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The Even oo eee Ee eee 2 “I know ene manager that never took out any- ( * thing but a musteal family over the ¥. M.C. A. * * % price for the Hippodrome.” circuit who wired to Gates to name his own Sot tt tt tet me as if everybody has learned some- thing excent the-| a) looks to (THINGS , Vis cea | people, enon sald the Chorus| Wy | Girl, “I've been| already asked to| sign In three new musical comedies | Pp that have naval 1 Heutenant heroes in white uniforms. I got ® good they want me in musical and hows, but whitt's the use? | WEeTterrerrrrrrrristrrtrtlectrrccll ls Sooo e@en tet. ee eee eer eee ner eee ees FURS SHES ISSIR TOIT IOOI IASI TRIOS TORIES SHEESH AHH EHS SAIS EOS HIS IEE SO SESE Sri be PPP eer eee eee seen OO Oe Illustrated by R. W. TAYLOR. LAY! IT'S ONLY A ONE SPoT! “ —_—__—, “BY HEC VLU JIST BUY ny, nisrea! ) MARKET ISTING, (Coroners W STING, ) cos 1 STINGER & oFrices dhs “The public simply won't stand for rt the nat aval lleut nt tenor any “y 1 1 novelty offset | ; ell the co s this year {s going to be dom! y Oriental poten— , what do em?—oh, yes, po- 4 sontates! Oriental potentate is i a lemon fo far as stage purposes is cone: | “ can play in a I, ,) \ barn, with a fly-pestered cow and « a. ; Ee font for acenery, and the peo- re & t ple would pay three a throw to see = “It's h a good play play and if you it from a depart ent store | th Enster egg keep the people from terribly in their ef- fon. you fort to pay admii orettes gold “But you can dress your ac in diamonds 1 have sotid aye to br he per- to accept two seats ‘e? Here are the Rot tohave p fall for on bring Jn about the Hippodrome. | a: won't nog But I've tg 8 wil {t. So many people I know vous about who'll get the le ip my mind e handed no going 19 buy’ ing to 1 ain't mer Dun think thes Flushing, “The Hippodrome fs all right W. Gates ian’t going to hi rrying six weeks L. L, for the summer. rom ombe is w Nixola Greeley-Smith. ™~ ? 5 ¢ yet, “‘tempera- meatus aayeril , increas Jo with the temperature. 4 ¢ love of the turtle, x . i On fen to crime. es A ons. We look beyond the er!me t e chat: ‘#8 we happen to he a@ beautiful pat we ¢ tragedy, nevertheless—the gront tragedy of boing afrald to By Margaret Hubbard Ayer, For Scanty Eyebrows. | lash be ver ANITY—This remedy has boen nuc flame the eyes, ° wanty case ft Y applled. It w As any of} w gets Into them. An Internal Remedy, | whole lot of company to help her In |Some managers who own their ow is ner- (clothes and others who have prom- Hip9o- |{sed to pay for theirs is around toll- ja John jC. A “Sawdust operators was benefactors to the race. Shes got ajof roller skates inside {t this winter. drome since Fred Thompson and El- \ing their friends the big offers ther y ducked out that I don’t wired Gates for the Hip. go to Monte Carin or manager that never took out anyth but © musfeal family over the Y M. clreuit, and {t was his own fam- ft out as | fly at thet, who wired Gates to name I know one y: ing World's Daily Magazine, Saturday, Pere errr ey June 23, 1906: eee ee “The packers is { popular shades.'' ena a ITS A FAIR (D15 OFF A MOOK \ poole: WAMED STUBBLES!) VEU! Mg (GEE! EVEN DE ACTORS HAS GOT dition? “Look es might have done it, but the nt ‘Collect’ and no thera ram how stocks {5 was givea, and all on account of the pr Zinshelmer says ‘Don’t But I do care. I'd lke in my profession, 1 tot That's what makes a pation prosperous—keeping money In circulation. being pounded down,’ says Loule, ‘and {t's ckers paying |being sore. A knocker never made|wnhy, nobody has any the highest prices for the best chem- | businesa feals in the market so's our canned |belleves inthe labels on the goods and |Street brokers hasn't any, and no- meats will be printed In all the latest notice Zinsheimer takes a/popular shades.’ pride in his, and ain't he sore at Louie Zinsheimer and Able Wog ‘these muck-rake men who are dis- glebaum both say that a busine: try’s financial con-|man has to operate these d not My money or your money." jto please the public, but to satisfy jor don't buy .& lot of sensational writers, cause they're “T don't blame Able and Loule for |804_ fertilizer over!'—what's any new clothes be- made of old carpets gunny sacks ground the consequence? money. The The Wall better, When the public |merchants hasn't any. buys thean ander ,the merchant's) body 18 spending a cent, and the guarantee, everybody feels the good |first to feel the effects of the gen- \times. jeral distrust are the restaurants and “When the muck-raker comes |the theatrical profession, along and says ‘Don't eat meat be- ‘obody 1s making any money ause {t's full of embalming fluld,|nowsdays except the muck-rake COU UU UU URE OR THE CHORUS GIRL—By Roy L. McCardell. 3 for the best chemicals in the market, so that our t canned meats will be printed in all the latest * |writers, all paying the highest prices H » » * » * * IRI TTT TET TR IR IR RHI III III ITE FI AI IAA IIA IIDIS ISA ISISSISISIISSSAIISSISSISSISSISSISSISSSSAS ALI and the; Think of ‘ro not making how much more } 4 a got if they kept owt them unpleasant things Instead of print- m! ing tt } ck-rake writers back j8howe, or open wine, or play the races, or go against the bank? You bet they don’t. It {s Just like what ad when they exposed the saw- ust and green-goods game, till now there isn't a farmer, even a Jersey farmer, that can he turned like a jhinge and steered to a jotnt. “Who was It the sawdust operators got the dough from? Why, tight- wads, t ple what went down in |their socks and brought up out-of- |print editions of money so’s to buy green goods to swindle thelr nelgh- | bors with “Sawdust operators was benefac- tors to the race, and even If they wasn't, they were good spenders, |wasn’t they? “And that’s what makes a nation prosperous and the arts flourish— | keeping money fn circulation. My money or your money. “Don't you know that a tightwad never went Into an honest proposi- {tion yet? You had to cheat them un. |der pretense that you were giving them a chance to cheat somebody else. “Who Is it that gets stung in the wire-tapping game? Good people, Iiberal with their money? No; tght- wads whe wouldn't put up a cent in an honest proposition or buy a bottle of wine for their dear old mother or a broiled lobster for some one who'd saved thelr lives! “Well kid, all this foreboding over financial depression didn't keep us away from the Suburban. It was a flerce bunch of skates, but we played Dandelion, the old reliable No. 2, for place, and came home with the cush. “But take It from me this thing of exposing everybody !s going to hurt the theatrical business. “Why don't they stop this holler about the monopolists handing us the lemon? Monopolists are all right to | meet socially. I know; I've met some, and It’s fineto be monopolized by ‘em. | “Look at Old Man Moneyton, He |was shown up in the papers to be worth thirty millions, and he Is now spending his time and money among foreign strangers with the rest of thia country’s wealthy outcasts. | pon't talk to me about the Com- |mon People; they're no good for | themselves and they never buy noth. ling for nobody.” HAT is becoming of the waist line Fashion divotees are beginning to find it ther dimou) rrows: Red va TLEMAN.—Pure cream of tar-|t?. Kee the ever-ns | that connection is. corrective of |“sgher all the time, and presen ~jeruptions of the face, But for genoral | !n@ a it looks'as though It would A tenapoonful of soda in a glise of hot Mix thorough’ ¥ ply to the eyebrows with a tiny tooth- water night and mc For Tangled Hair. use I would suggest phosphate of noda| ®eYer 8% T and th hlatory of woman's walst Mne through the diferent historic periods all con-| dressers. ed to be. ow the mparatively show ated n far | The h the! waist, w vent wa! ne Ww is what we soe cy ta la kanga But look out for the Our Indy of fash 0 has Which brings above t And even ectolre Ls bids fa: to the directotre st ral {ne the line s es three stages of uy o waist line pr fashionable short-walsted than the the empire gown, whic n supreme among smart * = to the a brush once @ day M. O.—Put the least amount of until the growth olive oll on the comb and gently suMeclontly stimulated, ‘Then less often. | M. draw it through the hatr. It will ‘This olntment may be used for the eye-| remove the tangles. Coleslaw, **™ Egg Sandwiches, UT.1 cabbage up fine Pp Geena ef HOF the yo fter enough ugh strainer or ' potato rices, | and moisten with ore m salad dre: | Remove end alice Jend of loaf aparin mM bread, spread | y and evenly with | 1p] who mixture. Cut off as thin ax possible | i} Repeat until the number of slices )] prepared, Remove crusts, pu poy in pulrs and cut in squares or triangles, «nd Gold Cake, | es UF berries can be added O*i cup sugar scant, % cup butter, when put in oven tf any one wishes, inch of salt, yolks of three we! about 1 oupful, Now double th ° eaten exe, ey Uty for fortr, and wo forth for as easy spoon bakiig powder: ain es you wish) Se water, inn adc Chr! expect love for me. often, */ that he would gi! i | prevent? Of course if you want to, Mass te | An Intermittent Lover. Dear Hetty: SSE ere ~ BETTY Unexpected Santa Claus. Dear Hotty Yo {max present which I ¢ He has also tol I do not g but one ve this y AM a young girl not yet twenty and in lovo with a young man I met six months ago, He seems to think great deal of mo and ts never tired of 1 rounded jon baking powder, Mix | tolling his love for me, He made on wel and ada i cup cold ix" qngagement with me two weeks aso VINCENT’S ADVICE would say, “We Uttle know what lays afo & chicks !'* without knowing we can be sitting anound with chips on « t4f they are not we with some pec they fanoy they knoeked t become that a ha little things anc a frend can't give Know, who can or who will? ud ‘s almost forgotten. true as the sayi Ml always fi which ho could not full and sald he had to work late. Ho has not called to nee me since, I have met him and have not noticed him, Is that right? I know ho saw me. him? I love him dearty. A TROUBLESOME GIRL. = WHY WE ARE NOT .~—__|__FASHION’S NEW PUZZLE: THE ASPIRING “WAIST LINE.” | TRAGIC ANY MORE. Shall I write to You made a mistake not to notice By Mark sensations to hear this talk about New Yorkers being swift and Joing such fancy stunts over the hur- of life," said Binks the Bellhoy, this morning, as he ordered his horses unahod and sent to the country. “I don't make out your talk,” sald Clancy the Broomman. “What I mean,” said Binks, “fs that these New Yorkers get the credit for being so swift, and as a matter of fact the people who cut up the real ‘didos’ and make the town @ continuous Coney Island with a convention of drummers in {t 4s the ‘peepul’ trom the water- tank towns of the cbuntry, who come here to spend thelr money and cut ‘or @ wood time with no fear of 0 dearona cutting them down oward co “Don't some of the Naw Yorkers do the High Jinks business once !n awhtle?’ quorted Clancy. “Sure, replied Binks, “but when you come to find out about it you fin they axe people who come from Aor where elsq who came here and went to till they get enough to get in| work ae fives me one of those fatigue | Binks, the Bellboy. Madigan. the Directory of Directors, and then they stop every once in awhile to biow off steam. “The ‘peepu that make ee ble hotels and theatres, however, con: | tinued Binks, “are the folks from | Scranton, Pa, Buffalo and the like. It's so easy to get here nowadays | that a man can come down here from |most anywhere and have a night's hot fun and get away back home be- | fore th ‘al newapaper has had time to find out he was ‘one of those visite | New York last week.’ a min who {8 the President and a leader in benevolent | socials in a town not far away who comes to town ofce a year alone on business and he usually gives a supper party that has more ginger in st than | dinners, and he drops a money from the time he gets in town till he leaves that an or nary New Yorker doesn't spend in @ of a b y one of a thousand of mm they ever find some ce 18 Kom to go to, Broa: way look like Fifth avenue om an August Sunday afternoon.'* May Manton’s Hp princesse i exirt {3 — pro- nounced fay and a very graceful and attrac- tve one. It can bo worn either with a Ungerle waist of With one of mat trimmed et banding, of interest to women. Daily Fashions $ with The r Fashe aot Ange {oy Gall oF wend N Top MAY MAN: Hy ew uo, a HavetO Rima tac aron rd street, New W i 1 Tido] 3 Obtain} yoy.” send ton ) pattern ordered, vane ees P We bape IMPORTANT =W rite name dress plainly, and If he has promised to change his Patterna))! cues le raieyiaisaiwanted ligton for yours, I seo no reason why BETES AE : o your parents should object. bea gnont td