The evening world. Newspaper, July 10, 1911, Page 10

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| : | gore - AU nia hi pie: he The Mek» asorid. Pablisica Daily Except Sunday py, ° & ANGUS SHAW, Pros. and Tieas., 63 Park Ev 6 Puliishing Company. Now, vw i JOSEPH PULITZER Juntor, Bee'y. 63 Park B Entered at the Bost-Offica at New Vork ne Sccond-Closs Matter Bubseription Rates to The gj Vor Engiana and the Continent and World forthe United States = | AN Count {esi (ie International { and Canada, costal Union, HIE anprecedented number of horses killed by the heat during the past week, and the un- told but only too! evident sufferings of the rest of the noble equine army, must have impressed — every one who owns or drives an animal with the many but in a large degree remedial causes of suffering that sadden the city all through the sum mer. The veterinarians assure us that horses are better taken care of to-day than formerly, because they are worth double money they were before the automobile put breeding farms out of business If this is the only reason it Anyway, wh nermal heat coincides with such a scarcity « pensation is required to the drinking fountains that serve for the entire Greater City of New is not very reass ng. ial di f water that a sp “p running meagre seventy public , even when their masters are York, it goes hard with the poor beast In too many cas better kind and thoughtful. than they know in caring for their dumb charges. Supt. Thomas F. Freel, of the 8. P. C. A., has been scattering broadcast a brief set of instructions in many languages for the care of horses in hot weather which, if generally followed, might be & boon: | “Drive slowly wet sponge on the horse’ these latter mean Cut down the load. Keep a hat containing a} head. Keep in the shade as much as pr sible, See that the harne properly put on, and use pads wherever it may chafe. Have the stable well aired, clean and comfortably bedded. Water the horses more frequently than usual, give them bran mash at least twice a week and cut down the regular allowance of oats by quart. If a horse drops, pour cold water slowly on the tip of the head, but keep it out of the ears. In these times of ecarcity, it is well to carry a bucket in the wagon, for quick use in case of emergency. Rub down the animal's | and let him lie down a while in the shade. “He will get up as soon as he feels better,” adds the authority. | “A horse will never shirk if he is feeling right.” Can as much be said for all us humans? $= “GOLDEN” AND OTHER RULES IN BUSINESS. EORGE W. PERKINS has evidently enlisted him- self in a veritable campaign of education in favor | of his acheme for establishing a supreme court of Iusiness and industry for the settlement of all commercial and industrial questions. When- ever or wherever he ‘speaks in these days, that always cither the theme or the refrain of his | sermon or his song. His argument is simple. Competition is intolerable because it i. wasteful, monopoly is intolerable because it is tyrannous; therefore there must be either socialistic co-operation or governmental super- vision. Mr. Perkine wishes governmental supervision, and he de- sires the creaiion of a court of business to make it more effective. Tt is not clear why a new court is nece ample amount of machinery for the enfo! thing lacking is the efficient force to keep the machine operating profitably, A fow more resolute prosecutions and wholesome con- vietions would do the Iusiness world more good than twice as much official and neglectful supervision. Judge FE. H. Gury, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the United States Steel Corporation, and evangelist of the world Steel | Trust that is going to make the original billion-dollar combine look Uke a piker, comes out strong for “the Golden Rule applied to busi- nem.” Ata casual glance, this may seem loftier, broader and at the same time more expiicit than any proposition fathered by Mr, Per- Kdaa, either before or after he quit tho steel business, Yet when you cma to read the sermon on this text which Tndge Gary preached at the lato international stool conference, held in| Brussels, Bolgium, it appears that his specifications and limitations | modify the original maxim completely off the map. His application | o? the Golden Rulo 1# meant to be only toward competitive neigh-| bore “on the inside” of the stecl interest, Moroover, there is the painful suspicion that he would revise the rule iteoll ao ¢} should road: "Do others, or ti Letters From the People with a wet sponge, | We have now an gement of law. The one vat, it ny will do you.” IM | with the fold she held tn her left hand ening World Dail By Roy L. McCardell. RS. JARR and her mother were sitting in the front room of the Jarr flat The inside blinds were | closed, with the lattices in them opened at a down- ward angle of} forty-five der rhis made the room forty-five de- grees darker than outside and, to Mr. Jarr’s , about forty-five degre warmer. oer “There's no sun] on this side of the street. Don't you cooler in here nds ang let the Roy L MSCARDELL tink ko wouja be muec You opened these alr in?” “You let those blinds alone! sata Mra. Jarr. “We are keeping out the re- flection and that makes It cooler."’ Mr. Jarr retired abaghed. Mrs. Jarr's mother held up a length of white linen, touching the ttp of her nose and the fold she held in her right hand as far off in @ straight line as she could Btretah It. Ghe grunted in a aelf-satiofied way! and moved up the right hand to where the left hand had heen holding and stretched the cloth away until she hed Got a new hold on the etge of tt with, her left hand ¢o her sharp, etraight nose again, he repeated this astontehing perfor- mance eome half dozen times and then remarked; “Well, strange to any, it TA alm yarde! You oan never trust some of the stores, | 1 every bit ef cloth I uy 1 where I deal they know pees Sees aay Eee A Prophecy. ayy me and the Ma |having better manners than the downs ng Work town store olorks us a rule, 1 notioe probiam' came in| the Jatior are sometimes effiaie f mM, Gla “Bquirrel and = Trew! poilte, Hut 1 nottee that TAA tt Lan Probiem?* In the “problem” {t states, | ar wo unctvil and curt that thay could “A man walke around a 1 On tha} at hold positions In uptown stores and top of which a squirrel stands, Tie Sil keep up such brusque demeanor aquirrel aiways turns co a8 to face the) HAL Hts hecwus Jority of their cust man, Not onco does the man get be 4 hind him, Does the man walk around). Obposite te the equirrel, or only around the p ty See BIBR FARAH tO ty He says: "Not onoe dos tie man gel! », Cham ol] sfireet ‘Trame, behind him,” If the man walked) he Chanhern street Lorke pare hav Ground the squirrel it standy to reason! gy jjard time making. thee ion Nn y tips from that he would have ta "get behind’ | Park How to the Hele ferry, ‘rucke, him in order to wat around him, | &o, block the tracks and often seem to KR, B, Mount Yernon, N, ¥, | pay no heed to jhe ear drivers! sixnais, T ihe cure are alten forced ta eraen Downtown Clerks, ' nd we mi ” 5 sions and We mabe fraing, How about We the Kaitor'of The Bseuing World: the Trafic Squad tr ta voform this, I agrees with the correspondent wha My, Puce « iksonae? " writes aheut tic uplega store ciarky COMMUTER, ( FUNNY How A Fe.cow CAN SLEEP WHEN NOBODY wanes Hin uP} ry it, and so they always give me full measure!” If the length of Mrs. Jarr’s mother's nose had any parc in the measuring process that lady must have got good measure indeed. Mrs. Jarr was at vork remodelling @ gown of some Hght texture, She and her mother sat by the front win- monopalzing what little lght in. And Mr, Jarr sat at the ack of the room eying the mysteries dows came | On How Much May y Magazine, Monday The Dzy of Rest. By Maurice Ketten. 1 CAME HERE To STay WHILE Your WiFE 15 AWAY SHE WANTS ME | To LUOK AFTER You ryals of the processes of making new dresses from old. It was too dark for him to read, where he sat. And Gertrude, the maid, was ironing in the dining- room. So Mr, Jarr came to the reso- lution that, for him, there was no place to go but out. He had started for the door, asllk- footed, but not @ move escaped Mrs. Jarr’s mother, “Is he going out for that No. thread and the whalebone?” she asked. A Couple Marry? By Sophie Irene Loeb. OW MUCH A WREK MAY A H COUPLE MARRY ON? This is the question asked tn many lettert ceived, It ts TH question that con- fronts young peo- ple every day. Of course, in the first glamour of love, when the world) seams to hold but | two, one thinks one could just en- dure almost anv~ thing, | he, for one, can make this or that do, Bhe can make her clothes, &e, ‘Dy economy here and | careful expenditure there things can move MUCH KASIEM than one would think,” $a the Delief, And what does'a | Uttle sacrifice matter when the love dream is young? Hut ¢o come down to the actual ques tlon, or rather up to st (for I take tt the folks who write have meagre means and want to know If they cannot moas- ure up to requirements), there are one | or two things to sonsiter, For tnstance, the girl who has been | aroustomned to wratitying EVERY LaT- | TL HIT before taking him will find tt bitter medioine to deprive herself of tho ttle niceties AFTIORWARD, | And if he has @ certain amount of “aponding money” it may be diMoult to do with lees, It may veom oan AT THEE TIME, | and no matter how tn love-afier a} Walle, when Ching» assume the natural normal ryday way that things have & habit of dotng, than her cravings and longings for Juxurtes, do, that per- | now for the tine have heen blinded by the little love-god assert themselves | again, and (here are montents when the | woman Of her Andes herself wishing, > | "Do you think the bullding of sub- | Ways Will cause fp "Sure! Pon’t th F ‘ Will son tyr ey pay ‘The dirt | estate to go. | wishing well, al} of ua ienaw, | Hut the reat, averwhelming quas- Honan people jappe oR leew than of the honeymoon, First of all, the love-in-a-cottage of fi tale lore, {f it ever DID exist, is A thing of the past. We are Ii an age where human emotigns are very much swayed by MATERIAL things, The tine w he fell in love with her in a calico dress and remained so to the end of the chapter is a closed. chapter indeed. To-day wo are SURROUNDED with things that !t takes mo! to buy, and we need those self-same things to be at peace with ourselves and with those with whom we have to live, If betora, she could not even KEEP HERSELF on $15 a week and he had trouble to make both ende meet on thé same sum, they cannot expect to do it in conjunction, no matter how they economiae, Livery day something comes up that 1s needed, and if one must CONTIN: UALLY DEPRIVE one's aelf there ie @ Itmit to all endurance, No greater truth than this, Love may be alluring and enduring, but the LACK of things has often been the means of Aistilusionment, There * more truth than we care to admit in the thought that “when poverty cameos in at the door, love mi out at the window.” One thing tw eertain—no one can Ilva without ao- customed creature comforts for long and remain happy that ts continually to be confronted with the EXTREMB necesstty of CLOSH SAVING, It were wiser to watt until things Asmime a better proportion and a firmer rity of at least tHe necessities that hag before not found wanting, than the repenting-atdeisure afterward, Bo tt narrows down to one thing to be considered by those in love who would join forces, Bach must he ine trogpective, A safe rule ts to have a reasonable ASSURANCE that, at least in @ material Ine, that to which they have alwaye heen asoustomed will not he absent, They may be able ta watt for better (hings, but the parameunt sense af wateby ja tai TAKH MOP TOO MANY BIYRDENS they have bean aocuetamed ta and he hapoyt The Sing is da tw ta lank at {8 from all eq WITHOUT the lustre ¢ [POR WHICH THE AHOULBRR® BAV@ NOT PREY FITTHD) Mr. Jarr Witnesses an Exhibition of Painless Dressmahing and Painful Scandal-Mongering “IT found a spool,” said Mrs. Jarr, “Well, he better stay around, tn case we need buttons of anything,” Said Mrs. Jarr’s mother, grimly. “Do you think if I hemmed the edge where it {s cut and let down another flounce it would do?” asked Mrs, Jarr, standing up and holding the dress she was working on against her. “You want to be careful or you won't get It to drape right,” said Mrs, Jarr's mother, warningly. “Will you ever for- get how Clara Mudridge looked tn that dress she tried to make over and got the front panel tn wrong As she said these words Mra. Jarre mother laid the white goods she had measured by her nose down on a lap- ‘yoard and cut around tt with scissors, following a paper sleeve pattern. She kept the scissors against the board And every time the blades came to- gethor and moved along they emitted a crunching sound that affected Mr, Jary in every nerve. “Did I tell you how Mra. Hickett haa to leave her boarding house because she involved them !n @ scandal?” asked Mra, Jarr, biting off a thread, to the great irritation of Mn Jerr’s nerves Do tell me! Ive always wanted to get eomething on that old thing! And at her age, too! Well, will wonders never cease?’ cried Mrs. Jarr’s mother, in mingled interest and delight. “ Oh, Mra. Hickett, poor old soul, did eco, it was Hickett, for all their eirs, were always doing some skimpy thing to save a penny. Mra. Hickett used to wash out her handkerchiefs in the washbow! in her room and then dry them out smooth ‘Dy pressing them fiat against the win dow pane, where they'd etick and dry: "Yes, I know, I've done it myself, but in my own home, not in @ boarding house, of course,” said Mrs, Jarr's mother, “Well, there was a jealous women who had been separated from her h band, and she lived across the wa: Mra, Jarr went on, “and she used to call at the place where Mra, Hiokett and her duughter, Cora, boarded; to see a man friend, But hin wife didn’t bellyo that part of {t, you know, (Mrs, Jarr's mother shook her head as though to ecy “Certainly not!) “fo the wife hired a room across thr way to watch her husband, and when she saw the handkerchiefs stuck up on Mrs, Hickett's window aud her hus- band enter the house shortly after, #ho thought {t wae a elgnal, and she rushed into the place ‘vith detectiv ‘Mra, IMlokett's room, And Mr, Hiok sitting without her wig, ae bald as a soot," ‘Why, where's your husband?” asked Mra, Jarra mother, looking up, vim! ina? * , te | must have clipped out! Fut never mind | Go on with what you were Bays | What dd Mra, Mokett de? How | 44 that eiuek Bp daughter of were fame WT" 10, TERM | Copyright, 1011, by The Pre Perimhing Cx, (Phe New Yorh Worth, No. III,- Boker’s “FRANCESCA DA RIMINI.“ | Py] HK two Italtan cities, Rimini and Ravenna, were forever ot war | with each other, The Quelle were masters of Rimini, | T Ghibeline governed Ravenna. Malatesta, the olf Prince | Inf, had two sons, Lanctotto and Paolo. leach other devotedly, yet thoy wore atterly anifke, | Was strikingly handeome, of fine figure, and blessed manner, Lancfotto was a hunchback, @ man of flerce and was far more at hin case on the battlefold than He was general of Rtrint’s armies and hed recently pell-mefl from the field tnto the shetter of thetr own Guido, Prince of Ravenna, foresaw ho should be | he could patch ap some lasting trace with Rica, | of bis only daughter, Francesca, the fairest women To please his father, Lanctotto srinctantly consented had never seen. And Paolo was sent to fetch her fret bede,his brother describe tim truthfully to i ' yi ile illsy i f 3 i i I i ri i i | : ! x2 a if Re ? tell the gtrt When Francesca came to Rimini, esoorted firet time, and well nigh swooned at the | horror he inspired in her, loved her madly from her. To gave her father and Ravenna from rutn, for the misshapen bridegroom. And the marriage | While the wedding procession wan leaving | Ghfbeltna were up in arms again. Lanctotto, ar fe fascinated by each oth helplessly in love, Beppo Pepe, Malaterta’s court jester, who hated Lanciotta, love affair and dashed off to bear the news to | reached the Guelf camp and poured forth his Lanctotto struck Beppo dead, then mounted Bie flestest neck speed to Rimini. Paolo and Francesca meanwhile had awakened to the lebt of devotion and honor to Lancictto end they must again. Paolo vowed that he would leave Rimini ¢orever, But at Francesca implored ‘him: “KAI me, But do not leave me. Nay, one &ies!” \ “Take it,” sakd Lanctotto, solemnly, as he stepped between them. “Zt ts he} Inst” Figo queried Francesca, unafraid “So be it!” end she kissed Pausle on the lps. Lanciotto, fighting down his blind rage, for love of them both, turned fsum one to the other, pleading: “Do you deny your guilt? Speak! I will credit ether. You eee, my trienés, how easy of belief I have become, how easy ‘twere to cheat me?’ A single lying word would have saved the lovers. But neither of them would speak that word. Instead, each sought to assume all the «utit ané to exonerate the other. ‘Then Lanciotte offered to kill himself, thus to leave them free to wed. But Paolo caught his upraised arm and averted the tMdow. The wretched husband, baffled in his efforts to save them, listened now te the valce of vengeance, “Look ye!” he snarled, “there is not ene hour ef Efe iawn among us three. Paolo, you ere armea You have a Feet WI We l8§ gword, T but a dagger. Bee, I mean to XM you.” $ the Last!’ Paolo retused to draw sword in his own defense. even ee when fis brother strove to rouse him by striking htm actows the face and by scoffing at him as a coward. Lanctotto, able to contro! hs fury no longer, drove his dagzer through Frencesca’s body, and, with « second stroke, Jaid Pacto, mortally wounded, at his feet. “May God forgive you!” he panted. “You Mame me? “No," answered the dying lovers almost in one breath. | Then, drawing Peoto’s bead into the shelter of her arms, Francesca forgot | the presence of the slayer, and whispered yearning love woris to the dying | man untfi thetr two spirits passed, | Lanctotto, looking Gown upon the sovers whose sin he had punished, but | whose love he had not been atle to kill, mattered: | “How atih they Me! A moment since they walked end talked and kiseed— defied me to my face, The honor of our house ts safe. I cannot cheat myself with words, I toved him more than honor—more than life. Here let us rest,” | he cried, stabbing himself, “till God awake us all | pA Ce | | Elopement Puzzle Solved. ESCRIBING the young men tn yes-} CD ed bd D terday's pement Puzzle’ as} BCD od » . B, © and D and the young] BCD bed b, @ and d it can be shown is 4 be een trips of the boat carried] 7,4 be the four couples acrops the stream: Da Ni | Shore. Island. Over. BDa@ b | ABCD abed oO ° d | ABCD cd oO ab a be | ABCD bed oO a a oO | ABCD be a od o | ABCD ed b a oO oO | Orr eeeeneenmenenennennnnnn, 4 The May Manton Fashio HE plain shirt waist made in Peasant style is et require ft- ‘the ervaholes, om an frat Bgt) the fli 1s finiah| itching but sn With @ neokband ae be wi walst can ore al 4ny preferred collar stock, When made as shown in the smal view the u ie Joined to the “ous Ke. with tee ue, that @re join centre back, under-anm cuffs lower neck can be finished either with @ neckband” or roum sollae. bed a "or the int ie medium ate Papas, of matoriad A) Frond" 4 38 or 44 Patter: 7070 gut in “sizes for a at, 42 and Plain Shirt Walst, Pattern No. 7070, Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON nf BURWAU, Laxington avenue and Twenty-third street, or vernon mati to MAY MANTON PATTERN CO., 189 E. Twenty-third meen. Ovesta IN. ¥, Bend ten cents in coin or stamps These IMPORTANT-Write your edéress

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