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mdr tc MENS bia preeminence =~ = A Le MEE NR LAE The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursda Cue BES oaorio. The Only Way. y by the Publt Company, Nos. 68 to 68 Pubtimned Dafty Becepe Bundy 67,0, Nee jabing Compal By Maeties hetten:, Row, orks “ 4. aos guyaigres end raat: SOsHPH rrp inary Zypon: Bor, FE ntl Rena FUP 777 Tnvered at the Postonice at New Your Becond.-Ciase Matter. +k. Eat, Drink-- But Be Healthy becri} 3 4 and Continent . ond forthe Unica “peates ~] ‘ait Chatto n es, Intern i ‘end Canade, 0 One Seige 881888 Reta: New York's Eminent Physicians Advise Evening World Readers on Summer Diet Oupertght, 1011, by The Prem Pubtshing Oa, (ihe tian Buch Westtl, VOLUME 88. ...600 seceeessseweeew cameaeeee NO, 18,216 YES, IT’S HOT ENOUGH; BUT—— OU cannot dbiuff MAN in perfect health can ent thing for a time if he ts eutetes the hot weather, LIFE i$ Just ia the. ces lf a great Sead and’ heavy io ata with he em do Jb indefinitely, If he t# pot out bat you can cal it ONG HoT DAY sil, Ue westuncena Tete th of ercyiang tein tt bad At aninks, piece Pd AFTER ANOTHER Bouya conteln practiowly ne nourtshment Aud when Hot made Cosas sents ove: contain really harmful material, Vegetable soup in harmiers ¢o a healthy pers fon, but {t contains @ very smaii amouet of nourishment, Bugar does more harm than any other variety of food. ‘This is partioularty comforts and dan- true of the city man. ‘The man wie ifves in the country and exereises in the eummer heat— ee ee ee nee ie tao iieueeey conors ie as Oak Gino ase i dency to ferment in the intestines before tins to be aimorbed which after all iso tie teed, regular eoheduled This fermentation causes gastritis, enteritis and ectitis, and Angust, end CITY person tn health should use as Little eugar ce penattter tt he tas chronic indigestion he @hould out tt out altogether, which we can or fi Practically the eame may de eaid of white bread, whtch ¢ommente ta ought to be pre 1 |asimfier way. The cruet is all right, but the soft part of the bread ebould aot YY be eaten, It would be better for everybody to eat only toasted bread. pared for—ts to HY In the ordinary case eugar changes into alcohol, with others to visegam If = | one cuts out sugar and etarches there is likely to bee feeling of depression, Gus to lack of alcohol in the system, Vegetables are harmful unless taken in moderation The most tasmtul vartetics are radishes, tomatoes, cucumbers, turnips and cabbage, The most easily digested are peas, string beans, potatoes and epinach Beef and mutton are virtually the only foods that will not ferment, More people’ underfeed than overfeod. A pound of meat three ¢imes@ Gay is not too much for @ person in poor health, A person in good henlth doesn't require @o much, If depends entirety upon | the exercise he takes and the other foods he eats, eee | Cy UMETTIMES chronto intentins! indigestion has been mistaken for Bright's | S disease. A number of such cases have come under my observation. Fermenting meats are the white meat of chickes, veal and pork These are also very poor in nutritive value Fivh ts etl right. Ham and bacon should not be eaten oftener tham two or ¢bree times B week, Raw clams may be eaten a4. Ub, They contain more sustaining power than eny other food I know of, and when fresh may be taken without ‘the elightest fear of evil com |wequences, With oysters there ts always the danger of typhoid. Alcohol may be taken in moderation by @ person in health, but tn ® heatth ft should be cut out. Carbonated drinks shoul! never be taken, nor should sweetened drinks in 1M health. Lime juice or lemon with gin ts the form of alcoholic drink. I object to beer, no matter whether @ person ts im SI! or good health. It ts, for one ¢hing, an irritant to the mucous membrane, thouzh if one drinks beer habitually the mucous membrane becomes accustomed to it, | provided the person is in good heatth. lines of least re- | elstance, and not | let {t overcome | you. “Orased by the Heat” fs a sessonable newspaper headline, and | the condition it describes is no joke nor fiction. Yet do we not find, | on looking into the average case of this sort, that the victim went atthe heat in a more or less crasy eort of way before the heat got himg Don’t envy the man who hee leisure antl money and can “get away.” The chances are ten to one that he will get out of the frying- pan into the fire. Even if he stays in town and loafs at home he is | liable to eat too much, smoke too mmch, overdo the icebox and the highball, or neglect his natural healthful exercise. The business man or working man who stays right on the job is by far the better off, becsuse he does not violently upsct his ordi- nary hygtento routine, What this routine may be fn individual cases does not so much | matter. The Board of Health and the family newspapers have been | for years past conducting en annugl common-sense campaign of phy-|| — : = : i oe % sical edueation, the beneficial results of which gre slowly but surely = See lf becoming apparent. If the average New Yorker nowadays cannot . take care of himself and his family comfortably all the year round, it is not because of ignorance. Nor need it be on account vf poverty. Provittentially, thehealth- ful life is the simple life, and the efmpler it is, the cheaper. Harlem and the east side have found this ont, and it makes @ difference in Sayings of....-.. *___ MRS. SOLOMON: Being the Confessions of the Seven Hondredth Wife. Trenstated By Helen Rowland, many ways. eee ___ For instance, there fe ment eating. You do-not have to be an 'Y DAUGHTER, heed my wisdom whtle the honey incurable vegeta- moon ehineth, for ite daye are numbered, and ite Ught te eastly quenched in a woman's teare. Lo! even as a skyrocket upon a damp day, tt goeth (Gigig7 Mewiamag] OUt with a fizzle when a bride dbeginneth to WEEP. Now, one of these came unto me crying: “Behold I am cast down and NEGLECTED for Harold no longer toveth [fme! Alas! when I cough, he no longer thinketh I am about to dle, but rian to admit that cutting out the pork chops and the Tib roast tn favor of oetmee! and milk, banans frit- Le ee aaepenaeaeeaeaaenaaaaammaaanamaaaaammamanaaaananaeannaaeaooaamamamond | Mr. Jarr Learns the Mysterious Art of Making contenteth himself with suggesting a LOZENGE! tenuilr potato cated a Real Friend Out of a Perfectly Good Enemy. } |, "11011: 1 tears no wonaer arive nim wnto attraction, bot ento is all right for « “When Iam offended, my wrath doth not cause him contrition, but IN- changein days Ifke By Roy L. McCardell. ert, eit Saat Jarn “imme Gve) Put on your ene-piane vemoers, Cages hay youl cima five cente for ice cream | DIGESTION! Lo! HOW shall I make him happy? For I am become as these. Besides, you get an oe cream eoda. you, and eit in the dining room It's a rT} HIF Geem't thet fceman| “Gimme five cents, too, mammal” | cooler there! Ob, why doem't en ice-| “And mo?” cried the little ete “Wine | ‘"° Paper on the wall, at which he never glanceth.” comer” cried Mra, Jurz, pet-| piped up the ittle girl. ‘And gimme| man came?” dete everythin’ !" Then I mocked her with my ha-has, saying: five cente to go to the moving pictures.” “Maw, when I was et the grocery| “You are too small to carry all the “Go to, thou Simple One! Thou weepest not because thow canst not roncving,, pictures thie westher? I} store I saw the foo man et Bepler’s/ice T neod,’ ould Mrs. Jurr. || make him HAPPY, but because thou cunst not make him MISHRABLE. e arr cher shop leaving @ le “But your suggestion ts splendid, ane “y, net itlis ‘You chiliren are not going out in| big cakes of ice,” eald the little boy.|1 will give you and your little sister Verily verily, what a brilliant imagination hath a bride of siz monthe! this hot eun oe cream eodas either. | “If I go to Bepler’s and get eome toe | money for ice cream sodas which it gets “Lo! she is astonished éf her Beloved doth not appear wpon the ap- te gutting eynit- a cooler—it it ever docs. Papa, won't | pointed moment; dut @ ecasoned wlfe ts astonished only when he DOTH ests. OF course a 9 | Tou please go to the telephone and tell | appear thereon. vi you cuff realy a eee ra Laer ou Mf | “A bride ts cast down 4f her lord forgettcth her for half an hour, but a th the I he Sympathy on my bill?" seasoned wife is overjoyed if he remembereth her that long. bewt-hem, ee : Mr. Jarr went to the telephone at| “A bride is shocked éf her Beloved showeth an healti Dongeun. [Yet wher-Cife tutchere take © half-holiday three or four . 4 if ealthy interest in his once and communicated with Mr. Bep- A jee weefetoek etudio. ‘Mr, Jarr ge. | Ui7ner, but a seasoned wife t@ shocked only when he doth NOT ehow an turned in @ very few moments with the| iMterest therein, information that Mr. Bepler eaid he “A bride trembleth when her Husband mecteth a tcoman with whom he theme © work, or clove their chops early every afternoon, as at| Jaume -That Satisfies. poset @e Gbing ef over town, {¥ is orient that they have ben perma thet “men: whole Coperight, 1911, by The Prem Publishing On, (The Mew York Wosid). had no ice to spare and that if he| path once flirted, but a seasoned wife trembleth only when he me: ial ore eoctiing’ # & not the thing had he woukin't open the tce chamber 7 sb alae pith whom he hath not YET flirted. worli—when the clinging-vine lady is|in hi hot weather as| ‘' By Sophie Irene Loeb. [Tero ae nce cee eetrcl tier ics Giese nero “A bride followeth her husband about with Kisses and solicttude ond LITTLE aympathy for the women | *V¢" © with afl the overwhelming/ ‘That's what get for making free | questions, but a seasoned wife giveth him a chair whereon he may put hie called “wife” saves many a ait- Sovrenent in the dirention of reform.) with such people. Or, rather, that 15 | feet and leaveth him at that ‘distance’ which lendeth enchantment. Bofenges wo-can go tlightly-clad and keep down the bodily tem- pecetuve, ent sparingly of meet and reduce our own euperfluons flesh, sxfi'by eticting to tho routine job help to inmmre good sleep, which | Fp Blsdh nation, arte ete | eae Se eee ea ei ron acolo!" exclaimed | “Verily, verily, my Daughter, a bride 48 a trying proposition, and per doa" cost anything at all—so long a8 we can fortify ourselves on a peed eg fess _/ 5 ns ri fae} ae chological moment. ‘Mrs. Jarr, turning on her hu: adventure many an husband thinketh that a ‘kissless honeymoon’ ts not these cardinal points, and save money while doing it, why regard the “If I had kept on dealing the title of “How | ‘Tite does not mean that she must be|hobnob with the butcher and the baker | to be despised. Selah?’ " I would have plenty dogdaya es an unmixed calamity? of ce But, no, I'm eoft hearted and 1 @0 deal with & pour man im a cellar, 4@nd when the time comes thet 1 need foe the most I can't get eny! My but- ter is like @aiud of] and the milk is to keep a hug. |hUmored and coddled at every eign of| 274 the candlestick maker, you go to band." phere are| ttoubla, Not much! @he, too, must| thelr taverns and royster with them, a tow things to| Dear the Durdene end whare the Joye, |¥OU are their hail-fellow-well-met, and Se gall on “HoWw| But when ehe ie SPIRITUESS ana] yet when I want @ favor, a favor TO K Pp {things have gone awry and ife looms| Which I will pay the vulgar person for, oe The |p big and dark and horrible—then, 1u]4!! I get 19 impertinence from YOUR The Day’s Good Stories || i ony, the local butcher!” spoiling before my ver; ‘on, ; cynto might an.|the Vernacular, IT I8 QUITE UP TO] crony. the | ‘i * cooling, batie tay Vary ares ‘ cynlo might ane [rite eo give che word thet reeasures,| “He Wasn’t impertinent, my dens," ex- Infallib!e People After a short mewch thanking the meeting for “We'll buve to be patient, I'm agrald, and turn all your |to take her in his arme—and—well, you |Di#ined Mr. Jarr, “but he has been out é ! Pasenedett ie tas alah tie oe Reg) 7 at rs h vt a lot Weather Advice, be easter for ontinary fot to under: |™Y dear,” ventured Mr, Jarr, — ‘The Te the Edllor of ‘The dvening Worlds tarnings eves te {and I know thet many a miserable|% fe, too, and a lot of meat has J= CORBIN, auttior and playwright, sag] brometed t0 ask whet was y nt a had ne 0 of the meeting. Instantly Jerry Dowd wes om his her.” thought has CREPT OUT when a/*?0lled. You really can't blaine the reently that he had resigned the post of fe "i tund? It is bad enough for traine | Mile hot apell has made @ sudden feet to protest against Regan's Mteary direstor of the Now Theatre because | °° Dont ] oF a man.” Sibert, ‘Sit down, Jerry yw |" polled ite ia puee nat” 3) welll aap co, |chemetyie’ tn bo hort con and excessive demand for tce and the But there are|LITTLE LOVE has crept in. *Oh, we mustn't blame the man, | Miialted we superior ai that auch afte cu7| yy ont ‘of order.” ‘Regn. “You at intervgle, being hot, for months to | without having t!me-tab) toe compantes aimply can* supply it. one or two other| A Women, at times, is not unlike @ , oH 8 “ ony ” “1 ain not,” retorted Dowd, struggling with se “— 1 4 mustn't wet’ mimicked Mrs, Jarr, “I| ‘You decline play after play," be Maas feniatos ube ware | come. But « few timoly hints may kpep {atie, SAPHEAD, | |2t ## the ame with all the private fam- | things besides enough food and enough | ttle child with childish hurts, A Mttled pipnoee your other friend and come | make euemy after enemy, You Goon Un Gaal aT tah, are be people from succumtdng to the heat.| Butter, N. J. Miley in this part of the town, ‘They are|€lothing that perhaps many of our | Petting, a It 1s necessary ee Gas the man who keeps the| #ulble, and the pow of your fatality ta en af roel eee le Leave “cooling drinks" alone, Bat mod: out of {ce and can’t get any, either,” |Jonds of creation do not pas 7 w 1 ckon with, [to Keep the spirit happy end youthful ugly and unpopular one, at : “ Jory Dowd, sit down,” replied Mo. no Smo ” corner saluon, is to be bemmed for tce 4 the erately and slowly, Don't hurry, derate Smoking. “ ody, you know, wants to be Like Blynn's it take h : ‘ "Oh, you @re always thinking of pfore the everyay domestic |@nd joyous. next. Whet answer will HE make? 1| wife ‘eS ma, twothiede) to Don't worry. Keep the digestion good. oe it Sia Bronias ‘Works other people!” snapped Mrs. Jarr. wees, Many a man Js so en-| Said @ ttle worthy wife the other! suppose je will come up here and @ot|, That wife of yours’ sald a ¢rlood of Blynn | gay here," i chats, and there's wot that Don't get excited. Don't wig to water.| oo pale Lighid ydballc raya old. Iemoke! «pnink of your own, once in @ while! in things that concern HIM | day: the house on fire!" beg ogi] never acmite having made 6 ml» Keep out of the direct sunlight al you | ty" griendy pe Danke caretion a day. | what do other people do for ME? 1 to him ts summed up in threa| “When I first marred Harry and! suse what should prompt the phieg-| ""Ob,’ sid Blynn with « bitter smile, ‘he 3 can, Don't run for ul He content | * riptaget Hoke too much. But| want ice, My things are epotling and | Sentences, “Hasn't she enough to eat? | things came up ¢o worry me, @ Mttle} matic Gus to such a cy . | Occasionally allows that she made one madet 9 é Ai . C ynical perform i wall to take the next. It ts hard for a New | “Pe” 1 ask then what they call “mod- | my enildren ere orying for cold Jemon- | Hasn't #he ‘gh to wear? What| word from tim, @ kiss, would just con sie married me, but she won't admit Green Room each gives a different ance, under the existing meteorological | fit outaide the family chro Yorker to do any of these things, But yo vice more does eho need?" SOMEHOW eet things right. Deaton Trad unawer, Bo 1 no pveni conditions and dearth of tice, it would | ler. ‘ it tw easier than to be laid by in the | WeNe hed 1 now ask The Bvening| “aw, I don't want any old lemonade, | Just #0! All ta said and done when| “If I bad even the toothache and he epee to say. But Mr. Jarr sald, if — Gl inting 8 ist ae neverdd Geen { teed in| ‘a wisest readers (including doc: | p= 9 ==Sses=a|she has CREATURE COMFORTS. | would just be @ wee bit kind end|gne wished it, he would go ask Gus for All Broke. oe the lOnient whore heat wan intense (and | t+ % auewer the question for me. i Io does not reckon that the heart of | sympathetic tt seemed to de Detter. sy a cour tines tate es tk ci By Frank J. Wiletach in tents, too), and I learned these max- Answer to the ‘Peace! ne nas a NED too-a GREAT need. | Hut now he ds eo busy, and when any-| “on, é tan't co you want at Gus's,"| "| ated. . ims from men who never «et sunstroke ” ‘The whole story !# a game of hearts, | thing turns up and I bave ¢o fight it PR ple ll A gh i AP argreyeaps NEW JERSEY MERCHANT. | ‘fo the Baitor af The Prening World Puzzle Often, very often, the greatest need t# out all alone * eeeme JUST TWICE me fee from him, eee am . Saat way peers eet 8 yearlia’ coh, ON critics are endless of treny; A Summer Drink, When wil fashion'’» wheel turn to not in the material food at all, Look | AS HARD.” @o badly I would even eocept “& from iu the bern, breakin’ an old othere as irefu) as (ging, To the Biltor of The Evening World sanity? Men wear stiff collars in sum- at the news of the day! Whet with | While we women may Qght toe findsh |that wretch!” i jailed In e@nawer to “Thirsty” asking the |mer, while women's throats go coolly unkiseed brites and the scrambling | the big thinge thet come up in the| Go Mr. Jarr took @ dishpan end went Mt rot, haven't out Pea other day, “Who knows of a good thirst |Dare. Men wear hot coats in summer, over the possession of the children,| course of events, we may go te pleces|on the forlorn hope to ask ‘that 5 nded as @ means ratistying, harmless drink,” as good &| while women wear cool ehtrtwa! &o.—all is a matter of hearts—hearts |at the tiny slight of @ nelgbor or &| wretch,” Gus, for ice. |, can't 1 aol you some patent clothes to digest dinner or escape thought, Crink as any I bave found ts oatmen! | wear heavy, atiff hata; they shave daily that MIGHT HAVE ITAD the balm |ittle ache ehat may be but e@ an eir| He had a tall cold one and then told lek enctiey heist and water N. W. |and thus rob themselves of the com: the GYMPATHY |bubbie. But not until THE men of|Gue ot tle wife's desire for ice. ‘ aes iid “ Pussling Time-Tables, And ease and economy of a beant. Men Ln, ail men assures that IF 18 but e bubble| "your wife ain't no friend of mine, ‘s| Parliamentary Precedent. | enre 9 acts as well as To the Falitor af Preung World aro Fashion's slaves far more than Since Mother Eve, woman hag NEED- |do we recognise # in tte true light. het” esked Gus. Railroad time-tables may be eaay for women are. MISS 8. 8. BD sympathy as much as anything. | Just in like measure may SHB give| Mr. Jerr hed to confess sho wasn't. of Martin Meena had to de with empert ‘accountants 10 decipher, /7 sup | How D4 It Originate? 1 might even #dy MORD than anything, | the advice, the encouraging word ef the} “All right," eald Gua, “under dem con- n the politics of Ki ITH the actor, ignorance ma pose Sam lovd could make One out | a, we maiitor of The Evening World: It 1s as necessary to her as the very | right moment, toan have all she wants tho early cightion In. tbe Sixth eae ce Oe 7 be costly, too. But to poor mortals with| What clever New Jersey reader can air she breathes. Anil the man who| We may explo the theories of the asked the surprised Mr. | axe wii Bt the ferrtory now Boowa oy ttle ) only he will never admit tt, narrow gauge brainy @ timetable 19 4/1611 up when and how the queer old say. does not realize thie fe the loner, day, but as to independence, in truth! ‘Tt'ee wise euy that will make a good Hl) which Jn for dum was lanwaly, tonabined — horror, I start out, clear headed and) ing originated that “Jersey does not So even in this Suftragetto era of|THBRE 1 NO SUCH THING. Eaoh| friend of @ bad enemy,” replied the Wily | Dowd, who passe! over many yea HEN an actress allows her hatp industrious. By the time I'm puzzled | belong to the Union?” What were the HIE accompanying diagram shows a| things whan the “side-by-side-with-| of ue ta dependent on BOME ene for the|Gus. “And hore's a bunch of fresh mint | of the mob priuiariey fm which & to turn gray you oan put i over @ thme-table for ten minutes, I am | otroumstances that led to eo misleading Chinese Tangram picture of the|man" attitude is our war cry, as well|comforting expression, And % fe-|mit my compliments. I know how it ts, | tion a Alimiual men lave, toe, keane tates down that she haw not the petog iithering. Can't ratirosd compantes ex'and ibelous a saying? The origip “dove ef peace” rearranged from|aa our song of peace, when independ-|preased, much that te good and happy|My wife, Lena, ehe don't Uke YOUs) tho oid Tivoll Garden at Independence avenue | OF that she is & thousand miles fem @ Fange heir train gohglules eo they will ugh, 10 prove acs. | A. R, [the Gem Liogd portray of @ war 3 soce te the keynote of the workadey (m She everzgay, gubque of MME U6 IAAI iid. gat OMe mate Hagaa ves ecid chairman wad | coloring sitabHebmemh ae ee 4 —— —'— - a es Tae d . + —heeantecerd o \ ; Caan en scent PRE Hr ana PORN S te PRELE P A tcetS t ae oe pmamcvrmenitones arnt A cul