ‘Tho left side of my face ts already the best sido, and if I were to coddle that with undue partlallty the right side would berome hopelessly plain, “Sherlock Holmes put me onto the A “Hello” Meter. Ble Ms YORK-—— CHIGAGO --- din The accompanying N shows tit varying amount of tub thal woes on during the diff ours trom 74 M. to midnight v York and Chiengo telephone The solld black lines represent York ang ¢ vs ey \ the dotted lines Chicago. begin their daily telephoning than do Gothamites, as the hlahyst point in the Windy City “helloing’ | reached at 10 A. M,. while Manhattan's Nigh talk mark does not appear until ti Al M. After lunch, too, Chicago waxes far more talkative than does New York, 3 to 6 P, M, being the former's banner talk hours for the afternoon, necessity of switching my looking-glase around every Httle while, if you wish to preserve a uniformity of good looks, Me Pointed out that the elde of the body that the light strikes Most diroctly while dressing will always be best groomed, the hair wil he curled) nore arustloally, the powder will be lejd on more smoothly, and even the cigthes will be arranged more becomingly, ‘This being so, it stands to reason that the atde that mets moat attention ingefinitely {a going to improve in the same ratio that the neglected side deteriorates, and that the person who dreases for months before a glaa® that stands always In the same position as regards the ligt ts going to wet really lopalded #o far as good looks are concerned.” ‘Phe tall girl sighed reflectively, “1 wonder,” she sald, “it that Is the reaeon my hair fs so much thinner on the right #ide, I think I'll go home and move my bureau,” ee neere enemies meer reat ANRC OAIO 3-TE Gold \in Your Garret Hundreds of housewives who never dye anything, who think they can’t dye, or imagine It Is a task, are losing the good of castaway fabrics that could he made new with DIAMOND DYES It is an extremely easy process to color with Diamond Dyes, and the cost is but atrifle. 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