The evening world. Newspaper, May 17, 1906, Page 17

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reas nae A cum th } | | : E Pies pais si iii a The Evening World’ s ” THE SERMONS OF A SINNER By Roy L. McCardell. Text: Tho Pathos of Being Rich. b“ ONEY isn't everything in this world, but it's next!” seems to be the modern maxim, The person who is poor but proud is gen-| erally proud that he {s patronized by one or more men of Even Shakespeare, who eald all the good things years ago and left us naught but paraphrase, came out con- cisely on the question by putting Jo the mouth of the/ crafty Iago the words, “Put money !n thy purse,” How tritely true to say that for money men atrive and and perjure and slay as {f {t were the Blixir of| To make our age comfortable with money we shorten our I!ves| for money, For {t Honor Js exchanged and Beauty bartered. Against Wealth in the scale Brains 1s made to kick the beam, for with the ald of money we can hire tho brains of others, but the possession of brains {tself seldom| means the knowing of the way to gather g | After all, however, ¥ little good {n this world and none} in the next, re 1s no pocket {n a shroud. When all} 4g sald and wear one suit of) cloth in the bank, haying it in your| Life itself! a do for ‘tis notorious that ¢ and do: Concentrate your thoughts and imagine you have millions, but that you are too stingy to spend them. The man of mode gets as much out fo as John D, Rocke- fo without causing a crowd and Tainted money! “Johnny wears a wig!” nen Sclence to your ways 0! in publ. and the ribal and the lk As weil off as Rockefell dinner when he gets it. 4s only co some one Wealth, the Th He suburt had ju also had a It was his ve spend or Pshaw! A poor man can enjoy a good ~psin. Wealth, as all things, eis poorer; {f you are rich : to prove that er the case of Rockefeller has dys are poor, some is rich An like Love or Bc Who-Found-O ood In the Grand Cer here were Science, state of mind, cons! T Depot watt of tr ng to take a train to his He knew that because he 3 had lots of tlme to spend. He ars. Yes, sir, ten do! i it. It was his to lend, Think of it— do! to the book stand and k Rake M nes anal the buys because they are like most re- hour bunch, didn't know he b wn. His wife away just as his fancy pled glanced at tame thir epectable thin The-Man-W ho- anything to re Nearb any swe Across the way restaurant and the concl n that he didn’t wa: a candy counter There He languidly decided didn't care for were care to smok grea h its cafe and ty that he did not w et Dead Desires it dawned For, be able to gett DOES ings and not —e+- ABSENCE CONQUER LOVE ?; By Nixola Greeley-Smith. But tro doubts at atm Pinquity that ed by months or tance love aff absent 1d poss{bilit 1 ma Ie the eather an opti: of eth he te the A EL ATES HEALTH AND BEAUTY. By Margaret To Reduce Flesh. Hubbard Aywer. pt ia that fat ts o arbon—oxygen de. § out carbon, xy by the en | For a Shiny Nose. HANKE Ul r —Hore ts the| rotatoes, ote. 1 you refer The re edy here given ts your breed, often very successful, Take one dram 1 ic acid and mix it with four ounce salt instead o se wator. Apply the lotion to your ter, to say, if it be pure and good, ts fat- | tening. Hot water is an excellent #) stitute for other liquids, Add « I! of the jutoe of itmes or lemons to It if you choose. Limit your sie moure to seven at the outside, naps, You must take exercise. If you cannot walk at least five miles a day and do not wheel go to one of the !n- stitutions where moechantoal massago nose as often as necessary, Hair Turning Early. NI would not advise a dye at so Mt Indication of the halr pro. « maturely turning, but would go to a rellable hair dresser and simply have the te: CALLING IT OFF. ‘se given, Several of my correspondents | «pa, what ts an entente cord! report excellent restilts from this| “phat's a polite way of referring toft Method of getting the vigorous exer- | when a couple of follows who haven't cive they, require, ‘The system ts thor- oughly Wholesome and mot expensive, Ba meduging Geet the one tact $0. reco beon the hest of friends decide to let by- gones be bygones afd step in to have a Arlak on it,"'—-Obicago Record-Herald, THIS QUIET BROOK SUBURBAN LIFE I CAN HARDLY KEEP AWAKE- Daily Magazine, HAPPY DREAMS. 1s DELIGHTFULLY RESTFUL: Th By Se ursday, M G, pone. erioce | Loox WHY YEARS nN EAST RIVER BRIDGES, ¥ PEOPLE USE WE GET ENOUGH) al Tut, man} ie THAT! = IT’LL BE TE EN] BEFORE (— Oman THEM!) HE DREAMED = SURE! Vive Ne. BRUNG ME THINGS se Say! AN AWFULLY LONESOME PLACE D R CINE_ COME. TO STAY, \ LA AEAR URING THE USH HOUR- LOU LET atm I AND DREAMED ~ HAND OVER. THEM VEWELS. Little Comedies of Success w By T. 0. McGill’ ALVNG FREI AND_To Keer UPA ONE BRIGHT HRIPY JAY.HE TROUGH THY SOE SOPT SUIMER BOARDERS’ Eapoe NH Hy NOW HES NOT WORKING aD SLEEPING TATE AND THE ECHOES RESCIND WITH HIS DITE . ORTH HOME. HINTS. | Sweet Potato Pudding. | ANB and one-half pounds of mweet po- one pound of sugar, atx nree ounces of butter, one sherry, one wineglaasful | aif peaspoontul allspice, | Battin cter toanpoontul powdered macs. Roll and mash the potatoes and press |through a sieve; while hot stir in the | butter and mugar, then the beaten yolks lot the eggs; mix tn spices, wine and brandy, umi lastly the whipped whites of the exes. Bake forty minutes tn a buttered pudding dish Serve warm, not hot, without sauce, Tortonl. NE pint cream, one dozen moa- Toons, three eggs, three-quarters cup sugar, three-quarters cup of Water, one teaspoonful vaniila, Botl the sugar and water together till ft threads; beat the eggs separately till ight, then mix together; pour the hot ayrup on the exe graduatty, stirring constantly t!ll it ia cool, thick and creamy; favor with vanilla, and. whan ready to free, whip the cream and eda Brown the maca- | roona in the oven and when cool roll fine; |put half the macaroon crumbs in a4 mould, turn in the torton! mixture, then the rest of the macaroons. Pack the mould in salt and ice and let {t stand tor tour hours, Oyster Salad. | QCALD oysters untt they are ptump and then put them in oold water wht! they are boiling hot, go as make em firm} put them to one il five exgs hard; take oft} chop fine; lay a bed of} na long dish; place the! cover m with a ma: gf; over tham place t | the whites white lettuce ore which have been and tastly the chopped | it stand do the become a ts thor-| | watery. oughly dried. PRETTY VINCENT S 2eViCe @ LOVERS. & people can By Betty Vincent. ERI * but one of m: letters written mo by girls who call up e dealing with one irs {na woma the hay “1 am and am in 1c eowith & yo age. I have think, he loves mo, although he has neve told me so. How can I find out (whether he does or not, as I have had of marriage from another but not as well uJ. 2 heir im: a proposal man whom I like seem by of them pticularly—nor to a ngs 49 not cloud the memory of his firs "“L love you" with the rec it was brought about by any ar means, Be your | et wholesome, | natuml aclyes, and he will tell you In] Now, his mother haa invited his own good time. come and stay with her during 1 say this to you, not in any critical} cation, H spirit, but aa your own mother might, He told nake the fu’ happiness that d You perfect, and to keep you t unsophisticated gir! that 1 now he wishes you to be. A forced flower may be beautiful, but t withers early and can live only in othouse alr, your hears to bloom tn the sine of @ sweet, natur Perhaps She Lobes Another. Dear Be! HAVE kept cc the last s1x Wil you please ad CONSTANT Be as kind and devoted to the gir as 0 to you soon enough to keep yc t at the | 1 in them wi god possible and do ni i 5 t + f q other man, and porhap M 4 friend who asked my advice. | ht by welting you that 1 He Wouldn oe at Hats. tbe able to obtain the aavioe| s f Letty {a in love with a young | 2°%, Retardant eA Sf ora koe hes ® young man, twenty-one year : age, and have beon golng with a He lives out of town, vary’ = much ¢ \ gets 1 1a § avenue and lool to put in ws. We passed a 1 Christmas he gave her a sort of jewo! and because I would r case, and Laster he gaye ber a ower, [at she window she got mad aud would her se all tho that 1 please ‘her b¥-celog e asks you, If they t she is not unreas I She Has Given Him Hints, | when tt Ur Geis RS | ay OG. to the part Although Misa Davis ¢ = performance, nie se rp the part. ather Hand) med t Miss Con ty conalat ty {ght actress in the rr! jot be maid for. M!. has pitcee! who good au Violet, 2d ofa en most sing the pi ene tn which Viol g even a amile las! put it on ice, and night. M the audier Charlea Gottho! 1 f has yrow and woul, gerously up anaemic, b have mas name of is a re omedy, end a bless!: a akit by Joseph Her- of tho feat- ay afterna: By giv! , at the Broadwa = the proce >melers . the Bohemian Club has Ained many motors in ita time; mong them the late Sir Henry Irving. 1 {nsuroes a folly afternoon. Davia ham will sing “Danny Deever,” with Walter Damrosch, who composed the music, at the ATO, A musical |autire called “The Songbinta,” treating Bisp of Bernard study que c 1 Macdonough, t and the Lady R 5 in the i 4 able to sit up and exhibit tn Amer ‘om Antwerp, In era two chim= nimats, as mown by yman since N nm to exhipit almu! or the three an- oretly the accom- of on when the news reacted that the 1 orangoutang did not sur- ‘The animals oost him thousa: 8, Another severe «as @ remit of the storm was the Cleopatra, of her at sea and tho led to let them morning the cubs had disappeared. ‘ in yet to be a record of tiger and ratsed to maturity in autumn, The frst wil] be ‘The Snow by Stanislaus ‘Stange and Regt- De Koven, The second will be @ comia opera, with the book by A. T. Cahn and the music by Jullan Bd- wardes. Ludwik Englander will supply the music for a musical comedy written by Joseph Herbert and other: | CHARLES DARNTON, Lost, One Thousand Gloves! ‘To the Wattor of The Hventng World: What becomes of all the gloves lost fo wan that I collect the glove trom t arter on my Way home alive tn the evening. I tgied it, The starter mnitlod long and loud, and sald “yours 1s nbout the thoumandth glove lost | chte week, but it has not come tn to | me." Now what becomes of these articles that men and women drop by His af’ man that ploks them up don't «ive them to the starter, does he take them home ‘and make bacon of them? I hope to from others who were unfortunate Tevinis way, and lea o ob the mystery D TAR fe ‘That Vanishing Buoy. Te the Bitter of The Bveatng World: Kindly let me comrivute my ttle’ knowledge about thie buoy contwoversy, A writer speaks of secing @ apar buoy in the North River, and aska why op certain days it 1s not visible, A second writer, “Mac” by name, suggests “tide” na the cause, I think {t ls to indicate to ships that they must not cast anchor by passengers on the bridge trains?| I boanied @ britge train bound for Menhattan. As I was putting on} a glove the train moved, «0 did} the glove, down romtbed. 1 spoke very kt hum- | tay te the man that wheel. accident from the bridge cars? If the) ft strikes me that a big, tong, buoy which coutd period!- | cally @taappear under the water wou be worse than @ ‘Mlerellot.” As ‘Mac | has taken such Mbertles in guying us Hobokenttes, I believe, without of- fense, that he must oome from tho Highlands and knows Uttle about the [North River for navigation. BALTIC ANGLO-SA Gold and Platinum, | To the Eititor of The Drening World: | In answer to Edwin EH. M., | asks the weight of gold, I would |any engineer's pooketbook will give im the information he asks for, wh! as follows: Pure cast gold welst | pounds per cublo foot; pure hamim: gold’ weighs 1,217 pounds per ouble Hey Pmtinum is the heaviest known eod platinum wire weighs 1815 feet a ar ae A Point ter Debate, f cisty ls getting up m debate “Reaotred, Jobn Andre yan, eatly, no more Hale? What give me one or below that part of the river, At any UCH # simple pretty Bittl frock es this one {nm sure to An tte welcome, both from the young wearor herself and the mothers detight in fresh from who everythin with open ne * ow sloover, coming and Harly well to warm wenther wear, Dut & yoke deep cufts can Ot eeally, added de to all The dou’ and el- no be pecu- sulted vultod sons whole marked —— | THE PERFECT CLIMATE. N r Ue te 1 There are some Hike tt. Girl's a, 414 yards vat Dress—Pattern No. tape Rela 34 or 8 5-3 3 WORLD i How to TON FASHION BUREAU. N Twenty-third street New nnee?, IMPORTANT—Wnite your name and address plainly, and al- Patterns. ecity size wanted. ways \ Wasting ton Star 9 eee erent

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