The evening world. Newspaper, January 19, 1909, Page 14

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England and the Continent and } ‘All Countries tn the International Postal Unton. al Un nn 6 VO. 17,318, Bubscription Rates to The Evening World for the United States and Canada. rat mts 43 4 OANCER, 33.60 | One Year a= {3 ' One Month reer VOLUME 49. MOLASSES AND AUTOMOBILES. TT Madison Square Garden this n dollars’ week there are a mi worth of automobiles. Machines of all sizes and prices are di Some of them have al- most the conveniences of a dressing room. They can be heated and lighted to make rybody inside as comfortable on a cold night as if they were sitting by the radiator and elec- tric light at home. | But without roads to run on automobiles would be worthless. | On bad roads an automobile is an extravagance. The wear on the tires over a badly kept road costs more than the gasoline and the oil. The repairs made necessary by bad roads shorten an automobile’s life and enormously increase the cost of its operation. Without good roads automobiles will never be the popular vehicle that they should be. People who can afford to hire chauffeurs and machinists are a small part of the population. When any man can keep an automobile with less trouble and expense than a horse then they will be numbered by millions. | How to make good roads so that automobiles will not destroy them is a new problem. The old style of macadam road was im- proved by driving on it. The horses and wheels packed the stones and gravel together and made the road better. With automobiles the rubber tires, instead of packing the road, tear out the binder and make the road rough. In turn the rough road wears out the tires and increases the cost of automobile main- tenance. The Bureau of Public Roads in the United States Department of Agriculture has been conducting a series of enlightening experi- | ments on new style roads, They tested various road surfaces with automobiles running at different rates of speed and then tried to find materials which would withstand automobile use. One of these materials is molasses. played. [Proseenity jSCHOTT SCHG rld Daily Magazine, Tuesday, January 19, 190%. Sees Ecler “A Perfect D : The ge World. erfec ancer. Published Dally Except Binder by ihe Erase Hubllah ag Company, Nos. 63 to @ B ' M a He , K a iu a JOSEPH PULITZER, Pres., 63 Park Row. J c.-Treaa., 63 Park Row, Entered at the Post-Office at New York as ss Mail Matter. * NAY HAVE THE PLeasuRe 7 i Sayings of Mrs. Selomon Being the Confessions of the Sevan § Hundredth Wife. ‘ ary Translated By Helen Rowland. OST thou believe in dreams, oh, my Daughter? D Then thou hast not married one. For she that weddeth a “dream" shall awalen with @ nightmare; and she that taketh an Adonis wato her heart shall receive her reward—even beneath her Piere rot ruche. Yea, she that marryeth a man for his fase cmating ways, shall divorce him--for the same reason, Vor lo, it is the fancy article in hushands, even as in the shops, for which thou payest the heaviest price, but a plain man shall wear well in the long run T charge thee, wed not an artist with long hair and “temperament,” for he cometh high. Yea, he is but an ornament around the house, and his wife ed Npon sunsets and moonbeams and canned things and tantrums. all tin a studio and her days shall be made bitter by gas # and cheap underwear, Verily, when creditors cone in at the door, love fiyeth out through the skylight Neither marry thou @ social lion, lest thine ears be deafened with hie roaring; nor a clubman, lest thou necdest second sight to keep an eyd upon him shell f She Behold, when thou enterest the matrimonial market, remember that husbands are not like unto sewing machines which can be ordered upon approval; for the divorce court is the only erchange desk, Therefore seek nota flashy thing which cateheth the eye, but that which is durable if dull and aii wool if bald aida Yet, when thou h " ard wide fe thy choice, For verily Tsay u bargain and the fonit of the matrimonial ty no further, but pay the thee no husband is a price of weal enest a lemon! Selah? —— me 'Nixola Greeley-Smith Says “The Wife Is a Slave’ Plea Is Femininism Run to the Head, © believes that her hus- anything but a silent just et on quest zh stock tn the 18 of dome rolling pest shim? The “drudg- of which the wi task but the nat makes ¢) jon distasteful, It Is of sub {s hardest to learn, 1 this no woman working In her own ’ to learn. She makes her and method of work, and, t of all, she works for ome, Like Alexander Island, she can say 11 survey; My right there {s none to dispute.” r s rarely that the tired bread dependence © negroes. who vere freed under re Thirteenth And Amendment?” she hese few roonis without 5 a “Now, for good: | bound up in some f) ness sake, do get |fangement to heep off the d up! said Mrs, |to pick things off the floor and op Jarr,coming in the | the window to room wherein her | “You surely a lord reposed, “Do! tea!" sald Mr. Jarr, get up! How do, “You m you expect me to) Mrs, Jarr. keep a girl if she! bring me a c has to get four It always seen meals in the morn: | Thank goodness, Ing?" out to sal So saying she let the window-shade men f arise, and the morning sun sent a shaft! "Now, look here, of ght into Mr. Jarr's half-opened | “when I said ‘busy oyes. I meant no reflection « “Four breakfasts?’ repeated Mr. Jarr | Qddiction to the fragrant hi Inquiringly. Orient. It was simply “Yes, the children's breakfast to get off to school, and then you come down | late a morning like this and are more cheerful this morning, trouble than three breakfasts!’ con- somewhat mc left after the sugar and the table molasses have been extracted. On the Louisiana sugar plantations there are thou of this molasses residuum. If the top of a road is loosened and mo- lasses residuum poured on it and wor! road adhesive and prevent dust. One of the com- binations suggested by Assistant Director Cushman and Chemist Hubbard is to use a waste mo- lasses solution with Jarr, for dust fl “[ hung them the room air. you h nds of tons cup of |; ed in the result is to make the firm and to ng a mi p of te shirtwaists, lime which called Mrs. Jarr, forms adhesive calcium sacchar- ates, Molasses residuum is about as sticky a thing as there is. sald Mr. Jarr, his el world 1s in (i ; are not Sprinkling dust on it and firming it keeps the stickiness from be- Mrs. Jarr, 1. "You get up, sor Mrs ; tinued Mrs, Jarr, can make that bed. What good Je tt give yo ing on the surface. “T gure admire your mathematics," your having a morning at home if yoy and yet Something must he done with the parks and suburban roads to yawned Mr. Jarr, “but please go ‘way (le there till all h 2? Look at your floo r ae and let me sleep. You know I was things scattered all prevent the destruction by automobiles and the dust evil in all sub- working late at the oMce last night and| "Now, there you co r the roorr * sald M Jarr, and rs, Jarr was making the Jarr placed her hand, tn some other part of the flat. our close rry to breakfast; every back the voice of | rr groped for five minutes lion petticoats, five hundred three skirts, seven hundred thousand articles | 9 on hooks and hangers, and) of n't you coming to breakfast?” A closet for my things?” asked Mr, he viewed the twenty million! was afraid to. i} Mrs. Jarr Resolves Upon a Day of Cheerful Industry, feat of magic, in between a vast and tity of sk and brought into view hing '8 clothing Mr. Jarr sought “Now, my coat and vest, , sald Mr. Jarr. Mra. Jarr handed him these. “Th they were, right before your e said. “Shall I put them on you?" pleas million my shirts for me, they are | busted?” said Mr. Jarr humbly. | Mra, Jarr “It you'll come and find my clothes) «7 can’t find one that will hold a “They are NOT) collar button,” sald Mr. Jarr, meekly. this closet, Everything else In the} "yw et, but my clothes! she aid i, T can at every pleat Mrs. Jorr got needle second wife wo: | make a slave of herself for hi But Mr, Jarr made no answ urban towns. = — A Blight of Fancy Letters From the People Molasses, tar and asphalt compounds may do it. ww & More About Osteopathy, | mand To the Editor A reader asks a a number of ye eated t ults than Te Ithin months I have bee athy wit! pected. I have strengt Wet Feet and Winter, and wels 7] hope of getting w Or t ' AAHe sata head science that tr t gs t arane inven ft only with the sclentifle 1 ath te the hands A. Vi while. But f No Papers Needed, You Are a ter | t joctor, I Cilzen, eve it to get F To the Editor of ‘The : W 1 t sta Do I need to get citiz rs? I Lot that t was born in this countr father is not a cit Ans To the ExAltow Answering J. ¢ All of them 1. ing, railroad and 1 pendent upor plants and mill tuate Bois Rieht Insurance, bank truat pa are stocks do not generally have su ynerate Sy rapid fluctuations. Causes cen A Tr Tec the caine GATE summed up as follows: Manipulati nets adverse sey supply .and de- | is right? \ the Bourgogne if doing a Will you fx the buttonholes tn one “IT fixed them all last week," said said Mrs, Jarr. And But t was a pleated shirt, and Why didn't you leave them on|{t was ripped and split by the laundry the floor, where I carefully lald them?” Jarr bounced Into the room. “Ij and thread, a closet to hang your things In| eighed, and remarked that she’s like ou throw everything on the to know whether h 4 By F.G. Lon nosevelt, the ) in his concern. ked that : perha m 1 young woman And Mr. Jarr Is Caught Up by a Domestic Cyclone } iris Teese ay OR nr ere set to a orce, but a sense Jam not exp nad placed them carefully | plece tor adecuatorconaer Q wae niaisclanlen Mei By Roy L. McCardell, [yess twas here I'd know where to ho: AGATE ERC > : 1 ; | T was morning | Msht, mending and da And he, grumbling, arose | yes, for your th you they be either Road molasses is not the kind of molasses that appears on tables, if in the Jarr | but I'm up earl for his bath, and when he returned the never use it I did hang a skirt or a Inivers alling to or that is used to make taffy and gingerbread, or that has been clari-! household, the | all my own wo! m was in euch excellent order that: enirt watst or two in It. If ever I move ite monarehy fied j z 3 Meneame, Dike Oa soe day's doings were | 8!f! around and © couldn't find a thing {t will be toa flat that has more closet led into colorless syrup. The hest molasses for roads is what is about to begin. | 80 saying, Mrs. J a Wh my trousers?" bay room. Here's your trous and aM slaves under bonded to ne the ere she all No, 22—Smetana's ‘'Verkaufle Braut’’ (Note—8 after writing first performed na did not reap the reward of this op t ha went Ingane, and war in an as He died econ afterward, 1 he y ARY, only daughter of the rich Bohemian farmer, Kruschina, fell in love M with Hans, one of her father's laborers, Hans, though penniless and un- known, had dared to woo her and had won her promise to wed him. But rich old Kruschina had no intention of giving his daughter to a poor farmhand, He had other and more ambitious plans for the girl. Through the ald of Kezul, a marriage broker, Kruschina arranged a match be- tween Mary and Wenzel, the son of Micha, another wealthy farmer. The en- ment Was to be announced at the Kirmess (merrymaking dance), but Mary, erto so gentle, raised unexpected obstacles. When Kezul brought her the g news that Wenzel was to be her bridegroom she furlously rejected the offer and sent the marriage broker about his business. The girl declared she loved Hans alone and that she would have no other sweetheart, * ¢ * When Mary's decision became known young \Wenzel came to urge his own sult, Mary would have nothing to do with him, So sharply did she scold him for trying to cajole her into a loveless marriage that he agteed to give her up. But Kezul, wily marriage broker, would not so easily abandon his hopes of a big fee, He offered Hans a goodly price to desert Mary. Hans angrily re- fused, Then Kezul chanced to mention that Wenzel was Micha’s son. On hearing this Hans suddenly agreed to accept the bribe, and signed a paper to the effect that none but the son of Micha should become Mary's husband, Hans followed up his remarkable surrender by publicly making known to the whole village that he retired from the courtship In favor of Micha's eon. Mary, horrified at her lover's weakness and treachery, listened aghast to his speech of oe renunclation Kezul and Kruschina were overjoyed at this happy result of thelr plans. But thelr delight was turned to uneasiness on finding that Wenzel had fallen in love with Esmeralda, dancing girl In a travelling clreus, Wenzel refused to * marriage contract with Mary, and even disguised himself as a dancing bear ino to be near Esmeralda, But soon he tired of woolng the circus girl and returned to Mary, only to find she, too, refused to sign the contract. Un- happy as she was over Hans's desertion, she declared she would marry no one else. Hans, however, forced her to grant him an Interview, and in spite of her angry tirade againet himeelf, begged her to marry Micha’s son, telling her that to be present at such a marriage was his one chief wish tn Ife. In rage at her lover's baseness Mary at last consented «again wild with delight at prospect of gaining his fee. He brought future daughter-in-law, But Hans took care to be present at the meaniln sign t At sight of Hans old Micha rushed toward the farmhand with a cry of happy recognition. Hans was Micha’s son by a former marriage and had run away from home as a boy Hans now demanded that Mary keep her pledge to marry ‘Micha's son’ himself! The girl, understanding at last the whole clever plot, eagerly consented, Kruschina, learning that his farm laborer was really the new found helr of rich man, readily agreed to the match and Wenzel all at once found himself de prived of both bride and fortune. ed += Sata. —_——_ series may be obtained by sending one Missing numbers of ¢

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