The evening world. Newspaper, December 26, 1906, Page 12

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A’ Brook maid yanking by the e Hooking, dres sconsiderable After watching the no ! woman wel What will te the fut tHe supervision of a, mot In the first 7 she is physical! ‘to stand the w: moral right to bring ja mothér should not ther and her husband's tir the work should be } Should be delegated. A-great deal said dozen children are few if the who bring up their child When a w in allows dren the children must suffer. Heast of all. The best per intelligent: affection : In time of -s ness the a child than can an anxious mother. drugs and th nursing. nothing can replace. becoming il obviates both t Y watchfulness of a mother ticular importance—but it is. fireman, the motorman, are denoted by their v distinctign or not the cap, On the wh might be exc: the mother ‘child rearing tace to other The tr the right reme omen in W t will, bo -Ehe_prear not this w f culs travel the exp: outras not Fant gompets trec-quar Deng Clerks! Hard Luek. E The y lens. why have Coupie of weeks on days How a) warug have to work fA orl ry. M round? 1 hear any t c one den, *mental ficult on JOHN BA Khe smoking Nulsance. Ane reoTot, New Tork Sew a ka Seco0asC Matter displaying (Serles of jerks ironeH 12’ baser nt eu told me,” re-4j “This is tiursemal id Ie hac Its typ] fd Americans. ag class of ‘wel ent of a child mies up under | re develop y ‘oper care} per ae own children iv iid reari ing it is doub stful whet hen s not mean th have the best the charge o! nor the cars nd written in favor of large families of hat one is not properly reared. of those valuable women men and women. come before her 2 hired, mother’s hes results belo ‘}dren. One child is too many and the nurse can do better for But to keep the child” from And the solicitous should not be a matter wears a ou cores of occupatio a bade Whether a maid wears a cap The policemar any 7 mare cap; ning of a child in th seers can't Ket © reek of tobac Grleya way gir IADWAY Wakes and Bape Will other. viet in the | is the hes’ the | love | ie —-——— Daily Magazine, Wednesday, December 26, 1906. Merry Christmas? Well, Rather! . By J. Campbell Cory. ° not on Rut vp Heine and pa EEE =| If YOU Had a Wife Like This. Love Affairs of Great Men. wt _- By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Heine's rage seem to have been entirely playful. Once he told Mathilde A she would marry agata after his death. asked him wondering’ de took cynictam good .humoredly, “‘Have your pest, my love mhe replied. “‘You know you cannot Go without me." wife of Heine was a beau He had eoant lov e Kay daughter of Pa whom he made ts wife, 1, has cheered my extstence,"’ he wrote. rrot than to tim, and th: je ear had been damaged tn a fg! de for any human being ctor tried to reassure tim by say! In the least. ay, t Mathilde really loved the great port, 1 his poems, and tris death left er Inconsolad| ¢. DF HENRY PECEI THE POSTITAN /5 0UrsIDE 2} CHRISTMAS TOKEN ¢ OFF THIS GIFT FROM ST 1 HENRIETTA. = — eae a0C tn, I yiaganine B00 ,14100/ You UNGRATEPUL WRETCH! oh DON'T APPRECIATE ANY THIN I 00 FoR You! ful, untnteliectual, but thoush of German Utrth, was| for hir own coun everything to Mathilde, who, “true aod loyal an she ! onotte,”” as he called her, paid sho vat up all night making iia eacrifioe, he do- as selzed with a epasm of coughing which he thought his death would vt, please, tell that to my wife,’ he pleaded cynically, “She has enough though he could never persuade her 2 <a & & & ByF. G.Long Dow'y You THINK YOU OUGHT To GIVE § j Say! wits I Give, Hi A) | WHAT A CHANCE T2 WORK) Him SOMETHING SS . | ‘For A‘ CHRISTE ‘| New Deputy Police Comm WaT HIS RANK WAS, Jax ni) i Mees her second or | KEPT QUIET, COULDN'T CORNER HIM. of the family |" Code tathera had Pode enjoy married lite, eh? Ever have iny | ss, Dashing, blondes or brunettes? 5 more ouranences of opinion with your wifey wnderstand-—Cassoll's Be 4 got bricks. told, Charles—Yea, but t don't le-her know | Jack Dushing—Oh! that all depends thun ever before,—Detrolt Wree Preau, Tabout tiem.—-Cassell's Magazine, om the girl Iam with.-INustrated Bite. i our | Jack—Hullo, Charlie, and how do yo} Miss Gushing—Which do you prefer, TWENTY-FIVE ROMANCES « PROGRESS By Albert Payson Terhune | No. 20—-SAMU | Spae } | N American artist, coming home in 1832 after a successful career as j A palnter and sculptorsin Europe, amused his fellow passengers dur- | ’ EI MORSE; fie Man Who Abolished Time and i ing the voynge by explaining to them a queer theory he waa work- ing out. The artist was Samuel B. 1°. Morse, a Now Englander,.who bad been graduated from Yale at eighteen and had, lke Robert Fulton, gone to England to study art under Benjamin West. In hin spare moments he dabbled, for recreation, In electrical experiments. On the ‘thome-bound ship he had met a Dr. Jackson, who had Interestod him still further in this subject. The thyory with whick Morse entertained the other passengers | was as fcllows; It has beon proved that an electrical current will pass instantaneously along » Wire of any length. If this’ current is Interrupted at any point @ © spark will appear. Why not let such a spark or succession of sparks.repre- gent some part of speech—a letter, number or other sound-symbol? The passengers laughed at the odd notion and most of them soon forgot it But Morse was #0 captivated by the {dea that he threw over hie ‘artistic career und ret to work at once on the electrical Invention whish he called “the electro-magnetic telegraph.” He sacrificed his meany of liveltbood by doing this. For four years he worked in poverty and want, | and at the end of that time his invention was compiote. Then he petitioned Congress for an appropriation in order that he might put up an experimental line from Baltimore to Washington. The | tera saa f request was refused. Then he went to Engiand and Long Struggle § tried to patent his invention. He failed. Nor would with Congress. other European countries assist him, Eyery one e—~~~~—#_ seemed to look on the telegraph as a useless, imprece Ucable fantasy. s Back to America came Morse- and cace more went to Washington, where he moved heaven anil earth to get Con. s to appropriate §30,000 for the telegraph. Ills efforts seemed tn vain, and of the last evening Con- | Sress was Jn session in 1843 he went to his lodgings heartbroken and with- out hope. This wns the lowest ebb of his fartuns, Without, prospects, pen- | nilees, more than fifty years old, his invention everywhere rejected, he | seemed to be one of the century's most abject fallures. Early next morning a yo girl called to sea h She was the daugh- [ter of the Commissioner of Patents, and she brought the discouraged in- Vantor glorious news. At almost.on the minute of adjournment, \ Congress had voted- Morse th propriation, The work of building the 1 uington to Paltimore was be- gun at once. In a year It was co May, 1$44, the first message was cent. It-was dictated by | t who h bronght Morse news of the !appropriation, and {t nith God wroug Now that the gcheme was 60 triur ess {t was at once adopted all-over the | world, But Dr. Jac talked over the swbtect with Morse on yboard Bo many years before, bronght sult, clalming credit for all atter had accomplished. The suit (unlike so many in which Progress 8 favor. Henceforth his him a testimonial of 1 side Irs poured { fonnd easy to t Hmitless stretches of r. It was found tha Ider the English Ch the Auantic Cat lating these wires|a cable'rould be Jala tac nnel from Er 1 to F) came the {dea of” That also ¢ ed with ft hero began’ a ; new fen of ecthacks and o for many | ye ‘Two large steamers twice a cable across the Atlantic, land both Umes the cable broke. Cyrus W. Fleld, who was the chief p | give up, even in the face of these repeated diss ~~ eflorts a third > ; An Atlantie } carried safely of the rcheme, would not nintments, ‘Through his pted and this time waa ross the ocean ctrle commitnica- A monster ovation was plannal the very day it was to occur For seven years nothing more iqned as uscless. Yet Field did net de- rmanent and practicable Hne was laid. telegraphy {s due. He made s various other ten, while he wns perfecting his machine. made more or les¥ futile experiments along the same line. But It remained for Morse to combine all previous electric inventions and discoveries and put them to their first great practical use. He lived te see that Ile strand of wire in 1843 he stretched be- tween two nearby/etties extend unt!! {t.pad knit the whole civilized world tn ore mighty. bend that ravolutionizes commergs, news and history itself; Jand forever aunihilated thme and space. Se Ten Famous Women in Make-Believe History No. 1—Mrs. Blue Beard. By Margaret Rohe. Ge7 WONDER what Bluo tas locked up tn the closet of his I den Mrs, Beard curtously. “He's always snoop! 1 that aoor, snapping the lock when- ver he ing a ihe canary when I catch} Td give « good deal to know what he has concealed in that closet Why don't you ask lim?’ suggested the practical aster Ann, who was Visiting the Heards at the time “I did.” confessed Mrs, Heard, “and he aald clgar coupons, The Idea! I may be blue, but I'm not green.” At which the ladies laughed heartily, such belng consldered ja rare jest tn tion a8 estab Cable at Last.) in Field's honos the cable again colls | was aone. The praject }spatr, At lest, In T866, the f But to Morse above all oth > fore unc! harttable. that the. man 1 spondence from some person of our own sex wonder who sho can be?’ nald Mrs. Beard, readily ao- | cepting the suggestion, ‘“L wonder {f It 1s some one we know? hiding @ corre- or a stranger?” It we had a key that would Mt the clonet door we could find out," sald slater ‘That Js so," paid Mra, Beard thoughtfully, She sought her bunch of keys, 4 tho frst one they tried fitted the closet door. It just had to, What ts the use of delaying the denoement? The door swung open easily. It didn't even creak. The ladies peeked in. | My goodness!" said Mrs, Beard. “Gractous me!" sald stater Ann. There wasn't sign of a compromising correspondence. There wasn't even a letter. Nor yet a | it pf baby blue ribbon, The closet was filled with-hollday gifts bearing such | tage as “From Blue to His Littl Wifey," “Merry Xmas to Slater Ann, from rother Blue,” and the Ike. The ladies looked at each other. “1 was sire Blue was on tho level,” said Mrs! Beard. “Ien't he a dear?” satd sister Ann. “1 love that old than,’ sald Mrs. Beard | And such are the!true facts of a persistently garbled historic happening we ee Good Old Captain Bugher. By Walter A. Sinclair. oner Bugger pronounces his name ‘Bower,"— y Item. | Hi Bt h shoots Us queer-#haped names In manner quitv staccato, | O Ho gave vs Rhino Waldo, and he followed st with Mathot, Vey | It took six months to say that last, and then, when we could eee, \ Ile threw the harpoon Into him because of poor Caruso, aoe ‘And looking down the list of names, In hopes to find a newer, je mtruck upon that King of Clubs, that well-known cop, Cap, Bugher. If Rhino Waldo got our goat and Mathot had us affied, Won't ‘Bugher’ terrify each crook who ever, over Raffed? | Fer he belongs to many clubs—pollcemen’s clubs excluded— So we can all be sure that "York" by crooks won't be denuded. Oh, when {t comes to terrifying every evil-dugher, t f You bet that we can al! depend on good old Captain Bugher. ; Tie might not know a poot-room {f helnet one on a ramble, He may mot know where sports collect) when they are wont to-gamble; Ho may not, know a single crook in all the big collection; He may not know a single thing concerning crime detection, But deputies of-soctal rank are growing few and fugher, So let us give three allont cheers for good old Captain Pugtier. — te | Science and the Hen. NVESTIGATION of the capacity of hece to lay esgd resulted tn the discovery I that the emg production of hens decreases considerably after the age of four years. Thus, a hen lays at the age of one year about twenty egga; at the age of two years, about 120; at the age of thres years, about 135; at the age of four years, about 13; at|the age of five years, about eighty, and at at the age of six years, about heats A

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