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t The Evening World Daily Magazine, Saturday, May 30, 1908. | The Political Grave yard. « : em DOBUDODNODHOOODOHODOODODOFOGHGHOGQOGOGIGOSGOOOHDS @ : 3 iy Whois teste. | Nixola Greeley- Smith] @pblished Daly Except Sunday dy the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to 68 ® 3 3 Park Row, New Tork. bs hee 8 ON TOPICS OF THE DAY. g POPEPT PULITZER, Pres., 1 Kast 12d Street. 1, ANGUS BILAW, 2 10) Wes ti @ nee : (@) nd-Class Mail Matter, mu For England and the Continent and ‘AV Countries in the International Postal Union. 3 Beautifying Hetty Green RS. HETTY GREEN, according to reports in yesters M day's papers, to be beautifu: —_ BaD: p Entered at the Post-Office at New fork as 5 Gulscription Rates io The Evening ‘World for the United States and Canada, Just decided that she can afford $3.50 | One enih 30 | One Son | 1 Mrs Green iv more thah seventy years old and ts said eee Hes| (© possess a million dollare foi every year that she ha@ lived So it te @ beauty y mandi extremely gratifying te read of her visit 2 and prompt payn of the $300 feé des by ths spec alist for improving her appearance i] no. anot oman in New York—I doubt, in. re be one A Who has denied hersel. ong and so persistent.y the fatal «itt of beauty in so fa it may be obtained from skin sv te and cwrinkl@ cators } There is not a factory girl In the world who did no# Bixoca Geckierawm fea) at sixteen that afford the 1 of lovelines$ MEMORIAL DAY. ORTY-THREE YEARS ago the Civil War ended with Lee’s surren- der to Grant, with Johnston’s sur- render to Sherman, and with the last Confederate troops in Texas on) Kearenaue) which the white-naired has ju lded is ~vorth Sy tI I ler while. Mrs, Green's belated sacrifice on bea s to my mind th@ taking their flares with them to pri- vate life. To-day is the annual holiday in commemoration of the sacrifices and bravery of the Civil War, of the deeds quite as heroic in the homes tered sinc@ not going day passeq fasted on cofs , who accep! greatest tribute ever paid to it. And, yet, w the world began for beauty? “No, I can’t eat te lunch for a whole month. I bought a new hat ye n New t some little working girl w: fee and bread does not make this annou € it as a matter of course, for they, too, ip th fasted fn the inte sts of new millinery, ! Some one may xo without lunch that Mrs, Hetty Green may be beautiful, dug Le ‘Ss. ae SSE which sent their sons to the battle- it will not he the mistress of millions. And if si: (ick Paveoctart 4 14 6 in the lap of the th r she would a le resh-lpped field as on the battlefield itself. This gypsy girl s by sticking a rose in her hair, ‘The auty 1s ealous godde her. In v 1 her new devotee has placed many t nasseuse, the deford Memorial Day has become a common o-casion for both the North and the South, for the men who survived and the women who suffered on one side of the Mason and Dixon line as on the other. It is one of the badges of a common Union. | Two generations have come into being since Appomattox. Soldiers ; ARTRUYaM PRESIPENTIAL) ntal doing up of efte who then were not old enough to vote are grandfathers now. Children 3 te $ ‘ : gain ul Oliver Wendell Holmes drew from the ylation of the who were born since the war have lived to see their daughters marry and | their sons graduate from college. | There are minor lessons which Memorial Day teaches besides its {Instruction in patriotism, its reminder of public spirit, its eulogy of self- moved from a $15 habitation to a $15.00 suite, beauty doos essary. ft Is the surface makes beauty, but in age the soul ae sf S deep eno to knead from a withered soul its lines of One of those lessons is that hardships develop men. - “ Refiections of a Bachelor Girl, : ee ; By Helen Rowland ! => o < BOF: lowed it; an@ matrimony mony as an actor sm, but withe ical that he it a single n make his prett rill, Jay her husband shoul ng to a wife that he does as pleasant as a plpe 4 BY canta ai thes ata aaa ne pat esi The Chorus Girl Agrees With Dop ey McKni ight REPU Geely oh ctype dich ete ee That ‘‘Family’”’ Is All a Matter of Accident. ee oy aot Ce ean 5 percent. The youngest of these men must be over sixty or he would by believing that there must be som e with her 5 «bnormak an only account for Of course, ive parted wit not speak er. | ‘ tot have been ail aiTsush te shoulder a musket in 1865. The average | By Roy L. McCardeil, o her that eee age must be fully seventy. | BReey Gab) cain ' VOTE LeRUCOR According to the insurance mortality tebles compiled from selected £E TF don't known He had What the Sui Does to Us. lives the mortality of men well nourished, carefully cared for and medi- Head (al ate Mt i Cae Seana ie Haren By Dr. Austin. O'Malley. cally selected is half again higher than of the soldiers of the Grand Army “We was talking about the | HING prove At the white ma sererates tn the troplos and Sow, the cause ts to be fo! * says Dr. Aust! the sun w © ultra-spectFal rays ia Scientist, wha ed Ami body cells—unlesa, vause his yuld never ind there wasn't nobody New York, and yet there was awful fussy if you ver ked to discuss family matte Whether his infaney or hers h of the Republic. The privations of wai weeded out the sickly. While the bullets did not discriminate in favor of the stalwart, but rather the opposite, disease, which killed three times a fan r destroy “In Altoona, Pa., lous of strang but al rays of the sunlight are t ier and Blondlot’s rays, or th same as X-rays, Bece um, actle severely, quere nium ut Jonium. Ail these latter rays will burn at more soldiers than died on the ture show or an ice cream {f he is not protected them by leather or lead firatemanttolancin battlefield, selected those of the like some dark-eyed strange ¢ | X-rays to s yin} @ was burned so badly that already fost one weakest constituti ar take ou! 4 y | arm other—and has suffered tn in for five year st constitutions, awful Altoona be: { the sun-rays is not 40 sudden or violent for there te n therm when th Others the simple diet, the no money nnsylve was a blind guy, but played the plano ¥ reach the human body us mmer and sleeps easy ti cal hey are li is of the gods—worki. 0 ee. cre 4 | Altoona 2 anical y a ® outdoor life, the exposure and the ‘ ew Yo: 5 ent e © Lamps “Man's natural pr against the ultra-s elements hardened and made stal- jort without their drawbacks, and. be- r e d to ffeur, would the poor old | ment, The man whose natural habitat is tropical has t roper amount of pigs sides, Altoona has su breathe. t all the | ment to prevent the sun rays {rom ng him, But tk of the north has, wart. The men who came back ave novelti ea blind ough to permit him to w a, all you have to do ts take a brisk 1 the sun in the ¢r and the subs “When coal is dear in w home unwounded and without a)! wai around town, inhaling < then come @ cough on the fire He! ast ad and triples; sd) the rave enter trough nit sperience were healthier! Cough twice and you can cov night. mbu} ration and hardier than if they had stayed in a factory or on the farm. TI ybody in York ts di J phannee ven Iunkel, and people that's T was telling you about my! Eon ‘ Foyvi i Werarelve erward the benefits lived there a hu onsMered strangers ire gets a chance to go to Atlantic City | % -—__-—-- —— ae aes s are still enjoying more than two score years afterward the benefits of an : they talk about you, When they was and sh me to get her a doctor's certificate thet she's sick abed In Memory. ‘open-air life and a simple diet, Eady a Iphia ates mada’ to send arcund to the show, tt T do. : ; ay Ma, aie, G ee learstnaee en Rava t es preter 3 ad come any «loser than Lancaster to “put when she Kets to ntic City she has such a good time she can't y Cora M. W. Greenleaf. The lessons of Decoration Day in patriotism cannot be too often = e just as well pleased, because they resist the temptation of sending pictu ards bathing on the beach WEPT be thy 1 mvivaby brave! enforced, but the minor lessons should not be overlooked. 1 that Dunkel, was George Washington's and scenes on the boardwalk to the stage manager, and When she gets buck B) Phe fag you nob te save : : ; railroads they couldn't have been much to New York she's f ury, although she explaized that while reer ital ad RO) =3 Oa : Tuere te @ branch ne over from Lancaster now, but they don’t approve she was sick abed ie City in It ae ‘ ‘ iu [eerie in'y “Bu ri uid would have hardly written oes WAP N Ean wacre BATHING SUITS, ES eee ter orien ta mente cam, pram baer eee aise Li Saray Bester sured ree , Pre tat 3 r ways that’s all right In its way, but while she den't brag about the ca yieture of the Marlborough Rattskeller, | Of all our ¢ y's. { Bathing suits w more expensive this season. are to be her an ators? she aa w nobody that hed any ‘ore nice husbands than: “What do you think of that?” | Vho tor the old flag fc 1. Hse aaa ‘That floats o'er lad and seas made of silk or satin, lace trimmed and carefully fit with stockings | — a ate 2 i ae and cap to ma the suit. 17 are also to be many ¢ The old ee Bach thy eteran comraen. c earn blues, grays and blacks are to be supplanted by tints with sea Reddy the ‘Rooter. -§- sae -§- By George Hopf Nee ee . Le remorse blue and sea green as the mos ar. =W Pian eaunOrentanatclear are to be stocks, with little collars. To-morrow’s Sunday World has a series of entrancing pictures illus- trating how th new bathing suits will look. It also tells about the Spring Harvest of Love, the Naosaurus ands of years ago and left sample bones in Wyoming, 1 in who fought forty-eight duels, J. Pierpont Morgan’s art treasures, the blind babies’ home, the Ex- plorigator’s continued travels, the St tepbrothers, ‘id, the Newlyw: Bill's Bad Dream, besides all the news, society, fashion : Please take the trouble to order from your news r in advance so that he will engage his supply accordingly. ‘ th some bathing suits there i H And while we have a native land e old States united stand— YOU TO TAKE CARE] ‘ow LET An Each year a loving, reverent hand WI place ihe old flag aere. & er J ee ) The oRadge” Idiotorial, I EE EEL 5 We are often asked by mothers —we seldom bear from a father How to —to lay down a few simple e FOOSE OOOE $444949609 i rules for Bringing up Children, War. i ° aes We cheerfully comply: GAs ehyy) AD) 5: 1 j THE BASES ARE CHOKEO OL 1, BEHAVIOR—Let them dovas N brazen splendor the armies come » AW - =| + MAN - STING IT AN' BRING'EM Tes they please until they becomg, "Mid blare of bugle and crash of drum; g - — Ew ACROSS THE PROMISED sComrrots 1008. byl the Rlanst Rub..Con) annoying. Then BAT them! “ eas With waving banners of stripes and stars And promise of Glory that goes with wars— @ Glory that dwells In a winding sheet And corpses litter’d at the War God's feet. SPOS HFDLH1E-GGF909O-409-06-6-9-9000604- 9060-9 20-0004O0O0i:; ? + Boiled Down Information. \ T HE present population of Germany {ts about 63,000,000. 2, DIET—Let them eat what they want until It MAKES pier SICK. Then send for the Doctor. 3. CLOTHES—Dress them for APPEARANCES In open work and, low stockings until they catch cold, Then put them tn Bed. vad 4, BATHING—Moke BIG SISTER wash thelr faces. The REST | WILL not SHOW. « 5, EDUCATION—Leave it to the School Teacher. |6, MANNERS—Get them on the Street. . We think the above Code will DO! ‘It fits most cases! 4 A motor vehicle purchased by the town of Tynemouth, England, can be used as a prison van, fire apparatus or ambulance. Gen, Porfirio Ding has been President of Mextco for twenty-seven years. There was an interruption between the years 1880 end léph | 4 m ( :