The evening world. Newspaper, August 26, 1905, Page 6

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Evening World’®s Homa ia had hi IA a) Saturday Evening, Awgust 206, 1908; Published by the Press Publishing Company, No, G3 to @ Pazk Row, New Yorke Entered at the Post-Oflce at New York as Second-Ciass Mall Matter. VOLUME 46, This is a text from the news: The only positively incurable cases are those which have been allowed to Wo without treatment too long. If people would only get the idea that con- sumption is curable and not dodge the issue and pretend that it {s only a hard cold or a catarrh, they might go to a doctor at once for the cure and nearly all | could probably be saved. The words are those of one of a committee of physicians reporting hopefully on Dr. John F, Russell's freshly discovered specific for con- sumptives, They are not less important than the new medicine. Dr, Russell aims to help those who will help themselves. Self- @eception about what ails one is not self-help. When hope lies in the plain truth, why call troubles by wrong names? It is possible that this point shall not be lost on a few doctors who ‘ghink it kind not to be wholly frank with their patients. As to the new specific, one does not take a prescribed quantity and ‘io away cured. Modern medicine has its miracles, but they are not ‘worked in that way. Dr. Russell attacks consumption on rational grounds. He believes ‘that the body and the blood well fortified—which {s to say well nour- ‘ished—are capable of fighting their own battles against disease once checked. His specific—a simple compound of the juices of familiar fruits ‘and vegetables—is his latest invention to assist fresh air and.good food in ithe doing of a perfect work of healing. In Dr. Russell's scheme of treatment, as in the schemes of all other | samodern doctors, the open window ranks high, No manner of medicine n 1 so ss s a s a “or tonic can affect its standing. Fresh air may be reinforced; it cannot OVE has four hours, four roses—the first, white, "ibe improved upon, nor is there anything else “just as good.” As the still, starless hour before the light. Because of what is thus true about fresh air and wholesome living, The second, the dawn flushes as {t flowers 4 “the continued tolerance of the squalid city tenement and the fetid sweat- With the rare radiance of its primrose hours, ‘shop is a public crime. So long as this tolerance is in evidence the benef- Redder than lips by Love's first kisses stirred, {cent results of the work of the most gifted and earnest physicians must And deep with the noon’s splendor is the third, find a sharp limit. e . Sere are the blooms its waning hour discloses The new hi ay and the acts Hs an vee Health ie And overs last voees AveomushealaD ones! g ions Ihave lowered New York’s death rate and improved many conditi s o o % ) wo among the poor. But even these encouraging results do not hasten the great work of cleansing and reconstruction which ought to be well under Way. Experience has proved that model tenements, besides promoting the health and morals of tenants, will pay good round dividends. Yet there is no visible rush even of own-pocket philanthropists to displace darkness- and-dirt rent rolls in favor of profits from sweetness and light. Mr. Carnegie has provided the libraries of the world. It Is a pity that men of the hour do not appear to join in the task of uplifting the hhumbler homes of the world—in making the daily breath of the tenements as gracious a blessing as the daily bread. Such men, inspired by Dr. Russell's earnestness, would carry to completion the rescue work splen- CHINAMAN HEAP’ MAD! BoYcoTEE MELICAN TLADE The Deadly Torpedo. How Hings Are Guarded) Sailor's Hard Lot. ‘Must We Stand a Boycott for This? ws By J. Campbell Cory. A AVS: HERE have been as many definitions of T love us there are or have been poets, And yet, though we all know what love ts, ‘or it defines itself anew in every human heart it one time or another, we have never yet agrees. spon what the best definition Is. “Love is our highest word and the synonym of God,” wrote Emergon, and to the philosopher or the transcendentalist he may have uttered the Inst word on the subject, But, fine as the phrase js, does it express fully all the rose-flusned rapture the little syllable contains? * Paganini, the great violinist, used to astonish his audiences by evoking music from one string. Yet Love, a Mir groater magician, strikes from a singlo chord melodies attuned to every life. Very often, to be sure, he strikes a false note; but that is because people oxpect him to play all the | time. They insist upon his stretching his one-syllabled self over the entire ‘course of polysyllabic matrimony, which seems rather unreasonable after all, Love has fcr each of us a different meaning, an altered guise. To one he | comes swiftly, terribly, and all the minor {nterests of life are swept before | him as the desert sand before the hurricane or drifting wreckage by a fresh- | ening sea, To others, slowly, and so softly that they are not aware of his pres- ence until they hear his footfall in the round tower of their hearts. To some women who succeed in serving man and mammon by a mercenary marriage he comes as Jupiter to Danae, in a shower of gold, or {s stifled or frozen to death in hearts that are elther safe deposit vaults or cold storage | | warehouses, But to the strong of purpose and the pure in heart he must come, inevle tably. ‘And then thelr dull gray days, of pallid dawns and frosty twillghts, will be over, The heavens will open and the world flower out of season like @ Christmas rose. MAN'S {deal woman means simply an impossible blending of the Chris- tan virtues and the Pagan graces. o 8 © 6 Heredity {s merely the explanztion of one neighbor's virtues and our own vices. eo 6 28 « The average woman divides the s!rens of her sex into three classes— beautiful women, charming women and ME. o 8 e@ 6 It is better for the mature siren to retire gracefully from her pedestal than have it toppled over by her grandchildren playing about {ts base. eo 8 8 In politics the “logical candidate” has been defined as the man you don't want but may have to take. In love ‘t is what most of us marry. didly begun in the physician’s laboratory. lcs Whitehead torpedo of to-day 1s | MONG the many ra that are A) sale fue f@ steol elgar, or automatic por- By John Sweeney iA 2 Englishmen is the ve " polse-shaped weapon or profectile, f practical disappearance of the The moment a man begins to think of a woman's name in capitals it L t fi the P | from twelve to seventeen fect long and | (Detective Inspector of Scotland Yard.) | native British ceaman and the increase! doesn’t matter if she spell it MAI. 4 eighteen inch 1 its | 7 a lof forelj sailo 1 ih ships. ° . e . & et ers trom eop e. ots ia Sori woe isee| VEEN VICTORIA was tn the habit of remarking that thore was one couin-| Perceval Glboon thtons nae ie ee | New York and London Postmen. ‘To the HAitor of The Evening World: Postmaster Willoox gives his {deas as to how the postal system of New York | #! compares with the postal systems of the large cities of Europe. With that! in a hurry, and (the!r minds being oc- cupled) have no time to take thelr hats | off, Many women go to the busizess ‘tion of the town and expect the same respect from men that they would get in other places. Let women keep iway from the business district !f the snial for our navy, and when ready for firing even @ small one will welsh half a ton. | They ere delivered in five sections, which contain upward of 2,000 pieces of machinery. The wet guncotton tn the |"war-head” ts Inserted In slabs, each try In the world where monarchs an4 the monarchy were safe, and to this might be added that her personniity had muoh to do with making this But {{ monarchs are safe in England, and ff, as I believe, generalization true, ney have nothing to fear ¢f accidents to cons|der. alien misanthrope, + John Sween t Some stra from political murderers, there {s always the chupter which cargo 'y lunatic, a mentally diseased doctrinair, an cause rovalty tnconventence-even a madman can kill, Chicago Tribune. some light oa ‘The lite ts not | Worth living. whole truth of the effair is in that fact. The rates at must rried require ML be of the The Board the cause. He sa: that the mere Though a man go to the uttermost depths for a woman, he generally does it at excursion rates and with the return ticket in his pocket, Said we on e the we Side. Ola GreeleySmith <« etrange perspiculty of a Government | matter of a man removing his hat wec-| With a hole in {te centro to recelve the! fy charges at diffor safe to make a trip from Columbus Sarsth , C1 Morristown clerry- M : oe ries them. J. W, HORTON, core of dry guncotton directly connected times have included. besites our own King and the |surce a ce HAT with © x 3 Hein Catenion ae ot sabes Passaic, N. J. | with the Aetonatie primer, a con- | At¢ Queen, the present Kulser and his late mother, the Czar end the Czarina, from expe man iving trading stamps to eres ‘to Sent Sn ainwel at Daaie fate tat " : Mental caine fulmninate meee per | the King of Italy and numbers of other royul princes and princesses, besides to make the fare ord palatable. brides. Wisconsin ‘rolley line of- | Mouse’ an auiomobiie" But does that hours fér less pay than did the New or Bodily Work. ns nate of mercu and a per: ork carrier, But he assumed a clam- | To the Butor of The Evening World: | sussion-cap, In front o: primer 1s 1. President Loubet and many other foreimn potentates of exalted rank. Its staple ts biscult, salt beef and salt fering free rides to wornen accompanied Settle the quesjion of safety? f unt. = | screwed the war “nose” very > @ police do not undertake to investigate every alle; lot bi vk, Meals are eaten In tne fore-| DY babes, and the vropescl of an lowa t Lon- | clerical work, » When vhe weapon strike: off i = i a ssid ee i iu pita " fs BSUe i DPASIOnS te ieetesls ere: orks thelother/Iaborious ‘Hoth| yaen ewe Qharge, Nsaye Heel | Portant pereonage is concerned, however remotely, the rumors of & conspire! and the men must find thelr first bila born to newly married cou-| 400 number in this case seems only to | pay the same, chances of adva: t Toc ‘alie'tn’ cage thse the hard wil Trentment of Factory Girls | work is for my. health. better ad comes the c! a! or threat are carefully trouble, {ted and all necessury precautions are taken to prevent 8, knives, forks and other ’ The ship gives only the ples, the antagonism against race sul- cide continues to develop. have kept its average ow. of Town of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., which in the compre food nd the bare bunks. The wage o . Mo the Waltor of ‘The Evening World: PeRien Ruy, mean singular prove In 1896 the Czar and Czarina came to Fngland, and I am bound to say that |a silos Taking. re- e. owes {ts hypaen to President’ Roose- I saw a letter about the way some NB. WOLPL. Into this this was most anxious od 1 have ever experienced, | cent ye r average of] Thought trom George F. Baer’s inter- yelt's recent order to the | Post-Ofice s ome spor by employers treat factory girls. Most| Conductors and Columb} To follow the Czar er he went was in Stself a sufMctent anxiety, and PS ere ie teed k CE ALTE SR Le i eae atk 1 Rue Ot swirls would more than appreciate good | Dollarn, ; aie den : wil | TO. the Eéitor of The Evening World : 0 ‘ ‘ had noted him into the railway bus-| pvp: epeeanrs thy ,« wtreatment, especially as pay is smal! | Tt ‘orld: ‘engines, The Czar never seemed quite at his ease—his eyes twitched nervously, his Bast Oee , sf dy Fucther development of the artistic fend the girls have to work very hard ste right have conductors on the power, | Next | comes hands trembled, 4 for long from enxtous glances gat iness he would have made a good Cal-| tamperament in burglars shown by Hare @nd all sweatshons are not done away | O.1'™ at oe oe Fefuse to accept ho Ny nent and left wherever I had on thia oceasion many opportunities of com- cago professor, rlson (N, J.) housebreakers, who, In ad- with by any*means Mrs, A.c. R, {Columbian half-dollar? On a Brooklyn b paring notes with m of the Ru et service. Their methods were penne dition to carrying off silver plate and A Man on Elevator Etiquette, | SF /88 Nght the conductor refused to astoundingly hot more so than ours ap- Reported from Paris that there “will jewelry, took the canary and the grame on Blerns ay “pt one from me, saying the com- peared to s thelr eurprise at the freedom be a luck of sardines this year” because |OPhone alao. | | Wo the Editor of The Evening World | pany did not allow him to turn them whic) four 1 lite of a short catch off the Brittany coast. | 5, es I note a letter from Mrs, Demacest | {n, ‘These colna, 1 undersana 1 is of our national Ife ‘ Maine terore in. | Explosion of a huckloberry pte at Pat wentitled “Men in Elevators," and 40 13°] mich legal tender as the fiftyroen, Stns ah his yacht Hehensolarn have: inecedaliated A Pulte pia een sua eraOn HUSD) astioue seaults Binapolere Ely wouka say that ars, Demme eat tA |e ea of any Other year, and theatres hime e had to watch seas, to board suspicious veosels, ana {9 pretsone snes! of malaga ising: gloomy spy a} grown sensitive about infernal 1 Gi Iroads should be compelled to take viating a exp! the ey. Buta detective who ts not ubiquitous | Yon! and the money gone, he hes no * & @ chines will exercise care at the junch J3P,8. | of the missing its target. Pita tand aaa ieomer are’) | Atrshtp navigator says: “It 1s Yust es | counter, M Y LO V E AF F A | R pond erie tent B Pp | I Ur ie cea ere ee cae]? a 9 Young Girl’s Heart. y 9 RUSSI AC Y ROTATED Ron TABIAN ) erotno 4 ke @ cigarette there. Wi "T am afralé of solling my lght/Tiyich?” I corrected myself, #ome- 4 « |T was about to go further Katya cu: Gress." whet confused by Leonov's pene- to me and told me in an “Of course! * * * How foolish of trating look, ‘Yes, it 1s a very long she wus going wih ain fair to buy cakes and that it seemed to handsome little hussar other-In-law, pub for @ display wecks to wreak her tll mt hat’s all right, He laid himself in our landau to take a rest after “How fs tt that he has let you off it a scene of Jealousy to-day?” ou have saved me—I put all the for the flirtation on you. Ha, Boia SHAS LeCROY LOS OL ALBTAT AB Oaili y Ive to take suck cloth album and @ pencil. | ‘ou resolve to take su; CHAPTER V1. ye ceased laughing, and wen" a aimoutt oti?” ; e ing, wy " | “I did it to avold sce: jn the how SASEH | for she was fri h pencil?" cones snd The Russian's Jealousy. hore eral en si and, besides, my grandmother threat ~ ‘“ OU are mistaken,” T replied. “1 the grotto, | “Ig it an etude from nature?” ened to curse and disuherit me.’ Y @m not your gues. You have Sean oe “Yes.” | “And which of tho two frightened you not énviti a ne ted in a tea ane “, landscape?” so much—to be curmad hy your grand- = S peren I have tn- not betray your secret :o "No," mother or disinheritsd?” od Yeo 4 th ef family." f replied i ya with a mise Yegor Hytch Jumped from his seat, chievous grimace 4 ran out from the “As long as I am alive a butterfly ease, ! ‘or Ilyich?" I interrupted her, | he wes never }eft alone. striker, “divine right,” &o, that if fate me not to know that every tag is dearer to you than Life itself! * * said Leonov with contempt, and taking eff his light summer topcort, threw !t over the rock, “sit down!" I obeyed, witle he seated himself a little distance away from me, ut the head of the wooden staircase which was laid on the slope of the hill, “Ave you sketching? * *” I aaked, I grew tired of getting euch replies as "Yes," or "No," so I asked him no more questions. We sat in silence for some time, Now a shrill whistle resounded, and 7 ume * * 1 saw him last autumn, be- fore he left for Caucasia, * * And I had not seen him for a long time pre- vious to that—that fs, I met hin very [mrely. I simply promised my grand- |mother not to meet him olandestinely, and sho as well as Yegor Ilyich tried thelr utmost to keep us from meeting each other openly.” "Havo vou kept your word?" | tt wai ‘Neither one nor why other, for grand- mother would not rave hep: ber threaia, 1 simply wanted to ri niyself of ‘ho headaches, which tormented me after each and every meethig with Andray tyich, for there wire always traglo belong to my famit anov oF eee nulders ag a train appeired in the dastanoe, Mite scenes in the house hetween me and “Of course T won a cool awed r with eyes, T Ung past the tall poplars on the other Brandmother after ‘hat “and for the sole reason that to mi sald wide of tho river, like @ bird, your family." Yegor llyich was about to say some-| ‘Novliing." I replied’ unwillingly. “Perhaps you are thinking of some: he pkasure of having you In our 4 Sergeyevna, you forgot to pay “What are you thinking about?’ ™ 1 yet pone head. ore than sufficient, and | woulda ter for the bes 1 the bread, asked Leonoy when all wus ailent & hes were stronger than yuur love, to double si by gating Into re 7 again: I forced myself to «unile,’ bat 1 found n> adequate rep! taken unawares Ny for nov, | Was vy ine Justice of hig remark, not merely a word, it was 4 thing to me, tut he nearly choked with! him the only silver n on He spoke to me no more. and occu. me , had in my pocketbooks Ie woke i wan 2 Saal fied timgit wth, the 'riudn Not ig Vicaliner! Zoblen!" J cited again, pt ein word and put 41 sls “It was not merely a word, It was an oath! A After a briet pause he asked me an- 4 A and gaze | inetora miveay paid iny i io the waster and, rising oy) POmeE rt; Tam not in) 1 stopped near the spring to see how » ‘lishubler, wonoy, other questions * mot unexpected Until my Benton Wik ttiored byw from my seat, walked away wit!) rai the mineral water was being pour The yest valley, #urrounded wi I am not tired as yet," question this time, ted kerchief, who Was sunning toward @ plying © Katya, who asked tn a frei: . W ia i nee nut need the] into botides, and | w about to # suuptalng and fore was cut throug ‘But Iam tired already.” cll me, Murla Sergeyevna, where us up the wooden alg Y with the aned voice: “Where are you d emerge , down again in order ake a walk a wide river, whose waters were flow “But there is no place to rest here~/and when do you expect to meet hea of he adele: 3 eo past ruth to tell, 1 did not know whe # mo tn 8 Vad etud imp nee} the park on the other side of the rive 1 quietly ws if they felt sorry to par | vou can't find any benches.” Ardrey Uyich?" iouiter ‘with the basset’ wha yyy ain re po! do eimply fel Uke Y but Leonov turned toward the moun 1th the beautéful banks, Here and] “You may sit down on that rock, | Nowhere! * *' I replied curtly. hand a ‘ . | vu may sketoh; Tam not in your ” tolling you | tains, and I followed him, without know here Were the tiny huts of the farmers | said, pointing at a rock near by, * There was a asllence for about a evil exclaimed Longs, casting a Passing the gamten, 1 walked up ny | way F est other, ing why I was doing it rowned in yerdure; and their brick | Jo not trouble yourself about me. minute, gfter whieh Leoney asked suri ok at $e 908 Ut girl, Like Jeading io the ininena epring, But “iu: 1 can't do it here It ie riher Without listening any further walked | After ® few minutes’ walk through | cots locked Mie eup roses on the green | “I don't want to @t down on the |esain: fr nd ‘ram on, Wut 1 allo "hue Qi) not @o a far us the wpring—I! dark here, and 1 want more light for, out of the grotto and directed my steps | the forest reached @ small square] seadows pork." “Ie it long sinee you @aw him last?’ i. ; ott im the middle of the soud in a’ my work” toward the spring, Leonoy followed me, | whigh eommanded & wondestul view of “Let uy tnke.e est hese!” suggested! “Are you afraid of catching cola?’ | “¥ou mean Ansrushi-Andeey (Bo Be Continued.)

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