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The E 7 Our Summer Visitors. By Maurice Ketten. Published by the Press Publishing Company, No. 83 to @ Park How, New Tork. ncernhaca cinwalfoennbes eeoliebaces ME NEITHER (ae 00K, MA —_—-. Be aa. Inet T's UGLY 7 Cay THunceR] | pHATS, L NO. 16,741 { Y THUN WGHT St DONT THAT. VOLUME 47. “ om HOONT Tri Rant at eas my \ HES HORSES AND HUMANS. « PONReTS ( THEW. 7oRRe RS TRNOW \ BPSw To DRESS. ~|_BY HECK! / N explaining how Orby was trained to win the Derby Mr. Richard Croker laid down some very valuable rules of hygiene applicable to human beings. He said: They cannot understand my not coddling my racers Orby never had a blanket on him all winter, ‘The doors and windows of his box were always open. Had he been in an English stable he would have had a thick sheet on at night and his box only open for feeding My: trainer believes in as much fresh air as the horses | can get. His only craze is for antiseptic principles This helps explain how an almost unknown West- ern horse won the Suburban. The man who loves his horses and lives with them will get more out of them than the tich owner who turns the details over to his trainer, Money can buy a good horse, but it takes more than money to make a horse win a race. It takes horse sense. Croker’s prescription for health and vigor should be read more by women than by men-Except the sons of foolish rich men, few men are coddied. “They have to work., They have to keep in health or lose their jobs. Business competition and modern methods do not tolerate turning a store or a factory into a convalescent home. LET'S Goin HERE, AND SEE WHAT Trey VE Gor, ANy way LETS GOIN, SI ano SEE WHAT THEY KEEP In THis STore | WWELL BY JinGeR ‘ WHERE 'VE You Fours Two-thirds of the doctors’ ordinary practice in New York comes from women. Men rarely go to a doctor unless they are really sick or injured. For casual headaches and colds a man goes to a drug store, Mot to a physician. As soon as a childless woman's husband has enough money for her to live at an apartment hotel she classes doctors mith milliners and dressmakers as necessary luxuries. Orby was not fat. 1 View the idle women who ~ spend their evenings in Paradise Row at the Waldorf. Stand at an entrance to Central Park any after- noon and watch the automobiles The Chorus Girl Bemoans the Stinginess Bred by Automobiles and victorias. Take a look over By Roy L. McCardell. “Mamma De Ihranscombe pointed out to us «)back ie stuck. He says be’s going ta stand in front - a foreign nobleman who's a wine age although |of the bank and see the las: man get handed a the grandstand at Sheepshead Bay. ‘a E was out to see the! Ghorge, who touts Perfect Brut and is Amy's flance, | lemon. How fat these women are! W Suburban run, a| Sy" there's no call for it. He was in one of them! “When we got home from the rac # we went to the Chorus Girl, ‘and b'sh-powered foreign ca the foreign nobleman | Martin's, and Able and Lovie saw a couple of buyers They do not sleep with open windows. They blanket themselves In furs and robes'in the winter, and even in the summer their veils inter- flere with their breathing and injure their eyesight. They use perfumes to excess. A perfume is not a disinfectant. They take massage instead of exercise. They do not even ar- we had a grand time. We didn't, ¥ 8%, And we passed him held up by tne romdsac! they knew and invited them to our table. Abte Wos- bet much because nobody seema| ¥!th a busted tire, raving like a maniac. «iebaum is a nice feller as a general thing, but when! to have much money. | “Years aj Mamma De Branscombe *, tho he gts lt up a I or has any out-of-town people “Mamma De Branscombe says! Count was o: about her when she was happily with him he gets the star-customer bug. You know it's because everybc leads tho | Married to her third husband. The complex life and has an auto-| fully jealous, Mamma De anseor wos dread-| What the ‘star-customer’ bug ie” It's when your're any place will anybody who wants to show you how he : t mobile. There's where the| time he put a reypjopr t Stands, and how his tab ts taken like as {f he was range their own hair, money goes. “Every time she trigger five times that saved he paying double rates, and how they'll cash hia check It is as natural for a woman to years a tire bust, Mamma De! the cartridges dtd explode, Mamma De Brane- for any amount. But the star-customer bug is al k ‘ 4 7 Branscombe says, it gives her combe said se 1 to 1 things went # is worst when he telle the w wien tall ane pee work as for a man. he peasant A pang of pain lycause she far 5 © compelled t m he sand. prietor that he's here, That's Able when he's stewed woman who follows the plo knows some ni eirl gets al Ao d E you, we went to the track Subur- and wants to show you how stands. You've been sandwich und e giass of beer where she might ban I 4 0 we lose on the big race we win| with that kind. “Tell Tom ley I want to see Europe needs no medical specialist] nag « course dinner with wine. Still, the on * and come out ahedd on the day him,” says Mr. Manhettan pgigy ce to preserve her health, The woman] might be wasted of something worse, Mamma De) “Old Man Moneyton couldn't come, out he sent! says the waiter. “Well, you tell him I'm here,’ saye ‘ Branscombe says, ond jt's no complim.nt now to take | dred down with Dopey to put on Electioneer, the pest; ‘he won't be too busy to s:e me! who scrubs her own floor, washes], jaay tor a cab ride in the park, as Mt used to be! but Dopey forge: aoout it, and ae he didn't sn ay Kid ain\t dks temaays to onad itso crheaeia eit el her own clothes-and raises her own| nm her young days. Peopleof moderate means goes anything to us he comes back with the kale inside gs. burban and other big scampere—after, they're % ans % it < n for a automobile, and when they pays for it ‘ t over? When the; winning jockey and the trainer tel ba ies need hire nobody t RIVE | tor supplies and repairs, they're all in financia Old Man Moneyton told Do oe Just how tt was dofe, according to programm, you r exercise by proxy and you ure expected to swallow the scenery and re) he'd wut it in bank, “and cpen ar 60) can't see’ how the public could have been so blind 3 ‘ rues saif © dust of some speed fiend that Dopey sali the way that ba.. 4 would Mak@! i, ite oest ‘business Interests as to bet on any other No double chins bo fresh yourself on th ‘ 4 on any o double chins bother her, has one of them selfish high-powered runabouts you think they was doing api nt to take And when the favorite ten't one, two, thre Go into the shops of New York! keeps ahead of you with !t. There should be @ law. your money. Finally he did and the women behind the counters have no surplus adipose tissue, Go| amma De Branscomoe says, to prevent ppople (he man that got tt ba nand then he 84% the explanation ts that ‘he fell back in the ruck it right over with @ lot ©f ang from that on was never in the running. But if o ‘ 3 owning mitos who can't afford te treat you to any- ot to the cashier and a guy come in Witt he win, pfier being on the outekirte of the race {nto the factories of New York and the women who work there have} ping vut a ride In ‘em a check and Dopey says he seen them with his own most of the way, the word-painters for the next noneteo much covering in the winter time, Time was, Mamma De Branscombe says, when eyes py iis money out to thie fuller He set up & morning news throw it up on the ecre’n like this nebed 4 automobiles, but everybody had the awful kick about It and r poller for his mo Jivlets the Jockey rode high schoo! a Richard Croker's advice is good both for horses and for the women pr { a good dinner, and a |i with # weak hearr and dof the feller that had ly | Carefully nursing his mount, he let the other a) ha et idle time to see the horses run. . t arcy digitalis and etry with her be- the toe om " t pace ill they pun thermeel off the'r hoeks, and a ws = dbase SRN Bind ae Ti a Pitas Z t i a an time to get a present ¢ ba hie ad then J —€ ng Sliver Onion his head, breesed mre fe ry Rut nowadays tnco sat | ahowe m how ow ° n without an effor , t ' frie n * ropey sald roked as if e a x n t BETTY VINCENT’S ADVICE TO LOVERS. Jo Make Her Acquaintance. | "ons it and passes remarks about it. angry at me for being sarcastic. Doya little cadling down? I have ato; 1 think @ great deal of this young| ¥ 1 mbt to keep up my saying how much I care for him Dear Betty man and do not like to have him get! frien Ofice Boy People break off great armfula of the > the Edilor of ‘The Eventing World flowering shrubs. We have a beautify In reply to “Sam's Mother,” who aake| playground the chances, temptations, eto, of an} wight. When t Moe boy's life, 1 beg to state that the] keep off the gra eon ary order s toward him or give him| aay now just the opposite I An swine | | Sa enforced ther t "| wrong? viv aera Ot an tears 1M le SY) bo. the Gaus! “iamparary’ right age and would like to get acquainted | Treat the young man in @ friendly Bim a good start. He may learn many | now « t ' hinge in the oMfce which can help him to Dusiness he tells you of his. You are very | : 2°25" May Manton’s Daily Fashions 22:2) S%%i""s vening World's Waily Magazine, Saturday, June 22, 1907. Pe ep road station every morning ! a | a, bright boy b devote his spare 4 spins paphasileed re eins yee Ma So Ang ati time to studying, 1 would advise “Bam's| 7? te & b len rchink # : ; mother” not te take the idea that t of t hile alae a betler than the plaited one, and e frill Ieare bad habits inthe office, but | Keep your temper. Don't worry. Leave |! wNictoe. [EN suet now inere Se an tote vs He Wants Her Picture. gpd wens. are een |) stoneen ond Seehing’ Sriesn Find out where she lives or works, | riety of attractive models offered. This Dear Betty ad Push or Palit oath eee ae ean or where she goes to church, end thea lone te exceptionally graceful and be AM a girl alateen youre of age, and We the Eatior of The Evening World (rea ite Varebee eet ieeee na ry the acquaintance of #0m®| nme being inld is haeiioe an long ago # boy asked « girl ‘ Will clever readers decide yuee rr ee. Aap pea pao, pee ' ' | friend of mine for my picture As tion? Does « horse push ble load or | (Tvl! and sewelabies i) saaaty [that are etitched flat over the hips, In 1 do not know the boy except by sight ah it Bome seg he pushes emails’ | now tf it would be right or fre fore me be amass SONNY | of guasirpe JeRieesies |A Vacation Problem. @ [Sheed ponges, with trimming of the | not tor meta ive ttt tam. 1 ‘ike te nota a ERMAN DOCTOR Hrvg vaterial piped with a darker colored boy real well GPRALOLN megou. Others my the horee p Dear? heat Ome f f ORAL magon, Whict is correct, readers? This Rade Clerks | AY friend o! mine ae i. toes t alt the noane able ulling It would be very improper. Don't do eer ee eg Leven & symposium, readers, | s A write frat? WRITER. | well a# wool, pongee and other simple the clase af we You should o man takes the first | silks, while trimming an be varied i The Onet me ee - Meaty alae |again and again. ‘The piain stitched A Jealous G..1. ‘ fe the Editor of Tor Ry Wore rv gs Pas ct a ig em is always correct and always Dear Betty er vere at is e tetone for t v t 4 ma plain ds © lus checked ee ~ wes raehg’ eir clas el 1 sunway | She Jold Her Love, Amn}! ‘pisi9 NAAM ar bine Am anenees dahlias corer Hiverside Park Nolsances ge Precip yg et OY ai may put individual fan There Jered sather pretty, © Wo the Bitter of The Evening Word i AM 5 girl peventeep Years O14) ace seven gores in the wkirt, but the ® fellow wwenty-thri Riverside Park is 0 te the west | * v « (o2.¢ clase ‘ wn @ follow for the] seams are « od by the plates. years old, and 1 think « #reat deal The bea sunken meadow m4 Mor many) past Ure years 4 The quantity of materia! required for him. He writes and comes to w ¢ Elghty-firet etreet te the love jn Nes hwy £ 9" aay | we have not been ter | the sixteen-year vise ie 4 yards 0% or on " © week he pret with other others d a ; : A : rls during the week. Do you think Hest strip of lawn in New York. The {t 5 we have nol been togeths 4 1-2 yards 4 inches wide, with 1s wire in Order to keep off the gr we not usu. cg, | often. 1 fet met him of braid to trim « istrated or js he just amusing Gliy enforced, aif tired grown-ups iie| GROUNDS FOR CLEMENCY, | young and did orsiand very p aises for girls Mii [am very Jealous and can Bi ease on the @ott, cool while} "Your said the chauffeur ar No. 5700. hardly sleep or eat VIOLer ebtidren play « pine of You will have to smother your Jea! - Bieae . afford to pe Gall or wand by EVENTING WORLD MAY MAN-T | oun: Ho lon he 18 mot engaged (o & Rew Yorker , The all I had TON FASHION BUREAU. Mv. Weet Twenty-third street News | you he has ® right lo eo with as many My Sunday vighi ai) the “Machine a To York. Gend ten conts in wile as pleases. He must like you by pep Mange peel, box ‘No; but | had @ bet that I could IMPORTANT Write your aime aad phelmly, very much, or he weuld not call eo yebeieh, Boye ear up handfuls | cress tows a: thirty miles an hour ways mpectty sme wanted, often, dake bim preter you by being art 9nd ctherwies apetl the piace, | not bli anybody. —Philadeipiia Ledg Mwave eweet end agremabin =... veggie TALE RAPID TRANSIT S MER. pw DEXTER W MAS@R No. 8—The “‘Wheel-Guard” Car. & HY does this car have no fender? - to people But these cars must run over many persons? On the contrary, they have never run over # single person in the last ate ra But there ts no fen- der to eave people, No fender to trip people up, you mean. There Is © wheel fuard. and if you can find a Way to get un- der the wheels you will do better than @ would-be gutcide, who Iny down on the tracks three times and was pushed off unhurt every time. Unhurt? Who ever heard of puch . thing? Well, Inst year these care pushed forty-four people off the track without seriously im juring © single one. But @ street rattway ¥ conceals the truth tn euch are not the cars of any they are operated by the city of Liverpo No one but a city could get up such an elephant This elephant reat twenty-two. The city every hour of the day an American car might We ‘ont a lot to do tt It « t people two cents to Ko to and from work, and the enterprise pays the city a some profit each year Rut the New k cars have wheel guards. Yer. but they are net long enough. They do not They roll you over and over, tnate yan angle. ly pushing you off the track. They run over people, and the Liverpool fender never does. How many under the care in Liverpool an@ pushed off the A of 4 have been aot Three hundred and elghty-etght In six years But what keeps you from under the boards, and Is not the front of the all along the bottom of the bo and the front s rounded and covered with r hose to soften any blow But does not the plough teeter up and down and strike the pavement tm front? It tn fastened to the axle boxes and keepa perfectly level at all times, be patented, Whi you make out of it? It ts not patented. It in free for ‘any one to use. And that fe one trouble, There is no one by recommending It Does not the car step hurt a fallen person? It ts made ¢ and has every sharp corner rounded purposely. But the front ar : you It is true that the Berit ering ‘a an improvement, but every Live acabel brake for emergencies and the care run af a safe mpeed, not m reckle But can polith push !t. No raf oMctal can make money on the side = @ powerful elec one en run street cars? tramway men are not pol nl appointees. They are a splen- picked out for ability, You have to go to American com- panies to find the fine hand of the politician Can sich a wheel glinrd be run over American pavements? Are not ihe lattes Who maintains the pavements between rails in America? The companies, And any pleading on the ground of rough pavement is an admission of fiagramt neglect of duty, City offictals, please take notive But as pavements exiat now, could the fender be used? Some companies have claimed not, when they were already running wheel guards closer to the pavement than the Liverpool one needs to be Parte of the cars almost always are lower than this fender. —-—_4-— Health and Beauty. By Margaret Hubbard Aye ™ water and a bland poap Me Tlere fe the bE ‘ormvia yon TO Keep Hair in Curl. afterward in several clear ldlac flower S—Try this formula, applied aa « one pint M directed: Gum arable, 1 dram; . Almond Milk, sicohol ($0 per cent.) suger, 1 dram; rome water, 3 ounces; «ly- ounces. Mix and dissolve, Motsten the . five ounces: hair with the solution. Put up in curling sweet aimonds kids or papers powderel), fou saiteytic To Make Hair Grow. 4 Try the following hair tonie, ‘ the al- fn the per fumed water: dix solve the acid tn the alcohol, then add the glycerine, agitate til thoroughly mingled, then pour very slowly Into the pmuuston, stirring constantly saging the scalp well twice Phenie acid. 2 @rams; erems; tine- tUnciure of nux vomlea, 7 1 ire of red cinchone, a gri ture of cantharides, 2 grams; cologne, 12) grams; sweet almond otl, 0 @ramea un . Apply ty the roots of te heir with « Pimples and Blackheads, Or cage anne ht SWI aan OPELESS—These biotehes from! lotion ia especially good for very ary H pimples and black ea 4 may ha sometimes Oe removed faccal Dyeing the Hair. asnage. eapectally electrical maseage. | Treatment. To remove the blackheads air. There Ja no other remedy. se the complesion brush w 1s D), Have it done by @ good hain requently recommend, scruobing your | dresser a Senor Bulacan of Sandiko. By Walter A. Sinclair. v of Sandiko, offers to form @ ° Bulacan, former ineurrecto, now & nat regiment to How does the Filipl With his failing for his dino. View, the straining of relation From the former tneurrecto What, oh! what, can we expect, ob! Here's the story of @ little fighting man Senor Bulacag, the Governor great, ruling the people of Bandiko State, Rebel converted, silk-hatted, bolled-ehirted, rigged like a carnival fete, Head in the papers numerous capers sprung on the far-distant coast— Read of the Japs (who now put on their caps with the ald of a shoe hore rom Wrung {rom @ peer with intent to strike fear caused the brave senor to frowns Ho In hot w rhe gathered together (he wartike and bold of his town. clapped oly #lk hat on bie big, shiny pete, and others, we're gathered on matters of etate no descending may land on thie beautiful shores Us in the moup If we don't raise a troop—eurely I need say no more. Lat us get busy and make the Japs diasy ie my siatements in yards for colonel, we'll be the infernal Sandiko Rough-Walking Guards Senor Bulacan, the Governor gr Saying others, ladrom War is impending—the Japs in my plan, as « practical man—surely ‘twill get the foes’ goats Threaten the Japs with « few save ps if (ney slep on the talle of our comamt They'd vever dare and will go in (ie alr, thus the Invasion will tall For, don't you see, i's as plain as can be, none of our coate has a teil!” It was a bluff, but Mt went well enough. Up struck the drum and the Ate While the bold don, beving passed o the ‘con,’ cinched up @ g00d job for ite et Queer Ways of Taking Pictures, T's are Umes when the oamers may be (led, Por ¢xampie, in photer graphs of clouds, waterfalls, balloons, &e., the camer moy point upward; while in taking pletures of people swimming or bathing, children at Wet. or play, de, it may be vied downward, Very succesful photosrephe ef prominent speakers, parades, crowds, 4c, have been taken when the coment held upside down, Hy holding the ea 4% in tho way wus od many @ rapher has secured good pletures, while oilers who tied to une the the veual way made absolute f ree. Often by holding ihe eomers @f the body end pointing It backwam one may secure pleiunte ay end of elder people ia natural poses without Lhe knowledge ee rume | §