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The Evening Published Dally Ex POUEPH PULITZE, 4 \e Bubseription | io 1 it if } LOOK AT THEIR FACES. The one who has the musiac i more hair on top of his head } others, two of whom are bald on a third is half bald. i This is not a political editorial, and has | nothing to do with platform principles or } political personaiities of the candidates, but % only with their faces. is Pictures of the whole seven are printed on ' this page. Only two or perhaps three of these \ faces are familiar to the general public. They i should be studied carefully by every reader, i because the face tells much. In many re- cts it is a surer indication of what the can- f didate elected will do than the protestations of his party’s platform. | i Look over these faces and see which one } looks most like a Prohibition candidate. | : Which face is that of the most literary candidate, the man who has written the most as the kerosene | and ablest books? Which do you pick out competitors of the man, one of the few real Standard Oil? Which is the face of the candidate now in State's prison, which in itself is a political novelty to pay attention to? Every one of these men will get thousands of votes, some of them millions of votes. Why do people vote for one in preference to the others? If accurate photographs of all these candi- dates were in every household how many votes would a study of their features change? Women are more apt to make up their mind H intuitively from a first look than are men. Show these pictures to your wife a Ask them which face they like bes one they would rather intrust the government. f Which one would they rather have for a father, or a husband, or a brother. After all, anatomically, a candidate for sident is as other men. He diffe the twenty million other men of the sao he’ he World Daily Magazine, Thursday, July 380, Taft's Hall of Rone 1908: | ea@oaonaase OOOO OO Husbands -:- All of Them More or Less Undesirable, By Nixola Greeley-Smith. No. 19—The Husband With a Temperament. F Heaven ever happened to endow the Husband | With a Temperament with anything else, he might. not be such a troublesome creature to lye with But men who can afford temperaments can seldom afford anything else. Automobiles, country estates and racing stables are, by comparison with the possession of @ temperament, cheap amusements, For the temperamental husband feels that he can afford to be poor, and he who cherishes that easy doc trine will never take the trouble to be otherwise. Such a husband, be he writer, painter or musiclan, spends his leisure revilimg what he terms the base com- mercial spirit of America, He sighs for the “true fleld of art’—otherwise Europe, but as his temperament wouldn’t command ten cents a week there, base necessity compels him to remain in his own country, where, at least, he has a chance to work whenever he doesn’t feel too much like loafing. Is the Husband With a Temperament a Musician? Then his compositions fat! to sell because he !s too true to the clas a AROOSEVELT THe FEARLESS PTRGCA GREELEY TA declares that » Which OH JOHN! THIS MAN 15 COING Te TURN OFF HorRoRS! \ SPOILED. TRAIN THOUGHT. 6 om) tiie Ss P” PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT’ W $ SUPREME, THe EVERLASTING ae TH Ps Si i over the floor, ROOSEVELT " TRE QUIET Ny 7 says he has ave | ed t cat ment 1 cannot be inters i for 8 rupt to cow d r father and the men an DODDS Betty Vincent’s Advice o tT The Best Jokes From the Papers The Art of Lying Is Elucidated NNO IO CEL Of the Day. On Courtship and Marriage g and Defended. site often he $8 easier to live with than the more normal male, tle | The same fate t irs Ta shes raialids (ere HEY say there will be no ; sance as the world believes. 1 to th ates not so much in the number of times “a lace, f th a nuisance wind to the Be STH aa Hie oy dea blondes in 6% years." | Break the Engagement, fb Wotan ee By G, S, Hall, |ghorn lamb blows the Husoand With a Temperament to the capable wife, But f is heart beats, or in the way his brain works, , , “Why not?” | Dear Retcy wiry GAR WN Chines wa HERE {sa sense in which every: |it's an ill wind for her, just the same. i or in the amount of hair on top of his head Bacellse) ihe) blondehtype leiraverting |p CRALnOnveety Lieve Been enes si sason for her objection. How: Bee NED tae GHB tt TY : : : Nene Usa . H 0 the brunette.” to @ young man one year my sen: 4 Ta elle oateen niga clined to believe that about all! or intellect inside of it, but in the fact that he 1, don't you suppose some of them | for. Lately I have noticed that 8 yon to ave ty renely WEY | children sometimes ile; that not « few A Real Mahat j has been nominated for the highest office ir brunettes will get tired and revert |affection for me seems to have changed pe Fau iste RUNGE RAM e irlend. | aes through 9 stage, nged, éa anatma., | “the world back?"'—Loulsville Courter-Journal, {and have heard that he Is attentive to q ¥ a unless dit when they prefer the lie to the truth, | ¥ ‘ re he world, Oo 0 0 janother girl, He has sald noth! ee van °F white in a few this trait persists Ramakrishna’s Maxims, f the milli cast this fall ‘me about it, and as I | d s unjust to rites G. 8. Hall ‘ Of mill cast this fall ix is the charge A 5 ae (HR) Grae aes Gayo writes G. 8. Hall In Cur. AX MULLER tn 1896 published a@@ketch of Ramakrishna's life, a iE Chak Ht h rye Tam ata loss to know tare ‘ ntitled w large a reditary 8 prisoner? é ou advine met Wn to your mother, As you TDeStiatenauelte ler nalinge’ | “A Real Muhatma." It {8 the philosophy.of tits Hindu that nts apogties the voter's father an—Your Honor, he called me.” Ga, you not learn for certain Tagine Vou) to aos cries, (ara Wak Ck ee have come to teach America, Some of his maxims are of beaut entice ‘ ; ’ or not the young man ls attent! and {f you still , iy ‘A true devotee should possoss absolute calmness and never pe dis grandfather and Bonyeul proved. It Dy the other girl? If he !s, you are of age then it turbed by the opinion of others. Like a blacksmith’s anvil, he will em will be be tm, eh?—Philadelphia Press. |e own happiness to give an ing otra rowel all blows and persecutions and yet remain firm in his faith, aes: t ed him with 7 fe F i vho dresses smartly will naturally sing love songs, play {f you married him with h igaievohentta three He who dresses smartly iy sing 88, play cards, carry @ i and how many (aor youl consider lente inseaaseulisrouldl ibelnye ces He Love Her? Q Aree cane, and such appeal to him. If you have a pencil in your nané s them Have a frank talk with him, tell my elty on anything, Such ts the power of the penail, x hasn't you have noticed the cha a AM a young girl of seventeen and has great power. When a man becomes wealthy hig nature 1s ene |: |sider It best to break the engage much In love with a young! house, or that God met tirely changed. A toad had a rupee !n {ts hole, An elephant was coming down | ; man one y Diaeniotherhokonya liaeeiandltclikninenc ete: that way and passed over the hule, The toad was very angry. It came out ana‘ H Qo) 0 | Her Mother Objects, a great deal of attention to me, He that he had been up to oon—and | Was about I peek che elep bans saying, ‘How darest thou pass over me?’ Suck j “They are quite ordinary people, ", | Dear Betty as never told mé he loves me, but he @ are real cases—he ! ee . | y are quite ordinary people, aren’ ARG eransry GAL om ep Ge Pore onrant HORI RRte? 1 can be realized by the pure heart alone, The mind may be comparea | ‘ HEatieyeertiat . very well. ¢ >t). Do you th it prop- to a needle. Ifa @ be covered with thick mud {t is not attracted py tne ena When I write hin Bectaula +f magnet, but when mud ts washed away the magnet attracts It, plain food, pay th ‘m asking him to basis in rea rks the mo-| Sr! irivtia eat anaula ; bert oetning tot (s ) can I find out If he loves|tive of the conscious birth of the imagl- The acqulaltion of Wealth sould not be the: endiand elm of ite, similasty 00 HEARTBROKEN, | nation. | vou should overcome your attachinent to personal heauty. Think what the boay | Mant secant Onan nites g ota ful woman {s made of. Like all bodies, it 1 of flesh and blood, skim ’ , | but not be sure| Se eT and bones, fat and marrow. t Ei Filove to dall vou. arnt “We mould our character according to the company we keep, And we keep , ‘ | ieee aeiteey My el Smoke Eats It Up. | 1 fas isin harmony with our character, aaa a or ee ee Taare = buble swouldube perdi @ attains to true devotion the less becomes one’s worldly work, i ae (or Saute Heats ey, the world do not satisfy such a soul, They lose their charm. Letters from the Peoole “He's a regular Georgia cracker, {sn't nitoido Ronee sere, } ral at Cologne, al- {ow can one who has tasted sherbet made with pure crystallized sugar be t . |he h : ela nervous, atale ACT ROE Tee nd ut a fow years | pleased with the taste of a drink made with molasses or treacle?" ss , Yes, but he took a trip to Boston re-| obliged to meet mee fort an a written one, ‘There Is! ¢rotory smoke that the body of nus : e's aw I detest, Am I dot 10 way out If the young manjchurch will have to be renovated | Locomotives With Red Stacks. preirne 4 F wrong by meeting him? s you until he declares himself, | throughout. | Wonders of the Age. Spyies | een ee we ee f 1 ; : By Eugene Wood. : Along the Great Highway, et BY dK, Bryans, racy vcregnerny a sr rte ti erat conor, b r % 4 partially, just how the other looks (he's not so much!) and how he au t ties his necktie, 60 that the one may be as like the other as one pew sed * @ is Uke another, If so he wishes. I have a picture of the Bishop ef i a | Londen at the entrance to that great church which stands at the i head of Wall street, It 18 a good likeness of his lordship; it 1s a better Ike nen. ss of his office-boy-ship, who has thrust his mocking mug into the focus, aires 2 | ‘ene Wood in Bverybody's Magazine, What is the purpose of the age? a 7 |\What is the purpose of the photograph? You've never so much as smelled salt i water, yet you've seen the King of Spain ride through the streets of Paris, e " | watched him filek the ashes from his cigarette, and noticed that his ocarrlage- ul JOHNS, J F iharete switch their tails like any other horses, In your parlor Caruso sings The Pollee “System, Una Furtiva Lagrima for you ag often as you Ike, and boo-hoos as he comes the F f down from high A-flat Just as he would if you were sitting in “the goldew vine ‘ horseshoa.”” What 1s the purpose of all these wonderful Inventions of the age— k was } ma the telephone, the ocean cable, the now device whereby men jet thelr words acrome ] to read It w i cptpestane eure lthe broad Atlantic through the pale air? By nature your life Js brief; for ® i be a N ew 1 few years only your personality reaches to your arm's length, to the fow yards i to learr : ! | your voice will carry, to the few miles your eye can dart, What is the pure i i | pose of the age but to extend your personality till it is world-wide and ages i ‘ Ai F enduring, It {s come that ye might have life, and that ye might have it mosm i) a oovIEsya ot 6 Cage | abundantly. We are to know the truth, and the truth 1s to make us free, J o A t ¢ | epee fj | + k Photographing the Stomach. =” ' k ; : {mproved apparatus has been made by Dr. Frita Lang, of Munich, ®y, which the Inside of the stomach can be clearly photographed. The cameta is actually swallowed by the patient, and no sooner does ft Teach hia stoma yan the walls thereof are illuminated by a small electric lamp attached to the apparatus. At the bottom of the camera is wound a photographic film twenty Inches long and a quarter of an inch wide, All the surgeon has to do is lto pull the cord and then run the film past the lens. The electric light is then turned on, and after the sensitive film has been impressed with the image the A f b ee bss ew i i esslons| Gaeieae “ 1 oat ae pia ; ' ! pau = x ou say things have been Me quiet around here this summer?” |. rant Js turned off and another section of the film is brought into play, yntil eH and pad n us nov s . ; A By ha reddy. Nearly every farmer ‘long de route has offered | Fatner—Yaas, stranger, purty qulet, 'ceptin’ fer a tornado, an’ a cyclon®,|the requisite number of pictures have been obtained. When this ia dene‘the © endryonic crop of whiskers that | all, BH a | mea Job as @ ecarecrow! an’ @ lew barn purnin’s, an’ a murder up at the uch, an’—I guess that’s all!” |entire apparatus is withdrawn from the stomach, 2 were Pa nee re mes oe eoeperny: + ee ett nah tenet apemeneam nmint? So epee a E