The evening world. Newspaper, May 24, 1907, Page 19

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Evening World’s Practical “The Evening Worlda’s $10 A DAY IN PRIZES. to Practical Housekeepers, as follows: Two prizes of $1 each for the dest 200 words or lese—the fewer words the better—under any one of these five headings, making ten prices in all: Summer Dishes, Bome Dressmaking, Cozy-Corner H Hints. 1864 New York City.” N« WEEK THE EVENING WORLD will give $10 o day im prices ints, Window Gardens and Kitchen Bend letters to “HOUSEKEEPING PRIZES EDITOR, P. 0. Bos The names and addresses of To-Day’s Ten Prize Winners are given be- fow with the Prize-Winning Suggestions. ee Making Over. A Mending Secret. $1 Prize. | ind's Or brother's trousers | bo mp) thorougaly | This up bem a trifle wider than & lip stitch Into position; place a damp eloth over By follow trousers will a fwioe as long. MARS. CHAS. BG. OTL Wearside ave Nd. J. com Ri For Straw Hats. When leghorn and light-c: hats become polled and weellen; method to make them look like mew is as follows: Make about a pint | ef very strong coffee. Place in a large pen. Dip hat in a few times, accord- | fw to tint desired. By drying tn the @unm the hat retains ite shape and re- @olors to a very pretty burnt straw | REJENE C. LANDSMAN, No. @ Bt. Nicholas avenus, New York! rize $1.| i 3 Care of the Hands. In Berry Time. Prize $1. Before doing work that will stain the inger-neails, euch as looking over ber- wm. @ firm paste of plain apd water, putting !t underneath Toots of the naila Af- hands when the work 1 find the nalls as free @s when you began. For eplit from having them in water, earbolated vaseline thor- @ughiy around the roots every alight Ma HD. KEEFDR, 4 G, 17th wtrest, East Orange, N. J. inert {To Keep Hands White. $1 Prize. | Keep « half lemon handy near the fingers after THERE Hi that stains Have also a small ottle of glycerine and rose water, Into ‘which » few drops of carbollo acid «: Mo, WS West Forty-seventh street, New Fork Cty, | | | Dining-Room Hints. | AA Table Cover. $1 Prize. A pretty and serviceable cover to be loth sewn over am over and fvished with @ two-inch hem in fancy stitoh. By wsing this, one is enabled to set the table for following mea! after washing Gigbes. At meal time remove and fold faded an ex-| ¢ the cover, and the table ts Iafd ready. and thus saves the busy housewife many steps when she ree be attend- . WILLSET, ing to the cooking. Mire W. ‘Three Bridges, N. J. ee To Save Linen. Hem the good pieces out of eld table clothes and put t nder each one’ plate on the dining table and sce what ng in Washing table linen. They very easily removed after each and are hardly noticeable while eating. Mrs. W. J, WILLIAMS. No. 235 Mowery , Danville, Pa pring Cleaning. Value of Paper. $1 Prize. Few people know the value of paper cleaning purposes. When wet, It ana mirrors and windows, polishing with dry paper. After 5. paper will we he grease off the ove like noth- in . and then can be burnt. U. PERCY, No. sf Gohermerhorn street, Brooklyn reais Brightens the Bed. $1 Prize. When house cleaning do. ¢ forge the brass beds need food care to prevent tarnishing. Dust of well Take @ soft piece of Cannel and ome good vaseline and rub well. Then take a clean piece of flannel to polish It wtll remove ail stains ang finger marks, and the bec will look Just like new. MRS. CHARLES STWPHAN, No, 639 Marcy avenue, Brooklya, N. T, eee Summer Dishes. Potatoes on Half-Shell. $1 Prize, Wash and bake three medium-sized potatoes, cut im palves lengthwise. Without breaking the akin, take out the potato and place in a hot bowl Mash and add one teaspoonful butter, one tablespoonful hot milk, ealt and pepper to taste and one egg, beaten. Fill the skins with the mixture, heaping lightly on top, Bake until « light brown Ar- range on platter with small pieces of parsley. MILDRED W. CROWTHER, No, © West One Hundred and Third street, New York City. Lemon Pie (Not Starchy) $1 Prize. Line a Geep ple plage with nice crust, then prepare @ filling as follows: After removing the crum from two silces of Dread shout two inches thick, pour ever one cup of boiling water; add a Gessertspoonful of butter and beat until | the bread ie well soaked and smooth; then add the jute and rind of one lemon, a cup of sugar, the yolk of two Denten, and « Mitte salt; mix with mixture end bake tn weittes of twe eggs to stim! froth, and four tablespoonfuls of powders’ sugar and spread on top and brown. BMILY SCHAEFER. No, 971 Gates avenue, Brooklya. M—Tere ts) 4n exoslient » feeh food which you may rub into your face, pre ferably st night, with an upward) and outward move- | ment, 80 as to @n- courage the mus oles over the cheek bone not to eas Spermaceti (pure) int ounce; white wax (pure), int @unee; almond oti, «+ pound; butter of fepeca, 1-4 pound) lanoline, ounces, Health and Beauty. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. Melt an@ stir in one dram of balsam of Peru. After setting pour off clear portion and add two fluid drame of orange flower water and str briskly untill meretes, You should also ta: a fattening tonie and build yourself up phystoaly by drinking plenty of milk, eaUng e@ee and fresh vegetavies and exercising in the epen ais, Remedy for Thick Lips. D. Re-Try thie formule ¢0 cure K thick Mpsi Melt an eunce of any + Of the cold oreams, 44 one gram each ef pulverized tannin and aikanet chips; let macerate for Ove hours, then strain Ubrough cheesecloth Apply to | the lps when necessary, Ma$ter Ma$ten and Ga$. By Walter H A. Sinclair, OW big was Alexander, Pat They say he war & Whale Could Aleck fix the price of gae where Legiemvures fall? They hed no Legislatures then, Ukewlse no gas, my eon, And yet the thing you mention Aleck never could have gone. Oh, father, fovlleh father, do not try to dodee my que Was Aleck te bis tm big ae Master Musten let ‘The histories explain, my lad, worlds that Alexander sighed . to wine-dt hurt his foolish pride. and of slate $1 Prize. | LOVE! COME IN HERE QUICK! SOMETHING TERRIDLE'S THE MATTER WITH LOOK! LOOK! IT WAS A MAADLE IN HIS MOUTH! NOVHING BUT © MARBLE! OH .DO TdT GLAD HE'S ALL RIGHT BUT AS I'm mere MLL JUST LEAVE MY Bic! A ( A Living Spectre from the “Laughing Lass”! tion, had @windled to nothing more than & Coating fowl. Upon the heels of Car- ter's complaint oame another hall “Boat ahoy. Three potnts on the star board bow.” The news ran electrically through the cruiser, and all eyes were strained for ® Climpee of the boat. The ship swung away to starboard “Lat me know as goon as you oan make her out.” ordered Carter. “She's @ email boat,” cime in the Clear tones of the fookoat, “Ariftin’ down.” “Cam you make out her bulla?” “Rides high, ike « Gory, sir.” “Wasn't there a dory on the Laughing Lass?” cried Porsythe. “On ber stern davits,” anewered Tren- don, “Tt ta hardly probable that unattached small boats should be drifting about these seaa.” eaid Capt Parkinson, thoughtfully, “If she's a Gory, she’s the Laughing Laas’s boat.” | “Thate what she ts," said Barnett. “You cam see her build plain enough now.” A Dory from the “ Laughing Lass.’’ will you wo atoft and Keep me posted?” eald the captain The executive oMfcer climbed to jot | sYNOPsis OF PRECEDING CHaPTans | 0% Mt As he Reoonded. those be- ae low aw the little craft rise high and slow on a broad ewell “Same Gory.” said ‘Trendon swear to her in Conatenttinopte.” ‘Somethin’ that looks ke @ man tn or | the bottom of her," eang out the crow‘a-nest. ‘Two of ‘em, I think.” For five minutes there wae stiliness aboard. broken only br an occasional low-volced coniecture. Then from aloft; “Two men rolling in the bottom.” “Are they alive?” “Wo, or: not that T can see.” The Morning After the Dis- appearance of the Vessel Ore of Its Dories Is Found Afloat with a Strange Scarecrow of a Man In It. THE MYSTERY. By Stewart Edward White || and Samael Hopkins Adams, } “Mr. Barneti Copyrighted 1907 by MoClare, Phiitips & Co Wolverine, the fic, after suddenly mects Téa ber pf nine men sccompany them cl a A OTe, ee tere separsied Area tho | The wend, which had been extremely ight appears The i° variable since dawn, now whipped dew}tel compass 4 Laughing Lass dis Beeatnees alle and’ the CHAPTFR VI. on The Castaways. “That's the one, etr. HIB ship," growled Carter, the| the name” ‘6 I second officer, to Dr, Trendon,| “Good.” said the eaptam quietly, te they stocd watching the| “We sould have sews, at least | village ‘That's the third seagull we've had officially reported mince break‘ast, utre,”” eum@ested For- As be enid, three Gietinct times the Wolverine bed thrilled to an tmminent around a couple of points, ewinging the boat's stern to them. Barnett, putting I ean make ovt 8." amended Carter. eaid Trendon, you know?” demanded “How & Yorsythe, “Dory was aboard when Glecovery, which, upon neerer investiga. her the second time, efter Edwants we found in eee Calamity Jane 1 JU9T FEEL Ad IF THOSE ROBBERS ERE GOING To ET AFTER ME Some. “rim aside his glass tor « moment, called | haa lett.” “Can you make out which of the men are in hert” hatled the captain. “Don't think it's any of our people.” came the astonishing re’ from Bar nett. “Are you sureT “L can see only One man’s face, ir, It tun't stranger to me.” “Ii must be one of the dtew, then.” “No, oir, ‘x your parding,” called the lookout, ‘Nothin’ like that im eur crew, sir.” A Thing of Shreds |A Real Scarecrow. The dont came down upon them swiftly, Soon the quarter-deck was | looking into her, She was of & type | common enough on the bigh seas, ox- | cept that a step for a mast showed that she had presumably been used for | skimming about epen shore. of her | passengers, one lay forwaed, prone aad quiet, A length of eat) cloth spread over him made it impossible to eee nis gard. At bie breast ao ugly protuber ‘ance, outlined vaguely, binted @ de tormity ———~* The other eprawied aft, and a « | nearer sight of ban some of the men | broke out into nervous Utters, There | wae scene excuse, for surely such « | scarecrow had never before been the | eport of wind and wave A thing of | eurede he was, elaborately ragged, a | face overrun with a eerub of beard. | and preternaturaily @rawn, surmounted | by @ wtiff-dried, dirty, cloth semi-tur | ban, while a wide, forbidding stain along the side worked out the Ukeness to @ make-up. “My God!” oackled Forsythe with an hysterical explosion; and sgain, “My at" say long-drawi, UTepressibie aapiattor of expectancy rose trom the warship's decks as the stranger raised his hag- gard fm | them, and fell back. The forward ov \o nt stirred Rot, save as Lie boar rolled, From between Geoks some one called lout sharply an order, In the grim silence tt seemed strangely moongruous lemat the measured business of & ship's Mfe should be going forward usual Bomething within the newoomers con- sciousness etirred to thet voice of au-| thority. Mechanically, like some huge, hideous toy, he raised first one arm, then the other, and Ottched himeelf halfway up on the stern t. His mouth opened. His face wrink He seemed groping for the meaning of @ Joke at whioh he Ives or McGuire He's & turned eyes uneeeingly upon | YOU THINK ME LOCKJAW? HEAVENS! | CELIeVE is THE MUMPs! QH, DOCTOR YOU DONT KNOW WwHaT RELIER IT WAS WHEN I Daily Magazine, Friday, May 24; 1907. PPLHPSPHHLSSSISSHSPSOPSDHSSSHSSHHS SHS SHSHSHESHSS HHS SS FH HE SD SHS SHOP The Newlyweds % Their Baby % By George McManus | JUST KNOW HED <OImg TORR AWFULLY SICK! ITSALOT.) | yey TS WON'T IT, t Lovey? wi ath To KEEP THE BABY WELL! YOU KNOW HE HASN'T REALLY DEEN SICK THIS For Further Adventures of the Newlyweds and Gheir Baby See Next SundaY World's Comic Section. knew he ought to laugh. Suddenly from in surprising volume, rasping, yet with a certain roliickin Geviltry ft to set the bead a-tilt, bur Down ‘on, the'coast of the high Baroaree-es Long-drawn, like the mockery of & wall, the nilnor cadence wavered through the news and died away. “The High Barbaree!" cried Trendon. “You know fH?" asked the captain, expectant of a clue “One of thowe cursed tunes you can't forget,” eaid the surgeon. soundrel of @ beach-comber sing it year ago, Down in New Zealand, that was When the fever rose on him he'd pipe up. Used to beat time with « steel hook he wore In place of a hand The thing haunted me ull 1 wae sorry [ hadn't let the rascal die This aresture might have learned it from him, Howts it owt exactly allke.” The Second Man Was Mate Timmins, “I don't see that that helps us any, aaid Foreythe, looking down on the preparations that were making to re celve the unexpected guests. With « Geftness which had made the Wolverine mous in the navy for whe niceties of seamanship, the great aruiser | tet down her tackle as she drew ekil- fully alongside, and made fast, pre paretory to lifting the dory gently to her broad deck | But before the order came to holst away, one of the jeckies who had gone down drew the co ing back from the etl) feure forward, ent turned \t over With a heif-eliflied ory he atfrank beck And af that the ten- sion of eou) and mind on the Wolverine snapped, breaking into outerica and sUduen, sharp treprecations The face revesied wa thet of Tammins, the | bo's'n’s mate, who had salled with the | fi vanished crew. A \ife preserver was fastened under bis arma He wae dead. “I'm out," aid the surgeon briefy, and stood with mouth agape Never | nad the dimiplined Wolverines per- formed at wea duly with so ragwed « roullne as the getting in of the boat | containing the Kve man and the dead body. The dead seaman was reverent- ly Gisposed and covered As to the survivor there was some hesitancy on the part of the cupialn, who was i- clined to send him torwerd uni! Dr, Trendon, after « ewift scrutiny, eug- | gested that for the present, at least, By W. J. Steinigans HERE'S YER Pocwe BOOK, MA'AM! | SAW YOu oROP iT! “Heard «| he be berthed aft They took the stranger to Edwards's vacant room, Shere Trendon was closeted with him Cor half an hour, When be emerged be wae bese with questions Where A e the Rest? He Cannot Tell, “Can't give any account of himedlt | Yet.” said the surgeon, “Weak and pot rightly conscious.” “What ails him?” “Enough Gesh in his seat, Fever, Thiret and exhausion, Nervous shock, too, 1. think. “How oame he aboard the Laughing Less? “bocs he know anything of BilyT’ “Waa he © stowaway?” “Did you ask hun about Ives and MeQutret* “How same be in the emall boa? "Where are the rest?” “Now, now,” ead the veteran ohid- jingly, “How can I tell? Would you have me kill the man witb quesuons?” He lett them to look at the body of the bo'ln's mate, Not @ word had he Capialy GO anything out of him out )erowkiog and uninieiigibie expressions, which seemed to be objurgmory and to express bewildered cogiation. “How jong bad poor Timmins deen drowned?” the capistn hed asked him, and Trendon replied: Capia.o Parkinson, the man wasn't Growned No water tn hie lungs,’ Not drowned! Teen Bow oame he by bie death?” | “If 1 were to diagnose M under any @ther conditions | ebould eay that he had inhaled fames. Then the two men stared at each oth- er in blank impotency, Meantime the scarecrow was showing signs of return- ink consciousness and a message was Geevaton| to the physician On hig May Mant Manton’s Girl's One-Piece Drewes With Sepa rate Chomisette—-Pattern No. 6687 to say when he returned Only the |@ bi stranger was wesing resilessiy in bunk, opening and sbutting his mouth tn silent, plleous appeal water that must eli tow doled parekmoniously, think [Ul try him with « little brandy,” eat Trendon, and sent for the quor. Barnett raised the patient while the wurgeon held the gisse to bis lips) The man's hand rose, wavered and clasped the glass. Another Surprise #or the Crew. “all right my (rien. Take your well, if you like,” sald Trenion. The fagers closed. Tremuiously held, the Httle glass tited and rattled against Lie lewis idee wae vie urun, = mo F spasm of swallowing. Then the fevered oo upon face of the Wol- Verine'® firs} olicer, “Prosit, Bas voloe itke the “Be careful are ‘d Warmed. Trendon. address. Derior omer sharoly. tor Barnett all but let bis chares . Was § puckered mask of amase tnoredullty, «slr Sak ihe. a itera singular wry. ‘ fon poking the. brush of ‘Ailinet - Out” the deep ines "ot memory to the reoomnition of Ha a. veon end ev countenance whisked him ecross seven Bert ine dave of Dewey and the Pe IT Siade, by the Lordi” be om e f the Lauchine Lasef ried EBT the Laws THER cae . fie" De Govtinued) Daily Fashions HD “Gress that can be were with or without the ghemicstte is « Very useful one for ¢he summer season. Here ils « model that also ah lows & chotes of eTbow or long seeren Tt le made of one of the pretty checked French ginghams, that show lines of ok on @ eotton background, and te trimmed with white linen edged with Dine; but almost every material chet ft weed for litle girtey’ dresses & ap Propriate for this one ‘The Gress te amde with waist and skirt tm one and te closed at the back, tm aptte of the Goubdle-breesied effect, while @e fulleees ot the wate ls held tm postion by means of he Selt The hemicetie whee wern te adjusted under the weist partion, Quantity of matertad required for me- Gum eee @ years), 46 yarde MM) BLe ergs &, or 36-4 yards 4 inches wide, with #4 yard #7 inches wide for the chemaisette, belt and cuffs. Pattera No, OGMT ts tn sizes for girls ot 4 € and 6 yeaew of age ead wii be mmefled te any sddress ty the Peshion Department of Gis paper on recetmt of

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