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| ft) ; ‘ ’ } | |) Her Parents’ Consent. _ She Listened to Gossip. | 3 been golng with a young lady -bim he will have to retract the The ‘Evening World’s Home Magazine Tuesday Evening, October 31, 1905. HOT TIPS ON FINANCE. By Roy L. McCardell, { The Letters From an Insurance Man Abroad to His Son on Broadway. PARIS —— undergoing there in New York. y do not take thelr politics so seriously in France, What's wor- tying the people here ts the Russian situation, next to thelr Grand Duke MeCalls, Hydes and Mo- Curdys, ‘Dhe French people are excited because bought a whole lot of Russian life insurance policies In the shape of Russian Government bonds, and now they they are beginning to suspicton that if the Hearst ele- ment in Russia get in control they will revoke dn set- tling the Grand Duke expense account—these Russian bonds, I meet a lot of Russians tn Paris, the upper olass, and I met a lot of all classes, mostly second class, when I was in Russia three years ago for our company to see {f I could get the Ivan Tvanovitches interested in the twenty-year deferred-payment plan and stant a Russian branch. We found the Grand Dukes and the ofMfotal class all willing to Insure, but fwe concluded they weren't good risks, because they balked at the assassination Glause, As for the Mouj/ks, t! @nce, Hegeman wouldi't ve mad Gufance to have lent himself $10 at 1-2 of 1 per cent. The Moujik thought it fwas flying in the face of Providence to put a kopek Into a Hitle book that frould square it with the undertaker. When the Moujik found he had @ kopek he also found he had an aridness of the tonsils that ly vodka would allay. Given the kopek and granted the fanidity, the Moujik's motto was “Do it now!" Bo, ast from an expense acoount, a most profitable form of fiction, our @eander over Russia amounted to nothing except an extensive acqua' @mong 4 lot of hard-drinking dukes that I meet occasionally here in Paris and tes with i the Russians of every class ts that they have positively no @waep hard luck st The trouble wi gense of humor breness. 1 do not b ¢ there ts such a thing as @ Russian comic song. Think, if we had a Crar jn America, what a hit at Hammerstein's Pote Dailey could make by singing “Hverybody works but the little White Father," or how Lillian Ruseell would send them tome happy from Proctor’a after trilling "George ts @© rough since he joined the Cossacks!" ‘The Russian reform administration will announce right away that there will Be nothing doing with the debts of the old regime, You can imagine how happy the Frenchmen feel about this when I tell you | Mbat one of the leading in ea of this Russians to come to Paris to spend, Oh, well, | have troubles enough of my own! Any news of Fields, Hamilton or Judson? Where are our wandering boys Bonight? YOUR DAD ntry hag been lending money to Follow a Precept. | UP-TO-DATE HEALTH ——_—__— | RULES, By Albert Payson Terhune fe “Bat heartily and sleep lon th" ays Tawrence, F old we had to scrape al O And do the best we could, We didn't know which course was | wrong And which would do us good: For Nature rang no warning gong Woe rather wished she would. Don | Rut now with great minds to ady | We can't go far astray heights of health we all can rise only we'll obey The almple course of training wise hut's published day by day: t heartily. Don't eat at all op long. Cut out the sleep, Work on tll trom fatieue you fall. Don't work, Just loaf @ heap! ‘Tis thus that through life's daily brawl wo'll reap. Life's best rewa. We'll profit by this counsel ciear, Johnny—The teucier wad yesterday} Absiemious gluttons we! consider it a pi And slumbrous wakefulness shall ob Mat we should paalant It pleaaure to | Ai dave that are te. ber oer ®o to schoo e 8 before | While lazy hustling crowns each year With slow activites, Y DEAR BOY: Recelved your letter and full M account of the hot politicai campaign you are) It looks to me as if the Russian people are getting they've! y didn't seem to care @ kopek about {ndustrial insur enough money in Russia in industrial {n-| ey eat a candle or throw a dynamite bom) with equal som.) {and seep lees and work more,” saye | The cand Tramp—I was not always thus, madame. Hourewife—No, !t was the other leg you had in a sling yesterday, The best thing for the little Czar Ts a mile-a-minute motor car! Just turn on spark at the Peterhof-sky Now sprain their lange larynges Will treat the people later on Just like a lot of stingies. Tee Give Tw Peee Gera FREE Gas- idates whose promises. Chauffeur—I hear you have mave Mr. Giraffe—Yes. I'm living in the |m air shaft of a skyscriper just now, h your horns? WILLIE WARBLE £2 £2 &2 The Chain-Lightning Poet. Hows ‘Your APPETITE ( Wont make one’s waist expand ; which Reminds us that it ought to class ith the Raines Laws foolish sandwich. Jerome he is a Boss-less Boss He bows his neck to no man Says Tammanyite with cold in head "T wean the yoke of dough man.” Monk—Say, I've Just had words with! Tramo—TI once travelled with a troupe y wife and I want to end it all by|as# A toe dancer, madam anging myself, May I tle this rope to] Mrs, Hippo—Well, then, go out In that woo! pile and let me see you do (he eplit. ‘ _ HART a2 O DON'T BE A CLAM GIRL! By Nixola Greeley-Smith, FT had to advise a young woman on the threshold of a I business or social career I would say to her as a great Mrst principle: Don't be @ clam girl Have {deas. Havo opinions, But don't express them tndisoriminadely. A great deal has been written about the “business face,” the get Intensity of vieage that many young women commercially employed acquire, But !t seems to me that a8 their faces set their views unsettle, Of course, we nearly all go through a transition period, when the |doas we have inherited won't serve us any They are born with brains petrified in the mould that has served for @ thousand years, and they cannot change. But whtle we are forming our own ideas we are apt to take the world too Puch Into our confidence There are paople who consider a woman's opinions on any subject @ mistake. And those of us who cut our opinions very young are unfortunately apt to lect these very people to confide them to, ‘The result is misapprehension on 0 part and such disgust on ours that {f finally we are asked whether or not Ot 's going to rain we do not venture to hamard an opinion for fear they will mot consider it a proper one, And #0 we become clain girls, afraid to open our minds on any subject, and Porgetful of the fact that even clama are only interesting on the half shell, We should cultivate discriminating and not universal self-repression, We should not have opinions about anything except the state ,of the ther- j A dnometer and the price of chiffon velvet with chance acquaintances or down town, But we must not let this clamlike polley affect our spontanelty tm our own homes, among the circle of people who really know us, —————— = BETTY'S BALM FOR LOVERS. for or after giving the ring? All perplexed young people can ob- tain expert advice on thelr tangled love affaira by writing Betty, Let ters for her should be addressed to ears Pyst-Office box 1,3, New ork, They ex- pect that we will marry some day. W. 6. Dear Betty: \ It would be better to ask her parents’ about six months, when ym i beore buying the ring, Otherwise it sho got angry at me for no possldie | would look as it you took thelr consent reason that I could see, Later found that Sngther young man had | too muvh for granted, tters tho o a Ths att tna ur Wittig’ He Marrted Another, which our. friendship. {What. would you advise me to do in the | pear Bettys ‘way of letting her know that I was AM in love with a young man about firue to her? She will not listen to ye my own age, twenty-two. Before » Montcations. A I went to the country he asked me to become his wife, I said,‘in a joking way, that I would not, When I returned home he wrote méa letter say- ing he was married. What will I do, as T cannot believe it is true, although I am. heartbroken, as I love him dearly and would rather die than give him up, Go to the other young man and tell itate- ments he made about you, Make nim « Mign @ retraction and send \t to the “young woman, Dear Betty: longer and our own opinions are not thoroughly formed, | Some women, of course, do not undergo mental ¢ransitions,| Which the meats have been removed | MOE Pace 2 WO MITH IN ¢ a# & SOME # MORE # GAMES # FOR # HALLOWE'EN, # # O-NIGHT {s Halloe'en, And the o% young gitls already decking their homes for the merry parties that will gather in them this evening may bo Interested in a few suggestions for thelr entertainment Rosy apples, strung together, or the jred ones slternated with green pippins, make charming festoons for the parior. fF Around the room, before the company Assembles, are hidden specially |pared walnuts, These are shells from and a silp of paper substituted, the shells afterward glued togethor agaln The writing on each paper is the |eame, It should read somewhat after | this fashior Gn the stroke of 12 steal eiicntly to the furthest end of the cell and dig Keep this etrietly secret. To tell any one will brevk the spel)."" Of course, on the stroke of 12 all play- erg will find themselves together In the cellar, which must be dimly Mghted only, Digging with tin spoons at the farthes: end of the subterranean apart- ment will reveal Httle envelopes con- HINTS FOR Beef Curry. BLT one-quarter cup of butter in M a saucepan and add two slices from a large onton, Cook slowly until the onion turns yellow, then take It out and add to the butter three level tablespoons of flour and one and a half level tablespoons of curry powder: mixed, When cooked smooth pour on one cup of \bolling water and one-half cup of beef’ gravy, Btir and cook five minutes, adding Walf a teaspoon or more of salt, Turn in one and one-half cups of beet cut in thin, uniform shav- Ings, or Into small dice. Wheen the meat |s heated through turn at once without cooking longer into a border of hot boiled rice. Worth Remembering, F you rub grass stains with mo- I lnsses they will come out without diMeulty in the ordinary washing. Spots may be removed from gingham by being wet with milk and covered with common salt, Leave for an hour or so, and ringe out In several waters, Bheep sorre! will take out rust stains from cloth, Rub thoroughly on the stains, and then take out the resulting grass stains with either molasses or alcohol, You can make @ faded dress per- footly white by washing it In boiling cream of tartar water, ‘Mud stains can be removed from silk pre- | | taining fortunes. ‘The nuts containing the important directions are bidden| around the parlor, to be searched for at some stage of the fun. Here is a suggestion for the riddles, | says tho Philadelphia Press; (What nute aro twice-told tale: Chestnuts. What put is a sandy coast? Beeoh (beach) nut, THE HOME, soup? Pecan (pea can), abbreviated? Filbert (Phfl-Bert), nut. ental eyes? Almond, What nut names a pare of itself and an animal's ory? Shell-bark, What nut is a barrier of very dark hue? Black wal (i) nut , Write the set of ptizzies on as many of paper or cards as you have received acceptances, and award as 4 prize for the best list of answers some little silver trifle, such as a stickpin of penknife, In one of the small paste- | board boxes representing nuts, whioh sell at from ten cents to a half dollar Or @ bona fide nut search, tn which nuts of all kinda are hkiden to be rdhed for, may be a feature of the | sheets evening. A gentleman and a lady search together, sharing a little basket be: tween them. Each class of nuts has a What nut should be eaten with bread?! gimerent value, and there 18 a prize for ntternut 4 the collection which aggregates highest What nut can make @ good vegetable | in w7NclOn i tT be ars Bach player In turn ree on which is poised an , is further surmounted with 1 Any player Who can run or walk bd quickly around the room without dis lodging the ring will very shortly win the person of his or her cholos. HEALTH AND BEAUTY. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. What nut gives two masculine names What nut is @ strong box? Chestnut. }@ What nut ts a dairy delicacy? Cream What nut is the shape of many Or- warm water give better results than wap in Washin elicate flannel or I Will not be necessary in your case, Try ‘o n goods, ribbon, c. m r Linen blinds ean be cleaned by be- To Remove Freok' es, this formula; Infusion of roses, § fuld {ng laid flat and rubbed with powdered bath brick, Piano keys can be cleaned, ag can any old ivory, by. Delng rubbed wish muslin dipped in alcohol. If very yellow, use A plece of flannel molatened with oo logne water, x Parsnip Stew, RY half a doren alices out trom a pound plece of salt pork, and when crisp take them up. Add to jthe Kettle four medium sized pansnips and eight common siaed potatoes sliced. Put the vegetables in alternate layers, j dusting each with salt and pepper. |Pour in boll water {i Te ahedana ae 3 Sth , tv Just before the stew done, be bed Mamina—Tommy, did you strike Nelli Tommy—Yes, ma'am, Mamma—You ought to be ashamed her for? ‘ Tommy—'Cause she struck me buck. Bobby (aged #lx)—Ye, air. eer ‘ use the Bible says we en ene Wa | Awwelt, Out of the Mouths of Babes, AGGED BOY—Please, sir, give a Poor orphan a few pennies, Pedestrian—Have you no parents? Ragged Boy—No, slr, They were divorced last. week. Minister—Bobby, do you love your teacher? 163 1. JIt | ounces; eltrie ackd, 9 grains, Mix and your freckles | pour into @ etoppered bottle. If any Ir. are what 18 | ritatlon should arise apply a liealing salled “summer | cream, freckloa” the for-| Ee Superfluous Halr, mula I give will wobably remove F.-Here are some remedies that hem. If you have! have been given for home appil- 4, onalt! kin | cation and have been found help- ind feel she first | ful In vf the growth of unnec- ’ tempera. | “ty hair: BSulphydrate of soda, 10 nS dire | ern: chalk, 300 | Min paste with water and apply to the inser of a Sciutwg | MY Dart, and lee it remain @ few mo- wit cure but part. | ments, and thea eorape it off with a Ing with the ‘eutiole | blunt blade—a paper-knife, for example, wy such @ heroic meaaure| T* effect of thin depilatory is to de- pe wtroy the halr, whioh comes off when ———— soraped. | Another good depitatory is made as follows: Sulphide of soda, 10 grains; slaked ene, 80 grains; staroh, 20 grains; lime water, 4 fluid drama, Apply as the preceding. Care of the Hair, RB. J. Min addition to scalp M massage, @ tonic of this descrip- tion will stimulate the halr in most cases and prevent falling: Cologne, § ounces; tincture of ean: tharides, 1 ounce; off of English laven der, off of rosemary, 1-2 dram each! Apply to the roots of the brir once or twice a day, It ts positively necessary that the scalp should be kept cloan. a of yoursel/, What éld you strike ¥ you love her, love our anemies,—Obtoago News, "ga ABR ios ins, Make into a | Sothern Plays Shake: speare’s Otpn Shylock, At the Knickerbocker Theatre last| thousand ducats for his triend Bas@anios ight Mr, Sothern and Miss Marlowe Signor Antonio, many @ time and oft, nade their first appearance In New] On the Rialto, you have tated me Fork In The Merchant of Veni Mr] And yet, mean as Mr. Sothern's Shy thern, a Shylock, Kave @ large and) jock ts, he makes you sympathise with very appreciative audience all that’ '8/ him, And when, in the second act, he »minated in the bond between himaelf| comes slowly down the steps to hie ind the public, that has grown to ex-| home, his daughter and his ducata, but ect Rreat things of him & moment fled with a Christian, the In the three hundred odd yours | tears are not as far from your eyos as that have elapsed since wk st they ought to be. lamored for his pound flesh, actors) Shylock cringing, Shylock triumphant, rreat and otherwise have hung their! Shylock at the Duke's feet without Mffering fancies=upon jin until it vords to bex the grudging meray he Joubtful if the folly country gentleman) dare not refuse—all these Mr, Sothern created ‘him would have recog-) “8 S¥eatly, impressively A hee teenaneen ihe sewnvind “8 Marlowe a distinetly ca- K Guettish Portia, So attractive a W en, davehter-loving typifeation of a could not help being a bit coquettlih 1 prtrectited mace he had become, Laiterly| sit Were cust as Mex Merriles, Bho lock’s Interpreters, Irving among and made one feel that tt ponies have played him for what he| blue sto t have been. enough to hide tt golden eurgle Nain haa SaerTRT the | Her, Voloe enriched even Shakespeare's WW stripped from the! golden verse unt rly scenes. aracter all these latter-day broider-| in the casket 8 all her future nae and played 4 Kean and Kem: pune on Bassani faltering oho! co, he 7 P Hip : ante 4 followed his every motion in a golder le did—for wh pespeare mate silence that proved the proverb, im—a mean and cruel usurer, thirsting| It was 4 revelation simply to wate oe his enemy's blood. You know Mr her hands @8 her lover poverne over the Scikern'e, Sasiook have hia poand | Cl&ket, all her hope and fear and doubt thorn 1 will have his ve und nding expression in them as they € flest--you suspect him of wanting aj cl ed the arms of her chair. And 1, pound and a half, You feel {t {n tho) the court scene, one thought the qualit ren. he dered speech when Antonio seeks t hat celebrate its beatitudes, Oh es Mantell Scores Again, In matters of politics the more or less publle haay KY asserting ite In- Last night at Robert Man revival of “Fichelieu,’ In the T Hience proved its good tas for the towet Jon for an hnnvat, m, lotged in th ¢ Bulwer-Lytton Mantell's interpretation of the great French Cardinal, tottering at his zenith, but ell With superduman grit to ning reins of power, was strong and magnetic. In a number of ways |! brough, to mind the familiar Richelieu of Hoary Irving. Yet in no lid Mantell’s characterization wk the backbone of individual thought, | The part, a8 Mantell plays It, fe #0 much of the stuff teat acting ts made of that kt will hold che attention of won | playgoers, in spite of such bulwarks In the Way as Mirle Booth Russell's walle ind ai otherwise rather deadly supe port ne lid eld play, tull of a saws, that lave grown plat! Ups, but vitalized with ‘ino Interpretacon of Robert will prove itself another please $ in the dover Broadway tell the loo Gara ny that 18 to say, a reverence assical, with almira fntetiigent Inverpre heart of every Irama attained no Mantell Sometimes the play Ing, Bach no success, whi varm some, red, fometines the a re ntell Roule that thore Sper si mingled with ippla ise antie lity +o——__—. “Ueronique’’ Well Presented, The musical play. title wardes's "Veronique," a dainty was luced by mpany from th at the Bi appreciative role was admirably sung by Ruth Vincent, who was heard here wo years ago in“) Maid vent re Medal and the part of Florestan by Lawrence n who sang in Danzig t season lian, took Apollo dway to a last on show min for #0 consecut ndon, It was and bids fad anees in Te forred to this ety direct W be one of the season's hit qu were Mise Iph Nairn, id Aubrey Pita wok was written by & and Duva Ande Messager, directo: Covent Garden, M, Mer orchestra, and wa: at the end Vanloo MM nthe | Vall Miss Lena ) gerald The ‘aetlo baiuciful ulmira ble and wf the opera takes place t 1810, and the costumes, f that period, were strike The stage settings whi ingly wert pin taal of the ++ Moonshine’ Is Radtant, Marlo Cail! came back to town last) the clash of arms between Russ and night with a new musical skit called] Jap ts forgotten when Marle sings ‘Moonshine. Marte was at once 4) “Robinson Crusoe,” "Don't Be What to all the vacant columns on the the-| You Ain't,” “The Conjure Man’ end atrical ballot, and the vote was that| “Fcolish,' They are a quartet of there is a real winner in the Liberty| songs that will be heard everywhere Theatre. thero 1s @ lip that can pucker, “Moonshine” $s in two acts, ft in| “Moonshine” has @ preity well-polsed company ant a chorus that ls as bused on an incident atteing out of the| snappy as @ bunch of fireworks, It will late unpleasantiess in Manchuria, but be with us well on in the cold , ’ Ben Greet’s Effort Enjoyed. the figurative fall of the curtainiess curtain, No Shakespeare | in more gcholariy and general Shakeapeare-in an undiluted three- heur allopathte dose, with but one Aoll- tary five-minute Interval; Bhikespeare ~ play has been acted without the signr-coating of fosnery | Wmnere egholarly and gene y agent: orchestration, theatric surroundings OF | tnd the universal excellence of its. pert fomiliar actors; Shakespeare, In hi* | formers made one regre, that the Te ongost, most drawn-out play, In other qulkerae 8 att, tmasphere forced words, Ben Greet's players in “Henry |") was Ben, Greet's frst venture into ¥.." at Mendelssohn Hall the heavier Shakespearian drama, and the plunge was justified Despite the strenuously severe Eliza- Those Who prefer. mud pethan atmosphere of cheerless and un Rees hgh and little sconery to near-Shi spears espoard usual environment, the hall was packed | ar G. Aauen, poeney, wi ra in Ben Gate Ana ar treet's ney Chat to the doors, and the performance WO joayt one such audience lett in 5 of @ quality that held its audience to York was proved lasc night May Manton's Daily Fashions, OTHING thag Fashion has to offer ls moce 1!ked then the biouwe Eton or more becoming, This season it 1s being shown fn even unprecedented , beauty and design, but 1a esseniially the seme Al togerler satisfactory Uttle garment which ts 80 pronounced a fayor- ite. This one is quite novel, and Includes @ yest and revers which allow of various combl- nations. In the case of the model the material for the coat iwelf is eoral red droadel the revers, belt oufts are of velvet and the trimming Is a heavy lace applique, while the lictle walsicpat ta of cream-colored broad~ cloth and the buttons are of carved gilt. There are, however, @ great many @ultings whieh can be utilized. anyth: that is suMociently i in weight to be ti with success being ap- propriate, ba The quantity terial requted. for ‘the medium gise is 4 yards a, 3 ds 4 or 11-3 yards inches wide, with &8 yard any whith for the yest, 1 yanl of velvet for vors, collar and and 3 yards of silk for Uning Pattern No 84 cut In anes fer @ 6, B® and @ tneh . measure, Blouse Eton—Pattern No. 5191, lioW to “all or send by mail to THE NVENING WORLD MAY MANe Obtain § TON FASHION BUREAU, No. 21 West Twenty-third street, Wi York. Send ten cents in cotn of stamps for each pattern ‘These TANT—Write your name and address plainly, and a> Patterns beclty blag wanted ells a