The evening world. Newspaper, July 9, 1907, Page 13

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mare evening World’s 5: 66-7 THINK [a itke to go to the Adirondacks this sum- if mer. We've never been there,” said Mrs. Jarr. “What's the matter with staying in good ald New York thts #.mmert™ asked Mr. Jarr. “You can stay in good old New York tf you want to, but I peed a change,” sald Mrs, Jar. “There's plenty of changes around New York,” said Mr. | Jarr; “only because they are near us and can be reached | without any trouble—places of interest, I mean—we wont take the trouble to look at them.’ “I think I'd like to go to Europe,” sald Mra, Jerr. “What for?’ asked Mr. Jarr. “The Rocky Mountains are finer and grander than the Alps, and there are more of | them. Yosemite sark-ana Yellowstone Park are matclie y Lake George and !ta surroundings are more inaptring than z Killarney, the Hudson ts more beutiful than the Rhine, and what have they in Europe to equal the Luray Caverns, the Mammoth Cave of Kentucky, Niagara Falls and a’ hundred more of America's wonder scenes?” “Oh, I get tired looking a¢ scebery. It's no pokey,”’ aaid Mra. Jarr. What?’ asked the umazed Mr. Jarr. i "I auld pokey; scenery gets pokey and tiresome. I would ike to see the art Galleries of Europe, the British Museum and places,” sald Mrs. Jarr. » ‘What's the matter with wa.cing over to Seventy-seventh street and Columbus ua and beholding the thousands of interesting things in the Muneum of Nat- History?” esked Mrs, Jarz, “Oh, one can go there Rny-time. In fact, I've been thinking we might go end a fee If it is worth Iboking at some day,” said Mra. Jarr lstiessly. S “It's worth lagking ut many days, It's ona of tho most wonderful and inter esting collec opological, zoological, mineral and ornithological objects} An the world, Jarr, “but {t's right at your.door, almést, and you won't en take the trouble to look at it, but {f something ope-tenth as good was to be : jets in Europe you'd Ko In ecstasies over It.”" i} m going to see tt some dey, but then we have no art galleries tn this coup sald Mrs. Jorr. dave you ever been to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where we have some gs and sculptures in the world!” asked Mr. Jars. “No, [ haven't,” anid Mra, Jarr, “have your” ve always wanted to go. I've asked you bots of times, but you never Would come with me,” mumbled Mr. Jerr, “It's too hot to go poking around museums gnd ert galleries," sald Mra arr, “we'll Go to aes thoso places some time th the fali or winter, only tt peems s0 foolish to go rixht Reeing when you live In New York Maybe it would be better to go to the Adirondacks. 1 wish we knew somebody that had a nice fodge or camp who would Inve us there this summer. After all the people we teave enterta I think there should some of. them entertain us.” I do not know anyone possessing a lodse jn the wilderness, We'll bave to pay, as usual,” sald Mr, Jarr, | “Mrs. Kittingly knows a lovely place In New Jorsey,” said Mrs. Jarr, “only @he says the mosquitoes are bad after dark / Ghe waa texing me that she was aiiting on the veranda of the hotel slapping at them with a nandkerchicf and a ~~ wery—fresh-youne fan thought she was waving {t at him and came right over | pnd pat down bes! ber and sald, ave renting. ien't tT“ “Wan it? asked Mr. Jarr, ———{T9-Clean- Tin and Iron. me she had ope: an hour, while they bit her terribly," “Why didn’t sbe go to her room end Sarr. “She would have, but when the young man found out he had made a take he apologized ao nicely, and when she found out who he was, tha he uch a very nice young man, just, ont of college, @ very rich father and was "He found it rather chilly for « while,”” said Mi, arr,“ Birs. Eittingty tots work stockings on-and had to sit there like a martyr for almost pot emmonfa on fhe bitesT™ asked Mr, nd really innocent of the word, and meant no harm, she thought it would be more indylike to sit there and ask him bow dare he presume to do such a thing.” “She wasn™ too severe on him, I hope,” sald Mr. Jury, with mock sertous- ress, be too careful in a place lke that.’ “I should say not!’ id Mr. Jam Yo, she forgave tim," said Mra. Jurr, “but it goes to ehow that one cannot “But the best way ts to be wo careful What you won't go to a place ke that, and then you wort be pmnoyed by Mosquitoes and fresh young men. irs. Kittingly sald Mrs. Jarr, re “She bas a nerve, etiaperoning.”” “Do you rewty “Mrs. Jarr. ‘She was rather cheeky, don't want t) go sny place with her. tively. salt Mr. Jarr. nk I look younger? wasn't she?” Where would you ke to go? says if we'll go there this summer 1 can chaperon her,” “She's older than you, let ber do the Sho makes up so, you know,” said edded Mrs. Jarre, “and I The Practical $10 a Day in Prizes. w uw Housekeeper The hames and addresses of To-Day’s Ten Prize Winners aro A given below with the Prize-Winning Suggestions. Kitchen and “Pantry st Prize. | To wash xreasy tin and tron, pour & few drops. of ammonia into every | greasy roasting pan after halt-filling | the pan with warm w A bottle of | einmonia should alw be kept ‘on | the. sink for such uses. | and near Wever allow the pan to stand dry, for 4t doubles the labor of washing, gbut | and use the ammopa, f done CHITTERN, to: $7-Austin street. Bridgeport, Conn 4 Care of Faucets. $1-Prize, | Clean brass fadicela with Mannet, am ped in yinegur or lemon Juice, and rud/ Uoroughty with rottenstone and ofl, | tien _po! with a dry cloth, and the| Cacccta will become as good as new. Miss B. DAVIS, Jo, #8 East One Hundred and Forty- “ninth atreet, Bronx. ‘Dainties for the Sick. Cup Custard. $1 Prize. Break into’ lange sized cup one ese, two teaspoonfuls of sugar, a pinch of alt’ and grated nutmeg, Beat up ‘thoroughly. then fi] up the oup with sweet milk, turn into another oup weil buttered, and put in pan of bdolling fwater reaching nearly the top. So: In the oven and when the custard hardens it ia done. Berve cold. N. M. CAULEY, ’ Richmond Hil, L. L. -Chicken~Tea. $1 Prize. Cut in small pleces a chicken from which the akin and fnt have, been re- moved. Boil the pleces in one quart of. ater with a little salt for twenty minutes. The tea should be poured from the chicken beford the meat 19 quite cold. Mrs, JAMES WHITNEY, No, 188 Du Bois street, Newburg, N. Y. Summer Preserves. Sunned Strawberries, $1 Prize, Allow ome pound of mugar to each pound of berries, Let stand. for two or three hours, then put on stove and let the frult get heated through: Be sure Met to let it boll. Take off stove and onto flat platters, then put in @trong sunlight for two to three days. The wun finishes tho cooking, and the ferries aro delicious. Put Into Jars end seal in the usual way. This Is an ld English’ recipe. Sour cherries may tbe preserved in the samo way, L. ADAIR, (| JEANNETTE STERN, Put the sugar over the tomatoes and set-aside tntti-ext-day, Drain off the syrup and boll it, removing any scum that may arfsa Add ‘the tomatoea and jetmmer far Mfteen minutes. Remove them carefully and spread on platters. Boll the syrup until thtok.. Add hale. of lemon juice to each six pounds of tomatoes, Put the toma- toes in Jara, pour the boliing syrup over them and weal quickly. Mrs. FRANCES FISKE No, 611 Central avente, Brooklyn. General Housework. To Keep Floors White. $1 Prize. Tf you have hardwood foors wast them with soda and water, after sprink- ling about teaspoonful of soda on any grease spota Pour boiling water over ft, then take a mop and wipe up the floor. This Is fur more satisfactory than scrubbing, and will tuke all grease pots out and will keep the floor snowy white and clean, Mrs, CHARLES PECK, 2802 Jamaica avenue, Richmond Hill, LL Sprinkling Clothes. ' $1 Prize, Inateadyiof sprinkling clothes with your ‘hands and getting all the water. on one spot, buy a l0-cent sprinkling pot, the smallest you can get, and sprinkle the clothes with it. It will @prinkla them nicely and evenly and they will tron better. stints No, 114 44 st, Borough Park, Brooklyn Labor Savers. : Care of Rugs. $1 Prize. Covering rugs during summer months with denim waves many a hard myeep- ing. Take three: widtha, four and a quarter yarda longs and one yani wide of green dentm to cover a’ nine by twelve rug. Whip seams together) as you would for m carpet, and tack smoothly.down with matting trols over the rug which must firat be thoroughly, swept with damp salt, and wihed with a cloth wrung out of ammdnia and water to take up any remaining dust. This makes the room look andj feel cool for the eummer, and ‘a saving the rus and labor at the same time, Mrs, H, F. ANDERSON, #414 Park avenue, Bronx. Paper Napkins, $1 Prize. When one has company a great labor paver {s to use paper napkins Instead of washable ones. Buy dalniily designed Wo {0 West On@ Hundred and Third atreet. “ 4-fFomato Preserves. $1 Prize, Gemove the skins and to every “Sh RSETR Na RE ena napkina for about five to elght cents a hundred, If used and crumpled do not throw away, for they can be used again for sweeping or cleaning stoves, &o, Mire. H. 8. HERMAN, ‘stm natant Miatestalin atanes...tten. ‘| | Injured man, starving and without amman!- [tion heady’ tor a hidden ily Tood_and-e7utpment. He tries to stay his bunger by catching @ iy fu in 5 Poot = 2 PART II. = Wounded Miner, LOVE OF LIFE. By Fack London. by McClure, Part | } | | SYNOPSIS OF PRUCEDING PART. A liner, returning from whe Asotio wil; Gotneee with tia parinet, to winteg atone Of the Fiudson Tay, poate, sprelsa Hla ankle, ‘Hie partner goes abead. deserting him. The ‘oaghe," where he has HH pursutt was renewed, tilt the water was again muddied. But I he could oot watt He un- strapped th» tin bucket and besan to bail the pool, He bafled wildly at first, splashing himself and fing- ing the water, #0 short a distance that !t ran back into the pool. He worked more carefully, striving 00 be cool, though his heart was pocnding -against yis—eheat-and his hands were | trembling. At the end of half an hour the pool was nearly dey, Not a cupful of water remained. And there was no fist “Hie found-w-hidden_crevice among. tho stones ‘through which {t had es- caped to the adjoining and larger poot —Aa pool which he could not empty in a night and a day, Had te known of the crevice he could have closed it méth a rock at the beginning and the fish would have been his, ‘Thus he thought, and crumpled up and sank down upon the wet earth. At first he cried softly to himself, then he eried loudly to the pitiless desola- tion that ringed tim around: and for a jong Ume after he was shaken by great dry sobs. He bullt a Gre and warmed himself by drinking quarts-of ‘hot water, and made oanp on a rocky ledge in the same fashion he fad the night before. ‘The last thing-he Gid was to see that worry from which family will be glad In the midst of th home. If you have time -she will enjo: Don't let an engage man prevent you home ple: eresting letters is a family. Do hi She Did Not Meet Him. Dear Betty: Ad deeply in love with a young lady. I made an appointment with her, but she didn't keep it The night wo swere supposed to meet I took a walk with some of my friends and met her} of Gold in His Sack, Faces Star-, vation in the Frozea North. You will leave fathers and mothers and sisters behind you in'the hot city in ‘the dally grind of work and her of where you have been and the people you have met. If you make her feel that you’are having a nice, -happy young man wait for a few moments If necossury. rey, er,| koes with that they will leave her soon, Daily ‘Magazine, Tuesday, With 15 Pounds Qds matches were Gry and to .nind hts watch. The blankets were wet and Glammy, His ankle pulsed with pain. But he knew only that he was hungry, and through is restless sleep he dreamed of fenats and banquets and of food werved and spread in all imagtna- ble ways. He awoke chilled and sick. There was no sun. The «ray of earth and sky had become deeper, more pro- found. A raw wind was blowing, and the first flurries of snow were whiten- ing the illltops. The alr about him thickéned and grew white whilo he made a Gre and dolled. more water, It was wet snow, half rein, and the flakes were large and sox: At first they melted as soon as they came In contact with the earth, but ever more fell, cov- ering the eround, putting out the fre, spoiling his supply of moss fuel, Tals was the signal for him to »trap on hia pack and stumble onward, he knaw not where. He was not concerned with the land of lttle sticks, nor with Bill and the cache under thé upturned cance by the River Dense. He was mastered by tha verb "to eat." He was hunger-mad He tonk no heed of the-oouTES he pursued, eo tong as tat yp course led him through the swale boi- toms. He felt him way through the wet snow to the watery muskeg berries, and less stuff and id not satisty, A Weed that tasted sour, and he ate all he could find of it, which was not much, for it was e crevping growth, easily hidden under the-several inches of mow. | Ha bad po fre that night, nor hot wate, and crawled under his blanket to slip the broken hunger-sicep, The snow turned Into a cold rain. He awak- ened inany times to feel tt falling on his upcurned face, Day citme—a gray day and no sun. It had ceased raining, The keenness of his hunger had de- parted, Sonsibility, po far as concerned the yearning for food, fad been ex. fed, There wna a dull, heavy ache 'ibla stomach, “but it did: not bother him so much. He was more rational, and once more he was chiefly tat ested in the lund of little sticka and| bhe cache by the River Deuse. He ripped the remnant of une of his| blankets into strips apd bound bl bleeding feet, Also, he veciuched the Injured ankle and prepared himself for a day-of travel, When he came 40. his back he paused long ever the squat moose-hide sack, but In the-end It went with him. * The snow had melted under the rain and only the hilltops showed white. ‘The un came out and he succeeded in locating the points of the compass, though he knew now that he was los. Perhaps, in his previous da ings, he had edged away too far to the left. He now bore off to the right to counteract the possible deviation from his true course, ‘Though. the “hunger pangs were no longer 0 exquisite, he realized that he was weak. He was compelied to pause for frequent rests, when he attacked the muskeg berries and rush-grass patches. His tongue felt dry and ERS, As though covered with a fine ha growth, and it tasted bitter in his mouth,” Hix heart gave him a great deal of trouble. When he had travelled a few minutes it would begin a re-/ morseless thump, thump, Urump, sand| then leap up und away tu @*petoful) flutter of beats that choked ‘him snd | made him go faint and alzzy, In the middie of the day’ he found two misnows in # large pool It was {ropossible to ball 1 but he oabyor | now und managed to cate: frie fh tin bucket. were ho longer than larly hungry. The dull ache to atomach had been growing duller fn ach Was conlies Ho ate the ing with painstaking caro, son. While he had no desire to eat, ho t to live. They Lis little finger, but be was not partiou- fainter, It seemed almost that or the eating Was an uot of pure roa- evening eating UWitra tor breaktast Stray shreds of moss, to Warm hlinself with hot ‘ater, He had not covered more than ten’ mile that day, and the next day, travelling whenever his heart permitted him, hel covered no more than f . But his stomach did not give him the alls’ uneasiness, It had gone to sleep. ie was in a strange country, too; and | the caribou were growing more plenti- | ful, also the wolves. Often their iyelpa drifted marosa the dewolation, aint once he saw three of them linking away be- fore bie path, “Another , ant in the morning, be- ing mors rutlonal, he untied the leather etring that fastened the aquat moose- hide aack. From {ts open mouth poured & yellw @oreain of courws fold-dum aid triggers, He roughly divided che guid alyes, cachelng one half on a prom- pent ledge, wragied In & plece of blanket, and urning ithe helt to the sack. Ho also begnn <o use strips Of the one remaining olanket for. his feot. He stil! clung to his un, for there were cartridges in that cache” by the ver ‘This was a day of fox, and thés Gay bunger'awoke ta him again, He wus d-he was able [chicks a day old—lttle specks of pulsat- | dodged out of reach He threw stones nis | ah -bantest | XPry_Weak end wae afflloted with a g1d- | dines which at times blinded him, It was no uncommon thing now for him to stumble and fall; and stumbling once, he fell aquarely into a ptarm|, nest! Thera were four newly hatcl ing life no more than a mouthful; and he ate them ravenoualy, thruating them. ‘live into his mouth and crunching them lke erg-sbella between his tooth. The mother ptarmigan beat about him with great outory. He used bis gun elub with wttch to knock her ove! tat she wt her amd with one chance shot broke @ wing. ‘Theo he fluttered away, run- ping, trailing the broken wing, in_ puree. Vttie chicks fad no more than wiietted his appertte. He hopped and bobbed clum=ly etong on his injured nile, throwing stones and soreaming oucecty et Times; at other times top- ying and bobbing’ silently elong, ple! ng timeelt up etimly and patient! when the fell, or rubbing his eyes wit Oia hand when the giddiness: threatened 4o_overpower dim. The chase led him across swampy ound in the bottom of the valley, and | footprinta tn the sos mosa. They were not his own—he cou sea that. ‘They must de Bill's. But he could not stop, for the mother ptarml- an was running on, 116 would catch, hor firet, then he would return and iu- Investicate, He exhausted the mother ptarmixan; but he exhbatisted dimwelf She-lay pas ing on her side. He lay panting on his , a dozen fect away, unable to eraw! to fier, And asa he revovered she re- covered, futtei out of reach as his hungry band went out to her, che chase was resumed. Night eettied down and she encaped. He stumbled from weak neea and pitohed head-foremost on h fnoe, cutting bh. cheek, his pack upon bi back. He did not move for a long while; then he rulled over on his side, nvound tis watdi, end lay there until morning. Another day of fog, Halt of his lest had—gitre thie —foot-wrap! He failed to pick up Bill's tral, d oot matter, Hie hunger was driving him too ‘compellinglyonly-only he wondered &f Till, too, were By migday the trie ot hia’ beoame too oppressive, A he divided the gold, this time ‘me piling half of It on tho ground, Th (he alteroon ne threw | the rest of It away, there remaining to him only the half-blanket, the tin bucket and the rifle, He plodded on for half an hour, when the hallucination arowe again. Again he fougnt Hand tii It persisted, “Ul very relief he opened his rif_le to uncon. vince himeelf: At thmas his mind wan dered further afleld and he plodded on, A Mare automaton, atrange concelts and whimstcalkies gnawing et his brain like worms, But these excursians out of th real were of brief duration, for ever the Paes of, thie hunger-pite oalled him kK He was jerked back abruptly once from such an excursion by a eight ‘tat caused him nearly to talnt. He reeled and awayed, doddering like a drunken man to from falling. Be- fore htm stosd-a horse, A horse! He could not beleve tda eyes. A thick mist was in them, intershot with eparkling fre came upon you are momentarily relieved, All the that you are having such a good time. 19 wood time don't forget the people at| mother write to her syery day tolling YY your vacation as much as you do, ment for tennis or boating with a-young Let the Writing: way to share your vacation with the| from writing this dally letter, mumbled. Now when I seo her she just emfies at me and wvalks ahead. Do you think that there is any hope still? I shoukt judge from the young men sho and I delleve she would like:to renew our friendsh!p. TB BETTY°VINCENT§ADVICE™ LOVER? Write to the family. Ne all of you are going away for a brief vacation. ‘| should think you would have more pride and would leave her alone Very Inbolbed Matrimony. Dear Betty: u I was a girl of eighteen I W marsted a young man, but tnside of half an hour after I was mar- ried to him I found out that he still had a living wife, Frém that moment I never «aw him again; but kept company with another for over @ year, when he proposed marriage to me. I aecepted| hirh after first telling him and explajn- ing my marriage with the first young| man. I] wrote to n paper, telling of my first marriage, and they wrote through | thetr paper to ma that I had not been legally marfied to the first young man. If you are willing to take her wn as long as he had a lving wife. and| told me I could marry whom I pleased and 1 did not need to‘have my first] marriage annulled. With my second} husband I was yery unfortunate, as he fy not the man I took him to be, I with some other young men. I eaid the other mén have wearted of hor so-| have been mArried to him for five years Oecd ewenins!! £6 her. bret she Ast elstr. X munposa there ia bona Bus. rand now aD mine fore divaron, I oesn| | sulted o lawyer. He tells me I have to find the first young man I married and get that marriage annulled before I can} Ket @ divorce from the second one. I} would never have murrted if I had not} been told: I-eoutd, My lawyer telis me Iam not marred to the second youns | man as long as I did not get my frat marrige annutted. ALR Your lawyer ia right, He knows more about the matter than I do. He Suspects Her Friend, Dear Betty: AM a youn man of twenty-one, keeping company with the intention of marrying. This girl alwaye told! me where she went until a few weoks She go: . when she quit telling SODEDED LEMS LELIDELOLDHHTODY PIGS SPSOIIITOE TPL OGOL Gs LOSS SOHO HOSTED he Newlyweds «: Their Baby points of ligtt, &gely to clear bi & horee, but a antmal wee ourtoaity. ‘The man had way. to hie ahouldee beter: he realized. Ba subbed ren eny~ a ‘islone a and Yeheld sot t brown bear, The broustt hls He lowered tt und drew tis hunting- knife from Its beaded hens! Before bim waa meat amd his Ghomb along the ng, It waa hai He would followed en ow id too of flutters, th dand about his foi pet tee hte tp. The tines! wea sharp. trump, upwarnt leap and el prsest as of an wad, the dizeinese into tds brain, 4 sromt ov what te atature, nard at clumed ly kom and gave the qman ren but the man as not run, now with mhe wied, He, too, fear knife and star! The bear advan @ tentative would nu 1. of fear. mye teretaly, german wa’ thet is to lite fea twisted about lites deep- ‘The bear edged away to dono ext_roote, [hatin menadingly, Dinacit rebate Dy tala; taysterious creature that ap: peared upright not move, and unafratd. But wand sink down Into the wet moss, Now and again tho wolves tn packs of ‘two and three croneed hia they sheered olear of him. notin sufficient numbers, and they were hunt! Aid not battle, ture that end bite. walked. erect But the caribou which thia strange crea- ‘acratich LY In the late afternoon he came upon soattered bones a idl. ‘The det where wolves trad made ria had been uw canthou calf an hour before, equawking and run- ning -eod-very-muct—alive.— ated the bones, cleun-picked and whioh had not y. bly be that he day was dane! that _pusned death. To -die wera to sloop. Crmmation, rest. content to die? [ot tful pink with the cell-lfe tn em at died. Could It posal- might de Chat ers the, Hd wee 1, oS athe. vain are flowing tin, otttat It was only lfe ‘There. wag no, hurt fn it meant “Then why wes he pot Gays of enow and rain. know when he made when ‘he broke the ni Pested whenever the 4 Up and bummed no longer erever he | fell, cemp, He travelled Ot ble nite. frst pat Gaal eh ju cart began its thump. Then Pion 1, the creeping of Hig desperate courage was evicted by of fear. In his weakness, x eshetenkoal freeritens aimt rew bimvelf up to most imposing ping the @ bear. le of steps, rearnd tt Sietwaarent: He ttre Ho stood Mike a iptatlig til the dinger past, he yielded to a St of trembiial nk Gorlaee Man ‘Lost in Wilderness Fights Duel for Life Against a Strange conten > f ae right indnd, } te WmUKe bi in his back ou’ a rocky aun ‘he was shining bright and warm. Afar off 30 heard we squawicug of caribou valves. He was aware of of T eorne time he erent, the genial him end saturating bis tes ta rere, AB pou git he ou! focae niceen ye suas Toateee rolled over on his aide, (1 Delow Rowed a Wide asd alu ps tonite Ry pusnled ne followed it Sart winding 8 wide sweeps acnong f the Vieux” bare fi dleaker and burer ain lower-lying. any hills he tad yet encountered. . ly, debiborately, without excitement—or more—than iw ‘most casual iateroat, de followed the ‘course of “the trea. towarnl the siyioe and saw emptying into @ bright and shining He was will unexcited. Most unuewal, he thought, a vieion or a mirage—more Micely a vision, a trick of tds die miered mind. He was confirmed in this by seit of & eiup lysng wm anduor in we midst of Che shining sea, He closed his eyes for @ wile, then “opened them, Strange now; the vision persisted! Yet TOU surangs. He uu Wisi Were in the teart of the bee reason he had soows Gare Sees aye ary He heard a enutte bent ohoking guep or co! Decaues Of tein vexcoot in pilffnesa, hé tolled over on He_could. see _pathing— hand. but Ne. walted ‘patiently, | awit out more uring le tte. he [came the snuffle and cough, and ned between two jogeed rocks score of teeti@way he made out gray lead & wolf, The sharp jada? pot mo sharply aa he them. At aagtl othor wolves; i much aa i Che Gay” Me | goomad to crawied on | Tine ‘animal frore bleated ad Plood-ahot p imply uked continvall ite is fim flickered sunshine It seemed sick. As he wtrove. I waa tne lite tn him, |e Eto ne Coat (fo Be Cootinueds Tonto for Hair. eau de cologne, monia, 1 dram: rosemary, cantharides, for ten julep, 1-2 pint rtir. A few dre 1 1-2 dram of each; minutea;” and again mix well and B—Mos ton- tea tend to « darken the hair, Dut not per manently, What ever you might uso to keep tho hair Neht would simply counteract the effects of the tonta the scalp dryer, Here is the tonlo formula requested: Glycerine, 1 ounce; 1-4 pints of] of orlganum, ofl of tincture of agitate camphor Briskly add ounce, then »pa of essence of musk Health and Beauty. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. |wpon the nalfa a nfght ‘Remove in by making | i¢ormula, and spread upon the natts af quid. am | Potpourri. buds, | sandalwood. Add @ little of the @xeqm. tal oll of roses. The Continental page LADO hers Sin lea non aun or other perfume can be added, friend to meet some yo: , ends of hers, which I don't approve | Mustache Grower. of, Is ft right for me to ask her to J, 8.—The best of tonics will not} give up this girl and do you think she make hair appear whore the ac WAU love te hahha bes » ditions show no Indic ‘There should be perfect c ever of a tendency for hair iegh pale your doc nobis tho | ye ocghstonally happens that men are be folly t «i would folly to marry her. detest thercix aaver ee | yu have, no right to ask hee-to give ériend 2 @ suspicion, ead you should sown yoursall fortunate that you are not obliged to shave every day ifke your brothers tn bondage. - x Brittle Finger Nails, —TRY this formula to cure the brit. tlaness of your finger nails; Take + equal parts oferefined pitch and myrrh, oF of turpentine and myrrh melted, and mix together and apread the moming with a -little olive ofl, Make the paste, for whioh I give you night, Bometimes this paste will nou > jish the nalls and make them etrongen, RA HY, L—This ts the potpourrd you ask for: Gpread the reese lenyes_on.a tray and expose them to the sun or warm @éruntd dry, Then lightly crumble them up emall bebween_ the hands, Add other dry odorous bie: grotients to sult the taste, such as gum denzoln, root of cajamus, eagsia. muek ‘Beod, orris root, vaniia amd M makes a basis) of seine fumer ‘usually deer moss. ‘Dais powder will give out a delightful odor for a long time, fa alve delicvus Lor sachet,

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