The evening world. Newspaper, January 28, 1907, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

The Evening World’ ry Daily Maga azine, Mon january : 28, The Day of Rest. 4 by the Preas Pubilshing Company, No. 62 to &@ Park Row, New York. “Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York aa Second:Class Mall Mutter. ———_ “VOLUME 47,,. NO. 16,596, as THE THRALLDOM. OF PAIN. paste for Medical Research. This institute | is now. ceeking some yay ito kill pain. Its doctors and pee report great progress, and that hey have succeeded ‘in co chemicals and creating “dr that | | | | @ because their use made x Wich other i tary-action of his trol the-invele Wescence 2 patient iia the ss use_the -ewas unable to be quiet. The tM (chine gs of his muscles, the shrinking from pain, the ‘writhing find physical.agony checked the development “of surgical 's science, a For these reasons the discov- greatest value. “It enables surgery to become aimost an exact art. The use of Cocaine asa local anaesthetic 4s‘ for a like reason -valuable. But would it be. good_ for. the | human race 1o-abolish pain? ‘i e from} many! other ills is tient by pain — If the chitd could éat what it =t pleased without pain, the pleasures of taste would be unrestricted ait there would-be ‘tio wholesome check upon an abuse of appetite. If a ¢man could drink what he pleased and as much as he pleased without-a ——-Lthrobbing-head next-day,-the-diseases which the excessive-use of-alcohol roduces would be much more common. Sensations aré either pleasurable or disagreeable. If they were ail) s ‘pleasurable the check on excess would be removed. So far as good ; ‘health and mental vigor are concerned it would be better in some respects SS" =io abolish pteasurable thar painful-sensations. : ~More perhaps even than moral ideas is pain a check upon vice. All forms of harmful imilgence are followed by physicat-pain of-some sort. certal pain promptly to follow, ~The "The older one is, the more certain is the lesson of pain makes up the warning teachings of experience. It is not well that the use of pain-destroying drugs should become hat-an-aequainisnce ith thelr namesand doses should be | rena knowledge. Nature does not tolerate the destruction of pain. ely permits a short postponeinent of the payment day at the price : jof the addition of compound interest. : at sae Goto [ 2 to banish pain. > { erring” of ihe Abroat; a ery of ether and-chlordform-was-of i GETOUT ay \ \ CONFOUND YOU By Maurice Ketten, SToP “ROLLING THAT CHARIOT OVER THE FLOOR, IWANT,TO THERE'S THAT PLAGUED That.is wherein morphine, cocaine and like drugs get such a hold upon their victims. The -moment their use stops the payment in p Oi} Rice begins: seu =the: fight must: then-he-fought until -—]f-the Institute for Medical Research could find any way of perma. nently destroying pain-without depriving mankind of the lessons fron is yhich pain teaches, the discovery would be great and valu- mpt_is self-contradictory, No. draft_can_be| ical, mental-or moral nature-which the-futin does not have to repay. The one way to keep pain absent is to tiv sang, healthy-aad-moral life What-accilents-may-then-oocur-wi} find-mind and body ready to meet them. : 5 Phat this theres te-oter AyAG body, mind-and soul which feel the pain. The thralldom_of drags kitpain-except-te-desth: = Obstacles to Cheap Manley {alone I have-no-diset Tey $e Ao The Everio e Wert = yo had. Iam almost wi L-would ike to ask those correspond up my life. My ents who are agi for prand Opera [prevented me trom cents to $1.50 Hoare inposs! ny of the[ the sufferings Broadway dramatic houses with plays {I went to buy some fies 1 bre requiring less than a dozen actors?/In the store and had -to w Twenty-five yeare ago such a schemetthe astonishment of the worst of all is that all the friendaof the fami ndure ons | mald proba ceaue speaking, &c., cof my own \ an inferior Can any one advise me? . M | estra, ‘The. Subway Again, Carpenter or To the Bittor Fdttor of The Evening W. ro must. to éeclde the following h will doubtless interest many others besides myrelf: To know what {a the bes ponter's or the pays the better? Jol an uptown Subway local’ + ninth street at 7,06 P.M. ety-sixth street at ubway local at the C wisht Th < to get out at Fl train stopped at en made -no-ate cet. I boarded an - Now Wothe Editor of The § Ifa servant en in- the mtd: to pay her? ‘ A Queer Di ‘ To-lie Editor of The Evening word When I war fourtern the M i other ofMcials of the ¢ wislt my school, and 1 was cal’ weed. An I was at { through 1| broke down and not go on. That | only the best rtly af BS Fm day was ne over t phone when 1! 1 a y Gould not speak, eave my position. yee‘ was telling 2 i sho same thing ho ¥ “Panrot trust myself to read aloud tieor use tho telephone. I, n em forced to +) old abettin’ soothe thelr trou! feeding and by pettin’ ‘om they want food or cai n ofd Uncle THE COMICS great genlu pire by a narrow margin. The first of these was Julius Caesar, Ine could not make up his own mind. Here Is his story: It was nominally governed -by the Senate; oe ys there wis some great-man who practically ruled the city. Sometimes thete were two such mon at a time. - TH , and sometimes civil war. The Patristans ¢ @ rough peasant by DL (hd: conquered Rom la, an aristocrat, successfully, won the “leade n power, The clash. between! Mpriua and pelal War, anid in ft Pompey, then a lad of seyen- }teen, first won famg ag a stanch adherent of Sulla. Later, Pompey raised un atmy in-ald of Sulla and won. soveral battles In reward Shilla bestowed on’ him in ‘71 B, C,'t} lutte of “Magnus” (the Great), and, though ihe Young soldfer was on twenty-five, the state showered enough honors cn him te turn a far old; head. At the head of another army Pompey next won a ‘erles of britilas victories {n pain, und on’ his return helped to olaves nnd hired fighting men Jed: by Spartacys, a gladiator. These suc- cesses led to his election ax Consul of Kome. Crassus, the richest man {n the city. Now, it was that ‘Pompey's Inability to make up his'mind firmly and junalterably, to uny one course’ first showed forth. He hail been an’ aristo- - crate and—-an—upholder of the Senate, Rome “was a repubiie. political parties: | fame as a genera jand the Patricilans were again awas huown as the against Marlus’s troops: Plans that Were _Helped by Pirates. ORO yet ripe for putting them into effect: phe personally simbarked, on ap-expeditidn-ag Tranean, anid who cali ing provision ships from landing at Italian ports. pirates from tne se over the Me: j felt es polities. champion of the Hberal party. The Scheme for Crushing Caesar. (had now found a pretest for TEMOVINE Chesar Tron his jto march agiinst Wie Invader ard overwhelm him by But the army had been bribed and “dther denunciation, indignation and agi-| oF It Is these weapons thot, according to a| with speech delivered by Mrs: 's Democratic Club last female suftrag ) ROTE STATION, from the oppre: better hy s until women are allowed to vote, is a slave who does to think 1 would weit Of Wor ten CH gaT Carrer pe Meet: Moreover, !s It rot the 0 undisturbed? We have forc Mary E, Lease before{the| tits cigarettes, w keep them. Daaty bracing feel and will| West suffrage § Mrs. | would be Caesar and refused to rise agninst him. his life before Caesar's victorigus ady He fled: to Greece, where he ratsed-ahoatin-h with a small army of veterans, victorious, but at length, salla__Hie_had 44,000 men, Cae: Pompey hiraself By_Nixola Giscleyesmnit our s’ collars and necktles, copied his tallor-made clot | utterly routed. Sepumus by ame. Caesar, now tt stroyed his {ee rival ek, are to wrest the Voting and going to one or two club-houses where women. are | mission constitute the solo remaining rights of the New | unfortunate toe, hesirdered-Septimue in the killin, according to the price for a vo! min. find no painiess escape except death. The Cheerfu ] Primer. LICK ENNYBODY ) Ative ! woop! HE'S THE CHAMPEEN. SOCKERINO OF DE {HE Says HE RIN LICK EN Bopy AuvE HUSTLIN’ FER Fhe family (react ten years ago Moncorvo repor fe to the wame-mibject. crowing exert Kreat antaxeously in all fove ‘Tae common suntloWer ts-ortzinenty-an-Ameriean. plant. stated by eminent botanists Co te: Peru and Mexico. —Russtan- peasantry seem to be convinced that the plant possesses proper> r patients sleep upon’ a bed made of munttower leavea This use has recently Induced a Rusalay ~ ent with a coloring matter prepared from sunfiower leaves, . ho had good results with the coloring matter and with alcot With 10 children from one month nut fever,\and feve also cover then yalclan to expe and {ts stated that hole extracts from the flower and loaves. Ive years old fie has, in the majority of cases, efeoted as speedy a cure ap otherwise with quinine, ven with thom. ‘No, a Suen Tish isno FAIRY S5TO-RY; the: Lit tle He-ro Will NOT Lick the Big Bul- -ly. Bul-ly? ig Bully SLUG the Little He-ro? YEP! SIXTY HEROES . "WHO MADE HISTORY — By Albert Payson Terhune., es 7—POMPEY: The Hero Who ‘Could Not Make- UP. His Mind. ZIUS POMPEY, hiero and wayeror, peerless soldier and -wretchea and greater biunderer, missed world-em- Two barriers stood between him end this The second was thetfact thas Ie 2. to strengthen his popularit undermine the Seuate people to. gre mes -Crassus belng dead and Caesai Mother words, of the } Pompey behait, r_had_ barely hurried to E anded he was sta the accomplish ed lest Pouipey's popils $ Mt. Fury att Tutto dea fen of Pompey. , Ta Jater; When” Cxeenr TTMsetl WaE ti | strange frony of-fate, as Thtgstite-tinod the marble tn und who, but for hin, acroes the: are of Pompey's ao might have ru worse, eee Alarge nose indicutes great scents, Love laughs at locksmiths and diverce at wedlock. seca t Sonie-preter thelr qane High=huta ee te Agrasa widow {s _never green. sgratior ts usually Ren} Estate Dealers—by thelr deeds ye shall know them. carers Money makes the mare go—If {t's pald to the Jockey. Tes better to-give than_receive—advice. It's love thal makes the orld 0. srounds—to the parsons, Alla fair in love—that's ay 60 many brunettes are “dyeing” to be Sunflowers and Quinine. professor has made the discovery that the sunflower yitlds Nendid febrifuge that can be uxed as a substitute for quinine, 41 to the Therapeutical Society of Parla with Accordingly tho sunflower should not only by Ite spelling effect, but also yield a product which 4s used a $e Papyrus from Egypt. ON syndtoate will have 10,00 tons of Egyptdn papyrus plant ready t) “ship to {ts paper mills within the next #lx months, ‘This revives an Industry which has béen extinct for over ono hundred yoxrs, A long search finall; jooated a few.planty in Palestine, which rere transplanted into Egypt and cul vated. ‘The twentieth century seems to find freauont occasion to Jearn trom t! } yest treasure house of PS datin ds of that remarkable people, | There were also two great = (or plain peo- 8 the Plebelans* leador. He wor ‘s enemies in many lands. ip. from hing, down a rebellion oi His colleague in office was proceeded to anid to help the self still further, famines. in-Rome-by prevent-———; Pompey swept these and then turned to the conquest of the Orient. defeated Rome's Bastern foes and annexed Syria an pire, storming Jerusalem after a three months’ siege. ty all Asia and the rest of the East under the Roman yoke, {home jn 61 B.C... Palestine to the Em= Having forced near- he returned ~ where he was acclaimed “Conqueror of Spain, Africa and In the flood-tide of his popularity Tie proceeded to carry cut the plans his ambition had earlier formed. in Rome at this time was another rising man, one who had lved down ith of proiigacy and deots, and who was already making his influence This was Julius Caesar, He was Asn step toward this goal he sought Pompe es secret agreement should rule Rome. nbitious of fame and 's friendship. Pompey with Caesar and Crassus by which the: three Crassus was made Governor of Syria and was straight- way killed in a war with the Parthlins.” Caesar was made Governor of | Gaul, and av once entered on his famous conquest of that country. Pom- pey made himself Governor of Spain, but left the administration of Span- {ish affairs In the hands of deptttes while he staye lened his power there, [ praceany niuster-or-Ro So he'Ket himself to getting permanently rid of C: jagain sought favor with the conservative Patrician party, come the recognized leader of the artstocrats, even as Caesar had become The chief difference between the two: was ) that while Pompey had 60 often changed Its mind and his principles that {both parties were beginning to mistrust lim, Caesar had won: his follow- rs’ full confidence. ; ‘The perfod-of Caezar's—hriliiant-revernorship-of Gant euine to-an- end | | Pompey made tho Senate order Cacsar to give up his Gallfc command and to > disband his army under penalt, } clared-an—ontiaweand-an-enem 4 in Rome and strength- — inway, Pompey was ¥iiized world, To do this he*’ wishing to be- ar, of belne: de-. path and prepared Superior foreé.of So Pompey was obliged to flyStor In the first few engagements Py in 48 B. C., he-met Caesar at the field of PI >. Fompay's-armyaeor , where he ho wk by one of hi Septimus cut off Pompey’s head an One man {5 no better than another, but lots are rthtwo nt Mink's, It original home fa

Other pages from this issue: