The evening world. Newspaper, June 26, 1907, Page 14

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seca e ne NLRC COC AEP tLe ETE COE ECAR OCI TIS York. Publishes by the Prete Publishing Company, No. & to @ Park Row, New Entered at the Post-OMice at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter, VOLUME 47.. EVERY DAY A DOLLAR. HRIFT is hardest in the summer time. cheerless winter months to work is natural. days are short. It Is easy to stay home evenings with the family. There are few unforeseen expendi- tures to interfere with the apportioning of the in- come. Winter is the easy time to save. Summier is the vacation season. Nature invites recreation and idleness. There are a hundred and one ways of spending money, all of them inviting and many of them enjoyable, Few families in this city do not let thelr expenditures exceed their in- comes during part at least of this season. To resist temptation when there is no temptation to resist Is like fighting a vacuum. There is nothing there to fight. Saving money when there fs no inviting temptation to spend it is as easy as the spending when the temptation time comes. So often does the yielding to the summer's invitations to extravagance exceed the summer's income and impair not only the winter savings but the surplus which every family should set aside every year that more will power Is to be called into exercise now than during the colder months. Thrift must be continued the year around to be successful. It is the foundation for every great fortune as well as for every competency. Rockefeller saved the bungs that had been going to waste in his first oil refinery. Jay Gould saved the pennies that he made peddling rat traps in the Catskills. Carnegie saved from his salary as messenger bo) and telegraph operator. Harriman saved from his wages as a broker's clerk. The great speculations of these men came in after life. Their of millions of dollars at one swoop took years of previous sav- training. The men who get suddenly rich are as likely to lose as they were to make it. NO, 16,745. we During the Gamblers’ winnings go as they come. ! While few men are warranted in hoping to accumulate the wealth equal to that of Rockefeller, Morgan, Carnegie or Gould, every man in good health witha good trade or business can accumulate a competency. This is no appeal for most men to seek to become rich. In the first place they cannot succeed. Again, in the seond place, if they should succeed it would be bad for their children. But for every man to have a competence Is desirable. He shouid begin early to save an amount which will protect his family from want and enable him to live without care in his old age. No old man should be driven to work by the spur of necessity. When a man of over sixty works it should be because his employment is congenial and a pleasure, @ recreation rather than a task. Any man who begins af the age of twenty to save $1 a day and in- vests that dollar in first-class real estate mortgages or bonds, letting the dollars stay in the savings bank until he has attained the savings bank maximum deposit, will have $50,- 000 at the age of sixty. By saving #2 a day he would hav. $100,000, or 50 cents a day $25,000. Every man should save accord- {nz to his income a quarter cr a fifth cf it.. A little less money speus for rent, a simpler and a more whoiesome diet, the buyiig of plain, substential clothing and the cutting off of superfluities would maké more than that much differ- . <7] ‘ance in any family’s income. The résult would be financial freedom and independence in oki age. In planting the vacatign, the summer apparel and the summer tip consider these things. What Great ThinKers Are Talking About No. 4—M. E, Sangster on ‘‘Large and Smal! Families?'’ Ww sides. The large family in which the children follow ¢ the world in quick succession is apt to be genial and sympa to have abundant opporturity for self-denial on the part of every for the jolliest of good times ‘There # no apparent reluctance on the part of our w this partic ere to undertake the cares in t beautiful homes of the rich among us ring’ wit patte cannot deny when we begin to discuss the question of the family t numbers, there are favorable arguments to ™ dental Gnd are sweet with the melody of children's v It ia the mame tener homes of the elties, and in the mountaig cabins of the & Extremes meet, “The pox man hopes that his chi) will one da e| faim to bear the bumiens of hard fortune. lis richer brother takes de and pride in the circle of litt Wantage, and who in time sha’ Belden spoon v immense contingent of thrifty people who fixht a life-long battle wit ones to whom he sive every eart {inherit all that comes to t oan The) '| tween the dense body and the remaining princtples of the human constitution; the nn rammcrnuasamnmnnyasnonmseiemmpmumanmmanicann noi Alii ee ‘ Fi : ‘ Daily Magazine, Wednesday, june 26, 1907. | 2 | | ‘The Model Husband. FIFTY HEROINES | i a | OF HISTORY. es OF Pam ye He mus } © Must BE ||Eestene (le ~ Cnesreaiets eovtvrs| BY ALBERT PAYSONTER oy 4 Nasr Abie] Reva JR MANNERS EVOTION ; Sow memeneo- Sova ) Queer) cs a pithy No. I-SEMIRAMIS, the Pirst ‘New’! Woman, Says: art yan ace: \ HE shepherds whe guarded the flocks of the Assyrian King were drtw -& ) 1 SAcuTe ie Bs Ing thelr sheej) across the mountains one day, about 4107 years ago, Comes when thelr leader, Simmas, heard the piteous crying of @ child HE MUST BE ABLE To FASTEN THE BUTTONS IN THE Bacty WITH EASE Must 4 BE Just Domestic Love To In HS HABITS Oo THis 1 $ RE Must NOT SWEAR IN ENGUSH HE MUST BE AND HE Must oo To ‘ Baeeuey. Ew 4 AY THE a“ THe MooisTé Science Asks: ‘“‘What Does the Human Soul Look Like?” U MUCH actentific data have been printed of lat about the “physical” side ef) the two still ‘is unbroken. The snappin_ of the cord means the death of the dense the human soul, {ts alleged weight, the possibilities of seeing it at the in-| physical bod;. stant of its departure from the body, d&c., that the following statistics com-| When the etheric double finally quits the body # does not travel to any dis- cerning ‘this mystic subject will be of interest to many: tance from !t Normally it remains floating over the body, the state of con- The process of the man's withdrawal from the body has been watched wicteene being dreamy and peaceful, unless tumultuous distress and violent clairvoyants and definitely described, declares Mrs. Annie Besant, the famous emotion surround the body whence it just issued. @fucator and occultist. Thus Andrew Jackson Davis, “the Poughkeepsie ster.) nis vivii sight is succeeded in the ordinar~ person by a dreamy, peaceful Gescribes how he himself watched the escape of the ethereal body, and he states | somi-consciousness, as the etheric double floats above the Lody to which It has that the magnetic cord did not break for more than thirty-six hours after APP&- | nelonged. Sometimes thie double is seen by persons in the house-or jn the neigh- ent death. Others have described how they saw a faint violet mist rise from | when the thought of the dying ‘bas been strongly turned to some one the dying body, gradually condensing into @ figure which was the cq@unterpart of i2¢: penind, when some anxiety has been in the mind at the last, something left the expiring person and attached to that person by @ glistening thrénd. |undone which needed doing, or when some loca! disturbance has shaken the tr: The snapping of the thread means the breaking of the last magnetic link be-| Cciuiey of the passing entity. Under theses conditions or others nature the double may be seen or heard: when seen it shows a dreamy, hazy consciousness, ts silent, vague in its aspect, unresponsive As the Gays go on the five higher principles gradually disengage themselves body Has dropped away’ from the man; he is excarnated, disembodied prin- ciples still remain as his constitution immediately atter death, the mventh, or his dense physical body, being left as @ castoff garment. The etheric Gouble is the ethical part of the gross body of man, says the Chi-| cago Tribune. It te the double tuat {* sometimes seen during life In the neigh-| w in ‘i borhood of the pody,-and its absence from the body generally is marked by .ae|Sidered. leaving the etheric double with the dense body of which It is the coun let py |terpart, thus becoming an ethereal corpse as much as the body had become a is or semi-lethargy of the latter. Acting as the reservoir or vehicle of the) x ‘The eth } corpee remaina péar the Gente one, and they disia- rinciple during the earth life, ts withdrawal from the body naturally is|ense <orpee. eee) eer ene semana Beer, wee. Care rae ane ee marked by the lowering of all vital functions, even while the cord which unites|'*&Tate together. Clairvoyan! used > lve In degree of clog 4 to givet than thelr par re those who believe in Mmiting the ( the family 1) must be admitted, too, that a woman who does her f@ttends to nome soca) claims, has a share tr wn housework ure work and persona Gesumes the making and mending for her brood, te seldom phyek fitted fo bear children rapidiy, Unless she has a suMcient tnterva resting be tween the arrivals of her children, the exhaustion of maternity will we thee out and she will leave her Iittle children motheriess. Neo-sight on eart Be badder then thet ‘of a little cluster of heads close together withont @ mot @r's guardianship, the tired mother of the little untended brood asleep in u aMrm, with « deal of reaw each chbid ae It enters the home, if they are ebie upon ft thelr thoughts und thelr money, waye Marware! K. Ban ristion Herald, They assert that they can hover over infancy i Becordance with the latest dieooveries of hywione, end that from kindergarter Re collene they oun surround their children with an atmosphere of Bee encompass them with al! thet madern eclence eungests, while their ow from anxiety about ways and metns will enable them to make (he happier and to be happier with them. Ao DOt Altempt to etrike a balance tn favor otther of the lary f ‘ThA 1 will leave to the judement of the roader. Mothers pa ie! WA tame Sheree lnemy.on the oynject that ee eee = lbenno arene ene Alig tine from the etheric double, and shake this off as they previously shook-off the grocser body. They press on, as a five-fold entity, into a state next to be con. Samot ‘he rocks above his head | Now | in those days, and for bat showed no weakn volce Ia fact, In a cleft in a boulder lay a strong, be g childless, picked up the foundling ar givin | {es later, {t was the enstom of parents to leave erippled or over-wei s out on the hills for the wild beasts to jdevour, But this child's the shrill |ness of Its éries led Simmas to turn aside from the path and explore. | ful Httle girl. The shepherd, | carried her home tn his arms, jThere he brought her up as his own. her the name “Semiramis.” | Her beauty became the talk of the whole district. Her exquisite face, the | aaring and wit she soon showed, coupled by the strange, story of her origin, led the villagers to believe she was the child of sowie goddess and that she had been thrown miraculously in S!mmas's way Numberless {mpoasible anecdotes were ented about her childhoo® The history of her later life has also been garnished to such @ degree by the wildest Mes that it !s sometimes hard to separate the truth from the l. # fiction, It is therefore out of the question to a nD Gil who wey) UP An absolutely accurate life-story of Semiramis, | 3A Girt Who Mele ‘Ohareaan Gly: tals ise’ Ot each (Haenielti Waren Called # Goddess. } most probable. In fact, some hietorians have even enn? gone 80 far as to doubt her existence Assyria was a mighty country in those half-historic days. Its half naked, barbaric legions struck terror to nations some of whose very names are now forgotten. Libya, Ethiopia, Egypt and India were jong its chief rivals for mastery of the East. Europe was still inhabited by. savages and the Orient held the world’s only glimmers of civiliz Ninus, a powerful King (and founder of the city and province of Nineveh) ruled Assyria. He appointed his favorite general, Onnes, Gov- ernor of Nineveh, in whose boundaries young Semiramis was growing into womanhood. The fame of the girl's beauty and cleverness reached Onnes, together with the rumor that she was half a goddess. He sought her out and married her, lifting the foundling from the squalor a shepherd's hut to the grandeur of palace life if Her career had begun. And, unlike most women of her time, Sem! ramis was in no way content to fill the role of sla d plaything im her jhusband’s harem. She was emphatically a “new” woman, born 4,000 years ;shead of her time. She gained great. influence over Onnes, advising bim in affairs of State and developing the most amazing military gentus. ' * So clever a strategist was she that when the Governor of Nineveh was summoned to help King Ninus at the siege of the walled city of Bactra Semiramis was taken along. The city had successfully defied Nipua's largest armies. Yet through Semiramis’s wit and personal herolxm jtqwas at last captured. A woman who could not’only fight but plan campaigns was a novelty. Ninus sent for the beautiful girl and promptly fell in love with her. He asked %nnes to divorce her in order that she might become Queen, and offered the governor gilttering bribes. Onnes stubbornly refused, for jhe adored his wife. then Ninus turned from ngs “to open threats. Realizing his own help! ness against so poWerful a rival, Onnes, in dew pair, hanged himself. Ninus, the last obstacle being cleared away, married | Semiramis, and the shepherd's foundling now became Q of Assyria, Soon afterward Ninus died, leaving her sole ruler. n it was that a ber “new eee qualities found full scope. Among UG hi play er reported achievements are the building of Baby- } The Foundiing § jon (greatest city earth in its day), ie |} Becomes a Queen.? hanging gardens, which form of the “Seven fmm Wonders of the World”; the e is and civilize ing of trackless miles of wilderness, the building of rouds, walls, bridges over the Euphrates River, canals, towns and aqueducts, and in countless other ways modernizing and strengthening her kingdom. For forty-two years she reigned. Nor was » building un of her country her chief work. She in person led victorious armics agafnst Egypt, Libya and Ethiopia, conquering-every—foe, until she was misirces of ail Asia to the very borders of India. Then. having crushed all other enemiss, she invaded India itself, with an army said to have containe: 3,000,000 | foot soldiers, 500,000 cavalry and 100,000 war chariots. King Stabrobaics of India met her in battle on the banks of the Indus, and there the warrior queen suffered her first defeat. Her forces were utterly routed, one-third of them slain or captured and her career of victory forever at an end. In rage and mortification Semiramis killed herself, leaving what was left of her former world-kingdom to her son, Ninyas. Legend declares she jturned into a dove and flew to heaven, But there was little of the dove in her life and nature. She was a freak, in an age when women counted for little; a new woman in an era when woman at large was still a slave. And blazed the path for many a later imitator That most of these imitators fafled was because thoy merely had all of Semiramis's ambition and none of her marvellous genius. No. 2 0 im Friday's ja, Mother of the Gracehi,” will series, “Cor we _——__—_—— SENSIBLE HINTS FOR THE FOURTH OF JULY Enact the signing of the Declaration If there are chimes, have “America” played. Keep piano music going all over town. Fifegs and drummers to march in Continental costume Print patriotic songs on cards for free distrivution. Bing these songs at all the band concerts Have strings of santerns across the streets Make it home-coming day; 4 family reunion day. Lat the boys have a camp-fire An automobile parade at night, picture. Send up smal! balloons with “reward” post-cards attached. Have an athletic contest between Uncle Sam and Jolin Bull, Free entertainments in hells would go far to make children happy. A porch may be used asa stage. and little folks give an entertainment thera, Exhibit war relics in the town hall—swords, Nags, pictures, letters, Ac. Eacn one of thirteen houses tu repiesent one of the original States. Use red, white and biue or blue and yellow candies for lights in the evening, Children Uke to put on uniforms and march. Let them, f they will go withewt fireworks | At the sunrise Nag-raising have « lot of little flags rolled up to drop out of the | big one. Wherever there is water have a water fete—canoes decorated, swimming matches and other aquatic sports; lanterns, torches, muste; bridges and rafts ) Mlutatnated Good subjects for tableaux are: Washington taking command of the American Army, Betsy Ross making the American flag, the Boston Tea Party, Signing ¢he Declaration, Washington's Farewell to slis Officers,—Ladies’ Home Journal. Weare tans HURRAY! HERE’S EIGHTY-CENT GAS! By Walter A. Sinclair. Hs Hurray! The papers say gas sells at eighty cents; 4 Oh, happy day, catloo-callay! Now fan’t that immense? We all can earn enough to burn « ttle gas at night, And ain't i nice they fixed the price without » bit of fight ‘That mergly shows the way it goes in matters touching gaa, And suspect that they'd elect to let the new price pass? Oh, Joyous thought--all gas we've bought and paid » dollar per Is that much saved, for this we've raved and caused an awful stir, How much ts thatt, The sum te fat So bring @ catalege— We'll buy & yacht or country lot or take an auto fog; A brand new suit we'll get to boot, or get « bigger fat; Perhaps we'll go to see & show or buy « new straw hat Ob, happy thomght: “Twas not for naught saved our trading tampa, And made our roar when asked for more beneath the Gas Trust's clamps. And ain't it kind to never mind but drop the price Itnelf; It shows « Trust #0 often cussed te not Juat out for pelt. yr 6 What's that you say? @b, great diemay. “It's not our New York gyi Ob, bang the fume It's pot for us ‘Twas dropped in Boston, Mass. — -+¢e—— —— A Destroyer of “‘Dead’’ Ships. HIPPING meq oo both aides of the Atlantic have been mf S announcement the United State bids for the derelict destroyer which was euthorized by dhe last Congress, . 9 ¥ aj Raia: wee tis ‘The vessel, which is to be stationed on the North Atlantic, will embody the ements ft of her Kind and will be capable of rule CRIMINAL. | ALWAYS IN EVIDENCE. SPRING. WIFELY CAUTION. latent io eves Fd dnote Riynakyyfioy, -. Be watng for 6000 | Hicke—Ien't the cost of living getting! "Tis springtime, but we do not ese | Tlie te ane eneh Gower of suring Kusdand—Listen, Josephine: If 1 8°! segrohiights and « wirelem telegraph euuipnient, (he latter fo enable ber Lo rvaaing to be just (rightful nowadays? merry insects Grawing sear, And hear each apringtime bird, ‘wor e-serlously Di-eend me to the ‘and give information es to the Toeation of dorviicts. Eve will be provided poy) Wiocks—It te protty bad, that's a fact. 1 the presidential ber I lke te warmth and vunshine, but | Respite! at its hb x, Whieh gally busses all the year, Washinglos Sam wer Than the cost Mt dying. —Gomervilig Joi

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