The evening world. Newspaper, August 15, 1905, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

' t ‘ * 49 literary, social and econ: “ of east-side horses. @udlishea by the Press Publishing Company, No, 6 to @& Park Row, New Yorle Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. | VOLUME 44... | RACE SUICIDE ™ Prof. Ross, of the University of Nebraska, has replied to President Roosevelt's famous remarks on race suicide. Prof Ross would lay more stress on the quality of the children than on their aumber, and he is op- posed to more children than the parents can properly rear and educ te In his view the decreased number of children in the average Ameri- can family is due to the ch. ws of American women. The edu tion of women has turned from instruction in housekeeping and maternity To increase the number of children born without provid healthy children but competent and wi only raise the infant death rate and unsound children. The remedy which Prof. Ross advocated in an address to both women and men students was to begin with a better home education and home training, and to add first to the number of American households which are fitted to have more children, He cites Russia and other c tries where a high birth rate without education and suitable home training means a high infant death rate, and holds that it is better for children not to be brought into the world at all than to be born to a life of disease and early death. Judged by the size of the fam middle class financially are not perpetuating themselves. of living is higher than they can keep up and at the same time give proper attention to the rearing of large families of children. Social aspirations, costly attire, expensive establishments, frequent trips, hotel life and restau- rant meals are not conducive to even a small family of three children, which is an average necessary for any increase in population, ies of to-day, American people of the Their standard COMMUTERS’ NEEDS. Such a fire as destroyed the old Lackawanna station in Hoboken is not without its advantages. It will hasten rebuilding with modern im- provements. While the transportation facilities to the Bronx and to Long Island will be greatly increased by the tunnels, subways and bridges now | building, and the uptown facilities for passengers from the west bank of the Hudson will also be greatly enlarged, the daily downtown travel is Evening World’s Letters One Woma To the Edit Home Magazine, Tuesdar Dealt in pans HO Sold Javested Groceries Serap leon His Fir ona small io Phillis $100 ina Scale. Qui Wasi. Grandstand, Ts now a To-day he is Now draws Millionaire A Railroad Salary 0! Merchant. President. $102,000. Here (aa New Se ayy ‘This Now Yorker ea New VA 3 x Oe OF $260,000 a © President of Wros Prem ot he Now York Cen pe UE rr pany. fi iirst by: made hi iness ven ral Railroad at a aury that is sald javings he tler. had accumuated to be $69,000 a year, ture a cash as a vote! cork. O° |W, He Newman. was once an ob Joan A, McCall, canitat ot sim venture into business, whlch ie Western he invested ft buying and scliing gro! youth striving to cet on tn the world. | in a grand-st © for a base- of his first business venture, | Dall gro which was that of sciling scrap iron | {tw to mills: “I put all my worldly posses- slons into the proposition and. then | ed out to make it 1 ike a team of he savs: “I was ad-| Ho ea ew that I was to : myself ni as to run mand out « affairs had arge admission to the grounds y 1a little harder, After that me more work. I got lttle se had to be out in ail sorts r, besides gett pearly in o ix to Keep tab on hat I would be of the trad hve and { mat set out to do, and n was proved a geod | ¢ er unt | day T] nat ev iving a n Suh mones from ‘man E¢ “my FiRST BUSINESS DEAL AND i1S RESULTS” — RELATED BY FOUR SUCCESSFUL NEW YORKERS.| ng to | en enter prin: Ae pnin Avsgust 15. 1908. The New Hydroscope ‘ for Exploring the ‘ m Bottom of the S3a dan ‘na fey years was| vorth Millions. This New Yorker, ho is a ml dionaire | | F.G, bourne, © says: “I had saved a little m (invested It ins: of a si jthat promised to be succes anufacture of a cer ing ventured, in them things and ually 8 push on, fmured It." From the People, By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Noa very clover magazine article this month, Maurice T 7 infernal Feminine,” decl, Lucretia Borgia was never di- , Writing of “The ‘ws Iden of Men. dd Worl 2 can't be conte: s the even are of her children and would have voreed, took good lagging behind in provisions for it. aut See oca pu te Gl attended Monday bargain sales if she could. He ad- ; q , Ps i 8 instead of thinking he . 6 . The number of daily passengers to New York who take the down-! auty to make tove to themiaiiithe ere vances the novel theory that history has purposely ma several men I'd Wxe to be ligned her and other ladies of the long ago, to make town ferries is and will continue to be larger than the uptown passengers. The Pennsylvania tunnel may divert to its uptown station many of the) rn, business men who now take the Cortlandt street ferry, but they will not) move their offices and will made the downtown trip on the elevated or in| idiots? the subway instead of on the ferry-boat. The Erie, the Central Railroad of New Jersey and the Lackawanna are all enlarging and improving their uptown accommodations, while the bulk of their travel continues down- town. To occasional visitors to New York the saving of five or ten minutes {n the time of their arrival or departure is of no great consequence. To the tens of thousands of commuters who every weekday come on the 1 know r ng or To the E It doesn't take get on to th (witne Subway and ir, and after two mont: formerly half empty front car jammed 8 with, butyas soon as I say so Bin looking like calves and try- make love, Who can explain this them interesting tc the masculine reader. We all er the old nu ry rhyme anent the composition of littl: girls, which as children we quoted remem) Suggest a remedy A al men DISGUSTED GIRL. ntly to disagreeable boys: Front Car ¢ favorite, Sugar and spice, or of The tt ew Yorkers long to st comfortable place t hogs), and the hot weathe allke, {s the front open door creates coolness draug: I came back to tow) absence to find the And everything nice; And that’s what little girls are made of.” Now, there is no doubt that this is a very delightful recipe theoretically, Only in real life, owing to the recipe’s vagueness as to quantity and pro- porticn, we encounter sometimes a surplus of sugar and a deficit of spice, and sometinzes the reverse combination, And we know it and mark the mixture a failure and shake our heads sadly over it as we might over a m whose Chambers, Barclay, Cortlandt and Liberty street ferries the saving of a| What the New Yorker doesn’t learn | Martini cocktail with too much gum or Angostura. few minutes twice a day accumulates to days of time in the course of a] “~™“* Somfort Sn Now, novelists and historiaas—fiction writers generally of the male year. The greatest improvement needed in New York’s transportation facilities is not in the limited trains or in the provision.for through pas- Sengers, but in better accommodations and more speedy facilities for the great nearby population and the neighborhoods which are in business and Social interests part of the city of Greater New York. HORSE POISONERS, '* Prompt measures should be taken to stop the maiming and poisoning It is the meanest form of spite and jealousy te take)’ revenge upon a dumb animal because of enmity to its owner. Hardly a day passes without news that some cartman’s or peddler's or small shopkeeper’s horse has been crippled or killed. While th horses are of no great money value, they are the best theif owners can afford to buy, and their ownership signifies the first steps of advance from a business conducted on a man-propelled pushcart to a little store and a little capital invested. The police could be well employed in ferreting out these mean, low-lived maimers and poisoners, The Detached Brain (SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS.) beside me. Know who ah Bam ‘Wall street magnate, dies, etary Phil “Dolan, and @ ist’ And | Buck Mudge nudged the His Secrotary, jentiat | Buck man, Bamed” Hottmielser perform an * No,” sald Hank, “but I'd like to.” Whereby Russell's head je kevt “Ever hear of Samuel vioe on W Russell, she ives ny Ly ry dlsinherited |b ery, ertae . raat paula by Buck Mute tne Neu tae ree Me thieves’ rescet DOWD great millionaire, w'at's juss died, an’ talkin’ ‘boutt?” Ought, but wasn't quite sure, heard of Mr. Russell. said Hank Mudge, ‘dat rioh He wouldn't as the Strangers’ CHAPTER XIV. In the Lion’s Den, Hs. on leaying Arthur had board- ole guy was Nell's father. acknowledge lawyera, an’ they way Nell's case is al dead sure thing. 60, you eee, I'll be) uble to get into thet mine game with you,” Hank was oo delighted with Buck Mudge and with Nell Rusvell, to whom | he had been duly introduced, that when | the two came to get off the car he was onsily induced to accompany them, Buck led the way to the Btrangers' | Home, on Rivington street, The woman, who was evidently at-| tracted to Hank, whispered something | to Buck Mudge when they reached| the bar entrance to the wretched hotel, | but he shook her off in a way that 4id| not neem treatment due te an helress to| whom be was betrothed, By this time Hank had Joarned all he wanted to know for ths present, He realized that he could train jn the Wert and hunt bear tp its lair or bad man to his hiding. but here there was law and mep who should enforce It Bo he would point our the trall #4 the wame Second avenue car with the couple he had set out to follow, and fate favored him with ¢ seat near the man. Hank asked for a match, and, getting ft, he handed the man a cigar, and the ice broken, for Buck Mudge was not the one to show reserve ip the pres such game as Uhis, “Ard w'at dead easy thought Buck Mudge, ‘As for Hank, he Just opened his big heart. He said this was his fret visit to New York. He had no friends or even acquaintances here, but out In Montana he bad no end of friends "aud the biggest gold mine in all outdoors, In reply to Buck Mudge's question as to why he had come to New York at this time, Hank said, with the con fidence of one speaking to @ friend who could be tr : “I'm tryin’ to find capita the cash to work the mine, game ‘tis ists to put up That's aby lea em to follow it. eried Buck Mudge, reaching| This was the conclusion he had! shaking Hank's big brown |teached when he got hack to the har, ‘This is great luck! I uin't|Where Muck Mudge wae awatting him gmesel’ w'at you'd call flush just ‘vout| Py this time two other men. one mow, for I got took in a bit ago by a| them & creature With a soiled ehirt and Jot of card sharps that played me for a/ 8” eruptive face, the ovher thi eveker all right, But I've got uncles ad with @ dyed musta and friends with dead joads of mone y|o huge stone in bis gre expans ag for investments. And, shirt front toined Mudge a futroduced to Hank as Buck Mudge brought near to Hank's ear and whisy 'm hengaged to a heiress!” ‘A heiress?” repeated Hank, with yy oad and joy, & belvess Hush!! it's the gal Judge Wherry and Col Sloper." about to propose’*'an all the begt in the house. MiSeSetatishielhae stilts et What Trade Shall To the Editor of The am a want to study trade tell me one 1 to adopt? 11.30 y rematn th wn takes his leave? 3 | father, no. What do readers say? and | savings tt head By way of cementing this happy meet- | hAvPy ing in true Western etyle, Hank was |#0uld a und drink of | 4n8-Froom when Col | special supper that would be quite worth] then di, ‘ » Bie Rees tn. fe hohen'', wien Col | endele q a[then did he recall that it was lock:d| gloper had becgme moderately abstem!- i lls a i persuasicn—very generally believe that the lack of interest in the real girl may be atoned for by upsetting the whole spice bex or the whcele sugar bowl into the composition of their ideal characters. according as they ‘would make of them villains or heroines. And there results the nauseating good- ness of Amelia Sedley or the incredible Emma Boyary, who ma ice both We Learnt World boy of or profession ou commonplace and second class. - In all fiction there is yoman made according to the right ich we all kno or els we en- recipe which we can none ¢ en counter its results. They are rid.” There is no reason in reel life why goodness should be mushy and wickedness attractive. The beautiful lady villains of fiction, Jevilling allurement, in the stern light of re y stand for creatures, all too “very, very good,” too “hor- Boy oF s No Girl o The INTE, the Steps, h their be- Ss mere ordi- h cultivated than if they no more interesting or had not nary looked too long upon the wine eup and the henna hair wash when they were red. The gentle herolue of fact 1 since she keeps regular hours and e (Still, it is pity to take mankind y from them, and if they want to go on believing that men only die with “round their hearts a single golden hair,” when the hair is a peroxide and ammonia product, far | be {* from 1s to destroy their little allusions. Wall Street ally stands 2 much better chance of beauty, siinple four. villains awa vd P.M? ¢ idee nul the other ° ° e per proposed “a wn this shebang, an’ the me of poker, just ‘tween ux ough when It comes to Kept ly got in, if the adding: Mmtt's “Tye o upstairs and there baye alhe felt back for his pistol, and only|ever he won, and he noticed that Col, up in bls trunk {) hig room, HED hs Ree eet Romance. ous; the Others drank as if they lked! last!’ ‘Said on the Side! Age nh tempers pol ect him from gan And not in De Ivania coal tow n or the stars, > the objective glass of they produce a very gu to a sort of the surface and is capable number, answers the Int , the rays of lig! top which tue Fleven soctety women to steer thelr , from which the accompanying own yachts in women's yacht ro DAT 1 Newport next Saturday, Two women ter the surface ts consideratty greater than Is gen= 4 board by the capsizing of a of the hydroscope has himself beon able to read al waters escape drowning ta depth of 35) feet from the surface by ing the water. are the lenses arranged round the steel tube. nses from damage by collision with rocks or will be uscd in the daytime when the ordinary ton. to prove of very considerable use on war ves by swimming. Woman thrown from en t at 5 ing Magnolla swims yn floun- ry gen- to the wa- spars. Genera sunllg’ gives ¥ q The hydroscope 1s also Ike eral evidence that she takes ter like a duck nowadays, wins him a. bride. | S218. A tube can be fitted into t 2 end of which lead the other day of a) to the captain's bridge and the o he bottom of t e vessel, and poem read to a Jurys will have ton portion which w wble of being thrust out and lerer, Practioal drawn bi quires, The water beneath the ou pcan be viewed to a dise v feet. {the most ron y which It has tar smplished ‘by the hydroscope and the Spants _ | raising apparatus has been man who means, Dovtor brings man ing his he Many Millions in Fans. n after patient had b fans of several vat Wh Sometim vast bulk of fans thus ex Consul Ander cE ta te exports fans from the port in 190i, by rote : 1 2 » frankfurter d to have | #9 repented by the c ms ausioritios, |g WV filled them with delight. No known | ‘8 Considerably over $500,000 gold, and q ¢ pwate that Is proof against its gas-| this probably does not cover more than Ch} very tronomic charms, half,of the trade. find their way to the United States, By Arthur Rochefort. & ee “Well, I haven't, rowied Buck) “Wel, I shall make It think lke Mud iss aad ¥ that again, ‘Then I will tako It back to adit young manhood—youth, childreod, and “Nor I," paid Judge Wherry, throw- | ho to the condition at birth, ing down his hand. ‘But why not keep It at 8 condition of Ww * | oy u | full manhood?" aske “nil eagerly. wise), Grawled Hanks rl on. wen) “Such a course would not serve ten, an’ ask for threo cards. the ends of truth, But come, you must The Colonel dealt the three cards to) make your report to It, We will stay ; If and the battle | but a few minutes.” Bane and oneste pimealt andthe Dr, Hoffmeister Jed the way to the © «jack parlor, ed the folds of the ee ee juminous tent and motioned for Phil to While Phil was still in the vasement Dr. Hoffmeister, who had just arrived, in the veil; with the violet Ment came down. “Do you think, doctor, we can keep | a moment Pill stood amazed, It in—in what I might call working ¢ ne Ta gosh Th that mor order forever?” asked Phil Aon took: brighter and more ex! “No, no, no ‘This Js but the first ex- Ai st periment, So far it is a transee: Even she aiRey, Me ita every guccess, but it 18 as nothing compared ‘ture expressed [is pleasure at seeing done in time,” | Phil | to the things that will | r, betwe As before, Phil r summary of the and ‘the last quotations’ of the ha 1» putts of his | rf nge, The latter interested | news Sut It will last some time™’ aN es, Tt will ‘eatl: “Oo, last some time, vor, e 7 y de. me pais, t onrews Hy wath sorined PRL aE EMR Spe ty a {ie \ time lesions will be well healed, area . Y ae: "4 am § to begin a new series of ex- purchases and anes, of th ae par periments." t’” and went ont, * “In what way, doctor?” asked Ph Neem midnight, and. before ye atisfled that! going home Phil thought ‘he would go nines 8 they were. basement and try to find Hank Tam tI can contro) eh. the ‘phon was looking orenatal pigmentation; but what I want the directo “Strangers is to try for a lon to previous | jjame," which, of course, was not there, | jeonditions, Do you understand, Mr, | when’ Arthur,’ looking very much ex- Dolan? Jelted. Durat in on him: Pull had to confess ¢hat he did not “Have vou herd from Hank?” naked Well, it is ice this,” the doctor made | Artur eagerly. ga Jf he wore drawing witht his long |’ Pill iold him of the tate over the | px finge 1 asked You remember when you were a an explanatory diagram, and tried to sleep, mat Tn 1 t to bed ioum, & atrald somes boy? to Hank. We must Very well.” rthur panied as 1t know F thought you were a baby?" ‘And when “Not at all, from at ana ¢ Hurrying out with , ¢ Arthur my clothes; but in my on + “You do remember, but ¥ r ran to A cabatand, and , pa Iaoial 1 rockon vel By thunder! I've got the cards at last!” reo It. As a matter othanehe we 1 pr to go with all speed 1 Aoaeariss ; | forg We ate unable to ailest 4 0 nmarier Mulberry 1 Bh Bt Hank knew that he was to win at ft, or wanted to encourage cia upagne| cha {t lo the memory. Now. 1 ain sireet, f of the Detective Bue ¢ That sound. Pulled up to the table he | fires d then thore vuld come the | importers. wolng to try ta carry te back throngs | a4 heard the sory of the Ovo friends. i unds A Mealy meanure 1 the three men about} time when he would either lame st i | It Wan midnight, and Hank was All Ity nerlods af change in this life. Do} f Team, for eants Moran, and avecase ie a bartiouiuriyd eee f lly or be induced to vik bls last dol-lonly about twenty dollars, ite “tam afraid not, doctor," coughed | Strans rs’ Home. Be a CARO USP te sauare Aghi he sould manage a|:ar on a hand that had b en prepared | wondering that the coup had not been | ven you undorstand “Ay “You know the house? axke@ the véhty he propored that they | dogen: auch, "Hut" he reasoned, "they | for him, sprung, when Col. Sloper, who had just] that of that It is now |C ah abate ' j his own private din-|are not the men to fight equare.” Then| As was the rule he ordered wine when Mats As well oe 7 nom thle and laughed, en go wilh these youn “By thunder! I've got the cards at Bloper a surprise ple Be Centinued.) 4 rt dealt, threw himself back in his | Vea. ou remember It ten years ago?” BOREAS ta we”

Other pages from this issue: