The evening world. Newspaper, August 8, 1907, Page 12

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, Published Dally except ‘Sunday by the Preas Publishing Company, No & to 0 Park Row, New York (PORETN, PULITZER, Pron, 1 Rast Ta Bereet. 2 AxOs s Entered at the Post-Office at Now York as Second-Class Sail Matter. bE isligiaiid and the Con: | Race yoan, YOL Week 119th Street, “AND | CAN - Bybecrintion Rates to The Canada, nent and All Countri Breed states | One yeer. srs |, 18 tye diternational DRINK MILK 60 | One year . oo OB AND One onth: s ssssNO, 16,788, CREAM" SUMMER FLIRTATIONS, LIRTING is a common summer pastime. ' Wherever the summer firi-congregates flirting abounds. in lieu of grown-up ‘unmarried “y men} boys, grayheads and stray Te husbands are utilized. The gir) who wants to flirt will find i somebody to flirt with if she has to steal him from some’ other woman, ' ‘What fs the attraction which makes summer flirtations so pop- ! : THE ular? Is it the season, or the / © temperature, or the surroundings, or ts it-merety-a habit? Whether-at the seashore or in the mountains, at a big hotel or a little cottage, the “happenings are the same. The most sedate and prudish girls sometimes “Jet down the bars of their reserve when they are away from home on their summer vacations. The essence of a flirtation.is that nothing serious is Intended. It _ means nothing except-a passing of the time. The most fervid protesta- tions of the man bind him to noth- . ing after the first frost of autumn. The acceptance of his invited de- wotion by thé girl does not obligate her even to bow to him on the lished and veteran flirt of either sex regards the whole proceeding aa # 7 a fs where many young - girls make foolish mistakes. Un- ~-der the summer moonlight they ict Some man's arm steal around a be- fibboned waist. When a cloud comes over the moon Ips sometim: meet. Whatever the man and the. girl say, each may believe that the "evening's episode is ended when the good-nights are said. It isn’t. A girl who has let one man kiss her flirtatlously has given away something she can never regain—her modesty. The man who kisses & girl flirtatiously has lowered something he should preclously main- tain—hls respect for women, The more often it happens the greater the girf's loss and the lower the man’s standards. The natural desire for com- panionship is diverted in summer flirtations to a narrow channel. The change of scene and surround- Ings in the vacation time can and should be put to good and useful purposes. Knowledge may be acquired of different conditions and s spheres of Ilfe. The vacation ter- _. witory may be studied. Meeting other people always affords oppor- ; tunities for a widening of experience and a broadening of the mental horizon. “To spend a Vacation-tn flirting tsa waste of bottr time and oppor-} turity. If a girl is contemplating matrimony, and most vacation girls are, she should realize that to make herself cheap is not the way to get the i best husband. To let a man hold i fer hand and hug and kiss her is i mot the path to lead him to the attar. He may enjoy her society temporarily, but he hesitates . at 7 thaking a life contract. The man who flirts does not get yw the -nicest-girls,-thase-most worth having. He is known by the company he keeps, and girls who New York Thro’ Funny Glasses By Irvin S. Cobb. . torecoth—tt's a very supertor word, thst “for- sooth"—why ehould we fritter away our substance gpending week-ends at the beach. where the sum- mer hotel manager charges extra for everything except Presenting his bill, where if you ewim herd enough to beat the undertow you get the cramps and where the much vaunted shore dinner is but a dollar and a halfs worth of dashed hopes feeding off with @ collection of swollen rub- ber clams! with sand in thelr eyes and prox ng to a planked fish that is nothing more than a fine tooth comb with @ greasy skin wrappéd around !t7 And why should we hike to the expensive and almost habitable hostel in the mountains to pay Gertrude Atherton prices for Laura Lean Jibby tood and to furnish the prov- B ender for the highland mosquito, the promenade ground for ho early-rising house fly and free grasing for the carnivorous red ant? ‘Why not save time, trouble and money—especially the last named—dy running up to Uncle Gene's and Aunt Milly’s in Sullivan County for two or three weeks tn the heated term? _W¥hat“boote tt ttiough the off farmhouse bea trifle-crowaed? Nota single boot; let alone a pair. You oan find rest and repose in the company bed and the children ean lap over into the living rooms while Unele Gene and Aunt Milly may | The Champion Strong Man. By Maurice Ketten. H ‘hursday, edie ie Hh ‘\! \ JOHN. D. HC1s THE BEST-TRAINED ATHLETE OF HIS AGE } Worve % leafs INTHE HE 1S STRONGER THAN ANY BUSINESS MAN — HE CAN SWING AN AXE AS EASELY AS HE.CAN A GOLF CLUB AND HE IS ONLY” Fou YEARS-GLD ee RISEN DOCTOR .. BIGGAR. Xe Ley Keep Young Youth-Preserving Recipes From Prominent Persons | et) 6 To . PATTI has given as her recipe for retaining yout& ‘Eat fragaily’ and be scrupulously clean.” It may be interesting to collect ether [Mee from those who have successfully combeted the ravagee of time. i | ¢ s ° e e | Gen. Booth, a grand old man of seventy-cine, hae gtven a peogthy tion of the methods by which he has retained his activity. Here is bis advice | ‘ “Yat an ittle as possible The average man eats too much Instead of nouriahing his body he overtaxes !t, compelling his stomach te digest mere food than i has capacity for. ie -~“"Denk plenty oot water tn preterency to-edultermed concoctions. Water be ee * 8 esome nourishment. i ‘Take exercise." \ y Lord’ Roberts, now In his seventy-fifth year, says? e ‘TI have kept ,myself young: on purpose, I’ have not @rank or emoked, end 2 am really net @ diy older than after Majube in 2880." | ‘ * . * * e | “No doctor,” tw the presoription ef Mra Honor Coleman, who ts now! Qrundred and seven years oki. Mra. Coleman belonged to « remartoxtty family, Both her mother and her grandmother were ‘centenarians daughter is nearly eighty. iy } e Dn Ciitford bee a spectal prescription. ‘The famons Baptist te seventromp |and a tremendous worker. Ee says: “The more you work the longer you Bye. t _* ° 2 oe @ and new). . e: @ ly to rise,” as dy overeating. Instead of making a mon healthy, wealthy | [and wise, earty rising lowers his vitality and results tm brain fmr and cart — s s s s se een Nee lave Gown the fHlowine pringplee for those who would preserva i | “S35 it, potatees, breed and milk ° e e | @uye the London Express, one gathers that the secret of long-life “regularity and abstinence.” sieGenrrenestmmanens, a marshal, Von Moltke, who, at the age of ninety, still possessed of fine in- tellectual power and remarkable vitality, sald that he had maneged to live so long and in such excellemt health “by great moderation in ail things and byt regular out-of-Goor exercise.” : — $+ -___ Queer Freak of Electricity. LECTROLYSIS es deen little investigated, but now demands greater at- E tention, as it appears that stray currents in damp soi!] may endanger buildings as well as the pipes under the street... Experim ko to show that the metal embedded tn reinforced concrete ts not as perfectly protected [aeaiaee corrosion as has been supposed. The teats were made on blocks of | Portiand cement sand conorete three years old and on blocks of Rosendale | cement thirty days old, @ pleoe of two-inch wrought-iron pipe being embedded tn each block to a depth of eight inches. Blocka kept thirty days in unclectrified aca water remained in perfect condition. the tron-continuiig quite bright. Bae posed to an electric current in sea water and in fresh water, blocks of the older ooncrete became badly cracked, were easily broken and the pipes very much corroded, and blocks of the newer concrete showed cracks as early as ‘the stxth day. . ‘ The Best Fun of the Day by Evening World Humorists. - Weep up in the garret, with thetr noses brushing the shingles, and observe tic | Stars through the oracks in the reof It were high timo they Je something about astronomy, anyhow. Elderly persons who have devoted the best years of thetr Itves to the study of agriculture and infant damnation need the broa | view. Take them a volume of Bmerson’s Essays. It will go wet on the cé table in the parlor along with the “Treasures of the Prose. World.” the hanly volume by Dr. Bottsford on the Diseases of the Horse and the gmas dome oon- taining the wax bouquet of purple Easter lilies and blue roses. body just to seo us lighting inte @ Sunday dinner of fried chicken. Tt will be worth considerably more than that to Uncle Gena with the prices for poult:y what they are. | And what splendid appetites we will be able to develop up there in the ozony | hills where the air Is full of health and we don’t have to pay anything for the fodder we are tucking away. True, Aunt Milly may lose Sesh when she observes the dofictt in the basket where she weed-to keop the fresh-laids before we came, but ali of us will be so plump and eo hearty. Dear mamma, who was barely able. to worry down « vanilla eolatr on Broadway where they come to fifteen cents per each,-will now be able at ene aitting to reduce @ cold boiled ham to e polished bone and @ fond memory. And from the way father’s busy dessert spoon will mingle fn and among the atloed peaches, ot al, you can’t tell whether he's eating the cream or beating ft THE FUNNY PART: Nearlyulwayu the-stinpte-minded. farmer folk wil fall for the fiction thet we're going to show them a warm time when thay coms Gown to the city next winters are worth while hesitate to be with him alone. A woman's reputation about such things is more to her |). than'a man’s, and the man who associates with free and easy girls i avoided by.the other kind. we dene a 4 Before a girl enters into a summer flirtation let her ask herseli whether a man's memory is not longer than her vacation. ‘Letters from the People. Ome More for the Foolkiller. Po the Editor of The Prening Work’; ‘A writer mentions certain people th Bill Hustle, of Harlem. » WILLIAM, WONT You sroP_jN AT THE STORE AND TELL THEM To SEND ME MY BATHING SUmT TODAY BUREP mes: HAVENT TIME, QUT FLL Do IT! BE SURE YOURE READY TO GO TO CONEY THIS AFTER NOON of the great nations mentioned are, x rome time in their career, the greater tn the world, Aj at varioy foolkiller might woll tackle. May 1{ (em, fet the pace, In a way. for all the ON TIME! B44 one to this list? While the fool-| feet of the then known world. All o Jdiler 1s about his work let him try his cp ee were Steruyed oes rs 1g) Ot, thing rematus of \thelr mow Band on the fools who pum het, acrid (oe ee thele beeps ela liad tobacco amoke, {nto people's faces with- out a word of apology. The killer will find them on every seat of the cars and ery plentiful on the streets. Isn't thir & free country? Hr fools the right to smoket Yeu! \\" fairly wallow tn) (Only a Hieh Schoo! freedom tn America, especially in anc} A-Kind-Hearted Hoy. | ela New York. Of course, the foolm| 7 the Intitor of The Drening World, have the right to emoke, but It fa an! As I wna coming home the otne @pen queation whether cars and crowd-| night I muw quite a crowd watching x ed streota are the places to exercise! poy of about sixteen holding a horse by the rigtt. Non-amokers have rights! ing bit, On inquiry I found that he aloo. They want pure atr—dimeult ,4o | Rea taeretiyar They want iscca eas |aenre! to Jet the driver run his horne ‘ y further, The horse had nothing 1 from rank fumes of tobacco. We have | 3+ ay Gasianaltwesinarcaien? elligent ‘Senior’ from the college on the Nelghts tell us how to avert thew common, fate of those nations, not as for reasons why we should not me: the same end. GEORGE MAL WHY DON'T YOU. SEND MRS. H HER BATHING SUIT? LET A MOVE ON} e) BET heat, ,humidity and crowded cars, Why | add kreeable. odors pines, | THen Tf saw the boy ask a man for Pest eome outa, whigh the lattor gindly gave. @igare and cigarettes to the trio of/T think this boy Is worthy of pealre| for ing mizerios? T. BO National Deeadenve, © We the Editor of The Bvening World) Anewering “Columbia Senior," on the Whance of New York tmitating thh fat! @f Rome, Greece, Persia, including the Mastern metre, I should like to state he that everybody knows those oncees Beat iy ‘knows the United States is \ in their footsteps, stopping a husky driver from ary. broken-down animal. J, HD. Teachers’ Duty. To che Weitor of The Bventng World: ‘Teachers, bow atwut it? We mothe: protect our chftéren to our utmost, b fow reallze how safe or unsafe they a: between the houra of 9 and % Bome| teachers send them cn errands over | nga And through unsafe Bverydod, ““)ttellowing closely What we don’t know is, how to pvert eoemingty tnevitable eonclusion All \ AK Mose i. Wi HURRY UP — UIT! MUST: SAVE IT RIGHT AWAY! WE'LL Br LATE FOR NOTHE THE) C2 G2 G&D By H. Methfessel. H's BANNING HAVENT GOT, Se GATHING Sum YET? YOU FOOLISH Goy,! DIDN'T IT TOUWEAR TODA) cd | Likewise we will enjoy Nghting into the luscious broilers that Uncle Gene hid hoped to dispose of on the rising market. If will be worth five dollan#te-ens=— the stimutative effect.” The Jarr Family’s Daily Jars. By Roy L. McCardell. be VE a letter fron Mrs. Rangle,"" said Mrs. Jerr; “shee I having the time of her Ufe at Asbury Park.” “anybody that can have the time of their Ife at ury Park 1s easly pleased,” said Mr. Jarr. ‘A gloomier ‘Sh, there's lots of places where Mquor can be obtained, am Informed,” said Mrs. Jarr coldly, * “Now, look here!’ exclaimed Mr. ,0ut Uquor? I'm not!** “JSumt the same,” said Mrs. Jarr, “when we were walking t st one of the big hotols, when we were down there a few bars ago, and somé one ea/d that they sok4 Uquor there on ue aly when they were sure of thelr patrons, you said it as the first hotel you had seen at jury Park that had a ony and homelike alr about it~ “Well, if I did St was not in any connection with tte sell- ~ ing or not selling liquor,” said Mr, Jarr sulkily. “I never couk! understand,”” Mre. jarr went on, “why, if men are so fond of Jarr; “who's talking Uaquor, they do not keep {t In the home. I'll tell yor what I'll do, I'll keep tt in * Qe house and yeu oan buy !t from me” jt‘ ¢on‘t-want-te buy tt—trom_you! I don'tmamt to buy it trom anybody! I @on’t want ft at alll’ snapped Mr, Jarr. “Why DO you buy it, then? asked Mra Jury. “Look here,” sald Mr, Jarr. “I¢ yeu will Usten to me calmly, If you wil] }taxe 1¢ from me that I'm met talking about myself, Ill tell you exactly why men buy Ugvor by the drink, instead of drinking a whole lot at once and being)’ [done with it? oes “It's a yery edifying subject, I'm sure!’ said Mra. Jarr with fine acorm, Well,'* eaid Mr. Jarr, ‘Tm tnformed INFORMED, mind you—thet mem drink whiskey not becatise they like the taste er smell but because thay want eS ‘z too bad about them, that they can't to without the-sttmutattye-efectt"————— ‘Well, as I wee eaying,” ‘the steady Grinker hee mp Gestre to gulp down a whole let of whiskey. He elmply takes enough to ptimt> late him to a certain potnt, and he also takes care not to allow the effect @@ Fl oe For that reason be buys am occasions! mall érink from time t ime,” ‘Went, I don't want to hear anything about itr sald Mrs. Jarr, sheryiy, "You brought it up yourself," said Mr. Jarr. “You were talking abeut Asbury Park, which te supposedly @ temperance place!” | “Yes, and for thet very reason you don't want to go there,” said Mra asm, “and then you started a long excuse for dram drinking.” *T Ald not.” eald Mr. Jarr, “Like other good things =a and It canbe abtsed, I'm not what you could call a ia aie tieo Bs "Oh, you think you are not, do yout’ wala Mra Jarr, with a meen “Wen, you have just Rosy telling me that you have to keep stimulated up to @ asrteS polnt. Oh;to-think that-T should lve to hear cont were a clave to the drink habit." » bs Te eects be “Listen to that!*-cried Me Jarr, “T toll you what I hed been tetd and that was all. And beford T’ata teli-you I begged you to ecnsider that X making any personal references.” i : ‘You were making excuses for yourself; that was what you were Gomgy” “Have It your own way,” sald Mr. J water wagon. I'm not drinking anything. “Oh, you've sworn off, havS you?’ anked Mra, Jarr, r “No, I haven't," sald Mr, Jarry. “I've just ‘stopped. Tt wau tdo goed em excuse for you to be roasting me about. I never took enough to hurt me wut you made | such a fus# about {t I thought I°a out tt out!” ¥ ‘I don't suppose you'd drink sore claret lemensfe with me, then? said Mrs, Jarr. “I've just made a pitcher of it” “No, I wont!" sala Mr, Jarr, sulkdty, vit \t were any one them," said Mra, Jarr. “And here's the gtri coming with the claret lemenada, and you've got to take some of it!” And so he hed fe, ¢oo, and It waea drink he detested, anyway, and always hed. > pean CA Science Finds New Use for Magnet. N twenty-seven years Dr, J. Hirschberg, a German occullet, has used the magnet in M7 operations for removing particles from the eye In the eght years ending 19% he performed the operation % times, securing gvod and permanent vision in 3 cases. In nine of the 8 cases the bit of iron was re- moved from the yitreous, in 37 the retina; 38 were/ fresh In 22 of the © cases the injured eye had to de taken large or bleed poleoning following the injury. In four eames tho magnet. ert

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