The evening world. Newspaper, April 22, 1905, Page 8

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PTR ee Batored at the Post-OMmice at New York as Beoond-Class Mall Matter. / THE LITTLE PHILOSOPHIES OF LIFE. x X.-—Work and Rest. rely calmness or dignity of manner, but an ability to rest commensu ite with their capacity for work, tired” never really rest. They lack the condition precedent—weari | repose’ which Shakespeare celebrates, : * 2 @ rag the best effort of all energetic Americans, “up to GO, and go he must.” the wheels go round in the air instead of on the track. , The nervous American's switch-off leads him on to another line when he should go into the repair shop of Nature, * * *. Worrying about business and the affalrs of the great, roaring, striv- Mg world keeps many men under pressure in their homes, which should be places of calmness and content. It almost makes one look backward with envious eyes at those quiet days in the past when, as Lowell put it, “the responsibility for the universe had not been invented,” and when men _ did not make a god of what they call Success! sh Is egotism so much an integral part of us that we can learn nothing _- from every-day events? The great statesman dies, but the only apparent fi ‘ difference in public affairs is that within a brief time another aspirant "for fame takes his place. Did no struggling politician note the “irony of 7 fate” in the news item the other day, telling that a statue to McKinley in © an Ohio town had been yanked off its pedestal by the angry sculptor and taken back to his studio for non-payment of his bill? The great merchant Avhose lines have gone out to the ends of the earth is carried from his marble palace to his marble tomb. There is a little jar in the great world wherein he ruled—tike that which an express train may feel in running over a pebble—and then “business” goes on as ual, Men in all spheres of activity and usefulness drop out suddenly and foreyer—and what happens? Let Thackeray give the answer: The sun sets on the earth, and our dear brother has departed off its face, ay ‘Stars twinkle; dews fall; children go to sleep in awe, and maybe tears; the sun > rises on a new day which he has never seen—and the children wake hungry, oe * * * e ns If this is true in the final dropping of all work, however important ' or by whoever done, what can happen if men turn their office keys on ‘their cares when they go home and leave their activities and worries |. behind them when they seek rest? Your little universe must get on without you some time. Why not s-in Theodore Winthrop’s pregnant phrase—to “wrest from life its uses and gather from life its beauty.” And to do either of these things in the best way one needs a rested, healthful body, a tranquil mind and a soul that has large capacities for receptivity. To all giving there must have been a precedent receiving. Activity fs reinforced by passivity. No man makes the mistake of attempting to rest his jaded horse simply by changing loads or drivers, though many * treat themselves so, “It is better to wear out than to rust out,” says one ‘Ging of those proverbs that sound so much wiser than they really are. Why - do either? Is it not better so to lubricate the machinery of life with fun —~pvenfngd World’s by the Press Publishing Company, No, 63 to 6 Park Row, New York ‘An observant foreigner once sald that the American people seemed to need “a greater genius for repose.” By this he did not mean | Still less did he mean habitual idling, The lazy people who were due to work. Such persons get languid with merely “loafing.” Even Itself, ‘tired nature’s sweet restorer,” the greatest boons to those require it, is to the lazy man nothing but physical stupor, in which rain takes small part because it is not essentially changed from its formal condition, It is as far as possible from “the golden stumber of To be re-created by rest one’s vital. forces. must have been spent in Gtrenuous effort. Hence, the man. who Is constitutionally lazy is forever h Such repose as is meant by “tranquillity, rest of mind, freedom from " uneasiness,” is the real purpose of all needed vacations or shorter periods Of rest, and its cultivation, as a part of the philosophy of life, is worthy Who has not seen the nervous and high-pressure man “seeking rest and finding none?” He keeps, as Gen. Grant said, ‘the telegraph at his ~ back.” His mails follow him. Frequently his stenographer or secretary] culine competitors, Can the hip-pogket accompanies him. Like the human jumping-jack in the play, he is “wound He bends his energies to recreation, but ' does not know what “repose” means—which is very like attempting to ‘cool off a heated locomotive by hoisting it up on jackserews and making | recognize the fagt in your pleasuring? It is not fatalism, it is philosophy | pha bt Abate bats Said on the Side. Innocence. objection to Sunday ball playing on the prairies, I do not think that. as Chief Executive of Chicago, I should Prohibit the boys from enjoying them- selves Sundays in harmless ball games. I even suspect that my own sone have been attending the games against which complaint {a made in this pe- tition." Growing feeling of tolerance for Sunday amateur baseball here, Weil for the players to bear in mind, how- ever, that there will be no tolerance of rough-house rowdyism on the trains! o and from the bail felds. eee YES, | CARRY A LITTLE GAS Stock BUT | Am STRONG ENOUGH TO DO IT MYSELF Rafiroad king’e cousin who hes re- signed a $15 a week Job because "work- ing for a living !s not in his tine,’ Probably regrets that he isn't an in- surance nephew, . to find out why yow are staring at her.—Philadelphia Press, e ° e Pistol-shooting champlonship of North Carolina won by two women over mas- —— habit be declining or ie Palmetto chiv-| alry merely true to ite traditions? eee Murder in ‘“Tobey's!' Tenderloin reso leads tho Police Commissioner to ‘“Phis thing of regarding the Tenderloin @ sort of ‘no man's land’ where, by a sort of common consent, one man may kill another and the whole affair be considered as eomething with which the police have nothing to do, must be stopped. I believe these ulcerous spots ought to be extirpated.” Idea {s a good, one, 2@- good now as when The Evehing’ Work arged it after the murder and decapitation of a patron of a Twenty- wight street place two years ago, It the Tenderloin is to be allowed to re- main open it is only fair to the stranger within the gates that he should be guaranteed personal safety in ita re- sorts, eo 8 « y Ten thousand new citizens in one] % Hi day's consignment from Eurone, Not iH 64 quite 80 cordial a tone to Uncle Sam's hospitality as there used to be, but he still holde out a welcoming hand. Fact that 9,000 come In one boat makes an Impressive showing of the capacity of & modern ocean liner, Large enough population in this one steerage to incor Be4 age of five to a family. . . . ‘ By J. Carmmpbell Cory. & NTERESTING contribution to the ; 3 J Sunday baseball question by Mayor ¢ Dunne, of Chicago, after hearing | % $ the petition of 600 citizens for the o ‘ BY suppression of the game: “I see no i} “The two-step to my mind fe valu- : Qble only because K ia #0 inane,’ says 2 Dr. Arnold, of the New Haven Normal $ School of gymnastics, Rather faint) : Praise, bit welcome where there has ‘ been none at all, t eee ' & Mra, Rudba—-I wonder why that ° woman ts watching me #0. @ Mr, Rubba—Probadly she's orying g ) | Dhives, The Man Higher Up. By Martin Green, SQ,” said The Cigar Stora Man, “that Commissioner McAdoo has been taking fomne personally conducted tours of the Tenderloin.” “Phe Commissioner,” replied Tho Man Higher Up, ‘is justly agitated over the murderous disposition of some of the permanent residents of the Tenderloin, but the fact remains that the Tenderloin is as safe as any part of the city for the New Yorker or the stranger who attends to his own business. There hasn't been a Tenderloin murder tn a long time In which the victim wasn’t a Tender- loin resident engaged in some bust- | Mess or occupation not on speaking terms with the law. “The crooks in the Tenderloin | flock to cellars and dives, and ooca- ;Stonally fight and kill, The places to which they resort depend upon |them for patronage. A decent per= son who digs into a dive out of curl- osity Is entitled to everything that arrives In the way of trouble. “There isn't a small community tn {thie country that does not shelter a place where the constitutionally law~ less hang out, Naturally, New York, ,the glitter of which attracts them all, has more than {ts share of such But you don't see any bark- ers with Lells outside making a bally= hoo for general trade, When all the thieves and professional jitt-jitsu pere {formers with the statutes are driven |from New York the dives will close for want of custom “That ceveral tenderfeet don't wel- ter in their own gore in the Tenders loin every night ts a wonder, at that, Why people of presumably decent. j instincts will pass up light, cheerful 66 * |! places of amusement and hunt up | hoies in the ground and the soclety |of the dissolute and the abandoned ‘2 | for enjoyment ts onc of the Tendere loin problems that the police have never been able to fizure out. It is ‘Y | considerate of the outcasts that they & porate ag a city in e@ States |? Ps Enough to populate the largest office] 2 $ skyscraper or to fill twenty seven-story | & g tenement-hauges on the American aver-} 2” @ A widow's sigh ww ten times more : ‘ effectve than the crude summer rs : sgirl’s smirkiest smile—New or- | ® ¢ leana Picayune. $OODODDE 69BOO00948 BOH-b0-06> dOPGDASHHISOOOOH shoot and stab each other and do not fexert violence npon the butters-in.” | “It's been a long time since I was through the Tenderloin,” sighed Tho Cigar Store Man, “They tell me," volunteered The >| Man Higher Up, "that a new joint up Longacre Square way has a ragtime piano-player who makes Mike Ber- nard's music sound like a solo on a bass drum, and {f you can take au evening off’—— Warning note in Dr, Schofleld’s new book, “Nerves in Onder,” that “loss of the sense of humor may be classed @mong incipient mental troubles,’ Ob- @crvation confirms the wisdom of the| ‘Inugh and grow fat" adage. Bald by ‘the same authority for the consolation of the many persons who have valyular}]f heart digease that (ils disease ‘Is not inconalstent with good health and long Ute." A Mercenary Maid. Diana of the Byways. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. LANA, the] some one of the many beautiful gowns bronze — god-/ that she sees whenever the wind per- + esa of Madi | inits her to cast an appraising eye down Bifion Square, has a ‘twenty-third street, where the lesser ew copper arrow members of her sex find everything that to her bow. It was! may beautify and allure. ° R, CHEEP- “M. SKAIT found the handsomest dog on upper Fifth avenue oe © djusted —yesterd: Sottero” 48 a small thin tor yesterday, 8 ome ‘ “ y HAT Hoy “Steeple Kk," Diana to want, to be eure, but It shows, beople are so lucky, Text from the same book which might eeple Jay Re eee ee Tere mturN eee hae ney reopen lucky, be printed in capital letters: “Alway's no climbed 385 | 1 which way the wind blows. Mr, Nags. Poor to think of what to eat or drink or st of peril to give “And the wind has wafied to her some- brother Willle, even to her, Trivial as this In- ident may seem, it sin fact heavy with portent, if you do abuge him shamefully, is so fortunate, He never goes out but what he finds something. unrestful changing spirit how much ¢ thing of the | blankets to sieep under ts u unhealthfulness se to take or how many ANE OF of the modern world and parhaps a dis- turbing bar or two of the sonw of the siren clty below, She fs no longer un- chang og, immutable, She has sought and obtained @ new 1row New data for the discussion whether Tt will not be long now before t the crmvked yotee In which she le g de to any haple © Pama To many of us Life is rude 1 dealing death: toveny hAaplews'ey's| Mrs. Nagg and Mr.—=, ... By Roy L. McCardell... | Mr. Cheerekatt was Roy L. McCardell, it is beneficial or bad to drink at meals Wor it suggests | sho will wiken to the crying noed of tellin h f 4d by two Fre gato eye tarcaan' A'pold turban and suspenders, i K me that he furnish J by two Preneh iny stigator.Penat the lady will be wanting a new ‘ polo turban Wa ale He edentalled va: | tbe hanaNoIne Bad the dog, which Serles of experiments with animals[etring to her bow next. And that is Home Or Nee ere Dan's | Hera hang e, following a lady. showed that they gained In \ Thing Anal blaine neveride ver, ‘and ‘we Will wonder what has Dex The lady went into a store, and Mr. euting food while drinking no To me 4 hag always seemed delicate- Come of our deliciously Inappropriate eepskait was so afraid the dog would goddess till We drop Into a music ; Be loot that havin ty then i bat lost in Weight when water was con-§ly Incongruous that the presiding, deity {iy some evening and discover her with | peteae v the collar an Joumed i quantities In addition to solid York should be the mlik-wilte her filleted locks tortuyed Into an oight. | ught ft along with him until he food : Malden who chose to dwell in. ie Pompadaur, and a. Pars, #onee found @ store on a side street where ho | oe 8 es oufy fastnesses far from the gaze of jeet while the doling tremble and shud- could borrow a plece of rope, "Mr, Cheepskalt says it ls upeless to 4 posing his impromptu speeches" for the Bohemian dinners where he got his meals for nothing because he was such | reckless Bohemian, who ffdn't care | how he wasted his money—that is, he | wouldn't have cared if he had any—and ‘he'd put thin coffe-pot's spout over the was Jet in his room after lighting It, and the copper pot, which wasn't sol- dered, would get red-hot and warn his | room, “When he heard Mrs, Dubb coming to inquire in a lndylike manner for her room rent, he had a big fron fork that he Ifted the coffee pot off the was jet with, and put it on a tin pan lnder his bed, but one day it rolled off the tin pan and set the matting on |fire, while Mrs, Dubb was telling him ‘she had to have some money to pay | her bills, and Mrs, Dubb realized how Mr, Redmugg was burning the gas night and day all that winter to keep Es he whs alone in his rogm, com ‘and to preserve it by care that it shall neither wear out prematurely nor | Gaeoe a ia that looked upon her ,,us that “she knows a thing or think there fa animal heat enough in a WE ad De Mesa ene er i ? And Joy a fleeting bubble: ior he stands guar ha Teo ie small do “Bhe had to order him out“ot the | be corroded with the rust of sloth? The only tine our credits mod Voxattlen rey ne tee ee Ailes {Shaped Roll "Could you marry a red-hended fel-| hu was e Teaneloe HELLER een eee house, and as he had no baggage exe The best promise alike of doing things and bearing them—of energy Js when we barrow trouble, adway—the way that ja called white Crescent-Shaped Rolls. ler HAreusrlit inind the color of hin| TM in Mrs, Dub's boarding-house |CePt | hie yainaey, mhich wae at the itude ii Vi iiecltale : ‘ y * # *« ‘ it Isa fusion of all the Hid Uitte horseshoe-shaped rolls to L i coor OF iis| Very. cozy with a dachshund, Chinaman'#, and: neither of the ehlete {hperformance and fortitude in encurance—is to be found in a capacity: " by waylot -Mountatua ant rainbow colors, | be seen In every baker's shop in| pain James. | It's the color OF his) better and more wentest await 2] would At Me. Dubb, she had to permit for and habit of repose after work. oA OLDMAN Dia ielehcont ted It would seem now that Diana has the world have an interesting ehh clea EA eer warming a hall bedroom, when you are | him to depart, but ahe kept the copper a9 Nyy Jsaid that he found himseif at ised to syuile in lofty aloofness at the history, In 1687 Vienna was besieged by ‘ not paying for a gas-stove in your | “ffee pot and ee she alwaya looks : A log sitting next an Am novngraty of her envivoninent, |the Turks, They were about io. enter A New One on Him. room, than the way Mr, Redmugg, the | Under the bed if @ boarder’s room seems ar met 1 na ie came 0) jal- eel ne TOWN Dy aay ht we le i The People’s Corner. (0am een ring Phin of Wie Chex ad dug mnie, she, Dale thie winter, ns Poor MH Pubb] sui you are not listening to a word eston, sn ‘Texas. ere good shoui- i b of Kino all nigh 0 u er, : ing ey asked Ardag’ Good [hs Hout het, ai hot bread ‘In. the morning — gave. th Vite Hada hall bedroom) because her endl bt Neen ua Ie we te Le PS | shooting 4 ne Ne yer se why the demand for a new are alarm, ‘The authorities were so. gral 3 1 id ‘ured people Letters from Evening World Readers)". oer, Saloon inff¥s nd the potential craving for a /ful, they allowed, thera to manutacture Foome, and she routed that, whan ave | lee Me, Redmuse, who alwaya.pnys ma f seen nen sho, the Saloon tn Ah i bres roll p All ae en 82) the nicest compliments when he drops MiGgex Hoxes ‘tor’ Henpltais, it Pnedoesctngineostpees Jono atte string crescent moon, Which Is @ device of the called at hie room to aak him to pay f people e1 oe will want, the first thing we know, | Turkish banner, ‘n to dinner now and then, when you To the Editor of The Pvening one side of cars. Why dé t | =, : S somevining on account the room always| phury your nose in your newspaper a Knowing how willing you are help low people t take both 2 Good on ye from the same source [ = ssemed so warm, and go she raised the won't listen? others, might I sngges! thai you usk |/Presout arrangement le very jc er ty who found difficulty rent on him three mes, although she| "1 see the mistake I make, Mr, Nase! hb city authorities to erect boxes on lent EEE Vin fe. tront door at har hone It Is on the Way! never got It, becuase It’ was an extra] T make your home too comfortable for Bome of the busy thoroughfares for Inquire Jnmen Fi Py ty | de nigh the elit he le warm room. you ai hats all you care for! people to drop magazines, papers, u Hea Ei March, Port Ware tig ghe saw two large eves gasing ut “But one day she found out on him. |and ony Urink or yous wn gelfaty Sonne books, ete,, for the convalescent In t Hem, New York City, hey! and soon @ servant, summoned He had an old oopper coffee-pot, and| fort. Don't speak to me!" @iiteren® hospitals and Institutions of | Te the tor of The Pvening World by the cat, » to let her In, ee this city. ARTHUR HAYDEN, | How ean 1 find tie owner's addreas we, f Jof a certain coul bange? i | Ne My son left eclation of ideas" ty Md i i lence, Rt burst into a roc ys athe walter of . in 4 mall coal bate by the ume want to think a think ae eee! I wonder what kind e e iotoria © Referring to ©, ‘| ks about | ary Ann The not heard 1 zo to the : @ tree they grow on? bie eee a adhaticd val eps heen think It [go to the place We are glad to see that our fen eating more candy than women, I * . e U thinked and then I think it Th Pi of . do not agree with iim and seal from No, 101 Summit street Na Magic in Thibet, e rower “Little” Mayor and Brother Vexperience, I sold candy for twenty “Too” In Correct, CO Shes 5 /yearain Jersey City and can prove what | the Kditor of The Hvening World Population of Greater Pittsburg now HIBET AN peddiere have amemes the Press. § Murphy STICK CLOSE to the or of The Evening World ESAS RNG SIE ETERS aN a regain that, liv say, AD, | A bets tho word to" ta proper in tie [ak At WroM Bellet chat” overy’ other [ TATE O SG UNGNIH cHRRs Tafa elt Scriptures, Neither admits that 4 i sentence Maver eas Date esident is a millionaire st be a i fl {Beating Capacity, 7,800) Canon eben ae en ee Diwali ll iaaite: acter al of Lassa there are men hostoseing (Copyrot, 1905, Planet Pub. Co.) his RIGHT hand knows what Capacity, 12,000, 3 . 6 e traordinary powers, distinet from 9 1 The Baltor of ‘The Bvening World: Write to the Police of Bakt Londons) police captain who “butted tn’ at a fay higher than the ordinary lamas of the LEFT Is doing, They have How many people can be packed inte) 7 the Editor of The Evening Wora street fight, with disastrous remutta for Ing eanetS ee line plae cis, giving (tO dee ALL their knowledge from the Newspapers, What would BUERo38 Bouare Garden, including the ow can I find a man jost in Bast |himself. may look for condolences from ese men c 3 WITHOUT US? Y | iondon? He hnat relarencs. tie’ Cop, rico , which they crush out | they do boxes, balconies and gallerica,| !0Ndun? He has been missing fer sev-| “Claren 1 1 them rice to eat, whic ‘ EMEA Gs cic censiagt Ora. | Stal sears and t have sent mene | o © 4 of tho paddy with thelr hands," They It looks as though Mr. Murphy DID NOT KNOW Brother John |to get inquiries frc perform many other remarkable feats, 4 (Where Are Forty-five Rinten, none yan ues froin T fon peaen wut Shinner—L understand you told vo are told that a young Bengall|was In business: The Mayor Is only able to remember that he ap- fe the Waltor of The Evening Wort: no one can give me informa! | die that TE wouldn't steal a red-hot in 1062 testified before & number of re | pulnted Oakley. He DOESN'T know what Oakley does EXCEPT Is the be rid , “ Fe store apectable witnesses that, le travel- £18 the number of Biaten to ou ou anything avout him, Wok. | Bifflany—So T did, but if it ing In Thibet, in the welghborhood of | when he reads about It, : fag! he Grosser Kurfurat’s Moawure-| isn't tre Din iclliny lo apologize, the lake of Munasarawara, he met one n the SS. jAriment of Commerce, Wash-| WOR tas | ‘ s . ‘ of these men accompanied by a num- _ We Iike this confidence In ¢ Press. How pleasant It MUST ington, To the Editor of the Evening World | pine Editor of the Evening World Kindly tell me the lengti, width ana | me could lapply for a position ag | speed of the Grosser Iurfurst, ond if | # on Hills Island? Tama she 18 considered the best steamer of i, and speak both Spanish} the N. G. L. (not including the other | DOUBTFUL, | three larger ones), 8. The Gromer Kurturet in 68 fect § pares: mane cen t long, €2 feet broad: her speal ts ber of chelus, or pupils, ‘The master ) le f lite for th saluted him, and, finding that he had fak law hotel Ta not the nathing to wave him some ground eblt. of sorder and debauchery grain and te: ageinet them great enough without a Ben had no means of ob- twelvernonth's additions? Long Island professor who regards liquor stores as a loss evil (han candy an how. The Ki@gs Wilhelm | stores haa thi & lenane. Aids tone. as. jourage of his convio- lant, - } tides) As tl ining a a maater called for sone At by simply blow on outh ‘cured. 4 olNght to ‘ANCE, of to | be to go to Mt. Clemens and Atlantic City and to KNOW all that {s going on WITHOUT further trouble than reading the papers, , Little editors should take notice of this and recognize that i heir Jobs,

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