The evening world. Newspaper, January 3, 1907, Page 16

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cenrch ning World’s Daily Magazine, Thursday, January 3, 1907. : - The Eve : ae Reading the Governor's Message | MAKING A START IN LIFE, AGaold : rages i) By J. Campbell Cory. | 2 4 by the Press P pblishing Company, No. 52 to 6 Park aeacaabd Yor! Srefi at the Post }OMice at New York as Second.Class’ Mall Matter. MEAT un NOS EZ) When the Bipoklyn Cilizens' Committee appears e the Rapid} |~ Sa TSE EEE ffransit Commissi’in to-day they should be polltely told that John D. “McDonald's proposition has made unnecessary the further consideration of the Marlin and Stevenson plans for a Brooklyn Bridge loop. © There are now two East River bridges, and there will soon be two / ‘more. Of these thice have theit west piers In lower Manhattan and thelr “Brooklyn-entrances-are near-the East River The old Brooklyn Bridge | “present transili-conditions carries teti (Mies “aS MANY. PASSCNgers: a5. the Williamsburg Bridge, and will continue to carry several times as) many passengers as the Manhattan and Williamsburg bridges combined. ~The old Brooklyn’ Bridge Is now’ shamefully overcrowded, To build a loop fromiit to. the Williamsburg Bridge would somewhat facilitate the handling of thescars, but it would increase rather than diminish the A Serica of Authentic Gnides to Those, W2e Wish to Select @ — | Career, Giving Information Concerning Qualifications, Cpportunities, Earnings, d-c., in the Different Trades andi Professions. By T. O. McGill. THE CHEMIST hemist.—A person versed In’ chemfstry; one. whose C business {s to make chemical examinations or Inveatie -gations,-pr—-who-ts- engaged _in—the-operationa-of -ap<—— plied chemistry. Chemtstry ts that branch of physical edl ence which treata’.of matter considered .as composed of atoms, and of the relations of one kind af matter to anothey — ‘Applied chemistry treats of the application and economig_ relation of chemliatry to the arts and trades. at The McDonald plan .tnstead of _ drawing more traffic’ to’ the old" Brooklyn Bridge would utilize both the “Manhattan and the Wittams- burg Bridge and divert traffic to them. - With the facilitles provided by Mr. McDonald's plan the volume of traffic. over the old Brooklyn Bridge would diminish probably -one-half, thereby making possivle 3 ~better-service and -comfortabte—ac- : = commodations to those Brooklynites — to whom the old bridge would-be stilt the most Accessible and convenient way of going to Brooklyn. __ “These arguments of. convenience are sufficient to warrant the prompt} | ‘acceptance. of the McDonald plan and the prompt rejection of any sug-| estion-for-an-elevated loop connecting the Brooklyn and. Willlamsburg ges; whether-on* Catitre street, as Engineer“ Martin proposed, “or-on} ~ Park Row and the Bowery, as providéd by the Stevenson plan: 3 ne There fs, however, a further and stronger argument for the Mc- Donald plan, ‘and that-is the great saving to many of the passengers, The essential: difference is that under the- McDonald-plan-only one fare would be-charged-from Lower Manhattan to Flushing avenue, Brooklyn, while sunder the Martin-Stevenson plans passengers who desired to go further down town than the present terminal of the old Brooklyn Bildge would ye-to-pay-another fare_or-walk. = see ll ~The MecDonaid pian is the first rapid. transit proposition ‘which fecognizes that New York 1s one clty, not five; that a bridge Is a high- way, No erry;-that-two-five-cent-fares-compe!-the congestion-of the: —erqwded downtown: tenement-house districts, and-that' no system — of transportation. should be adopted which does not fit In with a complete * Salary and Fees.—The salnty for chemists ranged ~from$60-&-month: to $2,000-a-month, but-tis; average ts 208 a month. The fess received by chemists for single tasks - range from $510 $5,000... . 3 Hours of Labor —In Inboratcries a salaried chemist ‘| works on an average of eight hours a day. A ‘shemis who has 1 operaa tions will work the same as any other professional man, and frequently he doe@ ee atop on the work of the prodiem tn hand, except-for sleep, till the work td jone, 3 5 me A Duties.—The duties of a chemist vary as widely as the ecopeof the sion. It may be hie duty to:sea that a mixture of steql !s up to a grad he may be_the last resort in authority in a food supply house; “}man-who-hax-to- pass ON the MAterINIw RH OParAUOH BE SleCUeIe @re many things — chemist may have as a duty aaide.from the nical knowledge as such. . — { Equipment, —To bo. equipped for the work of a chemist one must hare @ thorough knowledge of the basic principles of chemistry, ahd sufficient’ math matical education to do a sum In algebra: A course in @ college u -petent-lecturer-ts“very—necessary, although tere” are many cases have achleved eminence who had only @ second-grade schoo! education, whose adaptability in the laboratory brought them success. Tho best equipmi for_al chemiat beside the neceasary schooling Jaan imagination.and.Jlove of - worl. = — A CHEMIST as described herein ts not to'be confounded with the eee AW’ ei (cal chemist, who must pass the State examination to act as & dlape: drug clerk long before he could become a consulting chemiat. ROVE : at ‘iste that sre fixed In the practleal and marcial world. Ono !s an Analytical Chemist, and the other the Consul Chemist. The analytical chemist 1s usually looked upon as a man who works in the inboratory for the corsul-ng chemist,yet the term analytical chemist is used y generally in connection with the higher grade of chemistry, because the term ie / best known to laymen. : - é The field of chemistry offers atiractive reward to a young min who wants ta <=> ae ae : 5 - —— <== 2 | eeoape-the-commonplace-in-life--Neaziy-all- the- big tadustria! end trate’ com < tions employ chemists, and pay them geod salaries. The eanning business, silk business, | electrical engineering, food, supply concerns, ofl and patat ro Gucere—in fact-every line wherein chemieal values play a part require and: empl ploy. them, PRS Tt In @ fact to be commented on that It requires Dengl Z Some Chemists {profound study to equip one’s self for tt thaa ts popularty Have Big Pay. supposed. Thomas Exison {2 a conspicuous example what may be done with-chamtstry on = minimum of ke education. 2 é r Tho Belgian Bteel Works By retaining separate organizations the Metropolitan, the B. R. T., aaiuiautiere erie vance panels Gateal Te the elevated roads and the subway have succeeded in evading the spirit : recolving « salary of $20,000 year for five yeara. He had only a commen scheeh Tof the raliroad law in favor of universal free transfers. To adopt any S : » : Sri arial Gaited” Sta an Staal Cotcoralieh ears eee eS an for a simple tridge loop for the accommodation of the B, R. T.| — : : - 7 $11,000 a year. The emelters In the Weat pay from $1,200 to $15,000 ee ie would: continue: the: double fare. extortion and would also: prevent the use s: : P tata, who are becoming more and more essential to the economy of production, sas -fane_ extortion and “would also prevent -the_is Love: Affairs of-Great-Men : ES SS By Nixola-Greeley-Smith| “= of colleges eVury Yad iss pannel — chemists, and who keep the pay down @ broadening commercial feld ce TTT : bn fi inf mind, was no better pleased with a poet for a son-in-law. For @ time both canbe ineultdve faathen chemicier’ cesta iiene naa 3 i The College of the City of New York teaches chesilstry tree to students, buq Young man's avowed athelsm and his revolutionary political Hertel FO a ere aly On) Buns. which | Bhalley | boast at the} nearest.| (ono. New, Tork! public! night ¢susolal aleo'/ teach it trea’ is a ALANA | Fr Vine? BUEN sister's, by whose namo and face he wae remsided of his|Doet met Mary Wolstonecroft Gcdwin, whose mother wus one of the fret advo-| the opportunity to obtain work in a laboratory, where a email wage may Witeng an ° AN a TTT] el avs eee who later married her, perhaps to guarantee an audionce for PAN AnvavsrneanvanvaseananaennvenasonynuananienigsssO gest PATE \ iia ia. wlews.... She..wamonly.alxleen,--and- her father. property | evea!' he declared, ‘soothed. his dream. of pain"—a.Aream, by the way. which, | <inoves. ts of a fut oh = = E ces thought her education Incomplete. Shelley t ke that of Coleridge and-De Quincey, was largely wrought of laudarum. On the ‘prospects of 6 future os ® chemist, Mr. 4. E. Roberts, of the frm off f ‘sensational acience’ has made so many special 11 ¢ that any one|ts justified tn/attempting succend. via thase soctees ae i = The second.Harriet-s-narme—wag-Wreetbrook,—-end-}cater of the rights of momen,ané rho. masherself.« most talented «nd attractive: ight. The Brooklyn School of Technology, Columbia University and the Steves Ine With: the--people- of Greater. NewYork. paying $64,000,000 ‘an eae or mually-for transportation now, which will be over $80,000,000 before [Pit car al . he qerote to hia friend Horr, “has perac- any new subways can be completed, the first necessity besides efficient | corare valarleen UN eens Rs cen aes : muaking new. opportunities every day for chemists who have that vital 7 ai i ili TMT mi Sa pa aah cae prerreen omST ar c pe Se 7 Dosen B cal) ratative, backed by the necessary education, = a ir) que eee We Wy | y Mie My Harriet Grove, and became engaged to her. But the eee Naini enen YRUNE Commie, relates) that) fore) time they) ate) us |' as ino apbcial clgases CoP cheinistry (and!han only day’ a pee : 5 ; Z fewa es Tatatesen lena) soling ats alpaciiont parsatar had tise "he says, “I dropped a hint about a pudding,” but Bhelley confungtion wend ’ F “ compelled her to discard him. Very ehortly after Shelley | teplied firmly, “A pudding ts a prejudice," and eo quenched his faint aspirations | other studies, “ eee 5 IA ; | } became enamored of another Harriet a echo! friend of his| fot Variety. For a time Harriet and Shelley Iived in tolerable accord, Then th Tejanyjone whol cannot ia: to gtve all his time to study there ts Gl 10 lent a willing ear to the young disciple of fres thought, | Person. pede l | ti : “They fell in Jove. Mary's Itpe touched the poets “tromblingly, her beautiful | stitute, of Hoboken, all have important classes tn chemistry, but these are ib. & Rohberts,.who make food analyses for the. Government has this to. YA chemist ls not easily made; he is half born = chemist; but the modern era : Finelly Shelley and-Mary Godwin -eloped-to-Ytaly, where they =felt=ts wien | PtH Byron, and, regrettable na It was, lved very happily together until Bhelley'a death. : j 4 her ina most horrible way by endeavoring to compel| The deserted Harriet drowned herself, and @ year later Shelley: thus wrote * shield sich MAES = SS = mite! AY WT that It implies one must ha “service. reduction-of. cost so_tha’ be | her to to poh advised her, of course, to resist. She wrote to mo to say tmgedy? *% have a nimblenesd ef is38 t so that the general public may be-enabled| rT Sie tane eles, but that she would fy with me and throw herself “That time ts dead forever, child, f A yee bier crs © ne jnen in other lines must have a nimblex to get-at-a-reasonable price prompt access from the suburbs, where rent| upon my protection. ire ia se oareg DOM Sthosen,; Gena, fOr) ever! ee: ~ may be an analyst and mow Capper ire a i ‘Bo Shelley, aged nineteen, and Harriet, axed mixteen, eloped to Edinburgh and Yo look ont - ear ay —Ne--9 + boat | + low, to the central neighborhoods of their daily employment | aoe pS dslontmay ea lore tdays loa line trond ta bilse wines: belies ana ‘Ss must have. the dominant trait of perception and practical tmagination, are hundreds of men who have had the flower of education working for $8 a month, ‘Pull’ in high quarters where aecmsatetaeet Sake will help « lot; but a man must-have the nepessary ability to be s | after he gets such a place.” . Err talking wittrtne tread OF a Bie WIE Sbiipan: Ey erataty Dut The} y Tas in have 6Ver had. Ths ak DUsEsY Tks BScoitie so technical in the matter ef cighting silk by chemical processes, and tnasmuch aa the wolght of atiie ~ “A three-cent fare Isequivalent to @ reduction in rent. Since the city | awoke to the harah necesatty of money, and wrote, asking the obliging Ho ¥ ice ite -| relieve “a slight pecuniary istreas”’ by sending him immediately $1. eee _authoritieshave-no-power to fix the price which landlords charge they |" Tarriet's father kent a coffee-shop, and the paternal Bhelley considered that hold take this other. method. vite == If YOU Had a Wife Like This. «2 Ag the. spectres walling, pale and. «hast, Of hopes which thou and I beguiled To death on life's dark river.” if = { S: t * is > HENRY PECKT WHY Don'T YOU EVER INVITE WHY. HELLO= BINKS ‘HMowor, Peck! FAR GINKS=} SSO! HENRYS WIFE, ay It's pald for, the chemiat’s part In tho business !s most important.” : | Lane. company To THE HOUSES YOU'RE HAVEN'T SEEN You. OERN GLAD bd LS Sewe us YOUR PAW: i : = : Such A SELFISH MAN! You know I | rom MW FICE Comet 2 ae 2 eieae Siareiania ‘Word ne. medicines he ts exhausted, both men- s ear eer ora ee Neer io : The Governor's Message. am _very_—much _thterested —_in_The |-Uable_at_any moment to make-n_mis-|—}— - zZ Wire t- wan You: einai = = 4 wm Wal cor a = Wyening World. I. like to read tha| take, thereby tnjuring. tf not killine, ; To MEET HENRIETTA] f -By Walter A: Sinclair. tally and phystcalty, and is therefore grticlea_on “Making a Blart ia Life"'| the patient taking the madicine, and he| | : eae : GOVERNOR'S at Alany—a-Govern @tid ‘Wheat Would You Ltke to Be?" | himself may be thrown behind prison |_| $ x 5 zi se Tas remnee ta-tant— oo EM ENTS -10-Tead wiied the Girt at + x = te ~ rad A mund, he deern't fear to ast bare——iteny—render—can ns they will be gteatly appre- JORN- BANTTINGTON— FUE: ‘That solemn farce which all these years ti Slumberland has wheesed. When Ryan-Belmonts hear the oews, oh! will they not be pleased? v Taland Grievance. To the Walter ef The Brening World: {wish to call attention tothe man: Ner 1n which paasengera are Jostied on Molson pore -eubatanticl’ rothing | te Subway at Brooklyn Bridge, I am prevented from making connections witn uplifting. intellectually, aa dace Tne| Pr* Evening World. I iiks- the editorials | 2° Staten Island boata that oonnect It newer did a vital act ofwhich we ever Ye wot when the Assembly passed a bill for lower gus ‘This board trained not to help ft, dut just-magty tet it pass, It'e Greamy nothing-doing and {te methods slow and inx Induced cur brand-new Goverher to quickiy grab the ax, > there interesxing or more Inatructtye. | | “Go, on the whole, Tho Evening World fa a great paper, and is destined, I getting off for Mroo! ‘ Rxoept when going ‘round to draw thelr juloy monthly yey, think, to become areater ati. poor softs thet ste stiscuie,onelcen get SOME PEOPLE You IMP! How: DARE Tou DRAG SUCH @MMON | This, too, will be abolished if they Maten new to Bee fics On We Wanermm, |SOWR qplckiy. Consequently.» : ON SICH AURS ORDINARY TRASH INTO LAY” ied F "tne Governor who'w wot afraid to air his honest ‘views, Wo. G Montgumery #., Byracuse, N.Y. beer Tt 7a Pinesewedia put @ WHEN. THEY AUNT COULD CHOKE Yo Yor all the gas and traction trusts the danger bell has vung f UFor Weééine Subway Service. the contre of thone tains, people (NOBODY AT ALL ||) ANT HE GOT A | Eat\ ithe rblte] the ead eld B27, te leatiy etytes) Fete ty W te (fo the Balter of The Evening} connect with thetr trains both w z - : Se ee 4 T have a sane, fine JOSEPH, 7. ¥ What Boys Learwed 300 Years Ago, slow jsubway | expres: Bit CHOOLBOYS fn old England took tu Latin\qnd Greek at an early egy At N: imety, ie abo! An Orchard Problem, J L Baviorts grammer achool, Southwark, In 1611; a pupil of seven yours ralna from the opposite din lire the smditos oteahe cioventhe Wocldt sS Wis . . three monttis was admitted as an ordinary oncurrence, who signed hiv to Une Doth express tracks for! trove i @ problem for readers to work 5 Ons! Coy Palais of admission, ‘stating himacit to be “reading.and tecz7ing in the Accidenaea, SAE frees traine, Very, tow peoe| greet ey Faadneit cate avonasadewtn |e :) ae ree Ke , ' FO entering into Propria baierrerepeny feat and also Tully te second eptate, own between 6 and 7 2, M. or up-|' > 7°" m SuRGONIG HOLLIDAY, | ¢0come at.6 In the morning and be at’school till 1 Again at 1 and tarry tm town betweon § and 0.30 A.M. This Re BAS Cn the rest of the year he Js to begin In the morning at 7 und leave at 6 in the af} sis A-gOOd IGea Tat the aubway peopie tyson mecouuar ternoon. The maiater will not give leave to p'ay but once a week.’ The matster take it -up. VAs tt entatis lttle extra 7? was to be “akilled In the Latin, and able to teach grammar, oratory, noetry and ypeal to them. | Greek, as also’ the principles of Hebrew. He ts to be of.a wine, surtable abl < loving dtsposition, not hasty or furtous, nor of {Il examplo; he ehall d‘kcern, the ‘ nature of every. ohild-{f such may be discerned.” . - cee Science and the Auto. ae "5 : CCORDING to new regulations in France, no one will {n future be granted @ay He writes that he gets out my’ plo- | - automobile license who fs not able to prove, tn addition to the possession of” ew and 'Kk-Kinses It every day." the necessary technical knowledge, exemption from any, phypleal tnfirmiky: Well, that's surely nothing for you) whieh would tend to {nyolve unfitness for the control of an automobile, Persea due to} s, nut nothing ts sald | nt due to mere man, to. elghiteen | ine way ratively emall| ae too falary can be attealed by mo and by ¥ WHousinds of other drug cl wae pig: With Common sense wii! eo thatjas a crips HIS MONEY'S WORTH. Laundryman—l r T to tell you, air, hat one of your 4 is.10 WHY SHE QUIT. | AS IT WORKED, 5 had to quit.” | Mre. Freende—Why, what are you)t hte you Mked the newspaper Waar i Sustom ast pald | ote." crying about? to cry about,’ Beet ren fan) bier, on hls \fxet for) Knowtnx: left you twet up. “1 aii until the managing editor in| “sire, Newwedde-Well, you know,| ‘Yes. {t ish- Just tar @ Jo! took ! Whose eyenisht te tmpalred,/ whore hearing ts \not accute, whoes hand ia rendered F paventeen Hours of wich day | 7i0tr Mee oN of ary 4 Tikat, sir,) We | sfovcuccnae Lae Benator. Platt what ho i = , my ‘picture out of. rd he) unsteady by Unnking hnablis or who-eufertrom Sts ict uervousaen will met tas tng’ prencriptions: or” other ;20eT* BF? + ed it before we lost it—Harper's| thought of tri Jngea."' Loud John te away from home for a week on ‘ : abe bat of poleanap. her 2

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