The evening world. Newspaper, August 2, 1905, Page 10

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Wedwectas Bvening, i'The Faith of Woman. 8 ‘Home WMarcasine,. Letters By Nixola Greeley Smith, | s there are v * exclaime water ry Tew that return bringing the olive | From the — LOVEE him! aoa i | hor Vandeventer of the areh= branch of peace. And more are like his first carrier, @uenwhed by the Press Publishing Company, No. to @ Park Row, New Yorl | P le | i qiist Cariion. “He wouldn't the raven, that civclod aimlessly about and ¥ finally | Entered at the Post-Omce at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. | eop e poteod: Wer? nae teri voted tHe \luatiin. the.(einnest . | VOLUME 46...... 00000 NO, 16,082. | ae ee i} neentiar conviction of all weman- | 1 Na tong jump from Eleanor Vandeventer to Noah, kind thot, whatever have isn't it? And having taken it, we don't seem to have man m THE CENSUS, Rad Answers to Questions been to every other member of the arrived anywhere aniess it be at the conclusion that we ' August is not the right time to check up and verify the State census. | ay x, thare Is always one he will be. ean't all be doves, that it Is sad but true that some of us {The Superintendent admits that some of the enumerators have not done | anne rite 1 POET IAREREA: trie to—and that one her have to be ravens and that faith and constancy, even their work properly, that there are people out of town for the SuMMT | to the Bree of The Bvening Word! It is a strange fact that 2 women among ravens, is rather a pleasing thing to contemplate. Who have not been counted, and that returns from vacant flats and houses | WW! does a man win shaves ine n placidly sce aman desert another It 1s & pitiful fact that no matter-how successfully > 1 woman for her and then expeet him deceitful a woman may de, there is always some man iy incomplete, PHSUEITE:, I Tee etbrcaioee de to. belo tier iconstantascsie needié Wrcha hele who fools us a8 completely as she does her least sophis- In theory the census was taken on June 1, but the work was dragged een Bo long that the vacation season was entered into before the enumerator | + rwbone? covered the grounk Ten per cent. of the people in Greater New York | aa alt ah fare absent a great part of the summer. th the Amatey spices ind When thin homantty j ticated victim. ey he may and only love’ like this happen a certain portion of ates loarnedly of retrifmtive justice, not real- it is as the inevitable results of their own And it is her abiding faith that what- have hean to other women, his “first real ‘will keep him truo to her, that enables ‘spot Ligneesy 'ing that Most of the vacation people 80) To the Pittor of The Bi World natures that disast mes upon those who Ive accord- him to do so. gway for only a short time, but the great mass of summer hotel em- | peces it over strike you thut the enill| ing to t w of their mood, and not from any interfer- The faith of woman In the man she loves {s to the ployees, workmen at summer resorts, extra men on truck farms, boats, | nu ‘ot Seen a crama lor ireting | ORC® of the presiding fates who can afford to sit hack relist ridfewlous, to the idealist sublime. There'is no ys are Ft | and smile. woman so steeped in fgnorance and sin that does not Stables, buildings and the like are residents of New York the other months is and themselves Into prominence on the Not to Omar alone, but to all of us our souls come shed the glorifying light of faith and love about some of the year. talls of the grea sm and fuit {dol wrought with her own hands from the mire of her Duri August New York's permanent and _fluctuatin opu-| finding are inborn kifts of the bh | Fee aioe wy environment. There {s none so serenely enthroned on “fation i eee pers perma Me leet NE Pope) rec, but tt ia only the “wise guys" | aven and Hell.” That is, if they Mectual heights that does not worship some man tion is at its lowest ebb. “here is no necessity for the Census Sunerin- | who know how to use it profitably j come though we send them ont white creature similarly builded, And the faith of each is as is final report until the Legislature meets next January, : as the dove that Noah loosed over the wilderness of, bea' as insecure. tendent to make his final t until the Legislat eets next Janua OG a i hat Noah loosed he wild ft, beautiful as it is insecure. B.-The compass needle always as the object of the enumeration is to enable the Legislature to make a mew leeks A apportionment of the Senate and the Assembly. | Sub That the census is defective is confessed by the census officials. It Ae ae could not well be otherwise according to the manner in which it has been © Accidents, e S~wid A on A the A Side ss HEORY London Ped by on fte celebrated “chips” now slightly )dentiy need of a revision of previous that the less a anvbiguous since the ld was lifted. jremarks ebout the demoralizing tn- RUMTOT the be eer ence of college spc on stidies. taken and the time of the year at which it is proposed to make the cor-| Aaa at Peay We My ‘gate eeacked on nue in full | vite may think, perhaps, that possibly rections, entsthen ions oenite ‘are best to| “lew of t en add such tne Marvard athletic men are paying A a ih’ thet tueuneet” A ves to be events to “seeing >| too much attention to thetr books. The best course now to pursue is to postpone the revisings, correc-| ‘By‘2* Sure” AE enera eels | On Se : : : oe: ie “Airship flies well at Coney.” Ought tions and re-enumerations until late in the fall, and then to complete the ve earmei or boat Reavy sige Theciicanvenee: avis enumeration and to have it show the full extent of New York’s Bie Tianiale : appetites Which ed : the alr, population. to the surface by outsude > nite shirt-walst the: upper In 1 photog- ee | CHARLES DOCHERTY SLIT, De somes ng of the Women and the Car Smokers. tA e ° s for the ABSTEMIOUS BARTENDERS. re In indorsing Charles W. Culkin for Clerk of the Court of the Special! 7 oud | Sessions his former district leader says that although a bartender, Culkin: a street car neither drank nor smoked. Instead of this being something unusual for a. ‘ bartender, it is on the contrary rather common. Bartenders as a class ar2| right 1 more abstemious than the average workman. Many bartenders and ees saloon-keepers never drink anything intoxicating, and many more never! on the fro: drink in the place where they work. others there are ra of a laree uelle.”’ honors. fn Fifteen “jack ashore” tt ts to bear in mind that a rolling it Is more «pt to indicate algh seas half seas. feotb ull wa Superstition’: s Teiueee, n out of a soft loudly + gc super oe hundred have I like to smoke on my way hi any st his office who is 1 It will be remembered that even in the days when he was the propri-| 1 can't do tt wichout w rs who would » tee aver remicats cl. omen h rie iv etor of three saloons the Hon. Dry Dollar Sullivan would never drink I aay Pons f she Is fat she can + a oar man of the fa t a anything with alcohol in it. The abstemiousness from general drinking is| enovie waik on » business hint any urb. extending to politicians. They find that if they drink with one man they have to drink with everybody to avoid the charge of discrimination = * their safest course is never to take a drink in public, at least, in their own ‘ tay districts. skirt the o! Competition in any business requires a clear head and steady nerves to succeed. This applies to running a saloon or a political organization well as a steam engine or an electric dynamo. Dbably the Skirt-Trailer's Fant. and c Trade dis nology’ 1S eorn hale ANIMAL COMPARISONS, When the Japanese Club called Togo a lobster a high compliment to) cen, him was intended. The present slang use of the term lobster as meaning a *** gawk or stupid, dense, lou person finds no sanction in the many com- when he | and en caught in ver the blot Mrs, J. A. DEMARE: in the bic but there have been times and countries when such epi complimenta place, the w ries while we will not admit that thets were used in no opprobrious sense. In the poetry of the ancient aS ae ay De RSW sorters to ao ot paves) Greeks allusions to men as snakes and foxes were complimentary, imply-| »: only thaiinequalltstoeaninaalls ing superior guile and shrewdness. Even comparison with a hog at times | Can piderculenase tay wears z implied approval of the sleek appearance and the food-consuming capacity love. Thes Tne sampies of them. Cne hail of the object. a na eens the Japanese and would lose To call a man a snail was in the old days worse than to call him a Bet (he ween an were 2 ee The third had im as a F i cidedly. in. hi IATER. had made certain of snake, and to refer to him as a bull or a unicorn was decidedly in his a parten HATEH iar PHOBtNiEs Cartaceta’ A Barte nown a man become praise. To call a man an ox was a tribute to his strength and endurance. d-bolled egg at breakfast A lobster is a tenacious, long-lived animal, with a firm grip, good "Sy"yorave ta oveg 1) Ne ReOr Ba SUERTE fighting qualities and the ability to take care of himself in his own en-| barienders in ind t saltfi G bitnd to the calamities of the r 's all . 5 eae : . A . staiements. There st hers vironment. Such qualities would entitle him to praise in a country where ra st Tes on. tha " Able us to male ‘ om rison hy whieh 4 ‘5 . : y : as walt oF Sry f 1 past all ehnking that we are “th he is neither broiled nor served in the style named after former Gov. 2 i . in Hes rll 7 dows ae paiei| (Odell’s town, The Detached Brain .. . iP & er, and he followed the | clan into the hall where! for some minutes they held a whispered | conversation in German. strand, his Pintlinpines, 00 thur is engax rl Gy, Philip and’ « Gern 1 i omi pipes glasses “Hina hmnne ea the olf doctor produced acco and three ittle cut which he proceeded to fill trom of aromatic prune brandy not be afraid, my friend," Arthur Is good. Gentlemen, 1 fe you," | little peal, like back CHAPTER III. Pap Dr. Hoffmeister Hints at His Plans. a pleasant echo, to the old phils: T was not till they reached the street Welcome, Then, when the pipes were {ttle better after tt you and sa talk “ome The glasses clinked that Phil Dolan introduced Arthur to }% be drew the blinds over the open ack windows and sat down with that algh of comfort peculiar to elderly peo | ple who have been long on thelr feet “Ive been wonders doctor,” said un, by way of starting the con- versation, f what we are about to do will be right." Dr, Hoffmeister. “Iam most glad to know you,” sa iM holding Arthur's han lew of this most in- teresting ca: Come, we will quarters go and have a smol pps und a talk," are tom ey took an east-bound Twenty-| ‘Might? repeated the doctor, with al car, transferred at J ‘flash of the eyes. "Do you think 1| and got off at Houston and che would do a wrong? 1 work for aclence, for truth, not for money. Bah! ‘hey walked foe blocks east to re wanted money I could i ae ay : the doctor lived, on the second floor of can pay my rent and buy clothes 4 modest wile. house, rented from an’ and bread, What more want 1?" | electrician, cupled the whose shop and family ae- pst of the building Nothing: nothing. coughed Phil; °P wis just thinking Phe laboratory, the back room, they perma de nihil Cound lit up, and a young, slender, gran eal atk WmoneG -Arwiiir,: “bbe ‘shaset hele heavily-hearded man, with PETA beac i pee etree letey | a tag comfortably reading and smoking. ee ci ‘ "Ha, Rowemann; thought you would wan Whee a gan ey | be here, These are iny friencs, fur.| ,, 4" ween A man sve ‘Tam ignor-| Dolan and Nestrand, , {s ready to learn; that he {s willing to trand is the nephew of our interesting sroh Yor the Ilaht New te Case," said Dr, Hoffincinier, waving ii) Qorrtcon molence T cold expan hand from one to the other of the " laughed "wy purpose is to Alusty \? xu the! Speaking slawly, for be had to use) bunes, and all is senses, vet Lf thetead me to believe that the vitality, of & Baia i a te ce Pan 19038; 'Telegraphing Photos and Handwriting— How It Is Dorie. red with aR ts greitive shee fevolues aynshry ously with i GS AGTAS Cat the Sen Ration The Variahok ot the tesistans ot Fe t Selenium celta Anis Bo owithin ye. Abe Peylinder cevol f bring au The French between Paris service with telegraph hae been and Rouen experimenting an einstrument (the Arthur Korn, of Munich) jor transmitting photographs, handiriting and photo- on a ne invention of Prof. engravings toa distance. of photographs The method is described above, and the transmission has been rendered possible by the use of a selenium cela, the electrical resistance of which varies according to the action of light upan it. An image from the photographic film is thrown upon the selenium cell, and the variable resistances thus set up are reproduced at the receiving- end of the apparatus, and vary the light of a Geissler tube, which acts upon o sensitive surface aa explained in the diagram. Three epecimens of three transmitted photographs are reproduced with the erplonatory diagrams from the London Illustrated Nets, pasa — Win at a Sunspot Is. tremendous action in which some of the dislodged masses are thrown out as tar ss #4") miles from the wun, always, of ct to return to it. We can see these mivses, which are our sunspots, because. immediately yo are thrown off from the sun they : “ : 2: —— | me cooler in tie outer air a hich the li f th led. emate: Hocis anit (Cartons An B J hi A. Hi | d. \ consequently bocome darker. They arisons of men to animals with which the literature of the past is filled. | Numerous, ionn wlan may stil! remaln very Meht, but the} i 3 regarded a5 7h Ba Uses of Com parison y owrands | See oo a ene To call a man a dog or a pig or a fox would not now be regarded a | 2 pape “talking s by compart w Is a Vast opportunity for making | that when their forms come between} us and the sun they siand out in ree 4 Nef as dark spots. They often uppear in a gveat croup. which, if it is large enough to be visible to the naked oy has the appearance of being o sia, In the sun's minsma, or of least activity, they diseppear, so that dn five and one-half vears from this time here will Le no spots on the T= se we 8 the acvomus, sun and in the meanwhile they will Le panying ation $s 10,000 miles | come fewer as the period of minima ap- jn diameter and clearly “iaible £9 | iinaches, Wa eee atthe arte jthe naked eye, It has for the Fast} fvitye morth b the centre of Interest In the, 7? sat selentific ld. The ye i e a sr fe masses thrown off from be very large, Indeed, en enormous masses, many Umes larger than our earth, They have been known to be as much as_ 140,000 4 diameter, and one last Febru- v had a diameter of 000, againat Fome 8,000 miles as the diameter of our earth, By Arthur Rochefort. tor as he closed the closet and pm- ceeded to refill his pipe. Arthur all this year since A sunspot, we theory, 18 a mi from the sun by composed of n and in tts a early !n February ording to the accepted sof matter thrown aptign. ‘The sun 18 tals in a gasenus state, ve perlod it 1s subject to are t dollars at the most he could marry the pretty school teacher, May Dolan, and compressed his lips and | as for the rest of the life battle? Well, nodded, but PF who had been think- | together they could fight Mt out bravely ing the case over for months, though | with the strong t love, stirring their | not from the sclentific side, sald: hearts to effort. “It's clear as a bell to me, doctor.| Rut with his uncle buried, and hime But how long after the operation do | self practically ignored in the will, how ou shin you can keep life tn the—li) Were the millions to be madé? In vain he tried to answer his own question, So far cvery doliar nad come to him through the hardest kind of work, and That is what the whole ecion-|&0 !t must continue, he reasoned. tific world will hunger to hear, But {t| Wholly absorbed in his own thoughts, iy All na experiment; the most Interest- | Atthur could not notice a young woman ing biological experlment the world hag Carrying @ small grip, and a short ever beheld, We shall see. We shall trheadell man, who, after a whl "Tn the head to Phil's ald. * point a'4 the doctor coming ch, that le the gre! Kee, What, are you off so soon. An- | Pered conuttation, crossed Hourten other glass? No? Well, I shall sen vou! street to the shadowy side, and kept to-morrow, till then au revoir, my young @breast of him il they reached Broad- friends," Tio doctor shook hands with Arthur and Phil at the door, and then went “ek to his laboratory to arrange for) 8 G the “gremtest avientine experiment hn | |The two people on the opposite corner had ever mice, evidently knew the young man, for they Arthur refused his friend's invitation | #Poke his name and in no loving way. to spend the night with him, saying in| "He |# Just back from the army and excuse that his bunky, who had been | With the dough on him. Go over and Glscharged at the same time, was go-| tackle him. 1’ be handy,” sald the ing to start for his home in the West! én, as he slunk into the shadow, early the next morning, and he wan| "How aro su, soldlen? to spend the few remaining hours with| Arthur started at hearing a voice #@ him, Sending hie love to May, and| Ms elbow, and looking down at the promising to see Phil at his uncle's! Woman, who had # satchel on her arm, touse on the morrow, Arthur hastened! and was not bad-lookinx, he muttered, toward Broadway, intending there to! “Good evening,” and turned away, take a oar for South Ferry, near to| “Walling for ® cart’ naked the which was the hotel where his friend| Woman swinging the bag and coming 90 eae tt maar shat i struck hm, his head bowed tn serious) Ne) Aree ANG vege 4 toward the shadow, Arthur hurried eastward, nor ee ie sociable to-night,” sald the way. Arthur looked wp the street, evidently there was a block up town, for as far ce church not a car was in alight, With thougiat A.A9: eat he crowds that barred his way| \ parties named, Garr aicr se Tiree tah oe peer on the Bowery, though it was now mide) “2Ne', Dr. Rosemann rose and shook hands sitet i ee | wight “Well, you needn't «wear at met" she He, to, had “the student sivon,” snd ee acctaiiocied (isa an ong “After the operation is over and the! sercamed, ‘Then, leaping forward, she the sindent ou shat ball af a 4 as tei inva intcaih; while tha ’dasiar old man's body ja safely buried ta Granped, whe bier meted ba by the trospection, His face was of that Ane) 11 tieowing open a toialie tah! Pe EAI nie Ait i " fren we can make millions! arm and shoute ers! Helpt' intellectual cast s0 offen seen among 4 yh ne oF Lae tl : nt, A number ef elcctric lights flashed up, revealing a white, full-length human skeleton. iver aren Phil Dolan in hist Auth ciaild, hear the hatinnvan Jews who devote their ives to atudly |tywide, revealing In startling datinetnets | prose adj isin tar lida’ alisilescabigg, anid Iolite re-; vital functions remuin, or enough of} the brain can be maintained for + entdius had told him, pigbletek on the Raverent in the 8 and original Investigauion Speaking!) a waite, full-length human skeleton most Inicrosting p q | hope vou ure | wari ' the }them to sustain the deart and brain, ftor the heart has ceased io beat,| “Millions?” Ah, how thrilling the) gomething above his head, but’ befol excellent English, but with @ decided) we al) carry one of these things | bet Inirinied ’ {doot or exp th ‘Wife and reason will romain. ‘Phe brain | particularly tf the brain be supplied} word to a young man whose whoie| he could avola it fe was struck sel German accent, Dr Rosemann said: | about with us," sald the doctor, emiling | Iii! and Arthur yghod, exch Vihad for yeans been ¢ is nor the most essontial organ—many {with notriment vhrough capillary et+| wealth conalsted of $213 he had received | less to - Cay te egret that I cannot stay with you} ja the efart of the young men. “if wel! glances, and sesuyed Hoffmeister; tanate milffonaire injo a man of flinty |men,’ and the doctor laughed, “get | tract and absorption, ‘This Js the| that @ay from the Army Paymaster (To coatinued.) itlemen,"* were better acquainted with the body thi! they were never more Inieresied) bone ‘long without any, but when we still! exper! ; 1 propose, in the interest of} and which he now carried In his breast harem... eC ” “Oh, we wouldn't have you with us,/and its framework all would be or) in their lives, and in a way they told] “One can gradually lose bis arms,|the heart life becomes extint, Now| science, to try on this most interesting . SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK 5 ‘at lenat not to-night, Go to the case| should be healthier and so happier. But | ui exuct truth, log®, many of hit intepnal opgans and |my studios In electricity and radium| case, 1 hope, gentlemen, that you have| He had no of, no desire for 04 take notes of © [poet abla’to’dalow me wal sha goge grea mani, PeCeernnnene ©

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