Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Pubeished Daily Except Sunday by the Frees Publishing Company, Nos §3'to © BOS Park Row, New York. = POUREM FULITEER, Pree. 1 Kast 10d Beret. 4, ANGUS SELAW, Soe-Troes, BOI Woot 11th Biro tered -Ofice New York as Second-Class Ma‘! Matter, Bait Wihananss f is Canada. For Engi and the Con- investing World for the 5: unent and All C aT One 7Oar...--a-nooeee $5.75 ee Unt ‘(Ome month............ -| One yea: ‘VOLUME 48.. .€ | One month ~ “THE LESSON 2 | One month....---—--++ NO. 138,888. OF THIS SUICIDE, R. BARNEY'S suicide is a lesson in the’ value of domesticity. | Financial loss’ or failure af Itself fs rarely sufficient to break down an} 41 active, intelligent man.’ Business) reverses more often have an educa-/ tlonal effect in teaching a man where! his faults lie, wherein’ was the re-| sponsibility for his failures, and thereby opening the way for suc- cess, Experience fs the severest teacher | is and ifs lessons can never be learned So impressively in any other | | Hh Sthoh Hohhot “inherently there shoukl be nothing in a single failure ta] mike a man either despair or regard the rest of his life as ieading a man from a vocation for which his aptitude would at best “mit onily 1 moderatd success to some other calling for which his abilitie are better fitted and where the results will be many times more to his credit than if his energy and ability had not“been diverted by an initial failure. - If Mr. Bamey hail lost every cent of money he had, if he had in feality been penniless instead of owning equitles worth more than.a mill- fon dollars, he could still, if in good spirits and courage, obtain a large “salary as a real-estate expert or a corporation manager. In these lines his years of success would have assured him of immediate profitable ; ES Taney sicaeabek tea blow of sud@en_adversity, not because. mind and prepared physically to face adverse of trial and stress came he felt himself standing bopeless. On the omntrary, failure is often 2 good thing in COME AND SAY ~~, BYE-BYE TO = + Im UST CRAZY - 10 4ET ON MY AUTO! SurT AND TAKE THAT SRIN.INGGEO, MOODY'S ALTO’ THIS "AFTERNOON ! PAPA | “November 16, 1907. WELL, I'M ALL READY {Now TO Show My DEAR WIFE AND BABY | POOPED HPPHHHHESPSOLPH HOSS HHH HOSS TIAA OsEeHrOH+ cOddS The Newlyweds @ Their Baby & + nus See By George McMa be9 How 00 1. LlOoK MY SEE ‘PREcious ! SEE PAPAL NO HE'S NoT 4OING ¥ HE-PRIGHTENED BABY ~ D\ AND HE'S TRYING TO y MAKE UP! 4 “tOOn-BABY,— I") PAPA ! WON'T BABY FoR4IVE PAPA? } DIDNT | MEAN 10 SCARE -VTTLE PRECIOUS | Therein constitutes the great economic and social loss which un- happy matrimonial relations cause. A discordant married life detracts “from a man’s earning capacity. It diminishes his working power. It| weakens him in the worst-place of all—in his famly and home Ife. | + ‘In adversity what helps most to restore a man’s fighting spirit is happy, contented home. al ‘A man and hj; wife should have common Interests. They should “face the rest of the world as one. Their resources of brains and money should be used as the assets and credit of a business partnership. Do-| _ mastic infelicity destroys the strength of a united family. In Mr. Barney's case the domestic infelicity was not financial, but) personal. It was not a question of riches or poverty, but of the fhtegrity of his family life. _A divorce suit either contemplated or pending will take the edge of | + any man’s best efforts. When a man in adversity goes to any other | woman than his wife for sympathy and consolation there is a structurc! defect in his domestic life which will bring on a crash just as the structura’ defects i idge made it collapse. hea man's best friend and close advice or for solace. " The evil of divorce stops not with the injury to the chitdren; but sts upon the parties themselves. : Letters from the Peop Hancosk Pliner Mun | Me the Editor o | le. Two Pests, | istered by t Brenine World: nt of Hancock place M. and Always eo st until abo 2 & couple of chil lin the evening month ago, wh bexan ty comy a apd disturd the y community until | {0 5 it has heorme unbearable. They are two young girls and they Ive in the wa vicinity of On, Hundred and ‘Thirty- | mecond street and Amsterdam ay , How can we get rid o COMMIRTE: Rew ding in Hancock Place. Cemmercial Law Ia Taught in| Free Night High schools, CRY: Eleectly yery Funny Quextioy. |Net Second erm—No | ‘or of The tne Works | Lindt to ¥ | Can two men be. ted for the | ny ehe pra deliborn' der of one man, both be- iny egually guilty, Sommitted in the State of “A ways they oan and B nays t. Who wins? ‘ni Has the murder being second te: ew York? dent re: to The “Third Degree.” Bryan 40; Moomeyelt 49, the ¥ator of The Dyeninx World 7p the Bultor of The Evenire. World | Aoorrempondent has eaked about the A det B Bryan is ojdor than Roose. | on Thine Who ta right? JACK, ‘Degree’ se edmin- veut. f: aX For a Woman, With a Thousand Chances to One That She Loses.”’ OS é ONE Sumer ‘Sm BOAT .90 -00 See | women, too,"* “That's straight." agreed Bridget. others or they'll ‘fo you.’ him his money's worth of fight." The Poverty-Stricken Rich. THE U.00 ARE UP AGAINST IT FOR READY CASH (News ITen) STE pre mmc By. Gertrude Barnum. E were talking about « neighboring woman whose W husband beat her, and the question arose: “Should you leave your husband if he deat you?” * With two exceptions the girls all agreed that they would. The two excéptions-ware my friend Edne and a large Irish girl named Bridget. “What are you giving us? cried a chorus of yoices: “You would be the quickest to leave!” Rest “Not me,” inatsted Bridget. “If my husband ever Jald mn me, I'd not leave him; I'd leave his corpse.” all laughed, except Edna, who said gravely: no joke, this man question; {t's got the woman question deat, all hollow. I'm with Bridget one way. If my husband deat me, I wouldn't leave him till I got dam- ages. What would he care if I left him? He'd just get another wife and beat her. It isn’t right for us only to save our own skins; we've got to think of the rest of the han "The Golden Role for us girlo is: “Do That's why I say if my husband beats me, I'll give HoT. CHESNUTS ON FIFTH Avenue WHAT WE MAY SEE “Well, Edna protested, ‘we'd bveiter go slow on fighting.” | “What's troubling you?’ some one asked, mischievousiy, | You think you've got the prize steady. don't you? | ‘Dhat* mild Edna, blushing, “that may settle one young m: jaettle the man question, I ain't the Kind Gial tuinks a KuaWing wame Ly a |game just because I win. As far as I can see, the way men are running | world, {t's just a gambling gamexfor a woman, with a thonsand chances to o: ‘that she loses. “Look at the marriage question, for Instance. There’x all the bachelors ‘that never think of marrying—they forco thousands of women to by old maids, or worse, and lapgh at them, Look at the men who ‘Will consent to marry If urged. Do thelr charms always seem dazzling? Anyway, they set tholr lown terms, and yet the woren run after thein till it's a disgrace to the sx “You're all fixed. | ‘"rhen take women's work.- What we do at home Isn't noticed unices we dy |lt wrong or stop doing ft altogether. If we work outside we don't get equal pay ‘for equal work, and the men get the pick of the Jote. Then you've got {o flatter jer flirt with tho foreman or floorman or he'll give your job to some girl that w at ARE we going to do about It?’ some one asked. hopelossty. |justice from him. We can stick up for each other better, for another thing, I deliove. If we'd all Ifhe up together and use our wits and cur still, arvall volces to get what's right, even the other sex would help us settle ‘the man question,’ ”? By Maurice Ketten. | lather objection Iie {ayers senaible SHe's THE ONLY ONE WHO Toruee HER HER CARRIAGE — BUT HUSBAND HAD TOBE RE, COACHMAN ANDSTHE HORSES} EAT ONLY ONCE AWE ER For Further Adventures of ‘‘Ghe:- Newlyweds, Gheir Baby .’’ See Sunday World, Comic Section. “The Way Men Are Running the World It’s Just a Gambling Game , but tt won't | : bod for married men, they most all treat their families like a nen and chickens. a happy mother is far preferable to that of the business woman, The hoine “We can stop being quitters, for one thing. and never Icave a man till we get | | T } i | THE HOUSEKEEPING GIRL. I the girl of the present age so engrossed In the purault of knowledge that she forgets to perfect herself in the homiely art of housekeeping? If the modern girl would devote one-hal:the time she spends In becoming an expert stenographer to learning how to- boil an egg pr bake a bis- cult she would In all probability lead a much happler Iife, for to me the fate of should still be woman's true sphere, though the average girl of this age prefers to be independent and self-supporting, After all, aren't the Joys of a happy home life worth all the sordid success of a commercial career? Of course, there |s mucn to be sald in favor of atgirl< pursuing some business, but present day femininity has almost( lost track of tts true vocation’ In the attempt to be man’s equal In the business world. gies The average matried woman ix much more content with Ilfe than" her tnde- pendent, self-supporting alster. And {f more girls would spend a greater amount of time in learning the art of keeping house there would, perhaps, be less walle trom disappointed ofd malds. 4 His Lobe Grows. Cold. Dear Betty: HAVE been going with e young man two years my senlor for the Jast two years. For six 'months past he has Acted differently toward ma has. called loas and has gone out with other girls, Do you think he still cares for me and do you think I am too old for him, A. B, The young man seems to haye lost interest In you. Don't appear too eager to please him and ‘accept attentions from other men, You are not too old for him. Is She Too Old? Dear Betty: AM deoply in love with a young man of twent oO, mix years y juntor, He has proven in many ways that he loves me alncerely, and says that age t. but he-ts my cousin, an- —— 1 : would be a happy one, taking every thing Into consideration? MARTHA, Happiness in marriage In a matter og temperament rafher than age, and you seem to be the eort of xirl who would be wise enough to. make a mood wife. }If both of you are healthy and: unitke each other physically, the relationship is not too xreat an nbjection, She Is-too Young. Dear Betty: a AM twenty and amin love with a, | wirl of sixteen, Do you think phe be too yours? Pans Yes. Be {lends with her pnt don't spoil your friendship by making love to one so-young., . . Girl. Objects to Football, Dear Betty: in AM playing football, but my levy friend objects, Shall I glye up the honor of my sohool or the « aanenon ee ersehesen oJPry-te-conrince-her thet your etrengt! and maniiness Ja developed by this aport and-perhapa-ahe.ywill. seeit in anethag light. ‘ and has a brillignt future, and I love him “teo-mtch” to hinder htarin~any- way, and even if I did make up my Mind would’ not-merry-ttm for-atteaatt two years. Do you think such @ union May Manton’s Daily Fashions. | © ‘Mght blue elder fMannelettes and the Wke also are attract- Ive. For the little chit- dren rose color, ght blue and bright: red are favorites, The robo 1s made with fronts ‘and back, The back ts lata In a box plait at the centre, and there is « wide collar that fip- nishea the neok. ‘The quantity of ma- terial required fdr tne medium elze (6 years) {9 36-8 yards 27, 25-8 yards 36, or 23-8 yards } tern No, GNU2 In cut in sizes for chil- dren of 2, 4, 6 and 4 ING WORLD MAY, MAM. TON FASHION BUREAU. Ni Twenty-third street. Mew. York. Sep ten’ cents in coin of stamps for each pattern orderat, AMPOKTANT—Write your name and address plalaly, amt a>} How to optain eyenn