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The Evenin Published by the Press Publiehing Company, No. 63 to & Pack How, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Cinss Mall Matter, NO, 16,061, VOLUME 4¢6., PUBLIC SCHOOLS, Mrs. Clarence H. Mackay, the newly elecied Ros! Says: “A public school should be better than a private one.” In g it is, The country public school turns out boys and girls better the realities of life than the products of any boarding school or fashionable academy. Real education is not acquired in kid gloves, The training which is most valuable comes with attrition. Without friction a belt will not| transmit power and neither can learning be imparted from one mind to the other without friction and without effort. The generation in the schools of to-day is the generation which will be the people of the United States in a few years, and what the institutions of the United States shall be depends more on the training of the children than on any number oi written constitutions. It is doubtful whether in the large cities the public schools discharge! their functions as well as in the country villages. The nature studies! in the city schools are a poor substitute for that practical knowledge of nature which the fields and the forests best give. A course in cooking | or sewing at school can never bring about the results of a mother’s train- ing at the home kitchen. The handicraft of the school cannot give the game practical groundwork which a boy gets who learns his trade in ‘his father's shop. | The changes from the small workshop to the great factory, from) the single house to the crowded tenement, from the little store to the great emporium, these and the other: economic changes of city life re- quire an adjustment of the public schools to meet them, n school trustee, OBEY IN MARRIAGE. Discussion of the form of the marriage service is becoming general. | Both the Presbyterian and the Methodist Episcopal churches are consider- ing their marriage ritual, and at thessame time the French Parliament through one of its committees is listening to arguments on the same sub- ject. ; All the recognized American: marriage services contain the word “Jove,” which the French legal ceremony omits. The debate on the American form is whether to leave out the word “obey” in the responses given by the woman. There are advocates of both forms, the “love, honor and obey” and the “love, honor and’ keep” or “love, cherish and honor!” The word “obey” exists in the old English marriage service, where the obedience was not only promised, but insisted upon, In modern} matrimony, although the woman promises to obey, it is usually not long before she shifts the fulfilment of¢that particular promise upon her hus-| band and lets him do the obeying. Marriage is a solemn undertaking and the most important contract either a man or a woman can enter into. It is well that its phrasing should be seriously discussed, and it would be a great deal better if people, who do not honestly and sincerely intend to carry out their agreement in both letter and spjyit should not repeat the words as so many sounds without meaning. A SEASIDE ACCIDENT. A. warning to young men.and young women: who sit-on the beach moonlight nights is contained in the news from the Ocean House, at Swampscott. While strolling along the beach with a young man Miss Bessie Hayes had one of her ribs broken-through the too strenuous clasp of the young man’s arm around her waist, She isnow. under a:doctor’s care and angry at the cause of her accident. Before concentrating the blame on Miss Hayes or her young man there:should be a report as to whether her bones:are unusually fragile or whether the young man’s grip exceeded “a hard Squeeze,” as he calls it. Affection does not require an excess of muscular strength for its| display, Rather would true love provoke tenderness and a caressing em- brace instead of a powerful muscular effort. Even if it should turn out thatthe broken rib was unduly fragile, that does not exculpate the young | man, Young men should not be rough, and girls should not be boisterous. _ Amfoccasional caress is. one thing; a wrestling grip is quite another, | iH What-recompense can soctety and the state make to a man Biggiserved twenty-years’in state-prison for a murder which another _ Committed? Blowing: up saloons with: dynamite 4s-not the way: to.secure elther _ tegpperance or prohibition. him for others of his type. There are @ great many such as he who have dear, g00d, kind mothers, who never thought at the gambling tables and pose as gen-| a citizen can vote on his father's papers. |in New York. Magy Wes far in advance ef New ASHIONS change. Onc scigice, although I pelleve there are F Peaniee Gowen ested in the science of aerial naviga- jit, If eub: advancement of aerial navigation it should be the duty of such socety to nf World’s Home Magazin HAT ja the greatest gift the Fates can bestow W upon a woman? That is, with what quality must she be endowed to go thre h life with he greatest comfort to herself? Beauty, the unsophisticated may answer; others, har; and, perhaps, one or two may ha the sug- esiion, brains, I should say that a sense of humor is Fate's best as vell ag rarest gift to wo Have we not all wished when some deep-throated modern muse of Tragedy poured her troubles into our patient ears that she might be suddenly enlightened as to the ludicrousness of her pose? Of course, she has her little tragedy. Nearly all of us have, of one sort or another. But if we are wise we keep It locked up in our hearts and re- frain from crying {t on the strect corner After all, the true spirit of tragedy ts that embodied in the Byronic sentence: ankind. “And {fT laugh at any human thing, 'Tis that 1 may not weep.” e, Friday Evening, ‘The Gift of Laughter. & wt ot — By Nixola Greeley-Smith,|Human Rivals of the Bird Make New Attempts To Navigate the Air. And it is the Jaugh with which the woman with a senso of humor re-| Neves the tensest moments of life, Of her own Hfe that ts; erally the troubles of other people me 8 own, Which alone she can afford to lvugh at She may hear suddenly of a case of extreme poverty and feel the tears | atart in her eyes and her heart burn with impatient x Hef ne the distressing details are recited to her. And yet there may be in her own mind a half-forgotten memory of eim- h to go to its re- llar stress in her own life that sho accented with serene philosophy and that she would have thought herself crazy to ery over, With a sense of humor the myriad little ills of 1ifs are blunted Into. harmlessnees, and even its tragedies dwindle into evils easy to be borne. | Without it life lacks perspective and fs like one of those Chinese drawings | In which the nearby mountain and the distont molehill are all beautifully of a size. The tragic pose is one that naturally appeals to women, but whether the general absence of a sense of humor in womankind Is the cause or the effect of their love for tragedy it would be hard to say. Few of us are born with the gift of laughter, but we should all strive earnestly to cultivate, for it {s of all human endowments that which tends | most to the happiness of others and to our own, Letters Brides as Homemakers 2 & w By Mrs. Frederic Schoff, From the | “The most Important, tho most honorable and | }desirable taek which can be set any woman is tc{ to the pleasure of the new home, with one who ts dearer | People Bara good/andi wise anothers a Praises Parkway Ide: To the Editor of The Evening Worl | The originating of the Andrew H. Green Parkway by The Evening World ts one of the most notable and striking projects brought forward by any news- paper of late years. ‘The scheme for betterment, as suggested by your paper, will place in our possession a duplica of tne famous boulevani of Berlin, “Unter den Landen," and will prove a what ts just to require of them. fitting outlet northward from Central) 4 course in cookery and domestic science 1s valuable, and Park. The people of Greater New York wit} repay one many times over, ani a bride who has never hh a, course will do well to make It a part of her work yout newspaper carry this most COM- | grter marriuge. There are evening classes tn some of the | mendable {mprovement to fulfilmen | public schools which are open to girls will have much to be grateful for should | hag my Dr, ALFRED BARTELS. | quring the day, or to women who care to join them, and 1. D.—Thankegtving Day always falls | there are evening courses In other schools for which a very | on the last Thureday in November. sriall feo is charged, says Mrs. Frederic Sohoff, President of the National Congress of Mothers, in the Philadelphia More Foye Testimony. To the Bdttor of The Evening World: I have been reading about Foye. I Press, “THEODORE ROOSEVELT.” H ~~~@ | than bakers’ bread, cakes and ples. | than all the world, {t 1s hard to yarn that there are trinis and hard places that mu | for all the love and patience that should endow every mar- VERY young wife shoult have the de- Mase. termination to know how to do every- thing that mus: be done In a how : sa and in the best possible manner. Te Hever Pee aN ey a she masters every detail of housekeep- |_| The good old word “hel ing it gives her an Independence which ee ee eae ereecenergencten |the home depends on her, The social ilto of t of domestic life calmly. It enables her | /@rzely decided by her. The sy to do things In the best manner pos- /4T¢ in her keeping. Whether it ts a place of peace and joy, Hble and if she has servants she krowa /oF otherwise, remains for lier to determs happiness, and do not meet” 1s one that every | should remember and aspire to become, The charac! tem and order of the home | For the mothers of such brides, too, there ts much to learn. One chapter ts ended, but another begins. It ts full of opportunity to the women wh rowned with all the ex- perlences of wifehood and motherhood, may now do work for w blessed, ne exacting dy perhaps letsure for manj tal in the busy years of The foy of Itfe ts in w. Happiness never comes {nto em idle Kve wise woman will never lapse Into idle purposeless ilfe, but will keep youth who are employed things tt ( were necessarily omit- erhood Good home cooking ts far more economical and nutritious |and health through human interest and helpfulness. think his conduct 1s outrageous. Let Magistrate Crane make an example of "The Thief-Taking Art. te a an By John Sweeney. one a they would know the pangs of hunger or want, striving away in this great| olty to-day for a small pittance, while| the sons thev bore wreck their fortunes ter lis to ca suspects he meets. temen. MARGARET C. tral A. C. R—A man who came here as/ a minor and whose father has become | At the foot of Oliver street, about | fessicns. s!x doors up on tho east ridewalk and one of the tenem houses, les a cat with every appear-| well ance of having been there som I hope some official muy gee this and| leagues faced wita such perfect courage sive us a cleaner street. W. F. G. | it necessary to say thi P, L.—For a pass to the Navy-Yord| catching, w? quainted w supervision of the Boanl of Education. Detectives often make thetr biggest expecting to—in fact, while on holiday, We ajl know tho ster To Encourage Aeronau ‘To the Editor of The Evening Worla: There are aeronaukic societies in y Sepitrate criminal reperted ai cribed to @ detactive officer | y a mental photograph, | years for two erimyy always ready for comparison with the s wera (In my own mind) divided Into groups—political, Inciudins | to ths many mat anarchists—this was my larze: | , and various criminal groups, sach a3 | Tonelorers, burglars, Another Uncleaned Street. seldom happened that tivo classes overlapped: it is a curious! ‘To the Editor of The Evening World: fact that criminal trodes ure as specialized as the pro-| had rome! fe, in.a| Perhaps, fortunately, 1 had comparatively few of tho! but thelr untted pool of filthy green weter between the| commoner types of criminals to look after. My colleagues -nigh: secure ore, nt-| generally envied me my mors Important werk, tut I was tov h the whole toutine of labor In the detec- days. | tive force to underestlinate the tremendous dangers becatss the difficult work of burglar | fato closer r: le {t requires all sorts of rare qualities !n a) walked a few paces in adv apply to Commandant of Yard. Apply| detective, Is not regarded as so important as the essentially | reached to some broker or other Wail atrect | more dramatic work of tracking anarchists and unmasking villain No. acquaintance for a pass to the Stock | political plote. ‘The fact Js there ig no such thing as unim- Exchange. portant work to a consclentions Aetective, says Detective MRS. R.~Tye schoolship f9 under the | Inspector John Sweeney in the Chicago 1 of the omnibus driver who spenz! teen yea his day's holiday riding on another driver's bus. A dete:-! the public. Detective Inspector. Scotland Yard. T epececenne Seni eenses es a inliee farm et Pela y Duy ‘t sometimes happens that the detective's “works do follow him." A friend of milne in the samo tervice on Me had had the a: 6 tate | ‘arched five stance of the smoricst detectives In the forces. He had practically retin My Ksts of por-| quished the idea of running down his quarry, and he and ways | assistants had jon Ust, One day my fric i r i king alon away from the town and hundreds of mi scene of the tragedy with w the tio erimin. were connected Phot? a saw tha jatter, who ographs ned ped indelibly on his mind. desperate villains und my friend was alone. He was strong. rength was stronger. At the best cancers, &c. 2 and ability. I feul| pipe sid ask ed for a mateh, ‘This was sufficient to bring him jalions with o} h the other, who thus my friend dhe selzod @ telegraph post a y. 1, drew ont thy hanae and before rary jail waa made out of the most ord!- graph post you ever saw. V No. 2 took ibune. to his heels, but Imowing he had made sure of one criminal, catches when not the ¥ no hesitation In pursuing and capturing Reco air, Both villains were secured, and for four- they were un expense, though not a trouble, to August 11, 1905. DuMon’s Balloons. After looking forward for months to the wedding day, and j t de met. Two lives do not adjust | | themselves to each other in a few months, and there ts need | Do not expect that there will bs no clouds to mar your | hink that when the cloud comes it | QargeslAirs: fare -Feaw son, Smashed sPon ford ch earth and heaven wil! rise up and call them tes of motherhood are over, and there ts | An Aeroplane On Zi HERE are at present two forms of flying mact ond type of machine resembles a or strives to ma neratived by which help t nauts had congregated while the other fled. At the worst both | | might overpower and perhaps murder him. A! on th | n oof tha moment, the tives: al ny col-| behind tne two villuins, stuck a fresh Ml of tobacco tn his balloon open M. Santos-Dumont's new "> other balloons. It carries a prop Tho motor is placed about a third of the ig shown standing ou over 46 you eor:t | Santos-Dumc orse-power © vented by a S of a too rapid descent. Two inventor: It is pictured Paris, France. It seems etrange a s0-| clety of that nature fs not tn existen ork in this it wa in New York many men deeply inter- for Two.” Next the ‘automob! was prcssed into service for a honey- moon trip, Latest and most up-to-date 49 the naphtha-launch trip for newly edded couples, devised by a Canajo- tion, but who are afraid that thelr ideas, If made public, would be claimed by men who are looking for honor with- out belng able practically to work for |y dited to a society for the ee 8 Arrival of the Katydid reported. Six e _ | Patal case of tetanus at Harttont tol- | THOMAS PENN, |jowing tiny ecratch of @ pin. As 4 the Editor of The Evening World: than the sword. In order to settle a dispute will read- cee ers kindly discuss from all sides the| Alleged by Prof. Starr, of the Uni-/ trate question: “Which is the higher ttle, | verstt ‘Lady’ or ‘Woman’ The Detached Brain GYNOPSIS OF PRECHDING CHAPTERS. For liga Ea sy Pression overspreadit, ike a glad recog Lis dying, His body je ossiied, ja |tlon, when he came in. Piiippines 12 ‘fad fumweif aidtaheriion Ar meister, addressing the head, and em! Philip anda German nclen tet naged Tutt. | NE 88 Mf to an old friend, Halse Dave» Din or outs eanlie the |agaic, oe one ulckly and opened eth ‘alive a |osain, ‘te be tise Russell’ Glad to hear that,” AMEN PIMA, Mnennpelteber ate | Gendt Rear that,” said the doctor, Gite eile "up Broadway" ate at nightie | uch Dleased j Mipsked ang, knvcked winasless by & ina) | “May I read: the reporta?” stammened ‘The wonnun (wha calle herself Nelite Rus. ‘nil elt) Puts te mallee ee canscious Artiut, | AMR tie eyes opened and closed in S*recoentaen vy hie ariny ahuro, | 8 Pleased way, eine trem foncuaston of we bran. | Phil coughed and iS Finvaowy Arthurs amatiants | wrinkles between beran to read, the inatation’ of Frusee ie e) It ts planned to| 48 if In proto) Free iis Keaton ihe financieve’bedy utr | 6 Lad. | ihe Shas been nemoved, t onus fineral t yes deepening, thought, reading some minutes vily parformed. | when the doctor called “atop!” ng. ta retains | The last q mn was that of a consciousness wid all Russell'@ former wis- Fete annce inv the house ts kept | étock of wiiich Samuel Ruseell nnd secre, “Pnth"eoee to conault the head, bought 10,00 shares in the past three months, al | CHAPTER XI. The Battle for Fortune, ‘8 Vhe ¢yes closed with @ snap, K. HOMFMEISTER and Phi stood | 11°! D » the head of Samuel) %t would t Jong to explain the | process by w 4 learned from It What: buy? asked Prd, | es Were angry and open, Hl that he was to ewhile comprehends everything | oe ed nell ott blocks of some | Hoffmeister was saying, “I am |stocks and sei! othera. | anxious to see ¢ Judgmer oe far 48 tls capital would go on impaired, I will interpret Its ae i Hed to Invert at once ou till you learn to do 3 wre he went out he outiined to ave you she test tho Important foreign news, the last | eywaet Walt! Iam acting on hurry) Phil stopped to draw his hand a ready?” Jcfon reports ang the halla hee pred to draw hin ba For reply Phil showed a bu of |ttrert, AIL of whieh ee eee eo cailtue’ oHone Bal eae clippings he bad just are | Hstened to with the keenews interent onBeaa susnmons. “TP want four thousand Broad hy Naa Jooked at his! “Hello! Is this Fletcher é& rs] ¢ ett Su nett Mayan if i Tiroag? “Hello! Is Uuls Green & ‘Tuttle?* Ainary tones, Just as you ald when you} ‘ Py tat dese : ob Basal rout cy. have. teres iaptio ; ne 1 wa ne fr 'Mr, Green? Glad to fee you. Buy at Pistia A trite ne a ue 7 © for ount five hundred P, It scemed a irfie nervous this r Pail b oan a= mT anit ‘heevann 7 oor Rie OER dom, and fam sure the reason was the to which 4 even wiki; A alan’t recognise your " Males of tatit we become” ie ton at once five hundred G, L, and T. “Never mind the market, Do as I creatures of habit we } mig ha itanioUnieman oD aa itever ming the market Bo. as. eres apr fh ut the waite | o t cure If It ts golng up. Sell!] you in the morning,” Beam eld-time Went, The face loolor i war about to speak, }Sell! “Those fellows down on ithe street svi- 4] A thier than Phil had ever seen it, ! Phil run ne, at the same he was sure that @ pleased ex- Ume calling to his friend; dently think I am eragy, and perhaps 1 am; but I'll eee it through,” said Phil wee Said £ on A&A the aA Side pale the under the direction of yele Bult | there ts more barbarity than races where the young are reared under harmony to domes: fact that a eireet couple to Italy throws a new! Pointed Paragraphs. nm how penntes may lead to pros- ANY a ‘mers left at President Harper's Col- them to returr Parrot arrested in the Tenderloin for weelos to cool Subway air. pprofantty, 8p protect the member who submitted the Gaia | bird, as tt were. jacea for the good of ecience. ‘Tragedy told In thirty-one words by Injured woman." loquacity of about need of Something staggering (Lady” or Woman.” contagion cartier the pin is mightier tics of matrimonial {nfelicity that 60,000 wives carry thelr woes in ‘i court every year. Remark of Masis-| treated right conveys a hint of the readiness with of Chicago, that ‘In those naces | musicians do not figure in wife-deser-| wards" re brought up wholly | tlon cases points to a peculiar relation | {deas, . . . A Wall Street Romance. tn the statis- “Island American ‘| don't care If It Is going uz, to his friends as he hung up the re- Then ‘he told of his dnterview mich the head, The next merning men neglected And Phil leaped up. kissed his mother. May and Minnle, to the unutteradle their preakfast, #o dyspepela if he kept It up. sorbed were they in ihe morning Minnie Wiliins, At length Phil brought his ‘hand down on the table with @ startling bang and him with both about his arm, “We bave won!" "1 can't tell you now," stammered sd to a moto nediately the aer a hundre ards Jed gently and ft lar fast rem n n the water. of a bird cage made of w eWorld 22 SENE , rmosphere, It ertes of aeTa- proper. uerostat iven by elaborate 0 f four propellers Wd ascended #1 nie Was T ut rd, a few miles in th try, but stform earl was no nly and {t wae found neces- a roar, the car crashed ch longer in the body than his and a rudder of large area, of the framework from the Ker car. The motor Tt has been ine It Acts as a balloon and a parachute in case ere. Paris, ne, After wien the aeroplane de- her machine, treated in ut increasing aren, The tne is life only wort ne turned tur , and owed t to su d the mac i" | weekly salu Yes, Corde for’a pretty woman to be a plain cook of a man by what she says about him An Irish philo: iChicagc News. grizzlies. ttle girl, II worship But, say, Minnie, don't take cry, for I can't stand for t aco little gard, I'm in the game, and it wouldn't be square to give the push away, not even to you” After breakfast the threo friends hur- that meant so much to them, Phtl Dolan had good cause for his de: men on the sirect be h stock and sold another, and he had cleared, so far, $2,000 on the two deals. Although delighted at Phii's good for- tune Dr, Hoffmeister did not express sury "I cannot see,” he said, “how It could be otherwise.” "Then It knows exactly what it la doing?” queried Phil, “Burely, but with this difference: The old body, with tts clogging senses and selfish passions, ts dead and buried, What remains 1s pure intel- lect. It Js reason without a thought of self." "Then It where it ts “As to that, my young friend, Io: in see beyond the room trong man {ts pald a ft is possible You can't tell what a woman thinks If a man never speaks harshly to his he Coney Island Igorrotes| wife he ts either considerate or caus | @ they did not think they were | tlous. her says he knows of no satisfactory reason why women should not become good business men.— ola Nank, “And yet you—you pretend to lke me," sald the coguettivy M 1 [fhe covered her face with her litte hands and made a charming eff sob, “Like you?” repeated Hank, and the deep yolce trembied. "W riedly made thelr way to "The House of | lt," as they agreed to call the place | Hight. Aguinst the advice of the best | bought one | not ray. It may be that the body !s his|@ hindrance 1o the broadest percep- meant | ons." Phil followed the doctor to the “And you won't tell moe what it 1s ali| room where It lay, Is face and eyos wao|looked brighter and happier than on had drawn Hank into the bali, and now] the previous day, and Phil imagined hands clasped tat @ amile of welcome came to the ps. ‘As om the previous day he outiines', MO! “MISFORTUNE. us eyes, oh, luckless Dh latter I should do. not look, #2 By Arthur Rochefort. jthe news, read over the market ree por nd made careful notes of the signuls to buy or sell Pail was rather glad when the old r ed for him to | a few days,” sald Phi ankles were about to go to W. his orders, “we'll on own ned 5 ; that ds, if all wel we hope for. en though they were wo the ways of the erowd, the young men had ined to obey orders in a stern |, and so they went thelr separate consuiting Phil's instructions and carrying them out to the letter. Artuur was the first to reach the rene us in the hail of a huge building ir the Stock Exchange, To seem at his ease while walting Arthur lit a elgar, and he was pacing back and forth tying Jn a leisurely ive | way when a man and woman passed him on the way to the ewvator, ‘The man was short and stout, with @ thick neck, close cropped halr and a fat, protruding chin, The woman wore a blak waist and a black veil thrown over her straw tur> ban. ‘The face bore traces of dissipation, but it had aboutita sort of attractiver ne: ‘The woman started at sight of Arthur, Then selzing her companion's arm she whispered symething, and hurried on, “Where have I seen her before?" Are thur ashed his lf, “Was it at the funeral? Yes, and ewhers before that," Like a flash it came to nlm that thie was the Woman who accosted him tha nlght he was arsaulted and robbed. ‘The couple had entered the elevator and Arthur had started to follow, when he felt a rostraning hand on his ara and Hank was b ivy e SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK