The evening world. Newspaper, June 12, 1907, Page 14

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ne Evenin wednesday, ore SEFoaci | Petaned vy the Prose Publishing Company, No Mi to @ Park Row, New New Tork. Batered at the Post-OMoe at N w York as Seoond-Clase Mall Matter. | VOLUME 47 DANDY JIM’S FATE, ANDY JIM, the richest dog in the world, ts dead. it had not been for the legacy his former mistress teft him Dandy Jim. might be alive to-day. erinary surgeon and a regular hospital doctor treated | He had fatty degeneration of A stroke of apoplexy was the im- ally Magazine, “The Month of Weddings.’ By Maurice Ketten. NO, 16,781. CRT MEYER, SICKBED, | BLAMES STEP-SON ch Contractor Charges Up Matrimonial Troubles to JUTE) BY RH MAN SE SAS I $150,000 SUT Lace Expert Declares Young) Heine Made Love aod Hie him unsuccessfully. the vital organs. niediate cause of his demise. During his lifetime Dandy Jim wore diamonds. He ate candy every cay that cost “80 cents a pound. A coachman took him driving in the park sunny He had no cares and nothing to work His food came without effort and he was pampered, codilled and killed thereby. ng a $10,000 legacy to a spaniel “would seem ridiculous to most people, but it was as natural for the aged | } spinster whose companion Dandy Jim was to provide a life of ease for him as for the ordinary millionaire to provide a life of case for his son. And-it was much less foolish. - Whether a dog is pampered to death monkes little p @ifference. Steers are fattened on purpose to make meat tender. Geese are forced to become fat their wilt ih Order that their diseased livers Capons sell at a higher WIFE SAYS NE"S ‘HOPELESS: “Nothing Ma Can Do Will Cause Me to Drop the Sult tot: WOMAN DOCTORS FLE ENDS KER LOVE MATCH, wrneey marceag te tee in rey ‘Geek be teed tor Semone we DMUGHTERUAEPY, | MOTHER TAKES GAS | Bra. Hecht, Worrad Over Mary” || Quarrels of Youre Couple, JILTED MAN THROWS VITRIOL O8 WIDOW MASSEY, WHO ELOPED, COMES BACK TO WIFE a | Lemves Pricer Wilt Who Pla With Him on Ranch The idea of le ‘sueD Fon & oivonce: BLAMES CHILDREN Fon ir, GUILD TALKS OF BRAGG A CNTR SU “TRLIME LETTERS oe FOUND BY WE Pesinies Wocllias Ura Riche pe thay make pate de foie gras. ce. than roosters because they take on more fat. fattening of the lower animals for the susten- "ance and the taste of man is quite a common thing. ny Satisfaction to Miss Ellen Ann fiffin to know that her pet dog would always be fat and never go hungry she had the right to use her money for that purpose. eet it is no way to treat boys and girls or men and women. The} % that a father can do to his‘children is to arrange by| PRs will that their individual initiative is destroyed, their ambitions sitfied, | natural efforts for self-success obviated and their lives made like that of Dandy Jim, who dined every day at a fashionable restaurant, jewels which cost him nothing, had a solid gold collar, liveried ts and attendants—and fatty degeneration. “The reason that so many children of rich men—especially "so many men’s sons—turn out bad is because they havé not had an even *® By Helen Oldfield ey had all been of my mind, no one would | Wet Lord Roberts returned to Et Marriages That No Outsider Can Understand a the owner of a railroad would treat hi: er has to treat his boy there would be fe P Borrowed by their offsprings’ disgrace School where he fought other boys and other boys fought him, if he had #0 earn any excess spending money, if his clothes had to last him until Bis father’s old suit was made over, if he had to work or go hungry, if wyery cigar and every glass of beer had added to its enjoyment the} urchase had to be considered, there would be fewer rich m spending their old age in saddened solitude, i A girl can stand more pet tting and pampering thin a boy. knocks are not as necessary to get!» commen sense into a boy's. the uy a track- wer railroad magnates! If the boy was sent to the public HERE are not have wanted hei for the apparently mirmatched teams which > arness, everywhere and at all must be admitted to the fa enses of the word one has sald. begin © pommible answer ts made every day ¢ empting to expia married anybod wonder why ax s|wite la rarely or never dictated by is much to be question rned| 004 judges of echaracter—to be ab iat there are.men who poss | » who are supported to be} thought that its p a degree as to} { comea to choosing @ wife. genius should not be of pr common saying thas h of books know aise in which th her head as} Sheltering care is a good thing for her, but that is nc more reason for lea mense fortune to her trust than it) °% " is for sending a boy ot $1,000 a month allowance and then finding fault with him because he} spends it on chorus girls an teach ‘Bill the perplexity in wife or hus These are the ever recurring questions! mi lunders tn the conduct of * to marry wisely ¢ elted to prove } ong the proofs of * same blunder common sense and good judem as Lord Dundreary ude a blunder tn to college with| nia tictie, of Harlem. much to 0 human belt gS. "aU KK ABO T thd 1 have written to Prominent people to @F fhe could draw It would be the $0 Alleviate the sorrows « Another Record, Jet people pay in Or & much & month ftror Bnd i better to @ fund lke that than To the Editor of The Evening Wor Wing who will get p Femal Ald Soctety, 239 Broadway Abe Biitor of the Bvening Worle Where can | go ®t Romine) oor? it Property jet: by my parents NOTHING mone \ WIERESTING THAN A a lawyer's ald free bis year she would have compivted her eleventh BEEN WATCHING THAT FELLOW FOR AN MOoUR her record « remarkable one | ke to hear of others, ly had more school wpirit there would If boys aad giris Plve A clrovier # fs to be planted wite many Wem cen The Walter and His Jo» be within 10 leet Of! a the Maher of The Brewing World her and no tree within P12 feo econ erenens teem NATE INR TNR I RR RE TEE TRE TE RAE SIXTY HEROES whi ° MADE OE = SRY une. No, 69—LORD ROBERTS, Hero of the Afghan and Hoer Ware, HERE is a quiet little white-baired man in England who has the adoring allegiance of countless soldiers tn every corner of the British Empire, and on whom his country has a way of calling for help when such help te most urgently needed. He ia Frederick Sleigh Roberts, Rart- and Field Marshal. But the soldiers do not use so long a title in referring to him. They long ago affectionately christened him “Bubs.” Roberts began his career as lieutenant of Bengal Artillery tn India ta 1861, when in his twenty-first year. Not long afterward the Sepoys (native troops) mutined, and England found herself with a terrible rebellion to- crush. Here young Roberts showed the spirit that was in him. Once he dashed {nto a mob of charging foce and saved the life of a comrade. Again he captured a standard ‘ded by two armed Bepoys. For thie act of heroism he received the Victoria Cross, By 1875 he was a major-general Three years later the Afghan war broke out and Roberte was sent at the head of a amall army across the Afghan border. Roberts made a brilliant dash into Afghanistan, deliberately allowing himself to get out of com- munication with India, relying for food on a hostile country and opposed at every step by enemies. Ho set at naught many old traditions of war, but he won triumphagt victories, routing the Afghan forces at Kabul an sending their leader a prisoner to India; relieved a besieged British garris jSon at Kandahar and did more than any other map to win the war fot England. For these services he was mado a baronet ext came the first Boer war, {n 1880. The Boers (literally “farmers”) were the descendants of Dutch settiers in South Africa, They had originally » settled at Capo Colony, but after Engtand's Rake Afghan Campaigns and Same of that province a number of {Inhabitants -moved up-co y and 14. te Fie eee ees £ formed the republics known as the Trans eam val and the Orange Free State, In 1877. iGreat Britain annoxed these little countries, but three years ! jthrew off the British yoke. A bloody but brief war followed. al, waa unprepar ) Juba Hill, Roberts was o war. But before his arrival peace bad been cox was once more a practically independent nati New honors were showered on Roberts during the Ip 1885 he was chosen commauder-in-chief of Engiand’s fo luded, and ¢ | 1882 he was made a baron, in 1895 commander- { of the troops in j ireland end in the same year was promoted to the of field marrhal: | Lord Roberts was now s: a busy, dramatic « lay behind him. But he was to ach before he shovld be allowed to lay reward, too, than any he had yet known Ever since the war of 1880-13! Boer and Briton. The finding of rich go | swarms of Uluanders (foret | majnly Donglish, and they the unjust treatment accord Kruger, of t Transvaal, f adventurous foreigners tc ransveal evitable. Dr. Jameson, an Englishma: vucklers, made a theatrical but ludicr apital. He was captured and his follo er stirred up: bitterness beiween the This culminated tn 1899, whey matie correspondence, Kruger is vade the English territory of Natal and Cope Coic ormer province, and anya ley and Mafeking tp ( M ratontet: » more sp lendid tr ad continued between South Africs onght, These newcomers were saw tre | terrible disasters. the scene of war manship and strategy © armies sent again: The English public cla He was seventy; his old age was da ihe recent niy son, {who fell at Colenso, But ho readily obeyed > ‘The “Man of the Hour" in | the popular volce, and called for South e Africa to as x aand, Engiand's Time of Need, 3 igiing along Ger chief ots in 1900, At once defeat was turned ere later r. lratsed, and Ledysmith and Mae} er general, Cronje, was captured with a large his army A forced rch was made upon Dloemfor Then the | gailont little marshal pughed on to’ were scanty, the enemy ‘opposed ¢ torn up. Yet (he Boer capital was Naving thus d the Boers, Roberts nexed to Great Britain |to stamp out the guerilla war né Pretoria and rati access on the part of ange Free State an- Sending Kitchener is Botha and De and a $500,000 gift from the Brit nation were his reward. . | Time has not alinmed the little o's tireless rey, his military gta lus nor his superhuma of men DS aon en aaete jold age are pleas £ life of « x uaintascaitica’ | waritke achiever Furiher Frivols. By Margaret Rohe: @ mirror up to nature cfm a by a » frre With Just becavee a has bos cert to scx 2 no sign she's heartless A pluire on a hat fs worth two on an catr'e’. cashier zrt to ake ag ua with a sour disposition s » hae & meet heart Even if @ woman loses her tongue ehe still bas a #3 = countenance After ¢ hubby soon f riten and wifey finda that Wie “Making the Stars and Stripes.” enough fuga are made ip the EN one to think thet every year W Caited States to supply all the men, women, and childre mia with at least one each, it will be seen that (here is amp! wey manufacturers should make every effort to exp ‘dite * . ” duction. Although each year not less than 4,(0,00 Ameri are made, that number forms 4 part of the host of star-spangled bent f various sizes 1" id die between January and Janvar millions «f that are U printed Mags ex the flage are prt what Is called print goods ar ot paper are printed upon an ordinary ¢ clogtrotypes. No one knows t mber of the ® aad hnually. An idea may be gained fr ment which makes a specialty of them (ur printed in sheets, ranging in alse of sheet from Glass Dress and “iron Coat. NH of the latest novelties in dress snaterial Is reported to be » cloth mage ‘and it cam be bad tn while, green. Mlac, pink and yellow. fabric ts an Autirian, and he declares that it te aa ‘and {s none the worse for belng either stained o9” soled. The Tumsena many a fabric fom the fibre of a filamentous stone | too the Bibertan mines which ts enld to be of so durable a nature thet it Ie practically eve ing. ‘The materiel in eoft to the toueh and pilable in the ex- piesa, and nas only to be thrown into a fire when dirty to be made absolutely ve Fron cloth 48 largely used to-dny by tallore for making the cotlare of, . it properly, It ls manufactured by ow process from steel wool and as the arpearance of having been woven from horsehair, Some time irer tp the north, of Wngland succeeded in making # # quantity of aid rage and cordage, unravelied (hem process into # kind of rough cloth, —_———o# If the material used nor wily, in the same way that the é : Muslin flags and m iron blocks and tin flags th 000 a day. Such Mage are to 40.4 72 inches. | from, | and wove them by @ sor A correspondent writes how waiters tr certeln cheap potnarente and barnooms Pence that eurrounls the garden?! JOHN J. FARRELL, Queerly Bi-Partisan Newspaper. © of the oddest newspapers In the world ls one named the Wochenbiatt, & amall town of #ome 1,900 inbadiiante oie deinsetmnd. 1k is he only Béwapaper in the by the Laberel

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