The evening world. Newspaper, January 30, 1907, Page 12

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he Evening World's Daily Magazine, Wednesday, January 30, 19077 Sclectne aluor = || sDGhY H EROES coer by the Press Publishing Company, No. 62 to @ Park Row, New Tork Sees S 2 By M aurice Ketten ‘WHO MA DE HISTO ered at the ey York d-Class Mail Matter: 7 erpune. Entered a Post-OMice at New York as Second-Class att — WAVE YOU ANY STRONG 5 Doyou BELIEVE | By Albert PoyseD Te i V OLU M E47 sav soc cc sas cin oessceiase cas saeac to anee NO 10,508: ss IMPRESSTOM: HN THES CASE. {FAIRIES ? No: 8:—AUGUSTUS: CAESAR, the Politician Who Turned D | =e HAS public of Brick Into an Empire of Marble, — SAVE LIFE AND HEALTH. eee Reps SCAN Eee ae NINETEEN-YEAR-OLD boy—Calus Octavius—cxme’ to” Rome to lat: Re Every workman and every employer should go some time this week A his rights, in face of a worldful of Opposition. A few years Istor beans, to the American Museum of Natural History. Admission will. be had made himself Diiperor of the world, ‘The means. whoroby. berlowe TG Oi Cra GUTS NO a Sale ee eG Ob alrereaes gained that exalted rank were those of the politician, rather than the pate would be no less. ;man-or hero, Wyo i 3j } Romo had for-centurtes beena repudlic: Mancafter-man-had-risen tgs. Goy. Hughes opened this exhibition, which is called the, First Inter- > high power, but had be eked by the people's Will from becoming Kings, national’ Exposition of Safety Devices and Industrial Hygiene. Its ob- ject is to teach the public how lives may be saved and health preserved Caesar, after making himself master of nearly, ail. the world, wanted thes os: crown, but, finding the populace hated the idea of a king, he postponed bias ca: 22 seNiehl are now needlessly” Sacrificed through lack of proper safeguands/™ i, Se pe Lat Oar there Were = Seventy. plinatovroyaliy, until sich ime, as he could win Wie people to_hin way obre = thousand deaths in:the United States JWOULD UE Jo SEE MY WIFE FIRST pare wir i = . -- [ eon Jeol A purty of Kamans (calling themselves Republicans and headed aN r Hh by--Marcus Brutus-and—Calus -Cassitis) feared test he ould force ht y upon Ute country as monarch, and consptred™to kitt him.” Caesar died out chilaren, » Octavius was his.great-nephew and adopted son, and as 6 hecame ata heir, ‘The nineteen-year-oll lad was completing bis mili edueation In Greece, when (in 44 B. C,) he received news of his groat-uncley, from accidents of. various kinds. 5 4 Thete. were tens of thousands. of ; a i JA Os), canasivation. He hurried at once to Rome to claim his inhertzance; -/,/@ tes h i by itary ; < a A Octavius's prospects at this time did not amount to much, very one {ait or Se a aay ee Romie was tOo busy with personal ambitions and schemes for making selfiah) st2¢ use of tho disturbed state of politics to pay much attention to the boy. Marke Yo! Antony, Caeear’s friend and boon companion, hud selzed all the murdered} of | dictator's papers and property, and was in no hurry vo turn them over to tht Jegal heir, “The men who had gasassinated: Cacsar patd-cquatty tittio wtregemde tion to the youngster’s cluims. twas enoug!: to discourage any 9) rr 7 man. “Byt yeung Octaviur was tar troy workshops,. unhygienic . working conditions and- lack of proper care } n = in protecting men, women and chil-- ane " = Ty YOUR HEART. SO : 3 HAVEYOU ANY | First he won over Cicero, foremost orator 5 {Mie age, MAkIng Use Of the fatter's hatred for Antony Neat he drew to bint by Uberal’use of mqney nnd’ still more liberal prom a large part of thee J army, and: used these soldiers to scare the Senate Into arranging for bis elec tion assConsul. Through Cicero's aid he uext caused Antony to be declared a public enemy. Antony allied himself with Lepidus, a general commandiny tt a large Roman arniy, and prepared to march of the capital. Oceaviugy with, 2s his own soldiers, advanoed to repel them. But before the two armies coulg*™! come together he arranged a secret mecting between Antony, Lepidus anqle™ himself. He pointed out to them that by quarreling they would only bri on. civil war and o series of doubtful fssues, but that by combining (inte panies ‘will not issue policies to men engaged in them. The manufacture | what was known ae a “triumvirate”) they could selze the reins 02 Govorne ment, and, at their loiaure, parcel out the rulership of the world among them, of certain chemicals, the making of lead products and the working at dry | emery wheels and grindstones-are-certain in their oie Baking in cel- ze _Jars_and_tailoring_in_poorly_ventilated_rooms_ often produce. tuberculosis, : Z : = : J . ‘| This appealed-so-Antony_and-Lepidus; and-the-trumviralé-wae-formed——— i The argument for safety devices ant industriat hygiene is strong ‘To do away with all opposition they drew wp o ls ~ from the sympathetic point of view. The number of widows and orphans, : the crippled bodies, the-chronic-invalids,-amounting-to-hundreds: of thou- sands a year, are in themselves a pathetic appeal to humanity. But this “appeal has been made before. It is a constant clamor. Wom | dren. at their employment. Besides ||". : SENDER YoU WOULD) |. sone ; : : ti | these deaths these were hundreds of | 0 {Let YouRSELF BE (| : Saar er A : Say eR] Mn oraindry man. He laid bis plana with all W Yt a thousands oft cases of maiming or | . a INFLUENCED BY 3) aes BY ELECTRICITY? 5 | Rlauinneltanees skill ota ele) URES) and Droveoded, to sickness. a > all this« great loss of, = life and destruction’ of health Js needless, The object of. the_exposi- “tion is fo ‘educate: the public to the great extent of this needlessness and ‘show how work can be made safe and sanitary, . : Some ordinary-employments-are:so fatal to life that insurance com- | head of their troops. of men who did not appreve of their setzing the Government, and addi to this_the namer-of-their-personat enemies. —This—list-they—handel_overy to the authorities, with the command that all the men named-thereon bey put to death. Thus 304 Senators and 2,000 noblemen were ‘executed and no, gy one left in power except cuch ofMfclals as fayored the Urlumvirate, On the; Mst. by Antony's order, was Cicero's namo, Octavius, to_keop peace with’s Antony,-willinghr-sacrificed-his old friend and-supporter, The triumvirates) .y Coup You ~The other argument, and the one which will appeal more strongly to REMOVE THAT forces next marched against the republican army led by Brutus and Casstus iy, some employers and some workingmen, is the economy of safety devices OPINION 2 and put ft to rout, killing its badets puieiiaat ea nerenty of the qe Roman ret and sanitation. Men and women who have a cheerful workroom, health- pate were thus ERATE GeO eT a Oe aS ae But Octavius had no ldea of sharing his rulership with any one. He re} solved to. get-rid-of-his-two-allies as quickly as possible. With Antony's bre help he robbed Lepidus of ail real power. then get about to destroy Antony, In this fate aided him, for Antony, choosing the eastern half of Rome’ pire as his share of the spollx, became enamored of Cleupatra, tho fascine: ing Queen of Egypt. The Tove affair graduaity robbed h and power jn Rome. Octavius soon found excuse to make war on the two, royal lovers, and-in-t-few years hid catised Antony's overthrow and death. "), This left Octavius sole ruler of the Roman world. His ‘‘chance"-had at last , come. & Bp-bribing the populace aud the army, putting to death the few rematn-~ Ing persons who could oppose his reign, nnd pretending to keop up an out. = tward show of the old-time republican government, he claared tha way for — . ctically t and title of Emperor, Rome hated ing,” $0.1 alled “Imperator” *—or—““Empert ~—and—took= the Tbe Cystine mer ot ia ne of Augustus.” Having. won, byigulle, - AMY SPORTY te FEOF 8 WOT * giving surroundings and-are in- good physical spirits will do-more and HE COULON T “—béttér work: This is a benefit to the employer. It will add to his profits, | : = and if he is a corporation it will enlarge his dividends. It is also a saving to the men and women who work in cutting off their doctor bills, in elim- {nating the loss of wages through sickness, in making larger the fund --ayailable for savings.. ees ars : Looked at from either sidé, whether the sentimental appeal of hu- manity or the business response of the pocketbook, there is every reason “why every possible safety device should be used and why work should be nitary_conditions, —— Akt rity set in. War, violence and hard. times were} - An_era of peace and prosper succeeded by culture, the arts, general improvement and progress. When Money Becomes Love’s Deadly Foe By Hiclen Oldficld) risen terse nici Sie atti ti at \NUARY ts a month of financial reckoning, of balancing) perhaps most carefully and economically planned, of that home which he #0 and-hecamo a merciful. wise ruler. He encouraged It re and high ct¥ill- J ation. Virgil, Horace, Ovid, Livy and other great writers flourished unde accounts, In too many households the first of every| thoroughly enjoys? Poor average man! Undoubtedly he suffers much, for he month is a day to be dretded—a day of wrath and woe, | likes the best and hatea the price of it. He never cai understand how a woman his patronage. Art and architecture also came to the front. It was, Of reerimination and general unpleasantness, gets throagh with even a moderate amount of money, fot even In the face of an | & ¢ 1 Ma your extravagance will ruin me!’ storma the | account book. Yet all this foreshadowed Rome's For the empire, built on Dlood andy husband, while the wife replies, persecuted or indignant, ac-) Unfortunately the account book is seldom tn evidence. The woman who pats an ana: peels to the luxury which was at last_to wreck It even. cording to her temperiment: “You told me to get what I| Keeps accounts syatentatically and balances them: regularly ta the rary co |» | US#aton am {dlenesa sap the strength of a prize-fghter. x ee necded and have tt charged; you know-you-did.—I am sure} tion, ‘Thia alro partly 1s the fault of the men, alnce comparatively few women et) at the time no onesforesaw) this.” The. boauty and. grandeur: I haye been us cvonomical ws 1 could.’ Fae aeaclly elm don'| money they] ee ely! maylepend; terrace ssuppueanwith [ese tteneeras hod fscentiry,-nt;soverelgnty:) hol ralsed jthencountess <The pity of It Ia that all the trouble, all these domest!.| ready money for current expenses, 2 | Augustus to say Jn dying: “I found Rome a city of brick. { leave {tae Whirlwinds, might so easily be avelded hy the exercise of a! Fea aieere arta lnaia i cioibtana ene malitoeoplel me areiol 6 Cindy of marble." So far as outward show went, the same might have been eald'fi ltalec common eonesvang- wood: Sudermont:tt-pinimasbaauniy arya ee Rte ot DEMEANOR DIEM Te oe et netty | of-all the Roman Empire. -Yot the.“imarble, hoaut ifitl and-rteh as ft Le orey took nig wife nto bla confidence-and Rave hier WHXSONOW:|fensiy. Fortunes aro made and loat with marvellous rapidity, and the get-rich- RUSS Gon clOnd nel aumento eatin metenetiactnth an-increase of value is the result of manual labor. Seeger ema arnt nemo le quick mauia remorselessly grinds to powder numberless Cintorhivatense mareaven bad besnacenmened poes bole the Leones UCONN eas LACORS: ‘ hoe . a certain. > = 3 es ane a S 4 ye tha Therefore it is most important that all these processes should be nd certain: stake to euppose,_an_te-ao often charged, that | Mace everyman and woman of us is better than any one else, we will’not be} nad so laboriously -bullt_up_wowld_endure;-his pear urokensbe ieee ie outdone, but must keep up our end at any price. grtefs and hts fame already on the decline, Augustus died in 14 A.D, safeguarded and that the doin of them should be protected and ennobied, | 4!i women are by nature extravagant. They are, If anythtng, tauch less so than a The details of theses MSE re as Pp = 1OTACA. Jee men, and even the most lavish of them-are by-far more ttkely to demand a Clerks on small_salaries—conaider it—lncumbent —upon—them to take. theic/ ing-his-throne-a-pray4to-Eteabhling claimants. his court a network of etails of these safeguards are beyond the scopé of an editoriat| jute proquo when sponding thelr money, be that spending wise or fooliah, than | %O™en friends to the opera in food style; to send them midvwintir plots and _his country well started on thé road that was to lead to its uf ott eens “Peauty raseswith stems three feet long—to cut a.dash generally. By and by|rntn. This was the reward reaped and the price pald by the first ye They can be seen concretely at the Museum of Natural History. Every | ate thelr husbands and brothers. y Si , ‘Amerloan men are famously generous te thelr womankind. Wher one of them | ‘°%* He areca Euler iute lesel Dt te he sesh eh Sees | Cee onIOs convict encers the State prison, oe one should seé them and promptly profit thereby. ls sot upoa having the earth, it almost always ts In order that he may give {t-to ae nent patient 2 : ase ee ihe woman whom le lovex beat He wil huy her anything in of out of reason, on | VOue of debt, oat of danger,” teva old maxtm, which neve 7 7 eC ARS ITS Teer IRIN TOT Te TO Ao TA = Letters from the People. Hd growl when Wis Mevitanls ONT comes In, Helng more than he expected. {Beet res a a erent a stic-financter{s a wiiole bundle of psychological A “Dramatic” Story. Then when he looks the ‘work ove (eer er there {s always something the matt Twas ‘Caught in the Réln’ and mot [with the spaving. It Te elther over to = : = 5 : “WSPOON Gr 7] A “Ralomy Inne," who. told ms rhe was |much this way or clse tt 4s allequnachd 7 = : ; 2 SPOONING pe PUBLIC, and that (The Btu- (together, he eau, Probably that Jit : = z = LOUGH love bs. bitnd:the..world et —lerge who told "The Truth,” was {Ol bosses were once office boys, 20 wh EER Gaeeneoa tara oan ihe | ton't they treat um tho way. arene ST rEpEaNEaENeNeT =a =a z = = ‘BO_Writes that wise man,—Rudyard--Kiplingy and he never sald_a truer thing, Nor 1s cnet fact ever better iihumtrated that by the grin of “anrused “Contempt: z the fice of every outsider when an enamored. comple —Rreelty to ctatmnete StegdoN" ta Public“ Locknakdag is avery delighted: pase” ing with “The Lion and the Mouse” 7 fof ‘The Eventne World: hie. 8S, Tor that Tatler is a bats on a hot dayr “A Doll's House.” When “The Man-of}—1 heartlly Indorse the letter protest center __.-Relther_of thene joys {9 suppored to.be indulged intr puRee— the Hour! pawoThe-Belle-of May fajes 4 2eminst crueltsta_animals. The cr 8 gil loves a man, when hé-te-the man-she ts co marry, Uhe-msr she tae tie broke-“The- Vanderbiit- Cup" Tha +f! from which. thousands ~ of —p out of all the world for her very qwa,tt ta weet to feel: his arm: w had-a quarrel with “John |HOF#*® suffer in winter could be k i vaist, to reat her head on his Big shoulder, to listen to” hist Who wa a cousin of “The }{fOM thelr unfortunate bodies with If : : to hold ms strong hand. “But—let her remember-that though ho’ te | R yan in the world as far as sho ts concerned, he ts not always the only. mal golden age, even as the relgn of Louis XIV. was the goiden age of Manual labor is the base of the whole productive structure of the United States. Before an article can be traded in or speculated with, be- . + fore the great stores can exist, before there is occasion even for railroads, ==—there must be the initial production, the bringing into existence -by the house. From that initial’process on, every change of form which brings ithe average husband a¢-n dom. robleme : ory ane {s, of course, norm ne. Rich ttt Brew: Peter Pi m City, “where the “Princess Beggar was pin eed ud eben eae Tenia LITE ost or trouble, Horse blankets x i ange: Tron ‘vory. Stet Mya oi flonase orgie ore sae : car, And when the others look on, grinning and nudging other Jat’: SeutSO SoA TAU | thousands of our own species when t : st something yy iain. Ina youre ‘an = cs + to something yery ridiculous Don't. make-yourselt-and- the man-yous FELDER, |“ for then their miseries die too AUMANIT March 17, 1800, of The fous by public demonstrations of affection. LAfo ia long. You will dhe / of chances for love-making befor it {s over. So be sano when in pul s. Not only for your sake and his, but for the sake of the onlookerm:» een eee $ Makes Him Jealous,. HARRY UHL No. 1460 Lexington avenue, The Grocery Problem. TS the Editor of The Evening Wor! Cc, R. aske: "If a Krocer sel amounting to $352, weights 1 The Aifferonce In your ages—te great. You are far too young to ma eines fire? J 15 1-4 of. to Jb. and afterwards sells! New York the “Holy Cityt" Betty: to same man goods amounting to Tol ther Edltbelar the eae . {a Jowtsh young man of ekhtoen | 2°%? and two people could not live welghts averaging 161-2 oz. to 1b., Why not -call Now York the 1 : } : nd am deeply in love with a Gen: | #24 A week, possbly. Walt tll you Bich dons bo enin Tow 3 gain ci?) ‘Aver eumm made Mee as ot a ee hall He Mise Hee) aa 0 60.01 krauss’s “Salome she writes to me she seems to be ha le larry ler. ould seem t nice about tt, but Avhen I call to eal, losing $10 on the second! much care 18 teker A Wyal;—s16s0/ gain) minus $10 om’ eives | cn, even A SEO TS SoS bea ‘ Dear Betty: eedastistaiteaiavor!48.50 | no care at all pf starving std AM a young man’ twenty-five years d G. -H._LINEHAN, Sena SeeS ! tht of ue. For thé last saver wakes MERA OUS PORERGN II i { Llabave been in many parts of r ‘The Office Noy. What In the Rate of Interest ee fpaueve; Reve n left a foreaine rere esa I want to get married to « young wo- ler sho talka about other boyw and |™men whom I’ knew before I started on entirely different. ‘Nhat makes mo |my travels, and now I-find she ts lead-_ sadly, W. ing a yery gay Iife, put she saya that she loves me dearly and if I would marry her sho would be good. Do you. ‘Te the Extttor of The Byening Worl: "A good many people have formed an | {dea that the office boy fs one who has | 7 On the first day of each mar Hothing to do except to smoke cigarettes | Mfer Inuunry A pays B 369 and read dine novels, But 1f some ntersst. these people were office boys they wo patd on the fir f change their minds, it aim nn omco by thirty montis, wht arriage on $4.50 Per. and my hours are from AM wm PL . If I am not tn exac Betty: 5 te I Ae docked of soymuch pay Ma young man of seventeen and) Noaance im made for fhe tad acevice| am deeply in loye with a young lady! ‘of the Subway tn whiclf I have to ride |, atabwenty. cout She incense toler i comes in and: time afler 10|- - a . anal hee home at 4.3 Ma M. Eee } it 1 difference between her age and mine| think it would be a wise thing for she. Teaving hevaives we alot Of trperrit:|tecn i, {paid stand in the way of a havpy|to do, as I love her very much? yi) tng, &c., to do tor the next morning. If )), arriage. I am earning. 4.50 a week! It would not bo wise to marry her, my work ts unfinished when he comes ‘ad have a bank account of about $100,/1¢ you love her so very much you fa he says I have been load: ] ly desire is to marry Ae IROOM seh paride FOE METER i i UBT. (to you ma 48 simply trying to make you jeal, ‘Talk about other girls, At tH the uve rest that A pays B? WisWiNe J, Poor Mant The “anu-mash"! work both ways,

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