Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Daily Magazine, “Wednesday, December 12%, 1906. — Wa | Well Done, Jerome! . TWENTY-FIVE : at Cell is bi wh for a $150,000-a-yea ance Thi yell as for the $50-a-week Wrong-Doer. : BM seo eins esaaay Ko) Wa vark ey, ew! Fort Sp ee cine cere e ROMANCES « PROGRESS Entered at the Post-Omice at New York as Second:Clans Mail Matter. S By Albert Payron Terh ume a “VOLUME 47 pee + NO, 16,549, | |No, 14—Four Men Who Were Punished for Helping Mankind. TAKING COLD. | ph Uh FACTORY was on fire. The anger-crazed mob who had set it-ablaze Tite te Ht FI = eer ener auth f f danced about the flames and clamo’ owner's Ife, This is the season for taking cold. This gen i F : A > Sid” ‘ ae ea mY = : } Not content with inuproverishing\him ¢ is life-wor col 1S the common ' ched for hinyfer and near in order to complete their atrc | they now {by te: eases ofthe lun ring him to pieces or threwing lilm into the fire, The mi: Fought Was James Hargreay b 4 commiit ty by inVentin: hh should Jonize the cotton inde swith cold and dan: bronchitis and pr t so count. ay make cotton many times cheaper and § ss thousands of poor people. pat 3 | Cotton 48 a common ory of its pro+ 1 NORR g {duction 18 as romantic and as full of tragedies as dime novel, | | Cotton had been introduced into England before t) rentury, Roh Aen et but the labor and slowness of } | Exposure 40 those part | pensive and of goubtful gené t i) smiready exist. | jby hand “on ‘an cld-fushloned epinhing whe wis, f There are y -done by men or women in their own homes. kwand, A “Pee Shue 1 pl affitis worked by head: wich cottige int s cohitaived both ik and a few o cal plagues ar }loom- att wheel, Hundreds of’ people picked “up a scanty living by jepinning and weaving. | Hargreaves, un fenotant, 11 [inventive genius, one day In one whom a poi been infected. mosquito has t nevertheless had a Iatent 1 accidentally knoc a © wheel kept on turrt- rtirned condition, ‘This the’ new position of to work on what @ fellow, wa spinn He noticed ing In spite of-lis ov Fave bint an ide L ? ‘the wheel as a t © ho called a “spi dialect-of his county later changed in ni |4nd “gin” are both corruptions of the w« tqined at first eight and later eighty spin! of cylinder, which was hand. It | twenty to thirty threads at a time, Instead ised {9 an enorme 1 do the work it The natural result of course would be to low cotton, popularize {ts use and thus in time not — |, How Accident Gave | §* Hargreaves His Idea. > ach ini mon wheel ing from This, of ice of spun t down the ex- y hundreds © too short= losis hospital} give the for a week d work, STRATA if he clate this. could see was that germs a footho! M he} \tand work was no Jonger in demand. So they burned IL atin Sure. j |and wrecked all his property they could lay hands on, Other and Iuckler But all of us are exposed to-dis-} Hen took up Hargreaves's idea of the spinning jenny and ped untold 5 Raa aceon ences } |fortunes from 1t, But the inventor himself died improveri: hd hearte ease every day. ery crowded subway car this time of year contains} broken es, just as in the summe the germs of stomach Richard ‘Arkwright, a Lancashire barber, saw Hargr land became Interested in the {d In 1767 he add “spinning frame,’ Arkwright's “frame spun thr fineness or hardness, leaving the operator nothing to.do but to foln broken + threads and to “feed” the machine with cotton » spinning was done by rollers, the carding passing through one pal: of rollers and being reeelved by a second ‘and faster-revolying pair. In this way the thread could be drawn out to any size. By ads d fly of tho old flex wheel to the machinery the desir Arkwright worked hard. over this barber. His family grew poorer and poorer . i hot-tempered woman, spent most of her time scolding the Inventor for his k of money earning capacity, At last, one day In a gust of rage, she selzed-the. Jui completed machine and smashed it into fifty fragments. ‘All the we years was ruined and had to be gofe over again. ‘The {ll wed after this grand row. Arkwright, after another 1 | won success, He was made a Knight and acquired an o jout of which he allowed his shrewish ex-wife $150 a year, | Samiuel Cromptén, a poor widow's son, was next to {mprove the cotton ndastry. The gravest flaw inthe previous inventions was that the cons ve @ breaking of threads hanipered anon speed. Crémpton devised a w: pene unis ene tor ; ing tho thread and fhe Benefiting Fellow Men.’ industry's chief drawbac! invention in every spare hour, support? }self meantime by playing the fiddle {na local theatre orchest ; ‘came in for als share of mo} violence, wag forced to sell his {dea for $300 and | fed miserably poor So much spinning” The old-time slow method of hand-lcom paving Was revolutionized about the.same time by John igiish workingman. ‘The same weaving system that had been ised _. |in Pharaoh’s time was still in vogue.. No one had taken the trouble to jo nge it for the better. Kay, however, by a new system of reed flying Why “‘Grown- U DS Should Write to Santa Claus BysNixola Grecley-Smi thy ees vanurasvieantnecoschiareodition or noes i Alsi noni ss machine » it by inventing a of any degree of the germs of various lung and bronchial dise: ‘time many fruits, vegetables and drinks conta troubles, ‘ Why out of the crowd in a subway car some develop col others do not depends not on the exposure, but on the powers of re ance. At the present season mi inclement weather induces them to diminish their supply of | ‘They take too little exercise, They spend too much time in overheated) rooms. Their bedrooms are not sufficiently ventilated. Their clothing not suitable. They get their feet wet and seek to throw off a chill by huddling next a radiator instead of by taking exercise. In laying the foundation for disease more than any one-o factor is improper diet. During the bright, brisk, sunshiny days-of November everybe —felt-goad. That feeling induced more exercise and a bigger pret epression has supplanted exhilaration and the open- | their diet as they devi work as SNOT ES appetite. “Now that d alr exercise is cut off, few people radically rea ik ust be disposed-of. The-hea way is fo.cat enly what the needs of the system require, and through the lungs, Ale skin and the intestines to get’ rid of all the used material. In weather | / Tike this people continue eating a heavy diet without disposing of it. mobbed and his mill destroyed. He twas for years the best hated man jin England, Driven from town to town, his Ife and property always In ta Claus, too? | peril, he at last dled destitute. n your profession trat| Of all this quartet of genluses who did so much for progress and carthatone. I may wish |for the poor, Arkwright alone escaped martyrdom, But, though they for 1 Know he will not) had bullt up the cotton industry to nndreamed of heights, another man-— asta t e-me a thousand excellent rea-/ an American—was destined to add the capstone to the edifice they had ot have tt reared, | > t {Th ng World the ch ny should we not w 5 lished. Drums ani toys | 5. ie y wish for advanceepic tioned for, and I ho} Healey) cristae lence wil ars ver beca ne, Who gives a tho: people? Who wit {no one will pr to us poor, He; "t you write to Santa Claus, all you grown w. igex. women drudies, sick at reart yet w burning within y y of the routine of h somé great hidden They eat too much meat. Meat once a day is often enough for any one who does not’ do hard physical lab light diet carried to the} point of mild starvation will fortify the average system so that its] powers of resistance will prevent the incipient cold which so often de- vetops into fatal disease, Nutrition means the quantity of nourishment | assimilated, not the amount of food swallowed. | The body. shoult-be-xept clean inside and out, The best way to do] as sa: this Ish and-frequentinternal and external water. The lungs should be exercised, which is easily dor by takin ‘deep breaths in the open air or in a room with the windows open. If a cold should find a footing sta it-out. y energy of the. ae Hints from the House Horrible; or, How to ae Xv LY By Jean Mohr. system will try to get rid of it, and that pre hould not-be ham Y nd drinking too mu z —_——— ONESTLY TE THIS RIN OTOP . HINOA HATETO) GRANDPA MAKES THE oO } fo BEST B&AR ~ DETHTCH as WIS LACE CURTAINS Letters from the People. | ae O° ike 8 Hine THE FRSIHIOW ANON, vy BEGRS SEENT a | | TO Bere: A mil AST NOW | | Byr tHwEvreN 50 H/GH PRICES -HEVER 17102. WAVE YOU CAN ch MAKE ONE & urely not forget you “4 By Margaret Hubbard Ayer, Santa Claiis? Yea, you do. Write him a letter and tell | . and, {f vou like, I will take care of 4t for you and see | You netdn’t sign our name, Just tell him why you are glad r sorry and what the greatest wish of your heart ts. The Luxury of Bathing. | NAVE urged in these columns so often the advantages of fren ent bathing (or rathor of dally bathing, bos cause fre to mention 1t did wo not yo letters on this subject. There are tho pride (mpoak it softly!) of the k and there are those who tell with even greater pride of their two baths a week we address oure selves, and we hops to conyir i that nothing but @& daily bath will ever answer could but realize the thousands and tera housands @f pores which become clogged in one da fo inention she daya® - and which can only be opened un and.cteaned out by a rough scrubbing. they would not think 0° Mghtly on —thatter If you would be vowutiful, the frat step tc that end ts to be clean; and face, whick with a complexion brush and pure soap, and inn eetetnie to the body with an ordinary tuth scrubbing Brians thorou rd with warm water. This scrubbing not only cleanses: the pores, » blood to the and starts the reluctant ciretiation, The bather steps from the tub in a glow which ts unique in that seaecuranntre| else which gan produce a lke feeling of exhilaration and copi= couraged to start a new day. : yori good to tell about fe thd The Evening World will print tt in Santa Claus won't have to put on his spectacles to read St. | Tt will d 13S whose irone bath a ve 0 JUST LOVE TO HAVE ONE BUT THEY'RE _ \ SO_EXPENSIVE. Open Windows. i To the TAltor of T T wish 1 stand the be wae YOU MIGHT TELL W7 A SON SOANNIE, HELPS LO758- : OUT. OF Cee: fi FUNNY STORY © To Make Hair Fluffy. | Molten the ala non when GRANDPA qi WAGE oP E CY ‘A.-Shampoo your hair frequently, | (Tenens: The Wxgece fas the AND Your / 6 - THIS 'B week or ten daya, “using: | MAF On z » tonic on. the ood vonditon, formula when 1 Dry scaip to keep tt in! Enlarg Z éollowing I ne the hatr on kids | 3 Ita of tartar (cars ¢ f ta , and the only ¥ % 7. E; ' W Biss , ce] VE 4 \ea yoy &D QUEFER? VE 80 WAKE NII UP.) ee of is by the use of US THCROVEH LY ash), 1 dram; > Ubbing brush and a pure hiygl- Wow TAKE JOUMNIE GND MERTON (LITER VE fee > LD saan Leta 2 dram} Mquor of Resear uo naa Hat GLYE HID) hh OVER. LE WI/Lk SRAND PALS DONATION, monia, e of rose, 1 dram | ne enlarged py the EMSOY 77. \ ON FLOOR AND glycering, 1-4 ounce; rectitlé) spirit, | ons, ard kept (treo, eng : TELL SOHNMIE HE 11-2 ounces; distitted water, 18 ounces, will contract. and Sy ATHY ROLL (NEM THIS 15 A PICNIC FOR SOHNMIE. Lot the’ mixture digest with frequent) come normal In size. 1 know of tana stirring for a week and then Miter.| sands 8¢ cures effected In this’ mann “Dear Maria.” , Bi By Walter A. Sinclair. oe JOHN 0 No “New Tried! DIPLOMAT «nd acrobat was old Mack EB. Avelll; | A At velvet glove apd fron hand he surely wax the jelly, There was the brand that Talleyrand doped:out, It kept him But sand b 3 Jumped at his, st lege?” rept ‘em all go y Wo! linve no fore of dippy corps that yanked fit from tho pr Phe statecraft stor prodiiced xo far ts none but “Dear Marla.” & 10 ‘One Hune line. “Phe the Oné Richellou wos quite a few when Looles ran tho ‘French i Ss { ‘And Queens wid Kings were just ctiesa things, and Kmpe POA anop de tatta o€ diplomats H. Wa fed gayly; THE DIFFERENCE, AGA there! vere: Cow) wala over ikniewsthig)tnoves (of Leh Dizraell, ) different | But-those were days of long dolay: jen, rs his henohmon. NOTHING SERIOUS, Mann Hutton HARKING BACK. [eget TRUE BRAVERY, | n A.—How ts yonr club comings on, ! He ta perfectly lovely and no recalls by wire, SE ee tar faneaiaslielpenran ©. ‘There was no “Dear Maria." DHE YSEE ire now tort CORE? « |trom any man I ever met No Woman's League hetpe & Hana Pep aanon Nr ea a aN Mra, %—Splondid! We are going to| ‘He must, haye proposed to you." — S erate Unravel late lnmarck eyaniacwonder NETO EDP e|YOUS S So fpr ree ny or te ont ALE a ea ed gty Eesha sada night: Piegende Binette Hoa Laie Cre aaah 1 qnd apoke in tones of thunde cutest Mttle fat) W y and navy could come | SOT =) ‘ Ayratat al ———_———— With fron hand he ruled that Innd qnd xpo! A hunder— over here and ‘simply wipe your coun<\| Mrs) A-Al, indeed!’ “And how PEACE AND QUIET. And apoke the truti, because, forsooth, he sald ‘twould catch Yom dreaming but some | try off the map." thaede ts - the brave husbands} Mr, Back Itubm—! {5 a qufet room?| Ana Fox and Pitt were surely It at diplomatic scheming, bard [ haven't he neat Christ. | ‘what, again?’ quietly asked the | MT. he bas a ; diplomats may very soon aspire; swing so fastine'ye got orem, no and mind the ba | Landlady 3 ver: We democrats as dip a i @ it more room—Pniia- gir—Philadelphia — Public} bea and waah te dishes,—Chicage {a noleollwaealaes te last roomer Jer] oo. future uxo will give a page to cur own “Dear Maria, pha) be 3 : awa: = % Chicas Sy : . . ‘ 2 ’ :