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The Evenin Tie “Published by the 1 Publishing Entered at the Post-Gifice at New York an Beco Class Mail Matter. - VOLUME HE MILK TRUST. - 1 for babies, the milk ¢ Boiled contains natural bacteria \ —fs draw k h a ordinary to become sour. The icing of mil and keeping it at-a temperaturé be- low 50 degrees Fahrenheit checks the increase of the acid bacteria a’ lengthens thé time before m comes $s . The use of preservatives will ke: ik from becoming “sour fora }) Indefinite length of time, This fact makes it.easy for any mitk ‘user to determine whether the milk has pre- servatives init. If milk ts-kept in 8 warm place for eight or ten hours and does not tum sour it is positive _ proof that some such Injurious preservative as boric acid or formaldehyde | “has been used, 7 Cartified milk is the best of all for bables. This ts milk which has Been produced under sanitary conditions by clean, healthy cows in a @ean, wholesome stable, and whicn is kept in sealed cans or bottles at gifow temperature tmtil It reaches the consumer. 2°> The price of certifled milk has been recently advanced to 12 and 15 gents a quart. The price of ordinary milk has been advanced another cent aiquart. New York City received » week ago 233,577 40-quart cans of milk and 10,540 cans of cream. This Is about the average weekly —“canisumption throughout the year. One cent increase In price ts an adiiitlonal charge of $100,000.a week of $5,000,000 a year. 2 * This is the price which New York City Is paying for_the-privilege+ The Milk Trust is gong through the same progressive stages of growth as the Ice Trust. The Ice Trust began by cutting down the price which the ice producers received, thereby reducing the value of all the iceshouses, vhich it then proceeded to buy up at a low valuation. After the tee—Prst-then chised many of the ice-houses and reduced the quantity of production, This made it ase -prites through the artifical scarcity which it’had Itself a aunel of=mippt Produced. nO RE TT cn mn er en g World's Daily Magazine, Thursday, October 11, 1906: The Greatest Show on Earth, i =—By_J- Campbeil Cory. : (C1 —— BY Tpyin S. Cobb company, No, Sf to 6) Park Row, New Form) (WAL DING BUST NEW YORK THROUGH ores FUNNY GLASSE only kind of Southern family you ever hear spoken of in this town is the Old Southern Family, In the bright lexicon of Manhattan there's,no such thing ag the New Southern Famfly or the Latest Fall Block In Southern Famties, orceyen-an-XXX* Staple Southerm Family, or a Fancy Patent Southern Family for Family Use, . i It makes no dlfference that the paper may be spenke ing of a person whose shellac of Southern ctiture Is 50. tresh-as-tobo-sttit-atteky to (he touen, Porstpty” The” 2 siz drops his r’s" with o visible effort, like | 1G @ large oyster without chewing. All fs Old Southern Family fish that comes to the net.of the riting gentlemen on our island. The newly varnished kind goes just the same as if It were the real goods. A party with long bangs and a Colonel Moberly accent tries to alter the looks of a walter whild in a state of ‘pick His Gherkins {s given a ride on one of those wagons that are so easy to get into, and so hard to get out of. Next day in the police court he tells the Magistrate that he belongs ta one of the real Old Vatted Southern Families. The Mngistrate turns him loose on the broad principle that an Old Southern Family can do no wrong iH] wand when he goes back to his birthplace in Gallipolis, O., on a visit he has wt tomet.ing to brag about. 1 A indy with glorious nair hat ls TMtlan-red. this searon anda complexion that 1s all her own, becau . bevomes plaued at some one. Th Object-of Her ttaamnrs. = r r t Inciimbe | Y OU may have naticed, from time to time, that the “you-C ANT. LOSE ME | WENT ~ HAD A ) MILLION FOR AN HOUR _ TB tmextensivety.— Bend, and be- tufled income} — ghier of the South and ood so common among Old perfidious wretch wooed and Nashville on the Rfo Grande _ whtutored repor know xrow Jemons? js-often bread, meat and elgare te from owe of hix commoner her fol she Kot j fiding to the chockful of the soul press agent jon of the Mizry-Luvs Company vas born In Kunsas, ents. Her father would in the Confederate srmy living in Gei= ara ’n leading. at Mobile. On in the uudertaking business ce over, she is related to the Lees, the rh Families of Virginia, She often re- ppy culldhood days, spent on the shores |Southern pi [hep mother’s s | Pocahontases anc ralls, with fondest emotc |) ___ofher_nearby-countles are producing less milk. The independent dea = as, to-seame-a-supply; have-to-go-as-far-away-as- Syracuse, Watertow |) The Milk Tnist has heen golng through the first part of this process ng the prices paid the farmers until many farmérs receive only centsa quart, net, for their_milk.—At 2 cents a quart-a cow's mi sells for less than the’ cost of the féed at present market prices for bran, middlings, hay and corn fodder. , onto the-dairy- bushes Ors and Ogdensburg, where the freight rates are-higher and the tengih time consumed in transportation causes the milk to deteriorate re Everybody who has plenty of money could get all the ice he and Mts family wanted last summer, Everybody who has plenty of money now can buy good certified milk for his baby at 15 cents a quart. i A3 for the few million people who cannot pay these prices, they have to take what they can get, and watch the Stock Exchange quota- tions of the Ice Trust's stock and compute the increased pro! “Milk Trust. i ofthe Letters from the People. Signe of the Times, CWoths Maitor of The Brening World: ‘The other night I passed an apart- ment hose as 4 large jady was hand-+ fran Hittie-man-a-leash-on-whose—end wa at looked ike a bad HUGH MAHONBY Yea. the same} MB tbe ware you a mile. I do hope he won't catch Pipes Street. f, NY SMSS Paty fax ellis as beeen — role of that stiong drema dealing with the horrors THE: FUNNY PART : A THE MEN IN THE NEWS —Straight Talks to To the Dean of the Chicago University, Who pid from His Last Stronghold, MACCLINTOCK, had] be no more co- Henceforth at Chicago Unl- meet {n class, Has Dispossessed Cu can teach him; Sanipus- versity men and wom em. occasional chance encounters on the oamnpus, but the “wetings, yor decinre;-witt-be-“on-an-entireiy intelectual eeping the Atlantic Ocean out of her aweening the Atlantic PAST LRAT Re Dida man and acwoman ev al basis since the world’ began? vit Know any thiix pout mens en you'll have to admit that they dont and they Moreover, {t would be ver: h Lahey are, 81th no worldly advies of fatiers an or shape the generous impulses of youth to se a college should not be a match-making arena. But in the interests of unprofitable to you teach them—higher mathematics, phfloso- Perhaps you think the thing each other—not on phy, eta—are more {mportant than the things they learn from porsensing poor I! — os The real Southerners continue to stand St without a protest. The Seven-in-Six Puzzles. Fourth Series—Mark Twain. niversity—all the untyerstties in the world-are Life in i Ke af Sov ve made a diplomaed exit more from one blue eye than al tubsord more wisdom in a tete-a ai ta teh tof torr pate the devil nave atriven ttbught do you expect to miccead wl presided over @ co-educationa ege you must uid not attend e not for rT olassroom may be due to ¢ ition, Dean MacClintock, you deprive young men ‘eof meeting and knowing each other exactly as hers-to- Sight loves young { sh, mercenary Dr. MacClintock, T ask you to think again before dir- pid from hin last atronghold—the co-educational college. Two-Minute Talks with New Yorkers.: By T. O. McGiIIl. If YOU Had a Wife Like This. » pyr. c.tong EMRY PECKs IF You Hi, ELUNGS Yeu_weulor rae ie Vas (BE Ar : D =| 36 a Ta HEAR - sal Lh ay paceman K = eae Ane Ea Judgo ia a New edge of the election © SAALBURS Hidden Picture 4—Find the Hen. a ieee EVENING WORD hers prints A htdten=pteture—puzzs.—_ Tt —witt rint-one-every day: Bach-pteture-is compiete in itself; butt yor will cut out and save’ tho six pictures of each series and put them together properly at the end of the week you will be surprised to tnd that they make One big seventh ploture that not only belongs to the group, tat-Hithont which tite series wottld he-ineompleteSare-the Mark “Pwain ries and find the seventh hidden picture. : Betty VincentS # & ew ne viCe_10— Overs | Nemests of repeaters, One Conse for Tha works ay Will ba de: coll {f the air twere not diseased. | \ > af BENS al smoke ts iP poison In th URES MOM PLEO UGA TRAY ELANGIR, New York a bad as Ground Kenta, in the rmoke way, and ChigaKo : tHanesl Male to 949 ¥ LIONTH + Vi¢ ii Pi tes pets dit to Murry. 5 wrong A, UUPTON, Boheneotady, iN yenging angel yeopie who monkey wit gazine’ voter than | ‘ , care whether he calla on other girls or She Loved ina Week. bat cy 20 atty : —y fe Ae erately in love with a young| She Wants to Meet Hini. ‘whom_1 hava Kiown DUDA Ther setts Ho wishes to marry me, but [oe {8 & Youngman who passes there dy another whom I have known my house frequently, I would Uke’ for three years, and be also whfhen me to make his acquaintance. He to become nidwite, but he ts poor, while yeems to be a nice young man, and I | the other one is very wealthy. Now chink a great deal about him. what am I to do? Do you think it 18 Now, dear Betty, would you kindty only infatuation for the one whom T aaviag how to get acquainted with him? mot a weok ago or true love? (What do CORNELIA. | you adyise me to do, as I must bave| m4 only way to meet him Is by In= an answer ready for my new asqualnt- | oauction through some mutual trtends Vance by Sundny, ANIIOUBIG |trepune ieriateen tient homer haat Marry the one you love, whether you/, 1.) have known, him a week or ten years NOW YOu GET IN THAT-WAGGN AND OME WITH ME- YouIRE NOT Sy] nt TO BE SEeH SON THE STKCET en on the’ Job. wtanoes where on cannot realize “charaotera look upon thetr and the deeper | Mia money will help some, remember | T5q Much Mother-in-Law. | | U immer, tam i She Loves a Dru TAN atiousa fuser twenty-one years pea ta young lady neatly owenty | | old and have been keeping company pe THEMRIETTA yeara of ogy, and have grown up|” With @ young lady of ebout my own ‘DEAR © with, and have learned to love a|age, whom I love very dearly, She | coung man about four years my, sen-| seems to lova me also and le wilting « youn sho Mveas almont atrectly opposite |to marry me, but while her mother (n- {omy house, He je a traveling salca- | willing that, we showid marry, ahe In s!- nan, and ‘when he tourna from his trips | waye finding some fault with me and |, |e dosen't ecem anxious to call'on me. | making things unpleasant, In othr / What would you advise:me. to do to| words, aho ls a typtoal mother-in-law, | ake hf love me? I am alinost sure | Under these circumstances would you he calls on other girls white he & in| advise me to get marrted or not? town, " ALM FC. Tam eure he dow, too. You oan't| Yes, but tneiet that your wife shalt — ues | t office can get upy! make tim love you. Ba seat and| ive apart trom her mother, Dowd cracious £0 Di. Dui Moats: anpene MR. wIBATE: om-D- ebaR Ae MG of