The evening world. Newspaper, October 8, 1900, Page 4

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THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING; nme seiaemaialiitine siehet by the Prom Bnvoret at toe Powe HARMSWORTH DEFINES SUCCESS. ad Publishing Company, 4 ‘Office at New York as ’ 8 to OF PARK ROW, lo Becond - Class Mail }| deseo, New York Matter, tes VOLe Merccssrssceeesscsnsnsesesssveneesse NO, 16880 “It Is WORK,” Says the Youngest of Great } Te Dp Newspaper Owners. WORKING AT PLAY; pap HE rumor which has It that Alfred C. Harmsworth fs try- | » “* fl tng to negotiate himrelf into the ownership of the London D apex in the career of a man already (in hia thirtyestath 3 a ea year) marked as one of the brightest, not only tn all Bngland, ¢ ai F the ” but in all newspaperdom. 0 Amid much excitement among the “unemployed,” both rich and poor, the sons of several men of Mr. Harmaworth is tall, blond, determined and successtut | vast wealth are going to work. ‘The cause of this agitation seems to be a theory that work is wholly Bighteen years ago he was « pennyneiiner, sharing & poor | mi e i ke vondon, Today he owns . $n curse and, tow great extent, a degradation; that the only sensible ideal of life In to idle about; RT eee ee Uauaaine BRIEFS [kt that there must be something of the freak in any human being who labors when he might ait quietly cluding the Datly Mail, He has shaken Bngieh Joupnaliste ditions out of st he course of hi A march, at bis ease amusing himself by counting the drops of sweat as they roll from the brows of bts toll: ure We abe anh in vee Aan AERA pis ing fellow-men, particularly upon examples set by The World " Asked by a World w tive not lot for the secret This 8 an old, old theory, It has the sanction of many venerable authorities. But like almost of ie uC eee Mr. ilaereworih pees eoleaatil everything @lse that has come down to us from the far past, it will not stand examination. “Concentration! Devotion to my work.” 4 About the causes of failure, as it has come to some men start> There was a time when work undoubtedly Wag both a curse and a degradation, When the many ing with apparently better prospeets than his own, Mr, Harmar labored under the lash that the fow night reap; when the toilers got only the toll and the Idlers worth eald “Drink in a number of cases, laginess In others, ‘The men are WHEN WonK] Sot all the results; when the highest Ideals of the human race were a full stomach hot willing to work. ‘They apend the day chatting with one WARA and fine raiment and the gratifeation of the other ¢ » desires and appetites— her, They do nothing properly, and before long they find OURaM, Sega epee nr hde res: AAR ERY ALFRED 0, WARMBWORTH, the worl fins po soo1 for them,” then work was justly regarded as the degrading drudgery that \t was, rf etree — These words form one of Mr, Harmaworth's best editoriala Tho political ideal of a barbarian js to rule others; the political ideal of a highly etvilised man |-————-——~ $$ - ie to rule himeelf and Jet his fellow-men alone. The industrial td E ) ; ‘E Laden Tao ira of s totaran wo ve in| MERE # MATTERS » OF » LAUGHTER. — empty-headed and ambitiontess \dloness upon the labor of others, The industrial {deal of a clvillend M’KINLEY-Can {ft be, my friend, that you would vote for a fifty-cent man fe towork; and work incessantly tn: , ) i 7 Gi y In conditions that permit him to reap the full reward of his dollar? es hada C 7 2 OF SIGNOR JOCKO WORKINGMAN-No, Your Excellency; wa are voting against the Dol- efforts and to make those efforts tn the direotion best suited to his capacities, A ROBATIC ESCAPE O} SI NO R ' rs this time and for the Man! In It any wonder that a man with the brain of an Aesop or an Ppictetus should revolt againat Ty OOOO OU U GUO MUU OU UU OULU OU UO OU UL compulsory labor that could have been much better performed by an ox or an ass? On the other hand, is it not atnaging that any man with a thinking machine ta his skull and vital force flowing , along bis nerves can be content to lead a life which would bore a grasshopper? Tho eurso-nnd degradation theory of work adapts Itself to climates. Man began In the troptes, By EMMA P, EWING, where idlenoes 1s least difficult; therefore for a long time absolute idiencas was tho ideal of this " Model Home School, Marietta Col- theory, Hut when man moved up into the colder parts of the earth, where to ace, Ohio idle was to be physically miserable, the theory was «lightly modified. The curse and the degradation of work were thought to lle in the doing of useful em avbru a Rona lehT oat lic acaatAt work, To tlt with ironpointed aticks, to stab and Jab and cut, to spend days and weeks chasing little | Hin maintiiness ie ehown in his long and patient) foxes that could not even be eaten if by chance they wore caught, to hit little balls with little sticks, eptance of an Miemanaged home and badly ‘ f i rant ‘4 A food. V would Have: alli fegiatatures pubs iawn] cee all night matching monotonous ploture cardial! such “amusements” the hardest kind of qAWAt seen aVakMnane prohibiting any girl from getting married until she work, work at which the thinking part of any human being might well balk, were regarded as knows how to do housework “ + om, a : BEY Nd int Te ERaaT’ Ub a VA a OROOMA OR worthy of a gentioman lo plough, to sow, to reap, to manufacture something that might be the business of housekeeping until you go at tt youre] Used, to perform any kind of useful labor, mental or manual, was “low” and “menial,” n nelves. ‘Train yourselves and your daughters, Take ™ ; i. ) A leanon from the men, No man would think of turns This theory never had a very strong hold upon the people of the Republic, Those who came Ing all his business affatie over to ignorant helpers| here firat were laborers, And, having a chance themselves to gather the fruits of their toll, they from an intelligence office Instead, he aequainta hit. ‘ . pre ‘ i bolt wilt the minutest details of hia Work, ‘That W began to suspect or to pretend that they didn't think useful work so degrading and detestable atter what you women must do. You must be espectaily] all, But toward the middie of the century, with the growing wealth and the rive of a “lelsure- trained for the business of home making If home mak. ” e 4 . “ r ine iN i 4 sue lite wari, Shel ao (he doctor OF MA olnes,” the old-world tdeas found thelr way across the Atlantic, And in every community one saw lawyer prepares for his work At least @ fow persons who took on the superetlious and contemptuous attitude toward work, For- 1 do not belleve th establinhing training schools for ‘ parvante, It has been ried and It has always tailed tunately for the good sense and the happinoss of the American people, at about that time modern (n- ‘There ja only one place to learn ft=tn the home-and| dustrial conditions changed the whole system of getting and keeping prosperous, D one way to lmurn tt—by doing It, Intellect, heart and : ; b consctence are more essential In the kitohen than any Tn the old days idle and brainiess barbarians could hold on to and even add to shel posses- > where else on earth, and good food ts one of the might-| slons--agricultural land, But in the new day of intense energy, of rapidly eh ” Didly changing values, of re ane ee fu tla BBE odd ua raw | [unspent ar} trade, commerce and competition, of rise in the price of labor and fall in the Gubbaieen vos ante cishcbaasacscibalgnp aacsce ores tate areas SHOULD WE BAT FOOD RAW? ARRIET HUBBARD AYE ARISTOCRATIOT price of money, prosperity 1s always growing wings that must be clipped dally QUITE THE OPPOSITE, CAUSE AND BRFROT, IDLENRSS, , Tob iid Weat methods in politics,” “What does the poet #iy ‘a sOrrOW's crown of aor. and often hourly to keep it fre T object to Wi methods in politics,’ sald the p ; . todd eb ANSWERS . = ! ( re i ™ ae a It ts getting harder and harder New York boss earnestly row’ inf”! mused the thoughtful man. b 0 rea ere One has not sown, to induce men to Work without 4 ‘Yo ign’ sf ind of thes “I don't know the poot aya,” 4 President Perky Says We Should, and Talke of Questions About the Baby, » A proper return, or, atter wealth | “You wouldn't think of indulging In anything of they “L | aie cw what th pont ays” repiled a ene has been acquired, to hold on to |t without the use of all one's brains and energy Wind who had had ex Q \ je aching Bad Teeth In Amerios. A Skeleton Nab “Never, Tam devoting my energios to getting theferown a fe on the morning after he triee to D, PERKY, President of Oread Institute and] pear etre aver arESRRIEDAT® ‘Therefore the old theory of labor Is dying out, not chiefly because mon are getting botter [People in line in the hope of giving a tame Hast show." Fdeown ik Korrow promoter of the raw-food movement to Which] A friend of mine has a baby nine miontis olf and] @ense, but for the usual reason for any human advancement—changed conditions, compelling men | * stroeoveseunerer nenoigneseionsspeveneipeenoiivornerten >> trereteiOtren HE Ua nererentiania® " © that eatadilahment to dedicated, Is the mill) welghing about atx pounds, It is just‘okln 44) +, onangs their point of view VICTIM OF CIRCUMSTANCES UPS AND DOWNS OF LIFE, ra fonalre Inventor of a dietary product, He bought at} bones. Will you kindly wend me treatment? Worcester, Mans, the property, formerly a girlie’ sem Mra. FOL OE ‘Nhe reason the rich men's sons are golng to work fs that they, or at least their sagacious CANNOT very well suggest anything for this poor Hittle baby until 1 know what It has been fed upon We found that off bathe did a great deal for Ite Mathieen Dodge The baby wae gently rubbed all thus of the cause to which ho finds time and means to devote himoelf q “Permit us to eny that the raw-food people have dhary, which ts now used by the Tnatitute, Me writes | Maun tn their favor and that we eat many things raw Devause they ore better raw than cooked, 1 think over twice a day, morning and night, with a mix. ture of lanoline and almond of), and the little body fathers, know that if they don't work the men who do work wil! get their wealth away from them, And this reason of necessity ty golng to bring about a revolution where all the shrieking of the reformers, all the logic of the moral philosophers, all the talk about “the dignity of labor" and Stat much good will come from a fate Ascussion of ‘the subject foealled aclentin that they think there Is 6 they know {1 all ‘world who lay any olnim to elvill BE Bittlo about the food mubseot aw the Amer nd this with all thelr advantages for education To aneor at this matter people do, simply exposes the fact thing to learn and that There 18 probably no people tn the utlon who know #o an some of the Dear Mra. Ayer an people, wos greatly nourtehed by this treatment, A Weak Baby, Ni A he host way of minding a weak and] Yitontment do not preach; they Just quietly but relentlessly compel, And ead wrecks they make of troublesome baby who bronehttis? He is twenty] the pretensions and pomporities of the conceited human animal, montha old and not walking yet MK “happiness only in hand work" made no headway worth the measuring, Max- ima of good Hense and good morals can't be pounded or preached into poor, short-sighted, irrational, shadow-chasing humanity, Nature and the laws of en- WHY COMMON SENSE 18 ‘PRIUMPUING, It ts in vain that aristocracy-worshipping mothers dream of an old-world Upper-class life for ~ AK care to keep the child out of a draught q B0 row food Je bad, If it ls hot Aw proper food, the Don't urge him to walk Gtve hin @ warm bath) thelr eons and daughters, It is in vain that silly soclologiste prattle about the necessity and the r) Blot of the American » rer ane nt nee every morning, qutekly, ond dress him warmly ‘ai fi M e al Te ihe mal In worse ya ovidenood bethe fret that} aCerward. Ho ought at this geason to wear woollen advantages of @ “leisure-class.” Modern environment says “Work; work hard! Be a somebody or ) woarooly any one has y th, ‘They are aity | fram his te to iw throat, Don't give him anye| 1 will make you @ nobody” And werk we must, And presently we shall hear the lust of the no- GeAeeet tai many respects, thelr mu iA iamila le Jat or useless employment is “noble,” and “dignified " shatio.!! Gale bonewirickely and with the | (ha HUMBLE Gt : tion that idleness ploy and “dignified” and “aristocratic,” And only dootors Ajsrases aro Incr and with the increas | To Change Milk, in madhouses will ba found men and women who continue in thelr grown-up period of lite the * autetls ing num of dentists the nl f the enpl 5 » " " hoe Mra, Bumblebee Why don't you go in for Industry "emith<1 proposed to her last night. ood pe ih Lath oF A, ob eats wt hee to Reet say BAD) ih ht mit pastimes af childhood—playing with blocks and soldiers and toy tools, Wanderer-Hince the Chinese trouble folks won't? Bjones—8o did | , ' A poor |Bhe has been taking condensed milk and barle er, ; \ K , ae aniaics et a #004, and this, too, with an abundance of proper food |and whe does not eatn very rapldly on St LAE Work a¢ what pleases you, if porsible, If you muat work at something that is not to your | Me me about, There's such a prejudice againat yelo} Pemithmshe ‘passed me up traterial” DRESS CALLING mlm fot Y , COSTUME ® the child mB ANd |e trimmed, Nike (he whirt, wit asia tn Alao plalted al) round, but with wider! 4 narrower ‘Of the ribbons and ombrol latapatbuigit Gilles A Socratic Saying. | HOME Hood, OlA-fashioned notions, As) 4 Me may round in Athens he was ace ha i Nay! Nay! le not Waown by his trag> men ure to be rateemed for Increase the amount a very little ‘o in three hours ie IVE your baby from flye to a] ing, You ear Mra Mx ounces at to Kean the chil in pr PPE heat troatment Phe great potnt i No Aane temperature ao far as ponsible, Have the}, iston. The extra plate t+ for Misa lahe had been hy ‘ Fi imbly ventilated, but keep the ehiit from |),® \° Mtr use me of leaving you out tn the \day ibe ite) iM Ha i pty ere noreaaeds and one / artioter F Amalt-witter aponie bath fsa good tonic, and ; ‘ she: loaked bo’ tonely vend) tired: | ie apes ee, ecoane blind, "No; T had a torrible 1 rub te Uleo of beneht, Per emerecocien (cold: Nuts gertoualy, she | ely |That same day she shut herself in her room and wrote UUme. trying to pretend acl th Horm Aleta 4 [setting her tiny table toonight, that 1 had to ask Ner | Dean a cold letter, breaking the engagement, Bhe 1 preten pan. Shi alables kaon te . Ie }to dine with us She's about the Hider's age, 00, |gave no reason fee DAS HAARS OE All: e@ ‘ou should rep the haby othe: . ie ¥ n n lice aforethon t who khowa what "Ye N " (ors Head to teal duine thiveoia wearhan |S with ma | a al et mae Ni jogs ee | You women are brave, and she was one of the Potente ee eet nig (he cold weather: Tmight happen? He's old and presumably lonely: she's ibeavent, ‘The dark days passed, the doctors. proved YRIBNDLY, \ onchitis Rives slmne of ape] helt tly lonesome, Won't tt be nice to be 1 hele ee ‘ n “wi , ‘ wh emergency remedies, rub the] Qld and evidently lones } #10 Ave) wrong In thelr conelustons, and she became no longer Whom do you vist in est with a liniment of turpentine and aweet oll (one wrt t he and thre of sweet ofl) and wend for a WA Of claret-colored elk erkiet Is made wit be dihed is jah ie id fitted 5 mpnied ¢ ep tucks Jofolofolotolotautofatotal ‘ Of the wilk. Below ti ts 1 all around, the forteetietete . ay eonfined at the kuece we a vid trimming a =] . Of rows of light blue r owed together anit SIGH OF A SINGER. 1B points, outlined with an embroidery of black SHE (s: LD (hat 1 could sing a rons With ll an angel's art That to ts measures full and strong Would somehow plerce yourgseart HE Why righ for such a thing? Why french my eyes with tears, Bince all you have to do tp sing To Nearly eplit my ears? JOUN WC. low Jackets fe Hjones-#ho “turned me down," eee ee eee eee y SOOTHING, 4 n 6p “TIPLE “Henry hae insomnia MATTER OF PRINCIF LE, but he got a good sleep king, work dwWgently at it pation which 1s ag In harmony with your tastes as to seem to you like play and pleasure, Why really work at play only? Why not play at work? Are thore not greater posslbiHties of You wil the sooner earn the leisure to work at that useful oceu- a feed nough t r Try thla fesding pleasure and profit Ina hammer or a hee than in golf atioks or a tennis racquet; in a business prob: | last night.” Abloxpoon ful: milk, four tablempoontiia . (i? en gar, one tablespoonfal; walt, a pinch: water,| Jom than in a game of poker? “Opiate must be warmed ryn \ y) ay Or) aI Pare Baperiions forget that ana rule infante'are overted : a 1 OR y sale ony Le oo rs ; ( ° Goss, . Haby's Meats ond Bath, wv Bome people are talked About — because they Have M baby six weeks old. How often shall we H Ch °. iA eae, Coston est er ang 8 achieve succers, and it hott ‘\ nh we uNibbitee how i nd 1 1 € 0 In others because they have ( When wo Maine her Now tong] emo gti pig dininasroom Is aglow with light from) A moment later, ae the padlock clicked Into place, Iplng neighvors, Y ! ir) LN rature| the weatern windows, light Which makes merry |Rob, turning, saw his wife speed nolvelessly over the +} iba ite MNCS Hrs. with the sombre wainut trimmings of she olds |dew-wet grass, Bhe raised to his a face overflowing INNOCENT, " P away tee dans oy i Wiel {fash ‘red room itd mocks (he shadows Failing] with laughter, but her eyes were wet “Hor latest photograph t) ‘thwart the daintily appointed table, with tw snow ‘Oh, Nob, what do you think?” phe is a remarkable example » Kiven quick! ! 0 about 100 i he wasped, breath: apne tie N aulehly, rature about 1) inen and centrepiece of feathery wood ferns, the giaaN|ieasly, "You know 1 alivped in at the side dour ana f,ldeal art. tent tt?" ' * y Mie rasan AN, He DU ROO NAE: ah take on juatrous gleamy: they never hoard me, They were in the dining-room,| 0° Did rhe sit tor Hal siti See than tie t y anita Your home ‘sheds julet Hat tar for (hone who }junt whore wo left them, but her dear olf white head|'t. Y h ene la re than th or four MINULOR! LL wore homele quoted Hob, softly, Then re-}was on his shoulder, and—but f won't tell you any A ? Japeing into his usual boyish gayety, he mato her al more, Come out tn the hammock and tell me thel wr ao tials Nahy's Hronehttte. mock courtesy, ‘Methinks the Elders wil! amie with | story, for 1 know there in ono! mt a t think he treated * | i 1 t oy, had ; even more Lait haat Pek ag bald it 1 nie HA Ay ee little matchmaker,” he begins, mn Aid he dot Housewife—Rut look yor ever they ¢ yon dey rut, cord ‘omte conced c \ ‘4 hy ttle girl eleven monthe olf who when five Latta by Mig 4 t ; n \ ro iaee cereeneee th the hammock. “The Mider “Asked me to join him bday i ed POR} ChOnAT yas AgYeE eevee sad th A had br \ # Hite (MEH Hiliott tn the past, Hut for whom Is this fourth /and Miss Leroy were engaged years and youre ago My Frowsy Fogarty—Well, you see, mum, I've swore dat 1 won't encourage ae o 1 ine thf Ve lope inte th tit Ng te platet 1 thought Bider Dean was the only queat tor) when they were ae young as you and 1. He was BOR oe PRs Longe adit be : 5 a ' sot ; M4 P Ns 4 Stren. [aD and LT was preparing to be Jeatour of the at: |studytng for the ministry, and every one Predicted for | @-e-e-ee-ee-e-e-t-e-e-orenorene . SUTTER: Se: BB yA) OD: tot BS tentions you lavish upon him, You give me'—te- him @ very brilliant future, He was wit! for bronchitie ts preventta we i of . welar & y f bronchitis is prevention. | a cnrully.-tno terne to ent Aad SASMUAMAD th ty, pop 4 DRAWRACKS, , ally | "Did you enjoy meeting fo many authors and IN THE OLDEN TIME. are frivolous, \ nd this, allow me to assure you, | a very solemn “Almost on the eve of thelr wedding some trouble them mee |\\ helpless burden upon those who loved her. The Eider The dinner hour arrives and with It (he guests, the had not meen her since he lett in his youthful atreagth Wider, tall and thin and elderly enough, with his white jund vigor, ‘They must have been affinities, for, ac- veard and plactd face. riding to your story, they have made up and’ — Rob, Introducing him to Miss Leroy He paused auddeniy, for down the path jaet the suppress a smile, and talks with even more than usual |hammock theif guests were coming. The ta Elder tippancy to cover the embarrassing pause which on |bent a iitle coward the slender woman in the If sues Miss Leroy, & quiet little woman, with rippling |wown, and her eyes, darker with feeling, looked white mir and eyes like wood violete, faded but ten: lstralght into his, Her face was atrangely youthful une der, jt more than usually silent, Notwithstanding thie | der the crown of snow-white hair, and the frail hand \the dinner (9 arent success, and goon all are at thetr/on the Elder's arm did not tremble, ease, Afterward, in the delicious calm of the May evening, leaving the two guests talking together, the young Wilhelm Talks Fast, people wander away into the Nelda for thelr customary] Kaleer Wilhelm has made since 1889 more than 700 walk and talk, speeches, which have been printed in tho Relehsan- Returning & little remorseful at the time apent from |soler, He speaks at the rate of 2% and her guests Mildred hurries (o the side door and stands | syllables te, the German ls moment on the steps watching Rob puah together ting, © poasibie lang! the. tosra, the wal ‘the ' that street, Mopkins?’ "T go up there once iq awhile to pat the head of a dog | know." te tenet TRANCE, Friend--How y you know that he is a inesmers ist? P. Nurlous—He borrowe@, five of me In three mine bites hin lip to

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