The evening world. Newspaper, October 19, 1906, Page 20

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“households. eee = pate BaAltor otto Bs To ee OLU MEA == present=retait-market-prices forobeef;_this-ex Soe Ape ow fubiished by the Press Publishing Company, No. 63 to 63 Park Row, Now Tore Entered at the Port-Office at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter HORSE MEAT. i Prof. Brewer, of Yale, attended the Nat / erinary Surgeons at New Haven recently, and made an address fayori i the use of horses as food, In Europe horseflesh 1s often_eaten It is| —_epenly-sold-at Paris butcher shops-and_mafy of the lower-priced French | al Conv. and. German. restaurants use more horse meat. than beef. ; “However novel the edible use of horses may seem to most people fn the United States, it Is timely to consider the remodelling of, diet which economic and hygienic reasons,should compel in most American A horse is as cleanly an animal as-a steer, and much more attractive in its habits than a hog, Cats and dogs are ‘little different in their edible qualities, from “rabbits, and tur- tles seem rathe? preferable to ter- rapin to any one who has seen there much difference in appé: -ance bétween an eel and a snake. Yet human gustatory taste has al: ways made and always will make distinctions. ‘ Of the: $827.19 average annual} expenditure of the better-off wage| earners, from whom the United} States special agents collected statistics, the meat food expenditure amounted to $189.34, or more th: half of the total food bill, and almost a quarter of the total experditur The meat food cost more than the rent. 5 Taking the average family, according to the Government report, as 5 14-3 persons, this made a meat bill per capita-of 75 cents-a week. At nditure-does-not-go Ligne 1 ves i ff | per Considering that all the potatoes, vegetables, fruit, flour, bread, sugar, molasses, tea and coffee cost little more than half this meat bill the ratio of food expense gives large opportunity for readjustment. ~The American’ diet is based on outdoor physicat tabor.—ttts n= herited from the farm, where a heavy meat diet furnished muscular en-] ergy. Thé.use of pork in its various\forms was the base of this diet because the pigs were raised asa by-product and the pork was readily cured. ‘The popularity of heavy roasts and legs and. shoulders was brought from England. Now that a great part of, the The Evening World's Daily Magazine, October 4 6 Shall. By J. Campbell Cory. vA Dp We Have Them? URPHY-MADE JUDGES | Sewwrw ore “Hing. population are employed indoors at sedentary “occupations or= at such semi-sedéntary work as at- tending -to machinery without -Severe—physical_-exertionthe—-old American_diet does not fit The majority of the American people to-day are. overfed, They are not over-nourished, which is a ; ; yery different: thing-fromover-feeding, -hecanse nourishment depends-or supplying to the digestive organs the elements of proper assimilation, andthe eating of food in wrong proportions overtaxes the digestion with-1] out nourishing the system. While a wholly vegetarian diet would not be satisfactory to most eh hs a ta THE JAR nid Mr jarr Get Angry Just Because His Good Wifes R FA MILY z Se Sea. Hare. Takes-an Interest in Politics. vottad ¥ hasta ith n high good humor and keeping yepaper. in tho right © and 9 ‘i and doest grab off the newspaper, frst? They don’t» hear you ask them for more hrojied bacon and a half cup of co please to pass the cream, but they'll search the papers |) Mere ort 1 morning ne 0p he at all, appetites, the substitution of nitrogenous vegetables for part of the meat and a great increase in the consumption of succulent vegetables would “make aration more nourishing and less costly, x wrestle Wit the paper “Why doe he Typewriter vs. Cook, * The men who say thout-rebiit trying weather —pronabtiities—on—t he—titie—ts riage, death and engagement notices, and th iry gooda advertisemonta with ¢ id she?’ sald t 9? another Sy aoenee oe to's your,aut D bre doesn't, know he's alive!” only walt a minute and Ho's enga: thority!" sa! @ in Mr. J not Mr, Jarr, Rangle Andy be thins mu -aaylyou anked an Bnxioum thelr own, for the more soclatie and 1 TersnreEsed StenoRrA pliers, —— ONE OF THEM. To Change Metres to Yards. the Batter ot iy to the result ed years ag: practical afford satd tho 1 would bell would eto too | DA8 ‘To the A correspond: to put 41,000,0%0 Oh box we old in sqliare $11,053,000, 5m: Great “Dincover To the Eattor of T ng World etn A. Jfovel Imre r tolls ita monds have 1 rise ar ne sent. in the pa. years Sat the shortage of s I es ra prining thi riage. 1 think tt trados nbHS Ves Ate gale i palldine re « on ‘| eau a I telegr been used in mulling tie Now any inethinks, to ‘the song o. | ontering ent-howses.” I deduce this from BOSTON GU | art of his questic L on ann fn Eh Nn id -endt down..town you take the paper térrupt me! h sey terns theteny wht (o—bring—-the evening edit. I_am_not interested we stuft they . who do you think will be elected and how do you know It? again sala Mra. Jarr, & prophet or the son sa b fainner, h | been lightning quick EARS | England 1s-not-wholly- ecerrect. +-to-hurry-tohis € Jy By Roy L. McCardell. | {however not greatone jeonat ‘The FIFTY GREATEST _ EVENTS in HISTORY dred Days’? and Waterloo. UROPE, for the first time Ia twenty years, could rest in peace ant 1 iE pair its tered fortunes. Napoleon, who had been the “bogle m | disowned by his own people; and safoly stowed away on a distan{ [island, Where he could annoy no one, \Small,wonder that there was thai Pehing ia-Buropet =e = packed him off to Elba, Napoleon escape With 1,000 of his “Old Guard he landed In France, March 1, 1815. The news of his return swept tha country like wildfire. The French nation which, a year earlior, had grouned | popular king. After a quarter century of nillitary glory and endless’ excite }ment Jt had been hard for France to settle down to humdrum peaceful | existence. Pecploe spoke of Napoleon as an almost {mimortal hero who ‘had | With ono accord army -and popiiace greeted. their returned ‘Empero' jwwith a frenzy of joy, He moyed northward prepared for opposition. Buy he met’ with none. His journey to Paris was a triumphal march. Soldient Marshal serying in the Royalist army, was ordered.to seize. Napoleon 4s an enemy to France. But at th ght of his old conrmandeg 19, 1 9006 | No. 42.—NAPOLEON BONAPARTE. Part I[V,—Tho ‘(Huns of a ed Continent, was beaten br sheer: fo: of numbere}_ But tho respite was brief, Barely ten months after the Alles bud) | under his yoke, went mad with joy. Louls XVHI. had been a stupid, unt | made the names “France” and “victory” synonymous. Sent to errest him flocked to hi standard, et tito have Rees Triumphant March 7 to Parls. 4 Poor olf mech capiti —awtthout-strts : is tyranny and selfish he had wrouzht. They r ed only ‘Y, magnet He was again their io! the returned from exile was not the samq sort of man hgd overawed Europe. His early’ life was bagidd {ning to tell on Of old Ho b ed barely t fA course twenty. wake t same he will pow had domine sleepy the old tivity. . The “Hundred D | despotism the Empere proved strang. }and bided thelr can Dt out of sigh fed about thelws And thoy: For-the Altes Into. the field Naa 206,000 mon f Jon, he hurried Belgium, where Brunswickers, etc., under the Duke of Wellington and» the Prussfans under Marshal Blucher, were encamped. Napoleon knew Wellington and Blucher would try to unite at Charleroty | « fo he planned to get there ahead of them, thrash them cach in turn om {then march eastward, where the Austrian and R werd gathers ‘The plan was worthy of Napoleon at hi fae ot.) worthy his-3r0} t corps -of= amny at Zlethen, June 13, and s . Then he-sent rt of his army der Ney, against Wellington, Th J ard battle Ney wus repulsed hetghts of St. Jean, near the B | oteon, ue ainder of the F met the Prussians, under Blucher, at Ligny and u defdatwl them, | ldlling 12,000. It wad the Jast of the Emperor's Inn lo-brilllant view j tortes.—He-went tren. Grouchy with 33,000 men 1m pursult of th | Prussions (In the wrong dircction, as {t happened), and himself s Wallington. The French reached Waterloo late on June 17 Ss »g ext day they attacked Wellington's army {n one of The Man of perl} t bloody “and epoch-m: Battles vers: Last Stand. aes | and Germans, | Waterloo. Out of all Wellington's great army an were English, the rest being Hollande Thus the po 24,000 Belgigns pular impression that Waterloo was won by All’day the French ‘attacked, aay o But at nightfall Blucher and his Pri ouchy) came wp.. Napoleon had sent for Grou Dit-the-message-reached-the blunderer too late. Thi arrival of the Prussians decided tho day against Napoleon. Overwhelmed by superior numbers, the French were force’ to retreat. The retreat be= The battle bad lasted —elghtand—sone-tait—hours- | had lost 31,000 men, the Allles 25,000, r_had.set,—} eg jwns forever lost. Again he abdicated In favor of his son, 4 ow himsel prasetorever . ahd threw himself” + ke-OF- diplomacy that-Is vario: described: na a neces = meagre end-ta nt flacrant-breach of trust, the man who-for twerity sere had defied the whole world wns.sent to the fsland of St, Helena, and was kopt there under strict guard nntll In May, 1821, he died of cancer of tha stomach. He bequeathed hig hody to France and $2,900 to a man who had)” en arrestedon a charge oftrying to murder Wellington: : So perished Napoleon Bonuparte, genius, chariatan, wonder-wi | hota up man’' of Europe—one of the greatest men that tape 1 WEES t Tambttton anid pr lHpgton barely held hi had eluded stup: ald, We ( bree o Pht realize tires lory can never bring lasting succes: «Betty VincentS # w& rl and has the nicest figure and the! 2 w Advice to Lovers. How | her dearly. ‘ot a box of ae {tis called a tonsorial paric ~for that Js hi cand: Kisses Anot AM in Dear Bi love with have wealthy, wl I am a Reni aainey for -one-oe hould that be-a drawbac! ded you love no Alfons draws Re BIT tell wa botii k and ut you are bos i a Encouraged Her. aughing! A Disaster in Black and ome: White. st time T was 4 the second ¢! sur position was cor an made a w WELL, LF THAT AINT JUST LIKE A WOMANI! I Forcorro HiToH You To, THE Wason is, right? Ar = nedearned to p, Dut unfortunately fakes sma ig tea. Sis — zat See ken rota nat recip + = SNETY Her lady, whom Tomeet [-epoken-to her about tt x \ conten. love, -E— ia under the jnilience, thoush i Tt is not right. Talic to her abc and §f it doox not cease, break th gagement. foza, it and other admirablo attaln~ - nyust lot her w eRe iments, I encouraged. Di back» | As {cannot marcy tho other girl, do Heat No Draw [33h cu irl 69, 'e: sett & me and MAVE recently become acquainted ner to be {| with-a young Indy of seventeen, Pioposd | to ‘| one year my Junior, and have been |Sommands Up out, with har sevoral times, togethor micht in tt with a chum of mine and his lady frlenontee t Eh eos friend, through whom I became 4% fr is “a mistake fo marry one While nted with the former girl, During loving another. But Jove the CUM add ‘i I| girl who doves. you. try to the short time of our acquaintance, Solved:-—The Servant Girl'Problem, By Walter A. Sinclair. + Silty, Long Iwtand City court, sent hia own cook tp Sall.—Nows Treaty (Mfagintra ‘Vin whispered in Fiathitsh and echoed tull welt i I In Yonkers and Pompton and eXe ‘New Rochelle, | 1 “Tia talked of in Newark. St George, Pallrade— In fact, you can't think of tho talk it has made, | Intelligence" offices all stand nghast— ‘Doe Servant Girl Question has been solved at-laat| \ a ‘ And, wonder of wonders—twas solved by a man! snderful still—of the good old Smith olan, Ate Smith, of the Long Island Court, ‘All earth will now hear the report. Wy < was ‘arrested, Hin nerve did not fall, 4 lio dared not discharge her, but sont her to jatlt ro, unmoved by the frying pan's threat, Mo: Oh ¢2 \ Carnegie medal awaits you, you bet! Ci ‘ For men can face cannon With unfilnching looks, ) \ me But scarce are the mer, who would dare cross their cooks, ‘And here ts your tlp My cook: has a grudge: oi

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