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ThevEven ing World's” Home™Magazine.’ TucsdaytEvenin é: August’ 1) 1905. Letters |Jealousy and the Sea Serpent. @ By Nixola Greetey-smith.|Females Have Most Brains, Cy tat eee agects ot ta| tren. anatomy oy enlovatng thir oniarnes on and the Males Are Stupid summer resorts have seen the | May hope to crush the green-eyed monster under heel. ® sea serpent. But to all of us there Women suffer far more from jealousy than men, for In Ant Colonies comes a moment when we look an-| the best reason in the world that they have more cause other and more terrible creature in| to, But the cause is really no excuse, for never since the face—the green-eyed monster of| the world began has jealousy done any good. And it is OREL, the Rreat authority on ants, divides the ant colony into females, as jealousy that feeds on human hearts. | always bad for the nerves and a croature of wrinkles, F ROULSTE RTO TTTE Sey ree ee eer mee ee ey nu a I belleve that in all the stories of} I have often wondered if Christian Scientists are jeal-| males; and eftcr both females orkers : ancient prowess where the slaying of| ous or {f the power of mortal mind is such as to enable] Whe) In tts cherest state c j gigantic dragons is recorded the ref-| them to deny the existence of this greatest pain of all,|®iV¢® t the mere man of the colony—he « be valuable to the public. There cannot be too much general informa-/ ci" vesterday and nas ae erence 1s not to an actual, breathing, | If it is, then Mother Eddy is the wisest of all her tribe,| U™CcU, 1" front of his eves, tion, and every corporation which produces an article of general US¢/rather elderly woman with @ big bun.| Prehistoric brute, but to the same monster with the and “Selence and Health" should take the place of Marie Should take pains that the public are informed of its value, the bes Catan petra Brera at USE erecn eyes that trails its slimy length through the rose Past on the feminine dressing-table, way to use it and how much it is worth. hattan, but etood hopeless, neavy | garden oer ay eae A a EL ety iy One eae eGo nes cae soetened| Publicity’s value is not confined to the exposure of corruption or to betel forlorn, resigned. I rose and | St: George overcame exactly the same dragon that coils an. a 00 much pride, | sg s, | SAVE her my eeat. She looked at me in’ itself about your heart and mine and crushes them And so long as she isn’t in love she won't know any Politics, but it brings like good results in every other matter to which it} real amazement. The rest of the car| to-day. better. | Heat Some owe Maid. dae me into 8) For if we are in love at all we have this demon mon-| But let her love and feel the cold steel of distrust turn | From the New York. pecowacehaas Stall Of ter = Peopl e . NO, 16,081, PUBLICITY AND GAS. And Answers to Questions ™' The Consolidated Gas Company will shortly begin the publication of a magazine to teach people all about gas, especially how to cook] Manhattan Chivalry on A, BR. T. ry ry ; 4 tes e Ay} | To the Exito: ft ver vorld with it. The entry of this great corporation into the publishing field will] "] ‘Shantea « BiSOKon HaGtactvandtt © Preas Publishing Company, Ni the Post-Office at New York @ublisnea by th Entered VOLUME 46. ——___ lintty of the colony, two factltles are see, though never nd workers come the mase not find its way home, O smell and he ca are waable to learn anything,” 89 is applied. The American public are constantly seeking for what they| coat some ome said, “Jay born every | think is best for them, and they are as glad to be informed as any manu-|minute.” Some one cise, “Must be a Ster of jealousy to fight, and if we are lucky we manage, | in her heart, and she will wonder if there was ever) : New Yorker." The woman, as she| after a brave struggle, to slay {t, and, bathing in its/ such a word as pride in her vocabulary. facturer or sales agent can be to have them know. sank into m: “y. . iy seat, said our fir: P| a i visit to Brooklyn?” Then I and twelve fone: become invulnerable .as Siegfried himself. And There can, of course, be love without Jealousy, but it women stood for the rest of the trip. | thereafter we need not fear the stings and arrows of|is a love disciplined and trained by endurance and long MUSCLES. PETER CLAIVERES. / outrageous fortune, for they will whistle by us, leaving] suffering. And if love is. after all, nothing but. self- There are many things about their own bodies which few people Trees and People, us unharmed. hypnotism, we would do well to suggest to ourselves, | x of Even World: think about. For instance, there are the muscles. Everybody knows eee alts hea trees ar uel Ibehe Jealousy 1s not so much a mental as a physica {Inflic-| in the initial stages of the trance, that there is no such 4 A ‘ "I tion. Very often mi i 0 y, what a muscle is and what it does’ It is a sort of rope or bundle of ‘Da Boe ue is worth alecuss. hes ery often our minds smile in a superior fashion] thing as jealousy, i . ing. In the forests re millions o | ropes through which the movements of the limbs are accomplished. By} trees and no people; in the cities mill- a series of anchorages from one bone to the other the voluniary motions] !on8 of people and no trees, Which o~ Change of Work Best Vacation. we By N. W. Ayres, . in the majority? A0aL of the different parts of the human frame are made under the guidance] wnat are the Commuter’ Joya? of impulses conveyed through the nerves from the brain. of Canad ee ater But it is not the general nature and work of the muscles to which] He has a home. From the i i x y } 7) | door of his house to the door of his this is intended to call attention, but to the gradual way in w GH MANY:| Core whe Gleeciadiuct Ge Rowan ie muscles are becoming inactive. How many people can’ move their toes} ieaves his house at 7.10 A. M. and re- up and down or sideways? And still the foot has almost the same set of | ‘Urs at 659 P.M. Thus tn winter he never sees his home by sunlight except Y regular occupation ts that of a book-ycheck the mumber of boxes or packages as they were de- Keeper. This means that I work at the | livered, then put them ona truck and carry them to the same ‘desk from § until 6 each and every | place allotted for them in the stock room. working day of the year. I have be At the work for the tast elght years. do not mean to say that I don't like tho work, for I would be a fool to stay at if I did not like it, but almost any one will agree that if you work at one | 2 had never wheeled anything heavi rlage in my life. Be he first day dragging pain over my shoulders. Then my hands began to devel hens’ eggs. But within the fir an a baby car- ‘er th was a oroughly muscles as the hand, and the muscular structure of the toes is similar to] on Sundays. Will some commuter step desk for fifty weeks at a stretch you|CFOKen In and was actually enjoying the work the end that of the fingers up and testify as to what may be the] want to get that desk and your work out of your mind as | f te two weeks, when It was time to turn over the post- wes compensiting joys of commutation tol guickly and completely as possible when the annual two | {On to Its owner, T w Bb md jan I The curious tropie-like items of veuctation are different stayes in the growth | had for years. The trucking cise to de me good without tl Ir pe.-}o val the misery of twelve] weeks! hours a dav away from home and four] in thx ad given me jt of mosses, and through the jungle a fierce ant is perumbulating. .Among these hg me out. nnd the work had intellectual creatures there shines Livingstone, whose roamings may be come kept me so busy that T hadn't tin Among the children at the public schoois there is now a m eriod of v. centage who can wink one eye without moving the other, and there are 1 fon comes around, says N. W. Ayres yune, y : z hours a day of travel? I used to While gay vacation at eurinier resortald cound. to worry, | fined within limits which could be covered by us incan hour er two. A day’a many children who cannot close one eye and keep the other open. The] commuters. Now they have my ; ipable of forgetting my work. What Ineeeded| Here !8 a table to illustrate how this novel vacation bene-| journey to an ant would be cquialent to many weeks’ marching on the pare muscles of the ears and the scalp are suffering in like manner from disuse. } But WhY do they do it? Sneak up. some at woul) make me forget for two weeks | ted me of a man, P * fy gE % one. SAUL K. FRENCH. The boy who can move his ears or work his scalp to and fro is a rarity. IA Lawyers Opinions Almost all animals can do this with ease. The ears of a horse or a dog | To the Fattor of The Event: earl ii i i a vve: id while 1b are under as good muscular control as his tail. The fingers, too, unless] ,,1,0% a lawver and while f they have special training are generally losing their aptness. They are a} sion that there us nd tee . . vou Fove can b ced to support long way from the lack of muscular control which the toes manifest,| Mee ye te. proably. the but still there are few people who can move each finger separately without | despised an men, and I do! aw could hurt Seti nim'an much as nis toion-ovn's oy Ganiug ga Form of Insanity? vw By Cesare Lombroso. sures. And I got it. Saved tn ra Saved In r footed a column of oad fare end ot mine who was a receiving clerk in a small 1 pill downtown house gave me @ chance to try my new vacation Saved {n other expect He went away on his vacation and turned his job over Drew two weeks’ pay me for the time being. It was a beautiful position he had. f the day began at 7 in the morning and ended ut And it ran just about heavy enough to keep me My work was to ‘They are unable to than mere!y automatic demonstrable, Th t life ts a Of the bra largest ombine sense percept ets, t mely simple relat s of the three types | © brains of the If civilized men and women were subject to the necessities and dis-| ions Bat Lani ‘ LU comforts of savages these muscles might, in a few generations, develop | °° h™ “nies 08 Se Bsus their former activities. ‘The toes have been trained to take the place of A Warning to Tenants the fingers. If the head and skin were not protected from flies they might! To tne Eattor become as movable as a horse’s or a cow’s. If the sense of hearing was) S08 10" properly trained the ears might bend to each sound. Try your own whatics, says Cesare Lombrosy > man of} rea the man who | in | ic, among barbarous peopie, and alored by masses, who fds to him supreme ority. | odor Himes the samy ii i n preserved, but in a form. 4 “ nts muscles and find out their capacity. RG fSRaCl RILOSSHER exniniRarion scape ae ttn so, adopt ms to genius. Not only ts f with new scurces of 1 criticism for the study | ¢ o mer of genius | of genius in art and he work rin eagh case FARMER VANDERBILT. > : importinticlem) male. With only an George W. Vanderbilt is giving up farming. He finds it too trouble- ONS an pivtorecds : ! na gone and wi whl find his way Hl f } HVEGtbe ed Insane; tnd tt jowever, freq terial’ that may. some and expensive. Managers of some of his departments grafted, the meds wah eatiabniae pare He He t aterial that may bé men would not put in a good day's work, and the expenses rar. so far soaked for a whole + 1 ahead of the income that it was discouraging. I BEN THAR é “ = . 1 Marringe Here nnd i It is a common belief among men who have never tried it that any! 7, in one can farm, and that the reason the farmers of the United States are, Referring to y : : . Marriages," J mu: not all rich and prosperous is because they do not apply business methods they a, not think soy to agriculture. A man who would never think of going into the iron busi. of abiiity ind culture, hess if he knew nothing of iron, or of buying a shoe factory if all his ynown ded thousands of In the travels of the ant rritory contiguous to his nest, D pographieal knowle At comes to him him to determine which p points away from it. This taking. the tnsect up and dropping him suddenly at a point midway between the tratl’s extremes, Invariably he + s toward the nest. This movement Js sp il even studied and Guick as to have suggested a mysterious polarization to some udents of the little creatures. “topoe the trail leads nowledge is tested by ~ chemical’ tnst toward the ni of practical | nized as real b 1 affairs. Good | whic! ules: the is never. And . of insanity, w t renson, is su | nto a historic ies which are alone reo veh alone are useful ) the well-worn © crowd, not altos “Mixed at in E 1 ef color as vee ie Wan ‘ed—Competent Men. & & & The Sayings of Great Thinkers. knowledge of shoes was how to put them on, will frequently hav2 no he are ae seve UCH has been sald about the hardships; The < Fe ai 2S ; tation in tackling a large-sized farm without knowing anything more W enawileleconlit ofa man wt ks work; tile about flee fe ine worst wolf: that aaa peeks ee ake Sorat chee about farming than the hayseed jokes of the comic papers and the stage. | shir BRS PSOne vi iRise Geshe Gt tela tec!l anaes be ue ie liea fn many places; charitable with the rest of us.—Gow To farm well and successfully requires more kinds of knowledge than rated and found/to be su Jor a first $ at a premium ' yan Tie a different house—R. mo every ailty iRerrohines etere: the average business. Few farmers fail in the sense that a manu Berqood ee: the witite man Lea. ares Piet rarer ors cevetoniet | nae ray pe Sead ees give others aay of me, matters litle. tached an inward satisfaction euae turer or merchant fails, because they are original producers, and the only |, 4,A,p2"PeRie Iden of Men, bale SReaMah Been congety ig nen ays y problems | Sil sG0uj uma tiere |e cperaymath te See one tae T am con- Scott. man of thing that can close them out is to have the mortgage foreclosed. So long are found wanting whe ve, that gets the busines: ; Pa t © cut of ever in cerns a do I deem a of in- The onwest bond A as some of the crops grow, somehow there is enough to eat; the wood lot oA ee x xacting employer. This man that is w Aeseantect Te ae i : strongent BH a eelburan Ck) A ‘i . xt 2 . ongiy ot eis trained In the s 2 is 2 ot hd Ly relatioy can supply fuel, and even a leaking roof is some sort of shelter. But ‘ they had the Ae ne then ean had Wet # : Tae “ T) los ; our temper is a sign of a > uniting all working con between this and profitable farming there is a great ditierence. Mr. environment iave Acaltec wiry cheapness, Too n it rke veal anen OMe eer treaeceso vet es ones and kine ! et iat H " (nd that word and the rege 6 ‘ ds.—s alt 1804, 3eorge W. bi > onl s to take peopl r Revenge 4s i of wild ju Relics me i George W. Vanderbilt is not the only rich man to find this out. Sea na ME NC Teor ie UST ACHITHG CHU SETCR OE Heng eae | Revenae is arp en du es: vi ther a boy 4s from farm or elt; ie anianenees ay TTT} woh whose stuck in trade is respecta Ince fet is that spoclallzaiion has been #0 greatly overdone that Merchants do a man ts a sprctaltst ory, CHARS IAS BS Gro es fas anne wealt or strong, talented The man who felt an itching in his amputated foot is like a high Noose Bove in inde mits nn rnietdt ay eitaaicanost MOAT Lantutinatiiney wan mAeetD i mare oun! jnete iw ; He work are sure to wim A 7 " eee ONry . ro Tribu en w' ‘ © £0 ny capacity. is Bacon es fall, but — ncier who talks of the “dictates of his awakened conscience.” Chicago Tribune, | Men who will make good In any capacity. | There is so much bad tn the best of Fr. Carta” CUt Wills prevail. —Wibug ina! | \ oon nnn The Detached Brain . .. A Wall Street Romance. * + By Arthur Rochefort. | At length he mustered courage to) whisper, a far-off, you, my boy! Ah me! how T read) (7 SYNOP#18 OF P : . — : Phonographic yoiog Bamuel Russell the 8 of the Killed and wounded J Z f Way rena "(I AY y ; look Into the next room. that must , gtrest, in dying that heathen land, and my heart would Ae A Hi heh, Boop-snouldernd. gray-|1 have come from the invalld, oad, BAL MORO en Hn fea lage uA ; ) pearded man standing beside a low bet . i Dealt Searing ‘tes 4 Aven Some BLL y | Wy, ye Mi and looking “down intently through | Viet ou—thiak—d-atse toe Mm , ; f , i glassee that seemed to blaze with the sald the dostor. “You musg and sound, and we'll never) |B, Lg | \ , Aol speak till i y intellectual Neht behind them. ull T have given you some But it was the fleure on the bed to | Urishment—stimulant, Aub! hepe ig! ) away again. Will we, May, \ ‘Never, mother; nev answered whieh Arthu s fell. ee CHAPTER II. Repel ritieuauearre cent norwould faite omene BO Fesled 89 UC] so ate room beeen ey omucieg she yed her little hands about at was a were @ 0} HEN Arthur Nostrand halted at] Arthur—it was now dark enough to met hie rage. Phil Dolan Hy W the top of the two flights of c nps--was ensily persuaded As Arthur Nostrand closed his e: stood at the foot ot tee piace an aa pace, Up whieh be uadpounded | co to supper, which’ are, Delan in horror he recalled his uncle as he |WOs an exprension of ines ee ere ath expectant engerncas, he heard the PAIN RA aamatigesipeih coats knew him in the far past, an active, | If not of great pfty ions fone rustle of a skirt, then a low, glad maid Uunder-sized, n mam, with @ hand, | eyes, YY his blue. next Instant two wilte a ‘Ui put on eivilian togs to-morrow,” paasioniess faco and a head noticcabl; By nout ls neck, a s oro Arthur, consulting his wateh after large. if molater Dationtiy (on een Dr. Hofte head was tossing on jis mat, ond Hi er. ‘Then, reminded of his engage- His memory could not recall one kind| tea to his patient me half the boot Kissing thi Mushed face) ment with Phil, he kissed May and her word this man had ever spoken to him | tered @ hypodermic innate ar pa whl: W's ug | Mother night, and on foot etarted nor one act that did not spell selfish- | Colorless fluid into the Patient's — 1 heard vy 4 | for that a aliy aehinh 10 ornate hees and heantlessness; but much as ge | This done he wrung out a cloth tn the man ae seme a nee § ers ds sull Known as “Greenwich Vil. despised, even hated, him he could not | "Mm water and, placing tt about o BOR on can ie Ts drive from tus generous heart the pang | "AN'# head, he pressed his reht bene AE HEARD. Ee vs j As he slong his uncle's con- of pity that asserted itself, to the pulse along the temporal pur the loosened curls of her ¢! | dition and Phil Dolan an for keeping ‘Agein Arthur plucked up courage to| "4 looked at the watoh in my teae into pla the head part of the body allve and utll- lock af ihe bad, hand. dete Ye landed at Governor's Island yes-| izing | for thelr mutu aft whirled Under the single covering, tor the|, 494 all the while Arthur coin 4y. 1 was munered out this afiers| through his brain but without bringing night was warm, ‘he could make out |!™# uncle's burning, questioning eee 1 J siarted at o y find you, | him any light tee Gurnee of the Gaus, Aired on the doctor's tuco, bad may anok Fil ae] Sie Id Gee pooh, amit ao far ho had It was #0 lean he could ace the durve| ter. No, we wif abe eREaRt: A acbel tor a t's! never dono an set wile his mother of the ribs, into the hollows of which | I) when I shall be here again’ my nation, But cow a are | if would not have approved, or at pebye rman ypebsborprmylers rg Baws go muse, not Naitake POPE, Aworhcar!,” oxy mut |Jeaat ceorded lenient)s ‘The legs were straight and rigid as} shall send the man I'spoke of Meee ba hep wk eee ; reasyned, “Phil I a8 hon- those of a corpse, and the feet, rising | joni, HP tye Kood ma an Old Leos bexer view a, 80 od a | ale A RA med Ne newt snes straight up, looked to be enormously and enaoning his watoh® ‘octor riaing was ri onher ew e ler he} about suc hi ad I am a ‘5 “Tw! we here for vou Bee ouagathan in tue arn child in my Henorance, TH trust him.” S rene hands ley atraight and powerless | Lif? £0,the ofico tn ch" epGtaere. Betor d mother will be tos Arthur halted before a dingy, old: R88 he bent over tha hag fashioned house on a little side. eur by the aldes; long fleshless fingers | | Tie cyeude that had been drooping tn mek une Twenty-first and not far from the crooked Ike the talons of a bird of prey. procuces er, ouKh to the wate! Fearing that Arthur would yanis I 4 Bnt dt mwas tho face and the eyes that | deniy" amd the danish, opened me he had on that sad day tnree year wns looking for a Nght in the / 4% held Arthur's gaxe, despite his efforts to | heard: coul pen sie saw the train bewting him! yey front of the structure when he | look away. It was the face of a corpeo, | . Secreoy—Phil—tor your Mte~sémege yn a in 1 ran i and thy } ae 28) HRP) P covered with a yellowish parahrant tat oh, vi be secret, sir; depend o; noe, May ted wer inte a 4 recogni tet the prominent ¢1 wit," sald Phil, | Mitle parke, where her mot mj v an eu “Secrecy, Phil! For your life, secrecy.” slung Saetly. 00.8 ‘and was dfawn back | aid ‘made hi way Int the font hat Mhe ripe beauty of middle ase sow Hoffmeister Is here. ‘Phe oldman |old negro, Uncle Billy, who was. typewr but the girl that runs Jt-, Fearing to step heavily Arthur Noc-, him, and he felt it must be heard in| from the mouth, revealing the few re- 5 to Uncle Biny wading in eotes ye a al ch nog ltt discharged the other doctors, Come | Samuel Russell's only servant, at work| mighty pretty girl she te—leaves at 6|trand without comment followed his| the negt room, maining teeth. $ Bare. Dolin's greeting 10 the returned | pong don't speak for :our life. |in the kitchen, o'clock. Walk softer, Li fx you in) guide and permitted himself to be! Again’ and again Nostrand had feced| But the deep-set eyes burned like coals | ,, yan will be here tm Wer showed thi As a Mon Wele | His as sharp as needles You) As they were about to ascend to] the Iittle Ibrary. The door doesn't|posted at the crack in the library door, death without filnchiu, The Govern-| 4nd appeared co be fixed with an eager, | til) 1 weet peaking with a eoveet) must have a peep at him. the next floor Phil whispered close tight, and as the crack faces/through which came @ bar of light from! ment had given him a medal for valor, | questioning look on Dr, Hoftmelster's hnovent and ina way that indicated | Before Arthur could make any com-| ‘His béd is in the back parlor. The| the bed you’ can @ 4 look at the|the adjoining ro ‘and his comrades, quick to recognise the | leo face, bending over him, Htuure, she said ment Phil led him down to the dark! front is full of tle and telegraphs} richest, most helpless and the most| He heard Phil's retreating footeall,| quality, had voted him the bravest man! The silence of room was MPAs» ; ’ ‘ a hye og Loe ri i 7 her 5 t fot nin beort pest ry thar it racked! in a> pootment, But mow he trembled. broken by © a ee fal { at