The evening world. Newspaper, July 18, 1908, Page 8

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Sa a saat The Even a lard, ing Cempany, Nos, 63 te 68 The Pebliohed Dally Hxcept Aunday by the Presa D> Park ow, New York J. ANGUA AMA YY, Bes. Troan, 101 Wee TUT Btrart, PRSREA PULITERR, Pres, 1 Feet 184 Sirens Bntered at the Post-COflow at New York aa S000: Wedroription Rates to Evening C nt and Internationa: and the. The orld for the United Btatoa en in the ie Terr, $3.00 One Year Month 301 One Mor $ VOLUME . NO, 17,188 40 FLATIRONS AND RUSTY BRAINS. VERY woman who does her own {roning notices that the rustier a flatiron fs the more often It has to be heated and the more quickly it cools. In laundrles {rons are eith- ones, The same law of physles applies to kettles, coffee pots and what- ever other vessels or utensils are in- tended to retain heat. A polished or smooth surface, no matter how well worn, will hold more heat and longer, The reason an old flatiron cools quickly is be- cause the polish has worn off and the metal has become pitted. The Surface of radiation to the air is so much increased that it taker longer to heat and is harder to keep heated, For an opposite purpose, but on the same principle, is the radiator on an automobile, where the manufacturer makes so much fluting and, flanges to expose the largest radiating surface to the air. Hot water run through a rusty pipe cools more quickly than if the pipe is newly polished. This law of physics applies to brains and all forms of human effort, The man who lets his brain cells get rusty, who does not keep his thoughts clean, his mind polished and his thinking processes alert Soon finds that his ideas dissipate before they are completely formed and that his words scatter in their utterance, ' Rust is destructive of effi. dency of all kinds. A few drops of water dropped inside a machine will do more harm to its efficiency and capacity than many months of : 2 the hardest kind of work. Inactivity, not use, is the greatest destroyer ef machinery, whether animate or inanimate. Pew men wear out by work alone, Idleness more unfits them for renewed effort than does work, The best way to accomplish anything | Js to begin at it and keep on until it is done and well done, | The lesson of the flatiron and of the automobile applies to the brain | and the muscles, : { Edward H. Harriman, Thomas F, Ryan an other men of sufficient wealth to quit work were to make up their minds that they had passed the meridian of life and spend their remaining years in idleness their brains would speedily deteriorate, Disuse is as injurious to the brain as it is to a steam engine. These men would tind that the years of idleness would age them more than the years of hard work. | + TOO TIMID FIVE TIMES. Daniel Matthews was to have been married five times ceremony was performed. Every other time he became frig fled, He was an ardent enough suitor, but when it came to facing the clergyman he was too timid, Sometimes his bast me him at the license elerk. Now he fs married, an been a remarkable, patient and long suffering woman to put long in the manner that a page in tomorrow's World tells another page by Mrs. Augi I as a man briefly described in this column. She explains how it feels for a woman to work and dress like a man, E. A. Abbey gives advice about studying art, tells of the stars. Sir Walter Seott mermoor,’’ js presented. There is a remarka fngston in her wre: costume, as sung at the Kni ker Tt columns and the sporting section Kindly notify your new World so that he ta Seib, whose e aie Flammarion Bride of Lam-| ure of Miss Cora Liv-| A Song of the King,” The funny section, the news fig as usual, Letters from the In Behalt of Moracs of The Bvening W: low me to horse (man's People. — ment, while he was teeth. 7 rejected for bad Kindly for the Tam, ta roade friend). To pre Coming sore ur have a pail of w ‘ atavie collar ¢ @ay, wo that one day and tres WI keen ta skin yo @nd the horas w ¢oKet sore : 4 fhe saddis ar ft 5 : erly, Also 4 ever you © A Police The Revoiving House fo the 1a! Tam amy har @mpicy + @hippl: ere tw + took the ox he police, with the result thet I era. whe: MH Mew on the lt awaiting appoint- was in g_ er repolished or replaced with new were | tt World World Daily Magazine, Saturday, July 18, ms Ah | The Moth {nvasion. waa a By. Meunee Bees : Now York Thro’ : funny Glasses | 2 By Irvin 8, Cobb, e » Great Was with Edward K, Bok De Not Tow. termoor, alrb e name sh the new given eBid Home by ¢ mn League, ing on t pro- at ng the sidewalks everywh fan ing ‘The We On Slammershine's Roof Miss Muddle baby Oftman, the Salome dancer, chang>s her art and gives John the Baptist’s head fensa an egg shampoo with bay rum. I Foz In a body the white goods buyers 1 « from the South and West, who ate hi , fone laying 1 Stocks, attende Ca “| Don't Care! If | Did 1 Couldn't Do It!” ; 4. I ¥ ace such a ts [Ee Did ll know dding half a pound Oo OO iman halr at every pert Rut the press agen Wan f BI - - . ——— —________. eee pee ee ee ree the Clinical Theatre there ts being This + four-sheet he works 1 0 rm 4 one = the eriticiams ] c= osteopathic - pry hieallo- SURE HIT—-Datly. 6 OruS GIT! oquandérs a Bunch oO OUgNT mi, the Jol york ot] GRAND-snal Klein, Kennedy and good ol NOUNCED SENSATION. Poxy 66 9 ‘ D m, the well-known root and O8S PBRPON NGy on “Salome” and the Close-Lidded Race-Track vovsn tenon et YS [ f the refusal of a beautiful girl to be vae- SUCCE q ' ties nan the A sthes | cinated on either her upper or lower! ame othor shows close, ha Grean j | ot and mbs and fs entitled "More to Be Pitted invent apacty: eign. | f By Roy L. McCardell, K into dis- | Than Goared oat ne Clyde Fitch's latest and best piece, avardnad val id r | "Dainty Battenberg Edgings,"’ has ‘a e bill b: 8, ' Reflecti f a Bach i | eflections of a Bachelor Girl. By Helen Rowland, vo ’reston for | e he is now OING through Ife without love ts Ike gotr raze, You dook an G @ good dinner without an appetite everyt in {t some y, etther | Ls = so flat and tastel A clever woman ca a man, ith a Mande Allan {mita in great but ft takes a fluffy little ¢) f nd no Wav OMe Canoe and the ‘brains or morals to speak of to make him mé 1 of ad low Up to ‘The himaelt, excitement { | It {8 most provoking to a woman who !s winning In @& fi over the Vision quarrel to have @ man suddenly round and take the 4 and blue. Get argument right out of her mouth—with a kiss. and Jast 4 There 1s something about a rolling ocean Iner that town th wie her ehakes up a man's emotions, and something about svt Hae er buyers water and a ship diet that will make almost any woman tear ng in her tootsie pinktes, Go ta all the ith & red nose and a steamer cap on her head look Just aviprostcela Reh Mke a real affinity. ayn, she loves her toes Whether a gir] looks indignant or happy efter you have kissed her depends cass and do thelr best to ta deal on how long she has been waiting for you to get up the courage | - go bi to do it, { Perey don't know nave | before Judge | foot 19 as what WAS once nature is now art, ; with a barefoot Salome A (@) Li C ree carat n Ocean Liner’s Cargo. : d sand that tt uaed to | By Ernest Poole, s,and so], |. epee . be that a ore, and now He your OWN on the whart the rush was at its height. Under the sputtering j a et eM ee ne ars which bas crumpled up dlulsh aro lights, amid endless clang and rumble, the produce of | Rone nan la cni ace 00) rou ire America came tn, From the prairies, the mines and the mills, from ¥ b ssand- | “'galome dancer has put everything on & different footing now. What 60 ,the forests, the cotton plantations, tobacco fi orchards and vine- | : you know about tha’ | yards, from the oll fields and meat-packing housss, from the grimy _— = ———= [factories large and amail; ponderous sngines of stool, harvesters, reapers, au- J ‘t K id tomobilos, bars of allver and yellow bricks of gold, bales of cotton and woad T. . and hides and tobacco, meats, barrela of flour, and boxes of fruit, hoguheads of us | Ss. av ae Xv a By e S. Allen: of! and caska of wine; tens of thousands of things and maolines to make things !—piled up on the wharf by the acre, saya Ernest Poole in Everybody's Magne } ——EEE zing, And stilt all night the teame clattered in and the tugs puffed up with FAMILY the barges; and from hundreds of miles away the trains were ruding hither | ENTRANCE bringing more boxes and barrels and aga to be packed in at the last moment, _. In gangs at every hatchway the four hundred men were trundiing, heaving, straining, a rough orowd, cursing and joking at the hoarse shouts of the forge men; while from the darkness outside heavy black rope nets dropped down to gather gigantio handfuls of cargo, swing them back up to the deck of the ship and then down into her hold, 60 all through the night and right up to the hour of aafling the rash went on, Wor the great ocean Mner's work la wort |hundreds of thousands of dollars a month, And the ship must sail on time, | ————__ + } ’ - The Buslest Under Lip. By George Fitch, T ts the hartest working, most versatile, most conactentions lower Np in the world, writes George Fitch in the Amerioan Magazine, of Roewm yeit's undertip, It is @ part of the Administration, not mevely of the President, j — Not onty does tt deliver the Prosident’s conversation to the pablte, ut {t personally supervises It. It gives each werd, no matter how small, ite | Indivklual attention, molds {t correctly and hands |t out, a perfect, finished product. Hlastio almost beyond bellef, {t assumes a dozen shapes In as many woconds. Ft plotures, as the words pass it, rage, hate, earnes determina tion, statesmanship, It puffs out, distended with adjectl fighting for | precedence like diplomats at a dinner, It stepe asidy entirely a ells the teeth, hissing Ike a leaky steampipe wrth polysy es, Tt wraps | lovingly ! a a cherimhed phrase and releases it with hone pride, One most Bee {t at (mes reach forth and searoh the ait for a word (hat sua I best ft the filea, An Old Wedding Custom Revived. + the village of Blackwell (Somerse Bngl aus by ved the nelent custom known as wedding toll, eo 8 r ng a Tope | the ehutch rtender In dis ward calls my father by his first name.” "What yer got dat rag fastened up dere fer?” I across the road as the bride and bridegroom are © "Qoe, but you is a landiubberi Oat’s to show dat de owner's aboard,” and demanding toll before they ase allowed to pass, yer go, bragging about yer biame family agin!” silipdidada |

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