The evening world. Newspaper, July 10, 1908, Page 10

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Dai-y Magazine, Friday July (10, 1908. The Evening World D: ) A Quarter Ton of Candidates, Published Daily Mxcept Sunday by the Press Publishing Cempany, Nos, 38 to @ By Maurice Ketten. k Row, New York J, ANGUS BHAYW, fee. -Treas,, 401 West 119th Street, $34 Street, Journ rLiITZRH, ns Entered at the Post-Office at New York a Second-Class Mall Matter, The E For England and the Continent and 1 Sta All Countries in tha International ostal Unto Bubscription Rates to ° ening World for the Unit and Canada HELLO, | One One Year Month... EVERY BOY CANNOT BE PRESIDENT. SPEECH by Andrew §, Draper, State Commissioner of Education, should be carefully read. He criti- cised public school system of this city, saying: the nal system trains professional and the Our present educ for cultu managing vocations of the industrial In foreign countries boys expect to follow their fathers and are expected to stay in the class where they begin. Here all are encouraged to move out of their class and to do a more intellectual kind In other words, our educational system, acting ischief. It often en- purely to usil jon ¢ of work thar their fathers did. upon our national temperaments, often leads children inte courages them to undertake things for which they are not fi I think we make a mistake in telling the child that he can be Pres‘dent of the United States. Local educators are loud in their protests agains: Commissioner Dra- per's argument. As one of them says: Here in Rivington street young America is ifferent!y educsted and sometimes taunt their pare hich is wrong, but 1 would not keep them fr By all mean tell every boy he may be President and every girl that she may rise to the high honor of being the first lady of the land They are ntage s with progress even because of that y in five million AS a question of mathemaiical fact, not > a President's wife? can be President. Not one girl in a million Not more than one boy in five can earn a as well as his head. The average bricklayer makes more net money, has more sul’stan- tial food, and is happier than the average | ter has ten more years of self-support tha bank clerks make less than motormen If every boy refused to follow father worked with his hands, Who would farm? Who would put up bui Who would make clot Who would shovel coal i fire box; who would sit at throttle of the locomotive? The great error of of Dr. Draper is tion that some t labor are i | dren sh them and employment where they can keep their finger nails manicured and wear stare ands ng his awyer The average carpen- Many the average doctor, his father’s oc Idings? their their nob ed linen collars ary noblest employments are those which do the most neseseryl ee Way of the Respectable Citizen Is Sometimes Hard! work, and the employments which rank 2 those of parasites, 1 W:tness Mr. Jarr’s Sad Erforts to Have a Pieasant Evenin The community would be much be here were no lawyers | r $ no ope : \ s tw J scarring Ey Roy L. intcCarded Great Love Stories of History By Albert Payson Terhune NO. 7~ARTHUR AND GUINEVER : (3 HE was the finest woman in the universe. Her stature was nob ang § S elegant, her complexion fair and her eyes the fairest blue of the | heavens.” | Thus one chronicler describes the Princess Guinevere, daughter of the old | Celtic King, Leodegraunce. Much of her story and Arthur's is so shrouded in legend that the actual facts are hard to determine, Here is the tale as ft Js generally accepted: Arthur, a Celtie Prince, was spirited away in childhood by loyal servsae- ‘to save him from assassination, When he reached manhood he was ma known to the people and (about 500 A. D.) became King of part of Briain, He found the country In terrible condition. Poverty stalked aksoad. The wilderness had swallowed up most of the farmland; robbers sad cruel barons oppressed the poor, Arthur set out to remedy all th®, To ald him in the task he gathered about hiv a band of nobles known as the “Knights of Us; Round Table,” who were sworn to redress wrongs, help the needy, protect women and leaé apright Ives. So well did Arthur govern and eaatly did his Knights aid him that soon the kingdom was prosperous and @afe. | The bravest of the Knigh$: of the Round Table w Lake. | | Deed The Knights of the Round Table yee s Sir Lancelot of the Arthur and Lanrekx were as brothers {n their affection one ane other. The King saw sad fell In love with the beautiful Gulney Being detained at home %y affairs of state, he did not go to her father’s court to woo her in pereem, but chose Lancelot a; his messenger Now, Lageelot set forth for the castle of King Leodegraunce with every {dea of falfilling his royal master's commands. But at first ight of Guine- vere’s loveliness he wholly lost his head. From that moment le blindly jored her. Honor, loyalty, his knightly vows—all were swept away in that ce bring h elf to plead Arthur's suit mighty tlde of love. He could instead of his own. Guinevere, on her part, mistook the handsome stranger at first for Arthur and rejoiced at the thought that she was to become his But the welfare of the rown wishes, Guinevere e at Camelot and there e. Learning the truth, she was tneonsolable. kingdom compelled the two lovers to set aside ly accompanied Lancelot back to Arthur's INsuspec ynarch and Tan t could on each other, Lancelot absented r lone vals fron n order to d vere from 6 Queen sought ely at Arthur's side. But, at concealed lov celot were breathed abrcgd. of the Round Table gos of it. Since th est of their could so far forget his loy as to dare | the Queen, began le by little to lose the exalted id that had made the ible a menace to evil doers \rthur himself dof the affair. He was horrified; for oyalty could ne at his wife and his dearest An wen friend cou secret from him. cdom Wi at Lancelot with nd Arthur's advisers RISE Ea RH iy aded on him, ‘Then it +} bya Woman. } wee that cherou nephew, eeeraeapaeanganes: saw that the’ his uncle, and norrore of warfare, e head of his Knights to England, in 520 the lai But Arthur and the re- <lestroyed He headed a revolu lunged once more { rode forth 2 land was za ivasion Arthur w near Bath victoric while Lancelot put aside holy hermit, praying asa ot oun tlon Department pp World. oor tee will be Evening apen eoetpe Misatng one yn ote Cire of one-cent stamp. ote Reflections of a Bachelor Girl. - By Helen Rowland. 8: and no occasion for them; were everybody to uws of h : : : giene and discard doc w. > all gambling stock brokers g ce R tag eee The man who digs a hole in the ground for a sewer « ° 8 asure ben he can does indispensable work. The man who swings on a bridge A ‘ ‘i ; vided re M aiete vates society and promotes economic progress. Without tl - Me g UD al nace eautiful and a y follows the plow the so-called “cultural class” would stary " ; M tie shel! ke a me j a s mess! Look Bal ee ‘ A Mrs. Jar It takes ap fr, Rang s ‘ays her ncayers ri .) Ar, J fv e Tiknow nis Ws ¢ r ; Mr And F kno 1 sf we we gan g wr’ stammered Mr, ! paseball game v Im f Mrs. Jarr. "1 suppose you! oa, the rent they were vegetarians who 1 ete Twas always run-| poise W wpa ear ga heated you at of 1 Fetes een mial Some Facts About Clouds. . mi Mr Tyourhnow vouseldll By Edwin Tarrisse. a an | HE HYDROGRAPHIC BUREAU at Washington informs ship captaine x tars.” said Mr. J A ) the cirrus cloud plumes seen rauiating from the storm are Mr J c io F win t should come ti tint, gradually fading beaind av haze, A Mr is or a lonely y 1 he 8 gn old one of large area; but if the clouds t sles Rangle follare, T'll tosa ure *, projected againat a clear blue sky, it is a does, It inci f ihe t the dining roon al vol a qiarte He tossed and wo Jarr went with+ young cycione of 8: eat : a tt ; ire: he procession of clouds that accom hurricane at sea !s sometimes of hard toil ) en ashamed $|® p it ops, and, of | ‘The way of the reaped zon is hard Ja most beautiful scene when viewed from a distance, thongh a fearful tragedy js wrong, fundam: ho derides the » ! F 9 The Gourshin sikcheimercclevidenss = — a. | may be under way beneath ies glowing canopy of sun-tinted vapors hard labor has kept in food and and the gi Love In Darktow nh. yf and Beautiful Araminta Montressor. w By 7 UU. ong. to certain juminous clouds visible at night for a long time after sunset, and at the mother nds ¢ eho! a = = ——eeeenrnenrnns in the morning for a vorresponding dime before sunrise, ‘The clouds were mere Rua: gard . (AW WNOWED Yo : : if 7 IN? a\/ = Sot, | Naso, g in parallel stripes, not less than fifty miles high ney reflected make good ¢ : rue Hy pa Loney ips \ OELY, AHS Ein ©q) YOU BETTAH coy. OE EESTI NU ) EE | f {the sunlight, and had a silvery tint, sometines bluish. Many photographs were into them. Ie aeen CUM eer ) C97 ER THK. | HIRE ERS 5< Sy) You SPOSE Wth’s /'Senp IT,)\| Ei) | made of these curtous clouds. Tuey were seen only from the end of May to pea EA, yee pi =| ake Cue LIN 08 LEC WAGGING SS ely hel Ste TA NTE ALY | Oy the beginning of August. This was In the Northern Hemisphere. In the South: |{) [UNS iW OE) = —¢ /OLLY- ‘ | } Inisphere It has been found that they appear in December and January, t ’ | “ACE WIF- ih \ CODOLE x | [ar hus apparent that for some mysterlous reason they follow the sun, and (G} 6's rom 6 cop 6. é fe C. ay thelr arringement in long ridges with cross bars suggests the play of electrle cal torces in their formation SSS ~———— ( y wore first ween tn 188 near Berlin, and, until thetr disappearance @ The 'Tratic Police g ri Fs te with i | tow vears ago, they gradually became fainter year by year Sie Ges ably for want of ion 6 No one pretends to know just what they were; but many theories wore sug- Referring r gested to account for them, It will be remambered that after (hat great volcanio Impoliteness ft 1 A td C | exylosion that blew away half of an island in the Straits of Sunda in 1883, ‘Williamsburg Bridge (New 1 k I clouds of fine dust, hurled Into the upper atmosphere, quickly enetrcled the I wis ‘ rex fs ! 8 whole earth, and produced for several succeeding years magnificent crimson nessed several d f 8 1 | | | sunsets and other beautiful atmospheric effects, It has been thought that the apparent Bng- | £9 108 | |luminous clouds may have owed their origin to the same cause. eto M Ald | ine Esening Wor | How to Know a Mad Dog. i 1, Man owes $05. He 0 | BETTAH { An-0/5 HINT Golly! AH DONE By Caspar Whitney, an W r v |GO ON HEAVY ‘AAS GOT TOL’ you SO/ | YDROPHOBIA 1s in reality so rare and go terrifying that és symp- : Uno | HIRE A | NoUGH MUSKLE Be toms and troatment ara little understood, As a matter of fact, the ree aN WAGGW. | oe ode DG | commonly accepted expression af madness in @ dog {s often mislead- and Country Hot Weather Clothes, BA-Tow/ ER TOTE (7. | ing. The real mad dog does not shun water. as it is said. On the Ae d 4 itt TOL”. DON’ GIT ME contrary, mad dogs often rush to the water and drink eagerly, if they Having lived ‘ 8 v meee ') ERws! aw) \are able to swallow. The mad dog does not froth at the mouth. It does not ey 1 ha nd na ey Se ge |run amuck, snapping at everything in its path. What, then, are the Indica the ex Pi ¥ = ales ro | tions of the mad dog? To those familiar with a given dog the surest symptom places. W nies . iS and the one which should excite closest attention ts @ distinct and unaccount+ ly heard Seu) | able change in the dog's disposition—a staid dog beorming excitable and a frisky city it seem . | lone dull, That condition does not necessarily mean rabies, but it Is suspictou. 48 a daily ; : i and if, In addition, the dog has trouble in swallowing—as though it seemed ti dreds of ‘ i |have a bone in its throat—beware! That dog should be instantly tied up, fa the country H : ; cause if it be rabies ft takes but a day or two for ferocious instincts to ae Well fed and tr ‘ Sr Be Prered velop. The unmistakable evidence, however, of a dog with rabies is the eticky, @ity the dogs . a 5 : H BF . tac ee whitish saliva which covers the teeth and shows on the drawn lips. The ey Gre starving i VrouR ; ear glare and are red; the dog has paroxysms of running fury, during which {¢ Hd an extreme star ner Wiko can vette turks hoarsely, which alternate with periods of temporary exhaustion.—From Reus saeeatne 2

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