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World Daily Magazine, Thursday; January 2; 1908. The Second Day By Maurice Ketten. PECSE GL POE GED E SE SEHEPLPHGSD * > The Story of the Operas § 3) ® » By Albert Payson Terhune. | | | @Padlishea Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 58 to 63 | ® Park Row, New ¥: | 3. ANG! “New York as Second- Not mer yes Entered at the Pi ‘ee i B® p-we-Bubscription Rates te Canada, For 4 the Cone . NO, 11-CHARPENTIER'’S “‘I,OUISE."? Evening World for the tnent an § Suygore PReTey mall eseeine pets UnitedStates. | One year.sssecsesceseee 8675] |? BS OFF. YESTERDAY, ‘ one year 60, One month, a= ring day. She had just com wie +NO. 16,088, the sewing room where she 4 — KEEP AN EXPENSE ACCOUNT. TART the new year by keeping an expense account. How many people know for what they spent the money they received last year? Keeping track of an income is comparatively easy. Whether salary or wages, the amount does not vary greatly and by deduct-) ing the unpaid days or weeks and | appeared at the on a balcony fust man appeared. He a poor poet, who adored uutse had met by chance d found chance to speak to each other alone. For, in rance, parants do not allow thelr to form chance acquatnt- 9 ar to converse with men except in {the presenos of a chaperon, Yet the i nainder the| THANKS, TS ANY THIN ie ; j matpying by the remade the aaa REL ANE Se eee a eel ana Oe | total receipts ly kep' THAT WHISKEY 3 EVER SMoned ‘Wad written to Loulso's father, formally requesting permtssion to marry her- | ie track of. AS SMOOTH girs mother (with all the French workingwoman's native hatrod | f trust ists, fofans, writers and oth ¢ th : But the expenditures are different. AS On one Sine) ma ace saairetioceal Ae Od ponies be a philesophical husband to indores the refusal taking advantage | How many men can account for two-thirds of the money they | | th {_ spend? t They know what they received and they know how much they have} { left in the way of a bank balance or savings or In any other form. But} + ‘what became of the rest? A Rent, for one item, can be offhand figured out. An approximate | = guess can be made at the butcher’s and grocer’s bills by taking their last | Anonthly amount and multiplying by twelve. As for clothing, the main} j items may be recalled, but how about the many little items, the small purchases of handkerchiefs, socks, neckties, gloves, and so on? Under these three heads—shelter, food and clothing—fall the prin- cipal expenditures, but there will be a wide gulf in most cases between : their totals and the total of the money received. ae .On the incidentals the financial stability of the household depends. rshly on the match. Stions and flounced rworld’ rubbeu » Sg doa group of } the sewing room where Louise escorts her here,” the lover was exp 1 entreat Loutse ‘Aa of encourager oman has gone T st vnghter amd Joking wi his flancee’s arriv On them more than on the necessary expenses of living does the amount TAKE A. of savings depend. | SAE ARS. The Budget Committee of the French Chamber of Deputies has! Te Y been compiling the cost of living in all parts of the world in order to fix s the salaries of the French consuls. Jt finds that $2,830 In Belgtum or Switzerland will enable a family to live as well as $3,400 in France or Germany, $4,000 in London or $5,666 in New York. That is, for half the money a family can live as well at Brussels or Lucerne as in New Work City. agitate nL LS He would’ not obey, is and ends of clo g to her fect, she rai tle home he prow assed ‘at thet cal @ sight of his daughter could onve|bis life, geoot eee = a ee E ra to her ola hom 8, promletna j Did You Ever Come Home From a New Year's Party at Dawn ah hemes ra the ‘ 2 and Manage to Keep Your Temper? The Jarrs Tried It. ,. Te ae ea ean thee th git found to er 8 \ a crusty that was me faoner in their garret. At Inst one night she om ed her mother once 1 of the pro! bed. As sie passed her father he ned Mr. Jari ave ‘em be!” wa By Roy. L. McCardell, Ws Mr. and Mrs, Jarr returned home from the New With wage earners the difference is as marked. Derrick’s British Report quotes from The Wage Earners’ Budget that the average working. | prs “man in New York earning $851 a year has a surplus over necessitles of ~~ only $15.13, while in London a man earning the same amount could live bewty as well and have a surplus of $240. The greatest difference is in food, “; . over $100 a year, and the highest percentages of difference are in cloth-| “ing, light, fuel and insurance. | ae Food fs higher in New York than London because the middleman! makes more profits in New York and the people are not such close buy-| °' “ers. Small insurance policies are a ‘higher in New York. Kerosene «i; costs more here than in London. 7°" So do gas and stove coal. re A diary big enough to write o, down all the family expenses In can «+, be bought for 50 cents. If every "family with a moderate income would keep a family expense dlary «Mm which everybody every day would want me to com Much you care wha night for all you'd nd ordered sing her one of the lullabies with w sho broke angrily away from red at her, and her father tried, Year's party at the Rangle flat {t was a Oh, dear, why do you always forget said Mrs. Jarr peevishly, for she wes tired aft etles of the evening. ‘Whatcha always take muh key from me then? Mr. Jarr plaintively, for in him the good cheer was all ing down and he felt somewhat a# ene who treads alone in a banquet hall deserted. “You know I had to give tt to the girl, who was going e last night!” said Mrs, Jarr, “'You lose all the know De | pened look after them, the sick old man, in an e@cenrs of senite appen," sata Mr. Jarr . | iyeittta ordered her ont of the honer r fiercely. Mrs, Jarr smiled y beds, shook t awakening t up The child Paris calling to Its devotees. And Loy el] @he hurried ont into the ni she p nied in the ght and her ann in frantic re to the door and shouted her nar some back to him. ver followed hie angulshed cry Louten was gone—forever. riing?” asked Mrs. Jarr. ‘Why, her forehead ts rea! * i y > be sicit* The atory of “Fra Diavolo” will be published Sa Wd louder than r. "Dimme eome tandy!" she) = Beemer rerio eee | att dear," eald Mrs. Jarr. ‘That's what's the matter Colleges of Eating. E le girl. Mr. Jarr appeared at By Christian Juergensen. When a man marties—oh, w ind!” said Mr. “TD goess the girl will wake up when we ring and “Yes, she will!" salq Mrs. Jarr sarcastically. “Did you ever hear of one doing !t? And yet when THEY ring at hour and you don't to let them in right away they are mighty sniffy!”’ © we will have to camp out on the wie) ai night?’ said Mr. come to the ds “Well, I sup Jarr. “No.” 8 Now I all the thi “T wor the bed ness going “Bo It will k ‘Pape will g candy to-morrow." HIILE one can point to any number of cooking schools | ap and, fndinj and his parents we have until recently had no much thing as domest commenced to dig his tnto hi sand kick out lustily, (Me we c selene imed Mrs, Ja You've woke up Willle Just when I was! has favored us with his name by making valuable inve ma quiet! I go out with you to a party, and all you do 4s to) (oy teputions in that field, Thanks to his researches we have now the begin t man Rangle! Then you come home and wake up the children! | errr oe gaod, or titrology, as It t# technically called. put them to sleep again! I'm going to bed!" And Mrs, Jarr etalkea ess by preserving our health we must, therefor Jarr, fumbling around. ‘Here's the key under the mat. was real thoughtful of Delia! W sha shoyld he nice after — 1 got her for Christmas, going with: nings I needed myseiti” | 4° 4 the children are," said Mra. Jarr anxiously as they entered] part: eo Emma hae been hearse all day and there ia 60 much sick- > words the I! | of w science To incraaze our happin cone {! on going round I'll be setisfied,” growled Mr. Jarr. a 7 n aon aes. ca ; bern taree raraoeetin aa e eas Uns eines : : soot ettor:a along this Ine, We must continue paying more ai ta » put down his and her expenses the rH | nid (ries: and meh H the ehilaren did gett” sala sre, Tare muttered Mr. Jart, “TT thought t was mother love, and it was UBER OME MUN AMT sory and in practics, ‘The first atep tn that direct ”. information thus acquired would #f | REE eae Since 2 Menuses sets Up USC 30 ness acagyeinera allen! | the actene’piianinent of institutions whera this actence could be leveloped eam tia rer hem. his/allkc bat, his watoh, hia fountain pen at establish institutes) for the study of dletetica, with laboraterien) for) prace: “Look how 1 imed, “and the bandage and all the m ound Mttle Emma's throat has come off, and there them to sleep. ned, and promising them all the candy in the world, he got, ing of cooking. At the head of such an tnatitute must be @& tical use In the teach with cai hystenic and dietotic orate authority from the medical field, Phystolans should be conduce to economy and thrift. nts in such an tnatitution, in order to attain not rs of Everybody should get more food, more comfort and more whole- foremost among the stude 16 roe! some enjoyment in New York than in any other city on the face of the * 66 G fe) 99 ; ~ a A owledge of dletotl lan ‘ i; rely, foal but also practical kn lodge of Ailetetics, MM earth. Uc beaetcueki tty Male f 3 | l 908 U h S M CG p d yimanely &2 ners ont y people are fed should by all me RR MO MRM RRA (ate | Shers in “‘Miss Cupid.” By P. G. Lomg. rin anti noe Pan Stra aint Dh ete a | t 7 1 | jutre vetend much an Oa ae f hospitals and homes for Invallds.—From the Chicaga = 7 = gnrd to the attendants o! Nae EG TvE GOT) N) | regnrd to the a y You Ar Last! | ‘Tribune. Seas asd | The Police's “Third Degree.” Letters from the People. Berry The Park Laborers, jlesser Mght, of warfare, of bloodshed él S i : Ie Po the Biitor of The | of darkness, of sin, of “every man { é aces y By Charles P, vobnscns oe ae We park jimself and the devil for his o: = sphird Cegrec’’ Is a species of torture, nore is no erence L | on the legs and torturing his mind, unless the, | tween beating a man ver in the worse, Torture ts unreliable, saya Charles P. Johneon, ther celebrated St. Louls attorney. F he Seanniion provider that a man shall not be made to testify ¢ Under the present Knglah rystem, (ho moment o ian fe ar Mnrned. “You don't nem) to tall, and if you do say anything It will sd against you.” ‘The English ayatem ts sotentific, Here the police suspect work up a cage againat him; in England, the caso iw: e ar that the world will ¢ Tthink ti laborers wie have wee~do readers say? wo Distan: » the Eijtor of ninss WW bo a man and then try to | workest up first The English sy: / You never rend of a lene Ureumatances must potnt CHAR som ta pretty woll reveatod through @herlook Holmes, “third degree" in the Conan Doyle novels, In Englan@ induvitably to @ man's @ullt before he is asked’, A “Square” Query, fy tHe BACHELOR las n Francisco, By Stewart Edward White. AST summer the administrative and protective force of the forost# d numbered 1,200. Thig meana that each field man has charge, on the — average, of 206 nquare miles of mountainous wilderness—that ts to say, an area greater than nine Manhattan Islands, writes Stewart [sdward White In the January American Magazine, Ho has to patrol hia dis- _ | tric build his tratis and keep them in order, polis his territory, Issue his |pernvits, attend to the business Interests and fight hie fires, not to speak of DINE Nem works City :tou Lor Lac iy ee Ue Se, als Glan a question. Here If only the finger of eusploion points tdwant him, we have From New York to San Franetsce, | 5 ch contains an area AW. I HAVE ; TIME » the third degree.” + 620 miles. F n New York to Lon: equ to one acre. while the other AWAITED THEE Noun Universaily Observed. ab (42 lo J. M. 2 « | Longest Patrol in the World. $217 t ened and believed by s« # othe wor } | cooking for himself, attending to his animals and living @ man must live in } ferred t the wilderness, An incidental and miner objection of the rapacious ones Is that . view tn sp bu the Forest Service is an asylum for ‘dudes and foungers.”” I should like to take € $ the me Jone of these gentlemen on a single day's round behind one, any one, of our pj de predicted the k CUPID PUTS ON | Forest Rangers, I should ike to hear his opinion of just what mind of a enap +f wher 1 “Work walle tt is ; sralicithia) mornings in a i A FEMININE. , CHANCE it 19 to take care of 205 square miles, It ts interesting to reflect that for tyio areq ¥ for the night Gometh.” ‘That light has Patiites eawnolceninen tethia® , DISGUISE FOR ‘OF. | of 206 square miles Prussta maintains @ force of one hundred anf twenty men— | { @eDe eur and Weare living under 4 P. SMITH and GITTLNS. THERE LL BE WEDDING BELLS FOR HITT CLIUETS — wR | | ona finds it pays. fe sar seicet ects | \ © 4 F) \ il i a asl ;