The evening world. Newspaper, July 8, 1908, Page 12

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Published Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos, 53 te a Park Row, New York fy doanrit PULITZER, Pres, 1 Raat TH Strong J. ANGUS SHLAW, Bee, Tresa,, 901 West 11th 8! Entered at tha Post-Office ‘at ‘New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. t ontinent and weription Rates to ‘The Evening | For England and the Continent ee Wore tor tie United States ‘All Countries tn the International and Canada, Postal Union, One Year....... One Month... VOLUME 40, . ITH hundreds of prostrations and scores of d sulting from the excessive heat, it behooves everybody: to be careful and to take thought how he may con-| serve his energy and preserve his health. | There is no use of fighting against the weather. | When it is hot, it is hot, and no amount of discussion | or protest can alter the temperature one degree. Not) even the United States Bureau can do that, and it is in) the weather business, | Off and on every summer New York City is as| hot as the tropics. During that period people should | live as they have learned to live in the tropics—ac- commodate themselves to the weather rather than try! to go on in defiance of the temperature, At Panama, India, Africa, Lower Asia and all of | Northern South America there is more hot weather than in New York, and yet white men who take care of | themselves live there comfortably and sometimes lux- uriously. Only in these tropical countries everybody adjusts himself | to tropical conditions. He does not wear dark clothes, which draw the | heat. He keeps starch out of the MT | garments which come next his skin. if ii He gets up at sunrise, tries to do as much work as he can before noon, stops working until late in the afternoon, takes at least one bath a day and usually two, avoids a heavy diet and drinks with a high Percentage of alcohol, and manages to go through the summer with- out prostiation from over-heat or weakening his system from sun exposure and improper diet, There are more sunstrokes in New York than in Florida and | more in Philadelphia than in New Orleans, There is more sick- | ness from heat in the Temperate Zone than in the, Torrid Zone. | Many people do not make the radical changes in their diet which summer demands, They continue to eat meat, and hot meat at that, roasts and steaks, | They eat hot breads and rolls w ith plenty of butter. | They drink highly sweetened coffee, lemonade so satu- rated with sugar as to make a sweet sediment in the glass, cocktails, heavy beers, and they wear as many layers of cloth between their skin and the air as if it were a cool fall day. i Lo} ~3=—S Women have much more sense than men in the) way they dress in the summer. Note how much cooler women appear than men and how much less they suffer from 4 the heat, i In hot weather starch, hy fli, sweets and hot meats The oil with the salad fur- Fruits are miklly acid, which Lemonade is better made Berries and fruit he tree are chould be rarely eaten. nishes plenty of fat. is what the system needs. weak and with almost no sugar. eaten as they come from the bush and t better than covered with sugar and cream. Water, buttermilk and diluted pure fruit juices are the best bev- erages. The best way to drink is to sip slowly and not gulp. Have water cool, but a ng hot weather and keep cool and look respectable at tha “Yes, when the wea gets covler.” suid Mrs. Jarr, “and when I get some i i i i not ice cold, Buttermilk is good. For adults it is same time,” sald Mra, Jarr. ‘But don't talk to me about money to buy the things ‘ | at a better drink than sweet milk because of its mild the country. The last time I was in the country was “Last week, when It was cooler, you sald there was no tise leaving town, as DY drink than sweet milk beciuse of | Eald All I remember about it was files, glaring mn Whites it pleasant i> the city,” sald Mr, Jarr, 4 acidity and the absence of butter fats usty road that went nowhere, a plg under the porch that d rathes stay in the town if It nes et "sald Mre Jar’ aan 5 i VOULD ¥ mn out G r ni pathy siatte of Ch ng now it is too hot to pack and too hot to trave ) i A shower or sponge bath is often more cooling |v eon « wite putting up preservea, poor goull”™ en Of arse FUitgi UPR EN A, A OG ren Ny than a swim or a tub, The bather should not rub himself down vigorously. This is the contrary the winter rule. If he puts his clothes on is still damp the evaporation will have a cooling ~ Letters from U the People. St Swithin's Day fs duly 15, and. G gles ts grea , ‘ e the 5 } ty dat the ‘ gurated H St. Swithia's D AYMAN fe an old The BOW. 1. Agatn on that ca sin for the 7, . <W S suore! Blower Ridgen Ha y Line T ss \ and W i » K i as f : Bridge? 7 ¢ ‘] 10 ROR z i A Purchnsers Woes W possible for passeng } : TeaN | sa : th hould x Lawyer-statesmes INSTANT 8 ANG To the Hilltor of The F \ The Many Sided Man " I pelteve. | who son @ Prine Miniecer RR) a EE HOT WEATHER ADVICE, eaths re- | tojunder the Some Best Bets. By Maurice Ketten. The Evening Worid Daily Magazine, Wednesday, july 8, staat BRYAN \ WILL BE NOMINATED THAT HE WILL DICTATE THE PLATFORM BEARY WILL NORTH POLE THaT r TAMMANY WILL CONTRO THAT Gov, HUGHES DOESN'T USE A SAFETY RAZOR S) D) ASD LY vt AR THATAPAT Witt RECOVER i Me (ONG) Sa Spy LY ON ty “ay, £ SAR sy 147 SN) 3 Te AND JHAT 2a = SS BRYAN WILL NoT SLEEP_IN THAT TEDDY WILL MAKE A HIT WITH AFRICA SHE Waite House Apt © How to Dress and What to Do in Hot Weather Are Hard to Know; But It’s Always Cool and Breezy i in a Taxicab, Says Mrs. Jarr. By Roy L. McCardeil, Yes, and I showed you the « * whimpered Mrs. Jarr yuNtTy as @ Woman Seg tle “you showed me tie ¢ A man sees it, things for the children,” said Mrs, Jarr, "Do leave ing minute without eny preparation hittren, some barefoot sandals for them, a co wear with shirt watsts, for myself, and a lot of other asked Mr, In this weather?” replied the good lady dressing up and going downtown shopping in w “Now, for goodness sake, don’t sit around that way.” said Mra, Jarr, ‘I despise a man who permits a little warm weather to be his excuse to violate all the little ra- finements of life!" "Oh, you go powder your nose!” eald Mr You sit here by the window all day then start adgeting a man who's been toilee all day in an office like u bake oven!” “Well, I suppose it is hard to know Jarre, test!ly. “Why don’t you get them, then? Sarr. indeed, you wont o like this! “When will you go, when the weather gets co asked Mr. Jarr ow to dress dure she added. “‘I'm sure it will be cool sald Mr, Jar. “the first day it is cooler Clara Mudri She's got a book for fit oy to-morrow!” breeze! "Then you'll go sh ast I have better recollections,” mid Mr. Jarr. ‘Cool ech bank, a amell of mint and new m ne over the fleld, and lying on the cool grass in the shade ne's eyes, half asleep and half awake’ ‘said Mrs, Jarr, ‘you are the most exasperating man, to come at ooks shade of trees on the wn “T will not!” sald M [are going riding in a t.xicab we want to use up before we go away tckets gor where any and {ke that when I'm y swelrering,’ “Suppose It Isn't cooler?” sald Mr, Jarr. effect. me a picture of rural life and I showed you another,” eaid “Well, we're going anyhow,” said Mrs, Jarr, “It's always cool in a taxt- Above all, be cheerful and don't worry, There) Mr ‘ mb are a hundred of other things to k Bal - — t about besides the weather, and Heal hi the thermometer on a hot day never made anyb On the iieat Hig way. & J & B J. K. Bryans. cooler, 7 - WRARY-Y. me : i: go! ear dat house again. Why, de] WAGGLES-—Gee' T wonder why dat dorg bit me $1 eon water, alcked de darg on me threatened ter HIS PRIEND—Oh, well, dere’s no acountin’ fer tastes. you know! HIS FRIEN r mind, \ min tle things ike dat. You're entirely (oo sensitive fer dis business) \ W GGrPHIS Is the tme of year the folks in the country “1S ai s I have the best of us,” seid Mr, Jarr, as he took Well, way don't we go?” asked Mr. Jarr. “I can get away any tine ne oft ble collar and unbuttoned tha neck of his for two weeks shirt. “LT simply can’t go till I get @ chance to gu down tov uy some summer ip and ite me 1908, _ DOODODOGDHOOODHOHHOGHHHDOHOOOSHOOHSDOTOOH! Fifty | Great Love Stories of History By Albert Payson Terhune ” COOTE No. 6—THEODORA AND JUSTINIAN. HE Roman capital of Constantinople in 525 A. D, was aghast at the news A that the Consui, Justinian (nephew and heir to the Emperor Justin Lp was to marry Theodora, the farce-comedy actress whose clever per: T formances at the “Circus had for years set the city in a roar of laughter. For an Emperor's heir to make an actress his wife was not only sean- * |dalous, but illegal as well, People began to inqutre Into Theodora’s past life, |! Many of the facts they dug up were of too unsavory a nature to bear repett- | [tion But they learned also that she was one of the three daughters of a | brutal fellow who had been keeper of the wild bears in the menagerie under jthe Circus building. When Theodora was only seven her father had died. ‘The child was an Impish, gay little creature with a genius for mimiery.. So ‘she had been put on the stage. She could not sing or dance, but she was @ born comedian, She grew to womanhood, small, thin and pale. Scarcely | the sort of girl to attract the attention of the Emperor's nephew. Rome, since the days of Nero, had grown so great In size and wealth thet {t had at last split In two because of its own unwieldy bulk, and was divided into the Eastern and Western Empires. The Western Empire (with the city | of Rome as |ts capital) was soon overrun by barbartan tribes, But the East- lave ern Empire flourished for many centuries. sues L, Jacian peasant, had ght his way up The Avttora Whol Pathe to (he commen oF ce areye TheG Aa ad Became Empress.) made him elf Emperor and had proclaimed Justinian soem his heir. Justinian was a wise man, but lacking Ip firmness, The sort of man that a clever woman could manage to suit here self. Theodora won his love and pointed out to him a plan by which they two might become peror and Empres. His uncle's wife, the Empress y forbade the match. But this did not long stand in Theo~ For Euphemia died rather suddenly, Justin was old and ag Justinian's influence as the latter was under Theodora’s, Justin was persuaded to set aside the law yan actress. Theodc d Justinian, thus, were married in 525, when the girl was only se ren. Two years later Justin odora made her husband, Emperor, crown her as Eme Luphemia, stern] dora’s way. rest was plain sail Za prince to ma s. Then she proceeded to do the lion’s share of the ruling, interfering > i having her way in nearly all state affairs. The ci d world was thug " tor a time swayed by a ess's whims. Nor was 8 bad an Empress s her early Ife would frame the celebr make bis reign She attracted some notoriety by whose hu bands soug have seemed to fo timian Code" ‘ast. She aided her husband to Ws and in many ways helped . lec] herself the champ divorcee them, and she started be n of wives s a sort of royal “marriage burea Matchmaking was her fad. And certainly no one could have set a brighter example from her own success along that Mne, Justinian's love for her did not cool as the years went by. And she probably had ma fairly good wife. revolutionists seized Constantinople and clamored at the an way wild with fear and decided to creep to the sea- 1 it. Then it was that Theodore Once whe Ju balace git threw away the diplomatic tactics by which she had won and managed her hn nd. For once er he let him feel the lash of her scorn, and e er speech in the language of the stage instead of that of the stately cour e bade him fly if he chose to, but told him that death was nobler for a monarch than exile Ree ee Ty Quarrel of the Royal Lovers. and vowed that she would not stir from her throne, preferring, as he said, to “make empire her winding sheet.” Justinian, stung Into courage, stuck to his and thereby saved his crown. Once only he is to have taunted her in anger with her humble parentage. She is reported to have answered that her father was quite as well born as her hushand’s grandferhor. who been a b d to remind Theodora of her past. She had a way of s who broucht up the subject. For twenty-three years most of the ctv zed world. Then, at Theodora died e generally accepted story of her fata nm to cancer, But some authorities hint that she tried band once too often and without her earlier rage, had her beheaded ath persc Missing nombere Pientton to Cirealation Department, of one-cent stamp. of thin series will be eunplited apan Brentng World, np apaw receipt a Reflections a. a Bachelor Girl Fy Helen Rowland, MAN'S {dea of belng perf er without indulging in to that e A wife's indignation at the women with hee and often tempered by her pity astonishment hey should be so hard up as to waste time on @ man im. people and honest with who flirt is ie average husband has an {dea that economy should at home—and end at corner cafe. about being unhappily married |e not it the golden chance it gives all your r saying “I told you so.” The worst parties and summer girls can make a is to get wife back home agath cream would make him for a square meal of ad to exchange places with her cook on that lady's evenings off, Dry Milk Is the New Food. By A. C, Robinson. _ of dry milk 1s simply to remove the signty-seven g) HE fundamental | per cent. of water ft contains. The process by which this is accom- Used ix very shuple. ‘The milk as soon as possible atter it comes from the cow—In most cases an hour or two—is passed without pre- ry teatmi physical or chemteal, except straining, over rollers in a thin sheet. The rollers are heated to a temperature of 240 Far, milk remains on them only about two ‘and one-naif It comes off the rollers a dry powder containing lesx moisture thes nly five or six per It is than packed In boxes or barrels and can shipped far or near as required. [ts chemical composition nas been unr anged and it will now ep until the re-addition of water, 1, myeelf, nave drunk milk more than two years old, In the first place all germs are killed by the temperature of 240 degrees to which the milk is subjected. Tha milk {tself does not suffer any chemieal vange, as in the case of sterilization, on account of ¢he short space ot time |1t ts subjected to th At—only two and one-half seconds instead of twenty or thirty minutes. omdly, bacteria develop only in the presence of moisture. It has been ascertained that thera must be fifteen per cent. moisture for gne | propagation of germs. Now, as dry milk contains oniy six per cent, molar any germs which may subsequently get into the powder cannot develop; nenée milk keeps indefinitely or until water is again added. We have, therefite, milk a food eight times as nutritious as milk In proportionate its weight, and which is aosolutely free from bact and will ronaln some The Outing Magazine. | ese Net ialeria eave | How To Tell If You Are Crazy. (Acccording to Alienists.) you wiser and lovelie: delusions ad A sweetheart and the the | n dry ordinary F your sweetheart the If you never f unsound mind. devoted to your wife to the exclusion of all else, ve seems to than any other girl, you vietim of you are o you are Du have dementia uxoriosa If you, after a day's work, doze while your wife reads Browning aloud, vou are one-sided and abnormal, possessing only ability to have one interest If you join In the welcome evation to the Browns to-day, sot have neiplent parosis If yo dave confidence in the brightness of yo itire, you lave an exaggerated eg If you are skeptical as to your ever becoming P ou suffer from me Ol: f you are of any higher order of being than an animalenle, you are insane, ee ae

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